Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 6, 1918, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Che Casper Daily Tribune ssued e' ening it. Sunday at Casper, Natrona County, Wyoming. Publication Oxfices: . Oil Exchange Building. * Business -Telephone_ as second-class matter, Nov. ‘Teseclntes. Pronk: nana’ inted Press Nery ———-—-— _+Down on your marrowbones, Terrible _PreMipited Pies Bervice. i. B. HANWAY,: ident & Editor. EARL E. HANWAY, Business Mgr. te Editors % B. Evans’ Matenret Vv. G Douti+ Member of the Agsociated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled the use-for republication of ail news @ispatches credited to it or not otherwise erédited in this paper and also he focal news published. orth the government in the ie £Ove: ent in. cause of yt Brk for the period of the war- -+ PROPHETS OF A WORLD LEAGUE “Coming events cast their shad ows before.” As the end of the grea war draws néar, there is renewed in terest in’ the prophetic utterances of men who, Whether through reason seems to have foreseen, long ago ‘the era that mankind is now énter ing. Most readers are no doubt familia with the oft-quoted lines from Ten nyson’s “Locksley Hall,” ‘in which the poet : : “Heard the heavens filled with shout ing, and there rained a ghastl dew “From the nations’ airy navies grap pling in the central blue; “Till the war-drum_ throbbed nc lohger, and the. battle-flag: “were furled “In the parliament of man, the Fed eration of the World.’’ Not so well known,’ but no les. ‘remarkable for its vision is this ut terance of Victor Hugo, made it 1849 before a. Paris. Peace - Con gress:: : “A day will come when you France, you Russia, you Italy, you England, you Germany, all you na | tions of the Continent, shall, with _ out losing your distinctive qualitie and your gloriots individuality blend in a higher unity, and form ¢ European fraternity,.even as Nor , mandy, Brittany, Burgundy, Lor . Taine, Alsace, all the French pro ; vinces, blended into France. “A day will come when we shall sec seem as impossible between Paris anc j London, -between Petersburg anc Berlin, as between Rouen anc ’ Amiens, between’ Boston and Phila , delphia. “A day will come when bullets anc , bombs shall be replaced hy ballots \\by the universal suffrages of the people, by the sacred arbjtramen‘ of a great Sovereign Senate, whict shall be to Europe what the Parlia- ment is to England, what the Die‘ is to Germany, what the Legislative Assembly is to France. “A day will come when a cannon shall be exhibited in our museums ar an instrument of torture is now, and ‘men shall. marvel that such things could be. Hy “ day till come When we’ Shull sec ‘those immense groups, the United States of America and the Unitec States of Europe, in face, of. eact other, éxtending hand to hand, over the ocean, exchanging their products their commerce, their industry, thei art; their genius clearing the col onizing déserts, and ~ameélioratins creation. under the éye of thé Cre- ator. “And to you I appeal, French English, Germans, Russians, Slavs Europeans, Americans, . what have ‘we to/dd to hasten the. coming of that great day? Love one another To love one another, in this im mense jwork of pacification, is the best way of aiding God. For God wills that this ‘sublime will should be accomplished.’t" .:-; *$ 3 We should rejoice that what these two great minds foresaw only as a dream of the distant future now ! seems ony the verge of accomplish- ment. Jf: remains, however, to do ‘the actual, practieal work ef making the dream a reality, The Federation of the ‘World, for the suppression of war” and the perpetuation of peace, é¥en now will not come of itself, aiiy more than the American Union dane tof itself Gute the. wart \draws to a successful close, Lat) | Entered at Casper (Wy0.) Postafficc| Paatten, Nov. oo 1916 Fi up high, )_ bility ¢as the working out of a peace-league pro-| gram will be the most important | task facing this or any other nation. | Pee § 2 ee i SURRENDER! | By Charles B. Driscoll (Written for the United Press.) “Hun! Stick up your hands or your story is done! ‘ H Bloody they are, but you'll stick them, Or you'll die the death other foul murderers die! Terms? |You have! written them| bloodily well; 3 accepting in hell). t You and the world can behold at al glance | The terms you have written in Bel- gium and France. Horror? You hypocrite! Justice? | you swine! When did such words penetrate to The judges are sitting. You'll soon RECONSTRUCTION OF THE WOUNDED (Same terms that the damned are} } know your fate. o——————_ | Says a German military writer: If Tindenburg and Ludendorff had at) Wi ~/SUNS STRWE TO SIE Forty