Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 23 April 1915 — Page 10

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LETTER BLOCKS PLOT & TO FREE HARRY THAW

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Virginian Writes District Attorney That He Was Offered $1,000 to

Help In Escape.

NEW YORK, April 2S.—Sheriff ("Jrifenhagen said today that h© had taken •very precaution to frustrate an alleged plot to spirit Harry Thaw out of New York state, which came to light last night in Norfolk, Va. Without accusing Thaw or any of his intimates of participation in the plot the local authorities said they had reason to believe that plans had been laid to take Thaiw from his gurfrd on the way to court here, place him in an automobile and hurry him to the first train to Virginia.

According to the sheriff the plan was first revealed by the following? letter written to Assistant District Attorney Frederick J. Grohl, of New York by Louis Weinrop, of Norfolk:

MA

man comes over to me and he •aid I should go to New York when Barry Thaw's case comes up on the 22nd of Aproil and he will give me two more men and they will have an autoxpeAlle to take Harry Thaw away when lie comes to court room to another state and he offered me one thousand dollars and all expenses and a security for any accident happened to me In any responsible place, but I refused Mm the job because he wanted mo to go at once with him to New York but I wanted him to give me $50 before I go with him. He will not want to do that he only wanted to pay car faro to New York and go there with him to his office In New York. This man is a detective but he travels from, the city to another. I know him but I can't write you in this letter who he is. But If I could see you personally I will tell who he is, if you want me you could wire me at once on your expense and 1 Wfll come to New York."

YOUR HOUSE 18 NOT REALLY ON THE MARKET if it is not advertised in the for sale columns of The Tribune.

YOUR HEAD AND STOMACH

**V Headache caused by a disturbed digestion is nearly always accompanied ~v by pain In the storhach, belching of *, gas, vomiting and often by constipa-

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tion. This sort of headache is g«nerally located in the forehead and is not j. constant but comes and goes.

It does not come on immediately after eating but after the food has had time to ferment, which it does because

the digestive fluids that should take O1 care of it are insufficient, because the gl glands that secret these fluids are weak, because the blood is failing to nourish these glands properly.

Rich, red blood is the first essential f,* to proper digestion and the digestive V^_pr^Tyss cannot go on without it. When lacic~of nourishing Wood causes fermentation and poisoms are absorbed

from the digestive traot, the pain in ^s your head advises you of the fact. Ir. Williams' Pink Pills give the blood just the elements they need to correct this condition and. with a laxative, when required, form a perfect treatment for the headaches of indlgestion.

Mention this paper and 'we will send you two little books on the diet and the proper use of a laxative. Address: Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schnectady, N. Y. Your own druggist sells Dr. Willi sums' Pink Pills.

RUPTURE

Free Demonstration

fV Of the World's Greatest Rupture Holder—worn and endorsed by physicians.

§T THE WUNDERTRUSS

displaces all others. No pressure In the back or on the bone In front. No Jmg straps, elastic bands or steel spiring*. Especially for ruptures low down and hard to hold—those following operations and navel ruptures in fleshy women. Next visit to

Terre Haute House

Terre Haute, Tuesday, April 27th, 3:00 a. m. to 4:00 p. m.

M. H. BROWN

If yo« cannot call, write for future dates and circulars. Health Appliance Co., 45 W. 84th St.

New York City.

ilSISlSS

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If you care for heavy hair, that glistens with beauty and is radiant with life has an incomparable softness and is fluffy and lustrous, try Danderine.

Just one application doubles the beauty of your hair, besides it immediately dissolves every particle of dandruff you can not have nice,

Continued From Page One.

tell you you have got some church members in this town whose home life is as rotten as hell."

In a general scathing of the city he shouted, "Don't think your wickedness is altogether in the redllght district It's on your boulevards, too." In arraigning what he termed as sabbath violators he said, "The trouble with tco many of you is that you are making Sunday a holiday rather than a holy day. The Lord says 'Six Days Shalt Thou Labor" and then declares that the seventh is a day dedicated to Him. Why don't you keep it holy? All communities should discourage Sunday excursionis. Sunday is God's day and a day of rest."

