THE 8EMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE, NORTH PLATTE. NEBRASKA. PATHETIC AMONG Lonoj Aged Woman Is Sole Inhab itant Left In French Vil lage. NAMED LA DAME INDOMITABLE Ml Who Survived Hun Carnival of Rags and Rapine Which Swept the Place, Left Long, Long Ago. American Army Headquarters In France. In the chnrred vlllnge they call her La Dnmc Indomitable. Not a lind nnmo for licr, either. There Is a great gun In the French army called Indomitable, The enemy linn trained Us heavy weapons on this giant cylin der of destruction, but old Indomltahlo Mill belches Its deadly hnll upon the Huns, und so the old lady of was named after this famous gun, writes Don Martin in the New York Herald. I saw her the other day In the recon structed ruins of her onco comfortable house. Two artillery ofllaers Ameri can have billets with her. She takes care of their rooms, shines their boots and leggings nnd puts on a button now and then when they know nothing about It Then, when she Is not busy nt home, Bho washes dishes for the Salvation Army canteen or performs more labori ous service, for all of which sho re ceives ten cents an hour. That Is enough. She doesn't need much. She begins her dally routine nt five In the morning nnd finishes at seven In tho evening. Then sho wnlks two miles td a shop to get her allowanco of bread, nnd after ten o'clock, when her "boys" are In bod and asleep, she throws herself on n bed of boxes nnd old clothes, with one blnnket for cov ering, and sleeps. Village's Only Inhabitant. La Dnmo Indomltahlo Is the only In habitant left In tho village. It Is no place for women. Children all who Burvlve tho nun carnival of rage and rapine left long, long ago. Tho old folks dragged a weary way from tho. humble, aged stono buildings In which they and their ancestors had lived for many generations yes, for hundreds of years. Soldiers occupied tho town. Then tho Germnns enmo. Three times tho qunlnt village was taken and ro taken. Tho gaunt remnants of tho old dwellings could tell frightful stor ies of slaughter nnd mngnlflccnt talcs of valor. So can La Dame Indomlt ahlo. But sho says llttlo. She Just works. Sho wants to help France. Of ficers told 'her a long tlmo ago sho could go anywhoro sho wished. Even tho grandeurs of Paris were pictured to her In tho hope that she might be lured from tho abpdo of danger In which sho resides. But why should sho go? "No, I'm not old," sho mys. "I'm only Blxty-flvo or mnybo seventy. I'm a strong woman yet, but when I curry water this long, long dlstnnco nnd then walk to tho boulnngcrlo for bread some times ray heart beats too fast maybe, but that's all." So there she stays. She, has been CHARGER FAITHFUL TO THE END The churger of iiu Austrian cnvuirynuui standing guard our tin dead body of his rider. Tho Austrian was killed on rcconuoltorlng duty on tho Italian front WORK OF THE Y. M. C. A. mis spends $5,000,000 a Month In Ministering to Soldiers. Two Thousand Workers Are With Ex peditionary Forces and 3,000 In American Camps. Washington. In Us wotft of minis tering to the social, recreational nnd religious wclfnro of tho boys and young men of this city and couuty who havo enlisted In tho National army, the Y. M. C. A. Is now expending a total of $5,000,000 a month. These, together with other Interesting figures on tho scopo of tho work are contained In n bulletin Just received from the Nation al war work; council. According to the Btntement of the council, the "homo" sldo of army camp life Is being maintained among tho Juinlreds of thousands of soldier boys FIGURE WAR RUINS seen away up on the brow of the hill looking down on the German-held terri tory. One does1 not need glasses to sec It. She trudges along shell swept roads when it Is necessary, as It often Is. "A shell may hit me yes, perhaps, sometime. Hut wo all have our work to do." Waves of deadly gas swcjU over the stricken group of ruins from tlmo to time. La Dame Indomitable hns her mapk. An officer gave It to her. Jt Is tho best'. The officers see that she gets the best Her two American artillery officers hurry to their billets when the gas drifts Into tho village. They hnve nothing to do there. They Just go to mnko sure that their hostess Is safe. I hnd a cup of chocolate with her In her house and learned her story. I do not think aho ever told It