Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 September 1916 — Page 6
mm
f^4.
10 HOLD RALLY TODAY
Long Program of Music and Speaking Will Be Given In Grove— Basket Dinner.
:By Special Correspondent.
.^1" SANDBORN, Ind.,, Sept. 16—The M. B. church at Marco will observe SunkgK*day as rally day. The following projif \''J.T®ram ^ias been arranged for the day:
PROGRAM)—10 A. M.
I' March from church to grove. Music—Band. Song—Congregation, •v Devotional—Dr. D. P. Sheppard.
Address of welcome—George Morgan. Quartet, "Go Ye Forth and Seek the L»ost."
Solo, "The Lord is My Shepherd"— -Miss Fannie Blackwood. Address, "What Shall We Do With God's and our Boys and Girls"—Rev. J. A. Spencer.
Solo, "Ava Maria"—Ollle Deckard. Musia—Orchestra. Quartet, "The Beautiful City of /God."
Music, sacred march—Band. Solo, "The Little Gray Home in the est"—Cora Myers. Quartet, "Lean Upon the Savior." &. Music—Orchestra. $£ Song—Congregation. *5 Basket dinner. I 5!* 1:30 P. M.
Music—Orchestra. Song—Congregation.
,,T
Quartet, "Jesus Friend and Savior." ft'.st Address, "Be Ye Get Do"—Rev. ^Thomas.
Music, "Joy to the World." Solo, "Guide Me, Oh Thou Great "JsJehovah"—Roxie Carroll.
'In the Cross of Christ I
Quartet, "In the Cros "Glory." Talks—By L. H. York. John Andern and Rev. C. A. Chadwick.
HPSolo, "Morning"—Mary Eddington. Music—Congregation. Talks—By Rev. Owen and W. E. alson. _uartet, "Longing for Homo Land." .... Music—Band. i Song, "God Be With You Till We stiBptteet Again." Sapyj Benediction—Rev. W. E. Watkins.
FIRST TEACHERS' INSTITUTE.
^Interesting Discussions of School texjf-v Topics At Meeting. Special Correspondent.
SANDBORN, Ind., Sept. 16.—The /pT'flrst teachers' institute of the year was
s
jield at Sandborn today. The junior
IJpjiiigh
school girls served dinner in the
^I^Cdoking laboratory. The following i,,f^program was given: ^-Piano solo—Alice Corbin. •'&$'>! Song—By seventh grade girls. "Problefns of School"—Discussed by tliSpane Hargis. "Industrial Work for Eighth Grade' |'ffik-By Raymond Kohre.
V&. "What Children Study and Why"— S^By Martha Neal and Mr. Barr.
1
"Indiana School Attendance Law"— fStEiy Frank Pennington. "Course of English"—By Claude Yoeiman. $T "A Civic Biology"—By Homer B. Ayirtlsrood and George L. Russell.
I®. Solo—Ida Cox. (Piano duet—Ida Cox and Alice Corin. 'Solo—Roxie Carroll.
Child Falls Into Fire.
Special Correspondent. SANDBORN, Ind., Sept. 16.—Mil-
t~g^B5j£ea. Wells, the two-year-old daughter of Clifford Wells, a mail carrier of ippiiis city, was painfully burned about jMliie limbs and face when she f§U into
Ife5®^ bed of hot coals where her mother id been burning trash. Dr. Johnson fe&as called to dress the burns.
ifg? Special Sermon Sunday. jfy Special Corresponuent. pH^SANDBORN, Ind!, Sept. 16.—Rev. J.
Spencer, pastor of the Christian
Ijjyj&iurch, has prepared a special sermon fe-Vipr the young men Sunday night and i'*'he requests that every one be present, g^fJThe subject is "The Young Man as a ytjkover." Special music has been fur}'Jiished.
Cit Play Given By Children. |^jBy Special Correspondent. SANDBORN, Ind., Sept. 16.—The -play "The Tom Thumb Wedding" was y^F^g^tven at the M. E. church Friday night.
I v«^%sThere were about seventy-five children f|iS|from
the
ages of 2 to 10 in the cast, -o.
'SWAVE YOU ANYTHING FOR SALE?
.:T If you have anything to sell the Sunday Tribune will sell it. Twelve words, time, 12c: three times, 30c.
LUBIN DECLARES FOR WILSON'S RE-ELECTION
Head of International Institute of Agriculture Issues Address to American Citizens.
NEW YORK, Sept. 16.—liaviu j^uDin. founder of the international institute cf agriculture and father of the rural credits movement in America, joined today the list of prominent republicans openly espousing the re-election of President Wilson. Within a fortnight Thomas A* Edison, Luther Burbank and Henry Ford, all' republicans and men of international fame, have made similar declarations. None of them can see sufficient reason for rejection of Wilson or for substituting Hughes. Each one in substance advises his fellow Americans that in his opinion it is no time to swap horses crossing the stream of the greatest crisis the world's history.
