Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 September 1918 — Page 5

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1914.

i

The Camp Rose detachment quartet wthe main attraction yesterday evening at Collett park at the Liberty SfiiiS and cuinmunity band concert. The quartet exhausted its repertoire long before the crowd was satisfied. The soldiers promised another sing later.

The favorite selections seemed to be "Long Boy" and "When Johnny Comes Marching Home." Some of the old timers remarked that this song hadn't been sung in Terre Haute for more than 15 years but that this year it was sunf? with so much spirit that it was an up-to-date song, and great enthusiasm wai shown.

A stirring address was given by man. large line requpst. "riiis was the seventh fcing of th« series jTIip program provides for three mnrf.

Mrs. Worth Dawson announces the I marriage of her only daughter. Hazel Irene, to Herbert Pi Richmond, son of

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Richmond, of Nouth Rlghteentli street. The vows Here heard yesterday afternoon at the entral Christian church by the Rev. .1, Boyd Jones. Mr. and Mrs. Richmond will he at home at 6"9 Chestnut street.

Hecond Lieutenant TIarold Walker, Who received his commission in the nHfllorjr officers' training s«hool at amp Taylor Saturday, came home Nunday for visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C*. P. Walker. 1G04 South ifth street. At the expiration of his 5-ave Lieutenant Wilker will report at Vamp Jackson, Columbia, £?.

of this city,

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The Queen F/sther Circle of Trinity Methodist Church wilt meet Thursday ^vening with Miss Helena Dahlen. 2002 *'crond avenue. The plans for the Sear's activities will be completed at» this meeting and every member is expected to attend.

Sergeant Logan A. Schumard has arrived overseas safely, according to information received by .his wife, Mrs, I* A. Sehumard. Sergeant Schumard was with the 278th aero squadron, Hempstead, L. I.

i Mr. and Mrs. Carl Tucker, of Ft. Wayne, announce the birth of a son, r* .lack Lyons, Friday, August 30. Mrs. i Tucker was formerly Miss Anna Lyons,

•f Vigo council No. .125. Knights and ladies of Security, will give a euchre i U'otines'iA.v afternoon at their hall in

STHMA

There ii no "cure* but reiief is often brought by

Vour Boavduarci:

•HE

NEW PRICES 30c. 60c, $1.20

FASHION HINT

Your street frock for fall must be of Mark satin according to the dictates of fashion, but the styles are many Here is a one-piece frock which will appeal to the slender girl or woman. It is made on very straisrhf, lines with a plain skirt, and a blouse resembling verv much the once popular midd\ blouse. The bottom of the skirt and the blouse have a turned-up cuff which is heavily braided.

th® Naylor-Co* buildihg. friends of the members are invited.

Mrs. Robert I* Smith has returned to Pontlac, Mich., after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Fred B. Smith, of Allendale. Lieutenant Smith spent part of last week with his family.

Miss Ethel Reinhard and brother, Richard, of 439 South Thirteenth and One-half street, left yesterday tor Chicago. where they will visit their sister, Miss Grace Reinhard.

Mr. and Mrs, Harry Davis motored to Attica, Ind Friday to remain Sunday with their son, who has been there for two months, and will retyrn with his parents.

Miss May Miller, of the Hippodrome beauty parlors, ha.s returned from a month's vacation spent with relatives in the country.

Mrs. Charles H. McCalla and children have just returned from a week's visit at Dwnville, 111.

Mrs. W. A. Kennedy and Mi»s Effie A. Kennedy will return home 3jlonday

BRESETT SPECIAL LITTLE PIG PURE PORK SAUSAGE

(No Cereals Added)

The Best You Ever Have Eaten

FORTY CENTS A POUND and worth it

SCHOOL SUPPLIES

CUT RICES

TABLETS

Thrt famous Polaris Brand. Kxerclse Tablets NOP.

1

and

2.

Writ­

ing Tablets Nos. t, 2 and 3. Drawing Tablets listed regularly Mn 5 cents out to

Drawing Tahlfets No. I: list regularly at 19 cents cut to -DV

COMPOSITION BOOKS Polaris quality Compositions, S% inches, leaves, line grade paper: regular five cent values icut to 1C

NOTE BOOKS

Polaris Quality student notes three sizes, and open, 5x7 li. 6x» extra five-cent values vi*, ciit to

SPELLING BLANKS

The Terre Haute Brand, as spefied on list at cents: cut to

WATER PANS

as specified PRINTING BOXES

Pranft Box .No. 1 as specitied RULES 12-in. Boxwood rules, graduated in H-in. 1-16-in., '4 -in., *i-ln l«in. as specified 7

PENCILS

Uisrh Krade NTo. 2 Black I^en.i roncils, with erasers: 5 cent fn*» values cut to

Red cedars with insert rubb. tip cu?Tod

achoo,.p.enci1:....

