Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 May 1917 — Page 4

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iMlay. t|«-Vw« Ga«*t*. •b»ike4 1M». Th» Tvrfr Uaat* »iwt. wteMlalH 1MB4. I, ^Telephone Business Department, tfi Editorial Department.

UwpbOMi, lit Editorial Departm ?rtR«ns.l65: Central Union, lie.

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by mall, Daily and

Jpftinflay, $J» 00. Dal)y only, S3.00. San^yt»nly^|l^04. ...."•.

Entered as aeoon'lclaax matter, Janu­

s' 'ft^wggOTSJPjP^ ary i, 1904, at tb* Sf ^OwK postfifflce at Terra -VWwute. iiiuiana. tinder the act ot eon-

^mreaa of March -X. 1S?».

nj Oaly aanipaper la Terre Haute liavmt fall 4ay leaaf* wire aetTiw of Ai ji|»(!la4ca Presa. Central Preaa aaaoeiatttaai aervln.

(ivil Tirre Haute aewapaper for Terr* jlarate peo|»ie. The aalr paper la Terre ant* smtd, edited aad pakllabed by Ter*e Haateaaa.

Ail unsolicited articles, manuscripts jBtitrs and pictures sent to the Trib,^~?ane are sent at the owrter's risk, and n« Tribune company expressly repu{fcia^es any liability or'.responsibility

WjffiF their safe custody or rAtUrn.

GENERAL JOFFRE,

JIJfeGeneral off re makes it plain that he syS?A pi#Xpects this-nation to strike against

Prussian hosts with all the power ev£ry resource at its command. j%j|j6|fre fully expects that the American |^dldie^ shall tak£ his pla.ee shoulder to |^1hftilder with the French soldier and V^tlh* English soldier and battle to death .g^yifctpry for the allied cause. 'This iyV what we should' do. We should •Si JiM S *spfnd every man, loaf and dollar for ,^yl fbry in this, causte since we are jeopardizing the lives of a million men, v. '(Wd may be more. it

bet us face the fackV as! they are. Today, despite their encouraging mil--itary successes, the allies are facing a ^^^ItutLtlon which is serious, and likely fj^jpjbecome even morfc Serious. The war iyet !b4 lost unless the United

YStktesls prepared to 'send men to -^Irartce promptly, to begin without del^^y the organization of ocean trans^^jprtMind a systematic conservation of .national food supply.' Russia at ^tfit temporarily out of the wir .^iKfance "Almost at' the fend of -her1 re^fcjajircesItaly still incapable

ot

It how exists.

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^(lijf ^ucc^ssfully an a,ttacK organised by *|&pipjpan Ti'igh command such as deiretooyed' ^loumanla and almost captured

Great Britain struggling,W ith

submarine blockade not' yet masterI daily becoming, more serlous— i«"the picture of the war situation

.^.tThe United States can «upply .the ^itfeisive blow. It can supply the, de-

-*cjslve blow only if the, American peoput astd«i all notions that their irticipation in the war is to be small, limited to. contributions of money

present situation.' of the 1' war not .warrant pdAic.. But neither b#»'it incite optimism., The hardest. ^'VltjteneSt, most dangerous portion of straggle ,1s yet to comer and. urt-

Jjtoss-fche States is prepa.red ror

J-rlficeaUnited

as great as the .British a:id

Bijch people have already made, Germany may yet escape that' defeat1 "^tfhlch Is essential to the restoration of *j$Ltatice and democracy In the world |uid the vindication of international now threatened,, with permanent ipeal. And if Germany escapes todanger for us tomorrow will beyond present estimation. We are

K. war the issu6 of which .,1s atill i^lbtfUl And the outcome of which will allibly be defeat unless we are pre-•ed-to fight it as a war for our own a*t5hcii', exiling for our best effort our ultimate strength.

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FLAG RAISINGS.

