Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 2, 1918, Page 4

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PT operas ee mere re Ee sateen on: ———EEEeEeEeee LIBERTY Bonds WEDNESDAY, OCT. 2, 1; to Feed Fi ters. PROPAGANDA Of THE HUN LAGKS | | Today’s Quotations 1 | Furnished by j OTIS & COMPANY., Ground Floor Oil Exchange Bldg. | —__ Eee ‘ Stock Bid Ask. rniiwTnA Allen Gil__---- +25 32 American ----- .002 O01 Bessemer. — .0F 06 5 | Boston-Wyo, _-- 14 17 i ie tae 'Black Bear--_-- 08 -10 Future History Will Show That pig Indian — “20 ‘o5 | America, Target of Germans, Big Five, ------ 013 .02 Eclipsed Boche in Spread- Columbine .08 ll i i Cente —.— -003 01 ing Information | Cons. Royalty. .68 70 | : ¥ Elkhorn 17 | [By United Prens} T. Wil 2160 | LONDON, Sept. —(By mail.)— | Gjenrock . Oil-_- 3.373 Boastfulness and la lea-Wyo. 008 | ing are responsible for the failure Jupiter —- 03 of Germany’s huge propaganda ef-|Gjenhurst “10 forts. Kinney — - 60 | After 40 years of experience \in| Merritt 4_ 20.5 21.00 | this work, Germany can show little) Midwest |Com. : 98 | fruits for its labor. Midwest Ref. 113.00 114.00 On the other hand, America with|Midway -- :015 023) a record of less than four years, can ; Northwest z AB 50 | credit itself with being the most suc-, Out west 2013 02) cessful of all the belligerents in | Pahtfinder - OT 08 spreading propaganda. | Premier = 02 03 Col. John Buchan, director of in-| Republic Pet. -02 03 telligence of the British ministry of Riverton Re. - 10 12 information, today said the German Shiloh. 4~= = OL an | propaganda is ‘‘on the whole ineffect-| United. Pet:..-- 04 60a ive” and declared that “when history | Wyo. Blatkfoot sor EODA| comes to decide which country was | Western oe 4s SY | the most succesful in its propaganda | Wind River ky ae cho campaign, it won't be Germany—it Youngs seeizs-- : will be America.” “We here have had occasion to study the extraordinary merits: of .the German machine which Germans had been building for 40 years,” said the Col. Buchan. “On the whole its pro- duct has been rather ineffective be- cause of its lack of psychological acumen. “The Hun boasts too much and un- derestimates the peoples against whom his campaign is directed—as, for instance, America. “He makes queer slips. / “At the beginning of the war the kaiser sent an address to the Mo- hammedan chiefs of India, in which he pointed out that he—the kaiser— was their real friend. The address was elaborately gotten up, engrossed in the finest vellum. But it was bound in pigskin. “Here was an instance of the Huns’ tendency to overlook mport- ant details, for the pig is an animal the Moh&mmedans regard with hor-| ror. HUNS WASTE THEIR CASH “The propaganda scheme of. the Germans was most elaborate, but it has been overdone. They have spent at least $75,000,000 annually since the war began, some of which went to produce most absurd publications. Also, they printed too many. scheme might be described as ‘kolas-| report without being detached from! sal’ but stupid. “American propaganda has been conducted with a rare instinct for publicity. “Take the American Red Cross sin Italy, France and Russia, as well as the work of the Y. M. C. A. This was practical propaganda . In tend- ing the sick and wounded the Amer- iean Red Cross proved America’s sym- pathy to the Allies. “The committee on public informa- tion in. Washington appeals to the intelligence of the world. The Amer- ican ‘secret service is a fine organi- zation and has some splendid men in it. They managed to get hold of the most valuable documents which were published at exactly the right. time. “America is very much alive to the value of news in propazanda and the right kind of news. She hasn’t been obsessed, like the older coun+ tries in Europe, with secrecy. The soldier—professional soldier—is al- ways inclined to make a mystery of his work.» It is not always easy to get a response from him to an intelli- gent question the answer of which may be of value tovthe enemy but may be of great yalue tothe people. NAMES ARE ESSENTIAL “A war of nations,can’t be an an- onymous| war.. The people must be taken into the confidence of their government. *They want to know something of the organization of their armies and the generals who command them. “Take for eXample the. Official Gazette of the United States which on July.13th. téld of the organiza- tion of the American army and gave the names of the commanding gen- erals. “That’ Ss common sense. America has just! established propaganda agencies in all Allied and neutral countries. Their policy is the same as in America.. There is no jealousy. They put al) their in- terests in the common stock.” Col. Buchan is reluctant to boast of his own country’s efforts at prop- aganda. But German newspapers re- cently have paid it the highest com- pliment-in concentrating a campaign of “hate” against Lord Northcliffe, for. what they term Great Britain's “pernicious propaganda.” Ero ie eo GOOD READING FOR TOMMIE IBy United Preas} LONDON, Sept. 13.