Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 8, 1917, Page 8

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FOUR AMERICANS S.000 PRO BY wana KILLED BY BOMB RAIS OF ENEMY N WEST FRONT Report Is Confirmed as a Deliberate Attempt to Wreck Hospital; Many Wounded in Brutal and Uncivilized Attack. By William Phillip Simms (United Press Correspondent) SCENE OF BOMBARDED Amer- ican hospitals, France, Sept. 8. Four Americans were killed when German deliberately bombed American hospitals here yesterday. The death list: First Lieutenant William T. Fitz airmen simmons, Kansas City, adjutant to} commander of Harvard hospital Private Leslie G. Woods, Streat- 2 meeting of the or, Hllinois. Rudolph Rubino, Jr., New City. Oscar Letugo, Boston In addition three first lieuten- ants were wounded as well as six privates and one nurse. A visit to the scene today show- ed the destruction to have been the result of a deliberate attempt York to wreck the hospitals, another |‘ large bomb aimed at the Chicago hospital falling nearby but not ex- ploding. : ciate AMERIGAN RED GROSS WILL LOOK AFTER MEN CAPTURED BY GERMANS y WASHINGTON, Sept. 8.-—Ameri- eans captured and held in German Prison camps are to be dooked after by the Amer n Red Cross. Already a Prisoners’ Relief Committee has been organized, under supervision of Ellis L. Dresel, of the American Lega- tion at Berne, Switzerland, The German policy of giving pris- oners poor and sc y rations is to be counteracted by shipping food parcels to American prisoners. making sure the Americans get the aid intended for them. These packages will contain ten pounds of meat, « quantity of butter, jam, coffee or ten, salt, rice and dried food. The parcels will sent three times. in.a fortnight Arra ents also have bee permittir clothing, money and letters from the families in this country of men taken prisgnera. paeomncn as ahaa ae UATH MAN IS SLUGGED AND ROBBED IN CHEYENNE “n made CHEYENNE, Sept. 8.—His cloth vem smeared with blood, Edward Walsh, an enlisted man from Fort Rucsell, was arrested by Deputy Sher- Wf Ed. Schoel and placed in the county jail to face charges of highway robber¥! it beine alleged that Walsh assaulted and robbed George Monroe, a_ visitor in Chevenne from Salt Lake City, on Carey avenue within a stone’s throw of the county jail. Walsh was urrested near the site of the excavation for the new c'ty and tounty building | A Bounteous Stream of Profits Fi ok We ahi } i? bly | Regular services Each will con. | tain a post card, to be signed as a re-| ceipt and returned, as a means of! “SETS PRECEDENT THOT HELPFUL IN THE FUTURE By H. C. HAMILTON (United Press Staff Correspondent) NEW YORK, Sept. 8.—In fining John J. McGraw an additional $1,000 for allowing an attack ‘bn President John K. Tenor to be printed as com- ing from him, the National League set a precedent here that it will find to be extremely helpful to it in the fu- ture. By showing a backbone and a desire to begin quashing all attacks on administration of the league the di- rectors will find it much easier to curb outbursts in the future. Tacked on to the bottom of the lengthy statement in which the direc- tors answered the request of the New York chapter of the Baseball Writers’ Association of Amer was a warn- jing to managers and other employes jof the league that future occurrences jin which the head of the league or the leagues is made the victim of an at suspen for the rest of the on will be a minimum punishment \'There is at least one manager in the National League, and eral players who never bave had any hesitancy in} |showing some contempt for the ay |things have been done in the league |They doubtle vill be curbed. The edict absolved the bhseball j writers from any blame in connection wi e episode that first resulted in directors and what amou 1 to a formal apology from McC He declared he did not make any such statements as those attributed to him, and left the writ- ers to hold the sack. The incident was reopened at the request of the writers, and, while the last decision, admits it aws not prov- en McGraw actually attacked the president with the words attributed to him, he was fined and reprimanded for having allowed the interview to jbe printed when it would have been feasy for him to suppress it C= a fc) | | At the Churches o-— - _- - ° Services at St. Mark's Church Rev. R. B. W. Hutt, Rector Holy communion, 8 a. m.; morning prayer, 10:30 a. m.; Sunday school, 12 noon; 5 o'clock. raw. evening prayer, Methodist Episcopal Church Rev. J. J. Giblin, Minister will be held to. morrow; Sunday school, 10 a. m. The pastor will preach at both the morning and evening services.- Morn- ing sermon topic, ‘‘Co-Workers With God;” hour of worship, 11 o'clock. The evening service will be the last of the present conference year and un appropriate subject will be dis- jeussed. Special selections by the large chorus choir will be rendered ‘for both occasions. You are most jcordially invited to worship with us. Strangers always made welcome here. ‘Come and see. First Presbyterian Church Rev. W. H. Bradley, Pastor At the Presbyterian church tomor- row the pastor’s morning subject will be, “Giving One’s Self,” and the eve- ning topic, “Living by the Day.”