Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 June 1915 — Page 4
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The Terre Haute Tribune
AND GAZETTE.
\n Independent nw»paper, Daily iml Simdny. The 'I'crrf llnwte Gnxetie, entobliHlied 1M9. The Terre Haute Trl• I11 ncf established 1894. j- Only newspaper In Terre Haate hnv-
Inn full day le:ised wire eeiYicc of A»printed l*ress. Central PrM» afcsociatlon xervlee.
Telephone Business Department, hoth phones, 3T8 Editorial Department, Gitirens, 155: Central Union, S16,
In advancc yearly by mall. Daily and Sunday, $5.00. Dai.'.ye only, ?8.0t. Sunday only, $2.00.
Entered as secondclass matter January 1, 1903, at the postoffioe
at Terre Haute. Indiana, under the act of congress of March 2, 1S79.
A Terre Haute newtpuper for Terre Hnute people. The only paper li» Terre Ifaii'e owned, edited and yub/ished by Terre lnvteens.
All unsolicited ort4cles, manuscripts, letters una pictures sent to the Tribune are sent at the owners risk, and the Tribune company expressly repudiates any liability or responsibility for their safe custody or return.
THE END OF SCHOOL.
'while In a general way the people of the state have heard and known something of the vocational educational work undertaken under the state law, &od while the people patronizing: the rural schools have probably a more direct and intimate knowledge of ,the agricultural instruction in th,e rural schools, the bulletin Just issued by the state department of public instruction serves to shed a new and better light. This bulletin is splendidly illustrated, and treats especially of agricultural Instruction and gilves a summary of what has been accomplished as shown by official reports. l'here is nothing more practical or Valuable to the community and the individual than this one feature in all the branches taught In any of the Schools. It is the education that has i.faught the farmer's boy in Indiana to produce forty-seven more bushels of ^orn to the acre than his father produces the same year in an adjoining field. The boys have also produced ihls larger crop at 21 cents a bushel against the state average of 35 cents q, bushel. The farmers are naturally becoming interested in what the boys are doing.
Dairy herds have been improved and many cows have been sent to the butcher because the boys and girls halve "shown the folks" the milk was useless wh'en put to scientific test. Others of the herd have been made to improve the milk production by proper feeding methods. Whole herds have grown more valuable by elevating the Stock with little or no extra expense to the farmer. Boys and girls have been allowed to take home milk testing apparatus in order many times "to convince the rest of the family."
Orchards long neglected and of no apparent productive (value have been revived and Improved by proper pruning, spraying, grafting and budding,
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and in many instances the bulletin tells us that in addition to the planting of new orchards by the boys the care of the old ones has been turned over entirely by their fathers with excellent results.
These are by no means Isolated cases, but are taken at random from this bulletin. They illustrate the general rule all over the state. There are 7,600 teachers in Indiana giving their attention to this agricultural teaching. It is because this is so large and so interesting a subject that State Superintendent of Public Instruction Greathouse has prepared an illustrated pamphlet for general distribution, and has already sent out a few thousand copies upon application and to many whom he judged would be Interested.
SEVEN LEAGUE BOOTS.
The (vogue for fairy tales is wearing out. Modern genius has put the fairies out of business. One day last month, in Indianapolis, a young man moved upon the earth at the rate of ninety miles an hour for several hours. Barring an occasional stretch of a few minutes on a few miles of railroad, this is the fastest' motion of a human being on the surface of the earth. For time measured in hours, this generalization is certainly true. Compared to what this modest young American did, the chariot races of Home were the awkward playing of babies. Ralph De Palma's official record was 500 miles in 5 hours 33 minutes and 55% seconds, the average speed being 89.84 miles an hour. The minute mechanical perfection that has been achieved by the automobile makers during the past few years is suggested by the fact that only four years ago, in 1911, the record was 74.59 miles an hour. In the race this year the tenth car beat the fastest car of 1911. Among these ten, cars, six were American built. The young man who did this unprecedented thing at Indianapolis is Italian born. He came to America when he was six years old.
