Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 91, Ed. 1 Monday, March 12, 1917 Page: 3 of 10
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MONDAY, MARCH 12, 1017.,
GALVESTON TRIBUNE.
THREE
BAGDAD'S CAPTURE MARKS
ARE FOUND GUILTY
f
OF PLOTTING CRIME
A
years’ penal servitude.
Antiquity.
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SAILORS ARRIVE
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ON SWISS SOIL
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the Townshend expedition.
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Has Winter Left
EXPLAINS WHY DRY
KANSAS PROSPERS
You Miserable?
MAKES NET GAIN,
remedy that has done so much for Galveston people.
ULGL...
BASKET ball TONIGHT.
AVENUE B
14TH STREET
AVENUE M
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TURKS NOT WORRIED.
AVENUE K
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AVENUEL
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weakness’ of
bothered
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four or five boxes, which
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DOAN’S
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TARIFF COMMISSION.
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read
used
were
By Associated Press.
London, March 12.—Mrs. Alice Wheel-
had
for
Was So Helpless Couldn’t
Turn Over in Bed.
48 ai
History of City on the Tigris, Taken by British,
Beaches Back Into Remote
Tonight’s schedule of games in the
basket ball league at th Y. M. C. A.
follows:
First game—Ball high school vs. Y.
M. C. A. “Strong Arms.”
Second game—Y. M. C. A. “Hot Hands”
vs. “Texas Medics.”
Former Governor Says State’s
Well-being Is Due to
Prohibition.
R. H. BELL HAD
MADE OUT WILL
Mrs. Alice Wheeldon,HerDaugh-
ter and Stepson Are Con-
victed by London Jury.
Emaciated From Detention
German Camps, But Are
. in Fair Condition.
Gains Thirty Pounds On Tan-
lac and Now Works Every
Day.
WAS UNABLE TO WORK
FOR MANY MONTHS
Don’t try to work with your head all stuffed up. A tube of
genuine Kondon’s Catarrhal Jelly will make you clear as a bell.
50 million intelligent Americans have used Kondon’s for
cold - in - head or nasal catarrh. Some druggists offer you com-
plimentary trial cans. All druggists offer 25 cent tube with the
understanding that if the first tube does not do you a dollar’s
worth of good, you can get your quarter back from Kondon’s
Catarrhal Jelly, Minneapolis, Minn.
( \
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e
IKONDN
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‘g»
ing
that
on
Be Guided ByThese
Galveston Cases
8
1
Kidney Pills
At All Druggists, 50c a Box, Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., Mfrs.
tence, said he could imagine no worse
crime- than the one with which she was
charged." He told Mason that for the
jury’s’ recommendation he would have
imposed the same sentence on him as
he gave Mrs. Wheeldon. • ■
Regarding Mrs. Mason he said that
no doubt her position was largely due
to the wickedness of her mother.
Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, the suf-
frage leader, by permission of Judge
Low, went to the witness box to con-
trovert the statement' alleged to have
been made by Mrs. Wheeldon to, Booth
to the effect that the suffragettes had
spent the $15,000 in an attempt to pois-
on Premier Lloyd-George by driving
a poisoned nail .into his boot. Mrs.
Pankhurst declared that such a state-
ment was absolutely false in every
particular, adding: ,
“The Women’s Social and Political
Union regards the premier’s'life as of
the greatest value in the present grave
crisis and its members, would, sif nec-
essary, take risks themselyes to pro-
tect it from danger.” •
8 i
905
son, and the latter’s husband, Alfred
George Mason, were found guilty Sat-
urday of ‘ conspiracy to murder Pre-
mier Lloyd-George and Arthur Hen-
derson, member of the war council.
Miss Harriet Ann Wheeldon, another
daughter of Mrs. Wheeldon, who also
H
)
E
Ointment and Resinol Soap stop itching
and clear away eczema and similar
humors, so quickly and easily ?
Physicians have prescribed the Resinol treatment
for over 20 years. Every druggist sells Resinol
Ointment and Resinol Soap. For sample of each,
free,’write to Dept. 7-R, Resinol, Baltimore, Md.
procured at Schott Drug Co.