thot sand babies from Austria’: famine icken ‘provihces of Bo- hemia, Dalmatia,’ Herzdgovina and Istria are being fed and cared for by the two more fortunate: sister Suav provinces of Coatia and Slavonia. Details. of this atest effort on the part of the Slav provinces of Austria to sustain each other until an Allied ictory ¢an insure them a national | independence have just Séen recei | by Dr. Ante :Trumbio, who, repre- senting the Slav provinces of Aus-! | tria, signed: at ‘lu fon Jtily 20° 1917, the t with Serbia providing forfor a single united Southern Slav nation. following the wan Croatia and Slavonia rank as twe of the most fertile provinces of Aus- tria, and despité the ever increasing The last stage of reconstruction. of wounded-soldiers in Walter Reed hos- | Scarcity of food t exists thruout ital is the farming and gardening course. air and sunlight, the course gives an added impetus to agricultural work as | inces continue to produce more than one of the leading after-the-war occupations for returning man power. Besides bringing the men into the | thc dual: monarchy, these two prov- they need. Thru their local diet they therefore proposed to the Aus- tro-Hungarian government that they be allowed to suecor the other Slav the Rhine? In nr 17 provinces of Bohemia, Dalmatia, Her- 4 | - zozovania and Istria. The only con- Las of honor, be silent and) ; > dition @Aey demanded was that in wait; | - recognition of this they be exempted | ° > ° aod > ? | from military requisition of their PS $ 9°. 6 6 |People No Longer Have “ Business”’ Trips to Make} "5.7 oooSsition “was turned down By WEBB MILLER | provinces of Croatia and Slavonia be- PARIS, Oct. 26.— (By Mail.)—The ‘hundreds of thousands | gan immediately gathering together by, the Austro-Hungarian government | whereupon the two more forturlate heir disposal the inexhaustible hu- | 9f persons who “took their vacations” or found pressing business in| all the babies and little children from aan material and supplies that Foch the south of France a few months ago when the Germans were only’ the other Slav provinces. No dis- 1s, then German soldiers would long / 49 miles away and Big Bertha was speaking regularly, are flocking! grounds or tin¢étion was made either on religious grounds of diverse zo haye been not only in Paris, back. The city is regaining its old-time vivacity. The boulevards) branches of the Slav race. The chil- ut spread over the entire world.” | and sidewalk cafes are overflowing every afternoon with gay crowds dren likewise were distributed among We venture to remind the Kerrjstrolling in the bright autumn sun- ritik that those generals had that shine, and shops ame excess of men and materials nee; and what did they do with it?) = In the Day’s News that were closed suddenly in the summer are reopen- Within a fortnight after the al- ‘ere lied push shoved he German back aoa 0! toward Hunland, the vanguard of of “shell-dodgers” .'to flow back to Paris. vasion is in full swing. Today is the 57th birthday of sre doing a rushing business and the families of Craotia and Slavonia | without religious or other distinction. into orthodox families and vice versa. — | All are now being fed and educated Aritish under General Maude oc-)| towards the common end of saving Year Ago Today in War | Catholic children often being taken (oa i cupied Tekrit. the greatest number possible of the Austro-Germans crossed the Tag-| liamento river along the whole Italian front. Passchendaele won by the Ca- s { nedians, with several hamlets and d . , Watt Gregory, the member of Presi- nearly every hotel of importance is| 400 prisoners. | FROM CONSTIPATION Sidi | Jent Wilson’s cabinet who is called, packed full every day. upon to unravel the many~ unusual ficers and soldiers with a few days! legal problems which have arisen |l!eave in Paris, are finding difficulty; under conditions of wartime. Like in geyting any sort of a room. Many| he majority of the present cabinet |0f them are forced to visit a half dozen hotels before finding a vacant A In, hotels where only a score| 2d home rule advocite, now touring through July| C@nada and the United States, born ,-|in England, 54 years ago today. officials, Attorney General Gregory ;s a Southerner by birth and training. |To0om. . Mississippi is his native state, but |of faithfuls remained ?éxas has been his home since he 2nd August, there is now not a va- first entered upon the practice of |cant room. 1 » ‘aw in 1885. His education was re-|!