Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 July 1919 — Page 4
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THE TESKE HAUTE TRIBUNE
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AND GAZETTE.
Aa ladepemdent nempip«r. Dolly l««d«y. The T*rre limits Gticttt, ffljMWtt* IW». The Tern U*nt« TribvM. Mtabllikel 1804.
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th phones, S78 Editorial Department, tlsens, 155 Central Union. S16.
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•3 A Ten* Haate aewapaper for Terre H««t« people. The only paper la Terra Hwtt owned, edited mad published by 3 *erre Bantenns.
Entered as second «lass matter, January 1, 1906. at the postoffice at Terre
Kaute, Indiana, under the act ot con* Kress of March 8. 1879. Oaly ae*rspaper la Terre Haute haTlast toll day leased wire serTlce ot Aaaoelated Press. Central Press asaeelstlna aervlce.
All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures sent to the Tribune •re »ent at owner's risk, and the Tribune company expressly repudiates anjr liability or responsibility
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The -Associated Press Is exclusively featltM to the we for republication of •n aews dlspatehea credited to It or otherwise credited la this paper
•1m
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the local aewi published
All rl*hta of rfpuhllratioa of special es herein are also reserved.
All
THJE FIRST GUM.
It remains to be seen how seriously congress and the nation take the accusations made against President Wilson today by Representative Graham, |#hich in general can be summed up In the general indictment that the war Was blunderingly and wastefully conu e I k ..• This otithmrt rfeftaTts
The Iowa senator's oharge that his party leadership in congress has been .blundering was general. It undoubtI idly refers back in part to the course
pt
Lodge arnd Knox and Fall in respect to the peace treaty. This has beui a mixture of animosity and fee,3V^ Positions have been taken
Which had at once to be abandoned. "Resolutions" have been introduced With a flourish, only, to become sicklied O'er with a cast of thought paler than Hamlet's, and quietly left to perish. Senator Hitchcock maliciously read into the record Saturday a statement by
Taft to the effect that the Fall |resolution had met with the natural Uieath which the Knox resolution had fjbreviously suffered- It/is undeniable glhat for the past three weeks the leading republican senators have presentlied to their party and the country a ^•pectacle of singular futility. Willing to wound they have been afraid, or haye not known how, to strike^
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'It. is not noW necessary to argue Whether this senatorial policy was right or wrong. .The leadership was bad,- either way.- For it is of the essence of party command to win enthusiastio Obedience. Xn this Lodge and 'Knox dismally failed, They could mot secure the hearty or united support of their own party. Mr. Graham's 'enterprise, launched today, will be observed with much interest.
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HEAT AND HEF*.
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Summer Is a fine time for fat folks.
For summer is above all, the season for the diet that satisfies hunger without furnishing surplus weight. Taking off flesh is as simple a matter as reducing your bank account. All you have to do is to eat less food that you use Your surplus flesh will then diminish jusl as surely as the balance when you check out more than you deposit. There is no mystery about it.
If you really wish to take advantage of the situation and take off weight,
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Incident
Saturday when Senator Kenyon arose ind denounced the men in his own jparty for their "abundant capacity to make mistakes and to misinterpret the |»ublic mind.'*
Senator Kenyon recoimtefl TiW his partisans had failed to sound public sentiment in other such tactics Since the war and charged them that tpftfn the time cam* for reporting their stewardship for this term of ec^gress to the people that "there is but one'party in congress who can now b« held responsible —our own."
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specialize on summer vegetables. You would have td eat something like $9 worth of lettuce and tomatoes to get as much food as you would get from thirty cents worth of butter or ten cents worth of sugar So go tq the lettuce and tomatoes and spinach and beets and string beans, it is easy in summer to pick out a good living made up largely of vegetables that are mostly camouflaged food. They" taste good and give you the feeling that you have eaten, but they don't contribute t# the size of that equatorial region about which, as regards Mr. Willard, all the sport writers recently were so interested. ,'** -j .5 jf I" y'f
Incidentally, there is no use kidding yourself with the idea that you are restricting your diet if you restrict it only at meals and eat plenty of ice cream and candy between meals. Nature refuses to be kidded. It takes everything you eat quite seriously.
