Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 22 November 1915 — Page 9

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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1915,

GIVEN HEALTHY BOOST

Contributions Received Since Satur day Bring Total for Dinner for City's Poor to $250.

BASKET DINNER FUND.

Previously reported Jefferson lodge .Modern A uteri••niiM Zlon Kefornied V. 1'. S C. It. Smith A I'^rlemi Tereessn Helping Hand »lr. mid Mr*. E. William" UdK«i* Coffee Sir. and 31th. Ell Lee 31 r. Call C. H. MeCnllo Terre llautc aerie Xo. 201, K. O.

Mr*. Kamile Foiiter Frank Pro* Friend

211.35

1.00 1.00

5.00

1.00

1.00

Total 9230.US

As Thanksgiving day approaches, the Light House mission Thanksgiving basket dinner fund is booming and Captain B. E. Stahl is wearing the Bmile that won't come off, for he knows that many homes will be brightened and that the confidence that he ha-s always had in the generosity of the citizens of Terre Haute to help those whd are in need has not been misplaced. -I am glad that am a citizen of no mean city," said Captain Stahl this morning, "and I certainly appreciate the spirit shown by the people of Terre Haute to the work of the Light House mission, which I am proud to represent. Let those who have not yet contributed to this fund send in their donations and have a part in making this the most successful dinner in the history of the mission, and also care for the winter relief work. Today, Tuesday and Wednesday is pound day. Take a pound of coffee, sugar, canned goods of all kinds to The Tribune or to the Light House mission, 119 Ohio street."

BOOK READERS INCREASING.

Montrose Library Reports Marked Gain In Circulation. A marked increase in the circulation of the Montrose branch library is already noted, according to the librarian. Miss Clementine Dorsey, since the books have been removed to a separate building on the street. Recently the men's civic league of that locality at one of its meetings in the school building, procured about twenty-five books from this branch. The books were listed on slips of paper and the league members drew slips. At tonight's meeting of the league, each member will give a five minutes' discussion on the book he drew at the last meeting.

Miss Dorsey said quite a number of men drop in every evening to read the papers and magazines in addition to those who come, for books..

LOCAL WOMEN SPEAK.

Mrs. J. D. Foor, of Terre Haute, and Mrs. Carrie Jones, of near Youngstown, spoke at Seelyville Saturday night. Mrs. Foor, who has worked for many sessions in the legislature, told how legislation was procured and pointed out the Importance of electing the right men to legislature and congress in working to procure reforms of any kind.

THE BUCKS' WATERLOO.

Harry Hedges and Ike Powers departed Monday for St. Louis for a Vreek's duck hunting on the Desplaines river. Ducks along the Wabash are reported scarce but are said to be plentiful In Illinois.

One Of The Dalton Boys

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.Hit. A.Vl) MKS. EMMKTT DAI.TOX.

While the problem of what to do with our former presidents still perplexes, the problem of what to do with our former bandits has been adjusted. They are being put out as lecturers with moving: pictures of their supposed former exploits. Emmett Dalton will be here Tuesday to lecture at the S'avoy on the McCoy-Hatfleld pictures.

Suburban Day Offers

Thanksgiving Specials

Thanksgiving day specials will be the feature of the bargains offered by many ,2gSlic Terre Haute merchants Wednesday, Suburban day. Thanksgiving day brings to the mind of almost every one, the idea of a sumptuous dinner, and the stores have arranged displays of food suitable for the occasion.

Turkeys are being offered at many places, and many who do not care for this bird will have a choice selection of ducks and chickens to choose from. Fruits for the table arc in evidence at many stores.

Other stores are making their first big display of holiday goods and the varieties offered along this line are almost unlimited. For special gifts, the jewelry stores are offering the latest and best goods that can be obtained. The men's furnishing stores are showing artistic lines of neckwear and shirts, which are attractive as Christmas gifts, and the shops that cater to the women are offering articles that make every woman stop and dream of possessing them. Fur is very popular on many articles of female clothing, and this is being shown in almost any variety and color.

FIRE DEPARTMENT BUSY.

Three Small Blazes Call Out Various Companies. An overheated stove in a building on the alley near First and Mulberry streets, Monday morning, set fire to the wall paper and burned a small part of the ceiling. Fire company No. 4 made the run on a still alarm.

The Eights made a run Monday morning to the residence of Mrs. Densley, 218 North Fourteenth street, to extinguish a small fire in the kitchen. Mrs. Densley had left some rags hanging over the stove and went away. They caught fire.

A small roof fire at hte residence of Mrs. Terhorst, 815 North Eleventh street, called out the Threes Sunday. The damage at all three fires was slight.

GIRLS COOK OWN DINNER.

