Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 August 1918 — Page 4
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TheTerre Haute Tribune
AND OAIETTK.
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ladfpradeat atmpaprr. Dully
Mnd Xiin(t*7. The Terr® Haute Gazette. (rntalilishrd 18«#. The Terre Ilaute •Tribune, ratabllahed ISM,
Telephones Business Department, feoth phones, 378 Editorial Department Citizens, 155 Central Union, JH.
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Itiauie, luuiana, under the act of conUresz ot March J, 18/9.
aervlce.
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Iherein. All rlKhta of republication of special ,idlspitrhfi herein are ilm reserved.
THE STORES AND THE WAR.
Retail merchants
in
|ihipughout the country
many cities
in
compliance
flwith a request Of the war Industries '(board at Washington, announce that (after September 3 the privilege of returning merchandise purchased will
withdrawn, except in cases where ijthere
is
V'hich
4*when
clear evidence that the store
'[is at fault, No one
on
the outside can
tfot'm any conception of the extent to
this privilege has been abused.
Jt makes useless work for the clerks, ifor the delivery men
and
for the ac
counting departments, And ft benefits Jnohody. V Bona fide'shoppers will find it just «s easy to make a final choice at the "wtore, instead of sending out a line of samples to be Inspected and returned, while the temptation to order goods
there is little prospect of keepine them will be eliminated. Other "win-the-war" suggestions "from the same source that are worthy of adoption are to carry parcels home, ^thereby relieving the overworked and '.depleted ranks of the delivery departments do not have things sent "spe"iciai" unless therfe is real need, and ijshop early In the day. All of these jare "war-time" measures, but they involve reforms
in
retail merchandising
that might well become permanent.
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH.
The news to the effect that Germany !has acceded to the Spanish demands land will turn over to 8pain all shipping now interned In Spanish ports in.(dictates that Germany has learned
:,omething.
since the day when ne
gotiations were being carried on with .|th« I'nited States. There was a limit to Spanish pa^Cience somewhere, and there wer^ indications that the limit was nqt far fjbff. It was announced several days ago that the Spanish and American ^government a wpre about to roach an
n
HELLO.
corpuscles
A Stoiy of Reborn Physical and Mental Power Showing how iron builds up the blood and makes folks strong and healthy
.Tim. you're certainly look-
in?, fide:" "Yes. and feeling fine, too—
the best in many years. I think 1 have mere strength, energy and ambition i ha n since 1 was a real young fellow. I am working a great deal harder, dolling my work with less effort and getsiting real pleasure out of it, and 1 give fiTnll credit to that Nuxated Iron I've W n taking. You can see for yourself
,f,w
hat a short course of it has done for nte. My LOlor has come back, my skin has cleared up, 1 sleep as well as anyone ever did arid I eat. like 1 used to twenty years ago. My rase I was just one of depleted energy, due tp lack of red corpuscles in the blood, but 1 have wNuxated Iron to thank for my present ^excellent condition. I'll never be wuhout it again." li The foregoing is being enacted by '(thousands of people all over the coun?itr\ It is surprising how many people 'suffer from iron deficiency and do not «jUiiow it. If (hey would only take organic iron—Nuxated Iron—when they 11 eel weak or tired out. instead ot' dosing themselves with drugs, stimulants and al ohol there are probably thousands who would increase their, physical strength and mental energy and build up defenses that would protect them from the millions Of germs that are everyw here.
In commenting upon the alarming deficiency of iron in the blood of Vmeiii'an men and women. Dr. James Francis Sullivan, formerly physician of Kellefue Hospital. (Outdoor Dept.), New York, and Westchester Countv ilospital. said: "Notwithstanding all lhat has been said on the subject of run-down, nervous, weak constitutions, manv peopl" do not seem to realize that organic iron—Nuxated Iron—will build up the reft
and
KmiNG HARDER* andGettinc
RialPleasubeOutotIi
help
over
come fatigue, anaemia, nervous exhaustion and the countless ills that can h» traced in many cases directly to the blood. 1 strongly advise pale, nervous, run-down women and weak, exhausted men, to try Nuxated Iron. 1 have never found anything so effective to help increase strength and endurance, give *mtil ion, vitality and power in two weeks' time in many instances.
