Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 July 1918 — Page 2
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38,000 GIRLS URGED
•. VOLUNTEER AS NURSES
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Will Constitute "0*. I. "Reserve, Says Dr. Anna Howard Shaw in Appeal %,? ., «^-Ihey Are Needed Now. *:4
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WASHINGTON. JMy f7.—Young ?tvomen of the country between the "'.ages of 19 and 35 are called to the TJnited States student nurse reserve by *the women's committee of the council €f national defense. Thirty-eight .thousand iive hundred Volunteers are Ranted at once. '. "Don't let the thought that the war tnay bo ended and a victorious peace ^declared before the work of preparation Is completed, deter you from entering this service," appeals Dr. Anna 'Howard Shaw, chairman of the com"mittee. "Ixng after poace is concluded the work of rehabilitation end reedacation of disabled soldiers will be ^continued. and, in addition to the pubUic health service, the trained nurses sWill find constantly widening opporJtuoities for different lines of loyal and ^exalted usefulness. "The call is to all young women who fare strong, loyal and -worthy of our country to enroll as soon as possible."'
The student nurses are to go to the army nursing school or to civilian training schools, where the courses range from two to tSree, years In .length. The first purpose is to fill the serious gaps caused in the hospital ..Staffs by the transfer of American vtiurses to overseas service. Recruiting* ^vrill start July 23, and will be carried \on by the state divisions and the 12.000 units of the women's committee of the eonncii of national defense. The quotas assigned the states range from 4,285 assigned to New York, to 60 from Neyada and include California, 100 Illinois, 3,000 Missouri, 1,825, and Ohio. 12,230.
But every Intelligent, ablebodied young woman In the country is urged to regt«ter so there may be no shortage ^.cf candidates.
e TO ATTEND MEETTSTQ.
The Liberty Guards will go to iBeelyville this afternoon to take part In a patriotic rally, at which Governor Goodrich will be the principal speaker. The company will assemble ftt 1 o'clock at the Mulberry street entrance to the Normal school. Members are requested to turn ojit minus coats.
COURT TERM ENDS.
The June term of th£ Vigo Superior Court adjourned Saturday afternoon Until September 2. In the June term tl)ere were 189 cases filed and 306 disposed of, leaving about 1,100 cases on the docket. The Vigo County Superior Court has one of the heaviest dockets in the state of Indiana.
"WHEN IN DOUBT, Try The Tribune.
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^ODOR
We are glad to quote the timely Administration: "Let us not live us so eat that others may live."
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Obituary
MRS. MAT E. WEISER,
Mrs. May E. Weiser, 47 years Old, died Saturday afternoon at the residence, 140$ Plum street. Mrs. Weiser was a member of th« Edwards lodg^e, Daughters of Rebekah. She is survived by the husband, Curtis A. Weiser, and two eons, Harry and Eugene also the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cyrue Stephenson. The funeral will be heid from the residence, Monday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, with interment in Highland Lawn cemetery.
nipPHREV WHJM,
The funeril of Humphrey Wrin, who died Fridajl evening at the residence, six miles north of the city, will be held Monday morning at 9 o'clock from St. .Mary's of the Woods chapel, witn Interment in St. Mary's oemet#ry.
AMAJSDAR HAMMER,
Atrtanda Hammer, 61 years old. died at the residence, 1221 South Fourteenth street, at 6 o'clock Saturday evening, b'he is survived by the husband, Warrick three daughters and one son. The body will be shipped to Du Quoin, 111., Monday, for burial.
WILLIAM K. PARK.
By Sfiecfal Correspondent. SULLIVAN, Ind,, July 2T,—William E. Park, "7 years of age, a native of Sullivan county, and the father of County Superintendent Richard Park, passed away at his home in Shelburn .Friday evening at seven o'clock, after a lingering illness. For the last three months he had been bedfast and helpless, but his death was not expected so soon, as there had been no apparent change for the worse in his condition.