MORE FOR FARMER*
the government announcement today that fertilizers will be cheaper this fall will be received with much satisfaction by the farmers, for war hit the fertilizer buyer an unmerciful Jolt. The basis of fertilizers Is largely* the basis of high explosives, and as for potash it was sent skyward by the interference with potash imports from Germany*, So the farmer found himself the victim of all sorts of cause.
how much you use in budnf muffins doesn't matter greatly—it is tasteless and adds nothing and takes nothing away from the dough yott mix. It makes muffins, light, Jaigh and handsome.
THE HEEKiN CGI Cincinnati.
Nitrate of soda went up because the government needed the soda for munitions uses. Nitrates make powerful gunpowder. Acid phosphate was at* fected by the urgent need of the government for sulphuric acid, which is an essential in cutting the phosphate rock to makfe the acid phosphate. Cotton seed meal went up with the price of food and feed stuffy So fertilizers were high all along the line.
With the greater available number of ships to bring nitrate of soda from the South American coasts, and with the lessened demand for the material
T.R.WOODBVRN PRINTING
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for other chemical uses, nitrate of soda should naturally be cheape£. The lessened demand for sulphuric acid ought to lower the price on phosphate goods, while potash will respond to whatever treatment is given it by act of feongress. An effort is on foot to supply much American potash. What will become of it is too soon to assume. Some of the western potash has been accused of damaging the crops this sefti son./ If western potash is not available desirable potash from the Rhine country will be coming this Way again, and should be reasonably low. It would seem that fertilizers can be materially lower in tha fall" than they have been, and as the government is better informed as to conditions in this direction than any one else it is safe to suppose the statement coming from the government can be accepted as a fact.
I ^WHAT'S NEEDED,,
Senator Borah cries out that' our agreement to go to the aid of France, if she is ever again the'object of an unprovoked attack by Germany, is the "obituary of the league of nations" and wilt never be accepted by the American senate.
The senator seems to demand that he shall be given a perpetual guarantee that there shall be no more war .in the world. He does not want to try to stop wars through the league of nations, the very processes of which many citizens of the world believe will disconcert any war-hunting tribe. No, Borah must be shown where the moment we accept the league of nations all war ceases*.
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MOTHER. THE WATER WASN'T COLD.*
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As a very large section of "English thought sees the dangers of the future, those dangers are summed up in th® fear that the American people may be led to reject the idea of the league of nations, in whole or in part It is felt that if America now withdraws from the attempt to put world peace on a sound basis she will never return with any great and friendly interest to the consideration sof Europe's troubles.
It is clearly understood that tf America does not underwrite the league of nations it is doomed and all hopes that have been entertained for a new era and & better world will perish. The democratic nations of Europe would be left clinging despairingly to the eastern rim of the Atlantic, facing such menaces as have arisen in Russia and Hungary* There could be little in the future other than a long succession of wars.
The old world is In a parrtc Test America, tiring of the eternal squabbles and clashes of European politics, may decide to resume its traditional isolation. England, looking across the channel, iees the dangers that -are brooding in Eastern Europe. If the United States will stay in the league,
Cuticora Heals Itching Burning Skin Troubles
All liutJll'ta So«p 25, Oipnnent 25 and SO T*!"rnn25 each free of "Omtlcua, Dept.
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TEREE HAUTE TRIBUNE*
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backing it with its resources, physical, material, moral and financial, the old world has a chance to pull back to something like normal if w# west o| tht« Atlantic withdraw, leaving bankrupt aud ^riddled, demoralized and shakeln Europe to itself, then there is no hope in the world. That is the way current Comment and thought runs in the: libera^ groups of England, and doubtless in France and Italj^
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ought to sail out {"his way
for a few daysj and see some of the best meteorological conditions that ever stirred an airman's adulation. Our meteorological conditions are the best east of Fresno*
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The new w.ealther man seems to be batting about a thousand. A little heat to make the corn bulge, a little breeze to foster sleep and a little shower^ now and then to rout total inertia,
The agitation as to whether Mr. Dempsey' should have credit for & knockout flusters us about as deeply as a debate on the table manners of the Aztec.
