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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1918 SAME WAGE 5. IVE WOMEN IN 1.5, WAR WORK So Says Katharine A./Morton, Can- didate for State Superintend- ent of Public Instruction o—__________________o City News M. B. Camplin, mayor of Sheridan and candidate on the Republican | ticket for governor of the state, is a visitor'in the city today. omo at ciety will give a lawn social at the home of Mr. and Mrs: W. H. Leavitt in South Wolcott street this evening when ice cream and cake will be | Served. The. proceeds will be used | to make up the amount pledged by the society for improvements on the Presbyterian church. | The Presbyterian Ladies’ Aid so- NEEDED IN RED. CROSS SERVICE Call issued for 550 Young Women Cheerful and Not Stout” to Bolster Morale of Yank ne . “I CHEER-MKERS \ o. i? ae < 6 lp ne | Weer co) ' This evening the home-of Mr. and | Mrs. W. H. Leavitt in South Walcott | street, the ladies of the Presbyterian Aid society ‘will serve ice cream and Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Littlefield of East Third street have for guests, | | Mrs. L. C. Littlefield and daughter, ! ,,. 3 2 t; |Miss Josephine Littlefield of Aurora,|Ribbon Designation Dispensed THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNr cake, the proceeds of which will be devoted to the fund for church im-} provements. / | _ * 8 LABOR HEAD TO _ | NIVERSITY PLANNED _PROTEST WORK- | OR-FIGHT RULE | [Ry Associated Prenn.) WASHINGTON, Aug. 14.—Samuel Gompers, in a letter to the Senate Military Committee, expressed ganized labor’s emphatic opposition FOR MOUNT OF OLNES (By United Press} LONDON, Aug. 9—The Mount of Olives, near Jerusalem, is to be the ite of a university. The institution \is to be founded by the Zionist socie- or- to any “work-or-fight” provision in the new man-power bill extending the |ties of the world. While primarily for Jews, it wll be open to students of all nations, Zionist authorities have | Nebr., and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Shea | Later this week with in New Ruling Issued draft ages. announced. — jof Ecley, Colorado. i r s * 2 arin t s “Womens who? sre eran ncenm, Tope The last Peat os 40 per cent Fighters | Mr., i Mrs. ght and Mr. and by an Densripents to The letter referred particularly to ancien ine S actinoroe called to the’ colors should receive | of the third Liberty Loan bonds is | : ithe? Yalownone Natinal Pak a v per the amendment Senator Thomas pro- of medicine. Other branches will be 8 equal pay for equal work, not only |due August the 15th and all of those| The American Red Cross wants) Omo j Beeeetuat ors ace ibaa detilseacionel conan caer intel ieecsente. tics |e its aevesuon’ wll be etd } aN : who have bought bonds are urged not |550 cheermakérs—female. | & ) a re ppt oth B =}cation for industrial reasons where e ‘institution wi e opened as e because it would Resua Rae ear forget Gils payment ee Thase. women, ‘who must elgg reer at ee oe eld Mon. jthe letters /“U. § A.” will be fur-}men are absent over five days with-|soon as conditions in the Holy Land 4t would be the only way in which OmoO- 53 ra = jday, August 20, at the regular poll-|nished by the lc board to all se-|out cause. The provision, as added | will permit. = the men returning after the war| Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Dutton and| ‘tone self-reliant, cheerful and not/ing places in Casper. Get outand/lectives leaving Casper for mobiliza-|to the bill yesterday, was a modi-| An attempt will be made to use the ‘ juld receive their former employ-|family, Miss Mildred Judy of Day-| Stout,” will be attached to hospital jregister your choice of men for of-| tion camps, these bands to be stitched | gication by Reed eliminating the five-|ancient Hebrew as the classroom ul P y. ; gate nt at their former salaries,” said|ton, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Weather-| huts, to assist in maintaining the | fi¢e- omo |two inches above the elbow on the} day limit. language. Miss Katherin Bis MOseobs comucees Py or ooone re ana ues: BH: Rel: | orale, and spirite of conyalescinel Owing’ taidhpidslay in shipment of | Sinead oiifeoncttete wy nee QFE : ey eS Ss Sa for Superintendent of Public Instruc-|ton, Jr., and family, left this morn-| American. soldiers. General Mana-| ; ‘i ; ons pale Goes phate aaah mea bate 9aedae Siew sTsT si TTT IaOOi aaa AK t a in Wyoming on a visit to Cas-|ing in their automobiles for the Big| ger Harvey D. Gibson has cabled for | material there will be no further the National Army from the time of =. ee this wank Miss Morton is tour-|Horn mountains where they will’ this number,’ and |Washington head- Sade at Mee ocuns oe induction into the military service ag the State as other candidates are spend a “week camping, hunting and| quarters looks to the Mountain Di- ca ar worl oms i w ieee the eit of the meiseyed onan 7 doing, and has received promise of | fishing. vision states for a substantial num- 5 Sey 6 Peete nent an bs ae ae « 1 y } to be removed from the clothing of support in many quarters. Speaking further upon the new labor conditions arising as a result of the war, Miss Morton said: “We cannot know how long the war will last; therefore it is dangérous to ase the number of working hours e point where it lessens the ca- y of the workers. The ‘output of labor might be greater for a short time if a sudden and violent effort made. The belligerent nations learned this to their sorrow. Already in a number of States at- tempts have been made to change the laws governing working conditions of both adults and children. Here is an- other avenue of service for us. We may keep a watchful eye on the trend of events in our own State, oppose any move of the kind-which may be made in our own Legislature, and thru our representatives in Congress help to safeguard the children of the South.” Hewett, and Mrs. Carl F. Shumaker left yesterday for the Beal camp in the Big Horn mountains where they will spend’ some time camping. Mrs. M. C. Clarkson and son, Ted, and Bud Palmer are already at the camp. SEVEN OF EIGHT WHO BROKE JAIL AGAIN IN IRONS Thermopolis Jail Delivery Ends with Capture of All But One; ™ oO Mr. and Mrs. John Beal and son,/| ber of women of the qualities enum-! erated. | The Red Cross hut workers will be | “pals” for the Sammies, as they are released from hospitals. They will |sing or play some musical instru- ment; they will chat with the boys and take a hand in the card games; in short their duties will be to keep the sick and wounded chaps from get- ting homesick, weary, unhappy, or distressed. | Hut workers, according to H. D. Gibson, commissioner to Europe, will | be interchangeable with the canteen | workers. They will, at times, be on | | their feet for many hours. Their work | will often be hard. For these and) other reasons experience has shown that heavy, stout women are not fitted for the work. | The Red Cross canteen service is badly in need of more women. Mr. | Gibson has advised Washington that | 260 must be provided by January 1,| if the Red Cross is not to fall down} Vote at the primary election Mon-| the selected man prior to his arrival day at your regular poling place. No at the cantonment. registration previous to voting is} Heretofore, it has been the custom necessary. of the board to furnish the men with MET? some kind of badge with the name |of the town from which the selective came or merely the word “selective” Leaders and assistant leaders who have been appointed “S. P.”” (special police) will wear a band on the right |sleeve bearing these letters, and this NEWRAYS Th els constitute the uniform of the special military police. Their duty is to maintain proper authority and discipline among the men until their arrival at camp. Athletic Program Is Feature of Big vent Planned for Sunday, 0 E A Wat Gard Y* 130,000 Germans, the majority of ugust th, at Garden |whom were tailors, butchers, bakers, Creek Falls | Waiters or teachers. Before the present war the popula- pas, Stee LE eS tion of London embraces more than zo SU the next The newsboys’ picnic at Garden| ,,-7ePare—for Liberty A Bona Fide Paying Business Propesi- tion in Casper, Wyoming Have five year lease on building, and s4- rents more than pay the entire rent of build- ing. For full particulars address Box 222, care Tribune Office. LIMA APSAPPPAPALALAL ALLL SL 4 IT SS SS LLL LLL S| LISA SALALALLLL Natrona Lumber Co. Escape Held Sensational Jin its duties and obligations. [Creek falls given by the Tribune and} NEW INSTRUCTORS FOR Features | Transportation to and from France| other business houses of Casper for | will count more than anything else. || SAILORS IN U. 5. CAMPS Whenever the big posses of the Democratic party lay down and let Hayden White run for congress it is a sure sign that they are not going to try to win. Hayden has long been the Democratic party goat and when the party has accumulated what they | consider a sufficient amount of sins Hayden is called in, the aforesaid collection of sins is fastened onto him and he is sent forth into the wil- derness of defeat. in the river and came up with his pockets full of fish never had any- thing on Mondell, but this year Frank is luckier than ever,—Lander State Journal, ae At Rosa Bonheur was famous as a painter before her 20th year. Soy oa so The Summer Sale of