Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 30, 1919, Page 5

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1919 aT — \ 7 —_—_ WAR, WT ENDED, COST BILLIONS IN MONEY AND (MILLION AskeD |HOMESTEADER |= 2 *ytewite, che ’ é A everal avt A clothi BRITAIN MILLIONS (I LIVES Ag cuWN BY r | r \ [ | | FOR REPAIR OF LOSES $150 TO ” rie ot ott take aoe y moO 7 nder. Brtrance wae MONUMENTS HIT RANCH THIEF «: n f 4 2 aking ome of the win ; ; F AE PARIS, (By Mail).—An appropri. ye “ Mr. Walker estimates the lows ght Small Investor i a ——— ation of just a little Jess than a mil-/ The homestend st 1 Vale, at about $150 FO mere" Interest on Vast Debt to!‘ 2", 9° se» the old world go into s hae: Just bege ake a w handel —— it at Inter,- . 3 ankruptcy, with all bank accounts in Administration jenrock ‘ “ Py ag oraz Wenreye spyrecae: Is Claim Involve High Taxation “2° 9f confiscation. BOTH ATHLE Fi innde sipcsl fi gf iveasek as! b rs tative be Werren | _ The following tables show how vic- epair of national r able cdrriéd ot pi Ps tps RCY M. SARL for Long Future or and vanquished have come thru otally or partially rth of War S na foes eee s Staff Correspondent) he war. HILLIES IN NEED if sermans during their i (By Mail.)—If the war : Killed Wounded and oceupation of norther done nothing else they By J. W. T? MASON rnd ----1,600,000 — 3,500,000 F the small investor to put Ustria -- 800,000 2,000,000 BETTER TIM FR submitted to the Frer out at interest, instead of| (Written for the United Presa) | Turkey 250,000 400/000 E of national artist 7 ol ; The war which officially Bulgaria 100,000 275,000 ents that sustained the br it in the old stocking, the 3 7 Sr under the hearth in the ends with German acceptance , Total Central By C, HAMIL ‘ Fee aimane’ vengesnies seainst R Mid-Victorian style. ef the peace treaty, has cost! Powers --.2,750,000 6,175,000] (United Press arp jack Freneh culture and civilization com Fite the enormous growth of|‘P@, world 7.560.000 in lives, —— NEW YORK, Jung 260 The fave | oineny vente seven that were com “ tional Gnanee dising the past and $486,750,000,000 in mon- Russia ----.-1,700,000 4,900,000] o¢ Philadelphia’ sre wy nthe tana pletely destroyed and 218 serious ny ae Atty vedee, hh eta to sey ey. a he allies have paid a France --....1,400,000 Eos an unenviable demaged: The does not include there were hundreds of thous-| tsb otelt of EO ARA RE enue cen080 They hays two basebell clubs toland monucents of the leer : possibly millions—of workers,| ‘antral powe, Ce igsery-, ane | sony, ------——- 460,000 wpport and neither of the owners of tistie and histori ; Lj fi small middle cless money-makers in Sdilsdr aed see ocd lon Goan mega - 100,000 the teams is willing to spend money had ra 3 3 h 7 ; 2 ,000 in ad- Rumania 100,000 250,000] . P oy pat asl = y; o never dreamed of investing their ¢ Fi preted corr) | to bring stars of the game to ther French g " ° fe > vings outside consols. In fact the ts tl ce red sags psec States. eiioe eye The case ae the Athletics vat monumen es The New Health Drink ajority of them would not even| gomi eerie hoe ree nee 5,000 200,000) disappointing. When ( M Amon ae — rust gilt-edged British government Se sth cieced se pepe Total Allies 4,810,000 11,860,000] ised the axe on his old-time wrecking list, h Getto stock. ‘doMace pie ty allies six billion Soa crew, it was generally beli want lestvoved By the At school they learned about the} 4, thei dal © pay the interest Cost of the War 1e would use the money obtained in| during Hindenburg’s “strategic s nd “South Sea Bubble,” and seid “Nob| oct Will will be cheat en ea ner: | Germany -# 40,260,000,000] suying promising youngsters, and f March, 1917; the house 1qs 1 eston for mine.”