Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 August 1914 — Page 16
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BEFORE
INSTITUTE
Mrs. AHyn Adams Gives Talk and Selections Belative to High ... School Music.
The Friday morning session of the Vigo county teachers' Institute now being held In this city was opened Friday morning with devotional exercises conducted by Rev. Ewald Summerlatte of the Zlon Reformed church. Mrs. Allyn Adams then gave them work In high school music. In connection with her music work, Mrs. Adams had Paul and Wilfred Fidlar sing Thursday afternoon and also had a violin solo by Arthur Kill, of West Terr© Haute. Friday afternoon she arranged for Robert Duenweg, Mrs. C. A. Bcker and C. L. Fidlar to give selections.
The first lecture of the morning was by Miss Adelaide Holton. Her talk was in regard to general teachers' work and she made a special point of the effect that the character and disposition of the teacher has on the character and disposition of the pupil.
Miss Holton was followed by Dr. George H. Roberts, of Purdue university, who explained the methods of teaching soil work in the rural and district schools and methods and devices that the teacher can use to great advantage. Dr. Roberts also explained some of the advanced methods used In animal husbandry.
The afternoon session was opened by Dr. Roberts, who continued his address of the morning and he was followed by Mrs. Adams, who gave more •work in high school music. Mrs.
Adams is very much pleased with the Interest that is being shown in the music and says that this Is the best singing institute that she ever saw.
GERMANS ABE ACCUSED OF SHOOTING 3 BED CE0S.S FETUSES
French Government Swears That German Officer Killed Two and Injured Third After Battle.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 28.—France has submitted to the United States and other neutral governments a sworn statement that after the engagement at Moncel the German officers fired on three Red Cross nurses, killing two and wounding the third.
Marcelle Jouy, the nurse who was wounded, swore that after the battle on August 15 she was attending the wounded with two other nurses when a German officer opened Are on them from a distance of less than thirty ""feet. A bullet shattered her arm, she stated, and she fainted. On recovering consciousness she found that her two companions were dead beside her with bullets in their bodies. All nurses, her statement says, plainly wore the Insignia of the Red Cross.
ASKS BELIEF FOB PRUSSIA.
Kaiser Wires His Council to Care for Population. LONDON, Aug. 28.-3:53 p. m.—The Rome correspondent of the Exchange Telegraph company says: "A dispatch from Berlin states that •Emperor William has telegraphed his council of ministers, charging the council with the immediate organization of all possible relief for the population of his beloved province of Prussia."
ARTIST .SABGENT MISSING.
LONDON, Aug. 28.—Some anxiety Is felt here concerning John Singer Sargent, the American painter. Nothing has been heard from Mr. Sargent since he left London for Austria, July 24. Friends and relative? are trying to get news of him.
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FOR FIRST AID MEET
B. W. Harris, of Pittsburgh. Bureau of Mines, Will Help Prepare Teams for Contests,
R. W. Harris, of the bureau at mines at Pittsburgh, arrived In the city Friday morning to assist in the work of preparing the various teams for the mine rescue and first aid meet that will be held In this city, September 12. Thirty-five teams have already entered from Indiana and several teams from outside the state have entered through the bureau at Pittsburgh. All of the surrounding towns win be well represented by teams from their different mines. Clinton, Linton, Dugger, Shelbum, "West Terre Haute and Blcknell have several teams entered.
Dr. August F. Knoefel addressed a meeting at Clinton Thursday ervening and said that the greatest interest prevailed in the work and that the teams of that city were making remarkable progress in the drills and are very proficient. There is a keen rivalry between the different teams and
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Now, this same process goes on all over the body since S. S. 8. circulates with the blood wherever It flows. These interesting facts are more fully explained in .a book written by a specialist which Is mailed free by the makers of S. S. S., The Swift Specific Co., 29 Swift Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. Ask at any drug store for a bottle of S. S. S., but don't accept a substitute. The medical department of The Sw'ft Specific Co. has been of inestimable value to blood sufferers in saccessfully directing them to complete recovery. And this advice Is entirely free, very complete and a splendid aid to all who are in doubt and perplexed about their trouble,
Mothers! School Opens Sept. 8 All Boys' Suits Half Price
$3.50 Suits, save $1.75, pay us
$1»75
$4.00 Suits, save $2.00, payuB
$8.00 Suits, save $4.00, pay
All
$2.00
$4.50 Suits, save $2.25, payus
Boys' Sis
$2.25
$5.00 Suits, save $2.50, pay us
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$6.00 Suits, save $3.00. payus..,.. $3.00 $7.50 Suits, save $3.75,
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$9.00 Suits, save $4.50, pay us ..... $41:50 $10.00 Suits, save $5.00, payus..,,.. $5*00
A. R. Seewald, Pres.
Price
ALL MEN'S SUITS EXACTLY HALF PRICE ALL MEN'S PANTS EXACTLY HALF PRICE
EXTRA SPECIAL, $25.50 and $27 HIG-H GRADE SUITS $9.75.
