Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 22 September 1916 — Page 9

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FRIOAV, SEPTEMBER 2J, T916.

W. C. BULL NEWEST TARIFF

Ko Danger of Europe "Dumping" Anything Here When the War Is Over.

Editor of the Tribune: The Home Market club seems to be afraid that Europe is going to ruin us by "Dumping after the war." Dumping what, pray?

Just now Europe's chief and practically only industry is the raising (in addition to hell) of'scant rations and the making of gtins and munitions. She is eating the rations faster than they can be raised and is exploding the munitions. Eaten foods and second hand guns are not dumpable stuff. Exploded munitions are even less so. .i So much for that.

Europe will overwhelm us with competition. Will she, indeed? Just now Europe is using, for more than a year past has used, and for an i unknown period in the future will continue to uae all of her able-bodied men

In killing and maiming each other at the rate of thousands per day. Dead men can't compete, nor cripples either, very effectively. All the non-killers, s including women and children, are producing, not "dumpable stuff," but scant rations and clothing and guns and munitions. Europe is spending multiplied millions of money in destroying other and more millions of wealth in the form of property. Europe is one vast slaughter pen, ceme tery and hospital. I Europe is now a beggar and a bank rupt. The flower of its manhood is dead or maimed, its houses destroyed its fields laid waste, its factories jrutried. Can these bankrupts and beggars compete with us

Interest on the national debts of all "i the countries of Europe will be a fatal handicap in any race they may think ,-#• of entering for the next century. -ih Reconstruction of their ruined fac tories and fields and houses and roads

A will keep them busy for years to come |U' and put them out of every competitive

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race and keep us busy supplying their urgent needs. A

Car® of

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their cripples and blind, and

insane and diseased and derelicts will be a fatal handicap for a generation. The only "dumping" we need fear is of beggars and cripples and Insane. Heaven help us, for no lesser power can, if .we cannot beat the Europe that will emerge from this war. A protective tariff to keep a horde of human derelicts from beating us in the race of life? ^Nonsense. And again: Nonsense. WM. C. BALL.

SERVICE FOR STUDENTS.

Rev. Jones Announces Innovation At Central Christian Church. Rev. J. Boyd Jones has announced a special service for the schools of th,e city Sunday evening. Mr. Jones spent a number of years in the schools us a teacher and in the last few." years has given more than a hundred commenceI ment-addresses in In&airiaand" Illinois.

He tkkes the position that instead of condemning the schools for what they do not do it is the duty of all who have the welfare of humanity at heart to encourage and co-operate with the teachers in their splendid work. A chorus of seventy-five young people under the direction of Hirs. Carrie B.

Adams will lead the song service. Mr. Jones has invited the students to wear their colors^ The subject for the address will be, "Building a Character."

HA1F-CENT A DAY FOR WIFE. Mopey Given by Husband to Woman Who Supported Family.

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 22,—MYs. Ada Garland .testified before Superior Judge Graham that during her fifteen months of married life with Eugene Garland the total sum of money given her by her husband averaged but onehalf cent

a

dSy. She worked in a

candy store, she declared, and not only supported the family, but also gave him two pairs of shojes and occasionally gave him shaving money.

Get the Habit of Drinking Hot Water Before Breakfast

8aye we can't look or feel right with the system full of polsona.

Millions of folks: bathe internally ,now instead of loading their system with drugs. "What's an inside bath?" you say. Well, it is guaranteed to perform miracles if you could believe these hot water enthusiasts.

There are vast numbers of men and women who, immediately upon arising in the morning, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it. This is a very excellent health measure. It is intended to flush the stomach, liver, kidneys and the thirty feet of intestines of the previous day's waste, sour bile and indigestible material left over in the body which if not eliminated every day, become food for the millions of bacteria which infest the bowels, the quick result is poisons and toxins which are then absorbed into the blood causing headache, bilious attacks, foul breath, bad taste, colds, stomach trouble, kidney misery, sleeplessness, impure blood and all sorts of ailments.

People who feel good one day and badly the next, but who simply can not get feeling right are urged to obtain a quarter pound of limestone phosphate at the drug store. This will cost very little but is sufficient to make anyone a real crank on the subject of internal sanitation.

Just as soap and hot water act on the skin, cleansing, sweetening and freshening, so limestone phosphate and hot water act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. It is vastly more important to bathe on the inside than

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Rev. T. J. Everett to Deliver Memorial Sermon at Northwest Indiana Assembly.

