Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 30, 1919, Page 2

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PAC ¢ G pany Hd com mon Day PAGE TWO The Casper Daily Tribune This is the sort of thing which — lasued every evening except Sunday at} Americans sei e Germa Casper, Natrona county, Wyo. Pub! nee ca (iit Semel cetion offices: Oil Bxchange Bullains. | delegation would be told in the be-! BUSINESS TELEPHONE. 15/zinning. It might have saved Enter at Casper (Wyoming) Postoffice @s second-class matter, Nov. 22, 191 MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS FROM THR UNITED PRESS | JE. HANWAY, President and Editor RE . City Editor EAR Business Manager 4 ciate Editor tH ising Manager| Advertintng Heprexentntives David J ndall, 341 Fifth Ave. wow York City. Pr g« P n ger Bldg. Ry One Year ... Six Months Ons Montn Per Copy t months. ns must be paid in ad- ¥ Tribune will not fter ¥: subscription be Member of the Associnicd P. The Assoctated Press ia excl entitled to the use for republication all news 4 otherwise also the loc: Vy of ches credited to it or not dited in this rows published heretn NOT IN VAIN. For the he four years Memox ial Day made us breath at the contrast between the past and the present. Today it finds us almost incredulous as we turn from that past to our certain future. And vet the difference is on the surface. The deeps run ever th: same. A handful of old men march to day, and tokens of remem yrance upon the graves of thei comrade \ half century age these veterans were fighting thei: orothers of the South or North, ir their own land. These new veiei ans who walk with so steady < step, so gay, so young, so farwarel ooking they, too, have fousht out against scientific savages in ar alien land. Tt seems a long way m that to this—from Gettys nurg to the Argonne, from the cannon ball to shrapnel and poisoi gas, from the Monitor to the sub marine, from the slow passiny o by courier to the has lay messages wire ess and the airplane. But these are nothing —mere trifles of method, after all. Wha binds the veterans of old to thos: of today is the eternal basis o principles and ideals. Slow ha been the struggle, often marked by blood and tears, of the race to wards human freedom and broth erhoed. Bui on it moves. Eact terrible c si brings it that mucl nearer to the goal. “Your young men shall see vis ions, and your old men shall dreary dreams ; sons and you daughters shal! prophesy.” Upon the shoulders of us al lies the burdea, as we honor th: glorious dead, to that thes may not have died in vain STOPPING your GERMANY’S MOUTH. ibility of truth If there is any 4 from outside of Germany — sinkins into (he German national consciou ness, certainly the straight, sharp re ply of the Allies to Broekdorif-Rant zau’s treaty protests ought to fir jodgient there. After disposing in detail of based me the the 1 German objections, na on the that term hardships woul on Germany, repl impose suins up the whole situation in the unanswerable words: “Germany should recognize — the facts of the present state of the world, which she has been mainly in strumental in creating, and realize that she The upon to bear of the enormous ty hus befallen the been apportioned the cannot escape unscathed share which she is being called calami has that world by victorious not to her deserts, powers, but solely to her ability to bear it “All Ue nations of Europe are suffering from losses and are bear ng and will continue to bear bur- ens which are almost more than they can carry. These burdens and wsses have been forced upon them by the ugeression of Germany “it right that Germany, which! responsible for the origin of these | calamities, should make them good to the ulinest