Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 16, 1918, Page 2

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‘he Casper Daily Tribune| ** sessions of the Fifty-fifth Cor- Daily “4 IDUNE) ness are ns follows: f - Yin the first session he introduced at Casper, Nadegan County Wypming, nine bills, eight jaf which were \pen- Publication « es > ‘sion and claim ‘bills; the ninth, a ‘bill ; Building. |for the erection pf a public building. Business Telephone__- =. 15! No action was;taken in the Pita <= >. |on any cue of this measures, further) ee iinge ton: Noy. 32,016. shen reference to appropriate ‘com- DE << ‘| mittees. | aR steal Press Service. | The most important newer et eae oO | Session was the s0-called Dingley Bill, | J. E. HANWAY, President & Editor “to provide revenue for the Govern- | RARE #. en Mér-| ment and to encourage the industries | RE. Evens. et V. C. Douds of the United States.” i He consistently voted Nay on all) ember of the Associnted Prenn. The Associated Press is exclusively the proposed amendments that were} entitled to the use for republication carried overwhelmingly ; vena Yea ea of ajl news dispatches credited to it or| motion to recommit the bill; vote na hoe an ede this shane | Nay on the bill’s final pasage and the! kereth. adoption of the conference report. | |The vote in the House on final pass- | age was 205 to 122. Osborne made no remarks -cf any} SOSSC HSS SSS CECE SD DAILY > * ° ¢ »* Interesting Notes on Recent’ Allied Objectives Beirut, one of the latest objectives of the Allies, is the chief seaport on the Syrian coast of the Mediterannean and one of the most ancient settlements of Phoenicia. More than half the (population of the place is European and American and foreign capital is ‘heavily invested there. The town is beautifully situated in the narrow, garden-girt coast-plain at the foot of Lebanon. “2 * Bakue, the Russian port on the Caspian sea which has fallen into the contre] of the enemy, is a city of about 250,000 inhabitants and lays claim to rank next to Petrograd and Moscow in industrial importance, Baku has a petroleum industry that produces raw material to a value of $50,000,- 000 yearly, and is the distributing center to the tmge agricultural regions| Caucasus, the Trans¢aspia, and Northern Persia. 7 © & Durazzo, ‘the seaport town on the coast of Albania, which has just of the al Y 4E. 8. Drary in Wheatland World.) | f ‘WARREN AS A WAR SENATOR We believe that Francis E. Warren uld be re-elected to the U.S. sen-' ) Six years ago when he was e canili- [iste ‘we opposed him. At, that time hehe couritry was at peace and there ‘were no extraordinary problems con- ‘day, problems with which Se: ‘Warren has become | lservice as a soldier of the Civil War {and later ‘fof many years as‘a_ member ‘of the military committee of the U. |S. senate. 4 |. There have been things in Senator | Waren's official career which we did |not approve, And he has done many jthings worthy of the highest com- ‘mendation But he has donesthings. _—has been a doer all his life—and |that alone is a recommendation in ‘these strenuous times. Since the be- 7 Character in the House during that| been captured by the Allies, was a place of considerable importance and ginning of the war he has been a |tion and un invaluable nid in the shap- | ing of war legislation by congress. ‘fronting the nation as there are to- familiar — thru| For these reasons we ‘believe that During the four years |political prejudice should be laid aside and that Wyoming should send Sena- |} |tor Warren back tothe senate. NOMINATIONS ARE MADE FOR ANNAPOLIS EXAMS | Senator Warren and Congressman |Mondell have announced the follow- ing nominations of young men to take the examinations.next spring for entrance to the naval academy at An- |mapolis. The senator and the con- j@ressman have each three nomina- tions so that out of ‘the following list six of the men named will have the opportunity | aeademy. | Roy Edward Spicer, Laramie; John | William Breen, Sheridan; Ralph | Witham Murray, Garland; Elbert ; Charles Sheldon, Upton; Clarence Don Morgan, Glenrock; James Henry | Corum, Encampment; Walter Clar- euce ‘Russell Jr., Sheridan; Robert Linton Kissick, Cambrai; Leland Har- ‘old June, Buffalo; Lester Kimmerick j ~ mary * REPUBICAN STATE */ session or ‘upon that important meas-|splendor in ancient days, but since it’came under the sway of the Turks jstaunch supporter of the administra- + TICKET ¢/ure -by which Wyoming's industries | at the beginning of the 16th century it has fallen into a city of sorry dilapi- e | especially were so vitally affected. — dation. In ancient history it occupies a place as the scene of Julius Caesar's) _ When the Sundry Civil appropria-/1,.