Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 22 September 1916 — Page 4

"1 he Terre Haute Tribune

AND GAZETTE.

An indcperient newspaper. Dally and Sunday. The Terre Haute Gazette, established 1869. The Terre Haute Tribune entabllnhed 1804.

Telephones Business Department, both phones, 37S Editorial Department, Citizens,' 155 Central Union, 316.

In advance yearly by mail, Dailey and Sunday, J5.00. Daily only, $3.00. Sunfe y day only, $2.00.

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$

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Entered as second class matter January 1, 1906, at the postofflce

at Terre Haute, Indiana, under the act or congress of March 2, 1879.

A Terre Haute newspaper for Terre iHaute people. The only paper In Terre Hiute onued, edited and publlahed by Ttrrt Hanteana.

••-. All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, betters and pictures sent to the Tribune are sent at the owner's risk, an:l the Tribune company expressly repudiates any liability or responsibility for their safe custody or 'return.

Only newspaper In Terre Haute havInar full day leased wire service of Associated press. Central Press association service.

WOLF1 WOLF!

Judge Hughes, in speaking In Fort :i'

Wayne yesterday said that the eightI hour law

by

which

Resident Wilson

f- settled the threatened

railroad

strike

snare

nation-wide

was

*.

an^

intended as

a

for

the

V

%y*' i

1:

if

S|J.

trap

the working people of

country. At about the .same time

rtour of the leaders of the national organizations of workingmen were peaking in different parts of the cou-n and each onfe, without exception, endorsed the eight-hour law. It has "s^.en sa^ that Judge Hughes does not

Understand the Interests of the work teg people, and yesterday's incident Wbuld seem to prove it.

But for the sake of argument admit thfet the eight-hour law is the most langerous and most vicious law ever enacted. Here are a lew facts that rout Judge Hughes.

When the Adamson bill passed the house of representatives there were 124 I republicans present and voting. Of these, 70 voted for it and but 54 voted against it. Among its supporters were -Joseph G. Cannon, the former speaker, and Messrs. Campbell, Cooper of Wisconsin, iLenroot, Mondell atid Rodenberg, and Will Wood, of this state,

Some of the most prominent republicans in congress. The action^ of the house was there''fore not partisan,, since nearly three-

Hfths of the opposition voted with the riiajorlty.

v

i- When the measure reached the senr

ate the attitude of the minority was ottfe of only passive support. What this meant to the fortunes of the bill was pointed out in these columns be fore Governor Glynn emphasized it in ljjs .Indianapolis speech. Any repub l^^a&ir-seifator might have talked it to death It was enacted Into law with the responsible concurrence of the minority. '-Judge Hughes will have a -harcF time flu making the public believe that the

^Jght-hour law Is anarchistic or that it will undermine the fundamentals of

1=

s?

"REFLEX"

our government If it is, why did so many of his friends support it? An answer to this would be the most interesting thing the judge has done throughout the campaign.

TWO THOUGHTS.

The Tribune today contains two interesting items. One is from W. C. Ball inquiring how stricken Europe will be able to dump any goods here after the war, a favorite argument just now by the tariff over-lords. The other is Mr. Frick'a interesting interview regarding the present tremendous prosperity of this country.

When H. C. Frick says that the present prosperity in the United States does not depend upOn the war in Europe he is worse than a heretic. It is a crime against the only true faith to cast doubt upon the infallibility of Mr. Hughes. The candidate has proclaimed the doctrine that prosperity is only temporary and passing. It is due to the war, and with the end of the war It will disappear—unless, of course, Mr. Hughes is elected in November to serve—the saviour of the country. Anybody who ventures to take the contrary view is no better than a democrat.

Mr. Frick's offense is the more grave because there are people so weakminded as to believe that by business training and experience he may be no less qualified than Mr. Hughes to judge of the true causes of prosperity. That a man in his position of great moral responsibility should venture to question the economic value of Mr. Hughes' campaign speeches is alarming. It reveals how unstable and unreliable some of our leading captains of industry and financiers can be when they lay politics aside.

