Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 November 1915 — Page 4
The Terre Haute Tribune
A.\D GAZETTE.
An Independent newspaper. Dally and Sunday. The Terre Haute Gar.ette, e*tnhll«heil 1869. Tl»e Terre Haute Tribune, entnbllnhd 1S94.
Only nnspnper In Terre Haute having full dny leaned wire service of
Ah»
Hoclated Prcrni, Central Press aaaocl'itlon service.
Telephones Business Department, both phones, 378 Editorial Department, Citizens. 155 Central Union. 316,
In advance yearly by mall. Dally and Sunday, $5.00. Daily only. $3.00. Sunday only, $2.00.
Entered as fceconlclass matter January 1, 1906. at the postofflce
at Terre Haute. Indiana, under the act of congress of March 2. 1S79.
A Terre Haute newspaper for Terre llnute people. The ouly paper in Terre llnutc owned, edited and published by Terre llnutenns.
All unsolicited articles manuscripts, letters and pictures sent to the Tribune are sent at the owner's risk, and the Tribune company expressly repudiates any liability or responsibility for their saf° custody or return.
STOP, LOOK AND LISTEN.
President Wilson will have behind him an united people in his dealing with such conspirators who menace American Industry under the cover of sympathy for this or that nation at •\vnr. Every attack of this sort Is but a covert blow to Involve the United fc:ates in trouble.
Self-preservation, the first law of r.attire for nations, as for men, calls for measures of stern suppression thnsc who are using the protection of the American flag to undermine ^iiici-' ui neutrality. Behind the present attitude of the federal department of s'ate stands every patriotic citizen of the United States.
Half-way measures would be futile as well as shameful. The national honor and security are at stake.
Representatives of foreign governments proved to have used the Immunity of their positions to conspire aeainst the nation to which they are accredited should be dismissed without unnecessary formality. American pa-fir-nce h.-is been taxed to the breaking point.
The government of the United States means business. American citizens mean business. Conspirators against the peace of the United States must be brought to justice.
THE LIBERTY BELL.
The liberty bell which was seen here Sunday has again stirred up a controversy, it being held In some quarters *"hat this should be the last trip of the bell, and that it should not be jeopardized by touring the country. .However, the bell would seem to be in little danger and does not Its inspiration to eaeh new generation vastly
ETTER
NEVER
outweigh any apprehension as to the bell itself? The bell's history seems to bear this out. In 1884 it was taken from Independence hall and borne to the New Orleans world's exposition, traversing the south and remaining at the exposition through the winter of xSS4-5. In 1893 it was exhibited at the World's Columbian exposition at Chi cago, its journey through the middle west being a continuous ovation. In 1895 it satisfied the clamorous desire of another section of the south by appearing at the Cotton States and International exposition, held in Atlanta. In 1902 it was a part of the Charleston exposition. In 1903 it was exhibited in Boston as a part of the celebration of the 128th anniversary of the battle of Bunker Hill. In 1904 it. was taken to the Louisiana Purchase exposition at St. Liouis.
It was believed and stated at the time that the St. Louis trip would be the last the bell would undertake. For eletven years it was permitted to rest in its shrine in Independence hall. Then, amid the preparations for the Panama-Pacific exposition, a great clamor arose. The presence of the bell was demanded. Eminent officials asked for It delegations brought a personal appeal. The relic had never visited the Pacific coast. Here was the fitting time for it to preach Its silent sermon. The Philadelphia authorities ylelOtvS.
ELECTRICAL WEEK.
It Is proposed now to have "Electrical Week," and Terre Haute concerns Interested in and associated with this line of endeavor are preparing to more fully present their claims for public patronage and to demonstrate the larger usefulness which electricity has come to fill in ordinary life. Take, as a single Illustration, the Improvement in incandescent lamps. At the beginning of our span of years four or five watts and even more energy was required for a candle-power of Illumination. Today in the ordinary sizes hardly a watt is required for a candlepower and in the larger sizes half a watt will produce a like result. These higher efficiencies are not alone affecting our industrial and home life, but are making possible a wider use of electricity for advertising, as is evidenced in the "Great White Ways," to be found in whatever cities one Visits at night.