+ successful resistance in his struggle with Pompey. * For United States Senator @/|tion bill of that session was passed Rete * Fratices E. Warren by bie aoe! Sete a — rere Rheims, which has been wrested from the Germans by the Allies after ° f Chi o|ot spending Reha er ar having bi Imost blotted off the map ‘by “Hun bomb and ‘torch, ‘is one fe) eyenne public lands, military posts, etc., in having been almos lotted off the n D ss * For ieee | Wyoming, Osborne did not vote. of the most famous of the historic cities of France. ; ‘our o Frank W. Mondell @|__ When the House resolved to adopt | and more that it has been the scene of conflict the historic buildings of “ie - Pe e the House Rules of the Fifty-fourth/ Rheims have suffered irreparable damage. Most famous of these is the| 6 of Newcastle Congress as the ‘rules to govern the | 70-year-old cathedral, where the kings of France were crowned for * For G |House during the Fifty-fifth Con- 5 Or Neer gress, Osborne voted Nay. Evidently Centuries. z t ” >, Robert D. ‘Carey $ he did not want any rules. | i : . . 4 eh inde © of Careyhurst *! To facilitate the business of ‘the The little town of Cambrai, which has been captured by the'Ganadians | * For Secretary of State | Congress, a fesolution was presented after much hard fighting, is located on the eastern bank ef pagers at ili Ct calling for a-special order for four)| cone end of the St. Quentin Canal. For the greater part ‘of its history, a W E. = plin ~ bills, making appropriations for Defi-' until quite recent times, the town wag a fortress of considerable strength. , of Laramie id Siencies (war messure), evar tir it was, indeed, Charlemagne who first built walis atound it, and from * For State Treasurer be a oe Sa ang ce, and that date it has figured prominently in the history of northern France as . A. D. Hoskins Pe voted Nay. Ditto, on a similar reso-|# Place “forever in dispute.’ <3 te be Kemm i i i ill. ¢ of Ke lution or! the Dingley Bill. , ; © For Stat Peares — e During the second session he in- Albania, where the Italians have launched a vigorous campaign, has Py er L C3 fh . ¢| reduced eight bills only. Four pen-| been a bone of dispute between rival powers for centuries past. The dittle - X. Je sion, two claims, one about Depart-! country is situated between a part of Greece and Dalmatia, and just across : of Newcastle & | mental clerks in Washington. and one the Adriatic from Italy. ‘The Albanians, tho sharply divided into tebe * i pA Ppesisede cdepetice to y i 2 r s distinct: by themselves. For Supt. of Public Instruc- Micicie ak tlamsiaMsitin weremitedcanndere (otek? different types, nevertheless are istine ly a race by en I & tion ¢ ing that session, but one of his first- Other primitive population of the Balkan peninsula have been Hellenized, e H i es ty; Latinized, or absorbed by Slavonic immigration, but the Albanians ‘still Katherine Morton *| session bills covering a small private ‘ i e f Chi ~| claim was reported, but not passed. retain their ancient and difficult language, and preserve the customs and re} eyenne On a bill to provide ‘a military institutions of a remote antiquity. d é storekeeper for the Army, he voted 5 -_* * % PPEOSE SOLE OS SS HINay. “The bill was carried in the The Rhine, which is expected to become, the Inst line of German <> __— | House by yeas against 67 nays, We all have two ears and one mouth,which proves that we should do twice as much listening as talking. But in the matter of Liberty’ Bonds, every pocket has a voice, and is en- titled to speak for itself. —_—__ WE HAVE THE FOOD. | The news from the farm is as cheering as the news from the front. ere ‘is hardly a-crop of any impor- tance that is not turning out better! than was expected, and in nearly every case the production is above} normal. ‘ Spring and winter wheat conibisie' will be about 920,000,000 bushels, the second largest crop in our history, Corn, though nominally 440,000,000 bushels less than last year’s huge production, may still equal it in value, because it is of better quality. The 2,780,000,900 bushels ‘will provide plenty for beast and man, ‘and help in the accumulation of wheat surplus. The gat crop is the third largest o: record, almost equal to last. year’s crop, and