Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 4, 1918, Page 5

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EX-GUNNER. AND CHIEF PET CAPTAIN. >; FRENCH BATTLESHIP "WINNER OF THE CROIX DE GUERRE™ wee Cesrtigs 1918, ty Rely and Brizon SYNOPSIS. HAPTER I—Albert N. Depew, author of the story, enlists in the United States navy, serving f id ur years. an the rank of ‘Shier peity officer, it-cli gunner, CHAPTER II-The great war starts soon after he is ‘honorably harged fom the navy and he sails for France with a determination to enlist. a CHAPTER Ill=He joins the Fo: Legion and is assigned to the oe ape Be tateebanahip w Cassard where his tim high honors, CHAPTER IV—Depew is detached from bis ship and sent with regiment of the Legion to Flanders where he soon finds himself in the front lng trenches. CHAPTER V—He Is detailed to the ar- \illery and makes the acquaintance of the “76's”, the wonde: a French guns have saved the day for the fillies on many a battlefield. Before seeing any action, he \ is ordered back to his regiment in ‘the {front line trenches. CHAPTER, Vi—Depew_ goes “over the top” at oe his first German in a bay- onet figh' CHAPTER aidan the Germs takes part in another raid qn the German trenches and shortly afterwari assists in stopping a flerce charge of the Huns, who are cross No mowed down as they Man's Lan CHAPTER VIII—Sent to Dj ude with lispatches, Depew 1s caught iff a Zeppelin raid, but scapes unliurt. CHAPTER IX—He is shot through the thigh in a brush with the Germans and is sent to a hospital, where he quickly recovers. CHAPTER X—Ordered back to sea duty, Depew rejoins the Cassard, which mukes several trips to the Dardanelles as a con- voy. The Cassard is almost battered to pieces by the Turkish batteries. Not much more than an hour before the Zepp came, we had been sitting in a room at the house of the local mili- tary commandant, right under a big slass-dome: skylight.’ This house was now a very pretty ruin, and it was just as well that we left when we did. You could not even find a splinter of the big round table. The next time I sit under a glass skylight in Dixmude, I want a lad with a live eye for Zeppe- lins on guard outside, = Something about the branch head- quarters ruins made us think of break- fast, which we hand forgotten, so back to the hotel, Then. we. started back to our lines, We were ordered to keep to the main road all the way back, or we would be shot on sight, and to re- { port to headquarters immediatety oD | our return. I thought if thé sight of | me was so distasteful to anybody, ¥ would not take the chance of offend- ing, being anxious to be polite in such cases, So we stuck to the main road. Fritz did not give us any trouble and | we were back by five, with all hands | out to greet us when we hove in sight, and a regular prodigal,son welcome on | tap, for we were later than they had | expected us, and they had made up their minds that some accident bad happened, ‘ While I was around-Dixmude, I saw mavy living men and women and chil- dren who had been mutilated by the Germans, but most of them were wom- en and children, Almost every one of the mutilated men was too old for military service, “The others had been killed, I guess, But the Belgians were not the only ones who had suffered from German kultur. Many French wounded were tortured b¥ the Huns, and we were constantly finding the mutilated bodies of our troops. It was thought that the Germans often mutilated a dead body as an example to the living. The Germans had absolutely no re- spect whatever for the Red Cross. For instance, they captured a wagon load- ed with forty French wounded, and shot every One of them. I saw the dead bodies, When the Germans came to Dix- mude they got all the men and women and children and made them ‘march before them with their hands in the air, Those who did not were knocked down, After a while some of them saw what they were'going to get, and being _— Money to loan on everything. The} Security Loan company, room 4, Kim- ball Bldg, 9-11-tf aie | MONEY to loan on everything, The Se- curity Loan Co. room 4. Kimball Big ee elitr —— I WANT YOUR BRICK | WORK On Contract or P, Call for Estim ie PETER CLAUSEN | 4€ So, Jackson, Phone 804M, STORAGE Household Goods, Pianos; Etc. Storage House on Burlington CHAMBERLIN FUKNITURE AND UNDERTAKING CO. rite Phat : A } a} } FICE! OF FRANCE SS? a8 Gime Sports as I ver heard of, tried to fight. They were finished off at once, of course: y The former burgomaster had been shot and finished off with an ax, though he had not resisted, because he wanted to Save the lives of his citi- zens, They told me of one case, In Dix- mude, where a man came out of ils house, tryfhg to carry his father, a man of eighty, to the square, where they were ordered to report. ‘The old man could not raise his hands, so'they dragged his son away from him, knocked the-old man in the head with an ax, and left him there to die. T who were spared were made to dig the | graves for the others, | There was a doctor there in