Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 27, 1920, Page 2

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PAGE TWO = ae _fhe Caspet Daily eribane _THURSDAY, MAY 27, 199 Paterson, N. J. 135,866! Adolph Braunschweig was born in the X 132,358 Schwarzwald, Baden, in 1875. He came fhe Casper t Daily Eribune’ lecmed right * * © We are not, it gilt-edged ebaracter, were offering ae p 5. 0 is truste suc P erate desc s ‘ket rates of terest. Youngstown, io 3 J a lesued every evening except Sunday at! 8 ada Sg 3 cline OLEATE Hy Sie iui Meat ae Springfie ‘ _ 129/338 ‘to America, and to Cheyenne, when 17 2 AO mR Ben SE pe eS as ‘to prove recreant, and fail to defend, ‘ontinuation of the lo Nashvill « 118,842 years of age. He is survived by a W our al |with gallantry and firmness as un-| Serve discount rate nec ry to sustain | E widow and one daughter, and by eight se 3 a Camden, N. J. 116,309 a BUSINESS TELEPHONE...........- 15! flinching, all Avhich we howe either de- the administration's borrowing policy ae Albany, N. Y. . 113,334 pests ag i opelie ate of whom are GET THIS 7 | rive: 2 7 » for al time after the armist gave Wilmington, De' 110,168 | residents 01 e1 FR Entered at Casper (Wyoming) Postof-|fived from them, or since added to the, for # long time after the a nel ‘ Spokane cWash, iod‘20a! ee E fice as second-class matter, Nov 1916 rich inheritance. ue My seeeeate =o cet Sad zy [Ka ansas City, Kana, 65th 101,078} NOTICE SA OF WOOD. Ifyou 9 dandraf, if you" hat ieee eeacdh side vaxn us, the | eat ne close of the wa eer my bald’ i MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, “4!!,these considerations warn us, the pk 2 aka gis appa j | Regular meeting Friday evening, May legions of persons have cio REPORTS FROM THE UNITED PRESS|srayestones of almost every: former re-| Caused further credit expansion, w {28. Any member having a Woodcraft] *#e mephice Siyoush a fenuine Indive public warn us ,that a high standard of | Cned sll more our gold reserve position | Teuton Born Patriot | ritual belonging to the order, bring or |. Prost ‘box of the wonderfully wef with J. & President and Editor; - i and needlessly delayed the time of re | send it to the hall before 8 o'clock, ment, Kotallo, if you send only 1) ...°% 01m Y, Business M. nager| mors al rectitude, as well as of intelli S 3 | MARY FRANK, Guardian Neighbor. Hh Battal Brant ks this 9 St (silva gence, is quite as indispensable to com-|!urn to more stable economic. condi-| M: ry] ‘ity Tditor | |tions. It is in no small degree respon-| Number of Cities M Moved up into ociate Editor| munities, in their public a itorial Writer | of Cheyenne Dies) uri | dW Britain, see a ee eerd individuals, if they «would | sible for the wide: Advertising Representatives leither degeneracy or Devid J. Randall, 341 Site Ave, | oho if New York C bread feeling of un —-— Sno ees sie tamed pee ac = Which There | creyENNE, Wyo. ; ‘May 27.—Adolph| 4 i ; % ‘ere Monicipalities (Otto) Braunschweig, one of the be: ‘ pervades our economic life. | Le in 1910 |known residents of this city, who with| —_ = | ; = | William (Billy) Gauff, now of Californt e Mar ee wae |THE “OPEN COVENAN | WASHINGTON (By Mall)—The pop-|¢ormerly conducted the Michelob Chicago, . ; ‘ . ion rank of the cities will show a 1 pies of the Da iy Tribune are on{ It fs Mlumineting to read\in this day} ah ¥ one of the squarest and most popular New York and Chicago of-| number of changes when thejof Wyoming resorts during the wet cra,! the inner history of the peace confe tistics of the 1920 census have been vis dead at his home h after a pr mpleted. Monged illness. The funeral probably cities have moved up into! will be held Wednesday afternoon at! 100,000 class in which there were|the Elks’ home. Although both Braun- ifty municipalities in 1910. Some of/schweig and Gauff were German by jthe cities of that popuk Work Shoes Are an Economy ence, or rather the supreme coun | written by Andre Tardieu; one of the French delegates, and now being pub-| Q. Is it true that a comma was once Sch left out of a tariff bill, which omission cost the government a large sum of whose 1920| nativity there wére not in Wyomins| ed, hay Full Double Sole € One Month . Per Copy He explains how the council came to . money?