Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 28, 1919, Page 8

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1 si PES BETTERMENT ly “FO SEIT LAG | AURAL SCHOQLS Te toNicH lying in her cell, patiently waiting | 3 ni ares .| for the hour when she will be placed | Bills Drafted and Ende d at Re against the wall and become a target | - cent Meeting in C ne Seek | for bullets of the German soldiers, to Improve Conditions | General von Bissing, who has charge | in Wyoming | ey | of the troops since the Germans took | possession of Brussels, is indulging in| ae wanton revelry with the rest of the The betterment rural schools! German officers. Was) the chief topic of con- This tremendous scene of indulg-! sideratic the recent educational! ence takes place in a Belgian chateau, | Meeting in Cheyenne, according to! which is an exact reproduction from | statements of Miss May Hamil-!a photographed record of an original ten, county superintendent of schools | chateau in Belgium. It was necessary Who returned yesterday from the! in this seene from “The Cavell Case,” Meeting. The meeting ‘omposed | Select Pictures’ special attraction, ef county superintenden ty super: | produced by Joseph L. Plunkett and intendents and trustees from the) Frank J. Carroll, which will be shown Various school districts of the state! at the Iris theater for the last time and was held in lieu of the State o tonight, in order to adhere to a vivid Teacher: ociation meeting which) reproduction, to have Oriental danc- Was postponed many times on ac-| ers to complete the scene of wild count of the influenza epidemic. revelry. The producers, who wanted “Among the business transacted at} no imitation in any part of the pic- ROOSEVELT 16 EULOGIZED IN STATE SENATE Memorial Adopted by Upper House of Wyoming Pays Elo- quent Tribute to Memory of Great American Seizing advantage of a lull in the legislative grind, the Wyoming state senate adopted a joint resolution pay- ing an etoquent tribute to the memory of Theodore Roosevelt, whose ser- vices to his country will be further eulogized in nation-wide memorials to be held February 9. The memorial follows: “Be it resolved by the Senate, the House of Representatives concurring that the following memorial be draft- ‘LAWRENCE DOLAN, WELL | KNOWN HERE, SUCCUMBS n account of the death of Law- jrence Dolan, formerly 2 Casper con-' | jtractor and well known in oil cir- ,cles here, is contained in a recent issue of the Parkersburg, (W. Va.) Sentinel, and is a source of regret ‘to many friends in Wyoming. Dolan, | according to the report, had been suf- |fering from double pneumonia and had been confined to the hospital for labout a week. Of his death the pa- per says: Mr. Dolan came to this city with jother members of the family twelve |years ago from Washington, Pa., and with his brothers engaged in the oil business. cated in Casper, Wyoming, and came ‘home just before Christmas to spend the holidays with his mother and sis- \ters. He was stricken with influenza | Thursday of last week which speedily | developed into pneumonia and his Recently he has been lo-; TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1919 LABOR SURPLUS According to reports from the local ‘office df the U. S. Employment serv- in Casper is becoming less acute thru the agency of sending all applicants jthat care to leave town, out on rail- |road and other construction work that is being carried on by the railroad companies. During the week since the office ; Was opened up H. H. Tappert the ;examiner in charge has placed nearly seventy applicants in position rang- ‘ing from skilled* clerks to common labor of all kinds. |from the Northwestern railway for ; twenty laborers and in less than half jan hour after the call was_ received the allotment had been filled. The |laborers will be taken to Hudson for ‘special track and construction work. BEING REDUCED ice this morning the surplus of labor} ‘STRIP ALONG RAILROAD — 1S DECLARED WAR ZONE | MEXICO CITY, Jan. 27.