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Page Two Bay LIBERTY Bonds The Casper Daily Tribune {ssued every evening except Sunday at Casper, Natrona County, Wyoming. Publication Offices: Oil Exchange Building. Business Telephone 15 sehr SURREAL SDSL DEE st fntered at Casper (Wyo.) Postoffice | as second-class Matter, Nov. 22, 1916. ——_—<—<—<————— Ansociated Press Service. United Press Service. —— J. E. HANWAY, President & Editor. EARL F. HANWAY, Business Mgr. Associate Editors: R. E. Evans Margaret V. C. Douds ees ieeladeee a Rear aie Acacias pasa Member of the Axsocinted Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication | of ail news dispatches credited to it or | not otherwise credited in this papsr the local published and also news \erein. ° SHSCE SPEC SOCE Se 2%) 17'S YOUR MONEY AND SUPPORT Th YUNG FELLONS WTH THE REE REPUBICAN STATE TICKET For United States Senator Frances E. Warren of Cheyenne For Congressman Frank W. Mondelt of Newcastle For Governor Robert D. Carey of Careyhurst For Secretary of State William E. Chaplin of Laramie For State Treasurer A. D. Hoskins of Kemmerer For State Auditor 1. C. Jefferis of Newcastle For Supt. of Public Instruc- tion Katherine Morton of Cheyenne > finden Bir Ase. ee PO ePTFE SEK O HOT SEHH OOS SHO STOSCSOHESEO OSCE THE COMMANDERS In praising the dash and courage! of the American soldiers who have ‘won such signal victories over the Germans we, should remember that the commanders no less deserve their meed of credit. Marshal Foch; speaking of the St. Po oe stood Ses eo sotos+s | | | | | | | ° ¢ ? o| + « “Tommy Smith,” American dier, went over the bags with the rest of them. He was in the act of hurdling a bit of wire in front of his platoon’s objective, in fact, when the shrapnel caught him. His fine fight- |a burst toy balioon and he collapsed | intertly into th | plunged into the ground. ‘'Tommy Smith” was done. Right behind that first wave, how- lever, came. the stretcher bearers armed, not with bayonets, but with jplain, simon-pure grit, and they sol- | | ing vigor left him like the wind from} entanglement. His| | rifle guivered upright as the bayonet | Mihiel drive, was cereful to describe| picked Tommy off of the wire, got it as a manoeuvre “as skillfully pre- | him back thru a withering burst of} pared as it was gallantly executed.” | He knew, better than anyone else, | perhaps, the great det.1ad that mod-| FINANCING LIBERTY BONDS THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE _ Bay LIBERTY Bonds to Supply Ships. SSS ce ee ee ee Passed by the Censor. Copyright 1918. Nothing that the Kaiser’s Hordes can send at them will deter these fellows. simon-pure nerve they take the wounded from the wires and shell holes of No Man’s Land and start them back to the treatment that makes cach day's casualty list look very different. the nerve, but it is our money, subscribed to Liberty Bonds that makes their work of rescue and cure possible. fire and slid him dextrously over the parapet he had so lately left, D a communication trench was a dressing station. Tonithy was a bad c! and he didn’t stdp there long. Back to the first aid station and into an ambulance he went and, after a dash over shel! torn roads, he hospits] where, in his turn, he was operated on. Again he moved, this time to a huge hospital far from thé |sound of big guns where a fine, | healthy constitution, gained behind a plow in the Middle West, brot him back to health. x weeks later he was back with AT INSPIRES THESE TO 00 THESE JOBS ¥ unlorded at a casualty clearing | Oo At the Midwest M. J. Kolmer, Buffalo; Max Rice; St. Louis; F. C. Emmerich, Denver; ‘George Davis, Sioux City; T. Consel- man, St. Louis; P. H. Stanton, Oma- ha; Willis B. Troy, Glenrock; H. R. \Harrison, Minneapolis; F. H. Gorham, !Mrs. Alice Gorham, Thermopolis; H. A. Tyson, Denver; B. W. Baker, Sioux City; E- P. Domb. New