Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 November 1915 — Page 4

i1,-

1 he Terre HauteTribuno

\lVfl OA7.KTTK

An luleit-uU-nt ni-Avupniier, Dnil? t»nl Mmduv. 1 he Terre Haute Outttc, (nlilinhril 1

A,?'-,

$%-

'3

i*

Si

fi

i&

SOB. The Terre Hnut* Trlh.

unr. mtahlliilir^ 1HM.

Only Bcmpapct in l»-rrv lluutr )iavln« fall ilny lt«i«d wire nervle* of At«icl«tf(l Central Prtai Itnn "rrrlM,

Telethon* Buainean Department, bath phones. S78 Editorial Department, Cfttptns. 165 Central Unloa, 316,

in advance yearly 'oy mall. Daily Sunday, $6.00 Dally only, l*.00.

t'in1»iv

only. $2.00.

Kniervd a« aecontitter January 1. the poetorflca

fc'nL«r*

ir Terre Haute. Indiana. under thn net ctrar*-»SK of March 2. 1ST*.

A IVrre Haute newia|ter for Terr* llnute people. The only paper Ib Terre liante owned, elltei| and pnbllahed by T'rre l(ntit*nn«.

All uJiJauhcUtll arlKiea, muiu»cl ipl*. itVleia anil picture* lent to the Tribune are sent at the owner'# risk, and the Tribune company expresaly repudiates any Jinbtlitv or responsibility for 'th*ir i»a'e rupfo^v or return.

TODAY'S ELECTI0N8.

S3qual suffrage is undergoing a test today. Two large eastern states are considering it, New York and Massachusetts, and the outcome will have important bearing on the future of the movement. The most striking things about the suffrage campaign have been, first, the dignity and good manners of the discussion on both sides, and, second, the public's tolerant but indifferent mood. The politicians have, in the main, come out for suffrage merely because they did not wish to give offense. The newspapers have been exceedingly polite in almost every case. The suffrage leaders are entitled to the utmost praise for their fine temper, and tor the tact with which they have made friends by avoiding the ill-judged methods used by suffrage campaigners In England. But the Vaat majority of women in the state of New York have seemed wholly indifferent both to the "sulTs" and to the "aiitis." Probably the greater number of men have doubted the wisdom of woman Suffrage as an Immediate thing, while not wishing to seem ungenerous, and while conceding that the movement was destined to succeed sooner or later. That many of the women leaders were dead in earnest, nobody cdu'd deny. But even the friends of the movement who

You Can Enjoy Life ,.Eat what you want and not be troubled with indigestion if you will take a

I 5S22s££: "WSJ?

before and after each meal. Sold only by us—'25c a box. .•$*. ^Valentine's Quality Drug Shop 834 Wabash Av*.

ONINC

•t

zzzsjmmisrrm

were keen observers of public sentiment were obliged to admit that, so far.' As the public was concerned, the agitation in the state of New York seemed to be light-hearted and superficial, ra,ther than profound. It had little of the Intensity that important mweraents gain In states where a fight Is on.

INDIAN 8UMMER.

Forecaster Cade says he cannot exactly say whether this is Indian summer or squaw winter however, the name is a trivial matter, and a little doubt will not interfere with our enjoyment of the season. If you have long determined fome day to got out in the open, to take a hike through the woods, now is the time to so treat yourself.

The thing to do Is to get the Bunpurlfled air into our lungs and sunsuggested thoughts ir,to our brains that too often grow fagged and foggy. And if the nearest way is walking, happily that is also one of the best ways. But don't walk like a machine that has only to keep going. And don't walk as If raila and flanges held you in the track and you nldn't need eyes. Departing summer's majesty is not all gono. There are still trees, red russet, yellow, even green. There Is still something to learn. But beside this, you muat do a llttlr work fcr yourself— a little work that is getting rid of work, deliberately nnd honestly dropping all thought of your regular duties and the too regular worries that are the garb they wear. Mere trees and grass and houses, cosmos and salvia won't draw your mind away from troubles unless you mean that they shall. And though the fresh air may do you some good In spite of your reluctance to benefit, you'll b© wasting half your opportunity.

