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“> The Casper Daily Imbune|) the Casper Daly Inbune!) =—— I eer aeme means en as Se he | 4 NPIS UL AS EL Sa. “tah et er Gs tere tate Shee GRD DSS 4 ta Nh tae Lag ev eegains herded Sunday asper, Natrona County, raing. Publication Offices: Ojl phecgain ® A. Building, 15 918 ees AS, Carrie» 50c month: by mail, $3 for 6 months, $6 for year pA en ead ee bed Entered at Casper (Wyo.) Postoffice as second-class matter, Nov. 22, 1916. —<—<—<<$<$_____ Associated Press Service. ‘ United Press Service.» —————_—_ eee J, E. HANWAY, President & Editor EARL E. HANWAY, Business Mgr Associate Editors: R. E. Evans Margaret V. C. Doud: ———— Member «2 2he Ansoctated Prena, The Associated Press fs exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. FIGHT THE HUNS AT HOME One of the best means at hand to stop German propaganda is em- bodied in a letter recently sent out by a prominent business house of the West which is a chain letter that the recipient is to send out other copies to friends and business acquaint- | Ohio ‘Bankers’ | | Today’s Anniversaries i _- T, - > oday’s 1496th day of the Great War. One hundred and fiftieth anni- |1727—~<The | body of George I. of England. was interred in the versary of the birth of caro BPS A se Aa braid, f th ti | 2—-Gen. ohn H. Morgan reached pets gaa of the greatest of French "Lexington, Ky., ap his second raid. 4 | 1870—On receipt of the news from j Sedan, Gambetta and other | » French liberals . assumed to! First American casualties in France were announced one year ago today, when four Americans were killed in a German raid on American | depose the’ Emperor and .es- hospitals in France. | tablish bli . The annual session of the Wiscon- ies = 2 tore y sin Conference of the Methodist 1887—Irish National League met in Episcopal Church will open at Apple- defiance of the Queen’s proc-| ton, today with Bishop Thomas lamation. | Nicholson presiding. 1891—The Tefnessee legislature re- The annual tonvenfion of the Do- fused to abolish the convict minion Letter Carriers’ Association | lease system. will open today at Hamilton, Ont.,/1901—Prince Chun of China made a to continue in session until Friday. formel expression of regr 1 A big military parade isto be at Berlin for the murder of! civen in Baltimore today as the fea- the German Minister at ture event of the twentieth national Peking. encampment of the United Spanish) 1914-—-Germans crossed the River War Veterans. Marne on their march south. Wartime problems of business and! 1915—-Allan’ Line steamship Hesper-| finance are to be discussed by the! ian sunk by mine or torpedo | Association, meeting off the south coast of Ireland,| in annual convention today at Co- with loss of 26 lives. lumbus. 1916—French advanced on a 12-| The Chicago German Conference mile front south of the of the Methodist Episcopal Church) Somme, ances. The leter follows; “GERMAN PROPAGANDA” Natrona County Tribune, Casper, Wyoming. “The false rumors and malicious stories constantly being circulated as facts, discrediting our high officials, the Red Cross, the care and ‘eonduct of our troops, the condition of our cantonments, etc., is GEMAN PRO?-| AGANDA, ‘intending to create dis- trust and discontent among our peo-| ple and to discourage those working)! for our country. “The stories are accepted as news and unfortunately are being given| the widest circulation by patriotic} Americans, who do not realize they are aiding our enemies. “The Espionage Act provides pun- ishment for false reports of statements,’ con- cerning our Government. Those who are fighting for us deserve the full-|and Friday. est measure of our loyalty and sup- port, both in word and deed, those who ‘Convey any} is to meet an annual session today at enone, wes < s Behen! TWO'GREAT WAR | Herbert Hoover has called a con-| DRIVES DUE IN | ‘A SHORT TIME ference of State food administra- |tors to meet in Washington today | for a general