Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 16 September 1918 — Page 3

'MONDAY, SEPT. 14, in8.

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IHPR CONVEYOR IS RELEASED III COURT

His Home Police "Spoke Well of Him'* and Court Is Lenient— Others Less Fortunate.

She persons charged with violating the state and federal liquor laws were arraigned in City Court Monday morning before Judge Paul R. Shafer, and five of the cases were continued and one against John Johnsqn of Jasonville was dismissed. Johnson was arrested in The Stag hotel last Friday night, when he was found with lour quarts of whiskey in his auto. He explained to the court that he had purchased the liquor in Illinois, thinking that the law which provided that he was permitted to have one gallon also permitted him to procure the same. Judge Shafer, when the caae was called last Saturday, ordered the local police department to investigate the man's character at Jasonville, and when a communication from the chief of police of that pbtce speaking well of John Mm was received, the case was dSsmlgaed.

Robert Bnnktay* eokwed, soft drink parlor owner at Thirteenth and Collegia atreefcs Chwies Price and Ma Price. also colored, who reside at 403 Sooth First street, when arraigned oq a charge of violating the state Bqoor h* entered pleas of not guilty, and thwtr causes were continued until Toesday afternoon. The trio was arreted Saturday night at Btmktey'a home, 405% Sooth First street, and at the Price home, In company with a half dozen other negroes who were alleged to have been drinking liquor served by Banktey and the Prices. The other persons who were taken to police headquarters were released to appear as witnesses for the state.

George Olteart, soft drinlc parlor owner at Twenty-seventh and Third avejrae, who was arrested several days ago on a charge of violating the state liquor law, when arraigned Monday morning entered a plea of m»t guilty and asked that his case be continued on account of the absence of his attorney. The case was continued until tomorrow afternoon.

George Powell, 45 yearn old, who was arrested at the Union station a few nights ago on a charge of bringing liquor across the state line, also entered a plea of not guilty, and his case was continued until Tuesday afternoon. No other cases were set for trial Monday morning, although he docket for Tuesday afternoon is crowded to capacity.

MARS RAID NOME

Sneak thieves, who for some time have been plying their -wares in various parts of the city, are still at work and the home of Rev. p. C. "Whitthoff, 103 North Thirty -seventh street, was visited Sunday morning during daylight hours and a purse containing $2.32 taken. An entrance to the residence was sained by the thief by forcing a side window. The house showed traces of a general ransacking when the police were called to investigate.

Mvs. O- P. Oulbertson, 2301 Sprwe street, reported to the police Sunday that her purse containing $1.50 in change and several checks, receipts and etc,, had been either stolen or lost while the owner was riding a North Thirteenth street Car Sunday afternoon

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ST. WAR BASIS THIS YEAR

Girls Will Learn*Everything From Red Cross Work To Tending To Bees.

By Anna Bowies Wiley.

Saint Mary of the Woods will open today with the face of the student body turned toward the most unusual year in the history of that school which is among the best in this country and in JSurope. The study plan is I most unique. An added stress will be laid upon the plan adopted last year, to co-ordinate war studies and war service with the regular college and academic courses. New courses have I been added which will present a wide field of knowledge. Among othei^ new courses is the secretarial course, for one year and two years, which is attracting much attention. Subjects in this line of study will be history of economics, commercial geography, principles of economics, applied economics, commercial law, business ethics. With the one year course will be included typewriting, English, unsiness arithmetic, stenography, commercial correspondanoe and business ethics, office devices and practice and social carrespondance and social forms. With the second year course civics, applied economics, business administration and organization, and banking will be included. A large registration in this department of study has already been noticed.

In compliance with a request of the administration for the production of honey as a sugar-substitute, "a course of general agriculture will be introduced, whereby the pupils will be taught a general knowledge of bee culture. The apiary of the institution will be pnt to the service of the students. This course will come under the head of biology which will teach a practical study of agriculture, gwieral botany, taking in a study of medicinal plants and "weeds" plant pathology containing elementary stndies of parasites. This will include both field a,nd labortory application.

