Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 222, 30 July 1917 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, JULY SO, 1917
WORK ON GRACE CHURCH STARTS
Work on the new Grace church began Monday. " The church furniture Is to be removed and the scaffolding for the new ttructure put. up during the week. Most of the brick and steel for the new church is ready, and the construction will begin as soon as the preliminary work is finished. ' Sunday morning's service was featured by the presence of Rev. G. H. Hill, of Indianapolis, pastor more than twenty years ago. who preached. Rev: H. L. Overtfser gave a brief sketch ef the history of Grave church. Us told how the First M. E. church of the city and Grace church were both offshoots from the Pearl Street congregation, one because they wanted men and women to sit together, and one because they wanted musical instrumts. A muBical service was given in the evening, the choir slnnging several anthems and special numbers being given bv the irganist. - Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cox. Mrs, Ada Cook and Raymond $temple also sang. . ECONOMY Mrs. Emma Hlatt was called to .Webster Saturday morning on account of the illness of her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Cleo Culbertson Mrs. Essie Weyl and Mrs. Glennle Lamb were at Williamsburg Saturday afternoon:, . .John W. Taylor, Jesse Bond and Mr. McCoy helped J. L. Replogle put up hay Friday Harry Parker was at Greensfork today Mrs. L. W. Fenimore and daughter. Blanche, were over Sunday guests of Muncie .relatives. . . . A gang of surveyors are re-surveying tne C. & O. railroad route through here relative to a double" track, . ..Will Johnson, of Mbrran Creek, was here Saturday Mrs. Albert Chamness, who recently .moved to Whlttier. California, has written relatives here that the English, walnut grove they bought two years ago for $10,000, now is worth $20,000. . ..Lindsey Canady. Jr., who was recently married has rented the George Bright farm and will move on it soon.... Mr. and Mrs. Prentls Edwards and son Hurlin, Mr. and Mrs. Ora Edwards were at Indlanapolfh Saturday. .Albert Bell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bell, and Miss Lenora Weldy. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Weldy, were married Saturday evening. .. .Mrs. Doak Swain was the afternoon visitor of Mrs. Martha Good today One field of rye has been threshed and averaged 21 bushels an acre. GREENSFORK, IND. I Mrs. Francis Brook and Elise Pickett attended a shower given in honor of Mrs. Brook's sister, Mrs. Crull, who was recently married and reeides near Hagerstown. . . .Mrs. Ellen Nicholson was in Richmond Friday. .. .Mr. Mosey and son George of Cincinnati, are visiting the former's brother, George Mosey,, of this place Mrs. Daisy Klenrle, Mrs. Sarah Conway, Blanche, Esther, Elizabeth and Frances Conway motored to Richmond Thursday Mr. and Mrs. Cal Boyd, Mr. and Mrs. William Boyd attended the funeral of a nephew, Frank Boyd, at Tipton Wednesday. . . :Ben Davis of Detroit, is spending a few days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Davis and family. .. .Mrs. John Beck and daughters, Bernlce and Charline, were guests of William' Homey and family Wednesday Mrs. Ernest Wilson has had as her guest for the last week, Mrs. Martin Pennington and daughter Thelma, of Anderson, Indiana. James Monroe succeeded James Madison as president of the United States one hundred years ago. George the Third was still king of England. THOUGHTS TO THINK ABOUT Remember well but forget easily; told on to all the good and let all evil pass away from you. He who knows least doubts most; at the same time he doubts not but a doubter dies from self-destruction. Destructive thought destroys mental vigor; constructive thought builds character, happiness and health. Bigotry is the faithful mother of many an unsound doctrine; it always takes care of its own. You csn always help yourself by letting the Want Ad columns of The Palladium help you. Mafce use of The Palladium Want Ads today. See Want Ad Page and read die classified ads of today's Palladium. OUT OF THE GLOOM .' 'any a Gloomy Countenance in Richmond Now Lighten With Happiness A bad back makes you gloomy. Can't be hsppy with continual backache. . The aches and pains of a bad back . ure frequently due to weak kidneys. Doan's Kidney pills are recommended for weak-kidneys. So Richmond citizens testify. Mrs. Sarah Piatt, 454 S. 13th St.. s Richmond, says: "My back hurt mi and was weak and lame. My kidneys ere Irregular in action, i had read a lot about Doan's Kidney Pills an J procured a box at Thlstlethwaite s Drug Stored This one box rid me of the trouble and I hayen't been bothered since." Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't pimply ask for a kidney remedy- get f'-oan's Kidney Pills the same that (Mrs. Piatt had. Foster-Milburn 'Co.. -.1'rops., Buffalo, N. Y. Adv.
