Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 5, 1918, Page 2

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1918 seAn through France and Belgium)) —'\t|stand these ancient bell-towers with garded by the people with a love and | pride almost amounting to supersti-/ tiot. ‘The wanton destruction of! jthese fine old land marks and the] \Stealing of the bells has been one Aanocinged irreas een more cause for hatred of the ravag- United Prean Service. ing Hun. J. E. ANWR, ident & Editor.|“ “Alas! we have no bells left to CARL ANIA, Bosiness Met. | ing” has been the plaintive cary as R_E. Evans Margaret V. C. Douds | the people flocked to greet the allied Member of the Axnocinted ua. soldiers. The Asseciated Press is exclusively! But the SEMI Sows dittakstes Created tort oe | poten FSrogts. ae not otbar wide reaited to va ottakes | “pared, probably because the Ger- Nerein. r }mans fled so hurriedly, though with charactristic delacy they used the jlower part of the structure for a\ garage and machine shop. | Happily, belfry and bells are in- tact, and when Albert and his Queen Sre-entered the city, the bells of Bruges, called by many the sweetest Fy Europe, pealed forth their joy from theold tower which for six) hundred years has watched life come/ and go across the little square, like | all of Flanders so rich in hitory. On that great day when Right triumphant shali declare peace to a 1 nation, always did eat too much, | war-weary world, the bells of Bruges but of late there has been a decline |™®Y well be first to ring! Away back in 1914, Germany an-) nS . : th nounced that she was about to eat| Business? Telephon Entered a per (Wyo0.) Postoffice as second-c) er, Nov. 22, 1916. GERMAN DIGESTION The Germans, individually, and as | . “Ring in the thousand years of} the world alive. Shs By 1915 she had decided that per- aaps her eyes were bigger than her) °. stomach, so she canceled part of her} ROADS order, deciding to be satisfied with | An army is no more effective! RR their wonderful chimes of. bells, re-|_. | pr ee ee Tana) In the Day’s News © || “Ring out the thousand wars of old,|°f Benjamin F. Butler, commander, governor of Massachu- setts, and Greenback party candidate |for president in 1884. National election States, involving control of the next Co: |complexion of numerous State ad- | a bombing expedition on Metz, the Alsatian capital. AUTOM ae oe BANE.OF UTAH [By Associated Press] | i} eit for the United Press.) | LABORING | PARIS, Oct. ',—(By Mail.)—It}) ) - aa fas 4 young army doctor I met at’ aj ‘k, No Eats,” Is Motto ““sorial evening” wha aid to.me: | and Put into Prac. “I wonder if you Réd Cross peo: by All-Russian Con- couldn't do something for ‘m chap gress, Is Report ates ne ya rs pa 2 MOSCOW, Oct. 80.—(Correspond. SALT LAKE CITY, Nov. 4 The | ee nde of all of us, but there isn't "°° of The Associated Press.) —“He little smuggler—the one who brings G Phing wa tin do. vie hin. You Zay 0 does not work does not eat,” is in a pint or a quart of liquor, is the). had. bee 10 Se 15 ‘yearp, iat ¥ @ chief motto of the Soviet repub- man who gives most ‘trouble mowa-| ocular acta! sok aha the outfit lic ‘embodied in the constitution ap- days, according to John &. Corless, | Hooked 4 0 do Fiegnce phab idee ved by the Fifth-all-Russian Sov- [sheriff of Salt Lake county, which | cided he was too old, end that there Ket Gocgiyes apd just printed and put borders on. Wyoming, from which’ was something the matter with his state most of the prohibited liggor | heart. oa they save nin his ak Ceres enc ee at ; ; arge. He was all broken up about]! ined exelu- Fk rg pe pgp Rompe because ever since our declaration| sively to men ph ene over eigh- 4 > var of war, it appears he had just been|teen “obtaini hi by against smugglers since the prohibi- jliving to get to France with the boys. | vroduetive publicly beneficia) is- tion law became effective in *Utah, well as thc | Well, he found out when they were} bor, those ns engaged and to his efforts the capture of S c okay ehick Biter \going and how, and stowed away on|in di esti ( much of ,the illicit liquor is said to/the transport, hoping they would re-|the former the possibility of produc- be due. ‘or example, workmen jlent when they got over here. For 10] tive. labor. Every road leading into Salt Lake of all Ties, en- }months he has been hanging about /“ind employes ‘ coumerth guarded terdenats abentte without a cen of pay. He takes on| caged in industry, trade putare, and a careful watch is kept on trains into general circulation. 