Mr. Park was born in a log house which stood on the site of the old Park school house near the Citizens' mine. It •was the old Park homestead and belonged to the father of the deceased, Joshua Park, one of the county's earliest settlers. The Park farm extended well west into what is now the eastern part of the city of Sullivan.
After marrying at the age of twentyone years. Mr. Park was given a farm one mile southeast of the city, by his father and liv^d there the remainder of his life until the fall of 1916, when he moved to Shelburn.
Mr. Park was twice married,, his first wife having died several years a«o. He is survived by his second wife, one son, County Superintendent Richard Park, and two daughters, Mrs. Murray Burkhart and Mrs. Roy Simmfrs, eight grandchildren and several great grandchildren.
The funeral service* will be held at the Palmers' Prairie church Sunday afternoon at three o'clock.
^WANTED, TO BEST.
Coal Bluff Man Wrecks Thrashar to Get Day Off. COAL BLUFF, Indi, July 27 —Harvey F. Smith, a farmer living near this place, was arrested by government agents after having seriously damaged a threshing machine, but the man was later released, and It is said will not be prosecuted as he will be called into military service within a few days.
Smith put a rock and a piece of iron into the wheat that was being threshed and this was carried into' the mechanism of the thresher resulting In practically wrecking it. After his arrest he told the government agents that he damaged the machine so that he would not have to work on Sunday. An investigation convinced the agents that he was not a pro-Genpan and that his statement was true, ills release followed.
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DRAFT NEEDS MAY HALT REVENUE BILL
Urgent Necessity for More Manpower May Cause Military to Go Ahead.
WASHINGTON, July 27.—Urgent necessity for new man power to prevent wholesale invasion of deferred draft classes tonight threatened to delay final passage of the revenue bill until after the November elections. Secretary Baker is expected to lay the outline of the man power bill before the bouse military affairs committee about the time congress reconvenes after the present recess, and the bill will be reported to the bouse shortly afterward.
The revenue bill is scheduled to come out of the committee about the same time. There is no disposition to push the revenue bill ahead of the military, because of the fact that an invasion of deferred classes would seriously disrupt the industrials of the nation.
If this plan is followed It will be late in September before the revenue Mil passes the house.
Discussion in the Senate will probably take another two weeks, and after that the bill must go to conference "and tfye action of conferees be ratified by both houses.
In view of the precedence of the military, the committee showed an inclination to take its^ time in framing the revertue measure.
CHAIICIKC DRAFT AGE DEW ESSENTIAL
CLiEVEIoAND, O., July 27.—"Changing of draft ages is imperative to prevent invasion of deferred classes by the last of September," Julius Kahn of California, ranking Republican member of the house military committee, declared Here tonight.
Speaking before the League of Republican Clubs, he said that while man .power will win the war, our manufacturing and agricultural interests would suffer seriously at this time if men in classes 2, 3 and 4 were drafted. It may ultimately become necessary to call out many of these men, but that time has not yet arrived, Kahn said. Therefore we should change tne draft law immediately after tha congress recess so that several million men can be added to class 1. Invasion of deferred clashes, Kahn said, would be a serious calamity.
Kahn praised the work of American soldiers in France, but warned that we must not be carried away by their victory into placing any faith in German peace offers, abounding in glittering generalities. He urged that we must prepare for fresh sacrifices until the war is won, and denounced the profiteers as "money-mad degenerates."
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Camp Sherman Recruit Gets Years At Hard Labor. CAMP SHERMAN, CH1LLICOTHE, O, July 27."—After a general courtmartial for trying to incite mutiny in CJompany E, 335th infantry, and for making disloyal remarks, Private Joseph J. Bambauer has been sentenced to serve ten years at hard labor, in addition to being dishonorably discharged from the TTnited States army. The court-martial order was annotmced ,by the intelligence officer.
