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- ig LIBERTY Bonds to Furnish F THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE Two The Casper Daily Tribune Building. Business Telephone. sane 98 Entered at Casper Wee.) ffice as second-class gh ov, 22, 1916. This ype Ase enough. The AL lies are conteMplating still | si er! ews Fee, ‘Presse Service. nies It is even bugaregten ‘f an TSOTSI Dore Ea | ultimatum be issued, decla: at BR ie meth ad vei in like manner, to the same Dicer be : S| nant destruction wrought by the Ger. RF. Bvans C. Douds | man henceforth, the Allies will exact vengeance in like mannr, to the game ge He a Pe ernraty extent, when they reach German ter- entitied to w abliogtion ritory. of ail news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this. p and ‘also the ‘local news published herein, SOSCSOSSOSSSOSHC OS ° ".” REPUBICAN STATE . TICKET For United States Senator Frances E. Warren of Cheyenne For Congressman Frank W. Mondell 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 I. C. Jefferis of Newcastle For Supt. of Public Instruc- tion Katherine Morton of Cheyenne i i i ee 2 2 Ais Ai i a a i a a I a lg FRSC PSESESHOSSCO CSS TRIED AND FOUND WANTING They Cheyenne Leader has at last come out in support of Frank L. Houx for governor, pointing to him #5 a man qualified over Robert D. Carey for that position, but the sup- “port is half-hearted, for they know that they have a giant in pdpularity and ability to contend with. It puts the question as to whether the people want “The tried, expe- rienced and able executive, Frank L. Houx,” or “Robert Carey, an experi- ment.” Those who know Mn Carey know that the Leader has no hopes of con- vincing when it refers to Mr. Carey as “g man untried and uninformed, who has been unable to demonstrate more than ordinary ability in a few minor public positions he has held.” Mr. Carey has been a member of the State Fair Board, president of the State Highway Commigsion, president of the State Council of Defense, pres- ident of the Wyoming Stock Growers’ Association, and president of the Wyoming Development Company, as well as being for years the managing head of one of the largest stock ranches in the State. Compare this to the experience of Frank L. Houx, whose prior qualifica- tions for state office are well known. If that qualified Mr. Houx, why should not the varied training of Mr. Carey qualify him? It is known positively that Mr. Houx has made a dismal failure as a chief executive, the features of which failure stand out in many ways thru his lack of executive power and in- decision, while his diliatory methods have been the cause of much com- ment Mr. Carey has proven himself a big| man, and worthy, in the many duties he has been called upon to perform in a public way. As manager of the Wyoming” Development Company he has been at the head of one of the most successful irrigation enterprises in the West. He is a native son, and one who has made a big success for himself in business. Would it not be much better to devastation of any Allied territory {from which the Germans retreat here lafter will be punished inexorably— |that those ordering the devastation | will be held personally responsible, | and that the troops tHat carry out the erders and the people who share in the erimés Will share the penalties. Such a warning ought to denature] \the Huns, if any could. The Allies/ hesitate, though, for fear that even this drastic remedy would not raed the criminals from ‘their orgy vf crime. The desperate Hohenzollerns | and their fellow-conspirators may} choose to carry Germany down with }them in their ruin. | If they do, and the German nation | aequiesces, so be it! Germany then must be Belgiumed. Re a POLITICAL EXPENSES Does it pay to go into politics? New light on the problem is shed by John Wilson of Atlanta, Ga., as a fe- sult of his primary campaign for county commissioner. His campaign expense statement in- cludes the following items:: Lost 1349 hours sleep thinking about the election. Lost two front teeth and a whole jot of hair in &-personal encounter with an opponent. Donated one beef, four shoats, and five sheep to