David Lubin is a wealthy California farmer. His interest in securing a square deal for the farmer led him to make researches abroad ana out his efforts grew the International Institute of Agriculture at Rome, Italy. This unique institution does for the staples of agriculture of the world that American chamber of commence does for the products of the American manufacturer.
Before sailing today for Rome, Mr. Lubin, said: "In the application of business methods of distribution America, until the present administration, was about f50 years behind Germany and several more decades behind the rest of Europe, and yet in the very thing in which America is backward, she should lead the world. She does not, because a clique of special interests dictated public opinion and controlled legislation through the bosses of the republican party. So cleverly have they worked that the average man is hypnotized, his critical faculties are dulled. "President Wilson is neither fooled ror led by the crowd. He is tireless, patient, foreseeing,. he has a historic sense of the past, a sympathetic sense of the present and 9. prophetically spiritual sense of the future. While his head is above the clouds, his feet are always upon the earth. He is neither a dreamer nor a cabbage. He is a good business man. It is a pleasure and a satisfaction to do business with him. "I found Mr. Roosevelt a good fellow
TheRealuve 3.
WILL BE AT THE
CORNER FIFTH AND CHERRY STS.
Every Girl and Boy Call at
-„i«
TOMORROW AFTERNOON
Monday, September 18th, at 4:15 P. M.
Beraheimer's Shoe Store
For Your FREE ADMISSION Ticket
Beautiful Allegory Produced at the Mojitrose M. E. Church
SCKNE FROM "THE GATES AJAR," ALLEGORICAL PLAY AT MONTROSE M. J3. CHURCH THURSDAY EVENING
I find Mr. Wilson a good president. Wilson brings a scholarly mind to business. He knows that good policies and good economics are the same thing. He is fearless, in all my relations with him, direct or indirect, I failed to find anything or anybody he is afraid of."
BOTTOM LAND CORN GOOD.
Fayette Township Farmer Expects 75-Bushel Yield. Despite the talk of bad crops and no feed from many parts of the county, Marion Blackburn, a farmer of Fayette township, near Tecumseh, in a test made yesterday, found that his corn grown on river bottom land will average as good as it did last year. Recently Mr. Blackburn disposed of all of his old corn, and when his supply of feed ran out yesterday morning he husked one row through a field in the bottoms and filled a wagon bed. From the yield taken from one end of the field to the other he announced that he is confident the entire tract will husk out about 75 bushels to the acre, which is considered good.
It was stated, however, that the same conditions do not apply on the upland where the crop suffered during the summer for rain, and especially so on the sandy land. Here it is said many of the farmers were barely able to make fodder of their crop.
CITY BRIEFS
Mis* Mignonette Vermillion, public school teacher, and Mrs. Mary Layton will address the Debs league of West Terre Haute this afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. They will be accompanied by Mrs. Hazel Cameron and. Mrs. Martin Miller.
Lover* of Instructive moving picture shows will have the opportunity to see the "Great Wanderlust," a travelog, given in six reels at the Grand opera house next Saturday. One mile of pictures will be shown at three different periods.
Jmnea E. Smith, 30 years old, was arrested yesterday afternoon by the police on the charge of hauling a dead horse through the city without a license.
Daniel Voorhees Weeks, father of Bicycleman Jc/seph Weeks, is in a critical condition at the Union hospital. Mr. Weeks is suffering from cancer.
Bnjmond McPheeters, 25 years old, was arrested yesterday evening on the charge of driving an automobile past a street car, discharging passengers at Eleventh street and Wabash avenue. He is a driver for the Terre Haute Pure Milk & Ice Cream company.
Fred Knrdr, police officer, is seriously ill at his home.
658 WABASH AVENUE
TERSE HAUTE TRIBUNE.
MAY
ORCE WILSON TO ACT
Seizure of Official TJ. S. Mail At Shanghai latest Arbitrary Action of England.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 16.—Developments of the past 48 hours have convinced many administration officials that there is work ahead for the retaliatory big stick placed in the president's hands by the revenue bill giving him wide power to act against a belligerent nation whose commerce ships discriminate against American exporters. The arbitrary action of Great Britain in widening the scope of her embargo orders regarding neutral trade with Scandinavia and Holland was followed today by news that official mail, posted at the United States office in Shanghai, in official envelopes, had been censored. Some officials said the two incidents convince them that Great Britain has accepted the issue and will carry it to a climax.
Tonight officials said they not only believed the president might be compelled to order retaliatory eteps, but there would be strong demand that congress, when it meets in December, furnish him with additional means.
