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FOE CRUSHED] STUNG 10. ON HEELS OF CHECK HUNTER ITALIAN GAINS (Continued from Page 1.) | Fiver was passed on a wide front. | Cavalry teached the ‘plalae necth | by Well Known Guide and Hunter of Dubois in Let- OF BIG GAME Reports of Heavy Snows Denied) armistice terms submitted by General Canine Afflicted with Rabies and SATURDAY, NOV. NO INDULGENCE TOBE SHOWN evo ULATES AUSTRIAN FOE WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.— SETTLES FATE Intima- | | {tion of the drastic nature of the Frothing at Mouth When Shot by Center Street Tailor | Diaz to the Austrians is given in an | official dispatch from Rome saying: The American Library association is supplying soldiers with educational |’ | |books from first readers to technical | Houx’s political “obituary” says) \ works. This service is extended to| that he “was associated with Colonel | Z Mary Hamilton {,, | ; Jeven the soldiers close to the bis | Cody in the building of the Cody County Superintendent of School; on llines. , 1918 m4 Vote “for Mary Hamilton for ‘construction gang with a tent ‘County Superintendent of Schools on could be called “associated” lee Non-Partisan ticket. 11-2-2t probably true. — Wheatland ———— | (Democratic). pe AIDS: EDUCATION. > it Vote for 11-2.2¢ canal.” Well, if the following ap the the Non-Partisan ticket. : SERVICE We are endeavoring to give our Casper customers the very best Richards & Cunningham of Pordenone, thirty miles beyond ter to Tribune “The Italian victory is hourly as-/| ! best when it comes to the middle Piave. Italian patrols’ have reached the Tagliamento Fiver. A letter which The Tribune re-| ceived from A. H. Grandby, a hunter Materials Thrown Away in Flight letter is as follows: (By Associated Press) " “I am pate that es hunt- ME. as ~ ers are afraid of being snowed in up RO! 7 Nov. 2. The Austrians |" this part of the country, and have are fleeing to Udine, 50 miles east noticed articles'in some of the news- _ of Piace, according to reports. | papers which would lead one not ac They abandoned a great quantity quainted with this part of the coun- f Stara = f try to believe it to be a fact. 5 of war material in the region o “Now in justice to our country,| Udine, which was Italian headquar-|and to sportsmen contemplating a ters before the 1917 retreat. jtrip to our country, I want to say Péstiisction 6f the Austrian arm-| that I have hunted in these mountains ies continues along a front of 125 seen a time that our ranch, two miles is miles. - In every sector the enemy | #bove Dubois, could not be reached r; a § 9 easily by auto in mid-winter, and up| is “giving way before the Allies |to December 1 I have not seen the| smashing blows. |time that hunters could not travel} When Fadalto Pass was taken/|with a pack outfit anywhere on this side of the Great Divide. It is usu- a way was opened to Belluno and ally from November 1 to November 1e Austrian armies were Sepa-|15 that the big heads are taken. By rated. Simultaneously the fourth! that time the hunters have a good | “4 * _| tracking snow, and with warm clothes Italian ony renewed its fierce at and a comfortable camp it is sport tack in the Monte Grappa region supreme. to hold there nine divisions and See year ged a eas to .|six ladies out hunting the las ree xeeeryes between Feltre and Fon !weeks of the season with two guides. zaso, endangering both points. {They were over on the Jackson Hole Quero-Feltre Pass was captur- side of the range. They did not come i : in until November 20th or later. ed. The yea falling back had their elk and had a pack string of | and not attempting to defend him-| twenty head of horses. | self, Austrians are seeking safety | “There is not a possible chance of | i i \hunters being snowed in if they have in Trentino through the valleys of | Miner ornide, Please kill this snow the hon mountainous region | scare, as there is no possible chance aroun rent. of any danger befalling hunters at East of the Piave the Austrians | this time of the year. . aes | “Very truly yours, who are fetreating precipitately | “A. H. GRANDBY.” toward the Tagliamento are espec-| ially hard pressed by Duke Aos- ta’s army on the south. | LONDON, Nov. 2—(Official) | —The tenth Italian army troops crossed the Livenza river between! Motta Sacile and pared : bridgehead on the east bank o! the river. The British are fighting with this army. Mr.. and Mrs. Roy C. Wyland of South Wolcott street, who have both been ill with influenza are both re-| id t to be pee 5 Fay, tee aise. a ning of the war for their medals. rarer vr fans y Originally soldiers were charged | The body cf Frederick Brisley| about two dollars for their medals, was