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The Casper Daily Tribune Issued every evening except Sunday at | Casper, Natrona county, Wyo. Publi- | cation offices: Oil Exchange Building. BUSINESS TELEPHONE..........- 16 Enter at Casper (Wyoming) Postoffice a8 second-class matter, Nov. 22, 1916. | MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED REPORTS FROM THE UNITED T 7 PRESS | EARL E. HAN’ . Associate Editors: J. B. GRIFFITH MARGARET V. C. DOUDS SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail or Carrier One Year . Six Months One Month Per Copy . No subecri tion’ by mail accepted for leas period than three months. All subscriptions must be paid in ad. | vance and The Daily Tribune will not | insure delivery after subscription be- comes one month in arrears. Member of the Ansociated Press The Associated Press in exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pauper and also the local news published herein. WAR SPIRIT TO MAKE PEACE In one of his speeches abroad, President Wilson told of the remark of a friend of his, ‘“When peace is conducted in the spirit of war, there will be no wer.’” And isn’t it the truth? If nations gave to the promotion of peace one- hundredth as much devotion, effort and money as they give to the prose- cution of wars once started, surely there would be m'ghty few wars. And if a tithe of the thought and fore- that statesmen have hitherto given to preparing fcr wars and! ‘ars were given to th2 con: sight struction of guarantees against war, between times, would there be any wars at all? The whole world knows how the | statesmen of the Allicd nations found a practical way to pool ther own th'nk’ng machinery and the'r coun-| resources when it came to a zestion cf international unity or de- struction. They formed a league of: armed nations, in complete co-operz- | tion, end so defcated Germany and saved the world. son why a similar spirit and effort cannot now devise a plan that will stop all such catastrophes herea before they start? Is there any rea- | -o—— i THE LANGUAGE LESSON | «| ness | ( ‘ ay = to pay them to handle it individually. And the small stores and shops could do nothing with their waste wica| The Jack Pot for the same reason. Under the co-operative jment nbout 100 stores and factories, big and little, are turning their waste ‘i»nter‘al over to a mutual salvage es- if only for the week-end. tablishment. In this way scraps of usually burned or dumped into an sh heap, are collected. They soon zmount to large quantities well worth Government officials are watching {the Akron experiment with interest. | ‘If it works as well as it is expected, it will probably serve as the model for a national salvage system. A communit; vage that included in its operations the waste material from private homes, boxes, paper, rags, bottles, cans, etc., such as suit Less than a year ago an Asso€iat€d|Sccoms te’have possibilities not offered Press dispatch from Berlin reported, by the old method of turning a few that the German Language Associa-' things over to the twice-a-year rag tion of Berlin had adopted a resolu-| tion that all peace negotiations should be conducted in German. There is no reason to doubt the; truth of the report, as it is entirely, in keeping with the policy of arrog- | ance which until lately has marked every German deed and utterance. It is especially interesting right now as a point of sharp contrast. many could get any kind of peace! she would | terms such as she desires, adopt them gratefully whether in Choctaw or Chinese. However, whether in victory or de-, feat, one thing stands out prominent- | ly. Germany has never yet consid-) ered herself in her true relation to| the other nations of the world. Her) issued victory tion. Her defeat concerr as it presages the destruction of Ger-| her only| many or renders Germany uncom- fortable or handicaps the German future. Learning that the peace negotia- tions will never be conducted in Ger-| man is Germany’s first language les- son. She has learned that the other | nations of the earth will not be forced to speak the language of a nation which has voiced sentiments justly abhorred. Germany herself must learn to sneak the language of Now hymonity. which is not of necessity English or French cr Italian or an: other one tongue. but is the speech of any nation wh'ch voices th> will to act only in accord- of its n ance with the good of all mankind. |! ae COMMUNITY SALVAGE PLANT | Th Salvage work by Allied armies in the war zone has served to open many eyes to the value of saving! small th'ngs on In| the army camps at home and abroad, | nothing was considered too little or| too worn to be examined in the sal-| a large scale. vage plants. Akron, 0., has now started what! is believed to be the first big co-op- plant im the e ive city salvage The large manufacturing concerns in that city have always maintained salvage departments of | th own where the big auantities! of waste material were handled. But| even these large plants were obliged| country. | magazine. peddler and burning the rest. 0 HOUSES OF THE FUTURE kitchens houses without-dining rooms are dis- Houses without cussed in two articles in a current The cooking three times a day is no longer a necessity of the first. It proposes that cooked food be brought from a_ central kitchen operating for a whole block, and maintains that