Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Chanute Daily Tribune from Chanute, Kansas • Page 5

Location:
Chanute, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

October 12, 1917. THE CHANUTE DAILY TRIBUNE PAGE FIVE instruction card the war creed of the kitchen. That card on ono side sets forth the nation's rood problem. It tells what food products the Thrills, HAS BECOME BATTLE HYMN OFTSEPUBLIC WHAT HOOVER'S FOOD DECLARATION IS -CALLED. 'Vractipedics "ANURIC" THE NEWEST Discovery in Chemistry.

This is a recent discovery of Doctor Pierce, who is head of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute at Buffalo, N. Y. Experiments at Doctor Pierce's Hospital for several years proved that there is no other eliminator of uric acid that can Jae compared to For those easily recognized symptoms of inflammation as backache, scalding, urine TY -ti vrTy uD It LLkWlI I .1 lit lttV 4Kig r5 Itt norms, yi.VA'il'i V.i.V.J?. SV tTX 3 I America! immz imm He learned all about the human foot, its construction, its its deformities, and how there may all be overcome by simple, bul scientific means. He will be found at this sfcre at all times, ready to examine the feet and expert advice without charge.

You are invited to call and consult him about fect or shoes. -V. v. v. His education as has shown JJictv js a arid PAUCC THE KANSAS CITY STOCK MARKET WEAK; Prime Fed Steers Kcuched 17.00 in Today's Selling.

Kansis City Livestock. Kansas City, Oct. 12. CATTIJ: Receipts. 1, weak.

Prime foil steers. 1 (..00 (T 17.00; dressed beef stents. 1 1.00 fit cows and liriiers. 12.iu; stackers and feeders, 11. 00; bulls, (n 0 ea 1 3S, 0 (ft 1 0 HOCJS Receipts, tf.000; 2.ic to 10c lower.

Ileavv. 8 IS. 40 67 l.S.?r 1 lacker: l.S.To- i and light. $1 imtchers, I IS. r.Cyff 18.33.

(T Kansas city Produce. Kansas City, Oct. 12. BUTTER Cicamery, 41 Vc-; lirsts, 40c; seconds, packing. 3G'2C.

FCJtJS Firsts, UGe; seconds, 29c. Chicago II vest oek. Chicago. Oct. 12.

CATTLE Receipts. U.ooo; weak. Beeves, 57.20 17. IK; cows dud heifers. 1 12.

2-; calves, fi 1 G.00. HOCS Receipts. weak. Liglit. 1S.41 mixed.

Ca IS. 70: jeavy. $10.60. 18.70; pigs, $12. oof 1G.2."..

4.4. 1 GIRLS! MAKE A BEAUTY LOTION 1 1 T- a a a a 4 2 At the cost of a small jar of ordinary cold cream one can prepare a full quarter pint, of the most wonderful skin softener and complexion beautifier, by squeezing the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard iiite. should be taken to strain the juice thru a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and is the. ideal skin softener, smoothener and beautifier.

Just try it! Get three ounces of orchard white at any pharmacy and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion and massage it daily into the face. neck, arms and hands. It should naturally help to whiten, soften, freshen and bring out the roses and beauty of the skin. It is truly marvelous to smoothen rough, red hands. Chills Fair acts new chill the f.

i mScholl The great Four County is now on, the promises to -be --a series of THRILLS. Now avoic the Chills between by providing yourself with a good warm Overcoat one of our French Knockabout models will abolish the and in its self pro duce thrills wearer. of pride for Come in and see nobby new styles. the C. WARREN THE CLOTHIER BIG TEACHERS' MEET- ING AT WICHITA SOON Eleven Counties of Southern Kansas Meet There Today.

Wiichita, Oct. 12. Fully fifteen hundred school teachers from eleven counties of Southern Kansas are in Wichita to attend the annual convention of the Southern Kansas Teachers' Association, which opened today and will continue tomorrow. The counties represented are Barber, Rutler, Clark, Comanche, Cowley, Chautauqua, Elk. Greenwood, Harper, Sumner and Sedgwick.

A dramatic account of the war by a war correspondent who spent the summer in France with the Am-erican troops and witnessed the British drives in Flanders, will be one of the features of the meeting. Prof. David L. Patterson of the University of Kansas will give the account of the war. The headquarters of tlfe convention are at the high school building.

