Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 5, 1919, Page 6

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> — TY g T) ARAM aR ema a 3h wos. PAGE SIX body or comfort for the soul, not by what they get, but by what they The | Casper Daily Tribune Iasued every evening excepts Sunday at spend Casper, Natrona _ county, ‘upit- ’ cation offices: Oli Exchange Bufiding. | AH these ure kin. They cannot BUSINESS TELEPHONE? ...------- 16 enjoy today’s sun for fear of tomor- Enter at Casper (Wyomin, as second-class matter, MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS FROM THE: UNITHD PRESS J. E. HANWAY, President and Editor wet _ ecole y Editor EAR Business Manager J. B. TGRIEKITY Associate THOS. DAILY.... Advertising M. row’s rain. They will never know the flaver of the sound, sweet fruit marked from of the mE. Postopftice jof life, for they are ' their birth with the specked apple. sign er Advertising Representatives David J. Rand 341 Fifth Ave. = New York City ae J P. ay Higgins, 314 Century Bldg. t Beaver, Goto | Jacr F Ol eS A a SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail or Carrier It is said that “wet” are to be comforted after July 1 by the installation of ‘a omat mo- * Willa thirsty citizen drop a beer check in the slot communities now * tion picture theate No subsc less period than three months. All Bubscrlations must be paid in ad- yance and The Daily ‘Tribune will not Ones Ones oath te arreeee eee Pe and see a film of a bibulous citizen “Member of the Associnted 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 paper and also the local news published herein. engulfing a tub o° suds? * * © “Mandatory” government of back- ward peoples is an old story to Ameri- ca. It means exactly what we have “scHoor WAR MUSEUMS. cerns done with the Filipinos, . fat never gave it any such fancy name. The New Jersey commissign of edu-, 5 2 y + 8 Patrick Henry, jorated very eloquently {Constitution of the United States. j And yet the old document that he cation urges the prompt establish-, | ment of war museums in every school | once on a time, against the building. He suggests that students themselves could do a large part of! the work of gathering the material iviewed with such alarm worked and building the necessary cases for | pretty welt. the preservation of service flags, | e * # photographs and other war relics. | Most folks hoped that ¢ongress | Naturally such museums could not | would not repeal that daylight-saviniz be ords and trophies could not suitably very extensive. Many war rec- jew At the same time, it was noth- ing to get wildly excited about. Any- be kept in school houses. The aver-| body who really wants to save day age school building could not afford | light can accumulate a good deal of » to give much space for this purpose. it without any help from Congress. But the idea is worth consideration Lae The answer to war debts is thrift. The French, third of our population and one-fifth and could be developed to a worth- with only about one- while extent in even a small school. Now to be taught the history of the war is the time for the children of our wealth, have twice as big a and the part their country played PAtional debt; and they'll probably in it. Their interest in and apprecia- &¢t it paid as quick as we do. p : } at tion of such instruction would be The peace have conference seems to greatly increased if at the same time adopted Clemenceau’s tion of the “ all the honest ‘ concep- they were helping to set up a small mae ‘ balance of power,” with war museum. Many real war relics fs Fs nations in the world could be supplied by famili had made of magazine pictures and post- 's Who had weighing down one end of the balance Charts . and Germany boys in the — service. dangling by the neck from the other end, ers for various campaigns for war — relief work, recruiting and conserva- |® : —o ? | tion as well as all kinds of American-- | In the Day 's News | ism propaganda documents, could be, = Se) collected by the children, Bon Ogc cma cus Dus estes ofncialaggin Washington these days is Internal With the building up of such col- Revenue Commissioner Daniel C. Ro lections, too, a good deal of the deep- Pet, under whose spervision billions of dollars are to be collected under taught the new tax law to help pay Uncle and lasting ideals of community, na- Sam's war bill. In the performance tional and world progress could be Of the huge task that now confronts him Commissioner Roper has the ad vantage that comes of wide experi- ence in important administrative po- er meaning of the war could be t instilled. —— SPECKED APPLE EATERS. sitions. A South Carolinan with a record in the home legislature, he nee — moved to Washington in 1894 and “Until T was a man, grown, and became clerk of the S e committee got sense enough to buy a red apple ° interstate commerce, position ‘ involving clerical and organizing ca- at a fruit stand and eat it at once, ‘pacity of a sort not a ot committe lerks. demanded For J never knew what it was to have af (Ory he was a special agent and investiga- good sound apple,” said the man of ‘tor of the census bureau. For three 55. “My old dad always bought a years he was clerk of the House com barteleot anplencecsres vintesntanal mittee of ways and means, and for Lie : > *¢another three years, before receiving stuck it in the celler, Then it was'appointment to his present post, he was first assistant tincstmaster: gener: my job to pick them over every week, and I brought up the specked ones or ¢—____.