Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 August 1917 — Page 2

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ARRAS BATTLE GAINS RETARD BRITISH

Allied Forces Also Report Advance on Belgian Front—Russian Situation Hore Serious.

l,ONTDOX, Aug. 4—All the positions enst of Monchy Le Preux on the Arras battle front In France which were cnptured by the Germans Thursday night, have been retained by the British, according to an official statement issued today by the British war office.

On the Belgian front, where the French and British launched an oITen- *, sive Tuesday morning, the entente al« lied troop^ n^ide further progress east of Kortekeek taboret.

LONDON, Aug. 4.—A dispatch to the Times from Russian southwester® headquarters dated Tuesday says the improvement in the morale of the armies is not substantial and warns against optimism unless the political situation changes completely. The authority of the officers is still unrecognized. While the so-called revolutionary armies have opened a front for the enemy to enter the railway men have struck at a critical moment when •verything depends on the prompt removal of property.

PARIS, Aug. 4.—Despite the continued bad weather along the battle front in Belgium, says an official statement, Issued this afternoon by the war office, French troops pushed forward last night, advancing beyond the Cabaret of Kortekeer.

PETROORAD, Aug. 4.—Premier and War Minister Kerensky and all the other members of his cabinet, except Vice Premier Ts'ekrazoff, resigned last Bight. 'Later, with the exception of M. Terestchenko, the foreign minister, they withdrew their resignations.

1

The action of Premier Kerensky and tils fellow cabinet members came about, as the result of accusations against M. Tchernoff, the minister of agriculture, and a complete breakdown Of the negotiations to bring the constitutional democrats into the cabinet.

M. Tchernoff was accused of having |een connected with the German genAral staff.

A last attempt trW be njiade to reconstruct the ministry under Premier Kerensky with the chief new members being exclusively from the socialist and radical parties.

In a letter to Premier Kerensky, M. ItchernolT said he was resigning to Obtain freedom of action in order to defend his character against the calumny that he had been connected with the German general staff.

SCHOOL READY FOR SOLDIERS.

Company to Mobilize for Duty Sunday Morning. fornpany H, First Indiana infantry. *-111 mobilize at the McLean school at 9 o'clock Sunday morning and the boys —^yjll eat their first meal as soldiers at *ttoon Sunday. The mobilization will bo

St the McLtan school, Tenth street and J,afayette avenue. Cots were installed in the basement Friday tables for the mess were loaned |y Terre Haute company No. 3 an I Vigo company No. 83, uniform rank, Knights of Pythias and chairs for the tness were loaned by the Knights of Columbus. J. C. Keith, head chef for the. cornpnny, will have his first meal i-eady Sunday noon.

No word has been received by the li^kfTs as to the date upon which the federal medical examiners will be here to examine the company, administer -."anti-typhoid serum and vaccinate the %nen. There are 162 men on the roster *f the company and the officers hope ijlhnt the jist of rejections will be eo fe®7iall that the company will remain at

Vvar strength.

HOME GUARDS ORGANIZE.

SOUTH BEND, Ind., Aug. 4.—The -ieighth home guard company to be organized in St. Joseph county was formed last night at Mishawaka, with 'lone hundred members. Officers will ,-jnot be elected until later. South Bend ijiai seven companies, one for each Iward. The organizations are composed "of all classes of men.

u

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For Free Sample Each by Return Wail address post-card: "Cuticura, Dept. 29, Boston." Sold everywhere. Soap 256. Ointment 25 and 50c.

—iimMi'ffi" ~iiii" i""TTi ir •irmyr-fTAf Tom Mix in genuine roping and riding feats In five acts

"TEXAS RYAN."

SAVOY SUNDAY

Chilean Heiress and Man She Killed As Result of Dispute Over Baby Boy

Continued From Page One.

ined up to 10 o'clock. Five failed to appear -for the examination. George Howard Megnin, 420 North Ninth street, was one of those who appeared before the conscription board of District No. 2 Saturday morning. After he had passed the physical examination he was taken before Firtley Mc-Nutt and other members of the board for the final portion of the examination. "I would like to claim exemption," stated Megnin. •"On what grounds?" asked a board member. "I am a married n^an." "When were you married?" "Day before yesterday."

