Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 September 1916 — Page 9
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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1916.
DELUGE HENRY FORD
His Expression for Wilson Unique in the History of American Politics.
DETROIT, Mich., Sept.
29.—So
im
pressed have people been with Henry Ford's statement "Why I Am For Wilson," that a movement was launched here t'oHay for a National Ford Owners' and Employes' Wilson club. Ford h/mself has been deluged with telegrams from Ford owners all over the country
congratulating
him on his
clear and emphatic statement as to why President Wilson should be reelected. Ford's statement was one of the unique and interesting documents in American politics. In it he said: "I'm for Wilson," said Ford, "because he is onto the interests—the unseen hands that seek to control government—and is holding them off, as Is proven by his refusal to rush into war with Mexico, sacrificing the lives of thousands of young Americans, to save the dollars that Wall street has invested in Mexico on a gamble. "But for purely business reasons, which may appeal more directly to "many men, the welfares of the country demands Wilson's re-election. The republicans are raising a great roar about the eight-hour law and h'ow it will hamper business. I say—und I speak from experience, not from gueSfc-work—that the eight-hour law will, help business. Business men and employers who are hostile to the eighthoukr day do not know their business. "We have had the eight-hour day in force in the Ford factory for three years, and we have made more money each succeeding year under it. It has proved its own merit.
Punctures The Tariff.
."The business of the United States today has a momentum that no man or group of men can stop. As ror tne tariff, which the republicans insist must be revised to help save our prosperity after the war, I want to say that the tariff is nothing but a hot-house remedy. ''It may make business sprout for a little while, but its effect is artificial and it never can produce a hardy, permanent business plant. "i' know Hughes. Teddy and Wall street are behind him. "I'm a republican, but I'm for Wilson. I'm a republican for the same reason I have ears—I was born that way. But I'm for Wilson because I believe he can do more to enhance the prosperity and assure peace for this nation, than any other candidate. "Anyone who does not want peace and who wants to gamble, with prosperity should vote agaist him."
WIFE CHARGES CRTJELTY.
Elsie Fry Friday morning brought puit in the Superior Court for a divorce from William A. Fry on the grounds of cruel and inhuman treatment:- She says they were married in "1902 and that during the past four years of their married life he has been quarrelsome and constantly nagged at hen :vh A:
THE TRIBUNE CLASSIFIED PAGE ta the greatest real estate market of western Indiana and eastern Illinois.
is
Orig tit en Your Front Now It
an easy matter
to keep trade coming your way if you use Electric Signs and Electric Advertising displays to flash your name into the minds of passing crowds.
An Electric Sign
Is a Year-Round Investment
In summer or winter an Electric sign will draw people into your store. The long, dark Fall evenings are especially propitious for the use of an Electric Sign. Cool weather brings the crowds out onto the streets—an Electric Sign will bring them to your store.
Telephone C. U. 343, Cit. 168 and we will send a man to explain.
T. H., I. and E. Traction Co.
Terminal Arcade, 820-22 Wabash Avenue,
fc
J"
a
The Miracle Shoe
works wonders with the feet. It raises the weak or broken-
down arch to its normal position. It makes walking easier, as well as prevents the ultimate breaking down of the arch so commonly experienced by persons who are constantly on their feet.
"Thorp's ^lour Trouble!"
The Miracle Shoe relieves the foot of all strain. It corrects any foot ills. It combines the desir able qualities of the best shoes with its own distinctive feature of the built-in arch support.
The Miracle Shoe is exceptionally neat in appearance and in good taste anywhere. The price is $6. On sale at
PEYTON BROS.
1115 Wabasb Ave. Shoes of Character
IE DOC STAYS AT BEDSIDEOFWOUNDEDWIFE
Continued From Page On*.
light when it was found that Mrs. Belzer had bought a return ticket to New %ark, which she would hardly h%ve done had she planned to kill Graveur
and the woman with him and then commit suicide. It is believed now the revolver she used was Graveur's, that she found it when she first entered his room, and that its possession, and not a prearranged plan, suggested the shooting. "My sister didn't have murder In her heart when I parted with her Tuesday afternoon," said Miss McAndrews.
Mrs. Le Due's Statement. Mrs. Le Due gave a statement to the detectives, in which she said: "It is untrue that I registered with Graveur at the hotel as his wife. I left New York Tuesday afternoon after visiting my sister and came to Philadelphia to visit my nephew. After visiting my nephew I received a telephone call from Mr. Graveur, asking me to meet him in the evening. I met him at the hotel and he invited me to go to the theater. I had no baggage with me except a small handbag. Mr. Graveur suggested I leave my handbag in his room and I agreed to do so. "On our return from the theater we had something to eat on the roof garden of the hotel and about 1 o'clock I told him It was time for me to go to my nephew's home. I then remembered my handbag in his room. We stopped by at the room to get it. We had barely stepped into the room and just a8 I was about to pick up the handbag near the dresser a woman jumped out of the closet. She began to shoot. That is all I remember."
