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‘The Casper Daily Tribune “ Issued every evening except Sunday at Casper, Natrona county, Wyo. Publi Oil Exchange Building. L.EPHON cation offices: BUSINESS TEL Snter at Casper (Wyoming) Po! as second-class matter, N. MEMBER THE ASS REPORTS FROM TH JE. THOS. DAIL Advertixing Repr Davia J 1 fth Ave, . inquiries. S an agricultural way. ° 1 It should. give actual facts * when it talks about bushels and tons). ! | Jn the Day’s News | an acre. pre GR Today? $ : Bithdays * And. the campaign should cian a — 5 aan = era “i . 5 t ir Satyendra Sinha, who has taken be followed up with éxpert informa |) 5. Hace as Under Soéretary for India tion and expert advice in answer t0|\jn the v British government, i ‘the first East Indian. ever appointed tc a position jn the imperial cabinet. This is not the first important precedent established by Ris Satyendra, for he the first Indian to be appointed ta the Viceroy’s Exec e Council and also the first of his countrymen to be appointed a king’s counsel. .He was educated at the Presidency Cot ‘lege in Caleutta, and came to Bigland Advertising will help Wyoming in But it is a dif- ferent thing to whoop up crops as a matter of state pride and to whoop up crops a means of getting satis- fied enthusiastic settlers. eee Ray Higeins, 3 Bldg. in 1881. He studied at Lincoln’s Inn, Denver, : and allied to the bar in 1886. SUBRORTPTION RATES Returning to India he practiced as . hy) Ball oriCarrier, ; a barrister at the Hight Court in sie Sone: 5 : The Jack Pot ,Caleutta. Subsequently he became Qne Month . 4 ~~ | Standing Counsel to the government of India, and in 1907 was appointea post s od than th All subscriptions n! st be paid in ad- nd The Daily Tribune will not nsure delivery after subscription be- somes one month in arrears. Member the Associated Press The Associated Press in exclusively entitied to the use for republication of ull news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited tn this puper and also the local news published herein. ANOTHER RATE ADVANCE? (From Saturday Evening Post) There is little dispute about the They will remain in the hands of the gov- fature of British railroads. ernment. Apparently they have got to, for operating costs under govern- jas usual, come at the end.—Chicago The blockade of New York did not} th meager net eld sovecauessenerel cee E nea Be he war.— stic he held for ten years. He repre ed India at the imperial conference in 1917, and on that occasion v made a freeman of the city of Lon occur after Republican. * A lot of men love their country, don. but not enough to let it own the rail-| SS a roads.—Columbus_ Citizen. et | Today’ s Events + 8 8 pal It will not do to discharge a man; National Child Labor Day will iz from the fighting line into the bread-| guearved today throughout the United : = z Lea GS | States. line.——New Ronis pve rine Sun. | The 160th aniversary of the birth of Robert Burns will be celebratci today by sons and daughters of Scot- land in all parts of the world. The Baron and Baroness Cedee The pez soup and fish. The nut-cracking will, table has begun on the e strom (the latter formerly Adelina ment management have reached a Tribune. Patti, the most famovs of singers, Point withuwhiche dprivatelsmanaces| a 5S will celebrate their 20th wedding an- ment could not cope. The London Times figures that the railroad wage bill this year will be one hundred and twenty-seven million pounds against - forty-seven million pounds before the war. Our government has raised freight, 25 per cent and passenger rates e than that; ating costs have increased still more. rates somewhat m but oper- In October gross receipts of the rail- ‘roads were greater than in the year before by 28 per cent, or a hundred end seven million dollars; but oper- ating expenses were greater by 48 per cent, or a hundred and twenty- two million dollars, so in spite of the advance in rates net earnings were smaller by fifteen million dollars. Op- 78 por It seems not erating costs now consume cent of gross reccipts. improbable that the government will have to advance rates again or pay a deficit out of the tr . There is no question which it ought Not all of us service equally by any means. to do. use railroud If the railroads