One walks to let exercise and outside things distract hia attention. Let oxygen, the great purifier, into your lungs by all means, but don't forget to let other things out of the back door of your "brain*

THE COUR8E OF 8URGERY.

It la an oft-repeated V&tory that George Washington, after walloping the British and the Heselans, succumbed to the less formidable enemy, the surgeon's scalpel, and died from blood letting. This treatment used to be the first thing in the surgeon's box of tricks. After a while, blood letting went out of fashion. One hasn't heard of it for fifty years—but now the practice la threatening a revival. An English surgeon, in the Ixmdon Lancet— significant title!—advocates the free ,uje of the scalpel as a remedy for melancholia. He tells of how he saved a melancholy patient from suicide by relieving him of twenty ounces of blood. The man got well, enlisted, and went to the front to offer what blood he had left to the service of his country. The doctor sayB that this "simple little remedy" will save thousands of patients from madness and self-destruc-tion. It relieves the pressure on the brain, and thus does the business.

Maybe so. But the treatment certainly goes back to the primltflve prin­

IT'S GOING TO RAIN

S O E I E

And people who buy Raincoats this week will benefit doubly. Prices of Raincoats are 25% less than regular, and it is the better part of wisdom to have the Raincoat ready before the rain.

Men's Raincoats Women's Raincoats Boys' Raincoats and Hats Girls' Raincoats and Hats

2

ciples of Galen and Hippocrates. "Melancholia" la a very ancient name In tnedloine It means "black bile," and was supposed to result from a preponderance of that element in the system. Medicine recognized four "humours" In the blood—melancholic, phlegmatic, choleric and sanguine. These humours were morbid fluids, and an excess of any one of them determined a man's ailment and his temperament. Blood letting was supposed to relieve them.

And here comes a surgeon going back to first principles, and bleeding for the melancholic humour. Does the science of medicine, like many another, move forward In circles?

EASY MONEY(?)

The stock market, says Collier's, is booming like a June rise in the Columbia clerks are working sixteen hours dally overtasked brokers carry their orders In bags, and live on rice, milk, and cigarettes the beiter to serve their great duty of selling twenty shares where only one was sold before. Wall street is proudly and noisily functioning as the country's Investment center." And Thomas W Law/son, hero of "Yukon Gold" and other fantasies, gets the spirit of It all Into a scarehead trumpet call of advertisement "Whoever is confident that, war stocks will keep up should get aboard this boom, for all who get aboard will be assured enormous profits, provided war stocks stay up."

Sometimes It's a quiet person in black who asks how many cards you want, or a loud agent with near-dla-monds who Invites you to trace the little pea to Its hidden lair, or a mar-ble-fronted "banking flrrr." which advertises In the newspapers for customers—but what's the difference anyhow? Gambling la nearly always a business, business Is sometimes a gamble, and the suckers (customers) of the United States have $5,000,000 a month to throw away. Place your bets, gentlemen, the wheel spins the fearful energies of Europe's truggle throw valuea high in air Jike

l.he

a frenzied whale.

spouting of

After further mature deliberations one concludes that while Bay State and other provincial cities are entitled to their annual elections if they enjoy them, an election once In two years satisfies most of us.

With all the opera stars going into motving pictures, one may soon expect the films to feature the Swiss bellringers and the monologue artists.

Thomas A. Edison says that machines will decide the nepct war. It wouldn't be surprising—they decide a good many elections already.

.Are those Sing Sing convicts losing their cleverness through coddling? It took a half dozen of them four hours to open the Sing Sing safe.

Italy wants only $25,000,000. It might look as If that was the kind of war that Italy Is conducting.

What Lloyd George means is that somebody has got to be licked before anybody hollers.

