Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
po: Sere © a eS as" ara wR” Romine 2! . Ke ea WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 18, 1918. ARCHBISHOP OF NEW YORK DIES OF PNEUMONIA Cardinal Farley, Founder of Cathedral College, Claimed in Death at End of Long IIness MAMARO: 18. Cardinal John M. Fa , archbishop of New York died at his home here last night following a relapse after partially recovering of pneumonia. from an attack He was 76 years of age. Cardinal Farle: body will lie in state at the cathedral here over Mon-! day and funeral services will be held | al Farley was one of the three members of the Sacred College resident in the United States, having been elevated to the cardinalate in 1911, at the same time that Archbis- hop O’Connell of Boston received the red hat. His service in the church embraced nearly half a century in! the priesthood, twenty-three years as a bishop and sixteen years as arch- bishop of New York. In that time) he had attended the spiritual needs of the enormous and heterogenous Roman Catholit population of the| metropolis with devotion and _ skill and extended the work of the church and perfected its organization with striking success. Though a few of his achievements, such as the paying off of the debt on St. Patrick’s Ca- thedral and the establishment of the | Cathedral College, will always stand | out a monument to his episcopacy, they were merely symbols of all he! accomplished. | Interested as he always was in edu- cation one of the first things that he set himSelf to do after he succeed-! ed Archbishop Corriigan w to es-| tablish the Cathedral College, in New} York City, where young men who| wished to become priests might be| educated apart from the other stu- dents in Catholic institutions. An-| other of his notable achievements was | the final liquidation of the debt of St. Patrick’s Cathedral. In 1910 the last dollar was paid, and with stately | ceremony the cathedral was conse- crated. Cardinal Farley from time to time} made public utterances of great weight, In 1905 he expressed his strong abhorrence of the prevalence} of the divorce evil, and in 1910, when the misunderstanding arose which] prevented former Vice President Charles W. Fairbanks from being re- ceived by the Pope, he stood up vig- orously for the right: of the Holy See. CAUSALTIES FOR TODAY AS GIVEN BY WASHINGTON The following are ported by the commanding general of the American Expeditionary Forces: casualti re- Killed in action 74 Missing in action______ 19 Wounded severely 145 Died of wounds___ 27 Wounded: slightly 1 + “Died “of di T Wounded, degree undeter- mined) oo se 2 6 CRN ee ee ey ae Killed in Action Laurence F. House, Mont. Glasgow, Died of Wounds Orville F. Martin, Culdesac, Idaho. Delmar A. Poulson, Weiser, Idaho. Wounded Severely Lloyd E. Gamber, Coalmont, Colo. Leighton B. Pierce, Billings, Mont. Clarence George Peterson, Denver, olo. Missing in Action Oliver F. Durham, Naponee, Neb. Fred E. Sover, Shelton, Neb. Anton Tomek Jr., Pierce, Neb. Previously reported missing in ac- tion; now reported wounded: Private Edward A. Buchanan, Nam- pa, Idaho. Charles Burris, Hastings, Neb. MARINE CORPS CASUALTIES Summary of casualties to date: Officers Deaths -+-- =aenon, Wounded - Missing --- Deaths Wounded In hands of enem. Missing ---~---- Total 3,006 The following ¢ S are re- ported by the commanding general of ican Expeditionary Forces {included in above total Killed in action_-_-_- Died of wounds received in acon =e 3 Wounded in action (severely) 6 Missing in action__-------- 10 a We) | te ea SaaS 22 RAIL WORKERS MUST EXHIBIT DRAFT PROOF TBy Associated Press.) 18.—Rail- m WASHINGTON, Sept. roaders, like other workers, prove their services-essential to st BARED BY U.S. Bolsheviki Fully Informed of Duplicity of German Gov- ernment; Prisoners in Russ Uniforms By Associated Press} WASHINGTON, Sept. 18.—Ger- |man trickery in breaking the Ukraine army away from the bought-and-paid- Bolsheviki against loyal | their leaders to insure complete Ger- for government, plots Russian soldiers and man sway after the false peace con- ference at Brest-Litovsk, and further evidence of the precautions of the Teutons against Bolsheviki preaching in their own ranks, are shown in se- cret documents from Rusgia, made \public by the United States govern- ment., Communications written in Janu- jary discloses that the Bolsheviki were |fully informed of what the Germans were doing in the Ukraine and knew that peRce treaties with the Ukraine and Rumania were coming. They yais@ learned quickly engugn that Ger- many was disposing of their hopes to see their revolutionary propaganda } took root on German soil Notes from the»German intelli- | gence service to Trotsky§ the commis- sar of foreign affairs, show first that )a Turk with a Russian passport was |sent to Petrograd