Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
a ern PAGE EIGHT POPULAR OPINION SAYS NO TO BOCHE PROPOSAL | (Continued from Page 1.) of action it would not contemplate a cessation of hostilities, nor nego- SHEET QUOTA LINEN SHOWER tiations for peace with the German government, except upon con- AJ} (ther. Articles Oversubscribed ditions amounting to unconditional surrender. People Asked to Suspend Judgment Until President Considers Answer The government has asked that the people suspend judgment on the German note until the presid lent could consider it. If the opin- ion of the man in the street is reflected by editorial comment coming from every corner o fthe country, the people already have made wup their minds that there should be no temporizing with the enemy, whose word is worth only what the victori ious Allied armies make it. It is assumed that since Saturday night at least informal ex- changes have taken place between Washington and the capitols of co-belligerents dent may determine his action before the day is over. It is suggested that the president might ask a jo'nt sersion of the house and senate to communicate his decision and reasons for it to congress, the coun-|could not be obtained. try, and the world. No Armistice Without Unconditional Surrender, Demand London Journals’ LONDON, Oct. 14.—No armistice unless accompanied by Ger- many’s unconditional surrender, is the dominant note of comment on peace in the morning papers here today. The Daily News says that the German note implies that Germany by Large Margin and Lack of Advivees Accounts for Only Shortage The time*limit for the linen shower for hospital supplies in France has expired with Natrona county’s quota over subscribed in all of the articles demanded with the exception of bed sheets, four hundred and sixty these being collected, while the quota was five hundred. These would undoubtedly have been Informed of views of the Allied premiers, the presi- S°cTed if the Casper people had known before that sheets would be pieced to the proper dimensions where ones measuring the exact size This infor- mation did not come, however, until jthe canvassing had been completed so that_only voluntary subscriptions were received during the past few days. The quota of 310 bath towels was over subscribed by more than two Di hundred, while the 620 hand towels, | 430 handkerchiefs and 100 napkins all were gathered with an over-supply of each. SEE aed Money to loan on everything. The of | THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE #6. DUHLING EARLY PIONEER Harry G. Dubhling, one of the early settlers in Casper who has seen the small frontier settlement grow! to a city, died this morning at his home in South Ash street after a three years’ illness of Bright’s dis- ease. Mr. Duhling was 52 years/ of age and had lived in Casper or the vicinity since early childhood when! he came to the great, adventurous’ West from his birthplace in the Key- stone State. For many years Mr. Duhling was a cowboy, riding with the best of them thro the sagebrush and mountains In the early nineties he opened a butcher shop in Casper, and later started a confectionery .and fruit) stere which is now Schulte’s Confec-| tionery. ‘This was sold out later and | Mr, Duhling purchased a ranch, run-| ning the Duhling stables which, in late y . has been converted into a gar- a Mr. Duhling was a hard-work-}| ing progressive man, and his friends arg only numbered by his acquaint- argges. r_ Duhling married a Casper ng lady in 1893, Mrs. Gertrude A. ling still surviving her husband.) His parents and a brother live in the south. No funeral arrangements have yet) been made. y 2 Ri Money to loan on everything. The accepts defeat as the verdict of war, but expresses doubt as to For- eign Minister Solf’s reply relative to the elimination of military rulers. Germany may hope by approaching President Wilson alone to be able to sow seeds of jealousy among the Allies,” says the News. “This is of great importance. We must be careful that no shadow of distrust or jealousy comes between the Allies at this critical time.” NEW DRIVE STARTS IN FLANDERS DISTRICTS (Continued from Page 1) within 8. miles of Valencien- nes line northeast of Cambrai. British-Americans