Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 2, 1919, Page 3

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INTO PANIC AS THE BOLSHEVIKS “MARCH ON CITY Jews of Posen Are At- tacked in House of ‘ing on Foe Berlin reports that Ri panicetckenwaved (the, ad:| teen miles away. Many are fleeing the city The Russian fidget will attempt to leave Kronstadt to meet the British in the Baltic. Worship After Fir-| COPENHAGEN, Jan. 2.—| Ly During the fighting in Posen Sun-| KADISH VILLAGE RECAPTURED BY THE AMERICANS Bolshevik Defense SEE DAWN OF Crumbles Before’ ; | Yank Advance in Northwest Russia jociated Prean} American troops Tuesday re-| west hotel. grill. The uniforms of northern Russian front and yes- terday pushed forward their lines two miles i nthe direction of f Vologda. to the scene. This winter push, which wie. The members of the Mothers’ ON NORTH FRONT | CA — AND SAILORS GUESTS OF MOTHERS’ LEAGUE New Year's Eve was most fittingly | boat and was picked up several hours| jobserved by the Mothers’ League of later after suffering greatly from the |Wdd Fellows hall. A thre, | this city when at six o’clock one hun- cold and exposure. |dred fifty-four guests, including sol-| 0 C¥ul Ford, Casper's only “real! \diers, sailors, members of the Moth- jers’ League and a number of other! 5 : ARCHANGEL, .Jan. .2. —' guests, were banquetted at the Mid-|'8 not given to speech making but The main dining room| he is right there when it comes to| Miss Marion Carsley Weds oe mn captured the village of Kadish ‘25 filled to capacity and a number} vance of the Bolsheviki eigh-| i, the. middle pee of the |f late comers were seated in the various | WOU’ P branches of the army and some of|® high explosive shell that went off the navy gave a metropolitan aspect id sailor in the room joined jhim in drinking, holding their glasses of clear water high. The entertainment of the evening {was but party finished with the end- jing of the banquet for the guests then adjourned to the Odd Fellows Shall where dancing was enjoyed until the New Year was heralded. The use of the hall was donated by tho 't. 0. O. F. Part of the musical pro- | gram was given at the hotel while the guests dined. Miss Lulu Sams played a piano solo, Professor Rudolph ‘Lundberg sang, Miss Jessie Anderson pianist, played a solo and Mrs. E Grant with C. E. Hood playing a ¢ obligato and accompanied by Mis: Sams, . Miss Verna Burnett, ‘companied by Miss Violette Burkett, ‘played a violin solo, Professor Lund- berg and Mrs. Grant sang again, at the piece or chestra furnished the music for jing and the soldiers and si well as the other guests spent a most enjoyable and pleasant evening. eee THE YEAR AS | { | soldier, was given an ovation that) |shook the pillars of the room. Cyril| fighting the “squareheads,” a fact Lieut, Carrcil D. Marqui “ g y i quis. a, Ge fhe twelve)“ Mrs, Jennie B. Carlsey of Chica- | + Souvenirs from} +o, Til, has announced the marriage of her daughter, Miss Marion Cars- ley, to Lieutenant Carroll Dean Mar. quis, The ceremony took place Ti {too near him for comfort and safety. | | Everybody took a good look at a |“real’” soldier and then gave three day evening, December thirty-first, eight o’clock in New Jerusalem chu Stewart avenue and Seventieth street, ters are to be discussed. church parlors, followed the and will make their home here, Mr. Marquis being employed at the Mid- jy Mr. and Mrs. Borden McK. Coult ~ west Refining: company’s plant. The at their home in Natrona avenue. Mr. groom is the son of Mr. Robert C Marquis of this city, and the bride training at spent part of the past year in school and h: | of friends here who will wish and Mrs. Bolin w lo| them happiness. “|Mr. and Mrs. Foley Have New Year's Dinner Guests. Covers were laid for eleven at a six-course dinner given last night by and Mrs. M. J. home in South Vark avenue. ble decorations were red carnations The guests list included the Rev. Fath- er John H. Mullin, Attorney and Mrs M. W.Purcell, Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Ronan, Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Vilnave, Charles Carlson. The Mothers’ Lague will meet for a business session Monday afternoon TE EL ee 4 Page 3 All members should be nt at a number of business mat- at ty Library. ch py A reception held in the #1e: Fe CTC | Two Soldiers Guests Of ; Mr. and Mrs. Co nt and Mrs. Marquis will Ed d O’Brie:. and Everett An- per in about two weeks 'Herson were the guests of honor at a New Year’s dinner yesterday given O'Brien and Mr, Anderson were in 1 officers’ training recently returned beth Geis and Mr. Is Both young people have a, to Casper. Dr The table was c roses while red, white and blue used effectively as decorations thruout the Nouse. ee CASPER STORAGE CO. Storage, Hides, Pelts, Wool Furs. Reasonable, Reliable, Responsible. 