Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 29, 1918, Page 6

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EARALARRAD SOSA SERALLE SLED rere es “OUTWITTING THE HUN” SS Bo Ses LIEUTENANT PAT O'BRIEN ‘Copyright, Wis, by Pat Alva O'Brien ~ ‘One of the souvenirs of my adven-! ture is a check given me during this with the {dea of stealing this map, accordingly. a lieutenant and 1 got In Tront of this interpreter’s window one | day end engeged in a very hot argu- ment as to whether Heldelberg was on | the Rhine or not, and we argued back and forth so vigorously that the Ger- man came out of his room, map in hand, to settle it. After the matter was entirely settied to our satisfac- | freed what tlghi. | i As we passed through village after. | village in Belgiuin and I realized that. TRIO OF. HUN | 7 i ad te died toe Gane DUA nee ieee Sates tne Slate We eons thee = DOW AGEs Y Uy Se through the window! I would have} to go through that window while the) train was going full-speed, because if; __ I waited until it had slowed up’ or) NORTHWEST OF VERDUN.—( By stopped entirely, it would be a simple! Associated Press.}—Three German | 18 INSPIRING SCENE ENACTED WITH ARRIVAL OF BIG CONVOY AMERICAN NAVAL BASE, FRENCH COAST WITH THE AMERICANS French Citizens Turn Out in, Force to Witness Stately Procession of American |trance is under cover of darkness, to cases in which the ‘wounds incapaci- \cheat the submarines which have ap-|tate them from returning to military peared of late off the harbor mouth. | *@rvice—legs off, arms off, or other matter for the guards to overtake or| airplanes are believed to have been| Transports But the entrance today was in broad patyeveti meen « ‘ eee ay = shoot me. | brot down in an aerial battle over! Rx i ity had aj __- m ng to ery per- . daylight so that the whole city it I opened the window. The guard} Bantheville late Monday between an| AMERICAN NAVAL . BASE, ehatrce to. bkipddat he peel ths Staht) cine traveling, and so they are going who sat opposite me—so close that, 4™erican patrol of eight machines/FRANCE, Oct. 28—(Correspond- his feet touched mine and the stock |8"d thirteen Germans, of his gun which he heid between his | knees occasionally struck my foot—| made no objection, imagining no a that I found the car too warm or that the smoke, with which the compart- | ment was filled, annoyed me. | As I opened the window, the noise} the train was making as it thundered | along grew louder. It seemed to say: | vence of The Associated Press). The |latest convoy of American transports CADET AVIATORS (vii iis ately proceonen tetics tee bri; id-day ~ iff b: MEET DEATH AT wwntppea'the tues, the decks crowted ith A i Idiers, and the pi FT. WORTH, TEX. \ana castle walls black with cheering \people, as the fleet moved majestic- ‘ally past the outer capes to the shelt- It was just 11:40 when the first | destroyer was seen on the silvery wat- a thread of smoke behind, This was the scout ship, far ahead, piloting the way and on the lookout for any dan- ger along the path. It came straight into the harbor, its work done, while \er out between the capes, At that/+,, distance, three miles, it looked only a; ol (speck as it turned the capes, leaving} home for their wooden legs and arms, and after that, well—” At 6 o’clock tonight—five hours af- the fleet of transports had reach- the anchorage, the huge debark- ment had been accomplished, and the last man was ashore and in camp. —_— NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE oF CHATTEL MORTGAGE “banquet” by Lieut. James Henry persed : aay FORT WORTH, Texas, Oct. 29.— | ered inside harbor. |the main fleet, keeping compactly to-) Default having been made in a cer. Dickson of the Tenth Royal Irish Fu- ieoas bent sone ine Cadets Howard D. Burnett and H. W. abet coke ta Wg AO began to file peewern the/ tain chattel mortgage given by The 5 sileers, 2’ fellow prisoner. It was for | you're a fool if you don't"—and 1 said | Williams of Barron field were killed | capes. Ahead was a large destroyer/Duplex Transportation Company, 4 20 francs and was made payable to to myself “the noes have it,” and| When their planes collided in the air.| |with four stacks, and behind it on/mortagor, to O. Ramsey, mortgagee 4 the order of “Mr. Pat O’Brien, 2nd closed down the window again. Williams’ home was at Tippston, Pa.,| | either flank two other four stackers. |for Thirty-five hundred dollars ": Lieut."