Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 November 1918 — Page 4
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The TerreHaufe Tribune
AND 6AIGTTI.
Aa Inlrpcadrat Mmpaiwr. DallJ ••4 Rntar. The T«rre Haute Gucttti ntnbllihed 1868. The Terr* BM(I rrlhane, «it*bltikr 1894.
Telephones Business Department, both phones, S7S Editorial Department. Cttlsena, 165 Central Union, SIC. 'I la advance by mail, dally, 13.00 per |rear. Sunday only, 12.00 per year.
Daily and Sunday, $4.50 per year.
A T«m Haute ae*epN»er tor Terr# Hn« c»pl«. Tke oil paper la Ten* ••ate mied, f4itd aai pabllibcd k| lrr« Raultaa*.
Entered aa secondclass matter, January 1. 1906, at the
_____ postofTlce at Terre Haute, Indiana, order the act of conUreas of March S, 1ST*.
Only aewapaper la Terre Haatc la»fair full day Iea«e4 wire aervlee of A*» ftecfated Freaa. Caatial i'rcaa aaaoriatlaa eervlee.
All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, tetters and pictures sent to the Tribune ,are sent at the owner's risk, and the tribune company expreaalv repudiates any liability or responsibility for their aafe custody or return.
dlUMHKR OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Aaawvlaied I'reaa la exclusively featltled to the at* for rcpabliratioa at •11 ami diapatchra credited to 'a* fcot otherwise credited la this aaaer pad alao tha local aena rakUahed fcerela.
All rlshta af repabUeatloa of apertal dlaf^tcbta berela are alaa reaerred.
BECALM.
r, fhrwtdent Wilson today the j:"i people that when peace is signed he will make the fact known to the natloa. A peculiar phenomenon awept the country Thursday and Thursday
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night when the populace was fooled by false peace reports and premature peace celebrations were held throughout the land. The public mind was I roadily deceived, of course, being ripe for peace- news and every citizen 'straining to hold his pent-up feelings (against ,the day of a victory celebration.
The reports which deceived the public were soon proved falsa. As President Wilson says today, the nation can depend op reliable agencies for the news of the declaration of peace, and until such a time arrives, the people are admonished to apply themselves to sueh work as they have done to prosper the war.
TWEEDLEDUM AND TWEEDLEDEE
Former Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and William H. ^aft united in an address tg the electorate at the end of last week to elect a republican congress at the polls. Tuesday.
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But Mr. Times' now tlie president of tho AmerirSn body formed for the purpose of seeking to secure a league of nations after the war, and he is oh record as having made a series of addresses over the country favoring such a. proposition.
It is clear,- then, that Mr. Taft and Mr. .Roose\elt are not in agreement as to the things for which President Wilson still stand'#. By the way, is «.(* Mr. Taft, for Mr. Roosevelt for president in 19^0?,
^BOILER PLATE SHIRTS.
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dvpr fn England the stiff white shirt bosom, the starched front of masculine gentility, the snowy expanse that has been so near and dear to the society ornament and the devote# of conventional dress, is said to be on its way to desuetude. The soft shirt, the easy negligee, the shirt of comfort, is crowding the shiny Xronts from the manly British chests.
can be ascribed In large measure to the general letting down of the social bars. The soft shirt Is the garment of democracy. Lincoln has been called a soft shirt maiv ,»The soft shirt has steadily gained In favor since the gTeat war began. It spells comfort, convenience, freedom. The stiff bosom is a descendant of the. breast plate of feudal times.'
It is possible that In .the .coming year/s of peace the regime of the stiff bosom and tha white waistcoat will be revived, but there Is doubt of this. Having tasted freedom, man—British and otherwise—may show a natural hesitancy over resuming the shackles. Thf He**" jaocial independence, tha leveling of old conditions, will prove a serious stumbling block for those who might seek to bring about resumption of the old order of conventionalities. The ssft shirt i^ doing its bit for -world democracy.'