3 for Sc

Dixon High School S. M. Pencil a S cent v i!ue: A.g* cut to

PAINTS

Praise and Devoe ^Reynolds Color Boxes, as specitied on schoollist at 25 cents cut to

PAINT CAKES

Kxtra Paint Cakes, nil *-!ors. listed regularly 3 cents e% inr r„ cut to IWi UV

SKETCHING CRAYONS Dixon No. 341. as specitied

5c

12c

5c

The Blue Front Store

Marley-Johnson Co.

SCHOOL BOOK AND SUPPLY HEADQUARTERS 647 WABASH AVE.

5c

CRAYONS

Crayonart Style A box and ScottForesinan Box 3. as specified on list at 10 cents: cut to

8c

COMPASS

Kagle 576. approved by th Department, listed regularly 10 cents cut to

A rt

9c

SC.oSORS

Sharp pointed school scissors made of best material listed regu- 't'Ji* larly 20 cents: cut to

BOOK IV.—Continued.

His tormentors went no further. Why harass him for an item of knowledge which the morrow would certainly bring to lights^Instead, they hurried through the remaining formalities, adding to the reading already made a capitulation of such answers as he had given to their questions, and witnessing, while he signed both papers.

This done, he was left for a moment in peace, while the two officials drew aside Into the. embrasure of the window for a momentary conference.

He seemed to notice the hush, for he roused from the torpor into which he was again about to sink, and glanced cautiously about him. The stenographer was busy with his papers, and the other two stood with their backs to him. If help was to come it must come now. This he realized, with a sudden graying of his face which took from 'it the last vestige of that youthfulness which had been its distinguishing feature and the fiDger which had fumbled from time to time in his vest pocket stole thither once more, bringing forth a little vial which in another moment he raised to his lips.

Was there no one to see? No one to stot him? No, the stenographer was closing up his bag and the two officials deep in conversation. He could drain the last drop unseen.

But the sound of the llttto vial crashing upon the hearthstone whither he had flung it brokq the quiet and startled tb^ district attorney forward in a doubt -oordering upon terror. "What is that?" he a--ked, poiniing to the fragments/ that hacl just missed the ash heap. "It contained oblivion." was the answer given him in steady tones. "Do you wonder that I sought it? Nothing can save me. I have two minutes before me. I would dedicate them to her."

His head fell forward on his hands. The clock on the mantel struck. Could it be that when the second hand had circled Us small disc twice—

This was the thought of the district attorney, but not of the chief inspector. He had advanced to the desk where Mr. Roberts was still sitting, and remarked with a gravity exceeding any he had hitherto shown: "Mr. Roberts, have a great disap­

after spending the month of August at Richmond and Rome City.

The members of the Chatter and Stitch club will meet on Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Harvey Work, 1440 South Ninth street.

Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Dix, of South Center street, returned Saturday from a several weeks' vacation spent in Charlevoix, Mich.

Mrs. George Johnson, of South Sixth street, left Saturday for Maxinkuekee to visit her sister, Mrs. Mai by Failey, and family.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred B. Smith, of Allendale, leave today for New York to spend two weeks.

TOO HOMELIKE.

The burglar had entered the house as quietly as possible, but his shoes were not padded and they made some noise. He had just reached the door of the bedroom when he heard someone moving in the bed. as if about to get up, and he paused. The sound of a woman's voice floated to his ears.

If you don't take off your boots when you come into this house," it said, "there's going to be trouble, and a lot of it. Here it's been raining for three hours and you dare to tramp over my carpets with your boots on. Go downstairs and take them off this minute."

He went downstairs without a word, but he didn't take off his boots. Instead, he went straight out into the night again, and the pal who was waiting for him saw a tear glisten in his eye. "T can't rob that house," he said *'it remind rne of home."

o More

Bitter

Corn Bread

You will be wonderfully eased if you rop the old method of making c»m bread and use Heekin's Pure Baking Powder.

Heekin's will make the best corn bread you ever ate. There never will be any suggestion of bitterness or any unpleasant "soda taste".

He-kin's is so pure thai even though you use too much by mistake, you still run no risk of spoiling the food.

It helps good cooks become better cooks.

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TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE.

The Mystery of the Hasty Arrow

BY ANNA KATHERINE GREEN.