____+ the ones with a soft spot inthe side | Today’s Events | and we ute those, because they would * 62 ie : ‘gas Today is the anniversary of the not keep. Result, we always were Boston Massacre, one of the prin cating poor apples while the good pal events leading up to the A icu: f 3 Revolution. ones down cellar in the barrel were 7 : cellar in’ the! barrell:wer Today is Ash Wednesday, ushering gettir poiled in their turn in the forty days of penitence that We may laugh at it, as a sample precedes Easter, the festival of the of old-fashioned economy, but is it, Resurrection. ah. as : In the municipal primaries in De- so old-fashioned after all? Don’t troit today thousands of women vo. most of us spend a good deal of ters of that city will exe their pw rig s age first time cating the specked apples of life 1e™, Tiene hot gustrage! foe gchar tire when we might jus’ well enjoy the Alabama cotton growers meet in fresh fruit? Montgomery today to adopt plans for Gey. ,.., Preventing the planting of a large Pi ic ENOL Aereage to cotton and a drop in cot- leave her dusting to go and rest her ton prices, The League of Nations is expected to furnish the central theme of dis eusion at the international confer she ence by neutral peace societies to meet today at Berne, Switzerland. ee soul at a good play, for fear someone will come in and see her piano un- for to in-growing, too cum- bered with the dusted. Nobody does come, has become cares of her household ae eres = interestiny, so she foses out! Loday’s Birthdays _| —__——. -_——_—O Frederick H. is the business man who the U, S, Reclamation Servi A 5 ‘i Bradford, I years ago today. 3 use he cannot afford the time Albert Johnson representative in or the mor He breaks down from congress of the Third Washington dis- trict, born 59 William H. Maxwell, intendent of schools born in Ireland, at IL, ago today. overwork, spends the ‘time in bed and Springfield, the money for a doctor. Th the themse! former super- of New York years ago re people who deny 67 ss even fair und reasonable to expenditures in the present, George F, Slosson, veteran profes- which sional billi rd player porn ut De Kalb, prepar- ing for a future condition never develops, “and departing leave 9 eddie Welsh former ‘holder of the I them law-suits to engage their lightweight pugilistic championship, ‘born at Pontypridd Wales, 33 year. ago today. behi hei vy every expenditure they make, wheth- er it be for food re are the ones who measure oe The 150th aniversary of the Bos- ton Massacre will ‘be observed next eur. and raiment for the| oJ j Today’s Anniversanes | »- < 1820—Observance of the semi-cen- tennial of the Boston Massa cre. 1832—Dr. Isaac I. Hayes, the Arctic explorer, who believed in an} open polar sea born in Ches. | ter county, Pa. Died in New} York City, Dec. 17, 1881. 1862—Kansas State Agricultural So-| ciety organized. 1869—Illinois legislature ratified the Fifteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. 1891—General elections for parlia-| Conservative victory. 1900—British received peace tures from the Boer dents. 1915—British forces lost a thousand men in night attack near Cel- les. 1916—French gained part of Doua- mont in Verdun struggle. 1917—President Wilson in inaugural address took stand in favor of armed neutrality. ——_— over presi- ¢ —_________ ¢ | Year Ago in War | = > Roumania signed preliminary peace treaty with Central Powers. American “Rainbow Division re- pelled German raid in Lorraine sec- tor. Bernard M. Baruch appointed as chairman of American War Indus- tries Board. CREAGER'S RESIGNATION ‘are used. SPANISH INFLUENZA, ‘erally from three to seven days, the} | Golden Medical Discovery.—Adv. {9 ACCEPTED BY STATE HOARY GF EBCATION | J. 0. Creager’s Hy seein as state commissioner of education was ac- cepted yesterday at a meeting of the state board of education in Cheyenne. It will take effect April 1. Jam Morgan of Cheyenne sat as a member of the board for the first time. He has been appointed by the governor to succeed D. B. Atkinson of Jireh, whose term expired Feb. and it is understood that he will also !be a member of the new board when the department is April 1. Mr. Morgan is secretary-treasurer | of the Wyoming branch of the United | Mine Workers of America and_ has | been a labor leader in’ this state for | many years. During the war he} served as a member of the district draft board. | | STATE ARCHIVES is3i.35 used tor TO HOLD RELICS OF ‘BOOZE’ AGE) CHARLESTON, W. Va. Mail.) —Three quarts of whisk bourbon and Scotch—will be placed | in the archives of W Virginia for the reference of future generations, in event Governor John J. Cornwell xgns a bill recently passed by the ate and concurred in by the house. Passage “of the bill, was secured, | it is said by pressing upon the senate tle fact that John Barleycorn is | due to draw his “last breath” in the near future, and that, as whiskey will (3 become but a thought of the past, | it would be well to place the three | (By | samples in the state archives, so that | gene to be may look upon them ap say “we have seen it.’ KEELEY INSTITUTE Eighteenth and Curtis DENVER, COLO. Cor. Ste. | |. LIQUOR AND DRUG ADDICTIONS | leured by a scientific course of medi. cation. The only place in Colorado | where the Genuine Keeley Remedier | Do Not Fear When Fighting a rman or a Germ! By DR. M. COOK The cool fighter arways wins and> so there is no need to become panic-! stricken. Avoid fear and crowds. Exercise in the fresh air and prac-, tice the three C’s: A~Clean Mouth, a Clean Skin, and Clean Bowels. To! Carry off the poisons that ac-} E in the body and to ward! off an attack of the influenza bacil- lus, take a good liver regulator to move the bow Such a one,is made up of May-apple, leaves of aloe, root 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, drink freely of hot lemon- ade 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! saches. Take an “Anuric’” tablet every two hours, logether with cop-! ious drinks of lemonade. If a true se of influenza, the food should be nple, such as broths, milk, butter- milk and ice cream; but it is impor- tant that food is given regularly in ¢ order to Keep up the patient's strength and vitality. After the ncute attack is passed, which is gen-/ drug stores, or that’ well ‘kndwn from roots and barks of forest trees —sold everywhere as Dr. Pierco’s ment in Canada resulted in aj , atmospheric conditions for the guid- | reorganized | blood maker and herbal tonic made mM UTINEERS ARE LONDON. (Correspondence of the | Associated Press.) —Thousands of the | fi |British army who recently “became | |so weary that they openly threatenéd ciation, the’ capi jmutiny unless they were soon dis-| will’ be the first’ year are |charged, have turned about face and | JOHNSON BACK IN RANKS FARMERS FORM BRITISH ARMY AN ASSOCIATION COUNT 78 with the secrctai Johnson County 25,000. e . A, lare volunteering for the New Army, C:- Holland, L. G. Canterbury, E. according to the military authorities, |who assert that they are satisfied |do Great Britain’s~share . in safe- | guarding the peace the Allies have | won. The causes said to have sent the} men flocking back to the colors are | |the unexpectedly large war borius \offered to men who “take on” and the acute industrial situation. in the case of boys from 18 to 21} |trade to fall back upon in civilian | |life. be fed, clothed and sheltered and draw a minimunrof about five dollars |a week as pocket money. They have quickly awakened to the realization that there is no such prospéct await- ing them on a return to “civvies.’”” ge AERIAL MAIL STATION FOR THE CAPITOL CHEYENNE, March 5.— (Special) —Cheyenne will be’ made one’ of the tions, according to Observer George W. Pittman, in charge of the weather bureau here. The new service is designed to aid the government air|: {mail lines soon to be operated be- tween the Atlantic and Pacific, and | necessitates the installation of a gas balloon, carrying recording intstru- ments which will be sent to a heights Sf 3,000 metres twice daily, to revord jj ance of aviators. Wyoming road reports now issued | | Eder and R. O. Watkins. lerstood that the new association that there will be little difficulty in | plans to build a farmers’ elevator at securing the 900,000 men who™ will| Buffalo to fake is The first tains ‘no h factor has been of prime importance | gry, have the “best. A FEELING SF SECURITY You naturally feel secure when you! |know that the medicine you are about absolutely pure and con- armful or habit producing Such a medicine is Dr. The same standard <A sworn statement of purity with ‘every bottle of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root. df you need a medicine, you should} On sale’ at all drug stores in Bottle of two’ sizés, medium : jand large.~ new aerial mail service weather sta- Howeverslif you wish first’ to try this great preparation send 10 cents| to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. When writ- ing be sure and mention ‘the Casper Daily Tribune.—Adv. for a sample bottle. icles of inedrporation aye | been “of State’ fo: ‘armers asso- stock of whicl epee for att, Albert It is wi Kilmer’s who have been two or more years al- Swamp-Root, kidey, liver and blad- ready in the army and who have no der remedy. of - purity,| In the New Army they will strength and excellence is’ maintained in ‘every bottle of Swamp-Root. It is scientifically compounded from vegetable herbs. It is not a stimulant and is taken in teaspoonful doses. It is not recommendeg for every- ‘itMing. It is nature’s great helper in -re- lieving and overcoming kidney, liver an dbladder troubles. supply. People keep from # | jonly by the grace of. ine. ‘warm | ‘winter. Neutral ¢o' ies are eres al lin Switzerland there are ‘no’ I |Sundays, and on ase bare minimum ar cally no foal, i ot populatio; hich ci wor for ‘ooking. at wa | TEUTONS SAVED BY MILD AND WARM WINTER By FRANK “J. TAYLOR (United P: Staff Correspondent) SSEREIN fey Mail.) The Wwarm-|have decreed that afl cafes and res- est Winter in years has done much to Htadrants must be closed by 9 o'tlock. | lessen suffering in a and in |*This saves light too,’ since there is . other parts of the former central | nothing for people to do but go to ' empires. It is looked upon as an |bed. Berlin and other German cities ‘act of providence. |are better supplied, due to proximity There has been almost no freezing | of German ‘hiines, but ‘even’ here the weather in Germany this winter. The |sho ge would be disastrous, ‘were dread'of sickness from cold Which the} it not for” warm “weather. Nation had is gradually passing. | It is estimated that’ ‘thousands would have died’ for want of heat if the usual bitter spell of winter had set in, due to the lack of coal and clothes. In Austria the situation was par- ticulgrly bad, since the ‘hotels were jallowed barely enough coal for cook- { jing. Trains were cut down to a’ minimum, barely enough to care for| traffic. In both these countries no coal at all is allowed to the public, since the few public utilities need the entireq Phone 804. Poe . , TIM HURLEY TRANSFER _ Phones—Ofiice, " 26-J; Res. 779-W. Light and Heavy Hauling, Baggage Transfer, Piano Moying If It Can Be Moved, We Can’ Do It S ibbiibobaaicceans Dr. CG. M. 2 Announces his. return from service i in ‘the: Amy - to resume “his practice. Offices in Mokler Building . ¥ ‘To. save coal Vienna and eae am Save, your money—eat at \the Har- vey. sari f = ttels. Secu- Sutte 302 9.3 ia &s save you money ‘on your Wardrobe Trunk, Hane. bag, and Money to loan“on rity Loan Company, is|y i WANT YOUR BRICK WORK On Contract or Percentage Call for Estimate PETER CLAUSEN 416 So. Jackson by the weather bureau will be greatly | | amplified, according to Observer Pitt- Man. As soon as the state highway | commission camps are at work, ‘de-| tailed reports from each camp will be | received each day and published in local newspapers. q a Before India rubber came into gen eral use as an eraser the crumb of bread used for erasing purposes. At the ™ AMERICAN Where They Phone 34 i * * a hungriest. 140 South Center Street Our aim is 2p please the most particular. cooked food is health. Health to our patrons means success to us. ~ The meats used in our establishment are the best procurable. The milk, cream and butter comes from our selected dairies. Coffee, highest grade, especially prepared for us, fresh daily and served with absolutely pure cream. and all pastries are home made. Soups, tempting and delicious. Absolutely pure. Steaks, of quality” and quantity to satisfy the Orchestra entertainment dinner and supper hours. EKKEKLEEE JOBE HE REIT HOH HAHEI EIA IAAI IB ES The MANHATTAN CAFE Casper, Wyo. Clean and “well Our pies, cakes, puddings EKKKEKKE- ERR ELKRKREAR HEIR ERE ILIA IAS ASIII IASI I Get Instant “A SUGGESTION A @oa0 ONE ' A Pe 100 PER CENT WQOL | eS 100 PER CENT WOOL “Clothes for the Man who Kagws” Latest Fashions and Fabrics for 1919 J. S. PETTINGILL Tailoring Be Luxe Room 214 O. & S. Bldg. = 190 PER CENT WOOL ~ eo Na 190 PER CENT WOOL | expect to get this. Three room bungalow and lot in best part north ~ ; Casper Addition. Price $1300. Terms to responsible party. This house just completed, never occupied, ‘is exceedingly well built and finished. kitchen. Nice kitchen cupboard. Act quick if you Water in DE A BIKE _| I have on hand a shipment of the celebrated IVER JOHN- + SON bicycles, also have PIERCE and other makes new and second hand. Save and get you a Bigyela 5 per cent off for cash on bicycles and tires. — 3 Easy pa stsaule if De Call and look them F. A. CHISHOLM u 405 N. Durbin St. At the Loveland House S= SS INITIO OOMIOOTOTEOM MOH a ; BEST L OF INT Mo ‘AT "THE CHILI KING Lt CH ff of Grand Central Bar. All See Ben Transfer Co Top. - i ab and Heory beara Furniture and Pifno moving a cK AND SATISFACT ‘ORY SERVICE _” Stunley Overbaugh, Pr a AHHH HEH FIIFIHIIaHEP EMT HEEE pHa IE EE WHY WASTE TIME AND MONEY BUYING NEW (PARTS? y Ship oy Bring Us Your Broken Castings or Parts to be ae i sem rr or perry % "WELDERS AND BRAZERS OF CAST IRON, STEEL, BRASS, ‘ORE BE, ALUatUa AND OTHER, a “WELDS GUARANTEED” oe OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING SHOP f 3 South David “Across fro: ad : ; #, Suit Ravid “Across eg Syl See: ; * Phone fay

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