$2.75

Saturday we expect ever School Teacher in Vigo and surrounding counties to come here for a Raincoat

to

$9.45

$1.45

to

$9.45

$2.25

ta

$2.75

$1.75

to

$2.95

•HMJ'pu pps

TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNEc

BURNING ITCHING El

Kept Getting Worse. Could Not Put Hand in Water for Six Months. In Three Weeks

HEALED BY CUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT

"I had a breaking out on my hand last fall and I tried everything that I could think of, but itfkept getting worse. It wii called eczema. I was given a salve which healed it for a while but It broke out again. Just one pimple broke out on my hand first and it itched and burned so badly I could hardly stand It. I could not put my hands in water for about six months. I was doing my work with one hand all that time. "I read an advertisement of Cutlcura Soap and Ointment and I decided to give them a trial. The Cutlcura Soap and Ointment healed it in three weeks." (Signed) Mrs. Alice Creed, R. R. No. 3, Walnut Grove. Mo., Jan. 20, 1015.

Sample Each Free by Mail

With 32-p, 8kin Book on request. Address post-card "Cuticara, Dept. T, Boas ton." Sold throughout the world.

November 2, 1905.

The Are department made fifteen runs during the month of October. W. G. Schultz, of Terre Hau'.e, leased the Vigo Democrat of West Terre Haute.

The eighth biennial meeting of the King's Daughters and Sons of Illinois was held at Paris, 111., and was attended by many people from, this city.

The Knights of Pythias of this city went to Seelyvllle and confei red the second and third ranks on a class of candidates.

LIBRARY NOTES.

One of the new biographies is "Cecil Rhodes—The Man and His Work," by ono of his private and confidential secretaries, Gordon L.e Sueur. It is an intimate and readable account of the great colonial statesman and contains many personal anecdotes heretofore unpublished.

Another biography is "George Meredith In Anecdote and. Criticism," by J. A. Hammerton. "Heredity and Environment in the Development of Man," by Edward G. Conklin, is ,an interesting contribution to biological literature. "The Furniture of Our Forefathers," is a comprehensive volume by Esther Singleton. "Inexpensive Furnishing," au a practical little book £y' ERtn Walll'ck. "The Art of Landscape Architecture, Its Develppment and Its Application to Modern Landscap^ Gardening," by Samuel Parsons, Jr., deals with the development of this art In public parks, estates and smaller private gardens. Various chapters are given to specific features, Buch as roads, paths, water, location of buildings, etc.

COMPARES TJ. S. TO ROME.

Prof. A. 3. Hathaway Reads Paper Before Literary Club. Interesting discussions led by Prof. Charles Roll apd the Rev. A. E. Monger followed the reading of a paper entitled "Duties of the American Citizen" by Prof. A. S. Hathaway before the Terre Haute Literary club Monday night at the Chamber of Commerce. Prof. Hathaway compared the citizenship of America with that of Rome in ancient times. He laid particular emphasis on the self-sacrificing citizens who occupied political offices.

The great similarity between the two ages were pointed out by Prof. Hathaway. Ideal patriotism should be universal, he said, rather than confined to one district or country. Wealth is distributed unproperly today Just as it was in the olden times, he asserted. In referring to the Income tax, the speaker said, Augustus put such a tax in force •soon after taking the throne.

The Rev. Mr. Monger said America is going down in luxury and lawlessness just as Rome did. He said the people of today may avert this Just as the Romans might have done. At the netxt meeting of the club W. H. Wiley will read a paper on "Elsie Venner." Victor Miller and F. E. Wledeman will lead the discussion.

JORDAN TO SPEAK TONIGHT.

California Educator to Lecture At State Normal Auditorium. Dalvld Starr Jordan, chancellor of Leland Stanford university, will speak on "Ways to Lasting Peace" at the auditorium of the Indiana State Normal school Tuesday night. Dr. Jordan is president of the National Education association, and comes to Terre Haute under the auspices of the Teachers' federation and teachers of the Normal.

Dr. Jordan at one time was a teacher In the Indianapolis high school, professor of biology in Butler college, president of Indiana university, and president of Leland Stanford university. He Is the author of several books, and has been director of the World's Peace Foundation since 1910.

KOBBES RULE OVERRULED.