12-2-tf Foley at their, The ta- WAR SAVINGS STAMPS Will Pay Cash $4.00 For Each Stamp—Limited Num- ber Wanted THE BOND EXCHANGE 410 Ideal Bldg., Denver, Colo. John C. Whelan and Mrs. {mighty cheers for the lad who “does day Jews fifed upon the Poles from! goa; A | Lea hich has gi i gainst strong resistance, was under-| League which has given such untir-| the Byaneckce, wuerespon ie Poles | taken sitaaltameodaly with = move. |in& and patriotic service during the! “ahi eir artillery upon the wor-/ ment southward by Allied troops |'#8t year or more were heartily com- hippers. Youths raided Jewish homes | song the Onega river. The Onega|Plimented in thought and word for things, not says things.” Sergeant Dwight Grant, son of Mr. und Mrs. E. S. Grant, just returned NNN Do Your Sweeping With killed thirty and wounded many. 200 CASUALTIES TO BERLIN, Jan. 2.—Over 200 cas-! ualties have occurred so far in street | fighting in Posen, according to the that Ignace Jan Paderewski probably ts leading the fighting. Another report states that Pader- that the Poles are forming a coali-’ tion government. \ i 3 =i | BOLSHEVIKS CONTINUE) ; WESTWARD ADVANCE LONDON, Jan. 2. — Bolshevik troops continue to advance westward in’ Esthonia° and Livonia and are marching on‘ Reval and Riga, uccord- ing to.a,Russian wireless dispatch ived here, Southeast of Riga the ki have taken Romershof on | 1 fa, the capi- tal 'o vik government west of the Ural mountains, was cap-; torned Tuésday by the Bolsheviki, ac cording’ td a Russian wireless dis- pathic ik thu » aad ‘ 4 i R Is: CLAIM———~- -ZURICH, Jen. 2, (Havas | ut Ruagia, according’. to L i Anzeiger:of Berlin. ¢Reports reaching Paris Tuesday | \ were that the Lenine government was | ( tje:-peasants’and said the Bolsheviki | had had difficulties in suppressing a! peasant revolt in the region of Mos- cow int December. | H ——.--- - | ‘] 4 —_— Be.in,line for a good position. En-| now. . Casper Business College. | > 1-2-1t | | THE WAY 10 US Medicated Vapors Inhaled Throw Off the Germs. Most authorities now agree that| what we call Spanish Infiuenza is! simply the old-fashioned grip, which} was epidemic here in 1889-90. The in- figenea germs enter thru the nose and mouth and attack the lining of the sir passages—nose, throat and bronchial tubes. “There is no cure or specific for this | disease, but Nature will throw off the attack, if only you conserve your strength. A competent physician) should always be called. The use of VapoRub does not interfere with any internal treatment and it is now be- ing used by broadminded physicians everywhere, in order to stimulate the| Ie of the air passages to throw off the grip germs, to aid in loosen- ‘ing the phlegm and keeping the air : passages open, thus making the! breathing easier. Hot, wet towels) jould be applied over the throat, | chest and back between the shoulder blddes to open the pores. Then Vapo- Rub should be rubbed in over the parts until the skin is red, spread on thickly and covered with two thick-' nesses of hot flannel cloths. Leave the elothing loose around the neck, asthe heat of the body liberates the ingredients in the form of vapors. These vapors, inhaled with each th, carry the medication direct- to the parts affected. At the same ne, VapoRub is absorbed thru and} pulates the skin, attracting the! pd to the surface, and thus aids in wing the congestion within. ROW TO AVOID THE DISEASE Evidence seems to prove that Span- h Influenza is a germ disease, spread ewski has left Posen for Warsaw and | , | ., New Year's Day from the government the first speaker called upon and he ) SPANISH INFLUENZA The Influenza Germs Attack the Lining of the Air Passages. When VapoRub is Applied Over Throat and Chest, the Air Passages and