Chemistry in all of its courses will be taught. Special training will be given in analytical work for food chemistry.

Another departure will be in the teaching of English and French. Special assignments of reading and composition will be made from the government publications of the National War Savings committee, Committee on Pubtic Information, American Red Cross and the Woman's Committee of the Council of National Defense.

In social science a general survey of production, consumption and distribution and the problems involved f.uch as labor unions, trusts, transportation, money, tariff and wages, together with a deeper insight into the modern economic problems, such as the labor movement, control of trusts, railway regulation, socialism, etc., will be made.

A survey of women and war work especially adapted for women wlrl be made, while the course of philosophy will contain fin outline of the fundamental principles of morality and their application to the great ethical problems of the present time.

The Red Cross activities will, as last year, be in charge of local people. First aid will be taught by "Dr. A. Knoefel home nursing and hygienics, instructor to be appointed: surgical dressings. Mrs. R. A. Hoot on, instructor, with Miss B«*ssie Conlin, assistant.

Dtatetics will come under the head of the department of home economies, and will be in charge of Miss Josephine Hottfarth, M. A., fniversity of

A Bully Good Breakfast

POST TOASTIES

An improvement over common corn flakes, \%ur Grocer Sells Them

sea Si®l

To have those old, pesky, aching, health-destroy-ing teeth extracted? You say because so-and-so said it hurt him once upon a time and perhaps you at some time in the past were also hurt. Good reasons for your fear. But listen! We say to you we have a method of freezing your gums by which we can pull your teeth absolutely painlessly. We are doing it every day for your friends and neighbors they are pleased, surprised and delighted. You don't want to be hurt and w e won't hurt you.

18 YEARS AT THE SAME LOCATION

The Home of Dental X-Ray

Activities along war lines ^ere a part of the work last year, and beforei the close of the school last June, the college girls registered for applied work in social science, recreation, infant welfare, as well as practical work in sociology during the summer. Miss A. Elizabeth Churchill, M. A., University of Minnesota, is in charge of the applied work in social science this year. Under her direction, with the supervision of the sister dean, the senior and junior classes will do much practical work in sociology. The results of their work during the summer will be reported by the young women after\ their return to school.

There is a notable increase in enrollment in both college and academy this year, though a falling off in numbers has been expected on account of war conditions, and because so many of the students are taking up the preparations for army nursing.

Two former students, who made their junior year in eastern colleges, are returning as seniors to graduate with their own class from St. ^Mary-of-the-Woods. They are Miss Gertrude Reiss, Sheboygan, Wis., and Miss Grace Gill, Sioux City, Iowa.

MAKE THIRD TRIAL.

Same Justice Weds Same Couple Three Times, By Special Correspondent.

BRAZIL., Ind.. Sept. 16.—When Alton B. Craig, a miner of Glen Ayr, and Mr?. Laura Craig of Staunton, were united in marriage by Justice Law Friday at his parlors, in spite of the fact that it was the 13th. It was the third time that the marrying squire had tied the kno for this couple and Mrs. Craig remarked that she hoped the cement would hold beter this time, A coincident of the marriage is that both Craig and his wife were both born on the 13th day of the month. -Cs n?WK THTBUNTC TOfK WAN'T ADS.

IP®I mi tllBiBl

TEBRE HAUTE TRIBUNE*

Open Evenings

In order to accommodate onr many patients whom we cannot serve during the day we have arranged to be open evenings FROM 7 TO 8-

Don't Fear

NEW YORK DENTAL PARLORS

DR. REISS— 512£ WABASH AVE.—OVER JOSEPH'S

Chicago, while Miss Anna Dolan will instruct in the academy. The regular courses of the college department of home economics will also be co-related with war service.

The study of Spanish formerly purely cultural, will now be co-ordinative with the secretarial courses to meet business and commercial requirements.