Appears Daily in the Terre Haute Tribune.

pointment for you. This little vial of yours which held poison yesterday contained nothing but a few drops of harmless liquid today." The change was made in the night, by one suspicious of your intentions. You will have to face the full consequences of your crime." i

Carleton Roberts' arms collapsed and his face f^ll forward upon them, and they heard a groan. Then in the short silence which followed, another and a very different sound broke upon their ears. Seven clear calls from the cuckoo-clock rang out from the room beyond, followed by a woman's smothered cry.

It was the one ironic touch the situation had lacked. It pierced the heart of Carleton Roberts and -started him in anguish to his feet. "O God!" he cried, "that I should have let that thing of evil shriek out the wicked hours from day to day, only to torment her now with old remembrances! Why did I not crush it to atoms long ago? Why did I leave it hanging on my wall

With a dash he was in the hall. In another instant he was at the door of his bed room, followed by the two officials crowding closely up behind him.

Would they find her there? Yes where else should she be, she whom •his call from the past might almost draw from the grave! She was there, but not in the spot where they had expected to see her, nor in that state of collapse of which her former weakness had given promise. Apart from Mr. Gryce, with her form drawn up to its full height she stood, with her finger pointing not at the cuckooclock as would seem most, natural, but it a sma.ll newspaper print of the dead girl's face pinned up on another wall. "What is that here?'' she cried in a passionate inquiry which ignored every other presence than that of him who must heed and answer her. "Carleton, Carleton, why have you pinned that young girl's face up opposite your bed where you can see it on waking, where it can look at you and you at it—Or here checked by a sudden thought she broke off, and her tone changed to one of doubt, "perhaps you did not pjit it there yourself? Perhaps its presence on your wall is a trick of the police to startle you into betrayal. Was it? Was it"

To be Continued Tomorrow.

QUEER EXPERIMENTS ON HAL VISION

Does Grass Look Green to Horse, Or Did You Ever Give the Hatter Hueh Attention,

CAMBRIDGE. Mass., Sept. 2.- Do animals see colors as human beings do? Does the grass look green and the sky blue to a bird, for example?

It is well known that not all human beings see colors in the same way. Some are blind to red and green that is, they see gray instead of those colors, and a few persons are totally color blind, that is, they see everything as it loo is in a photograph, without color.

How can It be learned whether animals can distinguish colors'.' It is not enough of course to offer the animal a choice between two colors and see which one it will prefer. It may be able to distinguish them, but have no preference in the matter. The most thorough investigation so far made of the color sense of any animal was that conducted by Prof. Yerkes of Harvard with Japanese dancing mice.

Mice and Lights.

A bo* was constructed with two compartments, one illuminated with light of one color, the other with light of another color. If a mouse entered J5ne compartment, the red one, for example. it was allowed to run through and escape into a large space if it entered the green one it got a mild electric shock from wires on the floor. The lights could be changed so that the red compartment was now on the right side, now on the left.

The mice soon learned to choose the red compartment, on whatever side it Aras. Rut did this show that the mice saw red as red and green as green? It was found that when, after being trained in this way they were offered a choice between compartments that were not lighted by colors, but were merely one light and the other dark they chose the dark compartment at

Daily Shot at Kaiser For Home Food Savers

c.O

Clara

AITIOKAL WAR GARDEN COMMISSION Arrangement of cover on crock containing fermented vegetables. Note the use of paraffin, board and cloth, says the National War Garden Commission of Washington, which will send any reader of this paper a free canning and drying book for a two-ceoystani? to pay postag*. -..Si iVj' .il ••"-j,"

**iir

Net Contents 15PluidDractnr

mm

ALGOHOL-3 PEP CENT, A^efableftcpamtioftfefAs similatin^theR»d ty tingthe Stomachs tfd

Infants CmurnhN

Thereto Promoting Di^eslfc* Cheerfulness and RestGocto®8 neither Opitim.Morphixvc nor Mineral.

NotXahcqtic

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A helpful Remedy fbr Constipation and Diarrhoea. and Feveristmess and

Loss OF SLEEP

lresiltin^^fr^n,nfanc?

JfccSimife Si^nawrot 5

IS

To* CEKT.um ONMWt j: \£W VOR K _J months old |CPo»E-

it

Exact Copy of Wrapper.

once^ That suggested the possibility that they might have been seeing both red and green as two shades of gray, of which red was the darker.

Later tests made this very probable, for the mice proved quite unable to distinguish a red compartment from a compartment, that was wholly unlighted that is, from black.