About thirty-flve girls living at the Y. W. C. A. will prepare their own dinner Thanksgiving day, this being an annual "stunt" of the girls who do not go home. The association's Thanksgiving day for the public will be Wednesday noon.

(BARBOUR TOPS'

You can be as comfortable with a Barbour Top as with a $5000 limousine. Handsome in design, practical in construction and rattle proof. Patent flexible sliding doors insure this. Large production makes low prices possible. Built for Ford, Buick, Maxwell and Overland Cars.

W. R. BARBOUR

South 3rd Street, Opposite Court House

REV. REED PREACHES ON THE LOST CHRIST

Modernizes Bible Text and Closes Sermon With Song—Cites Need of an Awakening.

Rev. T. B. Reed, of the Fort Harrison church, spoke Sunday evening from the text, "The Lost Christ." He said: "Starting from His early childhood, at the age of 12 years, when He went up to Jerusalem with His parents, how He got lost from them and how grieved His parents were when they found they had lost Him, however, this Child Christ was about His Father's business. He pictures to us the mind of Christ, that he was thinking of His life, what it meant to be in the service of God, and as He was going up to the temple He saw how beautiful and glorious and how wonderful the temple was In all of its constructure. No doubt He took part in the sacred service. "He pictures how we belong to God, just as this Christ Child did to His parents, and what it means to us to be lost from Him. "As we go along life and as we look back In our lives we, too, may acknowledge the fact that we have lost Christ. What does this mean to us? It means we have lost the real virtue, the real spirit of Jesus Christ. "As His parents started homeward they missed Him, but they were lost from Him. They wanted to see Him and long to be near Him, that they might touch Him—just as we search ourselves today when he have lost Christ. We feel in our hearts that we have lost something of great value. "How many of us awaken to the fact that we have lost Christ out of our lives. Let us test ourselves it will not be hard for us to reach Him. He wants us to have that spirit—'to love one another, even as I have loved you, to lay down our lives for our friends.' If you have not that spirit you have lost Christ. There will come a time when you long to reach out to His hand and long to have Him close. Do as Jesus' parents did—they Went back to look for Him Jesus did not leave them, they left him He was about His Father's business. "There are some that have gone away and left Him, waiting for Him to come back. That test that you have failed to go through, the cross you failed to bear, is the thing that lost you from Him. It was you who lost Him, all because you went another way. How are you going to get back to Him? Go back to the place where you left the Christ, but the fact of it all is, Have yoy ever known Him?' "Let us remember that this life is not a life Ave are going to go into for everything."

At the close of the sermon, Rev. Iteed sang, "Lost in Eternity Gloom."

WRIGHT CITES PROBLEMS.

Preaches Sunday From Text "Wealth of the Wilderness." Rev. Manfred C. Wright preached Sunday evening at the Montrose M. E. church from the text, "The Wealth of the Wilderness." He took the topic from Psalm 65:11-12, "The Paths Drop Fatness, They Drop Upon the Pastures of the Wilderness." He said: "God going up and down in the earth in a golden chariot, scattering wealth everywhere. Such is the poetic imagery of this psalm. The wilderness shares in the divine outpouring. It stands for undeveloped resources of natural wealth. Not only upon pastures under cultivation, but upon the pastures of the wilderness does God's fatness fall. For which in the grateful tide of the year let us be glad. "These undeveloped resources—God's gift to red-blooded men—are his unending challenge to brawn and brain, accepting which man develops himself and masters the earth for finer human habitation. "One imminent danger impends— that we exhaust our energies developing natural wealth and have no strength or heart to bring out the larger wealth of spiritual life. "This is America's danger. Here is the problem of American home missions. There are vast areas of our extensive domain untouched by spiritual conquest, because of the preoccupation of Americans in petroleum, great forests, gold and silver mines, iron ore. other metals, and the soil. Building transcontinental railroads and intersecting highways, we have sometimes forgotten the importance of keeping clear the highway to God. "Here is the religious problem in Terre Haute. Few people ever had larger wealth given to their hands than those of the Wabash valley, particularly those living in Vigo county. In this favored valley God's chariots have surely dropped abundant fatness. But the misguidance of our activities has been that we have preponderated, almost to absorption, in material activities, while vast ranges of spiritual wealth in the lives of the people have been tractically untouched. Money in banks, investments in securities, with churches in debt and splendid programs of human service not yet begun. Let us bewore the folly of burying ourselves in mines and factories, in commerce and the soil, thinking that we live by bread alone and neglecting the spiritual gifts of God who is the giver of all good things."

HARPER RESUMES SERVICES.

Again Fills Pulpit at the First Methodist Church. The Rev. I. B. Harper of the First Methodist church Sunday resumed his place in the pulpit, which had been occupied for the five preceding Sundays by Mrs. Daisy Barr, evangelist. Rev. Mr. Harper was greeted by large congregations.

