Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 August 1918 — Page 8
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An lee cream supper was riven the officers and men of Camp Rose last night at the Institute. The cake was provided by a number of Terre Haute women After the supper the soldiers expressed their appreciation of the affair and save three cfaeer# for the donors.
The cake was given by the following: Mrs. Harry A. Johnson of South Eighth street, Miss Winifred Flaherty i. of North Thirteenth street. Mrs. Frank
Boyer of South Seventh street, Karl Boyer, Mrs. Armln Tolley, Mrs. Emma J. Pyles of West Terre Haute, Mrs. l/ouise Benny of South Eighth Btreet, Mrs. H. C. Anderson, of South Thlr't teenth street. Mrs. Morris Berkowitz, of South Center street, Mrs. C. Hlrschman and Miss Kreida Hirschman of
South Second street, Mrs. T. J. Moore of South Seventh street, Mrs. Jake Rassal of South Seventh street, Mrs. John Vendel of South Klghth street, Mrs. A. Thornton of South Seventh street. Mrs. George GramniPl of South Seventh Btreet, Mrs. Cowan of South Twelfth Mrs. Grady of Ohio street, Mrs, L. i- Burgan of North Thirteenth street, Mrs
Felix Blanken baker of South Third street, and Mrs. F. Rector of South Third street.
Mrs. Elmer "Williams of North Seventh street, entertained in Compliment to her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Joseph K. Williams, with a porch party Wednesday morning. Miss Gladys Roettig, Mrs. (». E. Williams of Chicago, sister, was also an honor guest. The guests were invited for ten o'clock. The morning was spent in knitting. At noon, a beautifully appointed luncheon was served, Those invited were Mesdames Harry Gilbert, Walter Talley, Floyd Newsom, "harle» Woerner, M. James, Karl Houck, Harry Stickle, Hart Farwell, Pearl Allen, Harry Fisbeck, S. lxoke, Walter Hice, Clyde Randel andf Miss Bonnie Far well, Mrs. Dickson of Evansville, and Mrs. Decker from Kockvill*.
I Mr. and Mrs. Grover C. Wright of North Ninth street, entertained with a family dinner party Wednesday evening at their home, the occasion being the birthday anniversary of Mrs,
Wright. Garden flowers were used for the decorations. ,The guest who were all from out of town were: Mrs. Dan Eckel, Mrs. Howard Harper and daughter Vera, Mr. and Mrs. Abre Honderich and family, Okel Findley,
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Do your euuuug «rly and tk* wolf •roti't stand a chance. Free book of Instructions on canning and drying •nay be bad from the National War Garden Commission, Washington, D. C, for two conte to pay postage.
all from Marshall, 111., and Mr a. Ida Soughers from farls. IU.
Mrs. Tillie Albrecht of North Center has received her first letter from her son, August H. Albrecht, since he sailed for foreign service. In the letter Mr. Albrecht states that he ia in splendid health, is safe and is having good wholesome food. He also says that it rains most of the time. Mr. Albrecht is in the field artillery, before leaving here he was connected with the Vocational school.
Mrs. Ellen E. Thimm, of North Fourteenth street entertained Tuesday with a dinner in honor of her niece, Mrs. Leo C. Logue, of Detroit, Mich. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Andres and son, Mr. and Mrs. John Comer, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hovey and son, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schaata and son, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Lloyd, Mr. and Mrs. John Foley of St. Mary's* Mary and Margaret Thimm.
David McBeth of Sbuth Center, Is celebrating his 73rd birthday today. Mrs. McBeth has invited a number of his friends in to spend the evening.
An all day meeting of St. Stephen's Guild will be held at the Parish House Friday to make comfort kits for the s .Id I era,
A
full attendanoe la de-
aired. The Morton Belief corps will hold an all day meeting Friday at Memorial hall. At 10 o'clock Miss Harriett Woolen will give a demonstration in canning. In the afternoon besides the regular order of business a drill team will be organized. A1JL members are urged to be present.