York; ‘Mr. and Mrs. P. G. Simplot, Billings; C. A. Katker, Sheridan; R. J, Skuce, city; L. F. Sountag, Mineral Wells, Texas; M. N. Koplan, P. L, Sturgeon, Denver; Bernard M., Sell, Lineoln; H. C. Ashbaugh, Denver; Robert G. Al- len, Cheyenne; Gary W. Jones, Lew- ter Borsch, Frank Borsch, Salt Creek; J. H. Mudgett, Denver; E. G. White, Est Chicago; Dean M. Gillispie, William | P. DeLoat, Denver. At the Henning F. E. West, Lincoln; L. G: Truby, \Denver; A. L. Merritt, Denver; C. J. Larson, Seattle; J. B. Dandson, Glen- jrock; Mrs F. 0. Emmett, Glenrock; Lloyd N. Young, St. Louis; F. W. | Zimmerman, St. Louis; R. B. Pickeny, ‘Lusk; J. E. Walker, Billings; Fred Blair, Sundance; E. A. Walsh, Den- | ver; E. D. Sprague, Billings, Capt. \W. A. Woodrow, Col. George M. SI jney, ‘Thermopolis; Frank Porter, Riv- erton; A. S. Putnam, Cheyenne; B. |R. Brassfield, Fort Wayne; W. W. O’Neil, Riverton. ——- | Méney to loan on everything. The) | |Security Loan company, room 4, Kim- | |ball Bldg. * 9-11-tf | TAYLOR & CLAY, Ine. | Securities, | | Investment | Private wire service to Chi || Denver, Chicago, New Yotk and } x |] other markets. 1 212 Oil Exchange Bldg., Phone 203 } Casper, Wyo, Armed with stretchers and GEOLOGICAL WORK Maps and Blue Prints, Surveying Wyoming Map and Blue Print Co., P. O. Box 325 Phone 849 111 North Wolcott Street Casper, Wyo. We have these boys and they have | {his company, proudly displaying 4 new wound stripe on his sleeve. Once more that dread casualty list head- | ing, “Killed in action,’* was cheated. | ~ We'll soon have millions of the |! | “Tommy Smiths’’ on the firing lines, |and we must have more first aid |) stations, more ambulances and hos- pitals to cheat the casualty lists. Aj 1,000-bed base hospital will take the | proceeds of $500,000 in Fourth Lib- | STORAGE Household Goods, Pianos, Etc. Storage House on Burlington Tracks ITURE AND UNDERTAKING CO, 1 fenne, J LOTTE ITISTL ISSO OOOOH, . UTALIANS LOUD | ‘REGISTRANTS. ARE AS |IN PRAISE OF |rvy rOTINNNAIATS YANK COMRADE! EXAMINE QUESTIONNAIRES, | BEFORE APPLYING BOARD United Press} 4 ; ROME, Sept, 10. (By. Mail.) — The werk of the lawyers who vol- Italian soldiers fighting on the west- ern front express great praise of the : American soldier and many letters/unteered to assist men in filling out are being. received here in which spe-\¢hcir questionnaires in the room back cial praise of the gallantry and brav-}of Otis & Co., was ‘airly strenuous ery of the Italian-American Buddy is|Monday as the little booklets had } jeommenced to arrive from the local boards and the were made. 2 Lieutenant Nicola Celeste of the Eektore Italian artillery, located with the | crowding the room asking for help on knotty questions. 2 # . The board asks that ail the ques- | Italian expeditionary force in France, lrecently wrote a prominent member ues tions the registrants is capable of. an- jof the Italian parliament in which jhe said in part: “Tam among the American troops. These sons of free America ere mar- yelous for their dash, orderly appear- hance and discipline. | “They have a prodigious organiza-| jtion. They have their own railway, erned and telephone systems. They have|the officials there had to place. a | their own motor car service. Their) sign on the door informing the regis- |supply of artillery and ammunition |trants were they were to go to have seems to be endless. their questionnaires filled out. _ “f was surprised at the great num- — ‘ber of Italian-Americans, most of| disaster which they had considered | whom haye left families in the States,| impossible. All are very keen on be- but preserving great love for Italy | ing sent to Italy to fight in America’s and the Italian army. ‘They were par-| name for the country of their fath- | ticularly surprised at the Caporetto ers.” : OTIS AND COMPANY Members New York Stock Exchange, New York ‘Cotton Ex- change, Chicago Board of Trade IN WAR TIMES, CONSERVE MATERIALS is. Don’t discard that Broken Casting, but bring it to us to be welded: We save you time and money. 