Doan's absolutely cured me, and
I have had no return of the
trouble.”
Skin trouble costs
many a man his job
No matter how efficient a man may
be, if he has an ugly skin-eruption,
there are positions in which he cnnot
be tolerated. He may know that it is
not in the least contagious, but other
people are afraid, they avoid him, and he
must make way for a man with a clear,
healthy skin. Why run this risk, when,
Resinol
was tried on the same charge was ac-
quitted.
Mrs. Wheeldon was sentenced to ten
years’ penal servitude. A sentence of
seven years was imposed upon Alfred
Mason, while his wife was given five
all counts—conspiring and soliciting to
murder by poison. ■
Mr. and Mrs. Mason were found
guilty of conspiracy, but the jury rec-
ommended the court’s mercy, because
of their youth.
Judge. Low, addressing Mrs. Wheel-
don after the imposition of the sen-
CLIMAX OF LONG CAMPAIGN
<
Esag
A P l 1
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a
my kidneys,
me off and
View Future With Calm Confidence,
Declares Enver Pasha.
By Associated Press.
London, March 12.—Enver Pasha, who
has just returned from Asia Minor to
Constantinople, has informed the Turk-
ish parliament that the military situa-
ion is better than at any time since
Turkey’s entrance into the war, ac-
cording to a Reuter dispatch from
'Constantinople by way of Amsterdam.
Enver Pasha is quoted as saying:
“We and our allies await with calm
confidence any offensive which the en-
emy may launch in the coming spring.
The safety of .the Turkish coast and the
Dardanelles is better assured than ever
before. On the Sinai front the situa-
tion is unchanged. On the Mesopota-
mian front we retired northward for
military reasons. For similar reasons
we have drawn in toward Kermanshah
on the Persian front. The situation on
the Caucasus front is unchanged. The
whole outlook justifies confidence in the
future. Thanks to the Almighty we
shall obtain the final victory.”
don, her daughter, Mrs. Winifred Ma- only twenty minutes.
Mrs. Wheeldon was found guilty on
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Harriet Wheeldon was discharged
from custody.
Judge Low in summing up the case
said that if the poison that figures
in the case had been required for dogs,
as had been claimed, it was unlikely
that such particular poisons as the
ones named would have been selected
in such large quantities and with such
secrecy and mystery. The jury was
out for consideration of its verdict for
Miss J. A. Coghlan, 1805 Ave.
K, says: “I had a very annoy-
“Along last spring I was taken down
with a bad spell of grippe. I got so
bad off I had to take to my bed, and I
was down for six weeks. I also had
rheumatism and suffered with my kid-
neys, and I was so nervous and full of
misery I couldn’t sleep, and many a
night I would sit up in a chair nearly
all night long.
“After I got down in bed I sent for
the doctor, but got no relief, as his
medicine didn’t seem to suit my case.
I lost my appetite and couldn’t even
keep milk and eggs on my stomach.
I was in bed six weeks, and never got
out at all. Along toward the last I got
so weak I couldn’t even turn over in
bed. To tell you the truth, I was a
sick man, and thought I was going to
die. Finally the doctors told me I
would have to go to the hospital, so I
closed up my business and made my
will for I couldn’t see much chance of
getting well.
“Now this is just tire shape I was in
when I decided to try Tanlac, and I sent
my daughter for the first three bot-
tles. Now, just think of it, that three
bottles of Tanlac got me up and able
to work, and you can believe me or
not, but in just thirty days after I
started on it, I had gained thirty
pounds in weight, which is an average
of one pound a day.
“Now, when a medicine will do
things like that, I think the people
ought to know about it, and I want to
say right now that I will take pleas-,
ure in telling anybody what Tanlac has
done fpr me, because I feel it my duty
to let it be known. Not only that, but
anything I can do for you people, I
will feel a pleasure in doing it, for
'l ' your medicine has got me up and out
again. I am working regularly every
day, making $4.00. a day as a marble
setter and making a good living for
my family, after I hadn’t been able to
strike a lick all summer.
