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PAGE SIX PAY CHECKS ARE LOST, WARNING [OOUED WERE Serial Numbers of Mid- west Blanks Given to Merchants. Merchants in It Creek and Cas: per have been warned to be on the lookout for pay checks totaling $2.443.98 which disappeared some- re between the } t Refining and the not been received. up r ed that the entire had been prepared for mail- ing and through an ovrsight had hot been regist Local officials believe it went out with the rest of the company mail and was stolen after it reached the camp. Deputy® Sheriff Frank Rutledge and te Officers Peter Stoten and ‘on Dank t to Midwest yes: fn an effort to trace the checks, but met with no The sheriff's office today was in th a young “ to ssfully in Gh ck ecks, 44 numbered from 1 except for the om 179,061 and 179,097. for $96 NEW TAX BILL fn number, are 050 to 179,0 ion of 179,051, The largest ts The Casper Daily Tribune SCENES THE “DOUGHBOYS” RECALE ON ARMISTICE FINAL FORM (Continued From Page One) 000 and 17 percent on excess up to $70,000 : $6,760 upon net Incomes of $70,000 18 per cent on excess up to 00. 0 upon ret incomes of $80,000 19 per cent on excess up to $100,000. $12,360 upon net incomes of $100,- 000 and 2¢ rer cent on excess up to that amount. LEGION CHIEF Hho MESoAGE (Continued From Page One) the principal of the universal draft, | thereby taking the profit out of war; | and The Immediate adherence by the United States to a permanent. court of international justice. The American Legion, in the name of the untold suffering and sacrifice of comrades, cffers this program for peace in the hope that through it, the men and women who foug peace may give come further to America aa! te the world. GEO. GOULD MISMANAGED | BIG ESTATE 1—aM)— referee in the today hand- | ding that ad mismah- { his fa. | Nov. 600,000 q@ A lovelyskin HAT’S what makes beauty—a lovely skin! A skin perfect in Its texture — free:from pimples, blackheads or blotches. And how everybody loves to look at beautiful skin! How they ad nire the fresh, clean, healthy. ap- pearance a perfect skin gives! And do you know what makes kin lovely? Well, it’s healthy, rich, red blood. Healthy blood purifies ‘he system—throws off the {mpurt tes that cause skin eruptions. And §. 8. S., that great blood cleanser and builder helps Nature make rich, red blood. You never 1ave to worry with embarrassing skin bleftishes when you keep your dlood full of healthy red-blood-cells Take 8. 8S. S. and have the beau ‘fal skin that belongs to you, And while it's making your skin lovely 3. 8, 8. is giving you newed strength and too—building ump flesh — hereasing your appe- ite and making you iealthy all over. It’s the rich, red blood that 8. S. S helps ture bull that does it, 8. 8. 8, today. All drug stores ell it, Get the larger bottle. Its In center s re ar end met witha 5 o'qlock on the moenit At right 1s a facsimile troops t» cease firing. OUT OUR WAY These pict a French dining car when Ger This historic scene took place view of the dining car, now in Pershing’s headquarters’ crdering 1 envoy: at a museum, American SAPMIFER ° WY SA POOR GOSH SAKES: \/SIMPLINGTON - DONT YA KNOW || WE AINT WEST \MITE AN WE AINT STEAUN' IM! WE'RE JUS BORRERIN iM “TILL WE GIT WARE WE VIN KEICH A couPIL with WEST FER , ' HORSE THIEFIN?, GRASS! 1 officers to agree on the of November 11, 191 cf the terms of the armistice. At right is an exterior is a representation of the message sent Mut from General By WILLIAMS ANY CERTHY YA PooR NuT! HAFF T'STEAL A Cow ' ENEY ONCE IN A WILE i T'FEED Them Doas, : WARE A HORSE'LL EAT WE'D AN ANY HOW DOGS DONT LOOKe GOOD ON A PRAIRIE ECONOMIC TRANSPORTATION. DAY 5486 GEN. HARBOR AT DEDICATION (Continued From Page One) character, but at all times outside the constitution, ts a choice which the American people must make. “The direct primary, outside the principles of representative govern- ment and marking the drift toward pure democracy which once estab- lished no government has ever long survived,’ susceptible of corruption, expensive and inefficient in the crop of office holders {t has produced, challenges your decision as to Its survival. . “The Amendment of the Volstead act, far wider in {ts application than was ever contemplated by the eigh- teenth amendment, its disregard of the constitutional provision against unreasonable searches and seizures, and the wholesale official corruption to which it has led, is an issue which patriotic Amerleans must face.” Wo Intelligent persons seeks the return of the saloon, said the gener- al, in urging ‘a decent personal Iib- erty.” which with free institutions, he asserted. are menaced from with- in and without. He spoke at the dedication of a war memorial group, erected by the suburbs of Oak Park and River For- est, and