Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 8, 1918, Page 3

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3121 8 TIEROOOA rRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, “1918 TTS ee FOOD NEEDS GREATER IF PEACE. IS CONCLUDED, SAYS LEADER IN ADDRESS URGING CONSERVATION Central Powers, after Four Years Priv- ation, Will Be in Market for Food and America Must Feed Starving NEW YORK, Nov. 8.—Whether we continue to fight the Germans next year or whether we have peace, America must produce still more food in 1919, declared Clarence Ousley, ant secretary of agriculture, in an address before the w York Humanitarian society. Mr. Ousley warned that unless the people of the cities Zo he farms in increasing numbers ; LENIENT WITH PERCE AUIS ces of the heroism of farmers their wives who have labored der great difficulties this year | One Hundred Locked Up for Own Protection After Celebration | of Thursday and Only One is Fined Almost a clear 100 plain drunks j were taken care of by the police yi t. obiesenuminnenns intl |terday and to the good record of Cas adjustment of ec d indus- | : : | fal conditions. Many whole coun-|P¢T be ie said that only one of all tries have been devastated; their | tltese who were arrested or locked up labor has beene more or less deci- | fF their own protection, was fined. mated and the demand for physical| . This one man who, out of the whole reconstruction of the cities, of roads | City, made things so rough that it and of public works will be so great | Went beyond the bounds of endurance and wages probably so high that it | WS John Cook, who works for Perry nay come to pass that few people | Morris, of the Texas company. Cook comparatively will be ‘inclined to go jentered the Manhattan restaurant in back to the farm, jCenter street about 8 o'clock end| Danger of Slackened Production starte a rough house, breaking fur-| “It is altogether possible, there-| niture and raising Cain generally. He fore, that for a few years following |C2US¢d a scatterment among the cus-| the complete restoration of peace | tomers in the restaurant and a hurry | there will be a lack of normal pro- | cal was sent for the police. Officer | duction. Farmers and their families | Webb was the first on the scene but who have exerted themselves to an|‘* took the combined efforts of sey-| unusual extent to produce for war | eral men to place Cook in the jail and purposes may not be so much in- | he wanted to fight the whole town, | clind to exert themselves to an un. | including the police department. | usual extent in peace times. The After being locked up he started in that the world might net go hungry. “We shall need more food in peace than in war,” Mr, Ousley said, “for the moment we conclude peace with the central powers they will be in arket for our food and they f the world around them are 1 ter four years of privation. “We may well begin to inquire now what will be the agricultural status following the’ restoration of eace,” Mr. Ousley continued. “We)| t remember that several years be required to bring about a re- T t i 4 Miss Ruby S$ 4 ee | to the héme of Cofohier and i A “fi M. Gal bn*East Setond stréet ert} ha: some time with influenza, Miss Me- ime yesterday. ‘ Fatid « tio confined to her home by an‘attack of Spanish influenza, is’ again ‘able ty be about. j , ‘ . rage, is a business visitor,in Lusk for a few days. iv ul gif ill in! Thermopdlis! for | Earle C. Boyle, of the’ Boyle’s gat; | | | By JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER, JR. { Since talk of a.cessation of hostilities and an early. peace | PAQERIT YAC VAD CESSFUL Dollars ‘to: Provide of the. Armies, Says Rockefeller». | CAMPAIGN FOR WAR ORK FUNDS WILL ADD CHAPTER | costae OF MORAL VICTORY TO BATTLES \Peace to: Make More Vital the Need fo Miss Louise ‘Thomas ‘who’ has’ been | against Neglect | has beén current during the past few weeks, the question has arisen in the minds of many as to whether the great fund of | $17,500,000 which the United War Work campaign is eonne | | to raise for the prosecution of the work for soldiers and sailors | which the seven constitutent organizations have been author- Dean M. Gillespie, of the Black- more Refining company, of Denver, is a business caller'in Casper today. * 4,8 | local note in last'night’s paper. Mr, and Mrs. Roy Sample are both ill at their home on South Park street with influenza. e+ Mrs. Jack Clayton, of the MeRorey apartments, is visiting her husband who is with the Cosden Oil company drilling near Basin. e eee Mrs. E. B. Hertzman will leave Sun- day for Newark, N. J. to spend the winter months with her sister. Mrs. Hertzman recently returned from Seattle where she’ has been visiting. se © R. C. Marquis of the Webel Com-| mercial company returned last Sufi- day from Chicago where he was call- jed by the illness of his daughter and son-in-law. * * « Robert D. Carey, the next governor of Wyoming, is in from his ranch at Careyhurst today and is receiving congratulations of his many friends in the city. « yates 2 Private Frank Lenehan who has been ill for several weeks in an Oma- ha hospital with influenza, arrived this afternoon to visit at the home of his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Lenehan, | while recuperating and until he is able | ta join his company. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Johnson’ are | the parents of a daughter, born yes-| ers. terday at the State hospital. +s & Mrs. Robert D. Carey and Mrs. A. J. Cunningham who are hunting near Laramie Peak, are after deer, and not elk, as might be construed from peaks can not be lawfully killed in this part of the state. impulse or the metive of patriotism | (F the other inmutes of the jail until will have been removed or at least will be no more than ordinary human | concern for the welfare of the whole | brotherhood of man. That is a very | beautiful sentiment, but it does not | ys work to the stimulation of | extraordinary energy. | “City people, therefore, may well | begin to inquire what will happen to them in the contingency of reduced production for the post bellum period,” the assistant secretary said. “Under normal conditions the price} or the prospective profit of an un- | dertaking is the mainspring of action. With continuing high wages and with unabated ed attractions in the city places it may be a long time before full production is restored in the/| tural places. Indeed, it is by .no means impossible that only the stimu- lation of extraordinarily high prices | for food will bring about the neces- sary production. It may come to pass | that farming will become so. profit- able that city people will be induced to undertake it as a livelihood in spite of its disadvantages and its! ‘solation; in fact that is the surest | means of restoring the equilibrium between country and city, the dis-| turbance of which has caused so} much lamentation among idealists | and sociological leaders,” | a genes a SEAGULS AND SHARKS LEARN | SHIPS? | «2X BOARD AN AMERICAN DE-| STROYER IN FRENCH WATERS,) “tov. 8.—(Correspondence of The Associated Press.) Sharks and sea- fulls, the scavengers of the sea have ‘earned to follow in the wake of the submarines and watch and wait for | the food likely to’ come from the “reckage of merchant vessels de- The d by the German sea wolves. fect has been observed by the nanders of American destroyers is he Hun at sea. The presents of schools of sharks Ss of Seagulls puts the men merican destroyers on the °e of expectation when they are re! for @ periscope in the path merican transports. »One com- r returning to port the other : “We saw a good many flocks of seagulls and KS and of submarines, ie several years of sinkings by pe a the sharks and sea fow] wale the habit of following in pi , oo submarines knowing at food fs likely to come from the ts crege. Whether it is cargo thrown oie i from the freighter or Sie “ge thrown up from the tor- be ,xPlosion makes no difference; asa peerance of sharks and birds y Means. that there are sub- the FOR RENT a large bs fifteen Horses Rarage, 945 So. ~Two small houses wn ‘ ni barn will accomodate orses, could be ent reasonable. Spruve}’phohe 159M. 11-5-4t, used as a clue to hunt down e men in charge had to place him Solitary confinement. The police and Judge Tubbs were easy on all those brought before them in view of the exciting times of yes- terdey and no one except Cook v fined, altho several cases of too mur “fire water” had placed the recipients in dangerous positions. One man was taken in from the rear of the Ideal Apartments who was thought to have been partially frozen, but it was as-| certained that he was not in a se: condition. 1. M.FREN VGTIM OF FLU AT OMAHA, NEB Pioneer of 25 Years nswers Final Summons. When Illness Over- takes Him; Burial Made in Casper rious Z. M. French, aged 58 years, an old timer and for twenty-five years a resident of Casper and Kaycee, died day before yesterday in an Omaha hospital after an attack of influenza. The body arrived in Casper this morning and funeral services were conducted from the Shaffer-Gay chapel at 2:3 this afternoon. Mr. French was born in Texas but j lived for a while at Buffalo, Wyv., |and has spent a greater part of the |past twenty-five years in Casper and vicinity. He was a member of the Masonic order, the Elks and Odd Fel. friends in the state. ‘The Masons had charge of the se:v ices which were private at the chapel. the usual Masonic rites being observ- ed at the grave. Interment was made tn the Casper cemetery. Mrs. French, who is in Caspe- for the services, is a guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs, J. P. Smith of South center street. SON OF JOHN W. HAY KILLED IN ACTION | ROCK SPRINGS, Nov. 8.