Dr. Lyon's talk Thursday evening was taken from Galations 3:24 "The law was our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ." The first commandment upon which he spoke Thursday night was "Thou Shalt Not Take the Name of the Lord, Thy God, in Vain." He said:

Takes Shot at Profanity. "Of all the foolish and inexcusable sins, methinks the most foolish and inexcusable is profanity. There are some vices, indulgence in which gives one at least a temporary satisfaction but this is not so with swearing. It never gave anyont enjoyment, even for the moment. A person that Bwears discloses both poverty of speech and poverty of Intellect. He reveals the fact that there is something radically wrong in his head and something radically rotten in his heart. "A man that swears shows, in the first place, that he has rto respect for himself when he thinks that people will not believe what he says without emphasizing his language with oaths. If a man has no self-respect, it is like trying to build character on quicksand. He shows, in the next place, that he has no respect for his fellowman when he believes that people will regard his words of greater weight, if he punctuates his sentences with profanity. He shows, in the third place, that he has no respect for God. "But I hear someone interpose, *1 never swear only when I get mad.' That Is no valid excuse. There is no man on earth that needs the grace of God more than the one that lets his temper get the better of him. "Supposing a great war was on and the patriotic citizens had erected on the public square a flag staff, at the top of which floated the stars and stripes. Supposing some traitor, to show his contempt for that fla# would climb up and tear down the stars and stripes and drag its folds through the mire of the streets. How long could such a fellow live among patriotic people? And yet there is a banner emblazoned with the name of God, the Father and Jesus Christ His Son,

Wise Precaution

will prevent the little illness of today from becoming the big sickness of tomorrow and after. For troubles of the digestive organs you can rely on

BEECHAM'S PILLS

Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10c., 25c.

Compound, prism atic and prescription work a specialty.

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FOR DANDRUFF, FALLING HAIR OR ITCH* SCALP—25 CENT DANDERINE

Girls! Girls! Save Your Hair! Make It Grow Luxuriant and Beautiful.

heavy

healthy hair if you have dandruff. This destructive scurf robs the hair ot its lustre, its strength and its very life,

LYON RIDDLES STINGY FOLKS

on Sale

Remember—Our work is all guaranteed.

Von Binzer

We make any style, shape or color glass you wish.

SATURDAY SPECIAL I will examine your eyes free and furnish perfect vision, fine spherical lenses with the new Snur-On mounting for the unusually low price of $3.00.

630% Wabash Ave. Over the Collins Store. Open until 8 o'clock evenings. One door east of Valentine's north side of street.

-.v ., \$

and If no«t overcome it produces a feverlshness and itching of the scalp the hair roots famish, loosen and die then the hair falls out fast.

If your hair has been neglected and is thin, faded, dry, scraggy or too oily, get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine at any drug store or toilet counter apply a little as directed and ten minutes after you will say this was the best investment you ever made.

We sincerely believe, regardless of everything else advertised, that if you desire soft, lustrous, beautiful hair and lots of it—no dandruff—no itching scalp and no more falling hair—you must use Knowlton's Danderine. If eventually—why not now?

crimson with the blood of Calvary, which men are dragging through the filth and mire of blasphemy. 8hows Place to Swear. "Man, if you want to swear, let me tell you what to do. Go out of town and flnd some barn crawl under It as far as you can, and there among the rats and worms and other vermin, open your mouth and cuss and swear. "The gospel of Jesus Christ alone today stands between the working men of this country and Industrial slavery. It is the sacredness of the Lord's day that has been the power that has preserved it thus far from Its being made like every other day in the week. Remove this influence that has protected it, and the result will be that almost universally the laboring man will be compelled to toil consecutively through all the seven days. I have no con troversy with the working man that Is compelled by his employer, against his will, to work on the Sabbath, know there are many cases when this seems unavoidable. Let me say, my friend, if your position demands. Sunday work, make that spot in the shop, or way-car, or engine cab, holy unto God. Make it a pulpit to proclaim by your words and deeds, your love and loyalty to Christ. Do not let the fact of Sunday toll keep you from being a Christian. Take Christ with you wherever you go. But pray that God may some day give you an opportunity for a day of rest.