The least Mr. Frick can do is to publish at once a humble retraction. He has been a good republican in the past, a liberal contributor tp the party's campaign funds and a beneficiary of its legislative methods. Unless he recants immediately he will §tand in the eyes of the world as a renegade who has stabbed dominant Americanism under the fifth rib.

THE, SCOURGE.

Terre Haute fortunately has had but two cases of the dread poliamyelitis. Indianapolis at present has eieven cases, and several deaths have occurred there. The present epidemic h^s not, it seems, advanced the ability of medical science to cope with it ,in any degree. Physicians frankly confess themselves unable to account for the diminution of infantile paralysis during the present month. They .were equally unable to account for the beginning and spread of the epidemic. Poliomyelitis remains one of the unsolved mysteries of medical science.

As the disease becomes less dangerous in the metroplis it shows signs of increasing in other parts of the east. The quarantine enforced, not onlv by

Gas Mantles differ, not in looks, but in service. The best for light durability economy are

Gas Mantles

BRAND

Upright or Inverted Formerly 25* IJ

All Dealers and the Gas Company

High Tops at Low Prices

In selecting your fall styles it will be of great advantage for you to see what we offer in either staple or novelty shoes. We have the high top black boots (as illustrated) for

$2.95, $3.45 and $3.95

As for the novelties, we have the solid gray kid, African and Havana brown, etc., and many pretty, new shade combinations for

$3.45, $3.95 and $4.95

Remember—Berland's service, prices and styles will please you.

SECOND FLOOR TERRE HAUTE TRUST BUILDING.

Opin Saturday Nigbto Mail Orders 10c Extra

RES1M0L PROVED WONDERFUL FOR ITCHING ECZEMA

Feb. 23.—"I had a chronic case of eczema on my hands for about three years. It got red in places, especially between my fingers, and when I'd rub them a little, pimples or blisters would i form which filled with water. The lqnger I had this trouble, the larger these pimples got. I can't ejxpress in words what a terrible thing it was. I couldn't find anything to help me— everything seemed to make it worse. I had about given up all hope of ever being cured. They were terribly sore, and I could not sleep for the terrible itching and burning. I learned of Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap and decided to try them. Well, Resinol really proved to be a wonderful thing in my case. It relieved at the first application. I used about a cake of Resinol Ointment and the eczema was all! gone. It hasn't returned since. I am i so glad I tried Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap, as I do not know how I could have stood that eczema much longer. It is a cheap and sure cure." (Signed) Mrs. H. H. Denbow, Sioux Falls, S. D.

AU druggists sell Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap. For samples free, write to Dept. 7-S, Resinol, Baltimore.

New York, but a'.so by most of the other eastern states has not, apparently, had any effect. The disease is almost as much a mystery as was tuberculosis or diphtheria a generation ago or "the black death" centurjies ago.

Some scientist will, in the not distant future, find out the why and the wherefore of infantile paralysis. The weird and malignant book of the microbes holds no secret that twentieth century brains cannot dig out. The scourge of the infants this year has been a sufficient incentive, and men whose interest is academic a^ well as I other men whose interest is humanltarian will essay the task of making poliomyelitis comparatively innocuous,

We are now in the dark but the innocents who have perished will be the inspiration that will save the innocents of the future!

CLAP-TRAP.

There is just a suspicion that the patriots who are behind the Hughes campaign are going to overdo the thing. Judge Hughes is a high-minded man, a good judge, and probably a patriotic man despite the fact that he' has not voted for years, and. too. despite the fact that he seems temporarily to have been seied with war fever and thirst for gore.

