Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 16, 1918, Page 5

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FRIDAY, AUGUST 16,1918 BY ARBITRATION McRorey-Majors Controversy Has Hearing before Board in cogs oa Court One of the first contrversies to be decided by an arbitration in many months was concluded at the district court this week, when a board consisting of Frafik R. Whitcomb and F, W.' Peckman, arbitrators of the case of George MeRorey. vs. M. E. Majors, returned a decision to the effect that the latter is indebted to McRorey im the sum of $6,704.86, representing payments due the con- tractor im the efection of a one-story concrete garage lccatel on East Sec- ond street. cording to the agrre- ment and bonded trust in the arbitration board, payment of the judgment is due within 30 days after the decision is rendered. The arbitration method is seldom exploited -by parties to local contro- versies. Instead of the court hearing ‘he proceedings, the arbitrators sit as a court and hear the arguments of the contending parties. Their 7/1 d- ings, together with a record of the proceedings, are filed with ths clerk of the district court, and unless the fparties to the eohtroversy fail to abide by the decision, the matter is considered closed. t |. PROFITEER By CHARLES B. DRISCOLL Go, wallow in you? golden mire, Count o’er yotir bloody pelf, Rent out your shriveled soul for hire, Build monuments te Self! Stand _not before the altar light In freedom’s holy fane; Begone! and let us fight our fight, While you comopund your gain. 9 | You sell our hero in the mart, Yourggrasping fingers shine With jewels from his bleeding heart, Your countryman and mine! He lies upon a crimson couch, Dead, in a holy cause; While you behind his body crouch, With banknotes in your claws! Beware the people you betray; They’re patient, they endure; Their wrath, once wakexied, none may stay, Their aim-is swift and sure. Your day is drawing to a close, Your slowly sinking sun A cruel, grewsome shadow throws— A gallows and a gun! — he Seeet atin ISTHE \an integral part of the British army. > ae (5° (By United Press} . LONDON, Aug. 15.—Lots of | women have been told they are angels but English women want to make a step in that direction by becoming be A flying. i tg temperament is a com-| bination of “qtialities” as likely to be male, ard mary women are asking: “Can we or.cait We not prove useful! for air work?” They are toid by mere man that! good eyesight and good nerves are es- sential. Most Women have both. And| combined with these qualifications, | women have also the intense desire to } do something, atid they are now set. upon provitig how much they could’ do. Naturally, they don’t expect to} serve over the firing line; but there ig a variety of Ways in which a wom- an with a flying temperament could ‘make hetself useful. Airplanes could be tised for locat- field, and for carrying certain cases from the clearing stations to hos-! pitals—surely a sphere in which a} woman would run no risk of becom- hing unsexed. English women have no lust for blood. They don’t want to kill, but they do want,to help their men. The wish is so fervent that it becomes al-| most an ache.~Thus they are alteady ‘They cannot be excluded from avia- tion on logical grounds. It is no use putting forward the sentimental ar- gument, becat#Se that is all in their favor. * There is a great. probability that women will be néeded, and they are willing. AIF they ask is to be trained so that they would bé ready should } : ? TRUCK DRIVERS FEEL THRILLS, AS ATTESTED BY STORY TOLD BY ONE WHO ASSISTED DOCTORS AT FRONT (Written by an Americari Red Cross Driver, for United Press) WITH THE' RED CROSS OVER- SEAS, July 30.—(By Mail)~There were six ks in the convoy that I took up-to the front when the Ger- mans wefe advancing toward Paris. found in the female sex as in the We left Paris at midnight, the ttacks ; loaded with food, medical sfpplies and blankets. Although thére was |heavy movement along the roads, we! |plunged along all night without many’ Place, non delays, until 5 o’clock in the morn- ing, when we ‘came tqa dead stop. Artillery, transport camions, sol- diers and refugees blocked the way. “Our orders were to go to N. with jthe supply stuff, but we couldn’t have | ti one it without an aeroplane. | The army was moving, bed space it left in the roadway was |veyance or on foot, pushing their be-| \longings in barrows and hand carts. | drumming a long, ceaselegs roll. With N. , off the map, as it were, | speeded back to A: , where there was a hospital in an old chateau. In this were 60 wounded Anterican soldiers and about ‘200 French. “There were.two American |army ‘surgeons arid a few French and English niveses. Americans from the hospital and made them all comfortable in their new lodgement at C——-. we drove back to A and turned in, because we looked forward to a hard day. QUICK WORK AHEAD But at 2 a. m. a French gerteral t | |w that the Germans were advancing the emergency arise, a