MRS. LAf RA BIKIIL, Brazil, Ind. "It was the most wondfrful extraction I have ever known or heard of. It didn't hart at all and I feel fine now that they arc ont. Are all 12 of them really gronef" naid Mrs. Biehl. tut she Joyfully left the extraction room.

TEUTON PEACE OFFENSIVE IS DOOMED TO FAIL

Continued From Page On*

are doomed to failure. In London and Paris the offer of Austria was very coldly received, while at Washington it is pointed out that the United States will not entertain any peace tentatives that can, at best, bring only a temporary respite from hostilities and will leave Germany and Austria free to break the peace of the world at any future date.

Even in the German press there seems to be little hepe that the allies will agree to meet representatives of the central powers. The newspapers of Berlin point out that similar steps by Germany and Austria have failed in the past and that while the people will no doubt be hopeful for a cessation of the struggle, there is little prospect of its early termination.

AUSTRIA'S PEACE PLEA.

Asks Conference of Belligerents Without Interruption of War. AMSTERDAM. Sept. 16.—The Austrian peace proposal, which is announced in an official communication telegraphed here from Vienna, suggests that there be no interruption of the war, and that the "discussions would go only so far as considered by tho participants to offer prospects of success."

The proposal calls for all the belligerents to send delegates for a "confidential and unbinding discussion on the basic principles for the conclusion of peace, in a place in a neutral country and at a near date, that would yet have to be agreed upon."

The proposal says the conference would be one of "delegates who would be charged to make known to one another. the conception of the governments regarding those principles and to receive analogous communication as weli as to request: and give frank and candid expressions on those which need to be precisely defined."

The government announces that, a note ?em bodying its suggestions had been addressed to the various belligerent powers and that the Holy See had been apprized of the proposal in a special note. The governments of the neutral states also had been made acquainted with the proposal.

At The Movies

BY MIQ.UK O'BRIBW.

The Orphean.

"The Firefly of France the Paramount photoplay at the Orpheum, screens up to the expectations its title arouses.

Wallace Reid doesn't play the name part, which is but a "bit," capablyplayed by Raymond Hatton, but is seen ,in the role of the wealthy young American who joins the ambulance corps in France. He gets mixed up with German spies and an American girl who is in France in search of papers hidden by the "Firefly," an aviator whose mysterious disappearance lias aroused high army officials to activity in locating him or learning his fate, also to a diligent search for the papers.

With the aid of the young American these papers are found in a chateau near the firing line, but they are not obtained without serious difficulties in which the American and the voting woman are involved. Tho chateau is the scene of many thrilling incidents, chief among which is a battle between the American and a quartet of desperate German spies, wno are seeking these papers for their government. The American ingeniously foists upon them a faked set of documents, but he. himself is made prisoner and is about to be taken into the German lines when a shell providentially ends the adventure. killing the spies and wounding their prisoner. The American awakes to consciousness in a hospital and finds the girl he loves nursing him. He simultaneously wins a cross of war and the love of his sweetheart.

Ann Little is the American girl and Charles Oprle is the Hurt spy. "The Firefly of France' is beinsr fhown again today. The underlined photoplay is "The Lesson," a select production with Constants Talmadce and Tom Moore.

The Mberty.

Th* new Liberty theater attracted almost as many people Sunday as the opening da v. wnen more than 5 Ol)0 people paid tribute at the box office

A udeville and picture bill of reasonable length is Lne second offering with the most popula feature of the opening bill held over for th» next three days. Mr. Hti^hes and little -Miss Rohycr had several ntw songs to offer only one of last week's collections being retained by request. Two dancing acts, each distinctive, are introduced. I'enry and Adelaidi are discovered in sepai f-te apartmeits n either side of the stage and then they-meet and tread forth in dance. The male part of the sketch makes a complete change of "scenery" while dancing gracefully to Professor Breinig's music. The dancing Tyreils. three, have some new songs to cro with their nifty hoofing. Kldridge ^Harlow« aud Elclridge ia their sketch,