If you are not strong or well and in tip-top shape, you owe it to yourself to make this teat. See how Ion you can work or how far you can walk without becoming tired. Next take two five-grain tablets of Nuxated Iron three time? per day after meals for two Veeks. Then test your strength again Ai.u sue how much you have gained.
WHAT NUXATKD IRON IS M.«)E FROM Sworn Statement of composition of its
Formula.
It increases the strength and en#trr*nce of delicate, nervous, run-d6wn folks in two weeks' time in many instance*.
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agreement on a large loan to be made by Spanish bankers, with the consent of the Spanish government.
This loan, which was to facilitate the purchase of supplies for the American army, indicated to say the least, that there was no unfriendliness in Spain toward this nation, and German officials could not fail to see the point.
Germany cannot afford to make new enemies. The old' arrogance, which caused the German war lords to act as if a few armies more or less opposed to Germany was a matter of no consequence, is gone. Therefore, when Spain asserts a right and at the same time shows signs of closer friendship to Germany's enemies, compliance takes the place of defiance. If Germany really concludes an agreement like that which is announced from Spain and keeps the agreement, the facts will be evidence that German resolution is weakening.
MAKING THEIR OWN BED,
News from Russia lately has followed so long after the events described that it is often impossible to Bay what the.situation is, but the dispatch from Archangel, giving the text of the proclamation issued by the allied troops there, is only five days behind. That is fairly prompt for -Russian news. It shows that there is no shadow of pretense to friendliness between the allies and the Bolshevik government in that part of Russia. •Lenine and Trotzky had said that the landing of the allies on the Murman eoas£ without a declaration of war was the act of brigands. The allies reply that they landed on Russian soil in response to an invitation from the only legitimate/government in that region, the government of the constituent assembly and of the Zemstvos. They say that'they have landed to support that government in an effort to drive out the Germans and to suppress completely the enforcement ot the Brest-Litovsk treaty, which, the manifesto declares, was "traitorously" negotiated by the Bolsheviki.
The allies have not been slow, therefore, to pick up Lenine's declaration that a state of war existed. They accept the statement for all it means and cast their lot with the elements in Russia squarely opposed to the Lenine government.
FEEDING A HORSE.
El well S. Hart, the noted economist, remarked a few days ago that the horse will never regain his former domain for the reason that in the future farmers of this country will not give so much land over to the raising of crops which are primarily for horse feed.
The secretary of agriculture, too, stated a self-evident proposition when he remarked in his annual report that the automobile had put the driving horse off the country roads, and that the farm demand had been the mainstay of the horse market for several years. It is estimated that the automobile trucks already in use have superseded at least a million horses the increasing number of farm (ractors will still further limit the demands. But. for the need of horses in war the
I?" P®Ptona.te (Special Specific Stahdard). bodium Glycerophosphate V. S. P. (Monsanto). Calcium Glycerophosphate U. S. p. Casoarin Bitter Magnesium Carbonate. Po Ginger U S. P. Oil Cassia Cinnamon U. S. P. Calcium Carbonate Precip, I". Sj
Monsanto). P. E. Nux Vomica V S Kach doso of two tablets of Nuxated Iron contains one and one-half grains of organic iron in the form of Iron Peptonate of a special specific standard which in our opinion possesses superior qualities to any other known form of iron.
Glycerophosphates used in Nuxated Iron :s one of the most expensive tonic ingredients known. it is especially recommended to build up and thereby increase brain power as glycerophosphates are said to contain phosphorous in a state verv similar to that in which it is found in the nerve rfnd brain cells of a man.
As w ill be seen from the above, two important ingredients of Nuxated Iron (Tron Peptonate and Glycerophosphate) are very expensive products as compared with most other tonics.
