Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 3, 1917, Page 5

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——_. ————= is) ' parties nall ads, , horge-shoe, couHies occupies. & great ' ° ; The Hub | TODAY—TONIGHT ALWAYS WORTH WHILE H The Secret Cellar Betty’s Hobo A Real Comedy | PAT SULLIVAN | CARTOON COMEDY { } | 5c and 10¢ Matinee __-_------_-.3 to 5 Evening Shows ___-_- 7, 8,9 | | —— SS i CITY NEWS i] Little Items About People ' You Know oc re} | Those wishi ¢ to shear their sheep at the Seventeen Mile Shearing plant should see Angus McPherson about booking dates. 4-24, 25, 28, 30 State Geologist Trumbull is in Cas- per today on business matters con- nected with his office. oo Mr. and Mrs. T. S. this evening for Denver where they will make their home, Mr. Foster hav- ing resigned as local agent of Adams Express company to become traveling Foster leave suditer for the company between } Denver and Billings. oo = Mr. and Mrs. Fred Neuman are re- ceiving congratulations from their many friends over the birth of a baby boy. The youngster has been named Harry Kenneth, and is doing equally as nicely as his mother, both of whom are at the State Hospital. o 9° Chili Charley’s new restaurant wili be opened*to the public Monday; ac- | cording to present plans. The new restaurant is in the basement of the b ed} ess;-from the heedless younger mem- | Westioned. pa new Lynch. building, and is equipp Wiad ht cae ere in a;.most .modern way. A large 1. i | Now open for business at 123 East |. Second street. H. Stahl, the Tailor, Phone. 187-R. s F261 | fo} portion of the room and tables for} ladies. are placed around the room.) The appointments are first class in every particular. oOo Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cary came in from Careyhurst for the Salto dance at the Temple Tuesday, even- ing. oo “Is it true,” writes a laborer from Alliance, Neb., able-bodied, ‘that a good strong, bright Scotchman can make 35 cents per hour in Casper?” | Secretary Nelson_of the Industrial Club has ‘written the inquirer that a man of those qualifications most cer- tainly can earn the sum stated, if not more. Mrs. George Siapapercer has re-| turned to Lander after a visit with | her father, E. J.* Wells, Sr. Capt. Harnsberger is now somewhere on the border line of Wyoming with the troops. ‘ > Oo oO 1 H. C. Young’ has returned to Glen-! rock after a short visit to Casper. | oo James C. Macy, a well known Den- ver attorney, is in the city this week. The Rey. ieittte Hever will leave the middle of the week for Cleveland to attend the Northern Baptist Con- vention and from there will go to Philadelphia and New York. ° Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bair have re- turned from the east where they have been spending several weeks at their former home in Pittsburg. They made the trip in order to see their son who has gone to Oakland, Cal., to make a visit to the Marchant Cal- culating Machine factory. ound Mr. YOUR ACCOUNT hye: cers: 3 - De John F. Leeper ae Cc. H. Horstman ©. M. Elgin Dr. T. A. Dean M. J. Burke Tom A. Hall John Beaton KING BAGGOT I |refined and | tonight and Friday. | clean-cut comedy and | enough to come | than you. } took down my | eve | like A NEW INSTITUTION SOLICITS YOUR BUSINESS, AND OFFERS YOU THE BEST pes AND Se FOR CIT. IZENS” STATE BANK OF CASPER Bair_.will represent this concern in| | Wisconsin. oma on . Dr. J. A. Redmond of Denver is in the city this week. Mr, and Mrs, 2 B. Minty of Sher- | | 1 idiin are among the Wyoming visi-| tors to Casper this week. atthe Lyric Josephine-Harrity Vaudev; The Company ’ wlil head the card at the Lyric theatre Included in the program. are Darby and Jones in songs; Billy Drehrer, the “human trombone,” and two dancing features. Withal, more than passing notice by those in search of entertainment. ——————— CURING SYLVIA By ELIZABETH SHIELDS. “Well,” I murmured, “I'm always glad the men at the club like me well to our