Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 16, 1918, Page 6

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J.C. BARLOW IS OGAL SCHOOLS | “CLAIMED TODAY TTAY PLANO FOR ans eencace ANNUAL OUTING (Continued from Page 1.) J. C. Barlow, a well known ‘old timer died this morni pita: after a lengthy illne of nephrjt‘s Barlow born to Wyoming abo mg at Split Rock most Since this illness he has been per.. Mr. Barlow is a brothe Mary Taylor id an uncle Sheperson of Casper. The funeral will be held Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Shaffer- Gray chapel, the Rev. Roland Ph brook of Glenrock officiating. Buri. will be made in the Casper cemetery. WOULD IMPROVE CONDITIONS OF WORKING GIRLS Entrance of Gentle Sex into War industry Plants Pleads Y. W. ©. A. to Make Plans for Their Prgtection in Ob ° tiversity of Nebraska and Went- ‘rth Military Academy, and has en in active service on the Mexican rder, having but recently received s honorable discharge from the ser- FOUR GRADES NORTH SIDE When the Burlington school is com- eted, Mrs. Willa B. Hammond, who w has a third grade at the Central hool, will be the new principal. The arlington school will have grades om the first to the fourth, inclusive, . d will be ready for occupancy by :tober 15. Salt Creek will have two new achers, one in Salt Creek and one - West Salt Creek. \ Uniforms will be worn by the igh School students as formerly, the | *ys wearing the khaki uniforms and e girls blue serge skirts and mid- es, Athletics will be encouraged, id the drills for both boys and girls ll be a feature of the course. NEW BUILDING READY The East Casper school will be ficially accepted Saturday, when (By Kate Russell.) e board will inspect the building. | Thousands of women are pouring ae furniture and fixtures are al-|daily into the states of West ady here, and are being installed |Sinia, Virginia, New Jersey, Geor; fast as possible that everything| Tennessee and Ohio, for in ti ay be ready for the opening of the |States, as tho Merlin had waved } hool for use Tuesday. The school ¥A0d, ate spcinging up over on a high elevation at Linden and great munition cantonments whic ‘fferson streets and comman Bre ed by women, to speak pur iestdid sviceraofserthe neninle _ | dox: ly and hence truthfully. rading is being rushed and walks! Twenty-two in number, these gieat ‘e being placed-so that everything munition centers are drawing from ill be shipshape before ~ the cold all ports of the United States worke: pathos cateea: by the thousands for these new ‘A tentative list of teachers for the| Plants are to"be made the war sup- asper schools follows, which is sub- Pigs for the American army. cestoucHanwe mhowevertibetoreutha efore even the surrounding coun- sale onan try is fairly awake to the fact that Pee LC! the quiet fields have been disturbed they are covered with houses, hum- 1347 Q|ming stores and streets thru which Neb. hurry busy women and girls into {fie Kuhns, Dabney , Ind | whose hands has been given the prec- ine McNew, 1ith St.,|‘ous task of making the munitions Mary Liggett, Adan:s,|that shall spell destruction fo the jenemies of their men, now at the Dundee front or in the training camps. » Minn. | Some of the cantonments are Benford Hotel |ready working and the 1219 FB | ones TRAL SCHOOL Eighth—Minnie , Lincoln, Seventh— Sixth—Ad: reeley, Eddlen Colo.; Larrabee, ah , Rothsay, Ross, al- remaining will be if operation by fall. enver, McLean, second, Casper, Wyo. But since women, who cz any Third—Cora Cruse, Denver, Colo., Ty|of them from remote s to keep the machinery ng, it is ,|most essential that the workers be | kept happy and contented, otherwise 2243|\the output fromthe plants will not D.; Mrs. Willa B. Hammond, care Read, Cold Springs Route, Dougls rye suphrosyne Pls oward St., Omaha, Magguerite|be up to standard, or, if they find arshaw, 621 Main St., ens Péint,|conditions unbearable, it is likely iis. |they will desert their posts and re- Sergeant, Neb.;|turn to their homes as they have done Gree-|'n Washington, SS hel Lyman, Nev. Towa. Realizing that this is a real obsta- Shafer, Pompton-Lakes,|cle which the government may be . Army Ord. confronted with, the, Ordnance De- | partment has asked the Young Wom- ‘First—Bess Hartley, K—Eunice ew Jersey, U. PARK SCHOOL *Highth--Clara Taylor, Glidden, Iowa.