Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 October 1915 — Page 4
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The Terre Haute Tribuno
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Aa laiMcnlcnl aewapnper, Dullj inil 8*»4«y. The T*rre Haate Gacette, c»« WfclhfcH 1R«0. Th« Terre Haute Trlb. •ae, cetabllalied 1804.
Oaly MW«t«pcr In Terrr Huute linv••V fall day learned wire aerrlct of AmI*M
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Business Department,
tk phones, 178 Editorial Department, ttiena, 155 Central Unloa, 316. In advance yearly by mall. Dally and frunday, fo.00. Dally only. 18.00. Sunday only. IJ.OO.
Bntered aa secondclass matter January 1. llOt, at the poatoffloe
at Terre Haute, Indiana, under the act •f congress of March 8. 187*.
Terre Baste acwapaper for Terre Bwrt* peeple. The enly paper la Terre Hnt* •waed, edited aid published by T*n* Ha«tcM«.
JLU uoaellclted articles, manuscripts, lettera and pictures aent to the Trlb I ine
re sent at the owner's risk, and tpany liability or responsibility
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THE DARKEST HOUR,
tragedies of the are as
paChetk} aa Kins Oeonrofa appeal to his poeplat Issued Saturday, in which he tfOs hte people they must rally to the opfan or Me the empire fall. On top of this comes the order retiring Gen. Ta« Hamilton, the staff of England's hope In the orient
The moot outstanding fttot of the war 6 the failure of the British campaign 4t the Dardanelles. To withdraw the British army and dispatch It to Bulgaria or Serbia would be an admission that the British nation has failed. To oust the general Is merely an admission &at Ian Hamilton has failed.
It has dawned upon the British government that Hamilton has been a failure. It has not yet been brought home that the Dardanelles campaign Is hopef)Mu. Perhaps In time the second admission will be made, and the British Ration will demand that the futile vqaste of men and ammunition be ended, i* Gen. Hamilton's strategy was simple. With true British oonfldence he landed his forces at the tip of the Galllpoli peninsula and attempted to walk Straight through the powerful Turkish defenses. Doing his best for more than six months he has progressed less than five miles.
It Is not clear that Gen. Hamilton's iuccessor can try any new plan. If he succeeds he must follow the lines laid out by the discredited commander. It Is a Herculean task which Gen. Munro must undertake, unless his government wisely determines to divert the energy uselessly expended at the Dardanelles tb a more promising field of endeavor.
!§jj& AFTER THE WAR, WHAT?
Elbert H. Gary in an address in Cleveland last night said that if the masses of the people in the warring European countries knew what was actually going on in the destruction of life and property they would stop the war. His opinion relative to the effect of the war on business reflects that of other leaders in other lines of business.
In the early days of the war, before It was possible to obtain a perspective pn any phase of It, the feeling in this country was that the conflict would be of brief duration, but that the expense it would be so great as to compel epormous exports from Great Britain and Germany particularly to pay the price of it, and that the goods shipped would come into competition with American products at very low prices.
oi
Today the outlook is different. The human loss has been so great, especialy*Trf Germany and in France, that it will take months, if not years, to bring about an Industrial reorganization that would be able to cope with bur manufacturers. This takes into account the
Central
Telephone Goes to
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$2.
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factor of tremendous efficiency on the part of the workman who will be available at the end of the war, and the indentions which have been one of the few compensation.? of the war. The destruction of property has been on a scale so enormous that the replacement requirements will lift exports of Iron and steel and of railroad equipment above the present level, and sustain them there for several years to come.
Mr. Gary does not concur in the notion that the declaration of peace will be Inimical to the growing prosperity of this country and It will probably work out the way he sees it.
DOCTORS' COMPENSATION.