said at that shrine vows of friendship should be renewed for France. ee SPECTATORSAT TRIAL EAPECT AN AGQUITTAL (Continued From Page One) eyes of every official and spectator in tite court room except those of Joel Stone, prosecuting attorney. Fazing dry-eyed through the win- dows at the towering peaks of the Rocktes as his case was being swept away from him under an avalanche of tears, the stern prosecutor re- mained true to the ethics of his pro- fession. On his shoulders rested the burden of proving that human life may not eyer be taken outside the law; in his mind was the vision of other such “merciful killings” that may follow if this country physician should go free, In his memory was the knowledge that lenfency granted killers in certain extenuating cir- cumstances has ever been taken as encouragement to similar action by other men in similar circumstances. He remembered the crimes of per- version ‘which followed the Loeb- Leopold crime at Chicago. And s0 while Lewis D, Mow self-made attorn: who we night at a tel aph key that he might study t day to fit himself pause of #0) eli Seve t Wah lesa Rwliams © 1924 BY HEA SERVICE INC. DIRECTED AGQUITTAL OF BLAZER DENIED BY MURDER TRIAL JUDGE (Continued From Page One) tim in this case possessed -any. of Griniele eet, menace SAMAGES, The: commonly accepted attributes babe Is as yet unborn, ‘That same human being, babe has life, but it 1s not the sort | “or the reason stated the defense of-a human, belng which the sta-| moves that the-court take the case tute contemplates | trom the ju direct it to re- “In order to have a human being t guilty.” It is not that we shall have a being | OA BRS. Ter Brat only in shape of a 1 attribute that fs nec n. There lx HIT HYPOCRITE the human a re T is the Henc vithe have not the| hurman that orehended under the law TI t nte nas fatled ‘to | pr murder as set forth the statute, Porsession of a mind, of | . sore cconotuical, | dence adduced to prove that the vie if tte court ples I wi (Continued From Page One) the term ‘soul’ ts implied | nd never falls to draw large and designatt 1 being.’ 4 clative audiences, according to respect 1 It to this) reports from other places where Mri court that there has been no evi-| Harper has spolen. Mr. Welch, the big singer—big in avoirfupois and in abiiity—will be here tonight for his first appearance in Casper. He has been detained in another part of the country, but has arrived for the remainder of the campaign. HOMEBU FIVE PERISH EAST ORANGE, WN. J., Nov, 11.— (#)—Joseph Distesano and his four eHildren lost their ‘lives tn a fire which destroyed a six family dwell- Ing early today, The mother es caped by jumping from a third story window. Her youngest child, in her arms, was killed. The origin of the fire is not known, for service in the An Hotel of quiet digni having! the arieantere He appointments of a well con- ditioned home. / 40 Theatres, all principal shops and churches, 3 to 5 minutes’ walk. ’ 2 minutes of all subways, “L” roads. surface cars, bus lines. Within 3 minutes Grand Central, 5 minutes Pennsyl- vania Terminals. —— and political justice as he under-| portation systems under his prest: dency, died here last night. services will beheld tomorrow. _ 1 Mr. Earling who was 77, had suf- fered from heart affliction since last August. stood that cause, fought masterfully for the life of a man whom he ahd most of Littleton’s citizens extolled as god-like, Joel Stone fought for the lives of other invalids, the bur- den of caring for whom might irk impatient relatives, For the jurors unalterably oppos- ed to the *taking of life the defense has provided an Insanity plea and apparently has shown thet the aged physician suffered periods of for- getfulness;" for the “humanitarian” juror, Harold Bilaser’s attorneys have presented the textimony of the dead girl's sister, the accused fa- ther and of neighbors to prove his devotion and lack» of “malice afore- thought;” for the legal-minded, the English common law definition is quoted—the yictim must be a “rea. soning creature.” So that, whatever the verdict— for the rendering of which not only Littleton and Colorado, but the en- tire civilized world waits with pain- ed intensity—the fact remains that it will be applicable to this cause alone and not to others having points of similarity. And as closing arguments begin to the accompaniment of clicking |+ telegraph instruments, the snapping of cameras, the weeping of specta- tors and jurors and the shuffling of feet in the crowded streets outside, humanitarians and law-makers are already beginning to draft laws un- der which the hopelessly handicap- ped of mind and body may be le- gally and mercifully given the re- lease of death. Whether or not these laws be passec, the net result of this Blazer