I'naer such circumstances the temptation to adulteration and substitution by unscrupulous persons is very great and the public is hereby warned to be careful and see every bottle is plainlv labeled "Nuxated Iron" by the Dae Health I,aboratories. Paris. London and Detroit, U. S. A., as this is the only genuine article.
Manufacturers' Note: Nuxated Iron which is prescribed and recommended above by physicians, is not a secret remedy but one which is well known to druggists everywhere. Unlike the older inorganic iron products it is easily assimilated, does not injure the teeth, make them black, nor upset the stomach. The manufacturers guarantee successful and entirely satisfactorv results o every purchaser or they will refund your money,. It is dispensed by all good druggists. Dae Health Laboratories. Detroit, Mich.—Advertisement, i
equine family might come to be regarded as much a relic of the past as the plodding ox team of pioneer days. For the time being, the requirements of cavalry and artillery create a demand for animals of that class, though for heavy hauling the mule is preferred to the horse as being hardier, easier to feed and less subject to disease.
It is. hardly likely that any tax scheme will have a vital bearing on the reinstatement of the horse. The man who has acquired the automobile habit and has experienced its convenience and celerity will not be able to reconcile himself to the more leisurely gait, and limited endurance of the horse. The automobile has passed out of the class of luxuries into that of the necessities. The horse, however, is indispensable to the farmer, especially to th® owner of a amall acreage, and must remain so until motor driven machinery becomes much cheaper and also more adaptable.
Statisticians tell us we cannot afford to keep horses anyway they eat too much. A man whose head is lined with figures asserts that whereas the wheat acreage of the farms is normally about 60,100,000 acres, 95,000,000 acres are given to hay and oats, essentially food for horses. Too much land is given to crops for which the consumers fall to return value received.
THIS SOUNDS BETTER.
Col. Rhinehardt, who knows, says the Liberty motor is all right, and that the delay In aircraft production has been due to a desire to give dtir flyers the best. If there is any ground on which delay and extravagance can be pardoned, it is that.
HOROSCOPE.
"Tho Stat* Incline, Bat Do Hot Compel." Copyright, 1916, by the McClure
KewBpaper Syndicate.
Friday, August 30,1918.
This is a fortunate day, according to those who read the stars. Jupiter and Uranus rule strongly for good.
There is a sign making for a national awakening to the necessity ©f producing food, clothing and other necessaries. Jupiter presages great results from this realization Which will reach all classes.
Through the influence of Jupiter there may be a new dignity attached to labor, which comes under planetary government making for great progress.
This is an auspicious sway for aviation. The stars promise fame for Americans who will perform unheardof feats through some new Yankee invention. [Lovers should not expect good luck during this rule of the planets which is supposed to encourage fickleness.
The seers declare that neither the young nor the old are immune from the sentimentality that always develops in wartime and continues to warn against foolish romances and even scandals.
Great changes in fashions for women are prognosticated. Simplicity will prevail and uniforms will have an influence toward modesty.
Dancing to excess and "nakedness in attire" are declared by the seers to be ancient forerunners of war and revolution and they predict that with the coming of peace a spiritual unfoldment will prevent whatever seems to offend delicacy and good taste.
December is to be a month of extraordinary significance and should be prepared for wisely.
Persons whose birthdate it is have the augury of travel and change. They should be cautious in financial affairs.
Children born on this day may be high-strung and careless. These subjects of Virgo are often original and inventive.
WED AT GREENCASTLE.
OREENCASTLE, lnd., Aug. 29.— Miss Pearl Harris, daughter of Sheriff and Mrs. Howard S. Harris, and Robert C. Brinckman, of Cincinnati, O., were married here today, the Rev. U. E. Reed, also of Cincinnati, reading the ring ceremony. Mr. Brinckman had as his best man Earl Hinton. of this city, ajid Miaa Dora Ambuhl, of Indianapolis, was maid of honor. They will reside in Cincinnati.
I'JURRE HAUTE TRIBUNE,
*'T JUST want to thank you for Dr. A Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It is fine. I use it for my baby, my husband and myself, and simply can't do without a bottle of it in the house."
