Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 12, 1917, Page 3

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Y.M.C. A. Huts Hug Trenches | Torn by Shells By J. W. PEGLER \ United Press Staff Correspondent | LONDON, Jan. 1—(By Mail)— The fighting front holds no terrors for the Y. M. C. A. It’s built wherever soldiers go. A. K. Yapp, general secretary, af- ter a tour of tte British sector, is back in London today with an account of the Y. M. C. A.’s work in housing soldiers and providing them with sim- huts are ple luxuries that do much to maintain National League of Commission Mer- the buoyant spirits of the Tommies. chants. They will sift reasons for rues hin yathentanaitiicliatadioweks the maintenance of high prices on ; catacombs cf Ypres and Loos,” he foodstuffs and empt to ascertain r ; said, ‘‘and one is placed in the where ‘costs can be lowered an oncér grounds of a Trappist monastery | “A co-ordinated effort is all that where the monks may never speak. will omplish anything,” declared There are others in the Somme terri- R. S. French, of Chicago, secretary of E ° ‘oa tory recovered from the Germans, the: commission men’s orgs ae Arthur a razier = forming little cheer-posts for Tom- \““There has been too much w ub 5 mies amid the awful desolation and In November we gave the soldiers on | twenty-fifth annual convention of the jcross purp THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE Factions Meet to ‘Man Should Not | Plan a Lower Marry until He’s |: Living System a100 Years Ol i By the United Press PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Jan, 12.— R and ex- joined in the of agriculture perfs in marketing | By the United Press | ; KANSAS CITY, Mo., Jan. 12.—Be- Ready to pare all the side issues from | cause woman forgets to have birth-! bs the high cost of living and get down todays she is wiser than man, W. Earl! accepted. FRED EB. PLACE, (fark a solution of the problem equitable to| Flynn, health evangelist, told his fol- the District Court. }everyone concerned, prducers, distri-| lowers here. | : | butors and consumers met here today. “Any man who has a birthday after| la 1 Seta) xEcaes SCaDaBY he js forty is a fool,” Flynn declared, | ¢lusively in fuel experts, governmen tials t “ly is aid the ti i i ldepectven officials o © Flynn who is 83, said the time is not Stationery Co. far distant when 3 ©. think of getting were one hundred re 7. ‘If a man takes eare of him aif; 1 still be a boy when he. 5 y So ‘ age /eentury mark,” the Bi ‘health said. “He'll at that enough to get marriod.” eles NOTICE TO SETTLER: 640-acre homestead filings it gts a Has | Casper Coal and Coke at 3 O'clock knee-deep mud of the recent battle- , } Raids: we have a few jo saddle ankets 1 floo’ rs ice pat- K “From the camps at the base the arnt left oe from Ghelatenah tie y hut lines extend ’way up to advanced M. Whisevht Co 1:0-t¢ } positions of the front. We are even — 3 ’ developing the dug-out idea for hous- Yasper Coal and Coke Co. deals ex- KITTY DOUILLARD, MANAGER ing men temporarily and providing : ly in fuel. Office at Casper | {}} them with warm food and chocolate. MR. FRANCIS D. WOOTON, ery Co. 1-9-tf 1 Comes to the Iris Sunday afternoon, January 14 3 one twelve-mile line to the front 161,230 cups of cocoa, tea and coffee. | These were men going up for their turn in the attack or returning to the base camps after being relieved in the trenches.” Many of the Y. M. C. A. establish- ments are well within range of ihe German shell-fire but these usually| are protected as well as possible by) S THE RECORD TO HELP THE REDS OUT SUTTON HAS THE the Gospel Singer and Soloist, who will lead the music in the union evangelistic meetings to begin at the Methodist y 21, D. Weoton is Church Jant “Prof. Franci ability. ously Sunday night with app the success of ‘Billy’ Sunday’ he had finished with the aud of his choir.” The Denver Express says of him: a choir leader of gratifying He got a rather small crowd to singing vigor- arently little effort, recalling s Homer Redcheaver. When ience they were all members Talks With The Business Men By NELS DARLING Here is my last talk of this series, things cheaper and meet outside com- and here are some points that I want) petition on merchandise that has been} | you to get well fixed in your mind. found for bait. 0.L Walker Lumber Co. | Phone 240 DEALERS IN HUDSON AND GEBO COAL } jA full line of Building Material of | Mr. Frazer comes with splendid recommenda > tions thra the press from all over the country No doubt this recital will be a rare treat. ADMISSION $1.06 Reserved Seats = : General admission and children .. Seats on Sale at Kimballs DrugStore A. A. CHAPMAN By H. C. HAMILTON First: Advertising pays. It is tak-| Fifth: Much money is wasted in United Press Staff Correspondent ing your business from the small) misdirected advertising. The news- all Kidde dian a NEW YORK, Jan. 12.