Here ig a way in which women car hélp their menfolk, and to want a thing badly enough is to get it! a NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. The Second Baptist Church of Cas- per, Wyori the office of Cheyenne, i Secretary of Stare, | of said corporation is to support the gospel and maintain feligious wor. ship. Said corporation is not organ ized for gain and has no capital stock. The term of its is ‘per-| petual. Three direetots shall man- age the concerns and affairs of the| corporation and Wm. Harris, S. F. Pelton and M. A. Eilonth are named for the first year after incorporation. M. A. Eilonth is the agent in charge} of the office of said corporationa at Casper, Wyoming. M.A. EILONTH, President. More than 100°medical schools of the United States are now open to S. F. PELTON, ® Secretary. Pub. Aug. 15, 16, 17, 1918 HA ui yuming, on the 19th day | wounded gen out. and that the hospital fad to be com- pletely evacuated in 10 minutes. He made it very clear it would have to! take. | Atueriedat army ambulances wheeled lup with loads of English and French | wounded. , They had. hurried down ‘from the advanced dressing stations; |and mest of, them were in bad shape. Re ac thefe was but a handful of us, hustled about and got the hos- pital | going again somehow, and | started to take care of the wounded. There weré no nurses about the jé in the town, so the driv- ers of the Red Cross camions volun- |teered. Thee wasn’t one who had ever done tiursing, and the stiff part | of it was that so many of the wound- ed were in such condition that opera- jon without delay was vital. The two American surgeons started and the lit-|operating at 7:0 and were at it at ering us, however, |3 in the morning. We—I say “we” {treated to straighten out their lines. |Germans began ‘shelling the place, finally driving out the entire civilian ‘population. billeting area for troops and army/ jcamions were, fot allowed to pass |thru the city. But there was a Red Cross staff on the job there. The task now was to get out the staff and all the supplies possible from the Red Cross hospital there. We went up with three camions, and as we entered the city saw three bic German sausage balloons watching the place and directing the gun fire. Soon the shells began dropping about as. . The sausages had seen us. The verehouse was in the chapel of the big seminary, and while we were at work loading up, shells from the 240’s came screaming in. One banged thru a house direetly across the street and made « puff of dust of it, but down in the courtyard we were protected from the flying pieces. Others landed about, show- and one of our men was grazed by a fragment, but we kept at it, making trip after trip, It then beeame such ayo, 1 felt it coming on pretty kad thot corner that it was no longer a again. occupied by the refugees. They came because every one had to do his bit) \streaming back in every sort of con-|—performed 17 major operations and every one successful. ‘and when the last load left late in the afternoon we had taken 200 tons of Only one set of instruments had | Precious supplies out of that ware- That afternoon we evacuated the| After that! time to stirilize them by boiling each time, we had to pour. alcohol over ‘them. Six candles stuck in their own wax to a board furnished the only light for the surgeons. I held the! board. As they worked, I moved it} |around so they might have the most! \light.on the probing or setting or) |sewing or whatever there was to be) done. Three of the operations were | | trephanning of the skull. Another of ‘the soldiers had 59 pieces of shell in ‘taken out by candlelight. It was a | busy night. Luckily, at midnight, an- |other American strgeon arrived and | relieved at the operating table. The |worst part of it/ was that ether aked me up with the announcenient | knocked out most of our drivers, so living at 662 South Montana Street, ‘that at last there were only two of us left to bear a hand. HOSRITAL EVACUATED In the morning we evacuated the |swing northward to S The him, ahd every one was located and| ing and removing wounded’ from the Up ahead somewhere the guns were been left behind, and as there wasn’t house and stored them safely behind our lines. SS as HEAD SALESMAN SPENT HUNDREDS Burton Suffered Twenty Years & Before Finding the Right Medicine In speaking of the marvelous way iu which Tanlac has relieved him of \@ long-standing case of rheumatism, B. E. Burton, head salesman in the wholesale fruit and vegetable depart- ment at Lutey Bros., Butte, Mont., recently said: “It is simply astonishing that just a few bottles of Tanlac should fix me up in almost no time, after I had jstraightened out. I went™to Hot! SES Furniture & Undertaking Co. sult ‘and then I tried the mud baths nearer home, but got no benefit from that treatment either. A little while My appetite left me, nothing tasted right,’I wge constipated and suffered from awful headaches every | | few days. | and knees avas so agonizing that could hardty*sleep