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Cbe Casper Daily Cribune Pea, cae] SS TELEPHONE. | Entered at Geaper Cizemigg» G fice as second-class ma a BRAG ! Ri > PRESS President and te Sha Pe cy . . ri R. EVANS. snk or) J. isociate Editor ee perpen Bnpacinte Balter Adve: ing Re} ‘tatives Davia 3. Bapatcny Riis) ‘Ave. Hi : Pruddén, King & Pruaden 1720-23 Steger Bidg., Chicago, Tl. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the New York and Chicago of- fices and visitors are welcome. EB ASSOCTA’ mS PROM Die UNE HaNway by SUBSCRIPTION RATES iy Carrier Qne Year.. Six Months Three Months One Month... Per Copy.. Qne Year. -$6.00 Six Months: . 273100 Three Months 50 @ subscription by mail accepted for period than three months All subscriptions must be paid in ad- yance and The Datly Tribune will not insure delivery after subscription be- comes one month in arrears. Applicant for Membership te Audit Bu- reau of Circulations. Member of the Ansociat The Associated Press exclusively | entitled to the use for republication of | all news dispatches credited to it or not| otherwise credited in this paper and) ress also the local news published herein.|jowers us to the level éf the old/@+“—- po eS EE SASS ae aa KENTUCKY GOING REPUBLICAN For the first time in the history of the Eighth congressional district of Kentucky, it has just elected a Re-| publican to Congress. No Republi- can landslide of the past, not even the unanimous of 1908, was sufficient to sweep this rock-ribbed stronghold of Har- vey Helm, the congressman whase well-nigh election Roosevelt in Democracy from its moorings. death caused the calling of the spe- cial, election held on Saturd last, elected from hud been seven times the district. Wilson's plurality in the disty vf the smallest Demo- t, one cratic pluralities recorded there in years, was 3,297. The election of a Republican, Capt. Swope, by rality of "1,500, gives evidence of a Republican ground-swell that ought to serve as a prophecy of future politi-| allotment cal events not only to Democratic | funds. vision for securing for the state of the Federal aid road only twenty-two. of trucks of every make, some of} them never used, were thousands of gallons of 26-cent gaso- ied up and) O——————~ Che Casper Daily Tribune | Today’s Birthdays [ ———_——+, Hon. Hugh Guthrie, Solicitor-Gen- eral of the Dominion of Canada, born line used in making fhem burn well. o: Guelph, Ont.,.53 years ago today. aoShe Don’t forget your duty toward the Salvation Army. valiant service to our Boys in France. -——-0- Even in his wildest moments Wil- 7 You'll never regret! Manager ‘Ne dollar contributed to this noble|the British National Federation of E organization which performed such) Women Marquis of Cambridge, elder brother of Queen Mary, born in Ken- sington Palace, 51 years ago today. Mary Macarthur, secretary ot Workers, a recent visitor to America, born 39 years ago today. Brig. Gen. John L. Clem, U. 8. A., retired, who was the last civil war veteran on the ‘active-rolls of the U. 8. Army, born at Newark, liam J. Bryan never dreamed of ag G8 years ago today. dollar that would buy only 30 cents’ worth. 0 The debate in the Senate yester- Lodge and Williams, may be taken as an indication of the rocky travel. It is a foregone conclusion road} |which the League of Nations must Harry L., Gandy, representative in Congress of the Third South Dakotr district, born at Cherubusco, Ind., 4 | years ago today. Edwin Grasse, widely known as a violin virtuoso, born in New York tity, 35 years ago today oS eee | Year Ago in War | Steamer Frederick R. Kellogg Se that the covenant wil never be pass- pedoed off Barnegat Light Great Britain formally recognized) ceptance of the plan. ed in its present form. There must be reservations which will adequate- j}ly preserve American rights and tra-| prison Czecho-Slovaks as an allied Allies reported s and thousa nation. ds of guns since ditions. The great American peoplt area counter offegsive began July 18. will, never ratify a document which world, and makes our country a party to European entanglements. sooner the Democratic administration comes to a realization of this the bet- ter. °¢——— | Today's Events | * The city of Marysville, Ohio,. is 100 years old today. Representative Isaac R. Sherwood three times of Ohio, oldest member of the Sixty- sixth Congress, enters upon his 85th year today. The national encampment Asbociation of Veterans of Foreign Wars will begin its sessions today at Providence, R. I. The