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BALLOT VIOLATION AT Che Casrer Maite erityne meee (1 TNS | PAGE FIVE MEN ONLY! DENVER MEDICAL INSTITUTE “He refused I received a letter ‘ | ‘The letter read tn part: T am sorry that you could not ac Sept the situation of our estrangement (more gracefully. You know now that we are through.” (Continued from Page 1) i Sore ys married Aug. 9, pr ods FOR MEN —— 1s. ¥ is listed in thi pees ized last week in advance of | board had plaint at $750 a month, but his wife ightecnth St the proposed general strike. x 142 shact jmmid it was much greater as the result eS aa terete ‘Lee cat eerie of telegrams ws to the of @ secret agreement with his father . - COME AND BE CURED Er plaining ‘Texas men voted udge Cruelty C i ———>___ * ; g 1 t Quit work In advance and by so doing | affected ‘July 1wage cut uelty Charges Made Basis! ._ PR gy ee fortelted their right to general striks|neod attend, The roll call began at of Action Brought by Mrs, 0 Conference i S eats benefits. 10:14 a. m. but soon was halted when Robert Giffen Stewart i ~ attay ents L, E. Sheppard, of the conductors, | Stone objected to the activities of sev- in Chicago. MI eo is yet curable, w sas. then cilld te’ the stand to ex-| eral “photageapters mr in London Today : ow corsiint : ' plain his organtzation’s stand. he had no control over CHICAGO, Oct. 26—Mrs. Elizabeth wtusn your Yeesh. Hie sid eonfinctore an ss , Wallentin Stewart has been granted — ‘ > Debility, Weak be f clgeicee J Fg have no control over ® divorce from her husband, Robert ; i), of exposur. ‘ strike order one of my strong arm Giffen Stewart, assistant general man: |, Det —Announcement Wy D ioe Kideeve, Wart 23 roads. evils clear them out in ager of the sales department ot! {tt 5 meeting of the Irish confer : ie ¥ tm the 'Bloed, seb vania lines, Duluth and the Standard Oil company af |®2°*, Or of the committee trying to . z rman@atly ew Indiana and son of Col. Robert W.|find a formula by ; , ¥ which the negotia- Stewart, chairman of the board of di-| tions may continue, would be held t rectors of the company. The Gecres| aay was made here ah 2 was granted by Judge Charles L. Mec-|o. Se ee i i eee Donald of the Superior ‘court. who| "2" At the Dail Eireann headquar jaiso awarded Mrs. Stewart custody of] mont ney ng eet the announce their one child, Elizabeth Jane, 4 years| yet, Nad no significance relative to Joid. ‘An alimony settlement arranged| !° Conference, an the representatives | oul of court is tail te coosane tay f the British government were ex pees tremely busy in connection h the departure of the Prince of 2 i i i i COME IN AND TALK IT ovER FREE—Consultation, Examination—FREE h of even the poorest, and i ga i Ee a5 aie IN LIVELY TILT, Warren S. Stone, grand chief of the | ¢Thood of Railroad Trainmen, to save Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers | time offered to file a list of his gen- followed Sheppard and cyme into con. | ¢ral chairmen.who were present. The “ict with Chairman Barton at the| Chair directed that the list be filed. very start when he attempted to read| &. E. Sheppa;ri, head of the Order of & list of seven rafiroads which, he| Railway Conductors, and Warren 8. said, bad violated orders of the board.| Stone. for the engineers, W. Car- Barton ruled against the reading.| te", President of, the Brotherhood of Stono protested that Sheppard had] Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen, evidence. and T. C Cashen, head of the Switch- “I want to read into the record a| men's . statement that 40 railroads have vio-| fered to file the names of their execu- New York is working on « candle which will be 18 in circumference at the base. When completed will be | |; Qhurch of the Madonna, at Pomel, Italy. It will burn only one on®All Soul's day. If allowed to continuously it would 1m. te for Men Only. Denver Medical Institute: *5\s<-"ores foxes ee otfice, Denver, Col: The deéree was granted on ti | ets of cruel. tion of two women named in