Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 July 1918 — Page 4
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Aa Indrptadeat aewapape*. D*Ht and Sunday. Tk« Terre Haute Guctt»i MtaMlik» 1MB. Tie Terrt Haate Tribune. r«tablbk»d ISM. __
Telephones Business Department, both phones, 878 Editor&l Department, Citizens. 155 Central Union. 316.
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A Terre Haute arwapiprr fa* Terra Haute people. The oaljr paper la Terra Haate owned, edited and publlaked by Terre Hauteaaa.
This means that the last stage in the .schooling process is approaching an ond. First came the American training camp, then training abroad, then experience in brigades with veteran French or British troops and then the
Veteran French or British troops and then the reunion as an American army, %, They are now finished soldiers and ready to do for more recent arrivals from America what tha JTrsncb, and
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British did few them. It is a source of satisfaction to Amer*V toana to know that their own army Is rapidly coming into being aa an lnde §yv pendent command. A greater responsibillty now falls upon American com|f 'wanders and a great probability that
American troops will soon be engaged In operation of first-rate importance appears. It is within tha possibilities that Hindenburg may choose to drive the point of his sext wedge into Uae .American line.
DOUBTING THOMASES.
'A few months ago few believed that $t would be possible for this nation to v send a million fighting men to France.
The common assumption was that the U-boats would send them to the bottom Of the sea. But they are there.
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liave strongly emphasized the fact that doctors should iTesc'ribe more organic iron—Nuxated Iron for heir nervous, run* own, 'weak, hajt* ard looking woes patients. When roil goes from the lood of women. the oses goes from the heeks. ..
In the moot common te»odf« of America, the btarches, sugars, table *vrups, candies, nolish,ed rice, white Bread,
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Entered as aecondclass matter, January 1. 1908. at ttaa postofflce at a
Haute, Indiana, under tha act of congress of March 2, 1879.
Only newspaper la Terre Haate barlas full day leaaed wire aerrica of Aaaorlated 1'reaa. Central Preaa aaaoelatlon aervtcr,
All unsolicited article*, manuscripts, letters and pictures sent to tha Tribune are sent at the owner's risk, and the Tribune company expressly repudiates any liability or responsibility for their safe custody or return. MEMBER OF THB ASSOCIATED PH*»
Tha AaaoclMed Fraaa Is W***'**1* entitled to tha uae for republication of •til aewa dlapatchea credited to It not otherwtoo credited In thla paP** and also the local new* pnbUaheed herein.
All rifhta of icpikUeatlos of apodal dlapatchea herein are alao reoerred.
NOW, ALTOGETHER.
Secretary- Baker's Fourth of July statement that he "suspects" several American divisions are,now acting together under General Liggett as an army corps may be taken as an assurance that an all-American corps has been or soon will be completed .jvn$L,kin possession of a sector in France^, sv
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The err© Haute rlbune AND GAZETTE.
A month ago people who wanted to I country, with the same rude force that
Mother, Why Dont You Take Nuxated Iron
And Be Strong and Well and Have Nice Rosy Cheeks Instead of Being Nervous and Irritable All the Time *nd Looking so Haggard and Old?—The Doctor Gave Some to Susie Smith's Mother and She Was
Worse Off Than Ton Are and Now She Looks Just Fine.
ftiialei f*an Will Taereaae The fDrtaftl kali tlkduraare Of Weak, Nervoaa, Carewan. Halcard Looking Wontea la Two Weeks Time la ^•aay Inataaeea.
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lOne .JaaUh* '.- beautiful, lrst- Q«^ol,y cheeked wornhird. *'!thout iron."
ys Dr. Ferdinand ing1, a New York Physician and Medical Author.