“Altogether I have taken six bottles,
but I was able to walk three miles
after finishing, my third bottle. I guess
a good many people will hear about
my case, and if they don’t believe what
they read in the papers, just tell them
to come and see me, and I will be
glad to tell them all about it.”
The above remarkable statement was
made by Roan H.. Bell, a well-known
marble setter, who lives at 925 Hal-
cyon avenue, Waverly place, Nashville,
Tenn., and is highly respected by all
who know him.
Tanlac is sold in Galveston by Schott
Drug Co., and Star Drug Store, under
the personal direction of the special
Tanlac /representative.— (Adv.)
Mrs. J. F. Andreason, 1208 Ave.
L, says: “Due to exposure, some
years ago I contracted a serious
kidney disorder. My head ached
and I was so dizzy I could hardly
stand. My back was as sore
as a boil and I couldn’t move
without almost screaming. I was
in bed a week before I called in
a doctor. He claimed I would
(km-"‛N -T
American Merchant Marine Ahead 351,-
114 Tons Through Transfers.
By Associated Press.
Washington, March 12,—The Ameri-
can merchant marine has made a net
gain of 351,114 gross tons through
transfers of registry since the Euro-
pean war began, although on the same
account it has sustained a net loss
of 201 vessels. Figures made public
today by the department of commerce
show that ships transferred to the
American flag numbered 204 of 664,-
92’5 tons. Vessels transferred to for-
eign flags numbered 405, but their
average size was less than one-fourth
that of ships gained. Most of the.
American gains came from Gr^at Brit-
ain and Germany.
C. Lorenz, fireman, No. 4 fire
house, residing at 1115 Avenue
B, says: “At different times my
back troubled me a great deal.
When I bent over, the pains were
worse, and it often took me a
few minutes to straighten up. I
became sor® and lame just over
my hips. Doan’s Kidney Pills
were recommended to me, and
from my first trial of them until
now I have always kept them on
hand. I have always received
great benefit from them.”
Prof. Taussig of Harvard to be Chair-
man of Body.
By Associated Press.
Washington. March 12.—Professor
Frank W. Taussig of Harvard has been
selected by President Wilson as chair-
man of the new tariff commission of
six members. Daniel C. Roper, Demo-
crat, of South Carolina, former first as-
sistant Postmaster general, and former
Representative William Kent, Republi-
can, of .California, are other probable
members. Among those under consid-
eration is Miss Ida Tarbell, a writer.
caught cold, the result was an at-
tack of backache. I used two
boxes of Doan’s Kidney Pills,
which I got at Schott’s Drug-
store, and I had so much relief,
that I didn’t feel it necessary to
continue taking them.”
Over three years later Miss
Coghlan said: “I can always say
a good word for Doan’s Kidney
Pills, as they have done, so much
for me. I gladly confirm the en-
dorsement I gave them before.”
Muggins—“What I dislike about
Wiseguy is that he never sympathizes
with the under dog.” Buggins—“Oh,
yes he does, when he has a straight tip
that the under dog isn’t going to stay
there.”
Charles H. Swenson Jr., 624
Ave. 1, says: “Some time, ago
one of my family gave a recom-
mendation for Doan’s Kidney
Pills as having cured one of us.
I was the one who took Doan’s
Kidney . Pills, and I surely got
lasting benefit. I used them for
my back. A dull ache had set-
tled across my kidneys and I had
pains through my loins. Doan’s
Kidney Pills gave me such great
benefit that I haven’t' had occa-
sion to take them for a long time.
I heartily confirm all that has
been' said heretofore praising
Doan’s Kidney Pills."
For three months General Sir Percy
Lake, the relief commander, fought his
, way up the Tigris, and was within
' eight miles of his besieged comrades
when on April 13, 1916, General Towns-
hend, his food supply exhausted, was
compelled to surrender. The British
abandoned the offensive for several
months and operations on a major
scale did not occur until December,
1916, when an advance on Kut-El-
Amara was made from the Babylonian
plains, while a second force again
moved up the Tigris. General Freder-
ick Stanley Maude, in command of the
new campaign, the successful culmi-
nation of which is announced, was un-
officially reported to have '120,000 men.