Desecration of Sabbath.

"When a man makes the Lord's day a time merely for merriment and revelry, he is driving a nail into the coffin of his own industrial liberty. A man that patronizes Sunday baseball la striking a blow at one of the finest, best sports that was ever played. "Someone may try to excuse himself for desecrating the Lord's day by saying he needs six days in the week tot work and he needs the seventh for recreation. Supposing a man would give another six of his seven horses as a present, and then on some dark night, this fellow would break into the other man's barn and steal the seventh. When he wa/ brought before the judge, suppose that he woiild plead in paV llation for his offense, that he wanted the six horses for work horses and he wanted the seventh for a trotter. "Let us now take up the sixth commandment, 'Thou shalt not kill.' Some one may say we have no murderers in this city, so you might just as well piwa over that law. Perhaps there are none that go out to shoot or stab their victims in cold blood, but there are other ways to kill than merely with a pistol or a knife. Many are committing suicide. First there is physical suicide. Do you suppose you can continue taking into your system a poison, that if you put three drops of it on the tongue of a dog it \Vill cause him to drop over dead within five minutes and still be as strong and healthy as before? 'Know ye not that your body is the temple of the holy ghost? If a man defiles this body, him will God destory.' Supposing you would give a friend a fine house to live in for a year, rent free, and at the close of that time you would return to flnd that he had taken buckets of mud and daubed over the nice white walls. You would say, 'Move out, and it will be a long time before I give you another house to live in.'

Attacks Cigarette Users.

"Gcd has given us these dwellings, these physical bodies to live in for three score years and ten, rent free, lie is testing us to flnd out whether we are worthy of occupying the spiritual body, the mansion not made with hands, eternal in the heavens. If you defile the temporary, can you expect to have the perman&nt? If you degrade the physical, can you expect to obtain the spiritual? "I want to strike a blow every chance I have against the great curse of our

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TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE

$10.00 Suits are reduced to ....$ 8.75 $12.50 Suits are reduced to $ 9.50 $15.00 Suits are reduced to .$11.75 $18.00 Suits are reduced to $13.50 Men's Trousers at Reduced Prices Men's $1.50 Trousers are now ., ..$1.19 Men's $2.00 Trousers are now .. ..$1.65 Men's $2.50 Trousers are now .. .$2.15 Men's $3.00 Trousers are now .. $2.35 Men's $3.50 Trousers are now .. .. $2.85 Men's $4.00 Trousers are now .. ..$3.35 Men's $5.00 Trousers are now .. $3.95 Men's $6.00 Trousers are now .. .$4.75

boys and young men, the coffin nails— the cigarette. I would rather follow a boy of mine to the grave than have him grow up to be a cigarette amoKer. There is something about nicotine, especially in this form, which is Inhaled into the lungs and oomes directly in contact with the blood, that poisons every part of the system, so that at last the victim does not seem to know whether he is doing right or domg wrong. Either America must drive ew the cigarette or our civilization Is doomed. Would it not be better, fathers, to give up some indulgence which you personally enjoy, even though It Is not a sin, that you may have a better influence upon your son or your neighbor's son? "Then there are many that are committing intellectual suicide by pernicious reading. The pictures on the walls, in many homes, the books on the table, and the pamphlets hidden away in desks and closets have poisoned many minds and blighted their imaginations. These vile nickel libraries and dime novels which are sold at news stands, are bringing a greater curse upon our communities than a scourge of smallpox."

The subject of the sermon Friday evening will be "Oraft, Gossip, Business Dishonesty and the Social EJvil."

DOWN TOWN MEETING.

Lyon Party Holds Services At Piano Company Store. The Friday morning meeting of the Lyon evangelistic company was held at 642 Wabash avenue In the room occupied by W. H. Paige and company and J. A. Kern. The room was crowded by men and several women were also present.

The meeting opened with two songs by the assembly, led by Loren G. Jones, musical director of the company, and assisted by Rev. Ray G. Upson at the piano. Rev. T. J, Everett gave the prayer and this was followed by a duet by Messrs. Jones and Upson.