farina,
^degrerminated cornmeal, no longer is iron to be itfle cesses have removed
Com'the iron of Mother ^ehart
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found. Refining propoverished foods. and silly methods of home
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cookery, by throwing down the waste pipe the water in which our vegetables are cooked are responsible for an-
y of •other grave Iron loss. thro "Therefore, you should supply the iron deficiency in y.our food by using some form of organic iron, just as you would use aBdlBa^ when your
I o o a s n o enough salt. "I have used
N u a e I o n widely in my own practice In most severe ag-gravated conditions with unfaiUng
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Dr. Ferdiaaad KlaC, New York Pkrairiaa and Medical Aatkor, aaya that phyaleiana ahould preaertbe more organic Iron—Naiated Iraa—far tkelr patients—An arm I it—Iron dedeleacr la the areateat oara* to the health, atrenRth. vitality aad beaoty of the modern American woman.—Soanda warning ancalaat aa* of metallic Iron which may Injure the teeth, eorrode the atomach aad ia many eaaea da mar* harm than goods adviaea uae of only nxated Iron.
results."
It is surprising'how many people suffer from iron deficiency and do not .. know ft. Iron is absolutely necessary v to enable your blood to change food into living tissue. Without It, no matter how much or what you eat, your food merely passes through you withs out dolnff you good. You don't get strength out of It, and as a consequence roil I•..«.*.me weak, pale and sickly 1«tf.k ri viat like a Want trying to
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see the airship program a failure, thought it was sure enough. But our war managers evidently are not going to have any failures.
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As progressive tests of the Liberty motor show that it is superior to existing types of engines for different classes of air and sea planes, the critics who were denouncing it as a failure must feel pretty cheap, while its advocated are beginning to take heart. The motor may not meet all the early claims of its promoters, but it is certainly not a failure, else the British and French governments would not have ordered them by the thousands, after exhaustive tests.
The latest tribute to the Liberty motor is from Vice Admiral Sims, who says in a teport to Secretary Daniels that recent tests in European waters showed that a seaplane equipped with tha new motor had better climbing and load-carrying Qualities than any of the existing types.
The British. wfct have ^nerer been overhasty In adopting American machinery, are said by Admiral Sims to "have expressed great eocifidence in the Liberty motor.** When tha tests of actual experience are applied It will be found that the Liberty motor was neither so perfect nor so bad as the early reports Indicated. It Is already regarded as a valuable contribution to the air-fighting asseta of the allies, aAd win become Increasingly effective, both in qoalty and quantity, as the weeks pasat
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A WARRIOR LAID LOW.
Trenton, S. C„ today gathers around the bier of her most distinguished citizen. History witl record that Benjamin R. Tillman was an able man and one who
tried to make the world better,
but the task of estimating just what sort of man he was will not be altogether simple.
In his earlier career W was a man of violent temper with whom prejudice often took the place of principle. He saw but one side of the negro question, and did not become reoonciled to the loss of the civil war until forty or more years after Appomattox. Whether he Intended It or not, his public utterances often encouraged the lyncher and had there been many men like him the reconciliation between the north and south would have been postponed for many years.
No doubt the circumstances of his birth and early surroundings had much to do with bringing out the less pleasant aspects of his character He early leaned to hate two kinds of men, South Carolina "aristocrats" and Yankees, and n«?er rose patirely above Mr dislikes. i I
Nevertheless, he was an able legislator, a powerful debater, and cast his influence on many occasions on the side of measures that were valuable to the
If you are not strong or well you owe it to yourself to make the following test: See how long you can work or how far you can walk without becoming tired. Next take two five-grain tablets of ordinary nuxated iron three times per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your strength again and ,aee how much you have gained. Numbers of ner'vous, rundown people who were ailing all the s while have roost astonishingly increased their strength and endurance simply by taking iron in the proper form, and this after they had in some cases been going on for months without getting benefit from anything.
But don't take the old forms of reduced iron. Iron acetate, or tincture of iron simply to save a few cents. The iron demanded by Mother Nasture for the red coloring '•matter in the blood of Iher children, is alas, not i that kind of Iron. You $ must take iron in a form that can be easily absorbed and assimilated to do you any good, otherwise It may prove worse than useless.
