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ca WANE | 2 . ° ° ° ° ° ° ro ' - _ What is legal tender, is the tech-|he staged here next Tuesday by the MANY LOGAL BOYS AMONG WAR HEROES NOW RETURNING sss, sine hss, ouing Bsn’ seared the erie H Sheriff Pat Royce, who states that|of Prof. Rudolph Lundberg as a vo- _ he has lived 29 years in Wyoming | ¢q) soloist. / and yesterday was the first time that | Mr. Lundberg has appeared at a he was ever forced to accept pennies! number of recitals in Casper but this in change. The question developed will be his RED CROSS OFICE HAS PRAISE FOR THE S1ST DWSION PEWW7ES LEGAL [FOREMOST SOLOIST T0 7 : is see Sie ah >| R, ROYCE | ’ | WRITES ACI OF UT FROM TIME OF DEPTURE. “Accezprs rove SNGATELGS’ MINSTREL t was a ten-strike for the man- 2 SATURDAY, FEB. 15,'1919 magazine and later appearing book hi form with great success. z = Jean becomes a cook in a literary family, living in the country, and save her sick husband and so notifies Wright, who sends for Dan. He goes The legion of admirers of Mary }to Barbara’s home. firm in the resolve Pickford, will find her new Artcraft|:Tet he will not give ee a photoplay, “How Could You, Jeap?”’ | 4 . to be shown at the Iris next Sunday, from Wright and the sight of Ruyter one of the best vehicles in which she | Dring, ordered from. the house. ie In_a letter of consolation to Mr.| camouflaged behind the Ninety-first, | pea eee gre tea a Barbara is again in “Dan’s arms. i os i ts lightful story which emphasizes the and Mrs. Party Mathison of Laramie) so other hundreds were roaring be- over the death of their son, Harry) hind each of the other divisions. The Zasper Judge Among Ten Resi- a Oe a ss A c th ; ; : is dents of State to Represent Lester Mathison, who died of wounds| volume of sound was amazing to these | when Attorney Patten, to play'a joke|stage in thi Bey and the mudionee ie| truth that even aristocratic young| Save your money—eat at the Har. Wyoming at Trans-Missis- received in action on October 1, Lieu-! boys of Washington, Oregon, Califor-, on the sheriff, forced him to accept assured of a rare treat for he bears|WOmen, when impoverished, will find vey. tenant Colin V. Dyment of the Red Ned \ nia, Utah, Montana, Wyoming, and| Cross service gives the best review themselves equal to every require- sippi Congress the insignificent coin in part payment /an international reputation as a vocal- Judge Charles E. Winter of Cas-) ser is among ten Wyoming residents appointed by Governor Robt. D. Sarey to represent the state at the of the activities of the 91st division that has come to public notice in Wyoming. In view of the fact that m&ny Casper and Wyoming men other states that contributed men to! 9¢ this divisidn. They‘were in front of | most of the guns, but there were guns certain legal services. jist and as an instructor in his art. — eae | ll a 1 them. For hi s this went i} all ercund them, For hours this vent’ RAWLINS SEEKS Q{HERS MAY BE DRAWN ment imposed upon them by their new environment, even though cir- CHICHESTER Ss PILLS cumstances force _them to earn their 2 ots) oa tos livelihood as ordinary house cooks. blamond |. This charming photoplay is based with: ‘ether. are members of this division, which) miles, | lupon the novel of the same name by po Asker Trans-Mississippi Readjustment Con-! was made up at Camp Lewis, Amer-! The hour was 5:30 a. m. That hour READJUSTMENT 3 INTO BOOZE THEFT CASE. Eleanor Hoyt | Brainerd, published yearakenown oa Best, Sateets Al zress ite Be held ant Omaha epee ican vale, Wi eS cola WIDELEX on the 26th of September is a fateful | OF LIGHT RA TE serially some time ago, in a leading SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE \ (8, 19 and 20. the following ap-' erpts from the le’ er are publishe one for hundreds of western parents. | —— = e : oi dointments have been announced: | ‘The transport carrying the Ninety- It was then the Ninety-first went over | The threat of several Burlington| John E. Osborne of Rawlins, Jacob’ first reached Southampton, England.| the top, and within a few days from | 4. pee ee ‘; eh 1. Schwoob of Cody, Joseph M. Carey on July 20, 1918. .Next day they! that time, and within a few miles of |_ Application has been made to the| €mployes who were recently arreste of Cheyenne, Dr. J. M. Wilson of} started across the channel to France.) the Forest de Hesse, most of the men |State Public Seey Commission by| charged with stealing” whiskey in ST. M A RK’S CHURCH t McKinley, Judge William c. Mentzer | reaching Cherbourg, alinost opposite | Jost by the d usnebrancethad pe Beviling lectric Light & Buel cases from sealed cars, that if every CG er of Casper, William E, Chaplin’ marched to a British camp three miles) ~ The writer spoke to some of the |2 oy Rene ueem te PS.! was arrested the railroad would lose hn. 5 of Cheyenne, A. H. Marble of Chey-| from Cherbourg and there rested one) men GEL ANG Tiincoh based and ase pean rate Tera a mumber (of ita) employes, is being | R a ee LS ee, ae Sun wnne, Fred H. Blume of Sheridan and) week. | fortieth as they went in. ‘Give ’em|# Consume ze to use! thoroly investigated by H. J. Rob- e un- : *ennimore Chatterton of Riverton. | From Cherbourg they traveled by} hell, Buddy,” he said to one group;|#" ¢Xtravagant amount of electricity, erts and other special agents of the egu ar services esum ; Problems looking to the readjust cent of the country to peace con- {tions will be discussed by leading uthorities and the following pro- m is enlightening with respect to ils of the conference: Tuesday Morning, February 18 Address of welcome by Mayor Ed. >, Smith of Omaha and