Worthy Savings on

Notions

15c SILK BELTING—all widths to 3-in. black and white yard •..10c 8c ALUMINUM THIM­

BLES 5c 10® CAMBRIC COLLAR BANDS—all sizes to a box for ., .48c HAIR CURLERS—25c package, 21c 10c package... .8c CHILDREN'S HOSE SUP­

PORTERS— regular 19c and 25c Kewpie and Velvet Grip S u o e s 1 a k a n white all sizes, pr. ...10c 10c ENAMELED WAIST*

HANGERS—rubber tips for dainty, sheer waists each 8c 5c SUPERIOR DRESS PINS •—Sharp points 400 count 3 packages 10c SEW-ON-OGRAMS—t e 5c and 10c embroidered initials and emblems for marking linens middies, eta all sizes choice 2c 10c DRESS FASTENERS—

Wilsnap all sizes in black «nd white 3 cards 25c LINEN«FINISHED THREAD —Monarch strong, light button thread 100 yard "spools special 5c 5c TRI-PRONG INVISIBLE

HAIR PIN S—black or brown pkg 3c —First Floor—

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Silks and Velvets

$6 Black English "Velvet, $4.50 14.-in.

wide Worrel dye and finish.

$4 Black Velvet, $2.98—36-in. wide for

suits and combinations with serge and satin.

$2 Costume Corduroy, $1.75—36-in.

beautiful quality wide wale assorted -colors.

$2.50 Dress Satins, yd. $1.98—36-in.

wide soft, shimmering quality in new, colorings.

—Second Floor—

New

Trimmings

"A Rural Delivery," present some familiar "rube"' characterizations of the type Chick Sale has made familiar to local followers of vaudeville.

Mi*s Theda Bara is the film star in a Kox production, "When a Woman Sins." In this picture Mips Bara doesn't start vampiring until a divinity student unjustly accuses her of being unduly familiar with his aged father, who. very ill, but very ambitious, is caught in "a compromising position" with his aurse, the same being Miss Bara.

The nurse was the victim of an unlooked for assault from a feeble old pafty and really was forced into the unseemly position which was un-' been chaittabiy interpreted by the son of the

old party. _/

Miss Vampire tires of it all and

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W% Give and Redeem Surety Coupons

For This Is—

—Fringes, Beads, Tassels, Drops and Motifs—of silk, chenille, metal thread many new ideas in wide^aasortment. —First Floor—

Bs

Special Demonstration

BUUsKSRS If* ONE

Burns Coal or Wood —and Gas

—You are invited to attend this intensely interesting demonstration—showing how you can save fuel, time and labor—and always cook in comfort with better results regardless of the weather. -—The Duplex Alcazar will warm your kitchen in winter—and keep it cool in summer. It burns coal or wood and gas—separately or at the same time. Just a simple turn of a lever and the oven is ready for either fuel—110 parts to change or replace. —Come and see it! —Basement—

AVE Peach Stones for Uncle Sam. They are

needed for making carbon for gas masks. Dry them and bring them to the Liberty Barrel—one placed at each of our store entrances.

W.'l

Broadcloth in extensive cotor assortment fully sponged and shrunk.

$3 Poplins, yd. $2.00

—40-in. Silk-and-Wool Poplins of extra fine quality with lustrous finish very durable assorted colors.

J.

Butterick Patterns

•"THE BEST PLACE TO SHOP. AFTER

tnent comes from -he oung divinity student whom she loves. He sends the former nurse a bun-h of lilies The divinity student is impersonated by the actor who played .lolin the Baptist in "Salome." The direct current u.~ed at the liberty makes for clear pictures. Some of the close-tips in "When a Woman Sins" are startling in their near proximity to reality.

