Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 23, 1925, Page 10

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PAGE TEN he Casper Daily Cridune LATE TORNADO DEVASTATION IS MONDAY, MARCH 23, 1925 TOLD IN PICTURES Just before tl mother and her he a them, snatched them from their places and cut open the front of the house ing the interior with its demotished furniture to open view from the str twister struck Murphysboro, Ill., where the ruins of this house are situated, a ldren were Without warning, the tornado bore down upon as with a knife, expos et. fully sleeping. at Murphysboro, LL, swept through the town, snatched off the roof tornado of of the building and piled the dead and injured in ene ae mre eT Ne ce “The efforts of hells and left IIL, one of the towns hardest hit by the twister. yreground snatched from their foundations and hurled far lifetime were sr 1 of death solid concre ashed to bits by a tornado which crushed in houses like so ind havoe in its wake. This picture, taken at Murphysboro, ives some concept of the tornado’s fury. Note the nd wide, PROGRAM FOR ANNUAL MEET surrounding pproximately 1,000. attain unto that life where| headquarters PORTER {I HIMGtLE SHOOTING HERE SERMON EXCERPTS Contributions from Ministers for Publication Under This Head Are Welcomed; Manuscripts Should Re Typewritten, Not Ba- ceeding 250 Words and Should Be in This Office Saturday. First Presbyterian, meena nore aeipase | Me fist. subjects of | Ila f church-going help t n Methodist Hagens | turned sume | th of 1924 will be | dre: ecr in | According wisdom too hare us monarch nd Kenwood Presb arles Guthrich, Hubert We TTEIPOTLEASE 5 ATTACKED » and no man man until pride ROBBER CACHE UNCOVERED is believed the: ght of the Sun of usting points 1, the treating of the soul through in this direc the higher Lenten season s certain of vic: and fn it the soul —————. a mile when the lghts of the shert government's Approximately manufactured Maine from M exaggerated the officers f Fer results tr doned truck, It Is believed that t! articles were the youths when they up out of great that if we ever blested- and attain the state accounted Commerce? y ceedings ip that direction were un- | dertaken there was a dearth of evidence to 5 S [indicate that ‘tormer' secretary ot || Sins Outlined | the navy Denby had a part in the , ; eh Ae ae, nero tions) except to “At Westminster Mr nerene closed his arg ment at noc The plan for divid- eve x urs of argument in order| LONDON, “March _23.—(United | by tomorrow afternoon | Press) —There are, after all, only the board when Mr. Pom-| Seven social sins in this wicked old nounced that government | World of ours, according to the Rev. Canon Frederic Lewis Donaldson of Westminster Abbey. sel would divide their side of the tatement to the court. Owen J Roberts, Government attorney, will That may make the millenium submit his argument this afternoon. | seem comparatively near, but the " St. Peierahirn | Letters Sent Back by Russ canon’s list of seven covers a consid- erable territory. Here it is: 1.—Politics without principles. 2.—Wealth without work. 3.—Pleasure without conscience, nowledge without character. 5.—Commerce and industry with- out morality, 6.—Selence without humanity. 7.—Worship without sacrifice. And of there, says Canon Donald- son, the passion for the accumula- tion of riches at all costs, preferably without earning them, is a disease BERLIN, March 23.—“Countr | and city unknown" was the notation on a number of letters recently re-| of the great mass of the nation. to the German postal au-| whatever articular form of rities in Berlin which were ad-| money-making the worthy clerics sed to “St. Petersburg, Russia.” may have had in mind, betiing on to the instructions of the hors races continues one of the soviet postal authorities, letters from | greatest indoor and outdoor pastimes Soviet Russia must be addressed | er iS Britons, Union of Soclalistic Soviet Repub cs’. Otherwise they will not be Se Loe eee ear onee eratarubire' |) (reba <Walker; an hae Laningees " |made the t frict F NEW YORK—Fi ihe y wegen Ppa With each Lorain Range we are giving Clark Jewel Gas Ranges A Big Ben Alarm Clock FREE Have your Lorain Range installed now off this spring and summer. 115 East First St. sTORMIICT GEN RELIES WN SUFFERING (Continued From Page One) will i rehabilitation and moves to protect the health of the sufferers and to guard against ep! demics Particular attent the water supply. Chlorine was sup- plied to many towns and well water was inspected and unsafe wells con- demned. sanita physborough on was pald to Dappert, assistant Ilnois neer, ed at Mur- wth his staff to take charge of sanitary work, He said that the water supply was not up to standard but that the department had the situation under control there as well as in other towns. Medical units constantly wy in specting all parts of the territoy prevent any outbreak of dise Danger of an epidemic tn Ind was said to be remote with the a rival of additional medical supplic including anti-tetanus serum and the advent of state saaitary officer: water in the Indiana area < being chlorinated. Dr. Herman N. Bundesen, Chic health commissioner, has arrived at Carbondale, the southern Mlinois lief center, to aid in the fight agair KO disease Bundesen id that the greatest ger was Infectious dis- —particularly typhoid fever. ef e fun I services were held Sunday for most of victims in five states, while pre: ers of all denominations asked for divine guidance in church services on the first Sunday since the dis- aster. A further check of casualty lis today brought a few changes, but did not materiflly :ffect the totals. the Deaths stood at $03 with 2,938 ir jured, or a total casualty count of 3, but slightly reduced from f ures tabluated by the Associated Press, the first day of the d Deaths by states were: Illinots 629; Indiana 109; Tenes: 33; Kentucky 18; Missouri 14. ‘ive additional deaths occurred at Mur physboro, bringing the identified dead there to 194, but relief workers estimated that twenty or more per- sons were incinerated. Murphysboro, chief sufferer from the fornado, buried nearly fift; of fts dead Sunday with services in the bandstand {n the public square. Other funerals were to be held tc a Most of the city’s homeless were living in tents and yesterday 5,000 persons were fed at public re- lef stations, The first shooting since the arrival of troops was re- ported when a negro was shot in the leg as the result of an altercation with a soldier. An unusual nun:ber of fires breaking out in the ruins has added to problems of relief. De Soto, the little village of 500 which was blown away, has finished burying {ts dead. The country cem- etery has fifty fresh mounds, with only rude wooden crosses carrying pencilled names as markers. Thirt of De Soto's 70 dead were children Some families have returned tq the village and are attempting to res tablish demolished homes but tik general opinion ts that the village >! will never be rebuilt Griffin, Indiana, where fifty per- {shed, today was cut off from all avenues excevt.a single railroad when flood waters of the Wabash In- undated all roads leading to the town. Governor Ed Jackson, who inspected the storm territory, ~as forced to drive through a foot of water in leaving the town. Rein- forced military lines held bai thousands of motorists seeking to visit the devastated quarters INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., March 23. —Rehabilitating southwestern In- diana, struck by a tornado last Wed- nesday which di ated Griffin and Owensville and destroyed the south- ern section of Princton, was contin- ued today despite the high waters of the Wabash and Black rivers which virtually {solated Griffin, The high waters inundated the lowlands about Griffin and covered the line of the Illinois Central rail- road. Workers today were using skiff Ir Time to Buy That Lorain Gas Range and be ready to enjoy the afternoons The “Magic Chef” Will Cook Your Meals for You Casper Gas Appliance Company, Inc, Phone 1500

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