Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 September 1918 — Page 4
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The Terr© Haute Tribune
AKT) OAXKTTF,
An indrprntlrnf iK-u»p»per. Daily •4 Snndny. 'I'In- Tprro llnutr Gairttr, patablUhrd ls«P. The Ten* Ilaate frtbanr, r«(aliU*h«4 1MM.
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Kritered as aeeondelnsa matter, January 1, 1908, at the pnstoflNe.e at Terre
Haute, Indiana, under the act of congress of March 5, 1S79. •7
Only nrw*p»)ier in Tprre l:iatr havI*bk
foil day Iwnfd wlrr nrrvlw
nt
A«-
noclated l'rcf»*_ Central l'ttu association »*-rvirf:
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JTKWBRR OFTTIK ASSOCIATED FRBRR The A—arlated Prm ft* eirlnlTctr eatitlfd to tkr one for repabliratfoa of all arm ilnpatfkea credited to It or •ot otberwlae credited la tfcta paper aad ala* tk« loral ac«i paklUcd here la.
All rifkta of nvablieatlM of apodal Oftttfcea kerehi are alao reaci »«d»
ENJOY YOUR AUTUMN.
lh A-—.
The Fourth Liberty LiOan can be put •ver like rolling off a log if all the men who are getting war prices and war wages and war profits will subscribe liberally instead of tightening up. The farmer la the lad toward whom we •hall look expectantly during the next two weeks, iiThe loan cannot go over in triumphant style unless the farmer comes across with great big generous subscriptions. This is not going to be a satisfactory autumn for the man who can afford to take $1,000 and who offers ta take fSf. The army wouldn't go vary tar tf each soldier took a halfhearted pop at the enemy and then hid behind a tree. Shoot all the ammunition you can getl Go after the bonds. Buy early. lon*t compel a committee to come around and ooax you.
VOTES AND BANDAGES. ——. On a pare of the Tribune a tew days age appeared a description of a public bonfire bald by Washington militant igiata who burned a message of sympathy from President Wilson.
Tha sole support which the women harrs received from tha president, according to this faction's leaders has baen 'words, worda, .words,** and the aatton wai mtendad to announce to him and to the whole worVl that "wvtds ahall not longer bo the only *Wpty gtven to woman.1*
On the BUM page te an emergency (BaD for Bad Croaa surgical dressing •Mtui a touohlng appeal for several tana aC dothtng fur destitute Belgium
Item aboot the work being dope for |anch war orphans and .a note relat-
*»Tb» body Is a highly •MM'iuiwt of compfirated parts kk wfafcfe the Btutnach, liver and the kidneys work for the common good. Dmage to any one of these organs interferes with man as a motor iwhaiiiam. If you dean the stomach, lrrer and bowels occasionally with a gentle laxatl^a yon can keep wefl. Too mach foel in man's machine, saeh as eating too moeh meat, or alcohol or tea, nerroos otei weak and lack of exercise in ootdoor air faring constipation and had health. Eat less meat, plenty •4-- of Tegetablea, and with air and good exercise yon need little else. If the liver needs rousing—aftd most at as need this once a week—take a
that due*
mint1 with zuad
ir
lug that high achool girls, enthused by the military drill of their brothers, are petitioning the school authorities for a similar drilL
On the front page
A CLEAN STOMACH
Ik
While the nation's head is shouldering the tremendous responsibility of the most momentous problems in history, many women are laboring unceasingly to relieve the suffering of a world at war, and one group is clamoring londjy for their •"rights."
Even the most ardent suffragists deplore such action at such & time, as not only unpatriotic but very detrimental to the effuse. Many states have granted equal suffrage to women. The time seems not distant when the whole country will grant It,., because Amer-. lean fnen.are willing to concede to their women whatever of equality they a s k
Tfts prtvtlegre to- -rots on political question* should not be pat ahead of the nation's right*. Anguish and death win
not result Cram tho lack of the •ota. It will coma from the lack of bandagea. ammunition and clothes.
