Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 September 1916 — Page 8
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FOR JOINT ACTIVITIES
Wiley, Garfield, Brazil and Clinton Organize Association and Plan Annual Meetings.
The Western Indiana Athletic and Oratorical association was formed at a meeting and dinner at the Tuller hotel at 6 o'clock Wednesday evening. At the meeting were Prof. T. W. Records, principal of Garfield high school Prof. O. E. Connor, principal of Wiley high school, and Prof. A. Montgomery of Brazil high school. Prof. Fred Brown, of Clinton high school, was unable to attend the meeting as his car was late but his school tyill be a member of the association.
Prof. Connor was elected president of the new association, Prof. Montgomery, secretary and treasurer. A constitution was also drawn up and adopted, and copies will be distributed among the schools.
The association was organized to foster various lines of school activities. An athletic meet will be held at Brazil next spring. The program for this event will be a tennis tournament and the thirteen field meet events of the Indiana Athletic association. In the evening there will be orations and readings..
The new organization is one of the most compact in the state. Clinton, the most distant of the four schools, is only 16 miles from Terre Haute, while the four schools have a total enrollment of more than 2,000 pupils.
RED CROSS SEAL CAMPAIGN.
Vigo Anti-Tuberculosis Society Will Meet This Afternoon. Wans for the Red Cross seal campaign which is to be set on foot during the holidays will be considered at the i- Vigo County Society for Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis at a meeting to be held at the Chamber of Commerce rooms Thursday afternoon. This will be the first fall meeting of the society and delegates to the Mississippi valley conference to be held at the1 Seelback hotel, Louisville, Ky., October 4, 5, and 6, will be appointed. A dinner meeting for Indiana delegates will be held on the evening of October 6 during the convention.
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WE MOVE TO FINER QUARTERS. In an hour we had transferred our belongings from the rather dingy room in the second-class hotel to more pretentious quarters in one of the best downtown establishments. I reminded Arthur of our plan to make a little home of our own, but he pooh-poohed the suggestion. "This is so much more convenient," he objected. "If you have a place of your own you will always be in a stew about the maid or the grocer or the milkman, and half the time you won't have any one to help you get dinner. The result will be that when I come home I shall find you all hot and disgusted and not at all like yourself." "But this isn't home," I insisted, gazing about our narrow quarters. "Of course it I*. You will have everything you need here. All you will have to do will be to press a button or lift the telephone receiver and your wants will be attended to." "But after all it is a hotel," I replied. "It is not home. There is not the privacy of home there will not be that feeling of mutual dependency which comes upon couples when they establish a nest of their own. Don't you remember how much closer we were to each other in the little place which we, used to have? Don't you realize how different it was from a. hotel "It was a nice place and we were very happy there, Roxane," he replied. "I admit that,
(but
you do not seem
to understand that I am considering you chiefly in making this arrangement. It might even be more comfortable for me if we had a home of our own, but I am not thinking of that. I am thinking of you., You will have nothing to do here except amuse yourself. You can go out every day and never worry about what you are going to have for dinner, and if the maid quits you won't have to bother because there are so many maids here that one will not be missed."
I saw that he was determined to have his own way about it, so I made no Immediate reply. After a few moments of silence Arthur spoke. "Of course, if you do not like it we can try your plan,'but let's give the bote] a trial first. I am sure that in a few days you will feel so much at home that you would not move under any ordinary circumstances." "Very well," I agreed.
Arthur came over and kissed me. "You look tired," he said. "You must have worn yourself out on that foolish search for an apartment. Tell me all about it." "Well, in the first place, it wasn't foolish, because I happened to meet an old friend whom I might never have met again had I not been house-hunt-ing.** "Who was it?" "Mariam." "Who is Mariam?" "Why, how short your memory is, Arthur," I said a little Impatiently. "Don't you remember Mariam, who was in the train wreck with me, and whom we knew later in New Orleans.
S E CDK.^" WAHASH AV*j
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("OK. tWAftASH AY*
THE CONFESSIONS OF ROXANE
BY FRANCES WALTER.
Copyright.' 1916, by the McClure Newspaper Syndicated
Arthur was silent for a moment. I could see that he was thinking unpleasant thoughts. "Who was that man who was with her in New Orleans? Was It *her father?" "No, her uncle, Mr. John Gordon." "Oh, that's the fellow," said Arthur sourly. "I recollect now. I remember also that I didn't like him." "Why, Arthur, how Impatient you
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TEREE HAUTET TRIBUNE.
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Arthur came over nnd.ltls«el me. "l'on loojc tired," be Mid.
"I believe I do remember her now," he replied. "A little dried up, sickly thing, wasn't she?" "Yes. That is, she was dried up and sickly, but she is no longer like that. She is the plumpest, healthiest, happiest and prettiest little girl you ever could want to meet. She has changed completely. You wouldn't know her now."
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are tonight. Mr. Gordon is a very fine man." "No doubt. There are many fine men whp I do not like He is one of them. I did not like him the first time, I saw him, and I think the Reeling never left me." "But you must like him," I urged. "He is Mariam's uncle, and Mariam is about the best friend I have. She is a darling." "Perhaps she is, but many darlings have uncles who axe not darlings." "How silly you are! I want you to like Mariam, because she and I will no doubt see a-great deal of each other in New York. And I want you to like Mr. Gordon because we may see him, too. Besides, he is Mariam's uncle." "I have just said that uncles of nice young ladies are not necessarily nice themselves, and I am inclined to think this is the case with your friends. If I am compelled to meet Mr. Gordon I rhall endeavor to be polite to him. The way I feel about him now, the less I see of him the better."