are perhaps up against the lincs and out- posts. because the fighting there has been unproductive of important gains for several days. Attorney James G. Stanley left Saturday evening for Denver to join Mrs. Stanley and their daughter, Mary Edith, who are visiting with Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Taylor, formerly of Casper. Mr. Stanley will return Wed- nesday, Mrs. Stanley and little daugh- ter leaving, for Los Angeles, Califor- nia, to spend the winter months. Pei EE Mr. and Mrs. Orville Cunningham of Parkerton have moved to Glenrock where they have leased the Glenrock hotel from Johhn Arnold. ogee Mr. and Mrs W. C. Chapple have left for Washington, D. C., to see their son, Church, who is reported sick. Their son is in one of the army camps near Washington. se © M. P. Wheeler received word today that James H. Cody, formerly real estate agent for the Wheeler agency, ‘and Al. L. Kirk, also of Casper have arrived safely overseas. Pum ya NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS AN- NUAL MEETING. Notice is hereby given that the an-! nual meeting of the stockholders of the Exploration Oil and Gas company will be held at the office of the com- Security Loan Corhpany, Room 4,/ Security Loan Company, Room 4, Kimball Bldg. 10-1-tf Kimball Bldg. 10-1-tf - — | Truck Tires CANE Truck Owners we are at your service If your truck was being drawn by hurses you would not think of allowing vour horses to perform this work day in and day out, half shod or poorly shod. You know that would be poor economy to sacrifice the horse by saving the cost of having it properly shod. This holds true of YOUR TRUCK. DON’T allow your truck to haul heavy loads day in and dav out with TIRES WORN DOWN TO THE We are here to give you quick, satisfactory ser- vice. Qur COMPLETE STOCK of ALL SIZES IN SOLID TRUCK TIRES awaits your order and our hydraulic press will attach the PRESSED ON types within a few hours. Half the truck tonnage of of The French are within seven-/yany, room 7, Smith building, in the teen miles of Hirson, at the City of Casper, State of Wyoming, on Western tip of Ardennes. If Monday the 28th of October at 11 they seize Hirson they will split o'clock in the forenoon for the pur- the German armies. |pose of electing directors and trans- Since July eighteen the allies acting such other business as may on all fronts have taken half a Pope paras peters oe aati ahi . ate: is tl lay 0! tober, muillion ‘prisqners. 1918, BERTRAM N. BEAL. On Secretary. LONDON, Oct. 14.—British puptish Oct 14, 15, 1918. @re pressing in on both sides of | OR. earn, Douai. Marshall Haig’s offi-| The percentage of women employed cial statement reports gains|in the metal trades in the United north and south of the city. States has increased since 1914 from 4.6 to 12.9. PARIS, Oct. 14.—The French are i swiftly following the German retreat on an eighty mile front between La- fere and Argonne. They captured a dozen additional villages, great mass- es of shells and other supplies. pabtdocr toa Cae Women students are now admitted to every department of the Universi- ty of. Maryland. It is estimated that 100,000 women are now employed in munition plants and airplane factories in the United States. Women are now employed for the first time in the niechanical end of the rope-walk at the Charlestown (Mass.) Navy Yard. After a year’s trial in New York state, under varying corditions, the Woman's Land Army has been pro- nounced a success. Labor Electric Traveling over some of the wild- est mountain country of West Virzi- nia, working as practical surveyors, was how three-young women of Mar- tinsburg spent the summer. Women physicians of New York City are soon to open a war hospital for treating the returned wounded, in which all the physicians, surgeons, nurses and other expert workers wil! be women. Two American Red Cross workers, Miss Sarah Fleming of Boston and Miss Sylvia Coney of New York, have been made honorary members of the Bersaglieri as a reward for their services to this most famous of Italian fighting organizations. The United Setates Ordnance De- partment, the. American Foundry- men’s Association, and the National Founder’s Association have adopted 2 ruling that a woman engaged in industrial work shall not lift weights in excess of twenty-five pounds. a dace Money to Joan on everything: The Security Loan Company, Room 4, Kimball Bldg. 10-1-tf | CLL LLL LEA AAA AAALALAAALLLLALAAL LL AE: » America is carried on FIRESTONE TRUCK TIRES EARL €. BOYLE 231-237 North Center Telephone 9 Savers. Get that Washing Machine Now then you can have more time for your Red , Cross work and other household duties! JUST CALL Natrona Power Co Phone 69 MM MAMMALIA AAPL ADEA AELALALLEALALL / & <= ‘ill | 15 YANKEEE PRIVATE CARRIES GROSS S SHORT IN CLAIMED TODAY, stoma Pye cus Fakin Wong. Y; Man PARIS, Oct. 4.