- The choir is taking up its work for the fall and winter and in the morning will sing Schnecker’s “Sing Alleluia Forth,” rendering in the evening Van Sickle’s “All Hail Immanuel.” At the morning ce Mrs. Bretschnei r will si vs “Come Unto * wh Thomas will sing Ds mond “Just f duy” evening. A cordial invitation. an friendly welcome extended to all = SS Baptist Church The pastor will preach in the mor- ning at-10 o'clock on the subject, “God's Stamp Upon Our Lives and Our Work,” and in the evening at at 8 oclock 4 special sermon to young people in view of the opening of the heol year, Sunday school is held at 10 o'clock a. m. You are invited to worship with us. Strangers espec- jelly are invited to come and get ac- Ew 5.M.COOK Prect TATTLE SALES Maly : . x \ . Miss f owing Through the Arch of - 1 ion Co. TONIGHT —_, 10c and 15c The land of romance and mystery authentically depicted: in “ALADIN FROM BRANDON” featuring | <a Edith Storey ALSO VITAGRAPH COMEDY Usual Dime Dance . | Creek dome, near Lusk, and is busy! | having material hauled out to its | property. By the fifteenth of this month one rig will be a work pound- | ing its way down to the oil sands, while they have two other rigs in tran- sit. There will be no let-up in their work all winter unless some unfor-! seen obstacle intervenes to interfere with the prosecution of their opera-| tions. | This company has under lease 5,-} (Continued from Page 4) jspeaks in glowing terms of what he saw there. “I was only partly pre- pared for what I saw,” said Mr. Bag- ley, “and have no hesitancy in saying that I consider Wyoming the ripest, biggest, best investing field in the United States today. They have only 800 acres immediately adjoining the begun to realize in New York what|Norbeck-Nicholson boldings on the opportunities the western’ oils present/east, the furthest point being about |for profit-making, and I expect to | 36 miles north of Lusk and the near-| see many millions released for new)est point 32 or 33 miles distant from | work and for the absorption of aroces | tae oil metropolis of Niobrara county. | in excellently managed companies} | with splendid prospects now being) Manhattan Is Organized traded in nearer home, but which the} The Manhattan Oil company has New Yorkers have so far ignored. |been formed in Casper, with Roy Wy- | |The trip to the field was ha country | Tea president, to purchase the jone needs to get into such a country | Tvaruzek tract in Sections 31 and 6,! to appreciate the resources of this land of ours. It is going to be my! | business for a long time to come to jhelp the East to realize the greatness jof Wyoming oils.” on the eastern side of the Big Muddy. | The property adjoins the section on | which the Pathfinder has a well near-| jing the Wall Creek sands. The Glen-) rock Petroleum has a producer within | a few feet of its line. | | Acquires New Holdings N. Rosenbaum, president of the Knickerbocker --Wyoming -Qil< eom- pany, has issued the following state- ment in Chi o: “We have contract- ed for mately 6,580 acres of etl lands in Taylor and Adair coun- jues, Kentucky; 820 acres in the | Lusk, Wyoming, field, and 40 acres lin the alt Creek, Wyoming, field, which adjoin production. With the acquisition of the above property the }company -has over 20,000 acres of a oil land in Wyoming, Kentucky and\ Kansas. The new property was ac- quired without the issue of further! capital stock or other securities.” a Will Drill at Lusk The»Clark Producing and Refining ;fompany, principal office at Dead- wod, S. D., is about to commence ac- tive operations on the Old Woman. & Hall Well Started The Midwest Refining company has moved two rigs on the Hall Oil com- pany’s leases on Pilot Butte field iand is starting two of the six wells to be drilled at once. A large stor- age tank is 1 ly completed and sev- TANT AM CI appro! inmate SATU “The Law of Compensation” to take a step which may lead that there is something afoot, sees herse’ the f going through precipice from which she has bi to her husband and child as t her life. & Teh re lf S| a ee ee esmanship - Tonight mt | Norma Talmadge ,, | “The Law of |. . Compensation” wife chafes at the narrow confines of the home, and is about and tell her the story of her mother's lite. ie strangely paratee to those in the daughter’s own lifs, and shé caused by her mother’s misstep. | ———SUND “Quick, Dan, He’s coming; shoot and don’t miss.” Five acts of thrill- : ing photo play, dealing with life in New York’s Underworld, with MARY MILES MINTER The exquisite little star supported by that talented actor Thos. J. Carrigan in ‘Somewhere in America’ NEW IRIS ATTRACTIONS TOMORROW A Paramount Production = “The Warrens wrote the story and it was fame. Power for pumping is being installed and will be connected with the wells. Eleven producing wells are located on the property now controlled by the Glenrock Oil company and upon com- pletion of six more wells the product of the field will be greatly increased. Everything is being made ready for! From :-HOLMES eral smaller ones are being erected. | Blanche Sweet 10c and 15c the star of such signal Paramount success as of Virginia” appears In “The Silent Partner” A gripping drama of loyalty and business. Ed- ward Golden, the author of many successes, made with the Lasky Temple Auditorium the pipe line to be constructed in the field this fall. FOR RENT—7-room_modern house, unfurnished, near High school; room furnished house on back of ‘lot. Will lease for year. Ph. 770. 9-8-2t* FOR SALE—Victrola, almost new. Easy terms. Ph, 754-W. 9-8-1t* =— - HOMES - to BATHROOM SUPPLIES SUIT CASES OF ALL KINDS COOKING THE UTENSILS HOLMES HARDWARE COMPANY HEATING STOVES AND RANGES Phone 601 Phone 60! US RAY RDAY— ' * tells a double story. A young 4 ta disaster. Her father suspects “ and hurries to visit his daughter The incidents are distressing mishaps which were At the close she realizes the een saved, and gladiy turns back ‘he really important interests in ods RS = A Ant 8 sa ASAT L:-YRIC THEATRE 4&4 TAL q LOR COM : REELS -

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