From a letter to Dr. Caldwell written by Mrs. John W. Christensen, 603 So. 2nd East, Brigham City, Utah
Dr. Caldwell's
Syrup Pepsin
The Perfect Laxative
Sold by Druggists Everywhere
50 cts. (£S) $1.00
Quickly corrects disorders of the intestinal tract, relieves the congestion and restores normal regularity. It is gende in action and does not gripe. A trial bottle can be obtained by writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 458 Washington St^ Monticello, Illinois.
ALL WOMEN SHOULD BELONG TO FOOD CLUB
Food Director Afcfgren Points Out the Eeal Importance Of This Side of War.
By J. H, Ahlgren, Food Director. The tendency is apparent in some communities to regard the U. S. food clubs as of small importance. Some women e^.y they are too busy doing other kinds of war work to bother with food ciubs. This is the wrong idea There is no other work so importam as the food work. Let's consider it for a moment.. Suppose the food administration should fail to secure the necessary distribution of food. What would happen? Disaster would be the result. The armies of America, Britain, France, Italy and Belgium would collapse. The munition workers in the same countries would be unable to produce the machinery of war. The physicians and nurses would he unable to care for the sick and wounded The wounded themselves would have less chance of recovery. The traj^dy of the Russian collapse might easilv happen in any other land if the same conditions were to prevail. Any one of these condition? would be sufficient to lose the war. Any of them or all of them, could easily happen if the U. S. food administration fell short of its task. Can you see now the relationship between the U. S. food clubs and the war?
Look at it from another point of view. You are knitting a sweater for your son, your brother, your husband, your lover. How would that sweater feel over an empty stomach? You are knitting socks for the soldiers. Socks protect only the feet, food strengthens and warms the whole body. You are spending three or four afternoons a week making clothes for the children of Fiance and Belgium. Which would make them happier, those new clothes or three good meals a day? The sewing and knitting are important. Go to it, but don't get such a false sense of proportion that you give all your time and attention to one branch of work and neglect that which is more important.
The XT. S. food clubs are the approved means through which the food administration for Indiana is trying to meet its share of a tremendous responsibility. Join a U. S. food club in your neighborhood.
SERGEANT ERMAN WRITES.
Says the Americans Kilted Fifteen Germans To One Yank Lost. Sergt. William F. Erman, Company H, l:!8th infantry, in a letter to his father, J. J. Erman, of the Terre Haute Coke cpmpany, tells of going "over the top'' for the first time, and says that the Americans killed 15 Germans for every casually suffered by them.
Erman was formerly manager of the Miller baseball team. He says that in bombing the German trenches they threw the bombs baseball fashion. "I have sp*nt some tim* in the front line," says his letter, "and last night we went 'over the top.'
v
To hear the
artillery barrage you would think hell had broken loose. We killed 15 Germans for every American killed, and also captured a bunch of prisoners. A gamer lot of fellows never was seen than those in Company H. "We finally got the chance we had been waiting for 11 months, and we were like a bunch of wild men. There was a machine gun 30 yards in front of us, and they kept' shooting at our legs, when we darted into a shell hole and seven of us threw bombs at once. This ended the machine gun fire. We all threw the bombs baseball fashion, as this old stuff about throwing bombs like a shot-putter doesn't Work in a
State of Ohio, City or Toleda, Lucas County, ss. Frank J. Cheney m*kes oath that h« Is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo. County and Srate aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for eaoh and ever' case of Catarrh that cannot be cured bv the use of HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE. FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December. A. D. 1886. A. W. GLEASON. 'Seal) Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Medicine is taken Internally ar»d acts thrcu« the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. OHBA'EV & CO.. Toledo. O. Sold by all druggists. Too. Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
—Advertisement.
Clothes
Men and Women
Women's Coats
RULE IS MODIFIED.
By Special Correspondent. SULLIVAN, Ixid., Aug, 29.—Count? Fuel Dirtctor
Dr.