Fred W. Rapp, who has charge of the factory and shop meetings, spoke on "A Good Man Who Was Lost and a Bad Man Who Was Saved." Mr. Rapp brought out the fact that a man might be a square business man and lead a clean and moral life, but that unless he was willing to accept Jenus Christ he was lost. As a contrast to this se said that the bad man who realized that he was a bad man and prayed to God for mercy, would be saved, because he realised that he was a sinner.

Among those present were Rev. C. R. Parker, Rev. I*. O. Richmond, Rav. L. O. Blake, Will A. House, Charles Ehrmann, W. H. Bear, Rev. Bwald Sommerlatte

The next morning meeting will be held at the Sllger Art store, 711 Wabash avenue, Tuesday at 9 o'cloqk.

Lyon to Tour Cities

and Towns in District

Cities and towns around Terre Haute will get to hear the Rev. Mllford H. Lyon next Monday when an auto tour will be made of Terre Haute and vicinity. Capt. B. E. Stahl, Ira Andrews and Prof. Hubbard have charge of the arrangements for the tour. The committee is trying to get 100 automobiles to make the trip. The following schedule will be followed:

Leave Terre Haute at 8 a. m. Arrive Sanford 8:30 a. m. Leave Sanford 8:45 a. m. Arrive Vermilion at 9:15 a. m. Leave Vermilion at 9:30 a. m. Arrive Libertyville at 9:45 a. m. Leave Libertyville at 10:00 a. m. Arrive New Goshen at 10:16 a. m. Leave New Goshen at 10:30 a. m. Arrive Clinton at lla:00 a. m. Dinner at Clinton. Leave Clinton at 12:^0 n. m. Arrive Rosedale 1:00 p. m. Leave Rosedale at 1:15 p. m. Arrive North Terre Haute 1:46 p. m. Leave North Terre Haute 2 p. Arrive Brazil at 3 p. m. Leave Brazil at 3:30 p. m. Arrive Seelyville at 4 p. m. Leave Seelyville at 4:15 p. m. Arrive Riley at 3:45 p. m. Leave Riley at 6 p. m. Arrive Terre Haute 5.20 p. m.

WHEN IN DOUBT, The Triton*

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:MYERS BROTHERS:

Cut Price Clothing Sale

It will pay everyone to keep posted on what's doing at the Home of Totally Different and Better Clothes overjr day. We're going to do some great things in clothes selling here tomorrow. The man who stays away is going to lose some money.

High-Art^ Sampeck, Stein-Bloeh and many other fine lines of men's and boys' clothes are included in this whirlpool of cut prices. A most backward season is the reason for this most unusual sale. Never before has clothing like we are offering been sold at cut prices just at the opening of the season. If you know a man who wants a good suit, pair of trousers or anything in outfitting for himself or his boys at a big saving, tell him! Tell him! Tell him! You'll do him a kindness.

Men's Spring and Summer Suits at Reduced Prices

Remember Our Prices Before This Sale Were 10 to 20% Below Others

Notable Feat.

"Who's the gent?" "Literary character. Highly interesting case." "What's his claim to fame?" "Seems he once read one of Trollope's novels."—Louisville Times.

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$20.00 Suits are reduced to .. r. .$15.00 $22.50 Suits are reduced to $17.50 $25.00 Suits are reduced to $19.75 $30.00 Suits are reduced to $23,50

Boys' Suits at Reduced Prices $ 2.50 Suits are now $ 1.95 $ 3.00 Suits are now $ 2.35 $ 3.50 Suits are now $ 2.85 $ 4.00 Suits are now .$ 3.35 $ 5.00 Suits are now $ 3.95 $6.00 Suits are now $ 4,75 $ 7.00 Suits are now $ 5.50 $ 8.00 Suits are now $ 6.35 $10.00 Suits are now .$

$12.00 Suite are now .. $ 9.50 $15.0Q Suits are now $11.75

Your

Credit

Will clothe you from head to foot for only $1 & week.

