Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 15, 1919, Page 8

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DS Do arnt tO OO OO tel te te inh bb bt 3 6 d Pp b 8 i: d y t we oe 1 UR TLTIVUNE EBL BU wey BERLE: Coe Casper Daily Cribune ptt catalina tihvet bhatt, Iesued every evening except Sunday at Casper, Natrona county, Wyo. Pubit- ion offices: Oil Exchange Building BUSINESS TELEPHONE............ 15 $< —$—$$<$<—___ Fatered at ee (Wyoming) Postot- ice as second-class matter, Nov. 22, 1916 PRESS psa A aetna ee ARLE Lg Raponts WRom Tie UsirmD PRESS . o¢ dent and Lidlicr He RaAW af, Basitoss Be pager A itor Advertising Representatives Devid J. Rani ns 1 Fifth Ave., New Yor! ity, Prudden, King & Prudden 1720-28 Steger Bidg., Chicago, Ill. of the Daily Tribune are on @ New York and Chicago of- jd visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrie: ree Mont 15 No subscription by mail accepted for fess period than three months. All subscriptions must paid in ag- vance and The Daily, Tribune will not insure delivery after subscription be- comes one month in arrears. . Applicant’ for Membership te Audit Bu- reau of Cirealations. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republicatioa of all news dispatches credited to it or not erwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. No. aim ONE BEATING THE PRINTER were forced to suspend publication because of a strike of printers and pressmen. The pressmen and press feeders belong to a renegade organi- zation known as the Franklin union, which is not recognized.as a legiti- mate labor organization. The print- ers, who are bound by an arbitration contract, were promtply ordered back to work by their international offi- eers, and ceased work in defiance of the order of their chiefs. The Literary Digest this week pre- sents an interesting and entirely orig- §| Y. Stock to equip the machine shop 0} and mechanical equipment, the office | er SHOP EQUIPMENT PURCHASED FOR GUATIOO AGENCY Shockley Garage Shop and Office Furnishings Purchased by J. Y. Stock for Modern Air- plane Headquarters The equipment formerly belonging} to the Shockley garage company has| been purchased in its entirety by J.! and offices here of the Curtiss air-| plane company. The purchase of this | ~ equipment includes besides the shop and fixtures and furniture with it. | Mr. Stock intends to make the Cas-| per headquarters of the Curtis sir-| plane company the largest and most attractive in the state. His con-| tract- requires the establishment of | an aviation school. } Two Curtiss planes for Mr. Stock have arrived here already and two more of the Oriole type are coming. | The machines in Casper are of the} |It was in the latter type that Bert) ne | |The Oriole has been used: [flights about Casper. A good many of the 152 national, magazines published in New York|!y placing its quarters in shape ncar| {the city landing ground. Oriole type and the JN-4-D type. | Cole flew from Massachusetts to} Denver, Colo., in bringing it west. in the| The Stock company also is rapid-| The com-/ plete headquarters of the Curtis cor pany here which will be located exst! of the city limits not far from the old brewery site, will cover a floor! i ——— space of about 95 by 100 feet. Of) | WHE CAPTURE of this TUNA, in this space 75 by 100 feet will be uscd} i for housing airplanes. Mr. Cole es-| ' timates that the capacity of this han-| gar will be 12 machines. The headquarters at the field in- clude a machine shop: a living room and office besides the hangar por- tion of the building. Present indi- cations are that work on the hangar and office building will be complet- ed in about a week. The work of grading and scraping the field near the hangar so that WINS for MR. FARNUM the TUNA CLI WILLIAM FARNUM AND parts of broken stone or gravel and proper quantity of water. “SAND. Clean sand shall be used, free from mixture with other sub- stances. ‘“,Broken stone or gravel, shall be, tough, sound and hard, clean from dust, loam, clay or other earthly particles, ~ inal appearance, and shows an amaz- ing resourcefulness when it comes to| aby z ay 2 vhe/mixer. The concrete after having bridging over a mechanical crisis|grader across the land in preparing) been mixed shall be immediately caused by the, absence of printers.