furnish service at less than cost, the bigger users get an adva age over the smaller u The only fair scheme is io charge those use railroad service what the service costs Higher operating costs under yoy- ent management are due ma her wages; and higher wa; thir they do not come out of the to hig and large, are a stood They must be paid for by users of railroad service or by the general public thru to meet the deficit on rail road oper: When the govern- ment advances railroad wages it is not king a gift out of a magic corn- ucopia is taking money out of your poc ay cheerfully, but look the situation in the face. es THE RIGHT KIND OF ADVER.- ING (From Buffalo Voice) Over the ¢ evine telegraph comes the news that the present Re- publican state legislature will make | an eppropriation for carrying on the! work of the Wyoming state board of immigration—a board that has been allovred to slumber for the past. siy years on account of the fact that the last three legislatures failed and re- fused funds for this d It is will asi, ppropriate any artment. reported that Governor Carey for a fund for use in adver- tising Wyoming and her agricultural and mineral re: purces, the money to in the be placed i beard hands of the state of immigration above indi- ch is a fine thing if the adver- is to be put in the hands of some person who knows how to tell the truth and nothing more, and a mig! dangerous thing if the adver- t to be written by some person who not have the ability to stick to the Wyoming could be helped by adver- For that matter, anything can y advertising, from an un- - extra change would be welcome with y owing to the’ de , business up. But the ad- vert 5: be such that there will be no flare-back. Wyoming, if it advertises, should advertise . speci-| | But niversary today. After getting the farms for the “Several speakers of national promi- soldiers, the next job will be to get) nence are scheduled to address the ais oe oes ig jg annual dinner of the Pennsylvania the soldiers for the farms, This is) anne! dinner of the Pennsylvania not 1865.—Duluth News-Tribune. | tonieht at the Waldorf-Astoria. «8 “Reconstruction” wiil be the sub- Pe Mehen ety: 4o.|dect. of consideration at a special Make Paderewski President of Po ie oro teed in’ Boston to land, so that the Germans will have |day by the Massachusetts State to face the music.—Indianapolis Star.|Branch of the American Federation | of Labor. Rt. Rev. David iH Greer sesh A Italian-American Soc s the most complete which Charles E. Hughes is and wholly satisfactory eulogy that dent, is to hold a celebration Thi Goes i- and Sa : od.—New York | Pageant this afternoon in the Metro- has yet been: uttered—New York) isn Opera House, in New York Tribune. City, to commemorate the service rendered in the war by the Italian ola |27™Y and na E Ford, twenty-fur-year- peewee Hs son of Henry Ford, has been made % =F 5 2 i y | | president of the Ford Company Year Ago in War musa lary AOt 2130 COCRa vege WHEL | a(coare sii nae tmaan bare wre makes one more Ford that got there ser and Kiel demanded realization of without self-starter.—Franklin | Reichstag’s resolution of J 19, ate abolition of militarism, and elctoral Bist reforms. a * ————— Why spend all day Sunday cook ing when you can get a home-cooked ladies’ ponfires? The Pres- meni a home-like piace. W 1 Cafeteria, t Wh» was the inspired idiot who stopt the ident draws a royalty on every copy burned, and you'll agree that a little » many royal butlers to tip.—Chi- 0 Tribune. Street in Chicago has long residents, inability of street-car Goethe been a sensitive spot to Mr. Louis Young, 205 Merrimac St., Rochester, N. Y., writes: “I suffered for thirty years with chronic bowel troubie, stom: ach trouble and hemorrhages of the bo We eht a bottle of Peruna and I took it. fa xithfully, and T began to feel hett: ond and On this ¢ residcat has suggested that the sed to Joffre Street. policemen to pro- ors nounce it. account some pi riot pame be ch Kansas City Star. My wife persuaded me to con- tinue, and I took it for some <> time directed. Now Iam a well man.” YES, CALL IT THE FLU your back is broke and your When eves are blurred, And your shin bones knock and your tongue is furred, V. V. Scoggan And your tonsils squeak and your hair gets dry, And