Remember that when you come to us for CREDIT, you do so at OUR invitation. Therefore, do not hesitate to buy on CREDIT which we extend to you so fretfly.

We want yon to come here perfectly at ease and to select from our splendid stock of cloth* ing just as if ydu were paying cash for your selection.

Our factory is In the very heart of the fashion centre of America—on Broadway, New York—and you buy these up-to-the-min-ute garments direct from us at the MAKER'S prices.

So come and dress yourself and your family in the height of style, at an economy such as you never believed possible for $1.00 a week.

Special!

Several Hundred Men's and Women's Elegant

Spring Suits $15, $18, $22.50

Let us show you the remarkable purchasing power of your credit. At the above prices we offer elegant Spring Suits that are wonderful values. All you pay Is $1.00 a week.

Complete Line of Women's Coatiy Dresses, Skirts, Millinery sad Men's Hats. Also

Boys' Clothing.

COLLINS CO.

630 Wabash Ave.

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^ijiiii.iiiii jiiii ».i4^iip)uiw

7.95

A Suggestion.

Mrs. Avre-Shaft—The people in the next apartment are having a lovely time deciding on names for their ne^v twins.

Mr. Ayre-Shaft—Tell them I suggested Hugh and Cry.—Judge.

FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1915.

FINE MICHIGAN

^OTATOES^

Extra nice, smooth good cookers. Lowest price in the city for Saturday and Monday.

Large Bunche* Horn® Grown

ASPARAGUS

White and grreen 1®#

Fine, Youngr, Tender

LETTUCE :4

Pound 15o

Young Tender

SHALLOTS

One Cent the bunch.

Mother's Oats

4 10c boxes 25c With dollar order Meat or Groceries on sale Saturday and Monday.

EARLY JUNE

SUGAR PEAS

4 10c cans 25c With dollar order of Meat or Groceries on sale Saturday and Monday.

KARO SYRUP

yt gallon palls 20o Light or dark sale Saturday and Monday.

HAND PICKED

WHITE NAVY BEANS

5 pounds 25o

Peanut Butter

Pound 10c On sale Saturday and Monday.

3 quarts Onion Sets 10c

Chocolate Drops, 2 Be grade, the pound 10c None charged.

SUGAR, COFFEE AND TEA

25 pound cloth sack Granulated Sugar $1.55 With order. Special blend Coffee, the pound 15c 40c green Tea, pound..... .20e 20c pound green Tea... .10c 3 pounds Tea Siftings 25c

Country Sorghum

Gallon 49c

SOAP SALE

Swift's Pridd or Gloss 9 b&rii for 25s Sale Saturday and Monday.

Vashiig Powder Sale

3 5c boxes White Line 10c 25o box Grandma's Washing Powder 10c

Special for Saturday

Beef Pot Roast \2}4c lb.

Young, lean &nd tender.

Country Dressed Hens

Smoked Jowls, pound.. .12*/fec Pickled Pork, pound 10c Picnic Shoulders, pound 12^e 20c Bacon, pound 16|/£c Sugar Cured Hams, pound 16J4o Skinned Hams, pound.. .IB'/fco One pound Smear Kase with cream ....15c pound Pimento Cheese for 15c Klngan Bacon, pound 18'/ic

Home Rendered

LARD

5 pound bulk 1 55c No. 6 pail 55c

Cooked Veal Loaf, pound. .30c

Baldwin Apples

Peck 30c

FLOUR SALE

48-pound cloth sack Gold Medal 11.96 48-pound Breeett Patent $1.96 24-pound cloth sack 98o

BRESETT

Arches and Paine From Constipation. iTA

Blackburn'ii

Banishd Qujokly.

15 dosea, 10 eta, 46 dosee, 25 eta.

The City Water is fine. Come on in. It saves the housekeeper a lot of work.

CHAMPAGNE VELVET That Em Wdoome Beer1' TEKB2 HAUTE BEE WING CO.

C. FRED

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AUCTIONEER'

"The Man That Gets The 109 N. 16th St. Bell pho Office 818 Wabash Bell Phon -21.

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