discussion of vital mat- ters affecting food administration. | “The Contribution Life Insurance 3 Has Made and Will Make Toward A great union drive for $135,500,- Winning the War” is to be the gen- jeral topic at the annual joint meet- ing of the National Association Life Underwriters and the Life Un-ten’s Christian Association, and the derwriters’ Association of Canada, to} American Library Association, open today in New York City. \ cording W. P. G. Harding, governor of the |\)y representatives of the four organ- Federal Reserve Board and presi-| ization. The drive will begin in the dent of the War Finance Corpora-|\cek of November 11 next. i] tion. isto head the list of speakers jat th annual convention of the Illi- nois Bankers Association, which | opens at Springfield today and will} continue in session over Thursday) | Christian Association, the War Camp ac- } In a statement explaining the) drive, George W. Perkins, represent- jing the Young Men's Christian Asso- ‘ciation; Frank A. \Vanderlip, the! American Library Association; My- =< TA. x | munity Service; and Mrs. Henry P. — “Ww AT G@ || Davison, the Young Women’s Chris- We hi ved | 1» “th i ‘ cars to all such stories and’so s-/ HOTEL ARRIVALS. !|tian “Association, said they werd in-| courage their circulations WILL}Q——— 7 {formed by Raymond B. Foster, chair- | YOU DO THE SAME? | AT THE MIDWEST |man of the Commission on Training “Eyery loyal citizen should assist} Chester Johnson, Sam Johnson,|C#mp Activities of the War Depart-| in stopping these malignant lies. En- list your friends by mailing six or more copies of this letter.” From all reports we have the Huns on the run now. That they will keep in that state is donbtful for there is| 3till much life left in the German} irmy and it-is still capable of sus-| ining many shocks and it is verv able to take advantage of any weak-| ening on our own line of defense. | The evident move that Germany} will make next is a peace drive and| towards this end we should be ex-}| ceedingly careful.! That everyone} wants peace goes without saying but} that we want a German peace is out} of the question. To halt now and listen to peace terms when we have the Hun backing up and when we are beating his hands that ~are, clutch- ing France and Belgium t6 loosen} them would be to give him the time he wants to recuperate to continué|} the war. , 0- ~ AN AMERICAN PEACE Every peace proposed put forward} by the German government has been based on the principle of what Prus-)| sian statesmen describe to their peo-| ple as “a strong German peace.” That sounded very well while Ger- man &rms seemed to be winning. It must come home to the German na- tion now with a sickening sense of futility. We know well enough what a! “German ~peace’™ would mean. It} would have little in common with the “Roman peace’? of which the phrase is deminiscent. Prussia, we know, aspired to be another Rome, making the world her empire. , But Roman rule was, on the whole, tolerant and even benevolent. Under it, most of the subject peoples prospered, de- spite occasional plundering by con- scienceless Roman governors. It gave weak neighbors protection against the strong. It meant a stern but fair- system of world-policing. To v all the conquered countries it brought civilization and enlighten- ment. Belgium, Poland, Serbia, the Rus- sian Baltie provinces, Ukrainia, Rou- mania exemplify the beginings of the “German peace” that, was to be spread over all the earth, a peace of tyranny, exploitation. and destruc- tion, a ruthless extinction of human liberties, a brutalizing of free and enlightened péoples, a substitution of force and darkness for spirit and life Senator Lodge well said, in a re- cent speech: ~“No peace that satis- fies Germany can ever satisfy us. It cannot be a negotiated peace. It must be @ dictated peace, and we and our allies must dictate it.” That /means ‘“a strong Allied nano Tt manne om American peace, ‘And afi {ndispensable