|en’s Christian Association to provide Seventh— herine 600 Nor-| livable conditions for the girls and al Ave. yvens Point, Wis. | women’ employes when they are not Sixth—Ruth Righatmyer, 202 West|engaged in work. The request to the ‘and Ave., Springfield, Ohio. Y. W. C. A. came from the Woman's . Fifth—An ‘Thompson, Jessis| branch of the Industrial Service Sec- hompson, Deer Park, Wis. | tion. Fourth—Bessie Buck— ¢@ius,,; Housing an industria) army is not 1046 S. David S:.,/928 easy as it may sound to the un- initiated. The best homes the gov- ernment is able to provide in such 1 short space of time are dormitory barracks. Of course, 2 } jall right in its way, but even the -|most. patriotic girl finds it necessary , Knoxville,|to be alone once in a while or in the _ “ompany of a few picked associates is.; Carolyn Moore, asper. Third—Musa Ross, Benford Hotel. Alta Jane Scott, Custer, enver, Colo.; dD. »wa. First—Mrs, C. C. t., Tacoma, Wash orth, Wis. K—Mae Winter, Wymore, Neb. E CASPER 529 S. 52nd Lord, Ells- Welk ; Evely therefore, the quality o€ her work. | ‘So the Y. M. C. A. will provide at | hese cantonments club houses with % |cheerful rest and recreation rooms, a Bighth—Beulah Hanks, 33 24th| great room suitable for group games, Gmata, Nab. jsports, entertainments, drills, folk Seventh—Emma Ogerstrom, Odebolt,| dancing and semaphore work. If the nlant’is not provided with a restaur- Specular | ant, “a cafeteria will be included in |the plans. Besides these, there will wa. Sixth—Catherine Fox, t., Marquette, Mich. 214 Fifth—Nessie Miller, St. Charles.|/be an information desk, rom direc- ees |tory, ete. In short the club will be Fourth—Selma Larsen, 2300 B. 35th}a home for their free time. t., Minneapolis, Minn. To be eligible for membershiv in ‘Third—Helen Morrison, 1721 21st St../the War Service Clubs whicht hese ock Island, Ill buildings will house, a girl has only Seaond—S. Marguerite Barclay, 256)/to belong to the women’s ‘industrial olly St., Rockport, N. Y. |jarmy. No membership in the Y. W First—Jessie I. Waite, Hulberton,/C. A. is required. The members wil! _Y. be divided into divisions called corps K—Blanche Mealey, 810 University| Girls will wear uniforms ¢ polis, Minn. s VISORS, Music—Harriett Little, tp Denver, Colo | Domestic Sci eyer possible they will h dlls under the army officers. There Eduro| will also be Service Corps for Red |Cross work, Gypsy corps for Satur Harriett Gardner,|day afternoon hikes and other 2616 )1 Townsend St., Lansing, Mich. m The Semaphore Corps will be Drawing—Natalie Dietrich, 607 en instructions in signaling under enn St., Hoopeston, Ill larmy regulatio |) Manual Training—James K. Schallen- EC Na) MEA 3 lerger, Lost in, oo Se re st Physical ing—Capt. George | 1 al Bi hd Beis, Pender, Neb. || oday’s Birthdays Penmanship- nia Neer, Laramie, |Q—_ eg By Ae Tyo. Albert Spalding, famous violin it now an the American a tion service Superintend Wilder, 256 in Cicigao, 80 years ago toduy Maple . Duchess Maria Amelia, heir to tt Princip t, 318 South| throne of Wurtemberg, whose ¢ aple, Casper, Wyo |cagement to the Crown Prince 618 38th ony is announced, born 24 years go today. Sir John S. Hendrie, lieutenant- governor of Ontario, born at Hamil- 1942 S./ton, Ont., 61 years ago today. English—Ruth Dudley, Fes Moines, Towa Langus Ina Hill, Tay, Berkeley, Cal. Ejstory—Charlotte St..| 2333 Channing Bushnell, ith St., Lincoln, Neb. | Marion de Nries,' associate judge Mathematics—Ruth K. Barr, t on,}of the U. S. Court of Customs Ap- Sinn. nenls, born in San Joaquin County rs RY. Commercial—Mrs. Florence Keaton | Cat. 117 S. 16th St., Lincoln, Neb. | English and Latin—Winifret Litteli,| States ss segtawa, Mich., Box |horn at Cary, } ommercial and Mathema Seience-—| day. uth Evans, Sheridan, W John K. Shields, who has been re- SALT CREEK. nominated for United States senator Miss, Sallie Mack from Tennessee, born at Clinchdale, Miss Myrtle Froman. Tenn., 60 years ago today. | . C., 63 years ago to. rracks is|| if she is to keep up her spirits and, BAD INDIAN ON LETTE WARPATH FIRE WATER REASON Reservation Po! Hospital with Bullet in His Stomach as Result of ‘a Bootlegging Fiasco LANDER, Wyo., > Aug. —A booze-peddling white man, a ad"? Indian and warfare, results in,a near tragedy. Johnnie Burns, ghief of police on | Px t the! we hop Randall Hospital in a critica! officers we can