The general sessions of the annua! meeting will be held in the auditorium of this building. Round table discussions will be conducted as follows: Rural school round table, high school round table, household arts round table, English round table, mnnual arts round table, commercial rouu.l table, music round table and primary round table. The convention was opened at 111 o'clock this morning at the high school, the invocation being said by Dr. Andrew Melrose Brodie of the First Presbyterian church of this city. An address wus given by Dr.

J. Ii. Jewell dean of education at the University of Arkansas, on "Education and From 6 to 7: CO o'clock this evening a reception will be held to the visiting teachers by the Wichita Teachers' Association and the Wichita Board of Fdu- ation. This will be followed by a general meeting at which addresses will be given by Dr. Thomas W.

Butcher, president of the Emporia State Normal school, on "Wjhv the Public School," and by Dr. W. A. Jessup, president of the University of Iowa, on "Education as a Science." Only one will be held Saturday, that at 9 o'clock in the morning. At this session J.

Kelly, dean of education at the University of Kansas, will speak on "Educational Lessons From the Wfctr." "Conventional Values in Education" will be the subject of an address by Dr. J. It. Jewell, dean of education at the University of Arkansas. Dr.

Walter A. Jessup, president of the University of Iowa, also will deliver an address at this session. The con-ention will close with the business session which will follow this program. Mr. and Mrs.

Guv S. Jeffers are it tells way, and upon the other side it sets iorth how, without en-j tailing sscriike. hut by simple, substitutions of one food product for another, every home, the American people can. a result of email savings, create tremendous aggregate food reserves That is the machinery of the campaign a campaign that has called1 million workers. it i ui luuciiiziery 01 tiie cam-most paigri'that enlisted as its 1 a o-r i a GIL AND OAS Xew Humboldt Oil Wells.

Humboldt. Oct. 12. A guo.l oil well was brought in and hot Wednesday with line lcsult on Hi Squire land, two miles south of Humboldt. Another tine one was finished on the Superior leave, three miies east, and still another shot or.

the Forrester. land, seven miles east. A contract was let Wednesday for six wells on the Pugh farm, four miles southeast. About ten welh; are due to come by the end ot the week. lOUK rOXVKRTKl) LAST MtJHT All-Da Mcctinsr Will He Held Sunday.

at Zion et The liev. Charles Henson and Professor Ogdeu report a good meeting at Zion church last evening, where they are conducting revival meetings. There were four conversions and interest still growing. A 1U meeting is planned for all day Sun day. TO INSPECT ZINC MELD.

Prof. Ten-ill 'Tlunks Kansas Has the Biggest in the World. Lawrence, Oct. 12. Kansas' great zinc field in Cherokee county, the lead mines of that district, and the coal mines of Crawford county will be inspected this week by representative mining engineers of the United States and -Canada.

More than three hundred mining experts who are attending the cne hundred and fifteenth meeting of the American Institution of Mining Engineers this week at St. Louis will go to the Kansas mining centers in a special train. A. C. Terrill, professor of mining engineering at the University of Kansas, is endeavoring to arrange a special side trip in automobiles from Pittsburg, thru Picher and much of the Baxter Springs zinc country that has come into prominence the last few5" months.

Professor Terrill believes the Kansas" zinc field bids fair to be the biggest-zinc field of the world. STOVE POLISH Quick-Easy Everlasting China VI III 1 fwRUSTPStovePipe LOST. Lost Merchants' delivery C. O. D.

book. Leave at merchants' delivery oflice. HELP WANTED Wanted Two ladies for laundry work. Apply in person or phone Johnson Hospital. LIVE STOCK FOR SALE For Sale Five spring calves and six from 2 weeks to 3 months old; extra good; must sell at once.

2202. For Sale Two Guernsey heifer calves. J. H. P.artlett, phone For Sale Good mule colt ust Anderson, Phone 915F32.

For V. O. Sale- few good fresh Davis, phone 2202. AUTOMOBILES For Sale 1917 car. run 3,000 miles.

ord touring Phone 2209. For Sale Buick roadster, electric Phone 1674. starter: price soju 4 20 Yi. Fourth. IW4 lias Keen Adopted -Jy Millions of People as Expression of Prograni to Vitalize Nation's Preparedness Efforts.

Washington, Oct. 12. In forty-right states of the union Herbert Hoover's declaration that "Food will win the war" has become a "battle hymn of the republic." In states of the union the declaration that "Food will win the Avar" has been adopted by millions of people as the-expression of a program necessary to vitalize the liberty bond and render effective the nation's vast prepaiedness efforts. In overs' in the union the men and women who cheered or wept when the boys from their town marched away have ceased their cheering and their weeping and are now engaged in constructive efforts to make tli3 home "do -its bit" in Mipport of the boy who has gone to the front. Food will win the war.