trial will be the same as that in Dayton, Tennessee—many thousands of the hitherto indifferent will bend their minds to the solu- tion of a great human problem. COUNTY PAYS ON TAX BILLS (Continued From Page One) squeezed between the opposing bat- talions in the financial war, ae ts usually the fate of the innocent by- stander. Other creditors of the county, however, will find {t less easy to collect. In any event, the stratagem Is good only for one month. Elther Scott and Morgan will have to come to terms or attempt to conduct county affairs for the next three months wholly on credit-—unless Scott's oft-repeated promise that he would find some outside “angel” to underwrite his expenditures should be fulfilled. = The Midwest Refining Co., yester- day paid the first installment of Its tax for this year, the largest single collection yet made by the county treasury. Former Head of Milwaukee Dead MILWAUKEE, Noy. 11,—()— Albert J. Earling, who entered the service of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul reflroad as a telegraph: er and later saw the carrier expand to one of the nation's greatest trans. How She Gained 10 Pounds in 22 Days That's going some—but skinny men, women and children just can't help putting on good, healthy flesh when they take McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compounw ‘Tablets. As chock full of yitamines as the nasty, fishy tasting cod liver ‘oll {t- self, but these sugar-coated, taste- less tablets are as easy to take os candy, and won't upset the stomach, One woman gained ten: pounds in twenty-two days. 60 tablets)” 60 ccuts. - Ask Kimball - Drug’ Store, Midwest Pharmacy, Casper Plia.- mac~ or any druggist fo> McCoy’s Cod Liver Ofl) Compound ‘Tablets and if you don't gain’ at‘ least 6 pounds tn 30 days your druggist is uthorized to hand you ‘back’ the money you -pald them. “Get's McCoy's, the original and HOTEL® ST# JAMES, —Adv withont . Escort Hor and Cold Waser and Use of Bath Single Rooms + « $250 $3.00 Double “ + 350 400 450 eRrocens with Privase Baty Single Pooms + $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 Double “ 450 500 600 Sand for bookie. W. JOHNSON QUINN for retrospect. signed. It is to them due. ‘1918—ARMISTICE DAY—1925 Mistake not the purpose of Armistice day. It is an occasion for real rejoicing. while we rejoice, let us spare a few moments Many of our brave never returned to home soil, but made the su- preme sacrifice before the armistice was, A. J. WOODS MEN’S WEAR STORE* But boys that great homage is ‘WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1925 ' CHICAGO—Admirers _ of a Grange, Illino!s half back, circ! 4a petitions to put his name on the ballot as“a candidate for the Repub- Ucan nomination for congressman- atlarge at the primary next April/ 1918—ARMISTICE DA Y—1925 Funeral All Casper has caught the spirit of the oc- casion. Our hats are off to the boys in khaki who valiantly fought to defend the prin- ciples-for which this nation stands. To the valor of those who are living and the mem- ory ‘of those who are dead, we dedicate this Armistice day. . MEDNICK BROS. HART SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHES 5 1918—ARMISTICE: DAY —1925 i ‘ We are glad to be a part of that great swell- ing pride which grips every community to- day, and which is rightly the greatest enio- ° tion any human being may attain, that of pabnotsi and. genuine love of the home - and. i Casper Gas Appliance Co. “Merchandise That Merits\Confidence” te No-man, who recalls the wi rejoicing of that first Armistice day, just s¢ven years ago, | | { can fail'to feel a return of that same emotion today. Haytin’s Boot Sho “We Fit the Feet” 1918—ARMISTICE ‘DA Y—192 Our hearts well up today, and our-minds re- turn to a day just seven years ago when ’ word was flashed over the cables from .. France that hostilities in Europe had ceased. Today we celebrate the anniversary of that event, and it is rightly one* of the most ~ typically American of all our holidays. 7 Kassis Dry Goods Co. j 187 East Second St. : Phone 1740 “DAY—1925 1918—ARMISTICE . Many returned and many remained.. We do honor to both on Armistice day. We cele- brate the victory of those who- went into the 5 4 jaws of death and returned unscathed, J A, ¢ We pause-a moment in reverence to those « who never came. back but who left their memories stamped in the minds and heart of ; the American people. 4 281 East Secon 1918—ARMISTICE DAY—1925 wet TEE AORN VST SE oh ae MOTO aoe Without malice toward the vanquished, but with a great and intense pride swelling up within us, we unite today to celebrate the “anniversary of_a great and overwhelming . victory of the principles of Liberty and Democracy over the rule of Absolutism and Autocracy. \ GLOBE SHOE.Co. 230 South Center St. rhe he