By Special Correspondent. GREENCASTLE, Ind., Sept. 22.— Dr. Demetrius Tillotson, pastor of College Avenue church, which entertains the Northwest Indiana conference, beginning Wednesday, September 27, has announced the full program. Bishop Thomas Nicholson of Chicago will be in charge of this conference. The feature sessions will be held in the Bishop Thomas Bowman Memorial building and in Meharry hall, where Prof. Van Denman Thompeon and the DePauw choir will give a sacred concert. l"he full program is as follows:

TUESDAY, 7:30 %P. M.

Music, College Avenue church choir address of welcome. Hon. Silas A. Havg, Greencastle response. Rev. Frank K. Dougherty, South Bend conference sermon, Rev J. L. Gardiner, Sovth Bend Rev. Albert E. Monger, Torre Haute, presiding.

WEDNESDAY, 8:30 A. M. Holy communion, Biahop Thomas Nicholson, Chicago, presiding. Conference session.

WEDNESDAY, 2 V M.

Missionary sermon. Rev. I. B. Harper, Terre Haute. Rev. B. E. Kirkpatrick, Crawfordsville, presiding.

Anniversary of the American Bible society, Rev. Adam Clark, Brookston, presiding.

WEDNESDAY, 7:30 P. M. Anniversary of the board of Sunday schools. Music by the College Avenue church choir. Address by Dr. W. S. Bovard, D. D. Rev. .John C. Benson, Brazil, presiding.

THURSDAY, 8:30 A. M.

Conference session. Opening address by Bishop Nicholson. THURSDAY. 1:30 P. M.

Temperance anniversary, addresses by Rev. Ernest Daily Smith and Rav. E. S. Shumaker, Indianapolis. Rev. W. C. Aye. Indiana Harbor, presiding.

Anniversary of the Woman's Home Missionary society address tv Jacob Berheim, Chicago Mrs. A. T. B'riir«s, presiding address. "The R*tir«d Minister." Rev. C. A. Kelley, JD. D.. Chicago, Dr. -James G. Campbell, Attica, presiding.

THURSDAY, 7:30 P. M.

Music by the University choir anniversary of the Proachers' Aid society Rev. H. N. Oerden, Indianapolis presiding address bv Bishorj Thomas Nicholson Rev. D. D. Forsythe, representing the Home Missionary society Dr. H. A. Gobin, DePauw university, and W. E. Carpenter, Brazil.

FRIDAY, 8:30 A. M.

Conference session, opening address by Bishop Nicholson! FRIDAY. 2 P. M.

Anniversary of Woman's Foreign Missionary society Mrs. Ida H. Clvnp, oresiding. Address by Dr. Isaac P. Headland.

Meharry Hall Service. FRIDAY, 7 P. M.

Service in Meharry Hall.—Qrgan recital and sacred concert bv Prof. Van

nenman

ThomrKon and the DePauw

University choir. Address, by Dr. A. W. Harris, corresponding secretary of Educational society Dr. George R. Grosse, fri-eUdent of DePauw Dr. H. A. Gobin, vice-pres-ident of DePauw university.

SATURDAY, 8:30 A. M.

Conference session. Opening address by Bishop Thompson. SATURDAY. 2 P. M.

Church federation. Rev. Oakel T. Hall, W'est Lafayette, nresiding. Address by Rev. John S. Ward, Indianapolis.

SATURDAY, 7:30 P. M.

Anniversary of the Methodist hospital. Music by the College Avenue church choir: addresses by Hon. Charles W. Fairbanks, president of the board of trustees, and Dr. Charles S. Woods, eunerintendent. and former Governor Winfteld T. Durbin of Anderson.

SUNDAY, 9 A. M.

•^Conference love feast in College Avenue church: Rev. W. P. McKinley, Lebanon. leader. Public worship in Bishop Bowman Memorial buildine at 10:30 o'clock. Music by the DePauw orchestra and University choir. Sermon by Bishop Thomas Nicholson.

SUNDAY, 2:30 P. M.

Memorial sermon in College Avenue church by Rev. T. J. Everett of Terre Haute on "The Diving God of Dicing Preachers." Ordination service conducted by Bishop Thomas Nicholson and district superintendents ordination of deacons and elders.

SUNDAY, 6:15 P. M.

Epworth league meeting. Rev. Oakel Hall, Indianapolis, leader. Anniversary of the Epworth league and Foreign Missionary societv. Addresses by Rev. Wilbut- F. i'herldian. fcocretarv of the Epworth league, and Bishop J. C. Hartzell, representing the Foreign Missionary society.

MONDAY. 8*:80 A. M.

Conference session. Opening address by Bishop Thomas Nicholson report of committees reading of appointments and adjournment.

BOY SCOUTS MEET.

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A special meeting of Troop Three, Boy Scouts, will be held Thursday evening, Sept. 28, and all of the older members are urged to attend. A routine business meeting of the troop was held Thursday evening.

