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THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE GREEK TROOPS MOBILIZING IN PIRAEUS Suffrage Parade Is Planned for Inauguration Event ASHINGTON.—Inangural visitors to Washington are to see a monster W suffrage demonstration, eclipsing the famous suffrage parade of March 3, 1913, according to announcement made at a meeting in Cameron House, the ,endquarters of the Congressional Union for Woman's Suffrage. The meeting was a war council of to inaugurate the ment to enfranchise leaders from the s on the western front, it through the presidential gressional campaigns, were eel nt eo The big suffrage parade here is - ntended to outclass any demonstra- ym ever held by the “votes-for-woman” advocates in this country, It is to nize nds of the votin ¢t De granted the privilege of the ballot. It is plenned to make it a concrete picture of the power of the women of the United Sta nly to impress congress, but to make the people of ; entire count <1 here for the inaugural ceremonies recognize this @ \ force to be reckened with In politics as well as homemakers. | It was onnounced that a tentative permit has been issued for tiisf suffrage ion on March 7, with the restr n that it must‘not con- way with any 48 for the in ural ¢ -monies, dy the women are organizing their marching’ clubs and planning itures of the pageant In a number of the Western states, It is éxpected this will be the largest gathering of suffrage advocates ever assembled 8 country, Greek regulars in Virneus responding to King Constantine's order for mobilization, ARMENIAN REGIMENT ORGANIZED IN PHILADELPHIA lermmonstre | Problem of Perpetual Motion Once More Is Solved § @) F COURSE I must turn it now with my hand, but when I get a la dynamo, a le r motor, and ball-be ng gears it is bound to run Its Jacob Rae square-faced Belgian, was explaining an apparatus, which he calls a “spring motor,” in the basement of his home at 1106 Six- teenth street northwest. The arfange- he s, Will some day rup all automobiles, heat all the houkges furnish power to turn all the s of industry. ‘Then all the coal mines can be closed up,” he explained. “Working but a few hours each day, people will be able to produce easily everything the country n ° Raes’ device consists of a large This photograph was taken in the armory of the State Fencibles in Philadelphia, and shows the first regiment | §Pring, wound up by means of a worm Give. Several cog gears drive a small organized by Armenians in the United Stat The: ne | dynamo at sufficient speed to generate enough electricity to drive a still tragic family misfortune. They drill at re smaller motor, which turns several wheels connected by cord belts. For demonstrating purposes the inventor winds up the spring and releases the brake. The dynamo runs, power is generated, and the motor MODELING HEAD OF LINCOLN | runs. Raes winds the spring as fast as It runs down. pes “You see,” he says, “when we eliminate this unnecessary friction and get a large enough ap atus, we will hook the motor up with this crank and let Jit wind up the spring, and as the spring runs down it will turn the dynamo, | which will make the electricity, which will run the motor, which will continue | to wind the spring.” “But where will you get the power for use?” “That is easy. You see this extra cog wheel on this side? Well, we will Just connect an extra dynamo on there when it gets to running and use the electricity it generates.” a stoc men are all refugees from Armenia, driven here by som lar intervals, ENEMIES TOGETHER IN MISERY Georgetown Cats Are Too Smart for Householders RE all cats as stupid e of understanding as most people think? Ye Or, is there feline 1 like the flower of the poet, “was born to ® ye ¥ blush unseen,” and wh inity has not yet recognized? These questions Ca” are being asked b ber of ¢ 7 Georgetown resid SX 2ere ure who declare cats, Georgetown intelligent o Mn ove the are being ion galvanized with clos ng ame material, designed y to keep out cats, and until comparatively recently served this pur- rer } | robbed are |metal con | | tops especia re next to useless, The Georgetown cats apparently have f them and remove the covers as readily and as noiselessly by a human. Nightly banquets are being held on the back town residents, and since these invariably are followed by 1 the back fences, the problem has become a serious one. Whether necessary to put the garbage cans under lock and key, and thus the vagrant cat by cutting off his food supply is a question which is George Barnard, the American sculptor, at work on the 15-foot head of Abraham Lincoln, in his studio in New York city. When completed, the head will be placed in position on « being seriously considered by many. of the heights overlooking the city « Cincinnati, The sculptor ts using Agricultural Department Library and Its Keeper wax process in his modeling of th Ba piece. The head will be cast in bronze He many of the millions of farmers in the United States realize that the TRYING TO KEEP RIFLES CLEAN and sent to Cincinnatl with another most extensive and the most important agricultural library in the world statue of Lincoln by the same sculptor | {s the library of the department of agriculture at Washington? And how as gifts of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Taft. | many of them