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Dr. Alexis Carrel, the famous surgeon and scientist of the Rockefeller Institute, who will instruct the surgeons of the Medical Officers' Reserve Corps of the United States in the Carrel-Dakin method of treating wounds, which method is the great outstanding feature of the medical relief work of the European war. In the photograph Dr. Carrel is seen standing in one of the removable sections of a portable field hospital, one of the several such hospitals erectedd on the Rockefeller Institute lawn, New York City.
Survivor of German Flagship Tells of battle Off Jutland
THE HAGUE, Netherlands, July 30. Correspondence.) Scene on board the German flagship Lutzow during the Jutland naval battle when some on the newest and largest of the German battle cruisers were battered or sunk by Admiral Beatty's British squadron in June, 1916, are vividly described by P. Krug, one of the Lutzow's survivors in a pamphlet which has just been published here. It is believed to be the first detailed story of that great battle from the point of view of the German, sailor to reach the public eye. Torpedoed by a British warship early in the engagement theLutzow, which was the flagship of Admiral Hipper, .was hammered unmercifully by the big guns of the British vessels, and soon became a complete wreck, a "ship Of the dead," -as Krug describes her. According to his story twenty-seven German sailors were trapped in the Diesel dynamo room before the battle had been long in progress and remained there when th Lutzow, a disabled hulk was abandoned and sent to the bottom by a torpedo from a German destroyer. Two of these imprisoned men had been driven insane and were kept tied by their shipmates. Tells How Tables Turned. After describing the first part of the battle' and telling how the arrival of British battleships turned the tables on the Germans, Grug writes: "Suddenly the entire ship 13 roughly 6haken. The colossus heaves far over, and everything that is not fixed is upset. The first direct hit! The torpedo pierces the fore part of the ship. Its effects are terrible. Iron, wood, metal, parts of bodies, smashed ship's implements are all intermingled, and the electric light, by chance spared, continues to shine upon this sight. "Two decks lower, in the Diesel dynamo room, there is still life. Thtt compartment has not been hit. and 27 men in the prime of life have been spared, but the chamber is shut off from all others, for the water is rushing into all sections. They are doomed to death. Several 38-centimeter shells' squarely hit their mark, working terrible havoc. The first hit the wireless department. Nothing left but Ruins. "Of the twelve living men who a moment ago were seated before the apparatus, there is nothing more to be seen. Nothing is left but a smoking heap of ruins. The second shot again pierced the fore part of the ship. The entire fore part of the vessel, as far as the Diesel motor room was past saving. "Another broadside meant for the Lutzow fell short, but a torpedo-boat close by disappeared, leaving only a Resinol does stop itching When you have something the matter with your skin, you want Resinol. It almost always stops itching and burning at once, and quickly clears away eruption and irritation. And Resinol is no experiment your friends and neighbors have known about it foryears, and doctors prescribes constantly. Sold by all druggists.
