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Casper Daily y Tribune ‘Casper Churches B every evening except iss) Christian Science per, Natrona County, Wyoming.| The services of this church are resi hange | held in the Odd Fellows’ hail, corner | Second and Wolcott streets. Sunday school—10:00 a. m. Lesson-sermon—11:00 a.m. Sub- ject—“God.” Wednesday evening testimonial-- 7:00 p. m. toffice liens public is cordially invited to 1916.! Z | ent & Editor. Business Mgr.} kaeseks Edito B. Griffith aret V. C. Douds ription— 50c month;/ il, $3 for 6 Ad hay $6 for year. Salvation Army The Salvation Army will begin/| meetings in their gospel tent tomor-| row night at 8 p.m. Sunday school} for all children at 2 p.m. Bible class for adults. Monday night, at 8 o’clock, there will be a patriotic rally with At-| | torney E. R. Shipp as the chief speak- er of the evening. Refreshments will be served to ail who attend: ‘Spe- |cial music on this occasion. | The tent has been made as com- fortable as possible, and Captain and ‘This paper has enlisted | Mrs. Pitt invite everybody to attend | A \the meetings here during the warm the EX rricrica Yor to spell. lvation Army meetings are| always free and easy, and the gospel | iod of the War- e+e |message is made simple. Make our tent your reading and| jrest room anytime from 9 a. m. to 7 p.m. SWALLOWING AUSTRIA is believed in Italy that Aus- First Presbyterian ent plight is largely due Delaware and Durbin streets, t her on/|ter H. Bradley, minister. Tomorrow at 11 o’clock the pastor| will speak on “Christian Optimism’’ and the sacrament of the Lord’s sup-| per will be celebrated. There will be pecial music. No afternoon or even-| ing service. pr Wal-| deliberate plot aga part of her senior p ie. rtner in the of imperial freebooters in Be Austria to get the very g she hus got. ere were two motives, aggrandizement. The pr wanted to get even r for the latter’s in- eparate peace. The however, was the ning absolute con- Tungary. e@ reasoning is umed-.to have about like th Austria, en-| dress by Mr. Durham. or commanded to go ead | at both hours. her fortunes on/jy inyited to worship with us. t to crush Italy, she has alway: a “stiffening’ ft helpless, mil- d= economi threatened invasion and revolution, she} id be obliged to call on Germany more. d this time Germany Evening service, 8:00 p. m. Hd make her own terms, taking Subject—“‘Silent Influence advantage of her ally’s desper-| Christin.” Rev. R. H. Moorman preaches the Ital-| first sermon as pastor of the I Mon- Ba t church tomorrow morning at untry} 11 o’clock. Mr. Moorman’s home 2 of com. is in) Braymer, Mo. He is ag of William Jewel college of Mi and of Newton Theologi 2 tion, Newton Centre, nthe bound Vice also had two years, Bcellor Von Payer recently put Southern Baptist Theological semin- hight be done aw with. Kais- ary, at Louisville, K. Y. farl might lose his throne; at Mr. Moorman is an athlete of no he would become a vagsal: mon-!mean ability and has been coach coe “with an empty title and q tin-/various high school and college teams. | fcrewn,. head of another minor!He, with his wife, brings to this) 7 of the German empire. Aus_| community talent and bility that will y would be another Rus-| have large influence with the people. llowed whole instead of A cordial invitation i§ extended to all who care to worship at the First Ger- | Baptist church. he se Our speciult; |. | Waffle sandw 5 According to this view, ranted revenge Methodist Episcopal J. J. Giblin, Minister. Sunday schoo] 10:00. all. Join one. Morning worship 11:00. Sermon by} the pastor. | Epworth League 7:30 p. m. All members are urged to be present. Evenenig worship at 8:30. Classes for Baptist Church Corner Linden and Beech. Rev. R. H. Moorman, minister. Sabbath school, 10 a. m. Preaching service, 11 a. m. Subject—“Co-Workers with God.” ph beaten without Berman troops. yy of literally, ther be'.no more sounds rather plausible. is quite capable of ance tr to her “gallant tell. Half the iy ow rritten c Warm aays, nches, all| son. ‘iVaffle