1558th day of the Great War. Centennial anniversary of the birth in the United ngress, as well as the political sommercial domination of the world,|than its transport service, and its/Ministrations. ind military domination of Belgium, transport service is at the mercy of President Wilson will exercise his rights as a voter today by casting his iorthern France, Russia, British co!-i.o.4, It is the ame with the ocia]|bellot at Princeton, N. J., where he ynial possessions, the Balkans, Italy ind most of Africa and Asia. When 1916 came she decided she sould keep from starving if she got, sack her own colonies, held the ter-|° i A itory she had stolen in all directions, | ‘°F %@w material must be got to} } i ore ind dominated Central Europe ana the factories. Food must be got to Russia. } the markets. organization. we grapple with comes back, sooner }must be got to the consumer. 1917 found her some-j>" ve | Little by little, the railroads im- what upest by her giet of death) i pat a they i Nad ot ae eee ak ae own | PTOve- ut always, as they in- Glomies:) Dantes) “Rurobe and Rus-| Tease their carrying capacity, they | is |find the natural growth of busiress| Early) in 1918/ realizing, that ft joutstripping them. Little by little lifferent elements \of her digt |e Aust cakes Li) ue burden tras disagreed with Her, aid that |*P4 is ates for ia railroads, But he could not: possibly retain them, mid-way in its aes career, the he said she was willing to be. satis- motor-truck ffnds__ itself ied with her own colonies, would|°@PPed by poor highways. maintains his legal residence, In addition to selecting their can- aber ; didatés for public office rae EE. coomeue. P TOMO inclantodgy; ell: pam Gepsostie| \proposal to call a State constitutio; r later, to the transportation fac-}convention. A possibi e voters | wanens Sdtdeedn: | posed In Nevada! Louay’s Anniversaries , 616—Jonian Islands were taken oe. | civil war) 1854—Battle of Inkerman, in which) 1862—General | 1886—George W. Baxter was 1900—The Boers under General De 1912—-Woodrow nal} 1914.—Serbia served diplomatic re-! lity that the “dry” ‘area Ph Ne 4 d of the United States may be increas-| 1816 ons OF ang ier engin jed lends interest to the elections in Finished products| Missouri and Wyoming, in both of |which States a prohibition amend-| jment is to be passed upon by the} | voters. a In today’s elections the interest of the suffragists will be centered chief- ly on Oklahoma, in which State a wo- man suffrage amendment to the con- stitution is offered to the voters,for jacceptance or } The elettions of ators in Montana. and Nevada are {given added interest by the fact that handi- |in each state a woman is among the contestants for the toga. Miss Ann Martin is running as an in-/ 1916—Allies launched a new grand Year Ago Today in War ierlin claimed grédt victory over | the Italians on ‘the Taglinmento. | American patrol boat’ Alee@o tor- nedoed and twenty-pii¢ lives lost. | German authoritied‘im Belgium im- Province of East Flanders: \so when they try to send him back|ete., peasants and : that I guess the officials are letting) who do not engage hired labor for eae a pe eesigage: sn Cha things drag along in the hope the old| profit.” a aa | boy will pick off before they can get ldiers 0; Soviet prohibition days a considerable quan- jim transportation home. He just ae ‘and See ‘who 5 ah | tity was brot into the state, but in|pint do enough for the boys who| workmen or soldi bab are. dues. recent months the amount has been | i: ; orkmen 9! ers | are inca. - |tome in from the front. The fellows} nacitated are also permitted to enjoy jpass him a bit of change now and| franchise. Foreigners resid £ ling in Rus- then, of course, he gets his meals free! ia who fail within the Soviet’s defi- lat the army canteen. He has no right BR nO ste wien coeinae aes. tert tothe iuniforai but nolones heath nition of workmen and soldiers are } iform, ballo’ heart to take it off him. Besides, it ba oe ny * Az eee wouldn’t do, for he hasn’t anything!) 