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BRITISH PLUNGE AGAINST Of Casper P. E. O's. G NE Saturday afternoon Miss Mae Win- jter will be the hostess at the first| (Continued from Page One) ee SOCIETY | | | First Regular Meeting ¥TGREVBULL BOY WOUNDED COME | | |o- ce) ' ———. } IS MISSING IN FAST AT TIMES | HOTEL ARRIVALS. At the Midwest Mrs. G. M. Bell, Norman Smedes, lis; J. W. Curry, city; W- S. Jewett, California; C. G. Gordon, Cheyenne; Ethel DeBacku, Boulder; D. G. Gor- don Denver; A. G. Jones, Omaha; M. Denver; Thomas Kenney, Thermoo-| . = | City; EB. Rousch, Topeka, k,, John Petrie, Lincoln; E. Tyler sna! | Denver. 5 r At the Henning S. R. Laude, Cheyenne; D. Hatch, Lincoln; G. E. Gilbert : \rock; B. W. Shepperdson and | Riverton; G. M. Adams, Crawfo, |D. S. Faulkner, Los Angeles G. Kirkpatrick, Denver; R, E. Rude-| Lewis, M. L. Barr, Denver; E sill, Milwauke; C. W. Tomlinson, Chi-}ford, Hoffland, Neb.; Mrs. W cago; Mrs. J. M. Klien, Basin; H. E.| Hampton, Greeley, Colo.; Harr ' | 3 Another Wyoming Youth on Honor} PARIS, Sept. 19—“No human |RBradiey, Denver; Mrs. Martin, Texas; yin, St. Joseph; Mrs. O.'R. V C. J. Morley, Charles F. Cassidy, Den-| Cheyenne; Simon Brunsw: i ‘power could provide accommodations Rel ease lfast enough for the great influx of|ver; Ben Stahl, city; Frank Adams, | Joseph. | i regular meting of th recently organ- | ON WAR FRONT < jized Casper branch of the P. E. 0.) | | The meeting will be held at the home} 5 i . ; ° * ! H Mrs. W. L. Bai 545 and occupied virtually the whole Hindenburg line outposts |°F MTs Rees coe i Pages from Pontrust northward to Gouzeaucourt. A great number, ee ; ect SASS of German dead are lying before the British positions on the|™°eting some plan of the work to be whole front of the enemy’s attacks. ) undertaken in Casper will be formu-| [By Associated Press.] | ed- ington; Casualties on f z Aliance; Jeo Harrington, Denver; A. —————______ fates: at ee | ri Daiioaoe jwounded such as came in after the|y Fan ’Findlay, Ohio; C. R. Weaver,| For information and prices on An WITH THE FRENCH ARMY IN FRANCE, Sept. LA Beal persian alan Fase eerie j lgreat drive in July,” said the Rev.| city; J] M. Smallwood, New York| metal Weatherstrip, Phone OTL, (By ASsociated Press.)—General Mangin’s army attacked along a front northeast of Soissons today and captured Colom- A . | bes farm on the plateau just east of Sancy and Just south of a Bee ene ene Soest of! is listed as missing in action among} 4 Military Hos- . the Mothers’ League gave a banquet} American Red Cross } v point where the Chemin des Dames road branches off from) . < 5 : | today’s casualties. |pital No. 1 at Neuilly. | Soissons to Laon. fat the Midwest hotel last night for The following casualties are re-| “Many of the boys had to wait A strong counter by. the Grenadiers’ Prussian Guard oo Postar tee eres eatninene ported by the commanding general of |While the more serious cases were be-| repulsed by the French, who drove the enemy. back of the road | the wireless division of the U.. Army. |the American: Expeditionary Forces:|in& cared for first. Some of them lead from the P. if A Gard Colombes f y. j ‘i |had not eaten in twenty-four hours eading from the Pateau of Ange Gardiene to Colombes arm. “It was one more of the customary| Killed in action__ loevest "\ Gone’ mere hie ee AT A This road is less than a half mile from Chemin des Dames. | -004 times the departing soldier boys} Missing in agtion Auce in Gain oY eb thareiwad neversad This success puts the French in possession of a part of the im-|by the Mothers’ League and differed) Wounded Severely — = 82. | Rord'of complaint. The amore they] portant plateau of Ange Gardiene, which commands the ridge| very little from the others but each} Died of wound: lost thes tone icheertul they’ seemed:| along which runs the famous “Ladies Way.”. It also drives a one seems, somewhow, better than the} Died from accid One boy who had lost the sight of | |Dr. Frances L. Frost, of State Island, | = —_ see pete enlace nae mesa Clyde H. Hess of Greybull, Wyo., | Y., Protestant chaplain of the) “THE HOUSE OF FEATURES” Matinee 2:30 and 4:00 Night 7:30 and 9:00 Vaudeville Pictures Banquets Boys at Midwest- TODAY deeper wedge south of Hindenburg positions in the St. Gobain | other one. , | Wounded, degree und lboth eyes told me that he considered | region and facilitates operations in the direction of Pinon, ||, Mrs. SA eee tine snl tal lhimself lucky! ‘It might have been! HELEN GRAY & Co. which was held by the French until the German offensive in \to os Ee aniliraveltnn Wettective nis of disease- | worse,’ he said. : T May. Fighting has been most severe during the last few days. At ee ROD ET ie -e-. | “They get the finest care possibble VISIONS DE AR | talk. Leslie Parker, clerk of the local | | board, acted as toastmaster and also |spoke to the young men. Charles | Wharton, one of the soldiers-to-be, | French Penetrate Hun Positions \responded for the boys. The Mothers’ League members ac- in New Offensive, Says Official wap inelgess a {companied the boys to the train and = i i jo fe ;.