Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 December 1914 — Page 24
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JOHN D. JUNIOR
:i DIRECTED BIG STRIKE
.^Telegram of Instructions to Be Introduced As Evidence Before Industrial Committee.
DEJv'VER, Colo., Deo. 4.— Juhn Ft. jAwson, Colorado member of the Coloa3o international executive coinmitt'ee ®E the United Mine Workers of AmerVt. (a, announced today that John .YlcLennan, president of District No. l., Who has been summoned as a witness before tl tihe industrial relations committee, will lZ Introduce a long telegram from John
Rockefeller, Jr., giving minute inttructions regarding the. conduct of jihe operators toward the coai miners' I ft ftrlke-
This alleged telegram addressed to J. F. Welborn, president of the Colofado Fuel & Iron Co., is said to in»lude directions for moulding public opinion and handling other matters j? ionnecte^ with the labor war.
It w«|S announced by the industrial y, ^commission that J. F. Reed, Denver tha^lger of the Western Union Tele-
yestify
raph Co., had been subpoenaed to as to the authenticity of the ?opy of the alleged telegram to be introduced by the United Mine Workers.
John D. Rockefeller, Jr., is a heavy stockholder in the Colorado Fuel & jn company.
)PTION 10,000 ACRES OF LAND.
pastern Syndicate to Sink Coal Shafts In Illinois. |y Special Correspondent. I'MT. VERNON, 111.. Dec. 4.—The bigst deal in coal land in the history of tefferson county was closed yesterday ilhen A. C. Snively, representing a indicate of men from Pennsylvania id New York, took an option of 10,000 .re* of coal land in Elk Prairie and Spring Garden townships,-from ~Jeo. W. feuelkeld and William H. Green, repfesentTig the Jefferson county people. |he vrice to be paid for the coal land 425 per acre. Most of the land lies |ong the Chicago and Eastern llli3is liiilroad near Mt. Vernon. It is rented that coal shafts will be sunk pii.ho.it delay.
MORE RECRUITS FOR NAVY.
fTwo Hoosiers and One lliinoisan EnService At Local Station.
tinter
Chief Master-at-Arms Peter Schncidin charge of the local recruiting staof the United States navy, announces the following men as havini? ltered the service as apprentice seaien: Glenn Raymond Slaom, Robinson,
Lewis Parker Davis. Burnett, Ind. Kur'us Roy Dean, Odon, Ind. A number of new and attractive jsters have been received at the reruiting office and will be placed on the board at the postoffice. These or.lin views of the men in the navy iken while engaged in their work in le different branches of the service.
Thete
proporti nels
WO
Wherein a Man Gets His Money's Worth
A Ford Suit
and a ticket for the
A
Iks' Show
Listen, men. don't let this one bounce off. We charge you the same amount as your neighbor and him the same amount as his neighbor—$16.00. ONE PRICE TO ALL. $16.00—no more no less. That's all. Made to measure, guarantee-:! suits, overcoats and balmacaans, from the choicest patterns in the new woolens-to select from. Regular $25.00 and $30.00 values and workmanship, fabrics, linings, material and fit that will more than please you. We are showing hundreds of handsome woolens, the new patterns in the pretty blues, browns and tartan plaids. Patterns you -Cannot begin to duplicate elsewhere for $30.00. Come in and pick them out. We will tailor you a suit, overcoat or balmacaan from any one of these elegant pieces at the one price. A big money saving price— $16.00. Remember, men, Christmas is upon us let's have a new suit ,for the big gift day. The time is limited, so act quickly. Tou will find the latest, nobbiest tartan plaids, the niftiest, swellest pin stripes and checks, blue, black 'serges, cheviots, cashmeres, homespuns and scores of other handsome patterns.
Ask For the Label
PADEREWSKi'S PART
Cheerfully Cares for Twenty-five Refugees at His HomS in Lausanne, Switzerland.
NEW YORK, Dec. 4—In a letter recently received by Joseph A It man, 5719 Fourteenth avenue, Brooklyn, from his sister, Eleanor Altman, the pianist, who is sojourning at Lausanne, Switzerland, studying with Ff-derewski, she says: "Refugees everywhere. Paderewski had forty-five of them during the first two weeks of the war now he has twenty-five. Think of it. Forty-five people to house and feed, most of them utter strangers, a good part without money—forty-five tales of woe! Poor Paddy! But he has been really splendid taking them all in, though he'is quite hard hit himself. Besides, his man servants are gone and his horses have been requisitioned. The cow carries the baggage to and from the station. "They arc beginning to eat their prize chickens. Imagine making a meal of a $1,000 chicken. 1 played to him the other day. He was very enthusiastic, and said it was an extraordinary talent. I piayecl for about, one hour anc" a half. Afterwards he played soine ot' his variations most exquisitely, so clear, so plastic, such beautifully modulated color. "The Americans are the only fortunate- people here now. I went to the consul here and he says it's perfectly safe to stay. There is a colony of about 150 Americans at Lausanne. There are provisions enough for a year. Fifty thousand cattle on the mountains, twice as much milk as we can drink, and now Germany is sending coal through. You must not believe all the tales you hear. One American girl's father was distracted because
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PROPOSITIONS ,o-
$
728 Wabash Avenue
-^^PJfWP?