Announcement has been made of the marriage of Miss Ruby Baldridge, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ,T. E. Baldridge of South Forrest avenue, Brazil, nnd Clenn Kuykendel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kuyendell of this city. The wedding took place Tuesday morn-
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ing. Mm JT. Brace Bindley of South Fourth street, has returned from Epworth Heights, Ludington, Mich., leaving her son, Bruce, Jr., and niece. Miss Norman Bindley, to spend the remainder of the summer with Mrs. Alois Graham, who has a cottage there.
Miss Hazel Peterson of S. Tenth street, returned Wednesday from an extended trip through the middle west, en route home. Miss Peterson joined her mother in Chicago and they re-
Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Hitch, of 663 Chestnut street, announce the engagement of their daughter, Charlotte Vea, to Mr. Olagroff Honey of Olney, 111. The wedding will take place In the early fall.
Mr*. Edward Lon»r, daughter of Mr. E. E. Lawrence of East Wabash, left the first, of the week for Washington, D. C. Mrs. Long will take up government work In the Insurance department.
The plcnio supper planned for Friday evening in the Masonic temple by the Terre Haute chapter of the o'ier of Eastern Star* beea postponed.
John Norv'n Compton arrived Tuesday and will be the guest of his parents. Mr. and Mrs. F. 8. Compton, of South Seventh until his marriage Saturday to Miss Lenore Co*.
Ed Sparks and family of Kent avenue, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wolf of South Fifth, will spend the first two weeks of August at Sargents hotel, Lake Wauwasee, Ind.
Miss Mary Ellen Neal of Detroit. Michigan, and Miss Esta Neal of Hymera, are spending a few days with Mrs. Ed Lash of S. 10th street.
Mrs. M. J. Murphey of South Eighth street has as her guest Mrs. John Acree and son, John, Jr., of Lexington, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. Ballard of N. Twentyfirst st. have returned from a month's vacation spent in Chicago and Lake Wauwasee.
Fred Sweeton, of 680 Lafayette avenue, who left for Camp Sherman, has been transferred to special railroad school at Indianapolis.
Miss Louise Vollmuth and Miss Elizabeth Freudenreich leave Monday for Trinity Springs, lad-, for an Indefinite stf-y.
The Ladies Auxiliary to tfte Switchman's union have postponed their meeting for Friday to a later date.
Mrs. D. B. Miller of South ICighth street, has as her guest her slater, Mrs. George B. Miller of Rockville, Ind.
The Friendship club will meet Friday with Mrs. John Frakea, 183d South •Ninth.
Word was received by Mrs. Pauline Kohl of N. 14th st. of the safe arrival overseas of her son, Paul Bernard Kohl* Co. B, 63rd Engineers.
Mrs. H. B. Bard of South Center, has returned from a visit with relatives in BrasiL
A public euchre will he held at the Moose hall, 6&3V4 Wabash avenue, Thursday evening.
SLOVAKS TAKE TOWN.
AMSTERDAM. Aug. 1.—The town of Yekaterinburg in the province of Perm, near the Siberian border, has been taken by the Czecho-Slovaks, according to the newspaper Isvestia, of Moscow.
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POLICE FIND TRACE OF A STRANGE RACE
Seems Like They Used Whisky and Kimmel Here for BeveragesSome Excavations Made.
For some time the scientific section of the police department known as the bone-dry squad has been finding evidences here and there, fore and aft and vice versa of a race of people which inhabited this section of the globe, it seems, and used beer and whisky and kimmel, etc. for beverages. This dates away back to the dark ages, even beyond the first of last April and Captain Barry, Professor Moore and other distinguished archaeologists connected with the institution at Fourth and Walnut streets, are gradually excavating traces of this strange people,
Thursday these investigators round at the home of Alex Moskus of 104 South Tenth and One-half street, several containers of a strange concoction said to be whisky and several containers of a concoction said to be kimmel which the people, it is said, drank as refreshment prior to the Goodrich dynasty. Moskus was taken to the public forum, led before Triumvir Shafer and his case continued the next semester. He formerly conducted a temple dedicated to Bacchus at Fifteenth and Beech streets.