| Fred Folmer, Avondale, Mont. rea ia su Goat St. Queptin the French pene-| wished them a Godsped. | Later in| Lester Wells, St. Anthony, Idaho. the evning the league met a train} Roy A. Hall, Columbia, S. D. Eight Thousand Boche Captives Wounded slightiy ~~ from both surgeons and nurses. It is only while the camions are unloading their freight so fast that all cannot |be attended to at once. “The spirit of the men is a revela- jtion. Naturally, every one expected great things of them. But they have far transcended all expectations. “It is not pulpit oratory that the | {boys want,” went on Dr. Frost. “It jis a friend. The opportunities for a! | chaplain to serve are toe numerous Beautiful Electrical Transformation Clark Oldfield and Frankie Drew The Big Basso and the Baseball Girl. Songs, Patter, Impres- sions and Nifty Nonsense. THEY HAVE MADE THOUSANDS LAUGH’ FROY, COAST TO COAST PICTURES Total Casualties for Wyoming and ad- | oining states include: |load of Montana boys enroute to Did of W. di |Boulder and distributed smokes,| | ¥. be Ter , Mt |flowers and fruits to two hundred| J&mes A. Yarno, Terry, Mont. | fifty boys who were glad of the gifts Died of Disease , r |and were most appreciative 6 the Mo- Arthur D. Patterson, Maudlin, to mention. Why, in one round a}| Taken by Haig Near St. Quentin |thers’ League eforts. They spent | Mont. day in the 60 wards here at No. 1,| Sessue Hayakawa —WITH THE BRITISH IN FRANCE, Sept. 19.—Field Marshal Haig’s 25 minutes in Casper and the league | Edward A. Flynn, Anaconda,| write letters home, I run errands and | Ne “THE WHITE MAN’S ©. AW” members visited with the boys and| Mont. < made their stay seem shorter by sing-| David F. Meile, Bowdle, S. D. besides being often taken into their ing well known songs. Lewis M. Rose, Athol, S. D. | confidence in regard to their personal | The entertainment committee and|_ Frederick W. Thompson, Garden, |troubles. They turn of their own | the following women were at the ban- | Idaho. | accord to the man who, they know, |} |quet, Mrs. B- B. Brooks, Mrs. Anna) Albert R. Lovick, Libby, Mont. | is there just for that—just to be their | Swartsager, Mrs. L. W. Bailey and} Anthony)Prill, Simla, Colo. * friend. { vate C. T. Boone. | attend to business matters for them, |j forces up to midnight had captured eight thousand Germans as the result of yesterday’s drive. Several thousand yards of the Hindenburg outpost line are in pice hands this morning in the Villeret sector, southwest of La- catelet. Haig’s Battlers Make Fresh Advances around St. Quentin [By Associated Prexs] LONDON, Sept. 19.—The British have progressed in their drive into the Hindenburg line in the St. Quentin region aimed to encircle that town. North of Pontrus they reached the out- | Post positions on the Hindenburg line. | a | Lemprie, four miles directly west of La Catelet, was cap-| Helen Gray & Co. in “Visions de | tured, as was Gauche Wood. | Art,” a study in electrics, described | The exotic romance of the Orient has been interwo- ven with as fine a bunch of thrills and as tense a suspense as we have ever seen intermingled in a photoplay, This is cer- tainly one picture ‘you can't-afford to miss. ALSO Lasky . Prevents | SESSUE HAYAKAWA «The WhitesMany Law - | Emerson E. Smith, Isabell, S. D. | “One usually thinks of a ehaniainll | eens ee Missing in Action at the bedside of the dying. It is! |\VAUDEVILLE AT | David Folsom, Gooding, Idaho. |there that we have our supreme call, a pure eont, of course. Sometimes they ask me} | lyde H. Hess, Greybull, Wyo. }to pray with them; sometimes they | | IRIS, ADDITION Alvin G. Kelberg, Troy, Idaho. would rather that I prayed silently | jbeside them. Often they thank ike | Marion Fairface John Browne: | Albert T. Klaus, Avondale, Colo. TO FILM PLA Y| ~ Martin Krasevisch, Pueblo, Colo. MARINE CORPS CASUALTIES Summary of casualties to daté’: Officers |just for staying with them until the lend. They know that I will write | home to their parents and it comforts | |them and helps their passing. And | | then”. | The enemy followed a heavy bombardment southwest of | Cambrai between Gouzeaucourt and the Arras-Cambrai road by a strong infantry attack on a wide front northward of Tres- cault. They were completely repulsed with great loss. They | were likewise driven off with heavy casualties shortly after-| ward when they launched a strong attack north of Moeuvres. | as original and unique, is the vau- deville headliner at the New Iris this evening in addition to a film feature of-unusual merit. Clark Oldfield and | Frankie Drew appear in a sketch of songs, impressions and “nifty non- sense” and the comedy is good. |. Dr. Frost spoke like one who has | had a revelation. | | “Humanity is experiencing religion | {all over again in the trenches. The |deep religious feeling of these boys| |who have stood face to face with} |their God {out there’ is beyond de-| Enlisted Men 942 In hands of enemy- 11 Some German parties that succeeded in entering the British} Jack Holt, seen in numerous para-| Missing _--.-_--_ 150 scription. One of them whom I at-| trenches were entirely disposed of by counters. mount pictures, is appearing in the | ——+— 3,030 tended in his last moments said to ’ — rea, eee a Henry Falkland in |me, ‘Whatever we are we have a com- * ‘The © Man’s Law,” a'-new| Total -..2--2..-.---- 2 3,132 [mon bond—religion.’ That ma: Bulgarians Completely Routed | Paramount picture starring Sessue | | sy seit: | t The following casualties are re-/a Jew! Hayakawa. Mr. Holt is excellent in| ported by the commanding general of | phetic.” either leading roles or heavy parts.| the American Expeditionary Forces = _ — = A VERY SPECIAL SHOWING NEW FALL FASHIONS B SUITS and cial statement. The Allies have advanced over 12 miles. good work. His fight with Hayakawa PY 3 And his words are prot by the Serbians and French - LONDON, Sept. 17.—The Bulgarians are in flight in Mace- donia and burning stores and villages, says the Serbian offi- war material. ; ing, scenes of “The White Man’s| The Bulgarians were defeated completely and the Serbians | Law,” which is to be shown \at the| are pursuing them day and night. | New Iris theater tonight. Serbians and French took Topolets, Potshishta, Beshishta, Fi Ra Meylnitsa, Vitolisshta, and Rasimby, and the heights of Kuch- ive out of the last nine Czars of | Russi i Lov Kaien: 3 | Russia have been assassinated. LONDON, Sept. 19.—The British evacuated Baku, the Caspian pe- troleum center. ‘ Mail us your Liberty Bonds, high- | est prices paid. The Security 'Loan Co., Room 4, Kimball Bldg. 9-11-tf OUR BRANCH STORE WILL BE OPENED American Artillery Pounding Metz Defenses, Lines Advanced ses Age Monday, Sept. 23rd 1 WITH THE AMERICANS ON THE METZ FRONT, Sept. t 19.—American shells are dropping in Metz. Aviators reported | 1 today that heavy artillery shells had struck a big factory and! also fell directly on the fortifications. | Americans are steadily pushing forward. Patrol encoun-| ters are frequent and artillery action is heavy. 4 The enemy is reported to be mining Haumont preparatory | 1 to evacuation in a great retrograde movement to Mars La Tour | 1 and Chambley. 1 One'American patrol is reported to have penetrated 300/ 4 yards.beyond Pagny, just across the Moselle river from the! 4 German frontier. | ‘ WITH THE AMERICANS IN LORRAINE, Sept. 19.—Entrenched j in the second lines of the Hindenburg system, the Germans along the! ! southwest of Metz appear to have accepted the new situation. The tac-| tics they are employing are wholly defensive. | ermans are carrying out a half-hearted and seemingly per-| ‘ functory bombardment of the American lines. Even challenges by American and French patrols are refused by the enemy, except where , conflict is inevitable. Progress is so rapid they are unable to count prisoners and_| in a dugout is one of the most thrill- | i» | 149 SOUTH CENTER To Supply the Demands of Our. Many Customers on the South Side of Town, surpasses any previous Fall showing of exquisite § Tailor-made and Fur- trimmed models, and-it is only thru having placed our order early that we are in position to offer such splendid values. Where we will handle the best of Dairy Products. Also Fresh Bal- timore Oysters from the East daily * All Garments Possess —wWwe e ere to rve lou-— S T Y L E : Fresh Vegetables nero | 7: falvtaalayand Lacie : cee, Sake Natrona Butter Shop § . ee ee em 2 ee ek Coats priced at $17.50 up CABBAGE SWEET POTATOES | i - Suits priced at $17.50 up PICKLING CUCUMBERS “WE HANDLE EVERYTHING THAT GROWS” CITY FRUIT MARKET TWO STORES—Phone 247 114 So. Wolcott 166 N. Center St. Across from Postoffice Natrona Hotel Bldg. Open Evenings and Sunday SARHHBHHHHARIRHRAHHEEe Webel Commercial Co. “THE BIG BUSY STORE” : United States Food Administration, License No. G13057 Watch Our Windows. Watch Our Windows. “YE OD TIMES BACK AGAIN” Come to the Harvest Bazaar at the Salvation Army, Afternoon and Night, September 20th «7