Next week, at Chicago, twelve starters are going out to exceed this record, and predictions are made that they will do 100 miles an hour. The seven league boots and other speed appurtenances of the fairy books have bocome obsolete.
THE CHOSEN LAND.
Everything indicates that the wheat cropl this year will amount to nearly a billion bushels. The Paul Kuhn Co. of this city in a form letter to the farmers of western Indiana and eastern Illinois, estimates the crop at 700,000,000 bushels. This, with other commercial developments, indicates .that the return of prosperity is here. Although not even the harvesting of more bushels of wheat this year than the country has ever before obtained, in a single twellvemonth, can stimulate business in the same irresistible fashion, as It would if a world-wide war were not in progress, it is equally true that such a marvelous wealth, as the wheat crop of 1915 is going to yield the farmers of this country, cannot fail to help business in every section of the union. Never before, so far as we can recall, has a rec-ord-breaking crop been in prospect, attended, as this one is, by every possi
Stock Sale
WALL PAPER
50,000 Bolts of Wall Paper to be closed out at the greatest bagains Terre Haute has ever seen. We have only a few weeks to dispose of this large and most complete line. Everything in Wall Paper we have it at less price than the factory cost. It will pay you to buy now and stow it away for future use.
5c Wall Paper cut to, bolt
8c Wall Paper cut to, bolt
10 & 12%c Wall Paper cut to, bolt
15 & 18c Wall Paper cut to, bolt 6c 20 & 25c Wall Paper cut to. bolt 7\c Imported Holz Mehl, 25c grade 121c Domestic Oat Meal, 15c grade 7c
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bility of an exceedingly good price for every bushel that is marketed. Usually, large yield has meant low prices, and the farmer has sometimes been forced to believe that a big crop of wheat is less of a blessing than a crop of more modest proportions. This time, high prices and large yield bid fair to go hand in hand, with the consequent result that the western banks will be full of money, the farmers well supplied with means for purchasing comforts and necessities, and the rest of the country spurred into great industrial activity, by the big sales which its manufacturers and merchants will make in the agricultural section.
THE TROUBLESOME JITNEY.
"The Fiscal Agent," which has some thing to do with stocks and bonds and which, accordingly, is interested In street railway enterprises, reports that "The jitney busses in Terre Haute Ind., have suspended." The article implies that the people would not support them here and that they have b«en relegated to the second-hand auto places. "The Fiscal Agent" speaks of the "jitney craze" as follows: '"The results of an investigation made by a prominent banking institution, and as published by them, appear to Indicate that the thing has been overdone,- and .that in places where the jitneys hive been operating they are now on the decrease or their effect has been lessened: This company received reports from' 138 cities, representing 45 states, the District of Columbia, and including as well eight of the principal cities of the Dominion of Canada. Of the 13$ cities reporting the information received indicates that jitney busses are bperating in 106, leaving 32 in which they are not operating. Of the 106 c|ties in which jitney bus service, is Jb^ing undertaken at the present timei'itfVeport that the number of jitneys in operation is decreasing. Of the 32 cities reporting no Jitney service at the present time, seven report that the Jitneys appeared, but were discontinued because they proved unprofitable, or because of the result of an unfavorable public sentiment reflected in the adoption of ordinances for their regulation. "In Buffalo, N. Y., for instance, an attempt was made to start the service, but was discontinued on account of regulations adopted, by the city officials. Colorado Springs reports their discontinuance after two days' trial, while in Elgin, 111., the service was abandoned after two weeks' trial, as it did not prove remunerating. So also in Green Bay, Wis., the service was discontinued after a few days, while Lexington, Ky., gave it up after a 24-hour trial. In Tampa, Fla., the service lasted only one and One-half days, and, according to the reports received by the Fidelity Trust company, Ottawa, Ont., with its population of 100,000, refused to support the jitney service and the little busses have suspended in Terre Haute, Ind."
Indicating once more that you have to go away from home to get the news.