annual convention and exhi- bition of the International Apple Shippers’ Association will open today oo News | | In the Day’s Gen. Isaac R. Sherwood, who today enters upon his 85th year, is the old the finer g est member of the Six¢y-sixth Con gress and one of the few surviving civil war veterans among the nation- al lawmakers. Enlisting as a private from Ohio, he served with disti tion thruout the war, and was mus- tered out as a brigadier-general of volunteers in 1865. He was twice elected Secretary of State of Ohio, elected to the judicial th bench, and is now serving his seve consecutive term in congress as re resentative of the Ninth Ohio district. of the For many years Gen. Sherwood was engaged in editing newspapers in Cleveland, Toledo and other Ohio cities. All during his congressional career he has been particularly active in promoting legislation in the in- terest of the Union civil war vet- in Milwaukee, to eontinue thru the | #"S- a plu-| week. The Virginia législature meets in special session today to make pro- How When she wrote her famous novel Comin’ Thro’ the Rye,” forty-four years ago Miss Helen Mathers was Today it is still one of the best sellers, although the to increase the production fifty-third edition has been published. leaders but to weak-kneed Republi-| 5¢ poultry and eggs and reduce liv- But Miss Mathers does not share in that to take issue with the administration is cans who seem to imagine to invite defeat. This frame of mind has been produced in the faint-heart-| Republican ground-swell | bout this Kentucky The election was set for the! same day as the state-wide primary. The Republican state ticket had been noniinated in convention,-and the pri- Only a could have brot result. mary served no purpose to Republi- cans except that of ratification in There was a lively fac-| tional contest within the Democratic party in the state which brot out the of that faith. Eight of the of the district Democratic, so that contests for coun- this respect. voters eleven counties are ty nominations were largely confined to the Democratic party,—another in- centive for the Democratic voters to} turn out and the Republican voters to stay at home. This was a special as light- been election, at which the vote wv er than it would. have at a gercral election, so that an overturn of the Democratic majority was made more difficult. o————_ | TO THE DUMP! Hauling motor cars, airplanes and motorcycles to the dump heap seems} to have been the principal occupation of most of the soldiers now arriving] A driver who arrived a few days in Casper from overseas service. truc | ago says that in some parts of France,) where cars are not destroyed, Cadil-} lacs are being sold by army officers} for from $200 to $500._ Dodges bring from $75 to $125, while if you stand) in you can get a Ford from $50 up to $100, He saw a large number of motor- cycles laid out in a row and smashed to shreds when a big tank was driven over them. Large numbers of motor cars were stacked into piles and smashed with sledge hammers previous to being| burned, he said. | The great American dump heap was located at Vernieulle, eight kilomet- ing cost will be discussed Chicago. & Mauufacturers and industrial lead- profits, ed by Democratic propaganda, .eeH-tets of\Canada and the United States; and thus lost by the!the prosperity of the American Poultry Association, meet-|she had written it she was offered a ing in annual convention taday at few hundred book. When dollars down by the original publisher, or a share of the She epee the cash offer, fOut$100,000 which , a5 am will gather at Calgary today ot the /she?would, have recei¥eM Tin royalties. ducted on a gigantic scale, which has opening of the Western Canada In-' been mistaken for public sentiment. | dustrial Congress, which promises to, be one of the most important con: ventions of its kind ever held in ‘the Dominion. ——-—— —S > : > | Today’s Anniversaries | ¢ ° 1877—The centenary of Rubens’ birth was celebrated in Ant- werp. 1888—Thru communication established between Europe and Turkey. by rail Western the new treaty with China regulating immigration. 1905—The vote in Norway on the separation from Sweden was practically unanimous in fa- yor of dissolution. is 1910—Floods which submerged To- kio, Japan, cost many lives and made thousands hameless. 1912—President Schurmann of. Cor- U..S, Minister to Greece. 1914—Belgians repulsed the Germans near Diest. 