It is not enough, then, to show that on animal can distinguish between two lights that are of different colors to a normal human eye, for the animal may see them as two different and distinguishable shades uf gray. It is known that a color blind person etes colors in this way. The best method by rrhich to prove that animals see a color as a color is by teaching it to pick out the color from a whole series of grays, ranging from black to white.

Some Conclusions.

Hardly any animals have yet been satisfactorily tested for color sense, hut a number of experimenters have the matter still under investigation. It seems probable that the color sense of many animals will prove to be quite unlike that of human beings.

Red has been called the king of color. The bull is not the only creature that resents red the elephant, the horse, the Jog, the cock, are all alike In this respect.

Tt is sufficient, for example, to cover the doors and skylights of a kennel with red material to cause incessant barking and commotion among the dogs confined therein. A spider and a wasp, confined in a glass case, are reported to have dwelt hap'pily together until a red cloth was placed against the sides, when the Insects tackled each other at once and a fight to the death ensued.

Of all brierht Colors red is the favorite among primitive people?. It excites to violence in flags and uniforms. Red is the emblem of domination in politics and religion. The cardinal and the doctor of divinity have their red robea.

Red Restful Color.

On the other hand, red has replaced green in one respect as a restful color. At great state functions out of doors in India., such as a durbar, red umbrellas are preferred to green as an effective sunshade.

Blue, has a minor influence. Curiosly enough, it appears only to affect the cat in the same way that red affects other animals. Humanity has a respect for blue, which is the cloak of heaven. In legends and fairy tales it is the good little boy, destined to achieve success in life and marry a princess, who is?

Naclme

Face Powder {In Green

The Danger of Imitations.

AN OHIO druggist writes to "The Practical Druggist,''a prominent New York Drug Journal, as follows: "Please furnish formula for Castoria. All the formulas I have worked with are either ineffective or disagreeable to administer."

To this "The Practical Druggist" replies: "Wo do not supply formulas for proprietary articles., We couldn't if we wanted to. Your experience with imitative formulas is not surprising, but just what is to be expected. When Castoria is wanted, why not supply the genuine. If you make a substitute, it is not fair or right to label it Castoria. We can give you all sorts of laxative preparations for children, but not Castoria, and we think a mother who asks for Castoria would not feel kindly toward you if you gave her your own product under such a name,"

No mother with a spark of affection for her child will overlook the signa* ture of Chas. H. Fletcher when buying Castoria

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Tints: Fle-.h, Pink, Brunette, White.

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Extracts from Letters by Grateful Parents to Chas. H. Fletcher.

Mrs. Wm. Palmer, Sterling, 111., says: "Your C»stori» hu been my fr5end for twenty yrars. I could not keep my children well without it, I cannot apeak too highly of your wonderful remedy.

Mrs. Frank H. Cafferty, of Providence, R. I., says: "If all young mothers would use Castoria it will bring up their child. My nurse doctor can also tell what your Castoria can do."

Howard A. Banks, of Hickory, N. C., says: "Your Ca*oria ia th« only physic we ever give our three babies. The fact that we aa« it promptly is probably the reason we never have to use afiy other."

Mrs. A. J. Nelson, of Waco, Texas, nays "Enclosed you will find a picture of 'Oar little Castoria boy.' When a week old I ordered your Castoria for him, and I have never been up a night with him since."

Mrs. EvaOtt Melin, of Jersey City, N. ,T., says "I attribute the pnwnrit excellent condition of my baby to your Castoria which he has been using since he was three weeks old. I have not lost ft night'a sleep in seven months."

GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS BEARS the Signature

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described as clothed in blue, while, a red blouse serves for th^ bad boy. Violet is held to be a depressing color. To live continually in a room papered and upholstered in violet is sufficient, it is asserted, to induce mild insanity. "Edward VII, of Knglnnd, had a passion for dark blue and always contended that his mental outlook was much improved by hangings of this color.

THERE'S ONLY ONE WAY to sectire a satin skin. Apply Satin Skin Cream, then Satin Skin Powder. —Advertisement.

USmCATES

m.III

I

UNWASHED.

A young cavalry officer Was fnfclrtg a .stroll early one morning, when he came upon one of his men trying his best to get a horse to jump a fence. After watching the greennorn for some time the officer said: "How do you expect to get that horse to go when you've only got one spuron?"

The recruit looked down at thl» boot and replied: "Well, sir, if I can only get that side of the horse to "go, the other one i« bound to keep up with him."—London Answers.

Putting a Smile ofi Earth

.ai*

sure helping jnake things to be smoother. And when you come to think about it you could go "round the earth wU&eyt fefiJjng

I

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