"Lansing claims 46,000," says a headline in a Detroit papfer. Reading further, howeiver, one discovers that the capital of Michigan, not the new secretary of state, is referred to.
Now that the allies have captured the Garden of Eden there will probably be much raising of Cain on both sides.
A Greencastle university professor asserts that there is hot a brain in the
2c
3c
5c
their former value
mm
TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE
Itched and Burned. Child Would Scratch and Cry All Night. Spread Very Fast. Caused Hair to Fall Out.
Used Cuticura. Trouble Gone,
BIrdsong, Mo.—"When my little daughter was two years old she had a terrible breaking out on her head which annoyed her a great deal. It came in yellow blisters which would break and run and where the matter would go At would break out again.
She could not rest at night. It itched and burned. She would scratch and cry all night. The trouble spread very fast. It gave her great
distress and caused her hair to fall out. ... "I applied various remedies without her receiving any benefit. At last with but little faith I began the use of Outlcura Soap as a shampoo and then applied the Cuticura Ointment. In one week her trouble was all gone and she has never been bothered since." (Signed) Mrs. Lucy B. Utley, June 26, 1914.
For red/ rough, chapped and bleeding hands, itching, burning palms, and painful finger-ends with shapeless nails, a one-night Cuticura treatment works wonders. Sample Each Free by Mail
With 32-p. Sldn Book on request. Address post-card "Cuticura, Dept. T,. Boston." Sold throughout the world.
world that is working to its full ca pacity. This is going to make sefveral prominent persons peevish.
Boy Scouts were appealed to for the teaching of sidewalk manners to Pittsburghers. Possibly the eighth city is not beyond partial redemption after all.
A woman of Yonkers left her husband one dollar In her wilL Yonkers Is altogether too close to Broadway for widowers with large sums of money.
Indiana farmers are being advised to plant peach trees along the highways. It is the motor tourists who are giving most of the advice.
An American man has invented a humane bullet, but not so humane that he cares to experiment on himself with it.
A swimming ejxpert states that swimming is as easy as walking. That doesn't recommend ..If much to a fat man.
BOOKS WOBTH WHILE.
A series of suggestive titles furnished to The Trtbune' by the Emmeline Fairbanks Memorial library,
Stories of Finance.
George DuMaurier—"Trilby." Eugene .Field—"The House." Robert Hamerllng—"Aspasia." Thomas Hardy—"The Well-Beloved." Nathaniel Hawthorne "Marble Faun."
Silas K. Hocking "Conquering Will." Blanche Willis Howard—"Guenn." •William D. Howells—"Coast of Bohemia."
Henry James—"Real Thing" "Roderick Hudson." Walter C. Lamed—"Arnaud's Masterpiece."
Flora H. Loughead—"Black Curtain." Maarten Maartens—"Price of Lis Doris."
Julia Magruder—"Princess Sonia." E. Nesbit—"Incomplete Amorist "Daphne in Fitzroy Street."
Edward Peple—"Prince Chap ''Mallet's Masterpiece." Maria Louise Pool—"Roweny in Boston."
May Slncliair—"Audrey Craven." F. Hopkinson Smith—"Fortunes of Oliver Horn."
LETTERS FROM THE PEOPfiE-
Medicinal Oils.
Editor of the Tribune—In an editorial appearing in the Tribune June 14 you comment upon the wonderful discovery by the Russians of a white petroleum oil that acts as an internal lubricant for the system, and which had obtained world-wide fame when the war broke out and interferred with our foreign trade but that American ingenuity has met the demands of the emergency and "replaced the Russian oil with a white petroleum oil from the laboratories of our own chemists.
This all sounds very well, but the facts are that we had been Able to produce a pure white, odorless and tasteless oil from petroleum long before the white Russian oil was introduced into this country.
