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Che Casper Daily Cribune) pct casas. lt Sram sh Sian ae t Sunday at yo. a every evening exce USaper, Natrona county Pubit- cation of Oil Excha nee Building. | BUSINESS TELEPHONE 18} Entered a fice as second-class matter, Nov. 23, 1 TED PRESS ASSES UNITED PRES MEMP THE REPORTS FROM TH HANWAY, Pre siden an@ Editor | > NW AY Bu Bay Adver Manager Editor Editor ‘ ven : Advertising F presenta en David J. Rands ahr Ave., i d m Kin & Prudden x B ryade n, a pigs nO, : ally TPribune are on ~ York and Chicago of- Ore are welcome. SUBSC RIPTION RATES By Carrier ths eription by mail accer pted for} hree month esas ist be paid in ad-j Tribune will no! subscription be- rrears. mbership to Audit Bu- epaictieisel inn ee Cireulations. Ansociated Press ag ee Pi ores ss is exclusively autle for * uiication ° edited to it or not this paper and otherwise published herein also the “PAY UP” WEEK. Can this be? A town where every man has paid up what he owes, and| the business of the whole town is on a sound cash basis? Sandusky, O., thinks about to observe “pay up week” a: the final bit of civic housecleaning in tts clean-up campaign. It is not ex- actly an untried experiment, either. Several towns in the United States have tacxied it in the last year or two, There is no reason why it should not be car- ried out successfully, if every citizen | will do his share. There are exceptions of course, but } See HH ee wee tem an tee so, and is with marked success. i é most overdue bills are matters of { carelessness, not of intentional dis- « honesty. They arise chiefly from! € poorly organized financial systems, | public and private. i The credit system fundamentally ¢ is a great convenience, but the min- ute any buyer contracts for goods be- yond his certain ability to pay at the | specified time, or fails to meet his account promptly, he is misusing that convenience and helping unsound the whole financial structure to render of his community. To get all the old bills paid, to plan fnture finances so that each purchase shall have a fund behind it, and tc start with a clean slate for the whole } community is a vision tc arouse en- thusiasm in the deadest dead-beat of them all. Such k could be observed tc} advantage throughout the nation. Ee BY WHAT RIGHT? av The newspapers report the recent lynching of a negro soldier in Georgia cfused to remove his uni- s murders thought he had worn too long. There is a federal statute that protects the uniform and Regardless of because he form that its wearer from abuse. the fact that the performed some of the most heroic fighting of the war, bers are entitled to some considera- tion on that account, why should not the war department be governed by the law and take steps to avenge the death of this man? jae ES NOT LOADED! colored divisions and their num- It is an unusual A president of the United States hold- ing a pistol at the breast of the sen- ate of the United States and demand- spectacle: img as the price of peace that there | shall be on the part of the senate im- mediate, unhesitating, unquestioning acceptance of his personally contrived wholly scheme of world reorganization. The pistol is not loaded, however. Farthermore, the president who is! and extra-constitutional holding the pistol and threatening to|Herbert Wright, who is under indict-| keep the country in war indefinitely, ment charging him with the mur- ||} unless the senate yields to him knows that the pistel is not loaded. The reason for the positive state- ment that the pistol is not loaded is as plain as the nose on your face. A‘ter the last word has been said about executive powers and legisla- tive limitations, the fact remains that the Constitution does not make the president the dictator of the acts of congress, but dves make the congress the iudge of the acts of the president, and in case of need his exeeutioner. The document aforesaid leaves no} doubt as to the whereabouts of the! ulti= ute authority.