Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 September 1916 — Page 4
A
The Terre Haute Tribune
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The Terr* Haut# Oattttie,
established
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Terre Haute
NtRblUktd ISM.
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eleptiones Business Department. pb ones, 878 Editorial Department, ©Miens. utr Central Union, si*. "Jn advance yearly by mail. Dally and kunday, $6.00. Dally only. (3.00. Bunlay only. $2.00.
Entered
as
aecbnd-
elasa Biatter January 1
... 190*. at the pastofflee •%t Terre Haute, Indiana, tinder the act 0t' congress of March 1. 1879. 11
A T«r« Haute sen«paprr (or T*rn Mt* people. The only paper to Terr* aate awaad, edited aad pabllaked by
Haatcasa,
-,feo«ly aempaper In Terre Hant« havi tmiR. fall day leased w|r« service of
gJMWiated
PTW
:|f|oa aerrlee.
Km-
Central Press asaoela*
PARTING OF THE WAYS.
,i FYom many newspaper sources comes word that "Col. Roosevelt Is o &ugh«s." The reason given is that
Hu&hes is too mild in his statetents and is not bracking heads like le colonel likes to crack them. Hughes hammering the^Germart hyphenates,
Roosevelt wants them annihilated
s "t^tirely. Hughes is talking civil serv-Jto®-when he ought to be talking "Amerjwaniswi," according to the colonel's
The
colonel led Hughes into a
^Jteclaration for woman's suffrage, and has promptly forgotten this despite insistence from the coliftl. The breach is not" surprising.
could .imagine what consistent b^d-fellows the hot and impulsive, .coland the cold and austere Rugnes I^Oirld make. However, the situation jftfeiely adds further illumination as to the game is played.th® ^colonel should contemplate
-ji^ther hunting trip Us Africa, the y York World thinks is not surprisThere are still hartebeests, elands dikdiks to slaughter, and magain which to tell tb€ tale. And the last photograph has been ^\r%k£n and the last trophy shipped,
T, 1
|here would be the Joys of homecom- ?/,&: that time, if Mr. Hughes were ^tf'j||Mjtied, possibly a trusted emissary
Id
await the colonel among the olive j^es of the azure coast of Italy and Tjnfpld to him the storv of the innutne^able sins of another republican presf(&nt for whom the colonel had stood itej Who can fortell that in the ,2|9rlcan jyngle he may not be refreshed
ft
spirit and hear again the call to
v2"'fle
for the Lord?
r,'Incidentally, Mr. Taft must be get-
lot
bt
tma, Jie having sounded the fickle long since.
TAX FERRETS.
•If ^'he county council would do well to'-disppse
£_ w*lic
of the tax ferret proposition and finally. Tax ferrets are a
of
1
the days of incompetency.
1
Qtfeful experiment!) and investigations have shown 'hat as the troubles were expelled from the tioae and i throat, the real caus of fhe disease was overlooked in ®hort time the Catarrh would return stronger than ever. Mr. Gau. s has gone way ahead of. the
Ordinary methods of treatment and has provided 8 remedy that
Removes the Cause
and Immediately Gives Re* lief to the Nose and Throat
.J Jcoea. of Scranton. Penn.. aay* that after tistaz flamy other treatments, he used this new method und— My nose is now entirely clear and free and I am not 1 bothered by the disease any more. The New Combined
Tmtment is worth its weight in gold*'* Temporary re lief from catarrh may be obtained hi other weys, but the New Combined Treatment must inevitably Krf.beaccepted for permanent results.
Sarah
J.
Cape, Mount Pelia. Ttnn_ says, I
that baa come over me."
Their presence means that the law is breaking down or thaj, official .functions ai*e not being competently performed. The argument is made that for .every dollar the tax ". ferrets get they must -put "three into the' county treasury. This may be true, but if those three dollars belong in the county strong box they should be there or the provisions of the tax law should be so amended as to put them there.