no house needs any more of a kitchen than a tiny stove for use in illness or emergency. This fully. Jersey plan has been tried success- There is a tewn which was to be won by annihila-|meals- to members, and which has! been running long enough to have A entral kitchen has been started by! a young woman in New York, who at to in assed the stage of experiment. forced put last accounts was. being enlarge her plant and branches. That the house servant of the past will no longer be available in the fu- In many com- ‘munities she has all but vanished, | ture seems certain. her place to a large extent having When the kitchen goes out of the house, the been taken by machinery. . last excuse for a servant for the or- dinary housewife will have gone with it. Temporary assistance with very, small children will alwa sar, the first few years this is not quired. The house without a dining room for a small number of adults seems ito work very well; but where mal are children or irregularity meals, people who have tried it find it more bother than it is worth. Houses in which bedrooms oe jgiven place to sleeping porches with |tiny dressing roonfs are also being! 3. built nowadays. Housing, like; overything else, faces\a stern scrut- iny. than the house of the past. as Liberty Bonds wanted and} club in a New serves cooked s be neces- if mother and children are to p> well and unruffled, but after! re- about | Precedents are being broken. The house of the future is difficult to foretell, but it will probably be! yiore sensible and less concentional, Security to let a great deal of small waste £0j;,52n Company, Suite 302 0.-8.! ARE you uP, JOHN? 1 i | It’s really too much to expect that that $36,000 Nobel peace rainbow up in Norway, {chance to run down . eo ot ! { |metal and waste paper, all the things, William Randolph Hearst.—Colum- {that are simply small rubbish and bia Record. * 8 & The Hohenzollerns and the cootics ‘are sorry the war is over.—Syracuse | Herald. hes Po | The Dr. Jekyll of Berlin now | fears for the safety of his Hyde.— |The Gamecock (University of South Carolina.) * * as eee | It looks as if repairedness were, | going to cost Germany more than! | preparedness didl—Columbi\s_ Ohio State Journal. oe * But when Pershing’s men come out | 'of Germany, they will know their: |conda Standard. | a ee | The Kaiser with his 500-odd uni- forms seems to be all dressed up with no place to go.—New York Telegraph. If Ger-|the private home is the argument of | * * «© Licking war-savings stamps leaves a pleasant taste in the mouth. Try\ it.—Chicago Daily News. * + It must be a glorious thing for \Grand Old Britain to reflect that in her modern history only her own \kith and kin have been able to put her down for the count.—Houston Post. ss 8 think of the inex- pressibly glorious achievements for the preservation of the liberties end civilization of mankind, it makes When we us inexpressibly proud to have been able to put out such a gallant foe in the days we used to scrap. And when British Army and Navy in the war we think of the matchless gallantry Phone 349-M. ove eo 9 Ssowceeeseneesevs way back if anything happens.—Ana- her ecocccrcccccccccccccccveccccosscoscoocesccenccestoceces: SPANISH Tucsdays and Thursdays, 7 p. m. CASPER BUSINESS COLLEGE, Inc. Smith Tarter Bldg. | | | | & ° ? ! In the Day’s News | | pllreLeueie rac Tecra “ To have an income of one milli dollars a month, to control vast busi- | 90” announced his famous “14 points” | arrange-| President Wilson ewill overlook the ness cornorations and to live in a fit: | ‘ teen-million-dollar mansion in New surrounded by one of the e pre collections in Amer- is the lot of William A Clark, mulimillionaire mine owner! and former United States senator from Montana, who today reaches the age of four-score Like fmany other Amtricans who have ac | ,. 4 z Clark | discussion at the annual conferénce cumulated vast wealth Mr. spent his boyhood on a farm. In early manhood he abandoned the study oi law to seek his fortune in the west- ern country, whence tame stories of men getting rich over night. In Colo- rado, Idaho, and finally in Montan: he engaged in trading and later on! in the banking business. With capi-4 tal thus acquired/he secured contro! of Montana mining ‘properties which coone put hin in the class of multi- millionaires. 1 Today's Birthdays! a ——o| Major General Sir Sam Hughes, former Canadian minister of militia | and defence, born at Darlington, Ont. | G6 years ago today. 1 Rt. Hon. Sir Maurice de Bunsen, ! ho was British ambassador in Vien- | hia at the commencement of the war, | born 67 years ago. today. | Sir Frank W. Dyson, astronomer | royal of Great Britain, born at Ash- ‘oy, England, 51 years ago today. Major General George Hr Camer ¢n, who commanded the Southern and Western American troops in the Ver- dun region, born in Illinois, 58 years ago today. Irwin W. Drew, United States sen. ator from New Hampshire by guber. natorial appointment, born at Cole. brook, N. H., 74 years ago today. A tus Thomas, one of the most suce ul of American playwrights, born St. Lovis, 60 years ago to- di | | Burton Holmes, noted traveler lecturer and author, born in Chicago 49 years ago t Weight for weight and with prope, ‘burners, fuel oil is supposed to give 50 per cent more steam than cons of the Yankee boys who have fought by side with s sons, it makes us proud that so onderfully side Dix we were able to lick their fathers un- til we were so exhausted that we couldn’t proceed with the job.