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Y, IST 21, i918 OS re f - = 7 lege Observatory, Cambridge, Mass, | Negroes from all parts of the In the Day’s News [|| Today’s Anniversaries | |° the sessions of this, the third day country who have attained success, . $ a end ed the Grand meee Pecapagers piace ya - ao will Sa M. Felton, works in| 1775—Continentai- under ment at Portland, Ore., wil le- oat u dy for open- gain ates the ians ise of 2 Montgomery artived at Fort| voted to the transaction of business|ing of the nineteenth annual con. France has been one of the wonders; |relating to the affairs of the organ-| vention of jof the war, has long been seat rail| ization. ni as one of America’s greatest rail- _ 18 |road executives and SeShavgriation Sokustown, N. Y.° Died at Auburn, specialists. A natiye of Philadelphia, | N. ¥., Noy. 1, 1874. | Mr. Multon chose railroading as a/1785—Oliver Wazard Perry, fa- life work after his graduation from mous American naval officer, the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- born at Newport, R. I. Died nology. Fifty years ago he began | in /the West Indies, Aug. 23, Ticonderoga. 1784-——Enog T. Thorpp, governor of New York 1829-33, born at the National Negro Busi. je. CASPER CYCLERY 405 North Durbin Everything for the Bicycle. Just received a carload of Bicycles and Accessories. Comf « § and see before you buy. Remember the Place 405 North Durbin vier. d Press Service. Member of the Associnted Press. The nt Casper, Natrona County, Wyoming. | ance for the issue of the war. “A BAYS IT FRONT -938 seek ta probe too deeply into the| Associated Prev: masters of retreat—a military a4 his career as a rodman ona (United Press Staff Correspondent.) Associate Editors: . 1 And the nearer one gets to the land,;Todman and president. As an ex-| the Hungarian revolution es- entitled to the use for republication|threy away so many lives in trying | Publication pee 2 Ou Exchange are now, as before, confident.” ilding. | Subscyption——By Carrie 50c month; ™mysteries of the Prussian mind. It|Greatest Passion at Home; Fight-| by mail, $3 for 6 months, $6 for year. suffices to know that the Germans! ers Work Their'’s off, in SEU lack i The first State legislature of . rs i re 0 in which Americans have little skill! Rennayieasiaioe: By 2800 pe eee errr ag Patented, after é J, EL HANWAY, President & Editor. /and less interest. | WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY become a railroad president, having} , R. E. Evans Margaret V. C. Douds |“Marne” being merely “catchwords | : : without importance,” we peally | uch fg no’ mand thé lea of hate ecutive he has served a number of caped to the Turkish frontier. one finds, |prominent roads in the South, East|189%—The French Government de- Soc otherwine Tcredited in. this paper |t© cross the Marne and why they PAGE TWO m=! bs |cording to our regular plan. | The Casper Daily Tribune |°r"ng, ‘0 oo Zesule piss tare Issued every evening except Sunday °F¢ only catchwerds without import-} + “Confident of what?” we might; Business Telephone_ - 15) curiously inquire. But let us not! Editorial Office ___ Entered at Casper (Wyo.) Postoffice are “masters of the situation,’ which | Battle with Huns | as second-class matter, Nov. 22, 1916. in this case means that they are! By LOWELL MELLETT. i . y —|had experience in most of the ad- session of 85 days. | BARL E. HANWAY, Business Mer, As for “gaining ground’ and |r emicrmtieray, Nek baron gl pares ees jobs that lie between | 1849—Kossuth and other leaders of vA: fated Pi is exclusively | Would like to know why the Germans n : to the. fort In a town well to the rear, a town|and West. Since 1909 he has been | Seon pea AA Rr A isafer than Paris up to the present, I/ president of the Chicago Great West-! dents in France must be reg- and also the local news published made that enormous accumulation 4 rm Railroad. istered. — — herein. of men, guns and ammunition in the |S? ™¢ Upon an officer of some rank | ad |1914—French and Germans battled | @=—=—————— xs | Marne salient, if said salient was not psd wd ‘da nasi per aee sel t for poi ion of Charleori. r jan essential stepping-stone to the at-|COnGuct of an under officer. Z MERC 1915—-M. Veriilfelos again became F i } wv latter had provided food for a young | Was it just a playful Ger-| Gorman officer, enroute through the| | “Bre and water’s good enough! for him,” declared the angry supe- rior. “And dry, hard bread at that.”