THE TRIBUNE CLASSIFIED PAGE is the greatest real estate market of

.. western Indiana and eastern Illinois.

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SEA BRINGS ARKENUN SON HE HAD NEVER SEEN

Father Barred From England Greets Motherless Baby Born In London.

NEW YORK, Sept. 22.—When the Cunard liner Saxonia arrived here from Liverpool, tiinety-one of her ninoty-two passengers were as anxious about tho reception on United States soil of the ninety-second passenger, as they wer? about having their baggage examined thoroughly and getting ashore. The passenger was a young boy in the cabin.

He is the son of Aram Papazian, a wealthy Armenian, who made his home in London and came herfe for a visit last September. When he tried to return he found he could not sail" from here without a Turkish passport, being a Turkish citizen, and that he would be deported as soon as he landed on English soil.

The son was born in London last January and Mrs. Papazian died sootf afterward, Papazian was distracted when he received word from Miss Edith P. Atkins, 'a trained nurse who attended his wife, that she had constituted herself the child's mother

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temporarily. He cabled her his thanks and asked her to bring the boy here when she felt he was able to travel.

When the Saxonia docked at West Fourteenth street, Papazian was there to meet his son with open arms, and Miss Atkins held out to him a bouncing boy. Papazian took his son. and Miss Atkins to Briar-cliff.

BLUE DRESS TJPfET POLICE.

Woman Arrested, Then Mis*ing Gowns Reappeared at Store. MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 22—Detectives Michael Neary and John Faltico are contemplating sending an S. O. S. message to Baker street, London, requesting Sherlock Holmes to solve for them "The Mystery of the Blue Silk Dress/'

One night they arrested three women who had in their possession a blue silk gown said to have been stolen from a downtown store. The women denied their guilt, but a search of the store proved that the gown was missing. Store officials declared it had not been sold.

A canvas of all other stores in the city handling goods of a similar class was made, and the detectives satisfied themselves there had been only one such gown in Minneapolis.

The next morning the police were notified the gown had been found in the same spot from which it disappeared. It Was not there the preceding nigtit, the store manager positively asserts.

At police headquarters is the other

Not a few patterns to select from at the price, but hundreds of the very, newest, most fashionable coloring and fabrics. We have here pictured only a few samples of our great variety. These patterns pictured here are actual photographs of the cloth—but they only give yoif a faint idea of the fabric itself. You will have to see them, get the-cloth bet.ween your*finget,s aiid feel of the all-wool fabrics—if this page was only a display room where we could lay before you the actual garment itself, so you could examine the workmanship and tailort ing, you would agree that Sherman^ Clothes at the factory price, $10, is the actual same value you. have always bought in ordinary retail clothing stores for $15 to $18.

If there is a pattern you like represented here, clip it out, bring it with you to the store, put the actual garment on and look into the mirror. Note the fit, the hang, the stylish appearance you will have in a Sherman's suit or overcoat.

Come here and let us show you through. Our iron-clad guarantee to you of absolute satisfaction or your money back is a point that should not be overlooked. Our clothes must be right, otherwise we could not make such broad statements about them.

We have sizes to fit every man from the young man of 16 years of age to the extra stout mail who weal's, a 52 s^ze. Remember, you have your choice of a^nv suit, topcoat or overcoat in the store in any size or pattern at our one price, $10^ no more, no less.

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gown, made of the same material and matching the other in every detail of trimming and workmanship.

Thev detectives admit they are "stumped."

BARS BATHB0B.T1 FQB CLASS.

Board of Education Says Teacher Appeared in One. NEW YORK, Sept. 2-2.—The board of education placed its official disapproval on the bathrobe as a classroom

No matter where you live your druggist has S. S. S. on his shelves, and we urgently advise you against accepting any supposed substitute for this grand

old remedy. The oldest inhabitant can recall Meing tho advertising of S.SJS. when be was a child. fa PURELY VEGETABLE and contains no mineral Ingredient. Acceptable to the most delicate stomach. Any Bleed or Skin disease yields to the powerful efficacy of S.S.S. Catarrh, Rheumatism, Scrofula, Eczema, Blobd Poison, Malaria, are among the more violent ailment* this medicine helps the •JPuno-e from the human system. BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES are almost Without number. S°

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the' slightest symptom. Write

Medical Advisory Department fair free advice. Addrw THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., 171 Swift Building, Atlanta, Ga.

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costume by the dismissal of Miss Lena Zippel, a teacher. Among the charges of "gross misconduct and insubordination" preferred by Cornelius E.' Franklin, district superintendent, was one that she had appeared before her class thus a.ttireQ.

Miss Zippel was accused of having s-aid, "This is a h—1 of a class."

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