—As a mil- ‘itary measure to check the activities of bandits along the railway lines |from the capital to Vera Cruz, Gen- i eral Candido Aguiar nas ordered that a strip 100 meters wide on each side of the Mexican line from Vera Cruz | to Esperanza be declared a zone of | war. Natural hiding places in this | zone will be destroyed and all inhab- itants in the affected area will be forced to prove their pacifist tenden- | cies. All persons other than inhabi- tants of the zone will be gathered in . | and examined by the military. This morning a call was received; oe The annual dinner of the First ; Baptist church will be held Wednes- ,day, February 5th, instead of this ‘week as previously announced. | 1-27-3t ed as a tribute to the memory of condition has been critical from the Theodore Roosevelt. | Start, altho the best of medical skill “One of the greatest characters in fought hard for his life. He was the American history has recently p: youngest son of the late J. P. Dolan | ST or ore Laniac gine men and mechanics. The only! | Stipulations with the order was that | ;they must be able to earn the top| afl |nity for fifty years and is highly re- | spect “ ted by all who know him. ‘Yes, sir, I have so much faith in Tanlac,” continued Mr. Oldham, | {that I have come all the way from Platte City, a distance of twenty-five | miles to get me another bottle of this | wonderful medicine. All these years \I suffered terribly with indigestion lin its worst form, and my stomach was in an awful condition. Just as [soon as I would eat anything I would bloat up so with gas that I would have to let out my belt a few inches, and there was such a tight- |neas in my chest that I could hardly | get my breath. Why, at times even a drink of cold water would seem to ‘set me on fire inside, and often I would turn so faint and weak that I could hardly do a thing. Sometimes {then it would go back on me and I would go for two or three days with- {out eating a thing. I just felt mis- erable all the time and altho I tried everything I could hear of I would ‘only get a little temporary relief. “I have been reading quite a lot about Tanlac in the papers but }eouldn’t make up my mind to try it | till ona day I saw a statement made {by a man in Kansas City who I knew iis absolutely reliable. I have taken only three bottles so far, and consid- | my appetite would seem to be normal,. the h i 1 i df the scene of world’s activi- and Mrs. M Dol H lering the nature of my teoable,. pod meeting was the drawing and in-| ture, had several real Oriental danc-| &4 from the se ys cya and Mrs. Mary Dolan. e was 2 salary and must be discharged sol-! Farmer Finds Relief After Suffer-|the many years I have suffered the dorsing of bills for the betterment of | ers ‘imported from Constantinople. | ties in the person of former President member of the K. of C. and B. P. O.|diers who have had special training} sng for T; tiny ‘way I have improved is just simply ‘education in the state to be presented! And they are given a splendid op- | Theodore Roosevelt. E. lodges. He was 25 years of age jwork in the army. The service has| ing for Iwenty-five Long | wonderful. My appetite is just fine 2 the state legislature for action. “His was a most distinct personal™| and is survived by his mother, twe!also_ listed several applications for Years ¢ portunity to show off their talent One of the measures that will be! ———>__-- Of vital importance to the develop- ment of the state will be a compulsory)} @ducation of boys between the ages! ‘2 ef. 14 and 18 s. The bill pro- POXAL calls for boys between those | MENT LEADS 10 Qges spending ut least part of their | why time in school. In order to briny the rural school into closer touch with the develop- Ment that is experienced in the city achools a bill will be introduced in the legislature creating the office of | Indifference of the war depart nent to appeals for the release and discharge of Lieutenant Lloyd Sny der of Valley, Wyo., whose mental and physical condition made him un fit for service in the army, is given | ty among those Americans of mod- ern times, who have occupied posi- brothers and five sisters as follows: |M. E. Dolan of Ranger, Texas, J. T. | houseworkers. tions of great prominence in national Dolan who is in the United States affairs. | service in France and who has been “His public and private career was ill in the base hospital in that coun- characterized by manly courage and |try: Mrs. Ray Wiles, of Washington, vigor, and while like all Americans: Pa., and the Misses Margaret, Kather- who have been truly great, he be-| ine, Ella and Alice Dolan at homo. lieved in and was identified with the|The funeral arrangements have not polities of his country. He was by his! yet been completed awaiting the ar- fellow countrymen of all parties re- rival of relatives. vered as one whose thoughts and ac- | VATA RIGh Cn aula ee tions were inspired by what he con- ILD BURLINGTON MEN ceived to be his duty as an