Manufactur ers' Vote: Xuxated Iron which is recommended by physicians is not a secret remedy but one which is well known to druggists everywhere. Unlike the older
organic iron products, it is easily assimilated, does not injure the teeth, make them black, nor upset the stomach. The manufacturers guarantee successful and entirely satisfactory results to every purchaser or tfrey will refund your money. It is diiioensed in this city by New Central Pharmacy, Owl DTUg & Chemiial Co., Bunt\n Drug Co., Shuttleworth Drug Store,\Gillis' Terminal Pharmacy, Arthur Blpu-'s Pharmacy and all other
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I-LEMON JUICE I TAKES OFF TAN
Girls! Make bleaching lotion if 3kin is sunburned, tanned or freckled
Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle, sunburn and tan lotion, and complexion beautifler, at very, very small cost.
Tour grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of Orchard White for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how freckles, sunburn, windburn and tan disappear and how ctear, soft and white the skin becomes. Yes! It Is harmless.—Advertisement.
he ejxerclsed In the advocacy pt others that were certainly unsound. It Is a matter of common comment that oven when he assailed fellow senators with the most violence he retained their affection and that he grew in influence and in. grace as years passed by.
For many months past Senator Tillman had been known to be not far from the grave. He was a broken and a feeble man, but he remained In Washington and Just as far as his strength permitted he labored patriotically and with a whole heart to carry the war to e a n y
When allowance is made for Ares due to these causes, it is evident that the Hun and his friends have not been remarkably, successful as Incendiaries.
It is announced that the railroads must have a billion dollars a year to keep in the best running order. So maybe it would be patriotic to do a little traveling this summer, after all.
Tribune War Poets
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Ko department of the government has been so suocessful In every endeavor as the navy has. It is the one department with which nobody finds fault. As chairman of the naval committee and a powerful advocate of naval preparedness Senator Tillman earned the gratitude of the country.
V STRAY SPARKS.. V
The decrease in large incendiary fires within the past few weeks would indicate with Von Rentlein and his tribe behind the bars, this country has less to fear from the Hun fire brands who broke loose In a typhoon of hate and destructipn When this nation Joined in the war on their fountain head and source.
TIME TO BE MEN.
We are not much if we are not men i When the country is hungry for heroes again We are not much if in all our pnde We cannot put self and like asida Forgetting the petty, the weak, the selfish, The tricksy whim and the folly selfish For the stern, great work that there Is to do, For the will that is strong, and tried and true. For* the soul that is noble and high and free. When for Qod and-the «ojinUy therf's need to be!
We are not much if we cannot try, i To put our little affairs aside, In an hour like this when the great things cry, And there's work to. do that is vast and wide,
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When there's service to give and sacrifice, A flag to save and a land to keep. And a menace of danger before oar eyes. And a monster of doom on the farflung deep. And our boys off there to take their chance For freedom and right, .that they may not sleep, And for Belgium, and .lTlanders, and bleeding France We are not much if we cannot say We will put our mvai things away. We will silence the self that is always first With its hunger and greed and pride and thirst We will answer the call of our common land. And facing the bitter and waiting the worst. Give all we have with onr heart and hand, Do all that we can with might and main That men may live in the world again As men should live in a world like this— In peace and order and plenty and bliss— In freedom and light and the reams-to-he When we've made things safe for dem ocracy!
(LOW BUT SURE.
The bond has got the golden wings. The war stamp has the flame The Thrift stamp has no w
But gets there just the
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The general impression that fires in the United States have been more frequent and more destructive since the country entered ths war than they were before is fully supported by figures issued by the New York insurance department oovering the United States and Canada. With the 10-year average loss a,bout $222,600,000, the loss for 1917 was $267,000,000, a figure that is more than $80,000,000 above the low record of 1915.
How much of the Increase is due' to the acts of the public enemy is, of course, beyond guessing, but it cannot be sufficient to cause anxiety. It is certain that a large part of the increase is the result of the Intense Industrial activity and of the accumulation of great stores of inflammable and epcplosive materials oh account of the war.
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New Store Hours-—Opens
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Wfm tha Trtbaae Files.
July 5,1908.
R. L. AJder returned from a six months' trip abroad. G. I. Kisner delivered tfi addmrs at the Red Men's celebration at Jasonville.
Albert Kinecke sold his wall paper stock at 1219 Wabash avenue to Robert R. HarroldL
The summer attendance at the Indiana State Normal school was the largest on record, more than 1,800 students havlnr registered.