—H. C. 1 | during the war with Germany two more One Xear $6.00/ the much-erjticized decision to drop Mr.| 4, The blunder to which you refer| OUST 's in the same class while| hotly partisan American citizens. Had Goodyear Welts Sin" at $.09| Wilson's “first point, which claimed) occurred in a triff bill about fifty y sik POU enirees all native-born Americans subs sper apy iption 1 ‘a for |“open covenants openly arrived at’ | 880. ‘There+was a section enume' { nk well up among the/meet the war-time financial nee S Built of solid leather an three months largest cities. |the United States as liberally pr has shown the most/portion to their means as did these} ong the larger cities. It has|German-born partners it would have} eight cities having 100,000 or|been neéessary to have issued many} = on secret| What articles should be admitted tions must Ue bald in ad- | M. Tardicu confirms the open secret] Or auty. Among those. spe y Tribune will not|/that Mr. Wilson himself objected tc 1 foreign fruit-plants, etc cription be- | ; ‘ ; holding discussions of the conference in|ing plants for transplanting, |more in 1910, whose 1920 populations|more Liberty loans to provide bonds to} t point’’|tion or experiment. Tlie enrollin , in copying the bill accidentally changed | Ba¥¢ been announced. |take up all subscriptions. Both part ik of the various cities cannot] ers) were members of the local Hun- F 3 {the hyphen to a comma, making it|, The Member of the Associated Press, only “public discussion of all the @r|read “all foreign fruits, plants, etc.” In|be determined until statistics for all) dred Per Cent American club and both The Associated Press is exclusively * been announced. New York, Chi-|save- open- handedfy to the Red Cross entitled to the use for republication of |rangements before they should become | consequence, until Congress could rem-}» Akron, rowth outsoles, insoles, heels and counters; carries a fulj double sole to heel, with an insole that is entirely free from tacks or threads, All sizes. Price, er of Audit Bureau of Cireulations | Public, explaining that his “fir Se) did not mean “public negotiations,” but nll news credited in this paper and nJxo|}inding.”” edy the misthke, all oranges, lemons,|c#80 and Philadelphia, first, second and|and other patriotic organizations. 8 00 the local news published herein, : Sal da chat peat nuts bananas, grapes and other fc | third ies of the country, will continue e lemenceau considerec a © pub\ fruits were admitted free of duty, The|to rank in that order, but the rank aD ic expected to be informed day by day|misplacement’ of this common cost th: cities is uncertain. From ei ply of the doings of the conference, and| government about 000,000. | announced some of the changes . . — ‘ HL. OF KOREIN. follow, dl Gireo- S Chat it was in the Interest of the latter] -@. Was there a. good. maple, sugar|shown in rank are: Nae Flexible Single AMERICANISM. Pee aa production this year?—C, M® | Washington, D. C., passed ,N. Ith |to take public opinion into its confi | A; the prea tior at Bott l7., Cincinnatt ana aOR S There has Ween no change in the de 3 A. > ction noth mi au-| J. E ad New Orle: Ween no change In the de) denog. But other’memberd Of thé con-| gt; The Production of both Pie Ne Ta Ganeet CReatAtL KIMBALL DRUG STORE Sole Goodyear finition of Americanism from the days a , a CASPER PHARMACY m the] smallest in the last four Toledo, Ohio, p production season was a short one and/ St. Paul was to invite the interference of politi la nmany localities the trees were not| Dayton, Ohio. passed Paterson, N. J. Americanism ‘has always .|tappeds owing to the shortage of labor. port, lee consequently, the line of) @) What is Jacob's Ladder?—H. D.!