5 Welders and Brazers of Cast Steel, Aluminum, Bronze and other metals, ALL WELDS GUARANTEED. OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING SHOP 118 S. David Across From Shockley’s. Phone 611-J Jat the court rouse, * BEST BOWL OF CHILI IN TOWN 15c AT THE CHILI KING LUNCH Back of Grand Central Bar. All kinds of Sam ° j erty Loan bonds. One $1,000 bond will buy an x-ray outfit like the one that found the shrapnel in “Tommy Smith’s” body. The American who | subscribes for $1,600 in bonds pro- | vides an ambulance. Patronize the ’ POpeaT Bees; at | ays LIBERTY GARAGE } Car and Truck Storage First-Class Repair Shop BERT TULLIS, ern battle makes on the general, the staff and the subordinate officers in charge of it. There are vast numbers of men to be handled. There are infinite details of organization and equipment to look after. The ordinary routine of the battlefront is in itself perhaps as complex as that of any big, highly de- veloped American business institu- tion. Making ready and putting over a big offensive operation, demand a combination of executive skill and cf- fort of which a civilian can hardly have any conception. The St. Mihiel drive was the first test of the ability of American com- manders, from General Pershing down, to handle this complex work as it must be handled, in order to win our war. Everything was ready. All the equipment and all the fighting units were exactly where they should have been, at the times required. All the machinery of battle moved with perfect emoothness, The only possi- bility of a hitch came from the eager- ness of the men to go beyond their objectives; but even so, there was never any serious lack, anywhere, of signal work, guns, ammunition or food, or any failure of fighting units to make proper connection. All this was not luck er accident, but the result of laborious brain work on the part of capable officers, It is # reassuring omen for our future campaigns. And it is exactly what we might have expected. Executive ability is as much an American char- acteristics individual initiative and daring, and it would be strange if the quality which makes our business men ‘the greatest in the world should be lacking mong our army leaders. (GAG Mes STANDARD MEASURES A representative of the Federal bu- reau of markets complains that in one city he finds thirty different sizes of berry baskets. The resulting con. Some aspects of the next Liberty |Loan may seem unfortunate. It is {sondnnced that subscribers are ex pected to pay 10 per cent at the time jof subscription, 20 per cent Nov. 21,| {20 per cent Dec. 19, 20 per cent |Jan. 16, and the remaining 30 per jcent Jan, 30, This brings one of the payments immediately before Christ- mas, thereby inevitably absorbing a |good share of the family’s Christmas imoney. It also involves the payment (of 50-ner cent of, the entire subscrip- tion in the month of Jantsry—o ;month when most people are trying to recover from their Christmas ex- penditures and at the sa pay their semi-annual taxes. for distributing the payment dates in this way. And they 1] not nece sarily impose any hardship. It is real- jly a problem in intelligent financing that each subscriber may solve for himself. The payment dztes are not obliga tory; they merely matk the end of jthe yeriods in which successive pay- ments must be made. Within those imits, the money can be handed over |whenever the subscriber prefers {There is nothing to prevent the pa ment of more than 10 per cent c: down. Any man or woman who sub- scribes as soon as the campaign opens, on Sep. 28, and s 20 per cent down, with another 20 per cent payment in October and November, will probably have no trouble with the December and January