|it a* @ landing field for airplanes. | placed and be of such consistency | % e \a i agrec-/| tamping. esty, the Digest.refrains from let-| ment. } “Concrete shall be. placed on ihe| ting the layman in on the secret LEgreere | sub-arades dn wee form and bee the ry a sees ores eo 6 | as to prevent. as far as possible, the of its process of printing “without { Letters From the People || eparation of: mortar dronisthe atonal printers. Therefore, to satisfy the Ue jTt shall be evenly distributed in asin- | curious, and to appease the appetite of the seeker after knowldege, an explanation might be appreciated by Tribune readers. The reading mat- ter in the Digest is merely a photo- graphic reproduction of the editor’s copy. The typewritten copy was) placed before a camera. photograph- ed on a wet plate. transferred to a zine plate, and put thru an etching process exactly the same as a half- tone newspaper cut, which produces an excellent printing surfaco almost as good as type. From a mechanical standpoint, the issue of the Digest was crude and unfinished, but the resourcefulness of the editor is re- freshing. Let us hope that the print- ers and pressmen have by this time enjoyed tion h obeyed the mandate of their chiefs and returned to work. their vi and o- — The national convention of the Travelers Protective Association held in New Orleans, adopted strong res- olutions denouncing Bolshevism. The same convention voted down a reso- lution endorsing the League of Na- tions. Delegates to the convention stated that they desired to know ex- actly what they were voting for be- fore they gave it a vote of confi- dence. —_—_—_——-0. Abraham Lincoln had in mind just such pressure as has been brot on the Senate during the past few weeks with a view to. rushing the American people into a one-sided internation: al contract without even taking time to read it, when he suid: “If thore be any object to hurry any of you in ‘hot haste to a step which you would Never take deliberately, that object will be frustrated by taking time; but no good object can be frustrated | by taking time.” { eS The New York World declares that “every radical whe is preachipg so- cial and économic revolution” is op- poping the pending covenant of the League of Nations. A very fair por- centage of these radicals are on the} government payroll by appointment. of the present administration, and}{ they are just as loyal to the league 1s the World is to the treaty meker sho gave the World’s editor ‘a job} on the entourage of the peace coum- 7 of concrete poured and left in the! any airplane will find a good land- ing place at Casper has been started. “All conerete must be mixed wit A tractor is being used to haul the; an improved form of mechanical gle horizontal layer of such depth! The City of Casper has contracted) that, after ramming, it will not: be for over one million dollars worth of | less than the specified thickness. paving this year under these speci-| “If necessary the sub grade shall fications, and this million dollars will} be sprinkled with water just before be assessed against the property| the concrete is laid. Immediately af- ACCORDANCE WITH the TACKLE SPECIFICATIONS UBS HIGHEST x THE FISH FOUGHT 104 MINUTES AWARD- A BLUE BUTTON HIS 1181g-POUND TUNA. a ee cage OT Greybull Dismissed Pupils in Starting $100,000 Building (Snecint to he Tribune.) GREYBULL, Wyo., Oct .15—One hundred pupils were temporarily dis- nissed from school here through lack of accommodations when buildings were moved off the present school site to permit excavation for.a $100,- 000 structure, bonds for which were voted this year. It will be modern in every respect. ek ae Runs in the Family. “Jack Grabcoin ‘says the most valu: poker fau Utph! I happen to know some- thing about ol Mr. Grabcoin'’s recurd at the same institution and it’s my opinion that Jack didn’t acquire a abutting the streets paved, and be|ter being placed it shall be well ram-| Poker face. He inherited it.” paid by the tax-payers owning said|/med until a compact mass 1s- pro- property. Are the taxpayers getting | duced. ————_ a pavement according to these spe+| “The contractor shall, if necessary, cifications? Is the SLOOP that has|keep the conerete moist by wetting been poured upon streets this sum-|with hose or otherwise until twenty- mer, of such consistency that densi-|four (24) hours before it is to be! ty can be acquired by tamping? We|covered with paving surface. have seen loads of this slop poured Headers. in which there was nardly a hat full| “Where the paving adjoins a ima- of gravel or broken stone and it|}cadam, gravel or dirt street, either never could be rammed hard enough|at the end of paved