—Hon. |John W. Hay of this city has just | received the sad news that his son, | Archie Hay, has been killed in action in France, No further details have been received. Archie Hay was a 'very poular and bright young man | and his family ic receiving sympathy of many friends. paid « pada Sy kb Latin originally was the langnage in whith»all peace treaties invoWing | Christian powers were French’ Was generally ‘a language for such agreements; but » You know, are a pretty good| used for nowadays it is customary for copies} Apply |of the treaty to be prepared in the| Manguage of éach of the signatory | powers. CH Ao lows lodges, and had a wide circle vt! . SOCIETY f Miss Helen Wallace Honored ., , Guest at Dinner Last Night Miss Helen Wallace was the konor- jed guest at a seven o’clock dinner last jevening at the Midwest hotel, seven | young womeri friends being seated at |the table. Miss Wallace is expecting jher notification to report for training |as a student reserve nurse at any time as she was one of the first volun- teers for this form of war service when the call came in Casper for young women who farmed Casper’s quota of nurses. Red Cross decorations were used at the dinner party, with a hospital tent, American flags, and Red Cross place cards completing the scheme. Red carnations were used as floral deco- rations. The guest list included Miss Eileen McNeil, Miss Ruth Wallace, Miss Mar- garet England, Miss Ethyl Whitta- ker, Mrs. Philip Ryan, and Miss Haze) Brown. FLU TAKES BIG TOLL IN MEXICO Ignorance of Both Danger and Treatment Responsible for Heavy Casualties There . CHIHUAHUA CITY, Mex., Nov 8.—Spanish influenza has taken it: toll of lives in northern Mexico. The epidemic was believed to have beer brought here and to other towns ir this state by travelers from the bor- der at El Paso, where the epidemic s sweeping through the army and ilian population. As the Mexicar vhysicians had no experience in treat ‘ng the disease and had not antici- |pated an epidemic here, they were | vithout sufficient supplies, only e¢ ‘ew nurses and no hospital facilitier jaside from the military hospitals | which were soon crowded with fed- eral soldiers. The epidemic wa: |most general among the poor, whe | know nothing of sanitation and think the only way to prevent pneumonie is to shut all the doors and window? in their houses. So great was thc number of deaths that bodies were jleft in the cemeteries for days, a: |the native sexton could not dig graves fast enough to bury them. The supply of coffins was soon exhausted and many bodies were buried without shroud or coffin. The ancient Chihuahua cathelra’ was closef for the first ‘tima in 200 vears, on account 6fthe influenzse spidomics All chase hesy schools: and thea ere cloged by the health snthopites. ; (Re —— <»,,.$300— REWARD —$300 I 68 eward. po qi stions asked ne fi er etapa f didmoml rings taken rom bath room at Wyatt Hotel, Ap- yply.clerk, Wyatt Hotel. eee dere! A A Af you.yalye your.time eat at the White House Café. “~ ~ 10-26-n0¢ 11-1-8t* 11-5-3pd cocveney UY MASORITY | war IN-STATE WILL ~— REAGH 19,000 ‘Reports to Anti-Saloon League Superintendent Show In- crease in Plurality First | | Reported CHEYENNE, Wyo., Nov. 8.--Pro-! | hibition wins in all counties of the! |state, according to reports received! | by F, L. Crabbe, state auperintendoat| of the Anti-Saloon League in thiz city. | | Sweetwater county, which was con-| |ceded to the wets by Mr. Crabbe. | sprung an eleventh hour surprise by | going dry with a two-to-one majority | in favor of prohibition. Wet advocates were looking to the | mining camps of the state to save the | wet side from the landslide which oc- | curred, but were spurned by the min- Sunrise went dry, Hanna and | other coal mining towns-joined in the dry movement, and the wets were completely snowed under, according to reports received, Two precincts in Cheyenne went wet. Votes cast at Manewal’s bakery gave the wets a majority of one vote, and there was a wet majority of sixty votes at Dinneen’s garage. Returns from elsewhere in Laramie county were so overwhelmingly dry, however, that there is easily a majority of two- to one in favor of the drys, it is re- ported. Washakie county leads, the field in the number of votes cast, for a dry ‘state. In this county the majority in favor of the dry amendment was eight to one instead of two to one. Many people have expressed the opinion that Mr, Crabbe is too conser- vative in his two to one estimate, ex- pressing the belief that it will go as high as three and four to one’ when the final count is made of the votes. Crabbe states that the state Will ‘go dry by a‘majority-of close to15,0C0 from reports which have’ ¢ome in’ to, SPANISH Do Not Fear When Fighting’s German or'a Germ! *! By DR. M. COOK ‘ The cool fighter always wins and so there is no need to become panic- stricken. Avoidfear and crowds. Ex-| ercise in the fresh air and practice the three C’s: A Clesti-Mouth, a Clean Skin and Clean Bowels. To carry off the poisons that accumu-, late within the body and to ward off; an attack of influenza bacillus, take a good liver regulator t6 move the} bowels, Such a