Kit-| Secand street. i cha ee perilous, factor, tho, | y not have taken The reported program | Germany can “grab | y with one hand and | ith the other. Sup- ©. TEUTONIC WEAKNESS arallel might be drawn from the} ult of the C; addock er on the represented the pitted against the uton. sane is a Bulgarian, a 4ject of a country which has its| ndents from the Teutonic race. | ble, very emotional, quick to ow to perceive, tho endowed 1730—Gen. James Wadsworth, sol-} Yoday’s Anniversaries jtoday for its first annual conven. +. Today’s Birthdays |) Their British majesties, King! Brig. Gen. Peter 0. Hains, U.S. } dier of the Revolution and George and Queen Mary, today com-/ 4", born in Philadelphia, 78 years ago! | tors association, meeting at Pitsburg! en == | torpedoing Sto be gossip only. i | stoke, delegate to the Continental plete a quarter century of married tolay | | congress, born at Durham, Conn. Died there, Sept. 1817. 1781—-After nearly a year of inac- tivity at Newport, R. I., the French army joined Washing- | ton on the Hudson. » 99 |1801—British ship Hannibal lost in| an engagement between the French and English fleets at Gilbraitar bay. 1846—Lord John Russell British premier. 1877—-Pleyna, one of the great strongholds of the Bulgarians, | was captured by the Russians. 1891—A tornado at Baton Rouge, La.,-blew down a penitentiary wall and killed several con- viets. | 1901i—Prince yon Hohenlohe, former } German imperial chancellor, ! died in Switzerland. Born March 31, 1819. 1916—British reported capture of more German trenches north of Ypres. 1916—David Lloyd George was ap-| pointed secretary of war for! Great Britain. oo Year Ago Today i in War a | | Officially announced in the Tae | stag that the war cost Germany $25,- 000,000 a day. | State department announced the -of American steamship | Orleans, with four deaths. July 25 and Dublin were named | as the date and place for holdings the Irish convention. became eee aS i a ees In the Day’s News “The Princess Victoria, second daughter of the late King Edward: VIi., and a sister of the present king, | will receive congratulations today on} the 50th anniversary of her birth. Victoria is one of the best-loved mem- | bers of the British royal family. She |is likewise one of the prettiest prin- cesses in Europe, and the wonder is that such a pretty woman with such lofty rank was not married to some son of a king long ago. Gossip has often allied her with royal gentle- men on the continent, but it proved More substantial, it is believed, were the rumors cur- rent some 20 years ago that the pret- ty Victoria had ¢ n her heart and hand to John Baring, Baron Revel- and that the match had been broken off by Queen Victoria, who is said to have objected to her grand- daughter marrying outside of royal- ty. feo ———_—_a — Today is the 50th birthday anni- versary of Princess Victoria, the spin- ster sister of the British sovereijrn. The silver jubilee session of the |New Jersey Summer schoo) for Sun-| | day school workers opens today at] Ashbury park. Senator Harding of Ohio and other prominent speakers are scheduled to} address the Pennscylvania City Edi- RICHARDS & CUNNINGHAM $ *< July Clearance Begins in the Men’s Department on SATUR- DAY MORNING, JULY 6th, and continues until the summer stock is greatly reduced. CLOTHING | birthday anniversary today. -9 | Today’s as fies ——£ | h boundless physical strength, the estler Hu: ne proyed far from a} tch for the cool, judicious, aggres-| » American, Caddock, who had the ick presence of mind to grasp ey- situation, no matter how criti-| And so it is with regard to this the American people are pitted | st a Row er, in nature, the same} And it will-be with our} our presence of mind, tact, | ious temperament that we win from the flighty, quick-tem-| d foreigner ATTE COUNTY RANCHER DIES FROM INJURIES H EATLAND, Wyo., July 6..F. e, prominent citizen of Platte was brot to the Wheatland in a dying condition from in- received on his ranch 47 miles town when he was thrown by’ orse. He suffered