are aware that this Wounded Serb and Bulgarian, enemies in battle, on their way together to the second dressing station. seeney tt iN) library, which has been growing and a developing in Washington for the iast q 48 years, is managed by a woman? Who Would Exchange Modern | — Ul A slender, quiet-mannered woman \ is Miss Claribel R, Barnett, who since é early womanhood, and after her gradu- ation from the University of Michi- gan and her course at the New York State Library school has worked here. Nowhere else under the sun {s ——$—<—$$—$_____ — NEW WOMEN AND THE OLD | Hl HLTA =a | Hal Hit 4711 1B Woman for Old-Fashioned One | {| | as We Imagine Her? | ho but a ninny would exchange the modern woman as she often is for | the old-fashioned one as we are apt to | fmagine her?” asks Judze Robert | there such a force of scientists work- Grant of the Massachusetts probate Ing for one object as is emplo; court. ; the United States department of agriculture. Three thousand cae tae “It being woman’s nature—observe | ™e2 of microscope and test tube are producing the most advanced results of the word, please—to be sweet and Bay cuore Harriton and experiment. charming, compassionate, self-sacrific- army entists depend upon the library for the wri ing, loving and tender-hearted, can any | Must be consulted again and again ere it gives to the world Tha. pede wee one regard her exchange of docility for | Concern the welfare of millions. self-reliance and an outlook limited by Some day, when the great structure which is to house the department of her garden wall for the initiative | @gticulture is completed, the library will find its place in the administration which enables her to see the world as | Dullding, which will form the center of the magnificent group. At present the it really is as anything but a gain? 183,000 books and pamphlets comprising this storehouse of printed knowledge “There used to be dread in the days | 8T@ conveniently placed in one of the new rented buildings which are-tem- of our grandmothers wiht the new Briss oe ve. Ceuat anes of agriculture. woman would dress like man, A few ie e library to contain the important, especially women did and were nearly mobbed. | lal, agricultural publications of every civilized pani Even eo es = “So impressed, on the contrary, ‘1s ee nae cultural books and periodicals can be found here. the new woman with the importance e library comes to the farmer mainly through of looking her best that she has been | department. In the preparation of the bulletins and page peneunans oo brat apt during the present generation to| Gepartment, especially those of direct interest to the farming community, the ape the fashion plates of the demi- collection in the library assists by giving printed opinions and the results of monde in order to attract.” the experience of past investigations all over the world. women of the West that their sisters in | The dangerous cold is the neglect- ed cold. Get a box of— Thankless Job. “So you are in the metion picture business?” res,” replied the man with a band- aged arin. “What is your specialty?” “lll explain. Sometimes one of those lily-fingered Broadway actors that all the women are crazy about appears in a photoplay that requires the hero to wrestle with a lion, leap off a cliff, dangle out of a top-floor window of a 20-story building or do ‘something else of that sort.” “Well?” “And I'm the stepchild of fortune who takes his place in that particular scene so he won't spoil his pretty face.” HEAL YOUR SKIN TROUBLES With Cuticura, the Quick, Sure and Easy Way. Trial Free Bathe with Cuticura Soap, dry and apply the Ointment. They stop itch- ing instantly, clear away pimples, blackheads, redness and roughness, re- | move dandruff and scalp irritation, | heal red, rough and sore hands as | well as most baby skin troubles. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. lL, Boston, Sold everywhere.—Adv, Sea of Pumice. A steamship which recently made the port of San Francisco reports hay- ing sailed in a sea of pumice, near | Sydney, N. S. W. Apparently the ma- terial had been cast up by a subma- frine voleanic outbreak, and chunks anging in size from that of a marble toa plug hat were thrown on deck by tle waves. The vessel was several hours in passing through the affected Tgioh Rej Cross Bag Blue, much better, goes farther than liquid blue. Get from any grocer, Adv. . , A Quick Decider. Clerk\—Yhe firemen turned the hose on our bysement, sir, and drenched two piles of that silk dress goods. Merchant,—Advertise a big sale of watered sili right away. Some pedple aré so eccentric that they even say something when they talk. Next morning as be lay m bed with plasters om bis broken bead, he wondered what the deuce he'd ‘The only legacy left-to some people is 2 poor stomach with @ tendency to nervous indigestion, or dy: and that close companion of the disorder called con Stipation. For more than half a century a ready remedy te countless thousands of households in every clime Green’s August Flower has been successfully used for the relief of stomach and liver troubles all over the civilized world. All druggists or dealers everywhere have it in - and 75c. sizes. ry it and see for yourself. BLAC LOSSES SURELY PREVENTED. by CUTTER’S BLACKLEG PILLS PATENTS Renae Denver Directory MACHINERY The Morse Bros. M. & S. Co. 1732 Wazee St. \\