before. Thanked by General. "When tho war was Just at the be YOUTH IS VICTOR OVER NOTED HUN English Boy Defeats Germany's Superflyer Voss in Des porate Battle. DOWNS 22 BEFORE DEATH Lieutenant Arthur Rhys Davids Said to Be One of the Three Elect Among Bravest of British Airmen. London. When Voss, the Intrepid German airman, was brought down there wns considerable demand that tho nnmo of tho British airman who accomplished the feat should be re vealed. He wns Lieut. Arthur Ithys Davids, an Eton boy of twenty. In tho ofllclnl Gazctto It is stated that among his other feats he brought down nlno enemy aircraft In nine weeks. But after much anxiety the boy's father, Prof, Rhys Davids, and his -J mother, both Oriental scholars of dis tinction, no longer have any doubt that their son, missing since Inst De comber, Is dead. In their home on Ohlpstead Downs tho parents nnd sisters mourn the bravo and daring boy, snld to bo ono of three very elect among tho bravest of British airmen. Arthur Ithys Davids, nftcr doing brilliantly nt Summerfleld, where, n king's scholnr, ha won a Balllol exhi bition nnd the Newcnstlo scholarship, took his commission In tho Royal Fly ing corps In tho nutumu of 191Q, lenv tng his civil scrvlco ambitions until after tho war. Brought Down Twenty-Two Germans. 'Young Davids had been good at sports nnd ho took to flying ns though born to It Ho won tho M. 0. with the bar nnd tho D. S. 0. after flvo mouths both In the United Stntes nnd In France. At tho present tlmo thcro nto 2,200 Y. M, C. A. workers with the ex peditionary forces In France and Eng land and 3,000 other workers In Ameri can camps. The Y. M, O. A. hns been asked by General Pershing to take over tho en tire canteen system with tho American army In France, and this will require the services of moro than 11,000 volun teer workers alone.. An effort Is now being made to sccuro at least 1,000 business and professional men of high Rtnndlng who will go to Franco for all sorts of Y. M, 0. A. service before July 1. It Is estimated that 8,000.000 feot of film nro being exhibited weekly to tho soldiers at home nnd abroad. A re cent shipment of athletic equipment for the troops tn France consisted of 70.080 baseballs 10.000 bats, ijO.000 gloves and mitts, boxing gloves, volley bull and various other kinds of apu- ginning," she Bald In French, "I hod three sons. They hurried off to get their uniforms and rifles. Then I waited. One day our soldiers cam pouring Into tho town. They hnd been driven back by tho Germnns. Many were Injured. I took ns mnny us I. could In my house and made coffee for them. You see my house was better before It was struck jy shells. "While I was making coffee a big shell struck this houe and killed some of the soldiers. Another one hnd both legs taken off. I helped them all I could, but they went away and the Germans came. They are cruel, hut I am old, so I nm alive. Then our boys came again nnd I made my house a hospital. It was struck twlco more nnd I wns hurt a llttlo, too, but not much. I-don't want to lenvc. I hnve lived here all my life nnd here is where I shall die." The eyes of tho old lady glowed un der tho spell of a thought sho hud not yet expressed. ' "A French general camo and thnnk ed me for what I did for our soldiers," sho said. "Then, long after, ho wrote mo n letter saying I was n brave wom an nnd had bravo sons. I have the letter you may see It" in France in April, 1017. 110 brought down 22 Germnns for certain he actually snw that number crash hut ho drove down many more out of con trol. Among tho 22 wore the Germnn supcrflyers Voss and Schnfer. The story of the defeat of Voss. who had been credited with being the greatest olrmnn of nil the armies, Is thrilling. When Rhys Davids wont up with a squadron of six nnd four Ger mans were sighted, It was not so easy ns It seemed, for Voss wns among them, nnd he took on three of the British machines. Two of these he put out of nctlon, causing them to re turn home with' their engines full of lend. Tho tlilrd was the boy from Eton. Voss nnd Rhys mndo a duel of It. Tho Hun was In a trlpluno, and there wns a most tremendous fight. The story of It was afterward told to the family by an officer acquainted with the facts. "I want to give Voss all credit" says Miss Rhys Davids, sister of tho bravo ydung airman. In repenting' the story. "Ho