Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 13 September 1916 — Page 4
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ThoTerre Haute Tribune
AND GAZETTE.
jUi fndct«lcnt nfwipnper. Oalljaapi S«Wd*»'. The Terre Haute Gnxette, established tS«». The Terre Haute TiHM.qe entnbliflied lsji-l.
Telephones Business Department, both phones, 378 Editorial Department, Citizens, 155 Central Union, 816.
Sunday, $6.00. Daily only, |3.00. day only, |2.00. Entered as second class matter January 1, 1906, at the postoffice at Terre Haute, Indiana, under the act Of congress of March 2, 1879.
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A Terre Haute newspaper for Terre Haute people. The only paper In Terre Haute owned, edited and published by Terrt, Hpiitenna.
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All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures stint to the Tribune are sent at the owner's risk, nn.l the Tribune company expressly repudiates any liability or responsibility for their safe custody or return.
Only newspaper In Terre Haute having full day leaned wire service of Associated Press. Central Press association service.
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WHAT'S THE ANSWER?
Leaders in Judge Hughes' own party have called a conference to readjust the judge's campaign and to have him leave off his discussion of the eighthour labor law and in other ways revealing his repugnance at such beneficial legislation for labor.
The Judge's record in such matters is clear, his vetoes of the two-cent fare bill, the full crew bill, the teachers' salary increase and of the farrners' institute bill while governor* of New .York Indicate his trend of mind on these Shatters.
But the judge forgets that every commercial interest,. $y§rx .industrialInterest. every business enterprise, and, in fact, the interests of every citizen ivere at stake in the railroad "situation, so the natural question is what would the judge have done in the case?
This lav was hurried through congress, as the public well knows, as the only possible way to prevent a strike that had already been' definitely. ,or-: tfered to begin within a ferw hours and which would hate inflicted upon the
n—Backache? *mRheumatism m*Run-down
Kil
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Those of us who arl past mfddlevage* ate prone to eat too much meat and in Consequence deposit lime-salts in the arteries, veins and joints. We often 6uffer from twinges of rheumatism or lunibago, sometimes from gout swollen hands or feet. There is no longer the slightest need of this, however, as the new prescription, "Anuric," is abound to give immediate results as it Hi many times more potent than lithia, in ridding the impoverished blood of its poisons by way of the kidneys. It can be obtained at .almost any. drug Store, by simply asking for, "A'qsyri4" for kidneys or backache. It will overcome such conditions as rheumatism, dropsical swellings, cold extremities, go&lding and burning ^rine and sleeplessness due to constant arising from bed at night.
people of the United States a disaster of unknown proportions. Would Judge Hughes, as president, have permitted the strike to materialize?
Even though this measure is a law, it can be repealed. Will Judge Hughes, iJ| elected president, urge the new congress to wipe this enactment off the
Ih advance yearly by mail, Dailey .and statute books? Sun- if jU(3ge js sincere in his denun-
ciation of this eight-hour law, he should answer these two questions without further delay. They are fundamental to any discussion of the Adamson act. Until they are answered the judge cannot in fairness criticize President Wilson for his part in the proceedings.
Some critics of the president on this issue have held up, as a pleasing contrast, the example of Grover Cleveland who permitted the great railroad strike of 1894 to assume the proportions of a national menace before he intervened to put a stop to it. Does Judge Hughes prefer the Cleveland method to the Wilson method?
Others, including Col. Roosevelt himself, have held up the colonel's action in the anthracite strike as the only proper way for a president to inter vene in a labor dispute of such magnitude. Roosevelt, it will be remembered, allowed the strike to continue for five months before he took steps to stop it in' the public interest. Does Judge Hughes prefer the Roosevelt method to the Wilson method? 'Cleveland performed a great service in the railroad strike of his time. Roosevelt performed a like great service wh£n he brought peace in the anthracite regions. But President Wil son performed a greater service than either. He prevented a calamity. They merely stopped, one. ...
PATRONIZING BOSSY.
Since this is fair week, some interest attaches to the news item from Sullivan county wh6re a farmer, has put screens on his barn, painted the interior a light blue, and rigged up fly brushes'on the theory'that a happy and contented cow will produce more and better milk. He contends that if Bossy is surrounded by esthetic environments she will .produce more milk to the cubic bucket than if she has to put up with any old thing the hired hand happens to have around.