taken ‘last night to Frederick,|then in November, 1917, the price | Oklahoma for interment. E. L. Bris-| WS raised slightly owing to the in- ley, the father, and Mrs. Brisley, wife | creased cost of ribbon. Last January of Frederick Brisley and their little the price was boosted again to about daughter, accompanied the body | $2.50. aia not ‘come north ‘a wan capactad. | AUSTRIANSON | TEUTON FRONT | ARE LEAVING | ees Attornéy William Marx has moved his law . office from the Neuman building op East Second street to the Lynch building in the office formerly | Cceabieeny % Races: | [By Associated Prens.) Miss’ Madelyn Seabright, one of| age ie set shpat AT} the teachers at the East Casper school} ¥ » Nov. 2.—Austrian forces | is M at ber home on Bucknum street |" the Some front an the. Boevre m r , +, ‘% .\region are entraining for Austria i with Spanish influenza. Miss Sea. Ne nanorted hers’ bright came to Casper this fall from} aot OT McDonlad, Pa., to do departmental | | work in the schools, a Ee eae * || Inthe Day’s News || [. jhave been falling in the big game] |country, and that there is danger of| {hunters being snowed in. Grandby’s a TAX ON HEROISM IS REMOVED BY | FRENCH RULING. | {By United Press} PARIS, Sept. 80.—(By Mail.)—| Although the cost of living continues | to soar, the high cost of becoming a ;hero has taken a sudden slump. Pre- mier Clemenceau issued an order that the state henceforth will bear the | cost of the medals conferred upon | heroes, and furthermore refund to soldiers money paid since the begin- *o* In many states upon the advent of | the “flu” epidemic one of the first) things to be closed was the saloons. | In’ Wyoming only Governor Houx’s health officers closed everything BUT the saloons. It is because our chief executive considers the saloons less dangerous as disease breeding Ee Se ee er Count Julius Andrassy, who was! named Austro-Hungarian foreign | minister in succession to Baron Bur- ian, is a Hungarian statesman who) for many.years has been prominent| in the political world of Europe. He | places than the churches and the. | W#8 in the revolutionary movement. ‘ of 1848, then went into exile, and we anes Times (Demo- | wag not able to return to Hungary| junti] the general amnesty of 1857. | Subsequently he was elected to par-| - . | e = The following casualties reported |iisment, and succeeded the famous by the commanding general of the/qoint Rhiist asteoret ani 7 rye ¥ reign minister. It} American Exppditionyy sores are!was while occupying this position | sire a Se euth weation today: _.\that he issued the famous Andrassy | | ‘nete to Turkey, setting forth the ir- Wenndett deezae undetermined--157| -educible minimums of reform de-| ounded slightly |manded by the Christian powers. 325 Count Andrassy was at one time very Wounded Severely Mae net | popular with the Hungarian people. | Conrad Batt, Hastings, Nebr. | Walter Bloch, Zurich, Mont. | George R. Clark, Moran, Wyo. | 5 FROM CALIFORNIA | Tate E. Folk, Brady, Neb The stars shine down into the bay, mes And the waters gleam like jasper, Pra Are lh cad ap § Di But the stars don’t shine here half ‘so 5 » , 8. D. Wounded, Degree Undetermined } Robért L. Ross, Forsythe, Mont. Adam Schleiger, Berthoud, Colo. The a | 5 7 lull red moon, | saison C. Reimann, Midland, Ciiee tap tes talents | And shines out in the gloaming, But the moon doesn’t shine here half so dear | _|As it does in old Wyoming. | Written by Lee Mortimer, on sen-} }try duty at Shore Acres, San Fran-! cisco Bay. Mr. Mortimer is a brother fof Miss Daisy L. Mortimer of the Cas- |per Business College. | carat tod —y * SERVING WOMEN. ray As they do back ther_ in Casper. | { Slightly Wounded Clyde Anderson, Havelock, Neb. Glen I, Murray, Omaha, Neb. oo Puta cross in the top square, oppo- site “Yes” on the prohibition amend- ment for a dry Wyoming. —S— se Vote for Mary Hamilton for County Superintendent of Schools on the Non-Partisan ticket. pay | The '¥. W. C. A. has more than| ————— to lean.on everything. The|100 secretaries serving in France in) Security. Lean Company, Room 4,|charge of foyers for girls in thé mu- Kimball Bidg. 10-1-¢f nition factories. { | | | 1 | | | ‘yet. |for over ten years and have never |\ \woman died last night of Spanish) |rangements have been made | the chapel. pre going to vote Wet, for if ‘tate goes Dry the men who must live out now will all be able to go into they can get no more help. how are you going to vote? Will you vote Wet and work for someone else, or vote Dry and work for yourself? | - f Julius J. Voight, a tailor who suming such proportions that any kind of indulgence toward the enemy which has insulted our brethren, de- crime.” Two VICTIMS OF “FLU” Johnson