He Finds aKondon’s” on the Job.
years. Every time I
Ex-Gov. George H. Hodges of Kansas,
addressed a large crowd of Galveston-
ians yesterday afternoon in Rosenberg
hall, taking for his theme, “How Pro-
hibition Ruined Knasas.” He was intro-
duced by Rev. Aatticus Webb of’ Fort
Worth, as the first Democrat ever
elected to the governorship in Kansas
on a Democratic ticket, a state’s right
Democrat, and a rockribbed Democrat;
in addition to thfs he was interested
in a number of lumber yards, several
newspapers and a farm.
Gov. Hodges began his address by
stating that what he had to tell about
his home state was not gathered by
mail or hearsay, but he had been able,
because of his close contact with
state affairs, to learn the truth at
first hand. He said that much had been
said and printed about Kansas, the'
state of long-haired men and short-
haired women, but he desired to pay
his respects to a pamphlet which had
been widely circulated by the whiskey
men, and which contained a mass of
stuff that could be characterized by
no milder1 title that that of lies. (
After calling attention to the “fact
that the women in Kansas had the right
to vote as did the men" he prohpesied
that when Texas gave the right of
suffrage to the women, it would sound
the death knell of the saloon, and then
he began to point out the misstate-
ments of the pamphlet he held in his
hand. That prohibition did not pro-
hibit, the speaker did not deny, but
he was positive that the prohibition
laws of Kansas were enforced as fully
as were any other laws on the statute
books; this much he could say, that
while the per capita consumption of
booze throughout the United States
cost $28, in Kansas it cost the people
of that state $1.12 per capital. If the
assertion was true, that as much or
more liquor was sold in dry territory
as in wet, why in the world did a
prominent brewer send a check for
$100,000 to Texas a Short time ago to
keep the state in the wet column.
Louisiana and Texas were the only
two states in the solid South that tol-
erated the’ open saloon and while he
desired to make no invidious compari-
sons, he pointed out that Louisiana
had a bonded indebtedness of $11,000,-
000 and Texas one of $4,200,000,,while
Kansas but recently burned its last
bond of $159,000 and scattered its ashes
to the four winds of heaven. He ap-
pealed to business men to say whether
or not prohibition was a good thing
for any community. He told how the
people of his state had worked from
under a load of debt until today they
they had more than $300,000,000 in
bank deposits. “In fact,” said he, “the
state from which I came is the richest
state in the world, a state where there
is one automobile for every thirteen
people.”
He alluded to the gift of Kansas of
two shiploads of flour to the starving
people of Belgium and how he, while
governor, had offered to help Missouri
make up the cargo of one ship for the
same purpose, and Missouri was al-
ways boasting of its superiority over
Kansas. He alluded to a statement
in the pamphlet to the effect that
Kansas had more people in the peniten-
tiary to the population than any of the
wet states. “This is true,” said the
speaker, “but please bear in mind
that the United States has located two
national prisons in the sate of Kan-
sas and these instiutions are filled
with law violators from the wet states,
they are not the product of Kansas;
but Kansas does put people in the pen-
itentiary and when a law is violated,
we believe that the punishment should
have to be operated on,
wouldn’t submit. I finall
of Doan’s Kidney Pills and
A RE you dull, tired, achy all over, bothered with a bad back? Do
Ah you feel all out of sorts? Do you lack the energy you need for
the day’s work? Don’t worry so much about it! This is a com-
mon condition in March. So. many of us neglect our exercise in win-
ter, eat too heavily, indulge our desires too much, and get slow, lazy
and half-efficient. Then, with the organs working badly, comes a
chill, a cold or a grip attack and it weakens the kidneys. To get
started right again, help the kidneys. Use Doan’s Kidney Pills, the
C
3-
02222
object was the shatteding of the great
German dream of dominion in the Near
East. The realization of this dream
was based on the construction of the
Berlin-Constantinople-Bagdad railway,
and by the seizure of Bagdad the Brit-
ish hoped to prevent the completion
of this road, at least by German hands,
and strike a shattering blow at Ger-
man prestige in that section of the
world.
