Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 September 1916 — Page 8
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LEAGUE IN INDIANA
Henry Lane Wilson and William Holton Dye Are Two Members Enrolled So Far.
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.. Sept. 8.— Harry Lane Wilson, who was fired from bis Mexican ambassadorsnip by Woodrow Wilson because the said Henry Lane tried to use his position to help mak9 an assassin Mexican president, and for other good and sufficient reasons, has organized a "nonpartisan Hughes League" in Indiana. William Holtom Dye, tbe other man who also has a large can rangling^bebind him, gives to Henry Lane his moral support in forming his league.
Henry Lane has let us all know that Woodrow Wilson did not handle the Mexican situatoin to suit Henry Lane and the wealthy friends in. Wall street with whom he became well acquainted while serving as embassador to Mexico. At the first meeting of his ••^on-partisan" league he expressed regrets that we are not in the midst of a. railroad strike, by denouncing Woodrow Wilson for stopping it. "This "non-partisan Hughes League" was to have been started several weeks ago, at the time when the progressives of Indiana tied the can to William Holton Dye, but he and Henry Lane could not find a democrat who would consent to say he would vote for
Hughes, and they had to have at least ene to make it "non-partisan" ,in the newspapers.
They say they found a termer the other day, who is from somewhere or other, and that he remembers that once he voted the democratic ticket. A meeting was speedily called, the room rent was guaranteed from the Wall Street fund and the "non-partisan Hughes .League" is at work. The league button will be a snjall tin can Rearing a picture of Hughes and marked "the full dinner pail."
The "democratic farmer" says he is Wor Hughes because he is getting too much for his farm products under Wilson, and that he lived so long under republican prices that he can't stand to much prosperity.
NO CORNS REMAIN
Dr. Hunt's New Corn Cure, Those who suffered last season with stinging, burning, aching corns are urging corn sufferers to get at once from any drug store a box of Dr, .Hunt's New Corn Cure, because it is 'absolutely dependable, penetrates and roots out the corn—no matter how bad it is. Dr. Hunt gave years to developing this plan of curing corns by penetration.
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Guaranteed or money, back. 10c and
25c per box. All druggists, or send stamps for a boat to American Chemical Co., Sidney, Ohio.
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The Confessions of Roxane
BY FRANCES WALTER.
(Copyright, 1916, by the ifcClure Newspaper Syndicate./
I AM TOLD OF A VERY WONDERFUL YOUNG MAN Day after day glided by without bringing any change in my relations with Arthur. The impulsive desire to write him which I had experienced on the train did not return to me in any acute form, but I did think often in a dull sort of way that some day I might acknowledge his letter. This was as far as I got in the matter. No definite idea of what I should say to him took place in my mind. I suppose this was because I did not know my own feeling. I had not come to a full decision to accept his abandonment of me as final nor had I determined to accept his overtures and allow him to return to me. j,
I did not broach the subject again to my mother. I knew that she would decide the matter on the basis of her own love for my father and not with a full consideration of all the circumstances surrounding Arthur and me. She had the old-fashioned idea that once a woman is married she is always married. Mother may have thought of divorce, but it was always in the abstract, Just as she thought of murder and robbery. A personal application of either was as impossible in one case as the other. She could no more think of me as a party to a
divorce than she could think of me as a party to murder or robbery. Under these circumstances it did not seem to be that^ mother's advice should carry any -vfrei^bt. My idea on the subject of matrimony seemed very different from hers and a decision based on her vieWs might be radically different from a decision- based on mine. The whole problem was one which I must solve. I alone could work out my future.
During these days of indecision I spent most of my time visiting my girlhood haunts, keeping to myself as much as possible. I did not relish the idea of meeting my old friends for I knew that the first question they asked me would be about my husband, and then it would be up to me to either lie or tell, the truth—in either event a disagreeable task.
In this seclusion I was aided by circumstance. Our old home stood on the outskirts of town, bordering on a deep wood through which ran the clearest of brooks. Through this wood I had wandered as a girl, gathering flowers, talking to the birds and endeavoring in my childish innocence to make them understand me or to learn the secret of what seemed to be their own language. In those happy days my almost constant companion was William Bent known to me in 1 those days as Bill, Will, Willie or Billy, according to my frame of mind or his treatment of me. When he was rude and inconsiderate I kew him and addressed him and thought of him as
William. Sometimes when I felt that he was a real pal I called him Bill, and when his treatment of me approached the point of tenderness I invariably called him Billy.