Mysterious Other Woman. While Mrs. Le Due at Jefferson hospital prepared for an operation which physicians have declared necessary to Save her life Joseph C. Le Due, the Chicago haberdasher and golfer, emerged, hollow eyed and nerve racked, into a corridor. Here he faced Miss Anna McAndrews, sister of Mrs. Harry Belzer, the Brooklyn woman who shot Mrs. Le Due in the room of Joseph C. Graveur of New York, killed Graveur, and then committed suicide.
1
Hueband's Faith Unshaken. To newspaper men and a coroner's detective Le Due declared his complete faith in his wife's innocence of any wrongdoing. He had talked with her in the hospital and. with her hand in his, had listened to her story of the strange chain of circumstances of which, she said, she had been the victim. Then, he told his interviewers, he investigated the' story and found it' true in every detail.
This account Mr. Le Due wired in detail to newspapers. While he was
MORE RHEUMATISM THAH EVER BEFORE
Clergymen, Lawyers, Brokers, Mechanics and Merchants Stricken. Our old friend Rheumatiz is having his inning this year, and a few words of caution from one who knows all about it may not be amiss.
Wear rubbers in damp weather keep your foet dry drink plenty of lemonade, and avoid strong alcoholic drinks.
If rheumatism gets you, or sciatica, and you have sharp twinges, gnawing pain or swollen joints or muscles, you can get rid of all agony in just a fewdays by taking one-half Leaspoonful of Rheuma once a day.
All druggists know about Rheuma it's harmless, yet powerful cheap, yet sure, and a 50-cent bottle will last a long time.. Ask Baur'g Pharmacy or any1 druggist
»*"*£!i
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TEREE HAUTE TBIBUNE.
4.50 Trim'd Velvet
hats
All brand new smart velvet hats, trimmed in fancy feathers and remnants choice at
\l
75c F1d. Night Shires at 44c 55c Heavy Underwear at 39c
Child's 75c Union Suits
For boys and girls, fleeced ,or ribbed, all sizes special sale price
.50 BLANKETS
I
Lar
Large size cotton I blankets, gray or tan I with fancy colored
I
outlining it at the hospital Miss McAndrews interrupted him. "Mr. Graveur and my sister were betrothed," she said, looking straight at Le Due. "Mrs. Le Due came between them and my sister was jilted. I know that is true, and it is a thing that should be told. I want to protect my sister as much as you wish to protect your wife."
Who Registered With Him? On one point Miss McAndrews won the police over to her way of thinking. This was that Mrs. Belzer was not the woman who was registered at the hotel as Graveur's wife. "That woman," said Miss McAndrews, "was light haired, while my sister's hair was dark." "She's right in that," remarked a detective. "I've investigated that. The woman who went to the hotel with Graveur had light hair."
Mrs. Le Due is a striking blonde, but Miss McAndrews did not press the obvious inference, and Le Due declared a third woman, neither his wife nor Mrs. Belzer. was the one wno snared Graveur's room.
Some Mysteries Left.
The police declare themselves puzzled over this theory of Le Due's as to the presence of a third woman. According to Mrs. Le Due's statement to Coroners Detective Frank Paul, Graveur,
$3 NEW FALL SILK VELVET SHAPES
In the new small and medium size hats, sailors, tricorns, turbans,^mushrooms, polks, In all the leading colors largest variety to choose from at
$7.50 Trimmed Velvet Hats at $4.49 Children's $1.50 Velvet Hats at 98c $2.00 Silk Velvet Shapes at 98c
tine $1.25 Fleeced or Ribbed
$1.25
Mediiim or heavyweight ribbed and fleeced union suits for fall or winter wear, regular $1.25 values, all sizes, special sale at
DRESS SHIRTS
Newest fall patterns with soft or laundered cuffs all coat styles speoial price
6Sc
Beautiful new fall silk neckwear in a large assortment of patterns. Sale price
50c Flannel Petticoats
For women, fine quality flannelette or seersucker stripe ginghams, at
44c
39c
98c
borders special Sat-
I
urday for
Men's 25c Silk Hose at 18c 35c Police Suspenders at 17c
Girls' 89c Dresses
e a u i u a e plaids, belted effect with collars, all sizes sale price
59c
3
$15 New Fall
COATS
Beautiful big flare plaids and new novelty mixtures, velvet and fur trimmed every coat in this lot made to sell at $15. Special at
n
•f •S *-v
Tomorrow Begins Our Famous Semi-Annual
SALE SAMPLE SUITS, COATS, DRESSES!
Exclusive Fall Styles at Popular Prices
WONTS $18.50 FALL SUITS
500 brand new suits made up in serges, whipcords, some fur trimmed, new collars and belted effects, full flare cut, all sizes for women and misses suits you cannot duplicate elsewhere for less than $18.60
9.95
Sensational Underprlced Sale ol Fall Millinery)
78c
35c SILK NECKWEAR
Child's 50c Sleepers
For boys and girls, knit sleepers special sale price tomorrow at
39c
526-528
noon, said, "I am down here with a Mrs. Belzer and I want to shake her and get away."