G. G. Billman ha-
announced that Sullivan county peopl. may use their pleasure cars nepct Sunday for the purpose of attending th" last sessions of the Merom chautauqua. on account of the fact that there is no other available means of .transportation to Merom. After Sunday, Dr. Billman states they will be expected to adhere to the government's request.
We Will, Extract Your TEETH WitM Pain
Our aluminum pfates, Ifght and unbreakable, will last you a lifetime. Our mcdical staff offers the most expert and efficient service in all kinds of teeth ailments and we guarantee every piece of work we do and at a saving of 25ro to 4(Kr. We will examine your teeth free of charge.
Get the right place,
tWz Wabash Ave. PEOPLES DENTAL PARLORS
Over Thompson's Restaurant.
WHEN YOU THINK LUMBER THINK HOOTON 65===== CALL ===85
Lumber for Every Furpos*
Why not appear on Labor Day with New Fall Clothes—You carf wear the best in the land on that big holiday for a trifling sum down and the first payment gets the clothes.
Cash or credit, our prices are the same. No extra charge for credit. You do not need any one to introdube you at Menter's.
We Do As We Advertise
Men's Fall Suits $20-22-25-27-30-35-40 Women's Fall Suits $25-27-30-35-40-45-50
$18
to
Women te Dresses $15 to $35 Fascinating Milline.ry ... $4 to $12 Waists, Skirts, Petticoats
Men's Raincoats, Hats Boys' School^uits
$50
815 WABASH AVENUE
Next Door American Theater. Accounts Opened on Interurban Lines
7:16 p.m. 7:23 p.m. 7:46 p.m. 8:00 p.m.
1:54 p.m. 2:12 p.m. 2:29 p.m. 2:42 p.m.] 4:05 p.m. 5:40 p.m.
THURSDAY, AUGUST Z9, 191S.
Labor Day New Fall Styles
Read Menter's Terms
On any purchase of $15 or less $1.00 first payment gets the clothes, then $1.00 a week.. On larger purchases of 25, 30, 40 or 50 dollars most generous terms will be gladly arranged. On $15 purchase $1.00 Down and $1.00 a Week.
Go to—
OHNSON'S
LUNCHEONETTE
Refreshments
Two phones, rest rooms, ten electric fans, eight waitresses, fourteen tables, seventy chairs. Courteous, prompt service. All at your command. Meet your friends. Come in. Glad to be of service to you all.
615 WABASH AVENUE One Door West of Root's
United States Railroad Administration
W. G. McADOO, DIRECTOR GENERAL OF RAILROADS
CHICAGO, TERRE HAUTE & SOUTHEASTERN RAILWAY
TIME TABLE OF PASSENGER TRAINS
SOUTH BOUND DAILY No. & No. S 5:50 p.m.112:30 p.m.| 5:47 p.m. 1:28 p.m.
No. 1
JasonviHe Linton Bee Hunter
w
4
1
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NORTH BOUND No. 4
No. 2
5:50 a.m. 1 Lv. T. H. Ar. 9:10a.m.|J|1:43a.m. 6:46 a.m. 7:14 a.m. 7:30 a.m. 7:4-8 a.m. 8:01 a.m. 9:25 a.m.
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8:15 a.m. 7:46 a.m. 7:30 a.m. 7:12 a.m. 7:00 a.m. i
Elnora Odon Bedford
11 00 a.m.|Ar. Seym'r Lv.
For time tables and further information apply to local agents or address
No. 6 5: 05 p.m. 4:10 p.rrt. 3:39 p.m. 3:28 p.m. 3:15 p.m. 3:05 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 12:00 no'ft
10:47 a.m. 10:11 a.m. 9:59 a.m. 9:45 a.m. 9:33 a.m. 8:13 a.m. 6 30 a.m.
J. T. AVERITT. G, P. A„ Grand Central Station, Chicago. HI,
rai A TK1IIIXE WA.Vl* AD.. OXK CK.VI' A WUIll) *"OH |It,ST UKSlL'I'l.
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