Paul Charles Ehret, No. 258, Twen-ty-fifth street and Lafayette avenue, was the first man to appear before the county exemption board at the postoffice building. Ehret passed a good physical examination, but filed a claim for exemption on the ground that his widowed mother and two children of sister were dependent on him.

Four Already in Service. Four affidavits were filed by men claiming exemption on the grounds of being already in military service. These men were Charles A. Guess and Frederick Whippo, who belong to A company, engineers, and Harry L. Bohannon and Raymond McPheeters, who belong to company.

According to Secretary Gleason, the men called by the county board are in excellent physical shape. He said that of the first fifty-six examined only one failed to pass the physical examination, although the doctors were giving the men a stiff examination.

The third floor of the postofflce building was crowded from early in the morning, many of the men filing claims for exemptions before they were examined. A great majority, of these petitions were from men claiming to have persons dependent on them.

BOARD RETAINS GERMAN.

Rejects Resolution Calling for Curtailment of Study. The German language will continue to be taught in the public schools of the city, following the action of the board of school trustees at the regular meeting held Friday evening. Some time ago a resolution was presented to the board asking that it abolish the teaching of the German language in the schools of the city. This resolution came up for final action at the meeting Friday evening and was voted down, three to two. Trustees Oreenleaf and Gestmeyer favored the resolution.

The committee which was to report on the proposed Increase in the teachers' pay schedule asked for more time and will report at the next meeting.

The salaries of the assistant city librarians were increased $10 per month. With this action all of the salaries of the employes of the school city, with the exception of the teachers, have been ra t»d.

The contract for the installation of some fixtures and the doing of some repair work at the domestic Bcience .om at the McLean scU''.-l was award ed to tbe Prox & Burget Co.

CITY BRIEFS

Penrlr lillninB, charged with failure te support hifi 5-year-old son, was released In City Court Saturday morning on condition that he contribute $5 a week toward tlie support of the lad.

WHRIf IN DOFBT Try The Tribune.

""SS,

MR. ASD MRS. JOHN

It.

DE SAILLES.

THREE DRAFT BOARDS TRAGEDY ENDS LOVE ME OF 2 MINTS

Continued From Page One.

been delivered to the priest by the mother of Mrs. De Saullea, who pledged him to secrecy

Under the terms of the divorce decree the parents wkere to have custody of the child for alternate months. De Saulles was giving a party for the boy last night to mark his coming to his home. Mrs. De Saulles drove to the house in an auto at 10 o'clock last r.ight and asked that she be allowed to have the child. De Saulles refused, and as he turned to enter the house from the veranda the woman fired four shots into his back. He died an hour later at a hospital.

SAILS DISGUISE U-BOATS.

Germans Adopt Ruse to Get Close to Intended Victims. *A GULF PoUT, Aug 4.—German U-boat commanders are making effective use of the ruse of disguising their craft with sails to resemble trawlers during hazy weather, according to Captain H. B. Thompson, of thts tank steamer John D. Archbold, which was sunk June 16. Captain Thompson is master of a steamer now docked here.

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»VI

The Archbold sighted a vessel of two masts and one sail about six miles away on the afternoon the tanker was sunk. Although suspicious of the vessel, Captain Thompson said he was not certain of its identity until the craft submerged wit$ sail set. Thereupon the Archbold changed her course. The submarine was not sighted again, but two hours later a torpedo crashed into the Archbold, sinking her-

OLD WORLD IN GARDEN.

Officials Plan Gay Approach to Wad« Park Plot. CLEVELAND, O., Aug. 4.—Splendors of the park of Versailles and other famous show plots of the old world are to be partly reproduced in an approach to the rose garden in Wade park, that will be laid out by the city this spring.

Plans are being prepared for a stairway aproach that will be forty feet wide. The stairs will lead to a sunken garden, in which thousands of roses will be set out. Two large flower vases have been purchased for the wide stairway approach.

A terrace south of the rose* garden has been designed for a similar stairway.

The rose garden is on the site of the old *oo in Wade park.

FIND GIRL TRUANT HIDING.

EASTON, pa., Aug. 4.—-With (Mty and county police searching for her for days, Audrey Caffrey, a fourteen-year-old high school girl, was found the other morning asleep in a secluded place in a local department store and was taken home.