Tajx ferrets still operate in remote communities. In other sections where there is more general enlightenment on the subject and where the public is more Jealous of its interests, there is no call for tax ferrets and regularly elected officers ire encouraged in their duties. Tax ferrets are not retained.
In time the tax laws will be so perfected as to make tax ferrets superfluous. If the money restored to the county by tax ferrets rightfully belongs to the county, it follows that the law should be so applied as to make the sequestration of such taxes impossible. The .tax .ferret system places a premium'on. dodging the law. Expert legal advice is requisite for this great American sport, hence the system works out in favor of the rich and against those taxpayers of limited means. The tax ferret system means that the laws are faulty, that the regularly elected officials have not the means for the collection of taxes and that the taxpayers must perforce employ outside aid in getting done the simple duties of gathering in public revenues, all of which is wrong on the face of it. An epidemic of tax ferrets anywhere iritfifcates eithfe** that public officials are lax, that the law is being evaded, or that the tax laws are no) being fairly and impartially enforced.
FACT3.
Colonel Roosevelt arose the other night in Lewiston, Me., and told the American people that the navy had gone on the junk heap, that desertions were higher than at any time in the history of this branch of the service and that sufficient officers could not be secured to command the navy. The general naval board, with Admiral George Dewey at its head, has just fired a, broadside at the colonel which raises him out of the water and which will rather discount any further criticism the colonel may direct at the navy. The board has gone right back to the days when the colonel was in power to draw its deadly comparisons.
Trie authorized strength of the navy
on
fun out of Mr. Hughes'
March 4, 1913, was many thousands
short of the number actually required. In spite of "this fact the navyj was turned over, to the Wilson, administration exactly 5,000 men short of the number authorized.
As a matter of record and unquestioned fact there actually were fewer men in the navy when President Taft and Secretary Meyer left office than there were eight months prior to that
Relief for Catarrh Sufferers Now FREE
?ou Can Now Treat This Trouble in Youf Qwn Home and Get Relief at Once. How the Remedy for Catarrh
Was Discovered.
THIS
By the new method the nose and throat art treated by an effective local
remtdy- applied
diX'l'£t
pXOyfjM
FMTR* OMAHA
ternble disease
has raged unchecked for years simply be-
CaUse
*Wptomi have been
t0 ike
Seated while the cause of
tranes. the trouble has been left to circulate in the blood, and bring the disease back as fast as local treatments could relieve it
C. E. Gauss, who experimented for years on a treatment for Catarrh, found that aiter perfecting a balm that relieved the nose and throat troubles quickly, he could not prevent the trouble beginning
The Elixir.
a13 OVer
Tmact'haJl On test cases, he could
direct influence
completely remove all
"wmlmtoZfes signs of Catarrh from note
dli
jimTered the pains and distress of catarrh for C„„ -a. «r thirteen yeats and needless to state, tried nearly ^©IKI tuQ IGSt I fCMIIlOllt r-v^ery method. But by yoar otw method I was I cored and you cannot imagfnt the
Trial Treatment FREE
and throat, but in a few
ease by remav-
weeks they were baoL
tng the cause.
1
TMs new method Is so Important to the wel/•Eilre of humanity, so vital to every person suffer- I ijhit4from any form of catarrh, that the oppor-
ttmitr to actually test it and provi ts results Will be cladty extended without one cent of cost. A larve, trial treatment, with complete* ml* ante diiwtkms, will be sent free to any catarrh mifereE. no ttska. maka DO
TOW
"n
u
Goes to the Root o!
StoppedUip nose* Constant frog-in-the-throat" Nasal dischargee Hawking: and spitting Snoring at. night Bad breath Frequent cold* Difficult breathing Smothering sensation l| dreams Sudden fits of sneezing Dry mucus in noso and any of the other ay** ton\s that indicate approaching or present catarrh
mm mm mm mmm mmm
FREE
CE. GAUSS. 0218 I|ai« Street, MaraltHll, Mich.