hnd n fearful fight with tho three for twenty minutes, nnd then my brother and Voss wheeled round nnd round; nnd then, suddenly, Voss crnshed to earth. "Yes, my brother spoke of ono or two nnrrow escapes. On the very first time ho went up 'out there' something made him turn round, nnd to his as tonishment ho saw n nun on his tall. If he had not glanced round at that moment ho would hnve been killed. Worse still, his gun Jammed, nnd for ten minutes ho hnd to get out of this machine's way by rolling and turn ing. Then suddenly, to his nmaze mcnt, tho Hun turned tall and went homo. That was ono of the narrowest escapes ho had. "My brother was Inclined to fly recklessly low, nnd that Is probably how he met his death In October, Inst year. Wo knew ho was missing, nnd wo hoped nnd hoped for eight weeks boforo wo had any practical certainty. Shot "Painted Banana." "Ho had very often been In a big fight of 25 on each side, and when he' wroto homo about such, he said : 'All you can, think of Is pumping lend Into any machine you seo nnd looking out nnd avoiding collisions, Just missing ench other by perhaps a couple of, feet. He used to laugh when ho snw tho German machines painted up llko an unripe bannnn. Ho described one of these mnchlnes, nnd said that when It como toward him ho chuckled with Inughter at tho curious appearance of' It, and then lot fly. Ho brought the minted bnunnn down." And now young Rhys Davids has himself been brought down. But he lives n memory of schoolboy British) pluck that can never die. 1 Among other raiders mentioned In' tho Gnzctte Is Lieut. R. n. Ayro, R. v. C who during one of his "many sti(v cossful raids" bombed an enemy nlr shlp shed, and on another occasion bombed n rallwny station from a height of BOO feot. Ho also derailed part of a train and poured machine gun fire on Its occupants. The mili tary cross Is awarded to hire. ratus for nromotlniz thn utnv i.u among tho troops In their leisure hours. Tho Y. M. O. A. hns established n chain of huts and dugouts along tho front lines occupied by American troops "over there" and Is meeting the needs of the Sammies ns thev tako their places In the Lorrnlno trencher Tho Y. M. C. A. huts on the aKn front have been demolished bv German guns and tho 150 secretaries there have retired hefore tho ndvanco of the Hunt and aro now established In Slborln awaiting an opportunity to return to Russia. Farmer Kills Wild Cats. Live Oaks. Cal.-Wlng. n farmep nenr here, recently killed two lured wild cats along the Feather river vrlille engnged In hunting Jack rab bits. Ono of tho wild cats raced ui a treo nnd started to show fight when Wing discovered It A shot brought It to the ground. Its cries of ruga and pnln . brought Its tunto to thq scene, and Wing dlsputcftvd the see! and cut with a shot .from Sis gun. OAD BUILDING SUGGESTIONS ON GOOD ROADS 8peclal Thought Should Be Clven by Builders to Road Crowing to Avoid Accidents. While hlghwny engineers, commis sioners and other are planning good roads and strong, durable bridges, they ought to give special thought and work to the road crossings ind the lowers or culverts placed at such cross ings, snys a writer in Farmers' Review. Such crossings are generally about 12 to 10 feet long, and It requires an nbrupt turn of n vehicle to take them at right nngle. These mre danger points on account of the short turn and narrow space to make the turn. The remedy for such plnces Is to make sewer or culvert as long as the width of tho road will permit, say not less than 40 feet, and more If possible. Durable Concrete Culvert. and then If vehicles meet, there Is plenty of room to pass without Inter fering with the speed or rights of the one going In tho other direction. We hnve seen several nnrrow es capes from nccldents In such places, nnd the wntchword now Is "Safety First" The nutomoblle Is here to stay, and we want room to spread out and avoid all danger of accidents. Our counties nre now paying largo salaries to men who nre supposed to be efficient, nnd good civil engineers, nnd the safety and comfort of the pub lic lnrgely rests on them. It Is the duty of such men to catch up with the times and provide roads suited to the needs of present-dny travel. Such Im provements nre not very expensive, and when properly made last a life time, and save tlmo, trouble nnd acci dents. TEST