Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 11 September 1916 — Page 4

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he Terre Haute Tribune

AND GAZETTE.

j^ A« Indcpeilent ne'irapaper. Dally •jWi Sunday. TKe Terre Hnute Gaice.tte, JUtabllahnd' 1:886. 1'h«* 'I'erre Haute fPrtbune eittnbliahed

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Telephones-- Business Department, |9th phones. 37$ Editorial Department, citizens, 155 Central Unitln, 316.

l^y only, $2.00.

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Entered as class matter January l,

second

v 1906, at the postofflce ft Terre Haute, Indiana, under the act congress of March 2, 187S.

Terre Haute newspaper for Ter*^ [ante people. The only paper In Terre. ante owned, edited and published by in* Hmitean*.

unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures st nt to the TribfW*e are-sent at the owner's risk, unl fthe Tribune' company expressly repUjojates any liability or responsibility jWr their safe custody or return.

Only newnpaper in Terre Haute hnvfnll dny leaned wire service of A»iDClktrd i*reai«. Central Prean aasocia wot wrvlce.

THE DRIFTbF OPINION.

i^|:: f(Ida M. Tarbell, who Is known to tjliewspaper and magazine readers as i v.oM of the foremost leaders of thought I\4 American women, announced |®l/: w3ay her active-support of -President .yttson. "He is," she declared, "the real progressive leader that this ^eca^e has produced." slightingMr. Hughes, for

®he expressed great respect, she "fcertainiy he has not as yet given sign of understanding or sympaizing ,with the thing we call progress'Weism and,' as far as I can see, Presi-

Wilson is the only leader we have T^ho does *T

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pr0erresslv,e of

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President Wilson's

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to see

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that the is-

1916, because of the world-wide

^pOte-up in the last three years, must 'hp different from those of 1912. There ii| something bigger to talk about today than the 'referendum.' New issues, are

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TheEver Positive Baking Ovens

Year after year, unceasing effort has been put forth to make the oven of all Acorn Ranges absolutely positive in baking ability, until today this Acorn Range will give you a perfect baking service—not sometimes, but always. Its oven bottom is ...ujiconditionally guaranteed against warping or buckling.

bound to come to the front, perhaps with startling rapidity and frequency. President Wilson can bring to these issues his tremendous experience. The evolution in thought and action of the last four years may be as nothing to that which is to take place in the next four. Does any American today see

1Mseer'Wtte'' "more

or clearer than President Wilson? I believe that progressives will see this

if they doij't it is a reflection on their intelligence." Miss Tarbell, in describing President Wilson, says that he differs from Colonel Roosevelt in his whole conception of the function of the politician. She believes president Wilson has the true conception of the first duty of leadership of the people "to find out just how long an upward step they are ready for and then to fire them with courage to take that step."

The president's foreign policy meets with Miss Tarbell's unqualified approval. "President Wilson," she said, "has proved his fitness to lead the cause of progressive civilization. True, he has not yet had time to convert the man who cries for his pound of flesh, nor alter the views of him who falls to see that bloody war is but the primitive expression of savage weakness promoted by the ignoble desire of conquest or revenge. But he has forced Respect for neutrality, and he. has handled his delicate Mexican inheritance with tact and wrisdom."

To- her associates in the progressive movement, of which she was a conspicuous part, Miss Tarbell's advice may come, to put it mildly, as a surprise for she tells them frankly that President Wilson—h"our greatest progress-ive"-—should have been that party's candidate last June. "He would have understood the progressives," she said, "which Mr. Roosevelt "did not."

Discussing with the frankness that characterized her world-famous writ­

In furnishing your hoipe, in buying a range or a heating stove, do you believe in buying goods with a reputation"? Goods that are built to give you the vexy utmost in service, in satisfaction? If you do—if you want a range that will always bake all your bread, rolls, pies and cakes to just the proper turn— no failures—then don't think of buying a range until you have investigated thoroughly this

'Its baking is true and positivenot sometimes—but-always"

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ings about Standard Oil, Miss Tarbell declared that Roosevelt could have had the progressive party convention at Chicago "solid for Hughes if he wanted it, but in his chagrin at the refusal "of the republican convention to nominate him, ha threw over his followers."

THE FUNNY SEASON.

"Senator Sherman has had so much fun during the closing days of congress that he must be almost sorry to see an adjournment."—Indianapolis News.

