Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 116, 26 March 1913 — Page 11
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Joe Clear, of Eaton, walked into Dayton this morning and upon reaching the Third Precinct police station in the devastated city Secured telephonic communication with Arch Raney, editor of the New Paris, O., Mirror. Clear informed Raney that the conservative estimate upon the number of lives lost in that city was ten thousand. "Many people in this city, who have been successful in escaping the flood, are starving to death," Clear told Raney. "It is a physical impossibility to secure food. We want help here. Do what you can to get into Richmond and notify them that it is imperative that we get some kind of food here. Anything will do."
joe uiear also teiepnoned cniei 01 Foiice uormon, irom the Third Precinct police station asking for aid. "J'or God's sake send us as many volunteers as you can and send up some potatoes and bread. We must have it or the death list will run up into many more thousands." Mayor Zimmerman, upon receipt of the news, declared that he was ready to send men and provisions to Dayton as soon as the Pennsylvania railroad can get through. Mayor Zimmerman is now at the city building, anxiously awaiting word from local railroad officials as to when they can get a train through to the devastated city. Because of the washouts along the Dayton division of the Pennsylvania railroad, local railroad officials declare that it will be late tonight or tomorrow morning before a relief train can be rurwnto Dayton.
v uancijr jo jjxeiJitieu tu senu x,uuu loaves oi Dreaa to Dayton. Every automobile leaving this city this morning was filled with as many loaves of bread as could be placed in the machines.) Other Main street merchants have signified their intention of doing whatever they can to aid the suffering at Dayton. At 11 :30 o'clock this morning the special meeting of the Commercial Club decided to order an automobile truck to go to the site of the old Sycamore bridge, east of the city, which was washed taway by the storm and report immediately upon the amount of lumber it would .require to construct a bridge across the creek. As soon as this report is made auto trucks loaded with timber will be sent to that scene and a bridge will be hastily constructed in order that automobiles loaded with provisions can be sent through to Dayton. ; An auto truck of the McKee Auto Service, started for Dayton shortly after 11 o'clock this morning, carrying ten passengers, all of whom have relatives in Dayton. J
SITUATION I IN DAYTON. DAYTON, O., March 26. This city ! a river three miles wide. The water irom six lo Lwcn .y reel uccp, cxnnai a mile and a half each way from Main 'street, the principal business thoroughfare. The deepest water is in the business section. Only remote suburbs escaped being covered by the seething flood. The crest was reached shortly after midnight and the water is now falling half an Inch an hour. The flooded district comprises a practical circle, with a radius of a mile and a half, and in no place is the water less than six feet deep. The worst of the flooded districts Includes all of North and West Dayton, all of the odwntown sections, the South Side as far as Oakwood and all of the residence suburb of Glendale. The district has a normal population of more than 50,000. MAY NOT BE EXAGGERATED. Rescuers and those at the hospitals said an estimate of 5,000 dead might be as accurate as an estimate of 100. While those marooned in the offices and hotels are in no Immediate danger of drowning, there is no way food or drinking water can reach them until the water recedes. Those In the residences, however, are In constant danger, both by flood and fire. First the frailer buildings were swept Into the stream, many showing the faces of women and children peering from th windows. NO HOUSES ARE SAFE. These were followed by more substantial brick buildings until it became evident that no house in the flood zone was safe. The houses, as a rule, floated only a few blocks until disintegrated. The flood came soon after daylight yesterday morning, after the residents had spent a night in terror. The main levee of the Big Miami broke at Webster street about 8 o'clock. An hour later the water was through in. a dozen places and a wall of water ten feet deep swept through the main street just above the juncture of the Big Miami and the Mad river. , WATER WALL 20 FEET HIGH. Where the water of Stillwater river poured into the Miami the flood reach Hair Turning Gray . Jus! Mix Sage It's Grandmother's Recipe for Dandruff and Restoring Color to Hair. Almost -everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compounded, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray; also cures dandruff, itching scalp and stops falling hair. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is musbv and troublesome. - - Nowadays skilled chemists do this better than ourselves. By asking at any drug store for the ready-to-use product called "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy" you will get a large, bottle for about 50 cents. Some
ed its height and rolled into the business section, a wall twenty feet high. The office of the Dayton News, which is owned by Governor Cox, was soon under twenty feet of water. The flood rose to the second floor of the Algonquin Hotel and all along Main street occupants were driven to the third floors. What happened to them since no one on the outside can tell. MILITIA CAN'T CHECK THIEVES House looting began early in the night and while the local militia is on duty it is incapable of handling the situation. Incidents without number are narrated of persons in the flood district waving handkerchiefs and otherwise signalling for aid, being swept away before the eyes of the watchers on the margin of the waters. Many of the rescue boats were swept by the current against what had been fire plugs, trees and houses. They were crushed. How many died in this way no one knows. Canoes and rowboats shared the same fate. What life exists in the district that the flood covers is in constant danger and helpless until the flood subsides. ..St. Elizabeth's Hospital, with 600 patients, is reported to have been washed away. The building was known to be in many feet of water. .Gloom reigns supreme. The Algonquin Hotel is surrounded in water up to its third story and above this level In the downtown district office buildings, hotels and business houses are places of refuge. SCHOOL WITH 400 GONE A school building that was known to have housed 400 school children shortly before the water rushed in that direction is submerged and as far as can be ascertained all of the children perished. CARD OF THANKS We sincerely thank our many friends and neighbors for their kindness and sympathy shown during the illness and death of our' dear mother and grandmother. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Clements and Children. or Falling? Tea and Sulphur druggists make their own but it's usually too sticky, so insist upon getting "Wyeth's" which can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair and is the best remedy- for dandruff, dry, feverish, itchy scalp and to stop falling hair. Folks like "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur" because no one can positively tell that you darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly, says a well known down-town druggist. You dampen a sponge or soft brush and draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This requires but a few moments, by morning the gray hair disappears and after another application or two is restored to its natural, color and .looks even more beautiful and glossy than ever.
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SAID TO BE A SUFFERER All efforts to confirm the report of a heavy loss of life in Brookville, on the Whitewater river south of Richmond, were fruitless today, owing to the fact that wires out of Richmond in that direction are completely prostrated. An Indianapolis dispatch early this morning says: Heavy loss of life at Brookville was reported in a message received yesterday afternoon by Ed Stinger, a clerk in the auditor of state's office, from the county assessor of Franklin County. The message had been sent over Connersville. All communications with Brookvillo, according to reports from Connersville was broken oft soon after the message came to Mr. Stinger, and all efforts to gain further information concerning the loss of life reported in the meager dispatch failed. Mr. Stinger formerly lived at Brookville, and he was much concerned last night about the safety of friends and relatives. The message to Mr. Stinger, containing the only information from Brookville obtainable last night, read as follows: Reports Heavy Loss of Life. "Levee broke. Valley flooded, with heavy loss of life. Paper mill destroyed, depot swept away, all bridges out. Tell the Governor." Governor Ralston was notified at once, and he immediately made attempts both by telephone and telegraph to learn if state aid were required. The Governor expressed hope the loss of life had not been as great as reported. He was unable to get additional news. Mr. Stinger said that a portion of the town of Brookville is situated on high land, though a large number of families live in the valley through whica the water swept.