Marion Mulvaney, an old offender, irho has been arraigned in City Court several times recently on charges ot violating the state liquor law, was arrested Wednesday night on a charge of intoxication and assault and battery. It Is claimed by the police that Mulvaney started on a rampage at Fourth and Wabash and that it took several policemen to subdue him.
Mulvaney has recently caused the police much trouble and has been arraigned several times on charges of violating the state liquor laws. He was also arraigned in Paris, IlL, recently on a charge of grand larceny, growing out of the alleged theft of an automobile. The cape in Edgar county was dismissed, however, several weeks ago.
Myrtle Carmicheal, -wife ©f James Carmicheal, who caused her husband to be arr?sted Wednesday on a charge of violating the state liquor law, was arrested Wednesday night on a peace warrant sworn out by her husband. It appears that domestic trouble in the Carmicheal family caused the wife to have her husband arrested and fearing for his own safety Carmicheal in return had h'.s wife arrested. When both cases were called In City Court Thursday morning a continuance was granted to give the defense time to get witnesses Into court.
COTTON CROP HURT.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 1.—Loss of 1,661.000 bales in the prospective cotton crop, due principally to droughty conditions in the western part of the cotton belt, especially in Texas, was shown today in the department of agriculture's August production forec? placing the estimated crop at 13,619,000, equivalent to 500-pound bales, compared with 15,235,000 bales forecast In July.
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young Romancer Found to Be, Boy Bnnaway From Glenn Orphans5 Horn*.
Raymond Green, the "tost" lad who has been at the Friendly Inn for several days, is not Raymond Green at all, nor neither has he been lost. He is Indiana Horsley, one of the thre boys who skipped out from the Glenn home last Thursday on a "tour" of of the wide, wide world. Indiana was identified by Superintendent B. h. Stahl of the Glenn home late Wednesday afternoon ana was taken back to the institution.
Indiana ia quite young, only 10, to be giving demonstrations of such versatile mind. He told the matron the Inn that he could not tell where his home was located that he lived on a five-acre farm that was equipped with two mules, somewhere and that h» had gone to the Bolton school. He said he had "Ju^t followed the gravel road" until he got into Terre Haute Saturday.
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Mrs Dudley Forbes, the Inn matron, said that from his clothing—blue overalls and blue shirt—she had thought he was a child from the home and asked him as much. He said that had never heard of the homo. Not an hour before Mr. Stahl called to identify the boy. Wednesday* Mrs. Forbes asked him if he didn't kno^v Captain and Mrs. Stahl.. He declared he had never heard of them before In his life.
After Superintendent Stahl had Identified the runaway youngster he asked him why he had left the home. Indiana gave no reason, merely saying he didn't know why. He said the other two boys had botfrted n
freight train.
Superintendent Stahl ex'prosrsed great surprise at the little boy's ability to concoct the stories that he had told, saying that he had been one of the "good little boys" at the home and that he had never given any trouble before.
COLORED MEN LEAVE FOR MIKING CMP
Vigo county's call for colored registrants to entrain for Fjygke university, Nashville, Tenn.» was responded to this morning by twenty-eight well educated and classy looking volunteers, who left via the C. & E. at 7:35.
The north Ride squad of fifteen had for captain Jjtmes Ira Shearer, 160! Sycamore street, a graduate of high school and Hampton Normal school The lieutenants were Augustus Lucas, graduate of the high school and the State Normal, and George H. Oreene, a high school graduate. Charles E. Rochelle, former principal of a Rockville school, was made captain of the south side squad of ten, and Elrod Morton and Benjamin H. Simpson were appointed lieutenants.
MINE STORE ROBBED
The general store at the Glenn Ayr coal mine, east of the city, was robbed of a large quantity of merchandise sometime Wednesday night. The robbery was reported to Sheriff Joseph Dreher by Clarence Freeman, manager of the store, Thursday morning, and an investigation was at once made bv Sheriff Dreher, Deputy Sheriff Less Maris and Detective Edward Bidaman. The list of articles stolen includes work and dress shoes, shirts, cigars and cigarettes, flash lights, suit cases, dry good, etc.