a county barbecue. Gave away two pairs of suspenders, four calico dresses, $5 in cash and 13 baby rattles. Kissed 126 babies. Kindled 14 kitchen fires. Put up four stoves. Walked 4,076 miles. Shook hands with 9,508 people. Told 10,101 lies and‘talked enough to make in print.1,000 volumes. At- tended 16 revival meetings and was! baptized four different times by im- mersion and twice in some other way. Contributed $50 to foreign missions. Got dog-bit 39 times. And after all that, John was defeat- | ed. Don’t be over-hasty, though, in| answering the question asked above. You may be wrong. John insists that it was worth every dollar, every step, every baby-kiss, every dog-bite and all the rest, because he met so many people he liked, and made so marty friends. From which we gather that poli- tics—or anything else—does pay, if you’ré truly human. a With the fact before opr nation that President Wilson is receiving a higher percent of Republican support in Congress than he is from the Demo- crats, the assertions of the Democrat- i¢ National Committee ‘in pamphlets being sent out to state chairmen, are plainly contradicted. In their great effort to hold a Dem- ocratic Congress together thru anoth- er two years there is little hesitancy in what they have to suggest in prompting the state committeemen as to the assertions and charges which should be made in a campaign for vic- tory. One pamphlet being sent out is en- titled “Why You Should Give Earnest Attention Right Now to Electing’ a Democratic Congress,” charges that “the election of a Republican Con- gress now"would be a source of com- fort and elation to the Kaiser and his coherts.” The charge is made, but not one word to prove the contention. The fact is that they have no~proof and jeannot get it. Republicans in Con- |gress have stood behind President | Wilson in his war measures and are} going to continue to do so until the war is an accredited. victory for the great cause of freedom. | President Wilson and the Demo-; jecrats know that if the Republicans {had been against him, their support |given to a Democratic minority, | would have resulted disastrously for | the nation many times: ome of the | greatest war measures enacted into | Jaw have been supported by Repuly | licans. The attempt of the Democrats to charge and then fail to prove, cannot be overlooked. discard the nian who has been tried and found wanting, and instal? in his ylace a man who has proven himself in mahy ways? a O A three-inch blank space in the editorial columns of the Cheyenne Daily Leader reeently attracted our attnetioh, and, in a stupified manner, we gazed upon it trying to figure out what it meant. And then it slowly| dawned upon us that it was a record of Doc Osborne’s «past political achievements. Laramie Republican. BORE cose MOEN SB HUN MEDICINE FOR HUNS A writer in the Berlin Lokal An- zeiger admits and glories in the sys- tematic destruction which thé Ger- mans, in line with, their established | policy, are inflicting as they retreat from France and Belgium. Entente statesmen, he says, “‘know quite well that Belgium would be turned into @ desert before the Union Jack could fly on the-Cologne Ca- thedral. And if they water their ‘hotses in the Rhine there will not be one stone left. upon another in any Belgiah town. “All will be destroyed afd the mines will be made useless, will be condemned for half.a century to unfruitfulness.” elgian industries / ¢}, Forests and fields | |led by Julius Kalin of California, who {had charge of the draft bill, one of | \the greatest of all war measures, to take the bill up after it “had failed lto receive the support of the Demo-| \erats, and carry it thru to a succeés-| | ful passage. The Democrats have nothing to say! on this subject, or many others which | would prove their distorting of the facts in their appeal for party pres- tige along unpatriotic lines. The evidence is that President Wil- son would be safer in carrying out his war policies with a Republican Con- | gress than he now is wth a Demo- | cratic Congress. . | —>———_o—_—__—_. A SMALL LOAN, AFTER ALL Six billion dollars is a tidy sum for a Government to borrow from _ its people, but it is too small after all. The amount asked for including the present loan totals up to dbout six- ten billions. It seems enormous uh- less we appreciate the fact that the average individual loan per unit of population amounts to $1660, while the average wéalth iss about $2000; so what are really calléd upon to give, ‘altogether, in our four Liberty Loans, is a loan amounting to about 8 per cent of our capital. | |state superinténden a 6.0.P. HASSTRONG STA Short Sketches Dealing with R . ie Elechon Cet * KATHERINE A. MORTON It has only been realized in the late years that the position t t of public instruction is one of the important state offices, which fact has been impressed thru the passage of legislation| much needed in placing our-schdbl system on a higher plane, and the fact that this officer is member of a number of state boards, requiring one highly competent to assuthe those duties. - “For this position the Republicans; = of Wyoming have elected a very able the Red Cross, a statewide tag day! woman as a candidate for this posi-'!for benefit of the destitute Be}- tion, and the name of Katherine A. | gians. Morton is possibly better known in| During the past 11 years Mrs. the homes of this state as a thoro-’ Morten has been ah officer in the of | of any other. One of her big broad ideas was ex-|four years. During her incumben> pressed in = pempelen Pete the icy pe yap “ roles gained primaries when she sai ‘women a i: in. membership. who are replacing men called. to the | Since its organization shg has been colors should receive equal pay for/secretary of the State Council of equal work, not only because that| Defense, and has directéd the patriot- would be just, but also because that|ic work of the women of the state, “sa ath La daly ver he males sess of pie woul es ener men at Ing atte! ir col ment © ie councl ing a lead- receive their former employment at! ing part in many: war activities nee forme emda = ‘ _ Wherein the women was organized to} ts. Morton came yoming in|lend great aid. 1903 to teach English in the seventh | Mrs. Morton’s experience in pub-/ and eighth grades in Cheyenne lic work is such as to qualify her| school. Her previous experience in ably and for the duties she may be teaching having been in Hiawatha, | called ‘upon te take up in our, public Kan. school system. She is deeply inter- For a number of years after ceas-|ested in progressive measures, and | \unusually bad, more than half of the, ly capable and able woman than that Wyoming Federation of Women’s |poverty. jclubs, and served as president €or were 8 per cent have risen to 44.4) {crease of 4 per cent for non-Jews, | ing to be regularly employed she was a substitute teacher and taught, in all the grades, and in the high is entitled to the vote of the people of the state in order that the sys- tem may be held on its present high | |charge of the sale of the Red Cross |! Today’s Birthdays. It remained fpr the Republicans,|tural and dairy expert, born at Stock- | The knowledge of hayoe the Huns! Wot, so lange 4. payment after all are capable of wreaking is the one|for what we already have and are bitter feature of AHied sticcess. Iti! shout to receive. “recognized that sdfe way fhust be.’ found to stop this dog-in-thé-manger ‘politically and industrially, has sub- vandalism, if the redeemed @ties and | scribed about. three times as much lands ate not to be utterly ruined by ! pep capita, the baffled invaders. sede Mid bli France, de vas'ted agriculturally, | which moved them? Or did they think! school. plané, and its advancement still con-| For the last_two years she has had . tinued, As a member of the state boards Christmas seals and each year won/she would bring to the administra- a new record ahd handsome pennant tion, of affairs of state, a sound log for Wyoming for the greatest sale/icaljand business judgment. } per capita. Mrs. Morton fs highly qualified | At the outbreak of the European/for the position of state stiperin-/ war she conducted, at the request of tendent offpublic instruction. LIBERTY Bonds to a oe THUANIA AD ply Ships. _-__., __ THURSDAY, OCT. 10, 1918 You We still ‘ave a few