The writer, after several years of experimental work with petroleum, succeeded sixteen years ago in producing a pure white, odorless and tasteless oil from American petroleum, and, knowing, the virtue of petroleum in pulmonary troubles, as well as an internal lubricant for the system, tried for a long time to put his white petroleum oil into a palatable form and to get it away from its resemblance to coal oil, finally succeeding in making a 95 per cent petroleum emulsion. This hei placed before the public under the name of "Petroleum Emulsion," changing the name in 1902 to "Milks Emulsion," which is now sold in every state in the union. J. E. MILKS.
768,622 SCHOOL CHILDREN.
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., June 17.— There are 768,622 children of school aig'e (6 to 21 years) in Indiana this year, according to figures made public at the office of Charles A. Greathouse, state superintendent of public instruction. There are 2,239 more children between thsse ages in the state this year than in 1914. Allen county has 27,846 St. Joseph,. 25,426 Tippecanoe,
1.0,779
Vanderburg, 25,332 Vigo, 25,-
573, and Wayne, 10,693
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315 PAIRS MODELS AT Sizes from 3 to 6%
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HOROSCOPE.
•Tta ft tars tacllac, but d* not co ape)." Copyright, 1915, by the McCium
Newspaper Syndicate.)
Friday, June 18, 1915.
Good and evil Influences are believed to contend today. Astrology finds that Venus is strongly adverse while Saturn is in beneflc aspect.
This is a time read as extremely unfavorable for the affairs of women. They will have many disappointments in politics, it is prognosticated. Their peace movement, however, is subject to a rule that is on the whole propitious. Benefits from unexpected quarters are presaged.
The stars indicate a period of loss for all who deal in wearing' apparel and articles designed for women's use. Modistes, milliners and jewelers are under a sinister sway.
The evil aspect of Venus is held to presage scandals and law suits which affect the reputations of men. All classes of society may suffer from this astral government.
This should be a fairly good sway for building, repairing and dealing in real estate.
Farmers, gardeners and florists have an encouraging sign today. According to ancient belief this configuration is particularly good for bulbous vegetables, and may indicate a good potato crop.
The lunation of this month, falling' on the place of Saturn at the vernal equinox, Is read as foreshadowing serious trouble for the British government. The resignation of a minister or disgrace of a general is said to be indicated.
Mars and Saturn are believed to exercise an influence that is said to be extremely disturbing to Ireland, London and New York are forewarned of a sudden financial depression owing to a sensational incident.
Deaths from drowning will increase greatly in the next month. This prediction does not concern itself with
Tstomach
IE X-Rajr has almost worked mlraclea In dla&noainf} troubles. You can take a series at X-Ray pictures at Intervals of a few minutes each, while the stomach is .busy digesting food—put these pictures together on a film, throw them on a screen, and
You virtually have a MOVING PICTURE of the stomach In action WHILE DIGESTING YOUR FOOD.
IFcall'
you have an add stomach—hyperacidity, doctors It— and your food in consequence thereof, ferments and sours, producing poisonous gases which distend the stomach,
The X-Ray moving pictures will show that the passage of your food from your stomach Into your Intestines is delayed.
This causes the formation of more poisonous gases, more fermentation and souring of food, more Irritability •f the delicate stomach walls, until in time.
Your whole system becomes saturated with toxic (poisonous) products, often producing great physical weakness, nervous irritability, intestinal disorders pimples or blotches on the skin, frequent duU headaches, melancholy or the "blues".
ACID
STOMACHS ARE DANGEROUS—the excess add may eat into the stomach walls, causing STOMACH ULCERS, which may lead to cancer. It is worse than useless to take strong drugs, pepsin or artificial digestants in such cases.
The trouble in hyperacidity is not a lack of digestive Juices, but the excess add destroys the action of these Juices so that your foood lies there and sours "and ferments causing pain, gas, belching, etc.
NEUTRALIZE THE EXCESS ACID—give your stomach a chance to do its work and you will be all right. But do not take large quantities of SODA for this purpose.
-of-
TRAVERS-SHOES
-from-
The Albreclit Store
Continues Witti Greater Values
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NOT NttRE THAN TWO PAIR! TO A CUSTOMER
SIZES STAMPED IN PLAIN FIGURES
?Y0W
ARE SURE OF A
675 Wabashi
the usual minor accidents, but foretells disaster on the ocean. The Panama Pacific exposition should benefit greatly in July as it is under a direction of the stars read as exceedingly encouraging.
