Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 6, 1918, Page 3

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LATE FLASHES FROM THE WIRE ROME, Nov. 6.—Conditions of the jistice between the Entente na- t and Austria are being carried vt without- delay. © Italian troops have begun to-occupy territory which nel be held as a guaranty that the clauses of the agreement will be ob- armi: served. WASHINGTON, Nov. 6.—Secre- t Lansing today wrote the Ru- < n government that the United States would exert its influence to- werd the fulfillment of »Rumania’s : « ambitions at the peace table. Rus , had written a note indicating that she feared because a separate yeace with Teutons Rumania’s inter- pats would be overlooked. BERLIN, via London, Noy. 6.—An official statement issued here says that “the German delegation to con- clude an armistice and take up peace negotiations has left for the western front.” AMSTERDAM, Nov. 6.—Germany ha * pussiait representatives to Germany, Rerlin dispatches announce, Ger- man representatives to Russia were recalled, it adds. PARIS, Nov. 6.—Germany is fac- ing disintegration like Austia-Hun- cary, says Swiss reports. Bavarian deputies adopted a plan for the new state comprising Bavaria, Wurtem-} burg, Baden and German-Austria. Arthur W. Crossman, who, in point of service, is one of the oldest men connected with the mechanical de- partment of the Tribune, left this evening with his family for their | ranch in Colorado where they will make their future home. They will make the trip by auto, GHENT STILL IN HANDS OF GERMANS, REPORT LONDON, Nov, 6.—(British Wire- less Serv’ —The latest informa- tion rega' g the military situation at Ghent goes to show that the Al- lies ha town If is holding out. It is possible that like Lens, Ghent will hold out for some time until & suc- cessful encircling movement is ac- complished. a |W. GURRY 15 VICTIM OF PNEUMONIA TODAY J. W. Curry, manager of the Crome mine about 20 miles from Casper, died this morning of pneu- monia after a srortsitnese Ont goal hospital. He is survived ife who has been in Casper with him for about a month. The body will be taken to Denver tonight for inter- ment, the arrangements being in charge of the Chamberlin company. << BRAKEMEN WILL BE LAID TO REST AT OLD HOME The body of L. L. Braugh will be taken to Morton, Minnesota, for burial. Mr. Braugh was a fireman on the Northwestern railroad and a close friend of Fred Hilstrom who died but a short time ago of influ- enza. A sister of Mr. Braugh re- sides in Morton, where interment will be made, The Shaffner-Gay com- pany has charge of the arrangements. —— l City News | Fees 8 Ww. B. Look, of Jamestown, N. Ys 's again in Casper looking after his oil interests in this vicinity. he’ te _ A: H, Black of the Chamberlin Furniture and Undertaking company, who is ill at his home with an attack of influenza, is reported as being some better today. * Tf you value your time eat at the hite House Cafe, 10-26-30t 11-1-3t* 7 © «© ‘ Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Richards of hestnut street are the parents of a son born yesterday’ at the Casper erence of the Wyoming General hos- al. Wi ya: He Kytey teller“at the Casper National Bank, will leave the first of next week for Lusk where he has ac- cepted a position with the Texas Oil company, ———_ ees NEWLYWEDS ENTERTAIN Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Michles whose marriage took place yesterday after- noon entertained a number of friends nage evening at the home of Richard /unn. Musie and games were en- Joyed during the evening aad light refreshments were served. The ueats included Mr. and Mrs. A omas Kilcorn, Mr. and Mrs. wena McLaughlin, Mrs. Kate Clay, sat Charlotte Dunn, Stanley Sew- ash snd Lew Hanna. Mr, and Mrs. Mickles left today for St. Louis to make their future home. , SHERIDAN FOR CAREY SHERIDAN, Wyo. Nov. 6.