1915—Thousands of Americans re- ported slaughtered. by Kurds and Turkish irregulars. Constantinople claimed fur- ther gains for the Turks against the Russians on the Persian frontier. 1917—Allies refused passports 1916. for conference. at the test wells there. of these tests. ers from La Palisse. One of the machines taken there was a big Winton Six, with nothing} wrong except one damaged front; wheel. H Dodge cars, he says, were special, objeets of destruction, thousands of; them being burned rather than being| sold to the French at juhk prices. obt expense to us. claims 4s you may Wish to pay doubt if the public has before a dea) as this. pendently wealthy. Hedning Hotel Lobby 1894—United States senate ratified - nell University was appointed! delegates to Stockholm peace | TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS MAY MAKE YOU RICH If the drilling in Lance Creek had stopped at the s®cond or third sands there would have been no discovery well. Salt Creek Field has never been drilled to the deeper sands. resent time several big concerns are quietly drilling deep ‘So we have located lands near and between some And-the wark we have done on these lands com- plies with the law up to January 1, wells now drilling will have proven our land by that time and with- You can be a part owner in these lands by helping us pay the location and validating expenses. You may have an undivided 1-8 interest in as many 160-acre $25 is not a large sum yet it may make you inde- Call on us or call us up. THE DOBBIN REALTY CO. Young Men UseCuticura To Save Your Hair * Nothing like shampoos with Cuticura Soap and hot water, preceded by touches of Cuticura Ointment to spots of dandruff and itching to keep the scalp and hair healthy. They are ideal for all toilet uses. In the morning shave with Cuticura Soap the Cuticura way— without mug. After shaving and before bathing touch spots of dandruff or irritation with Cuticura Oint- ment. Then bathe face, hands and scalp with Cuticura Soap and hot water. | | @e- Caticura Toilet Trio ea i Consisting of Soap, Ointment and Talcum are indispensable adjuncts of the daily toi- let in maintaining skin purity and skin health. By bringing these delicately medi- cated emoilients in frequent contact with your skin as in use for all toilei purposes, you keep the skin, scalp, hair and hands clear,sweetandhealthy.25c.ca.everywhere. WIGWAM : Take home a Box of Chocolates and a Splashme : 5 Doll for $1.50 Let Us Bake Your Pies and Cakes for Sunday Dinner WIGWAM PP-999HHOOO The West But 1921. Surely some of the test ‘or at the rate of $25 each. -We een offéred as good and as fair* Phone 1040-W | { ture of 70,000 | on here last winter to protest again The | Q—————————__ —— | it ws af | | Hg SHIPMENTS OF WOOL TOUS, INDER PROTEST | | { Clothes Come High but Westerners Fight ‘Proposal of Great Brit- ain to Ship Big Supply of Wool to America (Special he , WASHINGTON, Aug . West- ern woolgrowers thru Congressman Mondell have registered a vigorous protest with the war trade board and the department of commerce against the proposal of Great Britain ¢ to ship upwards of 20,000,000 pounds of Austra and New Zealand wool to the United States, to be auctioned at Boston. It is learned the pro- posal is still under consideration, with the chances favoring the ac- Western woolgrower who came} the govermment auction of wool, were! assured at that time that no further | such les would be held for the pres- | ent and at least not until after ihe current year's clip had been disposed | of. At the department of commerce stated that the English wool sent here would, if sent, be of des and would not com- western wools. DR. SOLF MAY BE | SENT TOU. S. BY | TEUTON NATION | (By Unit Press.) BERLIN, Aug. 13.—Dr. W. S. Solf, foreign minister in President Ebert's first cabinet, has been men- tioned for German ambassador to the United State: to be pete with A Littie wantad will. sell it. Twenty-five sections of wire fence. | to get over it,” continugd Mrs. Har-} | appetite and suffered so from the lit- FOR SALE room house, three good windmills, thirty-three miles of three- Plenty of outside pasture land. Good for ten thousand sheep. $14,000 dollars cash if taken at once. MUST GO WITHIN FIFTEEN DAYS, Write or Wire LEE BALDWIN Cashier State Bank, Socorro, New Mexico. MRS. HARRIS COULD |: | Everything She Ate Gave Her Trou- f lost, but am againing more right ble—Relieved by Tanlac— Gains Nine Pounds “I never felt better in my whole} life than I do now and I can’t refrain | Casper | from letting others know how thank-| thi Alcova Mercantile Co.