POEMS AND PASTRY.
»Kot long ago an abla writer said that tha only excuse a man had for living was to leave tha world a little better than he had found It otherwise ha would not only be of no value to the community, but Instead the world would have been better ofl if ha had never been born.
The same thing has been said before In varfous climes, times and" tongues. In short, unless each one of us can and does contribute something to the world in which we willy-nilly find ourselves, we are a distinct liability instead of the asset we ought to b# *'But," walls our young woman correspondent, "I cannot write a poem, I cannot paint a picture, I cannot even sing a song without disturbing the peace, how then, am I to 'leave the world Just a little better than I found
In London they say this decline is largely due to the shortage of fuel rations and the increased expense of laundry work, but there is no doubt It side of his business, if such it may be
Thinness and weakness are usually due to starved nerves. Our bodies need
due to starved nerves. Our bodies need
i I o e o s a e a n i s o n a i n e i n
modern foods. Physicians claim there
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nothing that will supply this de-
}S I flciency so well as the organic phosfr- 'i, ,.v phatr known among druggists as bitrophosphate, whic^ le
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ncxpensive and is use 1n ever Vre Tork "PI
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There sefcwis to 1$ ut one answer. Do whatever nature has best fitted you to do, and do it with a vision. When you bake a pie, don't make one merely of flour and shortening—stir in a little of the joy of life, mix up a little human kindness along with the other ingredients. If you have a light heart, you're bound to have a light pie crust. Poems are not all on paper. Some of the best of them are baked In .-the -kitchen and are known "as pumpkin pies or angel food.
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Mr. Roosevelt has so many complaints against President Wilson that It would, perhaps, be unwise to say that lie rests his opposition mainly on one thing, but certainly it ia true that Mr. Roosevelt is mm*e intense in his opposition to a league of nations than to any other one.thing favored by the president,
ABOUT ADVERTISING. ——y—
Many Awierfcan business ttiori are today wondering to what extent their advertising should be restricted. Some hav§ already adopted the plan of "no more advertising until after the war." Others are contemplating this course. A few even consider it a patriotlo spirit to withdraw from the public eye until our boya march through the gates of Berlin.
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The rumor is still prevalent in soma places that the government has ordered a severe curtailment of advertising in periodicals. This is not true. Probably the best "comeback" to such a rumor will be to quote from the recent statement of Hon. W. B. Colver, chairman of the federal trade commission, on this subject. He said: "Discontinuance, or even sharp curtailment,
advertising because of
temporary war conditions, would seem to Imperil the most valuable asset that any business has—namely, Its good will. No more faulty logic can be found than that which would impel a manufacturer, to cease building for the future by means of advertising, simply because the output of his factory Is for the time being, restricted or, because diversion of his facilities to war work has operated to withhold his goods from accustomed markets. In mdern business there can be no sufficient unto the day policy.. "In advertising the business man Has built up the tangible or spiritual
THIN, NERVOUS NEED BHRO-PHOSPHATE
What ft Is and How It Increases Weight, Strength and Nerve Force Two Weeks' Time In Many Instances
SHOULD BE PRESCRIBED BY EVERY DOCTOR AND USED IN EVERY HOSPITAL Says
Editor ol "Physicians'
Take plain Mtro-phosphate is the advice of physicians to thin, delicate, nervous people who lack vim. energy and nerve force, and there seems to b"« ample proof of the efficacy of this preparation to warrant the recommendation. Moreover, if we judge from the i-OTintless preparations and treatments which are continually being advertised for the purpose of making thin people fieshy. developing arms, neck and bust, and replacing ugly hollows and angles by the soft curved lines of health and beauty, there are evidently thousands of men and women who keenly feel their excessive thinness.