— (By mail.) — People have been the. postof- fice free postage privi as a means of unloading a wild tment of ic and litera j These are some of th« nes and articles s unk on the! | Wind River Pet.- 19 20 APPLICATION, BLANKS. FOR ONDS ARE WN TRYPLIGATE. Application blanks for the Fourth | Liberty Loan campaign are different |from the blanks used in former Lib-| jerty Loan campaigns. Each blank has ‘its individual, number and is in triplicate form, or rather an appli-| cation with two coupons. | The lower coupon is a receipt from the worker to the subscriber show-| ing thesamount of bonds subscribed for, the amount of first payment and) an indication as to whether the bond} is to be paid in full on October 24, 1918, or whether paid out in install-| ments, 20 per cent on Ndvember 21. 20 per cent on Devember 19, 30 per cent on January 16, 1919, and 30 |per cent on January 30, 1919. } The other coupon is the worker's record of the transaction. It is to show the name, address and occu- }pation of the subscriber, and the |bank or trust company in which the | bond payment is to be made. I€ is The|to be turned in with the worker's | (United Press Staff Correspondent.) | 5 p. m., and never had enough sleep | | the original application. | The original application is the gov- }ernment’s record of the’ transaction. When the bonds are paid for in full | statute which forbids the work of the /@bout 65,000. on sale. bed}, hardly able to move: _ “About last of April she start- ed on Tanlac, and the results have ‘been: wonderful. She has no trouble} eats anything she wants without suf-| hundred and thirty-three and, was 80 | taking Tanlac she hardly knew what|and was still losing. I don’t suffer weak she could hardly raise her arms./a good night’s sleep was, 'Fér one, solid month before she be-|she sleeps the whole night gah taking Tanlac, she was down in| just like a child. ‘whatever with her stomach now. She/I started taking the medicine myse! B paricle from it, and has Bits indice “Thad fallen off Casper Pharmacy, and in Alco but now particle with indigestion now, no m through | ter what I eat, and I am always req Her color is clear. with a big appetite when mea] Pe! tne up and she is able to do ali her)comes. I now weigh one hundred anyiq fiteen oF without any trouble. | sixty-seven he pebie 2B gain ¢ “When I noticed the wonderful tient ey eed ob Benet an s i \1 are bo! ‘an benefits she was getting from ae re hag dae tar niceties 7 i expected of it.” as I had been suffering for,same time aia is sold in Casper by th was badly run-down: to one hundred and f the Alcova Mercantile C LARGEFUNDFUR LAMB PRIGES |S WORK OF MERCY SE EN AT OM Grand Lodge at St. Louis Starts! Government Regulation., of _Re-| Ball Rolling for Subordinate | ceipts Expected to , Protect Lodges by Contribution H Market, Against Heavy of $75,000 | Runs of Sheep TI PILL LD At the annual session of the grand! S0UTH OMAHA, Neb., Oct. 2.— lodge recently closed in St. Louis,) Receipts of sheep haye. been liberal the Odd Fellows took a decided) for the past week. Yard records were | stand for Americanism by enacting a| broken nere a week ago Monday with | All, kinds | showed a heavy decline in prices. ~ | Searcity of fatlambs kept them from cept when the English“ language is| jpeaking as much in proportion a used. The sovereign grand lodge) the feeders. In fact, about 85 per) also enacted legislation donating/ cent of the receipts were feeders, and | $75,000 for the Red Cross and Y. M. | the atid of the whole was not very | C. A. work and permitting voluntary aerit lambs are selling from $16.25 donations to be made to this fund. ¢5-$16,75, the packers buying. some by all grand and subordinate lodges. | of the seconds from $14.00 to $15.00. This fund is to be administered by|A few fat aged wethers are‘selling at a commission consisting of the ,soV-' $10.50 and fat ewes are sélling from ereign lodge officers and the chair- $9.25 to $9.50. x man of the finance committee, and is The feeder trade has been a very to be used to relieve distress wher- uneyen affair, but at the close of the ever it is found and not restricted to week it is showing some, improve- the use for Odd Fellows only. mient. There is a big spread between The report that was submitted | the good lambs and the medium ones. shows the total membership of the|‘Best feeders are selling now from order to be-2,230,231.. Total amount} $15.000 to $15.40, with the medium paid out during.the year 1917 to help| ones showing most of the advance thosesin sickness or distress, $6,509,-|since Monday’s big smash, selling 889,65; number of Odd Fellow homes! from $12.00 to $14.00, these prices 55; number of. residing homes, 4,457. | covering the coarse wools and heavy | Baltimdre was selected as the next | hided ones. Practically no feeding meeting place of the sovereign grand | yearlings or feedingwethers were re- Jodge. . It was.in that city the first | ceived. lodge was organized and it is par- Feeding ewes are selling. from ticularly appropriate that the 100th | $7.00 to $8.00, with an occasional anniversary should be celebrated by| bunch of extra good ones reaching | holding the sovereign grand lodge | $9.00; common ewes $4.00 to $6.00. | session in’ the same city. At the|' The government, since the record | close of the convention the following | breaking receipts here Monday, officers were elected; Henry V. Borst |talen it in. hand to; regulate the. ré- | of New York, grand sire; Joseph} ceipts. . Their intention is not let | Oliver of Ontario, Can,, deputy grand | only abovt so many cars in a day, | sire; John B. Goodwin, ofMaryland, | and in this case it does not look-as grand secretary; William H. Cox, of|tho they would allow excessive re- Kentucky, grand treasurer. ceipts. Their intention: is not to let AMONG THE WOUNDED YANKS - Interesting Sidelights on the War Disclosed in Chats with Our Bovs it Hospitals order being done in any lodge ex- “This Is Make it the last! ‘Save e war. Pour out your res make the Victory Final! FIFIFPPEPLLZLAZLLAL. Phen 72) By FRANK J. TAYLOR |We had to work from 2-a..m. until j MERICAN HOSPITAL , IN|8nd_enotigh to eat. ; antes Sept. 3.—-(By. inaikj— “The Germans think we are doing | | Rodi aeRO ak f 5 the samé to German. prisoners. They! Hindenburg and his retinue of gen-| 4+. ali told that. Only onee did £! erals are the only boches who ride on| jee 9 deeent German:: He was a. | the subscriber by so indicating may’ have his bonds registered if he de- sires to register them. = ee “ ‘PIGEON BETRAYS BOCHE PLANS TO ALLIED GENERAL isn and American By E. A. BATCHELOR PARIS, Sept. 9. (By Mail.)—The pigeon, good soldier that he was, could not fly on ferevér. He was bewildered by the crash of the great guns that destroyed his homing in- stinct, and weary from a futile long journey round and round the com- | bat area. Finally he came to rest in the window of a Y..M. G, A. hut. A Red Triangle secretary caught him and remoyed the little aluminum tag from his Jeg, The message was in German. It read, “We are being hard pressed | by the French. Send help at once , «The Y. M..C.-A. man took the |behind thé German lines,” explained | paper to headquarters and the gen- mpcee he Tally. “We were treated terribly: SEATTLE M AN HAS. : “Have some more batteries turned on the enemy in front of us,” he or- dered. ey are calling for help over there.” The thunder of new. guns from a cluster of woods previously quiet |showed that the order had. been obeyed. Soon word came that the Germans were retiring. “Their message went tothe wrong place,” said the general. “The pigeon was an unwitting ally. He dught to haye the Croix de Guerre.’ But the pigeon wanted only food and water and these the Y. M,C. A. man supplied. Then he liberated the bird, ,which flew back toward the Hun lines. “This may be a good omen,” said the Red Triangle worker. ‘“Perhans some of the Boche soldiers are. just as tired of war and just as bewil- qered as that pigeon.’ — to. Improve .Yosr, .Complexion,” “Dressmaking at Home,” “Needle- |work for Our Girls,” ‘‘Nasturtium- planting,’ and “Tinky Tales for Tiay Tots.” , : —_— MONEY to loan on everything. The Se- curity Loan Co, room 4. Kimball Bldg. 9-1l-tr The —— List your property with us. t out for| Security Loan company, room 4, Kim- men in the trenches to read: “Aun palt Bldg. 2-11-t£' rubber tires. Ordinary staff cars.) cuard who liad four sons in, the Brit- jcamions, and other vehicles rattle and} igh army. The old man was eaushes {pamb over German roads on ircn|in Germany and made to serve. "\, ires. “Our food was. just black bread, So says Geofge Tully, of South-| and not very mae of oie -Some-} |shields, County Devon, England, who/ times we had soup;:made ‘6f nothing | shacbine. | Biswas: captivod yah var (pecaecegae Se Gee apnea Bs a 3 rs: thi fe that to flav- ly German offensive against the Eng- pa We were in pert Gant: llish, and with. a group of 500 ine tion when I eseaped. But the.-Ger- prisoners . WAS) man soldiers, ari t. much better | |made to work continually under shell-| 5¢¢, judging ten what I saw. E |fire. just behind the German lines! «]" worked on the rads mést, of = contrary. to oh nereement/ the.timé, tho we loaded: shells for alg pets ea at leas’ mes | while. .No rubber was used for the ehind the. lines. automobile, tires. . It iron, eve Tully escaped during the American) gor. the athe? ease: "They Booed and French push from the Marne, over the roads, and made a terrific but just as he neared liberty WAS | noise, and could not go fast.. Most = |eabahe ecg of Eee ond staff cars were fittee to run on nar-; erm: | row, tr: 5 Tardenois. Wounded, he was picked |"°\ "sw" ‘Hindenbute “oes Pee |up when the Americans drove the) made up.stand erect and still when |E Germans farther, and was\sent to an/he passed. He opened the car win: American base hospital. He has re- dow when he passed.me.. He looked! to the extent of hobbling like a monster, not human, His auto! ut on crutches, and his story in-'had rubber tires on it. I’d have giv- m aan Germans are AS my Biel rome cea. er CE s are’ Any one of us would—it would be }worked in gangs of/ 500, spread out! worth it, just onewchalice at him.” | covered ak jt GAINED 25 POUNDS Homie Town Folk Are, > < — Proud of Heroic Boy “L Never Fel My, Lite” t, Better in. . My United Press] | Says Bland fer Takide LONDON, Sept. 13.—(By fnail.) — Tanlac > Sergt. Ji Collins, of a Welsh regi- ESA ment, comes from the right kind of| «<(Tanise hasnot only nude & Wen an old home town. sce derful change in. my. wife, but I have Recently Sergt. Collins won the) pean greatly benefited by it myself. Victoria Cross by an act of amazing) [¢ has. put, her in shape: to, whew he bravery. has gained twelve pounds in thirty When he got home to Merthyr the days and now. she-feels fine all the presented him With atime And ds for myself, I have pick- mayor’s wife wad of money—just less than $1,500! eq up: twenty-five, pounds and never city felt better in my life.” in our céin, 6n behalf of the council. His old employers gave him This interesting and remarkab’ $500. more und Lord Rhondda gave statement jwas malle, by Pt Binal another $500. — of 2742 Fourth Ave., North, Seattle, Not content with that, the people Washington, re¢ently. -- I who attended the ceremony held an’ Continuing, Mr. Bland said: “My’ impromptu subscription. in : which wife has had one of the worst cases} they raised another $1,250, making a of stomach trouble, it seems. to me al mt gift of $3,750 for Merthyr’s person cduld haye, and » everything hero, causé. Indeed, we can This Space C ‘ she would éat disagreed With her ih a _way, that caused her the greatest of suffering. ' Durilié ithe .past five years we tried everything we heard of in our efforts to help her and build] her up, but nothing seemed to.do her any good. Her appetite left her, en- |tirely, her, complexion was sallow, and her‘health was all gone to pieces, |She used to weigh one hundred and|2 |seventy pounds, but fell off to one 1 oe “The Last of Wars” BUY BONDS TO YOUR UTMOST! John Tripeny Co. | Cl nc mm mn ne _ The boys are going over the top. Will you go, too? Will you be as free with your dollars as they are with their lives? American blood is being spilled without a murmur. American’dol- lars Mmiust be Spent without question. The Bonds Are a Great —the greatest security in the world—a ,fine rate of-interest —a noble bear your parting salutation, it is an investment, not a loss. WHITE HOUSE CAFE | 3 {ee i na we the Last of Wars very dollar you can and dig deep into the work of ources—hold back not a single dollar that can help Make this & | \ \ \ \ \ This Space Contributed by 145 South Center St. 9 GOES Ty ALUGAANAUAAAAUUALAUALAUAALU do ‘ho less, for ft seems to us that each bond must NNUAL A A \ ontributed to the Winning of the Warby => @ @ ANNAN 124 North Center :

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