of her capacity. Her hardship will arise not trom the con- of peace, but from the acts of those who ovoked and prolonged the ar. ‘those who were responsible for the war cannot czcape its just jleast their mouths are 0 1504 1 accepted for Audit Ru- | paper and| catch our | | consequence: the had made an introductory speech int} jand cleared air if Clemenceau this vein when the ¢ peared at Versailles. The German n tion would then have been somewhat jermans first ap-| prepared for the terms based on this | fundamental fact of Germany's guilt But it And as the ‘Germans at home digest that reply, ‘the {and obligation to suffer. is |hetter now than never. angry howling diminishes. At stopped. GIVE THEM BUT A DECADE. time) { The Jack Pot ie Germany begins to understand how [the Russians felt at Brest-Litovsk. } . The real reason why Columbus dis- by | Hindu student in a history examina- covered America is revealed a tion: “Columbus see that there is one-half of the world, and being very there keep up the know must be bal ship and dis learned man, other half to then he asked for re, ed it.” It’s queer that ju: commercial! practicable comes aulking about dig- rybody starts ding more tunnels. One hundred years ago. on the | 22nd : fay, the Savannah, firs iindenberedine He beeinnine ta |steamship to cross the Atlantiv M * look like a ow a nse on the \ started on her voyage from the city cee iS 2 fae wilig a rae : end.—Wall Street Journal }of her name. Her engine was 90 horse power, The German spokesmen complain and she was rigged as a sailing vesse!,! of “siaver It was their slavery to | with three masts and square yards as hese days her paddles were folded up m the deck, and only the sails used, j for the paddles were of no avail really rough water. She got into Liverpool safe, how- But vas 19 years after that that the first over, puffing and wheezing. it regular steamer line was vith the Great Western, which made he voyage from Liverpool to New York in 15 days o the doubters who “take no | tock in the flying trip may take reart. No one expecis trans-Atlant | ir liners to jump into being over light. But sure as the Savan vould be a pathetic little laughing swift le which today lay’ he he stock bes the transport swim the ocean in tive s, just so surely the successors NC-4 will before with their many years fill successful hum There to be a first fime. It may ve a long cry from the bride’s first viscuiis to the biscuits that mother ised to make, but the same hands '® experience fill the will with the fraining and And so they air gap sravelers. i BUILD AND PROSPER. ‘Can you house our employes? This is a question invariably asked ony the big industrial concern when t is considering locating in any town r city. The communi which eg nswer in the affirmative gets the business. are ov Many small communities to additions to their worting the failure secure ju such desirable lustrial life because they cannot pro for the What ood many industries which vide shelter men. is vorse, a wave the capil and plans Tor lia r ‘ tension because of ness are waiting the housing difficulty. The answer is obvious—begin the | building, everywhere, for it. is the | orner-stone of prosperity and re onstruction. Aside from the business delay di ectly traceable to the house short ige, the overcrowding of our cities ind towns is Iurgely responsible for nuch immoral arfd criminal activity. The everywhere. housing problem looms large It should be promptly as possible, solved as civic govern nents, business concerns and private individuals doing all in their power to help it alo STATE DENTAL SUCIETY | MEETS IN THERMOPOLIS The Wrenn ate ee ntal society will hold its fourth annual meeting at Thermopolis on June 9 and 