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TUESDAY, OCT. 15, 1918 Entered at Casper a pocorn tans seather: Nov. SA Sng Sees Wyo.) Postoffice WO Roe oe Tole, Associate R. E. Evans Margaret V. Member of the Ansoct! to local news pub! SSHSS ose osoe so oes ° REPUBICAN STATE ° TICKET For United States Senator Frances £. 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 ¢ FP SSP SSIS TTS H OFS OEP OT HOHTSEOOESe PCOS TSOFOLC OSES EXIT ANOTHER GERMAN WORD The movement to eliminate all things German from our daily life has now reached the kihdergarten.|'to do the smashing themselves, while they have a chance. Everybody seems to agree that there| to destroy this evil Thing, as menacing to thejr own life as it is to the/6 cents to 6 cents. 4 is no kultur to be found in the school- room of the tiny tots, but the name is German and must go. The question of a new name seems to be puzzling persons interested, Why not translate it literally, some | people inquire, and call it the Chil- dren’s Garden? That is what the Italians are said to have done from the beginnifig. They called it Giard- ino d’Infanzia. -————0. EARLY PEACE AND WAR BONDS ee son for the lagging of the Liberty Loan is that people generally, in spite of official warnings to the ¢ontrary, are hoping for peace within a short time, and are not investing, partly because of a perfectly human ten- dency to relax after €normous strain, and partly because of a little netv- ousness as to financial conditions fol- lowing the war. Not to invest in Liberty Bonds for either reason is a stupendous mistake. Five years ago United States govern- ment 4 per cent bonds sold at 110. An any one can figure for himself 1s 4 Service. |. BE. HANWAY, ident & Editor. E. nANWar ws: Mer | Cc. Douds | DPHEHHE OS | there where no merciful And now that thev’ve blighted Gernahy's Peace Cry | i ; By CAPTAIN PITT |. Peace, peace! she cries—but what did she do, | To the peaceful country that she marched thru; Where the blood of mothers and children ran Thra streets that were trod by the kaiser’s clan. by peace! they cry—but what did they do, hand could save A stra; soul from & watery grave— © aba eet that sleep in the ocean’s blue. the Lord’s own land, With torch and bomb and the devil knows what, They cry for peace—what a nerve they’ve got; - Germany now has her choice. That is the official verdict pla: ) Germany's piace acceptance and there is no alternative. authorities of the German government are not in a positiomto discuss peace. |sional medal of honor for gallantry or } ‘Those “constituted authorities,” of course, are the kaiser, who sought the field of battle. | to surpass the feats. of. Alexander, Caesar and Napoleon combined; his, medal was awarded -for exceptiona! { with emphasis on the shallow-pated, sword-/ service at the Siege of Port Hudson {royal und imperial family, * rattling crown prince; and the clique of military and diplomatic ‘“vons @iwho have done the criminal Pétsdam will and hoped to share in the booty. land glory of world-conquest. \Kniser Wilhelm and all he stands for shall be abolished. It ‘will not be Union commander in:the Civil War. enough for Wilhelm merely to abdicate in favor of the crown prince, or, some other son, or any other person selected by him. kaiserism, and kaiserism has got to be smashed. | | If the German people have as untlerstanding of the war, 1 capable of further harm. — | will of the ctimifial autocrat must be divided and controlled and made: in- They are crying for peace just to stay our hand. Great God, if peace should come to her now, When she’s finished her damning record of crime, Make it possible that for all future time To Thy will and no kaiser’s the Hun shall bow! KAISER OR FATHERLAND She can torpedo the Hohenzollerns or @ | ge down with them. Autocracy must go: ced upon President Wilson's reply to The constituted ” For sf C iilat ve With them, as the president has so often and so emphatically explained; | oe pet | there can be no peace, because they have proved themselves utterly with- of Newcastle * out honor, consciencless breakers of pledges who are incapa¥le of coven- For Supt. of Public Instruc- *| ated peace. With them we and our allies have nothing to do, xcept to tion i sweep them into the discard. j F ig ‘ i | How they are swept away matters little. We may do it by force, as serge Morton ‘| Europe a oa es ago did with Napoleon; or the German nation jtself 2 ee 9) may be persuaded to do it. The one absolutely essential thing is that He pefsonifjes yet risen to any sort of intelligent and any sense of self respect, they will proceed | o¢ American ities jn which the street If they refuse life of the outer world, if they continue identifying autocratic kaiserism \ with gountry, then Germany must be destroye | pulled apart, and those left of the 70,000,000 4 d. The empire must be oplé who have done the THE ARMY VOTE | their voting privilege. {the uncertainties of the battlefront, | i According to an announceitient of the war department, the, 2,000,000 | | American soldiers who will be in France by election day will be deprived of | Owing. to’ the constant movement of the troops and | says ‘the acting»secretary .of war, it -ojn~ does not:appear practical to attempt to obtain their votes, “No. commission, | It has been suggested that one rea-| therefore, is to be sent to France or England for that purpose, it is unfortunate. It may be unjust.’ But we can stand it if the men { matter at all. | people at | saying. | fighting—we do | just as | were there, so they may reasonably e: j had a chance. the voting. { WORDS A | “Surely if we represent the American people on the firing line, the | home can represent us at the polls!” some of them are quoted as It looks like a fajr emergency division of labor. It should be kept cleatly in mind, tho, that we expect those soldiers to fight as we would like to fight if we} | concerned can; and from all accounts, they are not bothering about i pe | ‘They do the xpect us to vote as they would if they ND DEEDS / The fair words of the new German chancellor would have met) a goat would happen to 44 per cent’ ¢riendlier reception if they had not been belied by the foul deeds of the ionds at the same ratio, The sooner peace is declared the Booher this jump in values will take place, and the quickéef thé peace the bigger tke jump will be, only by the most vigorous prosecu- tion of the war can we hasten -vic- tory; and our share of this is of course to finance the enormous expen- ditures vital to success, by arbas! ing bonds. rides Ra THE SOLDIERS' WAR GARDEN A harvest luncheon was given not long ago Near thé biggest war gar- den in. the country. That Was the soldier garden at Camp Dix. . This garden was an experiment.. It proved so successful that probably all the big camps: will have gardens next | year. String beans and corn on the cob just gathered the morning of the lun- cheon, potatoes dug by machiery, and honey from army bees, were some of the products from the garden enjoyed by the forty guests at the lunchéon. Camp Dix crops for this ore séason —and the garden was started late— are valued at $25,000. The soldier gardeners produced 290 tons of hay. Also they raised enough broom eoth| for 1,000 brooms which will be used at the camp. At the present price of. brooms’ this crop alone was worth while. militaty duty upon their first arrival at the tAmp found'the exértise in! fresh ait-exactly what they negded to fill out hollow chests and build up a sturdiet physique<Two tipusand men passed through thé farm work divis- ion during the past summer, ips Similar war gardens at every camp next year will have a fine effect on the men themselves and will help greatly to reduce tra’ tation need for the camps during the fresh veg- etable season. the —9— 14 Year Ago Today in War.’ Belgian troops made a_ successful attack on the Germans at Dixmude. United States Government took 7 468 ships aggregating 8,000,000. Maté Hari, a Dutch dancer, convict- ed of a German spy, was exe- cuted tthe French. te ZL Many’ men not ready for saivel German army. At the very time that Pftince Maximilian was unctuously professing | Germany's conversion to the principles of justice and humanity, her good will toward all the world and her desire to substitute international law for | against proposed increases But we are soiomnly warned that! brute force, hér troops wete busy bufning and blasting dozens of cities |freieht rates on lumber and certain |traffie changes affecting that ma-|Morgan, 4 niece of Justice Brown j (retired) of the United States Su- j}and towns in France and Belgium. { "That was not the sporadic, wilful work of troops maddened by defeat. It wa8 systematic devastation and pillage, ordered by the German high | command, seeking to create on a far | made last year ‘in their ‘Withdrawal vaster s¢ale such a desert as the Huns from the Somme. It.was in frank accord With the threat unofficially made at Berlin that if the Germans | were forced back to their frontier, they would leave behind them a deso- iiation unparalleled in human warfare. P } This vandalism is largely without military purpose or value. not done in reprisal. It is the sheer | bay, i | owner have them again. 4) Such vandalisxn will be stopped. | rains. | destroys the priceless treasure It is malevolence of a butglar who, brot to he has stolen rather than let the ‘The Allies will find means to. stop it, if they have to burn a German city for every Belgian or French city laid jn But what folly to perpetrate such an orgy a time! Nothing shows more clearly the insanity that réigns in Berlin. 