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Socata Sp ean ASE cna on A ect Be oie Atha RE Rast ta a at ME AS THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE ae FIRST SHIP IS [ D0 MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 1915 QLD OSLERZE AGED BY |""-"WoRE EET, CONFINING THEM IN Hed [By Associated Presn.} which has ‘been under AMSTERDAM, Aug 3.—Threats|for the past several baentie, jot coming confiscation of the con-) completed last Thursday and ¢ jtents of German wardrobes, in order/ed with the Newcastle Exchang: Victorious Allies FACE FLIES Be aa e | | Smash on to Aisne JAKES SLUMP ON sess: wo | 'Chero Jeannette, an Austrian Tyrol, | and brother of Joe Jeannette, of Kem- (Continued From Page 1) | HEAVIER SUPPLY spondent says that the German withdrawal on the Avre ex-| = merer, spent several days in Kem- merer recently, having returned from| PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 5.—With «to collect 1,000,000 civilian suits for! line was built by the Nebraska | tended to Fontaine-Sous-Montdidier and Menail-St. Georges, |[qaho Furni 4 et re Seba laho Furnishes Bull two miles west of Montdidier. The enemy is abandoning the South’: Onaliae ke AE ; Italy, after spending a year in Si-/hearty God-speed from President and | war Workers are the subject of satire) ephone company and is owned ; beria as a Russian prisoner. Jean-|Mrs. Wilson, the cargo steamer in many newspapers in Berlin and/by them and the Northern Wyo. meee hk tas pore er the LeBaree Quistconck, the first ship built at the | elsewhere. i Fy | Telephone company. oe e z t jLive Stoc'! ‘o., and is more than|Hog Island yards, was successfully) The Vorwaerts chuckles over the| Connections were immediate), hele eh peg of the river south of Aubvillers. Our line Feccdinstaad i Breading glad to be thousands of miles from! launched here Phis afternoti |possibility that yon Hertling may |tablished between egeastic The Germans are engaging in three retirements, one in- Stock on Increase voluntary and two voluntary. They are retreating slowly and orderly. NEWCASTLE, Wyo., Au, The new copper telephone ea ial es. the Siberian prison camps. | Mrs. Wilson, with the President|have to appear at court in patched) points in the Black Hills and ¢ Like all other Tyroleans, Jeannette |standing beside her, christened the pants and that von Kuehlmann may) ward. aa pones 1S |had no love or sympathy for Austria,/ship. Nearly 30,000 persons stand-|arrive in the peace conference with | ll SOUTH OMAHA, Aug. 5.—Idaho but, -being under dominion of ‘the/ing in a boiling sun, wildly cheered. | holed elbows. One humorist suggests | a x Tee Ey, is contributing the bulk of the range pac niiecit + Magaitigs ie ba sbmpeled The President made no speech, but | that, to pets yeaah 9 ae bere over} te0 ° * sheep arriving for market, and ow-|t0 serve in the army. He was in the|responding to the crowd’s urgent ap-) >? years of age be ordered to remain’ Destruction Continues in Wake ling. O° bSeRi Seek ¢ different|battle of the Moravian Lakes where|peal, he waved his hat and shouted;|in bed until 18 months after the war. ie ceipts a ifferent |?" Pp } 7 - |markets this week and a very dull Hindenburg made a reputation which|“Good luck to you!” Mts. Wilson Another recommends widespread cul-| of Retirement on Vesle Front Eastern drescdTamiy market, pack stblshed him a the ditator of Ger-amingly repeated this sentient, had of ers have been able to force a decline|many- In that battle, says Jeannette,| The Presidential party returned to Pet 4 ae _ WITH THE FRENCH ARMY AFIELD, Aug. 5.