of ‘unusually ‘high quality, ‘The tobacco crop is the langest ever grown. Barley, potatoes, tice cotton, apples and sugar beets all look ‘better ‘than they did a month ago. In no vital crép’is there‘anything approach- ing a failure. We have nothing to waste, but ‘we have enough for the esential needs of ourselves and our allies, Nature is with us again, and again the American farmer has done his duty nobly. In food, as well as in men 2nd materials, we are now ready for the big effort that is to ‘win the ‘war as we want to win it. sap See ll WHAT DID OSBORNE DO? While John .E. Osborne is touring the state, villifying the work of Sen- ator Francis E. Warren ‘and Frank W. Mondell, who are busy with con- gressional duties in Washington, and telling his hearers what he ‘would have done had he been in- congress, it might be well for the people ‘to know what he did while setving in congress. But don’t overlook the fact that he now says that any person who votes for the return of thése men is a traitor, and sending a message of cheer to the kaiser. Osborne’s record during ‘his short service in one congress was entirely one of negation rather than construc- tion Not one single bill which he intro- duced in the House was enatted ‘into law. Three small and “unimportant bills (two of which were _ pri claims) were his only mef&sures ever reported. from committee to the House. ‘Not only did they fail to ‘become laws, but they were not even passed by the House during Os- borne’s term. Mr. Osborne could maintain, pér- haps. that his inability to accomplish anvthing during his Congressional ca- and, became a Jaw. Qn a bill to establish a uniform system ‘of barikruptcies throughout the United States, commonly called the “Bankruptcy Act,” a very import- voted Nay. It passed both Houses by large majorities and became a law, as is well known. When the Deficiency and National Defense ‘Act, carrying’a ‘lump sum of fifty millions for the latter purpose, ‘was passed by the House unanimous- ly, March 8, 1898, obviously Osborne votes Yea; but on the resolution pass- ed by the House April 18, 1898, just a month later, ‘authorizing and’ direct- ing the President of the United States to intervene and stop the war in-Guba snd for the purpese of establishing a stable and independent government of the -people therein, which, as we !all. know, became a law, Osborne! ‘ant’measure to the entire:country, he | defense, is one of the world’s greatest rivers, both in history and in com- merce. Rising in the highest Alps in central Europs, it reaches the North |sea after a journey of 850 miles. The river gathers its waters atthe base of melting glaciers, plunges over great rock !masses toward its lower levels, cuts thru ‘the wildest mountain valleys, traverses‘a wonderful high, broad plain and then, entering its famous gorge, wanders thru exquisite panoramas, to finally emerge into the lowlands of>Germany and Holland, where its banks are dotted by scores of great commgrcial and industrial towns. WORLD IS MADE SMALLER BY WAR AS SHOWN BY MEETING OF THREE | BROTHERS NEAR FRONT IN FRANCE By FRANK J. TAYLOR , to leave at midnight. They parted, WITH THE AMERICAN ARMIES| Dot expecting to get together in war- =z Sa iL). / time- IN FRANCE, Oct. 2. (By Mail.) —} Trails Cross Again |vacillated and switched his position) War has made the world infinitely | about ‘by voting Yea on a’ motion to ; smailer, as the following tale of re- ‘agree to a substitute rekolBti aie abe |markable reunions along the front Nays defeating the motion by a arge| shows. It is-the story up to date of | majority: and by voting Yea on a| three brothers, and‘it began back in| motion to recommit the resolution to} California, where they were in a col- the Gommittee on Foreign Affairs,| lege two years ago. * which, of course, the Nays also de-| Several months before America |feated| ‘Then he voted Yea-on the} entered’ the-war, these brothers were | final passage “of the resolution, which|'seized with the desire. to come to was carried in the House by a vote| France. At that time the big possi- of 325 to 19. He did not vote at all) bility was the ‘volunteer ambulance jwhen the conférence report was] service, but owing to financial cir- agreed to in the House by a vote of} cumstances ‘but one brother could 341 -to 6. come to Europe. -Brother Number And yet, when the House was try-/ One then was sent atong, the other ing to-grease the war machinery by | two thinking they might never see adoption of @ resolution for special| him again. order to facilitate ‘the pussage of 2/ About the time America entered bill to provide ways and means tO} the war, Brothers Two and Three meet the war expenditures, Osborne} pag the opportunity to come to voted Nay. The resolution ‘was, of} France in the same service, and course, adopted started. for New York to embark. Then on the War Expenditures bill In France, Namber One was ‘sent to ‘a training school, and “‘Number/ Three -assigned -to work -in- -Paris | bureau. The thrée were now sep-| arated ‘and months passed, during which One was in a hospital for a! long time, and Two stayed in Italy, || with Three in Paris. Then one day | \within 10 minutes of each.other One! and two walked’ into the office in{ (which ‘Three worked. ‘It ‘was ‘a ‘re- union of surprise. | Again they parted, this time One| staying in a Paris military bureau, | Two going to an aviation center in France, and Thres to the ‘front. Months again passed, until "Three ‘had a chance to leave the front a ‘couple of days. He went'south of Paris to a town where he knew One was agair in school. Another surprisewas in store. Two had flown over -100 miles in an air— itself, after having voted against the There Brother Number Two joined) plane .over the week-end from his | the aviation service, and parted from aviation school, where he now was in-| order to facilitate its consideration, he voted Yea on a motion to recom- |mit, and Nay on the final passage of | the ‘bill by the House, and Nay again a < tees = $ when the final action of the House| , Unree continued to France, where was recorded by its vote on agreeing} PY luck he encountered Number One to' the conference ‘report. jon a permission from the French Of course, that War Revenue bill/ battlefront. It was then that both upon which Osborne voted Nay was| One and Three were transferred »into ‘ef Vast importance. It was the only|the same unit, and sent to the Bal- measure enacted 'to provide for rais-| kans to serve with the French army ing revenue to-meet the additional ex-|f the Orient. They served there un- |pense of the war. And.yet Mr, Os-/til their unit was recalled, wondering }horne talks about Senator Warren|#ll the time if they would ever see not supporting revenue measures en-| Brother Number Two, the aviator, acted by-a Democratic Gongress when| Whom they knew to be in England the country was at peace. | somewhere thru the single letter that Wien the bill known as the Indts-}had reached them. trial’Commission Bill, authorizing the| Cressing Macedonia, Greece, and appointment of “a non-partisan com-|the Mediterranean, Brothers One| mission to-collate information and to/@nd three ‘arrived in Italy, where a consider and recommend ‘legislation | Frenchman at the desolate army post! to meet the problems presented by| where troops embark from trains to Yabor, agriculture, and capital, was| boats and vice versa handed one of brought up in the House for canenttt them a telegram. It was from the sonsideration, Mr. Osborne’s remarks |-brother aviator who was ‘at a little were short and to the point. _ |dtalian town -on the road to Rome, He said, “I object.” Later in the thru which their train passed en same day evidently after his blunder} route to France. He’ was in’an avia- \had jbeen called to ‘his attention,‘ he| tion school. - Three, the trio figuring it was then broken. Luck Is with Them | Structor, to the location of Number One, arriving “at the ‘same ‘time as Three.. Needless to say, *they “cele- brated a spontaneous and entirely unexpected reunion, two of them meantime having ‘become -officers, jand the third being within easy. range lof “bare” | Reunions, unexpected.and surpris- ing, are constantly occurring ‘along the front, usually in the course of | the army’s work, 4 Brothers One and Two and ‘Three, having no plans, but being optimistic, | agreed that their next meeting shall be “behind the American lines in Germany, and /not too distant in joint of time.” I Earl Mortimer Oscar Marvin George Charles Rice, Douglas; George, Douglas; | Bishop,, Superior; ; Marks, Powell; Hugh Edward Brown, | Cody. pea | List your property with us. The Security -Loan Company, Room 4, Kimball Bldg. 10-1-t£ | > i Patronize the LIBERTY GARAGE | Car and Truck Storage First-Class Repair Shop BERT TULLIS, Shop Foreman ~ Gasoline and Oils Phone 983 (180 So. Elm St. a 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 ‘Dubois, Wyo. HO nee ME MADEGAS Peeueccsccaneecoocess: FOR:COOK STOVES OR