Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 20, 1918, Page 6

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nella then eeeed Sake NSU oe CITY NEWS|: oe Funeral Is Held Funeral services for Stanley Tre- zona who died Sunday at Salt Creek of influenza were held at the Grant street chapel today at 2:30 o’clock, Dr. Walter H. Bradley, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, off ing. Burial was made in the Cz * sc # Miss Lois Welty of Red Oak, Iowa, arrived this morning to accept a po- sition as first grade teacher at the East Casper school. Miss Welty is {a graduate of the Iowa State Teach- THERMOPOLIS SULPHUR BEDS TO BE WORKED Development of Great Deposits on Large Scale After January |, Is Plan of Shoshoni CITATIONS FOR = BRAVERY WITH YANKEE FORCES Tribute Paid Many Western Boys in List of Honors Given Out for Publication by per Department Today ers’ College and has taught at Brigh- Sulphur Co. ton, Iowa. ? : 5 The commander in chief of the eee! oe The resumption of an old industry American Expedtionary forces in! The North Casper school will be 0% 9 much larger scale is contained the name of the President has award- Teady in another week, it is claimed, ,'9 the announcement from Thermopo- ed the following distinguished serv-/25 the work has been somewhat de-|/is that the Shoshoni Sulphur com- , been lighted, have ice cross to the following named sol-! diers of the Rocky Mountain region for the acts of extraordinary heroism set forth after their names: Sergeant John Brinda, Company B, 455th Inf. “For extraordinary heroism in action near Flierey, ance, Sept. 12, 1918. Without waiting orders Sergeant Brinda went forward against a concealed enemy machine gufi which was holding up his platoon, killed the gunner and captured four men, thereby enabling} his platoon toe continue the advance.” Home address; Mrs. John Brinda, wife, Alsada, Mont. First Lt. Carl J. Sonstelie, Third Tank corps. For extraordinary heroism in action near Mont Maucon, France, Sept. 26, 1918, Lt. Sonste-! lie displayed bravery and leadership | of a high order in the advance toward | Miss Alfa Mokler, went to Thermopo- Mont Faucon by going out ahead of|lis this morning where they will visit the engineers, reconnoitering a tank! their brother, Dr. V. A. Mokler and merring the! family. route under fire, and tanks forward. He located the re- sistance in the Boise De Cuisy in ad- vance, later rallying disorganized sol-|t diers and enabling them to hold the | Bois De Cuisy. Carl J. So: avenue, West K ispel, Mont. pany A, 15th M. G. B. ‘For extra- t ordinary heroism near Vieville en Haye, in the St. Mihiel Salient, France, Sept. 12, 1918. leading his section forward to its ob- jective, inspiring his men by his} coolness under fire. idating his objective he was severely | 0! wounded by shrapnel, but remained gor her physical examination prior to in command of his section until over- he rentry into the social service de- | come by weakness and sent to the| partment of the American Red Cross. His example was an inspira-| She will leave Saturday for Cheyenne. soldier of his conj-| Mrs. Smith’s partner, Mrs. Helms, is Tear. tion to every mand.”” Willis, Durango, Colorado. | Second Lieut. William Belzer, Ob- server, Observation Group, 4th Corps. | ¥ “For extraordinary heroism in act-|? ion near Jaulny, France, Sept. 12-13,) 1918. On September ° 12th, Lisut. Belzer with First Lieut, Wallace Coleman, pilot, while on an artillery surveillance mission, was attacked by an enemy plane: They waited until the enemy was at close range. fired fifty rounds directly into the vital parts of the machine, when the machine was seen to disappear out of control. ‘The next day Lieuts, Bel- zer and Coleman, while on a recon- naissance mission, were’ attacked by seven énemy aircraft. Thgy unhes- itatingly opened fire, but, owing to! the guns being jammed, were forced to withdraw to our lines where, clear- ing the jam, they returned to finish the mission. The'r guns again jammed and they were driven back by a large patrol of ensmy planes. After _ skillful maneuvering they succeeded in putting one gun into use und returned a third time, only to be driven back. Undaunted, they re- turned the fourth time and aecom- plished their mission, transmitting valuable information to infantry headquarters.” Home address: Frank B. Belzer, Glasgow, Montana. see Se aS SECRETARY OF STATE OHEEP BOARD 15 DEAD CHEYENNE, Wyo., Nov. 20.