realize the | thru his scope of country the German lesd-|-ve have on the face of the earth. lies hoshoni reservation, bullet condition, with tomach that may prove fatal, and | ers a wo white men and several Indians ar aiting the action of the law in| ¢ the city and county ils. Deputy Sheriff Wise caugh Foley, a man with a notoriou: selling an Indian wh cer attempted to take the same time. “burned” up the street in an effort to get aw nccompanied by three good sized shots from Deputy Wise’s frevolver. When the Indian refu cord, a |to be taken into custody, Johnnie Burns and Marshal Pogue followed him, Wise taking his prisoner to the county lock-up. The lian took réfuge under a box car on the Chicago & Northwest- rn railroad tra¢ Having located their man, the officers attempted by ceful means to fake him. ‘he Indian, inflamed with the hite man’s “fire water” that had been unlawfully sold him, fired upon his would-be captors, striking Burns in the chest, and again in a fusillade of bullets fled across the river bridge to the eamp of Dewey Washakie. Burns, at the time of being shot, as Btooping to see under the car. The bullet struck him§in the chest, going down, the supposition being it assed thru the stomach. He was ed immediately to the Bishop lall Hospital, where skilled medi- cal attention v given him. The report of the tragedy was spread abroad Jike the spread of wild- fire. The sheriff, deputy and special deputies took charge, immediately. Not knowing the Indian or the direc- tion he had fled caused the net to be spread pretty well over town. But in ru Rané iceman in Lander this you will likely know the result) on that a modern implement of | thal» beut 40 ways, ‘ola’? ment. y. The offi-/|' the Indian at |/ The latter turned and |‘ | mishes. a few moments the officials were at Dewey Washakie’s camp, where sev- eral Indians were arrested, one man whom the officers consider the right party. His hat, coat and gun were discovered this morning—gun under the cinch of his saddle placed conven ently in his preparation to get: awa: The date of primary hearing has not been set yet, pending the devel- opment of the wounded man. The arrangement of the “booze’’* sellers, two white men, “Old” Foley and a man claiming to be a pro- erman bythe name of David Willi- jamache, will be held today before Judge Nickerson. Both men face a serious charge. “Old” Foley has been “oyer the road” twice before. | “The first time was for days and $100 fine; the second one and a day at the Federal prison at Leaven- worth, Kan. This time, according to a county officer, “he should be hanged.” > he: the e he also ren- s in the field the early part of the present tie struggle. During the war of 1$7t, General Pau—he wi gen- eral even th s not involved in any of the disastrous, defeats admin- red by the Prussians. By superior rategy or perhaps good forunte, au’s men were for the most part ctorious, For that reason then, Pau has been an idol and popular hero with the French people for al- most erul Joffre, Pan most emphatically lis rot a disciple of Natpoleon and does not believe in. Napolenoic tac- tics in war. UA iH hates Ss eneral Paul+Pau, who is now in| United States on his way to Aus-}| half a century. . Unlike Gen-) ne OUR ANNUAL Summer Clearance Sale BIG REDUCTION IN FINE FOOTWEAR now in full sway. In this sale we are offering the ladies the very latest in Summer Footwear. All styles and colors. Take advantage of these prices by buying for future use. Our prices have been cut to remarkably low fig- ures and range from L115 Up We have a few Men’s Oxfords which we are offering at $1.50 up GLOBE SHOE CoO. ruiliiiiiittiG, SGM iit In the Soissons Sector, France. -|pose thru spies or some other way Dear George: jand instead of dropping real bombs Received your last five letters in on this paper dump they dropped « bunch today and this is also the| imitation pasteboard bombs with big first chance we have had to call a firecrackers inside them. Say I sure minute our own,since the push com-| would have liked to havé seen the menced. I suppose you are now/Hun officer’s. face when they saw hearing about it and when yoy get those pasteboard bombs lying around fake ammunition ,dump. of the whole thing. /Some of the paper bombs were still valk sbout your strenuous days,| there when we went over the place this is the worst I ever