condition of that peace is the unconditidnal sur-| Germany. - 0. AN AUSTRIAN WAR LOAN APPEAL our ideas regarding popular) n appeals are overturned by 2| news item from Vienna regarding the; publicity methods used to persuade) the Austrian people to subscribe for} their cOuntry’s eighth war, loan. Beuuer vi All le ment, that the National Catholic War} Council (Knights of Columbus), the | city; A. B. Bonton, Cheyenne; Louis Jewish Welfare. Board, and the Sal- | D Bercu, Douglas; A. E. Brown and vation Army will be asked to join in| wife, Scottsbluff; B. H. Carnahan,;@ common Jr., Chris Carnahan, Marion Carna-| 1919. han, Salt Creek; Leo Sherer, Bonne-! ville; R. W. Haynes, Billings; F. S. Steedm, city: Mr. and Mrs, C. S.| Whittaker. Minneapolis; N. I. Zim, Billings, W. F. Kehoe, ea a) Sluuts, New York City; F. R. lams, Alliance; W. R. Merrifield and wife, | OVER $30,000 E, A. Dye and wife, Denver; J. H. Shank, city; C. H. Hill, Denver;, —_—- | C. Andrews, C. J. Clark, J. W. Lough; WORLAND, Wyo., Sept. 4—M. | Hoyt Leech, W. E. Fair, Cheyenne; |Clements returned homé this week | lin, R. S, Shannon, Denver elyn}from Omaha, where he had gone} Seabright, McDonald, Pa.; J. T? Ap-| with a shipment of lambs and ‘old | pelman, Cheyenne; C, L. O’Brien, I.) ewes. The eftire shipment prot G. Downes, Denver. |sbmething in the neighborhood of AT THE HENNING ' $30,000. Taylor brothers of Spring J. A. Bruce, Denver; E. W. Cham-' creek and Emil Faure also shipped bers, Ghadron; C. A. Riggs, R. G.\a large number of sheep and report Bonell, Billings; J. A. Adams, Craw-| receiving a good price. E. B. Wilson ford; L. A. Simonton, Denver; W. J. chipped 600 head from Moneta this Carpenter, Thermopolis; F. H.! week and went to Omaha with them, Brown, Denver; Sydney 8S. Hoits-| rhe sheep market has been running man, Torrington; J. S. Jones, Scotts-| fairly well of late and these gentle- bluff; Harry Berg, Billings; J. G.| men are well pleased with the results. ay Croosskill, Denver; Edith Welch, Bertie LANDER FOOD SLACKERS | Cheyenne. ~ GET JOLT IN RULING) 1 LANDER, Wyo., Sept. 4.—Uncle | niture, from a can of paint to a rail-| S8™ is hunting down the feod slack- | road. Everything, in short, abounds. | &"S; tWo violators of the food regula- This supply of goods, which cannot! tions being caught in the federal be described, will be offered solely to |\Gragnet in this section within the subscribers to the eighth loan.” j\past week. H No doubt thousands of Austrians, One food slacker bought two driyen by need or cupidity, were! pounds of sugar at each of three dif- taken in by this appeal, What will ferent stores in one day. Food Ad- be their state of mind when they dis-| ministrator Marsh has notified those cover that there never was any such /stores not to sell that person any booty—that the Russian districts, more sugar and has notified the food averrun by the Central Powers are }administration of the violation on the almost as impoverished as they are,,;part of the person making the pur- and that what slénder supplies the, chase. ussians possesed have been grabbed ~ by the Germans, or burnt by the When a suffrage petition signed owners to keep them from being! by 10,000 Swiss women was sent up taken by the Teutons? to the Grand Council of Geneva, the Our interest, however, centers in president of that body received it the state of mind of the government with the remark that it Was \nneces- which authorized that appeal. What sary to pay attention to the signa-| a frank, unblushing confession of the|tures, as the women to whom they | Central Powers’ wair aims and war | belonged did not know what they principles—the gospel of loot! were doing. SEPTEMBER BULLETIN. | OF EXCURSION FARES TO THE EAST | The entire scheme of Eastern fares will be available dur- ing September. These are probably the last reduced fares of the year to the East. # Aleova; E. V. Yanders, F. B. Thom- ason, E. V. Vanders, Frank G. Pierce, ONE SHIPMENT SHEEP