! The day before, I had seen alg batch of prisoners brought into the) ist headquarters back of the line. It tainment of their great military ob-| | jective. }man prank? Jewelry of the Highest Quality premier of Grvece. 19#6—/Vigorous assault on Fleury at § NEW PUBLICATION Verdun repulsed by French. || Year Ago in the War French forces at Verdun capture 0 | RALLROAD COURTESY. | The Federal railroad director has been pained by the discovery of “a} disposition on the part of employees | BOSTON, Aug. 21.—The United ‘tates Shipping Board has begun publication of a weekly journal as This paper has enlisted . : eh ‘ ¥ “pits : new positions along the Meuse. ot Arnerica for the ltesy in dealing with the roagonable|hausted by their march. Two sick-| 13+ marine. Called “The Merchant|tTenches at Lens by bayonet attack. Use eriod of the war- +++ [needs of the public.” He «cvests ly looking lads fainted and fell just! 4 they were being lined up for in-| that they are expected to be just as |% P pt; ‘polite and obliging as they were ol peep Mae EUORCEE ee and now a special agent of the Ship-| der private management. , ‘Way - “4 fs lens, ‘ \ping Board, #8 managing editor,| This may be regarded by many | this was diverted for the purpose of | this service newspaper is designed patrons as a rather mild statement |TCs¥scitating the two who had col-| not alone to convey merchant marine of the case. Were railroad employes lapsed and the others were then Italians announced the capture of 18,000 Austro-Hungarian prisoners in three days. Mariner” and with Edwin Reynolds, formerly a newspaper man in Boston BANNING LEMON EXTRACT Lemon extract is not commonly} thought of as an intoxicant. Yet DIAMONDS 1900-18 ST. On16 BourTe GEM STONES. DENVER. COLO. uu Means ee the state sheriff of South Dakota - found it necessary, according to a news item, to prohibit its sale in stores of that state. Fors South Daketa lemon extract, it is, waxed indignant at the alleged rude- alleged, contains from 80 to 90 per'nees of tickat agenti, (conductors, cent of alcohol. Judging by appear-|trainmen and others with whom they ances there was a great boom in/came in contaqt, and as a class, ever, particularly cour- teous to the public under the old re- gime? Foreign travelers have always Americans | givon as much as it was safe for them | to drink. Immediately after inspec- tion all were marched to whére food| and hot coffee was waiting for them.| I asked the officer in charge about | (this practice. “Starving prisoners after we've ;got ’em won't help defeat Germany,”| {that the steamship President, recent- | | Today’s Events | news to the men already enrolled) but to attract to this sea trade 85,000 others to man the cargo cartiers re- cently Inunched or under .eonstruc- tion. 1482nd day of the Great War. | Centennial anniversary of the) birth of Alfred A. Watson; first Episcopal bishop of East Carolina. ‘SCHWARTZ JEWELRY CO. NEW LOCATION IN IRIS THEATER BUILDING nnual convention of the In- —— ternational Photo-Engravers’ Union = ——— of North America meets in Washing- ton today and will continue in ses- “The Merchant Mariner announces ly acquired for the use of the Ship- 2 i i ften been | . ing Board’s recruiting service as a lemon pie and cake and pudding! traveling abroad are Ms he replied. j Ping ssctabaiy gion until end of the: week. when prohibition went into effect in surprued at peiercnreas Sentral HATE ’EM WITH SHELLS peabigt i! PF ag ie Kora | ‘New. 2 Birk tae of eivig, adminis- seetent oat if ete bros rg tee foreign railroad empoles. Of course bes He ak veel in real danger of| tices are enlisting from all parts of tration arising