10, Arrangements are being made for the biggest meeting in the history of the society, with a number of v: ne den s from neighboring states as well as |; > rfepresentation of mem bers of the profession within the state. A complete program for the two days’ business is being mapped out and the dentists who attend will find their time h, ably as well as pl ntly. The big number of the | Dr. Rupert E. Hall of Chicago, pro- fessor of prosthetic dentistry in the Chicago College of Dental Surgery. and a specialist whose methods and teachings have given him an_ inter- national reputation. — England is now the only country left which posses An upper house of parliament compos hereditary peers. i provision in case her engines gave yut, It took her 29 days and 11} rours to make the voyage. On 18 of established, | in-| been spent pvrofit- prograni is {the Hohenzollerns that brought them —Troy Times. jwhere they are.— United More a peace that will Arka | The world war has cost the ),500,000,000 to date. | States $ | making Rock — ( ‘reason for Little as ) | Much of this talk to the effect that -erlasting peace is impossible is done who said a great war (S.C. bs Ww the people impossible. —Greenville Piedmont. We would feel indebted to Mr. Bryan if he would mail the Berlin government one of his arbitration they Greenville (S treaties and remind them that once turned it down ©.) Piedmont. oa QO 2 1 | Inthe Day’s News | ed re) James Henry Thomas, M. P.. who is soon to make tour of the United States and Canada in the in t of the international labor re garded as the leading repre of labor in the British parliament As organizing secretary of the Amal his monition is an influent Thomas began work when nine years old, later he be engine cleaner, and rose to bi “fireman and then engineer on 'Great Western railway. a town councilor of indon came president of the Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants in 1910, the me year in which he was first returned to parliament. During the the He was made nd be- ywar he was a staunch supporter of ‘the allied ca and threw all his lenergy into the work of carrying on the war to the end. —- > a - ” || Today’s Anniversaries | i feud —Daniel O'Connell, the Trish ler, sentenced to im prisonment and fine on 2 ge of seditior 11549 irst case of cholera appexr- n Buffalo, followed by 2,000 deaths in three months. 1868-—John McRae, governor of Missi opi, and U. S. senator died in British Honduras. Born in Wayne county, Miss., about 1810. 1894—A monument tp tne soldiers and sailors of the Confederacy was unveiled at Richmond, Virginia 1910-—Col. Roosevelt, in London vised the British governi to check anarchistic ideas Egypt or let the country ern itself, -Russians checked German of- fensive in Central Galicia 1916—Germans claimed to have wou two: miles of French positions northwest of Verdun American armed stesmer Sil anged sixty shots ad at in gov- 1915 1917, vershell ex with € Mediter Natrona F nal Co. Phone 949 J. L. BIEDERMANN, Prop GEBO COAL COKE wooD City Office 157 S. Center Street Gen. Office 5th and Beech Streets $ CALL 74.5 See Ben Transfer Co Light and Heavy Hauling. Furniture and Piano Moving a Specialty. Baggage Transferred QUICK AND SATISFACTORY SERVICE < ‘Oly popular prices. N) : io Ebe Casper Dai ee Today’s Events ES will unite today in a celebration of Memorial Day that will be more elab- orate than usual because of the vic- torious part played by America in the world war. State Bar associations are to meet in je Island, of Kentuck ‘liver the inl Day observance at Harvard Uni- ri versity today. the Universit sion be-lushered in te of ' C U in co er ‘sh kima. ¢ Malone, SSSR eS ‘ Ecibune l eo Thruout a large, pay part of the United} tates: the veterans of three wars The South Carolina and Georgia int annual session today at Tybee Ga. Former Gov. Augustus E. Willson has been selected to de- ief address at the Memo- Commencement week exercis of Chattanooga will be | y with the dedication | Patten Memorial! John the hapel. Delegates from many parts of the | nited States and Canada will gather) St. Louis today for the biennial} onvention of the International Fed ration of Catholic Alumnae. | Calendar of Sports. Shooting: Washington state trap-, hooting tournament opens at Ya-| Utah Joe Stecher Wrestling: Boxing: Johnny Tillman vs. Jock 10 rounds, at Minneapolis. Marty Cross vs. Walter Laurette, 10 rounds, at Elmira, N. Y. Jack Britton vs. George Alger, 12 rounds, at Lowell, Mass. EL Ds es = > | Year Ago in War | o— = ~~ Germans carried their advance to w ed at Newa munition explosion at Ja: in two miles of Rheim: irst fabricated steel ship launch- k Bay, N hundred persons killed in a capital it t Four of Roumania. th t¢ Douglas, so-called cork legs do not owe heir me to their composition, but » the fact that their inventor was Dr. Cork. The _ United States Land Office at Wyoming will close at 12 The o'clock noon, beginning with Satur- day, June 14, 1919, until Saturday, September 13, 1919. 5-28-8t* Vase “YOUR ‘KS VAF ~ 307, 608% OTHERS Reduce your doctor’s bills by Eeeene always on ACCOUNTANTS EXPERT ACCOUNTANTS Books Opened, Closed, Audited. Stock transfer agents and regis- trars. Authorities on Income Taxes. Notary Public. The Guarantee Registry Corporation Rooms 208-211 Oil Exchange Blég. Phone 660. ARCHITECTS s ease Overbaugh, Prop. Quick service, highest qual WSL LEMME MLE LO DA ST LOMO DUBOLS & GOODRICH Architects oomn yownnend Blocks GARBUTT & WEIDNER Architects 415 Oil Exchange Bldg. Phone 1162 BICYCLES F. A. CHISHOLM The Cycle Man Sole Agent for Iver Johnson Bicycles and Vitalie Tires Phone 954W. 405 N. Durbin I WANT YOUR BRICK WORK | On Contract or Percentage Call for Estimate PETER CLAUSEN 416 So. Jackson Casper Loan Office Will save you money on your Wardrobe Trunk, Hand. bag, and Suitcases : 3 Reliable 133 So. Centur Phone 804-J. CALL 74-5 SOMME AST DA TM, BEST BOWL OF CHILI IN TOWN 15c AT THE CHILI KING LUNCH Back of Grand Central Bar. All kinds of Sandwiches at X e trapshooting tournament | opens at Ogden. | s. Charley | ‘utler, finish match, at Indianapolia:| a VELOUR BEAUTY PARLOR Face and Scalp Specialists C. M. Smyth 213 G-S Bldg. Phone 259-3 CARNES BROKURAGE COMPANY rn aca: Pubite Awctlé: A * Of! Stocks bought a Lint your Ol mtock with “EDDY” CARNES. jone your buying orders 145 N. jer St, Casper, Wyo. .Phone CHIROPRACTORS DR. J. H. JEFFREY BR. ANNA GRAHAM JEFFREY Chiropractors Lyric Theater Bldg., Center St. Office Phone 760. Res. 93 DR. B. G. HAHN DR. EDNA HAHN CHIROPRACTORS | Suite 2, Townsend Bldg. | | Office 423 | CLOTHES CLEANERS || THE SERVICE CLEANERS +-Phones-- Res. 841R Jourgensen & Nygaatd |] Cleaning, paces Remodeling Center, Service COMMERCIAL DRY CLEANERS “We Kleén Klothes Kleen” Dyeing Six Day Service Phone 1185. 147 S. Center (Upstairs) Reasonable Prices WM. JACOBSON, Prop. CORSET SHOP Modart Corsets from 94.75 to #15 Bon Ton Corscta from $2.50 to 810. P. N. Corsets from 81.25 to80.50. De Revoine Braastere from @5e to $4. We fit all corsets from $3.50 up free. MARTZ HAT SHOP 114 N. Center St, CONTRACTORS KARSTEN & JENSON \ Contractors and Builders 1016 So. Ash St. Phone 307-J F. R. WHITCOMB General Contractor Estimates Furnished er, Wyo. Phone 1013 CARPENTERS J. S. HARDWICK Carpenter 306 E. Railroad St. Phone 1015 Carpenter Job Work of All Kinds Promptly Done. DRESSMAKING SHOP SANDY'S || 0. & S. Building, First Floor | Phone 767W GOWNS SUITS \ ALTERATIONS DOCTORS DR. J. C. KAMP Physician and Surg Office: Suite 4, Smith Bidg. ‘hones— ote Office 130 House 85 DR. H. R. LATHROP DR. W.'