If Senator Sherman's "funny" attempts are as amusing to the senate as they were to his audience in the Fairbanks notification audience, the senate must have been tickled half to death when adjournment time came The difference is that his Indianapolis audience, led in the act by James E. Watson, could and did leave and go home while he was yet speaking, and the senators had to stay and listen.

THE MAIL MAN.

The motor rural routes established in connection with the local postoffice have increased the volume of mail delivered from this office over thirtythree and one-third per cent.

Acorn Ranges are the oldest stoves in America. 89 years ago the first Acorn Cook Stove was built in the modest little plant in Albany, N. Y. Think of it—long before the telegraph, even before there were any railroads, when the steamboat was considered but a crazy freak—long before any of these, your ancestors were cooking three square meals a day on an Acorn. Is it any wonder with 89 years of uninterrupted successful bakers behinds it, that this Acorn Range—the premier of them all—is really and truly

America's Very Best Range

Garfield says that it takes 100 years to grow a sturdy oak— each year a little taller and a little stouter—and so it is with Acorn Ranges. Each qf the 89 years they have been made has brought out some radical improvement over the year before, until you have before you today a composite Acorn embodying all the improvements that 89 years of unceasing thought and experiment has made possible—a range that undoubtedly has the best oven, the' best fire box and the best flues ever built into any range.

The Acorn Hot Blast Fire Box

The Acorn HotvBlast fire box burns not only the coal you buy and, pay-for, but the gas that any coal will generate as well, and it is here—in its ability to burn these gases—where this hot blast fire box may well be said to be the one vital part of your range. It saves your coal and your money.

If you want the very best range possible for your money to buy, buy an Acorn. Visit our exhibit at the fair, or our complete display at our Main store, 303 Wabash avenue, where we have ranges on display as low as

Easy Terms

barmers—Ask and Investigate Our Special Farmers' Range Proposition

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ministration expects to greatly widen and still further improve this public benefit and advantage until all sections and all localities where rural service can be made operative shall have these conveniences afforded them and have them generously maintained. Petitions for service are no longer necessary. The recommendation of the.postmaster brings an inspector who goer over the ground, and if service can be made/at all effective, it will at once be given. No consideration of administrative economy, no mere saving of money by miserly methods or parsimonious process, is to stand in the way of any benefit which the rural delivery can

The Acorn EVen Draft Fines

No matter how good an oven your range may have—no matter how durable a fire box it may contain, nor how well it is constructed, unless it has flues that are even and positive in draft— all these other good features would be useless. In 89 years there has never been a complaint that an Acorn would not draw.

TEREE HAUTE TK1UUJNE.

give or wise public policy can sanction. The common people, upon whom the burdens rest and upon whose toll the nation's prosperity is built, are to have their share of government favor in full measure returned to them and every aid to the furtherance of legitimate enterprise and effort secured to them by performance and by practice.

The rural delivery is indeed a boon to the country. Its measureless advantages can not be estimated, nor need the cost of maintenance be considered, for it has broadened the field of industrial opportunity, touched as if with magic power the possibilities of human endeavor, and transformed conditions. to a degree almost marvelous. It has brought the printed page, the great educator of civilization, daily to the home has brought special delivery almost to the door has secured good roads and maintains them by official interest and concern it has attracted the attention of the various states to this question and obtained results it has made farm lands more valuable and contributed to increased production It has abridged time by rapid communication brightened all environment, and made ordinary dull routine interesting and attracive.

ANOTHER SWAT CAMPAIGN.

A Tribune correspondent evidently suffrog frob hab feber writes in to inquire why, since goldenrod is the cause of all the agony, the government does not do. something to exterminate it? There is some question about this.

The fact that hay fever sufferers fre quently begin to suffer before golden rod blooms at all is a sufficient indication that the queen of the autumn roadsides is not the prime cause of the annual affliction. Medical men now seem to be of the opinion that goldenrod may Ije practically acquitted of an offense long laid against it. This cannot be otherwise than gratifying to the many who love the warm glow of the September fields. It may ©yen lead few to study the goldenrod, and encourage them to differentiate the various species, of which there are fiftyseven, more or less.

It is the giant ragweed and the giant's lesser ragweed cousins that are really responsible for the September wretchedness of a considerable part of our population. This is more as it should be. The ragweeds have no friends anyway. They are cheeky, rude and unhandsome. Any swat-the-rag-weed campaign would meet with unanimous approval.