streets to bring it up to the specific thickness; streets or alleys it shall be or a compact mass. Taxpayers, do}off at the ends by an you think it has heen necessary to|thickness of pavement, six (6) sprinkle the sub-grade With water be-|in thickness and twelve (12) in | fore the concrete was laid, during/in width and extending the full the extremely hot and dry days of|width of the pavement and shall be| September? There has been blocks|turned down at an angle of thirty (30) degrees with the line 97 fin- ished pavement. Filling Sewer Trenches | sun to bake for weeks without any} effort being made to keep it moist. | We as taxpayers are paying fifty| three (58) cents per foot for headers but my attention has not called to them and I have been unable to find any that comply wit the specifica- iions. | There are many blocks, some of which have been paved and others are being paved at the present time that have never had the carth settled in any manner in the sewer trenches, and the specifications requires ‘the earth to be rammed in layers of not more than six (6) inches for two (2) feet above the sewor pipe. It is costing the taxpayers from $500 to $1100 per block for surveying and inspection, which is done thru our City Engineers office. Have we had inspection? Some people know when they have enough; but we, the taxpayers of Casper, seems to insist upon having it rubbed in before we can bring ourvelves to the point of uttering the word ‘sufficient’. Below are a few extracts from the specifications covering the paving of streets in Casper: “CONCRETE, shall be composed of one (1) part of Portland cement, three (3) parts of sand, und six (6) D9OOOOOCOOe “Talk With King” Which is the most valuable, your life or your goods and chattels? The latter you are sure to insure; that which gains them, your life—well, you didn’t think of it that way PENN MUTUAL LIFE William E. King State DMoenager Phone 120. Suite 2, Lynch Bldg. > > mission. ee ~ SOLD “Earth must be rammed in layers of not more than six (6) inches, for two (2) feet above sewer pipe, bal- ance can be filled with scraper and flooded with water to settle.” TAXPAYER, Spiteful. Young Jobbles has bought a rakish roadster. It’s spitework, I fear.” “How so?” asked the other. “The money spent for that car was intended for a bungalow. Young Job- bles wants to show the girl in the case that he has no intention of pro- posing a second time.” FOR 500 tons of hay,.5,000 | acres of. pasture. with running water; two large sheds, Best place to winter stock in || state; 17 miles south of | Douglas, Wyo. WILLIAM DUNN LaBonte, Wyo. TOAUTO OWNERS Who want better Gasoline. We have in our north tank 68-72 gravity at 40c per gallon. Those wanting the Commercial Gasoline will find it here at’ the old price of 25c per gallon. Our niotor oils are of still the high- est grade on the market. We furnish no low grade goods at any price. Ask our customers. They know us. The Service Experts WYOMING FILLING STA. TION CO. Inc, Second and Beech Streets Casper: Wyo. able thing he acquired at college was a 7] ~ soee emg MINE OWNER WAS _| ~ FORCED 10 QUIT Moves to Coast Seeking Health— Takes Tanlac and Will Return a Home a Well Man “I was forced to give up my mining business in Nevada and eine out here seeking health, but thanks to Tanlac, Tam coming back a) well manj’” said William H. Hart, who-owns the Vin- dicator-Divido mine in Tonopah, Ne- vada. Mr. Hart made this remark- Owl Drug company’s stores in Los Angeles, Calif., recently. 7 “For nine long. years, I. have suf; fered terribly with, indigestion and Stomach trouble.” he continued. ‘No treatment or medicine gave me any permanent relief and I got in such a nervous run down and emaciated con- dition that I had to leave my mine and come out here and try to find something to help me. My appetite Was poor and everything I ate formed gas in my stomach that would start pains which almost drew ‘me double sometimes. I got so nervous that I couldn’t grasp a pen long enough to write a letter and at night even the sound of the wind around the house would upset me. I couldn’t sleep anyway and this together with my stomach trouble pulled me down until’ I had lost forty pounds of my weight. Back in June I had a more severe attack and couldn’t stay on |the job another day, so I just ‘gave up and come out here. JF didn’t get any relief until a friend recommend jed Tanlac and I started taking it. “I feel like a new man since J finished my foutth ‘vottle of Tanlac. I’m