payments. Christmas, too, need not interfere. We are wisely getting away, in thi war time, from the old orgy of e> ltravagance with which we used to jcelebrate it. We are likely to have a |safe and sane Christmas this year. Relatives and friends will not expect presents usual. And when liberal | presen ‘e given, what is more ap- lpropriate for the purpose than thos lsame Liberty Bonds for which |much of our hoarded Ch The treasury department, however, | may be assumed to have good reason| AMONG THE WOUNDED YANKS Interesting Sidclights on the By FRANK | emigrated to I ;and optimistic sufferers in the ‘ho pital, doctors and nurses and orde: lies say. lie went over the top with first of them when the Yankee ion stormed th German positions | of Chateau-Thierry. It cost him his leg-—they brot to the base h tal with a te ; wound, but he insisted on aying “Thank you” when one did anything for him. He stood the pain like partan, and after the tion lingered between life and | de. but w | pati attention to a im iy Soon he was on the in a cot on an open air pavilion they’ve made into he lar; ward in France, where Europe’, thy class used to spend | gay summers. . | One night, after the midnight taps, the sergeant in charge of that ward | heard a clear voice zing, but not loudly, The sergeant tip-toed over m the direction of the singing, say- Say, old man, why the midnight concert?” | as Leferbe who sang, and he ed, “That you, Sa Still up? my stump is driving me wild : it’s going to rain— so bad I can’t stand any longer, I just sing—tha’ Wee The “Sarge” understood. re? Our Boys in Hosnitals [United Press Staff Correspondent] AINN-AMERICAN HOSPITAL IN FRANCE, Sept. 2. (By Mail.) —He is one of three brothers fighting in Uncle Sam’s jarmy. Way back near their roots the family tree includes some | French royalty.. The branch that produced the three brothers | ada, and later moved.to Maine. name is Avid Lefebre, and he is one of the most cheerful pewudiec oon archos \s saan nme eam “Taps Shop Foreman Gasoline and Oils Phone 983 ~ 180 So. Elm St. War Disclosed in Chats with RUDOLPH LUNDBERG Graduate Royal Musical Academy, ‘Stockholm, Sweden Teacher of Voice and Piano Each Studio: Smith-Tartar Building f Durbin and Second Sts. Telephone 349-M | J, TAYLGR “Tt jen't so, bad as it mi been. I've got a right goo. left, and they’re m: ficial legs nowada: | eS THE TACRBOTt | THE JACKPOT ! | Es iO Hun “Allied Offensive,” | headliner on. our morn- porary, all of which dis- belief that they have thtir back to it. tho the only ones who want the clocks turned back an hour at the end ef October are those | ‘who want to make up the hour's Sleop they lost last spring. nt have | stump i dandy arti- A Ath Liberty Bond ‘ Judging from recent peace offens ives the nks are taking the bur out of Berlin at a lively rate. The lady driver who signalled in the opposite direction from that she intended to turn at a down-town cor- ner, has our apology for attempting to run over her automobile on foot. | = | The “Clown Prince” has been con- |spicuous by his absence in late p: reports, a development that leads to the supposition that he thas been transferred to another circus. to make one, No foreign-born Citizen came to America to spend a fortune, they came HIGH FINANCE =A Bond of Usion + Uncle Sam’s Respect OSIM A Tbh ddddddd usion is obvious, There are among|/money will be spent? The foundation of a Fortune is wise investment. them many sizes which may easily be| Cat ee te. mistaken for the usual bnshel, half-| FRUIT PITS AND GAS MASKS doen't count for you, old man,” he id. “Go on and sing.” And the Governor Houx may be speaking on patriotism on his tour of the bushel, peck. gallon, quart and pint measures. one another. There is nothing in their style, either, that is any safe index to their capacity. AM the old standards have disap- monred. A customer never knows how much he