€. FOSTER Office Phone 54 Robrbéugh Building Dr. Foste: sidénce-- Dr. Lathrop—Residénce_ Private 840 S. Dur! Phones 272 and 273 | DR. F. S. LUCKEY Physician an@ Surgeon Phone: Res. 001-Wi OMfee, 695 Office 122 East Seeond Street Room 3 Weod Bleck DR. MYERS | Phyzician and Surgeon Special Attention Given to Diseases of Women Child Suite 200-201, 0. |] OM@ce Ph. 699 ren Bidg. Res. Ph. ™ MARSHALL C. KEITH, M. D. Physician and Surgeon and disenecs of wamen pel alias Blackmore Buile Phones: Office, 30; Resl@ence, 164 DR. ELIZABETH GEIS Physician and Surgeon Office: Daly Bldg. Phone 145, Re Henning Hotel. .Phove 546. ssssiennemmamecsssmansnee muemimune cena DR. JOHN F. LEEPER DR: W. E. NIB Physicians asd Surgeons Smith Bldg. Phone 266 F. £. McEVENY Electrical Contractor Repaira and Fixtures Omce Pk. 10-W 141 West Firat Wiring, AMERICAN ELECTRIC CO. 112 E. Third St. Phone 1080 Motor Repairing Armature Winding Electrical Wiring and Contracting HAT CLEANING NEW YORK HAT CLEANING ee We clenn ané re-| 11 kimds of Hate. Pama! elu HOME HOTEL West Second St. Nellie P. Dalton, Pr. Strictly Modern Rooms Reasonable By Day, Week or Month. AMY 7, HANS ° Specializing i Nétve did Muscle fae eetne, Bet Water a Specialty. Jobbing Il kinds promptly attended te. Shop—826 South Spruce Street Phone 687-J Phone 1180W Pp. a MRS. A. N. ENDELL COMMONWEALTH LIFE Frank Hoagland, State Agent Phone: 889-W Office: 247 North Center Street KEY MANUFACTURER Box 150 KEYS MADE For Any Lock Complete Stock of Blanks SHOOT on "GA at RY NO WAIT NO DELAY LAWYERS WILLIAM O. WILSON Attorney at Law Casper, Wyoming Suite 14-15 & 16, Townsend Block E. RICHARD SHIPP Lawyér Room 21, Townsend Building Phonés—139 and 385 S. E. PHELPS Lawyer Rooms 49-2C Towssead Bidg. Casper, Wyo. Phos J. M. HODGSON Lawyer juites 5 and 6, Kimball Bldg. HAGENS, STANLEY & MURANE Lawyers 204-207 Oil Exchange Bldg. Casper, Wyoming —_ CHILES P. PLUMMER Lawyer Room 415, Oil Exchange Bldg. Casper, Wyoming: NICHOLS & STIRRETT Lawyers 309-310-311 Oil Exchénge Bldg. WARBER & SPENCER Lawyei 207-209 QO. S. Bidg. Phone 1187 GEORGE W. FERGUSON Attorney-at-Law Rooms 22-23, Towasend Bidg. Phone 196-J Casper, - - «= wu iRead the Advertisements in The Daily Tribune and'Save Money Hot Water kinds KIANO TUNER Work Guaranteed = WADE CRAMER en Phokée 306-K Richtef Muste Co. GEORGE B. NELSON Real Estate Taturance Townsend Building Casper, HENNING BAGGAGE AND | TRANSFER | Li Residence P Phone 381-) SEARLES TRANSFER 4 STORAGE Omee—Talt’s Bilifara Hell Phone—House, 87-W; Office, 104 Meéving a Specialty SOUTH LINCOLN STREET REPAIR SHOP All Work Guaranteed GROVER SCHULTZ, Prop. 620 S. Liticoln. Phone 648 STAGE LINES | F. J. HYE | | MAIL, EX#RnsSs, FREIGHT aND i Passencens i Caeper te Salt Cresit | | utile, Linerty Garage, Caiper, Wee. ] ‘Telephols 063 ot OT7-W | SEWING MACHINES SINGER SEWING MACHINES For sale or rent, easy terms; fe- pairing on all makes af machines; | | also parts for all machines, feed- | les and oil; drop a card or phone 289M. E. F. Sprague, 221 N. Pise. ~__ TURKISH BATHS A BATH AND A GOOD } MASSAGE ida PEP FoR} ow. TURK | Oo. & pei poets, Mar. I sharpen ragors, knives, ey kinds of tools. Make a spectalty LAWN MOWERS AND saws W. S. FERGUSON 3383 St.. ‘Tel. 1086. Work midy dled be left at Shooting Gallery or Exchange Furniture Store R. A. RATHBUN Veterinary Surgeon Leave Orders at Caspér Pharmacy Phone 32 ox ¥-ACRTYLENE WELDING SHOP 118 M, tinela Ot. Pisce 11-3. SEST RQUIPPRD WELDING SHOP IN Niieoh he Casper; 1 Welding aye | }et every | net ohel Ae seats gfe stent all metate | wt "pian ges ees

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