. Colossal frauds ‘like the arg Fear Tha Ce . ? ie a os es -- 20,000,000,006 idding to this, his ability to scrateh Menetriers” at Rheims; the Jabez Balfour operations frightened axe citl waht + e ae pow-| Ba. a 5,000,000,00C I he sticks for young stars, would build hall Noyan; the cathedral and waverers off even tempting indus-|°"s. PB ly repudiate their obli- ulgaria _ 1,000,000,0009 ,oon a team practically the equal of tower at Arras and the Chateau of trial, co-operative and insurence en- tay iy Sead don’t, their Fetal Ce ree he old club. Ham ’ Ben, yeaiy interest approximate $1) owers_____ $ 66,250,000,000} Connie hasn’t done this, nor has he Drink “SHEREX” with your meals But with the outbreak of war and Th 3 1 P f " a sven come fairly close. A couple of the wonderfully effective advertising Sette charges his be in- teat Britain ____$ 41,500,C90,00€ } -ears anc Mack's team. was iy of war bond issues, the public came | ‘ ¢ e purpose of paying off | France 26,000,000,00C | itryek when the army and navy took ont of thelr ‘shells, and said “It is poe of the principle of the war, Russia 21,500,000,00C J jver most of his men. Some of the the patriotic thing to do to invest.” ae ne present ucepenn gen-| United States 18,000,000,00(} sxperts then told of what a great They did, and finding their dividends |, price a eh to aie will have| Italy sree — 2 8,500,000,00C | eam was in the making for Mack coming in regularly, their appetites at least four to five times as| Other Allies _ 5,000,000,00€ | ind sympathized with him, Most of | a have been whetted. An immense army of new investors has invaded the world’s financial markets and with the renewal of stock market ac- tivity on the signing of the armis- tice, the last hoards were dug out from the family treasure-box. Print- ed script is now reckoned as market- able wealth by millions who formerly recognized nothing but gold, Bank of England notes and landownership. The “bucket shop’’ crook has nat- urally come to his own egain, but not to the extent that one would im- agine from the influx of so much new capital. Still conservative, the Brit- ish small investor leans mainly to- ward home enterprises. But he is still susceptible to increased divi- dends, and foreign investments are eagerly studied. South American is- sues in particular attract attention. The mid-Victorien mind is still dis-|"¢! from Athens to Rome to Constan-| American Red Cross during the fou much money by taxation as before ANGLO-AMERICAN ALLIANCE (By Associated Pres. CONSTANTINOPLE, (By Mail,) —The Anglo-American entente is no idle dream. Out here in the Near East it has taken practical form. | Wherever an American needs help, wherever a representative or group of American relief workers need a lift there bobs up a courteous Brit- ish officer or soldier intent on ce- menting the entente. Do American Red Cross personnel need to transport supplies or person-! tinople, to Asia Minor, to Saloniki, BRITISHERS ARE FRIENDS TO ALL AMERICANS IN NEEL _ Total Allies 00,000,006 I ALREADY IN OPERATION fore this war,” added the Red Cros: men. formerly a sergeant in the army “but I'm strong for the Britisher now. They fed us, they gave us foor for the refugees, they turned ove their bakery at Oxilar to us, the gave us transportation by rail an put their lorries at our disposal. Any thing you say about what they hav done for Americans out here in th Near East is not too strong.” General Milne of the British arm in the Balkans stood behind th hose men have come back to Mack ind those he has not for he part, are wearin togs of other clubs and are show noth ng of great importance. Win Noyes, pitcher, still is in t irmy, or was when last hb df The addition of this fine right-hander would bé a great help to } k and night assist him to rece of 1is lost prestige. He has the nucleus of a good hurling