A Tribune reader writes in to inquire If there is no law which compels a physician to make a call if his fee is not guaranteed before hand? There Is no such a law, and the -incident is suggestive of common misinformation on the point. It would be as wrong to take the view that all physicians are selfish as to take the other view that all physicians are unselfish. We cannot, therefore, agree with the correspondent who presents an Indictment for selfishness and arrogance against the whole profession. The fact is that physicians are very much like other people. Some of them are selfish, and some are philanthropic some are simply money-seekers and some are eager for service and are often willing to give it whether or not they are paid. These latter do the work and take their chances. There are not many, we believe, like one reported, who let a school girl sul'fer from a trouble he would have corrected for
The majority of physicians hold their profession in far higher esteem they are not mere money-grubbers they feel that they are called to relieve suffering and know that they cannot in all cases reduce their service to terms of dollars and cents.
THE NEW FORUM.
A new "state" newspaper was launched a few weeks ago at Indianapolis called the Forum. It calls Itself a democratic paper, and the only three issues yet produced have been filled with matter denouncing the men at the head of the democratic party in the state. There have been "bonehead plays" pulled in Indiana politics, but the Forum represents the acme of adamant ivory. The Madison Herald considers It in the following interesting manner: "If 'Arternus Ward' books were still being produced our friend Kirby Risk would probably be described as an 'amoosin cuss' for he can hardly be overlooked by all the fuiipy men in his political tumblings. His first stunt was when he and Richard Kirby got together and prepared a letter which Richard Risk signed telling Kirby Risk why he should be a candidate for governor on the democratic primary ticket. Then they worked together and formulated an answer in which Kirby Risk accepted the honor. When none of the newspapers of the state gave their work serious consideration they decided on a newspaper of their own, with the aid of Horace Herr. Then re of to or to el 'what is the matter with the democratic party in Indiana.' Since none' of the three voted for Woodrow Wilson an a of at at ticket in 1912, what they say ia almost as funny as Risk talking about getting the democratic nomination for gover-j nor in 1916. One of the leading articles in the second number of R'sVs newspaper deplores the faot that Mavor Bell was not convicted. Tt criticises
Union
Pres
Oct. 25
Additions, corrections or changes of address must be received on or before the above date. Ir ^ou do not have a Bell Telephone, the telephone for service, Order Today.
Receivers, Central Union Telephone Company F. H.
Kissling, Manage: Main 464
He Btarted out as messenger boy in 1902 but it was not long before he realized that he would never grow rich os us a a was receiving for carrying messages and washing windows. With the realization of this fact he immediately took up the study of telegraphy. For two years he studied it conecienciously and at the end of that time was given a position as operator. Once the breach was made prosperity came to him quickly. He was promoted from operator to manager of a little test station in the middle west. From this humble start he soon climbed to the top and is now occupying a position in Terre
democratic newspapers for exposing the corrupt methods to which the prosecution has confessed. The newspapers that condemned these outrages and that have supported the excellent Ralston administration arc alluded to as 'the gullible press of the state.' They are not sufficiently 'gullible' to nibble at any of the Kirby Risk bait."
Seriously, however, the Forum, affords a medium for Mr. Herr's unique political views. As a meal ticket for Herr It is doubtless an unqualified success. As a party organ it is a flzzer.
THE FAMILY RECORD.
Mr. Edison says that he expects to see the time when a family record will be kept, not in the bible as now, but in a collection of motion pictures, each member of the family having his own album.
It is a new and growing pastime to be filmed by a mCving camera. After looking on the performances of so,called professionals for a long time, some of which are distinctly amateurish, the qyery becomes general: Why shouldn't we all be in the movies?
Now, we may see ourselves as others see us, for there are cameras everywhere. One can be portrayed In every activity one cares to bo, and perhaps in some he doesn't. On the lawn, In the tennis court, at ths flshingf camp, in the drawing room, the oirinipresbnt photographer catches you.
It Is more intimate portraiture, even than that of the at-dent young man in £he early days of the kodak, who had diligently collected a whole sheaf of photos which he affectionately labeled "Alice on the front porch," "Alice on the hack porch," "Alice in the yard," "Alice at. the gate," and so on. Come into the garden, Maud, the moving picture man is here.
If some contrivance can be invented by which we may keep these films in small comrass in our houses and reel them off whenever we wish to recall sccies to memory dear, we may have souvenirs of the picnic or the day at the seaside somewhat more vivid than a pressed flower in a book or a handful of bright pebbles.