you're doggone sure you're go- ing to die, and KHKKKKKKEKHREK you're sed won't eH ed you afraid you will— Just drag to bed and have your chill, {And pray to the Lord to see you through, ‘For you've got the flu, got the flu. boy, you've For gravel and excavating. KEKKERREERKKEEE When your toes curl up and your belt goes flat, twice as as a mean yeu're Thomas cat, PERUNA. Made Me a Well Man az & MECHALEY CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 141 W. Second St. Telephone 20 YOU BUILDERS. SEE CASTLE & MECHALEY We give you good service Lord Fisher, first baron of Kiver, - tone, who was First Lord of the Brit-| ish Admiralty at the commencement of the war, born 78 years ago today, ° widely > Antonio Scotti, who is famed #3 an operatic baritone, born Naples, Italy, 53 y: o today Chas. Curt 3 d States enator from Shaw- nee: county, Kan., 59 years 0 to. day. Mrs. Marion Craig Wentworth, au, thor of “War Brides,” born in St. aul, 47 yea 0 today. Edgar F. G s, dean of American Yarness reinsmen, born at Lebanon, nn., 68 y igo tod vents igokieday: . = eG "Today’s Anniversaries | 1759—Robert Burn famous et, born Scotland. July 21, ture passed th g the Unive at Charlottes- vilic. 1828—The Duke of Wellington be. me British premier. New York Cits q we of Princess Marza: ct of Prussia, sister of the German Emperor, and Prince Frederick Charles of Hess,. 1894—The turbine wheels of the great Ni: ya tunnel were set, in operation. 1915—German armored cruiser Blue, cher sunk in North Sea by the British squadron in running fight with German fleet. 1916—President Wilson rejected Germany’s Lusitania proposai because it admitted no legal liability. 1917—French transport Admiral Ma, gon sunk by submarine, with loss of 150 lives. eS AIRPLANES IN MEXICO MEXICO CITY, Jan. Candido Aguilar, chief of military operations in the gulf regions, is using airplanes with success in his campaign against the , espec- ially in the state of Vera Cruz. only are the aviators doing valuable reconnaisance work, but one recently dropped bombs on a party of bandits who believed themselves safely con- led on the top of a mountain near Ree Eighteenth and Curtis DENVER, COLO. LIQUOR AND DRUG ADDICTIONS cured by a scientific course of medi cation. The only place in Colorado where the Gennine Keelev Ramede Cor. Sts. | Suffered thirty years with stomach trouble and | hemorrhages of the bowels. Liquid or Tablet Form Lander Valley Produce Hay, Grain and Farm Products Wire or write Lander, Wyo. KKK Our price for delivery of gravel and sand, $1.50 per yard; delivery any part of town. : i i i : EKER EEEREE KEES al curse And life is a long and And your food all tastes like a ha boiled hearse, When your lattice aches and your head’s a-buzz And nothing is as it ever was— 4 Here are my sad regrets to you, hil, Seaitties ety Gina Alm ine eT wot |} EVERYTHING IN BUILDING MATERIAL the flu. 1 RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY Whdt is it like, the Spanish flu? | Ask me, brother, for I've been thru. i wae oe It is misery out of despair. It FARM MACHINERY GAS ENGINES teeth pulls your and -curls your hair, It thins your blood and bends your bones And fills your craw with moans and groans; And sometimes, maybe, you get well— Some call it flu, I call it hell. —International Musician. Phone 62. Office and Yard, First and Center. Keep Your Pledge—Buy War Savings Stamps WAGONS COAL t opening of Brougham’s) . in Twenty-fourth St., 25.—General ¢ BIG SHEEP OUTFIT OF PARK COUNTY 1S SOLD. FOR QUARTER MILL Frank L. Hudson of Lander has bought the Hart Mountain sheep out- fit at Cody from Ganguet & Barth, of , Billings, Mont., the deal representing ‘nearly a quarter of a million of dol-) 25,- lars. The ranch embraces nearly 000 acres of leased and deeded lands on Pat O’Hara creek and will carry several bands of sheep. There were: 11,250 head of sheep included in the! deal, besides a great quantity of hay, grain and pasture. Mr. Hudson will move his sheep over there as soon as he can get cars, it being impossible to get across | the mountain with them now. as feed there for his former bands, as wpll as those bought, and will have summer range for the entire outfit, He will continue to make his! home in Lander, having placed Tim Barrett in charge of the ranches of the sheep. DISTRICT COURT MEETS LANDER, Wyo., Jan. 25.