Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 13 August 1916 — Page 10
OMNI SOCIETIES
A
Towns Adjacent to Terre Haute Will Be Represented on the Program.
«£|£Oreat preparations are being made fMjsr the celebration of the German day, SSj^unday, August 20th, at the fairground. It will be a day of amuseinent pleasure for everybody. Among lather events will be the vocal .concert
Vt»f the Terre Haute Mannerchor under
r^£fre
leadership of Carl A. Meder, and the instrumental concert by a band selected musicians. The concert ^Asill be rendered in the afternoon. Dr. J^fbredenck, pastor of the German ^-utheran church, will deliver the principal address.. The "Zoeglingsklasse," number of young boys upder the ^framing of Mr. Otto Zopf, will give raf®veral gymnastic numbers. It will be real "German day" and a certain 'percentage of the net receipts taken will be forwarded to the widows and ^di^phans in the old fatherland.
The following committees have been "^appointed by President Carl A. Meder, ^.Vho will also be the chairman of the ^'Arrangement for this festival:
Press Committee—Carl A. Meder, ^Karl Bartenbach and Herman Hage: jS^ommittee on refreshments: .Emil Ipdumenberg,- Christ Roethel and Otto eckar entertainment committee: tto Zopf, August Pohl and Herman iusidlak committee on finance: Karl eribach, Herman Hage and Her-
Meissel reception committee: A. Meder, Fred Jaenisch, Karl enbach, Reinbold Rahm, Fred e, Leonard Welte, Louis Heyden ,d Carl Wegrich. Germans and German societies of oUnding towns have been espe[y invited to attend and it is exacted, that a large delegation will |^ame from Clinton, Evansville, Jason|yine, Brazil and other points.
Win order to make this affair a great •fgjgcceas, the German alliance asks for s|^roperation of .the following vice fparesidents: Adolf Herz, Carl Stahl, Anpbn Hulman, Herman Hulman, Anton jMayer. Carl Wolf, H. A. Sal chert, Carl |Pauermeister, Louis Silberman, George 'i^s, Jpseph Dreher, Charles C. Fis-
Samuel Rosenbaum, Jonas use, Frank Hoermann, Frank Conth, Marx Myers, Fred J. Biel, Lee idman, Charles N. Murphy, Chafles
Schmidt, Simon Levi, Dr. Edward Leo Joseph, Alfred W.~ Ostere, Henry Meyer, John Luken, Otto Hornung, Jacob Bernheimer, Julius erer, Ernest Hornung, Fredrick von er, John M. Freitag, Judy Thoran, John Arnold. Allen Weinhardt,
Schloss, George Engert, Wm.
'ehrenbach, Ffink Fedderson, Oscar enweg, Leonard Welte, Joseph :hultz, Louis Gerhardt, Otto P. Newtart, Herman Salchert, Theodore ierweiler, Louis Adams, Theodore 1, Frank Prox, Max J. Duenweg,
HofC and others.
1
^-BEES, BUT AIL ABE STUNG. -Hastings Has Mystery of Vanifthifti]
Hive in Park.
cJJASTINGS, N. Y., Aug 12.—PrinH. L. Bretsch, of public school Oi 46, Manhattan, who lives here,
Is badly stung. He did not get the of -bees that friends here almost ,ve him. Captain Pat Cost*»llo and bluecoats of the Hastings constubiCe force also feel.stung. They have trying to catch the bees. s.:-'Mr. Bertsch's friends, after promislop to give him the bees he has longed •r, bought a brand ne whive to put in. Then, being thrifty, they put .A hive in Mohegan park, where bees •'warm, thinking to catch in it a stray swarm for Mr. Bertsch. 1 Early while the dew was yet on the
Crass, Bretsch went to Mohegan park to get hive and swarm. But when he got there the place was bare and outlined in the dewy grass were foot-
1
prints, rather deep, as of a man ca.vrying something heavy, like a beehive sTry as Mr. Bertsch might, thevstory •^buld get around, and Hastings is ithbuzz with it. Mr. Bretsch reported Ms troubles to the ,constab-police ft)roe, arid every bee in town is under fhirveillance.
STORY OF FRENCH TRENCHES.
Which Generalissimo Joffre Plays a Very Amusing Part. MILWAUKEE, Aug. 12.—"My broth St in the trenches," said a French chef of Milwaukee, "writes me a little anecdote about General Joffre, the generalissimo, you know. "Our brave Joffre was examining a map while under Are. The map was' fyalp by a young subaltern, a boy of sixteen from the military school of St. '. Cyr. Bang! S-s-t! went the marttiites and Jack Johnsons and whistling
Willies—for so they call those shells, you know—and the boy could not help starting and trembling as he held the "map, and this lost our brave Joffre
His place.
1
"The generalissimo was vexed when lost his place three or four times, ,Aftd he said to,the boy soldier: 'Volla, you are too conceited dodg-^-i^g the shells like that! Do you suppfoae the Boches aim those expensive ,,shells at you? You are only a little •boy soldier. Do you take yourself for a, cathedral?"