Old glory is being hoisted on the

JsMftns of Vigo county. Every railroad a Ruination 4s raising Its flag. Schools

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lodges, everything that

jjllfllkndg for national life is participating glthls sentiment towards old glory. ^Sald the late Senator George F. tj&r of Massiaichusetts: have seen the glories of art and ^jhiteoture, and of river and iiloun^j(iv .1 tyave seen the sunstft^jn Jung'and the moonrise' bver Mount lane. Brit the/failrest.visioa on which eyes ev^r rested iyas th'fe flag

Khy- country in a foreign port." fefeaxiifttl as a floWfer to those who love It,

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Many reports have been made by •i Terre Haute people who* derived Jjg&iM- results from the Quaker Herb

Extract. Here is another case reported. Mr Lemuel Mitchell, who night watchman, for Wadley & Co., at E^irst and Poplar Sts., stild that- he had suffered from catarrh for abbut 20 years. He would hawk £nd spit phlegm, had a -numbness 'in hi® head and dizziness at times. lie- would bloat and .belch, and Hstd

Attack/3 of soreness and .stiffness in his limbs, so that it was difficult for Him to move quickly on his feet.

Mr. Mitchell1 had used several .remedies, but he had not gotten: much relief. He bought some Quak- £& titorb Extract And took it regu^rly. He. called again to* get more jhl* greAt remedy, and while he Mitt:

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terrible as^ahmefceor te those who hate it. it is the symbol of the power and the glory and the honor of fifty millions of Americans."

And since those eloquent words were spoken the number of Americans has been doubled, and, let us believe also the ardor for the old flag.

broadening out.

An apt suggestion has been maSe by the publisher of the American Press ,that high schools throughout the country sliould teach advertising to their pupils. We cannot thinlc of anything more calculated to develop the mind of our boys and girls. Most of them enter the world of business from the high school and not from the college, and certainly a practical course in advertising would be of more advantage to them than the smattering o? the hundred and one immaterial subjects we find taught in some of the pity, high schools—subjects that clutter the curriculum and make for a poorly balanced, citizenship.

The art, Of advertising, if pursued, means manhood and virllity.*It teaches the 'attraction of plain statement of truth. It teaches effectiveness o£ open, dealing and the bringing out of that which is best in man and his product, and makes for the elimination of that which is .objectionable. The teaching of advertising would be character building of the first order and would cause intellectual development in any boy or girl who seriously studied the subject. Editors 'might well urge the Reaching of advertising in the high schools of their communities. The principles of advertising enter into the everyday life of 'almOst every citizen and would be a valuable asset to 'any young' man or Woman ih any'walk of lif^. The school of today not only should teach our youth the principles of right living, but should equip its pupils practically to' face life in its best sense. The injection of a course in advertising would not in any way suggest the passing of the trade school. F^tr from it. 'Rather would It more nearly suggest the merging of. the high School With, tlie. college, for those who arei not fortunate enough to take advantage of the ,highest education.

ALL KIND OF PEOPLE.

That it takes ill kind of people to ,make a world is a very natural refleetibn when one reads that the French goveriim&nt has just requisitioned 132v)MjOOO "gallons -of/wine for the. men

In the frr^hch anhy. riere'the inclinatlo'n is to deprive all of the men in Army1And niavy all Alcoholic beverages.

The leading doctors of France and Italy insist on-wine for the^soldiers in the trendies. The government furnishes AbbUt a pint of clAret A day to every French and Italian soldier jvlne being regarded" byy the greatest ttjilitary and ^medical authorities of Europe to "be just as necessary as food to the health Qf fighting men and for .increasing their efficiency.