Some of the season's nobbiest Suits are in this lot. We are determined to sell every suit in the house, hence this wonderful offer of $25.00 QQ17^ and $27.50 suits for only I O
every one la trying to show bo better advantage than their ajyponent*. There will be a meeting Friday night at the Chamber of Commerce and the teams from several mines iriil be instructed In first aid work and bandaging by Dr. KnoafeL At this meeting there will be two teams from the Vandal ia Goal Co., two teams from the Lower Vein Coal Co., and one each from the "Wabash, the Sugar Valley and the GHen Ayr.
Two mine reecue cars will be In the city for the meet and this will be an added feature that will be very Instructive to the men who attend.
HOLT H0BR0BS! TTRAK T3B.
The Bum Cigars Smoked Would KH1 Off Everybody In Three Day*. 'The Subject of Mystery** announced as the title of Evangelist Tlndall's sermon for last evening, proved to be "The Tobacco Question." Mr. Tlndall said: "The American people are deliberately committing sulcldc. Our dally dose of nlctoine would kill 640,000,000 men who were not accustomed to Its use, and depopulate the glebe In three days. "Tobacco strikes directly at the stomach, heart, kidneys, lungs, and brain of men. It is the most deadly alkaloid, with the exception of prusslc acid. "Forbes Wlnslow, the great English surgeon states, "The world Is doomed to insanity, in three hundred years the world will be filled with the mad and insane."
WILSON FAMILY REUNION.
President Goes to Cornish to Help Celebrate Daughter's Birthday. BELLOWS FALLS, Vt.. Aug. 28 President Wilson, who passed through here today on his way to his summer home at Cornish, N. H., will celebrate with practically his entire family the birthday of his daughter, Mrs. F. B. Sayre. After his arrival at Corni3h this afternoon, there will be a family gathering. With the president will be Mrs. Sayre and Miss Wilson, his daughters Miss Howe, his sister Prof. Axson, Mrs. Wilson's brother Mrs. Cothran, his niece, and Josephine Cothran, a grand niece.
The president was depressed today because of recollections of his last trip to Cornish, when he was accompanied by Mrs. Wilson.
STATISTICAL RECORD.
MARRIAGE I,ICE!VSES.
T-ane Frank Stlneman, 23 years old, laundry worker, Terre Haute, to Martha Compton, 22, Terre Haute.
Harry Edwards, 23 years old, gardener, Vigo county, Indiana, to Jennie Lynn Harlan, 21, Pralrleton, Ind.
Louie Roberts, 27 years old, clerk, Blcknell, Ind., to Bertalena Marshall, 21, bookkeeper, Blcknell, Ind.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Martha A. Dawson to Nora O. Huffman, pt lot 22, E. & C. railroad sub. 51.00.
Charles M. Elam et us to Peony E. Ripney, pt lot Gfl, John Siblev's sub ?t,000.
James C. Stimson, trustee, to Edna Anderson, lot 359, Maple Avenue Place sub. $800.
Lawrence S. Ball et ux to Nicholas R. Miles, pt quarter section 25-11-10 $1,500.
Charles W. Smith et ux to Wood J. Posey, lot 11, Foulkes-Dahlen sub. $1. Consolidated Real Estate company to Harold R. Vandrands, lot 68, Consolidated Real Estate company's sub.: $325.
Homer B. Talley et ux to Edward E. Bitner et ux, lot 7, Ogden Place sub. 51.00.
IJl'IMMNG PERMITS.
To Henry Haslen. one story frame residence, west side of North Second street in the 1600 block estimated cost, $1,120.
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By Mi(ne O'Brien.
TJiree out of the five acts on the new vaudeville bill at the Varieties are
while, which Is a fair average. Arthur and Roy, who close the show i? Juggling act, are tihe real headilnera. Don't Jump at conclusions when I refer to this contribution to the bill a Juggling act It is not what you may think It Is. Mr. Arthur in black face and Mr. Roy in white face have 'un plates and glassware. While doing some clever stuntB with the orockery, Mr. Arthur manages to smash a lot of his "props." It is all very funny the way they do it. Mr. Arthur was a member of the old team of Bedlni and Arthur, who once came to Kammerstein's theater In New Tork to plav a week's engagement and remained for six weeks.