-If the Cin:/country merchant to the big city/paper is the best medium for the man|"!! *inds. Figure with us for any of REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS cinnati Reds don’t kick holes in all store every day. The country mer-|in the retail business. your requirements m the ouilding line STOCKS AND BONDS r previous Ohio river records within the next few years it won’t be the fault of Larry Sutton, recently signed by Manager Christy Mathewson to scout for Garry Herrmann’s holdings. Baseball men agree that Mathew- son made the wisest move since tak- ing hold of the Reds when he signed up the foxy Sutton. Larry has a great record for ivory-hunting behind him. Connected for several years with the Brooklyn Club, Sutton dug up some of the most famous ball play-! — ers in the country. Among the Dodgers who got their big league cha.ces through recom-! mendations of Sutton are Jake Dau-; bert, Jeff Pfeffer, Casey Stengel, | Zack Wheat and Otto Miller. They, all have made good, and they don’t! form the total of his scouting maneu-! vers by several. Minor leagues know Sutton better perhaps than any person now in the scout business. And they know also that when Larry comes ixto view they-ve got to trot out the best they have. No one yet has been caught putting one over on the veteran grass j chant must learn how to talk in print. Second: Any dealer can | to write good, trade-pulling, business. building udvertising. Third: Occasional, spasmodic ad- vertising is better than none, but it|vertisements, n how ve attention to your ad- ou do to buying goods, ts and Jooking after ils of your business. Seventh: People will read your ad- heed your advertise- Sixth: Pa does not get the results that the re-'ments, need your advertisements, if) gular, stick-to-it type does. j Fourth: Good advertising will they are worth while. Make them in 1 in-| keeping With the spirit of the times—, crease your business, Increased busi-| honest goods at honest prices, sold in! ness with little or no increased ex-} pense will enable you to sell some| ee BOY, 20LEARNS TOFLYIN U.S. BABS 3 GERMAN PLANES By United Press | OTTAWA, Jan. 12.—Just a year ago, Murray Galbraith, 20, an Ottawa Valley boy studying at St. Andrews College, packed his grips for Dayton,} Ohio, to learn to fly. He made his course in record time and left for cverseas to commission in the British Naval Service. Today Galbraith has three German fliers to his credit, and is the owner of an honest store where service and courtesy are watch words. low me. “Then I looped round behind him emptied 36 shots into his machine be-| He did a verti-| fore he noticed me. cal nose dive for a thousand feet and then caught fire and fell into the sea, 10,000 feet below. “So I have had my first fight in the air and got my man! Gosh! I was excited Mother, and when I was com- ing back to the ‘drome’ I did all kinds of stunts and all my spare am- munition fell out when I was upside down.” He has been in active service ix months, “CANDY SALE and we will guarantee satisfaction. NEXT MONDAY, JANUARY 15th, All Bes offered at 15¢ per share will be withdrawn from the market and the price advanced to 25c. stock reserved, and all others who wish to avail themselves of the present low price must have their orders in by that date. The company is now in excellent financial condition and ready to begin drilling as soon as arrangements can be made and weather conditions will permit. the deep sands on lands joining us, and others ready to begin operations on all sides, there is no better prospect in the State. Secure a block of this stock NOW, before the price advances. Bessemer Oil Compan*: Phone No. 196-J. Room 22 Townsend Block emer stock now : Those who have asked to have With two rigs drilling to comber. He has the eye for young eh 4 act the : French Croix de Guerre, pinned to ball players “and he rarely picks a a A | us pos Ps * : his breast by the President after he} ° ° . ha M copertrngnertry Sug peanbey [Op sent a fast ‘Fokker’ flaming to} CG; E. Littlefield & Son, Fiscal Agents but most of them are, and that's a| th rounds i ™ go has’ received Suite 9, Smith Block, Casper, Wyoming. better record than a great many of r ete iy | atur a & leg ibnn Gan boast, | special mention for conspicuous gal- Ts this shine \lantry in Imperial despatches. Larry spends his winters in New-|' "5." cheery boyish letter he tells of | Rineae ark, N. J., where he reads proofs on a newspaper. He formerly was a com- \day two Germans were reported not) 3 e positor. He chases over to New York! ~"* | : |far from here and I was sent up after AT whenever there's anything going on) 1, an hour and a half I was! ‘ e ea y or Pp ng Oh and-he : usually has the best tips © | fying at 12,500 feet and saw a Ger-! fuscball wiknown to him, {man machine 600 feet below. I turned ORDER YOUR HARNESS NOW BEFORE THE BUSY SEASON Have them repaired before the Spring rush, as baseball unknown to him. and ran away, so he would chase! you will need them early this year. Mathewson’s Reds seem booked for| ane Let us repair your AUTO TOP—We fix them , hae ‘i . He was faster than I, and soon| an upbuilding process that will nth | WS under my tail, about 500 feet be-) WIGWAM up like new. . jhis first exploit. He wrote: “Yester-| complish something besides seventh or eighth places every year. } TRAP-SHOOTING IS MAKING BIG PROGRESS| . | Home-made Taffy 15c per pound | By United Press == NEW YORK, Jan. 12—Figures from various powder and gun manu- facturing concerns, issued at the end - ofthe year, show conclusively that GRAND CENTRAL STABLES the fast-growing sport of making dust} out of “clay pigeons” than in any, sport with the exception of golf. Trap-shooting clubs do not spend la- vishly on greens or club-houses and miss that expense. bs . The growth of the sport is shown THE place that giver | Also a big line of homemade candies Pa by the fact that forty-eight states last oua 38 team for any year held championship shoots. Con- . long or short. seryative estimates are that 50,000 <2 names were added to the enrollmeut e in gun clubs throughout the country. on Good and Careful S chil {Z Sneeze Me Neue Sneeze " Siar FEEDING ‘ Bottles For Family Use . By U Day and Night- Service ' ing Nurse Jeanette Leveau, Snee ze Midwest Hotel

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