1 Every American soldier ii {him what the Red Cross does séction. The boys will be jrule, works both ways | | tors than marrjed { bécause they have { had so many falls j | And so the kaiser got caught trying to “steal home” again._ So far, so ars a 5 While Berlin cooes like a nest of peace doves, the Huns in France and | Belgium eep right on Hunnjng. the two kaisers, with a Sultan for ko: A bronze tablet has been unveiled t Rovkville Center, Long Island, in Martin, librarian of the public library there, who shortly after her arrival in France last March was killed fn a German #ir raid on Paris. She is believed to have been the first Ameri- can womah to give her life in this war on French soil. Z Has anybody heard cf the crown prince lately? egeaped into neutral territory disguised as a perfect lady. in France is to have alittle pamphlet telling 1893 for the folks at home thra its home service] glad to know that the Red Cross, like a géod British aviation officials have decided that bachélors make better avia- ten. We should think the married man ‘would be safer, taken cut of them. Probably he has The question now is, will Turkey last till Thanksgiving? ] The two czars—Nicholas and Ferdinand—have been done for. Next, od méastre, France's famous order, tae Legion \of Honor, is ‘composed of 16 |weven grand officers, 20 eommand- jers, 30 officers and 3850 otdinary |members, all to be elected for life. — a Nearly one-third of all the street (railway conductors in New York City iare women. LOM tae \val career,than Francis of destruction at such} \ nized his eminent services, \in its po’ and keeping | for another term in Novem! Altho dent: Republican, he it , likewise an‘ ardent supporter of Pres jident Wilson in all his measures & ‘win and end the wat—and, as experi ence has shown, the Ptesident he: sofely needed Republican help ir | war legislation. Americanism anc patriotism are watchwords with Warren. i Senator Warren was born in Hins ‘dale, MassachuSetts, June 20, 1844 | was educated in the common schools and at the Hinsdale accademy. Ib | 1862 young Warten, then only eight teen years old, enlisted as_a privat in the Forty-ninth Massachusetts Regiment of Infantry. He servec |thru his enlisment as a private and (noncommissioned officer in the samc “regiment and his experience stooc |him in good stead after he enterec } the senate, particularly while he wa: chairman of the powerfulp commit ‘tee on Military Affairs as he was ® number of years. He is one of twe senators who received the congres In his case the | After service in the wat he be- came captain of a Massachusetts | Militia company and engaged in farm- \ing and stockraising. Early in 186§ his atttention was. directed to thre 7 > |. Today’s Events, | OSsdasdavae i cule eanc? |” 3837th day of the great war. Gentennia] anniversary of the birth of Gen. Irvin. McDowell, a celebtated Birthday greetings to! Vice Admiral) ; William S. Sims, U: SN, command- jing the American fleet in the war | zone, who is 60 years old’ toda: | Trenton, N, J., today joins the list railway fare has been increased from Former President/Theodore Roose- | velt has accepted an is.vitation of the | Liederkranz Society of New Yotrk to | deliver a Liberty Loan address before \its members tonight. | A second Democratic primary is to |be held in Lonisiana today to decide | whether EdwatdiJ. Gay of Luther E Hall is to be the.candidate for United States senatof, Unless called off because of the mn- | fluenza epidemic; the annual conven- | day at, York. Verfnont Republicaris are to. meet in convention at. Burlington today to ratify the ticket nominated in the pri- | mary and adopted a platform for the |coming campaign. Cleveland is to be. the meeting place today of a General Conference of the Russian Orthodox Greek Cath- olic Church of North America. |, A congress of Central European rnations has been called to meet inj \nationalities, relations, interests and |common policies of the nations ta be liberated, ; A convention of lumber manufac- |turers and dealers of the South an \‘da@y to formulate a strong protest’ in the} | terial. i + A HERE RA SRG SERS TID | Today’s Anniversaries |! | cow. {1860 Peking, the Chinese capital, sut-| ~ rendered to the’ British and French. { 1868 Joseph Hooker was commission- | ed a maior-general of the! United States Army. | The Tufks were overwhelming- | ly defeated by Russians in &/ great battlé between Kars and Alexandrapol. Joseph B. Cheshire was conse-| crated cOadjutor bishop of the| Episcopal- diocese of North Carolina. ~~ 1901 Prince and Princess of Wales | (King George and Quéen Mary) | ‘were _ welcomed a Kingston, | ] Ontario 1914 The Allies advanced between! Lens and Arras, | 1915 Serbs took the offensive against! the Bulgars, carrying the fight- 4 ing into Bulgarian territory. 