one is made up of jalap, and is to be had at any drug store, and called “Pleasant Purga- tive Pellets.” If a bad cold develops, go to bed, wrap up well, drink freely of hot} lemonade and take ‘a ,hot mustard | foot-bath. Have the bedroom warm but well ventilated. Obtain at the nearest drug store “‘Anuric Tablets’’ | to flush the kidneys and control the pains and aches. Take an “Anuric” tablet every two hours, together with copious drinks of lemonade. If a true case of influenza, the food should be simple, such as broths, milk, buttermilk and ice-cream; but it is important that food be given regularly in order to keep up pa- tient’s strength and vitality. After the acute attack is passed, which is| generally from three to seven days, the system should be built up by the use of a good Iron tonic, such as “Trontic” tablets, to be obtained at some drug stores, or that well known blood-maker and herbal tonic made from roots and barks of forest trees —sold everywhere as Dr. Pierce’s| Golden Medical Discovery —Adv. _—--— It is customary for each copy of a neace treaty to begin with the words, “In the Name of the Most Holy and) "Individed Trinity.” It is also cus-! tom: however, to make exception in the case of Turkey and other Mo- hammedan countries, the copies of ‘heir treaties being altered'to read: } “In the Name of Allah thé Almight: TO MEET IN; CHEYENNE May-apple, leaves of aloe, root of |* ‘COLD WEATHER IS HERE ized by the war department to do, will be needed, in the event of an early termination of the war. The answer is that the sooner the ends the more vital will be the need for this fund—every dollar of it and as much more as the generosity of the American people will provide. Our men in uniform are like the col- loge football players. While the; struggle is impending, they are ob- serving the rules of training that they may be fit to fight, but when the game has been won, the tempta- tion to break training and make up for the restraint of the past months! and years will be a fierce one. At! the best it will take many months to| bring home the men in uniform now overseas, and a still loriger time to absorb in civil life this great army of fighting men.’ During these days and weeks and months of compara- ive idleness, relazation, inactivity and waiting, they will need as never since the day they entered the ser-| vice the friendship, the inspiration, the occupation, the amusement and strength which these great organiza- tions alone can provide for them. Do you want to see the flower of manhood of this country, which has brot everlasting glory to our nation, | neglected by these organizations in the hour of its greatest need and a prey to fierce temptation? Then withhold your contribytion to this| fund. Or do you want to see a chapter of moral victory and prowess as superb and as glorious as that of the vic- tories of arms which have already been achieved added to the annals of the history of this country, and high standards of morality maintained and perpetuated by our sons and brothers | ip the daya to come? Then give of | your abundance, give of your pov- erty, but give without staint to this great fund. 4 WYOMING CONSISTORY. Attractive booklets: are, out” an-| nouncing the 35th reynion. of Wyom- ing ‘Cousistory No. ‘1, to be held in Gheyenne -December.9, 10,:11-and 12. All of the degrees will.be' exemplified fF communicated up to and-including | the 32nd, .. A-iarge: clase is expected ghd. there. will be, the ysual: entertain- Petts patatess Mantay, December 9, at Noon; ‘luncheon willbe served at Ate. age} ae eveht will close with a;reception, ‘dancg_and, banquet .on Thareday evening, December 11. Master. of Ko- Building. Seenrity Loan Co., phone 702. 11=1.t2 | “List your’ property ‘with ua. ‘The | Security. Loan ‘Company, Room 4, Kimball Bldg. 11-1.tf | | Home cooking at The'Harvey. 21-tf God.” A {ch fo tees if Try oux:compartment plate lunches, | Whitg 10-26-S0% sotties Loan a4, Kimball Bldg. 11-1-t¢ | kde hed ddd dk hh hd ddd ddd. HA nny my ij \) | Hh t Millions of Housewives are Using Swift’s Premium Oleomargarine It answers their every require- ment. Has the delicious flavor— gives most energy value per pound —is healthful— nutritious—has the elements for growth that allchildren need—it saves 20 cents or more a pound. Is easy to get —it is the most widely distributed brand of oleomargarine., It is' sweet—pure—clean—not touched by hand in manufacture or packing. They find it a most delightful spread for bread and fine for cooking and baking. If you doubt; a trial carton will convince you. Swift & Company;U.S. A. Other Quality Brands Ma . We Carry the Largest Line of Heaters in Casper Cole’s Hot Blast and Great Western Oak Exclusive agents for the Great Majestic Range We.can save you money by buying from, us i Schulte Hardware Co. | \ .132-North Center St. hy Chkadabeti td LALALZLALLLLAAD # GALA LA AAAAEAA AAA A hd hd Serre | | '

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