Mrs. Stewart's orig Inal complaint | Mrs. Stewart told of frequent quar rels with her husband, which started a 4 develc | at the dinner table his throwing dishes at her, draggin her up the stairs by her hair, or throw her down a stairway Tells of Wild Auto Ride, An unusual story told by her was Te al ‘at ae. hat of an automobile ride taken while ; eored ‘bistl Tiny ceuaevel the’ platit 10 ‘xe ‘4 she was recovering from a If we cannot faa Bago pe per fl de pe ; nate not be preferred to insecurity that| f > | “It was in the fall of 1916," she tes bourt. then bate Be 6 go eran th fy ee! “ie Rolee” nad ‘an-| WOuld result ifithe operation of trains ified. “I asked him if he would take pe cen engineers: pre pein tg ie jet a for absentees. The chair did| !s left to inexperienced men.” j me out for some fresh air, as 1 was! continued. not rule on the point and a roll call Mr. * | weak from an operation. He was ag: hibited from explaining the feeling of | PP* © erat Guaictied of the Stone said the railroads “with gravated, but after. several request our men then I do not sce that there e general cl jen of the ehg!-| characteristic cunnirig” have made it . pissy ” neers started. pe had been refused, he agreed. OR ened Goan | gS ‘When more than half of the tist had| “@PPear that the brotherhoods have “He drove direct to the roughest 5 been called and only two men had precipitated the whole trouble.” Evas-| din the neighborhood and imme. Rope TONITE--POPULAR 10c DANCE Admission 25c, Including War Tax. Ladies, Complimentary THURSDAY Cooks and Waiters Weekly Dance REMEMBER THE MASQUE BALL OCTOBER 31. $100 IN PRIZES. WOODMEN ANNUAL BALL, NOVEMBER 4 EX-SERVICE MEN’S MILITARY BALL, NOVEMBER 11 Miss Elsie B. Hughes in Charge of Studio and Dancing Lessons. mwered, Chairman Botan halted the] ive answers,\be sald, were made by Daschian tk waaineinne sitsed ee earenee secretary and asked “HY engineers! the raflroad executives to all queries| [ was suffering terrible pain. T plead. thelr names. ‘The menibers of the ex.|2¥ the “dig five” transportation or.) PTosress is being made on the Cas-| 1 with him to atop, but instead he Seti e cnialtine mene the cuit eues | santzation chiefs concerning retention |e" Auto and Gun elubhouse whieh thie Saett: Ge oat to neagund: 9f various rules and working condi. ‘ Dens erecte_ on the club prop After a few miles he was forced 2 p.m. Judge Barton announced aj tons: “The executives mado it plain {"*Y “bout five miles east of the elty.|:., stop by a flat tire. He ‘cursed that 2 Rie Macrae Barton announced *| chat they were through with collect. THe Sub, which In still in formation, |; a RCareee to {enc BAe Cicenactiee 108 oa COREA ive bargeining except so far as the | ‘0 elect an executive committee tn and offered mo no ald. A stranger Continuing his questioning of Presi. | FAllway wage board might be urefut|‘h® near future. “It ts the plan to|,arried me out of the car. A hemor- uestion in| oe ten atthe ten ‘Hoopes | {0 lending force and sanction to their |™&Ke the organization a large popular | nave had started. It lasted for fi Jon of tha | tent Teo 0 galamen, Mr. Hooper | designs” he added. “Informally the|0®® rather than set a limit on the| \eewe, rE asi who had: the proper authority [oi as aliea with talk that“now is, ™embership. A chef will be kept at "” Recites Other Cruelties. the time to smash the unions.’ ” lean paint wif 9! ‘at Sed and dinners! orner acts of cruelty recited follow ‘Suppose the brotherhoods. are . je tavern every! Feb. 6, 1916—Threw her down a broken up. The'first result will be CCK end and upon appointment. | sairway when she wanted to breal fs certain: lowsctng of physical ana Further announcements about the| frat wish hum Bh ho Moral standards with Inevitable loss Tembership of the “lub will be made! j.1,, 191§—Quarreled at dinner; ther o in Chicago could iasue the necossary | Mfe and property," the statement|tr; dragged her upstairs oy her hair and orders fot recalling the ntrike order, | Cntinued. ni shoulder, T. C, Cashen, chief