—Dr. Hugh R. Millard, secretary and trens-| ured of the State Board of Sheep Commissioners, died from influenza yesterday. Dr. Millard.was born in the state of New York, attending school and nigh school at Dundee. He came to Wyo- ming with his father, mother and brother_in 1911, settling at Worland, in the Big Horn Basin, on a ranch, Later his father. returned +o New York, and Dr. Millard and his brother Home address, Mrs., ground floor of the Oil Exchange wife, 628 Third) building. Ed McGuinn, the proprietor, may Sergeant Edward S. Willis, Com- chairs in the old location until after While consol-| Velour Beauty Parlors, has received Home address: Mrs. Maude | already Beeying in was in the city today, called by the George Smith. eee. Song Recital Presbyterian Church | give a song recital, singing in sev- eral foreign languages, Monday ey-| ening at the First Presbyterian church to which the public is cordially in-| vited. . No admission charges will be | asked. avcompanist, will assist Mr. Lundberg | in giving the recital. layed during the past two weeks. Reg-| P@Y has completed plans for the de- istration is gradually getting heavier Yelopment of the great sulphur beds and the new school will be needed to three miles north of there to which relieve the congestion at the other it gaiqed title last spring. Steam schools. shovels will be used to mine the mia- eral, rich in sulphur content, and the Mrs. Sam Bailey has returned to Shipment of 3700 tons a day to Chi- the Bailey ranch near Crawford, Neb, ©22° is contemplated. A railroad after spending several days in Cas. 8Pur is being constructed at the pres- . business. Mrs. Bailey is a sis-|¢™t time. : , ter to Mrs. Arthur Dupes, who with, _ Undersheriff Perry Elswick of this her husband and little child, were vie- ‘ity is among those heavily intere: tims of influenza a few weeks ago. in the venture, all of whom a ] oaths “* fident of its success. Samples hibited here burn readily and a test of the 500-acre field shows that the deposit extends to a depth of 289 feet. Due to the fact that steam shovels will be used in open cuts the éost of mining will be reduced to the minimum. The property was worked some years ago for a period of four years and at that time is said to have paid rich dividends. There was some dis-| pute about the title to the property and a highgrading mill erected at considerable cost was allowed to fall into disrepair. It is now proposed to treat the product in Chicago. al i th ol MUSIC BENEFICIAL 10 ue ana aes supe sncon are SHELL -SHOGK VICTIMS Payments on the Fourth, Liberty Loan issue are now due and the va- rious banks of the city would appre- ciate it if those who signed pledges would be on hand with the payments. PPO Mrs. Erwin Day and her sister, oS The World’s Fair barber shop is »eing moved today from the former location on South Center street to the continue to operate several Sergeant moving today from their home at 526, Willis displayed great courage, de-| South’ Durbin street, to 328 South termination and devotion to duty,/ Pine street. [By Associated Press] Bi |. LONDON, Nov. 20. — Music has been found to be beneficial in the treatment of soldiers suffering from shell-shock and now singing is to be tried on a systematic scale with the !approval of the Army authorities. It has been'found that singing has | both directly and indirectly a wonder- |ful curative effect, and there are a number of cases on record in which a nun who has been unableto speak suddenly joined in with the singing and so recovered his speech. An ef- brother, | fort is being made to organize a regu- lar singing training in all hospitals where there are shell-shock cases. NG INCREASE (N RICE INDUSTRY THAU TEXAS DALLAS, Te Nov. 20. — The war resulted in increased production ;and increased consumption of rice in} Texas during the last year. An ex-| tensive crmpaign in the south for greater acrenge, and for use of rice sa substitute for wheat was largely resnonsible. * * Mrs. Clara Smith, proprietor of the rders to report to Fort Russell, Wyo., France. ss Albert Smith, of Gillette, Wyo., liness and death of his SOCIETY f a —$<$§e Monday at Professor Rudolph, Lundberg will | rs, W. H. Leavitt. pianist and Mr. and Mrs. Al Forrester and son, Ralph, of Riverton are spendin, few days in Casper before leaving California to spend the rest of the: winter. & R z 3 3 a < 8 8 5 a > 4 ° # 5 o 4 > 2 a ° =) “ ennually, believe that the war taught housewives the value of rice {as food and that the increase in <on-! ‘sumption will continue. HUN GRATITUDE [eaaten eee earn t ces TAKES FORM OF grown on the 300,000 acres under COLD MURDER cultivation in Texas. The product of the large rice mills in southern Texas where extensive crops have been put say. (By United Presa) r _AMSTERDAM, Nov. 20.—Forty-- The quilt with a Red Cross design five years ago, Evert Baker, a Dutch! -affiled by the girls at the Midwest fisherman of the island of Urk, was hotel for the benefit of the United given a gold medal by the German! War Work Fund, was made by Mrs. government for heroically saving, at) John Manning of this city. The quilt the risk of his own life, twelve Ger-| netted $25 for the campaign. mans from a stranded ship at Nord- SSS erney in a December gale. He is still Casper Loan office loans money on alive, aged 82. | clothes, jewelry, guns, musical instru- Baker’s only son was shot dead| ments and diamonds. 