BRINGS t | | | | So the king would not be left out) of it the infants made for him a crown of laurels. = “sid 7 rere creer {000 will beymade by the Young Men’s jpower bill, on which Congres: ! ; : Mondell made an extended speed of | Communit: Service, the Young Wom-!before the recess, to an announcement made |ern development. \ion T. Herrick, the War Camp Com-|ment will campaign in~ January, is cretary of Agriculture of the Wind i lin CHAN Wi. MMUNBEL AUTHORITY ON 00 The August number of the Na- tional Magazine, Joe Mitchell Chap- ple’s Magazine, contains very good picture of Congressman » Mondell, end among other things, has the fol- lowing to say with regard to the | Wyoming congressman:: “Mondell js the best posted man on public lands in Washing. | ton—no doubt ‘bout that. He has made it a study. dn addition to this he ig a pioneer in woman suf- frage movement, and introduced it in Wastington year after year, when it was anything but a popu- lar issue. He is'a member of the steering committee and helps to direct the program in/ the House, and is one of the most active and persistent Republicans on the floor. Two hundred speeches are credited to him -on the tariff questi alone, and just now he is ig up a good fight against the sone system of magazins dis-~} tribution.” 2 SAR WYOMING SOLON KEEPS ~ TAB ON LEASING BILL Congress havifig passed the man-| power bill, the House of Representa- tives has been busy with the water- and which he is following closely with a view of se- curing provisions favorable for west- Wyoming’s Con- \grssman is also keeping close track | of the developments in conference on pen in their rights. The conference q impossible to tell just when an agree- reached, TWO WYOMING HIGHWAYS GIVEN FEDERAL APPROVAL | “Announcement has been made by the office of the Federal Forest Ser- ‘rice at Denver to the effect that a telegram received from Washington gives notice of the aprroval by th ver and Buffalo-Tensleep projects Wyoming. Both of these projects are impor- | the oil leasing bill with a view of having an amendment agreed to that | will protect the claimants and entry-! proceeding very slowly and it is’ n the Day’s News Brig. Gen. Peter ©. Harris, tional Army, who has been named acting adjutant general of the Unite ed States Army to fill the vacancy by the transfer of Maj. Gen. McCain, is an officer of wide experience. Gen. Harris is a native of Georgia, and a West Pointer ‘in the class of 1883. During the Spanish-Ameri- can war he was a first lieutenant in jthe Thirteefith Infantry, and too! | part in the battle of San Juan and the siege of Santiago. ‘Last Decem- lber he was appointed a brigadier- | general in the National Army. Gen.! | Harris is well qualified for the duties) and responsibilities of his new post, | as he has been serving in the adju- | tant-general’s departmet since 1914.) ——— | tant ones and it is presumed that Sec-| jretary Houston’s approval carries | | with it the approval of the United States highway council and the high-) way war board. Telephone CLEANERS The Cleanest Cleaners RUGS RUGS RUGS We are now prepared ta clean all kinds of Kugs and Carpets, ~ Dry Cleaning of all kinds is-our business. CASPER DRY CLEANING <O Phone 255-3 v 1 WANT YOUR BRICK WORK On Contract or Percentage | Call for Estimate ‘ | i Ten Per Cent The Kimball Drug Store On Next Saturday, September 7, ~ , will Be Given to the Red Cross Buy your Drugs of us that day and Help the Boys “Over There” of the Gross Sales at Russians retreated from Riga. Germans retired from a broad belt east of Ypres. , 5 Eleven persons killed: and 49 jured in a German air raid on Lon- don. _ GEOLOGICAL WOR Maps and Blue Prints, Survey; Wyoming Map and Blue Print c.. _P. O. Box & Phione 84g 111 North Wolcott Stree Casper, Wyo. A Long Sought Relief for Women Woman's highly ne#vous’and complex organism is very easily affected by the strain of her duties, The continual drain of “housework alone, puts*a burden upon