—New York Sun. |detivery of mails; but his only j tary genius seemed to be the object 0 | an end,” the war department |}s0, there is every reason to pin faith }was held in Boston a week or two j2o rounds, at Teialatape ls: sTUCK TO HIS JOB. i suppose Gen. Pershing could} easily haye made himeelf popular! jhave made himself more popular with the American people than he has if he) Manage vr had organized a better system for the| thought} was victory. He devoted himself as ja soldier to the task and played no} | favorites, as far as I am able to see. He selected the men who, in his judg-} ment, were best qualified to meet the demands of the case the time. | } Generals were dismissed at ruthlessly, | others were promoted to take th r| places. Courage, initiative, and mili-| jot his campaign; he was not iooking) \for the plaudits of the people. I be-! jiieve he is every inch a soldic:. T he- |tieve he was eminently qualified for the task he had to perform. If think jhe performed it wtih wisdom and courage and unselfish devotion. I think that history will give him the place to which he is entitled when jthe story of his achievements is! written by men ot unprejudiced | minds.—Rep. Martin B. Madden. a GUARANTEE LIMITS. Does not the ordainment of an ab-| solutely assured return take away from the private management very) much of the incentive to efficiency and economy which is the greatest! asset of private management? Experi- | ence in France, with a guaranty very | similar to that proposed by Senator Cummins, has shown that it did. On several of the great French regional | lines deficit piled upon deficit, until} outright government ownership be-| came the only possible ultimate} course even though the deficits still continued under that ownership. The railroad situation in the United | States may be serious that no} remedy less drastic than the one of-} fered by Senator Cummins will suf-| But unless and until it is proved | so fice. to the plan endorsed by the New Eng-} land transportation conference which ago. This plan limits the actual guar- ernment to a guaranty not upon all outstanding capital but upon bonds i pital. efully, copes <n issued to secure new Here is a proposal which sv the same time avoids committing the] government to the sponsibility of a guaranty upon all outstanding capital. many minds as a Bmit beyond which the government, after having taken all possible measures to secure to the railroads, through tne‘; own rates, | reasonable return on their whole in- vestment, should not be tempted.— Boston Transcript. : __ Today’ sEvents | The Hawaii Territorial fair Rr open at Honolulu today and continue thru the week. The supreme court of the United States today will take final adjourn- ment for the summer. Visitors are expected to fill New Orleans today for the opening of the national convention of the Travelers’ Protective Association. What prommises to be the greatest tractor show ever held in the west, if not in the entire country, will be| opened in Denver today. Matters of vital importance to the future of organized labor is America |are to come before the annual con- | vention of the American Federation of Labor which is to get under way | |:today at Atlantic City. | An address by Governor W. P. Hob- | s to feature the graduation exer-| to be held at the University of} Texas today. Today has been fixed as the date| for beginning the trial in Boston of . tremendous re- It will appeal to | i | jder of Lieut. James R. Europe, cele- brated negro band leader, popularly) known as “the Jazz King.” I |pire in France, in Flanders, at Gal-| lipoli and elsewhere are to assemble! in force today at Vancouver, B. C.,! for the Dominion convention of the | Great War Veterans’ Association. With several score of leading rep- resentatives of the medical profes- sion in the Allied countries in at- tendance, the American Medical As- sociation will open a four-day “Vic- | | tory” convention at Atlantic City | | today. | Sport Calendar. Boxing: Jack Britton vs. Young) Fisher, 10 rounds, at Syracuse. Richie Mitchell vs. Jimmy Hanlon, seems to be for bread.