Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 July 1919 — Page 4
I JE8DAY, JULY 15, 1#19, n
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"A
Store of Quality
Beginning witt^%
Wedne Thur\ Fridna,-•fifistoffice
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iterea as a^cona
*ias3 mutter, Janu arv i, 1906, at the at Terra under the aot of con*
J.TIR.
V
U.rch 2. 1879.
I n«pa|wr day lraaed wire service of
Terre Hante wire ifrrl«e of Central Pwm aaao-
.fd Press, •ervlee.
unsolicited articles, manuscripts, JS(*s and pictures sent to the Tribune sent at owner's risk, and the
or their
-Mine company expressly repudiates y liability or responsibility io ife custody or retarn.
Member
of the associatedphks*
The Associated Press la m«1«»Iw1T (ItHM to the oae for republication of nil uiri dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this p»»ef nnd nlao tk« local n**i published herein.
All rights of republication of apeelnl dispatches herein are also reserved.
THE FELTHOFF CASE.
In the case of the dismissed patrolinan, Jesse Felthoff, who was charged with absenting himself from his district and falsifying his reports, his defense la logical enough, but It does not meet the charges. His explanation, that he was called out of his district to escort women along a dark street, might have been accepted by the board hadp there been no effort at the time .jijto conceal his whereabouts. Two violations of tha rules of the department *r« established by the testimony of his superior officers, and the lesson to the police department is that any extraordinary conditions calling for devia tlon from the police manual should be
Explained at the time. The greatest obstacle the patrolman had before the board unquestionably was the evidence proving that he tried to conceal his movements in the exploit which, when he was discovered, he sought to justify as something In the line of regular luty»
A GOOD VETO.
"When the sundry civil appropriation bill was before congress the debate showed that there was a good deal of confusion In the minds of the members |,tp tj/K? effect of the bill on the appropriation for the rehabilitation of disabled soldiers. It Is doubtful If congress really understood what It was doing further than that It was trying to save money. i That was a highly commendable desire, but this country does not wish to save money by skimping appropriations for the benefit,of soldiers whose wounds interfere with their getting a living.
Nobody wants to see wounded soldiers sinking Into the helpless, dependent classes wlion they can be
MILLIONS
I Suffer from
t*r
Acid-Stomach
UUUins of-people suffer year after year from ailments affecting practicany every "*•part of the body, never dreaming that their 111 health can be traced directly to scid-stom-1 ach. Here is the reaeon: poor digestion k means po6r nourishment ol the different *, O or*ans and tissue* ol the body. Tbe blood is
Impoverished— becomes weak, thin, sluggish.
i
Ailments ot many kinds spring from fuch conditions. Biliousness, rheumatism, lumbago, sciatica, general weakness, loss of 1 power and energy, headache, insomnia, nervousness, mental depression—even more i vi. ,v serious ailments such as catarrh and cancer of the stomach, intestinal ulcers, cirrhosis jf of the liver, heart trouble—all of these can i often be trace directly to aeid-etomach.
I Keep a sharp lookout forthe first symptoms I of acid-stomach—Indigestion, heartburn, 4 belching, food repeating, that awful painful I bloat altercating, and sour, gassy stomach.
KATONIC, the wonderful modern remedy for y ucid-stomach, Is guaranteed to brina quick relief from these stomach miseries. Thousands eay they never dreamed that anything could bring such speedy reliel—and make them feel
9
BO much better in every way. Vry EATONIO A and you, too, will be just as enthusiastic in S its praise. Make your life worth livincr—no a hes or pains—no blues or melancholy—no more of that tired, listless feeling. Be weU 4 and strong. Get back your physical and men* I tal punch your virn, vigor and vitality. Yoa 1 will
always
be weak and ailing as long as yoa
have acid stomach. So get rid of it novf. Take EATON1C Tablets—they taste good— you eat them like a bit of candy. Your drug* gist has EATONTC—50 cents lor a big box. Get a box from him today and if yoa
quantity
I
I
n
are
do|
satisfied he will refund your money.
fTOR YODR ACIP-STOMACg
DRIIMK
Dauntless Coffee
It
is
grown on high lands
because quality
and
is
not
the aim of the
growers. HULMAN & CO. Terre Haute, Ind.
Let Cfc*
Hop
Buy a new or «scd
••sy terms.
Fmr4 mtk
J. LOESER,
mi,*.
TftSL
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taught their own way in the world. To prevent that, the federal board of vocational training was created and an appropriation ^aa made to support the wounded men while they were learning to work for themselves and to pay the expenses of the board.
The president shows in his message to congTess that when the appropriation passed It had been so mercilessly pared and limited that tbe board would be without means to carry on its work. Therefore, he vetoed the whole bilL
Four thousand wounded men are already under the care of the board, and thousands more are pouring into the country expecting similar help. If the bill, as passed by congress,* stands, there will not be enough money to support them, to say nothing of paying the salaries of the teachers and experts who are now engaged in restoring them to usefulness.
No economy plea will be accepted by the country as justifying anything less than generous appropriations in support of this work. If money must be saved by cutting appropriations in the bill, let some of the other beneficiaries of the 5605,000,000 which It carries suffer and let the wounded soldiers have all that is needed.