from the war will be pb oer a neueed & audden increase there are exceptions. erman shells and bullets for 4/446 country, the paper explains, | discussed by the League of Virginia in. the popularity of lemon extract. Be that as it may, public control |month, without a ana we rests | the President, after being refitted,’ Municipalities, meeting in annual! The people who were most eagerly is certainly no exeuse for discour- 7 st e added, the Ger- Lwi session today at Richmond. buying it on every occasion Were not|tesy toward the public, It should peste ae been paren eaeer Bay The cawenatst ee ships of this). Some fifty members of the Amer- aivk a h ki In fact, a/tather be an incentive to greater con- |? Shells and bu lets he controlled. | treet are placed before the public so|ican Astronomiral Society are ex- ys housekeepers. , iderat ing that the railroad |. ‘Hate em?” responded an officer | oe th f this branch of pected to attend the society’s annual |i} d many of them proved to . be /Siderateness, seeing tha’ ie railroad | ; be i Via | tha’ e Progress 0: is branch of, ies a il people under such a system becomes|i? the line, to the querry. “Sure | iy¢ Shipping Board’s work may be meeting today at the Harvard Col- Pas Le gnt of proatee a rn actually the employes of the patrons|%¢ hate ’em! We hate ‘em with | fpeabstierans. Eiht Aen Serf aneN | ealers rew ir own 1 ine ‘; x bserved. | |big shells, little shells, rifle bullets, |° — n for the abnor-|they serve. And any man repre-| + Q i _-_— ee aeoanat tn this flavoring ex-|senting the government of the Unit- jmachinegun bullets, bayonets, bombs| an oraer received by us befors tract. led States, in any capacity, is surely and gas. In fact we're so busy hat- a mw will deliver, anywhere f The sheriff must have drawn sim-|Under a special obligation of gentle-|'7® ¢m in that way that we haven't |city before noon, orders received a ilar conclusions, for he prohibited its) manly behavior. . jtime to hate them with our mouths. FPrn hak, BRL A700 Sy har te 5 3 ; But after we’ve taken them prisoner| day to any sale, leaving the population of South rs Dakota confronted with two prob- Natrona Lumber Co. LUMBER: AND BUILDERS HARDWARE We would appreciate the opportunity of figuring your lum! Office and Yard 353 No, Beech St. Phone 528 a LIBERTY GARAGE Car Storage, per month_-_ $10 Truck Storage, per month_$15 Gasoline, per gal AUTO REPAIRING 180. So. Elm. St. Phone 983 ae REEy' one famfiy: "We sonic your The Moscow council declares that Pic t worth while hating them, is/acash basis.” Your eredit te good at rs. Our } | | 1 "YOUR BEST SALESMAN A : O MATTER what you have to sell—-wheth- er suits, wall paper, millinery, hardware, shoes, paints, - | MF rae anys; And, besides, what’: e @ credit store, but not at ot lenis according to its various atti-|"the Socialist fatherland is in dan-| 2 .ain dorives: nate th on aien| Seis Re tudes toward the liquid in question. |ser.” There’s a new one, awe didn’t | you've already captured?” any ohe, unelss paid for Pperetires bare, to itind oad See Cc up-to-date Socialist had\"" , British B nt whose treated allie, Pay. Ross ‘or lemon extrac’ | 4 name is we! 10 . roser et Art ran of foodstuffs, and anti-prohibition- | —-—0 seaders Went. with ime. to vite en SASEER COMMERCIAL G ists must find a new beverage. ‘ARARINES Tl NED DUT American division. He was anxious 0- he said, to get at the psyc P A SEVENFOLD TASK et paddies private, Fo lean het bok never _brush_ it. However much women may be do-| f T he was thinking and what the: war! ing indirectly to win the war, it will meant to him. It was the day after, be a long, long time before the wom- jthe whole British line first started en of America will be called upon, ichuckling over the Australians’ siz-| to bear arms. Why, then, is the Y.|| SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., Aug.jing-up of the Americans as “great! W. C, A., asking for millions of dol- | 21.