Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 7, 1918, Page 2

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ete + ie Pie eee oe AE I eg wmes a oe The Casper Daily Tribune! ee eve: erenne. eee: Sunday at Casper, Na‘ inty, Wyoming. Publication Offices: Ou Exchange| Building. } Business Telephone ~15 Editorial Office ___ 918 Sora ae! eerie panier rat Rawle pg Carrie 50c month; by mail, $3 for 6 months, $6 for year. Entered at Casper (Wyo.) Postoffice as second-class matter, Nov. 22, 1916. —$—$ $$ Associated Press Serviec. United Press Service. et United Press Service. J. E. HANWAY, President & Editor. | EARL E. HANWAY, Business Mgr. Associate Editors: BR. E. Evans V. C. Douds Member of the Agsocinted Press. The Associet®d Press in exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to ft or not otherwise credited {n this paper an also the local news published herein. THE DOCTOR’S OPPORTUNITY. As the war work of the nation Je- velops a place is being worked out for every citizen. Those most capa- ble as fighters are rapidly going to the front and those physically unable to fight, or whose talents are such that they are more valuable to the government in other lines, are being brought into the service. Recently Mr. Franklin Martin, chairman of the General Medical Board of the Coun-| cil of National Defense, made a strong appeal to the doctors of the nation to enroll themselves under Gen. Gorgas and do their part in car- rying on the war against Germany. In commenting upon this appeal by the Council of National Defense, the Washington Post of August 29 says: “Franklin Martin} chairman of the genera] médical board of the Council of National Defense, appealed yester- day to all physicians in the country to make their applications at once for membership in-the volunteer medical service corps. “Great as-has been the response to the appeal for doctors, it must be greater,” said Dr. Martin. “It is im- perative that every doctor not, al- ready in government service fill out, sign and return his blank to the cen- trai governing board of the Council of National Defense in Washington. This will place them on record as vol- unteers available for classification and ready for service when the call comes,” This call on the part of Dr. Mar- tin should have weight with every capable physician and surgeon. If Dr. John E. Osborne of Rawlins has had any success in life other than in making money, it has been in his call- ing as a physician and surgeon. This call on the part of the government furnishes a rare opportunity. him to engage in a work which he is well qualified to perform. As- a doctor he has been a suecess. As a stfitesman he has been tried in sev- eral eminent positions and his record up to the present time is zero. ere" — RECAPTURED “CITIES.” It sounds impréssive when we read in the war dispatches, the long lists of cities, towns and villages recap- tured from the Germans. But it is just as well to keep clearly in mind what those conquests mean. It is not a case of:a viofated and plundered nation getting back the property from the burglar who stole it. Those once, happy places of human habi- tation are not won back. In general, nothing is redeemed but the torn and cumbered land on which they were built. “The battlefield the Germans have abandoned,” writes a ‘correspondent, “presents a picture of devastation and desolation that has not been sur- passed during, the war. Even ceme- teries have been blown up, tomb- stones smashed and graves opened. “The names of towns in this re- gion no longer have any other sig- nificance than as a reminiscence and a geological designation. They have cezsed to exist as towns. Their sites are hardly distinguishable for the in- tense shelling has not only obliter- ated streets and defaced boundary lines, but has .rendered the topo- graphy unrecognizable, im many laces.” ¥ This is what the Huns have made of the parts of fair France they-have polluted by their presence. It is what they have made everywhere they they have set their blighting iron heel. Surely there would be no justice