corps, but the rest f his club surely looks like a second livision—probably last place—organi most some tion The Phillies were humiliated by the elease of Pat Mo fter that smart eader had landed them once in @ yorld’s series and made other brave ries with them. Ha was quickly vicked up by the Reds and meantime ‘ack Coombs, former Athletic pitcher nd lately with the Dodgers, was en- aged to lead the Phils. He has done Somebody asks “What is tannin?” Tannin is what they tan | leather with—pulls it to- gether, makes it tough. There’s a lot of tannin in oak, hemlock—and in tea, but hardly a taste of tannin in fine tea unless you boil it. cheap coarse Now do you want tan- nin-flavor or tea-flavor? Do you want to put tannin NVENTORIP b Work e Opersters CASPER BUSINESS COLLEGE, Inc Phone 442-W | ——— = The Casper Storage Grocery THE RICHELIEU STORE SPECIAL TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY posed to distrust North American 3 * months ending February 28 when th zs ae > Richelieu capitalization, and the New York the umanien sport? ‘There is veut | first foodstuffs shipped by Amer | ‘thing oe pre enes Me 9h si cr tea into your stomach? iain Cor n 25¢e Stock Exchange is still associated | #208 a8 bee esrcoyer) sUD-' cans for the relief of Greece reache Pia shoul Rou poces saa : ; He h Schilling Tea i the fine i ty with the novelists’ flights of imagina- haser) nF peojon eee For fe Macedonia. id retgin re ee pa i = Les See eee tion, and vague nightmares of the |“"° sighted al pniacpdee rah de la dh Sa Major Horace §. Oakley, o jot re one ae Lin ra ‘4 yractical tea with the real Richelieu Chicago Wheat Pit color thoughts of The Balkan traveler strikes a lone- | Chicago: “Our whole Macedonia In the release of Moran there prob- | P Baten Cs 30e ly town in mid-Serbia. British offi- was an aroma of the of BnCar rn possible financial operations in the United States. Brazilien, Argentine and Chilean commercial and industrial enpier- auctions,” But he is keen, and bet- ter informed than he appears to be. So es prises are examined with interest and Py a canned moogs fon the baat rywhere one goes in the Ba | 4 Moran pean paar r i some discrimination“ ‘The — British ott iB eae fear truck or car at tans one fears the same storie his soci wee pales: for h ss aaa € nth bgp} Schiling { Seneneeeinnaneeaanetientined * 5 Pereern s isposal. Bears ss : : er the ' eylon - Ind jolong, ian anvenen papel eae ANY: eaceyaueneaple shave teen (good tho Ee ee tee at oe hale eee ag with the clad, it c 5 English Breakfast. Alj one quality. In j ri ard, ani atters himseif on his in-) 4. elesewhere,” they explain, “and|)_ ahead : > wful rut and the Athletics are in a} Pparchmyn-lined moisture-proof packages. ability to be caught by “gold brick |¥S “le aril Givedl peasatinke Npicharte help Americans on their mission z Tt will tak wie At grocers everywhere. } S er or e j om £2 -!American army couriers, Unite ‘orge one. It Wi a, Vv New Paper Stand on Main Corner Here A nifty newstand has been erect- ed on the corner of Second and Cen- ter streets by Chas. Gunnison who | will handle street sales for the Cas- per Daily Tribune and will act as | local agent for the Denver Post. Mr. | Gunnison has disposed of the un- sightly stand that formerly detract- ed from the appearance of the street near the Wyoming National bank cers take him or her into their mess. They speed Mr. or Miss America on his or her way with a liberal sup- Chalk it up to the entente.” » Between American and British na- val officers there is brotherly com- arderie. And even the “gobs”, have come to éthe conclusion that the “limey” after all is a “pretty good old skate.” At Saloniki British officers fina our Red Cross girls most bewitching. At Belgrade American and British of- ficers mess and knock