When the girl did not return home at night her parents got into communication with the high school authorities and learned that she had not attended school for a month, although she had left home each day for that purpose.

As an excuse for her strange actions the girl simply said she was tired of going to school and wanted to go to work.

KILLS SELF WITH POISON.

M. C. Murray, 34 years old, died early Saturday morning as the result of taking Paris green late Friday with suicidal intent. His act is attributed to ill health. He was a brother of Anthony Murray, who killed himself in the Shea baloon a few weeks ago.

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TEHEE HAUTE TRIBUNE.

David Lloyd George Says Germany Must First Learn to Offer Restoration.

LONDON, Aug. 4.—David Lloyd George, th« British premier, in the presence of a distinguished gathering of representatives of all parties which mat1 this afternoon in Queens hall to mark the third anniversary of the declaration of war, reiterated the aims for which the entente allies were fighting and indicated the only conditions under which they would consent to a suspension of hostilities with the central powers.

The premier asked what would have happened if Great Britain had not entered the war. He answered this question by saying: "Europe would have been at the mercy of a cruel military power. Russia would have disintegrated sooner. France would have fought bravely but might have been overwhelmed. America's Monroe doctrine would have been treated as a scrafr of paper. The fact today is that we have checked the ambitions of Germany. "Victory must be so complete that our national liberty never again shall be challenged. "Russia learned that an army without discipline is a rabble. "There are some here who want to set up committees for the British army and direct the conduct of the war. AVd cannot allow a sectional organization to direct the wai1 or to dictate the terms of peace. The nation as a whole made war and the nation as a whole must make peace."

The prime minister said he did not trust the German peace talk. "Neither the kaiser nor the chancellor," he declared, "has yet said he would be satisfied with German soil. They talk glibly about peace but stammer over the word restoration. Before we have a peace conference they must learn to use the word restoration. So far they have not learned even! the first letter of the alphabet. "War is a ghastly business but it is not so bad as their peace. While they know their plot has miscarried this time, the Prussian war lords have determined to succeed the next tlmej There must be no next time. This generation must eliminate war from the tragedies of human life."

KAISER HAS SITE FOR HIS IMPERIAL DREAM PALACE

Turks Believe He "Will Rule World Prom Palestine and Therefore. Prepares to Move.

'NEW

YORK, Aug. 4.—A palace built

In Palestine, from which the kaiser would rule his world empire, is one of the stories brought back to America by Dr. Clarence D. Ussher, one of the relief commissioners who has worked with the Armenians during the large part of the war. He told an audience at the Hardware club that this was the boast of Turkish soldiers, who evidently believed that It would come to pass.

After giving intimate descriptions of the massacres of the Armenian population, Dr. Ussher said that he thought that at least 80 per cent of the Turks were really in favor of the allied cause, but that the young Turk party, trained by Germans to German methods, na3 controlled the destinies of the empire.

The hospital of which Dr. Ussher was in charge in Van, Turkey, was until recently the only one within a territory as large as New England. New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. While the supplies of drugs were limited the Turkish governor attempted to take them by force for use in the army.

Col. Rcfosevelt wrote a letter to the Armenian and Syrian relief committee which was read at the meeting. He Highly commended the work as the only solution to the problem of the Turkish outrages until the government which permits them Is brought to terms.

JOKE HAD MANY POINTS.

Girl.With Pins In Her Mouth Laughed—Collects Damages.

NiETW

YORK, Aug. 4.—The assist­

ant manager of the Wool worth store at Dover, N. J., heard a good joke. The first person he saw when he entered the store next morning was Miss Teresa M. Jansen, of Morris Plains, a highly efficient saleslady: so highly efficient was she, in fact, that she had just filled her mouth with pins so thai when pins were needed she would have them handy.

The assistant manager didn't know she had a mouthful of pins. So he told her his jokes. Miss Jansen was then, in a manner of speaking, between the devil and the deep blue sea. She realised that it was 5 and 10c store etiquette to laugh at jok^s cracked by assistant managers she also knew that the business end of a pin wasn't anything to be mouthed carelessly.

However, she laughed. In the Morris county court Judge Salmon ordered the store company to pay Miss Jansen $5 a week for a period not to exceed 400 tfeeks, for medical expenses and $150 for legal fees.

The Dover correspondent was unable to get the joke for publication.