the system which, if not relieved, soon. make: old woman out of many a before her time. Especially/is the back the point of severe st and the cause of suffering. strained, moveable bones that causes disturbed functions and leaves women fagged-@ut. CHIROPRACTIC WILL BENEFIT For this reason, women who are run down because of house- work, or bysiness duties, find Chiropractic of benefit. ropyactor adjusts the Spine, pressure from the nerves. stored’ and nature goes about its work unimpeded, to buil the system, strengthen the weak and diseased organs and inc the disease-resjstin, A OTHE: bodily vigor. tic furnished. “Medicine cannot cure disease, for back of disease lies the cause, and the cause no drug’ can reach.”’—S, Weir Mitchell,-M. D., New York. Chiropractic removes the cause and nature cures, Try it. Dr. Joseph A. Jeffrey power of the body. There is nothing bagrassing about Chiropractic, it insures the best results. CHIROPRACTIC BETTER WAY TO HEALTH \\ Many women who are not sick, but fee] rumdown and tired, take Chiropractic adjustments to_keep fit and to maintain their For HEALTH’S sake learn more about Chiroprac- (KI-RO-PRAK-TIC). you an analysis of your spine and information, or send your name and the names af your ailing friends, and literature wlll be S an young and energetic mother rai It is the pressure a f the spine on the nerves 4 The Chi- corrects spinal defects and rettioves Normal nerve function’ is thus re. d up Tease yet No drugs or surgery is used, Have a competent Chiropraetor give 1200 Big, Smooth, Merino 2-year-old ewes, eleven-pound Address shearers. MANX SHEEP COMPANY, \ Casper, Wyoming. DUTTON STALEY & CO. We buy LIBERTY BONDS, also take up‘partly paid subscriptions Z 411 Oil Exchange Biulding AS Telephone 468 P oe TO WESTERN RESORTS | You can go to Colorado and Estes Park on reduced fares during this month. Colorado in September is ideal for a! short vacation and a rapid health-come-back. | The Big National Parks will be open during the First half of September. | Reduced fares from. Wyoming for the big State Fair at}! Douglas, September 8th to 14th, round trip Casper to Doug-} las, $2.62; also from Colorado for the Colorado State Fair at The big argument was.based not on patriotism, not even on peace, but on loot. A vast quantity of booty,| it was announced in the offieial gov-| ernment appeal, had been seized on! the cAstern front, and awaited dis-| tribution. | “Everything of which a man can| think is at the disposal of subscribers | to the eighth loan; everything from a cup to a shirt, from an automobile to a thrasher, from silk goods to fur-| Pueblo September 22nd to 28th. Get in touch with us for whatever kind of a tour| you désire to make during September. We will! care ] be pleased to inform you and serve you. Burlington J. H. TEAGUE, Ticket Agent Dis Casper Wyoming { } | | ¢ Route. L. W. WAKELEY, General Passenger Agent, L RES ats | 1004 Farnum Street 5 Omaha, Nebraska fiche acnen aaa e renee A A A SL FIALSLILAZLLAFSLZALLLZL LL D ning order. trade. yf Trucks For Sale Two F.W.D. 3-ton, just overhauled. One Duplex 3-1-2 ton, in good shape. One International, I-ton, good run- Terms if desired. Will give one haul- ing to purchaser. SEE VAN SANT . Phone 984-958-892W . Will consider \S Aili pa ATE FOR RENT Good, modern offices. Heat, light and janitor service furnished. Bartholomew Pelton Agency Company, Lynch Bldg., 111 East Second Street. Phone 370. AT Fe SATO AVA 212 Oil Exchange Bldg. Members New York Stock Exchange, New York Cotton Ex- change, Chicago Board of Trade Oil Exchange Bldg. BEST BOWL OF. CHILI IN TOWN 15c AT THE CHILI KING LUNCH Back of Grand Central Bar. All kinds of Sandwiches ot i popular prices, Quick service, highest ae DIDI LEG IG LS IMM A: at amrremente OAs eae ease TAYLOR & CLAY, Inc. INVESTMENT SECURITIES Private Wire Service to Cheyenne, Denver, Chicago, New York and Other Markets, CASPER, WYO. Phone 203. Phone 765 or 766 Casper, Wyoming quality.