Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 July 1918 — Page 3
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SIRGEON WHEY O. FARW KLI»
Hurircon W»y G. Kirwtll of Wash* In art on. has been cttrd for valor U ilapitrhra from Frnnw for the mini* n»r In which he rendered first ail to Col. A. \\. ratlin. The colonel jm« severely noundrd on the battle fin* while leading the marlnm. IM, .•"irwell attended him under terrlfle liell fire. The doctor soutrht an a«» ilRnmnit with the marines eight month* R)co and has seen considerable .uUve mitIc* at the front.
DR. ALO\KO E. TAYLOR.
"Dr. Alonmo E. Taylor In a member •f the war trade hoard nnd wan
WAS LOYAL TO HIS SON.
bathetic Story of Italian Who Was Forced To Fight for Austria. HEADQUARTERS ITALIAN ARMY, July €.—A narrow pass on the mountain front of the C.rtipps has given th» Italians a. kit of trouble up to a short time a.go.
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It is a rocky defile
Tvith vliffs rising .shoor 1.0(H) feet on iether suit:. Through this narrow pas«Hge it was necessary for the men to go every day in handling supplies. Rut as they passed tliey were picKea off one by one by an Austrian sharpshooter in a cavern near the top of the cliffs. Here he had been lowered from the enemy lines along at one side of the cliff, and here food was lowered and the deadly fusillade kept up 4ay alter day.
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member of the house mission to Europe. IVr several months he has been artlnc In an advisory capacity for the I. S. food administration and before that performed similar service for the department of aKricnlturc. If«
In charge of the feeding of Krem'h nnd Rnsrllah in Germany before the 1 nlted Mates entered the war. 14 private life he rank* an one of the leading food ehemlsts and biologist# In the world.
DR. FRANK BILLIKGS.
Dr. Frank Billings la head of the ram* ftnatrni'tion divlnioa of the Hurgeon frenerttl a department. Him department in busy erretlnc and remodeling bulldingK and trnining workern to care tor unU aid crippled soldiers. i
It was recently observed, however, tiat a strange change came o\er the Operations from the cliff. The shots ranK out as usual whenever an Italian soloier went through the pass. iSuT. singularly, no man ever fell the shots always went wide of the mark the cunning of the sharpshooter appeared to be at an end. 'Phis continued for days, with the Italians going back and! from an Italian bullet wound. But
forth safely, and the aimless ana utie
•hots ringing out from the enemy post
in
the cliff.
The Italians fl?m% ms«f a flash to
Clear out the place, their batteries
pouring shot.s into the cavern while a
WOMng f&rty entered it £rom one side.
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AMKRICAN AKTILLKRl POSITION I\ AJTIOV IV A V
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In the lead of the climbing party was Lieutenant Guglielminetti. and as he rushed into the cave a singular sight was before him. Stretched on the
rnough an Austrian soldier in thfr irraygrecn uniform of Austria, the wounded man raised himself on his elbow, drew a tiny Italian flag from under his coat and in a faint voice exclaimed, "Vive 1' Italia."
The dying tfiks had cmty ttme to
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ABOVE, AMI FRKMCH TAVK
OF THKIR BATTMiS.
Th« American *fficial photo* OB top. Mhowa an American artillery ponitioi* on the wrxtrra front, A liowitwr outfit I* enter) ns into iictl on. The artillery branch of the I f'„ forces abroad h.i* been more than holding up its en«l of the tiKhting. While (ho*f men have been throwing shrapnel into FVitr's ranka th«* marine* haTe been entertaining him in other nan, Aided by queer looking, but effective French tank*, the marine* h»*e been dec|«i»p|j beating the l.frman* in different sectors and in miuu CUM salaias (M»id«nbli fTroiinri.
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KIXH ALEXASUEB, IX Ci^lER OF XiUO IN KORKI.ROIM), Ugimti JiACEDOKUX S3LOV* WITH
ISH (OMIUMIKR.