American citizen, twenty--five years I have ;been looking for something to re-- | lieve my troubles and I believe I have | found it at last in Tanlac,” said Rich- Jard Oldham, R. F. D. No. 1, Platte |City, Mo., recently. Mr. Oldham, INFLUENZA LOSSES ARE - GREATER IN U. S, GAMES ‘known familiarly to his friends as| jand I am not troubled now with in- digestion like I was before, and I am |getting better right along every day. |The way it is with me, if a medicine didn’t help me I would say so; and if it did me good I think it is entitled to the credit, and that is why I say what I do about Tanlac.” Tanlac is sold in Casper by the | Casper Pharmacy and in Alcova by |the Alcova Morcantile Co.—Adv. The world epidemic of influenza jand pneumonia found the A. E. F. | “Dick” Oldham, is a prosperous THAN WITH THE | E f farmer who has lived in his commu- | abe Ta === Wholesale Largest In oloser harmony between schools and supervisor of country school who will as cause for his suicide at Ft. Keough, tem Tegislation tendin work under the county superinten- @ent in helping rv schools, » “The benefit of such a plan,” said Mont., where his body was found in the Tongue river by his father and bnother after the department had Miss Hamilton, “will be the more More uniform « lopment of the reported him as a deserter. W. L students of all cl This step, if taken by the legislature, will permit the appointment of workers that are sorely needed in the more thickly - populated counti t to eliminate | Vestigated the case and recommendea the State School commission has been | the immediate discharge of the young ses, Simpson, chairman of the district ex- | “His conception of American citi- | zenship in public affairs or private life was a virile type based on per- sonal character, active service and lofty patriotism, which will be ac- cepted by this and coming genera- tions as the true standard of Ameri- | canism. “As department official, governor president of our nation it was dem- onstrated that he grasped clearly the 'so busy fighting and so busy working | during the tail end of the autumn! and Rea EXClusive Market ‘7st! that it refused to be crippled or ham-} pered by disease at the time the whole United States was being rav- aged by the twin maladies, says an larticle in the Stars and Stripes, the! official publication of the A. E. F. | , eo Comerford, secretary to N. C.!- In the nine weeks of September 6) emption board of Wyoming had in-| of a great state, vice president, and |Allen while the latter was superin-|t9 November 8, at a time when the tendant of the Casper division of thc | American 7 , army of 2,000,000 was} Burlington, writes to his former chief fighting its winning battles at the, ~ introduced in the legislature, Ae-|™Man. At the time of his suicide he! spirit of the forefathers of our repub- Gordinyr to Miss Hamilton's belief this | V2 suffering from partial paraly, | lie, and the ideals of a government ~- Would prove disastrous to the ad-|5!% dedicated to life, liberty, and the pur- vancement of school interests as the}, C: R. Snyder and Perry Snyder,! suit of happiness, state suyerintendent of public instruc-| father and brother of the young man,| “He rendered conspicuous military went to the fort to investigate his strange disappearance, following a re. Spanish-American war. Upon the out- port that he had been missing and| break of the European war he sa‘ posted as a deserter since December! clearly the underlying causes of this tion ofter attending an average of five board meetings a week could not possibly give the time to school work that would be necessary to carry out service to his country during “the | at Omaha that he is now located ir cost of its heaviest casualties, the! \the office of Lieutenant Colonel Rob-! total of deaths reported in the A.| | bins, who is general manager of one of the railroads in France, according to information to the Tribune fron | | Mr. Allen. gained 20 pounds and he believes hat the climate is as agreeable ta im as the climate of Wyoming, “but E, F.