Dix- mude, who certainly deserves a mili- tary cross if any man ever did. "He was called from his house by the Ger- mans at 5:30 one morning. He left his wife, who had had a baby two days before, in the house. He was taken to the square, lined up against a wall with three other big men of the town, ‘Then he saw his wife and baby being carried to the square on a mattress by four Germans, He begged to be al- lowed to kiss his wife good-by, and they granted him permission. As he stepped away, there was a rattle and the other men went West. They shot him, too, but though he was riddled We Were Constantly Finding the Muti- lated Bodies of Our Troops. witn punets ne ilved, somenow, and begged the German officer to let him accompany his wife to the prison where they were taking her. This was granted too, but on the way, they heard the sound of firing. The soldiers yelled, “Die Franzosen!” and dropped the mattress and ran. But it was only some of their own butchers at work, Doctor Laurent carried, his wife and baby to an old aqueduct that was being rebuilt by the creek. There they lived for three days and three nights, on the few herbs and the water that Doctor Laurent sneaked out and got at night. Doctor Laurent says that when the Germans killed and crucified the civil- fans ,at Dixmude, they first robbec them of their watches, pocketbooks, rings and other things. There was a Madame Tilmans there, who had had three thousand francs stolen from her and was misused besides. ‘These were just a very few of the things that happened at just one place where the Germans got to work with their “kultur.” So you can picture the Belgians agreeing on a German peace, while there is a Belgian alive to argue about it. They will remember the Ger- mans a long time, I think. But they need not worry: there are a lot of us who will not forget, elther. CHAPTER IX, Laid Up for Repairs. One night, aftér I had been at Dix- mude for about three weeks, we made a charge in the face of a very heavy fire. Our captain always stood at the parapet when we were going. over, and made the sign of the cross and shouted, “For God and France,” Then we would &6 over, Our, officers always led us, but I have never seen German officer lead a ¢hatge, They always were be- hind their men, driving instead of lead- ing. I do not believe they are as brave as they argsaid to be, tat, and We pat up an awful Aight, bat | We could not make it and had to back. Only one company reached le Boche trenches and not a man of it ages canie back who had not been wounded big on the way and did not reach the — trench. They were just wiped out. . The captain was missing, too. We thought he was done'forp but. about two o’clock in the»morning, he came back. He simply féll! ever into the trench, all in, He had been wounded four times, and had lain in @ shell crater full of water for several hours. He would not go back for treatment then, and when daylight came, it was te, because we were practically cut off by artillery fire behind the front For God and France. When @aylight came, the artillery fre opened up right on us, and the Germans had advanced their lines into some trenches formerly held by us and hardly forty-five yards away. We re- ceived bombs and shells right in our faces, A Tunisian in ofr company got crazy, nnd ran back over the parados. He ran a few yards, then stopped and looked back at us. I think he was coming to his senses, and would haye started back to us, Then the spet where he had been was empty, and a second later his body from the chest down fell not three yards from the parados. I do not know where the top part went, That same shell cut a groove in the low hilltop before it ex- ploded. He had been hit by a big shell, and absolutely cut in two. I lave Seen this happen to four men, but this was the only one in France. About seven o'clock, we received re- »nforcements, and poured fresh troops over and retook the trench. No sooner aad we entered it, however, than the 3ermans turned their artillery on us, ot eyen waiting for their own troops ‘0 retire safely., (They killed numbers: of their own men in this way. But the ire was so heavy that, when they coun- ser-attacked, we had to retire again, ind this time they kept after us and Irove us beyond the trench we had originally occupied. We left them there, with our artil- ery taking care of them, ahd our ms- | thine guns trying to enfilade them, and noved to the right. There was a yunch of trees there, about like a small woods, and as we passed the Germans roncealed in it opened fire on us, and ve retired to some reserve tren We were pretty much scattered by this, ime, and badly cut up. We reformed | here, and were joined by other of our | roops, in small groups—what was left of squads and platoons and singly. || Jur captain had got it a fifth time, | neanwhile, but he would not leave us, | ts he was the ranking officer, He had | t scalp wountl, but the’ others were in | uls arms and shoulders. He could not | nove his hands at all. But he led our charge when we ran | ‘or