Stimulate the Mucous Membrane to | new in certain parts of the North, it |columns rested New Year's day at “he kindness and thoughtfulness that ‘the village of Gogoli. |prompted the idea to entertain the; The recapture of Kadish wa: |soldiers and sailors so royally. While RESIDENTS OF POSEN |marked by heavy fighting in which, the Mothers’ League was right ‘on however, American casualties were the Joby when! the boys prentilawey, slight. It was strongly defended, |they Were no less so when it was time The Bolsheviki used blockhouses | *° welcome them home again. It was Tageblatt, This newspaper declares! huilt by the Americans and British | timated that this highly successful! | banquet would not be the last affair |of the kind to be given to the League ; members. Attorney M. W. Purcell acted as |toastmaster and a very entertaining |and witty one he made. His first re~ |marks were to laud the Mothers’ pt ages os DR. 6. M. ANDERSON BACK | League members for. their service AS ARMY CAPTAIN WILL \and to anticipate the permanency of A \ the organization. He stated that the a lideals of the new life were not known RESUME PRACTICE HERE! when they occupied the town in No- vember, prior to being driving out by large forces of the Bolsheviki. by the number of coupons that could be clipped from gilt-edged, securities of the Liberty bonds, but by the wil- | lingness of the men and women who? |do things. Measured by these ideals, the Mothers’ League would stand high in the estimation of Casper. Lieutenant Russell H. Nichols was Dr. G. M. Anderson, now a cap- tain in the medical corps of the Unit- ed States army, returned to Casper hospital at Fort Oglethrope, Georgia. | responded with a spicy. talk. Captain Anderson formerly practiced in Casper and was numbered among the successful physicians in the city. | Lieut. Nichol’gave all the credit of the Dr. Anderson was commissioned | winning of the war to the women at enptain in the medical service of the! home and abroad, and stated as his Whil the boys in service became very fa. miliar with “service” of all kinds, )U. S. A, September 4th, 1918, and| opinion that the war would have con-| the right hand man of the Mothers’ i {was then ordered to Medical Officers|tinued for many years longer but League, ended the toast list by a two- “ Raraising School at Camp Greenleaf,| for the efficient and self-sacrificing oo Ga,,.-where he. completed the. basic efforts of the women. course and qualified for, and was as-; Sergeant C. E. Miller of the S. S. France and England. Sergt. Miller was on the “Lapland” After completing this course Cap. on October 8th when it was torpi operating surgeon to Evacuation Hos-| ES ee ie Ee is ok Se ae pital Unit, No. 58. His unit was in’ work he has under way and will re the process of entraining for overseas turn to Casper within the next two work when the armistice was signed. |-nonths to resume his practice. After a few days’ visit in Caspe: — ——-- lice Jah i n -iMr. Leary has cut his time to two ney.) —Peasant revolts continue | Signed to the course on military sur-|/Convoy, “Lapland” spoke briefly of ‘minutes and he gets by with some the gery, conducted by medical officers | his eight round trips to France with) good ideas in two minutes. |detailed from the armies of Italy,;U. S. troops bound for the front.! was with most of the Casper boys as i . | bres pe-' a position to know to what extent tho “glarmed over the attitude of | tain Anderson was ass igned as an|doed and sunk. Ha escaped in a life Mothers’ League work was appreci- | from training camp in time for the banquet and being a modest lad and {no orator ke sang “The Caissons Go | Rolling Along,” “Good” Rhoades, as |Mr. Purcell styled Otto Rhoades, a |voung aviator just home from Cali- { fornia to visit his parents, said he was j“too full for utterance,” while “Brother” Gillespie, being no orator either but a man of action, said all she did to help was to bring ships half way around the world so that the j boys who needed the ships on the |eastern coast could have the product jof the western shipbuilding yards. Senator W. W. Sproul, being what he and Lieut. Nichols styled a “near | soldier,” spoke for the boys who en- |tered the service to do their part. | whatever it should be. Mr. Sproul ‘is a Spanish-War veteran