experienced. and 1 bet there were som -sore Huns I thot some of the winters :wnen I behind their lines when they think kaye been hunting up in the Tetons that we got both the real dump and and the Jackson Hole country thst fake one without trouble, for they I was experiencing some rough times did not» have fime to blow up their but this game to Hunt the Hun has yeal dump. We went up against some res] shock troops Wednesday. They stood their ground and we used the bayonet on the survivors. George,.the bay- enet is one of the nastiest weapons commenced to drive towards} you know and from papers e tuken from the bodies of) great The a expected their armies to cover.|One of our fellows picked up a Hun For instance, our captain got hold/on his bayohet and tossed the body of s paper which we translate! and/up in the air like pitching a fork- t s the general orders for a rezi-|ful of hay on a high load. He had Say, George, they sure are the Hun right ‘thru the stomach un- n the details, every littl: move der the belt buckle and it made me that regiment of 114th Diack) as sick as a dog to watch it. I don’t pelhidee eG was Abe ™ | mind an ote ie I can’t seein $e e orders. ey were to advanve| pet used to the bayonet work wi so many miles the first day and take aj) the practice I have had. ur a position in the rear of our lines) This open fighting is just meat for facing certain Rouse in just sven and us fellows from the state =n fe such a manner. ey were to rest) Huns don’t like it for a cent. Today there so many hours and mi-utes and}js as clear as crystal and the sky then advance aon so me Bute is a beautiful blue oe in Apes cred yards and clean out a wood, and it is so nice and warm that a Hence? were to id to bale Ten eer feels lay and has me spring and take a town in the rear aud ever a year around only ve proceed towards Paris. The Boche | haven't time to monkey with it now veierals had everything =figaeeg age as our duties are too SEPUDOEA: Ev- tu the last item excep’ at they/eryone in the company is wondering forgot to figure in the fighting fofce jf Foch is starting a main drive or of American troops. This last item|js this merely a little nibble to stop licke the whole scheme an? buste:/ th). Hun and set him back for a short it w up o things wide open. Our captain SAYS | time. that, according to the orlers, the Yours, rans did not get really started) IR. their offensive. | es aed es 2B ae are ow camped in a sort of | A FUNCTION OF WEALTH rest camp for the time being, y : A 1 i We are hearing again of the “con- ingcppen D ccinpanpitarcd vay wall scription of wealth” as Congress Be- for we have lost no men altho i8/gins consideration of the new reve- were carried back wounded to the hos-!nue bill. A recent statement of pitals. Some of the other companies President Vincent of the Rockefeller of the regiment lost heavily tho and| Foundation goes to show how feeble especially Company K whicn is inade|the “conscriptién of wealth’ would up of a lot of boys from the Basin he in the face of war's demands for county and Montana. money. The Rockefeller Foundation We went over and inspected » Hun jg the most richly endowed private camouflage dump today. It was quite body in the world. Yet President antinsi glib: Mivo tue extremes) they bya cent says that its entire income will go to try and fool our flyers | ¢ npouldlwaitice to APs A ry pay the but this time it did, not work and) 10 ® year woule, Ly | it fe 1 here is a funny incident relating to expenses of the, Government for only it seven hours, and that if its whole ‘ | principal were taken it would be ex- The Huns built this great ammu- gs iti -». |hausted in five days. However, there nition dump out of pasteboard sheits is a way to make wealth do its fall Fi he: ked like th 1 thing; " : ake pao Pee) pet This oan ta | share in the war—and that is to make fool the flyers on the Allied sidé en vealth go to work to create more mec them to drop bombs on this dump| Wealth which, in the form of income, instead cf the real dump close by.;may be taxed. The old motto, “Take Well, someway or other the aviat-|the honey, but don’t kill the bees” got onto the true facts. 