Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 November 1918 — Page 3
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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6,1918
Conditions Considered Good All Over City And Little Trace of Epidemic Remains.
The flu ban on theatres and other public institutions of Terre Haute is definitely lifted, and will not be placed on again unless wholly unexpected conditions should make it advisable for the board of health to act once more in the interest of the public health. While all of the local doctors have not filed complete reports of cases of colds and influenza, it became known this morning that those filed were of such an encouraging nature as to leave absolutely no excuse for not lifting the ban immediately.
Physicians will continue to make reports to Dr. Van Cleave and his associates on the health board, Dr. Larkin and Dr. Moorhead, and these reports must be accurate and complete.
Hereafter the health officers will pay no attention to wild rumors regarding alleged "plague" spots. Every statement made by regular physicians will be carefully considered, and the volunteer calamity howler must have facts to back up his statements. One of the exaggerated stories reported to the health board told of 40 cases of influenza. amongst employes of the traction company. Careful investigation by General Manager Walker disclosed the
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IS EVERYBODY USING T0NS1UNE!
The Spanish influenza epidemic has meant a wonderful increase in the sale of Tonslline—The National Sore Throat remedy.
The moment medical authorities advised frequent use of an effective gargle to sterilize the throat, which these deadly germs must use a gateav and breeding ground in entering the body, countless families went to their medicine shelf or sent to the r'arcst druggist for a bottle of Ton«i!ine.
Also, the majority of those afflicted with this dreaded malady found themselves suffering from decidedly sore throats and many of them have refie wed their faith in this time tried remedy.
For more than a quarter of a century Tonslline has been relieving most Of the sore throats in the territory Where it was sold. This records stamps i* as being particularly Indicated riflht now as a preventive and relief in doing its share toward ending the present situation. It is as safe as a Liberty bond.—Advertisement.
Look For The GIRAFFE
Safe
fill BAH P80BABLK- Instantly! Stomach Feels Fine! WILL REMAIN Off
tlPSET1?
thought migus well be applied to merchandise.
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No Indigestion, Gases or
Stomach upset? Belching ad^ls, gases and sour food?
Instant relief awaits you.
The moment Pape's Diapepsin reaches the stomach all the indigestion, dyspepsia, gases, heartburn and sourness vanish. No waiting! Magic! Don't suffer!
Costs little, at any drug store. Eat favorite foods without fear.
Pape's Diapepsin
fact there "were but two persons on the pay roll of the company oft duty on account of illness.
Dr. Parsons, of the Normal, has given definite statements regarding the pupils of that institution which have put a quietus upon circulated stories of an alarming character.
Dr. T. W. Moorhead, the new democratic member of the board of health, succeeding Dr. TV. F. Willien, now In the service, is already on the Job.
Attendance at local theatres is picking up. The advance sale for "The Bird of Paradise," booked at the Grand for Thursday and Friday nights, took a sudden spurt this morning as result of the action of the board of health.
The theatres of Indianapolis are now doing a normal business, it is said, although for a day or two after the lifting of the flu ban people were etill a little timid about venturing into playhouses. The scare has apparently been removed, however.
Members af "The'Bird of Paradise" company arrived from Cincinnati this morning. A1 G. Field has written to Manager Galligan to say he may como to Terre Haute before the holidays, after all. He recently played an engagement in Evansville, wlutii waa highly successful, he said.
WOBE PUDDING ON HIS CHEST.
My. Coddles was suffering from that run-down feeling. A bright idea came to him1—namely, that he should visit some friends in Bradford, England, for he knew there was no cure quite equal to Yorkshire hospitality. But hardly had he come to them when he caught cold and had to take to Deci. with kind thoughtfulness his hostess baked a Yorkshire pudding, which she car* ried to his room. Three hours later she again irislted the invalided Mr. Coddles. "Well," she said, "have yo* etten it all oop?" "Eaten it?"-said Mr. Coddle#, "was it to be eaten? I am wearing it on mv chest." V v
WHEN. IN DOUBT, Trv The Tribune.
Way to Buy
I keep in close touch with market conditions of food products. I am correctly-
informed as to the cash and food value of practically every article of table and baking use. Mjr knowledge and close acquaintance with baking materials and their quality and money worth passed on to you in my article*, should aid in the selection of proper foods at proper prices.
oil have ofte ri heard the expression lhat "water seeks its own level."