The rural sketch presented by Walrfh, Lynch and company is* good enough to warrant proper designation of the principals on the program. There it some good "rube" stuff and one of the actors sings very nicely. Bob Knapp and Chris Cornelia offer a Bit ot sidewalk conversation, they tumble, dance and sing, and are entertaining three-fourths of the time. The Four Society Girls, according to the program "sing—that's all." That's enough. The act of the Ch'armlon trio Is redeemed by the excellent playing of one of the comics on a new fangled piano. The comics are supposed to be Italian organ grinders. They had better keep out of Russia for awhile lest they be mistaken for Germans, and they had better keep out of Germany lest they be taken for Cossacks. But Italians— neverl
That moving story of the great Canadian forests, "The Wolf," will be told In film form at the Grand today and tomorrow. Compared with "The Wolf," some of Eugene Walters' other successes, "The Easiest Way" and "Paid in Full," for Instance, are merely polite parlor plays. It has all the elements that go to make up perfect groundwork for a powerful film production. There are duels to the death, there is the story of the wronged girl and her babe devoured by wolves, the hatred of old MacTavish for his daughter because her mother "who had tawny hair" like the child, had ran away from him. Surely there is material In "The Wolf" for a big film play. The Lubin company has made the production with Barry O'Neil as director. Fred Chaston, the photographer, took a bunch of Lubln players to the wilds of northern Canada, to the Nlpisslnjr country, to pose for the picture. Many are outdoor scenes. The cast Includes George Soule Spencer, Ethel Clayton, Ruth Bryan, Ferdinand Tldmarsh, Bernard Siegel and Gaston Bell. Even the minor roles are played by actors whose names are familiar to those who have paid attention to feature films of the higher grade.
Alice Fisher seems to have made a conspicuous hit in "The Higrh Cost of Loving," which A1 H. Woods brought lo the Republic in New York last Tuesday nlsrht. with Lew Fields as the star. Mr. Fields plays the part of a Milwaukee mustard manufacturer who is largely under the domination of his muscular and persistent wife. Miss Fischer is the wife. All of the Now York reviews of the piece contain complimentary allusions to the Terre Haute actress. James Lackaye, Wilfred Clark, Charlotte Ives and George Anderson, Fritzie Pcheff's new husband, are in the rast. In "The High Cost of Lovin^" Mr. Fields is. minus the aid
of
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12
Newest Styles
Finest Quality Velvet
singers
and dancers for the first time in his career It is a straight fnrce. He does some serious acting in it. Broadway expects the piece to lun all reason.
Answering H. R. P.. "The Wolf" was first presented in Terre Haute on November 2, 1908. The engagement was for two nights. It came back nn the ISth and 14t.h of the same month with the second road company in the oast Mr. Walter's play was last seen at the Orand on January 15, 1911. It mav have been pirated by a "reptile" company—they steal everything—but I don't recall any midsummer horror that resembled "The Wolf." Don't mention it, you are entirely welcome'
May De Sousa has taken the place of Valli Valli as star of "The Queen of the Movies."
William Harris has followed the example of Klaw and Erlanger in deferring the production of "The Unseen Empire" until the European war Is un-
dcr some sort of control, announcing that Bayard Vieller's new play will be produced later on. It will be a very expensive production and Mr. Harris awaits a more propitious time lor its launching.
IX DOUBT
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Stop STOMACH SICKNESS
Take Saint Johannis Drops
Diarrhoea, Colic Chnltra, Cramps, Paini In the Stomach bring oc dangerous ailments unless checked at once. Attacks! are sudden. Agony lasts until after the doc tor conies perhaps he niay arrive too late. In infants such attacks may end disas-: trously while waiting for
-F
HERZ'S BULLETIN
Peaches—Five Cents The Dozen
Ripe Michigan peaches will be offered in the basement tomorrow morning at the very low price of five cents a dozen. Good, juicy fruit. None will be sold to children.
Store Closes at Noon Tomorrow
Remember to do your shopping before noon tomorrow. All the special sales advertised for Friday selling will still be in full swing until noon tomorrow. This applies to the basement as well as to the rest of the store.
The restaurant is open until one o'clock. Come any time before one—stay as long as you please.
What Have You in The Way Entertainment in Your Home
.The children are growing up. Some nights this winter they won't have much school-work to do. How are you going to entertain them and make them want to stay at home to spend the evening?
We suggest that you try the Victrola way—it's worked splendidly in numerous homes. Buy your machine for cash or on easy terms, as you prefer,—get the records you think the home-folks will like, and you 11 experience no trouble keeping the young folks at home listening to good music.
Glad to have you come to this new department to hear the new records. Glad also, to be given the chance to help you select the best-suited records. Fourth floor.
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grief for loved ones—or yourself griping misery. ST. JOHAXN'IS DROPS were used for years in his medical practice by Dr. H. C. Lemke. Thousands of persona huve used them. Many aosert they o«e their lives, or tholrcliildren's lives to the prompt relief given when nnexpei-ted Stomach illnesx invaded the home. A remedy at hand ia north dozen doctors milra awny. It is an in.-uranoe of relief and of saving in doctor's hills. ST. .TOHANNIS DKOPS »re purely compounded, scientifically tested, harmless, easy to take —just a few drops In sugar and water. Sold la every druc store. Demand Dr. H. C. Lemlto'e 3T. .TOHAJJNIS DHUPS and take no other. Name is on all wrappers and labels and blown in bottle, If your druggist has none In stock, send his name and 25 cents for a bottle direct to the Dr. H. 0. Lemke Medloiae Co.. Chicago. Ill,
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