While Company "E, 335th, which is made, up largely of then from Indiana, was on & practioe hike, from Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky^ to Prospect. Ky„ May 18, 1918, it is alleged Bambauer was guilty of this offense.
The conrt-martial found that Bambauer made the following remarks among others: "If we would all get together and not go on these hikes we wouldn't have to go, and what could they do about it? We ofcght to do like my father. He deserted the German army and knocked an officer in the head to do it."
Dead Float Down Marne
WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY ON THE AISNE-MARNBFRONT, July 27. (By the Associated Press.)—The American troops advancing along the Marne have discovered hundreds of dead Germans. The victims fell before the heavy machine gun fire of the Americans during the retreat. In one horseshoe area the ground was covered with dead. The Americans buried as many bodies as was possible. It ia estimated that 2,000 Germans fell there.
Farmers along the Marne report having seen the bodies of German dead floating down the stream. The military authorities are planning s'ime system by which they can clear the river of bodies.
Three dftvs after the Germans evacuated Chateau Thierry the Americans found a lone German in Mont-St. Piere hiding in a cellar. The prisoner said.he was tired of the war and was determined to secrete himself notwithstanding the fact that he had no food and later take a chance by surrendering to the allies. He asserted that the German soldiers were dissatisfied with the way affairs were going and that the general opinion among them was that the crown prince was unable to bring sufficient reinforcements or food supplies to aid the forces being attacked from the south.
The American soldiers with pleasure watched the prisoner appease his appetite after his three days fast. The German requested the Americans not to report his desertion, saying if they did and he ever got back to Germany he would be shot.
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911 WABASH AVENUE
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MAKES BIG INCREASE
Chairman Hurley, of the Shipping Board, Is Now Beating German U-Boats.
WASHINGTON, July 27.—American sUip builders are now beating the XTboat and steadily forcing this nation into the forefront of the world's merchant marine.
Chairman Edwkrd N. Hurley of the shipping board completed his first year at the helm of one of the nation's greatest undertakings, and with his new skipper, Charles M. Schwab, he looked forward t® a year that promises to make the United States the greatest maritime nation in his tory.
Here is fTte recon? Hftirtejr and his builders reviewed tonight: Completion of 182 steel and wooden ships, totaling 1,420,099 deadweight tons.
The laying of 790 keeli. Construction of 819 Sthipways of steel, wooden and concrete.
Increase of the ship building army from 45,000 to 250,000 men. Lowering of ocean freight rates 26 per cent.*
Addition of 118'German and Am trian-owned vessels and their alloca tion in allied service.
Requisitioning of 86 vessels from Holland. Chartering of 215 neutral ships for allied transportation Atlantic service.
The board in ttye last year has brought the merchant marine up from 2,000,000- to approximately 7,250,000 tons. Of this, nearly 4,000,000, or more than half, is American built.
MAKES GOOD SHOWING, Near One-Fourth of Rose Poly Grad uates in Service.
President Carl Leo Mees, of the Ro&e Polytechnic Institute, has completed a list of the students and graduates of the institute that are engaged in war activities in the government service. This shows that out of 1,024 students and graduates, 232, or 22.5. per cent, are engaged in war service for Uncle Sam. This list was completed lajst Monday, and at least live Rose men have entered active service since that time, making a total of 237.
Following are the figures contained in the report: Number of living graduates, 866 number of students 191718, 158. The senior class Is included In the list of graduate# students enlisted in army and navy, 22 students in engineer enlisted reserve corps, 13 students in enlisted naval reserve corps, 17 total students in service, 52. Graduates in army and navy, 161 graduates in bureaus of the government connected with war activities, 18 total of graduates in service, 179. Former students, not graduates, in army and navy, of whom institute has record, 45.
OPTION OK NEWSPAPERS.