Who's Who"
the necessary phosphoric food elements, bltro-pho&phate quickly produces a welcome transformation In the appearance. the increase in weight frequently being astonishing. 'Clinical tests niade in St. Catherine's Hospital, N. T. C., showed that two patients gained in weight 23 and "7 pounds, respectively, through the administration of this organic phosphate: both patients claim they have not felt as strong and well for the past twelve thenia.
years. This increase in height also carries with a general Improvement in the health. Nervousness, sleeplessness and lack of. energy, which nearly always accompany excessive thinness, soon disappear. dull eves become bright and pale cheeks glow with tha bloom of perfect health. 1'hyeieians and hospitals everywhere, *r« norv recognizing its merits by Its increasing quantities.
sold by most all druggists under a Frederick Koiie. r.. editor of New itisfaction gu* rantee of ratisfactlon or money I Tork "Plr sic^an's Who's Who, oack Ify feeding the nerves directly "Bitro-phosphate should be prescriD^d .and by supplying the bodyacelis witn by tfvery doctor and used in every hos- -pat aa'fleafi.—Advertisement.
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designated, aa distinct from the material side. It Is the spiritual side as represented by the good will, that is slower of growth and that* Is the more seriously jeopardised by neglect—neglect which could take no more disastrous form than an Interruption to advertising •.»...." *,
Mr. Colver's entire statement foTtows the same general tenor. Instead of the government calling for a reduction of advertising, here we have the chairman of tl"»e federal trade commission urging a continuance of advertising.
The American business man is now in mudh the same position as the British business man was at the end of his first year of war. Discussing this problem, Mr. Val Fisher, member of the London Chambe* of Commerce, recently said:' *'In the last four years the business men of Great Britain "have learned more concerning the importance of building good-will through advertising than they did la, forty years preceding the war.** He went OD to illustrate how the London business houses which have continued their advertising are holding their places In public favor, while those who have discontinued are. showing losses. He said that trade is abnormally good in Eng land because "never before 4n its history have there been so many workers per thousand population—never before haa the wealth of the country been so evenly distributed."
American business men, here is food for deep and serious thoughtl
Tt's getting mighty hard to lioM diplomatic correspondence with Austria. One never knows whether one's correspondent Will be alive when the message arrives.
"We have lots more g-uns to sTwot Huns with, now that Krupp Is making a large j^art Of our supply 'for us.
.-.We ere now told that ''the country has only begun to Hooveriz«ft/*-. How do they expect us to finish?
Germany should be flattered the allies are about to concentrate their entire attention on her.
PAID IK HIS OWN C0IK.
The son of a wealthy man was given a much-needed lesson in politeness by a poor gatekeeper. One rainy day as the young man was proudly driving his new car he rame to a toll-mate and asked haughtily what he was to pay. "Ten cents, if you please," said tha civil gatekeeper.
Instead of handing the money to him the self-conceited young man, with the air of a grand duke, threw half a*dollar carelessly on the wet and muddy ground.
The keeper stooped for the silver and, placing the change exactly on the same spot, walked into his cottage.
The lesson was not wasted, for the boy learned that it does not pay to be impolite or discourteous to any one.—The Irish World.<p></p>PEOPLE
piml t» increas# gtrmgth nervs force and to enrich the blood." Jos. D. Harridan, Former Visiting Specialist to North Eastern Dispensatory, says: "Let those who are weak, thin, nervous, anaemic, or run-down, take a natural, unadulterated substance such as bitro-phosphate and you will soon see some astonishing results in the increase of nerve energy, strength of body and mind and power of endurance."
Bitro-Phosphat© is made entirely of the organic phosphate compound referred to in the National Standard Die. pensatory as being an excellent tonic and nervine and a preparation which h.as recently acquired considerable reputation in the treatment of neuras-
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The standard of excellence.
strength and purity of its substance is beyond question, for every Bitro-Phos-pliate tablet is manufactured in strict accordance with the U. Pharmacopoeia test requirements. Bitro-Phos-phate is therefore not a patent medicine and should not he confused with any of the secret nostrums, so-called tonics or widely advertised "cure-alls"
Caution s—hHhough Bit ro-P|jo*phate (n iin»nr pnK!trl for relirvinK nervom. nctm, ilrrplrDnru nud (sonrrnl n«nkKFM, oning to it« roninrkuhlr flcah Frowinj properilc* it should not he need by nnvonr «ho doee nut daitt tg •pat aa fleah.—Advertisement.