A telegram of greeting was read from Mrs. Barr in West Lafayette. The words of Jesus, "Say ye not there are four months and then cometh the harvest? Lift up your eyes and look, the fields are white, already to harvest," taken from John 4:35 formed the text for Rev. Mr. Harper's sermon in which he said these words suggest the fundamental prniciple in the Master's philosophy. "For Jesus," said the pastor, "the question was not, 'what can I get out

TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE

Wait

Remember the Location and Look for the Name

of the world?' but 'wh«.t good can I put into the life of the world?' Today the Master calls for laborers who will carry with them this splendid spirit of loving service. Society has enough grafters and some to spare. It waits for the larger spirit of brotherhood."

FARMERS HOLD INSTITUTE.

The annual institute of the farmers of Prairie Creek township will be held at the township high school building, Tuesday. The program will last all day and will close with an entertainment in the evening. Dinner will be served at noon. Two epeperts from Purdue university will deliver lectures.

Pres. Wilson To Attend

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Army-Navy Grid lilt

WEST POINT, N. Y., Nov. 22.— Reservations on the army side of the Brush stadium in New York, where Saturday's footbaJl g-ame between West Point and Annapolis will be played, will be made for President Wilson and party, it was announced here today by Lieut. Charles B. Meyer, secretary and treasurerof the army athletic council.

Indiana's Grid Record

Indiana, 7 DePauw, 0. Indiana, 41 Miami, 0. Chicago, 13 Indiana, 7. Indiana, 7: Washington and Lee, 7. Ohio State, 10 Indiana, 9.

Indiana, 14 Northwestern, 6. Purdue, 7 Indiana, 0. Total points, 85. Points scorcd by opponents, 43.

Purdue's Grid Record

Purdue, 7 Wabash, 7. Purdue, 26 Beloit, 0. 'Wisconsin, 38 Purdue, 3. Chicago, 7 Purdue, 0. Purdue, 10: Iowa, 13. Kentucky, 7 Purdue, 0. Purdue, 7 Indiana, 0. Toial points, 62. Points scored by opponents, 72. -O

RENT YOUR HOUSE.

No house will remain vacant long it advertised in the Tribune. Twelve words, three days, for 30o.

l$P3oi

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Do what this advertisement says. Wait for the biggest, grandest, most stupendous Clothing and Shoe Sale ever attempted. It's on the way, coming.

Wednesday, November 24,1915

SCHULTZ SMITH

FANS DESIRE TO SEE MORE Of YOUNGSTERS

"Lefty" Gilbert Favors Complete Reorganization of Playing End of Game.

"Leftv" Gilbert, Highlander chieftain, thinks baseball is in for a complete reorganization of the playing end of the game. Gilbert thinks the baseball public is tired of the old style of plaver. "We might as well face the situation squarely," he declares. "People want more of the youngsters and less of the mechanically perfect game. I can see that coming. For instance, I recall when Kansas City American association club was asked to play a preliminary game in the American association with the Cleveland White Autos in the big contest. There was a $3,200 gate, and Danny Shay, manager of the Kaws, took his team off the field because they offered him ?50 for his end. At the same time, frankly speaking, the amateurs drew the money. "The young fellow is not a finished ball player, but he has the enthusiasm and the spirit. That's what counts with the fans. We must havo more young fellows on our club, and that is a solution of the necessity cf reducing salary limits and the number of men. I can remember when I played ball wit'n a forefinger mangled and one eye out of commission. I had to play, because there was no one to take my place. Now a ball player can't start if his head is bothering him."

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THE QUALITY COAL

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New Phone 1099 950 Wabash Old 2334

Want Advertising is Profitable—You may get that situa-|./" tion you are looking for

%vinserting

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407 Wabash Avenue 12 and 14 South Fourth Street

25 Cents—Grand Special Offer

In order to introduce the V«i»orpino Inhaler and prove that it will act like magic in Chronic Catarrh, Catarrhal Deafness, Colds, Asthma, Hay Fever and all diseases of the nose, throat, and chest, we 'have arranged with the undersigned druggist to supply all applicants with this $1.00 Vaporpino Inhaler and two bottles of Inhaling Fluid for only 25 cents. This wonderful Vaporizer converts healing oils and germicides into fog-like vapor, sending this vapor into every passage of the nose and throat, healing the membrane and eradicating the germe of the disease. Thousands of testimonials from grateful people.

For this regular $1.00 Vaporizer" outfit, with two bottles of Inhaling Fluid, at the special price of 25c. By mail 5c extra. Call from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Xov. 22, 23 and 24.

BUNTIN DRUG CO.

Sixth and Wabash.

an ad in The Tribune.