| Poor Jim forgot to scratch , ‘As soon as the window was closed,/2"4 that of Burnett at Dodge City, | | This was the forward protecting bar-| ($3,500) dated February 23, 1918, ~' out the “London” and substitute the tndiaa (of he) train amtuckitedeabs| 222° rage of destroyers in a Lea en ‘3 fe duly aed at 11:30 a. m. on Octo- > ‘Courtral” on the date line, but its sided and its kpeed seemed to aera Sa | Now a huge prow pushed ou! vA Cou A Cha » in the affice of the ¥| value ss a souvenir is just as great. ish, and my plan appealed to me| WELLS FUNERAL TO BE : yond the white cliff of the cape, an ng Ned lerk and ex-officio Register %| When he gave it to me he had no idea siveuges then rer | HELD THURSDAY AFTERNON| grew gradually—towering decks, fun- + Deeds in and for Natrona County, j} that I would have an opportunity so Tlacakw ithe ¢gadin interonk erie . | t 5 \nels, bleching smoke, and then the; saree being numbered 59754; “' soon afterward to cash it in person, | didn’t understand @ word of English, The funéral of Arthur Alex Wells, | |mammoth hull of a 20,000-ton trans- | 2" ereas, said mortgage contains =| although I am quite sure that what- anid ioo, Inte qlee tide Gtwclne er cae the colored porter of the 0.-S. build- | port, formerly a German trans-Atlan-| full power of sale and foreclosure 3 See picencial reverses Rn my be a: fided to the English officer who sat | i?& Will be held Thursday afternoon | fic liner. Soon another appeared—| UPON default being made in the pay- a) ined to meet, my want w! never be great enough to Induce me to realize on thet check. There was one subject that was talked about in this prison whenever conversation lagged, and I suppose it is the same in other prisons too. What were the chances of escape Every man seemed to have a differ- ent idea and one way, I suppose, was about as impracticable as another. None of us ever expected to get a chance to put our ideas into exécution, but it was interesting speculation, and anyway one can never tell what op- portunities might present themselves, One suggestion was that we disguise ourselves as women. “O'Brien would stand a better chance disguised as a horse!” declared another, referring to the fact that my helght (I am six feet two inches) would make me more con- spicuous as a woman than as a man. Another suggested that we steal a German Gotha—a type of airplane used for long-distance bombing. It is these machines which are used for bombing London. They are manned by three men, one sitting in front with @ machine gun, the pilot sitting behind him and an observer sitting in the rear with another machine gun. We fig- 1 Confiscated the Map. tion, he went back into his room and I watched where he put the map. When, therefore, I learned that I was on my way to Germany, I realized that it was more important than ever for me to get that map, and with the help of my friend, we got the interpreter ‘out of his room on some pretext or another, and while he was gone I con- | fiscated the map from the book in which he kept it and. concealed It in my sock underneath my legging. As I had anticipated, it later proved of the utmost value to me. I got it none too soon, for half an hour later we were on our way to | Ghent. Our party consisted of five British officers and one French officer. At Ghent. where we had to wait for several hours for another train to take us direct to the prison camp in Ger- many, two other prisoners were added to our party. In the interval we were locked In a room at a hotc!, a guard sitting at the | door with a rifle on his knee. It would ‘have done my heart good for the rest of my life if 1 could have gotten away | then and fooled that Hun—he was so | next me what I had planned to do. “For God's sake, Pat, chuck it!” he urged. “Don't be a lunatic! This rail- road is double-tracked and rock-bal- lasted and the other track is on your side. You stand every chance in the world of knocking your brains out) against the rails, or hitting a bridge or | a whistling post, and if you escape those you will probably be hit by an-/ | other train on the other track. You | haven't one chance in a thousand to | make it!” | There was a good deal of logic in | what he said, but I figured that once 1 ; was in that reprisal camp I might | never have even one chance in a thou- sand to escape, and the idea of re- maining a prisoner of war indefinitely went against my grain. I resolved to tuke my chance now at the risk of | breaking my neck. The car was full of smoke. I looked | across at the guard. He was rather an old man, going home on leave, and he | Seemed to be dreaming of what was in store for him rather than paying any | particular attention to me. Once ina , while I had smiled at him, and J figured that he hadn't the slightest idea of | what was going through my mind all ‘from the Chamberlain chapel. Defi- nite arrangements will not be made until the arrival of his two brothers from Kansas City, Mo | The colored Masons will have| charge of the funeral services at the! chapel and at the gra { ton lalate |Shipment Started from Knighton Ranch on Powder River Aban- doned by Cowpunchers En- route to Glenrock GLENROCK, Wyo., Oct. 29,.