—Detroit News. the anty that shall be given by the gov-|% Episcopal bishop of San Francisco, | ‘born at Lloyd, N. with ond of the gréatest needs a rail- rogey. ea, led . _ sae . E 4 Cheries J. Bonaparte, former at-| Rea Nii have—the need to supply torney-general and secretary of uhe} itself with new funds for mainten-|navy, born in Baltimore, 68 years} ance and improvement—and which at|280 today. 7 } John F. Shafroth, late United hoor (The Jack Pot | Germany wants the Allies to pool) Ul t Casper (Wyoming) Postot: [ite the army. He probabiy could | ail the merchants fleets. She will be a |accommodated to the extent that ihe German filect will be pooled. s+ # Im Lincoln’s Gettysburg speech jthere was not a single capital “I.” In jthe closing paragraph of President memorial address in | Wilson’s day |France, there were eleven “I's.” And there were only three lines in the | Paragraph, as printed in the Congres- sional Record. Osa Newt Wound Up At Last. Six months after President Wilson declared “thus the war has come to was in- creasing the number of its employees. By strenuous efforts, Baker may yet be able to win the war. es A South American explorer kas found a thrush that will swim. After July ist, we will be seeking a swallow that will kick.—Lusk Herald. 7 « & A Thoaght. Isn’t it strange that Princes and kings And clowns that caper In sawdust rings, And common people Like you and me Are workers for eternity? Each is given a bag of tools, A shapeless mass, and Book of rules, And each must make, Ere life is flown, A stumbling block Or a stepping stone. —Exchange. * * a hard bed, * It’s made it?—Cleveland Press. * The bump in bumper wheat crop the * * We shall soon see whether marriage tats or drink is the cause of the divorce’ @ | evil.—Salt Lake Herald. * The luxury tax on soft drinks adds “kick.”—Long Island City Star. * * Today’s Birthdays ( ————__0 Rt. Rev. William Ford Nichols, Y., 70 years ago| States senator from Colorado, se &t Fayette, Mo., 65 years ago today. | ' Admiral Sir Deveton Sturdee, hero} \of the Falkland Islands, born 60 years | ago today, Dr. Chatles C. Thach, president of } the Alabama Polytechn: Institute, | born at Athens, Ala., today. years i " Today’ s Today's Ansivesaies | 1 | Ts46¢—Fire de ira destrayed a large part of the city of St. John’s New- foundland. | 54—The emperor and empress of the French attended the first agricultural exhibition ever held in Pari 1870—Charles Dickens, the famous English novelist, died at Gad’s! 18 Hill. Born at Portsmouth, Eng., Feb. 7, 1812. | 1883—Remains bf John Howard Payne, author of *‘“Home,|! Sweet Home,” who died in A rica in 1852, interred in Oak Hill cemetery, Washington, D. C. 1902—A celebration of the centen- nial of the United States Mili- tary Academy was begun at West Point. 1915—Second Lusitania note from nited States sent to Berlin. 1916—German reinforcements from| the north failed to stop Rus-| sian drive. 1917—Gen. Pershing and staff en-| route to France were receiv- ed by King George. 1 WANT YOUR BRICK WORK On Contract or Percentage Call for Estimate PETER CLAUSEN “16 So. Jackson | ‘ Canadians who fought for the em-| ~_ CALL 74-J Stanley Over See Ben Transfer Co Light and Heavy Hauling. Fu Specialty. Bagg QUICK AND SATIS BEST BOWL OF Back of Grand Centrai Bar. popular prices. Quick -men who have {to be a captain. Heinie, but who he commanded the British force which consumer of) was in command of a British cruising squadron at the beginning of the war. a * great Montididier. 