of the Switch: ie cucl,| ‘Next will. come an inevitable re-| 41K, MAIL SERVICE UNIMPAIRED met but. only whe: 0 roads made such Aug. 6, 1919—Threw a glassful of pt) ane ae ote America was settle: aun OF demanded. organization of the worker, not along! CHEYENNE, Oct. 26—The first} water at her, hitting her on the shoul- peepee ts pxipedie ea ak aah. the seen the old brotherhoods, but! blizzardy weather of the fall season } der. Appoin| ts From 10 A. M. to Noon and 2 to 8 P. M. roads FIG! G ‘ organization based on the ‘one big| Tuesday failed to paralyze air mail| Following the last incident, she said. which his) men had voted. not to pe egy EE union’ principle; wielding the power service out of Cheyenne, although it|he sulked to the kitchen, where their 132 North Center Street Telephone 170¢ strike, Cashen said there was no svt) “" of ‘direct action’ and stopping at caused the ships to halt for severa!| maid served his meal. Then he left Bi SLEVELAND, Oct. 26.—(By The| nothing in the furtherance of revolu-| hours until wisiuiity. tm: r beer? proved. By} ‘or the Milwaukee Athletic club an: every case the switchmen voced aaa Press)—Warren 8. Stoné,| tionary political designs. Such hag al-|3 o'clock ia the o7cer. aii ships | they never lived together afterward, is to strike,” he said. president of the Brotherhood of Loco-| ways been the reaction from unbridled | oucbo74 hut: 2sparted and all in-| “I asked him to, return to hi Wi 8S. Carter, president of .the}™otive Engineers, in a statement) bourbon dominatio: fake, wh Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen| ®#de public here today, asserts that — and Enginemen, followed, going] “te brotherhoods * fighting for through the same general explanation | “it very existence,” and warns that of the brotherhoods’ strike ballot. v they are destroyed, “radical labor Mr. Carter, in explaining the strike} ‘"sapizations are sure to spring up call aa it affected the firemen and en-| 9 ‘ke their places within ay) few sinemen said: iby Ponte Yoo ordi tonl “After giving ission to strike us assure you, however,” Mr. uJ * 7 . r cannot recall fe. It stands, If a| Stone snid, “that this overthrow is a Tes aifin Piedmonts satisfactory settlement can be reach-|!ong way from an accomplished fact.” —all the fine full ti Mr. Stone. also asserted that “the de HE RD PEA, ONY S88 SEER re owerful force tn deciding thie mellow flavor of Vir- The board adjourned failroad controvers: the force ; r X 3 eet 3 oo he publi¢ opinion, peng, it is : inia tobacco, For RULING VIOLAT(ONS | causal oe ak beeilaoeme nd iedmonts are all ey : Virginia and for ciga- CHICAGO, Oct. 26.—(By The Asso- ciated Preas}—Tne United States raii-| i a il rettes Virginia tobacco road labor board today initiated “an “ official governmental inquiry” into is the best. the national rail crisis, to determine : constitutes a violation of board deci- sions or of the terms of the transpor- tation act. Chiefs of the conductors, engineers, trainmen, switchmen and firemen, to- gether with the five general chairmen of the labor organizations on cach rajlroad appeared to answer & sum- mons under two sections of the trans- portation act. Ratlroad executives from all of the principal roads were ae also present as the result of a re b N are quest by the board. : $ c In citing the labor groups to ap- < i ; pear, Chairman R. M. Barton said in " f his opening statement that the board : was “principally moved by a threat- 4 : ened interruption to commerce. 