Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 23 April 1918 — Page 4

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^TheTerre Haute Tribune

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Alt tnrtppfndpn( iirnnpRprr. naltj1 s*IMl Snnda 'I he Terre llaute (.n/otte. .(•MablUkrd I

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Haute. Indian*, under the act of conKress of March t, 1J79.

Only nen»|ianrr In Terre Hnute TinvintC f«1l day learned wire »fnU'e of A»lated Pre»«. Central Pre** nasoclalUn service.

All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures sen,t to the Tribune are scut at the owner's risk', and the Tribune company expres.sly repudiates any liability or responsibility for their safe custody or return.

MKMRi:il OF1 Till: ASSOCIATED I'ltKSS 'I'lie Aaaocfntrif Pre** la e*«'ln*lvely MtJtM to thr u*e for republication of all n«im dl«|tatchea credited to tt or not etherrvlKC credited In thla paper xai alas the lfcal Bena published herein.

All rlslita of r«*putilicatIo i of apeelal dlapatchea herein are alao reserved.

v ABOUT YOUR BONO. _U,«" A reader of the Tribune asks a question which doubtless is being mulled over in the minds of many people. The point he raises is this:

It has been generally understood that if one had a liberty Bond it. could be used in various ways, such as paving debts, etc. Now. it seems the his firms are refusing to do this, even those that were willing to do so at first. T'lease cl*ar thia up for a host of interested readers.

Of course, the owner of a Liberty 1 Bond may do as he' wishes with it it is his property, to sell, to give away or to hold till maturity. On the other hand, firms which refuse to take bonds in payment for merchandise are probably acting from patriotic motives.

Certainly their attitude is in accordance with the wishes of the treasury tie I i tment.

JL

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i Telephones—Business tieparunent. ItiMT 11 phono*. 3"8 Kditorial •epartnient, •.'Itusens. 15 i Centra! L'imoii. "Ifi.

,ij| In advance yearly by mail. Daily and ."js-inday, }l no. Dally only, $3.00. Sunday onlyj f2.0Q.

T»rrf Hniitr we^wpepee for Terr*

Hente owned. «di(«4 mm& fitblUlicd l»y Tmt* Heatan*.

Kntcred as secondclans mutter, January 1. 1906, at the po.-toffice at Terrt

One buys'**. Xiberty Bond in order to

___RROW COLLARS

FOR SPRING CASCO-2vein. CLYDE-2V*/*

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help the* government finance the war. He loans his money for a stipulated icim i.: .ears, at a ftxed rate of interest. The purchaser "who immediately turns about and sells liis bond, or uses it in exchange for goods, in a sense breaks hia contract with the government he is not going through with his part of the bargain which the bond represents.

For these reasons and others that

tary McAdoo some months ago asked the business firms of the country not to encourage holders Of Liberty Bond to uae them in trade, but to urge them to hold the bonds as an Investment. Most firms, we believe, have acquiesced in the request. They recognize the patriotic motLves behind the appeal and realize that for the best interests of America owners of Liberty Bonds should keep them unless there be an imperative need for money.

Put away your bond in gome safe place, pay no attention to market quotations—for they do not affect the basic value of the investment—cash your coupons as they mature buy some more* bonds to put with them. This is the way to do your part in financing the war. This is your part —perhaps your only part—in helping to crush the Prussian monster.

Keep your bonds.

RUN FRITZ.

May one suggest, without being' accused of giving valuable information to the enemy, that the Huns are likely soon to be forced to endure a new kind of bombardment? For Charlie Chaplin has been called to military service and expects to go for training in June.

Germans originated the deadly gas. But Chaplin invented the custard pie. It remains to be demonstrated, of course, just how decimating a longrange bombardment with custard pies may be, but not one who has seen the prince of humorists on the screens manipulate his famous weapon will doubt its efficacy in Flanders.

Charlie ought to make a great soldier. Vet one doubts whether he can ever wear the country's uniform with quite the same effect as he wears the familiar derby and the trouser* and the coat that make up his civilian garb. And will he be permitted to carry the cane? Certainly, Chaplin without his cane would not be Chaplin at all!

I^et Charlie promenade in no man's land In broad daylight, in full sight of the enemy's trenches—derby, coat, pants and cane—and the war in that I sector will he over at once. That

MR.GEISLER SAYS

NUJOL LABORATORY! STANDARD OIL CO. (New Jersey), BAYONNE, N. J..

Gentlemen:—

3 Donnell Place, Maspeth, Long Island.

Dec.

I am pleased to state that I find Nujol a top notcher, having tried a great many other remedies which can come nowhere near vours.

Nujol relieves chronic or occasional constipation at all ages. You .can depend on its gentle and safe action: no griping no physicing no dangerous reaction. It is pleasant to take positively pure, drugless and tasteless. The mild, effective remedy for young and olct, Avoid harmful pills and physics. Use Wujol and be "regular as clockwork.''

ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS There are no substitutes—there is only Nujol

In bottles only, bearing the Nujol trade mark—never in bulk Write for free booklet, At every t/rng itorr. 5end 5t»e. and we will ship mw Wit sire lo soldiers or sailors anywhere.

cas Clockwor^

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LITTLE GIRL RESCUED FROM A TAPEWORM

".«» titer Tathf Wonderful QUAKERHERBEXTRACT

Little Janet Lyon, Whitcomb Heights, Stop 6 on the Paris traction line, had suffered for about a year from stomach and intestinal troubles. She had a changeable appetite and frequent headaches. She would often sit around not caring to play, would sometimes feel tired and listless, she bad been given a remedy but there were no permanent restflts. Some Quaker Herb Extract was gotten for little Janet. After she had taken it four days she passed a fearful tapeworm complete with the head and neck about 38 feet long.

Quaker Herb Extract is sold at Gilfis' Terminal Pharmacy, 9th and Wabash Ave., and leading druggists in •surrounding towns O. B. Stark, Shelburn: Smock & Son, Sullivan Mendenhall & Artman, Brazil ,Gillis Pharmacy, Clinton .Tett's Drug Store, Clay City Lacy & Son, Jasonville CityDrug Store, Marshall, 111. W. J. Ham ilton, Linton Chas. Parish, Farmers burg Goeko & Peckinbaugh, Bicknell. —Advertisement.

slouch would capture the opposing dug-outs without even bloodshed. Of course, we'll miss Charlie, but war demands its sacrifices. We gladly let him go, knowing what a contribution we make toward victory. Only— we'd like to be near when Fritz gets the first custard pie squarely in the face!

NOT THE GREATEST EVIL.

"War in a good cause," wrote John Stuart Mill, half a century ago, "is not the greatest evil which a nation can suffer. War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things the decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks nothing worth a war is worse. "When a people are used as mere human instruments for tiring cannon or thrusting bjtyonets in the service and for the selfish purpose of a master, such wfer fie grades a people. A war to protect other human beings against tyrannical injustice a war to give victory to their own ideas of right

20, 1916.

Your# truly,

Conrad Geisler.

Are you free enough from constipation to feel such enthusiasm as Mr. Geisler puts into this short endorsement of Nujol? You certainly can be, too! But you must first overcome constipation, the poisonous source of more than a score of serious bodily ailments. Resolve today to be one of the countless healthy thousands who now insure natural bowel regularity simply by the use of Nujol.

for constipation

TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE.

Unus"**

and good, and which is their own war, carried On for an honest purpose by their free choice, is often the means of their regeneration. "A man who has nothing which he is willing to fight for. nothing which he cares about more than he does about his personal safetf, is miserable creature, who has no chance of being free, unless made and kept so by the epcertlons of better men than himself. As long as justice and injustice have not terminated their ever-renewing fight for ascendancy in the affairs of mankind, human beings must be willing, when needs is, to do battle for the one against the other.'*

CRYING "ENOUGH!"

The parliament of Baden has adopted a resolution requesting the imperial German government to take steps to secure a general agreement for the cessation of air raids on cities outside the zones

of

military operations. In

other words, the representatives of the people of Baden woulJ put an end to "baby killing," as the British have designated the Zeppelin and airplane activities. The action appears at first glance

to

be highly creditable

5f- Hammel 4/. Tribune Puhli®K, Coun City.

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government and people of Baden. Unfortunately the inspiration is geographical rather than humanitarian.

It is the misfortune of the Grand Duchy of Baden to be located nearer

NUXATED IRON

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Kay* Naiated Iron Puts AntonlahlnK

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Strength and Knerjiy Into the Vein* of Men nnd Brine* Hne« to the Cheek* of \erTon*. Rnn-Down Women. Ask the first hundred strong, healthy people you meet to what they owe their strength urid s»e how many reply ",\uxHfert Iron." Or. James Francis Sullivan, formerly Physician of Bel levue Hospital, (Outdoor Pept.) New York, and the Westchester County Hospital, savs: "Thousands of people suffer from iron deficiency, but (lo not know what to take. There is nothing like organic iron—Nuxated Iron to quickly enrich the blood, make beautiful. healthy women, and strong, vigorous iron men. To make absolutely sure that my patients set real organic iron and not son.e ,orm of the metallic variety, I al.vays prescribe Nuxated Iron in its original packages. N'uxated Iron will increase the strength and endurance of weak, nervous run-down folks in two weeks' time :n many instances." Manufacturer'* Note: Nuxated Iron recommended above by Dr. Sullivan can be obtained from any good druggist, with or without a physician's prescription on an abs'olute manufacturers' guarantee of sue-,-^ew nr ^irniev refunded.

LUMBER

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the fighting front than any other German etate. For this reason the French and British reprisals have been usually against the cities of Baden. STarteruhe, the capital, has been bombed again and again. Mannhein, Freiburg and other Baden cities have been occasionally visited. It ha», indeed, become a custom for the French and British to visit some place in Baden whenever there is a peculiarly atrocious German attack on London or Paris.