a concussion brain and succumbed a few Satter his arrival here. a aT IN I) N) & N N) iN) ) S k) ‘ Ne In this department we will give you 10 per cent off on al! of the Men’s and Boys’ Suits, which will be a great saving, and it will pay you to pur- chase a new suit. You know that we sell one of the best makes of Clothing in America—the celebrated HIRSH-WICKWIRE brand. STRAW HATS and SUMMER CAPS will be closed out cheap. We have one lot of odds and ends of Straw Hats that we will sell you you rchoice| for ONE DOLLAR, and a re- duction of 10 per cent on other Straw Hats and Panamas. MEN’S and BOYS’ SHOES We have the largest stock in Casper, and during our July Clearance Sale we will give you a re- duction of 10 per cent on any Man’s or-Boy’s Shoes in-stock. It will pay you to buy two or three pairs. SLO LEIITE SLL I OES “THINK RICHARDS & CUNNINGHAM WHEN YOU WANT: THF. BEST.” life, the occasion being the first in| well oyer a century that’a British | 9, monarch and his consort have cele- 2 brated their silver wedding while stilj |viser in the federal management of| on the throne. jthe railways, born in Powataton! |county, Va., 53 years ago today. Thomas Gallagher, . representative | James E. Campbell, former Bover-| ict, born. 3 ame ngage E eee Sik nor of Ohio and for many years a oy Orn abraeore, N. thy any ears prominent figure in Democratic na-| 48° today. } tional politics, celebrates his 75th; Katherine Tingley, world head of \the Universal Brotherhood and The- Business reconstruction is to be the | osophical society, born at Newbury- keynote of the 14th annual conven-|port, Mass., 68 years ago today. tion of the Associated Advertising| Alfred Lawrence Aiken, head of clubs of the World, which assembles | the federal reserve bank at New Eng- }at San Francisco today for a session!Jand, born at Norwich, Conn., 48 that will continue thru the | week. years ago today. John Skelton Williams, comptroll- er ofthe curreney and a chief ad-| SUNDAY, “JULY 7 -1487th day of the great war. DOUBLE LENGTH CARS Equal 19 60 Freight Cars Trained ~> LIONS LEOPARDS PUMAS TIGERS POLAR BEARS BLACK BEARS SEA LIONS ELEPHANTS CAMELS HORSES ZEBRAS PONIES MONKEYS — THAT — LION Loops the Loop [ PARKER’S CAR! VAL SHOWS | il || SOLLOSAL ZOO OF WONDERS Col. Hebh’s $10,600 Challenge Dancing Horses fas stew ior & Bostoa Borse Show 3 "700 PEOPLE SOO HORSES SITITTIIITITITTII TOTS A, j Savage's Co., of World’s Famous Wrestlers CASPER *sucy" 20th} JULY BEST. BOWL OF CHILI IN TOWN 15c AT: THE CHILI KING LUNCH 7% Back of Grand Central Bar. All kinds of Sandwiches at N » popular prices. Quick service, highest quality. Le hdedededdedetedetededidedidtense IP chang Oil Exchange Building Phone 765 or 766 | Casper, W; : ’ ; SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1913 Ones AND COMPANY Members New York Stock Exchange, New York Cotton rs e, Csicago Board of Trade, Make You | Hone | Beautiful By the Use of Painting and Papering Alfred Peat's Prize Wall Paper gives an atmosphere of refinement and good taste to your home. We carry a full Jinc of Painter’s Supplies. ing or papering of any kind, call Meyenfeldt & Platt Contracting Painters. 335 North Grant. For paint- Phone 378 J OOPS MMS SIEM ETE EMM, FOR SALE TRADE One F W D Truck Two Duplex Tracks, Almost New One International, | Ton Will sell on time or will consider a trade. Will consider touring car in trade. R. N. VAN SANT 135 Spruce Street Phones 984, 892w S PME LPI MISS a RES Eee ae eT alors 9Ooe CM LS EE Le oy 2 Hirsig-Steele & Co. BROKERS We are in a position through our private wire connec- tions to give you a superior service in any local oil securities We Solicit Your Patronage OFFICE: LOBBY MIDWEST HOTEL . Phone 810 Casper, Wyoming Phone 810 ———Private Wire Connection With———_ Sheridan Billings : Cheyenne : Denver Mountain States Transportation | and Storage Co. Garage: 2nd & Spruce Sts. RN VANSANT | eral Manager Midwest Hotel Bldg. Garage: 2ud & Spruce Sts. Phone 984 IVAN CROUCH Field Manager and Solicitor Phone 892W DUTTON pIALEY & CO. Phone ses 468.