Why Graveur should have suggested that Mrs. Le Due accompany him to his room when he was already implicated with two other women, the Chlcagoan admitted he could not explain. Nor did he explain his wife's statement that Graveur, on entering the room before the shooting, expressed surprise that "some one had been there."
According to Guy Miller, manager of the .Hotel Walton, one of Mrs. Le Due's shoes was unbuttoned when he found her, wounded, after the tragedy. This statement is borne out by the house detective and city detectives who assisted in her removal from the hotel.
ARRANGE UNION SERVICES.
$1.49
e a u i u e o e e crepes, charming new styles, crepe de meteors, taffetas, some emb'd, others lace trimmed ..
Sg.oo SILK WAISTS
New China and Jap silks, also voile and lingerie blouses, embroidery and lace trimmed, AO all new fall shades special at %/0C
Child's 50c Rompers
39c
y
Wabash
Ave
Meet
Methodist Congregations to Sunday at First Church. The congregations of the variohs Methodist, churches of the city have been invited to attond Sunday morning services at the First Methodist church. All of the pastors are attending the conference at Greencastle and on account of this a special service has been arranged at the First Methodist church.
The sermon will be delivered by Rev.
•when he •'telephoned to her at Richard H. Crovdei and there will be
special musical features. The chorus choir, under the direction of Mrs. Oti3, will render "Crossing the Bar." Mrs. David Silverstein will sing "The Lord is My Light," by Frances Alletson. After the sermon Mr. Weston will sing "Sing Ye Praise," by Mendelssohn.
The Epworth league will meet as
WOMEN'S $25 FALL SUITS
Hundreds of beautiful new fall suits including poplins, serges, all with guaranteed satin linings, in countless styles of semi-fltted or belted models, copies of high priced models that sell for $40 and $50 in exclusive shops, at
$30.80 Plush
COATS
Beautiful Saltz plush coats in a wealth of fur trimmings, coats that you will pay $30 for elsewhere, special duriijg this sale at
22.50
WOMEN'S $30.00 FALL SUITS AT $18.50 WOMEN'S$5.00 FALL DRESS SKIRTS, $2.87
$15 SATIN OR SERGE
Dresses
Smart new models made of extra fine quality satin and serge. Save from one to five dollars by getting your new dress here today or tomorrow, at
7.95
$5 GEOftGET E CREPE WAISTS
$3.00 SILK WAISTS
Dainty new crepe de chines, all over laces, satin stripes, etc., new collar effects, (hi AQ black, white, peach, flesh, coral tpX.c/O
Women's 79c Dress Aprons
Galateas, ginghams or flannelette, several styles, all sizes, sale price
In mediaeval days when armed foes met in belligerent strife, victory was the reward of the best equipped, accoutred and PROTECTED. PROTECTION against the slings, arrows and Javelins of the enemy was the deciding
element between victory and defeat. The chief element that decides between good and bad health, U PROTECTION AGAIN ST DISEASE. We are all prone to be more or less lacking In the care of our health, and all too often overstep the bounds of resistance againstdisease, and find ourselves suddenly "checked up" and feeing a "spell of sickn ess" that proper preparedness might have entirely prevented. WHAT IS PREPAREDNESS? It is STS-S. the GREAT NATIONAL BLOOD PURIFIER, that builds the new tissue, purifies and revitalise* the blood. If you are afflicted put on the S. S. S. armor—the mighty shl eld and buckler" against disease. Write at once for free books on BLOOD AND SKINDISEASES: or write to our MEDICAL ADVISORY DEPARTMENT for free advfce.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY 165 Swift Budding, Atlanta, Ca.
•W-.
—ms£
V/S*.
wm
4.00 Lyon's Silk Velvet SHAPES
Genuine Lyon's silk velvet shapes, also hatter's plush and mirror silk velvet shapes in all the^ wanted shades, including purple choice
2.49
SPEC'L SALE of ORNAMENTS
Up to $3.00 beaded and fancy ornaments—
Up to $2 beaded and fancy ornaments—
Uy-
pii •J**
Up to $1.50 beaded and fancy ornaments—
98c
79
$2.00 Long Kimonos
Light and dark fast color housedress aprons, all sizes sale price
lannelette or crepe flowered and oriental patterns sale price
BOYS' $5 SUITS
Blue serge or fancy worsted novelties new Norfolk coats and full cut knickers sizes 6 to 16. Saturday
asasmsaEsapfp
o'clock in the evening-?"^.
usual at 6:30 but there will be no evening preaoliin sr.
RENT YOUR HOUSE,
No house will remain vacant long If advertised in The Tribune. Twelve words, three days, for 30 cefits.