By providing a kind of illumination, which, while possessing a charm all its own, in effect carries the day into the night, extending our activities into
life Said It Return)*'*'" 1m 85 We
Say
Atiiiajw.S.,.Y.lltH
ALUES
EXIS1ED
Comparison Elsewhere Will Convince You Yes, It's Possible to Get $15 Clothes Here at $10, and $25 Clothes at $15
The Only Guar anteedClothes In Terre Haute
Oaffifte™tforfrfen*. Womervfiiuf^Aildreti
Walk a Block Save $5 Walk a Block
Save $10 You Decide Whetherlt's $5 or $10
If you can match our $10 Clothes for lees than $15, or our $15 Clothes for less than $25, we refund your money.
clothing to stand this test. It's up to you to investigate.
OUR
GUARANTEE
To press your Clothes and keep in repair free for one year goes with our Clothes at $10 and $15.
Important to Dispose of Waste from thi Stomach With Regularity
People frequently attribute to failure of the digestive organs conditions that are primarily due to inactive bowels, and apply remedies that from their very nature are more apt to aggravate than to relieve the disorder.
When the bowels act regularly the stomach is in better shape to perform its allotted tasks and can usually be depended upon. To keep the bowels in condition there is no more effective remedy than the combination of simple laxative herbs known as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin which is sold in drug stores for fifty cents a bottle.
Dr. Caldwell has prescribed this remedy in his practice for over a quarter of a century and it is today the standard household remedy in thousands of homes. Mr. Thos. DeLoach, with the Department of the Interior, Office of Indian Affairs, at Washington, wrote Dr. Caldwell recently that "Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is the best laxative I have any knowledge of, and the cleaning up guaranteed by its use relieves every organ." I
fields other than those confined to the
1
And now the old relic, after a fivemonth stay In San Francisco and at the Panama-California exposition at San Diego, is again renting in Independence hall.
daylight hours and so broadening «n« extending life Itself, we live more, if not longer. And Is this not the equivalent of living longer?
Dangerous places are made sare through (ventilation, noxious gases and fumes are taken out of the atmosphere our workers breathe, and the dangerous trades become safe. The employer who continues a danger does so because he is ignorant or careless, not because it Is necessary. The dark and dangerous places in Industry are mafie safe through convenient light, and better feeling Is encouraged between employer and employed. But the result] is not only in a lessened accident rate and more harmonious relationship, but In more efficient production.
There Is no thought of going into the wonders of electricity in the medical world. There are too many practical and useful applications. Take alone the fact that within a few minutes a physician may have a photograph which shows any part of the human body under investigation as though he were looking at that part directly or take the cautery which seals as It cuts and removes, or the convenient methods of sterilization and applying anesthetics. The world at large has small conception of the major as well as the minor operations that are ciow made possible by iyje„ ,qf electricity In one fon» or another"
DENATURED COLLEGE YELLS.
In the official song book of the University of Pennsylvania the only "drinking song" that it contained has been cut out by the college officials. It was thought too suggestive, perhaps, in these days when the prohibition waives roll high on a stern and rockbound coast. The song Is familiar to all who ever attended old Penn and to many others. Its chorus is:
Drink a highball, at nightfall. Be good fellow, while you may, For tomorrow may bring sorrow
So tonight let's all be gay Tell the story of glory Of Pennsylvania Drink a highball and be jolly,
Here's a health to dear old Penn.
The faculty may feel that highballs are a little extreme in the present period, besides "highball" doesn't precisely rhyme with "nightfall," and institutions of scholarship should be careful.
The students who may regret the exile of their classic might remodel it after the manner of the Garfield student body, who were forbidden the profane reference that indicates the indifference to trouble of those who sing "Hail, hall, the gang's all here." The students retained the tune and the meter, but substituted "What the naughty word do we care, what the naughty word do we care, now."
This substitution and with lolly-pops Instead of highballs make such outbursts more parlor-like and acceptable in mixod audiences.
Many hundreds of Houston Bchool children sat up until 8:30 in the morn-
What's
Bad for Your
Skin Is Bad for Your Clothes
Many laundry soaps and soap powders roughen the skin of the hands. The same 'hemical that does this is injurious to fabrics.
Borax is beneficial to the skin. It cannot possibly hurt vour clothes. But it cleans tliem to perfection. "20 Mule Team Borax Soap Chips" are pure soap md pure borax combined in the right proportions for aundry work.
A 25c. package will do more cleaning than 50c worth of bar soap or washing powders.
TfiEEE HAUTE TRIBUNE.
Well Known Remedy Relieves Chronic Case
.MR. THOS. DE LOACH.
A bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin should be on hand in every home for use when needed. A trial bottle, free of charge, can be obtained by writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 454 Washington St., Monticello, 111.
lng to meet and greet the liberty bell. That's one of the reasons why it's worth while to lug the grand old relic about the nation.