— WASHINGTON, Oct. 29,—The Spanish influenza caused the turning new Atcststal tae » hing foe an ar. |1008e upon the range of what was mistice and peace was received today |PT°Dably the largest bunch of cattle at the’ SwetihilewaHien. ‘Tha caae to be shipped from Converse county ET | BaWitieaiieal 23 |this fall. The cattle, avout 1,250 in SST b. Saas Mee ntea = chet! number, were headed toward Glen- Basel voted id ess from | rock from the Dave Knighton ranch babes. oi jon Powder river, about 65 miles : 4 northwest of the city. Fifty cars had Lille and, Leus, St. Quentin, Loan, |heen ordered for their transportation and Rheims, around which the tide of | and it was thought they would be battle raged recently, are all old-time | joaded Sunday. “4 . battle grounds Lilie was captured by | Mr. Knighton was at home ill with Louis XTV, and was stoutly defended j¢1y" and several of his cowpnchers in 1792 against the Austrians. In|were down with the same ailment, 1648 Lens was the scene of a great| few of them: having been sent to battle in which the French routed the Pst for treatment. Spaniards. At St. Quentin in 1557, The big herd was entrusted to the the army of Philip II, gained a great)remainder of the crew, several of victory over the French, and the Ger-{ whom were seized with the malady mans, under Von Goeben, defeated |while on the trail, until there were the French there in 1871. Laon was | too few to properly handle the cattle, ‘the center of fighting in the religious|so they were turned loose upon the and League wars against England, | range. | then still another German liner. | “Off to the right of the big ships iwas a line of destroyers—the star- board barrage—and to the left an- other line, the port barrage, and as- tern was another one of the destroy- ers forming the rear barrage. Thus enveloped, the big ships passed into the anchorage, the destroyers drew eff to their buoys, and soon lighters were along side bearing ashore this new consignment of many thousand American troops, It is a scene oft repeated now as day after day and night after night, but often as it is, it is always a stir- |ring sight, and one which makes the |blood tingle, as these thousands of | fighting men pour out of the west. The American Naval Base present- ed a wonderful panorama this bright day spread out across the water and {along the shore. Besides the fleet which had just arrived there was the throb of huge naval activity ashore and afloat, over twenty miles of shore line enveloping this deep blue basin. In front lay a score of the big trans- ports which had come during the last week, most of them like those just |another former German liner—and/| ment of said sum of interest thereon; and whereas, there is now due at the time of the first publication of this notice the sum of thirty-seven hun- dred thirty-nine and 36-100 dollars %$3739.36) together with expenses and attorneys’ fees in the sum of three hundred fifty dollars ($350.00) thereto added; and whereas no suit or proceeding at law has been institu_ ted at law to recover the debt or ob- ligation to secure said mortgage or any part thereof; and whereas; said m property consists of four duplex trucks, Serial numbers 870, 806, 787 and 711 now in the posses- sion of 0, Ramsey, mortagee. Now, therefore, I, O. Ramsey, elect to foreclose said chattel mortgage ou said described personal property by reason of the same being in default and remaining due and unpaid; that I will sell said property in the City of Casper, Natrona County, Wyoming, at the front door of the Court House at public auction to the highest bid- der for then and there to be obtained on Wednesday the 20th day of No- vember, A. D., 1918, said sale to be- gin at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, to satisfy said note, interest and costs and attorney’s fees. ; red that, at a pinch, perhaps, seven ee the time we had been traveling. at Laon Blucher defeated the French, ae Ea SEE ._|in, German liners, | O. RAMSEY, or eight of us could make our escape °CkKsure. I began to cough as though my throat | in 1814. Near Rheims Napoleon ad-| There will be no meeting of the) ‘«trony of fate,” remarked the ob- Mortgages. ; 4m a single machine. They have two Later we were marched to the train | ministered a disastrous defeat to the|stockmen in regard to the extermi- motors of very high horse power, fly very high and make wonderful speed. But we had no chance to put this idea to the test. to everyone, but the one great obstacle | that was to convey us to Germany. It consisted of some twelve coaches, eleven of these containing troops going home on leave, and the twelfth re- “Yes, what of it?” he rejoined. was badly irritated by the