Perhaps some agricultural Belasco will arise arid invent an entirely new scheme of interior decoration of dairies.
The gentleman farmers have already worked the matter out to the last word with respect to sanitation. It appears that it is. now .time, for Art to join hanks with Science ,and .complete the job.
BY
Wiring lor Electricity
Your old homestead— so good
to look upon and carrying treasureless family memories within—can easily be made a better place in which to live by the installation of Electric Light—the safe, convenient, clean, sunlike illuminant. ...
Electricity Is Constantly Growing Cheaper
Although other commodities
have advanced steadily within the last ten years, electric current has been reduced from year to year and is now cheaper than ever before.
Your home can be wired quickly
and with very little muss or expense. We will gladly submit figures if you will call or phone. Citizens, 168 G. U.,,343.
U. H., I. & E. TRACTION COMPANY i Terminal Arcade, 8&Q-822 Wabash Ave.
I?yrir the ^esC tyrp has--kntown'fdrj^fflcle^(afl'a vigorous citizens a long time That rbd' ls an undesirable Color where cattle..-h£rJs are qpneerned. So red probably will be omitted rrom the chromatic scale in the cow boudoir. Perhaps mulberry would be a good
substitute, however, if the rest of the furnishings are in harmony., Lady Baltimore III, who leads the ticket for the production of futurist milk and impressionistic butter, doubtless has her own royal ideas about the fittings of her suite.
If this cow specialist from Sullivan country would devise some means of ascertaining Bossy Baltimore's predilections in the way of "art, the task would be easier.
He asserts that cows like music. And there again is a wide field for speculation. We do not know whether she prefers Beethoven to Berlin, or Chopin to A1 Jolson. If we slipped on a record she particularly disliked, how do we know that she wouldn't go on a milk strike entirely?
Maybe it's true that Sullivan cows do have feelings like human beings, but it's mighty lucky for said human beings they cannot express thtm!
GOING STRONG.
A morning paper gloats over the discomfiture of Germany, and says that the "Vons" who undertook this war with such self-assurance, of sufficiency are "breaking down." TJie editorial is based on the assumption that Von Buelow has been dismissed for his failure to keep Italy in sympathy -with Germany, and that Von Moltke has been disgraced for his failure in the campaign on the Marne. The climax of such biased argument comes In the assertion that Von Falkenhayn has "been made the goat" to save the reputation of the German crown-prince.
The case Indicates how unfair a partisan newspaper can .be when it sets its mind to it. The' facts are that Von Tirpitz, who' is mentioned as having been disgraced by the kaiserj id, according to reliable correspondents, still directing head of the German naval operations. The writer might have men-I tioned some other "Vons" who have I not "broken down" if he wished to do the subject justice:' "He might have mentioned Von Immelmann, the greatest aviator the war has developed, and who has been reported dead five times by the allies., He might have mentioned Von Boehm and Vondergoltz and Von Spechk, who have held the 1916 drive on the west front, and. Von Hin-. denberg and Von Schlaack, who have kept the Russian bear out of the east for over a year, of. he might have mentioned Von GIUCK. who led the Turks and swept the Dardanelles of the air lied troops and locked General Townshend up in Kut. Or he might have mentioned Von Stock, pilot on Captain Koenig's "Deutschland." A little contemporary history of the war, if it is accurate history, .wooJd show that the "Vons" are .holding thiir ow:1 pretty well, jin fact, they seem eminently
THE TRUTH WILL OUT,
Seeking to make as little favorabl* comment as possible on the work ol the congress which has just adjourned, the Indianapolis News admits that "not since the civil war times has congress been as busy as during the Wilson administration." Still further the same editor says that "taking the records as a whole, it must be said that congress has dealt with, many subjects of very great importance. The amount of work done is remarkable. It certainly has not been a da-'nothing congress."
good things they have accomplished, but even the belittling process is an admission that some of the laws were excellent. The worst the editor can possibly do is to assign selfish motives. For instance, the editor says, "the tariff commission, and- child labor bills, both undemocratic in principle, w^re passed as a bait to the progressive voters."
Here the editor should have recited from speeches of Judge Hughes, in which he pronounces his opposition to child labor legislation, which may be why Albert Jeremiah Beveridge,- advance agent of child labor legislation, advocates Hugheis. 'The farmers' credit act," says the editor, "was designed to- -beguile- the farmers, and the employes' compensation act to have a similar effect on the workingman." Still further the editor says, "of course, much of this legislation is meritorious, but it is doubtful if the democratic majority would have violated party principle to such an extent if there had not been an election pending. We are to have a tariff commission and it is to be hoped better roads as a result of the new roads law."