in any termination of failed to bring home such devasta- ste tion to the German péople them- selves,. The war must be carried across the? Rhine. Bs pic Nan REGISTERING Willing or unwilling, the only thing for every man between 18 and 45 to do is to march to the booth on September 12 and register in the great round-up of American man- power. There is no eseaping. Dodgers will find, sooner or later, that the arm of the government is long, its eye keen, its mémory unfailing. Dodgers of the first draft law have aes this war that| PARKMAN YOUTH 5 WOUNDED AT FIGHTING FRONT Only One Wyoming Boy’on Cas- ualty List Today; Losses to Montana Men Predom- inate in West | Corporal Clay M. Long of Park- ham is the only boy from Wyoming on today’s casualty list. Long is re- ported as wounded severely. The following casualties are re- ported+ by the’ commanding gen-! eral ef the American Expeditionary forces: | | Killed in action__- == 2 Missing in action. S45 Wounded severely _..164 | Died from aceident and | other eauses _--.____-._. 2 | Wounded, degree undeter- mined 70 15 Died of wounds_ Killed in Action Tomon H. Setekin, Cedar Rapids, Neb. | John D-* Kirkpatrick, ,Terrance, Mont. Claude ‘W. Bills, ls, Neb. Daniel J. Allen, Denver, Colo. Elmer E. Bowlby, Westport, S. D. j Wounded Severely 4 Clay M. Long, Perkham, Wyo. t Allen Cleveland, Boulder, Mont. | Albert C. Beard, Bristo, Mont. { Joseph Duda, Omaha, Neb. { | Edward H. Kennedy, Omaha, Neb. | Paul ©. Townsend, Central City, Neb. Wounded, Degree Unuletermined | | Rhody F. Tumman, Wolf Point, ‘ Mont. CA! , Eddie Hermon, Baylon, S. D. { | William E. McKinley, Homer, Ne { } Hans P, Marcher, Fishtail, Mont. | Martin H. Sheriff, Oak City, Mont. Walter A. Stanley, Dolnad, S. D. Missing im Action George Ingval Lund, Astoria, | S. D. j } eS | ‘tracks early Monday morning: They ; ~Today’s Birthdays P [ay that the four ‘cases which ‘they | } 2 Mario G. Menocal, president of for|the Republic of Cuba, born in the|handcar by some men unknown to! }Province of Mantanzas, 52 years tgo! today. Charles, F. Scott, former Kansas congressman and recent candidate for the senatorial nomination, born in Allen County, Kansas, 58 years | ago today. ‘ { Pietro Mascagni, whose new opera! is soon to be produced in Rome, born ie Leghorn, italy, 55 years ago to-) jay. William F. Murray, former con-|} gressman, now postmaster of Bos-| ton, born-in Boston, 337 years ago today. \ discovered that to their sorrow.| Those who remained at home have, for the most part, already been caught, and the net is now tighten-| ing about the’ rest. Those who fled) to foxeign countries are living a mis- | erable existence as, exiles, despised by/| all they meet, and certain of punish- ment if they ever return home. Even, peace will not make them immune. | It will be the same with this mew ob- ligation. Fortunately for the men now econ- ‘cerned, and “for their country, there are few who vant ‘to dodge their prescribed duty. The new registra~ tion law was not imposed by a tyran- nical government; it was adopted in deference to the clear mandate of the people themselves. Our effective manhood wants to stand up and be counted and numbered, becatise that is the only democratic way to fight a democratic war, and the only sure gurantee of victory. Let no one hesitate for fear that injustice wilh be done him. There; is no intention or desire to force into | | the army any man who does not prop- ‘erly belong there. The age limits sre made so broad’ precisely in order’ that the proper candidates, and none / but. them, may be chosen. Fj All registered men will be ¢lassi “ad necording to their eligibility— their health, age, occupation, femilv responsibilities, etc. Those who are most able to stand the rough and tumble and most free to go will na- |turally be taken first, Those whosc work is imperative, whose fajnilies |really need them, will not be draft- |ed in any emergency which can now be foreseen. Every case will be con- sidered on its merit. | The whole business is one not of jarbitrary recruiting, but of intelli- }gent