The food pledge family enrollment campaign with the liberty bond campaign ars sweeping the nation two mutually dependent lines of endeavor both tests of the strength of the nation's democracy. The food pledge family enrollment campaign, termed by Herbert Hoover an "unparalleled adventure," and now organized from coast to coast, has so lingerl the soldiers of the allies and the boys at the front and in the camp with the homes they left behind that one phase of the world war is being consciously and definitely fought out in the American kitchen. The food pledge week campaigners the "shock division" in the "unparalleled adventure" are a unique host. Every element in The social, business or religious life of the various states is represented. The front ranks in these "shock divisions" are composed of women who become a distinct class only in times such these.

They are the war mothers the women who have given their sons to the nation. Theirs is a double interest They have come to believe that "food will win the war" and they have made up their minds that, if their efforts count for anything in the economic life of the na: tion. hunger will not be added to the foes their sons will face. In response to the appeal issued by Herbert Hoover these war mothers, and the war grandmothers, sisters, aunts and cousins as well, have, in every state, been accorded the distinction of front rank service in the "food will win the war" campaign. From Maino to California they are being organized into squads, companies and battalions, contending for the principle that there must be more than munitions in the hands we stretch across the sea, and taking upon themselves a part of the responsibility for making, it certain that the cause of democracy is fed as well as armed.

As organized in the. various states the food ple'lge week campaign has become a policy insuring the complete success of th? liberty loan campaign. The food pledge week drive has, in the various states, brought into the field five hundred thousand active workers who are making it business to see to it that the funds contributed by patriotic citizens do not ultimately go begging-in the markets oT the world lor foodstuffs that do not No agency is being overlooked in the matter of bringing the nation's food problem to the threshold of every American home. In North Dakota a woiflan rides across the plains from one isolated settlement to another, telling the people there tan do in the home to help win the war. In Iowa, Indiana, Tennessee, South Carolina, Ohio and a score of oth3r states the children in the schools have inaugurated a food crutade of their own.

By arrangements with state superintendents, county and city superintendents and teachers the children being taught just how essential America's food reserves are to the success of the allied cause. More than thirty states have corn- pleted organizations that extend naturally less. Ask for a oottle of "Mother's Friend" at the drug store today 'and do not go a single night without -applying it. Write The Bradfield Regulator Dept. 300 Lamar Building, Atlanta, and they will send you a book of scientifically prepared, practical information, without charge.

"Mother'3 Frindl' is composed of such penetrating oils and other ingredients as to make it entirely indispensable to expectant mothers. Appliance crRc3)h1y ForEieyFootTivufik 2nd he will gladly demonstrate, on your own foot, how the rroper Scholl Appliance will make it possible for you to wear the stylish slices you like without the slightest discomfort. He the same methods as the famous authority. Dr. Scholl, anJ employs the devices which Dr.

Scholl invented. Come in and sec for yourself. No charge whatever for services. Everybody invited to get "foot-happy." ASK THE FOOT EXPERT AT BLOOMHEART Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 15th 16th sediment in the urine, o'r if uric acid ana irequeni urination, as well as in the blood has caused is simply wonderful how surely "Anuric" acts.

The best of results are always obtained in cases of acute rheumatism in the joints, in gravel and gout, and invariably the pains and stiffness which so frequently and persistently accompany the- disease rapidly disappear. Go to your nearest drug store and simply ask for a 50-cent package of manufactured by Doctor Pierce, or even write Dr. Pierce for a free sample. If you suspect kidney or bladder trouble, send him a sample of your water and describe symptoms. Doctor Pierce's chemist will examine it, and Dr.

Pierce will report to you, without fee or charge. NOTE: French scientists affirm that "Anuric" is thirty-seven times more active than lithia in eliminating uric and is a harmless but reliable chemical compound that may be safely given to children, but should be used only by grown-ups who actually Wish to restore their kidneys to perfect health, by conscientiously usinif one box or more in extreme cases as "Anuric" (thanks to Doctor Pierce's achievement) is by far the most perfect kidney and bladder corrector obtainable. Dr. Pierce's Pellets are the origi-nal little Liver Pills. One little Pellet for a laxative three for a cathartic.

school districts. In every ttate churches are making food conservation a matter of religious conviction, and Sunday, October 21. cne hundred thousand ministers will preach food jonservation sermons to twenty million people. Thruout all of the vast machinery created to carry the food campaign forward the war mother stands out as a striking figure. To her there has come the privilege of leading in a movement calculated to bind the American women in a sisterhood that will make it certain American boys who fight are fed.

and that our allies who right shoulder to shoulder with American boys are fed, together with the civilian population back of the line. The war mothers have become skilled advocates. They know that three billion dollars would not buy a bushel of wheat in a land in which there was not a bushel of wheat to buy. Their household experience has taught them, that without tooci money cannot talk; that it cannot eveu stand and walk; that food is the fundamental consideration in the life of the home in the life of the nation, aiyl so they have gone forth with a twin message. Their appeal is buy a liberty bond, but remember that fcod will win the war.

The food pledge family enrollment campaign, reports from every state sliow, has become just what it wa; designed to he one of the "mosl comprehensive experiments in applied democracy ever attempted. The that has been put up to the American people by the United States food administration is whether or not food control by popular agreement is a possibility. Europe is on rations. Consumption' is governed by legislation. The question of how much and what shall be eaten is determined there by law.

The United States food administration has asked the people of this country to make a national war creed of the kitchen so effective that those charged with the responsibility of making certain the United States can comply with the food demands made upon it will not be forced to rely upon drasiic legislation in order to succeed. The food family enrollment cam paign has forced the nation to view statistics with a new vision. The war mother, her boy at the front, demands that food problems be stated in terms of human life. No nation-wide campaign was ever attempted with simpler tools than those used in the family food pledge onrnllmpnt drive. First there is a card thrt, when signed, is just a lit tip that the signer will, so far as hi circumstances permit cany out as an individual the food iirnsram that will win the war.

addition a membership card to han in thp window as a visible evidence that' in that home there resides a family that three times a day, as a mattpr of individual conscience, is doing its bit. And last of all an IS a foot specialist him that will be distributed on the train. Kansas deserves widespread recognition as a foremost mining state; ia well as an oil and lessor Terrill said. wheat state, Pro- ROOMS FOR RENT For Kent -Two or three empty rooms for light housekeeping at 1703 S. HighJaivl.

Phone 2200. WANTED TO BUY. Wanicl To buy second-hand Dec-ring om binder in good running or-der. F. C.

Davidson, route 2, box Clu'iiute. anted At the Ford agency, clean cotton rags, cents per pou nd. Want' 'd- To buy move from man. phone 1 20 1 small barn to A. A.

Acker- FOR SALE For Sale or Trade For Chanute property. 9 G-room house, good barn, chicken house, land fenced, fruit trees. A. J. care I i ribr.nc For Sale or iSale very ijeautuui manog- any, piano-caeri organ at a bargain; you are lucky, if you get it.

Jeffers ByHOP" iX. 14 ii MP I I i ii Professor Terrill ar.d Dr. II. C. Moore and Dr.

Y. P. Ilayncs of lie university mining an.i geology faculty have prep-ired a bulletin on the mineral resources of Kansas which His Papers pg Makers if fffiSljPD I home from visiting with relatives in fdown'from tate executive-commit-Miami and Welsh, Okla. -tees with imposing personnel to the PREPARE FOR THE CRISIS Every mother awaiting: motherhood should get in condition for the crisis. There Is just one thing to do give nature a helping hand throughout the waiting period.

No time should be lost in beginning the use of the penetrating external preparation, "Mother's By its use during the period the muscles of the abdomen are made pliable and elastic; thev can then expand with ease when baby is born and paia at the crisis is SCOOP THE CUB REPORTER The Boss Had Better Run Along And Peddle Everything Good to Eat. Phones 530 and 531 $1.00 Cook Book with a pound can of Ry-zon Baking Powder. Fresh Peas Preserving Pears Shelled Lima Beans Spinach Peaches California Pears Tokay Grapes Celery Celery Cabbage Onions Blue Plums by the crate Celery Hearts Concord Grapes Red Peppers Pickling Onions Egg Plant Mangoes Watermelons Squash Green Beans Fresh Tomatoes Beets Turnips Fresh Rhubarb, Head Lettuce, Cucumbers, Pineapples Grape Fruit, California Oranges, Bananas, Fancy "Apples" The filson Grocery 17 Fast Main. I I I 1 I I I 1 '1 i i 1 I II 1 I 1 1 gT Wwdww Kth crush ABLT3 LOOK -vas: i i i i 1 I I IL 1.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Chanute Daily Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
58,278
Years Available:
1893-1923