to keep watch over \the Russian commagder-in-chief, and |that a month afterward, late in Feb-, |ruary, removal of the commander-in-| |chief General Bonch Bruevick, wa demanded. Bruevick, whose continu- |ance in the position was “particularly no longer desirable” to the Germans was turned out and General Pai named by the German intelligence vice Complains that “the agents sent to kill”"Genera] Kaledine, Bogaeviski and Alexieff, were cowardly, non- | enterprising people.” This same do-j cument shows that as long ago as December, 1917, former German pris oners of war were being dre Russian uniforms to fight loy sian soldiers. { The significance of the document lis discussed in notes by Edgar Sisson, d in al Rus-; |who brought the documents out of/and oil lands are quite contrary to} Russia for the committee On public | information. = PUBLICITY SETS MEXICANS RIGHT \ed here that the: HUN TRICKERY LIQUOR AGENTS DENVER YARDS IN UKRAINE IS TOSS AWAY BIG 7) SEE LARGE “LOAD IN CHASE Wyoming-Colorado Bootleg Trail L ittered| with Glass | Pints Worth Small Fortune FORT COLLINS, Sept. 18.—One of the biggest hauls of bootleg whis- | i key since the establishment of the state constabulary, was confiscated by George Eyerts, W. W. Runnels and D. M. Kelley of the constabulary, fol- lowing a race with the would-be boot leggers that lasted more than four hours, and which covered a great por- tion cf-northern Larimer c6unty. The bootleggers abandoned their whiskey and made a getaway. _The-confiscat- ed stuff totaled more than 1,000 pints. The booze was taken through Fort Collins enroute to Denver where t will be turned over to the state authorities. * The constabulary members declar- became suspicious to be when two trucks appearing heavily freighted, attempted to pass | their camp about midnight. They challenged the drivers of the cars who refused to stop, and a chase en- sued, the fugitives reaching a speed ‘of as high as 45 miles and hour at times. As-they sped from the offi- cers, they threw case after case of bootleg booze from their trucks. They finally succeeded in dodging the tabulary and made a clean get- There was no clue as to the awa \idenitty of the conspirators, last night After giving up the chase the con- stabulafy officers returned over the ground covered in the race, and pick- {ed up more than 1,000 undainaged pints of booze. a theater holding qore than 4.000 pectators, in a poor district. where anti-American sentiment has high, there was not a murmur when virtually the same characters flick- red on the screen. In fact, one ard- ent pro-ally Mexican had to be fore- ibly prevented from making an anti- German speech. According to ‘mining and smelter men, reports that German interests are buying up huge areas of mineral the facts. They assert that German mining interests are in sore straits and that no ore produced in a German owned mine is being smelted. ————__—— Have Allmetal Weatherstrips in- stalled at once. Save 20 to.40 cent on your coal bill. Phone 271-J. 9-17-tf ———_s—___-—_ Money to loan on everything. The Security Loan Co.,,Room 4 Kimball Bldg. been} AUN OF STOCK Marked Increase in Receipts of Cattle and Sheep Forecast by . | Representative-in Casper | O. W. Allen, a representative of | the livestock department of the Den-} ver Union Stock Yards Company, who has been in Casper for the past | few days, declares that the Renyse Stockyards this®year will show the greatest volume of business in the history of the yards, and already shows an enormous increase over last | year. » | According to Mr. Allen, the Stock- | yards at Denver this year Will handle | VALID EXCUSE REQUIRED FOR FAILURE 10 DRILL Company D of the Home Guards} \held its regular drill last evening in the Empress theater and only abent a third of the command were present. A few men had sent in excuses that | entitled them to, be absent, but in the | main, the absentees were not excused for any valid reason. | Captain Handbury notified the |company that no further slackness in | |t..e matter of attendance would be |tolerated and steps would be taken to bring those who were making a |practice of staying away from drill jto time. The Guards are a part of | the Army just as much as the soldiers over in France and severe penalties | could’be inflicted upon those who are absent from drill if the oficers wish |to make trouble ior the men. . After the drili, an officers’ school was held and“ Mr. liter, a Casper |resident who was with the Engineers gave an account of the newer prac- |tics in the miilitary routine of the camps where he had been stationed. eS A. J. Cunningham, president of the Casper National bank, returned this morning from Wiscassett, Maine, where he has been spending a month ‘or six weeks with Mrs. Cunningham jat their summer home. > List your property with us. The | Security Loan Company, Room 4. | Kimball