co-operation between male citt- |zens and their government. For Jewelry of the Highest Quality . SaTw4 R A ae 1900-6 ST. onie scuatin SCHWARTZ JEWELRY CO. NEW LOCATION IN IRIS THEATER BUILDING HOME oF ORIGINALITY- — GEM STONES DENYER,.COLO. .. ee ae 17 1820—Nathaniel |Puesday afternoon. © |cached near the track, and that the} | LIQUOR AND DRUG ADDICTIONS | Em een tenn. ; > ° 5 | Today’s Anniversaries | || 81—British fleet artived-off the|* Chesapeake and engaged in skirmishes with the French fleet under Count de Grasse. {818—Richard D. Hubbard, gover- nor of Connecticut 1876-78, born at Berlin, Conn. . Died at Hartford, Feb. 28, 1884: Wheeler, sewing machine manufacturer born at Watertown, Conn. Died at Bridgeport, Conn., Dec. 31, 1893. 1830—Revolution in the Ceo duchy of Brunswick, am flight of the sovereign. 1867—-Bismarck announced that the 4German nation would not sub- mit to the itnerference or guidance on the part of any foreign power. G 1898—The German Emperor abol- ished the exceptional laws and privileges heretofore in force in Alsace-Lorraine™ ¥914—The Germans retreated across the Marne, -closely followed | by the allied forces: 1915—eppelin raid on English east} we is of Mario G. Mencoa); president of the Republic of Cuba, and gne of our al-| lies in the present’ war. Menocal is a native of the Province! of Matanzas, : pioneer} ceived at the ‘ College anid the school of emgin of Cornell University. Cuba after his'graduation from Cor- nell in 1888, young Menocal entered on the task of railroad building, and! chosen. the ranks of the ixsargen republic was firmly established he was induced to beeome a candidate for the presidency, in which office he | Year Ago Today in. War } came more orderly. In the Day's News 1 Today is the birthday anniversary) 149th day of the Great War. Centermial anniversary of President | Maryland Agricultural! The Maine 3 Ret i , imi to, in inl clase today, preliminary e \ernor and other officials are to ~ tinued this. until the revolution of 95 broke out, when he enlisted in its and soon on; rank and reputation. When the c rei sideration tment of industry ufter maintain efficiency, is proposed now serving his second term. —I- St. Andrew’s Yonkers, Russian retreat from Riga be- Secretary Lansing and Viscount He aching persons | tehii conferred on Japan’s assistance | has the seo con g being, 1916-—Roumania announced the cav-| im the war. : yeaah obfice : Government . raids on. I. W. W. : ture of the Bulgarian city of | Orsova. \ $450 IN CASH AND 13 CASES LIQUOR headquarters disclosed plots to calf strikes in ajl munition, works, ”~ ae 4 by far the oldest j hiktito claims pie our rene Soabboas the world, According to a British scientist! BURGLARS’ LOOT, KEMMERER, Wyo., Sept. ¥.—The | saloon of the Wyoming Mail Order | House in Ractadhec was broken into | here and robbed of 13 cases of whis- | key, worth abort $450. The rob-; bers gained admission by breaking the lock on the rear door. The Sheriff’s office was notified | early Monday morning, and igme- diately began search for the culprits. The various sheriffs were notified | along the Oregon Short Line by tele- gram, and Monday afternoon two men. were arrested at Montpelier who had in their posséssion four czses of whiskey» Deputy Sheriff Collett went to Montpelier on Mon- day night and brot the men back The arrested men claim to have found the fqur cases of whiskey in, their possession near the Short Line) took were four of the thirteen eases, other nine cases were loaded onto a them and taken west. * ' eS GEOLOGICAL WORK © [; Maps and Blue Prints, Surveying Wyoming Map and Blue Print Co., P. O. Box 325 Phone 849 111 North Wolcott Street Casper, Wye, = Patronize the LIBERTY GARAGE Car Siorage, per month.-_$10 Truck Storage, per month. $t5 Gasoline, per gal__._____28c AUTO REPAIRING 180 So. Elm St. Phone 983 JKKEELEY INSTITUTE Cor. Eighteenth and’ Curtiz Sts. DENVER, COLO. cured by a scientific course of medi_ cation. The only platg in Colorado where the Genuine Keeley’ Remedies I WANT YOUR BRICK WORK On Contract or Percentage Call for E ate PETER CLAUSEN 419 Son Jackson, Phone 804M. STREET, FIRST DUNN’S, DOUGLAS, WYOMING. A REPRESENTATIVE IS THERE DAY AND NIGHT. THOSE WISHING ROOMS, CALL ON OR WRITE TO “P. H. PHILBIN, MANAGER INFORMATION BUREAU, DOUGLAS, WYQMING.” ._ HE HAS ROOMS AND WILL LOOK AFTER -YOUR WANTS. THESE ROOMS AT REASONABLE PRICES. 