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Continued From Pago Four.
And of that there is not a particle of doubt. American, money paid Mex ican bandits to attack American homes to make an "issue" and force this country into a war from which would come that annexation that would increase the value of American invest ments.
Now Hear Sen. Lewis.
So much as preface to the speech of Senator Lewis. The ^pnate chamber was filled in the galleries and every democratic senator was in his seat. A large number of republicans were on the floor when the speech began. There was Fall, saturnine, sinister as Cataline—the man who says in his autobiography that he is "interested in mining in Mexico" with a sjieer on his face there was rosy cheeked, cherublipped Wads worth of New York, proxy in the senate for a popular father and an able father-in-law giggling like candy eating kid there was Gallenger exuding hate in his expression and even in the peculiar pallor of his face and Townsend with the same smug and complacent smile.
And there were otherp, but they came and went. "Penrose poked his red face into the chambers and ducked., Borah 'the same. Weeks looked on for a moment and left. Sterling looked sick. And a few republicans who are not so reactionary if at all like Clapp, and Kenyon gave close attention. As Lewis" progressed with his phillipic the smiles and smirks strangely vanished and, in their place scowls, frowi^i, with an occasional direct insult as from the senator whp$e .interest in Mexican, matters may be explained by the fa'ct that he is "interested in mining in Mexico." It was like pokipg the animals at tjie circus. I never in five years have seen the faces on one side of the chamber expressing such hate as during the Lewis expose of the dirty deal between the investors in Mexico and the men who got their nominee for president at the Gary dinner. And I haye never heard a senator handle an "issue" without gloves as Lewis did.
It would be absurd to attempt resume of the speech and, of course, the "kept" press has given but meagre extracts and these carefully selected and not with the view to news value either. But the speech will be printed and every one should read this shameful story of the dirtiest attempt that has ever been made to^ use the American government to crush out the aspirations for freedom of another state in the interest of dividends^ for a little group of American concessionaires.
The alliance between the Mexican bandits and these American "patriots" 'ts made plain. "Not until Root shot at the president of the United States did the outlaws of Mexico shoot at the soldiers of the president of the
United States"—that sentence cut. And there were many others equally to the point. At the conclusion Lewis' marvelous speech the galleries rang with applause—contrary to rule —a rule seldom violated.
And then the "weepers for Huerta" felt that they should answer it at once. If they could not answer it they could throw mud. If they could not find a weak spot in the speech they could lie about it. And looking about to find a man for the job they found him quite naturally in the senator who boasts in his autobiography that he is "interested in mining in Mexico."
And what did he do? He brazenly declared that Lewis had said that the president was planning at one time to recognize Villa as president.
What Lewis did say ^as that he had hoped to use Villa as an agency through which to bring some order out of chaos.
Lewis oalled the attention of the senator who is "interested in mining in Mexico" to this misrepresentation.
But 4he party of Huerta with the speech before it sent out this contemptible lie to the country.
And thus we have our "issue." The
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money of the investors in Mexico and a multiplicity of lies about Mexico. With all this the average man will probably not care to .bother himself. Witty him the issue will be peace or war with Mexico. And he will vote for peace.
The pitiful inadequacy of the Mexican "issue" has been manifested by the insipid and silly statement of Judge Hu&hes at Detroit. Now note how illuminating is the following statement of the "justice" in reply to the insistent demand of the people that he explain to the people just what he would have done in Mexico:
He says he would have told the Mexicans that they had to protect American life and property and if they didn't—. In other words at a time when there was nothing resembliiiftf government in Mexico and the country was in a state of anarchy he would have told them very firmly that they must not molest Americans. Of course the statement is silly. To make it other than silly he should have gone a step further and told the truth— that he would have sent an army into Mexico, have gone to war with Mexico, and after years of expensive occupation with the loss of hundreds of thousands of American lives, he would have considered annexation. But he is evidently afraid to make that the issue—but it is the issue. Peacs or war with Mexico is the issue.
Watch This Candidate.
I have heard even republicans here shake their heads a little dubiously at Judge Hughes' statement that the administration recognized Villa. Of •course that is a lie. It is not often that a man aspiring for the presidency who is hard pressed for an issue will deliberately misstate the facts.
The next count in Judge Hughes' indictment on which he asks the American people to repudiate Wilson has caused more open amusement here than would have been thought possible in these days of sweltering heat. He is shocked because Woodrow Wilson appointed democrats as ministers and ambassadors to South America. That, of course, is flagrantly dishonest. It is nauseatingly dishonest. The ministers and ambassadors are not and never have been under the civil service. The moment McKinley was elect
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ed every democrat minister and ambassador went promptly and republicans were named. The moment Hughes is elected, if he should be, every democrat minister and ambassador would go, of course. The attempt to turn Wilson out of office because he appointed democrats to diplomatic positions is brazen and idiotic and utterly shamelessly dishonest.
On a p'ar with that his lament because the wonderful Herrick was not permitted to remain ambassador to France. For one the writer is a trifle sick of this rot about the wonderful Mr. Herrick. His "great" work in Paris in the early part of the war consisted of aiding Americans to get out of France. He did his work well but no better than Mr. Gerard in Germany,
One Thing More.