"CALLING THE TURN."
It Is reported that certain senators are Inclined to take the position that the president is now .eliminated a3 a factor in the discussion of the peace treaty. It is argued that his constitutional duty ceases when the treaty is negotiated and submitted. After that, the constitution turns the treaty over to the senate. Therefore, the conclusion is drawn that the president should hold his peace like one of the contestants who has used up all of his time in a debate, or like a lawyer in court who has had his turn with the jury.
That view of the matter is purely formal, and artificial. The president did not go into the provisions of the treaty paragraph by paragraph for the manifest reason that he could not do so without going to intolerable lengths. This he told the senate at the outset, and he confined himself to an exposU tidn of the facts that maile the league
HELP YOUR DIGESTION
When acid-distressed, relieve the indigestion with
RinaiDS
Dissolve easily on tongue—as pleasant to take as candy. Keep your stomach sweet, try Ki-moids.
S
MADE BY SCOTT A BOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTTS EMULSION 12^5
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of nations necessary and to an interpretation of its spirit in broad terms. Having done that, he offered to enter into details at any convenient time, formally or Informally. He offered to appear before the foreign relations committee for that purpose.
If that offer is rejected. It will be because the members of the committee who oppose it do not want the truth from the man who knows the most about it. In the light of the importance of the questions to be determined, the question whether the president's status changed after the treaty was presented to the senate Is trivial. His status may have changed, but his knowledge did not disappear.
Not long ago these same senators were complaining the president would not take them into his confidence. He offers to meet them now with all the doors open and the bars down. They cannot refuse to meet him without betraying themselves as bigots.
IN WHOSE BAILIWICK?
"Is the spokesman for the government aware," asked a member of the British house of commons yesterday of Bonar Law, "that nobody particularly wants the kaiser to be brought here?" The remark was greeted with cheers. Probably no city or country is specially eager for the distinction of being selected for a state trial which would give the humblest hamJet place in history. The logical place might appear to be Geneva, the headquarters of the league of nations, but neither Geneva nor Switzerland nor the league of nations would be pleased by that arrangement. To hold the trial in a neutral country, which on general principles might seem the ideal place, is, }n fact, impossible, if only because of the unfavorable attitude of neutrals toward the trial of the former German emperor by his enemies.
If the trial is to be held In the capital of a belligerent nation London is perhaps as rational a choice as any, yet one gets the Impression that the announcement of this choice, made casually by Lloyd George in the house of commons, has not been well received in any country. The American commission at Paris seems somewhat inexplicably perturbed over it, if we may trust the report that it is asking President Wilson by wireless if he promised to support Lloyd George in a demand for the extradition of William II and his transportation to London for trial. This can refer only to the place, for by the treaty "the allied and associated powers will address a request to the government of the Netherlands for the surrender to them of the exemperor in order that he may be put on trial."
In some, respects where the trial Is held may be a matter of indifference, and since it is to be international the legal practices of the country in which it is conducted are immaterial the procedure would be the same at London or at Lhassa. Yet the choice of London evidently produces a disagreeable impression, in England as well as
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x' TEBRE HAUTE TRIBUNE*
By Temple
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in other countries. Perhaps It recalls unpleasantly the often drawn parallel to the rivalry between Home and Carthage.
SHOPS WELL EQUIPPED.
This, some people believe is unnecessary, but it is an indication of the class of work which may be expected from the local shops, the work of experts.
THE SODA FOtTNTAIN TAX DUE.
Blanks for Collection of Pennies Have Arrived. The one-cent war tax paid on every ten cents^one spends at a soda fountain has been accumulating since May, and the government, pressed for funds as it is, has been unable to collect the money, because "the offical printing office in Washington did not have the necessary blanks and forms ready. Now the forms are here and the soda fountain owners a*e to make their returns to the internal revenue office. The May tax was due on or before July 1. Because of the shortage of blanks, the time was extended to July 20.
A. Com ins Financier.
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Save your Every Day Labels
to
Local Bicycle Dealers Prepared Handle. Any Repair Work. Few people have any conception of the great variety of sizes, models and kinds of parts and repairs that are necessary to maintain an up-to-date 'bicycle siiop and fewer still realize the skill and workmanship required to make an every-day and uswally considered ordinary repair, and still .fewer know that Terre Haute, through the efforts of the Bicycle Dealers' association, has nine shops where anything in the way of adjustments, repairs or special jobs cannot only be done, byt be correctly done and quickly done.
The dealers of this city have organized their forces so that their patrons may have quick and effective service have selected their stocks of supplies and repairs and parts so that any kind of a wheel in any condition of repair can be made serviceable In a short time and done in Terre Haute. In thedays of the fftst "safeties" the bicycle shofcs tvere r^ufred to build tho wheels for their patrons and in manyplaces the dealers have allowed the standard of efficiency, which made this possible, to fall. Not so in Terre Haute. The many local shops have even improved their methods and their appliances so that now if it was required of them they could do even better work and do it much more rapidly than they could at that time.
buy
Small boy—Mother, won't you me a watch? Mother—What do you want a watch for?