7 Nh WYOMING STATE FAIR COMMISSION Let an Expert Do It \S “Charging is not an especially complicated ey as nat it seaueeencialy eet ies This 1s an Easy Way to Get Cool ibn tes coatie: wriaeeon income: ’ their life is likely to Be eenonatta shortened. : Eat Casper . Dair y Ice eal ‘ J When your battery is charged by a Wit Fat Casper Dairy Ice Cream expert, the chargi te ii Hy det ined, S gyrre oo gah ig br is slowed Seen by Peete Cake acca Made in Casper’ as the process nears completion. Co 4 Ask us about the Still Better Willard. It ip Delicious and Wholesome, Good Enough for the only battery with the “Bone Dry” Principle, 1 ‘ shut’ le-ySuc} abeghihes sobetoater el gonttad 1 Anyone. Everybody Smiles When There is battery as new as the day it left the factory. i ‘ Ice Cream for Dessert Bon hs oe A nr *:- C Casper Dairy and uto Electrical Co. Ice Cream Co. ~ 111 East First Street. SPARK PLUGS. : ACCESSORIES Phone 804-W Will SERVICE STORAGE BATTERY ar STATION é HE WYOMING STATE FAIR INFORMATION BU- REAU WAS OPENED SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER | FIRST, IN THE STROUD BUILDING ON SECOND DOOR SOUTH: OF PATTERSON & < : birth of Stephen Sayre, a celebrated patriot of the American Revolution. Primary ‘campaign, involving nom- belongs to a family! ination of candidates fro United that has long been prominent in Cu-! States’ senators, will close today in _|ban affairs: His edueation was re:|Minois, Colorado and Lovisian. State campaign will ennial election Monday, when a Unit- ed tSates senator,’ congressman, gov- of a constructive war, to prevent unemployment and) the annual~ convention ofthe Na- tional Federation of Federal Em- ployes, to meet today in Chicago. Memorial Church, , N. Y., is to be the scene of a military wedding today when Miss Katherine Louise Baum, daughter of Mr. arid Mrs. George Baum of Yonk- ers, becomes the bride\of Major William H. Draper, Jr. Major Draper who is now statioved at Camp Upton, The present Japanese dynasty is be the 122nd men go te sleep more quickly than monarch of an unbroken line’ dating women, but sleep less sotndly and, from the seventh area before the if normal, health. tas Jong. __ Christian roweccaccccsesosceoesconcscoeseses OCR EERE LOCC 06. cece, EAST SIDE GARAGE ~ \ FIRE-PROOF BUELDING Ww ir all kinds cf cars and guarantee our lab. daa, Wars Storage for $10.00 = month, OF to be fine. AGENTS FOR HAYNES axd ELCAR Third and Pine treet, i: FOR-SALE 1200 Big, Smooth, Merino 2-year+old ewes, eleven-pound shearers. Address ps MANX SHEEP COMPANY, _, Casper, Wyoming. i) the Phone 79-J. peseccecesccocssescscoesossoeseoseseooseagoco bi- be the = — IN WAR TIMES, CONSERVE MATERIALS Don’t disgard that Broken Casting, but bring 1% to 15 to be welded.’ We save you tim: and money. K “Welders and Brazers of Cast Iron, Stesl. Aluminum, Bronze and other metals. ALL WELDS GUA! D.. = . QXY-ACETYLENE WELDING SHOP 118 S. David Across From Shockley’s. Phone 611.J for Hunters Outfitted GOOD @FeGUIDEs Good horses, good equipment. Horses and equipment for hire by day. » Write or wire " : FLOYD J. STALNAKER, vee Dubois, Wyo. the | the for Why Worry About the Heat? SATS SAT Good, modern offices. Heat, light and Pelton Agency €dmpany, Lynch Bldg., 111 East Second Street. Phone 370. TAYLOR & CLAY, Ine. INVESTMENT SECURITIES ' Private Wire Service to Cheyenne, Denver, Chicago. New York pela ells and Other Markets ‘ co ONS CASPER. WYO... Phone 203. OTIS AND COMPANY Members New York Stock Exchange, New. York Co'ton Ex ¢ change, Chicago Board of Trade Oil Exchange Bldg. Phone 765 or 766 Casper. Wyomlis CBEST BOWL OF CLIN TOWN N 15c AT THE CHILE LUNCH & 7 Back of Grand Central fen AW kinds of mien at SOOPESIL TST IITOITIO! iat

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