Aj-thur jerked the words out and sat in moody silence for a long time. What reason he had to dislike Mr! Gordon was a mystery to me. In fact, Arthur had seen him only once or twice. Did he know intuitively that Mr. Gordon admired me? Could he have guessed that at one time my feeling toward the handsome railroad financier was slightly, more than even admiration? Did Arthur, looking into the future, see something which cast its shadow athwart our lives?
These were questions which I could not answer. Only time could answer them.
To Be Continued Tomorrow.
NINETY-SECOND BIRTHDAY.
Mrs. Maragaret Klneer Observes Occasion at Home.
ity
Special Correspondent. CORY, Ind. Sept. 28.—Relatives,aid friends met at the home of Mrs. Margaret Kinneir. two miles west ol Cory, in honor of her ninety-rsecond birthday. Dinrer was served In the yard at the noon hour on a long table. Those present were Mrs. Nancy Lee, of Riley Mrs. Betty Gummery, of Terre Haute Mrs. Kate Wilson and Mrs. Eliza Gray, Saline City Mr. and Mrs: Samuel Jackson, Mrs. Arietta Stoneburner, Mrs. Anna Huff, Mlrs. Vena Tucker, Mrs. Minnie Tucker and daughter Caroline, Edward Jackson, William Jackson, Mrs. Susan Jackson, M?rs. Ellza,beth Criss, Mrs. Cordelia Swerlngin, Mrs. Rachel Gummery and son Clarence, of Riley Mrs. Lillie Stoneburner, Miss Irene Stoneburner.
Parsonage is Repaired.
Ey Special Correspondent. CORY, Ind., S^pt. 28.—The parsonage of the M. E. church Is being repaired for the new minister Rev. Cash, who was assigned to this district place by the conference at Franklin, Ind., last week.
GERMANS HONOR FREDERICK.
As an appreciation of his efforts in behalf of the German-Americans of the city, Dr. J. Frederick, pastor of the St. Paul German Lutheran church, was presented with a gold handled umbrella Wednesday night by the united Ger-man-American societies of Terre Haute. The presentation was made by Carl Bartenbach of a committee of three who waited on Dr. Frederick at his residence. Mr. Bartenbach announced that the present was a tribute from the German-Americans of this city and lauded Dr. Frederick's work.
TOWNSHIP VOTED DRY.
By Special Correspondent. NEWPORT, Ind., Sept. 28.—The dry forces carried Vermillion township yesterday by 58 majority. At Newport the vote was dry 145, wet 130. At Quaker, dry 90, wet 47.
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"A breaking out which caused my baby much suffering came first in minute blisters on his cheeks, and spread downward covering his chin, neck, and chest. It formed a crust and his clothing seemed to aggravate it. The eruptions must have itched and burned. He was almost a solid scale. "I picked up a paper with
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NEAR MOT MARKS BANQUET.
Auto Assn. Speaker Charged With Aiding Cement Trust. LAFAYETTE, Ind., Sept. 28.—The annual banquet of the Indiana County Commissioners' association nearly ended in a riot her^ last night, when M. E. Noblet, secretary of the Hoosier Automobile association, addressed the banqueters and attempted to advocate the establishment of a state highway commission. Thte commissioners jeered the speaker and, finally, W. B. Newman, highway superintendent of Lake county, was called on to answer Noblet. Mr. Newman accused Noblet of appearing and making a speech for pay and made the direct accusation that the Hoosier Automobile association was being financed by the cement trust and that the Universal Cement company was the official representative of the trust. He accused Noblet and other representatives of the Hoosier Automobile association of recommending and pushing the use of cement concrete roads to the exclusion of other types of paving. He asserted that the cement trust was agitating and financing the movement to prevail upon the legislature to enact a state highway commission law,
Noblet denied.he personally was doing this and said he did not know others were doing it. He admitted, however, he was being paid to make the speech. He further said he was not advocating any type-of construction and had steadfastly refused to do so.
AMERICANIZE PRAYER BOOK.
Protestant Episcopal Committee Plans Revision of Document. NEW YORK, Sept. 28.—An effort to Americanize the book of common prayer of the Protestant Episcopal church will be made at the triennial convention in St. Louis next month by the revision committee on that volume.
The committee has prepared a separate prayer for the president of the Unitd States and the governor of the state and there will be presented for adoption a prayer for congress, a petition for the army and another for the navy, intercessions for "the courts of Justice, a prayer for our country" and for the state legislatures. The committee also has written a special prayer to be said on the Fourth of July.
In an open letter explaining the purpose of the committee the Right Rev. Corlandt Whitehead, bishop of Pittsburgh, who is its chairman, writes: "Tn the circumstances of this church seeking to reach the cosmopolitan population of the United States as also to attract American people by an American service, it must needs be that Anglican tradition and usage be in certain points set aside."
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RENEWED TESTIMONY
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Albert F. Mosel, jeweler, 520 North Fifth street, Terre Haute, says: "For some time I was suffering from inactive kidneys. The dull pains and constant lameness in my back Interfered very much with my work. In my business I have much sitting to do and whenever I went to straighten, I got a catch right In the center of my back. The kidney secretions annoyed me greatly, I felt miserable and was all run down. rJoan's Kidney Pills gave me positive relief. I was so much better after I had finished the first box that I continued using them. The lameness in my back left, the kidney secretions became natural and my health improved wonderfully." (Statement given September 20, 1913.) On January 31, 1916, Mr. Mosel said: "Doan's Kidney Pills have always done all that I said for thejn in my former recommendation. I shall continue recommending them to everyone needing an excellent kidney medicine."
Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan's Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Mosel has twice publicly recommended. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.
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A SILK FLYE
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DAYLIGHT SILK SECTld
Newest stripes and plaids in bright or subdued col so extensively now for skirts, dresses and blouses, witfc fall shade predominating—good, durable A/I silks, ranging In price from, per yard «pl»UU
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