Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 2, 1919, Page 2

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CASE BAILY TRIBUNE Page 2 SPEAKING OF BUDGETS The €a Casper Daily Tribune| “Why bother with a budget?” ' The Jack Pot Issued every evening except Sunday atiasked a friend of the woman who Casper, Natrona county, Wyo. bli- i cation offices: Oil Exchange Building. | was struggling with the problem of} BUSINESS TELEPHONE |how much she could take off the| inasmuch as the United States senate| Enter at Casper (Wyoming) Bostartice as second-class matter, Nov 9 MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED F REPORTS FROM THE UNITED PR the entertainment andthe peace conference take care of the . President and Editor|amusement column J. E. HAN without letting: American war revenue bill. We might R. B. BVANS, City Ed’ A EARL E. HANWAT: Busines taanager| \the family grow stale and “‘pepless.” then entertain some hope of the bill JIB. Grireitn et | “I hate them!” frankly replied the | being enacted. REG ABET UCuDOUns | pudgeter. “But I make them because LE EG Od RATE! Sh By Mail or Carrier e S litdble dentist bills, and how small she the peace negotiations, it might let culd make * * * lq cannot bother without them.” Eat lucidated somewhat as follows:: formation of a workable League of “I don’t think planning my money | Nations is an impracticable pted for |and knowing what I spend is highly seem to think that its perfectly prac- vance and The Daily Tribune will not | Moral at all. And I am no more in- |ticable to get $120,000,000,000 insure delivery after subscription be-| terested in the water that run under demnity out of Germany. ; = the bridge last year than you are. * The ‘Associated Press ia exclusively |Ngither do I consider it a matter of| It’s easy enough to agree roughly! entitled to the use for republication of | All news dispatches credited to It or not | Virtue to keep my linen closet and what the territorial limits of the Eu- otherwise credited in this paper and algo the local news published herein. One Month . Per Copy No subscription by mail acce| less period than three months. All subscriptions must be paid in ad- dream in- * * Member of the Asnocinted Prean desk and pantry in order. But I have 'ropean countries should be, but there do not, I be- come the slave of my own disorder, it comes to fixing the fringes. Seti = to do it, because if I vill be an awful series of howls when “END OF THE WORLD There is a good deal of discussion |and my tools master me, and all the nowadays as to whether the Kaiser jtime which should be preciops leis- is in truth the “Antichrist” spoken of | ure in hunting for things ‘ly won’t have any objections to eating in the Bible, and whether the “wars | | which are in the wrong places. Every |‘ “capitalistic” bread and ‘‘bourgeois” and rumors of wars” do not portend little job becomes a horror because of |beef, especially if they can get it for the second coming of Christ and the ,struggling with disorder while doing | nothing. end of the world. \it. If things are where they belong | It is a fact that in almost all re- I simply do the job, with neither | now exists a’ wasted time nor wasted temper. “It’s the with money. Teacher to come simply cannot afford the time and’ them. Some believe literally that it strength to wrestle with petty prob- Those hungary Bolsheviki probab- is spent * 4 The Germans have let their famous ; Watch on the Rhine run down a bit, I ‘but the Allies are winding it up for ligious bodies there rather strong feeling that the time is ripe for a forth. will be Jesus in the second ministry lems of making ends mect all thru’) In war, chivalry is the best policy,| f I cannot face a moral issue not only because it is decent and) that it will be another Teacher, no every time I buy a theater ticket or tight, but because there is such a The futile ‘Can I thing as getting licked. Germany is taught by Buddha and by Jesus, but | afford this, ought I to afford that,’ sorry now that it overlooked this im- with emphasis suited for | faced and answered daily as a moral portant point.—Howston Post. this other time. Some look for him question leads either to miserliness i Ae immediately, others believe that it or immoral prodigality, and in either willbe nearly the end of the century case to weakening of character. before the present chaos will have! “Once a y quieted sufficiently so that he may jevenings f be heard. From one point of view the end ‘not at all. In case of doubt, at the book. “IT make the plan afford leeway I don’t pretend to verse, or even of our little earth. But; keep within it to the last penny, but newspaper. Evidently, ot all the ideas, beliefs, prejudices, po- I make the various allowances ayer- secure a newspaper thru which no litical systems which made the world age up., I don’t spent four dollars one could suspect him of dealing with: of the past have consumed. | worth of time hunting for a missing the brewery interests, Mr. Brisbane Thought in every lirfe’ isi new. The | three cents in the balance, but I know beught one this time! in, Milwaukee.