Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 27, 1919, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

sea SLO yc, EE TOE SN age of cont Don't wait uti the situation x seria! ROOT FAVORITE IN LEAGUE !S31E ee ee Military Hero Would Have to Be Drafte dd Friends De clare, and if Root Is Turned Down, the Atlanti Coast Will Not Be in Running STORE YOUR to The t oo + aaa WASHINGTON Septs227=sPershing a supresidetiial. canichict One can get positive answers to both sides of thi uestion | and from sources equally worthy of consideration. As 4 matter of {4 I it is known by those very close to the general that he himself ha t taken kitidly to the oe and that it will will first be © necessary to « pect und esteem of all. * Toseturn ld of p nst him who wide from this into the f ties is to at once array x the minority party m vould soon turn their present eulo- tifa! ies into bitter personal attacks. ‘The! ari b lory of his achievements would be . limmed, the honor accorded a world vl hero would be tarnished—and the fu ! ture uncertain in these days of po igical unrest. me of his food ? The friends here believe the additional ,, Th ¥ honor will not tempt him, and that. Trell 3c \ hen the hour comes in which he must ! i { ie he will decline. ts tn ‘ Evangelist Harry C. Maitla nd of Winfield, Kansas \ quite yweneral impression here is galt W I \ hat nobody will go to the next ; ; tals 3 publican national convention with a) *Tferneon ie Can Rev. Gib! ori laste as \ chine majority of delegates in his pocket;! Oficiatin Burial will be’ I ¥ . : hat there will be five or six strong the Freeland cemeter HE: : i en each with a goodly following, =e : "a and that the convention will deter. Nearer Heaven W tl f W r mine finally which should be nomi- A newspaper tel : ated. This will largely depend up- couple bc urried ; : : al with on national conditions at that time, The only advantave was tha ¢) co The “public may demand a milit bach . hero; it may demand the elevation of Newly we Boston ‘Pranser ome man in congre whose activi sng ties have brot him into the limelight. [yy hor ur f b yehological moment; it may erous Hi ve vas born : rhooled in international- Pierpont, N. Y., 60 4 ago today ; ihu Root on account of ue of Nations ‘mand uation; or ‘or onece——a plain or dinary business man. Whatever the fominant demand, it will be sensed by th muvention, and one 1 nearest fill the requirements will be named—and elec If it to be 2 soi Pershing will above Wood or any other; ruc of Nations situation in- the selection it will be Elihu Root beyond question; if in onc of the two other classes it may one of a hall be ca Koh | NOTICE! “a / Atlantic coast . ees va 4 «f oy country will not furnish the candi Customers, please ask for your duplicat« \ ' date, according to wiseacres here, and sales slips. We will give no credit on re go ty ] f the honor will fall west of the Ohio turned goods without the duplicate slip wet C8 if not the Mississippi. a — WOOL MACHINERY HUMS i ON DEMAND FOR LARGE olumbia Gratanola DELIVERIES, REPORT and Records “The pause in wool) Weaving which t in about the middle of August, has continued up to the present = r sthe monthly bulletin of iz , Vl Cet i the First’ National bank of . Boston OF LYEUSICLL sh than 10 per cent of the card- ing, combing and spinning machinery S a’ sf Stead Lees of the country was idle at the be- sattistaction inning of August, according to the fovernment’s figures jus issued, snd it is safe to say that the per venta fot is fully as great as then. More- Many Models time,’ and Prepare for the Hard Winter Forecasted DO NOT GAMBLE On Possible Shortage and Higher Prices of active machinery at pres- ? Sc my ase to Show You, Priced at 4 over, about 10 per cent of the actives x pinning: machinery, over 10 per cent =e of the woolen carc nd nearly 50 per cent of the worsted combs were running on double shift, and the con- 0 stant ery from ‘the men higher up’ bas been for quicker and larger de- liveries. With consumption approxi- nating the record figures of the war period, it would seem as if the wool should have become more ac- he persistent popularity of fine fabrics has caused a reluitve scarcity vf choice fine and half-blood wools here, to the neglect of lower grade et very useful wools. The manu- facturers naturally ooked to Austra- Jia to supplement the supply of fine wools. Subsequent to th applica- tion for Australian shipments, the ritish government decided to open ‘he London Colonial wool auctions to unrestricted competition, except for the necessity of securing export li- venses, which is merely a matter of routine,” TUBERCULOSIS PREVALENT INWYOMING SAS DOCTOR jo The Tribune.) Wyo., Sept. 27 mption of Wyomingites that s little tuberculosis in this state ured erroneous by Philip P. Jacobs, Ph. D., of the National Tu- herculosis association, who was in Cheyenne Friday. Jacobs said that he did not have statistics on tuber- culosis in Wyoming but that he was confident this state had as many cases ber cupita as any other state with « similar population living under hilar conditions. One per cent of ‘he populstion of Laramie county, he ascerted, have tuberculosis. and Sold on Liberal Terms Webel Commercial / Company THE BIG BUSY STORE WATCH OUR WINDOWS ( HE The the Casper Supply Co. Cor. Center ann Linden Phone 913 Phones, 13 and 14

Other pages from this issue: