Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 September 1916 — Page 4

The Terr© Haute Tribune

A.ND GAZETTE.

An indcpertent nfwuynper. Dally Sandny. The Trrre Haute Gazette, established ISttO. Tlie Terre Haute Yrlbnne established ISM.

Telephones Business Department, •Ijoth phones, 37S Editorial Department, Citizens, 155 Central Union, 316.

In advance yearly by mail, Dailey and ^Sunday, $5.00. Dally only. $3.00. Sunday only, $2.00.

it

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

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

A Terre Haute nemapaper for Terre Haute people. The only paper In Terre Upute owned, edited and published by Terrt Hvnteans.

All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures

stnt!

to the Trib­

une are sent at the on ner's risk, ami the Tribune company expressly repudiates any liability or responsibility for their safe custody or return.

Only nevTMpaper In Terre Haute having full day leased wire service of Associated Press. Central Press association" service.

THE FLARE-BACK.

e a i o a e n o e o u n y a e

E* getting restless under Judge Hughes' charge that they got bilked in the seti tlement of the railroad strike, that they 1. Ijiad the wool pulled over their eyes, that the settlement Is a bad thing and AS that the workingmen did not know what they wer^ doing when they entered Into the agreement. The railroad

W,£ 'imen imply that they were represented iL^jJby just as able men as were the rail|J|.%bad managers and Judge Hughes' p5i*'t&ympathy for their "blunder" is getting ^on 1 their nerves. iK" Afigust Icks, general chairman of the railway trainmen of the Chicago & .."North Western railroad, 1b the first representative of the labor organizations to take exceptions to Judge

Hughes' patronizing the railroad men andin a statement to the press yesterMay he said that Judge Hughes better investigate the eight-hour law before |»e 'jumps into an attack on it. "The best that can lie said for Mr. Jfughes," Mr. Icks asserted, "is that he does not know what he is talking about. fie is going about the country declarS Ing that the Adamson law }s not an JT «ight-hour measure, but a law to force kn Increase in wages. It does not increase wages for any railraod employe fenless the road requires him to work beyond regular hours. If the road $oeB, iti has to pay the price. The railroad is penalized for'working an employe beyond ..the eight-hour limit, 0^hlch is the most effective encourage-

'ft.

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JN thgjit the road could be given to observe the eight-hour work day. The wnployes wanted to make the penalty 'working trainmen' niore than eight (hours :a day as nearly prohibitive as

Ipo^sible by assessing time and a half jfdr overtime, but waived that point for MJ^the sake of peace."

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Mr. Icks decliared the people of the country will give Mr. Hughes and his supporters on election day the most stinging rebuke in jrecent history for their misrepresentations and attacks' bn a great forward step for the bettering of working conditions.

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These unfounded attacks are makJng the working people of the country lighting mad," he said. "Nothing more

6n to action than what Mr. Hughes is

BMNK MOT WATEK W YOHJ ©ESME A 10SY COMPLEXION

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Says we can't help but look better and feel better after an inside bath.

A* To look one's best and feel one's best 1b to enjoy an inside bath each mornittg to flush from the system the prevl wis day's waste, sour fermentations r&nd poisonous toxins before it is absorbed into the blood. Just as coal, tirhen it burns, leaves behind a certain vrjsmount of incombustible material in the form of ashes, so the food and "drink taken each day leave in the alimentary organs a certain amount of

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Indigestible material, which if not eliminated, form toxins and poisons

which are then sucked Into the blood through the very duets which are intended to suck in only nourishment -to sustain the body. {l- If you want to see the glow of ,-Jiealthy bloom in your cheeks, to see ypur skin get clearer and clearer, ..you

Are told to drink every morning upon 'arising, a glass of hot water with a te^spoonful of limestone phosphate in -•It, which is a harmless means of wash.ifagf the. waste material and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary tract, before putting more food into the stomach.

Men and women with sallow skins, liver spots, pimples or pallid complexions, also those who wake up with a coated tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, others who are' bothered with headaches, bilious spells, acid stomach or constipation should begin this phosphated hot water drinking and are assured of very pronounced results in one or two weeks.