— springs of life have been} quickened. |withjn three or four dollars what I, Kangas City Star. From the ashes ‘of the fires of old spend every month. aie hatreds and misunderstandings “It’s not, I repeat, a sprouting a new | phai It’s not a matter survey of tle situation: There ate in of interest or enthusiasm. But as'a the uniform in France at the present matter of sheer self-protection, as ajtime six future presidents, 367 future saver of life, liberty and happiness, Governors of , States, 3,643 future I cannot do without it.” members of Congress, 134,987 Fed- eral department clerks, 64,3 ,bers of State legi: ¢ | justices of the peace, 7 It is well enough for not o ‘ but present office-holders in the United States not to lose sight of this fore- ‘ .,. cast. Full reports will increase the estions as to its democratic majority all One that _ - ston Pont ‘ —Houston ‘os! developed to the highest degree, it “"° same new 6 4 foretold in scripture. Some believe | the year. less great, teaching the same truths ja pair of shoes. another “We are down and out; isn’t that enough?” the ar I spend two or three prince one of his ing finances and making ‘Everybody knows that they are down Then I bother my conscience but what must be made sure for all is that they Observer. remarks crownless in interviews. a plan. I mere- | time are out.—Utica of the world has already been ac--jly look There has been no li eral destruction * 8 « complished. of the visible uni- for emergencies. anxious been matter of We can only give a_ preliminary era. ical virtue. The world is indeed gone. The ten- der shoots of the new plaht must be fertilized with faith. . They must not) be ,stunted with old dulln We, who have been again in the baptism of fire of the past few years, must tend and nour- ish this new world. And to do off the ourselves in mental and or in- credulity. born! PEED, SUBMARINES HEREAFTER Champions of the submarine are # sate beginning to lift their heads; ft egeemn ine? the subm: and it we must cas old arment: ne in its recent role, and! clothe as a civilized tool of mankind. Vari- spiritual vestures suited to the time. 0. GREED It is said that greed has been sug are made along the aoe possibilities. of them is it bee y become a war vessel which will ‘eel MEW YEAS 5 AY OF REST FOR PRESIDENT PARIS, Jan. enjoyed his first relaxation on New sult, more effective than fighting in Year's day since coming to Europe. bringing the nations to terms. Despite rain he played golf in the morning. He enjoyed another day of rest enroute to Italy beginning may be employed to salvage the car- night. President “Wilson will visit goes of the vessels which have been Naples, Florence, Venice and probab- ly Milan. sponsible for every great disaster. from the Flood to this last war. The building: de-- d, would not pay for proper fire protec- burns, and lives are water, when a war is declared the under-sea boats of the belligerents will simply proceed to blockade each stroy because the greedy owner tion. The excursion boat turns turtle other’s ports, and a dead lock will re- because too many tickets were sold. The coner eonstruction collapses, which graft breaks e building of improper the dam a little result ay It is suggested too, that submarines somebody collected down with the that lives and property are destroy all the sunk, in waters shallow enough to al- low it, as the English channel and parts of the North Sea. If this should prove practical, it would be’ n precious thought to make the crews of the German Their findings and so on thru list of public such catastrophes. That this great because of greed there tion. That greed is the most danger- ous element with the conference will have to contend unquestionably true. Fear of this most human of fail- ings was at the root of the suggestion to sink the To pursue this course in regard to them war arose pure is no ques- boats do the work. would ether pleasant, and memory would play her part. It racking and arduous, and when it was | which peace not be alto- would be nerve- done the property reclaimed could go German warships. to its rightful owners. Perhaps it is not a bad plan after is to fly from a common foe. There all to retain the submarine and de- velop it further. It may act as an, {instrument of justice. ————0 Liberty Bonds wanted. Security Loan Company, Suite 302 O. S. Build-! ing. 12-1tf this operate = fai This is the If it implies the yielding of is some method for disp which will y toward everybody. thing to be sought. a point here, the conceding of some- so much the better, for! the world will then be on the high- road to generosity thing there, ok a Home Cooking—at The Harvey. and the dispas- sionate adjustment which must-be the standard of human dealings if peace is to rule from now on The disposal of the battleships may well’be made a test case of the pra ticability of peaceful division or co That the should be sunk would be a confes operative possession. on of ‘the superior power of Waste and Greer. Eighteenth and Curtis Ste. » DENVER, COLO. | LIQUOR AND DRUG ADDICTIONS orage, Hides, Pelts, Wool, Furs. |cured by a scientific course of medi. ; easonable, Reliable, Responsible. | cation. The only place in Colorado: 12-2-tf! where the Genuine Keeley Remedies | o— CASPER STORAGE.CO. The New York World suggests thaty Sl eissine allowance to meet the inev-|is devoting a large part of its time th Some people who insist that the| Mr. Brisbane has bought another! 