about ensem- ‘ta. In Bucharest they sit at the same tables in the cafe or watch the ne-round boxing matches at the Al- hambra from the same bo: In Constantinople American off)- cers head at once upon arrival for the British Officers’ Rest House, expedition would have collapsed ha it not been for the British, The Brit ish forces had oceupied eastern Mace donia and knew its desperate needs, E States Food Mission officers, Nes East Relief Mission personnel i Asia Minor and Armenia and mem-, bers of the Balkan Commission of} the American Red Cross all teil the same stories of kindness, courtesy and the helping hand. _—- BRITISH BUILD — BIGGEST PLANE | ! IN 'THE WORLD\ } Press.) (By United Press.) | FARNBOROUGH, Engiand. (By| bly irover Cleveland Alexander, who was urned over to the Chicago Cubs with-| ut Moran's ever having been res on the part of owners of both lubs to land them again in the favor] vf the fans. 7 PASSENGERS SLAIN BY EBEL BANDITS IN ATTACK ON MEX TRAN VERA CRUZ, Mexico, June 24 ‘(Correspondence of The Associated ~The death of seventy-five defenseless passengers was one phase | tea-flavor—the most eco- nomical beverage next to water. A Schilling & ¥ Co San Francisco The Cigar (| that never \\| ets on } y i \ 1 yj Richelieu 30¢ Grain Corn General Storage Car Lots Canned Goods, Meats, Fruits, Vegetables Handled, stored, re ipped aud Checked in a Business Like Manner SM ae SE SE a The Nicolaysen Lumber Co. and has moved the new stand to the | where the meals are superfine and the s BORO! of the revenge taken by the rebel Cesper National bank corner. Sunday night concerts as wondrous mail.)——The Tarrant Aircraft Con- ands | under the nominal command Tf order to prevent news boys con-| almost as the army version of “The| struction company has just finished of Felix Diaz for the death of Aure your nerves oes . se = greyating around the stand and en-|Chocolate Soldier” in the park near] building the biggest aeroplane in the}liano Blanquet and Francisco Alva RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY dangering their lives by the heavy traffic Mr. Gunnison has secured dis- tributing quarters for his papers at the rear of the Oil Exchange build- ing and in future all papers will be} given to the newsies in the new lo- cation, SPENT A FORTUNE \both Engli the Pera Palace hotel. In Athens officers and men of -speaking countries toil up to the Acropolis together and in Rome the Young Men’s Christian As- sociation cinema shows and _ sight- seeing tours for the city include both Tommies and Yanks in equal meas- ure, In Macedonia the American Red oss men jocularly called themselves world. It is a triplane, the middle plane{ Above | bearing of which is 131 feet wide, and below this are two planes, each 98 feet long 15 feet 2 inches deep. 76 feet long (10 feet longer than the biggest biplane), and the height is 37 feet. beyond the line of the planes. The The pilot’s seat juts out 12 feety rez. A train on the Interoceanic peons being armed with instruments of labor was line, only iyna All three planes are{mited between Pino and Las Vigas The body is\the greater number of the passengers killed by rifle fire and their bodies, together with the living purned when the train was fired. Within a few days a party of bap- (dits, commanded by the Arellano ON SELF AND WIFE) British Red Crossers” last winter of the machine resembles a);brothers, burned a large part of the ees “If it had not been for the British} whale in length and girth, with a great/ village of Tlapocoyan, causing an Before Taking Tanlac Waco Man\army we would have had to stop] blunt-ended nose, Between the planes undetermined number of casualties, wounded, | Shade-grown Real Havana 10¢ and up L. G. Murphy Cigar Co. Distributors for Wy PISS RD SPI SII AISI SP SI SP