lad es’ shoes still continues att he Globe Choe Co. nee HAVE YOU PAID A VISIT TO THE MASTER MIND Years ago Joan d’Are was con- demned to death for one of the t services ever rendered to a ion—Edison was taken as a mad inventor—the tlephone was thot to when the Wright brothers said they could navigate the air they were ridi- culed—yet today we have the posi- tive evidence of the fact and success in each instance. . Did you ever ask yourself what was the cause of the success of each? “MASTER MINDS” Is the Answer. A keen training of the mindso that the MENTAL FORCES are suffi- cie strong to combat the physical ness of the kody. There is noth- that is done in the world that is entirely governed by the work- f mental forces. Therefore con- your station in life. Is your nd strong enough to shape your ny? If not see the MASTER ' MINDS and-have him teach you the power of concentration and de- pment of the mind so that you justly reach the station in life you are best adapted for. If thru any power, gifted or cultivated, ene can etll you names, past and resent, without one single word yourself, then ask yourself the 1estion— 'S HE NOT CAPABLE OF GUID- é ING YOUR FUTURE Can you in all justice to yourself “rope blindly thru-life to look back . and say “IT MIGHT HAVE not The man who fell) be the product of a distorted brain—| CHEYENNE, Wyo., Aug.” 14.— Captured in various sections of the State, seven of the eight prisoners who escaped from the County jail at | Thermopolis last week spent one night in the County jail here. they were marched from the County jail to the U. P. depot, en route to |the State penitentiary at Rawlins. |They were calm and willing to go back to prison after the battle they had put up for their freedom. The men broke jail by the use of a |duplicate key which they had either made or were given by confederates on the outside. Getting a start be- fore their absence was discovered, the |men headed for Cody. On their way from the jail they stole a Ford ma- |chine and drove close to Cody, where one of the men was sent to purchase some food with the $2 which they \had scraped together. Their confederate not returning in the time thought necessary to make the trip, and thinking he had been picked up, the rest of the crew started | back on the route which they had provisions, and who was a mere lad, ireturning to the place where he had jleft his, pals and finding them gone, returned to Cody and a few minutes later was driying a stolen Dodge car back toward the prison from whence the had escaped. By a strang coin- cidence, the lad drove the Dodge car into the same bridge which his pals |had. struck a few hours earlier, and the too, was ditched on top of the jother car. The lad was thrown into |the pile where his pals were taking a nap, but was not injured. The jail breakers spent the night where they had ditched the two ma- chines, and with the arrival of day- |break were again on their way to safety, when they were detected by guards from the jail. Some of the |men kept up the track which they were following, and the guards got a got a switch engine and started in |pursuit. After a run of a little ways, \the fugitives parted company, and after a running battle were captured. The men who were caught are as |follows: Ed Holton, William Miller, |Hary Sparks, LeRoy Martin and Ne- vins. Of the men captured Adam circles, having been sent to the peni- ltentiary for the hold-up of a night clerk at the Normandie hotel here some time ago. | Green was sighted by the posse on a hill near Red Lodge, and stood still | ‘until the guards were nearly upon ‘him, when he made another dart for safety. As he started down the hill \the posse opened fire on him, but he merely laughed at them and ‘asked them to “come on.” After frunning a short distance, he decided, ‘to. give up. Two of the men were cap- \turéd near Cody, and one was caught fabout 11 miles from Red Lodge. The ‘others were picked up near Thor- ‘Green is well known in local police} Poo Be to Soe Soke teeta tele tate | Pe eeo eho eee sie tio oe tho eho ho see soe aie ta tae aio Oe Co Hea eS t Keith Lumber Co. $ _- Let Us Quote You On RIG TIMBERS and a salary to cover living expenses while abroad will be paid. The term of enlistment is for not less than one| year. | Every chapter in the Mountain! |division must assist in obtaining the| requisite number of workers. This} is a large requisition, and chapter | officials are urged by the Division | Chained and handcuffed together, | Bureau of Personnel to secure pub-|charge of. the freshmen of Harvard licity and prepare to take care of ap- |plications, _ Communications should be ad-} States Division, A: R. C., Denver,| the Bureau