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few odd pieces of wood and a smashed lifeboat drifting round. It is now half-past seven, and the hostile circl grows ever smaller. The Lutzow and the Seydlitz lie with their bows deep in the water; both are badly mauled. The fore part ofvthe Lutzow was in flames. Shells burst against the ship's side in rapid succession. A terrible eight is presented on board the Lutzow, and it needs iron nerves to look upon it coolly. "Hundreds have loest their lives, while many have lain for "hours in torture, and the tight is not yet over." The bow is now crushed in and entirely submerged. The four serews are al ready sticking half out of the water, so that the LutzOw can only make 8 to 10 knots an hour, as against the normal 32. Admiral Quits Lutzow. "The admiral decides to transfer to the Moltke. He gives order to turn and get away from the scene of the fight but the Lutzow has not gone a mile befpre she receives a broadside of 38-centimeter shells. The entire ship was filled with poisonous fums of. the shells, and anyone who failed to affix his gas-mask was doomed to be suffocated. "It was three-quarters of an hour before the lighting installation was restored. Then for the first time could the extent of the damage wrought by the slavo be seen. One of the shells had landed in the sick bay. Here there were three doctors and fifteen attendants besids 160 to 180 wounded. Of all these only four remained alive. These four were hurled into the next compartment by the air pressure; there they law unconscious. "The Lutzow was now a complete wreck. Corpses drifted past. From the bows up to the first 30-centimeter gun-turret the ship lay submerged. The other gun-turrets were completely American Chicle Company Ten minutes after every meal SUMMER TIES Beautiful New Patterns. The finest Silk Ties we ever offered at 50c a lid 65c ' LICHTENFELS In the Westcott
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Clash Between North and South Faction in China is Near
LONDON', July' 30. The outlook in China ia very serious and a complete rupture between the north and south seems inevitable, according to a despatch from Shanghai to the Times. Dr. Sen Yat Sen, who recently was reported to be leading the rebels near Swatow, has gone to Canton to organize a league of the southern and southwestern provinces. Proclamations refusing to recognize the government at Peking have been issued in Kwang-Tung, a southeastern province. disabled, with the guns sticking out in all directions. On deck lay the bodies of the sailors in their torn uniforms, in the midst of the empty shell cases. From the masts fluttered torn flags, twisted signal lines and pieces of wire of the wireless installation. Had not the lookout man and the three officers on the commander's bridgo given signs of life, the Lutzow would have truly resembled a ship of the dead. Below, on the battery deck and in the coal bunkers, there still lay innumerable wounded, but there was no longer a doctor to attend them. Bulkheads Give Way. "Night came on and hope was entertained of getting away without a further encounter. But at 3 o'clock in the night news of the approach of two British cruisers and five destroyers was received and just at that critical time the fore and middle bulkheads gave way. - ."Orders were given to quickly carry the wounded to the stern. Then the order rings out: 'All hands muster in division order abaft' A tumult arises on the lower deck, for everybody is now bent on saving his life. It is impossible in that short space of time to bring up all the wounded, for they are scattered everywhere. Eighteen men had the good fortune to be carried up, but all the re3t who could not walk or crawl had to be left behind. "The 27 men shut up in the Diesel dynamo chamber had heard the order through the speaking-tube, for many, mad with anguish, screamed through the tube for help, and it was learned that two of their number lay bound because they had become insane. Inspired by their sense of duty, these sealed-up men had continud to carry on their work in order to provide the ship with light. Those J-eft Were Doomed. "The torpedo-boats now quickly took of the crew of the Lutzow. and thosft left behind were doomed to death. It was resolved that no piece of the vessel should fall into the enemy's hands. An order was given and a torpedo cleft the waters. Just then seven men to be seen running like madmen round the rear-deck. Over-fatigued as they were, they had apparently dropped off to sleep and only just awakened. As the torpedo explodedd, the Lutzow's bow quickly dipper, and the stern rose until she stood on end. Then she heeled over and sank, forming a great whirlpool that carried everything within it fctto the depths. "When the roll was called it appeared that there were 1,003 survivors of the Lutzow; 597 men had perished in the battle. Jean L. Jaures, leader of the French socialist party, was assassinated on July 28, 1914. O. E. WATCH REPAIRING
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The wooden ship Flush, built four months ago at a Gulf of Mexico port and intended for submarine blockade running, has been inspected by the New York Chamber of Commerce and found wanting. The committee asserts that although the Flush hag made only one trip, from the Gulf of Mexico to New York, she is unfit for the purpose for which she was constructed The finding- of the Chamber of Commerce committee is considered a powerful argument for the Goejhals plan of steel ships instead of wooden ships.