A quarter pound of limestone phos phate costs very little at the drug .Store but is sufficient to demonstrate that just as soap and hot water cleanses, purifies and freshens the .skin on the outside, so hot water and limestone phosphate act on the inside organs. We must always consider that

Internal sanitation is vastly more important than outside cleanliness, because the skin pores do not absorb imparities into the bloo^r' while the bowel,»pores do.

doing. In my judgment the count of ballots on election day will show the thoroughness with which the stand taken by Mr. Hughes has been rebuked. '"I did not vote for President Wilson four years ago. But entirely aside from his action in the railroad strike I and the other workingmen of the country would have ignored party lines to return him to the presidency. He Is bigger than any party. He Is the only president we have had that measures up to Lincoln. He has handled an endless succession of difficult problems In a most skillful manner, and the American people will show their admiration for him by the big vote they give him in November."

MIXED PICKLES.

Next to Judge Hughes' cold reserve' and his inability to. get in touch with the people, his greatest handicap probably is his bolting the platform of his party on the suffrage issue. The judge may be for suffrage, but the leap ahead of his party has confronted him with a dilemma from which he has been unable to free himself thus far In the campaign.

A cryptic question comes from a Tribune reader. It is addressed to Judge Hughes and concerns his repudiation of his own platform on the issue of suffrage, It is propounded by a person writing over his own signature. "Did Mr. Hughes not say," asks this correspondent, "to a committee of anti-suffragists comprising Mrs. Dodge, Mrs. Brock, Mrs. Breese, Mrs. Ford and Miss Chittenden, shortly before his acceptance of the nomination that—

I have always been opposed to woman suffrage, probably because Mrs. Hughes has always been strongly opposed, and my daughters, so far as they have thought at all, think with their mother. As a presidential candidate I shall not add to nor take away from the party platform.

The increasingly active feminist movement, to my mind, makes the ulti mate granting^ of votes to women lamentable but Inevitable. "A negative answer to this question would be .interesting," observes the writer who propounds it. And, one might add, an affirmative answer would be scarcely less interesting.

Lamentable but inevitable! Did the judge 'say it? If so, what a sudden change of mind Mrs. Hughes and the daughters must have undergone!

GERMAN-AMERICANS.

If Mr. ^Raymond Robins in his speech this evening explains the mental attitude of close friend and political intimate of Colonels Theodore Roosevelt towards the German-American he will have done,the public a service.

Colonel Roosevelt still insists that this nation punish the kaiser for the violation of Belgium's neutrality. The colonel still wants war witji Germany. If Colonel Roosevelt has told Mr. Robins the details of his plan to punish the falser the people would be interested in knowing it. I

The Fatherland for this week reflects the mind of

vtbe

German citizens of

this country in the following editorial: "Poor COlonel Roosevelt! What further embarrassments has tricky destiny in store for him? "Not long ago the

swashbuckling

colonel was vociferating his loudest on behalf of the American Defense society, of which he was a member of the advisory board. At that very moment It came out that the 'We Soys,' a group of merry New York grafters, had been engaged to gather funds for the society and most of the money was going into their pockets. The colonel

had never since opened his mouth onjharbor

behalf of the defense society. "Now It comes out that the colonel was a member of the allies' hospital relief commission, of which the directorgeneral, Dr. Charles T. Baylls, was indicted on the allegation that of $8,000 collected by the commission, not one cent had been turned over to the hospitals of the allied. "Colonel Roqsevelt attempted to whitewash Dr. Baylis, but District Attorney Swann says the 'dlrector-gen-eral* must stand trial.

the fe|erai

1

"Tarred with the same brush as Theodore Roosevelt, Morgan's, man Bacon went down to! ignominious defeat. The indorsement of Theodore Roosevelt was fatal to the hopes of his protege."

As Fatherland remarks, destiny seems to be playing tricks on Colonel Roosevelt, but remembering the colonel's offer of Henry Cabot Lodge to his progressive friends as -a candidate for progressive, president establishes the fact that the colonel can play a trick once in a while himself.

PET ANIMALS.

Dr. Willien, of the board ,of health, has a bulletin on the infantile paralysis situation which says that 175,000 cats and dogs have been destroyed as part of the fight against the plague in New York City.

Lovers ot these animals will no doubt be shocked to hear of this, yet most of these pets were killed at the request of their owners, who presumably were fond of the animals, but had come to consider the lives of their own children of infinitely greater value in the face of an epidemic menace.

Aside from infantile paralysis, there are other serious epidemics periodically

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with us, and as cats and dogs gather infectious germs in their hair they are frequently carriers of diphtheria, scarlet fever, measles and other serious contagions.

Children love these four-footed playfellows, but, as one bulletin issued by

health department points

out, they are apt to contaminate them with their mouth and nasal secretions through coughing and sneezing, as well as through the habit of affectionately burying their faces in the fur of the animals.