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TEEEE HATJTB TBIBUHS.
'Tto a
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Tht UKiwy
HOROfeCOML
lun UellMi
Ce»yrlcht, lilt, by tb» M«Clor* Kawspapar iyndlemtc
Saturday, Novambar 9, 1®1S.
Astrologera raad thla aa ao unimportant day. Jupitar is atronfly adverse, but the sun is in beneflc aapect.
Initiative that has for it* aim the enlistment of capital'or influence la under the most fortunate direction.
It is not a lucky day for beginning any mercantile or professional enterprise, as obstruction and delays are indicated.
Lawyers, judges and .diplomats should postpone decisions or
activities
while Jupiter is unfriendly. There is a sign threatening to certain financial conditions today. Fear, caution and suspicion in transactions, big and little, are supposed to be encouraged by the stars during thla configuration.
All who seek positions or appointments should be lucky today, which Is supposed to be helpful in the placing of persons in the^ right environment.
Industry comei tinder a planetary government making for great expansion that will continue after the war. Women in America will have opportunities that will not encroach on those of men. Although they may be temporarily employed in many new lines of work, they will escape from the severe tasks necessary for European women.
One of the new era indications will be revealed in the greater kindliness toward all classes of men and women, which will be manifested by persons who have places in the sun.
Disasters to shipping are foreshadowed. One of these may be due to a stormy
Great Britain has a sign menacing to foreign relation* and interpreted as presaging a mieundeytanding that will not be serious.
The last month of this year will subject to strong peace Influences that will be felt in all parts of the world, the seers declare.
Persons w hose birthdate it is should, not speculate or risk money ia the coming year.
Children born on this day may be reckless aftd extravagant in money matters. These suj.iects of Scorpio usually do not have good judgment in financial venture*
financial venture*.
V
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.. "Cr. .ri §l?S§ii§g
Thirty Millions of
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and Turkey is clearly outlined in the leading article in
To Become Free Men
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German Toys Not Wanted Mr. Wilson's "Cowboy Brutality" Plain Words for William Prom His People Damascus Steel Vacuum-Picked Cotton
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"An Ambassador of the Dead" "Cleaning Up" the Orchestras Evil Effects of Competitive Missions The Best of the Current Poetry Personal Glimpses of Men and Events
From Maine to California in many of the high* class njotion picture theaters millions of men and women are being joyously entertained by The Lit* crary Digest's "TOPICS OF THE DAY" feature. This consists of series of "punch" editorial utterances—patriotic, humorous, and thrilling—selected by THE LITERARY DIGEST from the news-
IUKG OF H1S JUXO.
Release the devil from the darkest pit 'in hell. Call forth his arch-angels and ring
O bells
The devil is a saint (his name the only taint) Compared to the kaiser king Of devils, king of murderers A scourge to the world, king among kings of his kind
King of barbarians, a dishonorable swine: His heart is black, his hands are dripping with gore
Wrung from the hearts of the rich, wrung from the poor. The devil has been painted In many heinous colors
But, try as you might, with main and with skill. You never can paint him as black as
Kaiser Bill.
He Is a black-hearted king at murderers, And one whom all the world does abhor and detest
He is the king of devils and th^ world's greatest pest 1 All the world shall cheer and yell-i themselves hoarse,
When the king of murderei*» lies cold in death. Like the misere of old. who suffered great miseries .untold.
So shall the kaiser, whose love far, gold
Has changed him from a man tpto a! convetous swine
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When the king of murderers lies in his grave. Step back. Satan: give the kaiser the right-of-way,
For he is recognijed as the king or devils this day. Birds and fowls trom out of Germany shall fly
With the speed of lightning across the sky And the kaiser's erown shall be shattered in the duet.