The coon famine dates from yesterday.
Edison has invented a voice mill, to attach to a cradle. If the baby cries, the cradle rocks. Tha harder it cries, the faster the cradle goes. That's a
There is too much supposition and fe-ir exhibited in man's profession and relation to God and not enough confidence, love and positive reliance upon his promises. Man is inclined to transfer that unfair adage in his dealings with humanity to his relations with God. "Deal with all men as though lie were a rogue," which has developed in the mind and heart of man for tha want of a true vision.
In this remarkable change as seen by Mr. Begbie, life went on as before, men toiled and played and died. Only the bitterness somehow vanished, and the hard feelings and the selfishness and meanness that had separated men disappeared. .Men were rich, but they did not use their riches solely to satisfy themselves. And men were poor, but no longer in a poverty that degraded. Christian men rejoiced to bear no another's burdens and so fulfill the law of Christ. So the world was changed.
Why can it not become a realty? Is it not because most of us who say we
TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE'
How I Earned My First Dollar
A. J. Doyle, manager of the Postal Telegraph-Cable company in this city earned his first dollar carrying messages in the same big corporation in which he has risen to the office of manager. He began his career in Newton, Kan., as a messenger boy receiving for his services $8 a month. Carrying messages was, however, the least of his worries he says in retrospection of the days when he was starting out In the business world. Besides this he was expected to wash all the windows in the office, keep the floors in a presentable condition and in many ways, make himself useful around the office.
A. J. DOYLE.
Haute held.
that few younger men have
bad Idea. A cletver baby will soon find out how it works, and yell continuously.
Bulgaria having cast its lot with the Teutons and Roumania being about to cast its lot with the allies remind one that "casting lots" expresses the situation pretty welle
Mrs. Hetty Green has again been discovered living In a $3 a week furnished room In Hoboken. She's got a right to live In a cheap room If she wants to, but why Hoboken?
It appears that the New York street fell into the subway because of Inadequate shoring. This relieves the street cars and taxicabs and pedestrians of a lot of responsibility.
A New York policeman is recovering from an extremely rare case of gasgerm poisoning. And the physicians in attendance are not disposed to make light of it either.
JUSTICES FILE REPORTS.
Show Amounts Collected In Fines During Last Half Year. Report of the fines collected by justices of the peace in, Harrison township were filed with the county commissioners yesterday afternon and accepted. Joseph R. Scott reported that betweeti Febyrary 22 and October ^16, he had collected $11.1%! fn fines. Justice Martin Beal reported, He had collected $26.06 bg.t,yyeeQ Marcl* 12 and September 15.
BALLADS OF A GAY WEEK-ENDER.
I like to visit the Reggie Doanes, Although their place is hot close by They haven't any telephones,
Nor infants that at midnight cry. They never bother one, nor try To urge one to perform strange capers
But best of all—oh, ecstasy! They take In several Sunday papers.
No stint is here! With morning scones And coffflee made deliclously, One sits upon the porch, and owns
He has no cause to fret or sigh. Oft have I waited patiently, At other homes, whilse Jackernapers
Looked through the news. But here —oh, my!. They take in several Sunday papers! There's one for you, and one for Jones
You do not have to peep and pry Over his shoulder. No one loans You half a sheet bogrudgingly.
The front piage you can read! That's why The Regsrie Doanes .have no escapers.
I'd never wire myself—not I— If more hosts took in several papers!
L'EiivoI.
Dear Rejsfgie Doanes. I'll not defty You're poorer than the SuttottT~rapers And I'll forgive your Scotch and rye—
You take In several Sunday papers! —Paul Norman in Judge.