house. Sylvia enjoys them so much.” — Sylvia was Just then climbing into a low racing | car with Robert Hewes, who had called to see me, gripping the wheel. “My dea xclaimed my mother, “do stop criticizing your sister. You | must realize the eso much younger Naturally Sylvia and Lu onable on motor trips | T don't mind in the least,” I ge ply 3ut I did not feel ‘rt had come to the house | ed, as did all my who cume, by taking one of the younger girls out. Oh, I didn’t care usually, but Robert Hewes was— well, he was different. And I did ear When his siren horn sounded I sweater and hat, threw them on the bed and flew downstairs. | We had planned, perhaps vaguely, to #O up to Slayback'’s woods t re the t s were stark and bare. Sylvia, how- , Was downstuirs before me, and | un hour later she left the house for, a ride with him. 3 dear,” from mother again, “please don’t flatten your nose against the window pane in that undignified way. Sylvia is very pretty and amus- ing. ‘They'll have a perfectly lovely the together” Mother wus fairly raging Betty,- with twenty-five years on my | shoulders, had ‘no more maidenly mod- esty than to cling desperately for one look from Robert Hewes, or any man! I'm perfectly willing to accept the po- sition’ of oldest, io tuke all the drudgery, the bitterness and thankless- bers, but I want some ot the sweetness, “100: Lucille, fresh and syeli groomed and just twenty, rughed into the room with an explosive shrick. “Did you see | Sylvia? Who was the mun?” a scréen heroine and only proper thing for me that fo do was r abandon to prostrate m and shriek bac “Betty met him t the Friday night Said moth und went into de- “He evidently much da nee, with “Oh feall glance: Later in the kitchen I worked stead- ily preparing supper for Robert and | lo Lucille she and syluyxithet- mother exchunged Sylvin. in the kitehen, ut least, I could be alone. Mother hated the place, und so did the girls. Never in tay life have I spent such a qwiserable | hour as I did when I baked the hot | biscuits, broiled hum and made the } coffee for their supper. I watched | , through the window for a sight of the long, gray car. For a moment I could not see clearly through the window for | a mist had dimmed my eyes. It was all se hopelessly muddled and Ure-| some, this charming, do-nothing fam- | ly of ours. The next moment I} oroke panic-stricken for the doo. Robert Hewes had swung his car out of the valley road, and, taking the turn at 50 miles an hour, the car siuushed into a monster tree, skidded | | across to the sandbanked roadside. As | I looked Sylvia und Robert shot into} the air. | In a moment we were bending over them both. Sylvia sat up stunned but unhurt and blinking bewildered. Robert lay crushed and broken in the rondway. With assistance Sylvia got to her | feet and staggered to the house. I sat} in the road and held Rober i Now open for business at 123 East Second Street. H. Stahl, the Tailor, Phone 187-R. 4-30-6t Wyo. - ty ent Directors; John F. Leeper, Pres. M. J. Burke, 1st V.-Pres. | C. H. Horstman, 2nd Vice- 1 > Pres. and Manager W. J. Bailey, Cashier sf; | up-to-date entertainers, | the | | program is elaborate, and will claim! jund phr I felt | the taken * THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE WILLIAM. FOX Presents r VALESKA SURATT in ' } { } VALESKA.S5Ue ALi -Lirection. Wilitain Fox. i NEW YORK PEAGUC Coming to the LYRIC THEATRE F Watch for It head in my lap. He had fainted. When his eyes opened he looked into} tine with utter amazement. He siniled wanly as he ussured me he wasn't hurt, and his lean, brown hand caught compellingly at imine, as if | he would never let me go. Mother and girls stuod in the halt uwed und weeping as we curried him in. REAL VAUDEVILLE AT THE LYRIC THEATRE TODAY and TOMORROW Matinee and Evenings The Joseph-Hamity Co., Featuring DAINTY MARIE Tiny Tot Toe Dancer DARBY & JONES The The BILLY Human Trombone In Clean-cut. Comedy THE WORLD'S GREATES