New York, says the Times, "must be a city of fifty centers." So it appears, sometimes but couldn't the Times from sheer local pride raise the estimate to a dollar?
Munitions of war note: An American manufacturer ha3 sold a million cans of Irish stew to the French army.
New York is already organizing an army of 100,000 snow shovelers. The lesson of preparedness Is sinking in.
The man who invented circus lemonade is dead, but many of his victims still survive. 'Tis a strange world.
Thanksgiving Is a purely American holiday, and Europe would not know what to do with it if she had it.
The war has lasted so long that many constant readers of the news now know how much a kilometer is.
The Turks have named the kaiser Muhib U'l Islam. But that's nothing to what the allies call him.
They are said to be wearing paper underwear in Germany, but not as a matter of fashion.
By this time, doubtless, Wiley knows how It must feel to be a Serbian.
Will Kitchener prove more persuasive than Sophia?
HOROSCOPE.
The Stars lotJSne, But
Do Not
Compel."
Copyright, 1916, by .'he McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
Sunday, November 28, 1915.
Mars Is In a most forbidding aspect today, but Saturn is faintly helpful. There is a sign read as presaging a new alarm concerning the need of military activity, but the anxiety will be only temporary.
Public discontent is indicated by the stars. Unrest In business as well as labor circles will be prevalent with the beginning of the the new year.
Discoveries underground are foretold and a mining boom that will enrich the nation is predicted.
Gain through reform measures willt mark the Coming months. College men and women are subject to the best sort of direction today, which is believed to encourage initiative $nd to aid enterprise.
Fame for a young scientist is prophesied. Ho will belong to the east, and apparently his birthplace is Brooklyn.
Business complications wiH disturb the career of a woman who is known as a philanthropist.
Marriages among elderly persons will increaso rapidly In the new year. A famous foreign astrologer prophesied that the war will continue through the new year and that peace is three years off.
All who control large amounts of money will cause much distress in the future.
A serious accident to the young heir of a great fortune is prognosticated. The sudden and tragic death of a public man Is again prophesied. It has been said that he will be assassinated.
Hospitals should benefit today. Endowments are likely to increase in the new year.
Persons whose blrthdate it is should avoid dissensions and litigation. Children born on this day may be high strung and stubborn, but they are likely to be most fortunate in all their undertakings.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY.
November 26, 1915.
Mrs. Minnie j\{. Cook was elected noble grand of Alma Rebekah lodge No. 568, I. O. O. P.
During the last fiscal year the Terre Haute postofflce, which is of the first class, ranked fourth among the offices of the state.
Miss Emma Lamphere, national organizer of the Retail Clerks' union, was in the city and called a special meeting of the Terre Haute local.
THE OI,n TI'llKEY.
Now when wo gaze upon your rack No wonder we should seold, p'or what is left will sure come back,
Warmed over, hashed and cold. —Judge,
We tell you day in and day out in our advertising that we have and Overcoats.
They are new, the very latest in fashion aiad fresh from the tailor's bench.
But in them are experience, the prudence, the long-learned, hard won lessons of more than half a century of clothes making for you—the most discriminating men in the world.
We must have feund out something in that time. Let us show you what it means to a Suit or Overcoat to have a Joseph label in it.
Overcoats to $10.
CHAPTER XXII—Continued. "You do as I tell you," Judge Thorne said angrily. "Yes. and be quick about it," added Max.
Jackson took the pencil and nervously wrote: "This letter wae written by me with malicious intent," the judge prompted. "I now deny every allegation that reflects upon the character of the Pierce family." "I further apologize to Mr. Max Pierce and to Mr. Henderson for this cowardly act. of mine."
Judge Thorne then asked Max if that was sufficient. MAx answered that it was. "Sign .your name," said Judge Thorne.
When he had done so, the judge took the letter. He and Mr. Moore then got into the surrey and were driven away, leaving the two Jacksons standing in a dazed condition.
CHAPTER XXIII.