The Indianapolis News and like organs cannot quite recover from the shock received when congress passed the eight-hour law. They pretend to reflect the outraged sentiment of a business and commercial community on this subject. As the New Tork World expressed it at the time of the passage of this law, when chambers of commerce were imploring congress not to take this action, "if a strike should occur as the result of non-action on the part of the administration there would not be ears enough in the nation to hear the screams of the same chambers of commerce, manufacturers' associations and their individual memberships. when the business of the whole country was paralyzed and more than half of these individuals were forced
TSERB HAUTETSIBUNE.
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into bankruptcy, while millions of people were thrown out of work for weeks or months."
At the pharmaceutical convention last week it was asserted there were too many drug stores in this country. Well, they're awfully handy when you want a postage stamp.
One of the most glaring instances of unblushing preparedness is found in the alleged fact that the Boston baseball managers are preparing for a home world series.
The general opinion seems to be that in rescuing his twenty-two marooned comrades Sir Ernest Shackelton has performed a finer deed than discovering a pole.
It appears that Henry Ford wired the white house that if there was a strike he would have to close his factory. But that wasn't 'what settled it.
A wise prelate says that in the ideal marriage the question of obedience does not arise. Of course the ideal husband always gives way.
One of the queer things of life is that the article whose profits have now passed $1,000,000 a week should be nicknamed a "flivver."
Galveston is out with a claim to be the ideal American city. And with all the chances she has had to rebuild she I ought to be.
HOROSCOPE.
"The Stars Incline, Bat Do Not Compel." .'Copyright 1915. by the MeClure
Newspaper Syndicate.
Thursday, September 14, 191j8.
Astrology reads this as an unfortunate day. Mars, Saturn and Urartus are all in evil place, but late in the evening Venus is friendly.
It is a most unlucky rule for first meetings between men and women, whether in social or business life.
Mars seems to forecast agitation S-gain over military matters. An epidemic or the spread of disease may cause serious discontent.
Uranus indicates marvelous Improvements in aerial navigation and
An attempt is made to belittle all the h°nors *or American inventors, but this is an unlucky day for experi-
ments. Danger from trolley accidents is forecast. Wherever electricity is used peril is increased during this rule, the seers declare.
Saturn exercises malefic power from early hours today. This may affect anything that comes from the earth, whether vegetable or mineral products.
Events that will cause the world to believe anew }n miracles are prophesied for the next few months.
A reign of brotherly love is supposed to be near with the new cycle of the world, but this will come slowly. Europe setting many a lesson for this country.
There are signs read as foreshadow ing the prevalence of strange crimes and the. increase of certain forms of degeneracy as precursors of a day when the world will be purified.
Before- a year has passed the rise of a new school of literature will be recognized. A great novel will be written by an American, probably by woman.
Persons whose birthdate it is may have a year of anxiety. They should run no risks personal or financial.
Children born on this day may have many ebbs and floods of fortune. They may be too impulsive to be always successful in nu sin ess affairs.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY. From the Tribune File*.
September 13, 1906.
Edward J. Bidaman left on a trip to Colorado. Rev. D. B. Cheney resigned as pastor of the First Baptist church.
Col. Alexander Hoagland, "Father of the Curfew," gave an address at Lake View park.
Superintendent Harvey Jones announced that the Bertillon system of measurement would be installed by the local police department.
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Metal Workers:-
We have gas furnaces adapted to almost every metal working trade.
Some of the money-saving uses of gas for you are in
O O N E S 1 2 3
Hardening and tempering furnaces Babbit-melting furnaces Parafine baths Japanning and lacquer drying ovens Rivet heating furnaces Reheating furnaces Gold, silver, brass and nickel melting furnaces
Gas is a practical fuel.
We shall demonstrate the industrial uses of gas industrial appliances in our office from Sept. 5th to 19th. The people
Terre Haute will find this demonstration inter
esting, instructive and practical. Come and see how gas will save you money, time and factory space in your business. Open evenings 7 to 9 o'clock.
Central Union
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Receivers, Central Union Telephone Company F. H. KISSLING, Manager
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