OF TIRES ON HIGHWAYS Results Obtained by United States Of fice of Public Roar'-' After Pe riod of Years. In its testing of tires on country roads during a period of several years the United Stntes office of public roads has prepared the rond prior to each test by plowing, grading nnd rolling thus, with further consideration of moisture nnd atmospheric variations, giving conditions as ncnrlv Identical as possible for each of the trips compared. It was found that tho draft decreased with increase of tiro width to a cer tain limit, beyond which It Increased. As a result of the experiments, It Is recommended that for ordlnnry farm work and general trucking, the stand ard width of tire for a one-horse wagon, with gross lond of 2,000 pounds, should bo two Inches ; light two-horse wagon, 2,500 pounds, two nnd one half Inches; medium two-horse wagon, 4,500 pounds, three Inches: stnndnrd two-horse wagon, 0,800 pounds, four Inches; heavy two-horse wagon, 7,500 pounds, five Indies. CONSTRUCT NEW HIGHWAYS State of Illinois Expected to Expend $3,000,C00 In Improving Roads This Season. It Is expected that Illinois will ex pend $3,000,000 this year on federal aid highways. Tho proposed road con struction outlined by tho Illinois state highway department hns been ap proved by tho national government, ac cording to Secretary of Agriculture Houston. Tho proposed work includes con struction along tho Dixie highway, tho Lincoln hlghwny, tho highway from Chicago to the Wisconsin state line, the Chicago to .Toilet highway and the rond from Peorln northenst to Spar land. Federal-aid money for these roads Is to be available shortly, It la announced. Good Roads Campaign. The good ronds campnlgn Is nlways on nnd will nlways bo on until every road shall have been paved with the best of material nnd In the best of manner. And then there will probably be the establishing of more main ronds, and so It will go on until the country Is well supplied with roads that will be practicable 305 days In the year, Gaining In Importance. Tho question of ronds gains In Im portance and Interest with every pass ing year. A CAPITAL k K M 11 "Wanted, Live Press Agent; Apply Mother Mature" WASHINGTON. Nature needs a press agent. If you wero among the thou sands who missed the recent display of tho aurora borcalls, you will agree with me that a little advance publicity for old Mother Nature would result In cwwr I tvnu'T FEEL TH EMTHQUAKE ? 01- enough, but to miss nn earthquake that shakes beneath your very feet lu tool much. When you failed to look out the window that night, It wasn't your; fault, of course how In tho thunder were you to know tho aurora borcalls was out there, nnywny? j But that earthquake I If you were so absorbed In a book that you falledl to feel' the house quiver, It was your fault, and you feel It You may forgive; yourself for not looking out the window, but not for falling to note the carth-t quuke. ( When you went downtown the next morning there was Henry Joues vultJ lug for you. . ' ' , "Did you feel tho enrthquake?" he asked. "What earthquake?" you said. He looked at you with pity. "Where were you, anyway?" You confessed to home. "Anil you didn't feel that quake?". "No." v "Why, It shook our house and rattled nil tho dishes In the pantry didn't: you hour the dishes rattling In your pantry?" , i You had to admit that If your dishes rattled you failed to detect It. ' And Henry Jones went away looking as If ho felt sure the fault' lay with; you uud not your dishes. 1 J Yes, decidedly. Nnture needs n press agent. Washington Youngsters Ablaze With Patriotism WASHINGTON has Its patriotic boys and girls. Because a war requires the1 activities of grown men and women we arc apt to forget nil about ourt boys and girls, and how their young henrts bubble 6ver with n real, a'lthoughs undeveloped, patriotism; i Their patriotism may appear su perficial sometimes, nnd perhaps It Is only a reflex of what they hnve heard their elders say, but It Is real, tremend ously real, nevertheless. I know a little boy, so small you feel that you could pick him up and put him in your pocket with ense. But, as small as ho Is, his llttlo brain Is con centrated on the war. He Is always thinking about It. He doesn't think of It la terms of men and guns, or ships and aircraft. Ho doesn't talk of this nnd that battle field. He Indulges In no speculation. Here Is a sample. 