Upside Down Dancer and Ragtime Songs 50 Minutes of Comedy-Singing and Dancing, in Conjunction with a Five- Reel Motion Picture We Guarantee this Attraction——PRICES 25c and 3 Ge Worth More E2ad Daily Call Speake in of Hagens’ Law Partner The D.) local nnouncement of the law partnership formed between G. R. Hagens and James G. Stanley, late of Lead: ing these duties, i “After thirteen years of successful civic left Lead y | successes, where Complimentary Terms ted. following from the Lead (S. commenced Daily Call will be interesting to people in connection with the Washington. practice, social popularity and distinction, James G. Stanley from Lead f his law ociated with His departure during the yez practice he has been ass Chambers Kellar, in Kellar & Stanley, is generally regret- His connection with that firm almost immediately after his graduation from his law course at For the last nine years of his residence in Lead he has held the office of city attorney, addition to those of his private practice, with ability and faithfulnes “In his new association in Casper, French Commission Leaves Washington on Tnp Thru West WASHINGTON, May 3, — The French High Commission left Wash ington this afternoon for Chicago ané other Western cities. firm of eee Now open for business at 123 Easi Second street. H. Stahl, the Tailor, Phone 187-R. 5-2-6 perform- Let the ‘Casper Landscape and Gar- den Company fix your lawns, make Next day when it was all over, Rot. terday for Casper, Wyo., he will be a partner of G. R. Hagens, your gardens and do your house ant ert ban ed and his broken ribs sét,#Where he 1 continue the practi the leading attorney of that city. The | windo cleaning. My business is te I sat beside him. 1 tried to forgetyo! his profe: sion under © conditions | firm will be known as Hagens & Stan-| please you. W. W. Colliver, Mgr., that through the delirium of the night, Wich promise to bring him further | ley.’ | Phone 540 1: , Riverview Hotel. _4: ott he had continuously called my name. } Soe - a The Was great ¢ ment in the fam. circle, no one had slept. ‘They had crouched about listening us my | hame fell froin his lips. But Sylvia suid, of course he was del us. In his delirium he thought I was sitting next him when the crash came. When the pain stirred him from his semi- stupor, he murmured broken words -s and t » he opened his eyes In consciousness, the entire fam- | lly was in possession of his heart se- |cret. During the long night he strug: gled to keep me near him. Ceaseless- That I,|'¥ he cried out against letting Sylyia ‘run the car. She confessed share, | facedly that she had teased him into permitting her te take the wheel, just | before they tarned. effort to lift himself. “No one else was hurt, really: “Thank God for tha’ ; Then I heard his voice, a mere h whisper, as his eyes sought 4mine, “Will you, ever, forgive me,” hé@ sald, “for running sway from you $ester- | day?" “Don't tulk,” T begged. “You did not .se¢dm anxious to go,” re explained, “F must huve seemed a ‘rute.” His hand closed over mine. Waveringly I forced my eyes to neet hi And then we knew. Copyright, i#i6, by the McClure Newspa- ner Svndic: ate) bake OF THE FAMOUS “PICKARD” HAND PAINTED CHINA. IN A CLASS ALL ITS OWN The Kimball Srug Store In Denver Make your HOME at the ALBANY | HOTEL “A ROOM _- __ with -__ ‘BATH. i j { When Robert uwekened "he made nr | 4 $1.50 to $2.00 | Per Day A The Parkerton Store of the Midwest Commissary Compal is prepared to give you the most prompt service when in need of anything in the Oil Camp Supply line, including soar AUTO OILS agt, Bev oe WORK SHOES GROCERIES CAMP SUPPLIES ata GREASES | OVERALLS The MidwestCommissary Co. J. A. LIKELY, Gen. Mgr. CASPER FRED NICKLESS, Local Manager SALT CREEK BIG MUDDY Sound New Policies. ne Cc. R. McGREW, Geist Agt. CASPER, WYOMING’ Up to Date Service SIA The Capital Life Insurance Co. OF COLORADO ‘ + ' %

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