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TO GIVE OPERA. "The Feast of the Red Com," an American Indian operetta will be given by the Young Ladies of the St. Andrew's parish Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, April first and second in St. Andrew's auditorium. Argument. Act I. The maidens of the Wanta Tribe of Indians gathered every year in secluded spot to celebrate "The Feast of the Red Corn." The one who finds the first red ear expresses her dearest wish to the Sorceress (an old squaw of the tribe) who calls upon the gods of the Four Winds to grant the wish. The Queen, Weeda Wanta, joins the maidens this year, hoping to get word from her husband who has been absent a long time. The squaw 'declares that no wish will be granted this year because of some crime. The blame is fixed upon the queen's sister, Impee Light, a mischievous maiden. She is threatened with burning at the stake but is saved by the queen's intervention. Night falls. Act II. At dawn Impee Light entertains the queen's children Fudgee, Wudgee and Pudgee and the maidens with "The Tale of the Three Little Bears." The queen then suggests that they take a canoe ride before celebrating the feast and expresses the hope that the Four Winds will give some sign that the wish will be granted. While riding in the canoe, Impee Light and the queen's children play a joke on them upsetting the canoe in shallow water and coming up under the canoe. The queen and maidens return and lament the death. The children are brought in on stretchers and the queen and maidens learn that it was a joke. The queen insists that Impee Light has said the children, and the Four Winds must therefore grant the wish. The squaw calls upon the winds; the queen finds the first red ear and sees a vision of her king. Program. Act I. Overture Instrumental Dead Leaves and The Corn. .. .Chorus Somebody's Been Up to Something Squaw and Chorus That is all wrong. If you will take a teaspoonful of delicious Syrup of Figs tonight, you will never realize you have taken anything until morning, when all the poisonous matter, sour bile and clogged up waste will be moved on and out of your system, thoroughly but gently no griping no nausea no weakness. ' Taking Syrup of Figs is a real pleasure. Don't think wou are drugging yourself; it is composed entirely of luscious figs, senna and aromatics, and constant use cannot cause injury. Ask your druggist for "Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna," and look for the name, California Fig Syrup Company, on the label. This is the genuine old reliable. Any other Fig Syrup offered as "just as good" should be refused with contempt. Don't be imposed upon.
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She is a Regular Indian Chorus Burn Her at the Stake Chorus "O. Star of the Farthest North".'. . . Queen What, Did Impee Light Do?.-. Fudge, Wudgee and Pudgee I've Inherited a Most Peculiar Failing Impee Light Ghost Dance (Dead Trees) Instrumental Sleep Song Queen and Chorus Act II. The Tale of the Three Little Bears Impee Light Canoe Song Queen and Chorus Song of Sorrow Old Squaw Flaming Arrow Dance. . .Instrumental Song of Sorrow Chorus Funeral March Instrumental Was There Ever Anybody? Chorus Somebody's Been Up To Something Fudgee, Wudgee, Pudgee Incantation Old Squaw and Chorus Finale "A Little Red Ear" Principals and Chorus Characters. Weeda Wanta Miss Leona Buening Impee Light Miss Helen Batter Fudgee Master Joseph Grothaus Wudgee Master Leo Kutter Pudgee Master Frank Berheide Squaw Miss Blanch Gausepohl King Robert Thomas Chorus Sopranos Miss Anna Ortman. Miss Mary "Berheide, Miss Helen Miller, Miss Florence Buening, Miss Constance Pardieck, Miss Mary Torbeck, Miss Mary Cook, Miss Matilda Feldmann, Miss Hilda Gausepohl, Miss Mary Heidelman. Altos Miss Laura Stein, Miss Gertrude Pardieck, Miss Anna Stolle, Miss Catherine Broerman, Miss Norma Runge, Miss Elizabeth Kennepohl, Mi6s Florence Torbeck, Miss Loretta Maag, Miss Josepha Ramler, Miss Julia Hubej, Miss Mary Knauber. Dancers Miss Mildred Lichtenfels, Miss Nellie Smithmeyer, MissLoretta,
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NONPARIEL CLUB. The Nonpariel club met last evening with Miss Elnia Koehring at the home of her sister, Mrs. Frank Watson in Randolph street. Point euchre was played at three tables- The favors were given Miss Anna Oelklaus. Mrs. Robert Haustetter, Mr. Frank Watson and Mr. George Cox. Mrs. Harry Ryan will be hostess for the next meeting. A three course luncheon was served. High Class. Wimble Isn't Grumble's light halrM wife pretty extrarapant? Gimble You bet! He calls her his blonded Indebtedness. TJfe. Why Women Th "Wii" anxietv &Wnlesne
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