Naval affairs may present unexpected problems. A commanding officer of high rank will be put to a severe test.
Persons whose birthdate it Is have the augury of a prosperous year in business, but they may have disappointments or illness In the family.
Children born on this day are likely to be extremely prosperous through life. These subjects of Gemini partake also o!t the qualities of Cancer, as they are on the cusp. They may be very fond of publicity. Many" actors are born under this sign.
Lo, the Rich Indian.
"While you were out west did you see any Indians on their mustangs?" "Nope. Saw plenty of them in automobiles."—Louisville Times.
OATMAN'S
Show Why "toil Have GAS FERMENTATION and SOURING of FOOD, Pimples,Blotches, General Weakness. Melancholy and the'Blues"
THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1.915..
A -if"
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VALUES $3 to $7
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THE PAIR
FOR FRIDAY OILY
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IvSbrecht
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Store
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY.
June 17, 1905.
The young people of the Zion Baptist church gave a lawn festival at «the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. J. St. Clair.
Edward L. Hallinin will succeed Jphn L. Davis as trainmaster of the Vandalia system, it was announced at headquarters.
Mrs. Sarah K. (Davis was elected president of the Wiley high schpol alumni association at a business meeting last night.
The per capita cost of each child, at, the Glenn home during the. past month amounted to 14 cents. There are now 75 children in the home. -O*
THE BEST REAL ESTATE BARGAINS are always advertised in the Trihune Real Estate Columns. Twelve words three days for 30 cents.
For Boy* and GMa
Every boy and girl in town can have a fine pair of guaranteed roller skates absolutely Free if they get their mother to buy Oatman's Dundee Milk. It's the best canned milk in the world. It is clean and pure and absolutely free from germs.
Start Saving Oatman's Dundee Labels Today
and in a few weeks you will have a brand new pair of Roller Skates and they haven't cost you or your folks a cent. Write today for our new premium book. We
FWWilfTl £*ve R°£ers guaranteed Silverware and hundreds of other valuable and useful premiums. All you have to do is save the labels. "V"&P OATMAN'S DUNDEE MILK DuBdM. ininoi.
^nniwnmimwiiniiiiinii—iitifi
MOVING PICTURES OF THE STOMACH DURING DIGESTION
y- rlr.
Too much SODA may not only Irritate your stomach walls, thereby causing them to secrete more add and. this actually aggravates your trouble, but SODA liberates CARBONIC ACID GAS and this added to the gas you already hare may distend your atomadi walls and in time cause stomach dilatation, an exceedingly difficult disease to cure.
FOR
neutralizing excess add when your food ferments and sours, THE BEST THING Is to take a teaspoonful of Bisurated Magnesia in a four/h or half a glass of hot water after meals.
This will generally gl»e relief In worst cases from ONE TO FIVE MINUTES, then your food will digest naturally and normally.
If at any time, you should have an active attack oI stomach or bowel trouble, get 10 cents worth of Bismuth Carbonate and take a half teaspoonful before your meals and take Bisurated Magnesia after meals. But do not continue the use of the bismuth carbonate longer than three days as it has a constipating effect and might cause constipation. You can continue the ose of Bissura ted Magnesia, however, as long as may be necessary. as It Is harmless.
BISURATEDChemist
MAGNESIA was discovered by a great
European and it is widely used throughout Europe for the relief of stomach hyperaddlty. The manufacturers will send a liberal quantity to any physidan who wishes to test It on his patients for 10 cents. Address BISURATED MAGNESIA. Department A, 26 East 26th St., New "York. 31surated Magnesia is now generally carried in stock by all American druggists and others of this city aiways keep it on hand.
It Is positively guaranteed to give O MPL.ETE RELIEF IN AN if CASE of hyperacidity (acid stomach) or. the manufacturers will refund1? your money. 'h.