> | ection was settled at a few sittings. On| 9, ference objected that’ to infé ed Louisville and} And by good druggists everywhere | who will supply you with genuine | OIL OF KOREIN ssed terson, | and Spokane. | 2 Nashville. | nd~ Spokane number of} f $0,000 or more in 1910. | $., passed Nashville, ef the founders of the Republic. There Welts Built solid throughout, with pliable uppers that are both soft and tough— its roomy tip carries a soft boxing. You can’t buy an press of the discussions im prog e no chznge. Substitution js im partie the one thing, And all along from the beginning there have This name was given to the lac reaching from earth to heaven seen vision by b. ‘This al name given to a short der on] Albar January 16 it was decided to consult the | SPOT CASH FOR YOUR : ct raph ad ho rs froM{ yess representatives themselves, who | oe ists to the present day. naturally wanted to be admitted |" There were Washngton and Jefferson.) erywhere. “But on the ifth. tt Was | shipboard, and’to an ere for rais-| cities of o ont yates in pons ae I ERTY BONDS hanes work shoe. All ere were and nackaan. g here} qecided that they should be admitted] ing light weights to a consid N. J., passed Albany and} sizes. Price, Xu anc Kinley, and last 7 PRR EAT, 54 aight: (An fenclona trayaising¢obsin Gm ere . ipeeeait: igGday) bane ana| on iy a shreds 2 o Rapes |buckets, filling themselves at the bot-| : Tenn., and Albany, N. y. My at REG $7 00 Lenroot are the most er it prec fate | jtom of the chain ahd emptyir | ane, Wash. | c. r Tisai awe Clothing = f Continuing. M. Tardieu shows how | selves at the top, formerly much used | Cities of 100,000 or more population! aspe! "S h C 8 : : APs _.s. | Wiison completely reversed himself on|i” breweries and distilleries, 1s known] in Wilols: Hawa beat TannGunced. Store—229 Sout enter From time to time in the country's} ™ ‘ % as Jacob’s ladder. |with their 1910 rank and 1920 popula- ——— | \istery our srreat men have written ana] his epen covenant position and filed! @. Whag kind of fur is Hudson seal?| tion, include: | WIGG “AD-ITORIAL” oken upon American citizenship and] With’ the council-his vie in writing. | —B. M. e ‘ 1910. 1920. | Auld and xiche have writteni@nos) Aseruraien iret: A. This is a name given to the fur! City, . Rank. — Pepula- You will not find anything but leather in our 1d comprehensively th work shoes where leather ought to be used. | And you fellows who wear work shoes know ay edt aoc Ch muskrat dyed the color of Alaski les ae eae sony SHEAR YOUR cibly summarizing the Q. Have all insurance claims bee | ee ag wif SHEEP NOW ment, fc shed Am an statesman ana} ous arguments. appealed to the com-| settled’ fer our soldiers who lost th Levi Woodbury. What he that it takes leather to stand the strain of the : ; ssign itself lives in the world war? 0. ; - : ; 2 am applicable today |Mon sense of the press to resign itself | mn We Washington, D. C. 437,414) ; ull and tug th your st: 7 nd total perman¢ ent | inecinr nm made by thi Ohio . 401,158 money. ous sa ns, La. - 387,408) 2 It behooves us to look our perils and|net to convey personal information to} isk Insurance. ‘ThiS| Minneapolis. Minn. We are now prepared to ulties, such as they in the face pre The daily communique of total value of more than Thin. Mrith ‘the sexercike of -candos| secretariat was to be the only valid ithculties, such ¢ ya ited jaily ec Boaidong . y t more tha" | Tnaianapolis, Ind. 19 shear 5,000 sheep a day. me st : : ; ts { ‘eet hs seenBtdnlyi va jeleven hundred million dollars... There \Toleag, Ohio { ‘A@andanverat eter Lond xe | F jare only 5,119 claims now pendins. | Louisville, Ky 3 E > & calmness and fortitude, being able to/ Statement Q. When was the New Thought) oo" paui Minn. : : feed; convenient crossing Bt comprehgpd fully their characte and! Resuming his story: “The @ice were|movement started?—K. M. : annie = ; on Casper Creek; wool in extent; et us profit by the teachings |thrown.. The conference was to carry| A. The New Thought religion is the) | chee, N.Y, anti § storage and dry. ° “YOUR ‘SHOEMAN’ : aie,” “Ten! ba Bishop Shearing Pens members of the delegation were invited! 4 have | history. His interpretation follows. tasdifMfcult :tauk amtdy the. indit-] {ect snecesfor:'to ‘the Rie enya moult. taake Panties Transcendentalism. — It metaphysical movement and was in it i hon and myself en-jaugurated by P. Mz Quimby? of Porc.