eating three square meals every {day and enjoying them. My nerves are as a rock again and I can lay down at night and sleep as sound like a different man. To make a long story short, I am going back to |my mines a well man and able to get on the job and stay there. Tanlac has overcome the troubles that kept {me in misery for nine long years and |I am glad to have a chance to tell | everybody just how it has helped me. iIf I had only found Tantlac back at home it would have saved me the ex- pense of the trip out here and all that I have paid out for treatments and medicines, but my experience with than that to me.” Tanlac is sold in Casper by the ° Cuticura Is The e iJ | |: Soldier’s Friend After long hours of hiking or guard- ing, when his feet are swollen, bot or blistered, the soldicr will find wonderful relief in a Cuticura Soap bath followed by a gentle anointing with Cuticura Ointment, These fragrant, super-creamy emollients soothe ane sel Scrat as oe TAaNES H stop itching, clear the skin o! - | TH the acai of dandruff and the ands of chaps and sores, Also for cuts, wounds, stings of insects, | } sunburn or windburn. Soup The Healthy, Up-to-Date ;Tanlac alone has been worth more; able statement whilp in. one ‘vf. the jas a healthy child and get up feeling | Nes razor ef SEicy ont fo speak of wala te,premoting Ska parity, skin comfort aid skin Neat Phone 442-W, Inexpensive Our Mimeograph Dept. Knows How Call us CASPER BUSINESS COLLEGE, Inc. Smith-Tartar Bldg. for SHEEP right at Home, within trailing Casper Storage Phone 63 Notice Stockmen Here is a CHOICE FEEDING PROPOSITION On the Burlington Railroad and not out of the State. ‘ OVER 400 TONS CHOICE ALFALFA and choice Native Hay, 400 acres of good Stubble, good wa- ter and feeding Pens, fine shelter. This is really place to feed, at an exceptionally good price. or CATTLE distance of your own Range, an extra fine Co. Warehouse Casper, Wyo. ir, «8 1 to The ‘Tribmne.) CHEY: ; I Deb. Ab ‘Lieutenant B. W, Maynard, enroute on the return leg of the twice-across the-continent hig race, is. expected to reach Q’Neil field at, Fort Rus- sell at gbout 4. ’clock this after- noon, barring any accidents between Baie Mountain, neva 2, Where he spent it, an ‘is place. Tees teneesgutines Pda i pie bound, spent last night at Fort Rus- sell. They Any Lieutenants Kirby, who arrived at 5:11 yesterday after-| hoon; ‘Lieutenant J. Roullot. who, made a forced landing near Chey- enne Monday night, flew his machine | MEALS Bare Family. Style Your Appetite Tested to O’Neil field yesterday and was Breakfast: pele ie Sete aenter ecats ee 6:30 a. m. to 8:30 a. m. Casper Pharmacy, in Alcova by the a : ; Alcova Mercantile Co., and in Salt 11:30 gid :30 Creek by the Salt Creek drug store. :9U a. m. to 1:5U p, m. —Adv. Supper: ——— 5:00p. m. to 7:00 p. m. tf Héadache— Rub the forehead Cc ARMY AND NAVY CLUB Basement, West Hotel - Your Business Partner--- It is a good bank’s duty to assist its clients in the solu- tion of their problems—whether they be the problems of a merchant or a farmer. Both are business men. In fulfilling this moral obligation, we like to consider our organization as your business partner— interested in your success and eager to forward your plans. Confidential Counsel If you wish sound advice in seeking credit, making in- vestments, or even the more personal problems of your business you will be welcomed here. .You will find a talk with our officers helpful. This service is in addition to those commonly attributed to banks and is a mark of our appreciation for your account. We want to show you that this bank wants your business. And we want to show you the mény practical benefits you receive through placing it here. The Casper National. Bank eee The Nicolaysen Lumber Co. eeaeaahla hin Ghee RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, COAL WAGONS, GAS ENGINES Phone 62: Office and Yard: First and Center Keep Your Pledge—Buy War Savings Stamps N N) Cf hhh allel MP Stoves Stoves Stoves. Have just received a shipment of Heating Stoves and Ranges OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT! Natrona Lumber Co. Phone 528 353 North Beech Oh ddd dididiadidid, ie. Pa CAMPS for HUNTERS Forraesand further information inquire at Tribune Office. FLOYD J. STALNAKER, Dubois, Wyo. e“irer BOW! OF CH IN TON : 20 AT THE CHILI KING LUNCH Grand Central Block. All kinds of Sandwiches at Quick service, highest quality. POPE TEOL LS ISD:

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