If your New Combined Treatment will relieve my Catarrh and bring me health and good spirits again, I am willing to be shown. So without cost or obigation to me, send, fully preai'd, the Treatment and/'Book.
ftpttiaad tke teat oaekac* «f thc N«w Combined I to**ttM?
rv 4
TWO BUSY MEN
7/
TtMB
day, although congress had in that time authorized an increase of 4,000 men and the retiring administration had the best season of the year in which to recruit them.
Under Secretary Meyer there werej 10,860 cases of desertion in the navy. Gf the ,experienced men with good records honorably discharged upon completion of their enlistment only 52 per cent re-enlisted. Under "Wilson's administr^ion desertions have dropped to less (han 90 a month, or more than 50 per cent, and are steadily decreasing. Furthermore, by substituting more enlightened though stricter regulations, the administration has decreased the number of naval prisoners from 1,800, to 700.
During Secretary Daniels'
tregime'
6,331 men have been added to the enlisted strength of the navy, filling the vacancies which Secretary J^eyer a i e o i e u i i i s e v o
The fact that 85 per cent of honorably discharged men are now re-enllst-Ing bears eloquent testimony to improved conditions in the navy from the standpoint of the average young man. For the first time in a great many years there are a ftew more men on the payroll of the navy than congress Jias actually authorized.
Congress is providing in the pending naval bill for 16,650 additional men. Arrangements ar) now being perfected for carrying on an effective recruiting campaign to secure these men Secretary Daniels is confident that all of them 'will be secured within his administration. This will mean an actual Increase of 22,981 men in the naval establishment during four years of democratic rule, compared with 3,500 under President Taft. The permanency of the enlisted force, relatively speaking, is shown by the increase in reenllsments from 52 per cent under the last republican administration, to better thin 85 per cent under the present administration.
These are hard, cold facts, which Adi mlral Dewey and his colleagues on the board have taken from the naval archives. They rather leave the colonel at sea.
In spite of the Increased cost of. living In civil life it costs nearly a cent a day less to feed a man in the navy than it did ten years ago. What if we'd all join the navy?
QermAny has remitted the fine imposed on Belgium for celebrating her national holiday. That's a heap better than trying to collect money that doesn't exist.
A Ft. Wayne man, 99 years old, attributes his longevity to the fact that he eats onions. Well, why not? It keeps weak, germ-bearing people away from him.
The sound of the heavy guns at Verdun can be heard 188 miles away. That's about as near as the cautious observer will care" to go.
People are aeroplaning over Niagara falls and back, which may be considered quite an improvement over the ancient Niagara falls hackman.
A Chicago alderman wants the municipal authorities to cut the weeds In that city. Weeds in. boastful Chicago! Think of it
The twinkle trot is one of the new dances, but we don't believe that stout persons of middle age can star in it.
A
New York man has invented a 'submartne chaser." After you've swallo^wed'a auBniarlrie you need orrt.
,||fIdfwei
TERROE HAUTE TRIBUNE.
Tn*Meat *hN WnMac XKkturf Bw fc Save fb* Comatrj tttm roreln «Bd Indaittlil Wufei*
natfare «a the PrMldMV
HOROSCOPE.
"The ?tar« Iticlln:, But Oo !tu Compel."' Cop/rig'ht, 1915. by the McClure •Newspaper Syndi'iare.
Friday, September 8,1916.
Astrology reads this as a singularly unfortunate day. Saturn, Venus, Mars and the sun are all in evti place.
The signs appear to indicate a continual upheaval in labor conditions and frequent strikes that will be most serious in their results.
ThlB unrest among workers may In some way affect military conditions and bring about peculiar complications, the seers declare.
During this rule it is wise to continue routine affairs and to avoid risks of every sort.
Women are warned to be careful in all public matters. There is danger of an ill-advised movement that may cause political reaction at a time of apparent growth in public favor.
-i
cational training established by Secretary Daniels is given credit for having greatly Increased the attractiveness of the navy for promising young, men.