| BMidsepert, Conn. - 145.752) 9 Dishsps Wee. cEhans GF2 te the impression }land, Maine, who preached the doctrines | Bartford, Conn — 188,036 t | with Dr. W. F. Evans, who wrote them. = ; n_by receiving ©M lhe New Thought cult held a conven need new laws, new instivu-|fixed days the representatives, of the/tion in Chicago in 1903, at which time But in March, discussion having 'was formed the New Thought Alliance (Mr. James A. Edgerton was chosen | |president. The magazine of the j jicalled the “Nautilus,” cerning the true sbirit of our present | questions, were were requested by the} Holyoke, Mn under| Supreme council to abandon these re-| Q, What is a Papal Bull?—T, R. of almost e ery page in our anni ference or the hostility of the press: | ¢ ayton, Ghio _ defects, tinder our existing sy have resulted mc e from the manner of) Mr.) Balfour, Myf dd to mitig . 122 East Second Strect ministering it than from its sub | deavo: ahr or éteon. ed by this deci Ww tics or new powers than we nead, on} d more intense and differences at all times and in all intelligence con-|having become evident on important ail ovcasi: ve requi moral cour at : Secrets elie A. This is a papal letter sealed with 6 99 ‘ 1 against every offend-} ceptions : ja bulla, or with a red ink imprint of| Ears sewithenaelity | theleathoriien in Anril: the aquestionieropned) up| aging kerk coe e ream re) caed: and the maniy|Whether the conditions of peace should] have been written in Roman already endence sandon all supineness,| be made public before or at the time]ordinary parchment and — since 1914) Z » Germans.| have been dated by civil calendar. | rresplution, vacillation and time-serv-|of their being handed to the Germans,| Dire Imen Gated by ft zu eter caes Ph Ss h t B } ing pusillanimity, and enforee our p M. Clemenceau demanded publication. rou parchment and dated “a die In Ce) a e Fs S ow e $s ent mild system with that uniformity] He said: jonis,” (from the day of the in ‘it is inadmissible that our fellow-} carnation.) ‘The bulla use und steady vigor: throughout, which djs a round} leaden we AS Ol e side al alone ean supply the pls of the great- aeup nag ea bes saat read Haat ani h as rt on Ane der | Dr. Price’s “Cream” Baking Powder i is now made with pure er of less free institutions. 1e treaty in the Berliner Tageblatt. and the other the e of the Pope | Fe ed cncatvece aa iu venewea| “Being ale of this opinion, he was|who wer ites | phosphate by methods of production which make it the obliged to submit to the predominating| Q. How many elept nis are kill to accomplish everything on. this| Sbliged. te submit to the predominating) | 04 thw ey ye | “cream” of phosphate Baking Powders. ect which is desirable, our history} > e A. The tusk of the African e is the best and gr n May and in June the qtestion ivory of commerce, nd it oeffeient resource, and indeed to th ; 5 ht ner m a tig to| UP ag The American senate and aj that 70,000 of these animals ar | only elixir, secure a long life 0} "i Sithacninpaee : French journal had published the full] ®nnually for the purpose | F lar government, : s the tu Some tusks reach a length} nf abatk asera causation . text of the treaty; the council, neverthe-| of nine feet and weigh more than 200/ : less, decided to wwaittits signature. In| pounds als, with the wise deseription of D ae | ry . > July parliamentary discussion began Q. About the beginning of the war, «| 4 and just practices they |* woman was caught giving | “ i s ght giving information n emenceau demanded permission to N t rdea | M- Clemencea : pen to the Germans about shipping. What jcommunicate to the ymmission Pre) became of her?