IN PRISON CAMP.
Corporal Charles H. Doane, reported on June 22 as missing In action in France, is alive and a prisoner of the Germans, according to information received Thursday by his mother in this city. Corporal Doane is confined in a prison camp at Darmstad.
YOUR HOUSE IS NOT REALLY ON THE MARKET If it is not advertised in the for sale
cblumna of The Tribune.
Drop little Freezone on an aebing jorzL, instantly that corn stops hurting, then yen
When the admirers of Mary Pickford, who will pack the Orpheum during the next three days to see her in "M'liss." her newest Artcraft picture, they will sea her in a role entirely different from any che has appeared in since si** became a Paramount standby. ".Stella Maris" was an eye-opener for those who thought that the Mary with curls waft the only Mary who could hold and satisfy their demands as the little slavey she reached a heighth of dramatic achievement that marked her for the really great actress that she is.
Then she did "Amarilly of the Clothes Line Alley," and again the public gasped. In the picture we saw Mary Pickford as a little girl of the tenements, tough in speech and manner, yet with the purity of mind that lifts even the besgar from the ditch and places him among kings.
Now, in 'M'liss" she is the hoydenish little creature who rules the western mining camp with slinp shot and a saury tongue. Brut Ilarte wrote the storjr. Frances Marion made it a picture. Marshall Neilan made the production and directed it. In Its stage form "M'liss" was for many years the meal ticket of the late Annie Pixley. The play was always sure of a packed house at the old Naylor opera house. In the cast with Miss Pickford are Theodore Roberts. Thomas Meighan, Tully Marshall and Charles Ogle.
Ameiicaa.
Mn.he.1 Nortnand, "the rainbow girl of the scr«en," who is quite as captivating in polite comedy as she was in the
Keystone or roug^h neck period of her activity in the movies, is the woek end star at the American in the Goldwyn photoplay. "Back to the Woods."
Miss Normand la seen in the role of Stephanie Trent, daughter of a lumber king. She tires of society in her native city on Long Island, goes to a
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The Orpheam.
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backwoods towt?. In Maine to become teacher. There she meets Jimmy Raymond, a special writer for a New York Sunday newspaper, who ia ieeking inspiration for a serial. Charmed by her looks and manner, he makes Stephanie the subject of his story. It displease# her and she enters a suit for libel.
Here the excitement and the fun. for this is really a comedy, begins. Miss Normand is supported by Herbert Rawlinson, Arthur Housman, T. Henderson Murray and •ther screen favorites.
Prlaeeee.
Mignon Anderson is the star In "The Shooting Party," a western thriller, at the Princess today. "Passing the Bomb." a Nestor comedy ,and the animated weekly are also on the bill. On Saturday, the Universal shocker, "Smashing Through." comes for a stay of three days. In this picture, Herbert Rawlinson does a lot of hair raising stunts. Among other things he whips a $rOss« at cowboys, one after anotliflE.
Lola.
Rocher and re Lee, In musical set, and Kdwin Felix Burnham, character comedian, furnish the vaudeville at the Lois. The movie bill Is a Pathe production entitled "The Ueruiaa Cursa in Russia."
Head Year A ninn,
Albert L—Sam DeGrasse was in the cast of "Intolerance," but Is
n°t
'n
"Hearts of the World." He is now working with Universal,
Such n Bother—Oh, yon are no trouble to muh at all. Stanhope Wheatcraft is the son of Nelson Wheatcraft and Ida Stanhope, both highly rat»d players in tfeeir time. He i* uow witb Fox.
Regular—Jack Pickford and Louise Huff head the cast of the film production of "MIle-a-Minute Kennedy." The pir-tuie will be shown at the Orpheum next. week.
WHEN II? nOVBT*. Try The Tribune.
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