—j; | Houston Post. New Classes Starting. Second and Durbin ;. i KA oes % Poe oereceesoaies Coal. mp3 We have several cars Rock Springs Coal % on hand. -Fill your coal bin with this good $ Keith Lumber Co. Phone 3. naa ae ew oe 6 0. 6..6..0. 050 OL BS Mi Rock Springs | 3 senator, is 80 years old today. |!umber situation will be discussed by KEELEY == sides | I LIQUOR AND DRUG ADDICTIONS "Ted's AnniGeanes | excedtive GarenieS i to meet in Charged in Transit 3 _. ‘oda Anni ‘Saries | | Chicako today to decide upon a tenta-| ‘One “oF the methods of commani- pees ly S ver: ] |tive program for its future activi-/cating from one officer to another § ACB. a gs ‘ ithe trenches is to-give the message Ratification of the fedefal prohi-i'‘to one of the privates and tell him to bition amendment is expected to re./“‘pass the : along” the line until. ceive early attention in the leginia |it teaches fs patemtion, viz., the of- |tive sesions to begin today in Ver |ficer at the other énd. ‘The follow- mont, Missouri and North Oarolif™. |ing story Will: show how a serious Doctor of Music in America|“ conference between packers, hog/message can be distorted on its jour- . born at Medfield, Mags. Died &™OWers, commission men and food ney from mouth to mouth: : at Orange, N. J., Aug, 11,/2‘ministration officials is to be hela) “Lieutenant A., in charge of one end 1872. % in Washington today to consider the of the British Ithe, told the private 1821—Gen. James Longstreet, the Brice establization plan and to fix the] in front to “pass ‘the word along” “war horse of the confederacy, ae! erp nial & to Dieutenant B.: “We are going born in Edgefield district, N-|4: 93 ce the National League of Come| <0, mavanice. Can you sehd ‘us Fe-in- C. Died at Gainesville, Ga,, | i of the National League of Com-| foreements?” |mission Merchants, which is to meet a : 1844 Congress refunded the fine|i Boston today for a three-day wee |, When Lieutenant B, received. the imposed on Gen. Jackso: a{sion, A OA ey ierowdts, | mosenee tune ‘Can you dus ‘ n AU shippers, railroad officials and com-|#0ine to @ dance. ie Sab dhs 1628The Duke of Luxembourg, * comrade and,’successor of the great Conde, born:in Paris., Died Jan. 4, 1695. 1792—Lowell Mason, the first music- ian who received the degree of, ' New Orlearis in 1814. * three ‘and ‘four-pence?”—Strand 1869—Admiral Sir James A. Gordor,,|Tstlon men from all parts of tH) 9p, aise, <a the British naval-officer who | ~™** = ers —_—__— forced Alexandria, Va., to cap-| > Home -Cooking—xt The Harvey. itulate in 1814, died. Born in! | 1872. if 1890—Separation ‘of Church anc! * State proclaimed in Brazil | with religious liberty and equalty. 1915—Great Brtain replied to Ameri- can note on detention of neu- tral ships. 1916—Germans carried by assault part of French line in Alsace. 1917—Portuguese division of 20,-! 1S, = ci . . .’ | Sir Robert Warpole was Britain’s 000 men joined the Allies in| srs Prime Minister, and he served Year Ago in War _{ British recovered line near Bulle- } court after temporary German ‘sut-} | tess. President Wilson outline 14 cdK | | Hitions of peace, which, he deciared, | | America with the Allies would fight to the end to achieve. ONE BY ONE People of all classes are dis- ‘covering that our cleaning, pressing and repairing serv- ice represents completeness. We do all of our work so France. A thoroughly that he who calls yates much the longest of all—twenty-one all <: ‘gain. J > —_—______—_______* 4 | years without a break. There have will call again > been fifty Premiers since Walpole, oday s Events | who took office nearly 200 yeate a6. = @! Of the men who have filled the of- Anniversary of the Battle of New ‘fice more than once William E. Glad. Orleans, the last battle between Eng-| stone holds the record with ‘four | land and the United States. | terms. William A. Clark, multi-millionaire mine owner and former United States! When Will You Call? Unexeetted Service Phone 255-J One year ago today President Wil-| apon which peace’must be based. i Progressive farmers of Kansas wil:| assemble in force in Topeka today} for the annyal convention of their! various State organizations. i Various after-the-war phases of the the Red Cedar Shingle Congress, in| its annual session today at Seattle. Important subjects are slated for) of the Manitoba Grain Growers’ As-! AT THE HENNING ak Socinon, to be held this week at MERCHANTS’ LUNCH ; e "Mareus H. Holeomb today will en | ~ 50 Cents ter upon his third term as governo: | > DURING ‘DINNER EVERY EVENING of Connecticut, simultaneously with : the meeting of the state legislature. | MN The republican women’s national |Powecvesccccoevescocccces: woocevcccoe: ONE. INSTITUTE Cor. Eighteenth and Curtis Sts. DENVER, COLO. IF IT CANT BE DC WE CAN DO IT EAST SIDE GARAGE Lite Stade bcen yo coniers bl Lecspd rome H ’ eured by a scientific course of medi. cation. The only piace in Coloraae where the Genuine Keeley Remedies « Leveccecccscces streets e Annual Clearance Sale - Last Call of the Winter Season on Our Entire Assortment of Ladies’ Winter Coats at One-half Price Extra Special Girls Heavy Winter Coats AT $2.50 EACH | Values Up To $15.00 Richards Cunningham “THINK RICHARDS & CUNNINGHAM WHEN ‘YOU WANT THE BEST