smoke and then I opened the window again. This time the guard looked up and showed | his disapproval, but did not say any- thing. nating of pedatory animals until the lifting of the quarantine for Spanish Russians in 1814. : | i Ned f There are but three kisses mention- | influenza. A meeting was called for ed in the Gospels, the one of betrayal, | November 2 at the Natrona County | minto are among the out of town vis- server as he pointed out the many German ships freighted with Ameri- can troops, A hospital ship now passed to the And downy pillows piled in place; A. H. COBB, Attorney for Mortagee. Published Oct, 29; Nov, 5, 12. NOTICE OF SALE UPON EXECU. Procéeded to levy the said execution ve w ‘ i left. On the decks lay long lines of F I worked out another plan by which Served for us. We were placed in a It was then 4 o'clock in the morn-| by Judas; the one of adoration, by the) Court House under the auspices of e; _ TION. | I thought I might have a chance it I) fourth-class Sere wee 014, | ing and would soon,be light. I knew I | Magdalene: one of Fecbneiliation, by | Pedatory Animal Control Assocjation ie pray ba ee Overland-Major-Willis Company, i) Sonia ever. ast ito Mina ot ini eaks BE TG cite a iesadiawaiecaa aia had to do it right then, or never, as | the father of the Prodigal Son. | but ie ea ney ee eailt-bir: “They. are going home,” 3 Plaintiff. momes. I would conceal my $4 SS ‘ | there would be no chance to escape in | _ poned " e doctor. “They -are Are Se NM 4 ete aaehted seated bur eas ieee aeartnes Se of US the daytime. _Dr. M. C_ Keith officiated at three | thorities, ag | si eae if Great Divide Oil ape Se, ar) Me taxied slong the ground I would As we sat in the coach we were an| 1 had on a trench coat that I had | births which occurred at the Casper Whereas, the» Overland-Majors. rush out, shout at the top of my voice object of curiosity to the crowd who "Sed #s a flying cout and wore my | branch of the Wyoming General hos- | # Hi Li Willis Company, on the 5th day of | ni point excitedly at his wheels, This, gathered at the station, knapsack, which I had constructed | Pital during the last twelve hours. Of || Let im ive \October, A. D., 1918, obtained a iz figured, would cause the pilot to stop | “Hope you have a nice trip!” one of | Ut Of a gas bag brought into Courtral | the three new arrivals two were girls +. + judgment against the Great Divide i“ Sarest : : | eliean (aman taa tednahetiea |by a British prisoner. In this I had|®nd one a boy. Mn, and Mrs. E. O. | 7 ., 5 Oil Com for thi ‘ get out to see what was wrong. | a a 5 < 5 z .| Yeaman, who have® bi ing | As long as the flowers theit perfume give, pany for the sum of One By that time I would be up to him, and “Drop me a line when you get to Le, more rena foe eters ait the Basket Grocery Ox Teckacnteses | So long I’d let the kaiser live, ! Thousaid Two Hundred Thirteen and ‘ ae rl cee aid ne Tae Led malant abou ted euneter aay | of them had to go with me through the rfc the spagit of e fine girl, born Live and live for a million years, . pasa Eerie Sea, Ba slcpete | 5 | ” 7 | last night. 2 4 i i i i ; s-Wi 7 t jamp into the machine and be over the | “When shall we see you again?” “ Tae ' ‘i " Tiderbeon own the po io exes oa | wi Spe! rs pice water pcs ‘Majors-Willis Company was plaintiff, lines before the Huns could make up asked a third. He train was now going at a rate o! morning, while Mr. d Mrs. Phili With nothing que > and the Great Divide Oil Company ‘ thelr minds just what had happened.| “Remember. me to your friends, wih | between thirty and thirty-five miles an | Dewald hav bag wa ts. Philip |- But the salted brine of a Scotchman’s curse. was defendant; and { It was a fine dream, but my|you? You'll find plenty where you're }0Ur, and again it seemed to admonish this Sic brs + eee ees . ‘ - ereas on the 25th of October, , chance was not to come that way. | going!” shouted another. her je 4 I would let him live on a dinner each day, povrie! wane aie Disiotist caused exe- There were dozens of other ways! The German officers made no effiort E. 0. Y si d from silver on a golden tray; eution e issued on said judgment, f . O. Yeaman, ma S erved fr , ! | which we considered. One man would |to repress the crowd, in fact, they ket Grocery on Tackett ns Served with things both dainty and sweet, directed to the Sheriff of Natrona | be for endeavoring to make his way | Joined In the general Isughter which | quarantined ut his home, having an | Served everything but things to eat. County, commanding him to levy on prevente ‘im isi ii | ’ i; i . ks ‘ swim some river that crossed the lines. | passing our windew. Za daughter at the Stak delet ded rane And I’d make him a bed of pikencaneey, Whereas the said sheriff, through { The idea