and said | that he got about as near service as the boys who trained in the camps jin the United States. But he, like the boys in the camps, learned to obe orders. The same spirit was mani. |fested by the boys in training when they got their orders, even if they |were ordered to do. mental service, bs the boys who went “‘over the top” in Flanders showed. Lieutenant R. E. Cole, an aviator instructor, responded briefly to the | request for a speech, and Jack Leary, Z = = = = Ss ll |minute talk. Since being honorably |discharged as a “Four Minute Man” ‘they left during the year, and is in ‘ated, and he knows that it was the ‘sort of service that the boys liked and |fully appreciated. He closed with a | fitting toast to ‘Mothers’ which every Captain Anderson intends to leave for one of the large hospitals either in New York City or New Orleans, La., where he will complete some} E VAPORUB FOR New Loosen the Phlegm, Open the | So avoid persons having colds— which means avoid crowds—com- mon drinking cups, roller towels, etc. Keep up your bodily strength by plenty of exercise in the open air, and good food. KEEP FREE FROM COLDS Above all, avoid colds, as colds ir- | ritate the lining of the air passages and render them much better breed+ ing places for the germs, Use Vick’s VapoRub at the very | first sign of a cold. For a head cold, melt a little VapoRub in a spoon and| — Burkett | Spring Millinery ARRIVES WITH THE 122 North Center Yeur See the Aaron Gage in Moire, Satin ard Straw Combinations. The New 1919 Sensation Millinery VanoRub in a benzoin steam kettle_ If this is not available, use an ordin-| ~ ary teakettle. Fill half-full of boil-| * ing water, put in half a teaspoon of VapoRub from time to time—keep| # the kettle just slowly boiling and in- hale the steam arising. NOTE—Vick’s VapoRub is the dis- covery of a North Carolina druggist, | 5 who found how to combine, in salve} + form, Menthol and Camphor with! 3 such volatile oils as Eucalyptus, Thyme, Cubebs, etc., so that when the salve is applied to the bdy heat, these ingredients are liberated in the form of vapors. VapoRub can be had in three sizes—30c, 60c, $1.20—at all druggists. While comparatively agency. your work, WELDERS AND BRAZERS OF is the standard home remedy in the South and West for all forms of cold troubles—over six milion jars, were sold last year. VapoRub is particul- arly recommended for children’s croup or colds, as it is externally ap- plied and can, therefore, be used 118 South David y by human contact, chiefly tru eotighing, sneezing or spitting. freely. and often—without the slight- est harmful effects.—Advt. inhale the vapors, or better still, use Slee hehehehehe tatalahahelelalalalelalallabebabababile’ WHY WASTE TIME AND MONEY BUYING NEW PARTS? | Ship or Bring Us Your Broken Castings or Parts to be Welded. = | Ordinarily we will save you one-half to one-third the cost of a aew part and save the time lost in ordering from the factory or Welding also makes the broken casting stronger than the new by adding additional strength to the weak part that is broken. We have an Oxweld Portable outfit for field work for welding such pieces that are not easily moved; also for welding in seamless patches in fire boxes, welding cracked flue side crown and door sheets, calking edges, etc. Let the best equipped shop in the west give you an estimate on BRONZE, ALUMINUM AND OTHER METALS—ALL WELDS GUARANTEED OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING SHOP “Across from Shockley Garage.” Casper, Wyo. | | i | | | | cutting out and CAST IRON, STEEL, BRASS, Phone 611-J Ground Floor --A Hoover-- It Collects All The Dirt, Dust and Lint Let Us Demonstrate Natrona Power Co. Mr. Leary} INN REL Annual January Clearance Sale Of Greater Imvortance Than Any Sale of This Character PRICES ARE PRACTICALLY iF CUT TO HALF ON F A ° Dresses, Waists, Skirts PocccccccccccccocccccccccoesoecescoocesoooccoooconeccoooseoooosooeoooooeneseeS Corsets and Brassieres The French Shop Saves Time--- Eliminates Drudgery Phone 69. K PIII III IIE HAIL EK EXE AE PEP OE DE SEESPOVOOSHOP GOCCP OOS E BOC OOP OOOP TEN PER CENT DISCOUNT Liberal Discounts on Silk Underwear Kimonas Negligees Linens Ladies’ and Children’s Hosiery. O. S. Building

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