1 is the only one to apply. en LEH KALKI ARAL HKALE e All that the name implies RAPID SHOE Repairing Co. 151 SO. CENTER Two Doors South of Tupney’s Confectionery Shoes of all kinds repaired same day brought in or while you wait. Rubber Heels for all kinds of Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Shoes, 50 cents. GIVE US A TRIAL AT YOUR BUSINESS RAEN ERIE ER ATR IH HRA SEINE MERE NK TRIER ILE J EMELINE LSE TERE ELE, RS FROM OVER THERE JUNTAS STILL MAINTAINED BY MEX REVOLTERS EL PASO, Tex., Aug. 10.—Mexi- can revolutionary juntas havé been in existence in E] Paso since the first one here was organized for Francisco I. Madero in 1911 in a back room of a cheap hotel in the Mexican quarter. Orozoco, Huerta, Villa and Felix Diaz have all had their juntas at different times since the revolutions started. A second-class rooming house or hotel is always selected for these meetings or reyolutionary fol- lowers in order to avoid suspicion and to escape secret service agents. Beds are drafted into service as chairs, and the Mexicans squat around the walls | while the junta meetings are being held. In these meetings are planne. the ‘revolutionary movements an schemes devised for getting contra- band ammunition into Mexico and often recruiting among the floating Mexican border population is carried i on by these juntas. At present a well organized Villa junta is in operation here. It is in charge of a young Mexican revolu- tionist, who has the usual retinue of clerks, look-outs to watch for secret service men, military advisers and American legal advisers. Behind __ FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, i918 closed doors the revolutionists. whis- per plans for aiding Villa in the field, for buying ammunition and ma- chine guns and for spreading the Villa propaganda in American papers. These agents have plenty of money and live well, while on the pborder, Several lawyers on the border have grown wealthy acting as legal advis- ers to these juntas, while ammunition dealers and. uniform supply houses reaped a rich harvest until the em- bargo against all military elements was ordered from Washington. The activities of these revolution- ary agents are closely watched by Government agents, but, because of their clever advisers and their care in avoiding any violations of the neu- trality laws, it is difficult to ,obtain evidénce upon which to convict these revolutionists. Me = At the WIGWAM Old Fashioned Black Walnut CARMEL Home-Made SATURDAY SPECIAL M. D. Barnett ° Off on All CHESTERFIELD CLOTHING Hand-tailored suits for men and young men. Summer and new fall suits all go at 20 per cent off. Star, Metric, and Corliss Coon shirts and all summer underwear at 20, 25, and 30 per cent off on the. dollar. Outfitting Co. 121 East Second Street Figure Your pound............. We also carry in stock num- erous brands of high grade coffee such as— 10-Ib. Galvanized pail filled with top grade coffee, a real argain $3.50 Half-pound package Ja-__ ‘pan Tea Half-pound package Eng- lish Breakfast ______ 28¢ Bulk Black Tea, as good as Lipton’s, per Ib __65c CANNED VEGETABLES 2-Ib. can Tomatoes____18¢ 35¢ 21/.-Ib. can Tomatoes__20c 3 Ib. can Tomatoes, per Ped sy 23c paragus, tall, per can_40c Spinach, large’ can, per ran! cee ---30¢ Chili Con Carne, 2 cans_25c Sweet Potatoes, large can) 252 a ee Kraut, per can Peas, 2-Ib. can. Peaches Plums, Different Varieties Oranges Pears Cantaloupes Lemons Fancy Sweet Potatoes E. R. Williams, Proprietor Fancy Display Fruit The Central Grocery & Market 132 West Second, Half Block West of Grand Central Hotel Savings Here WHEN SHOPPING COME TO THE CENTRAL GROCERY & MARKET and SAVE 10 TO 15 PCT. _The Famous Morado Coffee that lowered the high cost of living, per pound... .......25c We have high-grade Coffee in bulk, at, per Ak fee .23c and 27c RE PRR EST SATURDAY SPECIALS™ Corn Flakes, per pkg___11c Large pkg. Pride Wash- ing Powder __ _-23¢ SYRUPS One qt. Cane and Maple_50c 2 1-2 lb. can Molasses__23c CANNED FRUITS Peaches, large can____28c Apricots, large can__--28c , large can 25c ing Powder $1.15 2 1-2 lb. can Calumet Baking Powder —_-258c Half-pound pkg. Dunham Cocoanut .____ pen ay +P Quarter-pound pkg. Dun- ham Cocoanut _ llc 2-Ib. can Roast Beef._:75c Large Bottle Pickles. __35c Hershey’s Cocoa 23c. Sardines ____________ Milk, tall cans 13c, 2 for 25¢ and Vegetables Green and Wax Beans . Carrots Turnips “ Radishes, Cauliflower Green Onions, Lettuce Cucumbers And Numerous Others Telephone 134)

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