This
Inferior merchandise may find a ready demand when first put on the market—
but its inferiority is coon found out—and its sale usually takes a slump. Hence I have come to the conclusion that the biggest seller it the best buy.
VVhen some certain -brand is given a wide preference over all similar merchandise
k means but one thing—merit has proved it best.
So it* follows that if housewives would purchase only merchandise that meets the
greatest demand their buying would be fir more »2ti«factoiy.
I have noticed invariably that the demand for a product always veaifies the value
of a product determined by scientific tests—which proves my contention concl^siveJj.
Take baking powder* The biggest selling brand on the market today proved to me by the most crirical ex pen menu that ft is entitled to the preference it has gained.
There are more pounds of Calumet sold than lliy other brand of baking powder. Usage has proved its
superiority my teets pointed to the tame fact. The woman who buys Calumet eliminates ail possible watte. She profits by the experience of million* of women who after testiog dsfrrent brand* of baking powder find Calaaet best.. It it life to bay because overwhelming choice thowa the supreme aatiifaction it rendert the vast majority of bouse wives.
I have made investigations and trips through many plants that manufacture food articles, snd I have yet
to find a finer and bettar eq^ip^cd, more up to date, sanitary plant than that of the Calumet Baking Powder Co. Anyone who will visit tiiia plant will rsadiiy understand vrcy they should and how they do Hinofactaie baking powder that fills all the requiremcati.
A
PJOTE-—Miss CosteUo is ahvatfy until fowen to
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of ChtatgtK 9 /graduate of Leuris Institute, Supervisor of Domestic Science in Schools. Special Ijtcturor on Domestic Art» end Economy, Special Lecturer to the Women's Clubs.
We *1 publishing tents of her most important efticlmi
vf the tad'ies
the Domestic Scifnc* Branch of the Urtwersity
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BrTTEET
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PIONEER UNITS TAKE LEAD IN ATTACKING
In Front Bank With Infantry Their Work Is Often Fraught With Danger.
WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN FRANCE, Nov. 6.—When the infantry moves forward many miles through the rain over such a eeurred and tortured countryside as stretched ahead of the American army In the Argonne, the Immediate task is pushing the heavy artillery and ammunition up behind them. The immediate problem is the instantaneous creation of roads where no roads had been for years.
In such times and «uch places the Yankees realize as never before in their lives that the pacc and ease oi! an advance in France varies inversely as the square of the mud.
In su«'h times the men of the hour are those pioneers—both engineers and- infantry—who are the pathfinders for the guns.
They were hf rd at "Work at dawn on this day. With the first doughboys to go rip-roaring out of the 20 miles of dismal, mist-veiled trenches went engineers with wire-cutters and foot-bridges.
Plank for Everyone.
In the division that swept up and beyond Bethincourt. the engineers at the zero hour were lying abreast of the third infantry wave, each man carrying a plank. When the great hour struck, tliey passed through the third wave, through the second, through the first, so that by the time the first wave came up to a swollen, swamyp stream a kilometer ahead of the jumping off pla.ee, there were the engineers tossing their planks down to make a swift and decent footway.
Over this footway a brigade passed on. Then up came the planks, to be fashioned in a twinkling into a broad, substantial bridge over which, by 9 o'clock that first morning, heavy traffic was lumbering slowly forward.
As night fell at the end of the third day, their colonel could have been seen ensconsed in his headquarters. His headciuarters was a limousine car. He was neatly uniformed, except thct, to defiance of all regulations, he wore neither sock nor shoe. His weary feet had got past the point of enduring either.
Making His Report.
In one hand he held a cup of coffee, the first warm thing he had encountered for four sleepless days and nights. In the other hand he held the receiver of his telephone, which was conveniently set up in the front seat. Into the mouthpiece he was pouring his report, which was both a boast and a bitter complaint. "A broad, solid road all the way through, sir, and 1 11 be doggoned if the traffic of five divisions isn't hogging it already."
In the region just to his left, a road had been opened up for three kilometers at the end of the first day. Down thnt roael at sunrise, it would have been impossible for a column of twos to have marched
WHEN FAMILY NEEDS A FRIEND
In the Absence of Doctors Nobly Gone to War, After influenza, the Grip,— Those wonderfully useful medicines, Hood's Sarsaparilla. Peptlron and Hood's Pills—comprising the new combination family treatment—are warmly recommended.