n eercecesoee™ - l pevecccsceneveenes i fi 3 a Car, Se in stock, also some ‘ant : q SoARY PL HT gains in; used ,Buieks, Elcars, Chandlers, Overlards, etc. IG Br DON RGET TO BUY YOUR enor ge BOND « [Ry Anmoctatea Press] i Senne cacebsepsocoppooscepasbenceseosocncancesbene x z TYPEWRITER FOR SALE CHEAP In good condition. Call at the Tribune of- fice . i LONDON, Oct. 10,—Thousands | 2 of in Poland and Lithuania, idle and destitute, are described as in a “sorry t” by & ‘representative of the h felief committee in the Judische Press of Bein. — i) Seu of taw rial and lack | if of chinery have cut the means of earning a livelihood from a vast pro- Saray of the Jewish population in th countries, he says, and the mor=| tality is exceedingly high, particu- larly among the young. Conditions in Valna are said to be! 57,000 Jews there being in abject! Deaths which normally IN WAR TIMES, CONSERVE MATERIALS Don’t discard that Broken Casting, but bring it to us to be welded. We save you time and money. Welders end Brazers of Cast Iron, Steel, Aluminum, Brinze and other metals. ALL WELDS GUARANTEED. ; OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING SHOP ‘ 116 S. David Across From Shockley’s. Phone 611-J | | per cent and in Warsaw here in 1917 the rate of mortality showed an in- the statistics show an Increase in the | death toll of Jews of 21 per cent.) LATE CZAR’S “DOUBLE” PRETENDER TO THRONE AMSTERDAM, Oct. 10.Bearing a| remarkable likeness to the late Em-} pefor Nicholas, of Russia, a pretend: | met emperor, is reported trying CLL LLELEOE EIEIO OAL BEST BOWL OF CHILLIN TOWN Bolshevik bondage and to be The fore 15c AT THE CHILI KING LUNCH hribe pessenia‘in the Viadimir dis Back of Grand Central Bar. All kinds of Sandwiches at trict of Russia to revolt against the, popular prices. Quick service, highest quality. Voce emernment according to the i OTIS I ID MS IM TMI IMT A A? Ogni, a Petrograd newspaper. The imposter is said to! have abundance of money and to have claimed he was seeking a racye| among his “faithful peasants.” { ———— } Evérybody must register to vote at| the election November 5, regardless! of whether one has previously voted. | Registration in all precincts opened, Tuesday and will continue all week. | > : N , OTIS AND COMPANY Members New York Stock Exchange, New York Cotton Ex- change, Chicago Board of Trade QO) ee | Today’s Events. ||! Today’s Anniversaries | o_o 1802 "George Pope Morris, a preco-| ° =O | Today-is Fether Mathew Day, the| cious literary character of the, anniversary of the birth of Father Theobald Mathew, the “Apostle of last century, born in Philadel.! phia. Died in New York City,| Temperance.” July 6, 18864. | ie seini-centennial anniversary of beginning of the ten years’ wa (¥ rf Prossians defeated by French} at the battle of Saalfield. | (1868-78): will be observed today in Cuba. Habeas corpus act suspended in| Bohemia: because-of riots at) | Hisoe In China today will be celebrated }4868 as Wuchang Day, the seventh anni- versary of .the great revolution} ie | against Manchu monarchial rule! 1889 The Government of Saxony de-| which had endured nearly three cen+ cided to admit women to pmivi-| turies. leges of the universities. 1893 Count Austrian parliament a bill for electoral .reform, leading to universal suffrage. | Detachment of the Honourable| Artillery,,Company: of London) received at the White House by President Roosevelt. British air squadron bombed! Zeppelin hanger at Dusseldorf. Russians driven back across the | Styr in Galicia. British hotse of commons agree to thirteenth war credit of $1,- 500,000,000. Many persons will recall today as the thirtieth“anniversary of one of the worst railroad disasters in American history—an excursion train collision near Penn Haven, Pa., which resulted | in the loss of more than 60 lives. — Stockholders of the Central {Ver-} mont Railway, at their annual meet- ing today at St. Albans, are expected to take action relative to the agree- ment with the Federal government for the taking over of the company’s) property. Prominent insurance men from nu- merous states are to gather today at Briar Cliff Lodge, N. Y., to partici- pate