And the blood of the murdered ones be upon his head And all the world shall be hoarse after the ovation,
When the king of murderers, King ot devils lies dead.
A war for gain is a heraid of pair:. Great miseries, woe, death and desolation Ah! think you. young man, that war ia pleasure—
Good exercise and sport for men of leisure? War ia hell—no one shall doubt me—
If so. he is at liberty to join the ranks and see Forth into the fields of slaughter, join in the fray—
You shall see it v.ai is nel! or plaj ARUEI-_A. SPEAR?,
-And "tiie progress of tlie iVericli revolution, arrested at t"he Congress of Yienna, lias been extended^* by the collapse of Austria and Turkey, according to the New York Tribune.. Instead of Germany consolidating an Empire in Central Europe, interested observers now see the Allies encouraging the development of a group of small independent nations j:\'v between the Alps and the Carpathians, between the Adriatic and the Danube, and in West,ern Europe, let the political task of building the new from the ruins of the old is never a simple one. The task ahead of us in Central Europe can, editors declare, be compared1' only to "unscrambling eggs." The far-reaching importance of*the surrender of Austria'
Many Striking Illustrations, Including Maps and Cartoons
THE DIGEST IS ON THE "MOVIE" SCREENI!
November 9tb Number on Sale Today—All News-dealers -10 Cents
FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publlihen of the Famotu NEW Standard Dictionary). NEW YORK
Tribune War Poets
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November 9th. It explains all the many ramifications of the subject, and is illustrated by, helpful maps.
Other news-topics of unusual interest and timeliness in this number of "The Digest" are: ,+-• w s**
The American Army's "Post of Honor" in the Btitfc
Summing Up the Four Weeks' Fighting o the American Forces North oi Verdun IS 1 A Healthier, Wealthier, Wiser Land -i Peace to Make Food Scarcer
upset*?
C)ay In4
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Germany Colonies as "U-Boat" Bases Indian Leaders Dubious of Home Rule Invisible Wounds Leviathans of the Bails Sounding Niagara's Rapids Emancipation of Stonehenge Turgenef's Failure The Religious "Communication Trench" of Finance News ice and Commerce
paper press of the World. "The Digest" is the first* ,* great news-magazine to introduce this novelty and it is meeting with the widest popularity. If you have not yet seen THE LITERARY DIGEST'S, ''TOPICS OF THE DAY" feature at your favor^ v ite "movie" theater, why not /equest the manager to present it?
Stomach-Headache, Indigestion! Instantly End Stomach Distress
Souring food in stomach form# acids and gases which cause head*, ache.
As ioort a# Pape's Diapepsin reaches your sick, unsettled stomach all the misery stops.
No wafting! Iflstant relief!'
Indigestion, acidity, gases, heartburn and dyspepsia go. Upset stomachs feel fine!
Cost# little—Any drug itorS,
Dane's Diapepsin
late Wire Flashes
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WASHINGTON.—Senator Martin.
,,cwu. democratic leader in the senate, said He shall suffer as has ]iis victims, {hat congress Would call on executive All th.rworld'shafl8dTnce'in*Wlee and
CUrt^}
,h0Ut dent to the war immediately upon signWhen Uncle 3am hands him a knockout All the world shall ring with Joy and
ing of armistice by Germany,
WASHINGTON.—Fuel Administrator Garfield announced that only careful use of anthracite coal by houec» holders will prevent suffering this winter, production having been reduced about half million tons by influensa,
WASHINGTON.—The committee cm public Information denied reports that cable censorship was holding up information that might confirm false announcement that armistice had been signed.
WASHINGTON.—Cotton investigation committee of war industries board announced it would advise President Wilson that fixing of prices on raw
CuticuraSoap
IS IDEA!
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LITERARY DIGEST for
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NEW YORK—United States fit eel corporation announced that it had made a contribution of five million dollars to United Statea war work campaign.
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