General Townshend with a force of
about 40,000 at first pushed forward
with amazing speed. Early in June,
1915, he captured Kut-El-Amara,
about 250 miles from the mouth of the
Tigris, and about 100 miles from Bag-
dad. On the 22nd of November he
reached Ctesiphon, 20 miles from his
goal, where he was met by an over-
whelming force of Ottomans. His wa-
ter supply gave out and he was forced
to retreat.
Fighting a continuous rear guard
engagement, the British troops re-
gained Kut-El-Amara op Dec. 5. Here
General Townshend" determined to
make a stand with a portion of his
forces while the remainder continued
to fall back along the Tigris in order
to join the relief army that was hur-
riedly dispatched from France and
India.
Thirty thousand Indian troops and
two Anglo-Indian divisions,, which had
been fighting in France, formed the re-
lief corps that joined the remnants of
Mrs. John McYoung, 1213 14th
St., says: “For some years, I
have been using Doan’s Kidney
Pills at any sign of backache or
disordered kidneys. For a long
time I had been subject to catches
across my back, which came on
suddenly, seemingly without
'cause. At such times, it was very
painful for me to bend or bring
my back into use for any pur-
pose. Whenever my back has
been this way, my housework has
been left undone. Since using
Doan’s Kidney. Pills some two
years ago, I have never had such
an attack. They cured me per-
manently.”
n -__.__ ....
I fiEtiery Picture
TelJs^a^Story "
Mrs. E. B. Matthews, 1310 Ave-
nue M, says: “I had been suffer-
ing from kidney disease for a
long time. I had chills and at
times was very dizzy. I also had
such severe headaches that I was
sick all over. I suffered much
from pains in my back and sides
and the kidney action was irreg-
ular. My whole system was > all
run down. Doan’s Kidney Pills,
which I got at Schott’s Drugstore,
left me without a sign of kid-
ney disease.” (Statement given.
March 7, 1907.)
On June 16, 1915, Mrs. Mat-
thews said: "I have never had
occasion to change my good opin-
ion of Doan’s Kidney'Pills.”
/ V *
39
follow. We do not take the life of
any man because he has killed another,
but we do see that he is punished.
When a bootlegger has violated our
prohibitordy laws the second time, he
goes to the penitentiary and there is
no escape. Let me add, that 78 per
cent of the crime committed in this
nation is traceable to booze and this
much Kansas is escaping.”
Mr. Hodges claimed that Kansas
had the best system • of dirt roads in
the entire country, “and,'” said he, “we
built them without a bonded indebted-
ness and we keep them in perfect con-
dition; We spent $15,000,000 on our
schools last year and $2,000,000 . on
booze, while Texas spent $$,000,000 for
booze, enough money to run the state
government for eight years. In 1914
we had 800 paupers in Kansas, today
there ar© nineteen counties in the state
that have no poor farms and thirty-
two counties with poor farms but no
occupants; there are but ten pauper
children in the state of Kansas, while
in Texas there are thousands; there
is but two per cent of illiterates in
Kansas, the best showing of any state
in the nation. We have not called a
grand jury in I don’t know how long
and we should think that something
terrible was taking place if this body
was called upon to perform its func-
tions.” *
The speaker pointed out, that every
dollar that was spent for booze was
taken from some ligitimate line of bus-
iness and that if a town or a commu-
nity with the open saloon was pros-
perous, it was in spite of the saloon,
but most communities were suffering
depression because the saloon was
drinking its life blood and making pau-
pers, criminals and insane to constitute
a yet heavier tax upon the people and
the business men of the country were
awaking to the fact that the so-called
revenue received from the liquor traf-
fic by no means covered the tremend-
ous cost of the police, the courts, the
asylums and the poor houses for which
liquor was responsible.
Following the ex-governor, Rev. At-
ticus Webb called attention to condi-
tilons in Texas which the antisaloon
league was endeavoring to make bet-
ter; he drew several comparisons be-
tween wet and dry columns in the
state and showed how prosperity had
followed the voting out of the saloon.