4 pied £0. all ranchise in specific: " jelse to wear. We can’t give him work wh oe oe ya regardless'o : in our hospitals, because he isn’t in pober af oe “3! > tir tthe army, byt there are lots of thin, labo en it Fi peat oy 3 me he could do, and he’s crazy for a job OF FOF profi » live on unearned in- with the soldiers.” come, suena) interget. 20m. capital A day or two later I dropped in at| °F a Mae frome eoperty or enter. the Hotel Ste. Anne, and asked for| ?'8®:. onks an Cerppnen s the state went “dry.” Several truck the man who had stowed away on the! denied the right of franchise, to- loads brot across the Wyoming bor-|\sransport. PreSently they produced | %¢ther with officials and agents: of der late at night have been inter-} t the former police, members of the him, and the sight of him warmed my rome . cented and seized. A piano box | i | former reigning house, insane “per- heart. For anything more pure Yan- eA 2a ae st J shipped with a carload of household! is ii goods was found to contain 15 cases. Keo fies oo taeend Ringe £59 Absolute prevention of the ex- One of the difficulties of the sheriff's) «The Red Gross needs a man in | Ploitation of one man by another in deputies is searching every vehicle une of its military hospitals,” I said, | the chief avowed purpose of the So: eoming into the city or county. In|“a man who will tend fires and do|iet constitution. G some cases it is necessary to unload ibaa jobs of plumbing.” abolishes § several tons of fruit or vegetables | “That's me,” he said. fiscates / without results, but in many in-| So now the stowaway has his| of the chu; stances a supply of liquor has been hearts desire—working with ‘She| ™ found under loads of produce. Some \boys” and wearing his uniform unmo- ae Woe biggest seizures have been |jested, and, also, peldien Ay eel- made at Bingham, a mini: camp jing is “doi is bi ingh: ining P |ing that he, too, is “doing his bit. the hrorite ‘oF bie Sorting peaple near here, but that camp is now said to be nearer actually “dry” than ever Money to loan on everything, The| °Y& the exploiters.” | in its history. Security Loan Company, Room 4,}* = = - Destruction of the liquor on hand | Kimball Bldg. 11-1-tf may not take place, tis said; if the government” wishes "It" ¥6tr ‘fuel “or! medical purposes. “Recently the po- lice department sent several thousand gallons to the motor transport corps of the army, thus saving the waste aud providing a much needed fuel. exceedingly small. “Sheriff Corless has several thou- sand gallons of liquor stored in the basement of the county jail awaiting destruction. Already many hundreds of gallons have been poured into the| sewers. Destruction of that on hand will"take place after the decisions of the court, which in several instances |, has been asked to determine the right of the sheriff to destroy the liquor. The biggest seizures made by the sheriff were of stocks stored before der the Britain. protection of Great 50,000 Russians were defeated by a force of 14,000 British and French. McClellan was re- lieved of the command of the Federal army of the Patomac. ap- pointed governor of Wyoming Territory. Wet were defeated at Botha- ville by the British under Gen- eral Knox. Wilson Jersey was electe of the United States. of New President lations with Turkey. on a mission to the near East. attack in the Somme district. dustries, such as mills, mines and ing Tailways for the purpose of “i ‘Try our compartment plate lunches. White ‘House Cafe. : 10-26-50t} R. Soe tare AE roe List your property with us. The Security “Loan Company, Room 4, Kimball Bldg. 11-1-tf a fine of $2,500,000 on the sive up her stolen territory and gen-| The interurban roads were ‘rously relinquish a part of Austria’s,|/too good before this Se ? *3 none dependent candidate, In Montana the| Today s Bitthdays truckk era\cadidate is Miss Jeannette Rankin, | 0. \the first and only congresswoman. | —— ——— Poa ; Poche hotest Mn o% thake hands and start all over again. | started. But by now she is so sick that Jl she can do is crawl home, lie! lown and call in Od Dr. Allies. then she will be shown that in the) nterests of the public ‘health, any) sation as sick as she is cannot be llowed to order anything it wants, | ‘ut must take what is prescribed for t. GETTING READY FOR PEACE | There is no question that the time) as come for the United States to} egin preparing for peace. We are] o thoroughly on a war basis that the| ransition will be a big, slow and ifficult. matter at best. There are ilmost countless problems to be! vorked out—problems affecting the) estoration. of oyr soldiers to the | conomic life of the country, prob-| ems of labor and capital, problems, f public utilities, problems of do-| restic and foreign trade, problems} f manufacture’ and mining and agri-| ulture, of shipping, of houSing, ducation, of transportation, of de-| eloping our national résources, of; eorganizing our governmental de-} artments, and so on indefinitely. | It cannot. be truly said that we re as ufready for peace as we were or war, because in the big organ-, zation we have developed for war vurposes, consisting of the best rains of the country, we have the} aachinery at hand for tackling the) eace job. We also have the benefit} f plans worked out by England and/ ‘rance, which have been engaged in| his task«for two years. The main} hing is. to ‘provide some central) uthority, and get down to work- The plans are proposed at, Wash-} © ngton. “The chief difference be-| ween them és that one would place he responsibility in the hands of Adolph of Louisville, Ky., will arrive gtound-work of the map is polished) ———————____———_| he exectitive and the other would|in a few days to take the pastorate of jasper, and the chief towns are rep- save it with Congress. They have broken down since, in thousands of cases. of the paving was never intended for such loads a are now carried over it, at destructive speed. Many that were strongly enough built have |fallen ‘into ruin because of failure to; House Nov. 5, 1605. make repairs in time. There is hardly a state in the Union that has yet taken full cogni- zance of the new situation. What is needed, in most cases, is an en- tirely new highway policy. It is of mo use to complain of the devastat- ing truck. The truck has come to stay. To make it smaller or drive it slower or run fewer trucks in trains would be a backward step. The logical remedy is to build roads to accommodate larger and faster trucks bearing heavier loads, and to keep those highways in repair just as a well-run railroad keeps its track. And the plans must be adapted not to single counties, but to whole of states, in order to get the best re-| fsults and propertly distribute ‘the | cost. This policy requires more than good road engineering. It requires ja willingness on the part ofthe en-|cotton and corn, two of the chief tire public to pay the bills. Those bills will be bigger than ever be- fore, if the job is» well done. But the returns, in added rdqal ‘estate |values, better market facilities and |products of the North and West, are improved business conditions, still bigger. So long as the money is.spent by responsible men who kknow what they are doing, it is hardly possible for road taxes to betoo high. will be ——_—_-0. NEW CATHOLIC PRIEST FOR DOUGLAS PASTORATE DOUGLAS, Nov. 56, — Father St. James Catholic church and the jmissions of this district. Father re SEO TF 5 Adolph takes the position left vacant THE BELLS/OF BRUGES" ‘“|by Father Isidore Rafferty who left In the market place of Bruges “Stands the belfry old and brown; Thrice ,consumed and thrice builded} “Still Gt Wattle!” ofer:'the town. |somé time ago to take up his work as out in a wonderful scheme of brazing” chaplain jn the army, Since that time Father Matthias has had charge re-|and has been assisted by Father Ben- edict. The latter two priests will re-/ ered Why, but it is a fact that the| ‘here. as, the work of: the parish ry extensive. Most | n PINE a HT TEER Lieut. Gen. Georg Hey Milne This is Guy Fawkes Day in Eng-/one of the promidete