But It really would be too bad to have, to condemn the goldenrod. There are those' who love-it so well that they wauldJ.jcQake.4t ihe national flower, SurelyV'lt' possesses the American traits of confidence 'jand thrift, and is handsome to boot. The redemption of goldenrod's reputation is an act of justice that will please everyone.

It:doesn't take much of a scare ta force up the price of provisions. Unhappily, the people who fix the prices appear to stay scared.

A Mexican patriot sadly admits that there is no patriotism in his country. A settlement seems near at hand.

Villa must get many a hearty laugh when he thinks about how much better he is than Aguinaldo.

Also what is so rare as knee deep in September.

TEN YEARS AGO TODAY. From the Tribune File*.

September 11,1906.

Dr. and Mrs. Ernest Mattox, of West Terre Haute, were given a surprise by a number of their friends.

George

R.

MeCay, of Cleveland, O.,

supreme' prosi'derit, delivered an address, at the joint meeting of Pathfinder lodges No. 35 &nd 27.

Attorney John Stuart Jordan was named as a member of the Indiana reception committee which is to welcome

W.

J. Bryan at Louisville, Ky.

D. V. Miller, acting as attorney for Sugar Creek township, filed a petition with the county commissioners asking that the grade from the river bridge to the corporate limits of West Terre Haute be paved with brick.

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HOROSCOPE.

"The Star* Incline, Bat Do Not Compel." Copyright, 1915, by the McClure

Newspaper Syndicate.

Tuesday, September 12,1916.

Astrologers read this as an unusually fortunate day. Saturn, the sun, Venus and Neptune all rule strongly for good. Uranus is slightly adverse.

Real estate and all transactions in land come under a lucky, direction. The signs are good for larga enterprises, especially those that have the developments of large areas at stake.

The aged should make the most of this government of the stars. It is predicted that an old man who has won fame will confer a great gift on the nation.

Women have the best sway today. It is a favorable time for weddings, engagements and love affairs.

Those who seek enployment should find ready response on the part of persons in places of power. The sun is held to cause successful persons to be sympathetic and helpful when aspected as it is today.

Again the stars hold a ninister warning for philanthropists who may find that money Is diverted from relief channels. Exposures of fraud may be numerous.

Mars has progressed to a place in the kaiser's horoscope that indicates danger to health and some extraordinary incident in connection with the French nation.

Venus presages increase of political power for women, but much enmity and bitterness will be engendered.

The wife of a high official in the United States may cause serious antagonisms among her own sex. There is a sign indicating gossip with misunderstandings and misjudgmentjS.

Persons whose birthdate it is should not lend money or go to law within the year. Prosperity is foreshadowed Romance will take hold of the young.

Children born on this day probably will prosper through the early years, but losses after middle age, when sudden changes may occur, are probable.

LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE.

Note for .Mr. Bowers.

Editor of the Tribune:—Just a simple question and please answer through the Tribune. What remuneration does your Washington cor-

Like tkat 'pincli kit the9thj~—'*1™satisfy!r'they in

respondent receive for being secretary to Germany, reporter for the Tribune and secretary to Senator Kern, in addition to his chief duty, that of being champion of Ireland?

JOHN F, COLEMAN, 2012 Third Avenue.

Hughes and Gompers.

-Editor of the Tribune:—Mr. Hughes, by his assailing the railroad brotherhoods and by his implied attacks on Samuel M. Gompers, in which he is ably seconded by Senator Sherman, of Illinois, seems to indicate that he wants a clear cut issue in this campaign between capital and labor with Mr. Hughes taking the capital end of the bet. This 1b a dangerous thirig to do. Mr. Hughes is treading on thin ice. However, his appeal to sectionalism in his criticism of southern democrats indicate^ how far he will go to try and land in the white house. If congress was demagogic in its enact­

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 )/l91*6.]7^

ment of iaws for the benefit of the people, may not Mr. Hughes be demagogic in leaning too far the other way? a J. PRATT,

Brazil, Ind.

Germany and Justice.

Editor 'of the Tribune:—In the. Washington, Side-Lights in the Tribune, Sunday, appeared as fair a statement of the case of Germany as I have seen in any newspaper. Anyone who has watched the course of history for the past two years well knows that where one complication has arisen with Germany, England has given a score of reasons for grievance on the part of this nation. The Tribune seems to be .one paper that cannot be swayel by prejudice in this matter. Spare us from any more Balderstones if Germany is to have a fair hearing.

C. F. SCHWARTZ.