@w of supply and demand is geting) .:eived at the Southern Presbyterian |i" its work — the prices are being niversity, the University of Virginia | shoved up notch by notich. Although to the casual observer) nd the, University of Texas. His d by: the state of Texas when he was »mployed by the state of Texas in he prosecution of certain large cor- -orations for alleged violations of the nti-trust laws. His success in these rosecutions led to his appointment | |, S special assistant attorney general f the United States, and when At-| | orney ‘General McReynolds was ele-| stimulate rated to the supreme bench, in Au-jextent and a fair percentage of th vust, 1914, Mr. Gregory was selected |invaders are provincial business peo o succeed him as head of the depart-|ple in Paris on buying trips. every one of~them brings his whole jfamily and spends a week or twe > = = and many francs enjoying the Today’s Anniversaries; |‘torolis. ee sp One of the most immediate effect: on the allies’ victories was to raise the rate of exchange upon In the last few weeks the rate has been going up a few cen- times at a time. The influx of people to brighten the city in many ways. At least five theaters that haye been |closed for some time are reopening. All the movie theaters on the boule- yards are crowded every afternoon In deference to the ¢hou- 891—John Gregory Smith, governor | Sands of British and American sol- of Vermont and president. of |ets in town, the the Northern Pacific railroad, | 804 ment of justice. Len Boek o———__________________o i 847—First American missionary | church organized in China. | {865—Earl Russell became British | premier for the third time. 873—Mrs. Robert E. Lee, wife of | the famous Confederate com-| mander, died at Lexington, Va. Born at Arlington House, Va., in 1806. 865—Qteen Victoria sent a mes- sage of congratulation to the} people of Canada. died at St. Albans, Vt. Born there, July’ 22, 1818. 893—Gen. George D. Ruggles was appointed adjutant general} of the United States army. | ‘914—An army of 25,000 Turks be- gan an invasion of Egypt. Nish by the Bulgarians, open- ing thru rail route for Austro- Germans to Turkey. 916—British steamer Arabia tor- pedoed and sunk in the Medi- terranean. SURE ’TWAS AN ERROR The Gazette, upon erroneous infor- nation, stated last week that County | Jommissioner Allen, with a helper, ras in.town with the county grader, | snd would grade the highway to the Natrona courty line. The outfit) Spent ‘the night in Glenrock, then | neaded for Douglas. Glenrock peo- yle have now been permitted to get two short squints at the county road ‘his way.—Glenrockk Gazette. —_—_ oo List your property with us. The! { Incoming of-/| Today’s Birthdays | Get Dr. And the well known) .. y time railway draughtsman in Pitts- burg, now the greatest railway mana- ger in England, born at Logansport. Ind., 47 years ago today. lawyer ‘first. attracted|th¢ number of people that stayed-in| vide; ittentfon whet he Was enipioy-}Paris “through the period of danger) of invasion was remarkable, ft was noticeable that most of the people} of the streets were soldiers whos: business kept them in the city. deniably a vast number left the cit: coming back anc master and composér, now in the United States naval service,yborn in Washington, D, C., 64 years ago to- day. | n congress. from Wyoming; born in Nawatthayiceivall it. Louis, 58 years ago today. ‘elebrated of professional baseball ritchers, now in war Service, born at Humboldt, Kan., 30 years ago today.!'= The allied successes have tended t business to a surprisin sandidate for presideng df the United | jf States in. 1916, born at Plainwell Mich., 47 years ago today. ped a Ns i = SO > ————-o; ————o r. Edwards’ Olive Tablets © That is the joyful cry of Lord Charnwood, traveler, writer. Henry Worth Thornton, a one- John Philip Sous: famous. band- Frank W- Mondellp representative Walter Johnsen, one gf the most * | Southern; Slav! race, which has had | J the’ most disproportionate losses in Working hand in hand war worker; right. Soh i «Ap; the present war, for the future, in ¢ dependént Slav state. MEETS SOLDIERS’ NEEDS 1 The Y) ™ A, K. of C., Salva tion Army, ‘ewish Welfare ei i i money which ‘sol-/ as place in their, charge | over) WS bez. tte List your property with us.’ The Jecurity Lean Company, Room 4, Kimball Bldg. Press it fase rn 4 White 'Honse . Cafe setves! you Do You Know | That, key KuTTER TOOLS and CUTLERY are the Standard High-Grade Goods, of America, and that they are-known also in foreign countries as THE VERY BEST GOODS OF THEIR KIND IN THE WORLD? i Do You Know ._. ‘ That when any dfticle bears the brand of ASN surteR, it-méans that the quality is THE BEST THAT MONEY AND BRAINS CAN PRODUCE? Bo You Know That fhe name KEEN KUTVER, no matter whether it is on an Axe, File, Plane, Hatchet, Chisel, Saw, Razor, Pocket Knife, Butchor Knife, Shears, Scissors, or anything in the line of TOGLS or CUTLERY, is always GUARANTEED TO BE THE BEST OF ITS KIND, and therefore always THE CHEAPEST IN THE END AND. THE MOST SATISFACTORY ARTICLE FOR YOU TO BUY AND USE? Do You Know R That “THE RECOLLECTION OF THE QUALITY OF EVERY KEEN KUTTER ARTICLE REMAINS LONG AFTER THE PRICE HAS BEEN FORGOTTEN?”