Mr. Mojre, Judge Thorne and Max had spent a good part of the next day In Columbia, looking over the property George Dalton had left to John Moora, and arranging legal matters necessary for the transfer of the estate to Max Pierce. There were several pieces of property that were veryvaluable, having increased In value with the fast-growing city. The old building where Mr. Dalton had kept hia general merchandizing store was now replaced by a modern building, occupying the very heart of the city. The old home place had been cared for tenderly, with an idea in view to keep it as nearly like it had been the night v\ hen little Grace Dalton crept nervously out Into the great big world to meet her lover, who had come to mean more to her than all else in the world. "There is one request I want to make," said Mr. Mloore, as he plucked a few roses from a bush on the lawn. "Take these to little Grace—little, because that's my last recollection of her —and tell her they are from an old friend—"
Mr. Moore hesitated, as if he were having a' battle with his conscience. Breathing a deep sigh, he continued, showing much feeling: "My God, men, this is a terrible condition to be in. How could George Dalton have expected me to withstand such an ordeal?"
Judge Thorno and Max stood with bared heads, silently respectful of the old man's feelings, as his eyes filled with tears and he shook with emotion.
After a time, the old man began speaking. "All these years I have kept faith with George Daltcn against my own wishes, and against every right in the code of morals, and now the breach must come. I cannot face my Maker with the thought of having robbed anyone of their lawful belongings, even though it be the wish of
It Will Take You a Few Minutes Only to Get Your New Suit
But It Has Taken Us Over Half a Century to Make It
'new" Suits
all the way from $35 down Suits $30 down to $10
A New Line of Overcoats for $15.00 and $20.00 These are splendid
!ues.
models. You should see these.
M. JOSEPH'S SONS
512-514 Wabash Avenue
THE MAKING OF A REBEL
C~ =^=0
A Story of Life in the South by JAMES MAXSON SECREST
the testator, and I have every right of possession through legal technicalities."
Turning to Max, Mir. Moore placed the roses in his hand. "Take this little token of love to her, boy, and tell her they are from the bush she planted when she was a wee bit of a girl. She'll remember, I know."
Max took the roses and carefully pressed them between th© leaves of his note-book and put the book back in his pocket. "She will prize them very much, I am sure, Mr. Moore," he said. "Now, gentlemen," said Mr. More, "if you will come with me to the bank, we will finish our work."
NOTE
Form, semi'form fitting and the Balmarue
MR. CHARLES W. GITTLEMAN. Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. His recent letter state# he is atill grateful for what Duffy has done! "There is but one and just one Duffy's as to quality. I would rather be without my dinner than without Duffy's. Your product certainly put me back on my feet after a long spell of sickness (pneumonia) and I will always be more than pleased to recommpnd it."—(Signed) Charles W. Gittleman.
Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey
is a most valuable tonic-stimulant whose medicinal worth has been proved many times. For more than half a century it has brought the blessings of health to overworked men, delicate women and the sickly, who find in it the strength ing properties so necessary to them. It is a great remedial agent in the treatment of coughs, colds and stomach complaints. Prescribed by many doctors and recognized as a family medicine everywhere, you, too, can
"Get Duffy's and Keep Well."
Sold in SEALED BOTTLES ONLY. Beware of imitations.
Get DnH's front your local drugKlut, Krooer or denier $1.00 per bottle. If he onnnot supply you write im, we will tell you where to get tt. Medleul bookie let free.
The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, N. Y.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1915. '.
A
WICKWIHK
The three men went to the bank, and to the surprise of Judge Thorne and Max found that Mir. Moore had never used a penny of the mpney com-, ing from the Dalton estate, except for improvements. "I have held this money In trust as a sort of administrator, hoping that some day I could turn it over to its rightful owner,' Mr. Moore Informed the two men.
Mr. Moore then went into the cashier's office, excusing himself by saying he wanted to get a balance on the account.
Ha was not gone long, and when he returned he handed Max a check for $27,690.
(To be Continued.)
Where Kindness Killed.
"Henry," she murmured, fondly gazing at her slender lord and master, "you are quite the style, your narrow, sloping shoulders are the correct thing."
Then she added dreamily, "I wonder, Henry dear, If bow-legs will ever come in."—Judge.
My Physician Prescribed
Duffy's When I Had the Pneumonia
The value of a reliable stimulant in pneumonia cases is appreciated by both profession and laity. Mr. Gittleman was benefited by Duffy's when suffering from pneumonia. What he says is interesting:
"I have used Duffy's -Pure Malt Whiskey as a medicinal tonic since 1906. I had pneumonia and was directed by my family physician to use Duffy's. It did me a great deal of good and ever since it has been used by my family. I am 38 years of age and a commercial traveler. Am outdoors a great deal, and find this medicine a worthy stimulant and good preventative of colds, etc., which 1 cheerfully recommend."— Charles W. Gittleman, 1684 Gates
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