—German)| of $1.25 per cwt. from last week's|/Seven out of every eight men in his/ Washington after remaining in the| feet. In Munich, it s reported, 13,-) resistance is stiffen‘ng all along the Vesle river. The Germans close on lambs for slaughter. Orders Tegiment were killed, and the samejyard less than 30 minutes. {000 complete suits have been given) ase enmloying heavy artillery freely to harrass the Allies. They/for feeding and breeding stock are fatality ratio prevailed in many other! 5 / jaeaeneuay only’ 11,500 were ide-| otly disputed the French crossing at Muizon. jeoming in daily, and prices are hold-|Te¢iments. | | oe a ‘ 4 * Cnt fighting occurred at Vauter farm and station, but ing up remarkably well for this early| ane en, papery i cor CRACKSMEN HIT Sear aie actin ee ete the Germans were unable to recapture them. The Germans|in the season. While values may/¢red with marshes, and it is a matter 1 its | mined and blew up La Grange tacks north of the Vesle. |work to a somewhat lower level as of history that large bodies of men COME ON SCENE are made about the number of suits i Fer) i + ired from the metropolis, eight The French heavily shelled large G . the season advances, everything indi-| Were driven into the marshes where \require i 5 near St. Thierry pce adi ie Rhein ces S cates to a broad demand for killers they sank out of sight. Jeannette CHEYENNE, Wyo., Aug. 6.—An | les More. than was demanded from | n , i. Munich, whereas Berlin is only four land feeders as the Government has|Says that when the tide of battle was attempt was made to blow the safe/.. | * | placed a large order for pork and beef | #oing against the Austrians, they had|#t the office of the Sanitary Home times the size of Banish: 9 I Nears hence and it is bound to keep all other com-| the alternative of being driven into | Laundry between 12 and 1 o'clock Lieutenant Eddie Rickenbacker, famous American ace and for- tse * \the srtat rs +n»{|in the morning, but the robbers were} With noothe r tool than an old, ie bee neat lambs are quotable) poe eR to certain death of being |srustrated in their plans by the ear-|knife or a piece of broker glass, the 2 F * ly_arrival of police. natives of Torres Straits, Queensland from $16.90 to $17.10, with a little| It was his lot to be captured; but) E ; . i lless desirable kind around $16.75. the succeeding year spent in a miser- | R. A. Hopkins, proprietor of the)make bany beautiful ornaments out : i} . |The best handy weight feeding lambe, able prisow’ camp in Siberia made him |Zaice, Pharmacy, who resides at of tortoise and pearl shel —— Be : |$16.75 to $17.10, and plainer and|wish many times that he had been i $eaed| ~ u heavier kinds, $16 to $16.60. Best| killed in the battle. Mr. Jeannette front, of the laundry office, was) fat yearlings, from $14 to $14.25,| says that the death rate in the prison g y p a awakened about 12 o’clock by the |with plain commoner kind, SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY sight of a flashlight at the back of | $12.50 to $13.50; lightweight feeding greater than in the famous battle of EL TL TT TES | from camps, due to hunger and cold, was|hjs residence. He looked out upon FANCY FRESH EGGS A2¢ per doz. ' MORE PENNIES SAVED Fresh Fruits and Vegetables at all Times The Central Grocery &Market E. R. Williams, Proprietor Telephone 134J 132 West Second, Half Block West of Grand Central Hotel mer auto eed kind, tells the story of the life and adventures of ‘the plant of the Jaundry and saw a American aviators at the front in a series of ten articles to be publish- yearlings, $12.50 to $12.75; heavier the Moravian Lakes. man there with a flashlight. He} ed in © Daily Tribune, beginning today. |and plainer kinds, from $12 to) SS \immediately called Perry O. Guth- |$12.40; fat wethers, $13 to $13.50;, There are many great forests still/ rie, owner of the laundry and no- feeding wethers, $11 to $11.75. Best| standing, but for the most part they | tified him that someone was making |fat ewes are selling from $12.75 to|are in parts of the world not easy of an effort to break into his office. |$13; plainer kinds from $11 to $12,|access. Central Africa has a forest/ Mr, Guthrie notified the police who and feeding ewes $9.50 to $10.50.