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Hold-up men Ibot a- drug store here on Sunday night and decamp with the day's proceeds. We thought this would, cea^e. after tjie «&loons were gone
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Everything is .going by superlatives in the world these days. A Peoria^ player knocked a ball over the center field fence, so we understand.
"Krehmeyer done the individual hitting for the Browns," says a morning paper. Well, in hot weather*. any grammarian is liable to nod.
Cfthsfder that you h&ve flODte
your full war duty until you h&ve helped the Salvation Army drive. V» t. ,—,—
TEN YEABS AGO TODAY, Frna The Tribuae I11M.
July
7,
1909.,
Ed IjOwerv has taken a postttttn Wtth the Vigo Printing company. Andrew Schmidt was installed as sachem of Iona Tribe of Red Men.
Dr. L. Z. Breaks was recommended as a member of toe medical pension board.
Rev. John E. Sulger was named as head of the executive committee to plan, for the opening of the new Elks home: f**-! /,
MCTATIOW.
When the storm is groin* strong, Darkenin' the day, i Streak o' sunshine comes along
An' chases it awajr.
When the sun is blasin*
high,
Makin' heat severe. Raincloud sails across the sky. An' cools the atmosphere.
No occasion fur dismay. Whatever be your fate: It's sure to go the other way. (l
IX you. wilifOaly wait.
—"Washington Star.
OrlKin ot "White Elephant." The king of Siam, in years gone bj would send a white elephant to a cOurtier whom he disliked and whose fortune he wished to destroy. The man could not sell the elephant and the expense of keeping it eventually "broke him up." From that custom was handed down our present day saying, "He's got a white elephant on htfi^Jpnds—Omaha NfiWS
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HOROSCOPE.
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Copyright, lilt, by the MeClnr# Newspaper Syadlcatc
Tuesday, July 8, 1919.
Mercury and Jupiter rule strongly for good today, according to astrology. Saturn is adverse.
This is a planetary government under which there should be extreme activity in business affairs.
There is an especially promising rule for commerce and for manufacturing.
Labor remains subject to the forces that give domination ana power. While there will be many strikes, in all probability, there is slight danger of any serious cut in wages.
Fame for a worker who leads In a movement that may he said to democratize labor is prognosticated. This is part of an interpretation of a sign "that seems to indicate changes in trade union organisations.
Occultists declare that many guardian forces will be active during the coming months in protecting Americans from disasters of all sorts.
There is a. sign read as foreshadowing the recognition of a great political leader as one of the spiritual teachers. According to ancient lore this should be a lucky day for fishing, since keen sport that assures u good catch is forecast.
The rising position of Neptune eon joined with Venus is held to be threatening to the morals of the people. Flirtations among young married persons will bring among much domestic' unhappiness.
Danger that diplomatic Wurfders may become apparent under this sway of the stars Is foretold by the seers.
All sorts of business pacts should be successful,
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agreements are signed
before nightfall today. Persona whose birthdate ft Is !i«?a the forecast of success in business, but they should safeguard the health and avoid overwork.
Children born on this day will find the path of life smooth in all probability. These subjects of -Cancer usually are bright and talented.
For Skin Tortures
Don't worry about eczema or other skin troubles. You can have a clear, healthy skin by using Zemo, obtained at any drug store for 35c, or extra large bottle at $1.00.
Zemo generally removes pimples, Uackheads, blotches, eczema and ringworm and makes the skin clear and healthy. Zemo is a clean, penetrating, antiseptic liquid, neither sticky nor greasy and stains nothing. It is easily applied and costs a mere trifle for each application. It Is always dependable
The E. W. Rose Co., Cleveland, 0.r ,—Ad vert Isem «»*.••
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"candied" in the glass *7,1 This line, clear Karo Syrup has a natural affinity for the fruit juices. It blends the sugar with the fruit and brings out the full "fruity" flavor, n
For Cooking, Baking and Candy Making: t,, Karo (Red Label) is used in millions of homes. In all cooking and baking recipes use Karo instead of sugar. It is sweet, of-
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EAT EAT •EAT
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