Judge Bingham May Buy Two Louisville (Ky.) Dailies. LOT7TSVILLE, Ky., July 2T.--fU(-ports published here are to the effect that Judge R. W. Bingham, of Louisville, in New York today, was paid a legacy of $5,000,000 from the estate of his wife, formerly Mrs. Henry M. Flag ler, who died in this city about a year ago. Coupled with the report was a published statement that Judge Bingham had purchased the Louisville Times and Courier-Journal, allied properties, for $1,500,0001
A forifeal statement by General \v. B, Ilaldeman, chairman of the executive committee of*the corporation owning the papers, said: "Judge R. W. Bingham has not purchased the control of the Times and
Courier-Journal companies. He has an option to purchase such control, howeve*. That his option will be exercised I- cannot affirm, as there are too many contingencies that might arise to prevent the consummation of his pufpose."
DRAFT EVADER HEID.
Farnsworth Miner Under Arre»t for Neglecting Questionnaire. By Special Correspondent*
SULLIVAN, Ind., July 27.—Clyde Walters, a young miner living at Farnsworth, will soon find himself in the army, following h!s arrest here by Deputy Sheriffs Otho Brodie and Ed Douthitt on a charge of evading the draft. Walters registered in Canon City, Colo., where he had been working, and then left for Sullivan without filling out his questionnaire or notifying th^ board where he was going.
He is said to have made a boast that he "hacl fooled them once, and would fool them again."" Following his arrest here on failure to show his registration card, a telegrdfei was sent to Canon City, which brought a reply to the effect that the necessary papers would be sent at once so that Walters could be taken to the nearest military camp.
EISNER IS DISCHARGED.
Private Fred Eisner, of Terre Haute, member of the 5th company, 2d training battalion, 158th depot brigade, at Camp Sherman, Chillicothe, Ohio, has been discharged from the military service on a certificate of disability.
Arrive "Over There'
Information has been received of the safe arrival in France, to join the American forces, of the following Terre Haute young men.
Vern l^aForge, parents, Mr. and Mrs. James C. LaForgfe, 1807 Grana avenue. James H. Cajnpbell, mother, Mrs. Lottie Campbell, 1552 South Twentieth street.
Robert J. Edwards, mother, Mrs. Anna Edwards, 1480 South Third street. Member 112th ammunition train,
V. J. LeForte, father, James B. LeForte. Member 321tli field artillery.
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sector the division which participated in the operations in Belleau wood and Bouresches, and only asked an "opportunity to prove the same gallantry."
The review said: "But when acting as a pivot, and it is necessary ui regulate on the pace to the flanks, in an especially commendatory manner, the Yankees followed orders.** In six days they realized certain points, a gain of seventeen kilometers (ten and a half miles), fighting without respite day and night, and proving the most splendid military qualities. In all service they functioned perfectly. Their discipline caused the Germane p"'•prise %nd unwilling admiration. "They marched with their ©fllcers a&e&d, like French units, enemy prisoners cannot get over this, saving.
do not see enough of our officers. It is yenr good fortune, lik$ the French, who have always their officers ahead.'"
FOCH AWAITS AMERICANS.
Allied Army* Head Not Ready for Major Offensiye* NTTW YORK, July 27.—O^nAral "Fbch has shown by this week's cautious attacks of the allies along the Marne salient, that he does not intend to allow the fighting to grow into a major eifort. The time for taking the measure of Germans on so vast caliber has not yet come.
General Foch cannot be led into any trap of the character which the enemy is capable of setting. The controlling
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of the Marne Is far more economical, and is accomplishing at the same time highly Important strategic moves.
This is apparently the process that hr ought on the German retirement recited in tonight's French official statement and in battle front dispatches.
Paris had been made secure agailisf any possible drive and Von-Hinden-burg's own future plana for warfare have been terminated. These are sufficiently important triumphs, without the capture of two or three full German armies.
HEIRS PAY MILLION'S.