Bldg 9-11-t£ | ‘Advices from Holbrook, Navajo. : County, Arizona, indicate that this jpart of the country is becoming an oil prospecting country of note. Sev- eral strikes have been made and the between four and five million head, “Wyoming stockmen can £0 to th of sheep. while the increase in cattle Denver market with less sir." shipments will be numbered in thou-|:nd get back with less expense. sands, and all the shippers who have more money in pocket, th; cut have consigned their stuff to Denver|any other market in the bebiint i this year have received top. prices, | Our increase in cattle this Year ¢ “The increase at the Denver yards last amounts to about 76,450)... this year has ‘been wonderful,” said! while the increase in sheep will react Mr. Allen yesterday. “Why? Be-|about 41,000 head.” cause Denver has a good market'for| Mr. Allen makes all the Princips all kinds of livestock, and we have | points on the Burlington road j age the most modern yards in the coun- interest of the Denver yards, anditise try for handling the stuff. The com-|his efforts the shipments from ‘this mission men at the yards are all men territory this year have shown of wide experience and know how to | increase. treat the shippers. The sheep and) : "TES Ee cattle will bring back to the West the; Mail us your Liberty Bonds high. money which has been spent for Lib-| est prices pai: The Security 16,” big erty Bonds and War Savings stamps,|C®-, Room 4, Kimball Bldg. and when this money does come back the bigfhearted stockmen will again invest it in war securities and tell Uncle Sam to call again. Y Loan 9-11-¢¢ ———— For Allmetal Weatherstripp; {zone doors and windows, Gat i. HAPPY DAYS, BOYS, AT THE LYRIC THEATRE "TONIGHT Marguerite Fisher In a Classy Five-Reel Comedy. Drama Impossible Susan —Theh— BILLIE RHODES with a'shapé like Venus, in a Comedy And Latest War Pictures Taken at the Belgium Front You Know Us 10 and 20 cents Eight Reels TOMORROW Henry Walthall the Little Colonel of the “Birth of a Nation” in a great classis, “Humdum Brown” Saturday The Great Nazimova THE TOYS OF FATE ee : 9-11-tf] town of Holbrook is booining. Prov CET BEL. tod 6 - —— | SOCIETY Pisces from Ball Will Help French Children | The Natrona Pioneer Association held its first meeting since the sum- mer vacation yesterday afternoon at} the home of Mrs. Peter C. Nicolaysen | at Third and Wolcott streets. It is the desire of this association of Cas-| per women to adopt one or more | French or Belgian children, and to| this end will give a ball on or about} the fifteenth of November, the pro- ceeds of which will be devoted to this purpose. The adoption of one child will mean the expnditure of about $90 a | oO pear, so that the number of children | thus cared for will depend on the bal- ance in the exchequer at the finish of the ball. The afternoon hours were devoted | to knitting and other Red Cross sew- ing, after which a war lunch was served by the hostess. —>_ E |Kingsley was one of the former pas- will be authorized. Secretary McAdoo, who sought such exemption, thereupon dire:ted | all regional chiefs to ask deferred classification for every necessary em- ploye. ee Martin McGrath of Thermopolis is a business caller in Casper today. The Rey. and Mrs. Ira W. Kingsley of Sheridan are the guests for a few; days of Mr. and Mrs. Chris Wagner} of 235 South Grant street... Mr tors of the Gantz Memorial Metho- | dist Episcopal church in Casper, and | he and his wife made their home here | for several years. Their many friends | | and acquaintances will be glad to wel- come them if only for a short visit. , ° | | |the draft. t Marshal Crowder | | MS | |raled that no blanket class exemptions | f Change of Sentiment Follows Dis- semination of Facts Refut- ing Claims of German. Propagandists : MEXICO CITY, Sept. 17.—(Cor- respondence of the Associated Press) |—The American publicity campaign is showing results in Mexico. The widespread dissemination of facts concerning the war aims and accom- plishments of the United States are, according to foreigners long res dents here, bringing about a change of sentiment, which, if not charac- terizable as love for Americans, may at least be called respect. Pec | |The only Genuine Allmetal weath- jerstrip for doors and ‘windows, Phone 271-J. 9-17-tf “ * * CITY NEWS o—— ——— Marvin L. Bishop, Jr., left this af- ternoon for Camp Pike, Little Rock, Arkansas, where he will go into train-| ing He is a reserve officer having signed up at the University of Virginia a year ago and has had some training. Pee Lae: Professor J. R- Coxen, head of the vocational department of the state schools, of Cheyenne, spent the day in Casper and this morning gave an instructive and interesting talk to the Natrona County High School stu- dents. ee George Robinson of Fort Collins, Colorado, who was visiting in Casper a