2 “The inquiry,” the chairman's statement said, "is based cn two pro- 'e e e ’~ visions of the transportation act. One, . mia e section $13 of the act, which: provides le : You don’t buy.Coal : by the load! | at Each delivery is weighed. You pay by the pound—by the ton. And the scales must be exact, How do you gauge the value of your advertising message? Is your measure tested’? rs The Standard of Advertising Value Today Is % The O. K. of the Audit Bureau of Circulations * There could be no more exact investigation and analysis of circula- tion than that carried out by the A, B. ©. in examining a paper’s distri- bution. ‘poard has reason to believe ar ake @ecision by the board has —from down where been violated by any carrier or em- Te ried ee sre ploye or subordinate official or organ- ization thereof, it may on its own mo-} ‘tion, effect due notice and hearing to all persons directly interested in such violation, determine whether in its a opinion such violation has occurred a and make public {ts decision in’ such ’ manner as it may determine. * “The other is the provision of sec- BENJAMIN H.'KAUFFMAN, tion 307, the emergency — provision AAA which au! the board to act | 7 Reading, Pa. rhs dispute is likely to substan- CAPITALIZATION $100,000 when a Mtg goed winter ait paren “to| theres no count in oy mind onl ~=© BURKE-TEMPLETON OIL CO., INC. thoroughly understand the limits of} Tanlac saved my wife's life,” PAR VALUE ic i this inquiry and conform ore tne uot positive statement of Benjamin H. uestion is simply, has there been Kauffman, 605 Bingaman §&t., Read. Siolation. or sired pe aot aeee oa | 2 Pa., popular clothing salesman for We are offering our stock at 114 cents. Another well expected in on the “The board urther ing! 7 to what, if any, wage reductions have : 28th (tomorrow). The stock wili advance again. mag: Natio; by Gerciere eidicut ‘et secur the 2: GET YOUR SHARES NOW Pree OHATHMAN IN. OUR HOLDINGS ARE IN THE OSAGE OIL FIELD, WYO. VICE ped ps in ee Ena WY, Hioouer an| eee a aang Seer ate ee Location—-N14 of NWI, Sec. 6, Twp. 46, R. 63. We have 2 wells drilled in, head of the begrd’s judiciary, commit- bers. feeling better in ‘her one on the sand and another expected in the 28th, this month. Depth to sand, tee, was placed” in charge of the in- Her health ‘was, failing steadily for 800 feet, Production of wells, 8 to 15 barrels, We are going to drill 12 more t A thorough check is made to determine accurately the quantity of cir- culation. Not only the “‘press run,” but the exact number of copies placed in the readers’ hands, An exhaustive analysis is made covering the methods of obtaining sub- scribers. This is an index of the interest of readers in the paper, Gite You need such facts to determine with exactness whether a newspaper can carry your advertising message. The reports of the A. B. C. on {ts members gives authentic Information on all these polnts. The Tribune is a member of the A, B, ©, quiry on behalf of the board. year ag a result of catarrh of wells on this tract, : The heuring was slow in getting UN-| stomach, and I have never seen i Aas etS . dan icraye Vin pinice” neat awere @t¥ et | hoay cniter as aiuich: thee tnetonetton Call at our office and talk it over. Our stock will continue to advance as each the ‘choice ‘seats, with the 150 rail-|anq nervousness as she aid, well is drilled to the producing sand, ' Foad peOeneh Es MeAPT Grae scattered | nc tit satiny tentace pee ae CALL AT ROOM 19, TOWNSEND BLDG., OR WRITE TO E. L. BURKE, SEC- through the hall. Among the early! rm, firmly convinced that years have A y arrivals were 50 girl college students. | hoon added to her‘iife, RETARY-TREASURER, or Tama, brunigonta, te presaente{emuae BURKE-TEMPLETON OIL CO. hi , ot the 165 railroads and slvo Tin |taken ‘Learin P. O. Box 1658, Casper, Wyo. Room 19, Townzend Bldg. L unlohaé generat chatrnian.:O@ “eG0h | -remizo ia'geld fi Oneper by. the E ? A 00 f CCC eCerrenereroe eens oo ereeereeeenereneeDeeereeToenee Our records have been examined by the Audit Bureau and the report is open for your inspection, Buy your advertising as you buy coal—by measured value. 9990604009 500000000004 099 9OSPFSOO OOOO SSOP OSS SO DOF OO OOS OOS OD OOOO DD IOD ODED DD DODO OOO DOD OOOO DFO DD OOD ODODE OOD PROPOOPHOOO OOS LODE DO DOLE TOD IOP OOO OOD HO OOO OEE HOPG OO DOF 9G FT PEHODD OD OPO GD FOO OOD OOO OOOO GHE LD OF FLOOOH 96 FOI 99E = road. Warren S. Stone, president of | 40° phory y and by leading drug 2 the engineers, protested that the’ pis. cverywucre.—Adve t