15¢ AT THE CHILI KING LUNCH ant a heathen bart abe Sos alee oh PLAGE INU. $, NAVY FOR MACHINIST ELECTRICIAN Splendid opportunities to young men with some knowledge of elec- tricity of the machinist’s trade are of- fered by the order received by Chief Boatswain’s Mate C. B. Starnes, in charge of the Casper Navy Recruiting} Station, Room 2 Postoffice building. This station is authorized to enlist worked for a short time as machinists and send them di- rect to the Navy Machinists’ School at Charleston, S. C., for an intensive | eight months’ training in this line. | This is considered’one of the finest} trade schools in the world and men who have been through this course are sure of good jobs at a high rate of | pay. Starnes may also send men who have served part of their electrical apprenticeship, to Navy Electricians’ | School at Hampton Roa: Virginia, | which is unexcelled in its class. Men who have studied telegraphy, | on passing a preliminary examination, | will be sent to the wireless school at} San Francisco, California. | Promotion in all three these | branches should be rapid. —~— Miss Alice L. Currie has the dis-) tinetion of being the first woman to} be appointed to the position of as-/ sistant high school principal in De-| troit. | of Se Seed es 7 Se) | In the Day’s News i Sixty years old ¢ today is Admiral | Sir Doveton Sturdee, who won the great victory for the British in the | battle with the German squadron off the Falkland Islands in the early part of the war. The famous sea fighter entered the navy in 1871, and his first important war service was in the Egyptian campaign of 1882, as a re- sult of which he wears the Egyp- tian medal, with the Alexandria clasp, for his services in the British bom- bardment of Alexandria. In 1893 Admiral Sturdee was detailed as as tant to the director of naval ord- nee, and in 1899 he was promoted In the same year landed in Samoa, and his service in the Samoan campaign won him an- other decoration. He reached the grade of vice admiral in 1912 and Year Ago in War launched between > | | & | in and new drive Noyon force British airplanes sank three Ger- man submarines by dropping depth bombs. S = Ole MAKERS THE 4 cas]? Too: Denver, Colorade. 1 ACCOUNTANTS EXPERT ACCOUNTANTS Books Opened, Closed, Audited. Stock trarisfer agents and regis- trars. Authorities on Income Taxes. Notary Public. | The Guarantee Registry Corporation Rooms 208-211 Oll Exchange Bidg. Phone 660. OIL LANDS PIERCE S&EVERTS mt ad Street mee Building | OIL L S LOCATED|) Lunds To Lease In Proven and Unproven Fields. Validating and Assexsmenat Work Done Casper Loan Office |} Will save you money on ! your Wardrobe Trunk, Hand- bag, and Suitcases : : : | Reliable | Phone 804-J. 133 So, Center | 2096604 | Natrona Fuel Co. Phone 949 J. L. BIEDERMANN, Prop GEBO COAL COKE wooD City Office 157 S. Center Street Gen. bie 5th and Beech baugh, Prop. CALL 74-J rniture and Piano Moving a age Transferred FACTORY SERVICE IFIP PIPZALZAZZALZ LLL LL DA | CHILI IN TOWN All kinds of Sandwiches at Ne & service, highest quality. Ve 1 | = i ARCHITECTS punots & GoopATcU Architects — } Rooms 24-25 Townsend Block Casper, Wyo. GARBUTT & WEIDNER Architects 415 Oil Exchange Bldg. Phone 1162 BICYCLES F. A. CHISHOLM The Cycle Man Sole Agent for Iver Johnson Bicycles and Vitalic Tires Phone 954W. 405 N. Durbin BROKERS CARNES RROKERAGE COMPANY Open Air Public Auction 8 p. m- Ol! Stocks bought and sold List your O11 stock with “EDDY” CARNES. Phone your buying orders 143 N. ter St. Casper, Wyo. .Pkone v 147. CHIROPRACTORS DR. J. H. JEFFREY DR. 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 --Phones-- Res. 841R CLOTHES CLEANERS THE SERVICE CLEANERS Jourgensen & Nygaard Cleaning, Pressing Remodeling “THE POINT” Vent-r, Linden and read Service Qur Motto. Ph COMMERCIAL DRY CLEANERS “We Kleen Klothes Kleen” ae Siz Day Service , one, 118%, 14% S., Center npne PY (Ugbtats Bath nt Reasonable Prices WM. JACOBSON, Prov. CORSET SHOP Modart Corsets bd seas te B15 Bon Ton Corsets from $2.50 to $10. P. N. Coruets from $1.25 to$6.50. De Bevoise Braasiere from O5e to $4. We fit all coract# from $3.50 up free. aS HAT SHOP 11 Center St. CONTRACTORS F. R. WHITCOMB General Contractor Estimates Furnished Casper, Wyo. Phone 1013 CARPENTERS J. S. HARDWICK Carpenter 306 E. Railroad St. Phone 1015 Carpenter Job Wo-k of All Kinds Promptly Done. DRESSMAKING SHOP SANDY’S O. & S. Building, First Floor Phone 767W GOWNS SUITS ALTERATIONS ee MRS. FRED FREEMAN Sewing PLAIN AND FANCY Reasonable. Work Guaranteed. 