—M. M. | No record of finding a spy in the im) Before their alliance, the spirit “ft lavevill. always, in) time,;stana) sed over M. Viviini the minutes of A rebuked, and. those who worship at the| te committee on the léague of nations artment is found. A woman : who worsh Pee : baie irae text {Charged with giving confidential infor-| Y shyinc. of unhallowed ambition ,.must |! ys agi i mation concerning the sailing of ships unanimity, again, for refusal. The text of the treaties is public property. butlto an army wry of the treaty was published x fe constantly points her finger to a most |" ¢ atest sourc m every leaf of ree quail officer was discharged from | Repent 1 the political atmosphere, {the Preparatory work must remain]-the service, but-no findings showed th: at | © ane aes : a Jsecret. ‘That will go to history the|she had any contact with Germans. ! 1 cecasior y happen, by the en 1% sane rifasentt . {Any reader can get the answer to chments “of usurpers, the corrup-|' ROkeINS Abr neseoD ‘relic any question by writing The Casper ‘on or intrigues of demugogues, or in} M- Tardieu wisely concludes that the! pany Tribune Inforn ation Bureau, ecrecy of the conference did enormous} Frederic J. He 5 ector, ning | the) inspir agonies 6f faction, or dy i j J. Ha : : i } iden f f popular frenzy; ‘bué harm to its work. The peoples of the] ton. D. € picbete: x r tly to | . x t © sudden fury of pop enzy; but, nformation. The rive nations concerned have been unable to i Biv h the: restraints and salutary in Jadvice on financia! lunderstand the eauses of the long and} matters {resume lage inthe preparation of{ domeroe troubes, to undertae | Sells for about HALF the price charged when treaty, and the fielc us been left) haustive re 4 Write | 1 the field has been te the powder contained Cream of Tartar deseribed healthfully | sical world, your question p Give full name and address and enclose two e. AN] cism, falsi-} for all manner of cri instead “ution and misrepresentation, The/di-] cents in stamps for returr . + EEO He rock deeper. In replies are sent direc o ulrer. : 2, . . ugele the onijglifened and amoral] revi Bete wigs CVn 8, AEM ee doef wens wo SC naar and appeals to every housewife who is interested in reducin p vuxiliacy and} the action of the pgople and of the! mi. National Board of Fire Under-| . ers i - Te aed, srzitere Will tmepl ih Nay ‘varie eloriat| the high cost of living and in protecting the health of her home. <a - for its fifty-fourth annual conven. | ‘ vie or it onward, In 4 THE INFLATION POLICY. Hon | banking und currency committee or improve Th “When the strugg assumes the form of the advisory committee on policies aiform of the natiogal Republican FOR RENT. our summer sheep camps on of a contest with power, in ad its sub Here are the prices: or with undermining and cor-|#8d tee in its report, following an a7 gaa eer oy Soatiat tae inquiry into the subject, that Big Horn Mountains. rather 1 with turbulence, sedition or | exti ve iry » subject, . e open ¢ ession by the needy and des-]the Wilson administration is responsible MARION P. WHEELER. 2 yorate, it will be indispensable to em:|for the im sed cost of living by rea (@) OZ. ploy still greater diligence; t cherish|Son of the fact that it has eontinued its} earnestness of purpose, resoluteness in} Policy of inflation by which it financed! ||" tenn AREMOW i conduct; to apply hard and constant|the war. The consequences of this in The C. E. HOOD AGENCY H OF or OZ Plows to new) abuses, rather than milk-) fetionary war financing are that: Phone 196-3 ; ¢ and- water remedies, and encourage not| “It has caused great injury through G =a { é ole ind orig x, | the snseq uel the rice of i al Insurance i y bold and original thinking.| t ae n ae ata ; 4 Pi ge a { Strongest Companies | a Cc or re) but determined actior goods und services that enter into | Live SWice taaevice | 3 ZZ; In such a case, our fathers were] ing costs. } i et | men whose hearts were not accustomed It has greatly increased the cost of jalizing in Complete | : 1 a ; | " ACCIDENT, HEALTH C. ; H My fail them ths for-| war ; : ontains ng alum. . d bs di rida Giinlacles. Home of them] “it haw cauiled septot Yom tor pa Protection 9 ever disturbs digestion. of Cromw and im-, chasers of Liberty bonds, who we led " i r, in whatever they} vestment which —consi¢ ass ‘ , 2. 2.2. 2.2. ee

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