GIANTESS IN COAL HOLE.

Takes Three Policemen to Pull Her Out of Tight Squeexe. PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 4.—It required the efforts of three policemen to dislodge Mrs. Anna Schmidt, fortythree years old, of Master street below Second, from a coal hole, into which she had fallen a few doors from her home. Mrs. Schmidt weighs about 300 pounds and was returning from a shopping trip when she plunged into the open coal hole. Her body became wedged in the opening and when neighbors were unable to release her the police were summoned.

Patrolmen Houser, Stein and Reister, of the Tenth district, hurried to the spot and were soon tugging at Mrs. Schmidt. She was soon '"-agged

to the sidewalk, where v/* found that her kneecap waK V V She was sent to St. Mary's

„,v»£

ONLV FULL VICTORY SATURDAY TESTS BRIKG MARYHENIOKEWARM*

Continued From Page One.

ERNEST LEO CORNETT, 1308 South Fifteenth. HILLERY HARDISON, 1421 South

Thirteenth and One-half. DAVID GINSBURG, 318 Park. FLOYD JOHNSON, 318 South Second. WILLIAM ORMAN, 1516 South First. JOHN WILLIAM ROTROFF, 1611

South Third. ALVEY SHIPMAN, 2426 South Sixth. LEROY KURTLEY FEREE, 1610

Crawford.

DIVISION NO. 2—PASSED. NICHOLAS J. KASPER, 827 North Eleventh. xJOHN E. NEWBY, 1324 Third avenue. xSTEVE BODNOIR, 2121 North Twentieth. HERBERT RAMER, 228 North Fifth. xCHARLES JOSEPH HOGGAT, 127

North Water. CECIL C. MARSHAL, 315 North Third. HAROLD LEROY JONES, 1206 North

Eleventh.

xFRANK ELIJAH GRANTHAM, 1441 Fourth avenue. xFLOYD R. GIBSON, 1538 Barbour avenue. xWILLIAM MASHINO, 1190 Oakland avenue. CHARLES TAYLOR, 224 North Third. xWILLIAM WALLACE, 129 North i rst. HAROLD LEO JOSEPH KENNEDY, 1517 Maple avenue. xHARRY WILLIAM PETRY, 1446

Barbour avenue. xMATHEW W. GUSTIN, 1609 North Fourth. JOHN J. KEUNS, 2248 Locust. xJOE WINDLY, 1205 Lafayette avenue. J. RAYMOND MURPHY, 816 Spruce. xLAWRENCE W. RUBE, 922 Lafayette avenue. xGUY BARNEY COFFEL* 1610 Seoond avenue. JOHN TITUS, 62/2 Wabash avenue. xHARRY GIANAKIS, 650 Mulberry. WATE PALMER, 424 North Fourth. HARRY STEVENSON,

2&

North Thirteenth street. xCLARENCE W. CAMPBELL, 326 North Eighteenth. RUSSELL HOWARD GALLIAN, 2342

Cleveland avenue. xGEORGE HOWARD MEGNIN, 420 North Ninth. CLAUDE MARTIN, 408 Eagle.

REJECTED,

EDWARD J. HOLMES, 1618 North Thirteenth. MICHAEL S. SCHAACK, 698 Lafayette avenue. GEORGE LEWIS TROTH, 1330 Woodley avenue. ERLUND B. CORNELL, 421 Fourth avenue. GUY TRUEBLOOD, Kieth hotel. JOHN LAWRENCE MURPHY, 2324

North Thirteenth. HARRY BRAUN, 802 North Eleventh.

MULE HANGS ITSELF.

HTnn-GBSVTLLE, W: Va., Aug. 4.— A mule owned by Charles Graybill, near here, committed suicide the other day after a previous futile attempt. One morning recently the mule was found hanging in its stall, and was rescued just in time to prevent strangulation. The next night the animal succeeded in hanging itself.

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.JOII-V W. WAGOXER.

The funeral of John \V. Wagoner, 18 ycara old, who died at th« family home, 1516 Barbcur avenue, Friday at 10 p. m., will be held Sunday at 2:30 p. m., with burial at Highland Lawn cemetery. He is survived by the father, D. W. L. Wagoner, a sister, MTrg. May Siner, a brother, J. Frank, of Danville, 111., and an adopted sister, .Dorothy Lucile Wagoner.