|region 3,000 miles from north to}quickly went to the scene. Upon Breeding ewes of all descriptions are south. and of unknown width from their arrival there was no one to} in strong demand, choice yearling, east to west. be found on or around the premises. | ewes from $17.75 to $18.50, with| * | RMN 2 geatclle on 8 es OOOO IIS IIS I TM, DETROIT VAPOR STOVES § | ewes, from $10.50 to $. ih) Our Vapor and Oil Stoves do away with fuel gathering. The American aviators in France have evolved a brand new language to fit the new life of the air fighters in this most romantic phase of the great war. “Rickenbacker is America’s head gimper,” writes Frank J. Tay- lor, United P. ff correspondent. .‘‘Gimper,” in the new avia- tion lang: bird who won't quit. Rickenbacker tells of battles in the air, the intimate lif. ods of the bird men and the experiences of new comers, rpseingt) (Copright, 1918, by United Press.) WITH THE AMERICAN AIRMEN ; IN FRANCE, July 10.—(By mail.) and keep straight ahead until you —Se you want some gimper talk??? Pass them. Usually, the Germans are said Lieut, Eddie Rickenbacker, all-|Willng to do that, too, unless you American ace and former speed king attack them. But a gimper never lets in the auto facing world, today. | himself fail to see them. He manev- | “We'll call a bunch of the gimp-| Vers around until he can pique on ‘ ST 4 ers in, and there will soon be plen-|them and let them have it, until they | Notwithstanding reports tothe con- ty of gimper tlk. But you'll have|Tun home. Then he’s satisfied he’s|trary, the Wyoming Map & Blue to translate it, or the people betel gimper.” f |Print Co. has not moved its place home will never understand this ayia- POLICE PROBE REPORT lof business, and the firm is still lo-| A ; d Heonte OETA ae ahd OF RED X SOLICITING cated in the rear of the Salvation “called |MAP COMPANY CONTINUES | IN BUSINESS OLD STAND. i They are Smokeless and odorless and give full heat the moment they are lighted. HOLMES HARDWARE COMPANY CASPER, WYOMING IIOP AA Lee oe PLP MTs i Rickenbacker, who downed ris five| Army hall, at 111 North Wolcott ! Germans in less than two months, and} oscar a i street. * became the second all-American| A Woman was reported soliciting ee trained ace,-is at all, strapping chap | funds ser ae Bed, Grom this morn- with a fine sense of humor and a/ing in the East End neighborhood. * ss Se eee rere ialeagadclite, they | Queties at thé “Igeal! headquaxtersl ree sree oe eee Senne tea call him “head gimper,” just because |failed to give any trace of a local | ®Te accustomed to live in the Speny he is naturaliy a leader and tre life | solicitor being out, and the police/#it, inured to éxtreme heat and cold, | of the unit. The escadrille is’ knowti| were notified to take the woman in|and table to undergo operations with as the “gimper squadron,” and was! charge when located. a minimum. of shock the first group of American trained) == fighters to take the field, or the air| Russian soldiers are described by OA A he hehe hd uke duke SLE LLL SS SS \y. rather, away from the German air-) men. | “A gimper is a bird who would} ' stick by you thru anything,” explain-| ed Hickenbacker. ‘If you were up in the boches and ran into a dozen! boches and were getting the worst of it, perhaps and the fellow with | you stuck with you and gave it to them until the Heinies went back in- to Hunland, you’d know he was a RIS THEATER INTRODUCING THE é imper. | out he didn’t have motor trouble, and his gun didn’t jam, or he didn’t accept any one of a doben good ex- euses for zooming off home and leav- ing you to do the same if you could | get away, he’d be a gimper all right. A