Perhaps the most dishonest feature of Hughes' flagrantly dishonest Detroit speech was his whine about the democrats destroying the civil service. Have democratic workers found that to be the case? As a matter of fact, the complaint most frequently heard among democrats is that the administration has gone infinitely further in the maintenance of tite civil service than any administration in history. I personally know that when charges are
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brought against civil service employes it is much harder to make a case against a republican than against a democrat. It actually requires more evidence. The civil service feommission, which is republican, and is absolutely dominated by its head, an appointee of Roosevelt, assumes that a charge against a republican is always political, while a charge against a democrat is always assumed to be bona fide.
But the real "scream" of the Hughes speech at Detroit was his talk to workingmen. Of course his friends defend the stupiclity of his utterance to the workingmeri on the ground that his life work has never brought him into touch with the workingman's point of view, and his advisors, Elihu Root, Boise
Mr. Whitlock in Belgium, or our am-- Penrose, and the Gary dinner gang of bassadors to other warring states. As a matter of fact, more of the "cream" of our society, the gentlemen with wrist watches and the ladies with poodles were in Paris than in any other capital,* and the woes of these delectable society people of course attracted the sympathy of our people and caused much publicity. They came back and" were interviewed because they are our "best people," and they sang Herrick's praises at Newport and at the Plaza. But only an idiot does not know that the most serious, the most difficult, the most dangerous, the most strenuous work that fell to any American ambassador fell to Brand Whitlock in Belgium. And next to him to Gerard in Berlih. But we have heard little about these men—because thty are democrats. And so Herrick was displaced by Sharpe—and no one ever heard a word 5f complaint about Sharpe. The crime consisted in turning a republican hack out of a job— and on that Wilson must be repudiated.
millionaires, are hardly capable of giving him good advice.. And so his talk about all strife between capital and labor ceasing—is all bunk, and punk bunk at that. It is the cheapest of thread-bare political gab. But Hughes made his most stupid blunder when he solemnly told the workers that they are really human beings and not mere economic units. The workingmen knew that. They told it to republican convention after convention, to republican cpngress after congress, to republican president after president, but the law, making it clear to federal courts that the workingman is a human being and not a commodity to be treated under the Sherman anti-trust law, was not passed until Woodrow Wilson and his party came into power.
And so with Hughes on the stump the reasons for the re-election of Woodrow Wilson are multiplying. The republican leaders here when gently joshed- about the ferocious onslaughts of their candidate merely smile €f Bickly smile.
An Answer Coming.
Meanwhile Woodrow Wilson is preparing with characteristic deliberation and care to make known to the people the real story. of his administration. The other day he sailed down the Potomac, taking with him a stenographer, and began the writing of his speech of acceptance. The present indications are that this speech will be delivered not later than September 1. It had been the president's intention to delay the
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The other day—and it was Sunday, too—a,s i was entering the senate office building.I met Senator Norris in his shirt sleeves and with his sleeves rolled up.- A: little later Senator Sherman, his face '.denoting rage, stepped into an elevator, and with the exclamation which seemed to come from the heart, —"Damn the man who invented collars," tore his off—but he was on his way to his office. The majority of sen* ators are now. garbed in white cloth of an exceedingly light texture, Mid Washington suggests a city of the tropics in its dress. Of course It would be treason for a senator to remove his coat in the senate chamber, and I don't recall ever having seen one thus comfortably arrayed even in the cloak room. The capitol is the home of dignity, but with an intermixture of "Damn the
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notification meeting until after congress had adjourned, but It now eeems scarcely possible for the adjournment to come before the 9th or 10th of September, and it is probable that the president will make a hurried trip^to Shadow Lawn to make his speech and then back again and on the job. The program laid out for congress la a heavy one, but rapid progress is being made. The senate now meets regularly at 10 o'clock In the morning and remains in session until 6 o'clock in the evening and a little later the senate may resort to night sessions. To appreciate, what this means of physical hardship one has to be acquainted with the mUshy, slushy, enervating humid-: ity and deadening heat of a Washington August.
who Invented—" this,
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The worst feature of the situation lies
in the
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that it la going to require aome strenuous work to eren interest thi people in throwing Wilson out at olSce to make! way. for the "Justice."
They are no longer figuring on mtwhj filibustering. Too many of their own men are involved in the coming eleo-j tion to take ohanoes. And so the beat informed have decided that the gavel will fall on or about the 9th of September. And It will be none too soon for comfort.
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The Spine As a Factor in "Health" ml "Disease
The cause of "Mental Break Down," "Disease" and any form of "nervousness" is where there is a
shuttng oft of nerve supply by partially" dislocated, vertebrae. In this
case the nerve impulses which should go to the parts are dammed
up, held in the brain and spinal cord thereby causing a disturbance
of function in brain, cord, organ or tissues of the body. Chiropractors remove the pressure on these nerves and relieve the disturbance.
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