As officials here see it, this is about the way the new -British orders will work out:
Britain had barred certain commodities from neutral sources to the neutral ports of Scandinavia and Holland. This means no British merchantman would accept such goods from shippers, including American exporters, for those ports. For a British merchantman, docked in an American port thug to refuse American goods for any other reason than lack of cargo space would be a direct violation of the law contained in the revenue bill enactment, and the president could order that ship held in port. Attempt by the shipmaster to clear until the presidential ban lifted would mean forfeiture of his ships and perhaps two years' sentence or $10,000 fine for the shipmaster, or both.
The Shanghai mail affair was referred to the state department, where officials said the 'question would be taken up immediately with Great Britain.
WHITTLES VIOHN FINGERS.
Player Hopes to Increase His Proficiency By Surgery. WICHITA, Kas., Sept. 16.—In order to become a more proficient violin artist, Mark Sanfort, p, member of an orchestra here, had a piece of flesh taken from each of his six fingers. The incisions w^re drawn together and sewn with horse hair. The operation was perforrhed by Dr. H. S. Hlckok, and Sandfort will be able to remove the bandages soon.
According to physicians, this is th« first time that an operation of this kind has beer, performed.
NOTES OF COLORED PEOPLE.
Mrs. Janie Mitchell of Anderson is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Irvin. The Rev. Irvin Is attending the conference.
The sewing circle of the Missionary Baptist church will meet Friday at 2:30 p. m. at the parsonage.
Miss Eura Manuel has accepted a position as teacher at Lost Creek In Miss Belle Artis* place. Miss Artis is teaching near St. Louis, Mo.'
Preparations have been made for the celebration of emancipation day at the fair grounds. A parade will be hfld at 10:30 a. m. The Hon. Crews will make the address.
Rev. Conlev will preach for the Rev. Irvin while he is away. Misses Mayme Donaldson and Arm ehtra- Kennedy left Friday morning for their school work in Rockport, Ind.
Dr. D. A. Bethea was in Paris, 111., Friday to attend the opening of the new hospital.
Madam Jones will leave Wednesday for Florida, where she will take up school work.
The topic of the sermon at Saulter's chapel this morning: will be "Human Aspirations." Rev. Haygood will preach this evening on "What the Free Will Baptist Believes."
Rev. Dickerson will have "Who Is This That Cometh From Edom?" for his morning subject at the new Second Missionary Baptist church, Fourteenth and Oak otreets. Communion services will be held in the evening.
NOTES OF THE LODGES.
The Loyal Order of Moose. No. 1009, will initiate a large class of candidates at their regular meeting Wednesday, September 20, after which a banquet will bo served for members only. The committee in charge is composed of Elmer Swickard, Gus Boyer, 'Everett Miller and Richard Dottia.
A dance scheduled for Wednesday night has been called off.
~7
MOTOR UNIT. Test compression of each cylinder. Touch up any valves that may be leaking compression.
FOR
STUDEBAKER OWNERS I
N addition td the regular FACTORY GUARANTEE for 12 months, we agree to furnish the necessary LABOR FREE to replace any part that is covered under this guarantee.
In order to have PERFECT RUNNING CARS even in the hands of the most ine'xperienced drivers and owners and those that do not have the time to properly care for their car, WE have inaugurated the following DEFINITE SERVICE to be given FREE to every purchaser of a NEW STUDEBAKER for a peiiol of six months from date of purchase in addition to regular guarantee.
Every TWO WEEKS the Following Inspection and Oiling
1
Clean spark plugs. Examine for oil leaks. Adjust push rods. Drain carburetor and clean air valve. Examine timer and distributor. Clean test and oil generator. Clean test and oil starting motor. Oil fan and adjust belt. Oil starter motor clutch. Examine water connections. Drain and refill radiator. Examine clutch and oil.
(JJThese inspections will be made at a certain time, and as we are equipped and experienced we can assure your car to be done and ready for you on schedule time. At the expiration of six months this SERVICE can be had at a nominal expense of $3.00 per month. Also any present Studebaker owner may take advantage of this SERVICE.
WM.A.ENGLES
New Phone 3358, Old 910
200 N. 7th St.
««rr
-. ,*•• a,w-v^v.
4
«&NiA^fcPt8Mi8R 1^
WHEELS and AXLES— Grease wheels. Grease springs. Adjust brakes. Grease universal joints. Inspect transmission for grease. Inspect differential for grease. Examine gear shift rods. Test front wheels for alignment. TEST BATTERY and PILL WITH
DISTILLED WATER. STEERING GEAR, BODY, FENDERS, ETC.— Grease steering knuckles. Grease tie rod bolts. Grease steering gear. Take play out of steering gear. Tighten body bolts. Tighten fender bolts.
•SfT
••i