—Dis- trict Court will meet next Monday to take up the work of the regular by Judge Winter because of the in- fluenz epidemic. On account of accumulated business counties of this district, Judge Win- ter has secured Judge V. J. Tidball of the Laramie district to preside. hile Welix Wilson will have charge | = | who will explain the necessity of rais- jing the fund for the refugee children He! | IN LANDER NEXT MONDAY’ December term which was adjourned , in the other} It is hoped that the business of the} regular term can be cleared up. TIME SAVED IN BOILER REPAIRS We recently saved the Big Bear Oil Company, three weeks’ shutdown by welding a @ cracked mud ring, calking 2 edges, cutting a man-hole in the top of a boiler permitting the boiler tubes to be cleaned with- out removing the tutes. Aftey ihe tubes were cleaned the piece cut out was welded place, leaving the sheeet in its original strength. a in We can do the same for you Mr. Oil Company. We will save you from one- f to one ‘d the time it will for any other process i making repairs Ali Welds Guaranteed Oxy-Acetylene_Weld- ing Shop 118.5. David Phone 611-3 Casper, Wyo. WH tH nu Then you can clean your drap- eries and walls also. - NATRONA POWER CO.} Bas nA ia ie NOTICE: - ve Larsen: desirés to-anougeet tees. returned to-Caspér and is prepared to do metal’ weather strip- ping for the home owners of "ATHERLESS CHORE | Address, A. Larson, So. Butler | pelos City. : + ce The covadetea Bava. drive by the mem | Sarma ys coe [ bers of the With the Célors club a We tinke-a special of adlasy joe |raise a fund of $3,000 for the father- ‘Security Loan Company. Suite 302, less children of Franee by the sale/0.S. Bldg 1-2-tf of 3,000 chances on a Pathfinder’ car which was donated to the cause by Steve Tobin will be ushered in thie evening with a thoro canvass of th business district. The hotels and} business houses will be invaded fo)- lowed by a brief but strenuous cam, paign in each of the local theaters. i Speeches will be made at the the | aters by retired Four-Minute-Men, 1 WANT YOUR BRICK WORK On Contract or Fercentag: Call for Estimate PETER CLAUSEN 416 So. Jackson i Seeing Is Surely Believing ‘and urging the purchase of the tick- ets for this noble work. { ae The Wyatt Cafeteria is ready for the public. Good cooking. ee We will buy your second hand fur. niture and pay highest market price. ' Phone 249. 121 West First st. | 1-13-26, | And that’s.the reason we are so anxious to have you: 4 allow us the pleasure of ' cleaning, repairing and. pressing your clothes. It’s - the way to learn that we are best equipped to do choice work. | i STORAGE Household Goods, Pianos, “tc. | | Storage House ca Burlington Trac A CHAMBERLIN FURNITURE | | AND UENDERPARING ca. i ——— Casper Loan Office Will save you money on your Wardrobe Trunk, Hand- bag, and Suitcases Reliable 133 So. Centor Phona 255-J Casper Dry Clearing Co. 0. L. THOMPSON, Prop. Phone 804-J. SPANISH and FRENCH Tuesdays and Thursdays, 7 p. m. New Classes Starting. CASPER BUSINESS COLLEGE, Inc. Phone 349-M. Smith Tarter Bldg. Second and Durbi: CALL 74-J See Ben Transfer Co Stanley Overbaugh, Prop, Light and Heavy Hauling._ Furniture and Piano moving a specialty. Baggage transferred. QUICK AND SATISFACTORY SERVICE pre Why pay $3 for a tree that we will furnish for $1 BUY YOUR SHADE TREES OF THE COLORADO NURSERY COMPANY Established 1880 Incorporated 1907 WHOLESALE AND RETAIL—OLDEST AND BEST Western Grown Trees—For Western Planters’ We expect to make delivery of trees about April 20th. We have all kinds of shade trees. Do not wait until planting tim’ to place your order. The sooner the order is given the better trees you get. A six to eight foot tree in most any varicty for $1.00. Our prices are right and the trees of the best. S. H. PUNTENNEY Casper, Wyo. 412 South Park Ave, Phone G83-J 4 Registers E cleaned out with the Hoover attachments. Theso attachments eet the dirt every- B where—bigh or low and you neither have to strain your ‘back or stoop, May we demonstrate to you? Phone 69. Sr = Duct! Dust! Dust! |: HADI AA YOU can. get all the dust--- sand and lint out of your rugs and carpets and with f the attachments you can get the dust out of your floor registers and radiators.