and I would wak up six or seven times during the night racked with pain. Why, at the time ‘1 started taking Tanlac 1 The pain in my shoulders I kk. enderse Tanlac and only ho’ with this wonderf z to v I certainly ¢ couldn’t raise my arms as high as my my ¢ shoulders to save my life and was un- ne else w able to put on my coat without some- what I did. @ body helping me, and my knees were Casper by t | so stiff and hurt so bad I'tould hardly ( i in walk. t le Co : es. REAL ESTATE fe Buy now, don’t wait until the Allies cross the Rhine. Prices == ill go up and you will miss the chance of a lifetime. We quote you one of the several bargains we have'listed: Three- room, bungalow, furnished, located in the southeast part of ” town, best residence district, 11/, blocks from new school, $1,625; $75 cash, balance like rent. PLATTE VALLEY INVESTMENT CO., Inc. Room 202 0. $. Building; 129 East Second St. Telephone 8-W PIP LLL AeA hh hdd did BEST BOWL OF CHILI IN TOWN 15c AT THE CHILI KING LUNCH Back of Gfand Central Bar. All kinds of Sandwiches at popular prices. Quick service, highest quality. ¢ N \ i AUGUST BULLETIN OF SUMMER TOURS |be done in 10 minutes or we'd find hospital, taking the wounded to C—, spent almost every dollar I earned in ROCKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL-ESTES PARK is proving if ourselves in No Man’s land. So I|where there were ample facilities. |the last twenty years to get relief popularity as an attractive tourist-locality. Colorado-re | turned the men out and we went to| Then we es out right to work pom ae awful Ribs re arta sorts are quickly and economically reached. work in thé dark. |getting out of town the refugees who efore coming to Butte Mr. Bur-} : : 7 ‘As a matter of fact, these 10 min-|had accumulated there for several|ton lived for ten years in Spokane,| THE CODY GATEWAY OPENED: Yellowstone Park tourist ing, was incorporated in utes stretched until after 6 o’clock,|days. C. was subject to air raid} Wash., where he was salesman for the will be pleased to know that the Cody scenic automobil the when we carried the last of the|every clear night, so we had tg sleep Aner Trading Company of that road to Yellowstofe Park n operation.. Autos, in cor Some of them/in the cellar of .the great chateau. Cy * 7 nection with the “Permanent Camp Way,” leave Cod of July, 1918; the obfect and purpose) were in a bad way, and had to be| The bombs-bursting about the place |“! tell you what,” he continued, ieee mpenitiie at Sight ofcidck-tor the Canyon. |handled very slowly. We put them made rest almost impossible. “I have gone Shroanh ail sages of : : |in our camions and took them to the, When the last of the refugees had fheumatism, and the agonies f have GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, scenically famous, the climax 0 Oise canal, whence transferred torbeen transferred to a neighboring serthod rhe troncle Sect Reeve on Rocky Mountain grandeur, will be open throughout th barges, they were convéyed to Paris. |tailway station, wotd came that the * “33 iy ie Summer ig rf . ° me about twenty years ago. My : That left the hospital with only | Germans had dtopped a 240 on the tinaliane Gebhe ahd cabbies eee Wel ; < > two American army surgeons, the train at R——, a few kilometers i). moct’ worry and ached pet at| Lhe usual resorts and ranches in the Big Horn Mountains, th Red Cross personnel ‘and a French | away. So we hustled two camions tines that I hardly had any use for| Black Hills, and along the Cody Road through the Al rok chaplain. The American surgeons over there and found four men killed | jy<elf, About three years ago it! Mountains are open,-and will give you a mos looked about the place rather lone-|and five woutided. gotso bad that I was laid up in bed | hospitable welcome. pone ’ys bat one. of a an As to phctt +80 va apt Meth aes were | for six long months, and when I got | ¢ > Croose your locality and let us assist ye something was going appen, and /again caring for refugees who were | ain I Had to-go , about on & : 2 that before long there’d Be plenty streaming toward the havén of Paris | crutches for thee sromehd, and till | Burlington.’ LAWE, of work for everybody. The guns! by the thousands. recently I never did get it ont of my| Hii ee! ups . ; thundering all around us seemed to! IN HOT CORNER |system, although I have spent hun-| L. W. WAKELEY, General Passenger Agent, bear him out. And ‘he made no smis- Soon the ttucks were ordered to\dreds of dollars in trying to get 1004 Farmuny Street Omaha, Nebr i BUY YOUR FURNITURE NOW The Chamberlin Furniture & ‘Undertaking Co. Closing Out Sale is still going on and will continue until Paste ste cin Mo cte te te steak he Re ho fo foots slo oho fo ofe sho o20 ofo ote, SO ~ Moyea toe oo oie ee aio eo eo ee ee EVERY- THING IS CLOSED OUT OO, ee Pe ot, oefeefe ake oferty ofe-ale efecto efecto ele et> Peers eee e ey 2, 2, renee 124 E. Second St. Phone 3 7W. I WH ! AE Hl HNC H ult

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