of making one’s way to| “You're an officer, aren't you?” 1 a | 3 eee With costly linens to lie between, his duly appointed, acting and quali- | Holland, a neutral country, occurred | asked, respectfully enough. = | Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Marquis of Ar- | And covers of down and fillets of lace, « fied under-sheriff, Perry Elswici, ‘ ' in that direction, we all realized, was | the great barrier of barbed and elec- “Well, in England,” I said, “we let your officers who are prisoners ride | itors in Casper today. . * ee It would stink with the rot Yet, when to its comfort he would yield, of the battlefield, upon one Jeffrey Quad truck, the personal property of the said defend- trically charged wire which guards ev- | first class. Can't you fix it so that we Hoyt Leech of Che i brai f ant ,and now has the same in his pos- ' 3 enne, is spend- And blood, and bones, and brains of men | €fy foot of the frontier between Bel- | can be similarly treuted, or least be | ing several days in Casper while at. Shenld covecciint smcthen hint ano tiger bec ne A fias wees Foesleny ap- » glum and Holland, and which is closely | transferred to second-class compart- | tending to busi i | re 4 Toa ‘ al e sum 0: ,000. | Watched by the German sentries. ment?” le aiiariery oi His pillows should cling from the yotten clay, Now, therefore, I, Hugh L. Patton, Clay from the grave of a soldier boy. And while God’s stars their vigils keep, This barrier was a three-fold affair. sheriff in and for Natrona County, It consisted first of a barbed wire wall ‘If I had my way,” he replied, “you'a shall under and by virtue of such levy a jad my: N. Isenberg of Denver, of the ride with the hogs!” i - Blackstone Petroleum company, re-| wix feet high. Six feet beyond that was a nine-foot wall of wire power- fully charged with electricity. To touch it meant electrocution. Beyond that, at a distance of six feet, was another wall of barbed wire six feet high. Beyond the barrier lay Holland and liberty, but how to get there was a problem which none of us could solve and few of us ever expected to have | a chance to try, Mine came sooner than I expected. CHAPTER VI. A Leap for Liberty. I had been in prison at Courtrai nearly three weeks when, on the morn- ing of September 9th, I and six other officers were told that we were to be transferred to a prison camp in Ger- many. One of the guards told me during the day that we were destined for a re- prisal camp in Strassburg. They were sending us there to keep our airmen from bombing the place. He explained that the English car ried German officers on hospital ships for a similar purpose and he excused the German practice of torpedoing these vessels on the score that they also carried munitions! When I pointed out to him that France would hardly be sending munitions to Eng- jand, he lost interest in the argument. Some days before, I had made up my Then he turned to the crowd and told them of my request and how he | had answered me, and they all laughed hilariously. | ‘This got me pretty hot. | “That would be a d— sight better than riding with the Germans!" I yelled after him, but if he consid- ered that a good joke, he didn’t pass | it on to the crowd, Some months later when I had the |honor of telling my story to King | George, he thought this incident was one of the best jokes he had ever heard. I don’t believe he ever laughea harder in his life. Before our train pulled out, our guards had to present their arms for inspection and their rifles were loaded |{n our presence to let us know that they meant business. From thé moment the train started ;on its way to Germany, the thought kept coming to my head that unless 1 |could make my escape before we | reached that reprisal camp I might as | well make up my mind, as far as 1 was concerned, the war was over, It occurred to me that if the eight of us in that car could jump at a given | signal and seize those four Hun guards |by surprise, we'd have a splendid | chance of besting them and jumping of. the train when it first slowed down, | but when I passed the idea on to my |eemrades they turned it down. Even \if the plan worked out as gloriously |a# I had pictured, they pointed out, SS jared to Casper yesterday after S |spending a few days in Riverton at- | tending to business matters. a 6S bg, tay Delfelder, a prominent | banker of Riverton, and his wife are | stopping a few days at the Midwest | hotel while attending to business mat- | ters in Casper. | 7 © | |. E. McClintock of the Western | | Union Telegraph company, of Den-| | ver, is 2 business caller in Casper to- | ~amm | day. | “1 Pulled Myself Up, Shoved My Feet | Austin B. Nash, a well-known geo- Through the Window, and Let Go.” |logist of Cheyenne is attending to business