the woods. We carried some ma-| thine guns with us as we went, and he gunners would run a plece, set up, ire while we opened up for them, and ‘un on again, Some troops eame out | ‘€ a trench ‘still farther to the right | ind@ helped us, and we drove the Ger- nans out of the woods and occupied it | vurselves. : From there, we had the Germans in ur old trench almost directly from he rear, and we simply cleaned them ut. I think all the vows were kept hat day, or else the men who made hem died first. I was shot through the thigh some ime er other after the captain get jelved an army ¢itation for that piece |f work, but I do not know, as 1 was | } in the hospital for a short time after. ward. Ido not remember much about going to the hospital except that’ the ambulance made un awful racket going | over the stone-paved streets of Etaples, | and that the bearer who picked up one end of my stretcher, had eyes like dead | fish floating on water; also, that there jack. It felt just like a needle-priek t first, and then for a while my leg vas numb. A couple of hours after we ook our trench back, I started out for he rear. and hospital. The wound had een hurting for some time. They ear fed the captain out on a stretcher bout the same time, but he died*on he way from loss of blood. Fresh roops came up to relieve ws, but our 2en refused to go, and tnough official- y they were not there in the trench, hey stayed until they took the cap- ain away. Then, back to btilets—not ullets, this time. I believe that we Te Well, we went over this time, and | were some civvies standing around the the machine guns were certainly going | entrance as we were being carried in. it strong. We were pretty sore about | The first thing they do in the hos- the chaplain and the Swiss and all | pital is to take off your old dirty band-| electric magnet in and “aibcor is “ they let down the magnet er If the Shell fragment or bullet in you is more than Seven centimeters deep, you cannot feel the pain. ie first doctor reports to the chief how deep your wound is, and -where it is situ- ated, and then a nurse comes up to you, where you He, with your clothes still on, and asks you to take the “pressure.” Then they lift you on a four-wheeled cart, and roll you to the operating the- ater. They take-off your clothes there. I remember I ltked to look at the nurses and surgeons; they lookéd 80 good in their clean white clothes. Then they stick hollow needles into you, which hurt a good deal, and you take the pressure. After a while, they hegin cutting away the bruised and maybe fotten flesh, removing the old loth, pieces of dirt, and so forth, and scraping away the splinters of bone, You think for sure you are going*to bleed to death. The blood rushes through you like lightning, and if you get a sight of yourself, you can feel yourself turning pale, Then they hurry you to your bed, and cover you over with blankets and. hot-water bottles, They raise your bed on chairs, so the blood will ran up toward your head, and after a while, your eyes open and the doctor says, “Out, oul, i! vivra,” meaning that you still had some time to’ spend before finally going west. The treatment we got in the hospital was great. We received cigarettes, to- bacco, matches, magazines, and clean clothes. The men do not talk about their wounds much, and everybody tries to be happy and show it. The ood was fine, and there was lots of it, I do not think there were any doc togs in the world better than ours, and they were always trying to make things easy for us. They did not rip the dressings off your wounds like some of the butchers do in some of our dispensaries that I know of, but took them off carefully. Everything was very clean and sanitary, and some of the hospitals had sun parlors, which were well used, you can be sure, Some of the men made toys and fancy articles, such as’ button’ hovlts and paper Knivess: They made the handles from eripty shell eases, or shrapnel, or pieces of Zeppelins, ot anything else picked’ up ‘along the front. When they are getting well, the men learn” harness’ making, mechanical drawing, telegraphy, gardening, poul- try raising, ig, bookkeeping and the men teaclp the nurses how to make canes out-of shell cases, aud rings of aluminum, and slippers and gloves out of blankets, , The ‘nurses’ certainly work hard. They always havé ‘more todo thin they ought to; but they never complain; and are alwaystheerful and ready to play games when’ they have the time; or read to some pollu. And their work is pretty dirty toor'E-would not Uke to hdvesto do it.’ They'say there were ‘ots of French society ladies working as nurses, but you! never heard much bout society, or any talk about Lord Helpus, or Count Whosis, or pink teas or anything like ‘ that from these | ausaes. A féw shells landéd near our hos- pital, while I wastkere, but no pattent was hit, They '‘knocked:2 shrine of Our Lady to splinters, though, and bowled over a big erucifix. The kitchen was agar by, and It was just the chef's luck chat he hid walked over to our ward ‘0 See a pal of his, when a shell landed plumb inthe center of the ‘kitchen, ind all you -eould.see all over the bar-. racks was stew, That was a regular eatless day for 4s, until they rigged up bogies and got seme more dixies, and mixed up some zornmeal for us. The chef made up for it the next day, though. The chef was a great little’ guy. He was a “blesse” himself, and I guess his stom- ach sympathized with ours. There was a Frenchman in the bed iext to me who had the whole side of ais face torn off. He told me he had deen next to a bomber, who had just it a fusé and did not think it was Jurning fast enough, so he blew on it. {t burned fast enough after that, and shere he was. There was a Belgian in one of the other wards, whom I got to know pretty well, and he would often come over amd visit me. He asked many ques- dons about Dixmude, for he had had relatives there, though he had lost rack of them. He often tried to de- scribe the house they had lived in, so that I might tell him whether it was still standing or not, but I could not semember the place he spoke of; Dur- ng: our talks, he told me about many atrocities. Some of the things he told ne I had heard before, and some of them I heard of afterward. Here are some things that he elther saw or teard of from victims: He said that whem the.Germans en- tered the town of St. Quentin, they started firing into the windows as they passed along. First, after they had oc- supied the town, they bayoneted every workingman they could find, Then they took about half of the children that they could find, and killed them with thelr musket butts. After this, they marched the remainder of the chil- dren and the women to the square, where thoy had lined up a row of male eltizens against a wall: The women and children were told that if they moved, they would all be shot. An- other file of men was brought up, and made to kneel in front of the other men against the wall. ‘The women\and children began to beg for the lives of the men, and many ; hand and turn on the juice, ~ Women and Children Begged for the Lives of the Men. of them were knocked in the head with gun butts before they stopped. Then the Germans fired at the double rank of men, Affer three volleys, there were eighty-four @ead and twenty wounded. Most of the wounded they then killed with axes, but somehow, three or four escaped by hiding under the bodies of others and playing dead, though the officers walked up and down firing their revolvers into* the piles of bodies. The next day the Germans went through the wine cellars, and shot all the Inhabitants they found hiding there. A lot of people, who had taken refuge in a factory over night, decided to come out with a white flag. They Were allowed to think that the white flag would be respected, but no sooner were they all out than they were seized and the women publicly violated in the square, after which the men were shot. & paralytic was shot as he sat in his arm-chair, and a boy of fourteen was taken by the legs and pulled apart. At one place, a man was tied by the arms to tle ceiling of hts room and set afire, His trunk was completely. car- bontzed, but’ his head and arms were unburned. At the same place, the body of a fifteen-year-old boy was found, pierced by more than twenty bayonet thrusts. Other dead were found with thelr hands still in the air, Teaning up against walls, At ginother place the Germans shelled the town for a day, and then entered and sacked it. The women and children were turned loose, with- out being allowed to take anything with them, and forced to leave the town. Nearly five hundred men were deported to Germany. ‘Three, who were almost exhausted by hunger, tried to escape. They were bayoneted and @ubbed to death. Twelve men, who had taken refuge in a firm, were tied together and shotin a mass, Another group of six were tied together and shot, after the Germans had put out -their eyes and tortured them with bayonets. Three others were brought before their wives and children and sabered. The Belgian told me he was at Na- mur when the Germans began shelling it. The bombardment lasted the whole of Al 21 and 22, 1914. They cen- tered their fire on the prison, the hos- pital, and the railway station. They entered the town at four o'clock in the afternoon of August 28. During the first twenty-four hours, they behaved themselves, but on the 24th they began firing at anyorie they pleased, and set fire to djfrerent houses’ on five of the principal squares, Then!they ordered every one to leave his house, and those who did not we-%s shot. The others, about four hundred in all, were drawn up in front of the church, close to the river bank. ‘The Belgian said he could never forget how they all looked, “I can remember just how it was,” he said. “There were eight men, whom I knew yery well, standing in a row with several priests, Next came two good friends of mine named Balbau and Guillaume, with Balbau’s seven- teen-year-old son; then two men who had taken refuge in a barn and had been discovered and blinded; then two | other men whom I had never seen be- fore. “It was awful to see the way the women were erying—'Shoot me too, shoot me with my husband.” “The men were lined up on the edge of the hollow, which runs from the high road to the bottom of the village. One of them was leaning on the shoul- ders of an old priest, and he, was cry- ing, ‘L am too young—I can’t face death bravely.’ “I couldn't bear the sight any longer. I turned my back to the road and cov- ered my eyes. I heard the volley and the bodies falling. Then. some one cried, ‘Look, they're all down.’ But a few escaped.” ‘This Belgian had escaped by hiding —he could not remember how many days—in an old cart filled with manure and rubbish. He had chewed old hides for food, had swam across the river, and hid in a mud bank for almost a week longer, and finally got tc Yrancu. @ took it very hard then we talked about Dixmude, and I told him that the old church was Just shot to pieces. He asked about a painting called the “Adoration of the Magi,” and one of the other prisoners told us it had been saved and transported to Germany. If that is true, and they do not destroy it meanwhile, we will get it back, don’t worry! My wound was just # clean gunshot wound and not very serious, so, al The Daily Tribune Is the Largest Paper in Centr TougN It WAS Not Completely healed, they let me go after three weeks, But before I went, I saw something that oo man of us will ever forget. Some of them took vows just like the bien of the legion I have told about. One of the ents was a German doctor, who had been picked up in No Man's Land, very seriously wounded, He was given the same treatment as any of us, that is, the very best, but finally, the doctors gave him up. They thought he would die slowly, and that it might take several weeks, But. there was a nurse there, who took’ spectal interest in his case, and she stayed up day and night for some time and finally brought him through, The case was very well known, and everybody said she had performed @ miracle, He got better slowly. Then a few weeks later, when he was out of danger and was able to walk, and {t was only a questiom of time before he would be released from the hospital, this nurse was trans ferred to another hospital. Everybody knew her and liked her, and when she went around to say good-by, all the men were sorry and gave her little presents, and wanted her to write to them, She was going to get a nurse she knew In the other hospital to tern her letters into English, s» that she could write to me. I gave her a ring I had made from a plece of shel cage, but T guess she had hundreds of them at that. But this German doctor would not say \good-by to her, That would not have made me sore, but it made this French girl feel very bad, and she be- gan to cry. One of the Frenenh officers saw her and found out about the doc- tor, and the officer went up and spoke to the German. Then the French of- ficer left, and the German called to the nurse and she went over to him and stopped crying. They talked for a little while, and then she put out her hands as ff sho was going to leave, He put out his And Then He Twisted Her Wrists and Broke Them. hands, too, and took hold of hers, And | then: he twisted her wrists and broke them, We heard the snap, There weré men in that ward who had not been on foot since the day* they came to the hospital, and gne of them was supposed to be dying, but it is'an absolute fact that when we heard her scream, there was not a man left in bed. \ T need not tell you what we did to the German. They did not need to shoot Nim, after we got through with him, They did shoot what was left of him, to makegure, though. Now, I have heard people say that it is not the Germans we are fighting, but the kalser and his system. Well, it may be true that some of the Boche soldiers would not do these things if they did not Have to: myself, I am not 80 syre, But you take this doctor, Here he was, an educated man, who had been trained all his life to help people who were in pain, and not to cause It. And he was not where he would have to obey, the kaiser or any other German, And this nurse had saved his life, So I do not see that there is any argument about it. Be broke that girl's wrists because he wanted to; that is all there is to it. Now, I say this Gerinan’ doctor was a dirty cur } and a scoundrel. But I say that he is a fair sample of most of the Germans TP have met. And it Is Germans of this kind that we are fighting—not merely the kalser, Tt is like going to colleg I have never been there, but I have heard ¢ people say it did mot do a man any good to go. But I have never heard a man who went there say that, Probably you have not been over there, and maybe you think we are not fight- ing the German people,’ but only the kaiser and his flunkeys, Well, nobody had better tell me that. Because I have been there, and I haya seen this, And I know, CHAPTER X, Hell at Gallipoll. . After I was discharged from the hos- pital, T was ordered to report to my ship at Brest