in the semi-annual meeting of the Westerr Insurance. Bureau. | Initial. steps toward the establish- | ment of a League of Nations are ex- pected to be taken at the conference to assemble in London today under the auspices of the Council of the League of Free Nations Association. —————— 1903 1914 1915 1916 | In the Day’s News — || ———___________0 Today is the forty-fifth birthday of | the Duke Adolph Friedrich of Meck-/ Jenburg-Schwerin; who has been -slat- | ed to wear the crown of the new King-} |dom of Finland—in the event that ul- timate victory should enable the Ger-| |mans to carry out their ins in the | | far north, Duke Adolph Friedrich | Ont et ae ne) was born in Schwerin and received Major General George B. Duncam.'his educatidn at the University of one of the first American officers to| Rostock. For a time he served as win the French war cross for distin-; governor of Togoland. He is a col- vuished gallantry in action, borh in /anel of the Second Regiment of the Kentuckv, 57 years ago today. Prussian Guard and was awarded the Brigadier General John W. Ruck. | order of the Black Eagle. by the Ger- man, U. S. A., coast artillery com |man Emperor, ¢o whom. he is closely} mander of the Department of the related'by merriage. The Duke is an| Northeast, born in Dlinois, 60 years/Uncle of Friedrich Franz, reigning | ago tod |Grand, Duke .of Mecklenbnrg-Sch- | Lord Reading, British Ambassador | werin. | and High Commissioner to the United! een States, born in London, 58 years ago | ‘ today. William D. Hoard, former governor of Wisconsin, and a noted agricul-}| will accept a few pupils WATER COLOR TAPESTRY PAINTING | and the new Chinese © Enamels on bridge, N. Y-, 82 years ago. today, } Prince Charles, second son of King} Albert of Belgium, born in Brussels, 15 years ago today. | John Oliver Wardrop, British Con- sul to Moscow, recently reported to | have been arrested by the Bolsheviki, | . born in London, 54 years ago today. | Porcelain | George W. Smith, mayor of the| Phone 636-R. for city of Louisville, born in Louisville, ; "4 | 54 years ago today. | Appointment io aR F Yin Ago T oday in War | o i Announcement of mutiny in Ga man fleet at Wilhelmshaven. German attacks forced back’ ad-/ vanced British troops on 2,000-yard front in Flanders. President Wilson issued proclama- tion placing dealers in foodstuffs un- der stringent license after Nov. 1, COME HUNTING TO THE BIG GAME COUNTRY in your Car. We will furnish you full cAmp outfit. Saddle. and pack horses, all equipped at $1.50 per day per horse. Guides $6.00 per day. Write or Phone after 6 P.M. GRANBY & NICOL GUIDES AND OUTFITTERS _————.0. WHY DOES THE SOUTH OBJECT? It is interesting to know that the Susan B. Anthony Suffrage Amend- ment was killed_in the Senate by the South—the: majority of the opposi- tion being senators from the southern states’ This from the home. of chiv-| alry? Was it the temptation to display “a litttle brief authority?” Was. it the ancient idea that an independen woman is an unprotected woman] granting woman \ right to yote in| those mighty questions which 0 vi- tally concerned her and her family, in any wayecould interfere with the | The French government is said to! . “pan Germany” is righht. have issued a solemn warning that the | going to pan Genkny, if ‘ We're prompt and efficient prosecution of the war? is, Wyo. fe introduced in the | fl The booths are open from 9 a. m. till | 9:00 p, m, Register today! | Oil Exchange Bldg.. Phone 765 or 766. Casper, Wyoming The Casper Grocerteria All goods plainly marked... We:want you to call and look at our prices and ‘see the saving you-can make by trading with us. : The Casper Grocerteria 143 East Second. Phone 428 Even Light up a Perfection Oil Heater these evenings—enjoy its cheery, quickly drives wut.chill. | less, odorless glow. si oe inition Oil om pi Are they : Start itiagain 4h th leat cli Sone. pall OE ftpes-tgor $6 cadmas meodeny Leap ee Sold by following dealers: CHAMBERLAIN FURN Co. RICH, 5 HOLMES HARDWARE CO. SCHULTE HAN NC HAM 60. HARD) WEBEL COMMERCIAL €0. aseiies THE CONTINENTAL ” OIL COMPANY * (A Coloradd” Cor “PERFECTION OIL HEATERS A 2&2. Triangle Gade Mark