RANCES prcoesovesceessocenves Generated from Commen Coal.Oil and—AIR reer wes due to the fact that he was|submitted a parliamentary inquiry to} ‘The train stopped: 40 minutes in would seem vom Season! of prin aly of entering the| 4 iN ‘as a candidate for United zerenensconeseee ences eeovepecccsseseccenescesonepessoseos oe z oneer i If You Want.aCar, See Us ; : We still have a few new*cars .in stock, also some excellent bar- 3 H gains in used Buicks, Elcars, ers, Ovetlands, etc. H 3 DON’t FORGET TO BUY YOUR LIBERTY BOND 3 Hi %y = ‘the. tor bear the ‘trade’ _ RUDOLPH 3 ‘Graduate Royal Musical Academy, Teacher of Voice and Pi: Studio: Smith-Tartar Building Durbin and Second Sts. Telephone 849-M DEVOE PAINTS H ERS’ HARD] ‘STOVES STOVES STOVES ‘Natrona Lumber Go. 353 North Beech - Phone 528 LET US FIGURE YOUR ‘BILL Buy War Savings Stamps— WE SELL THEM Building Material of All Kinds. Freight Hanling is OurBusiness AND WHITE TRUCKS Are largely responsible for the Dependability of Our Service. - SEE US FIRST . Operating 17 Motor Trucks Ask for Harbison Telephone 908-480. NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS. . . Ford Bidg., Sand Bar ‘Open from 2 p.m, to 4 a.m. Chop Suey, Noodles, Short ‘Orders streets 3& aoeeecccccocvcesccccccces: ITER FOR SALE CHEAP _ Ingood condition. Call at'the Tribune of- ‘IN ‘WAR TIMES, CONSERVE MATERIALS » Don't discard that Broken Casting, but bring it to‘us to be elders an razers m, Steel, Aluminum, Bronze (OY GRVACEIVIENE WELDING SHOP 118 S. Davi Across From’ Shockley’s, . «© Phome 611-3 ;cUE SRR Ee | BEST BOWL OF CHILLIN TOWN 15c AT THE CHILI-KING LUNCH & Back of Grand Central Bar. All’ kimds of Sandwiches at h popular prices, Quick service, highest quality. N : a member of the minority ‘in the|the Speaker, asking whether it would House, But that same condition now! be in order at that time to withdraw confronting Senator Warren in the his objection. ‘The Speaker replied, Senate Has not interfered with shis/*It could not be withdrawn now, be- ability'to, secure beneficial Jegislation| cause tk objection has had its ef? for Wyoming during the years, since fect to prevent the consideration at March, #913, that the Senate shas|the-time the measure was proposed.” been demoeratic. is | But, as is well known, the bill be- Mr. Osborne fathered twenty-three came a law regardless of Mr. Os- bills in aH, during his two 'years’séry-borhe’s temporary blockade, ‘and the ice. Not one of them became a law | laboring people had its benefits, or even passed the House. In'the third session he introduced He opposed two of the big:matters | six bills, one’ pension, one claim, one of his time—the panish-American war monument, one to establish an execu- revenue act, and the Dingley ‘Tariff/tive department, one to establish a Act, conceded to have begn|the’ best military post, and-one tendering the measufe sever enacted for ‘th protec- thatiks of Congress to a religious or- tion of American industries and labor ganization—none of which became a and “for the provision of the neces- Jaw or even passed the House. } sary revenue to cover the Govern- On an amendment -to the -Legisla- ment’s EXPENSES. Wp j tive; Executive and Judicial support The) facts in ‘detail, covering (‘the |of the Civil Service Commission, he| )pertaining to the Marine Corps—the | the Italian town, time enough for | brothers One and Three to find “Two, (and get permission for him to ride | to Rome with them, returning next day alone. It was the first reunion of the “league,” as they called it, Be-| | for the train reached Rome, wrecks | stopped it, and in-a muddy, wet lit-| tle “Italian town, Number ‘Two ‘had voted Yes. | jected. On a bill to reorganize and increase the efficiency ‘of the personnel of thes Navy and Marine Corps a vote was re- corded in the House on the sections! The amendment was re-% October 17th. organization which has been making} such wonderful showing as a part of our forces in France—Osborne voted ’ Nay, but’ the sections were ‘agreed to! by a vote of 127 to 64, | Coun THE WONDER OIL-GAS BURNER ‘MORE’ KINDLING MORE €OAL OR WOOD MORE $ : MORE SOOT IN STO ' DUST, SMELL OR DANGER Cannot Explode. ' A:Beautiful Gas Fire at Moderate Cost. Odorless, Sanitary z Demonstration at 125 West First Si., beginning i ty Agencies Ope PIPE n. PURDY : K) Let Us Quote You On _A complete stock of dumber, - ; RIG TIMBERS lime, cement and coal Phone3 | BUY W. ote AR SAVINGS STAMPS — |

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