for sea duty. The boys aboard the Cassard gave me a hearty welcome, especially Mure ray, who had come back after two weeks In the trenches at Dixmnde, I wus glad to see them, too, for after all, they were garbles, and I always feel more at home with them than with sol- diers. Then, it was pretty rough stuff at Dixmude, and after up at al Wyoming, Carries the Latest New Page Five tie lospltal, I Was kéen om Zong to sea again. The sard was in dry dock for re- er her last: voyage to the Dar- S convoy to the treepship Everything was being rushed fo get her out as soon as possible; and crews were working. day and night. There were other ships there too—st- perdreadnanghts, and dreadnauchts, and battleships, and armored cruisers, all being overhauled. . We’ recéived and placed guns of newer design, filled the magazines with the highest explosives known to naval use, and generally made rendy for a hard jow. Out magazines were filled with shells for our big 12 and 14-inch gons. A 14inch shell can tear a hole through the heaviest armor plate at 12,000 yards, and will do more damage than you would think. When we had coaled and had got our stores aboard, we dressed for ac- tion—or rather, nndressed. The deckg were clear; hatch covers bolted and davits folded down; furniture, chests, tables, chairs were sent ashore, and {n- flammable’ gear; Uke-—our rope’ ham- mocks, went ovérboard. You contd not find a single wooden chair or table in the ward room. When the ship is cleared for action, a shell bursting Inside cannot fina much to set afire, and if one bursts on deck, there is'nothing to burn but the wooden deck, and that is covered with steel plate, Finally, we had roll call—all men present. Then we set sail for the Dardanelles as escort to the Dupleis, which had on board territorial and provincial French troops—Gnascons, Parisians, Normans, —Indo-Chinese, Spahis, Turcos—all kinds. When we messed, we had to squat down on the steel mess deck and eat from metal plates. There had been a notice posted be- fore we left that the Zeppelins had be- gun sea raids, and we kept’a Mve eye out for them, The news proved to be a fake, t h, and we did not see a single cigar while we were out. Wemade the trip to the Dardanellas without sighting an énemy craft, keep* ing in elose touch with the Dupletx, and busy every minute preparing for aetion, I was made gun captain and given charge of the starboard bow turret; mounting two 14-inch guns, I had my at gun practice daily, and by the We neared the Dardanelles, after days, they were in pretty fatr shape, Tt was about 5 a, m. when we drew near Cape Helles and took stations for action. The Dupleix was in front of us. The batteries on the cape opened up on us, and in a few min- utes later those at Kum Kaleh joined in. As the Dupleix made for “V” beach and prepared to land her troops, we swung broadside on, raking their bat- terles as we did 80, and received! a shel, which entered through a” gon hort in the after turret and exploded, Some bags of powder stored there Qvhere they should never have been) Were fired and the roof of the turret Wos Just lifted off. It landed on deck, tiited up against the side of the tur- ret. On deck the rain of fire was simply terrific. Steel flewsin all directions, It smash, crash, slam-bang all the time, and I do not mind saying I never thought we would come ‘out of it. Some of the heavy armor plate up forward was shot away and after that the old Cassard looked more like a monitor than anything else to me. As we drew nearer the shore they began using shrapnel on us and in no time at all our funnels were shot full of holes and a sieve was watertight com- pared to them, Naturally we were not just taking all this punishment without any come- back, Our guns were at it fast and from the way the fire slackened in certain places we knew we were mak- ings it effective. My guns did for two enemy pieces that T know of, and per- haps several others. The French garbies were a good denl more excited in action than I thought they would be. They were dodging around below decks, trying to miss the shrapnel that came aboard, shouting, swearing, singing— but Sighting hard, at that. They stood the gaff just as well as any otter garbles would, only in thelr own sweet way--which {is noisy enough, believe me. One of our seamen wags hit 190 times by fragments of shrapnel, so you can see whut they were up against in the dodging line, A gun urret In action is not exactly the best place on earth for a nervous man nor one who likes his comfort. There is an awfnl lot of heat and noise and smell and work, all the “me in a fighting gun turret. But during an engagement I would rather be in a gun turret every time than between decks, At that, if anything does happen ia a turret—it is. good olght sure for all, and no rain checks needed, TO BE CONTINUED atronize the . IBERTY GARAGE Car First- ind Truck Storage slass Repair Shop BERT TULLIS, Shop Foreman Gasoline and Oils” Phone 983-180 So. Blm St.

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