Small boy—I waqt to swap it with Jimmie Jones for one of his pups.—. From Answers, London.
HAVE YOtT ANYTHING FOR SALE* If you have anything to sell the Sunday Tribune will sell it. Twelve worda one time. 12c three times, SOc.
ACCREDITED SCHOOL
In selecting a school it is well to remember that this school is accredited and that back of that also is a record of seventeen years' service in the training of young people.
Hundreds and hundreds "Of young men and women have trained here and are making good in the business world. We can train you. Arrange now for summer term. Both phones.
WABASH COMMERCIAl SCHOOL
M. P. AKEUS, Pres. E. C. STEWART, Vlw-Prea.
(V.
,-
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Letters From the People
Going Up.
Editor of The Tribune:— Sir: The cost of living mounting higher and higher each d£y and the means wherewith to meet it either remaining stationary or at least lagging farther and farther behind, the question naturally arises in the mind of the thoughtful man, where will it end and what is the reason for it? The war is over and while during the period of hostilities high prices obtained—such being the natural consequence of abnormal conditions—it was believed and expected that when peace came there would be, in a measure at least, some semblance of a return to easier living conditions. But not so, and instead we are told that even higher prices are" to be^imposed upon a people who were not only willing but glad to make every sacrifice to bring about a condition of peace which would insure a plentiful supply of all things needful to those who were willing to work, and these same people, under the same conditions, would be willing and glad to make the same sacrifices again were it necessary. The same conditions are no longer with us, the plentiful supply is with us, 'but in a large measure beyond our reach. The people's sacrifice has made a condition of peace possible. The people's labor has brought a plentiful supply of all things needful. The laborer is indeed
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4
Wup
B. T. R.—A man honorably discharged in the navy upon re-enlistment in the naval service within four months after discharge receives certain additional benefits, but his service in the navy%will not entitle him to any benefits from re-enlisting in the army.
MOST tISEO AUTOS CHANGES HANDS through the want ads in The Tribane.
r* J* *4',
ATCH your husband brighten when he gets his first taste of that golden brown rich coffee you have made for him with such care.
No wonder it tastes better. You haven't changed the coffee—but you have learned a great secret—you have .changed and improved the milk
You have added Every Day Milk to the coffeo to make it richer and to give it a far better flavor instead of thinning and weakening it with dairy milk. You have added the nourishment of a milk which has in it all the cream of twice its quantity of rich milk!
Because it testes so good, because it is so rich, to nourishing, and yet costs so little—because it makes you independent of ice man and milk mail —Every day use Every Day
E VERY
JOHN M. C.
The Soldiers' Friend
Mrs. F. K.—Hospital train 81 returned in the mid41e of April and has been demobilized.
F. S.—Motor truck company 501 is part of the 422nd motor supply train, but is not attached to any division. The present location of this company is Nantes, France. It has not been ordered home yet.
Chep—Write to the Adjutant General, War Department, Washington, D. O., about the medal. The home service committee of your nearest Red Cross chapter also can advise you how to make application for it.
Dorsey A.—Write to Inquiry Division, Bureau of War-Risk Insurance, about allotments. You might get quicker returns if you will put your problem up to the home service committee of your nearest Red Cross chapter.
DAY
M.I.LK
worthy of his hire, but if the higher and higher and forever higher cost of the ordinary necessities of decent living continues where does the hire of the man who works stand by comparison, must it not also keep pace?
Where friends gather
Bergo fills a social need for delightful, wholesome refreshment. Bergo has the true taste and the actual food value of selected cereals. Decidedly healthful.
You'll like Bergo, It's different. Full of life, snap and sparkle.
Orcfer a castfnm your gncer or phone the distributor.
Berghoff Products Co Ft.
Wayne,
Ind.
Distributor: C. W. Jean Co. Either Phone,
2S34. Terre Haute,
111
TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1919. V V
.4'
Terre Haute Forty Years Ago Today
The heirs of Conductor W. D. Guernsey were paid $3,509 Masonic insurance.
The infant daughter of T. H. Haringj was choked to death while eating a piece of cheese.
Several members of the Adelphi theater company returned from a trip through northern Indiana, parfc oC ibe journey being made on foot.
Misses Anna and Mary Roach, AlMe Leonard and Maggie Reilly were soloists at a social given by the young ladies' sodality of St. Joseph's church.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY. Prom Tb« Tribune File*
•July 15, 1909.
The balance of city funds on hand is $215,544.69. Three thousand dollars worth of new machinery was installed in the Sugar Valley mine.
Monninger and Dressier, proprietors cf the Great Northern hotel, dissolved as a stock company and became a flfm.
Alonzo Dunn, foreman at |the Standard Wheel Works, was presented with a suit case and umbrella when he resigned his position.
Cereal Beverado Refreshes and benefits
xSWV'B
Also Try
Bmrpo Ginger Ale B*rgo Orange- Tang Bergo Birch Beer Climax Sparkling OAf
Ind.
Also Distributor for Hire's Root Beer.
5•»*
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