Women Riders of Great Britain's First Aid Corps
Women riders of Great Britain have organized the women's first aid nursing yeomanry corps to aid the wounded British fighters in the field. The photo shows some members of the corps in tlie open country.
he heard that we were eating mice in Switzerland. Why, one can get anything and everything, and the hotelliers arc,only too happy to run up bills. Now one can get a, reasonable amount of cash easily. "Madame Sembrich leaves on the Rotterdam on the 5th. I had a very pleasant visit with her. I played and both she and Dr. Stengle were very enthusiastic. She is so kind one forgets the great artist in the lovable woman. She sang at Paddy's birthday. "It was a great fete. Hoffman, Sehelling, Zimbalist, Kommoenich, .Brockway, Dorce, Altna Gluck, the DeKovc.ns, the Hills, the De Coppels, every one was there. It was all Chinese. Fireworks in the gardens, hung with Chinese lanterns, a Chinese play with appropriate music. Chinese works of art were presented by four 'Chinamen,' namely, Schelling, Hoffman, Granoda find Brockway, and then dancing with music playedcby the same four Chinamen."
TRANSPORTS AT MONTENEGRO.
Allies Cannot Disembark, However, Because of Austrian Aeroplanes. LONDON, Dec. 4.—5:55 a. m.—A dispatch to the Central News from Berlin says that according to an unofficial announcement made there, a number of transports, escorted by British and French warships, have reached Antivari, the sole seaport of Montenegro. The Austrian ships guarding the coast are said to have retired before the newcomers.
Austrian aeroplanes are active, it is stated, making disembarkations from the transports unsafe.
NOTES OF LABOR WORLD.
LIBOR MEETINGS TODAY. Vlgro lodge No. 202, International A*. fitclMt]6h of MiCblninU) Bartenders* hall.
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rticsrs mti corials.
A y,M •!•M .•»' .MI i' »-U 4W "l U|jllj*^ y.- T*'
TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE
CHANGE IN METER READING.
Gas Company- Announces Plan Used in Larger Cities. Announcement' of the_installation of a new meter reading system the'first of the year for the. gas consumers of Terre Haute was made Friday by C. D. Shaul, .t er.eral manager of the Citizens (las company. The new. .system will be known as the continuous mc-ter reading ejetem, which means that the gas meters in certain districts of the city will be read every day. "We will not read every meter every day as some people think," said Mr. Shaul. "We will divide the city Into twenty districts and each district will have the meters read at different times. 'I his will make the different districts have cbfHrent days on which to pay their bills and will eliminate the crowds Rt tjie ofrice. We believe the new system Is for the benefit of our patrons as well ds the office force of the company."
Gas billt will be made and delivered with the last day for discount stamped plainly cn the bill making different discount cays throughout the month for the \iJ'.ioup sections. The larger cities have rcopted the plan.
CRIMINAL CASES CONTINUED.
Judge Smith Puts "Them Over Until Next Week. The eases of William Bunkley, colored, charged with killing Clem Logan Georgia Stewart, held in connection with the same case Rivers Florida, charged with killing Ed Price by running him down with a motorcycle, and Francis Murphy, charged with killing Cory Gould, were continued in City Court Friday afternoon until next Friday. The latter case is to be taken up by the grand jury. It was reported that Charles Logan, stabbed by the Stewart woman, is in a critical condition.
Mike McCarty, charged with stealing a chicken, was fined $5, and Haidv Howell and Manus Brown, chargcd with stealing coal, were each fined $1.
COLLEGE WILL BE MOVED.
Institution At Ewing, III., Gobs to Marlon, III. By Special Correspondent.
MT. VERNON, 111., Dee. 4.—Ewing college, one of the oldest Baptist schools in the state of Illinois, is to move from Ewing to Marion, according to the arrangements and contract signed, reported in this city today.
The city of Marion pays a bonus and donates a five-acre site to obtain this college, which for years has been characteristic for its location in the isolated village of Ewing, which educators of former times declared a great thing for students, giving them a chance to pursue their studies without distraction.
New York Fashion Hint
A balmacan coat of pepper and salt material: a high black hat trimmed with a black spray or feathers: a fur set of raccoon wit'i the favorite round muff gray gaiters buttoned on tlie side —this describes tiie wearing apparel of the correctly dressed girl in the picture. who was photographed while walking' down Fifth avenue. New York, last week. ...... i\ v.