SILA LD PP SASSI SI SI SIMI SII LI RD ing FARM MACHINERY, COAL WAGONS, GAS ENGINES Phone 62, Office and Yard: First and Center EVERYTHING IN BUILDING MATERIAL Keep Your Pledge—Buy War Savings Stamps > Hen A work up here during the rush-back, of] are six Napier-Lion engines, each de-| Another attack by Pedo Gabay, Couldn't Lift Foot Three lthe denortees from Bulgaria in No-| veloping 500-horsepower. | Four of falsely reported killed, on the Alva-| Inches from Ground. |yember, December and January,”|them operate two-bladed tractor pro- rado railway near Salinas, claimed} ai , y oa Saws ise jsaid one Red Cross man. pellors; two of them four-bladed ¥ifteen passengers and fifteen soldiers| CUT YOUR ICE BILL WITH A “I spent a small fortune on medi- ‘es for myself and wife before we »t hold of Tanlac, which soon put an end to our troubles,” said J. F. Bryan, of 713 South Seventh street, “J was howling anti-English be- ASSAULT IS FATAL TO “pusher” propaljors (as victims. Yes; 5. §, S Is Purely Vegetable Nature’s Safe Blood Treatment HERRICK OR ALASKA in taking her to her home, where it} required her whole family to keep her quiet from convulsions. Denbeaux was charged with the as-| sault and placed in the city jail. | Coroner Johnson will hold an inquest tomorrow, under the direction of the county attorney, who, it is said, will charge the soldier with murder in the first degree. \ Denbeaux has been operating @ | dance hall and is said to never ci tmuch attention to Josephine Hovey ive Wa can Paraly step, Saisie abou" | The latter was a daughter of D.| Tanlac is sold in Casper by the| Hovey, a retired:and pensioned em-| Casper Pharmacy and Riots by| ployee of the Union Pacific Railroad | the Alcova Mercantile Co.Ady. company. | Waco, Tex. | ka “For six months,”. he continued, | ARAMIE GIRL : Pam ep aed y TN On the Market Half a Century.) of the system. It is then that you | tism that I couldn't lift’my Jeft foot —— | then yom age ie poripcs Teeth) sam Pee ee Great blood puriéer | ; ure enj a stpong 3 |. S. Sy the great bie 4 | three inches from the ground. My} | aRAMIE, Wyo., June 30.—Jose- ea elie it ehiben that snd strengthener. It will cleanse | penis and shoulders sometimes pained phine Higley Hovey, who ip alleged to! your blood is free from all impuri- the blood the aty 1 build | me us if they were being torn with|} ive heen beaten by Hal Denbeaux, 4 ties uh pad, Ereaete | red hot pinchers, and the muscles of) -oturned soldier some days ago, died) You shoyld be very careful and | te Valuable i bout | my left leg felt like they were tied without having regained conscious-| vive heed to the slightest 2 ists. Vuluable in iation ut | my saeteectal clue. Maar. Sire ad | wit ' tion ot impure blood. A sl ; { lood supply, re would almost cry out in pain. My|" "gy s beaten into insensibility; ‘reulation 4: af indicated | writing fo the Switt © wife cs os i e was beaten iy impaired appetite, a feeling of |Co, 50 Swit Laboratory, Atlan i MIZES : poldery tit Fs A ae Yitteen and Denbeaux is said to have assisted | itu fc and general veakening | Georgia i ALL SIZES ; — years and could get no relief, no matter what she did. “Since taking Tanlac I can get about and do my work as well as 1 ever could, there is not a pain or ache in my body and I simply. feel fine all over. My wife took Tanlac at the same time I did, and her treu- bles are gone and she is gaining in weight and strength every day, We both feel so happy over the bene- fits we have received from Tanlac AMERICAN CAFE Serves You Right CREAM WAFFLES Served 5:00 a. m. to 11:00 a. m. And from 2:00 p. m. to 5:00 p. m. See Our Line Before You Buy Schulte Hardware Co. 132 N. Center—Phone 64-W Blacksmith Shop, Corner 2nd and David-—Phone 368-J

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