Both addresses were frequently ap-
plauded.
By Associated Press.
New York, March 12.—The capture of
Bagdad by the British marks the cli-
max to one of the most dramatic and
picturesque phases of the war. The
city which has fallen to British arms
links the present to a past so distant
that it is semifabulous. The known
history of Bagdad reaches back for
more than four thousand years to the
shadowy times of King Nebuchadnez-
zar ©f Bayion,* a quay built by the
scriptural monarch still existing, sub-
merged, in the Tigris. Within its pre-
cincits also there still stands the tombs
of the Jewish prophets Joshua, Ezra
and Ezekiel and the well of Daniel.
Long after the Babylonian dynasty
had ceased to be more than a memory,
Bagdad rose to splendor as the artistic,
literary, scientific and religious capital
of the world. The heart of the great
island empire of the caliphs for hun-
dreds of years, it was known through-
out the world as “the glorious city”
.and was the scene of the fantastic ex-
ploits of Haroun Al-Rashid, the poten-
tate whose magnificance is immortal-
ized in the Arabian Nights. .
In 1800 B. C., Bagdad was credited
with a population of 2,000,000, .and ws
easily the . first city in the world in
wealth and commerce. With the fall of
the caliphs before the Turkish sultans
the decline of Bagdad commenced. It
was successively the prey of Turks,
Mongrels, Tartars and Persians, but
it was mot until 1638 that the city be-
came definitely a part of the Turkish
empire. Its ancient importance was
largely due to the fact that it stood at
the center of the lines of communicas
tion between India and Persia and the
west, but the opening of new routes
by way of Trebizond and through Ar-
menia diverted its trade and was a
vital factor in its decline.
The British campaign against Bagdad
was opened early in 1915 when an
Anglo-Indian force under Major Gen-
eral Charles Vere Ferrers Townshend
was landed: at the head of the Persian
Gulf and moved rapidly up the Tigris.
The primary object of the expedition
was to secure the valuable oil wells
in the region at the mouth of the Ti-
gris, but the ultimate and far greater
By Associated Press.
Zurich, Switzerland, Sunday, March
11-—Via Paris, March 12.—Laden with
cigars, cigarettes and food showered
upon them by the hospitable Swiss, 59
of the now historic Yarrowdale pris-
oners arrived in Zurich today. They
had arrived at the German frontier at
Lindau yesterday after a continuous
trip of 52 hours from the prison camp
at Brandenburg.
The sailors, although emaciated
from their imprisonment and serious
lack of food since their arrival in Ger-
many on Dec. 31, are in fair condition.
The party was met here by United
States Consul General Keene, who
asked them not to forget that they
were Americans and not to bring dis-
credit on America by an understand-
able temptation to “kick over the
traces.”
The men were distributed among
several hotels until instructions shall
have arrived from Washington. Their
personal effects were lost when their
ships were sunk and their wardrobes
have been only partially replaced by
makeshifts which render them for the
present a decidedly motley crew.
Nevertheless, their stories were told
not in a tone of complaint, but in a
philosophical way.
The'sailors said that they were con-
vinced that the raider which sank
their vessel was the “Ritz, of Bremen'’’
They describe her as a new vessel of
about 3,000 tons, capable of 18" knots,
equipped with one funnel, two masts,
one false funnel, four torpedo tubes,
seven rapid-firing guns and a wheel-
house. which was hidden by the sides
of the ship. The funnels had a device
by which the stripes could be changed
at will and the ship’s .doors were so
constructed as', to cut off all light
when they were open. The ship’s
sides were so Constructed that por-
tions of them could be automatically
dropped and raised. •
The impression that the boat was
new and built for raiding purposes
was heightened by the fact that she
was equipped with steel cells below
and, although looking like - an old
tramp, was really an armored cruiser.
The sailors said that the Yarrow-
dale, although ordinarily capable of
ten knots, had to make 14 at times to
escape capture. She was carefully
mined so that she could be destroyed
at a moment’s notice.
———————
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 91, Ed. 1 Monday, March 12, 1917, newspaper, March 12, 1917; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1481639/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.