Death was caused by epilepsy, according to the coroner. It is said he had been having convulsions frequentlv following an attack of infantile paralysis when he was 18 months old. which left him an Invalid. He was 111. only twelve hours. According to the father he had worried over the death of his mother a few weeks ago whiesh is thought to have affected him.

HAIIIIV I-. TOH.VKR.

Harry L. Tomer, who died Friday morning following a short illness at his late home, 5S1 South Fourth street, will be buried Sunday morning at Highland Lawn cemetery under the auspices of Masonic lodge No. 19, following services at the residence at 10 o'clock conducted by Rabbi I. E. Marcuson of Temple Israel. Deceased was a recognized expert in the clothing business and had been traveling for the Gruewald Clothing company at Philadelphia, for a number of years and enjoyed a wide acquaintance all over the country. A large number of prominent business men from various points will be in attendance at the funeral.

MKS, ANNA VIOLA TARREXCE. Mrs. Anna Viola Tarrenc*, 6C years old, died Friday morning at 3 o'clock at the residence, 1404 First avvr.uo, following a

five

I Iff

100

North Fif­

teenth street. xELMER CLARENCE TOMLINSON. MERL RICHARD FAUCETT, 814

By

Ppe.Mal

years' illness. Se is sur­

vived v the husband, Charles, throe daughters, Misses Dorothy and Mabel, at home, and Mrs. A. J. AValler, of Pueblo, Colo. Funeral services will be held Pnndav at 1 p. m., with burial at Highland Lawn cemetery.

MRS. MARY W. REAGAN. The funeral of Mrs. Mary Walsh Reagan will be held Sunday at 3 o'clock from the residence of her daughter, Mrs. Nellie M. Dunnigan, of apartment No. 1'Davis flats, and at 4 o'clock at. St. Joseph's church. Interment will be in \Voodlawn cemetery. Friends have been invited.

IDA HOLLINfiSW ORTH.

Ida HolHngsworth, 41 years old, died Friday niht at 11:45 at her home, 421 Vi North Third street. She is survived by the husband, John H., a daughter, Mary Myrtle, a sister and two brothers. The body was taken to the Gillis chapel, where the funeral will be held Sunday at 2 p. m. Burial will be at Highland Lawn cemetery.

MRS. JOHN KKKAKS.

By Special Correspondent. DOGGER, Ind., Aujr. 4.—Mrs. John Reeves, a?ed 32 years, is dead, following an illness of lung trouble. She is survived by a husband, two small children, four s'sters, Mrs. Dan Plgrg, Mrs. Homer Wilkes, Mrs. Bert Moore and Miss Delia Goodman, and one brother, William Goodman, of Twrre Haute.

A

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Dangers Enough.

Tuberculosis, too, often gets' its start in infancy. Every effort therefore should be made to protect the baby from infection. Common ways of infecting the baby are by kissing it, coughing or sneezing near the child, or by allowing it to sit on the floor where it has a good chance to pick up tuberculosis with the dust on its toys or other objects and thus get them into its mouth. Milk from tuberculosis cows may also be the cause of the disease in the baby.

Just as well for us to know about these things and to guard against them. There's no place that the "stitch in time" theory applies more forcibly than in the case of the baby.

CHANCELLOR'S KIN ENLISTS.

Young German Casts Lot With U. S. Army. HARTFORD, Conn., Aug. 4.—It was learned today that Carl P. Struth, who claims to be a nephew of the German chancellor, has enlisted in the United States army. Recently he applied for enlistment papers here, but was not accepted. At that time, it is said, he declared himself to be a relative of the chancellor.

Through war department officials, it was ascertained that he went from here to Washington, where he has been accepted as a recruit for the regular army.

MANY ASKING EXEMPTION.

Correspondent.

NEWTON, 111., Aug. 4.—The exemption board consisting of E. V. Hesh, chairman Dr. J. P. Prestley, clerk W. F. Johnson, assistant, and Peter Warren began the work of examining the men drawn for the army Friday. Thirty-three men were examined yesterday, some of whom passed the examination. The same number will be examined today and the work will probably be completed Wednesday as 230 men have been called. The quota for Newton is only fifty, but it is thought 300 men will be called as man'- are asking fnr exomption.