Gommenttng on the wisdom of this course, the London Times says: "Dr. Landouzy, Dr. Armarid Gautier, D. E. Vidal and others—the onost eminent ln*thelr profession—publicly announced that the use of wine is not only a desirable food for the troOp.s, but necessary to secure ... efficiency. The addition of a pint of wine to the daily rations is therefore, regarded,, as indispensable, for soldiers who are galled uppn to undergo the excessive physical strain which is inevitable in, the fighting lines. After an experience, which is not excelled by any physician in France, Dr. Landouzy makes the following emphatic declaration: i refuse, as a physiologist, the tabto of wine.' Dr. Regis, professor of the faculty of medicine, Paris, states that the prohibition of wine uhder present clr* cumstances would be 'almost a crime agaihst the riAtlon from the economic point of view.' and a heresy from the hygienic point of view.' Pure wine is found to be especially suited to those who derive insufficient «nourishment from their ordinary dAily food, as well as to the adult who Works hard and eats badly to the convalescent who is recuperating, to the/ aged who are

vthat

Herb Extract is .Certainly Fine for Catarrh

"I can* feel that my head is clear now, and my stomach is much better.' I *can start right off walking now, without that stiffness and pain

I believe was rheumatism. I can say that Quaker Herb Extract is certainly fine for cafarrh."

This is but one of the many cases where Quaker Herb Extract is doing a remarkable curative work/ If you have catarrh in any form r6membeir that it is a germ disease. Quaker Herb Extract Ms a germ-de-stroying herb remedy, sp it removes the cause. Indigestion and other f,orms of stomach trouble are often caused by catarrh. Get rid of the cause and the symptoms will leave. Quaker Herb Extract is $1.00 a single bottle or six bottles for $5.00 three bottle* for $2.50. Oil of Balm a great liniment and pain killer, 1ft &5e and 60c a bottle. Kidney

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Good

The selective draft will take such men from the universities as are needed and put them where they are needed, while the universities will retain As a part-of their duty their normal work of preparation for a future that will be peaceful.

If the late czar is looking for a place to invest 9, little money in farm land, he might find what he wants in the Wabash valley. Climate and soil are right, and no trouble from revolutibns.

Twenty-cent bread is noilv prophesied. But a lot of people are resolved that -rather than submit to such an outrageous charge they'll eat crackers.

A Chicago club has agreed to make May a potatoless month and urges all Chicago to join the pact. There Are too many clubs in this country.

Mr. Bryan will lecture on crop production in the south. The farmers should hear hi^i. if they can spare the time from their work.

It begins to be pretty clear to the American people that Old Glory needs neither gold fringe nor tafeseled pords to enhance its beauty.

Joffre will not visit all the towns that haye invited him. It is necessary that

Pills, 50 cents a box.. So call today at the Buntin Drug Co.'s, store, northeast corner of Sixth street and Wabash avenue, or your local druggist, where these wonderful Quftker Herb Remedies can be obtained at all times.

The Quaker Remedies. are also sold by the following druggists: Shelburn, Ind., O. B. Stark.

Sullivan, Ind., Joe K. Smock & Son. Brazil, Ind., Mendenhall & Artman.

Clinton, Ind., Gillis' Pharmacy. Clay City, Ind., Jett's Drug Store. Jaaonville, Ind., J. J. Lacy A Son._ Linton, Ind W. J. Hamilton. Rockville, Ind., Dick H. Ott. Farmeraborg, Ind., Charles Parish.

Marshall, III., City Drug Store. —Advertisement.

Sfeflfs 4^ ,r i,

V#x^.^iftaaBl||S|s

"Get Duffy's and Ktep Wall"

Sold in SEALBD BOTTLES ONLY. Beware of imitations.

NOTE—Get Duffy's from your local druggist, grocer or dealer. $1.00 per bottie. If he cannot supply you, write' us. 8end, for useful household booklet free.

The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co.. Rochester,' N, Y.

failing in strength, to the sailor and to others who are exposed to cold and trying conditions of weather, it is a generous and a precious tonic."

SCHOOLS AND THE WAR.

A proposal made, in the Wisconsin legislature to close the state university for the peribd of the war, in order to save money, has been referred to a committee, where, it may. be presumed it will die.

It has not been found necessAry or advisable to close the universities abroad. There are students and professors who are not fit for war, and there are others who, though available as fighting m^n, can serve best by remaining in the universities. In England men from universities who could have been of great use at'home as scientific workers1 rushed to the recruiting stations and were set to digging trepches.