—from all causes—was 19,750 In the United States, during the} {same period, altho the number of; He states that he has;men in camps and cantonments was! approximately half the number of men in France, the total of deaths; was 19,539. | GOOD THINGS TO EAT Beef, Pork, Veal, Lamb, Mutton—We buy in Carload Lots. Special Prices in Large Cuts or Quarters Fresh, Salt, Pickled, Smoked and Canned Fish—Fresh Oysters, Shrimp, Lobsters, Crabs and Blue Points Fresh Dressed Poultry, Game, Butter, Eggs, Fruit and 2 Sai » the advancement policy that has been |=2; mighty conflict, with its dangers to|he longs to get back to Casper.” The proportionate rate of influ-| The word came to the father in x} personal letter from a friend of Lloyd who asked that he come up and see | if he could not untangle the mys-, terious disappearance as he believed! the young man had taken his life instituted in the state. Sach a law would office 1 f an educatio 9 abolish the 1 commissioner tg the needs known to eommissioners, Improvements of various | in v City schools including the adoption of Yovational training of ficials claimed. Father and son met in Billings and | proceeded to Ft. Keough near Miles! City. There they learned that the | many kinds our ideals of government. With all his boundless energy and courage he devoted himself to arousing the citi- zenship of America to the imperative duty of subordinating every other | consideration to that of national safe- ind had not deserted as the army of-| ty and the triumph of freedom and ! democracy over despotism. this crisis of humanity and civiliza- | tion he offered himself, his four sons, And in all that life holds nea : lay of his disappearance his hat had | Sere poeta dear, Ubon | E. H. Piper, Harry Weir ana Frank Maurer, all Casper boys who jworked in the Burlington offices |here, are all located in or near Tours | with very good positions, says Com-} |erford. Piper has the title of master | engineer, senior grade; Weir is in enza and pneumonia in the A. E. F. for the period was only one-eleventh | of the rate of incidence in the states. | Burglars broke into three busi. | ness houses in Glenrock during the past week and stole property and |the telegraph and telephone depart-|cash valued at something less than | ment at Nantes, and Maurer is in the | railroad transportation department at | the same place. | Comerford says that news is scarce $100. Barker’s grocery, the Glen-| rock market and the Northwestern | Lumber company office were among, those burglarized, and $14 in change | Vegetables. We make all our own Luncheon Specialties THE NORRIS CO. —Phone 12— the altar of humanity. “It is fitting and proper that to the was also taken up at the om ‘NB \ been found on the bridge and in it} and recommendations m: | and that he would be glad to hear was secured from the latter place. | to the! was a note stating that if they cared from his friends in Casper, also thay | — legislature. to find his body it would be eadaal memory of such a character the leg- the American Red Cross gave them| FOR SATE eh iaeards ‘pearing’ bn If the plans outlir t the meet-| attached to a wire tied to a lee {Kel islature of a sovereign state should | a good Christmas. ee words ‘or Sale, OF ent,’ ing are put amor ted | location/et whieh! He ate. pay tribute and | “Furnished Rooms For Rent” may b Informa —_—— eee o u “The e, let ii | a ant had been detailed to investigate, | of Wyoming recognizes in the death a-!found the wire tied to the log, pullea a i af ze peer tae ..| Of Theodore Roosevelt a national loss on it hard enough to break it and re-| and joins\in the natlonalaoro@, Pas ported back to his superior officer ualernv, that he found nothing find that in hig Seney CORSON opinion the thing was a ruse to cover <u NET Ue moe. ip A W. W. DALEY, > YELLOWSTONE EXTENSION [sts st een and after careful search the son “Joint Committee.” [found a piece of wire sticking up)’ MUST CLOSE RED LIGHT HOUSE THRU MONDELL seve the ice. The river had froz | en over the ripple which before wat) 4 call for immediate action in clos. the defendants $10 and costs. The in air hole. They secured axes and ing up the red light district has been case developed as a result of a Sat sr ; chopped the ice following the lead of received by Rawlins officials from) urday night fracas when the princi- * lind committee | the wire until it was loosened. The! the governor's office at Cheyenne, | pals staged a little war near thelr ble report on | body was then pulled from the water | Steps will be taken at once to carry homes and the neighbors called in the; ng the boun- where it had been more than twenty ont the mandati | police for referees. i tional park, days. ember of the statutes the schools have received the 4 remedial legislation fr ture in their history. | had at The Commercial Printing Co., }at 15¢ each. In the same room with | | The Tribune. TO THE POLICE COURT _-. _DARTIN Do Not Be