— Sh enty-nine Precincts out of 40 in werden county give Osborne 1,342, 1 ie sth, Houx 1,364, "Carey Stow. oshon 1,265, Chaplin 1,324, dana 1,245, Jefferis 1,804, Jor- 1,880 259, Hoskins 1,301, Hefferon Monden woten 1,261, White 991, Bae ‘ 1,268. Prohibition carried demanded the withdrawal of all | reached the suburbs but the | } This photograph, taken when man artillery, shows Gruedell and Winterfelt. |more severe. | PARIS, Nov. 6.—Germany is ex pected to indicate soon whether shc will ask Foch for the armistice terms the Versailles conference formulated. The German govern- ment appointed a commission to han- dle the armistice negotiations. The German government issued 2 proclamation urging the people tc maintain order if they do not wish tc delay peace. The proclamation re cites the reforms undertaken and ap- péals “to ‘thé peoplé to unite “vor an honorable peace, AMSTERDAM, Nov. 6.—Severe rioting occurred at Kiel after e meeting of sailors and laborers. Mu- tinous sailors made their way to the military prison with the intention of liberating men confined there for in- surrection. The military guards fired on them, killing twenty-nine, a HOTEL ARRIVALS. | At the Midwest H. T. Buman, Chicago; W. J. Mc- Naien, Blffalo; T. H. Redington, Denver: W. A. Allen,L os Angeles; L. Glove, Lusk; J. C. Holmes, Powder River; F. D. Durmand, Alliance; Joe Phoenix, city; Gray Richardson, Salt Creek; Roy C, Smith, Saddle Rock; George Barton, Denver; W. H. Bos- elly, Cheyenne; Harry L. Harwick, Milwaukee; W. O. Slate and wife, Minneapolis; William Gibson, Basib; C. E. Slanter, E. C. Johnson, Seattle: J. B. Davidson, Thermopolis; C. A. Neff, Worland; Mrs. B. Fehlman, B. H. Fehlman, Midwest; J. M. McDow- ell, Douglas; T. T. Hickey, Kansas City; A. F. Allen, Denver; O. M. Poland, Fort Wayne; R. M. Daniel and wife; F. E. Cullifer, T. A. Mac- Cullagh, Denver; W. T. Furger, Lup- ton; V. H. Austin and wife, John Donahue and wife, city; F. R. Adams, G. W. Gardner, Alliance: A. C. Gebr, Chicago; Fred W. Freeman, Denver; Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. McQueen, Lysite. At the Henning Mrs. M, Marshall, Denver; J. G. Glescock, Sussex; Mrs. Joe Stomes Thermopolis; C. L. Nerr, Sioux City: H. J. North, Scottsbluff; J. L. Kales, | Chicago; W. B. ok, Jamestown, N. | Y.: O. C. Goss, Denver: R. C. Hawley, tillines; Joseph Weinstein, St. Louis; Paul H. Moore, city; F. Layton, A. L. Tefft, Denver, CHIEF WOLF IS SENT ‘PACKING’ BY LOCAL VOTE (Continued from Page 1.) Perry A. Morris, who has consistently protested against the acts of the ad- ministration and who “stood pat” for a program such as will be inaugur- ated the first of the year. Mr. Mor- ris has voted “No” on every occasion when bills have been allowed by the council including the payment of a double salary to Chief Wolf and with three members of the council pledged to a similar program, the governing powers of the body will be reversed. ? Long, city; A. E. Otis, Bnffalo; Tom! ‘HIGH EXPLOSIVE SHELL FALLS IN AMIENS Aliens wes syill under the fire of the Ger a high explosive shel! explocing on a roof. OOS ARMISTICE DELEGATION LEAVES BERLIN FOR WEST FRONT; MUST ANSWER YES OR NO TO DEMANDS |Proclamation Issued by Government to Pave Way for Fighting Appeal If Terms Are Deemed too Drastic AMSTERDAM, Nov. 6.—Berlin today announced that a Ger- man armistice delegation went to the west front. delegation includes Admirals Von Hintze and Meures and Generals It is reported the It is understood that Germany must answer yes or no within| five days after its receipt. Otherwise present conditions will be made JUSTICE TUBDS LEADS TICKET W. E. Tubbs will continue to ad- minister justice in his David street sanctum as a result of the election yesterday in which he received a plu- rality of 89 votes over John D, Sal- mond, Democratic aspirant for the office. Salmond polled 214 votes and Tubbs. 