Greece te In the war heart and soul, bat will not have her full man-power at the front until the enrrant crop I* III. Thai wfiitcmcnt may sound odd to the person who doesn't know that the black entrant I* the national
the great product—of Greece. It provide* the greatest sonrce of income for the nation. Without this income from this crop Greece would sulTer the name way the I nited States would suffer without wheat, coal and stt'el. When a few weeks since. the famous Spartan divisions demanded to be called to the line, Premier VenlselM, "the man who nlwuja sees the farthest," told them in effect to get their enrrants la first, and he would see to It that, with equal certainty, they would get the Bulgarians Inter on.
The two divisions «hich struck on May 31, carrying a mountain 4.000 feet high and capturing almoxt Its enK'irHion, t^rre from re te and othor partw of Oww inhere fe« etirraiitN vroiT. How ninny other divlnfona are already in line the (crinanM would be glad to know. Enough that with new equipment, supplied by France and Englnnd, tlxcj nlil «w{A 4U be there. What kind o jucaunt ithoukl we be able to expect them t* clvc themaelvesT
TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE.
Fresh-Pictures From the War Fronts For Tribune Readers
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LEFT TO RIKHT—CHAPLAIt B. DE TALLES, CAPTAIN CO\'OLLV, CAPTAI.Y ROBIOHTS AD LIEVtk "J,®*":'' BARRETT.
whisper his story. He was Giorgio Avanzini, nephew of the socialist deputy Avanzini representing the city of Trent in the Austrian parliament.
ground was an Austrian soldier dying Like all the people of Trent and the Trentino, he was an Italian instinct though forced by the political situation of Trent under Austria to enter the
Austrian army. As 3uch he found himself in the Austrian lines at the top of the cliff, and he had been detailed for the dangerous task of being lowered to the cavern to pick off Italian soldiers as
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heiiiB decorated frequently by the French for gallantry in action. The men are
(•rawn up before the trench and American officers in the presence of their companies and give* the award* he abo\e photo showa fosr Americana recently given the Croix de Guerre by the French.
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WHICH IS AIDING MARINE
they passed. Being under observation he kept his rifle going, the shots rang out regularly, but Avazini took good care that no shot found its mark in an Italian soldier.
Avazini's body was lowered to the Italian lines, and the soldiers whose lives he had spared joined in giving the honors of war to a man wearing an enemy uniform.
WHEN IN DOUBT, Try The Tribune^
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FAIfL MlLllKOKV (LE^f, N. GIJT CHKOW AND U.
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The accompanying picture of the I nited Sliten cruiser Brooklyn in the harbor of Vladivostok reached thh eountrj at about tiic mime time that news came from the far cast that two of the altlest men in Russia's fnt ^provisional government. Prof. Paul \. 1 ilitikon and 1. Gutchkofl. were at Harbin, Manchuria, laving plan* for the (establishment of a provisional KO\crnmeni In Siberia that would he friendly to the allied cause. should such a ernment be established at Vladivostok, It would doubtless have the backing of ani allied naral forces la that «oa«w ler of the world.
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iOW SANDBAGS PROTIXT PAIUS ART THK VS[ Ul. «i:PI J!l It S'l K A ROV l«) AD THE LOi \HE:. WI^-1 DUttS Ol' 1UK 1'AVULIOA DOiUV.
AMERICAN TROOPS REVIEWKD BY THE
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frenouren of Tiirt*. running- Tnfo niifoTtT mllTTonn In value, vapidly are feeing' made bomb an(
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attin-Ux ol the Hun.
Noted statuen. iiKimimentM and principal porta or trcn«tire! bullriintcs are beiny llternlly buried In Sand baKn. The work, when completed, Mill have cost the city thousands of dollars. Wooden or nteel frame* are constructed around the statuary or art work to be protected.
two leet thick* ia laid over this framework. Thousands of the sacks of sand are needed to eorer the laraer pleccs,
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