ritish° com- land—the anniversary of the discov-|manders in the present War, born 50 ery of the plot of Guy Fawkes and his| years ago today. | fellow conspirators to send king, Truman H. Newberry, Republican j\lords and commons skyrocketing in|candidate for United States senator ‘one grand explosion by springing a| in today’s election in Michigan, born| 4 i gunpowder mine under Parliament) in Detroit, 54 years ago today. Where it was} Prince Cyril, second son of Czar! jonce the great patriotic festival of | Ferdinand of Bulgaria, born at 80-| |English youngsters, Guy Fawkes Day| fiu, 23 years ago today. jhas not generally been observed for Brig. Gen. Robert E, Noble, U. S. ithe past few years, and pelea Pi director of military hospitals in \since England is at war. |the United States, born in Georgia,} Se |418 years ago today. | ] Ida Minerva Tarbell, noted author |’ and editor, born in Erie County, Pa.,| | |G years ago today. | . | President William O. Thompson of) | Ohio State University, recently sent! J | to Europe on a special Government) | ‘mission, born at Cambridge, Ohio, 63 _ COTTON, CRY erin a cE (fo Rendiorepent TET) AMONG RETURNED YANKS Demands Presented. Earl step-brother of Frank S,_' employe of the Standard refinery. | was among the wounded Yanks re- turned to the United States to assist with the Fourth Liberty Loan and in| ja recent communication to his brother recounts some of his ex-| periences. He was wounded in the arm at the battle of St. Germain woods, in the Chateau-Thierry sector, |and notwithstanding the fact that his ; wound took four inches of the bon | of his forearm, he is in good healt! ,and spirits. “The pigs moved out and we moved \in,” is his original way of describing the entry of the American boys into the war. “The cooties?) Yes, we got} the first ones September 25, 1917,| and I bade goodbye to mine Septem- ber 25, 1917.” Ho claims one Yankee is the equal |of three Germans. | After, all his > WE Zp there” he was destined for another | _. The most costly map in the world exciting experience, for only 450/| jis a miap-of France qwhich was pre-' miles from France on his.xeturn. to| sented to the,Republic by the Czar thie country the ship was torpedoed of Russia when ‘the Franco-Russian! and had to put back to Se erie it alliance was ‘“congtimmated. The’ negotiated safely. | WASHINGTON, Nov. 4.—A com- mittee from the National Wheat ‘Growers’ Association is endeayoring to prevail upon President Wilson to \fix a price on wheat, in accordance | with resolutions adopted by the as- sociation at its convention recently jheld in Washington. ! wheat growers point out that |crops of the South, are bringing three times the pricé at the beginning ,of the war, and that thra the south- ern control of Congress no price has | been fixed upon these products, altho wool, wheat and other commodities, jheld down by fixed prices. | The wheat growers claim that they jhave been discriminated against in | favor of the Solid South, and ask that |they be given at least an even break. They have asked the President to es- | tablish a price of $2.46 a bushel for | wheat. | List your property with us. The! 5 “i +» Security Loan Company, Room 4. | resented by precious stones amd their © } {namés inscribed in gold. The rivers Kintball Bldg. * tt the eighty-seven departments are set. Home cooking at The Harvey. 21-tf/ pre strips of polished platinum, and, } \gems. | STORAGE Household Goods, Piatios, Ete Storage House on Buglinyton bet ‘CHAMBERLI AND UNDERTAS oP Bahn no | Medical science has never discoy- | vast majority of the insane are dark-) Ihaired. Picard of Waltham, Mass . ‘Tomlinson, dventures ‘“‘oyer, bs Now Open for Business Phone 458 A FULL LINE-OF ~ Also Making A Specialty of Fruits and Vegetables Will be pleased to meet my old customers and trust that fair dealing will bring me many new ones: Will also continue to tral Grocery and Market, at 132 W st Second street. Yours for Service and Fair Treatment, | E. R. Williams, Prop. Phone Your Call 45 8 Order Announcemet IN THE SAME OLD STAND—109 E. SECOND STREET, WITH Staple and Fancy Groceries te the Cen-

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