of Personnel, Mountain States Division, A. R. C., Denver, | Colo. ———— — | At a critical moment in the recent great battle along the Marne Gen- jeral Petain saved the situation by dispatching -.every. available aero- |plane on his front to attack and dis- |perse a great hostile concentration | which was preparing behind the Ger- jman lines. The classic and brailliant-| ly successful stroke set the sea on a new role of usefulness for the aero- plane—that of a purefly offensive weapon, pea ae | The Globe Shoe Co, is offering | some rare bargains during their sum-) mer clearance of ladies’ shoes. | tively will not be left anywhere, for any one, unelss paid for before leay-! ing the store or on delivery. All are treated alike. Pay CASH ~and Pay LESS. Groceries, Meats and Hardware. CASPER COMMERCIAL CO. Phone 1 Freight Hauling AND WHITE TRUCKS Are largely responsible for the Dependability of Our SEE US 165 Ash Street. | | Service. Blackstone Transit Co. Operating 17 Motor Trucks Ask for Harbison the kids has been provided with autos} In the potato race, a half bushel enough to take all the boys expected |or bushel cf potatoes are placed to the falls thru the open-hearted |about a foot apart on a long line for contributing of private cars by theirjeach runner and then the runner owners. |must make as many trips from the Mr. McMillan, who has charge of |starting point as there are potatoes the program and who has had con-|and bring them back separately, the || siderable experience with boys in the!one who finishes first ‘winning the east where he was at one time in| prize. foadeciie Te Bae bol a college when he was attending that! EEI great school, will have full charge of the races in company and with other | men will award the prizes for the| INSTITUTE best runners and those who excell in|C°¥- Eighteenth and Curtis cther sports | DENVER, COLO. ‘Innere will be foot races bot: for LIQUOR AND DRUG ADDICTIONS distance and against time, that is|CUFred by a scientific course of medi. there will be foot races over a long |¢&tion. The only place in Colorado distance that will try the youngsters’ | here the Genuine Keeley Remedies wind to hold upifor a long stretch} ss . | and then there will be races for only | 100 yards where the matter of wind } ‘ | : @ } Sts. will be a secondary matter but the speed of the runner will count for nore than anything else. Also, there will be potato races and sack races where the agility) of the contestants ees es ies RUGS RUGS RUGS We are now prepared ta come. Adam “Red” Green, who had \| clean all kinds of Rugs and was chauffeur of the Ford cnn, ram|a, an oer ftenined bx,ue before, age|f Carpets. | Dry Cleaning of || "2 . mm, we Ww! y vhere in the |p) mikey ce : : id over a bridge which had been washed | City before noon, orders received af. all kinds is our business. | Awe uy Clairvoyant out by the recent rains and ditched ;liver anywhere in the city thet. sy) CASPER | Do not use water for irrigation purposes ex- the car, The men then laid down to|bUt pnly one delivery a day to wny | d rest, a cash Denis, Your credit ta good. at] DRY CLEANING bet thew f Si ht py Suey ey an The man who had been sent for|*2reMt steht aot at oun Or | LE | cept between the hours of Six and Eight o’cloc CO. Phone 255 J = OurBusiness {1 WATER SHORTAGE Ry order FIRST aa | Telephone 571-J. TO 0 We are now prepared the best of mechanics, repainting your car. | in the evening, on account of temporary he Shockley Garage Under New Management added a painting department and will be pleased to give you figures on | LUMBER AND BUILDERS HARDWARE We would appreciate the opportunity of figuring your lumber bills Office and Yard 353 No. Beech St. Phone 528 . ) to Water Users of WILLIAM JONES, Water Commissioner. WNERS OF CARS to do all kinds of Auto Repairing and employ only thereby giving you first-class service. We have & : 4 | Opportunity knocks at your | mopolis. “oor but once in @ lifetime, This is| your opportunity to know your des-| “ny thru the powers of —The— MASTER MIND Office Hours 10 a. m. to 9 p. m. Phone 938 NEW COBB BUILDING (Next to Wyatt Apartments) Daily and Sunday . A complete stock of lumber, lime, cement and coal Phone 3. Io ep eho eo sop th tho oo ho ap eho soo sho too 6 og Ladies save money by buying your shoes during the summer clearance sale at the Globe Shoe Co. ——_—_—>__—_ | France has 1,500,000 widows on} the government pension list. Our storage rates have been reduced to $12.50 per month Shockley Service Sales Corp. Corner Second and David ___ Telephone 122-123 ANON ee tenn eS The average American could not! stomach Chinese eggs, but a China-| man will tackle a six-year-old iny| with enthusiasm. \% =|