—Full fledged “soldiers of the|fighters, but too rough.” The men_ lars for war work? .;8ea” are being turned out from the|we saw were part of the same force. The hostess houses operated in|tinited States Marine Corps recruit-|that had earned this real tribute from army cantonments are one form ofjing depot, Marine Barracks, Mare|the rough-and-tumble Australians, | its beautiful and benevolent work.|{sland, at the rate of 750 or 800 a PICKED A “TOUGH ONE” The cheerful, big rooms where a/month, according to the post adju-| TI tried to steer the correspondent, chap can meet his mother or sister /tant, Caotain C. C. Riner. Approxi-jinto a group of smooth-faced, bright | or sweethezrt have proved blessings |mately 4,000 men are maintained at | looking boys, but he made straight) to many a lonely soldier., But the/the barracks, 1,300 in the garrizon|for a lean, leather-skinned veteran hostess houses aren’t going to cost/ and the reraainder recruits in various|of the Spanish war, whose tin hat fifteen million dollars. jstages of training. jSlanted rakishly down over his eyes, This, however, is just one of seven | “They are a fine, clean and con-|giving’ him an appearance of inde-| lines which the war board of the/tented body of men,” said Colonel |scribable toughness. He was chew- National Y. W. ©. A. has under-|fincoin Karmany, commanding offi-|ing tobacco, which didn’t alter the taken. It is a picturesque work, but|cer of the barracks, the receiving de-| impression. it is by no means the most vital. pot for men enlisted in states west esently the distinguished corre- For every million men who go to|of the Mississippi river. The recruit-|spondent returned and pulled me war, a million women are affected. |ing in this territory is in charge of aside. / The Y. M. C. A. looks after the men, Major R. E. Lowndes. “By Jove,” he said, “it’s remark- the Y. W. C. A. looks after the) Mare Island lies in San Pablo bay,|able! That chap's fighting for the women, and it does so by the request/an arm of San Francisco bay. Ac-|same things your President is. You} of Secretary Baker who, because of |cess to it is by government launch! know what I mean—says America’s the fifty years of the Association’s|oy ferry,’ and | behind the formal!in it until G rmany learns she’s! history and its far reaching organ-|buildings of the post the parade|licked and that then we've got to} ization has delegated the task to it./grounds reach in a wide sweep to|devise a way to prevent any more | He has not only asked the Associa-|rojjing hilis where the topography,|wars like th s he does't be- tion to do the work, but he has ex-|i¢ is said, 1s not unlike that of north-|lieve in punishing Germany or any- amined the budget and approved it.) ern France. |thing like that, but he’s willing to| The spe al Sosa work —__—_ see another million or two of them) on behalf of the thousands of wom~ killed if necessary to make Ger- | en who Pues fone ante rhe A Bes NEW TREAD FOR mans understand. He thinks it wi tries and who work in cantonm { districts. In these districts Girls’'| TIRES TO SOLVE Clubs have been formed which Bre the girls something interesting to do besides flirting with the soldiers. WEAR PROBLEM These are said to work er enichy and to have helped the girls show a Casper has a new boon to setor- ee A aregn senke and ists. For many years the ideal tire Emergency housing is another} branch of the work. In some dis- tricts the Y. W. C. A. has been vir- tried to make is a tire that would wear out evenly all the way around }on the tread. A tire of this kind tually _ commanded by the govern-| . . ps pia ct ment to erect houses for women| Would then give the maximum wear PORTO Ri { ‘ ae to its user CAN LABORERS TR i ales on, won Special work among colored and| This tire is nearly perfected and| READY TO AID WAR WORK| your payroll the more ad- foreign women industrial workers is/™®ny of the old tires turned in as being done by their own people whojJunk are worn out around the tread have been specially trained for it. {in Practically the same amount all Besides this, the Y. W. C. A. is| the way around, This makes it im- sending a big force of women