A story is told of one of these men, a chamist, who*,was -set 'to grooming horsel, while able than he were wrestling with the ammunition prcfblem. Finally, when British authorities and *thte British public came to their sen^e^, ffiat man was taken out of the stables and sent to a laboratory. Refusing appropriations to the universities in tftis country would be to repeat s^uch-mistakes .by wholesale.

Spring Tonic

Most evei^^iT^ .fefels the need of a. dependable tonic at.this time, of the year Duffy's'is Nature's true tonic-stimulant, made from so.und grainy! thorbughly il^alted and distilled to absolute purity, which niakes it a medicine of the highest order.

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with its prescribed^advice of a tablespoonful in water before meals and on going-to' bed, 'gently stimulates the Stomach to healthy action, impro^i^g digestion' and assimilation of food, and in this way enriches |he blood and brings strength, and- vigor to\the System. If yQii fpei.'filt:^iri?d. out", these days, after the trying mqriths' of winter have sapped your strength, you should "Get Duffy's and keep well," just as thousands of others do. It's a medicine for all mankind which will help to give you new health, new'strength, new vitality and new life. Because Duffy's assists nature, you should try it today.

he return home before the end of the war.

It is proposed to kill all cats as An economic war measure. Is the whole ornithological population to join the. American eagle?

The farmery this year is going, to have a lot pf' fun laughing at the city rubes.

Lai'ge oaks from little acorns grow cigarette ^sta^ts a $10,000 fire in Calgary.

HOROSCOfE.

"The' Stars Incline, But" Dtf 'tfot Compel." Copyright, 1915, by the McClure

Newspaper Syndicate.

Wednesday, May 9y 1917.

Until evening of this day the stars rule unfavorably. Neptune and Mars are both adverse. -In the evening

It should be an auspicious time for traveling on land as well as water. Uranus is in beneflc aspect.

The stars appear to promise large profits to hotel keepers at inland summer resorts neAr New York and other eastern cities. Newport lias a sign presaging a sensationAl event that may be a tragedy for a man of prominence.

Uranus gives promise of splendid achievements in aerial navigation. In-* ventions of surprising character are foreshadowed.

There is an asiJect read as Indicating widespread interest in cooking and the prediction made .a year I ago, that American women who desire suffrage would Win by preparing fpod for men instead of delivering speeches to them, may6 be fulfilled through some public service or army aid.

For thil1 day the planets seem to threaten trouble for both the army and the navy.

There 1^ a sign read as presaging honors and national farrie for members of the' colored rAce, among whom heroes will-afise.

Arizona is under a sway making 1 excitement *and bloodshed. Its mines have the prognostication Qf property.

The planets appear to-*' foreshadow more war enthusiasm in the east than in the west, but San Francisco and Chicago will achieve distinction in unexpected ways.

Wool merchants have the prognostication of great profits and extraordinary obstacles in business.

The seers prognosticate such gains end benefits for leather dealers thar fashion will devise shoes of substitute materials.

Fame for a woman surgeon is prophesied. She will belong to the west. Persons whose birthdate it Is may liave a troublesome year in business, but friends will compensate for heavy losses.

Children born on this day may meet many obstacles in the way of success, but these subjects of Taurus have the power of making influential friends who are always ready to shield them.

OBSTRUCTION.

In ever^wintl that blows Stands some- obstructing tree In every'tU1» that flows

Some^driftinn: lose you'll see. The tree makes murmuring strong And seeks the wind to s»tay. Tb" log 'eaves ripples lqnp—

The tide flows on' its v»av. 'Qainst «?very oumose high Opnosing forces "stand. Till Time shall sweep them »bv

With an unwavering hand. Even a neonle's will Is haltingly defied, Tet moves, unconquererl still.

Even as wind'and tide.

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City folk are looking with suspicion on the roof garden fArms, belieying vegetables to be plenty high enough already.

Twenty-two divorces were dismissed by Judge Gerdink yesterday. Now, if the nations at war would take a hint.

Famous sayings of great men: Joffre, traveling on the-Vandalia, "I believe they are shaking us for the drinks."