—Lis, Do You Know y That WE CARRY IN STOCK A FULL LINE OF KEEN KUTTER GOODS and that we are selling them at prices no higher than you will pay In many places for INFERIOR articles? We will be pleased to show you our line of AEE KUSTER goods and tell you why THEY ARE BETTER THAN OTHER ° MAKES... "et Won't. you come in and look them over? HOLNES HARDWARE COMPANY Holmes to Holmes—Casper, Wyoming. Buy W.S. S. and Liberty Bonds Tool, buy o” WE, HAVE THEM Allan L. Benson, Socialist party | Is Today’s Events || tions scheduled to open in numerous | states today have been postponed be- cause of the influenza epidemic. Canada which haye adopted the man- agerial form of government will be represented by delegates at_the fifth annual conference of city managers, which is to meet today at Roanoke, Virginia. moving picture | city has fixed today for the opening| of the postponed trial of Jeremiah Q’Leary, the former editor of thi anti-English weekly Bull, who is un. der .several indictments for allege | violations of the espionage act. ses are using , films and running films with cap- tions in both French and English, | To the American soldier accustomed to his nickel “movie” or at most ten cents or a quarter, the prices of from |thirty cents to a dollar are stagger- ing. But they pay the prices gladly to get a glimpse of “‘back home” even if it is usually New Jersey or Cali- The news stands are taking jadvantage of the demand for Anjer- jican publications- and ere offering; the Saturday Evening. Post and Col-| liers at 20 cents. Their supply is} snapped up within a few hours after) tives of men captured: by the enemy on the battlefield, will observe St. Leonard's day today.; For many cen-| turies this saint has been’ considere the especial patron of. prisoners, an his intercession is sought by -Cath- olics, in behalf of those held captive in a foreign land. Of all the saints Leonard is believed to be the most powerful in this regard, perhaps be- {cause he spent>a large part of his | life in comforting captives taken by a Frankish king. sf 915—Berlin reported the capture of | | fornia. |magazines sells for 65 cents. A number of the comers are buyers from the big fash-| ionable women’s stores from cyery| large city in the allied and neutral For the usual autumn fash- ion shows are in full blast in a score of the establishments that set fashions from Vladivostok to | Some of the buyers are} from stitch far-away places as making. machinery, but have never |neos Aires, Rio and Tokio, with a! seen it in operation on the roads up goodly porrion from Chicago, New! York and London and the Scandi- |navian capitals. ;, With the city full of visitors ‘the Security. Loan Company, Room 4,/9:80 closing decree becomes a real| Kimball Bldg. 11-1-tf | hardship—upon the vrestaurant men} ; }—when thousands are ‘fall dressed | jup and no place to go’’after the cur- few darkens the lights. ‘ Although many pass the time strolling .aimlessly. along the dark- ened boulevards, the wise ones say that places. can be found where the} fecurfew can’t be heard. | Wyoming Map and Blue Print Co., P. O. Box 325. Rm, 10, over Lyric |. Home coking at The Harvey= 1,559th day of the Great War. Conventions of teachers’ associa- Cities of the United tSates and The federal court sin New York Thousands of Europeans, the rela-| | | GEOLOGICAL WORK what claimed. Maps and Blue Prints, Surveying Crude Oil Testing a Specialty Casper, Wyo. STORAGE Héusehold. Goods, Pianos, Etc. Storage House on Burlington > Tracks =» & The Casper Daily Tribune SARBTUNDERTARING CO. NTN ASAT IN EXPRESSION often used with reference to some chronic kicker or agitator, and appropriate, but not so in all cases. The Tribune could “continually harp” on the - value of its classified advertising coliimns to the buyer and séller in real estate; auito- mobibles, etc.; to the man or woman in the field for em WERE 24.0 ployment, or the employer needing help. Their worth has been tested and found to be exactly They are cheap and’ most effective and classified advertisers will profit by using these columns con- sistently and assiduously. IN FRONT LINES : e ¥. M,.C..A,, K,of C., Jewi i if od e's of » Jewish rd fiers iri the suit Ec rates alin nad x tok erything. Pies bd Bat Cohetens: ante Kimball Bldg. AAS ANIA

Other pages from this issue: