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Che Casper Daily Cribune issued every evening except Sunday et Casper, Natron® County, Wyo, Publication Offices. Tribune Building. BUSINESS TELEPHONES 15 and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting / Departments Entered at Casper, (Wyoming) Postoffice as second class matter, November it MEMBER PRESS THE ASSOCIATED RE. EVANS . THOMAS DAILY Advertising Representatives den, King & Prudde: 3 Steger Bidg., Chicago, 286 Firth avenuc, N , York City; Globe Bidg., Bos- Daily Tribune are on file in nd Boston offices and visitors welcome. Prud: mu SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier si30 One Yeor .,.., Six Months ae Three Months te One Month E Per Copy mths 2 196 iption by mail accepted for less period than nrust be pold in advance and the ot insure delivery after eubsorip- th in arrears. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulétion (A. B. ©) Member of the Associated Press ne pcmorated Press is exclusively entitled to te publication of all news credited in this paper and hed bh ne local news vu Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. Cail 15 or 16 any time between 6:30 and § o'clock p. m. tf you {fail to receive ur Tribune. A paper will be de wered to you by s messenger. Make it your duty to let The Tritune kiiow when your carrier misses you. > et a a ar ON MAYOR BLACKMORE. The battle of Casper is over and Mr. Blackmore is the mayor by a cqmfortable majority. All things con. sidered it was an unusual vote, coming within about two hundred of the total registration. It was a hand- to-band fight to the hour of the closing of the polls. None of the candidates need be ashamed of the sup- port he received, for in each case it was cordial and loyal and altogether to be admired. The will of the people is made clear in the result and all good citizens will endorse it. Campaign ani- mozities will not long survive in the more important work of placing Casper upon a# firmer business foun- dation and relieving the people, insofar as is possible, { be done with the amount of money we have just spent on war they will stop at nothing short of yielding of national honer and safety in the effort to secure the assurance of permanent peace. The league of nations was proposed as an assur- | ance of peace, but, believing that it was a supreme | sacrifice of nationa! independence on the one hand, and a source of war on the other, the voters of Amer- | ica rejected it by an overwhelming vote at the polls. | They turned over to the opponents of the league of nations the power to speak for this nation in an ef- | fort to promote world peace and world disarmament, and with that power goes a measure of responsibility. | The United States and its spokesmen cannot alone se- cure world pegce or limitation of armament. ,Neither can this nation be held responsible for failure of the present conference, unléss the course pursued by our | representatives shall be such as to prevent agreement | Without just cause Counting the cost of war, in suffering and Joss of | life as well as in money, and feeling the burden of | taxation incident to military preparedness, the Amer- ican people are willing that their representatives shall go to the utmost extent consistent with honor and | Safety in the effort to make the conference a complete } success, —_____o0—____—__ EVERYDAY VANITY. The old fashioned barber shop, known to our fath- ers as a place where \ ers were amputated once a week and hair was maybe twice a year; where the boys of the fam ere sent when spring was well- advanced and barefoot time had come, to get 15 cents’ worth of-hair cut and a dose of very smelly hair oil thet was entirely ruined in the old swimmin’ hole the same afternoon, has disappeared, Just as the old tir »arber shop was evoluted from a sort of a one horse doctor’s office where the profes- sor in charge appliéd the leech to people who needed “bleedin so has the batber shop of our fathers graduated into a modern Apollo factory equipped with all the machinery and appliances ingenuity can de- vise for making rought-necks look like human beings. | The barber is no longer a barber—he is a tonsorial srtist. In his repertoire, reposing on a long shelf at his back, is a wealth of face powder, rouge, cosmet- ics, vanishing creams, tonics, perfumes, toilet waters, dopes to grow hzir on bald heads, dopes to remove surplus hair where it is not desirable to have it. Ma- chinery for cutting hair, machinery. for giving vari- ous massages, shampoos and other operations, known to the artist and demanded by the customer who hopes to enhance his personal appearance. The “tonsorial specialist” rather disdains the hair cut and shave but is all attention with eectricity and sanitatfon to apply his magical art in.a job of facial carpenter work for which the price is posted in a con- spicuous place in his studio. It is wonderful what changes are wrouglit by a skilful operator. How double chins disappear, how Epitaph. (By Annette Kohn.) Within this Nation-hallowed Tomb An Unknown Soldier Hes asleep, Symbolic comrade of all those . ‘Who on the land, on sea, in air, In that red death across the seas truths That Righteousness ts all the Law— That Justice is true government— Man's Liberty the gift of God— In memory ef the faith they kept, Here through the ages all the land As Honor Guard on watch will stand! Unknown. (By Frederic T. Cardoze.) No floral tribute, wreaths or ‘cross, No cold and graven shaft of stone, Need grace the final resting place Of him who passes as Unknown A thousand feet might pass him by ‘With nene to claim the loyal slain, And yet an e’er enduring Ged fhe Casner Daily @ribune | _ Poems to The Unknown Soldier ‘i Unknown! Not so, for angel hands Shall potnt in glory from the skies Towards the humble sepulchre And Fame shall say, “Here Valor lies!’ Their Memory Is Sweet. (By J. Edmund Estes.) Sealed with their blood the sacred/A priceless heritage is ours For which they fought and fell, For which our Country ever stands:}And generations yet untorn Shall prize and guard it well. The anguish done, the conffict won, Demise is not defeat; They died for you, they died for me; ‘Thetr memory is sweet. ¢ * * To Our Us Dead. } (By Rev. William P. Preston) Our boy was leaving home: ; i ‘ man, and filed when hearing of-his We prayed to God to keep him there ebifed tx ful the And save him from the tomb, * * * Our boy went forth for his Country 10 fight, ‘The pride of mother and home. CHI kina J. , Nov. Yormer girl, will receive a lump 000 and two valued at $800,000 according to of @ settlement reached outside of ‘Around the hearth we knelt in prayer,| Court with her millionaire ausband, J. Stanley’ Joyce, reopened. 000 home in Miami, Fla., returns $400,900 in jewels Former Chorus Girl Will Get New York sum of $80,- and jewels terms ‘Chicago Tumber- from a Has marked his grave upon the plain. thought right The golden sun and silver star Each in his turn shall guard his bier, And Heawen's rain shall be the tears That fall in sorrow, year. The rumbling thunder of the storm Shall be the echo of the charge. The sombre grandeur of the clouds The spirit of the smoke barrage. Hymn. (By Rest, Sold heir of glory, Thy won; Between the twilight and tire dawn Unheard yet with celestial tongue, ‘The name that has been lost in war U story, “Well done!" ‘pon the sighing wind is sung. —_ “Lest We Forget” He has given his life for a cause he But his grave is with the Unknown. The Christian Soldier's Memorial Rev. J. M. Lyons.) T, rest, through Christ an war is over, and thy victory Let men and angels tell the joyful The crown is won, thy Savior says: purchased Paris jeweler, but fot paid for and alse releases title to temporiry all- mony of $1,350 a month, awarded her last spring but never paid by Joyce. Joyce testified his assets aggre. gate $2,996,186. ONLY TWO CARS STOLEN IN RIVERTON THIS YEAR “RIVERTON, Wyo., Nov. 9.—Theft this week of J.J. Broderick’s light six Studebaker from its parking ‘Place on Main street revealed that it for Metro Marks New Epoch—lIbanez Film Surpasses Stage in Grip on Emotions. HAILED AS SUPREME EXPRESSION OF SCREEN AR \ | Sene from: THE FOUR HORSEMEN of the APOCALY PSE* seas. Thousands of brave Americans died in that Devil's Broth across the Other thousands died’in the cantonments on this side of the seas. Died that “Other Americans” could live in peace, happiness and pros- was the second car Year in Riverton. to be stolen this} Pex Ingram's $1,000,000 production No trace of the|of “The Four Horsemen of the Apo- auto has been found. With only two|calypse,”" made for Metro, is an- perity under The Flag, who died that they might live? the tortures of Hell, were blinded and maimed that they might have sifety? If they have not— and may God strike dead he who has devote the entire day (Armistice Day, men. GYMNASIUM FOR LUSK Will continue to suffer until the Great Busler sounds “Taps.” Have these “Other Americans” forgotten their duty to —they snould November 11) to honoring these E. RICHARD SHIP?. Visitor Is Put To Have these “Other Americans” forgotten the debt they owe to those Stull other thousands, sightless, legless or armless are yet suffering those who of the burdens occasioned by careless administration] wrinkles are ironed smooth, sagging jowls bolstered of public affairs. In this endeavor we will be unani-| ep in place and other evidences of age and dizillusion- ctl ment eradicated. . ; We will also be at one in enforcing the laws and The fountain of youth is certainly there or there- SCHOOLS AUTHORIZED Rout by Bruin In autos stolen in 10 months, Riverton (occupies a place at the head of law and order towns. Declaration on - Fuel Supply Is ~ “Unfortunate” TOPEKA, Kan., Secretary Nov. | 9.—Declara- Wallace, that western farmers*would find it profit- able to burn ‘corn for fyel this winter and that large quantities probably tion of nounced by the Lyric’ Theater be ginning November 16. This will he the first showmng here of the screen version of Vicente Blasco Ibanez's novel that -has been acclaimed in New York, Chicago, Boston, Pittsburgh, Detroit, and Los Angeles as marking & new epoch in the development of motion pictures. At its New York opening people paid $10 a seat. Crit- tes said the picture had definitely es- tablished the screen not only as cap- able of rivaling the stage at its best, but of surpassing it in its grip upon the emotions. Y “The Four Horsemen” 13 the su- preme expression of the ‘great war. Certainly no novel has stirred the uni- versal appeal created by the Ibanez ordinances, faithfully and reasonably, to the end that good order and public safety may be re-established in the community. We will find ourselves in a¢cord on many other points of contact, because the people, in the aggte- gate, always desire what is right and for the best and in Mayor Blackmore, we are certain the people will find a leader who will serve the public interest faith- fully and well, and in his efforts he will be tupported by a council equally loyal to the publie good. “The new administration has its mandate from the people and the matters which formed the basis of con- tention in the campaign and settled by the election may be summarized brifly as follows: Strict economy and elimination of all waste and ex- travagance. A business administration on purely busizers. prin- ciples, free from secrets and mysteries and star cham- ber proceedings, with full information upon all mat- ters belonging to the people, through the widest pub- licity. re intelligent enforcement of the laws and ordin- ances in the spirit of reasonableness in which they were made. Eliminating the gross evils flaunted in the public face to the humiliation. of a Christian com- munity. All igond citizens will unite under the leadership of Mayor Blackmore in securing the best and most pro- gressive government Casper has ever had. The con- trary minded will be few and of slight consequence. pinata My ae it 18 TO ROBERT J, VEITCH. The citizens of Casper without regard to party or policies or any other consideration will unite in com- mendation of Robert J. Veitch and his friends for the clean and honorable campaign they conducted through- out the late contest for mayor. At no time, and under no provocation was an un- kind word heard from the Veitch contingent and no ene can put his finger on a single act that cpuld be criticised. Robert Veitch conducted and directed his own campaign and he has raised himself in the pub- lic esteem by his gentlemanly conduct. Although he was not successful at the polls, Rob- ert Veitch’s place in the hearts of the people is more secure than ever. eggs 0 eer THIRTY BILLIONS OF DOLLARS. Whatever the Washington parley may accomplish to- ward reducing the great burden upon the people for military and naval preparedness, it will be a stride in the direction of a better civilization. National honor and safety may be preserved with- out the tremendous outlays of the peoples’ money in senseless rivalry in construction and equipment. Counting the cost in money only, the European war cost the United States more than thirty billions of dol- lars—a hundred times as much as the cost of building the Panama canal, considered in its time one of the greatest undectakings the United States might as- sume. What would not thirty billion dollars do? Thirty billion dollars would buy all the railroads of the United States, free from debt, and leave ten bil- lion dollars for betterments. Thirty billion dollars would’ build 600,000 miles of the best highway, at a cost of $50,000 per mile—high- way enough to lay 50 national highways across the country east and west, and 50 similar highways across the country north and south. Thirty billion dollars would build and equip a col- lege in each of the states and in Hawaii and the Phil- ippines at a cost of $200,000,000. each and leave 20 billions “with which to erect and equip 100,000 high schools at $200,000 each. Thirty ‘billion dollars would accomplish anything that could be devised by the most ardent advocate of public improvements, so far as money could attain the end. When the American people contemplate what might abouts, The female of the species has nothing on the male when it comes to the dolling up factory, and recollect we have the whole course of treatment including the attentiops of the manicurist and the shoe shiner. He is a different looking man who emerges from the pres- ent day whisker parlor after having taken the long form. The artists can do it all, but restore the dead. Ae a ies “ THE UNKNOWN DEAD. “Religion, older and deeper than all religions,” says the Independent, “‘finds expression in the homage that Europe and America pay to the soldier dead whose individual identities remain unknown, ‘The tributes of governments and of commanders, of private citi- zens and of public throngs, the pomp of processians, ‘the borial in national shrines and cemeteries, and the veneration that will continue are ceremonial in part, but also in part they are spontaneous and profoundly real. Before men had gods they bowed before the fatefulness of\luck. Before they built altars they re- membered their dead. Before Buddha and Christ they revered such as effaccd themselves that their tribes ht live. “Of all the tragedies of war the fate of the missing most poignant to those who survive. To the an- nish of uncertainty succeeds the bitterness of a sec- ond obliteration, Individually the unknown dead are blotted from the book of local remembrance. Stranger hands, if any, lay wreaths upon thair graves, “But, though all but one in each land are publicly emembered gnly as men who were comrades of men, yet when the drums tap at the burial of the one un- every grieving wife, will spring the hidden thought ‘I caanot know, I never shall know, but he may be my he may be my lover, “And when those drums tap shall there not be, in the hearts of us who live in peace and liberty because these unknown dead gave all, that consecration which Lincoln adjured at Gettysburg?” 0 DOWN PRETTY FINE. “Parisian scientists are all upset,” the St. Louis Star informs us. “The standard meter of France, made of an alloy of platinum and irridum and kept in a safe underground to protect it from expansion due to heat or contraction due to cold has just been ex- amined, and found to be a ‘demi-micron’ longer than it aught to be. “A demi-micron is one-half of a one-millionth of a meter. Now you can understand the agitation of science. Suppose the clerk measuring out a meter of tjuslin in the Bon Marche should give a customer a demi-micron more than she asked or paid for? Sup- pose a man running a hundred meter race was com- pelled to step fifty microns more? That difference might cause him to die of exhaustion. “We are not as finicky as the Parisians, If we could keep our meters—gas, taxi and others—even A within one thousand microns of where they ought to be we'd feel fortunate. However, we are glad that we have stumbled across that word ‘demi-micron.’ Its possibilities in ironic repartee are immense.” eS The world is never happy. We formerly had only a shortage of houses, now we have a shortage of rent money. eee oe SE Ses ; Officer T. E. Rentjes of the city police force in- forms us that there are no non-citizen members of the police force. -All are’ American citizens and all are taxpayers. The officer admits that this statement would not have been true thirty days ago. vt Uist k A newspaper headline says: “Governor Carey Calls on Wyoming People to Observe Father and Son Week.” That is exactly what Wyoming people have been doing too long. All trades and Industries have been e in the “Perfect to be conducted f November by the nid lines and exorcss © United tates ind during ‘the mo vailroads, stea companies of Canada. The purpose of the 1 TILE AND MARBLE COMPANY pe ee: further Oe Coal Baskets Tile Baths nae saree vere te ae Chicago Grates Tile Stores iat eee Screens Marble Fronts Andirons Mantels WE HAVE TILE SETTER IN CASPER NOW 427 McELHINNEY See Mr. Davis at Henning or Write Us 17TH ST., DENVER, COLO. known, in the heart of every sorrowing mother, of | ” LUSK, Wyo., Noy. 9.—Removal of an old building to the high school srounds and its remodeling for a gymnasium has been authorized by the school board here*to provide ath- letic training. ‘The structure also will be used as a meeting/place for students, + Newspaper Office LUSK, Wyo., Nov. 9.>In the mua debauch ef campaign debates, occu- pants of newspaper offices have been|by inference at any rate kened to many kinds of animals but it remained for Lyle Berry, electrician, to find a live bear. in the backroom of the Lusk Herald plant and his exit followed. Inquirydc will be consumed, was characterized | masterpiece. The book, now in its 4s “unfortunate” by J. ‘secretary of the Kansas City State] has been read! Board of Agriculture. “It strikes me that the statement, ‘though true, is unt seem to encourage city | premier foodstuff for fuel,” he Only one-third of lation ts white, C.° Mohter,|one hundred and sixty-sixth edition, throughout the world. The monumental task of transferring it to the scréen was accomplished by June Mathis, who made a scenario it Would] that from all accounts Has preserved the use of this| the force of the original and in many “a, incidents heightened it. But it is the Urector, Rex. Ingram, who has ap- »arently achieved the most sensation- il success. He is reported to havo fortunae in that, the world’s popue DURHAM-DUPLEX RAZOR CO. pracy City, New Jersey Factories Jersey City, U.S.A. Paris, France Reeders of the novel ‘will recall the story opens on the Argentine ranch of old Madariaga, whose terri- torles are ‘as ‘extensive as those of the. great independent barons of feudal times. And = Madariaga rules with feudal power. A rioting, roys despot, he. is filled wit Castilian pride of. and yearns .| for @ male child to carry on his tra- dition. His two daughters have mar- ried ranch employes—one French and the other German. OM 's Latin anti; to’ the German son-in-law brings ith it a @islike of his halt. German: but when a son is born to the Frenchman, Des- Noyers, the old man finds his dream realized. The:boy, Julio, is selected as ‘heir to the huge estate and is brought 1p a8 a spofled prince of the realm. As a young man Julio becomes the companion of Madariaga'’s debauched adventures in Buenos Ayres tango re-_ sorts. But Maddriaga dics suddenly without making a will and the Ger- man branch of the family finds itself sharing the estate equally with the Desnoyers. With this sudden wealth, the two families leave the Argentine for Europe, \ The Desnoyers settle in Paris, and Tullo] an expert tango dancer, becomes the sensation of the fashionable dance plames. He meets a fascinating ttle soctety woman, Marguerite Laurier, and the two of them are swept into a reckless love affair that takes no account of Marguerite’s elderly hus- band. Their butterfly mentalitios do not even. respond at first to the sud- den shock of: war that breaks about them... It is 1914 and the Germans are advancing toward Paris, Marguerite is first awakened to the realization of tremendous events. her love for Julio in order to be the tant companiory of her husband, is blinded in battle. without the attractions, hears the call of duty ‘and enlists in the French army, where he meets death at the hands of his Ger- man cousin when the two-face each other in a trench raid. ‘Through it all are galloping the four horsemen, spoken of by St. John in the Book of Apocalypse—the grim. fig- ures ef Conquest, War, Famine and Denth. 2 The cast includes Rudolph Valen- tino, Alice Terry, Pomeray Cannon, ae Swickard, Brimsley Shaw, Alan , Bridgetta Clark, Mabel Van (Smoke) Buren, Brodwitch ce) Turner, Ni- el de Erulier, John, Sainpolis, Mark Fenton, Virginia Warwick, Derek Ghent, Stuart Holmes, Jean Hergholt, Wallace Berry, ease ears Curt Rehfeld, Mile. Dolores, ‘Bull'’ Mon- tana, Isabel Keith, Jacques Lanoe Noble Johnson, Harry Northrup, Min. nebaha, Arthur Hoyt and Beatrice Dominguez. Phe photoplay 1s by John Seitz, and . the technical direction by Amos My- ers and Joseph Calder. Walter Mayo jrvas assistant to Rex Ingram. | Di al Strok agonal Stroke HE Durham-Duplex is easy on the face because the blade sweeps diagonally across the beard in- stead of pulling directly against it. Everyone knows the easiest way to sharpen a pencil is to draw the knife diagonally across. the wood—not to push the blade straight through, No other razor gives you the length of blade necessary to shave with the | comfortable, diagonal guarded stroke of the Safe Razor — FOR SALE BY THESE | IG DEALERS; CAREER WORN, GFFICE AND SCHULTE HARDWARE Co. FH CAMPBELL HARDWARE co... as Sg i CASPER FHAwe eon .- @. west, | 137 Bonn Gentes sheet |S eri’. < . O.WEST:: .. 282, South Center suet: | ore HOLMES ateees boa Recoetla Streets § AYRES JEWELRY Gna a 3 in Casedaat KIMBALL DRUG. songs a pra it do the same price y 214 Center Street PION , DRUG co., RES MIDWEST PHARMACY, Pe a a ane Wro. A Bt cde one Ss — 50c RICHARDS a CUNNINGHASE Se Syatluaes Aap: AMES RESON oe “18 SDI RUS eraser oo; iivsaen @ baste ae oe SMOKEHO! f 248. South ‘Center and. Wyo. your ideas. Wi, rial and the cost. oe We Would Be Very Glad © - To Figure On any building orimprovement you'might | -have in mind. If you have an idea what you would like but don’t know exactly what it will take in material, come in and give us” Ze will figure the bill of mate-: O. L.Walker Lumber Co. West Railroad Avenue TeePEPORC SR TT RAL eremeee een ey, HAIRCUTS | » 35c--40c--50c Adults (over 12 years), any time_______40c Children, before 4 P. M. (ile hours)___35c Children, after 4 P. M. (busy hours)_-_50c Henning Barber Shop oeeveevecvonnecoes Oooo vecvessceseoverccooecoooee: Phone 240 ss. ‘ at