few days ago and is now a student at the State University at Berkley, California. Mr. Robinson formerly lived with Mr. and Mrs. George Wil- der while attending school here and was for a time employed at the Stock- man’s National bank. -_ * Mrs. J. W. Burns and Mrs. Leavitt were the hostesses at an informal tea and shower for Mrs. R. K. Staley, given at the home of Mrs. Leavitt on South Wolcott street. There were about twenty-five friends to enjoy the hospitality of the hostesses. A delightful luncheon was served. + * * Dr. Walter H. Bradley left last night for Denver, where he will at- tend a meeting of the International Service Commission of the Presbyte- rian Church. Dr. Bradley will return Saturday. +e Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Shumaker of Billings are visitors in Casper for a few days and are stopping at the Midwest. pa ee List your property with us. The Security Loan Company, Room 4, Kimball Bldg. 9-11-tf Mrs. C. Snrings. S. D., has left for her home after visiting ih Casper with Mr. and —f|Mrs- Thomas Daily and other friends | are for the past month. * * & i In order to make the best posiable |charcoal and wood charcoal has proy- ed deficient in this respect. The sav- ing of peach stones, plum, apricot, olive and cherry pits, butternut, wal- |nut, Brazil and hickory nut shells and date seeds is being urged today by the Webel Commercial Co., in res- ponse to an appeal from the U. S. government. * * * | Last night at the Wyoming Gen- eral hospital a daughter was born to |Mr. and Mrs. William Graig. Mrs. Sidney Roberts has returned home after visiting with relatives and friends in Bellfouche, S. D., for some time. ot ee Mrs. W- D. Waltman and son, Billy, will leave this evening for Denver to spend a month there. <i St. Mark’s Guild will meet to- morrow afternoon at 2:30 o’clogk |with Mrs. Lew M. Gay at her home at 705 East Second street. A large attendance is desired as the members will discuss taking up some kind of Red Cross work for the winter meet- ings. core ® Mid-week prayer meeting will be held this evening at 8 o’clock at the |Gantz Memorial M. E. church when the pastor will make a very important announcement regarding the plans for the new year. Every member of the church and congregation are urg- ed to be present for this service. —--— — Look at your doors aud windows, and see the necessity of having All- metal Weatherstrip. No job too small or too large. We do them all. Phone 271-J. 9-17-tf | So aa J. Somarindyke of Hot) Prepa The effect of the Allied blacklist |becomes more naticable daily. The |Germans apparently have much less |money than formerly to spend on nda. German firms,. forced |to deal in hidden ways to secure even the smallest imports from -the states, Iss prosperous. ‘Arrogance of German officials and business men in |public places decreasing. Since it becamé known that four members the officers’ training school.| gas masks for our soldiers it is nec-|of the American club, alone in the {essary to ‘have the finest quality of! building at the time, evicted thirteen Germans who invaded the club, there have been no further outbreaks. _ Posters, pamphlets, reading matter for newspapers, war photographs for window display, daily official cable reports, reading rooms, moving pic- tures and authoritative statements by American officials on international questions, are among the means ad- opted by the United States govern- ment to change the long standing di: like for Americans that, have prevail- ed in Mexico. Another effect of the truth cam- paigr is the disclosure*of the fal of the news reports regarding Ge man’s successes and aims, for which Teuton propagandists tre responsi- ble. .It has been shown that the Ger- man: papers published here donot re- ceive the news in the way they a vertise, that it is taken from Amer can papers smuggled across the bo der at Laredo, distorted in the re- writing and then telegraphed to Ger- man papers in the capital and other cities. . a Outward signs of the increase in pro-ally sentiment are the number of newspapers seeking news tfeports from American sources, the amount of space given in periodicals to allied war news, the increase in the number of posters that are not mutilated or defaced, th® addition to the ranks of pro-ally publications of numerous new periolicals and the growing pop- ularity of allied moving picture films. When President Wilson, General Pershing, the American flag~- and marching American soldiers first ap-| peared some time ago on the screen in a down town motion picture theat-| er there was a protest. . Recently, in! BRAVE BROTHERS SINGLED OUT AS VICTIMS OF HUN SHELL IN TOWN | | BACK*OF THE LINES IN LORRAINE By FRANK J. TAYLOR (United Press Staff Correspondent.) | WITH THE AMERICAN TROOPS IN FRANCE, Aug. 19. (By Mail.)