Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 3 September 1914 — Page 2
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DESCRIBES ZEPPELIN ASSAULT ON ANTWERP
Correspondent Says Result Fully Demonstrates Futility of Efforts to Do Damage.
LONDON, Sept. 2.—7 p. m.—The Antwerp correspondent of the Central News describes the second aerial raid upon Antwerp by a German Zeppelin, which he said occurred just before dawn. The bombardment he explained, demonstrated from a military point of view the futility of the German's efforts to do any damage of importance. His description of the aerial bombardment follows: "I was awakened by a rattle of rifle fire from neighboring' roofs and the crash of exploding bombs. Hurriedly descending I was just in time to see the airship disappearing southward at a tremendous height. There was incessant rattle of shots from rifles and machine guns from the darkened town and shrapnel could be seen exploding like meteorites in the trail of the flying marauder. All round from points of vantage on the high buildings spurts of flames indicated the efforts of the firers to bring down the hated Zeppelin. "It is believed the Zeppelin drifted over the city with the aid of a brisk easterly wind so that with her engines almost silent she was able to get near enough to the city to begin work unopposed. There was no panic in the city, the people remaining in doors until dawn when they gathered in small groups on the street corners to discuss the outrage."
FARMER IS KILLED.
George W. Sullens Thrown From Wagon By Frightened Horse. George "W. Sullens, a well known farmer, of Honey Creek township, died Sunday as the result of being thrown from the wagon in which he was riding near the Budd school house. His horse took fright at
a
motorcycle and
ran away, throwing him out. He was about 70 years of age. The funeral services will be held Saturday at 10 a. m., at the residence of Hayden Elliott, a nephew, who lives in Linton township.
BIOT ON GERMAN STEAMER.
Three of Crew and Fifty Steerage Passengers Lose Lives. NEW YORK, Sept. 3.—A riot aboard the German steamer Bluecher, at anchor in the harbor of Pernambuco, Brazil, in which three of the Bleucher's crew and fifty of her 800 steerage passengers were killed, was described today by passengers aboard the Brazilian steamer Sao Paulo upon her arrival here from Brazilian ports whence she sailed at the commencement of the European war.
Reasons Why
LABOR DAY PICNIC TO BE BIG AFFAIR
Arrangements Are About Complete, As Is the Program—Expect 10,000 People to Attend.
Enthusiasm over the plans for the Labor day celebration in Terre Haute ran high Wednesday night at the meeting of the committee on arrangements and reports showed that everything had been arranged for the day. The committee on publicity reported that the celebration had been given much space in the newspapers over
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BETTER THAN WAR
the county and that indications pointed to a large crowd. Jake Frisz, general chairman of the arrangements committee, etated Thursday that the program for the day will be the best in years. Auto races, boxing contests, dancing and contests have been arranged and plenty of amusements are assured for the crowds. One of the features of tha day will be the awarding of a mahogany library table to some woman who attends the celebration. "We are all ready for the big day and are prepared to entertain 10,000 people. All we are anxious about now is the weather. We intend to see th9 weather man some time this week and make arrangements for an ideal day," one of the members of the committee said Thursday.
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TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE.
Adapted from Cleveland Plain Dealer.
DELLA CHIESA ELECTED POPE
Continued From Page One.
he was elected to the post of advisor to the holy office. In 1907 he was appointed papal nuncio of Madrid in succession to Mgr. Rinaldini, but this appointment was cancelled three days later. This incident had occurred just before he was made archbishop of Bologna. When Mgr. Delia Chiesa was given this post, it was declared in Rome, it was mainly with the object of combating modern religious ideas, Bologna being the headquarters of the National Democratic league, whose members advocated what Is known as "modernism" in religion.
In January, 1914, while still at Bologna, the present pope Issued a pastoral letter strongly condemning the tango.
It has been 174 years since the time of the last pope Benedict. In his election to the papacy in 1740, Cardinal Prospero Lambertinl assumed that title. It is an interesting fact that the new pope was archbishop" of Bologna while Pope Benedict XIV was born in Bologna.
According to a dispatch from Rome, dated at 2:50 yesterday afternoon and received In New York early today, the White Star steamer Canopic, bearing Cardinals Gibbons and O'Connell to Rome, was not due at Naples until tomorrow. Therefore, it is probable that neither of these two American cardinals participated In the election of the new prfpe.
Italian Wins Place.
The choice- falls on a cardinal of Italian birth, as was expected from tradition and also from the disturbed conditions In Europe which mitigated against the. selection of a pope outside of the Italian heirachy.
It was at the age of 24 that the new pope was ordained in the priesthood. He soon attracted the attention of Cardinal Ra.mpolla, later secretary of state for Pope Leo XIII. When Cardinal Rampolla was made nuncio to Madrid he took Mgr. Delia Chiesa with him as secretary of nunciaturo. On Cardinal Rampolla's return to Rome to become secretary of state for the Vatican, Mgr. Delia Chiesa entered the secretarial of state as one of the minor officials until 1901 when he was appointed substitute of the secretarial, and also secretary of the cypher.