The press won't mind a censorship so much if it is extended to the congressional record.

Holding the road to Paris was nothing to holding the track on an American railroAd.

—WcLahir.g-tonSt'jir.

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A deAl was closed' yesterdAy evening between the Commercial clu'd

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coming^Es" before wearing

TEN YEARS AGO TODAY. From the Tribune Files.

May' 8, 1907.

The ninth annual conference of the state association of, Cbngregational churches opened last night at the First Congregational church.

Street cars were placed in operation at noon tbday on -the East Wabash line a*' the Country'clu^.

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Does A Dollar Buy from Your Dealer

it buy merchandise or does it flay for his delivery mutak^s? A doll&r is worth just as much as it ever was* ~but it won't go as far.

One reason is because some merchants haven't jet realized that it is good business to wave money for their customers.

Efficient, modern delivery methods will do it 22,000 progressive merchants have discarded horse -delivery and converted pleasure car deliyieiy.

They are sending their customers' goods home in VIM Delivery Cars—die trusty, sturdy, delivery trucks jrhich are built solely for merchandise delivery need* Built to cover twqnty or twenty-five miles at a tripto serve many customers and thus keep down the detiverycostper ctutomer.

And built to atay oat of the repair shop where converted pleasure$to eattheir heads off with big Jbifls. Easy on tires, economical in gasoline consumption, designed to save expense for the storekeeper—that's the VIM Delivery Car.

The American housewife knows that her dollars will go farthest with the merchamt who is good enough business man to save his own money. i e V I e i v e y a e e a s i e s e i v e y u n i to buy—through the Vim Deferred Payment Plan.

Full information on request. Thoroughly equipped Vim Sales and Service Station in this city for the benefit of Vim owners.

Barman-Ritchie Motor Car Co.

669 Ohio Street, Terre Haute, Ind*.

CAR

The CHaa«*_ sells for $665. Completo with Open

Closed Pan^*£oc lyv»74l •taadard bodie*. All Philadelphia.

$715 with Ten other f.o. a

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$745 Complete A Year to Pay

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Who are not our Customers

/•••We are using this advertisement to tell you that we are very anxious to have you come in and look uaw over.

We want to put it up to your sense of judgment^ to your sense of style—to your sense of values.

"I'd Like to Look Like That Man'.'

HbW often have you admired some other man's clothes and wished that you could appear as welEf*f dressed as hie? rr

The secret'underlying his well groomed appearance, probably, is that he's wearing

Joseph'sHighClass Clothes For Men and Young Men /M

No doubt he selected them in our store aild satisfied* himself of their "be-

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and the, T^rre Haute Paper company by which the paper company agrees to double its capacity.

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You have the same opportunity as he. In spite,of the^fact that it is hard tobreak away from old associations :$ come, in and see us some day. Our fabrics will make you glad you came.

Suits Vl5f $17.50 $20 and up to $25, $30 and $35 as low as $10 and ^112.50

Joseph's Sons.

512-614' Wabash Avenue

T.he death of Mrs. Mary Joyce, 90 years of age, occurred yesterday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. A. J. Kaufman. Mrs. Joyce .came to this city with her husband, Austin Joyce, fifty-five years ago.

In accordance with an ordinance requiring the removal of all dverhead Wires and poles on Wabash avenue by October 1, the Western Union Telegraph company is arranging to remove its wires by June 1.

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AUTOMOBILES COLLIDE.

-By Special Correspondent. OAKl'OWN, Ind.,. May. 8.—Two autbJ mobiles- collided about- one-hai^iUM south of town late last .,night. G|lt|j«i Snapp was driving a roadAtep. belOJig ing to A.

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Stillwell, of Vinceflnes, jieBM

Paul Hieth. was driving hl^ I^the^s Bqick.. The roadster \waf almos|t molished, aijd. the.Buiclc was dantAgeiq to the extent of about f2(IO.. irhe,v ^c-| cupajits

the'cars, wire not seriqjis.l}j

injured.^,

PHONE TRIBUNE

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