is getting in any given basket, and often the merchant does not know. The same uncertainty ex- ists with regard to receptacles for various other kinds of rood. There is a Federal law providing for standard containers but it applies only to food shipped across state lines. Most.of the states haye as yet adonted no such standards. for food- ‘stuffs sold within their borders. es could accomplish a.good deal in the way of such regulation, but they gen- erally let the matter drift. ——0. If you’re short on sugar, try “long sweetenin’ ” — which, if you do not know it, is corn sirup, a thoroughly wholesome and nutritious foodstuff whieh can be. produced in almost limitless quantities if there is a suf- They grade insensibly into | The government hzs set on foot an \anti-gas drive in which all Americans, |old and young, may participate, From {the chemical warfa section of the army comes word that carbon for gas masks can be made from fruit pi and nut shells. The Food Admini: tration therefore as housewh canners and users of such fruits and nuts to save the pits and shells. The fruits useful in this way are the peach, apricot, prune, olive, date, cherry, and plum. The nuts are the Brazil, hickory, walnut, and butter- nut, It is just as jas to throw the into the garbage can Keep a special container ready for them all the time and drop them jin. When there is a good Jittle col- |lection take them to the Red Cross or, if some local grocery or départ- jment store is helping the patriotic collectors, take them to that store Two hundred peach pits or seven |pounds..of shells furnish enough car- |hen for one mask—and one mask y to save the pits! “Sarge” tiptoed away,|state but th i See EBs c Vays) st @ partisan newspapers of te Lefebre went on s ging. The other cities are at least hon ehctetl A Lit-|té advertise the event as a “Demo= cratic rally,” ul, Lefebre re- of his mother’s death. earc sister, all the It was quite sup: and comfort then }tria-Hungary to pe back in Maine,/ posed informal © conferengé brothers were|should be “non-binding.” Any agree- ing. ; mt_made by either of the Central Avid is on*his way back to ther /powers, whether formal or informal) now-—he may reached the *Lit-/ will be non-binding, so far as the: fre | tle Home in the U. S. Av’ Before he! cone é 7 | left the hospital he wrote to his sister) _ of his wound and the capntation: fluous for Aug- greatest fy that her pro- his since end all our Tet? th or so, with! ’ provided our an appeal for » for the ne ang a poison gas attack. “Yours for the 1 Two hundred fruit pits may sound) {ie don’t take i |like a good many. Start saving: them | Personal succor. jand you'll be surprised to see how SRS }fast they pile up and how soon there) Canada jis’ he moteriess ‘Sum- are enough to be of real value, Fur-| 98¥8, too—whic no ore than thermore, the small lots saved in sep-|Tight, seeing that nearly all the gas- ate homes ‘soon make an imposing Oline used in Canada comes from the amount when collected in one place. ; United States. Here is a simple service that has a_ Sas {direct connection with the battlefront Turkey, the tail of jand one so much the more interesting snake, is still wagging )duri: the German a little, but FI TIFITCTICOFLALAPFEPSPPPLEZAL ALLL ALD PIPILLPLSILLL LL LLL UNCLE SAM will p venture, it is as certain Lyric Theater Bidg. % There is no more wise or more safe investment than one of UNCLE SAM'S 4th Liberty Bonds. There are Bonds io be sold ($6,000,000,000). Now*is the time to get in-on the % ground floor. Buy your bond today, tomorrow may be too late. tapped and GUSHERS aie the result. , E Foreigners who wish to make their fortune—BUY TODAY. This space contributed to the winning of the war by DR. J. H. JEFFREY only a limited number of ay dividends regularly. “Theré is no if’s about as DEATH itself. The OIL SANDS have i this Shed . SIILIIIGIIIIVDOOT OSD,