Now Baden has had enough. sThe allies' intensive bombing of one state of the German empire has thus brought excellent results. The policy of reprisals, which was not Inaugurated till a long time after the Germans began their butcheries, was adopted for the precise purpose of inducing the Huns to cease. Baden's wail of distress may have the desired result. Or it may be that the high and mighty ones, safe in Berlin, will decree that Baden must continue to suffer. It used to be the custom to give the Berlin school children a flag-waving holiday after the most successful raids in England. Should not the children of Karlsruhe be willing to be killed rather* than deprive the children of Berlin of their pleasant celebrations? And think of the children of Paris! They have been killed In such numbers both by recent air raids and by the new supergun that they are being sent out of the City. Killing French children or I driving them from their homes is, in

Berlin's opinion, going far to advance Germany's power and glory. Would the wretched Badeners spoil all this?

Speaking of patriots, how about the man who **mushed" from Skin Bay. Canada, to Seward, Wie.—650 miles— to take his piace in the second draft?

A news item says that Australia is exporting millions of frozen rabbits. They must have been having a severe season down there, too.

One notices that there is a tendency to call the American soldiers abroad "Yanks'* instead of "Sammies." That's a relief.

France I* sending calamity howlers to prison. The American way is to send them to congress, it seems.

A few more nice days, and the movement to intern the weather man wih doubtless be abandoned.

Last year's spring hat looks mighty pretty on a ivoman who owns a Liberty Bond.

And as to the Liberty Loan—have you come across, or, do you want" the kaiser to

Maybe the phantom burglar stole the spring weather key out of Dr. Cade's office.

1 Gee, we ba-t Judge PuUiaai (eels

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TEN YEABS AGO TODAY,

From the Trlbnne Flic*.

April 23, 1908.

The city

moved to the new rooms we&t of the city hall. The Coal Bluff Mining company leased seven rooms on the eighth floor of the Terre Haute Truat company building.

Dr. S. V. Ramsey purchased a new bteel motor boat and will launch it within a few days.

Vigo county received a bill for $!.•» 768.1.1 covering one-half the cost of keeping persons sent to the state In stitutions from this county.

FROM JITNEY DRIVER.

Editor of the Tribune: I see in the Tribune that the new jitney ordinance is satisfactory to the jitney drivers. Io you think it is

MARCH 1SI7

"My parents consulted seventeen physicians during the time 1 was ill with rheumatism of the joints." said Miss Marion Maton, of 20 Roosevelt Ave., Beverly, Mass. "One specialist had me enclosed in a plaster cast. He said I might have to remain in bed for months or possibly a year. I had 39 X-R»y pictures taken. One doctor said my stomach was displaced others said it was the fault of iny diet^, I was gradually growing worse. "My jaws were closed. One doctor said that if my jawa were not operated on they would become locked in six weeks. I had to live almost entirely on liquid food. "My knees were very atiff. My hands were Half closed and stiff* fingers stiff and useless. "I was helpless. However, in two months' time after taking Var-ne-8is I was able to open my jaws, use

TUESDAY* APRIL 23, 1*11.

Co.

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Third street

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satisfactory since it has driven out twenty-five per cent of the jitneys. At least twenty-five jitneys have stopped operation because th owners did not have the $70 or $80 It takes to get the license. That many people are be-

engineering department ing discommoned and denied jitney "service. Does the Tribune think that is a i-factory settlement of the jitney' question It doesn't appear so to the jitney men. E. B. SCOTT/

DON'T LET IT LINGER. A cough that follows la grippe oi1 any other cough that "hangs on" from winter to spring wears down the sufferer, leaving him or her in a weakened state, unable to ward off sickness and disease. JOB. Gillard, 148 Fillmore St., Nashville. Tenn., writes: "I was suffering with,.a dry hacking cough and a pain in my chest, but since taking Foley's Honey and Tar have been relieved." It soothes, heels and fcures coughs, colds and croup. Good for whooping cough. Valentine's Economical Drug Store, 634 "Wabash Ave. —-Advertisement.

Marion Mason's Wonderful Recovery from Rheumatism

Sullered Tortures in Plaster Cast—Knees and Hands Stiff-—Jaws Locked

MAY

IMPORTANT—Don't take a substitute. Regular Var-ne-sis for rheumatism comes in a GREEN package and always has the picture and signature of Mr. W. A. Varney on the front.

Feb. tfia

my-hands and get a o u e ifouse Now, 1 consider myself entirely free from rheumatism and cannot sa: how wonderful it all seems to bt well again."

Rheumatic sufferers should "know the truth'' about Var-ne-sis The complete story of Miss MasonV e o v e y w i s e v e a o o graphic illustra i o n s w i mailed free.

CONQUERS RHEUMATISM

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ARNE-5IS

Send to W. A Varney, 25 Hamilton Ave., Lynn. Ma.ss., for Var ne-sis, or get it from any reliable druggist.

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