Priii

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In "Playthings." the Bluebird photopla?' which will be shown for the last times at the Princess today. Miss Fritzi Brunette is a young shop girl who has more sinned against than sirimore to be pitied than censured, who fell for the horrid words of her

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Being turned adrift, what could the employer, represented »y Charles (icrpoor nurse do but become s.n actress and a vampire? That's what she did at any rate. But after many conquests in the making, t»f which she acquirer "riuch loot, fine raiment and all that

rard. But iater on the abused heroim finds a roughneck who. knowing her past, tells her to "forget it." "Playthings"' is taken from Sidney Toler's stage play. Miss Brunette in this picture adds to thi. favoranle impr^.i]o

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about, to commit suicide at a dinner 1 che made upon film fans in "Beware parti whea Uu1 me&sase of condone-1 of Strangers" and "Unto Those Who

Established ia i&tf

September Sewing Week

—A co-operative community service making for economy attd' efficiency in home-sewing—providing bountiful new stocks of fashionable, but scarce wool, silk and cotton fabrics, and the various supplies essential to successful home-sewing. Many special prices just for the week.

Wool Goods--Special I

Now—every taste and every need flsay be suited, from light to heavy weights, from plain to fancy weaves. The color ranjje, is perfect—prices interestingly low. $2,25 Storm Serge, $1.75 —All wool, 44-in. serge, in colors of taupe, myrtle green, plum, navy blue and black fine weave*and soft finish sponged and shrunk. $6 Broadcloth, $4,50 —54-in. rich, lustrous Chiffon

Fine All-Wool French Serges

$2.25

—Beautiful coloring* of taupe. Damson, burgundy, Maduro brown, navy blue and black. Very soft, line quality Cor one-piece dresses. $3 Serges, yd. $2.25.

$2.50 Black Serge, $1.35

—42-in. beautiful quality English Cork Screw Serge hard twisted very durable. —Second Floor—

Wash Fabrics

—49c Serpentine Crepes, 30c—Exten­

sive pattern assortment and plain colors.

—40c Dress Ginghams, 29c—Light and

dark striped patterns 27-in. wide.

—49c Imperial Chambray, 39c—Assort­

ed plain colors and baby checks for children's wear, house dresses, etc.

—59c Oyama Nainsook, 49c—Extra fine,

yarn mercerized^ soft and silky 40-in. wide white and pink. —Second Floor—

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—The first essential to a successful costume. Smart originations nnd style correctnessfor women, misses and ehildren. 1 —Second Flddr—•

DOUBLE

Coupons Surety

All Day Tuesday with your purchase of

Groceries!

—Remember, that whatever savings our low prices afford, Double Surety Coupons are equivalent to another reduction of more than 4 per cent. VAN CAMP'S MILK—the small cans special—•

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APPLES-—completo assortment of fancy, selected eating and cooking apples pound 10c and .8!/&o

I N E A E i u o i u brand dozen bottlc-s. $1~75 bottle TUNA FISH—Albaoore light and dark meat extra fine for salads, croquettes, etc, 30c cans .....23c AMMONIA—Parson's Household

Cloudy Ammonia regular 15c bottles 12'/a© OCTAGON SOAP—an excellent laundry soap 10 bars 48c HORLICK'S MALTEO MILK— large hospital sisai regular price ?3.75 on *ale $3.39 MALTED MILK TABLETS— plain and cocoa flavors jar 4flo TOMATO SOUP—Heina Condensed pure tomato soap 15c cans 13c CATSUP—Snider*s celebrated

Tomato Catsup: red ripe, hand picked tomatoes' and pure spices 30c bottles .28o ALL

.Sin." From the titl»^ of Miss Brunette's photoplays it will be observed she suffers much in films. The bill for Tuesday at the Princess is "Brace Pp."

Bluebird photoplay with Horbf rt Rawltnson as the athletic star. Elmer Clifton directed this production.

The Truth of the Mutter.

Boob— Most thinga that are bought go to the buyer." Simp—"Yeah, all except coal, and that goes to the cellar."

Your Best Asset

A Skin Cleared, By

Cuticura Soap

All dfijnr'ta: S*ap X, r* 4^ Tttetmi barapla free of

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CANS

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