303 in election district No. 10, the latter leading his ticket. Richard McDermott, whose elec- tion was uncontested, was chosen constable on 241 votes. CANTEEN FEEDS 10,000 IN ONE DAY IN FRANCE WITH THE, AMERICAN ARMY IN FRANCE, Oct. 28 (By Mail.)— More than 78,000 American soldiers were fed at one American Red Cross canteen along the lines of communi; cation in France last month. On one day of that month 10,000 passing troops were given hot coffee and food to cheer them on their way. This is a record in service for Amer- ican troops, It was performed by a squad of eight American women and girls. And, to make their task more diffi- cult, they served this food at three different points, each almost three niles away from each other. When the American people showe] their loyalty and appreciation of the Red Cross last May by subscribing nearly double the amount of monev asked for, it had a wonderful ef- fect upon the members of the organ- ization in France. They interpreted it as meaning that nothing was too good or no efforts too great for the fighting men of America in Europe. So, from the seaports to the battle front, the American soldiers are met at intervening stations by Red Cross workers distributing hot drinks, food and tobacco, The troop trains are stopped outside of these Red Cross canteens, and most of them remain until every soldier has been served. If a train does not pull into the terminus where the canteen is lo- cated, the Red Cross workers pile their food and hot drinks upon a truck or camionette and hustle it to the place where the train does stop. Where the wait of the troop train is an hour, the soldiers are served a full meal. Last month, 6,000 full meals were served at this particular canteen. oid “Se SS WHEATLAND RETURNS IN WHEATLAND, Wyo., Nov. 6.— Nearly complete returns in Platte county give Carey 1,261, Houx 719, Chaplin 1,133, Morton 909, Hefferon 982, Warren 1,138, Osborne 806. ——=——— More than 22,000 men and women are employed in the pulp and paper industry of Canada. per Bnoecnaot bat The Danish Aeronautical society is preparing to start aerial mail service when the war is over. ' s ' | Fred Lockley, Y. M. C. A., Tells of ‘a fellow Y, M. OC, A. secretary to hunt i =, 44 Us wy $o32 ‘SERVICE THAT. WINS | THE SOLDIER HEART the Gratitude of the.Boys | at the ‘Front. | “One ef the discoveries men* are making over here,” Fred Lockley, of | the Y. M. G A. and of Portland, Ore- | | gon, writes from London, “is that | more pleasure can be had out of giv- | {hg than getting. Many a man who bas spent money freely in the old days to buy pleasure ig finding that he gets More pleasure over here by the spend- ing of one’s eelf In the service of others. | “A few months ago I went cut with up out-of-the-way detachments of troops. A stable guard here, a ma- chine gun company there, a platoon | somewhere else. We carried our | goods In. ap automobile. We had. plenty of writing paper and envelopes | for free distribution, and chocolate, cookies, chewing tobacco and smoking tobacco, cigarettes, razor blades, | tooth paste and things of that kind for | sale. American war service workers _ were busy rywhere. We found Sal- | vation Army lassies making doughnuts | for the boys and K. of C. secretaries | giving help. Books furnished by the | American Library Association were to | be seen on all sides. | “Hearing firing at a distance, we @rove down the road and found a score or so of men at machine gun practice. The officer gave the men half an hour recess to buy goods. “At another place we came in sight of a Heutenant drilling a platoon. I sald to the lieutenant: ‘How soon be- | fore you dismiss the company? We bave Y. M. C. A. goods for sale,’ { “He sald: ‘Right now. Sergeant, dismiss the company!’ “And ten seconds later the company was in line waiting to buy goods from | our traveling ‘Y.’ Grateful is no name for it. The men can't do enough to show thelr gratitude.” || Why You Should Give Twice | What You Did Before The government has fixed the sum needed for the care of the men in the service at $170,500,000. Unless Americans give twice as much as ever before oar soldiers, sailors and marines in 1919 may not |] enjoy their | 8,600 recreation bulldings 1,000 miles of movie films 100 stage stars 2,000 athletie directors 2,500 libraries supplying 8,000,000 books 85 hostess’ houses | 15,000 “Big Brother” sec- retaries Millions of dollars of home comforts Give to maintain ‘the morale that is winning the war now NEXT SPEAKER IS SUBJECT OF 14 fee. | | Tius ts the military mission of the Czecho-Slovak army from Siberia, 1D Washington to report to thelr commander in chief, Prof. Thomas G. Masaryk, ‘The original ctJect of their mission was to ask for ships to get their fighters to France, but they are now planning | are, left to right: Private R, Chytil, Lieutenant Danielovsky and Capt, ¥i- \urbatty OUI UF GLUIHES GUSTS SU00 IN AUSTRIA, CLAIM By HENRY WOOD | (United Press Staff Correspondent.’ ROME, Nov. 6. (By Mail.) —Men’s clothing in Austria-Hungary nov costs from $200 to $300 a suit, while women’s tailor-made gowns average from $300 to $400 each, according to the “Krejeovsky Listy,” the offi- cial organ of the Teheque (Czech) tailors in the dual monarchy. Copies of the last number of this periodical have just reached Rome by way of Switzerland and give in- teresting details as to the present! sale of government shoes, no one is| cost of clothing at Vienna and Buda- pect. According to this trade jour- nal all of the cloth manufactured in the dual monarchy since the begin- ning of the war is absolutély worth- less and the Tcheque tailors practi- cally refuse to make it up into suits and women’s gowns for the reason that the result is not worth the cost of the labor expended on it. ‘ The only cloth that remains in Austria-Hungary that is fit for cloth- ing consists of the few remnants of | stocks that existed before the war. This was largely cloth of foreign manufacture and what is left of it means of getting ald to Siberia.» -..4janas Taoulous prices. For a man’s suit, cloth averages: 380 a yard; lining, $32 a yard; flan- nel, $22 a yard; and lining for. the sockets $10 a yard. To overcome this situation the gov- 2mment is planning to manufacture a single style of cloth and to issue tickets to the civil population per- mitting them to have suits from it. In this connection he same require- ment that already is in force in Ger- many, will be adopted, namely, every Jerson ordering a new suit from this| government cloth must first turn} over to the clothing department his | old suit. This same rule will apply to the women’s dresses and dress goods. Under the new arrangements for | allowed to purchase a pair unless the shoe census of last May shows he | had only one pair of shoes at that | time. Sach Sa bed Fresh milk is to be supplied te 20,-| 000 sick and wounded soldiers in France by 1,000 cows which the French government has agreed to | loan to the American Red Cross. Constantine was the first emperor to introduce the two-headed eagle as HOW TO FIGHT SPANISH INFLUENZA (By Dr. L. W. Bowers.) ig Avoid crowds, coughs and cow- ards, but fear neither germs .nor Germans! Keep the system in’ good order, take plenty of exercise in the fré&h air and practice’. cleanliness. Remember a ‘clean mouth, a clean skin, and clean bewels are a pro- teeting armour against. disease. To keep the liver and bowels regular and to carry away: the poisons within, it is best to take a vegetable pill every other day, made up of May- apple, aloes, jalap, and sugar-coated, to be had at most drug stores, known as’ Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel- lets. If there is a sudden omet of what appears like a hard cold, one should go to bed, wrap warm, take @ hot mustard foot-bath and drink copiously of hot lemonade. If pain develops in head: or back, ask the druggist for Anuric (dnti-urief tab- lets. These