Afraid to feed your babies CASPER DAIRY MILK. It is clarified and pasturized, bottled and capped with an electric bottling machine. in. PIERCING SCIATIC PAINS Cive wey before the penee trating effects of Sloax’s Liniment A community riot with Mrs. Grace Land as the complaining witness ana Mr. and Mrs. Uhl, all residents of shacks in the west end of town, was settled in justice court yesterday | ‘afternoon when Judge Tubbs fined | | 5 If you buy tickets it only costs 15c per Quart 9c per Pint We deliver to all parts of the City the Mondell bill exten ries of Yellowston iss Rankin, Montana So do those rheumatic twinges and the loin-aches of lumbago, the nervee inflammation of neuritis, the wry neck, Sennen cueelineneed |e Sot Ye 4, i Famitte eth report and) CDE K SUPPLY | oetecociontontototontoeteateetoeioetoeteatedioeietinetediodiootodged | the joint wrench, the ligament sprain, Vvorabl: vy congress is ex \ bruise, : | reted to in due cou ° > The Mondell bill thus favorably ze-| . ted differs only slightly from the ago 1 ensure introduced some time i The ease of applying, the quict:neso Just Phone 471 f relief, the positive results, the clean iness, and the economy of Sloan's Liniment make it universally preferred, You “re cordially invited to visit our plant at all times ANNOUNCEMENT Inder the new bill some addition 9 | erritory is taken into the kin t AND PURE FOOD AGENT | m Scaliticn | chirsl thes ereau anaes a C SPER D IRY Cc 0 nately south of the present park ° e . = 2 % - jotiidary, and adjacent to th eldahe - s Richards & Cunningham Co. » Finiment ff A A Es ine. This additional territory it is|, 1" response to various complaints KAlls aim relieved should be included in the|that had been made to his office} —fark for two princip: asons. Fi Maurice Groshon, state dairy and! We have just received our spring line of in 30cr GOc. $1.20 Sizes n order to bring within the park the |Pure food commissioner, is in town’ ead from Ashton, Idaho cond, to| today to investigate the local sup-| nelude some territory that is reedea| Bly of anil and run down the source | or, game preservation, particularly |°f complaints. he preservation o fi nd of moose Mr. Groshon stated that from re- hat graze in that section. vorts on file in his office he was| “The other cha: in the boundary | of the opinion that the reports of | 3 the inclusion of some lands imme-|P0r milk were founded on the fact, liately north of the Buffalo fork of|that all milk supplied Casper pur- he Snake river. The former propos-| Chasers is pasteurized and that the d boundary followed the divide be-;P0or milk supplied was rather the ween Pacific creck and the Buffale|Work of half pasteurization rather ts SQUAT Kelly-Springfield Tires are made to make good, we are Dress Ginghams and ' Percales This assortment contains plaid and stripes in all the beautiful colorings. We would urge that you make your selec- ?° + Cotete totes M % ro so-asesteoao-acoateste fo-ale-ofeste-sie-stoete Lato Codtecteaiodtoegs or. The present proposed boundary|than any overt attempt on the part tion while the line is complete. ". sa few miles further south, using) of local dealers, : ere oO see a ey ma e eTheRvOUNdaty: scar Lamb, an operator fro: | Weattalotory ssithe ibe ae Bey pure food office, und Carl Moudy, EXTRA SPECIAL FOR TODAY FINNEGAN GOES SOUTH state chemist, are due in Casper this J. W. Finnegan, vet n passenger| week to make tests and suggestion: onductor of the Northwestern, who|to the dairymen on the proper meth- nows more men in western Nebras-|0d of handling their pasteurization | ~a and Wyoming, to nothing | plants. -tie part of the country, lett Thurs: |, 1% speaking of a recent basket- _ay on his Mnnual trip to his winte: | ball game between the Wyoming Uni- ome at Tampa, Fla. He expects to| versity and Laramie High School con- ‘eturn about April 1, when he wil |tingents the Wyoming Tribune says: same loaded down with Panama hats,|«The Uni had only tow old players ploridmvoranges/and Key Westielgars | inaithe High School had none at all.” oy his friends, and Florida fishing i ries for anybody that will listen.— From the score, 10 to 6, it looks like Jenrock Gazette. neither side had any players. and WEDNESDAY (Two Days Only) Lotom POP eocorecodteiors good. Try us. 36-INCH BLEACHED LAWNSDALE MUSLIN, 29 1-2c PER YARD Think Richards & Cunningham Az When “Jou Want The Best” THE CASPER SUPPLY COMPANY Corner Center and Linden !

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