—Adv. ful I am for what Tanlac has done} for me,” said Mrs. William Harris, | , of 728 Fifteenth ave., Seattle, Wash.,| | while in Bartell’s Drug Store, recent-| ly. | “Several years ago I was in a boat} wreck and this had such a bad effect on my nerves that I didn’t seem able! ris. “Then an operation on my eyes} seemed to affect my nerves still more | and three years ago last January I) had another breakdown and from that time until soon after I started tak- ing Tanlac I was almost a neryous wreck. The slightest sound out of the ordinary would upset me and I could hardly sleep at night, but would just roll and toss in misery and, besides) this, my stomach also was in an aw-| ful condition. I hardly had a bit of! tle I did ea@that I almost hated to go to the table at meal time, because it just loaked like everything I ate soured on my stomach and filled me up so badly with gas that I could hardly breathe. I fell off in weight from 125 pounds down to 100 and was actually so weak I couldn’t have swept out a room if my life had de- pended upon it. | “Nothing I took for my troubles seemed to do me a particle of ‘good, but I kept hearing so much about( Tanlac that I thought I would take another chance, and it certainly proved to be the lucky one for me, because after I had taken a bottle vo of it I was feeling lots bet- o I kept on with it and now I have a splendid appetite and eat al- most anything I want without suf- fering the least bit with my stomach; afterwards. My nerves are as strong as they ever were in my life and 1 sleep just like a child every night and ned so in ength that or t Italians he mixture | { | | drop by { H should be thick i you open it; tai: good Pasture Land, one four- room house and don’t mind it a par-| HARDLY BREATHE, YICKS VAP -30¥. 60: cookin: astic about Mazola, Your grocer sells of the best olive oil. 1 of Pepper if AVE all ing: egg yolks and when well mixed, add } at in the remainder of the Mazola gradually until all i in the ice box to he us FREE five illustrations, i | every bit of the work in an eight-| and I a a ot wae BY 2 Y 2 any time. fe not only, 3 i Eighteenth aad Curtis Sts. n back nine pounds of the weight | Cer, raion 4S ‘amd-am so happy ove this-won- LIQUOR AND DRUG ADDICTIONS | Serta improvement that Tanlac hes by _@ scientific course of medi_ made’ in my condition that I want he only place in Col io everybody to know about it.” the e Keeley Remedies ‘Tanine is sold in Casper by the| are ‘used. Pharmacy and in Aleova ad AY FEVER it VapoRub in ¥ sty dnd inhale . the vapors. Attention Stockmen We have under contract several thousand tons of the best hay in the country, and can sup- ply you in car lots at the very lowest prices. We can also supply you with all kinds of grain in car lots. BEFORE PURCHASING, SEE US We Buy Hides, Pelts, Furr ind Wool. —_——— The Casper Storage Co. . Phone 63 or 97 Casper, Wyo. fer and salads erfect oil essing $e1 ho know real olive oil are enthusi- Dressing Today 1 teaspoon of Mustard 4 tablespoons of Vinegar redients and mixing utensils cold. Mix dry ingtedients. A, 1 pint of Mazola 1 teaspoon of Sait dd x ] YG teu f vinegar. jazola drop until the mixture begins to thicken, ulGrceit ae ickens, add the remainder of the vinegar a little at atime. Now used. The mayonnaise jar and cover close. Place weeks, Donot stir it when enough to hold its shape. Put i Ja Kc/out as much us you necd with « tablespoon, and close the jar, Cooking made simple and econqmical wh: sult the new 68-page Corn Products ialsad ae me A book you will keep, Free—write us today for it. Your Declaration of Independence Follow your country’s example. Declare your inde- pendence—jndependence of the tyranny of. financial worries. Banish the fear of the futnre. Win your complete freedom—and hold it. You do all these by starting to save and keeping at it. Your signature to your initial savings deposit slip is your declaration of independence. Every daily or weekly deposit will be a celebration—safe and sane. Save for Your Future . Ready cash makes you ready for opportunity. To’ be financially prepared is to have practical insurance on success. You dream of the future. Why not plan to realize those dream: Decide on a definite saving policy and stick to it with determina- tion. You will be building character as well as capital. And character will bring you extra capital when you need it. Sign your declaration of independence today! The Casper National Bank” 2 DEP TA SN PC AG A