gimper is a scout who does every- thing just a little better than he has) IIPIPLLPALLLLLLLAL AL IIPL LL 2 to. “We all this the gimper squadron because every man has to prove him-| self a gimper by his actions. When | a chap arrves, he’s an egg. All good | eggs soon become vultures, and they are promoted to goopher standing. Then is when they have to prove themselves gimpers, and they’ll be a) gimper just as Tong as they make | good. A man who isn’t a gimper) can’t stay with the squadron — it’s zoom for him back to the woods. “Gimper means: a lot to us. It means more thah good scout, or pal, or comrade. I got the word from a} mechanic I had when I was in the racing game. He was a gimper, and I knew when he finished with a motor she would run. In that man’s liffe| there were two kinds of people, gimp- ers and bums. There were mighty few gimpers in th eworld and lots of bums, as this mechanic put it, and it took a good man to be a gimper. | “This pursuit and fighting part of | aviation requires a type of aviator who will stick, especially the way we) fiy in groups. To do“ your best work, | you must have a mutual feeling of! confidence in the gmper flying beside you that is unequaled anywhere else. | If you have a gimper with you, you) know he won’t make a mistake in judgment or lose his nerve at the critical. time. A gimper couldn’t do| that—if he lost his nerve just once, | 90 HORSEPOWER A motor car of First Magnitude. Exclusive. DISTINCTIVE There is that subtle atmosphere of “Luxurious Appointments” about the McFarlan Ninety which makes its appeal to the discerning buyer. Its dignity of appearance is but the outward expression of its con- cealed super-excellence, and is the interpretation of the most efficient mechanical means of transit, combining the highest degree of comfort and culture that has hitherto been attained. Bore and Stroke......4 1-2 x6 Tires,—Cord ; Wheel Base ........136inches Fuel capacity . Extreme width .......72inches Oil capacity . . Extreme length. .17 feet Ginches Water capacity Timken Bearings Thruout ........90 Block Test ... Actual Horse Power he’d never be a gimper again. We all know that and no gimper ever loses his nerve, “J don’t mean a gimper will al- ways pique nto a crowd of Huns, no matter their number. A good gim- per knows when_to fight and when not to fight. If he hasn’t a chance, IA LALADLADD LL Ld Fourteen Models. »..35x5 et Sea Bigal: The McFarlan Ninety fills Every Requirement. Seven Passenger Touring, $4,500, f.0.b. Denver ....7 qts. 7.42 gal. Digital He SOOOOOO4OOOO run in New York. Matinee, 2:30 and 4:00 ‘Today and Tomorrow | Theda Bara in the Greatest of Emotional Plays CLEOPATRA The Siren of the Nile . . 2 . ! . There is just.one Theda Bara and as the Vampire Queen she is wonder- { ful in this great Super-Production. This pictur e is direct from a six months POLPOOOOO OSE DHOOL OOO OO HOV OOEOO LOO OO OOOSOOOOESOSOSESSESESESESSSEEHOOO OOD 'PPPOOOOOOOOD SPECIAL NOTICE During the Summer months the admission to the “ he draws off, flies around until he| gets his altitude and then drops on) the Heinies. A gimper doesn’t need| to be foolhardy. eH watches his| chances, but never gives up when) GEO. H. ESTABROOK = | ~ “Dances at the Masonic Temple Auditorium | ‘on Wednesday and Saturdayevenings will be | ee _ 25c For the Entire Evening Ladies Free another gimepr is beng strafed. “When you're flying around up there over Germany, and being fol- Western Distributor. ‘ lowed by a string of black pufs from| the German archies, and her them ex-| ploding around you, and then see} TIF FLALAL LL £ some German planes off to one TI AISIPIVAPOLLLELAPAL LALA LA AA of you, it is the easiest thing in the a Broadway and Seventeenth — Phone Main 6415—Denver, Colorado / IIPPPPCLALLALLLA LALLA LLAMA AAA AAA Ah Adhd hdhidedidedededick Wa. ae. ~~~ IRISORCHESTRA