"REALLY, MOW—

"I can't take \hat. I must have Red Cross Ball Blue. I hare \ised it for more than ten years. My white dresses, linens and lace curtains are snowy white. I simply can't do without Red Cross Ball Blue. You will get it? All right, I'll wait."—Adv.

Guaranteed Dental

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mmm sai is mgk-m for C0U5HS, OT, GRSUP

Oafarrii, Ouick

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SATURDAY, AUGUST 4, 1917.

I

Dr. Ferdtuand Kinc, a New York City P*»y«lc«l» and VtHlral, Author snj "There can be no atoms, vlgorona, Iron men nor beautiful, henlthjr, roarcheeked 'women without Iron— \uxnted Iron taken thre». time* per day after nienla will Increase the strength uud endurance of weak, nervmiN, run-down folkn

per cent: In two weeks' time in many Inataneea. Atotd the old forma of metnllie Iron which ma? Injure the teeth, corrode the ntomach, and thereby do more hnrm tl«uu good. Tnke only organic Iron—Nn.\atel Iron." It la dispensed In this city by Xcw Centrnl Pharmacy, Owl OrtiK and hcmlenl Co..

The mother holds the life of her little one in the hollow of her hand. Whether the child grows up to health and a useful life or passes away after a shortened and inefficient life, depends largely upon the care of the :z other. The resistance of the little system should be built up by proper feeding, sleep and surroundings. As the spread of most contagious uiseases is caused through carelessness or ignornnce, the mother must take it upon herself to see that the child's room or sleeping quarters is kept free from rubbish or accumulations of soiled clothes in which germs may lurk.

Itiinltn I)ru« Co., *hn111 cmorth Ilruii «liirr, (.illis" Terminal i'huriinicT.

RIOTS SPREAD-1). S.

raTHERTASKOF SIZE TROOPS 10 BE CflLLED

Continued From Page One.

tie babies are having the worsts lot in life, as it is a difficult proposition getting food that agrees with them and for the mothers to prepare it Just as it should be, and so on.

Continued From Page One.

by officials of the two departments concerned. First official intelligence of disorder in North Carolina was received today in a telegram from Gov. Pickett, who advised that trouble might be expected in two townships of one county of that state. The governor did not name them.

General Crowder said today that he had reeived no ofilial reports within the past 12 hours from Oklahoma. Ho was not worried, he said, about the situation either in Oklahoma or North Carolina.

HEP. SANDERS' SISTER DEAD.

Congressman nnJ Mrs. Everett Sanders arrived from Washington Saturday to attend the funeral of Mr. Sanders' sister, Mrs.

Margaret

disease*

10o.2V..50c.$]

Bessie Eyton and George Fawcett, first time toflether since playing in "The Crisis," in "TEXAS RYAN."

SAVOY SUNDAY

FRY A TR13UNE WANT AD ONE CENT A WORD.

Tfe.-ir'-

Carna-

han, who died Thursday evening at her home in Illinois. Mrs. Carnahan recently underwent an operation. She will be buried Sunday afternoon, after services at the Friendly Grov® church, southeast of Lewis.

Stop iliaf poor childi! Jorturef &

A little Severs Germfo rubbed into that eruption will stop th$ itching and burning and heal

Is

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life. It's

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ot

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Dandruff,

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Ivy Poisoning, Barber's Itch,

Skin ami Scalp Kruptiortt, and is one of

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It stops skin eruptions csrry time. Good drugjfitts sell GERMFO in 29cM 80c. and 91 Botties, with a guarantee of money back if it

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CRESCENT, TODAY

Cnas. Chaplin

in "The Count" Also Margaret

Gibson in "FATE'S DECISION

Tom 8antscM, the star of "The Garden Allah," in "THE COUNTRY THAT

GOD FORGOT"

CRESCENT SUNDAY

Will. FARNUM

—IN—

"Fighting Blood"

V||

Five Acts.

SAVOY—iODAY Sunday—"Texas Ryan"

With Tom Mix.

A real western featur*.

BUILD ON THAT VACANT LOT. WE CAN SHOW YOU HOW TO

MAKE

IT PAY

Hooton Lumber Co.

TRY A TRIBUNE WANT AD.,y"\ ONE CENT A WORD. i i

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