—Private Jean Fournan of New York City here- after will carry a cross on his back as a souvenir of the great war. |The wound that has marked him is so unusual that he is known at} American Military Hospital No. 1, and doctors, hurses and patients have watched Fournan is a member of one of the (the “Red Cross Man,” his case with unusual interest. American regiments recently engag- jed in the fighting around Fismes. He has been in France since last Octo- ber, and went through heavy fighting on several fronts without a scratch. One morning a short time ago, just as his company went over the top, headed for a Boche machine gun nest, a shrapnel shell knocked him out. He had a momentary stinging sensation and then awoke to find himself on an American sanitary train from which he was taken by ambulance to the hospital. When he was carried to the oper- ating room, the surgeon looked over him and then called the other doc-| tors to come and look. The boy had been hit by two pieces of shrapnel, one of which had: gone down his back so close to his spine that only a mir- acle saved him from paralysis. The 3 MP Watch Our Windows es a where he is now convalescing, as other had crossed at right angles, leaving the mark of a perfect cross on his back. Fournan hes tnose pieces of shren- nel in his Red Cross treasure bag, He says thep’re “lucxy pieces” because they only left a scar.” CZECHO-SLOVAKS SEND JAPS THANKS FOR AID TOKIO, Oct. 14—A special mis- ‘sion representing the Czecho-Slovak troops in Siberia has arrived in Japan to express thanks to the Japanese ‘REGRETS’ OVER PEACE | NEW YORK, Oct. 14—Regret that | President Wilson was not encourage) |by Germany in his policy of peace | before America’s entry into the wo, jis voiced in an editorial in the Ber|i, Tageblatt. It says: “We are of the opinfon, based on valuable evidence and information, that Wilson strove for the fame of a peace mediator, that it would have been a wise policy to encourage him in that and that all the rest was not a wise policy. But whoever dared to speak of a Wilson peate at that | time committed heinous treason.” FICE RIOTS IN JAPAN SPAHAD TO MINING MEN TOKIO, Oct, 14—The social unrest in Janen which started with the rice riots spread to the mining districts of southern Japan. The miners recent- ly requested an increase of wages to meet advancing prices. In Yamagu- chi prefecture miners set afire to the house of the mine owner. Troops jeovernment for sending military as- sistance. were called out. Twelve rioters were killed and 176 wounded. Doing About Get quality. THE BIG BUSY STORE United States Foud Administration, License No. G13057. BUY W. S. S. C hakakk AQ tthhb bbb bAEDLAPZLADALALE A Wool goes up as the war goes on. Your only true economy is to buy less and bet- ter. Shun the high cost of cheap clothing Insurance in a suit by a house that, in these times and all times, maintains its standard of Suits Priced at $30.00 and Up Webel Commercial Co. What Are You : Clothes Value Watch Our Windows I LAT . AA Bulla OOO TUTTE TES TES TT IN EXPRESSION often used with: reference | to some chronic kicker or agitator, and appropriate, but not so in Tribune could “continuall value of its classified advertising columns to the buyer and seller in real estate, auto- o the man or woman in the field for em ployment, or the employer needing help. Their worth has been tested and found to be exactly what claimed. They are cheap and most effective and classified advertisers will profit by using these columns con- sistently and assiduously, The Casper Daily Tribune PSO eM VAM STM SW SAMA all cases. The ly harp” on the Tm cS iA NNT FAUT