Sunday School Lesson for Oct 24
1!Y RI3V. AV. II. BAST. WESTMINSTER PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
"A Vo-.Tiir: Mr.n's Vision." Like the young man in the lesson, too any of our young men lack a di vine vision of liis possibilities combined with the power of the omnipotent. If the present ambitious gen-or-'itirn of young men and women would stop a moment in their wild rush for supremacy and give a thought to the mighty forces that surround them aiul are actually within them in lalc-nt form, awaiting, the touch of the divine flncrer, they certainly would like the s'orvant of Elisha, receive a vision that would give them a higher life. We tire all too prone to underestimate to the resources at hand because our vision is too low. In Luke the ideil mar. of Gallilce says. "Look up and lift up for the day of thy redemption draweth nigh." Harold Begbie. the English writer hns written a story which he calls "The Day That Changed the World." It is, more the pity, only a story, but in it he depicts the changes that he thinks would have taken place in a-certain city and the world for that matter, when the christians grasped the Idea that God was real.
REV. W. H. BAST.
believe in God are like the servant of the prophet? We live as though we did not believe God as though God had no part or lot in our affairs. Wc are frightened by difficulties and dangers just as though he could not help or had never promised to help.
And further, the last thing apparently that we think of or realize is that we shall ever have to stand in Christ's judgment where we shall be tested not by what wc said we believed, but by what we did. The whole thing, our fear and our failure, is due to the same cause, wc have lost the sense of God's reality of His autual pro.sence in the world in which we live.
WHMPMjH)-, j?*.
HERE IS YOUR
OPPORTUNITY
SOLVO is the Greatest Remedy Ever Produced for the Treatment of Rheumatism and Diseases of the Blood, Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder. The fact is. there is no other remedy like Solvo. It's entirely different, tastes .different and works different from any other remedy. It is really surprising how quickly it soaks right into your poor, worn our kidneys and dissolves and eliminates the uric acid and poisonous waste matter which has clogged up the tiny cells.
That's why you feel, a hundred per cent better within twenty-four hours after you begin taking Solvo. If your limbs and joints are wrenched with the miseries of rheumatism if you have sharp, shooting pains weak, lame, aching back inflamed bladder with scalding burning sensations or any of those tormenting, life-sapping ailments due to deadly uric acid poison in your system, Solvo is the one remedy which gives almosf instant relief.
HOROSCOPE.
"The Stars Incite, Bat Do Wot CompcL" (Copyright, 191.6, by McClurs
Newspaper Syndicate.)
Monday, October 25, 1915.
Astrologers read this as an unmportant day in planetary direction. Neptune Is strongly favorable In the evening. Saturn Is mildly adverne.
It should be a fortunate time for lectures on purely abstract im')Jects. Unusual attention will be given to philosophical and esoteric themes. Foreign thinkers will command attention during the winter.
Business affairs connected with shipping should benefit while this configuration prevails.
The good aspects of Neptune Incline to profit through choice foodstuffs, canned delicacies and tinned meats. Exports will increase extraordinarily owing to an unexpected condition of affairs in a foreign country.
Again it is prophesied that Mexico will gain through the aid of cho United States. An American will be the means of helping a native to a\aln power that means peace, it is prognosticated.
Persons whose birthdate It Is will
HORNUNG'S
^f--£', ?f»?-
ft'TTi
RHEUMATISM
TRULY CALLED "A MERCILESS DISEASE
CAN BE CURED
Rheumatism is merciless, sleep^destroying and agonizing. At times it lets up for a few hours only to turn loose again more pitiless than ever. It leaves one joint and moves on to another with double intensity. It eats up all your vitality, robs you of all .worldly pleasure and unless you conquer it, it m^y reduce you to a hopeless, chronic rheumatic cripple, with joints enlarged, twisted and deformed, with hardly strength enough to drag yourself around.
WE SOLVO
RIGHT TREATMENT WILL CURE RHEUMATISM "r':.