—| |In a tiny village of Lorraine where a| |regiment of “doughbbdys” was resting |after a long stretch of time in the trenches, a German shell found, a in two brothers. They were the hospital mortally mark rushed | wounded. They were just regular hard-fight- ing “doughboys,’ liked all the ;men in D company because they were “géod pals who always did a little more than their share of the work.” Every man in the company admired |the brothers because he.had seen them behave byavely when it was so hard to be brave. Out of all the men in D company it was hard to see why fate had singled {out these two to be struck ‘by one German shell. Fate makes no expla- nations, so the doctors in the hospital operated skillfully and quickly on the brothers and placed them in beds next to each other in a ward full of wounded soldiers. For a time both men lay there hovering between life and death, dnd | there was uncertainty whether or not they would ever gain consciousness. Finally one of them stirred very to by slightly, opened his eyes, and grad-} ually came to his senses. A motherly nurse bent over him and eased ‘his pain as much as possible. Then she whispered to him that his ‘brother was on the next cot but still yncon- scious. Speaks to His Brother The conscious brother looked dazed, but gradually an enlightened look came into his eyes, as he recol- lected what had happened in the last |three hours. He looked across to the next cot, faintly reached his arm toward his brother, and whispered, |“Joe, hoW are you?” The other brother stirred slightly, and gradually regained his senses. The nurse gently eased him, as he |looked around with a puzzled look, and finally told him, ‘‘Here’s your brother on the next cot.” | The second brother looked over with pained amazement. “What are you in bed for, George? “Yes, Joe, they say the same shell got us both.” Are you-hurt, too?” “Are you hurt badly, George?”’ “I think, so, Joe, I feel awful weak.. How are you? Does it hurt you a lot, boy?” “T don’t know as it does. I’m weak, too. But there’s another feeling I | can’t describe.” “What is it, Joe?” He Mother's Voice “I dunno, George. But, remember the things. Mother used to tell us when we were little, and fought to get on her lap? I keep hearing her telling us Sminday school stories, George, over and over, just the way she used to do it years ago.” “We were on our way to mass when it hit us, Joe. Maybe that’s why you hear Mother telling Bible stories. I can hear now, too, Joe.” “I wish she were here, don’t you?” “T should say so, Joe. Maybe the nurse or someone will talk to us the way mother ushed to. We ought to do it anyway, because if something happened to us, mother would like to know we were all right.” “I think so, too, but George.” “Yes???” “Tf I should die, you'll be careful so you can go back and look after mother, won’t you?” “That’s a promise, Joe. I want you to make the sanfe one to,me.” “Let’s shake on it, George.” They reached their arms across the space between the beds and clasped hands. say,— Not Afraid of Death | “I’m not afraid,” said Joe, “if you come thru all right, Joe. I wish we | didn’t have to leave D company, tho, but even if we got well we probably couldn't go back with the boys. I’m afraid I'm pretty low, George, but don’t you worry. There’s no pain now.” | | “Im not in pain either, George, but awfully sleepy. We don’t have to worrv about D company, because the | boys’ll never lose a chance to get a German.’} | “That's right, too. I feel myself going to sleep, so good-bye, Joe.” “Goodbye. George.” The brothers drowsed back into | their pillows, and the old hospital | chaplin, who had just arrived, made | his services a simple prayer fot two brothérs who were never to awake | from the sleep they were entering. | cA MAP DRAFTING a and BLUE PRINTING ARCHITECTURAL BLUE PRINT WORK Maps showing practically every oil field in the State at reasonable prices We make a specialty of testing the specific gravity of o GEOLOGICAL WORK WELL LOCATIONS GENERAL ENGINEERING WYOMING MAP AND BLUE PRINT CO. BOX 325 —'. 111 WOLCOTT ST. CASPER, WYOMING ils. J 2 zZ 2 is | 1S =. = as = = = \= |= = Navajo Blankets and Rugs SPECIAL TWO DAY SALE Last Day Tomorrow A large assortment of Navajo Blankets, Rugs, Laprobes and Saddle Blankets are on sale at the Chamberlin Furniture Store on East Second street. In a certain New England town a brave mother has already been told | by Uncle Sam how the nation appre- | ciated the brave sons she reared, taught, and sacrificed “to make the | world a decent place to live in.” | In a certain New England regi-| ment on the front in France every | man in D company has promised him- | self and his “pals” that D company will never lose a chance to get a Ger-! man. t DIRECT FROM INAIAN RESERVATION These blankets and nigs. were made by the Navajo In- dians on the reservation at Ship Rock, New Mexico. THE PRICES ARE RIGHT PC. MATTOX.