3 land 2.—President Wilson ~ Today’s Events The United States congress will re-( me its sessions today, following the! recess over the Christmas holidays. -| Calvin Coolidge will be inaguurated governor of Massachusetts today in succession to Samuel W. McCell. | The Senate Interstate Commerce |Committee at Wsshington today will begin public hearings on the legisla- 7 | | tive program with regards to the fu-| |ture of the railroads. A great public campaign to advo-! cate the establishment of a League of Nations as an intergral part of the \peace settlement is to be inaugurat- ed with a public demonsration to be) held tonight in the Albert Hall, Lon- |don, under the joint‘auspices of the ‘British Trade Union Congress and the |Labor Party. A waterways convention has been called to assemule in Pittsburgh to- ny tou that the present session jof congre shall appropriate a sum sufficient to provide one great deep linterior waterway extending from |Florida along-the Atlantic coast to New York, thence to Lake Erie, the |Ohic and Mis: ppi rivers. | oe % & 1 ? | In the Day’s News | Soa] | office as governor of Massachusetts, | ‘has long been prominent in Republi- |. can politics in the Bay state, altho he is still comparatively young in years. Governor Coolidge is 2 Ver- 'monter who took up his home at; |Northampton, M ,» and began the practice cf law, after completing his udies at Amherst College. He be- |gan his public career in 1899 as a member of the Northampton city council. Subsequently he served in \the maroraity of his home city for two terms. Meanwhile he had broad- ened his experience in public affairs with the service in the Massachusetts general assempis: Then he was sent to .the state senate and became the presiding officer of that body. This service was followed be election as lieutenant-governor, which office he now vacates to become chief execu- tive of the Gepunony. ealth. Today's Bithdays r 7. Miss M. Carey Thomas, Saat of Bryn Mawr College and prominent with the plan to create a League to enforce peace, born in Baltimore, 62 years ago today. Mrs. Maude Ranford Warren, known writer, who was the ‘man nurse to enter Che born at Wolfe Island, Can., 44 years ago: today. Brig-Gen. Preston Brown, member of.the general staff corps of the Unit- ; ed States army, born in Kentucky, 47 years ago today. Rt. Rev. Wiilam Forbes Adams, Episcopal bishop of Easton, Md., born at Enniskillen, Ireland, 86 years ago well ugust Benziger, celebrated New potrait painter, born ni Switzer- d, 52 yea: 10 todz Yor! —<— — We make.a spécial of salary loans. Sec UTIL Loan Company, Suite 302 . S. Building. 12-1-tf uve your mo buy a meal ticket The Harve OLD AGE STARTS a Today's s Anniversaries | ° | Calvin Coolidge, who today takes! > 1727—-General James Wolfe, the hero of the capture of Quebec, born in Kent, England. Died on the battlefield, Sept. 18, 1759. 1801—Lord Pigott’s famous diamond sold by lottery, for which an act of parliament was passed. 1844—Chantrey’s equestrian statue; of George IV. set up in Traf- algar Square, London. 1871—French and German forces en- gaged in severe fighting at Baqaume, with indecissive re- sults. 1897—German Emperor congratulat- ed President Kruger by tele- graph on the defeat of Dr. Jameson, 1901—Ignatius Donnelly, who believ-| ed Bacon wrote Shakespeare’; plays, died at Hastings, Minn Born in Philadelphia, Nov. 23,; 1831. 1915—Germany declared all exequa- tures in Belgium invalid. 1916—-Huge Russian force sledgehammer blows from Pri- pet to Roumania boundary. 1917—Germans victorious in the pre-} liminary fighting for posses. sion of the bridge at Foscan Year Ago in War |! German government announced that Germany could not withdraw her troops from those parts of Russi: which had declared their indepen-! dente. GEAMANY TO ADVOCATE ABOLITION OF WiILITARY SERVIGE, SAYS EBERT (By United Press) BERLIN, Jan. 2.