As secretary to the secretary of state, Cardinal Delia Chiesa wn3 brought into notable prominence throughout the Catholic heirarchy but his position was not at that time o« cardinallst rank. On the accession of Pope Pius X, Mgr. Delia Chiesa continued in the secretariat until Dec. 16, 1907, when Piux gave him a noted promotion to the position of archbishop of the important see of Bologna.
For seven years he administered the see of Bologna with notable success until May last, when Pius named him among thirteen members of the hierarchy to receive the red hat.
The full title of the new pope, In addition to Benedict XV, will be bishop of Rome and successor to St. Peter, supreme pontiff of the universal church, patriarch of the west, primate of Italy, archbishop and metropoltan ol' the Roman province, sovereign of the temporal dominion of the Holy Roman church.
HURRY TO BORDEAUX.
Thousands Leave Paris for New French Capital. TOURS (via Paris), Sept. 3.—5:35 a m.—Tours is crowded to overflowing with travelers bound for Bordeaux. All the hotels are full, and some of the landlords are asking as much as forty francs for a single room. Many automobilists are sleeping in their cars because of the lack of accommodations in the hotels.
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A SECOND BMLAVA
Britons Push Forward In Face of Deadly Fire From Germans— Take Position.
LONDON, Sept. 3.—3:40 a. m.—The Daily Mail's correspondent behind the British lines describes the charge of the Ninth lancers, which occurred at an unnamed spot during the recent series of tactical retreats, as a second Balaklafva. He says: "Terrible havoc has been caused in our ranks by shells from a battery of eleven German guns posted inside a forest near the Belgian frontier. "It seemed impossible to silence their fire until the Ninth lancers made their attempt, riding straight at the guns after debouching into the open and charging under a hail of melinite and lyddite. "I have not been able to get reliable figures as to the distance they rode, but they reached their goal. Nothing could stop them. They reached the guns, killed the gunners and put the guns out of action. Then like their prototypes of Balaklava, they rode back. "On the return they fell in greater numbers still from the attack of other German batteries posted at vantage points around the valley. "Notable bayonet charges were made at (name deleted) on Wednesday last. Several British infantry regiments occupied an exposed position around which the Germans gradually circled, drawing the noose closer and closer. "The Britishers decided to cut their way through the cordon. So the men went at it yelling and shouting, and got through, although the German artillery mowed them down frightfully. "The German machine guns have been tremendously effective In all engagements thus far. Men who saw the South African war say the hottest firing there was childish compared with what the British troops have undergone since their arrival In Fiance. So far as I can learn this far the Germans have lost 26 of these guns."
PRESIDENT WILL ASK FOB WAR TAX MEASURE TOMORROW
Plans to Let Congress Decide Upon Way to Raise $100,000,000 Annually—Confers With Underwood.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 3.—President Wilson will appear before a joint session of congress tomorrow afternoon at 12:30 o'clock to ask for a war tax measure to raise $100,000,000 annually. This announcement was made to2ay following a visit of Democratic Leader Underwood to the white house. In his message the president will not advise means of raising the money. The president completed his address and showed It today to Mr. Underwood, who will ask congress to provide for obtaining the $100,000,000 in a way which will be felt least by the people.
A. 0. H. HONORS MEHEGAN.
GARY, Ind., Sept. 3.—The Indiana convention of the Ancient Order of Hibernians elected the following offices:
President James Deery, of Indianapolis: vice president, Ignatius Mehegan, Terre Haute secretary, John Hay3, South Bend treasurer, Richard Kelley, Fort Wayne chaplain, the Rev. N. J. Byrnes, Lafayette.
FRENCH WARSHIP OFF COAST.
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 3.—Shortly oefore midnight last night a bar pilot yi rt.ed to the marina bureau of the chamber of commerce that he had spoken to a French war Vessel just outside the Golden Gate soon after dark.
DEATHS AND FUNERALS.
GEORGE M. "VOISEY.
George M. Voisey, 35 years old, died at the residence of his sister, Mrs. A. ,T. Collier, in Rosedale, Ind.. at 3:15 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. Four sisters. Mrs. Collier, Mrs. Thomas Brady, of East Chicago, Ind. Mrs. Charles Sullivan, of Fontanet, and Miss Nelle Voisey,, of Rosedale, besides three brothers, Luvlne and Joseph of Fontanet, and Willard, of Terre Haute, survive. The funeral services were held at the residence of his sister in Rosedale at 1 o'clock Thursday afternoon, with burial in the Rosedale cemetery.
MRS. JAMES COX.
Mrs. James Cox, 28 years old, died at her residence, 527 North Third street, at 12:15 o'clock Thursday afternoon. She is survived by her husband and one small daughter besides a son by a former marriage. The son is working in the broom corn fields near Areola, 111., and efforts are being made to reach him so that he may attend the funeral services of his mother. The funeral services will be held Saturday afternoon with burial in Woodlawn cemetery.