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A
The Ideal
Foot Protection for Children
Illustrated above is a HubMark two-buckje gaiter. It is a strong arctic made for grown people and children, but it is especially designed for the needs of school children who require a tough, warm shoe.
A Rmoos FVodnct die Bostcm RableTSKoffG.
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Lack Icr
Look for the Hub-Mark on all kinds and styles of Rubber Footwear for Men, Women, Boys and Girls.
Note thia: You can rely» on anything vou buy from dealers who sell Hub-Mark Rubber Footwear.. They are dependable merchants.
Boaton Rubber Shoe Company Maiden, Mam.
CHURCH ANNOUNCES CONCERT.
A concert will be given at the Poplar Street Baptist church, Fifteenth and Poplar streets, Tuesday night r.nder the direction of Mrs. H. Farr Waggener. The members of the choir, with several outside friends, will represent an old-fashioned singing school, to be conducted by E. L. Liston. Several piano, violin and vocal solos and ducts will help compose the program. A silver offering will be taken at the door.
CONCERNING CANCER
Write to THE WE3BER SANATORIUM, 17 Garfield Place, Cincinnati, O., fir information concerning the Medical Treatment of All Forms of External Growths, especially Cancer. Established 25 years and well endorsed. 96page book free.
Economy Meat & Grocery Co.
230 No. 4th St. 4th and Eagle Sts.
Fresh Pork Shoulders 12'/2C
Small Pig Pork Ham 13c
Small Pork Loins Pure Pork Sausage "I2'/2C
Good tender Beef Steak 10c Best of Beef Roast 12'/2C
Boiling Beef 10c Lamb and Veal Roast 14c
Veal Chops 17c
Lamb Chops .10c Sugar Cured Bacon. Kingan brand 17'/2C
Swift's best Smoked Ham ...15c Sugar Cured Smoked Jewel Bacon 12'/2C Pure Lard, 5-lb. pail 65c
Compound Lard, 51bs. for ...50c
Groceries
Ecst Patent Fiour, per sack 65c No. 3 Solid Pack Tomatoes, 2 10c cans 15c Best Golden Rio Coffee (sold for 25c elsewhere), per !b..15c
Whole Grain Jap Rice, 5 pounds for 2oc quart prepared Mustard ..10c
Macaroni, Spaghetti or Noodles, 2 10c packages 15c Country Butter, per pound ..30c
Fresh Eggs, per dozen :.36c 20c Apricots, 2 pounds for ...25c
15c Dried Peaches, 2 lbs. for..15c 12%c Dried Prunes, 2 lbs. for. 15c
Potatoes, per bushel 60c (Every One Guaranteed Sound.) Noco Oats, 4 10c packages ,25c
phones: Old 1034 New 1922-R. Goods Delivered All Over the City
PRACTICALLY All. THE TYPHOID CASES IN TEHEE HAUTE AKE AMONG USEES OF WELL WATER.
HULMAN & CO.'S
DauntlessCoffee
Unexcelled in Qualify Delicious Flavor
Pecked In On» Pound Cartons Only.
GIRLS! GIRLS! This is the way to get rid of chapped, rough or blotchy skin. Bathe the face in warm water: apply Lahelbro Liquid Face Powder, a. pure velvety cream and powder combined repeat daiiv until your completion Is clear, soft and beautiful. It's a woncler for pimples, freckles ajid sallow akin. gi&ta.
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HdsTiadcMsi^
tr-:^ ,^^9f t*s
STYLE
Our Big $5 Seller The ALDEN Shoe
QUALITY
Fur Sets
A fine Christmas gift. A little each pay day will buy one.
$5*00 to $35.00 MEN'S and
YOUNG MEN'S $10, $12, Easiest Terms in the City.
SERVICE COMFORT HORNUNG'S, 655 Wabasi
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1914.
See Herz's Advertisement on pages 6, 7,13 of this issue of
OVERCOATS
$15, $18, $20 We CMe the VMe Family
MENTER
815 WABASH AVE.
Open Saturday Until 10 p. m. Every Monday Until 8 p. m.
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TO THE FOUNDATION
OF $5.00 SHOES
I
BOUGHT
if
FROM
MENTER WILL TRUST YOU
AVING a confidential charge account here means that you can get the newest styles at the same time they appear in New York.
Quite some advantage, isn't it? And all oecause we have a resident buyer in New York who is on the job all the time.
New variety of styles just in for the holidays, and we will make the terms of payment to suit your convenience.
Women's Swell Coats, Suits, Furs and Millinery
WILL TRUST YOU
HE VIQUESNEY COMPANY
Office Supplies and Printing
Both Phones 3303 614-616 Ohio Street
Want Advertising is Profitable—You may get that situation you are looking for by insp^tine an ad in The Tribun^
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