plumbing shop. IN CASPER ON FRIDAY’ The dog was first seen run: |\wildly up and down the street, dog as the canine was jumping Dave Cumelow died last night at ‘the Red Cross hospital after a short tthe illness of influenza which developed | ¢on¢; ‘nto pneumonia. Very little i known of Mr. Cumelow except th: he worked for the Security Bridge}; company on city contracts. No fu-|, neral arrangements have been made! ..o. The body is at the Shaffer-Gay | yoigh chapel. | Boyle garage. ion was attracted to the ani frothing at the mouth. it said that after the dog shot the blood which came from Mrs. Marinas DeVora, a Spanish|} Jack, influenza at her home in the North! Burlington addition. No funeral ar- they didn’t. show up in time body is at the Shaff time of going to A FUNNY REASON. In one of the rich farming districts of the county the ranchers say they the to remove it early this morning. - —_ and then Laborer, business for themselves troops overseas. 2 for Vote Mary Hamilton 11-1-3tx 11- HMA. Keen Kitter Tools are inevery case made of the best steel obtainable and are made by thoroughly expert tool-makers. ‘Throughout the whole line of these tools will be found the same sterling quali quality that has made the Standard. All Keen Kutter Hatchets and Axes are wedged with the Grellner Patent Wedge which prevents the head ever flying off or working loose, and are sharpéned ready for use. The Keen Kutter Trademark coverg_a com- plete line of tools and ‘cutlery. Sold by a KEEN KUTTER SHEA RS ~ SCISSORS HOLMES HARDWARE COMPANY Holmes to Holmes—Casper, Wyoming. ~ 3 Prescriptions Good Drugs Are Hard to Get, but We've Got Them—Expert Pharma- cists Are Also Hard to Get, but We've Got Them In spite of the demands that the government has made upon drug supplies and pharmaceutical help, we are one of the few drug stores that are still able to fill prescriptions accurately and perfectly. ‘You will run no chances when you bring your pre- scriptions to us. So play safe Kimball Cash Drug Store THE PIONEER STORE THE REXALL STORE a shop next to the Wyatt hotel on! North Center street, was the hero of land ide from Dubois, denies the| V@stated our lands and fought with the hour this morning when with his | [Sublished reports that heavy snows|the utmost barbarity would be altrusty rifle he shot and killed a mad biting at the door o the Handbury- \jumping and biting at the radiator of a car that was being filled with gas at Mr. Voight’s at-| *®¢by is unusual actions and when it ‘at! dashed into the basement entrance of he plumbing shop, took advantage of jthe trap to shoot the animal which wound was 80 dark that it was almost The police were notified that a |mad dog ‘was running wild but as yet and | Voight took the opportunity to make er-Gay away with the insane cur. Up until press the dog’s |body lay at the side of the street altho the stweet cleaners were asked SENDS TRAINED WORKERS. ' As rapidly as men can be trained | the Jewish welfare board is sending war workepie,t> serve the Jewish | County Superintendent of Schools on P; ¢ runs | service and good treat- ment. Company The great drawback during the past six months has been poor deliveries i from the factories due to various causes. ‘| ning | then | and By constant pleading and pounding we have at last secured a large per- centage of the choice merchandise we have contracted for. Commencing ~ Monday, November 4th We will sell to you at very much reduced prices, the following: LADIES’ WOOL DRESSES Navy blue, panama, with satin col- lar and cuffs, trimmed with buttons; and up-to-date in every particular. For this Occasion. . . . . $15.00 ‘imal Mr. | was the Mr. for LADIES’ TAILORED SUITS These are made of the season’s most fashionable fabrics, the coat is beau- tifully lined, and the cut and style is the very essence of refinement and good taste; worth up to $50.00. ThisSale . . . . . . . $35.00 2-2t LADIES’ SEAL PLUSH COATS Lined throughout and the best cold-weather wrap on the market; worth up te $45.00 | Sale Price, $27.50 — For One Week Only ! HY “Think Richards & Cunningham When You Want the Best” BUY W. S. S. BUY W.S. S. Get Into the Habit of Buying Good Clothes! IT’S A GOOD HABIT TO HAVE. MEN WHO make a practice of buying good clothes—and paying a good price for them—are economical and thrifty. They select the best because they know, in the long run, the best - is the cheapest. 601 We recommend KUPPENHEIMER CLOTHES PRICED AT $30 to $60 MAKE A HABIT OF BUYING clothes at this store. You'll be prac- ticing the good-clothes-buying habit —the genuine economy habit. Webel... Commercial. Co. “THE BIG BUSY STORE” United States Food Administration, License No. G13057 Watch Our Windows. WV atch Our Windows.