THE DIFFERENCE,
September 28 has been set tor the beginning of tha Fourth Liberty Loan drlva aad It Is important (1st) that it shall bo as largely oversubscribed as former loans (2nd) that it shall be oversubscribed quickly. An immediate oversubscription will do inore than anything else to hasten victory. Delay, on the other hand or a falling off in subscriptions, might revive the waning hopes of the enemy. The boys at the front are risking their all—the folks at home can afford to risk their money. The government cannot promise that any son loaned to the army or navy will come home, but every dollar loaned has a guaranteed return, and it not only comes bade without a wound but it brings with it a rate of Interest higher than the average rate paid by the savings banks of the country. Subscribing for Liberty Bonds is the easiest form of patriotism there is.
v. WAR "LECTURES." "N
S
It la
a
weil known fact that several
of the most popular "war books" wbJah are supposed to be the first hand experiences of their authors were written by literary hacku, Ono of these successful war books, which sold upward of 600,000 copies and which was pronounced the most realistic of all of Its kind, was written by a poor literary hack who received less than $1,000 for his work. This professional writer had never bean oast of Sandy Hook, yet his descriptions of Franco in war time ware pronounced "remarkable."
Just before Thomas J. Gray (tailed for France as a member of an entertainment unit a
.J'
lyfalran a Well Han
The Exceptional Man
..-X -n- I V
Oiilv exceptional men are shrewd enough to make Iff money in business, but anybody has sense enough to save money. To be among the forehanded in this world, all the genius you need is enough to save. -t
ThisJbank will help you.
i
Terre Haute Savings Bank
Southwest Corner Sixth and Ohio Streets.
mm
the news of the
reply made to the Austrian peace offering by the United States through Preside Wilson.
prominent lyceum
manager came to his office* and an-
(vrittJ^araB4 safe -vegetable cjitiact of the leaves of aloe, May&pple, root of jslsqpt, made Into a tiny, sugarcoated pffl, sold by almost every druggist, as Dr. Pierce's Pleasant
Pellets, and first pot np nearly fifty years ago. jn vials, twentyfive cents.
Most peofda die eventually of an over-acid ajndition. If the blood can be rendered more alkaline, the kmger we lire. With regular hours, six to eight gl—w i'i at water betimm meals, sensible coarse food and a chance to get the poisons out of the tystexn, a man will live to be a hundred. But, unfortunately, ocr highly nervous way of living taings increased storage of uric add in the body. This sets as a poison, and consequently we suffer from headaches, neuralgia, lumbago, aches or pains, rhoo* matism, gout.
Get rid of this uric add poison by taking a harmless medicine, called Amine, which throws oat the uric acid by stimulating the kidneys. Drink a pint of hot water before meals and take Anuric (double strength), after meab and at bed time. Anuric ean be obtained at almost any drug store for sixty oents, or send a dime to Doctor Pierco, Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. for trial package. —Advertisement.
On Face and Arms. Disfigured and Kept Awake, Cuticura Healed.
"My face and arms broke out with small pimples. The pimples came to a bead, and then burst leaving hard red places which burned so that I was compelled to lie awake nights and scratch. My face was disfigured. 'I had suffered for two years when I sent for a sample of Cuticura. I bought more, and I used nearly four cakes of Soap and two boxes of Ointment, and 1 am healed." (Signed) Misa Bessie Johnson, Richmond Dak, Ohio, Dec. 14,1917..
Why not use these fragrant, so percreamy emollients for every-day toilet and nursery purposes and prevent these distressing skin troubles. taut ImI Tv— WMdL AUraa p«a in •Mnn, D«pt H, iMttt. SoM afc Soar Be. Omtmat tS and Me. Taicm Sa.
nouncad that he bad a famous fighter Under contract for vaudeville tear. This fighter had had many thrilling experiences at the front and the lyceum manager asked Gray, who is an author of vaudeville sketches and monologs, to write a twelve-minute monolog of thafighter's oxperienoei in ,the trenches. "An right," said Gray, when the financial matters had been selled. "Send your brave soldier lad In to see me to give me the facts. Pll need some dope before I can write the stuff for him." "Don't bother about that," replied ftie lyceum manager,. "Write any old thing, just so lonp as it's thrilling and has a few Jokes in it." "But I've never been at the front," protested Gray. 1 don't know anything about it"
WHAT- JHAVE YOU GOT?