GERMAN WAGES RISE.
Labor Net Connected W4th War Is ^Reaping Harvest.3 'r AMSTERDAM, July 5.—The situation in the German labor market as described in the official Reichcarbeitsblatt —the Labor Gazette—pictures the relative prosperity of the working classes In contrast to the grinding penury of the people who draw fixed salaries and others of the middle classes. It is estimated that the Incomes of the working men have risen proportionately far beyond the increased cost of living, because of the war, considering the fact that the porkers' wives and others have been able to add substantially to the family incomes owing to the. abnormal conditions apd wages.
The Gazette's Agues, complied by the imperial statistical bureau up to September, 1917, show that shop workers' wages had risen from 92 to 175 per cent since 1914. It is calculated that other workers, not Immediately connected with war industries, such as jvoodworkers, stone masons and plasterers, are earning an average of a thousand marks more annully than they did before the war.
With the increased wages the workers are enjoying many extra facilities for the securing of food which are not available to the middle classes, who are real sufferers In Germany today.
BaiM Thai Vacaat Ut W# oan show you how to mako It pay. UITBI LUMBER UMPANY
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Through the Danger Zom
KUPPENHEIMER CLOTHES
to verify this. They show in what an efficient
629 WABASH AN/E.
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Tka Stan lacllaa. Bat Us Mat CMIftl." Copyright.
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During this configuration it is well to push one's business and to begin new enterprises.
Bankers have the forecast of new responsibilities and larger opportunities in international affairs.
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manner this great clothes making organization has anticipated conditions and overcome them as evidenced in the wide rango of quality fabrics, patterns and colors offered. You take no chance in buying these good clothes—service and satisfaction are assured. $25, $30, $35 and up to $40.
Alr-O-Weaves
Coolest Summer Clothes
$12*50 $20,. $2S
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The Kupvenheimer House in Terre Haute."
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When a ship crosses the ocean today it is closely convoyed by warships to see that no harm befalls it.
Today we are' guarding the public Interests through these uncertain merchandise times just as closely and carefully. s -f
We offer no untried or uncertain mer
chandise You can depend absolutely that our high standards will be maintained as rigidly aad conscientiously as, in the past One has but to see our elegant assortment of
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Newspaper Syndlcata.
Saturday, July 6, 1918.
Jupiter and TTranus are today fn an aspect that is most beneflc, according to the reading of astrologers. Neptune is slightly adverse.
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This is an encouraging sway for whatever concerns aviation. The stars seem to promise great progress In the manufacture of machines. There is a strong forecast that betokens great fame for American air men.
Neptune is in a place making for suspicion and criticism and warning, is given that enemies may be nnusually active in disseminating propaganda this month.
The position of Neptune Is read as presaging more scandals and circumspection in privata as well public life is enjoined.
Again the growth of spiritual vision Is predicted and the coming new teachers Is prophesied.
Increase of patriotic effort is pitgnosticated for the coming months,
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Children born on this day *r« llkelv to be clever, original and fond of change. The subjects of Cancer have tha moon aa their principal ruler.
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WHEN IN DOUBT, Try The Tribune.
By first, last and always giving your preference to KEEP-KOOL Clothes you rally to the support of our country's trade war—which doesn't threaten, but is actually being waged. Never was it so urgent as now for every American to wear "MADE IN u! S.
A."
Clothes—and of all
"MADE IN U. S. A." Clothes, that bearing the suggestive KEEP-KOOL label is the most satisfactory in point of style, comfort and price.
THE HOUSE OF KEEP-KOOL THE SNELLENBURG CLOTHING COMPANY Philadelphia
JOSEPH^ 512-514 Wabash Avenue
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when many- (disloyal punished. There ia a most protmstng alga for,' farmers, who will probably have great crops. They are warned Ql danger of loss through some pest,
Business this month should be sails-' factory, as the algns are soapJdous. ,v Some difficulty or danger affecting
sailors Is foretold. This may he In connection with the navy and may affect mechanics as well as men in the service.
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