While the cat and dog are allowed to associate intimately with children and are given free access to our homes, we

a constant and convenient

TERRS HAUTE TRIBUNE.

car-

rier for diphtheria and other communicable diseases.

The 10-cent loaf may not prove an unmixed evil. Think of the number of old-fashioned cooks its arrival may drive to making that delicious corn bread!

A million Chinese are homeless because of the great floods. Between the Japanese and the deep sea John Chinaman has an unhappy time.

When this cruel war is over what a lot of ex-monarchs there are going to be for our chautauqua managers to pick from!

Why wouldn't it be a good stunt for all the rest of the belligerents to quit and let Roumania and Bulgaria fight it out?

The Greek ultimatum has gone into the scrap-of-paper collection.

TEN YEARS AGO TODAY. From the Tribune File*.

Sept. 25, 1906.

Dr. Charles Fleming, of this city, was called to Dayton, O., to consult with the Ohio state veterinarian.

The "Vandalia Railroad company be gan the laying of a special track to the site of the plant of the Terre Haute Malleable and Maufacturing comany,

George W. Brown, of Paris, 111., superintendent of the Edgar county schools, delivered an address before the school teachers of Brazil and Haute.

George Hargrove, Wellington O] ner, Harry Littlejolm, Harry and Harry Cole will represe ,United Mine Workers of Distf 11 at the meeting of the State/ tion of Labor.

HOROSCOPE.

"The Stars Incline, rfut Do Not Compel." Copyright, 1915, by the -McClure

Newspaper Syndicate.

Tuesday, September 26, 1916.

Astrologers And that two good stars rule this day, although there are mild adverse influences. The sun is in beneficent aspect .from morning- until night, While Jupiter and Mars are mildly evil in their aspect.

It is primarily a day for pushing all business or professional interests. The rule is believed to make persons in high places sympathetic and helpful. Political candidates should utilize the advantages which this sway promises.

The planetary government is most favorable for spiritual and intellectual unfoldment. The seers predict that minds everywhere will awaken to superb. possibilities and that art and literature will benefit.

V

Many Reasons for Every Woman Regardless of Her Income

To Buy At

Harvey Furniture

Granting that the right sort of Furniture is essential to every home, every woman, regardless of how little she cares to spend, wants to be sure

furnished not only in the best taste, but at the lowest possible prices (all prices at Harvey's are marked in plain figures).

When you enter the Haryey Store, with its quiet, refined atmosphere, a store where every detail of service to you

is exacting and based on quality alorte-—take

your t.me and select the things you w.ant, undisturbed and at. your leisure. (That's the right way to buy furniture).

You can't possibly make a wrong choice because the very heart of this establishment depends upon your good will, that's the foundation upon which this institution has been founded and built through many years, for each item in our entire stock, whether a single chair or complete outfit, is bought right and priced right.

Your charge account is most welcome at Harvey's, and you receive the same values as though you paid cash. Terms of payment may be arranged on a weekly or monthly basis.

Many Specials Are Featured for Monday and Tuesday.

Cbme as Early as You Can.

HARVEY FURNITURE CO.

668431 Wabash Avenue Wholesale and Retail

nosticated and railway accidents are predicted. The rise of is prophesied. with the west.

new woman financier She will be identified

Chicago has the augury of a year of vast gains in business. Artistic enterprises will also flourish.

Persons whose birthdate it is should pay strict attention to practical things during the coming year. Speculation will be peculiarly unfortunate.

Children born on this day may have rather a hard time to make a living. These subjects of Libra are often too much inclined to pleasure, but they are likely to be gifted.

BREEZY BITS.

.As the stage coach careened toward the edge of the cliff, the timid tourist gazed anxiously down at the brawling stream 300 feet below. "Do people fall over this precipice often?" she asked.

The driver clucked to his broncos. "No, madam," he returned -placidly "never but once."—The Christian Herald.

P&tisncc

In October a surprising incident will new suit? arouse public indignation and affect Patrice—Yes: the national election, the seers declare,

To add dinger to your sales—to carry a cheery message—to serve you in every emergency

WESTERN UNION

is awake and always ready. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CQ

Have you seen Peggy's isn't it too ridiculous I like it. too.—Yonk-

f°patience—Yes

Storms of unusual violence are prog- I ers Statesman.

that her home is

on L/OU

Need. ''Pep

t| You can get your Chero-Cola "In a Bpttk -Through a Straw, at Soda Fountains and other Refreshment Stands.

Everybody knows it by its name

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Chero-Cola

THERES NONE SO GOOD