over-| Possible for the tire to be vulcanized, seas to do for the nurses what the 48 the cost of vulcanizing a whole new Y. M. CG. A. is doing for soldiers, and| tread would bring the cost much to carry on industrial and cafeteria | higher than the original tire. work in munition centers of France| A new invention recently put on and Russia. It is keeping up the, the market consists of an entirely morale of the women behind the lines| new tread, known as the Gates Half just as the Y. M. C. A., Knights of Sole, and which. is built. to Columbus an dother societies are do- | the outside of the worn out tire. With | ing it for their brothers under arms. | this recovered tire, it is possible for x 7 ORTLRGES, | the owner to obtain another 5,000 “MASTERS.” j miles from his old tires, even tho Trust the Huns for ingenious ex-,S0me of them may have blowout planations of reverses. Gen. Luden- | holes. dorff’s version of the big German} In fact, the new retreading feature retreat is another masterpiece. _is just about like getting a pair of The German. high command, he |shoes half-soled at the shoe shop after says, quickly perceived Gen, Foch’s | the original soles have given long plan to break through the German | service, $ f right flank and cut off the Marne, The new tire is but recently in- salient, and proceeded triumphant-|stalled in an agency in Casper, and ly to foil that purpose. “We reck-|is known as the Gates Half Sole Tire}! oned on an attack on July 18, and | Berwice. It is located at 151 South | were prepared for it. By the after. | peneets same entrance as Rapid Shoe noon of the 19th we were already! ae fully masters of the situation, and! WE are experts on alterations of 124. we shall remain’so. We left the: ies’ garments. C. Moore, .tail- abandoned round tO. the CROMY iG.) OF, ummm Natt. | | ‘hating couldn’t fight like men of the} | talked offered another proof of th They didn’t talk of the! for cars that the manufacturers have | |the Australians found “too rough.”| fit} take a year or a year and a half.” | The correspondent added his be- lief that men who waste their time} Spanish War veteran type. The group of boys with whom I | contention. They ‘talked of “Fritz” and “Heinie. | ‘These are the hateless heroes that SAN JUAN, PORTO RICO, U. 8. A., Aug. 21.—Special Agent Rob. erts, of the Department of Labor,; has notified the authorities in Wash- ington that he is ready to send 10, 000 laborers to the mainland wh: ever transportation is provided: That number of workers has already reg- istered and hundreds of others are seeking registration. To get these men and others like them into indus- tries essential to war is the special agent’s aim. Here, he maintains, they are a burden to themselves and the com- munity because they are idle. At productive war industries they will become an asset to the nation, pues a 8 xine Ladies’ tailoring, latest fashions. L. ©. Moore, Tailor, 168 So. Center. advertising. men busy. who a fair chance and you will get results. your business ask an expert to help you. be glad to talk it over with you anytime. Very sincerely, GEOLOGICAL WORK Maps and Blue Prints, Surveying | | | } Wyoming Map and Blue Print Co., P. O. Box 325 Phone 849 |! 111 North Wolcott Street 1 Casper, Wyo. garden seed, silk dresses, safety razors, stocks, cigars, oil leases, gold teeth, fresh eggs, silk hose, houses, but- ter, lumber, jewelry, furniture, or service— Newspaper advertising is the best salesman you can hire. One man and the right kind of newspaper space will sell more for you than four to five clerks or salesmen without vertising space you ought to employ to keep the clerks and sales- If you believe in advertising as a salesman-and surely you do when you sce it making others about you rich— the only way to make your advertising pay is to keep it work- ing as regularly as your other salesmen. You would fire a clerk worked only one or two days a week. Give advertising If you are in doubt as to the right way to advertise The undersigned will The Daily Tribune Advertising Manager