378 N. Maple (Rear-) DOCTORS DR. J. C. KAMP Physician and Surgeon Office: Suite 4, Smith Bldg. —Plcnes— Office 130 House 85 _— DR. H. R. LATHROP DR. W. C, FOSTER Office Phone 54 Rohrbaugh Building Dr. Foster—Residence_ Dr. Lathrop—Residence Private Hospital 840 S. Durbin St. Phones 272 and 273 DR. F. S. LUCKEY Physician ané@ Surgeon Phone: Rens., 901-W; Office, 505 OMce ‘122 Eust Second Street Room 2 ‘Wood Block - DR. MYERS Phyeician and Surgeon Special Attention Given to Diseases of Women and Children he 200-201, 0. §, Blax. Ph, 690 ‘Ren, Ph. 746 Pare 7 Semele) Riven to DOCTORS MARSHALL C. KEITH, M.D. Physician and Surgeon ebstetricn and children Phones: Office, 30; Renidence, 164 DR. ELIZABETH GEIS Phystcian and Surgeon Office: Daly Bldg. Kes, Nenntng Hotel. .Phone 546. DR, JOHN F. LEEPER DR. W. E. DOWNIE Physicians and Surgeons Smith Bldg. “Phone 266 F. E. MeEVENY Electrical Contractor Wirts, Repairs and Fixsteres Office Ph. 19-W 141 West First AMERICAN ELECTRIC CO. 112 E. Third St.- Phone 1080 Motor Repairing Armature Winding Electrical Wiring and Contracting NEW YORK HAT CLEANING WORKS We clean am Hats. Pana Bate tor New trimmi teed. tak fer and deliver. connect! ef shoes dyed. i: it tt tt 127 E. Secovd, Casper, Wa. 0. S. Building Phone 951-W HOME HOTEL West Second St. Nellie P. Dalton, Prop. Strictly Modern Rooms Reasonable By Diy, Weék or Month. HEMSTITCHING Phone 1180W Box 156 MRS. A. N. ENDELL Hemstitching, Picot Edge, Krench and Plain Hemming All Worle Done fn Caxper, 1 Or Phone ey Newman Balldiug) INSURANCE P. Oo. COMMONWEALTH LIFE Frank Hoagland, State Agent Phone: 889-W Office: 247 North Center Street KEY MANUFACTURER KEYS MADE For Any Lock Sold Complete Steck of Blanks SHOOT on Hand GALLE SRY NO WAIT Gn meey LAWYERS WILLIAM O. WILSON Attorney at Law Casper, Wyoming Suite 14-15 & 16, Townsend Block E. RICHARD SHIPP Lawyer Room 21, Townsend Building Phones—139 and 385 8S. E. PHELPS Lawyer Rooms i9-2C Townsend Bldg. Casper, Wyo. Phone 916 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 Exchange Bldg. WARBER & SPENCER Lawyers. 207-209 O. S. Bldg. Phone 1187 LAWYER GEORGE W. FERGUSON Attorney-at-Law . Rooms 22-23, T, ‘Ownsend Bidg. Casper, Wyoming AMY T. HANKS Specializing in Nerve and Muscle Diseases. Pffice: 225 N. Wolcott St. Phone 411. — PLUMBING AND HEATING J. DONOHUE Plumbing and Hanting, Hot Water Jobbing Heating a Specialty. of all kinds promptly attended to. Shop—826 South Spruce Street Phone 687-5 w. et FALMER Tumbing, 9: Hemete!" and Hot Water pive Hot A! nee ta Promptly attended to. ess SEop 139 W. Firat St.. Phone 772w. (MeClare Bldg.) PIANO TUNER Work Guarantecd WADE CRAMER —o Phone 306-8 Richter Music Co, REAL ESTATE MARION P. WHEELER Real Estate and Insurance Wyoming Casper, - © -° GEORGE. B. NELSON Real Estate Insurance Townsend Building Wyoming HENNING BAGGAGE AND TRANSFER Offico—Hedning Hotel Phone 45 Residence Phone 351-J SEARLES TRANSFER & STORAGE OMice—Tait’s Billiard Hall Phone—Houne, 87-W; Office, 104 Moving a Specialty REPAIRING SOUTH LINCOLN STREET REPAIR SHOP All Work Guaranteed GROVES & SCHULTZ, Props. 620 S. Lincoln. Phone 648 STAGE LINES F. J. HYE NAIL, EXPRESS, FREIGHT AND PASSENGERS Camper to Salt Creek «Mee, Liberty Garnge, Casper, Wyo. Telephone 983 or 977- SEWING MACHINES SINGER SEWING MACHINES For sale or rent, easy terms; re- Pairing on ull makes of machines; also parts for all machines, need- les and oil; drop a card or phone 289M. E. F. Sprague, 221 N. Pine. TURKISH BATHS A BATH AND A GOOD MASSAGE TONIGHT Means PEP FOR YOU TOMORROW. TURKISH BATHS CHIROPODIST 0. S. Bldg. Leo. Wileth, Mer. VETERINARY SURGEON R. A. RATHBUN _ ‘Veterinary Surgeon Leave Orders at Casper Pharmacy Phone 32 OXY- ACETYLENE WELDING SHOP 118 8, Davia St. Phone G11-3. SEST EQUIPPED WELDING SHOP IN THE STATE Repairing Broken Automobile Parts A Specialty INTERNATIONAL WELDING WORKS Casper, Wyoming we me and brazing of all metals ul Oxyineetyiene and Thera ne eee ‘Wremisy Power bd Blidg., 0. L, FLADI Phone 251W 185 8. Maple.