Some efforts are being put forth for Mr. tjughes that are not only in bad taste, but theiy are hiHtting hls ^ause. i The preparation for tfie republican riational committee of a ^'lilm/showing!' President Wilson aslfeep at his desk in Washington while struggling nuns were being 'carried by raiders into the! hushes from a convent in northern' Mexico is such an outrage on decency as the annals of partisanship cannot match. The "raiders," we are told, are supers from nearby theatres, and the "nuns" are actresses from divers theatres in the New York section.

It had been supposed by democrats, that the slogan, "Anything to beat Wilson!" meant simply anything .w'thinj' the rather indefinite bounds of repub-j lican partisan decorum. It was not guessed that the words were to be taken literally as sanctioirng outrages on public morals repugnant to the law of the land and libels of a character fo revolt every decent citizen of the republic.

The authorities of the state in which these pictures were prepared should i see to it that the laws against lewd and immoral acts are enforced. The alleged participation of members of the na-J tional guard in the preparation of the i film should be the subject of instant investigation, and, if the facts warrant, of action by a suitable number of courts-martial. As for the republican national committee, the American public .will take its case in hand and in due time render and record a verdict. That body had been indistinguished thus far in ihie campaign it now has the distinction of having set a mark well below the zero on the gauge of political decency.

Madame Petard, who "foresaw" that the kaiser would be assassinated last June, has predicted the election of Mr. Hughes.

The latest dance step, the two-two, is said to be the simplest of all the new ones. Then why not call it the four?

Judge Hughes is against the eighthour law, but he declines tc say howmany hours he favors.

FORGETFULNESS.

Where once the battle raged. The fields will billow with the ripen-, .ing grain And-skies will smile and grief will be assuaged

As sun shines through the rain.

The walls by cannon torn Will be restored by patient tolling care Or else the ivy o'er the scene forlorn

Will weave a mantle fair. When clouds serenely float Where summer skies are tranquil to ihc view, The world will laugh again, nor pause to note

The storms that rise anew. —Philander Johnson in Washington Star,

I

iiEEii HAUIii TBiiiUiS.

jSupcrbi ^riotUcs

Your Suit

In a smart

666 Wabash Ave.

H0K0SC0PE. t.

"The Stnri

?tIhcI!ne,

tfut Do Not

Compel.''

Copyright, 1-915. by the McClure .Newspaper Syndicate.

Saturday, September 23, 1916.

Early in the morning Venus rules beneficently, but later Mars, the sun and Uranus are all in evil plaice.

When the sun enters the sign of Libra this morning, the beginning of the autumn quarter, Mars will be rising hi Scorpio, in square to Neptune, and in opposition to Jupiter. The ingress takes place in the second hoi^e and the quarter promises to be marked by stirring events in the United States. Stormy weather and vast expenditures of public money again are foretold.

For England colonial troubles and trade disputes are predicted by astrologers. A strong democratic movement in the house of commfins is foreshadowed. Treachery and losses on the sea are probable.

Grave religious scandals are probable in the United States, where there wHll be an unusual amount of litigation. Serious railway accidents are forecast. Naval affairs will rivet public attention.

The rule today gives warning of military, agitation in which Washington will hear many conflicting reports.

It is a' planetary sway that is most unfavorable for dealings with the great or those who imagine greatness. Any applications for position or philanthropic act should be postponed.

Love affairs should be avoided while this configuration rules. Through the autumn months disturbing influences may be apparent in even the best-ordered lives and poise of mind should be cultivated.

There is'"a sway that is believed to

Gei Duffy's andkeepwell

It is as Easy to Obey the Laws of Health as it is to Disregard Them.

One of the first requisites is to establish immunity of the body against disease.

Pure

K

A RE you about to decide on your New Fall Suit?

Drop-, in for ten minutes, look over our models of Superb

encourage secret workings on', the part of foreigners i of every class. The collapse or damage of *a public building will cause a sensation.

A winter of' extraordinary weather conditions Is predicted. These condit tions will exist in Europe &s well as in this country, and may hasten the close of the war, which will show sudden Indications of coming peace.