11-15-tf in cold blood, for no offense, on the] a deck of his own vessel, by a German| submarine gunner. —- If you value your time eat at the White House Cafe. 10-26-30t Your Dollar Counts took over the ranch. He completed his course in veteri ary surgery at Cornell on June 26,| 1911, and came to Wyoming where he | was appointed assistant state veteri-| narian, serving in that capacity for! one year, when he was made chairman | of the state board of sheep commis-| sioners. He was married on March 23, 1912, to Miss Arlena Lockwood. and four children survive him. Dr. Millard was a lover of music, | and finished a course in the Ithaca Conservatory of Music. He is a thirty- second degree Mason, a member of the Alpha Psi college fraternity and a Shriner. pas ES The Franco-Wyoming Company has piped gas to its camp at Shannon, where Leslie Snow and his wife are quartered. It is said that Mrs. Snow His wife} | at the Holmes Hardware. The buying power of your dollar is greater here than elsewhere—quality considered. Come to the store and prove this to your own satisfaction. You'll save money by becoming a Holmes Hardware customer. Attention, Motorists A frozen radiator is an expensive affair. Better be safe than sorry. Buy a package of Johnson’s Freezeproof, price $1.75; will prevent radiator trouble. Automobile Robes $6 to $18 —And let us remind you that a visit to our auto accessory department is well worth while. You will find just about the mest complete stock of the best there is in automobile sup- does not have to cut wood or carry in the coal since the new means of heating was installed. A Tribune Wantad will sell it. We buy and sell anything of value. Casper Loan office. 11-15-tf pocahiaa ES a Money to loan st the Casper Low office en anything of value. 11-15- 1 A A OR a cE seme cea come plies that you ever laid eyes on. Bring the Kiddies to our Toy Annex Holmes Hardware Co. PHONE 601. CASPER, WYO. | VITALI L DLL A * It is esti-! in, is valued at $6,000,000, producers - Stop! Look! Listen! Patronize Home Industry THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE BRITISH PA LACE BET C TO BE COLD FOR WINTER SEASON [Ry Associated: Press] LONDON, > . 2v.—King George and Queen Mary with their court have returned to London to a cold, m Palace, ortage and to will soon be fireless Bucking Owing to the ¢ fact that the coun on its winter's rations, the King had given orders cutting down the use of coal in all the royal palaces to a th strict minimum well within legal ra- tioning. Almost every fire-place in the Pal- of which fires had bricks placed consumption sages, cor- the private and family! none e, in to reduc of co Lighting ridors, anterooms apartments of the K has been reduced by half. GUNNER KILLED; PILOT FLIES ON UNCONSCIOUS QF TRAGEDY FOR TIME. in them (By Unit PARIS, Oct. 27. ( Mail.) —The extraordinary of flying for some time unconscious of the fact that his machinegunner was lying in} a crumpled hpae in the cock-pit with} a bullet thru the head befell Lieut. | Henriaues Crawford, an American} pilot flying with French squadrons. The grim story is told in the brief matter-of-fact official report of Lieu- tenant Crawford to his commanding officer. emmy experience . ... There were heavy clouds} at 400 meters on the afternoon of | ——, and we were flving just below} them in company with other of our bombing planes. . . . Lieut. Craig toldme to go farther north over our objective in order to get a better tar-) ge’ . . . We had narrowly missed a collision with one of our own planes and as we came down out of the clouds, we were attacked almost im- mediately from the rear. We dodged | and continued our course... . . : Later we sighted anbdther enemy nlane and I turned toward it... . Lieut. Craig did not fire so I glanced back and saw jhis guns pointing up- ward, while he-was lying‘in a heap in the pit. I 4ost the attacking planes in the clouds and landed as quickly as possible at the aviation field at The-bullet-had struck him in} the center of the. forehead, passing thru the head and completely shat- tering the skull. Lieut. Craig had always showh himself to be the) highest type of American, an excell-| ent observer, cool and fearless in any ; emergency: te . Don’t Forget That to. get satisfaction from All-Metal Weatherstrips it must be installed by men who make a specialty in this line. When in need of Weathe: makes this line a specia'ty. shown. Remember the name Our famous fresh churned Bitters Ib Se ee 65c Process Butter, Ib. _-__55¢ Best Storage Eggs dozen ...tea, ee 55¢ Just Received Fresh Shipment Oysters Pint 40c NATRONA BUTTER SHOP Two Stores at 149 So. Center Phone I carry the best All-Metal Weatherstrips on the market, so to be convinced just Phone 174-W and samples wilk be HARRIS The’ Weatherstrin Man Na BELGIAN ARMY GOT SUPPLIES BY AEROPLANE Eighty Machines Share Labors of Transporting Thirteen Tons of Food with Roads Impassable URy Associated Press] DUNKIRK, France, Nov? 20—Thir- teen tons of food was carried by the} British Royal Air Forces and the Bel- gian Air Forces to several divisions | of the Belgian army which had ad-| vanced beyond the Houthulst Forest in Belgium, early in the Allied of-| ive in the Belgian sector, and sus-} tained those troops during the period in which they were cut off from sup-| plies owing to the impassable roads. | This is believed to be the largest scale in which supplies were ever deliver- | ed to troops by airplane. | Continuous rain, shell fire and ar-} tillery fire had ground the roads out of existence. They were transfor:n-| ed into channels of deep mud. By! evening the General in command of the Belgian forces reported that sup- plies of food had been exhausted.| Would it be possible, he inquired, to send food by airplane? The answer was that it would, and the task was assigned to the Belgian | Air Forces and to the Fifth Group of the British Aig Forces. Their job was to deposit army rations at a point| to which nothing but a bird or an air-} plane could penetrate. It has been done before, of course;| the-garrison of Kut received supplies) by air, and ammunition and the like have been dropped at various places. | But it had never been attempted on} such a scale. The cases of rations were broken} ~ WEDNESDAY, NOV. 20, 1919 eeeerererees 20, 1915 SATHERINGS CONTINUE. GN Now Please Tell Peon How to Make Coal Dust (Ry United Press) WASHINGTON, Novy. is your own coal and help win This is what they are doin land, the department of cop has announced. WILLAGE GREEN BUT THE YOUNG MEN ARE MISSIS VILLAGE OF POTTEW END, 5383 4 HERTFORDSHIRE, Eng., Nov. 4.\ oat qust, ope wnple, Sweet (By Mail.) —The English countryside $02! dust, mix with @nders fine chips and any of the accumulates in the cellar little cement and some water mixed pack in small flower other convenient molds. | made in this way should b a week until thoroly har English have learned. When made properly th: will burn and give much heat ; is today just as quaint and peaceful | and beautiful as ever. But it has lost its young men. On the village green last night the | countryfolk gathered at sundown as | they have done for several centuries. The duckpond in the middle of the green; the Red Lion Inn (200 years }old), tight in a hedgewall on the south; the squat little church steeple just over the hedge on the north; and the heathery moor to the west—all were just as they were before the war, except. There were no young men. ear France’s famous tri-color flag wa invented by Mary, Queen of the Swiss Guard in France— France, blue for Scotland, ar Switzerland. ee THE MOST THE MOST SANITARY SANITARY THEATER THEATER IN THE STATE IN THE STATE MATINEE NIGHT 2:30 and 4 p. m. 7:00, 8:15 and 9:30 Jesse L. Lasky Presents Wallace Reid — and — Myrtle Steadman in the up into appropriate parcels and these | were packed in sacks of earth to cush- ion them for the fall; while upon the| front the hungry divisions prepared the dumping grounds and marked them with large white crosses. | Some,eighty machines shared the) work between them, including a squadron of the Fifth Group’s two-| seaters. They lifted their loads eas- ily, and one by one they dipped to! the front—it waS the front,too, and! close to the line—and dropped them overboard to the cheeritig reception) committees below, and returned. Only one machine, attacked by a German machine-gun from the ground—it was as close to the:front as that—had to| land, and by 11 a. m. the General re-} ported that All his units had been | supplied, —$—_— The most prolific fish is said to be} the cod, the yield of which averages) about 45,000,000 eggs each season. , rstrips bear in mind that Harris VIII LALELZLALLLLLLALLZALLMALZLIZLALLZLAL LLL ELL EAE CAA a a “P| Liberty Cheese, pt. 20c; quart Blue Hill Cheese, any kind; package Cream Whip per bottle__30c Quart 75c | Your Service 943 1 12 No. Durbin “Prison Without Walls” A Paramount Picture Don’t forget the Dance at the Temple tonight ME LP ME LE EME OLE LF ES I ELE ELE SF LI LE IL LF The Popular Grenadier back--- is featured in quite a number of the new suit models we are showing for Winter wear, tailored by THE HOUSE OF KUPPENHEIMER To men whose tastes run to the slightly unconventional—but, to be sure, not the extreme—the Grenadier back will appeal strongly. 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