This week the Red Cross is collecting garments for the destitute people of invaded Belgium and France. Every kind of garment for all ages and both sexes is needed. Garments of strong material Which Will give real Service are preferred.
"lloti*t get impatient because we don't march right into Metz. Even the Yanks are going to take their time about the reduction of the strongest single fortified position in the world.
,^|The, kaiser speaks of his "death defying navy." Right-o—and "tha deifying isk» mighty good in the protected .waters of the Kiel canal.
Hlndenburg issues
a
statement ex
pressing confidence that his army will soon "stop American insolence." Why, have our boys been acting impolite?
jThe Invincible union—fighting lars and fighting me|
-fAx
jtot-
Put yonr dollars into khaki! Liberty Bonds.
BuV
Back the fighting men with the fighting loan.
"Austria's peace offensive 9el-tainly is.
Bonds btiy "bayonets.
HOROSCOPE..
Tfca atara IaeUoe, Bat D* Mat OaateL" Copjrrtjrht, 1915. by t»# VcClure
Newspaper Syndicate.
Wednesday, September 25^ 1918.
The hours of greatest human activity this day are guided by kindly stars according to astrology. Neptune and Jupiter are in benefic aspect.
It is a rule under whioh to: jmStr'Sll business interests. Buying and speculation are subject to influences believed to promise gain.
Initiative is well directed. Plans aa well as actions are supposed to be favored by the stars.
There is a sign making for great commercial enterprises that combine altruistic and gainful aims.
University professors as well as the heads of famous educational institutions have the promise of honors and fame after the war, when they will bs called to important public service.
The seers declare that in the coining year colleges and schools will make much progress in practical training for the needs of a new era that is dawning.
Serious fires, attended by explosion?, are prognosticated for more than one American city this autumn aad
tha
coming winter. Some sort of trouble especially affecting France and Russia ia foreshadowed.
Earthquakes are likely to disturb the western pnrt of England and a disaster due to seismic shock is presajred for the twelth degree east longitude.
Holland comes under a plajietary direction that should benefit the cotintry.
Hoapitals wffl ©eeapy puhTff attention in the United States from this time on throngrh the winter. Institutions will benefit and great achievements are indicated for American burgeons.
Lncrease in the birthrate wflf be appreciable during the next two months and many boys will be born. There is a good sign for the welfare of mothers.
Per.sons whose birthdate it is have the outlook of a quiet year. The. young will seek social advantages, Iomestic friction is to be avoided!.
Children born 011 this day are likely to be very artistic and talented, but inclined toward untidiness and carelessness^ -L-~i
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._ .....,- ...
IERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE.
SAYS DEMOCRATS IN IMMAHA HAVE MARGIN
Cincinnati Enquirer Sizes Up Political Conditions As Fall Election Approaches.
A political writer in tha Cincinnati Enquirer has written a letter on political conditions In this st&tfe.: He saya the predominant sentiment arnoirgf Indiana voters is t© stand by the president, to elect men who are known to be in uncompromising sympathy with the president in his war plans and to make this nation appear as a unit to Germany On the day after the election.
He says these conditions give tha democrats a large margin. His letter follows:
Regardless of the attitude of the party leaders the war will be the overshadowing feature in the election. Among the republicans there is a deep conviction that if they were ooliged to make their campaign on the accomplishments of their state administration they would receive a wallop early in November that would force them to take the count for at least two years. The war has enabled them to get away from state issues, which eeeraa fortunate for their ticket*.
The merits of some of the measure proposed by Governor Goodrich and indorsed by the state convention as a part of the platform are not considered by a large element within the party which is opposed to them and which would welcome the election of a democratic legislature. There is no disguising the fact that many business men who have been regular contributors to the republican campaign fund are rentiers over the prospect of another fight for the enactment of an excise tax law, although Governor Goodrich never has said t^at ha will have the bill reintroduced.
The effort of tha present state administration to hold a constitutional convention in the face of the tremendous majority against the proposal at the referendum in 1914. haa left a bad taste with thousands of conservative men.. The enactment of the state-wide prohibition law has hurt the republicans in many cities—particularly in Gary, Hammond, East Chicago, South Bend, Terra Haute, Ft. Wayne and Evansville.