Heavy Inheritance Tax Assessed In California Estate. SAN FRANCISCO, July 27.—The heirs of Henry Miller, California cattle baron, are liable for
factor in General Foch's plan is the i pearing in the Tribune, conveyed to strength of the American forces in George W. Cowan, also of Chicago, a France. This will continue to domi- guest at a local hotel, the first news nate plans until the war ends.
Since there are not yet enrftigh American troops Overseas, General Foch has been pressing the Aisne-j Marne salient very slowly, but appar- I ently accelerating the allied advance! with today's retreat of the Germans,
Foe Position Not Secure, I The cautious tactics, however, 'do not mean the German position within e s a i e n i s s e u e A o u e n e -j al Foch is conserving his man power, I he is persistently hammering at the German line on two Important sectors, threatening to throw the Germans off their balance on the side of the salient, but this is unlikely.
It is more probable that tile slow 1 shoving against the sides of the saiient will so narrow it that no room would be left fox the German troops to maneuver.
This process is likely to result in an immense capture of German prisoners, more than if the allies were to force
Eugene Gruenholz, father, Iferman I open the salient and pour their troops Gruenholz. Member of 112th supply' train.
through the breach. But the Germans have so strongly reinforced their positions that so pretentious a policy could be attempted only at enormous cost in casualties such as have been done by Hindenherg for four months.
To squeeze the Germans northward
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$10,000,000
inherit
ance taxes, equal shares of whi^h are claimed by the federal and state governments, according to a report submitted today to the federal authorities by R. F. Morgan, state inheritance lax appraiser.
Morgan fixed the gross value of the property left by Miller at $42,000,000. We: Exclusive of liabilities, the value is
placed at ^35,000,000.
THE GERMAN WAY.
LONDON, July 28. (Sunday)— Four members of the crew of a Belgian trawler were drowned off the east coast of England when a submarine, which had sunk the vessel, placed the crew on her own deck and then submerged.
Brother Is Killed
"Killed in action—Lieut John W. Cowan, Chicago." These few words appearing Saturday afternoon in* the casualties list from France, as ap-
of his brother's death "over there." Mr. Cowan called the Tribune earTy Saturday evening, soon after the paper appeared on %he street, in an effort to learn further particulars of his brother's death, but no information was available beyond the bare statement «arried by tbe Associated Press.
PHONB TRIBUNE TOUR WANT JJM.
SUNDAY, JUt-Y 28,
And yon cannot
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UK CASE GOES TO JURY UTESAWJY
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stantial evidence, but that Is the best* evidence there is. Witnesses may 1i^ but circumstanoes never do.** Like O'Mara, he mentioned that Clark had always shifted the blame to someone else's shoulders. 'If he operated a sa* loon at Second and Cherry streets un« der the license of Harry Covis, he could have operated the Oakview roadhouse under Charles Morgan's license." Ha said that in prosecuting the case they had gone after the chief rather than, the underling. He said he would pot Taylor and Kennedy's word up against! that of 'Buster" riark.
He attacked Clark and his past record and said that his taking out federal license after the state went "dry" was an example of his disregard! for law. The receiving of stolen goods knowingly was the main thing to be determined in a cas« of this nature, he said. He said he rfould expose the workings of the "fence" and madet light of the defense trying to shift the* blame and guilt on the Spaniards, or' the thieves. He attacked the defpnsei because they demanded the witnesses* constitutional rights for them, saying that it admitted Clark's guilt. He concluded his argument with a summary of the details of the evidencei introduced and asked for a verdict of guilty.
NEW STJGAR PRICE.
Grocers Now Allowed to Charge 9/ Cents Straight. Grocers are now allowed to char ye 914 cents a pound straight for granulated auear, according to an announcement Saturday by Food Administrator John S. Ahlgren, but the price must be maintained at this figure until further notice.
Any merchant charging more wfii be penalized. The purchaser should demand a purchase certificate setting forth the price paid, and in excess of the figure named the matter should be reported to the food administrator.
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