—Germany will be among the first to advocate in- ternational abolition of compulsory military service, Chancellor Ebert told the United Press today. But if France continues to keep a strong will favor the adoption of the Swiss system of modified service, Ebert stated. ITALIANS TO OCCUPY SOUTHERN GERMANY, {9 BELIEF IN BERLIN’ iny Asnocintea Press] COPENHAGEN, Jan. forces of Italian troops are concen- trated near Innsbrueck, Austria, and according to reports from Berlin, it is presumed that the concentration is directed against Munich. Berlin re- ports say that if Bolshevis out in South Germany, Ita! will occupy that region. ee Pale Word.—Salesm: Mewnishuns— aaa megniiic ent one.” ‘Grand! T want London Opinion WITH YOUR KIDNEYS e begins with estive organs. i easy to believe the kidneys and 2 and in prope un be deferred on. relieving the y due to adv ing yea’ home rev GOLD M lea’ contain e them as e © ‘ r beyond that enjoyed)‘ you would a pill, with a swallow of The oil gtimulatey the liduey action and cnabl off the poisons old age. New life and ngth increaso you continuegthe treatment, comipletely restfred continue. takin, le or two each day, GOLD MED- riem Oil a will keep you in health and vigor and prevent a return premature until old age or disease have gett wn for good. At the first sign Bae Sour Rider are not working properly, go to your druggist and get a m.| box of ‘GOLD MIDAT Hoare Oa Capsules. Money refunded if they do not help you. Three s But re- member to ask for the original imported GOLD MEDAL brand, Ta sealed pack- ages, Bloom’s Annual January Clearance Sale January 4th ‘riday’s Tribune hurled. standing army Germany -| 2. —Large | i—I suppose | you require a grand piano, madam?”’} M */“T Have Never Seen — | Anything Like It” |Carrick Gains Sixteen Pounds | In Less Than 30 Days By Taking Tanlac. William Carrick, for many years! |a resident of Tacoma, ‘Washington, is {now a citizen’ of Hunter, Missouri. |Hunter, recently, Mr. Carrick ‘called |at the Owl Drug Store in Kansas City and purchased two bottles of Tai his experience with the medicine that will be of interest to all suffering people. ~ * “T have nevér seen anything,” said | Mr. Carrick, “sell like’ Tanlac: is sell- ng out on “the Pacific coast, around | where I lived: A friend of mine ac- itually went 75 miles one day to get it now, I believe I would do the same thing, rather than be without it. When |' first started taking it I had little |idea it would do me any good, but {when I tell you I have gained sixteen pounds jn less than thirty ‘days and lam able to work for the first time | ‘in months, you can understand whyI talk like I do about it. | “Something like a year ago my ap- | petite went back on me and my stom- jach got in such a bad fix that noth- ‘ing I would eat seemed to do me any good. My food would sour sdén af- |ter meals and keep me belchifig up sour gas for hours. It suffered ter- rible pain about my stomach all the time and at timse I would tifn so deathly sick that I could hardly re- tain a thing I had eaten. I dropped |off 27 pounds in weight and hardly |had strength to raise my han F | was so nervous for almost: six P Aes 14 ig nally ly jthat I hardly slept at all. got down flat of my back in be | ouldn take a bit of nourishmentjex+ |cept a little milk—and for five Weeks I thought sure I would ASYEE Pally | through. | “I was stopping with my nephew ii ind 2 | Money to loan on chattels. “ Secu- |vity Loan Company, suite ‘302 ~0-S , | Building. 12-2-t¢ | | | | | | ieee ‘omen én roa eee jtiste ion seerente or mony 35c Quick, Clean Service. Home-Made Mexican OPEN’ | While enroute to his future home in) fro lac and made a statement regarding a bottle and knowing what I do about | UNTIL'2 A. M BOSTON CAFE GUST TRIPLAS, KATIE VAN, Proprietors. Tacoma at this time, ‘anda seen Tanlac recommended he went down and got a Well, sir, by the my first bottle’ was on my feet and feel- ing like a different man. MY appe- tite picked up right away and I soon got so I couldn't get enough to eat, and ever since I ae -my second ° bottle I have been feeling strong and fine as you please. Thé sour- ness, gas and pain left my ee; ach entirely an m my diet. It was al f spring when T: nla‘ me up and I work immer, at my trade as c ard have felt fine ‘all the t don’t -believe- I -ever--enjoyed better Brae than I do now. Ihave Ps fat peo; people ‘and as I was FL “here. today, I stopped in to get ‘bottles to carry down to lek igh because I don’t want to be with er by the gut it. Tanlac is sold in C Casper Pharmacy and in ‘Alcoy, OVA. | lhe" Prcoute Mek M scaptite Co.- Be |HOME COOKING:=at The “Harvey. | A Man With Well "Pressed Clathes It means much to him and~ more to us tobe able to them better ‘than ‘they : ever pressed before, You can Prove this statement to ‘your — i Will saye you : money your Wardrobe rank bag, id Suiteases textainjaent, 7 to 12 in the tenoe ef Music and Entertaini s Try Our Meals AND UP BOSTON CAFE ¢ Best in Town. Chili at’ iF Phone 349-M. mith x Coal. : We have several cats is Rock S % onhand. Fill your coal in ee SPANISH Tuesdays and Fhursdays, 7 p:m. New Classes Starting. CASPER bees. oe COLLEGE, good ber Co, Se

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