MILTON, IND. Mrs. Wilbur Elwell jwill entertain the embroidery club Wednesday afternoon. The 500 club will meet Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Will Bragg with Mrs. Carrie Johnson as hostess Mesdames Blackburn and L. H. Warren, Elizabeth Warren, Rev. and Mrs. T. C. McCormick and family, Misses Nellie Jones and Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Jones and Mr. Frank Jones formed a party Friday to Ft. Benjamin Harrison Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Beesen were dinner guests with Mr. and Mrs. James Murphy south of town Friday evening. .. .J. C. Beck and family motored to Indianapolis Saturday to spend Sunday with relatives. Master William Coy, who has been visiting the Becks for two weeks returned to Lis home at Indianapolis. .. .Harry Roberts and party from Chicago who have been guests of Miss Sarah Roberts for a week left Saturday morning Olin Davis and Raymond Bryant are enjoying the sights of New York city Mr. and Mrs. Ed Wallace of Wabash who have been visiting-Milton relatives returned Thursday and took Mrs. Dayton Warren with them in tneir auto Mr. and Mrs. Linville Wallace went to Indianapolis Saturday to attend the funeral of Mr. Wallace's aunt Dr. Albertson and family mo
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tored to Arcadia Sunday to take Mrs. Kill, who has been visiting them to her home. Mrs. Albertson and children will remain for a two weeks' visit with her parents.
Masonic Calendar Members of the Loyal Chapter of the Eastern Star lodge, and their families will picnic at Glen Miller park, Wednesday afternoon, August 1. All members asked to bring filled baskets and go to the park for an afternoon of fun. Tuesday, July 31 Richmond Lodge No. 196 F. & A. M. Called meeting. The sailing ship, though war demands have brought it back into service to some extent, has almost passed. In 1915, there were only 205,000 tons of sailing ships registered from England and Ireland, against a maximum of over 4,000,000 tons registered in 1860. Bell-ans Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Onepackage proves it 25c at all druggists.. DIAMONDS MOUNTED
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FIRE MOTOR TRUCK STRUCK BY TRAIN
EDGE WATER PARK, N. J.. July 30. Richard Whitick, a fireman. killed and nearly 30 men and women injured here Saturday while fighting fire caused by the explosion of a gasoline tank motor truck when it was struck by a freight train. Three other firemen were severely burned. The burning fluid spread to a freight station and three email buildings, and fire companies from Burlington nearby were summoned. While fighting the flames a second explosion occured, killing Whlttlck and spreading burning oil over many other persons. Although there are larger reflecting telescopes abroad, the one on ML Wilson, Cal., with a mirror sixty inches in diameter, and a focal length of twenty-five , to 100 feet. Is one of the most perfecL A telescope at Birr Castle, Ireland, has a seventy-two inch mirror. jfhe Real "War Bread" must contain tnc entire wheat grain not the white flour center but every particle of gluten and mineral salts also the outer bran coat that is so useful in keeping the bowels healthy and active. Shredded Wheat Biscuit is the real "war bread" because it is 100 per cent, whole wheat prepared in a digestible form. Contains no yeast, baking powder, seasoning, or chemicals of any kind. Food conservation begins with Shredded Wheat Biscuit for breakfast and ends with Shredded Wheat Biscuit for supper. Delicious with sliced bana.ias, berries, or other fruits. Ia1e at Niagara Falls. N.Y. AUTLUBO THAT GOOD OIL" Made by the Moore Oil Co. A pure Penn. FILTERED Oil. f Not bleached with Sulphuric Acid.) For sale Hdw. Co., Irvln Reed & Sen, E. R. Oraver In 1 to 5 gal. lots. H.S.MALTBY Local Agent Phone 4772. BEST LINE OF 5c AND 10c WALL PAPER IN THE CITY DICKINSON WALL PAPER CO. 504 Main St Phone 2291 IS NATURA' For All Forms of Catarrh, and is worth the price as a Blood Purifier only. NATURA can be obtained through all reliable druggists, but always at the following progressive dealers in and around Richmond, Ind. Richmond. Ind. A. O. Luken & Co., Quigley Drug Stores. Conkey Drug Co. Cambridge City, Ind.- Dean House. Centervllle, Ind. C. B. Lundy. Hagerstown, Ind. P. M. Whitesell and F. H. Stonecipher. Manufactured by The Natura Drug Co. . ' Indianapolis, Ind. PATHE RECORDS Ross Drag: Store You Save """""N Furnished Complete
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