MARY ANNA BRUNNING. Mary Anna Brunnlng, 75 years old, died at the residence of her daughter, Mrs. Ophelia Leik, 618 North Ninth street, at 12:25 o'clock Thursday afternoon. She is survived by the one daughter and two sons, William and Edward, both of Terre Haute. The funeral services w'll be conducted at the residence Sunday afternoon with burial in Highland Lawn cemetery.
MRS. BENJAMIN GRESHAM. By Special Correspondent. SULLIVAN, Ind., Sept. 3.—Word has been received here of the death at Newcastle, Ind., on August 18, of Mrs. Benjamin Gresham, formerly Lydia Klingiran, a Sullivan county girl. Tuberculosis caused her death. A husband and three children survive. She was 36 years old.
"AUNT POLLY" EATON BURNER, By Special Correspondent. ROBINSON, 111., Sept 3.—"Aunt Folly" Eaton Burner, one of the county's oldest residents, is dead at her home near here. Four children survive her. The funeral services were conducted by Rev. Hathaway Thursday afternoon with burial in Mt. Pleasant cemetery.
FRANK LAURENT.
By Special Correspondent. SHELBURN, Ind., Sept. 3.—Frank Laurent, a resident of this place, died at his home late Tuesday night. The uneral services were held at 9:30 c'clock Thursday morning at the Shelbiarn Catholic church. ^Burial was in the Little Flock cemete_^.
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DETROIT, Mich., Sept. 3. —The Grand Army of the Republic and the several organizations affiliated with it, took up routine business today. The principal event of the forenoon sessions was the annual address of the commander-in-chief of the G. A. R., Washington Gardner, of Albion.
The meeting c.f the Grand Army and the Women's Relief corps promised to last until late in the afternoon. Questions of national policy, concerning each order, were discussed. Matters of interest to the old soldiers included a movement to establish national headquarters in a large city, possibly Washington.
It was considered probable that the encampment would officially protest to congress against any proposed plan to change the present method of management of the soldiers' homes, scattered throughout the United States. These Institutions have been managed by war veterans. G. A. R. sentiment seems strongly against so-called "outside control."
Receptions and camp fires and a display of fireworks at Belle Isle, were the entertainments arranged for tonight.
Colonel J. L. Smith, of Highland Park, Mich., champion long distance runner of the civil war veterans, was called upon to defend his title this afternoon. At the state fair grounds, he was to run ten miles against a picked relay team of ten old soldiers, each of whom was to run a mile. Colonel Smith was victor in a similar feat at the 1912 and the 1913 encampments.
England's Defensive Work Stops Teutons
LONDON, Sept 3.—3:39 a. m.—The Daily News correspondenf, wiring from Gournay-en-Bray, a small town near Rouen, says: "The German advance is amazing. A great battle is raging with what result I know not, but I do know that the French and British armies are intact and still confident of ultimate success. "Incredible as it seems, the tremendous masses of men that the Germans have hurled at the allies hatve not overwhelmed them. It seems that while the Germans have the weight, the allies certainly have the wit and science, and these, with reinforcements, will eventually win. "General Pau had fine success, but In the center and left center the allies were not so successful, being obliged to retire. As a result of Sunday's battle the Germans now occupy ——." (Name of town deleted by censor).
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ALLIES FEAR NO ADVANCE OE GERMANS
Continued From Page
from a point northeast of Paris to Complegne and thence through Noyon (fourteen miles northeast by north, of Compiegne) to Lafere.
Many Officers Fall.
Lafere, one of the weaker of tha French fortresses, evidently Is In the hands of the Germans. ITfertli^ er east and north the allied armlet apparently held their own In tha neighborhood of Laon and Rethel (twenty four miles northeast of Rheims). The right of the allies rests on the fortified Franco-German frontier.
The names of the British who fell In the four days' battle last week will not be announced until they have been communicated to relatives. The heavy loss of officers in proportion to the men is the story of South Africa over again. It indicates that the officers refused to take cover, as they insist that the men shall.
The west coast of Belgium and the west coast of northern France are free from Germans. Many Americans are crossing the channel to the continent, determined to see something of the war at any risk. ..
Judges Transferred.
Two trains reserved for the president and the members of the senate and chamber of deputies left for Bordeaux this afternoon. Fifteen judges of the court of' cassation also will be transferred to the provisional capital France.
In addition to the American ambassador, M. T. Herrick, the Swiss minister, M. Lardy, also has decided to remain in Paris.
The population of the capital is taking the departure of the heads of the government calmly, recognizing that it is a matter of prudence.
Although the city generally is placid, the people feel keenly the approich of the German army and they are rapidly preparing for whatever may happen. Many families left for the coast today. The refugees from t*ie capital have been forced to make very long detours because the railroads are encumbered with military trains.
The railroad lines out o" Paris to the north have virtually ceased running trains owing to fears of possible raids by German cavalry.
PLAGUE CLAIMS VICTIM.
NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 3.—Ethel Ticker, a 12-year-old girl, was taken to the Isolation hospital today, suffering with bubonic plague. She resides in a district that until today was not considered Infected. This was the twenty-fourth case since the disease made its appearance.
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