William Bent lived with his mother in the house nearest ours, and as he was an only child and his mother was poor widow, Bill's social standing had gradually disappeared as I grew to maturity, and' for many years before my marriage I had not seen him and had heard nothing about him. Indeed, he had almost passed out of my recolleotion when I came home this last time, and it was only when I looked over at the old Bent home that thought of him at all. "Why, mother," I exclaimed the day after my arrival, "what has hapened to Widow Bent's house? It looks like it has a new coat of paint and a new lease on life." "Yes," replied mother, "and the Widow Bent herself looks like she had new lease on life. Sometimes when I look at her and see "how rosy her cheeks are, I think she, as well as the house, has had a fresh coat of paint." "Paint?" I exclaimed. 'Why, the old woman must be at least 60." "More than that," replied mother. "But, of course, I was joking about the paint. It is nothing more or less than happiness that makes her old face glow like it does. It is pride in that boy of hers. He is the rising young man of the town. He has served as state's attorney and is spoken of as a candidate for congress. His mother thinks it will only be a few years before he is the president of the United States, and the only thing that puzzles her now is that he hasn't been president before this." "No wonder she is proud of him. With so little to start on and with such an uphill road to travel, it seems remarkable that he has gotten so far." "Indeed it does. At least it seems so until you talk to him, and then you cease to wonder. His 1b the brightest mind that I have ever come in contact with, a perfect dynamo. In this slow, dull, little town, where everybody seems half asleep and every one moves at a snail's pace, William Bent would seem remarkable if he moved only one-tenth as rapidly as he does.
As it is, his mind probably does more thinking in one day than all the rest of thelhinds in town do, and his individual energy accomplishes more in 24 hours than is accomplished by onehalf of the population that surrounds him." "He must be wonderfu.," I exclaimed. "I should like to meet him." "perhaps you will,'? replied mother. "You" will almost certainly see him if you do not stop wandering through the woods. He takes a long tramp there occasionally, and unless you are not careful he will see you chasing butterflies as you used to do when you were a girl."
To Be Continued Tomorrow.
THE BEST REAL ESTATE BARGAINS are always advertised in the Tribune Heal Estate Columns. Twelve words three days for 80 cents.
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Mrs. Susan Hendrix and daughter. May, called at the home of William Lehia and' Dr. Ralston Wednesday.
Mrs. Carson and Mrs. Bruner spent Monday with Mrs. John Herbert. William Shoppell and .wife spent Wednesday at the home of Evan Cline.
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$8.75 Striped Taffeta Silk Skirt $3.98 $7.50 All-wool Poplin Skirt $3.98 $10.00 Extra Size Taffeta Skirt $4.98 ,$10.00 Guaranteed Taffeta Skirt $4.98 $10.00 All-wool American Poplin Skirt ..... $5.98 Last Call—Every Wash Skirt, none reserved at 89c and 59c
Evan Cline and family and Oscar
School
THAT ARE "RIGHT", as far as durability, style, fit and price are concerned. BERLAND'S specialize in Misses' and Growing Girls' footwear. This season we
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Women Folks, Buy Your New Fall Suit or Dress Now. 307 New Fall Suits, 426 Dresses, on Sale at Nearly One-Half Price.
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Hixon and family took dinner with Andy Shoppell Friday. James Saddler and family, William Shoppell and wife, of this vicinity, attended the Smith reunion Sunday.
Frank Nier and wife, of Jasper •county, Ind., visited relatives in this vicinity last week.
William Shoppell and wife, Mrs. Carson and Mrs. Bruner spent Tuesday with Mrs. C. N. Hendrix.
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2nd Floor Terre Haute Trust Bldg. Open Saturday Nights
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Price or Quantity
Which Do You Buy?
Some Bakers Sell a 5c loaf of bread weighing ten ounces
We Sell a 6c loaf which averages 14 ounces
One Cent Buys 40 per cent More
Which Do You Want? Miller-Parrott Bread Co.
TRY A TRIBUNE WANT AD„ ONE CENT A WORD, FOR BEST RE8ULTS,
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