matters in Casper for a few me as It rattled along over the ties, | days. “You're a fool if you do—you're a fool if you don’t. You're a fool if you don't | Ww ch —you're a fool if you do. You're a fool | e wish to express our sincere! | if you don’t.” 4 | thanks to our many friends for their I waited no longer. Standing upon | floral offerings and benevolence dur- | the bench as if to put the bag on the |i& ane bereavement and death of our | rack and taking hold of the rack with | @#Ughter, Alice Carlson. ‘ | my left hand and a strap that hung E. G. Carlson and Family. from the top of the car with my right, | I pulled myself up, shoved my feet and | legs out of the window and let go. There was a prayer on my lips as I went out, and I expected a bullet be- tween my shoulders, but it was all over in an instant. | 1 landed on my left side and face. CARD OF THANKS ———— ee probably didn’t stop within aly of a mile from the spot where I lay. I came to within a few minutes and | | when I examined myself and found no} | bones broken, I didn’t stop to worry j about my cuts and bruises, but jumped | | up with the idea of putting as great a | distance between me and that track as | burying my face in the rock ballast, cutting it open and closing my left eye, skinning my hands and shins and! stralning my'‘ankle. For a few mo- mind that it would be a very good | ‘## fact that so many of us had es | ments I was completely knocked out, | thing to get hold of a map of Germany, | C®Ped would almost inevitably - sur | and if they shot at me through the! which I knew was in the possession of in our recapture. ‘The Huns wou one of the German interpreters, be- | have scoured Belgium till they bh cause I realized that if éver the op- | ot us and then we would all be sli portunity came to make my escape, | Perhaps they were right. such 2 map might be of the greatest | Nevertheless, I was determined that assistance to me, do, I was going to make one bid for no matter what the others decided tec | wiudow, in the first moments after my | escape, I had no way of knowing. Of course, if they could have stopped | the train right then, they could easily | , have recaptured me, but at the speed it was going and in the confusion which! | must have followed my escape, they} I Possible before daylight came. Still be- | ing dazed, I forgot ull about the barbed | wire fence along the right of way and | ran full tilt into it. Right there I lost | one of my two precious pieces of bread, | which fell out of my knapsack, but 1] | The one thing that was uppermost in | my mind was that for the moment I 8 free, and it wasup to me now to} ake the most of my liberty. | TO BE CONTINUED | ee ee = - ei ed al And while the waves the white sands sweep, He should never, never, never sleep. And thru the days all thru the years, There should be an anthem in his ears, Ringing and singing and never. done From the edge of light to the set of sun, Moaning and moaning, A ravaged French girl’s bastard child. And I would build him a castle by the sea, As lovely a castle as ever could be; Then I'd show him a ship from over the As fine a ship as ever could be, Laden with water cold and sweet, * g Laden with everything good to eat, nd moaning wild, seas, Yet scarce does she touch the silvered sands, Scarce may he reach his eager hands, Than a hot and hellish molten shell Should change his beaven into hell, And tho he’d watch on the wave-swept shore, Our Lusitania would rise no more. In “No Man’s Land” where the Irish fell, I’d start the kaiser a private hell; I'd jab him, stab him, give him gas; In every wound I’d pour ground glass; I’d march him out where brave boys died, Out past the lads they crucified. In the fearful gloom of his living tomb There's one thing I’d do before I was thru I’d make him sing, in a stirring manner, The wonderful words of “The Star Spangled Banner.” —Grace of execution upon said property, sell and dispose of, to the highest bidder for cash in hand, the said Jeffrey Quad truck, at the south front door of the Court House of Natrona County, Wyoming, situated in the town of Casper, between the hours of 9 o'clock in the forenoon, and 5 o'clock in the afternoon, on Saturday the 9th day of November, A. D., 1918 |said gale to begin at the hour of 10 o’elock in the forenoon. This 29th day of October A. D., 1918. HUGH L. PATTON, Sheriff. |By PERRY ELSWICK, Under Sheriff. Published Tuesday, Oct. 29: No- } vember 5, 1918. _ KNOCKS OUT PAIN |THE FIRST ROUND Comforting relief from paia makes Sloan’s the World’s Liniment This famous reliever of rheumatic iri grey that humanity Se a external Olcott, Los Angeles. Team Work of All Kinds. — Also Sand and Gravel Hauling STARK & COMPANY, Phone 713R

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