It wouldn't have made so much difference If the republican leaders had not assured the brewers and the saloon men generally two years ago that the liquor question was out of politics and that if their side was victorious there woold be no further prohibitory
CUT THIS OUT—IT IS WORTH MONEY. DON'T MTSS THIS. Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c and mall it to Foley A Co, 2SS5 Sheffield avenua, Chicago, HI.,
WTiting
your name and
address clearly. You will receive in return a trial packaga containing Foley's Honey and Tar Compound, for coughs, colds and croup: Foley's Kidney Pills, for pain in sides and back rheumatism, backache, kidney and bladder ailments and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly cleansing cathartic, for constipation, biliousness, headache and sluggish bowels. Valentine's Economical Drug Store, £34 Wabash avenue.—Advertisement. ...
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65
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—LUMBER —HOOTON
(All Mean flic same)
STYLE FOR FALL,
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CpnriigKi, 1911, A. S. GncUna Onav
legislation. Representatives of the republican organization fiho assisted the county committee last week in registration matters found in many localities a deep soreness over the passage of the prohibition law, although it is not the issue it might have been if the people were not so much interested in every phase of the war.
The pledge of the republican convention to place great power in the hands of the governor in abolishing offices and making appointments has not benefited the party. It bids fair to lose some members Of tha legislature in the close districts and to cause a bad split in their organization if the republicans should happen to gain control of both branches of the general assembly. All these state questions, however, seem merely incidental to the campaign. If the democrats win it will be due to the feeling of a majority of the voters that the best
nwmfmfwt
u sow or*
1 mm
BOVE all things, avoid the frivolous and short'lived in men's fashions For the patriotic obligation rests upon us all not to discard wearable clothes merely because we have grown tired of the style Kirschbaum models are spirited, yet sane—original, yet always in good taste The sort tnatwill be just as much beyond criticism next spring as they are today*
cJ(irschbaum (Clothes
UPTO $45
512-^14 WABASH AVE.
way to "stand by the president" in the prosecution of the war is to elect members of his party to office.
If the republicans win it will be dna to their ability to organize, their superior campaign fund and to tha conviction of the rank and file of their party that they are actually the war party, as Chairman Will Hays, of the national committea, claims. It does not appear likely that there will be a republican
victory
that might ba
traced to a secret opposition of the war policies of the present administration, which the republicans boast their own members of congress have supported mora loyally than hava the democrats.
It is understood that the republican leaders are giving out the dope that they will ckrry Indiana by from 40,000 to 60,000, which recalls their predictions of 1916, when right up to the election they said that Hughes and Fairbanks would sweep Indiana by at
wm
SHOES
This SDOGf PBCtttse it farojsncs totn uomtorr Style* is s Walk-Over leader. It has a heel and toe for the sidewalk—a toe and top for tha office, sod
It
(•tTCSDAV, SEPTEMBER 24, I91#r'
least SO,M0. It turned ont that they were very hicky in carrying the state for Hugbas by less than 7,000. They may consider themselves fortunate If they do aa well this year.
XEN TEARS AGO TODAY, syoaa no Trltaaa lllea.
September 24, 1908. J"
Tha board of public works accepted., tha paving of South Ninth street. I The Indiana State Normal School T. W. C. A. opened headqnartera at i 414 North Sixth atreet.
Many local Presbyterians want to Evansville to attend tha aeesioua of I tha Indiana Presbytery.
Albert Goodman, tha oldest switch--man in the city, was given a reception by the Switchmen's Upion.
••I
ivm
The
BALIOUR
Price
$8
A Modern Shoe—An Old-Fashioned Price
jf yon seed shoes, there hi no economy hi Waiting until they coat more. If we won th« war tomorrow, leather wouldn't be pleatiiul lor some time.
contains room for one entire foot.
It is s favorite with men of all ages. You •ee, besides Comfort and Style, it brings witb it the famous Walk-Over Quality.
Look at its fine, thoroughbred fines, and then take a peep back at the price. There is economy in getting socb a shoe st such a price.
Cheney's Walk-Over Boot Sbop
551 Wabash Avenue
aiiii
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