This is not a lucky day for marriages, entertainments or first-nights of plays.
While the configuration prevails excesses of every sort should be avoided. Overwork and worry are believed tor be peculiarly dangerous at this time.
Throat troubles are supposed to increase when "Venus is adverse. Army officers and those who hold power over military affairs should guard against injustice and misjudgment, under this sway of Mars.
October should be a time of £reat fortitude for all who have interests in Europe. Sudden and unexpected events that will be depressing are prognosticated.
Canada should safeguard all interests during the next few months. Great commercial progress Is foreshadowed.
President Wilson continues under a sway that is read as exceedinly trying to the health.
Persons whose birthdate it is have the augury ot rather an unsettled year. They should not speculate.
Children born on this day may have many vicissitudes in life. By nature they are likely to be pleasure-loving and inclined toward extravagance.
TEN YEAE8 AGO TODAY Fr«a
the Tribune Fllca.
September 7, 1906.
Robert R. "Harrold moved his office to room 15 in the Erwin block. Dr. James McCall read a paper before the Vigo County Medical Society.
Dr. Jj. P. Luckett has returned from a vacation spent in the lake region of Wisconsin.
For Catarrhal Deafness and Head Noises
Here in America there is much suffering from catarrh and head noises. American people would do well to consider the method employed by the English to combat this insidous disease. iAeryone knows how damp the English climate Is and how dampness affects those suffering from catarrh. In Fngland they treat catarrhal deafness and head noises as a constitutional disease and use an internal remedy for It that, is really very efficacious.
Sufferers who could scarcely hear a v/atch tick tell how they had their hearing restored by this English treatment to such an extent that the tick of a watch was plainly audible seven and eight Inches way from either ear.
Therefore, if you know someone who is troubled with catarrh, catarrhal deafnesB or head noises, cut out this formula and hand it to them and you will have been the means of saving some poor sufferer perhaps from total deafness. The prescription can be easily prepared at home for about T5c and is made as follows:
From your druggist obtain 1 oz. of Parmint (Double Strength), about 75c wcrth. Take this home, And add to it
lA
pint! of hot water and *4 ounces of granulated sugar stir until dissolved. Take a tablespoonful four times a day.
Parmint is used in this way not only to reduce by tonic action the Inflammation and swelling in the Eustachian Tubes, and thus to equalize the air pressure on the drum, but to correct any excess of secretions in the middle ear, and the results it gives are usually remarkably quick and effective.
Each person who lias catarrh in any form should give this recipe a trial and free themselves from this destructive, disease.
SIX CENT LOAF STILL
Wholesale Bakers Say Nearly All Bread Materials Continue at High Mark.
The price of the small loaf of bread was still holding at six cents in Terre Haute Thursday with the announced intention on the part of wholesale breadmakers not to recede until the prices of flour and other ingredients should be reduced.
Only one wholesaler, R. Rahm, returned to the five cent loaf after raising on the price. Other firms that are staying with the six cent agreement are Miller-Parrott Baking company, Ideal Baking company, Peter Kirchner, United Bread company, Richard Voigbt and Jerry Fitzgerald. While some of the smaller dealers had changed from a three and four-cent loaf to five cents a few of them have returned to the cheap loaf. The Rex Baking company is continuing to sell bread to dealers to be retailed at five cents.
On account of the recent raise in the price of the small bread loaf to six cents several of the principal wholesalers state that there was for a time a falling off in their sales while there was an increase in the sale of the ten cent loaf which was not raised in price or changed in weight. The sales of the smaller loaf have now returned to normal.
All Materials Higher.