1916 puied forces Serunied Athens, i seized enti Greek navy and * — took neiinete. forts on ' | 1877 j other military works. | Inthe Day's News i fepen. 2 et NR eae eae «) | A stalwart figure surmounted by aj Massive head—m personality certain to errest attention anywhere. Such is Vice Admiral William S Sims, the commander of the American naval forces operating in European waters, who today is in line for congratula- |tions on his 60th birthday. Admiral memory of Miss Winona _ Caroline | branches, ‘each branch consisting of | Sims is a native of Canada. He en- tered the United Stetos Naval Acad- emy from Pennsylvania,. and was graduated in 1880. Tn addition to the routine duties of his calling “he has server as naval attache at the Ameri ‘ican-embassies at Paris and St. Peters- (burg. From 1907 to 1909 hé was |nave!l aide attached to the President. mist y giving him prac’ him in the Senate, ber. And so it ‘ent world’s war the Senator has been a tower of strength. great. possibilities. for stockraising _what is now the State of Wyoming. |were, 7 - we de Fémoyed to that part of the coun-| The signal cofps was thé connect-|tists appointed by . Govern. ing link between the jafantry, attil-j|ment to make a Pictorial history of xy and thus became’one of the early Aoneers. = Senator Warren las a natural ap- -itude for politics and has béen much n public office since the early sev- enties. He was president of the ¢ert- ate of the Wyoming legislature in (873 and 1874, and again a member of the senate in 1884-85. He was wice. a member of the council of Jheyenne, and also mayor, and served hree terms as treasurer of the terti- “ory of Wyoming. In February, i885, ie was appcinted Governor of Wyo- ning by intil 889, he was appointed Governor of the Territory by President Harrison ‘nd sefved until the Territory \dmitted State, whe other boche shell and cuts the cOm+/ fo give Women a Iurg “eeu a tae $6 the United pete pth munication. There’s nothing to do but/ the war ae PI 2 vhere ‘he has served ever since with |%° out and find the cut and fix it,! ment of Labor at W: ington has au- he exeeption of two years in the sarly 90’s, from March 1891 té March 1805, .when there was a deadlock ‘h the Wyomitig ijegislature and no ection ef a Senator tould be brot about. , Senator Warren has also played a ‘rominent part in National politics. The first Republican National Con- vention which he attended was the one at Chicago in 1888, when he was a member of the Wyoming delegation. At the cenvefition in Philadelphia in 1900 and in Chicago in 1904, 1908. 1912 and 1916, he was chairman of ‘the Wyoming delegation. 1s chairman of the Republican Terri-| 7 ‘orial Central Committee in 1896. tn these several capacities he had wnuch to do with shaping the desti- nies of the Republican party to which he has ever been devoted. senate he has always been wart and has never been afraid to meet his palitical around. the making ofthe earlier tariffs and] of Chicago women is organizing the iting an optometric specialist has fought.valiantly for the cattle,|Women Student Training Corps in|f~ who ‘presctibe correctly sheep and mining “interests of his |'order to secure for its members defi- for them. We can tell all adopted state. 3 nite training for some particular w. abott. your eye wants after While this course may have met with the disapvroval of some of hir own varty and the Democracy, his constituents have heartily avnraved of it. 3 . i necially the an ore heer righ Poke per [had a lifetime knowledge of and ac- quaintance with the Senator, reryrd- less of party affiliations have always) Sailors exhibited their continuing cenfidénce in his ability and desire to most creditably represent the intelligence and high standing of the people of his ‘state and to obtain for them ‘every possible benefit thru his effi- ciency, and. tireless. industry; they are going to ‘see that he is re- |turned this fall. Senator Warren, had two children | Paris today to discuss the reconstruc-j by. his first wife: Frederick E. War- ‘| tion of central Europe on the basis of ren, a prominent business man of the West, and a daughter, Helen Frances Warren, who married General John J: Pershing, now making such a bril- ant. record in our war with Germany f | but-who ‘lost her life, with-three lit- | Southwest is to be held at Dallas to-|tle daughters. in a fire at the Pre- sidio of San Francisco in 1915. On June 28, 1911, Senator War- ren married Miss Clara LeBaron j}preme Court. ‘ Senator Warren is a man of tom- manding appearance, six fect or more 4, in height, and fs fh splendid hex |1812 The legions of Napoleon began'His