will flush the bladdér and kidneys aod carry off poisonous germs. To control the pains and aches take one Anuric tablet every two hours, with fréquent drinks af lemonade. The pheumonia appears in a most trecherous way, when the influenza victim is apparently: te- covering and anxious to leave his bed. In recovering from a bad at- tack of influenza or pneumonia the System should be built up with ‘a good herbal tonic, such as Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, made without aleohol from the roots and barks of American forest trees, or his Irontic. (iron tonic) tablets, which can be obtained at mast drug stores, or send 10c to Dr. Pierce's Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. ¥.> for trial pacake.—Adv. ED pe me HORSES; NOT SQUIRRELS COPENHAGEN, Oct. 16.- (By Mail,)—Danish horses are now on ra- tions. iY Strong cart horses, measering over ten hands, are allowed 4.4 pounds of nut fodder and the same amount of molasses fodder daily. “Smaller horses are given 2.2 pounds of nut fodder and 3.3 pounds of molassts fodder. : Iceland ponies get 1.1 pounds of nut fodder and the same amount of molasses fodder. ——_—_—— Liberty Bonds wanted. Highest cash price paid. Room 4, Eimball Building. Security Lean Co., phone a royal or national device to indi- | cate that his empire had two kings, but was nevertheless one body or empire. 702. 11-1-t£ ps SASS List your property with us. The Security Loan Company, Room 4, ‘Kimball Bldg. 11-1-tf OAKLAND | CAPITAL TALK Republican Leader Mann in Line if G. O. P. Wins Control . and Champ Clark Is Dem- ocratic Choice WSHINGTON, Nov. 6.—Republi-| cans, confident of winning tontrol of the next House of Representatives, today were discussing chances of va- rious members for the speakership. | | | Second and David victory as Republicans, but in their! Democrats are just as confident of | case, it is practically certain that Speaker Champ Clark will succeed himself. | Queen Alexandria frequently vis- Republican Leader James R. Mann, } Illinois, would be the leading Repub- | lican candidate if his health permit- ted his accepting the place. Mann, | however, has been away from Con- gress for several months, and while he is on the road to recovery, friends | say, he would not risk a set-back by assuming the burdens of the chair. Acting Majority Leader Gillett, | Massachusetts; Rep. Nick Longworth, Ohio, son-in-law of Theodore Roose- velt, and Rep. Horace Turner, Iowa, are mentioned after Mann, If election returns show Republi-| | can strength still lies in the east, Gil- | lett is conceded the place. | A big turnover which would send a big G. O. P. delegation from the| West probably would result in elec-| tion of Towner, the leading parlia-| mentarian of the Republican side of the house. A third possibility is an even divi- | sion of West and East with Ohio) holding the balance of power. « ‘Lnis | would mean the election of Long- worth, who has distinguisaed him- self by his work on the ways and means commitee. ——— FOR RENT—Two small houses and a large barn: barn will accomodate fifteen horses, could be used for garage. Rent Pessopable: Apply! 945 So. Spruce; phone 159M. 11-5-4t, cate 1S EE Pa $300— REWARD $300 $300 reward and no questions asked or the return of diamond rings taken from bath room at Wyatt Hotel. Ap- ply clerk, Wyatt Hotel. 11-5-3pd FILIP PZLLLELAZALLLZIAZLZALLIAZLLZLZ LOD | | | i The Sensible-Six. Overhead Valves Another shipment just arrived. Roadster, Touring and Coupe Models now on display at our salesroom. Call and see this wonderful car. Shockley Service Sales Corp. Phones 122-123 in Casper n We can save you from us Cole’s Hot Blast Great Western Oak Exclusive agents for the ‘Great Majestic Range ‘Schulte Hardware Co. 132 North Center St. COLD WEATHER IS HERES ~ We Carry the Largest Line of Heaters fd, d money by buying | : Ne “~* ~~

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