If taken regularly, Hood's Sarsaparilla before meals, Peptiron after meals, and Hood's Pills at night as needed, they are reasonably sure to keep a family in health and prove to be reliable and always ready friends. They pufify the blood, build up strength and regulate the system.
Get all, or any one, as you think you need, from year druggist today.
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I HEAD STUFFED FROM I I CATARRH OR A COLD
Says Cream Applied in Nostrils $ Opens Air Passage^ Right Up.
Instant relief—no waiting. Your clogged nostrils open right up the air passages of your head clear and you can hreathe freely. No more hawking, snuffling, blowing, headache, elryness. No struggling for breath at night your cold or catarrh disappears.
Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a littUs of this fragrant, antiseptic, healing cream in your nostrils. It penetrates through every air passage of the head, soothes the inflamed or
swol
len mucous membrane and relief comes instantly. iff just fbf-ed-up with a cold or nasty catarrh.—Adr. .- V-
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TERRE JIAUTE TRIBUNE.
without casualties. The shell holes were so many and so huge that a five-ton truck could not have stood level in the road, much less have driven a htindred yards along it without elisaster. Yet soon road came into being there.
Outf of a hundred dugouts the pioneers oarne. carrying the stones with which those dugouts had been walled. Out of the stones they would build iiew thoroughfares, or with them mend and strengthen even those along which the trucks were slowly grinding. You can shove such stones under the crushing tractor wheels and watch them be ground to a powder that will defy even the steady wash and drain of autumn rain.
Blessed Stone Roads.
An engineer captain, commanding some 2,000 men at work on one main I nilery of traffic, mopped his brow and blessed the god of good roads who had inspired the rench to macadamize theirs. For only roado originally made of broken stone can 1 be mended quickly with broken stone. For material, even if the neighboring dugouts were not full of.it, th» villages all about are now nothing but broken stone, fit only for roadbed* for the I avenging armies.
These engineers had marched up to the line under the bombing guns the I night before, carrying two huge bridges, each strong enough to bear two lines of five-ton trucks. I
In some cases the engineers worked from freshly developed aerial photographs which indicated the details of their job exactly, but even photograpl's snapped from the air the day before cannot predict the shellholes and mine craters which will j-awn in the earth at the eleventh hour of a retreat.
ALL USED.
Bilkins and his son Bobby were taking great armfiils of parcels to a little sister who was ill. A? they nearcd the bedroom door the father said, forgetting momentarily that the youngster's arms were full. too. "Open the door, son," to which the youngster replied "I can't, papa, I'm all used."
HAVE YOU ANYTHING FOR fALE? If you have anything to sell the Sunday Tribune will sell it. Twelve words, one tim*. 12c three Umu, SQc,
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THE
SURETY COUPON'
—Save on Winter's Supplies —Save on Christmas Gifts —Save on all Needs for Home and Personal Use
That fate often ordains differently wag demonstrated by a story told by Gov. Elias M. Ammons, of Colorado, while on recent trip through tlie east.
Some time since, so narrated the governor. Smith returned to his home town in the west after a short absence, and while walking down the
NOW I TO
1918 Either. Phone
Will Begin a Sale Unparalleled In Our History
FURS, SUIT,
V
S
Sixty-Second
See Windows Now See Tomorrow's Newspapers
Surety Coupons Will Play an Important Part
ESTABLISHED 1856
SOMETIMES HAPPENS THAT WAY
"THE BEST PLACE TO SHOP, AFTER ALV
iivrW_
street ran across his friend Jones. Glad greeting and then some conversation. "What in the world is the matter with Brown?" asked Smith, stirring up the ice in the aforesaid greeting "I saw him on the opposite side of the highway a few minutes ago. and he looked as gloomy as a candidate "Vho had run on the wrong ticket." *'IIe failed in business," responded
-^-w—- Ijgsq*^
PLUSH COAT, OVERCOAT,
WINTER DRESSES
In Fact, Now is the Time to Send All Your Winter Garments to be Cleaned by
"Everybody's Cleaner"
ISURET v' COUPON!
ili
Smith. "I thought yon knew all- about it." "I knew that he had failed." responded Smith, "but I heard that h? had everything made over in his wife name before the cyclone hit him." 'w. "So he did," rejoined Jones. "an.Y then his wife eloped with the principal
creditor."
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