rugged physique plainly indi- | the historic fetreat from Mos-| cates his early training and military experience. LIBERTY GARAGE. Phone 988 COME HUNTING TO THE BIG GAME » in your car. . We will fumish youfull pn hic SY camp outfit. : ‘ ipped at $1.50 per da: oreo, Guides $6160. per’ day. Write or Phone after 6 P. M. an : Ea. an should. In the pres- : General Robert Nivelle, one of the keep wnieations alway’ open be-}famous French commanders of the ‘tween headquarters and the villages} present war, born at Tulle, France, newly captured Where. the doughboys 80 years ago r | Ernest C. Peixotto, one of the ar- the wat, borh in San Francisco 49 years ago today. ee Ernest lery, ambulance service, and head- quarters. The signal corps did won- r . B Charles Chndsey, noted au- testo aad Renting work. Bory |r, how aupesinlenteas ef the De. It’s. no cinch being the signal | ttoitspublic schools, born at Nebraska corps after a division that is continu-| Citys Neb., 48 bonis ago today. ally gaining ground, As soon as the “NOTICE infantry’ makes a push you have te > = get ».telephone line strung into the To eK ed Lodge No. 15, farthés} ruins’ or woods or wheat/" y are\hereby summoned to meet in front of the jénée. of dur de- field, no matter hoW many -German Shells are spattering eclat over the céased’ bfother, Harry G. ling, as 179 South Ash street, on Wednesday afternoon, October 16th, at 2:30 Then, about the time you get & wire stretched along the ground and) o>clock sharp, to pay our respects to our deceased brother. ident Arthur and served November, 1886. In March, in working order, call up headquar- ters to tell them, “This is the n isiting brothers welcome, ‘post at Squeedunk, give us a ring to, GEORGE W. CAMPBELL, W. M. see how she works,” along cémes an- rr and probably more boche shells are trying to make more cuts in communi- cations, or even cut you off, The signal corps had wites every- where in bushes, along the ground, on poles left by the boches, under- ground through ruins. Headquarters say they never had suck quick ser vice, and they never out of communi- cations with regiments longef than the few minutes it took a signal corps man to imspect the wire and repair a break. A signal corps man was stringing some wires Across a wheatfield. “Some war this,” he said. ‘‘I haven’t had a sieep for more than two days. suppose I’d fall asleep on the job if it wéren’t for these shells that come whistling along, Duck. There comes one!” 3 g After it exploded, he said, ‘They kind of scared-me at first. I thought every one’ was meant for me.” a To prepare themselves for some es- sential service, a group of University thorized the appointment of two wo- men members Na State Advisory Committee of United States Em- ployment Service, ° He served In the za 5 stal- T is a rather serious~met- ter for a perso who feels the need of glasses to ~ pat off from day ty day vis- foes upon that He had much to do with a short investigation ahd can assure you that the lenses we will furnish you Will ex- actly’ meet ‘your visual , re- uirements. Now don’t hes- ome in, and see us. Barnett Hynes Op. Co. needed by the nation. —— * At the beginning of the mt war he was president of the War College at Newport. The Admiral is a man of the athletic school, a lover of out- dcor games, neither smokes nor drinks and would ake 2il of Uncle Sam’s do_ lik e. Th: voters of Wyoming, es- aarly settlers Who have Pan }POOSeoeoDerecoosooesoesooooosooSooooNOsCS If YouWantaCar,SeeUs ,° "We still have a few new cars.in stock, also, some excellent bat H Agains in sed Buicks, Elears, Chandlers, Overlands, etc. 3 DON’t FORGET TO BUY YOUR LIBERTY BOND % snasbhgne, 79:3 and rae _ TYPEWRITER FOR SALE CHEAP ~ _ In good condition. Call at the Tribune of . fice. 74 -IN WAR TIMES, CONSERVE MATERIALS Don’t discard that Broken Casting, but bring it’to tis to be aro We te you eye brah we ers and Braz » Steel, and other metals. ALL WELDS GUARANTEED oad , OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING SHOP 118 S. David Actoss From Shockley’s. * “Phone 611-3 h. Patronize the wn CWecarererreeee, _- BEST BOWL OF CHILLIN TOWN 0 \ 1c AT THE CHILI KING LUNCH y Back of Grand Central Bar. All kinds of Sandwiches at & Quick service, highest popular Prices. ? $ hy SSascancsianaaieaUnianRNannninaai seer commen ree reed Car and’ Truck Storage First-Class Repair Shop ‘ BERT TULLIS, Shop Foreman Gasoline and Oils 180 So. Elm St. ee The Nicolaysen Lumber Co. COE SEG CED can sateen Omer] EVERYTHING IN BUILDING MATERIAL : RIG TIMBERS~-A- SPECIALTY COUNTRY ° COAL FARM: MACHINERY — GAS ENGINES eee Phone 62. Office ‘and Yard, First and Center. Keep Your Pledge—Buy War. Savings Stamps Saddle and pack horses, all r day: GRANBY & NICOL GUIDES AND OUTFITTERS Dubois, Wyo.