Persons whose birthdate it is should be careful not to make changes in the coming year. They may meet unsettled conditions. The young will court and marry.

Children born on this day may be too fond of pleasure and inclined to extravagance. They will be popular with the opposite sex.

TEN YEARS AGO TODAY.

From the Trlbnae File*.

September 22,1906.

The day's attendance at the county fair passed the 15,000 mark. Ray Jared was elected president of the senior class of Wiley high school.

City Judge Charles Fortune purchased the residence at 327 South Fifth street.

The Indiana state department is looking for a suitable site to establish a rifle range for Company B, Indiana national guard.

Highly Recommended.

"The *cook is leaving today and wants me to give her a recommendation, but I don't know what to say." "You might say she is a good worker." "A good worker! She's anything but that." "Oh, I don't know. She has worked us for $30 a month and her board, hasn't she?"—-New York World.

Duffy's

Malt

Whiskey

helps to do this when taken as directed. Its distinguished record as "A Medicine for All Mankind" should be your guide in purchasing Duffy's for the family medicine chest, where it will prove to be your nearest doctor in emergencies.

NOTE—At most druggists, grocers and dealers, $1. If they can't supply you -write us. Household booklet free. TH* Duffy Mall Whi«k«y Co., Rochester, N. Y.

Duffys andkeepwell

i

For Early Fall

styles for Fall-—thumb the fine fabrics,

inspect the beautiful workmanship, glory in the smart array of exclusive patterns, and try on a few suits before our big mirror.

Superb

well dressed for less money than you ever paid. Price $20 to $30. Others at $10, $12, $15 and $18.

TUST arrived:—our tirst series of Y Superb Fall Overcoats

Superb Overcoats

suit you will be mighty

See the New Fall Hats, the New Sweaters, New Shirts, Neckwear, etc. Call in and See 1 hem Tomorrow

THORMAN & SCHLOSS

Tailors, Clothiers, Hatters, Haberdashers

Double H&C Green Stamps Every Saturday and Monday

There Is a Chill In the Air

Youf thoughts now turn to warmer apparel and we are ready to supply .your tieeds. You can come here with confidence sure of finding just .the sort of goods that you have a right to expect from a store like Ours, and you will find them at right prices.

Autumn Fashibns in suits, coats, blouses, waists for young and old women. Clothing, shoes and everything else for women, children and men.

LADIES'SILK SKIRTS AT $6.98

We have just received a new shipment of silk striped skirts. These skirts are the newest models. Other stores charge $12.50. Special

2^ $6-98

Come and see them. One lot of ladies' allwool sweaters in all colors and sizes. $4.00 val-

&r.\ $1.98'

Ladies' fall and winter suits, some of them are silk poplin trimiiied with white and green. $18

IS $12-50

All kinds of children's school dress- OK es, from 25c to^

•,

FRIDAY, SeLr" 1 tsVlw&R 22, 'i/»$£?-

and

They represent styles that are a step ahead of the ordinary ready-for-wear clothe i. Overcoats that will appeal to you as a welldressed man, because they possess all the fine points of smart, hand tailoring, the same that you look for in high-priced clothes made by crack custom tailors.

Suits.

are moderately priced.

•Superb

Phones 13?

One lot of ladies' bath robes, beautifully made, in all colors and sizes.

££r™'...$2.98

Ladies' fancy shoes,, sold for $4.50 any place in town, spe- djQ J7K cial, $2.98 and^^* Ladies' Georgette crepe and crepe de chine waists, all colors and sizes. Spe- A /IQ cial, $2.48 and^*"*0 One lot of children's allwool sweaters in all colors and sizes, OK special, 98c Our winter coats are the latest and the best for the money. Prices from

$27.50

One lot of men's shoes, button or lace, all sizes, $4 values, (1J1 QQ special ...

411 Wabash -Ave.

TRY A TRIBUNE WANT AD., QNnE CENT A WORD, FOR BEST RESULTS

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