Argument was heard Monday afternoon by Special Judge J. Harvey Caldwell in City Court in the case of Harry Kobbes, saloonkeeper, who was found guilty by a jury last week and fined $50 and thirty days in Jail, whose a?torney asked an arrest of judgment. Jtidsre Caldwell held city Judge could not suspend sentences.

THE TRIBUNE CLASSIFIED PAGE iy the greatest real estate market of western Indiana and eastern Illinois.

THOSE

Newspaper Syndicate.)

Wednesday, November 3» 1915.

An uncertain day, according to the reading of the stars. Early in the morning Saturn is in beneflc aspect, but later Neptune and Jupiter are adverse. In the evening Venus exercises a kindly Influence.

The signs are exceedingly good for all who deal In the Jwoducfei Of the earth, particularly minerals. Coal operators and miners should benefit, but labor troubles will be numerous.

This is not a fortunate rule for bankers and brokers. The often uttered warnings ot the seers, who foretell danger in foreign loans, are repeated.

Merchants should conduct their business with the utmost caution, as mkny will suffer severe losses, especially those who deal In luxuries and artistic wares.

Judges and lawyers have the prognostication of extreme variations in luck. The few will profit greatly and the many will suffer severely from la^sk of income.

Landlords are subject to a sway of the planets, which Indicates heavy losses. Delinquents will multiply, especially among tenants of the better class.

Excitement In Washington over an international Incident that will arousie public anxiety is prophesied for the end of the month.

Affairs in the Transvaal and Cape Colony will add to the general upheaval of established condition^ of life and commerce.

The pope 1b likely to meet queetions of policy more delicate and exacting than any that have been presented to the Catholic church in recent times. He may lose favor among progressive ecclesiastics and laymen toy retroactive measure*.

Persons whose birth date it Is should avoid speculation during the coming year. They should watch financial and domestic conditions. Vigilance will Insure good results. The young maycourt and marry.

Children born on this day have the best Influences to guide them. They are likely to he industrious, clever and successful.

Kirk*s Flake

WHITE

SOAP

Baby's Clothes

are soft and snowy white when washed with this pure harmless soap.

your Grocer Sells It

«WS

-j-

with the Belted Backs and double breasted vests. They are the "Big Noise" down East and coming this way very fast

As usual, we are the first to ^how them here. Any number of good styles and patterns. '::"V

15/17

Come in and see them, they are the "nifty" Suits of the beason for the young fellows.

HOROSCOPE.

••The Stan IaclUe, But Do Not CoakpeL" Copyright, 111$, \V

20

0

and

The Hatch One Button Union

HERE ONLY

One button on the entire suit. The most convenient, comfortable, practical Union Suit that has ever been shown. V. V'-. You will Surely Like It after you have tried it.

$1.00 and $1.50

Come in and see them

M. JOSEPH'S SONS,

McClure

1

Cfi

Vv

ELECTRIC LIGHT FOREVERYBODY

That Each Light in Your Home May Be Better and Cheaper

Each New Advance in the Science off Illumination Finds Quick Reflection iii^ the Lamps that Light Your Home.

If your house is wired for Electricity yoitshould replace your present lamps with the new WESTINGHOUSE MAZDA LAMPS, these lamps giving greatly increased candle power with a lower consumption of current, have made it possible to give BETTER and CHEAPER LIGHTING for EVERYBODY.

If your house isn't wired for Electricity let us^ send our representative to give you estimate and* arrange your lighting for you. Now is the time to wire so that you can have your house brightly ., lighted for ELECTRICAL PROSPERITY WEEK (Nov. 29 to Dec. 4) al|o for the holi^ys.

NOW is

thIe

v.. "W

512-514 Wabash

JK

A*

TIME TO -Uv-

Do It Electrically

DECIDE TODAY

TERRE HAUTE INDfANAROUS AkD EASTERN TRACTiON CO.l

Terminal Arcade, 820-822 Wabash Ave. Bo'l Phone 343:344

99

Cjtizens Phone 168"

:i

am tn.

5