If you are one of the many unfortunate people who have taken and experimented with the many worthless "so-called remedies" with which the market is flooded, and your condition Is beooming gradually worse, do not give up hope. THE RIGHT TREATMENT WILL CURE YOU. One the Greatest Trhuwps of Sciemce ls now within your roach. The results of this wonderful discovery have been nothing ehort of marvelous. Health and happiness have been brought to thousands of poor, unfortunate sufferers. No matter of how long stand-' ing your caso may be, no matter how Intense your suffering, rfo matter how little you have benefited by pastr treatment, no matter how many doctors have told you your case was hopeless again I say, DO NOT GIVE UP. HOPE. Five years ago SOL/VO cured me oi one of the worst cases of rheumatism and kidney trouble on record and my trou'ble has never returned. You are now offered the opportunity to try this wonderful discovery. Do you not owe It to yourself to give this great remedy a fair and complete trial before resigning yourself to a life of suffering and misery? Go to your nearest drug store and get a bottle of 80LVO today. Regular size $1.00, trial size BOc. A few doses will convince you of its wonderful curative power and prove to you why thousands of people are so enthusiastic In their praise of this grea/t remedy.
prosper if they guard the health and pay strict attention to business. They are warned against trifling with those of opposite sex
Children born on this day may be exceedingly headstrong and difficult to manage. These subjects cft. Scorpio may engage in perilous ventures. Mars is their principal ruling planet.
TEN YEAES AGO TODAY.
October 24» 1906.
J. A. Parker, 903 South Sixth street, pioneer resident and proprietor of the Eagle iron works, died, 75 years old.
Nelson White, held for the murder of Pleasant Cooksey, both colored, denied he shot the dead man to the police
Robert Strecker, tackle, was elected captain of the Rose Poly football team to succeed Captain Lee, whose Injuries forced him out of the game.
Mayor Bldaman and the council held a meeting to determine what course should be pursued relative to placing the Central Union Telephone company's wires underground.
Credulous.
FOR MONDAY
Like cut, Dull Matt. Kid Button with Patent Lace Stay up the front. AA to D,
$5 00 the pair
Glaze Kid 8 inch, High Cut, white piping up the front seam, leather Louis XV heel
$6.00 the pair
Dull Matt Kid, Gypsy Button, 8 inch high cut, leather half Louis XV heel.
$4.00 the Pair
1
"Very credulous, Is he?" "Why, you could sell him a mortgage on a castle In the air."—J udge.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1915.
ii
HAD A BAD CASE OF
Rheumatism
"For a number of years I have sUf-* fered with one of the worst cases at rheumatism in this port of the country. But few people can realize the pain and misery I was In at the time I began taking Solvo. Am now using my second bottle and my general condition is very much Improved. I can truthfully say that of all the medicine I have ever taken, Solvo Is the best. My apatite Is good, I eat what I want without any bad after effects and now able to be up and about. I shall continue with Solvo until I have taken several bottles."
H. P. EDOfFM YMR, Barton vllle, ELL
MICHIGAN
HOLLAND SEED
Cabbage
V-v Extra Fin^ 1, Special for O N A
Per Hundreds Lbs.
70 Cents
Whole Grain Bice (Pure food) 2 pounds for
Airline Honey, our own bees come in and see them.
10c, 25c, 50c
Jars of Different Size.
Good Potatoes, per bushdl I VC Sweet Potatoes, per rjfp* bushel, 40o, 60o ...... OC Pour cans Hominy for .......... SdtjC Pure country Sorghum Molasses, per gallon {Hlls One-half gallon 85o 24 lb. sack Flour, guaranteed
X"-*!
.. 90c
70o, 76o, 80o, 85o
9 Different Grades of Flour. MEATS. Good sugar cured Bacon, per pound 16o, 18o and 20o Pure Lard, 60-lb. can .$5.40 Pure Lard, 10-lb. can .. 1.20 Pure Lard, 6-lb. can .. .60 Pure Lard, 3-lb. can .40 Compound Lard, 5-lb can .45 Good Beef Steak, lb 12l/2 2 cans Kidney Beans. .15 Good Wash Boards, each 25 11 bars Daylight Soap .. .25 10 bars Lenox Soap 29 6 bars Star or Fels Naptha Soap .25 7 cans small Milk J2S 3 lbs. Good-Luck Butr terine .55
Geo. Hanna and Son
101-103 Wabash Avenue. Old Phone 2235. Free Delivery All Over City.
Keeping pace with best ii^ Scientific Water Purifica-
puunb xmsvaiffl xovr
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