'of what ho thinks and says : . His mother was talking to nnother member of the family concerning an. article of food which Bhe was'cooklng. ' "And do you know," she said, "It wns red hot " "Mother," chimed In the llttlo boy. "Yes, dear?" suld his mother. "You mustn't say 'red hot,' mother," he replied. "You must say Re Cross." Even whon ho goes to bed 1iq carries the war with him, evidently. He takes with him, too, tho phrases ho hns heard during the day. Strungely, with, his bnby wits, he turns them Into telling phrases, more potent than he realizes. "You must go to bed now," his mother said to him one night "It Is time for you to go to sleep." He looked solemnly nt his mother with sleepless eyes. . "I won't go to sleep till It's over over there," he snld. lllustrating Anew the S HE hnd dodged Father Time in iln.mM - l'-'- 41. n ... .. 'u'wTSaI,v:i, muu n millinery ...in. .i... j.ii.. IY0U ARE A IHUU Yl m m considered her figure more elegant, than mine, but It wns not tho popular opinion. The night I accepted your grandfather my eleventh proposal to your Aunt Eliza's third I wore a white cnmella llko that In my hair on tho left side, below the ear. All thought usr an extremely handsome young pair " "I bet you wero a peach, Grammuh, and If It .wasn't for the looks of the thlng I'd shake you right here In the street for not handing down your good' looks to tho best grandchild you've got to your name come along now. dear;, there's a whple lot moro to see." Isn't memory a jollier? Except when she's n scourge. Just One of Those Who Heard the Country's Call1 IF YOU shut your eyes and keep on for three, squares you will come to a shop. You can't miss It, because outstdo the window there Is n sign on which sortie amateur has gone Into art paroxysms over shoes that no foot on earth couldl wear and nngols wouldn't want to and above tho door is lettered a gramlr opera numo that only genius conk' spell. Casually glimpsed, the shop stand- for a very small pel-hlo with which Bomo venturesomo Dnvld Is lighting n big, strange-tongued tlollnth whom he calls tho New World hut you can't always depend on glh apses. If you hud seen David, tho other day, say, standing lu his open door with one foot resting over tho other u,8 ,f J t",,,u'tt huv, t0 KWk ,,r'J wouldn't, with Ids shirt-sleeved arms folded w tho ofllclnl attitude of ono who has downed his foe, nnd in his midnight eve a something that would have been u smirk except that It was honest prlde you would have known right there that Golluth was as dead us the stoned cat Id the. alley that'a tho tlmo you should have come across youn" David ! Thero was a repsoti, of course. A photographer on tho piwement wu taking a postcard snap for the folks buck In Italy, where tho crossed feet and folded nrms with smllo attached will mertn success, and where throui tho alchemy of uffectlou, tho youngster's desire to show off will be Internreted Into loyalty und memory nnd love. ' , l' ?TU,1 bilni u'lt" n n,onth Now tho signs nro gone nnd th door la locked und tho dust has mudo brown ridges on tho shutters You cannot be contented to sit nt a bench and peg and sew and tin "Santa Lucia" when you have u country to fight for. am larger audiences for some of her most choice displays. Those who missed the "northern: lights" havo been kicking themselves because they didn't have tho gumption to look out the back window nnd see! something worth looking at But how were you to know nny thing about tho aurora borenlls being: on the way? Nature needed a press agent, that was nil. And now an earthquake l Missing the Aurora borcallswasbnd i - DOtl'T SWKED HOT, MOTHER, SAT 'RED CROSS" Magic Power of Memory the same fashion that a here-and-thtere? . ,. . 1 . . .... i . m Bcyuiu. mi sno was stanuing ueiore- huh i nt- juujf juunKiHii woman wno nnu ner m cnurge.. i ... "I used to wear a cnmella like that In my hair to every ball I went to on the left side, below the car. All thought It most becoming. Your Aunt. Eliza wore flowers to match the colors of her ball dress, but I never appeared; In anything but flounced white tun latan, with a cnmella In my hair ons the left side, below the ear. Your grandfather thought It most becoming. All snld we were an extremely hand some yountr nnlr vnnr Aunt Rllzii cuuli 1 I ' Jkwm 71 r.