In explanation of the raise in price of bread Mr. C. W. Miller, president of the Miller-Parrott company, gives the following figures. "In the fall of 1914 we paid $3.50 to $3.90 for the best grade of' flour. We now pay $7.00 to $8.25 fcr the same grade. We buy on the carload bulk basis. In 1915 flour did rot go below $5.50. At present we can only get advance prices approximately. Sugar has advanced 75 per cent since 1914, prior to the war, and lard 50 per cent. Paper hag advanced 100 per cent. We have not felt this advance in wrappers as they were contracted for, but the question now is whether we can get paper. Yeast is about the same. Our small loaf has been Increased In weight from 12% to 14 ounces. We have weighed *b'read retailing for five cents and find it Weighs from nine to ten ounces but rarely more."
J. B. Hollingsed, manager of the Ideal Baking company, states that since 1915 his company is paying 1% cent per pound more for flour or $2.68 on the
When you buy your new Fait Suit what are you going to consider most? If You Want Style— If You Want Quality— If You Want to Save $5 or $10—
We buy only the most dependable fabrics which must measure up to the standard of quality we have always maintained. Every garment the latest and best styles, carefully made with the best of linings and must fit perfectly. This means better service and satisfaction to the wearer at our one price of
«e$10 and $15«"i Why Pay More—
We ask this particularly of you men and young men who always find it necessary to pay at least $15 to $25 to get the style and quality you want
To you we say: Come to the Newmarket and investigate it costs you nothing but your time—we can save you $5 to $10—surely that is worth your while. THE NEWMARKET
SPECIAL HATS All CO AU Colors Styles
The Ckeaterfield blend has in it the highest grade Turkish that They satisf mad
barrel. He stated that Sugar has increased 100 per cent and shortening 60 per cent since 1914. "It has been thought by some," said Mr. Hollingsed, "that the baking companies should have made a smaller loaf and continued selling at five cents. The reason this was not done was because you cannot get quality in a small loaf of bread. We thought it better to advance the price, give more weight and get the quality."
Charles E. Hunnell, manager of the Rex Baking company, denied that the bread they were retailing was inferior ir any way to that made by the large bakeries. He said, "We use the best grade of Pillsbury flour and employ only union bakers. Our weight is lighter than the six cent bread, but we desire to serve the public who do not want to pay the extra cent. We scale our bread scant 12 ounces in the pan. It will bake out one ounce.'.'
Charles W. Miller,
v
of the Miller-
Farrott company, gave out the following statement relative to the bread situation. "The large bread producers of Terre Haute wish to make it plain to the public that the advance to the six cent loaf is absolutely required by the cost of ingredients. Tfie public has become accustomed to paying more for the products used in the manufacture of bread when they buy them separately and can well appreciate the fact that the bread manufacturers are paying more likewise, and that consequently if we are to continue in the making of bread with a reasonable profit in cur business we must get mo^ei for our
S O K .- W A A S
What Do YOU Want?
Latest Fall Furnishings —New neckwear, shirts, hosiery, nnderwear, popularly priced.
NADAY
product. While it is true that some Lakers are offering the five cent loaf a test in weight will show that there is °i^
t0
ounces difference and the
public is getting less value for five than for six cents not considering the quality." .....
FLOWERS KILLED CHILD.
Girl, Eight Years Old, Ate Dog Daisies and Convulsions Followed. Dog daisies caused the death df Sarah May Carter, the eight-year-Qid daughter of a dock laborer, at Pelham road, East Ham, it was stated at the inquest.
After the mother had described the child's death, Dr C. O'Sullivan said hV had examined some flowers, some df which, it was said, the child had eaten. They belonged to one of the sixteen varieties of daisies commonly called "dttfe daisies," which, though not poisonous,, might set up inflammation of." the stomach, causing convulsions whicli brought about the child's death.
A verdict In accordance with the medical evidence was returned.—Lon-' don Globe.
COLORED G. 0. P. MEET.
A meeting of the Vigo County Colored Republican club will be held on ^Thursday evening at the club rooms: on Ohio street to make plans for a rally and watermelon feast which will be held in the Third ward. All members are urged to be present.
o.l-}
W. L. Douglas Shoes for men, union made, $3.50, $4, $4.50.
Packards, $4, $4.50, $5.
iillSil