Gov. S. R. fcKelvie of Nebraska. Statement of purpose of the Con- cress by John W. Gamble, president Jmaha Chamber of Commerce. Tuesday Afternoon Address: “Readjustment Problems ‘f the Middle West,” by Harry A. fe} Vheeler, president of the Chamber) ;,,, h. mae h ere “came out,” another division relieving h o t jing north, They knew they were “came . isio ie HARRY FREE, Agents, i rse i ‘£ Commerce of the United States. bound for the front, but did not know| it. It rested three days in a woods 157 So. Center Se | ae Pyare Galy slsee in Colorado | Address: “Getting Back on the/+9 what part of it. They were) from which it had recently driven the : 2 y PB fighway of Progress,” by J. Ogden (rmour, Chicago. Reading of Message from Judge 5. H. Gary, U. S. Steel Corporation. Tuesday Evening Address: “Pan-Americanism and ts Mighty Meaning,’’ by Hon. John Sarrett. director general pan-Amer- can Union, Washington, D. C. Address: “Water Ways and Their nfluence on Foreign Trade,” by Wal- er Parker, Chamber of Commerce, Yew Orleans, La. Wednesday Morning, February 19 Reserved for group meetihgs of 22 llied groups of business, agriculture nd professional men. Wednesday Afternoon Address: “The Financial Outlook,” y Arthur Reynolds, Continental and train to St. Nazaire, near the mouth of the river Loire, in northwest! France. They remained there one | month, They then entrained for a new training area in eastern France. in the department of the Haute Marne.} some 20 miles southeast of Chaumont. | A town called Montigny-le-Roi was the center of this training area. The; men were billeted in small villag within a few miles of Montigny-l | Roi. They arrived there late in! August, and received their last train- | ing preceding the battle. On September 6 they began mov-| | greatly keyed-up at the prospect of | getting into the fighting for which {they had trained so long. | As it turned out, the part of the | front to which they proceeded was 100 miles north of Montigney-le-Roi. | Their first move was by train to | Gondrecourt, which is in the extreme | south end of the department of the Meuse and is about 18 miles north | of Neufchateau. From there to the | front they marched, and always at night so that the Germans would be| jless apt to learn of their coming. | Meanwhile, also, numerous other American divisions were marching up by night toward the front, for the! great drive in the Argonne was about to begin. The second stop was in the woods | 362nd infantry were sent, and fought and to another, “Go get ’em, boys. “You bet I will,” came the answer. Not, “You bet we will.” That was the spirit with which the doughboys went in. Each seemed to feel it was right up to him. The faces confirmed | it. \ ch: to ling From September 26 to October 4 je6n set for the Ninety-first fought magnificently. | tion, the Gqneral headquarters congratulated it in a telegram. Many of the men| were too brave for the good of the army; in their absence of fear they | 9° got wounds not always On the 4th of October the division| , Germans. Then there was a call for two regiments nd the 361st and the! till October 13. Meanwhile the rest of the men had been drawn back by slow stages to the region of Bar-le- Due and there the 361s8t and 362nd joined them October 15. The fighting of the division from September 26 to October 13 was prin- cipally near the following village: Cheppy, Very, Epindnville, Eclisfon- taine, Avocourt, Cierges, Gesnes and Charpentry. Only the best maps show these villages, which are all tin They are only a few miles apart, and range from 12 to 25 miles west, and | | slightly north, of Verdun. Just to |= the southwest of the area is Varen- i= = Ei nes; nine miles to the north is |tion. at a smaller cost than he would be arged had he practiced conserva- eliminate this by adopting’ a slid- gf scale system. hearing on the peti- —— Liberty Bonds at 100 cents on the llar, in exchange for Lusk lots Don’t take less. necessary ; . | often they would not take cove | MIDWESTERN INVESTMENT CO.. Owners, 21 OIL EXCHANGE BUILDING. 2-14-2t| where the Genuine Keeley Remedies Willar SERVICE That is, he may pay less for 100 kilowatt hours one month than) ‘he pays for 85 or 00 kilowatt hours! the next month. The company se; ks, So far no date has| NH road. Another warrant ‘in the case was} issued yesterday afternoon ° against Will Davis, a negro who will be charged with grand larceny in con- nection with stealing a case of whis- key valued at $45 from the Burling-| ton. He will be turned over to the} county authorities today. KEELEY Cor. Eighteenth and Curtis Sts. | DENVER, COLO. LIQUOR AND DRUG ADDICTIONS A STORAGE BATTERY STATION day, February 16. , Services at 8:00 and 11:00 a. m. and 5:00 p. m. Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. EVERYBODY WELCOME Do Not Be Afraid to feed your babies CASPER DAIRY MILK. It is clarified and pasturized, bottled and capped with an electric bottling machine. If you buy tickets it only costs 15c per Quart 9c per Pint We delfver to all parts of the City ‘ommercial Bank, Chicago, III. about 15 miles north of Gondrecourt,, Romagne; just at the northeast edge e Ney) “Posponeihilities of Vie-| where the division remained in the| is Montfaucon—these three places eatin ac rost Just Phone 471 ee ‘Trust; rain over Sunday. The third was in| are shown on smaller maps. 1 itt Ci another woods around the villages of; In these villages, in the numerous You are cordially invited to visit our plant at all times inesday Evening Void and Vacon. The fourth was in| woods and thickets that lie between | He’s a hard fellow to beat when he’s after y ant en's Pa Feed-| and around Vavincourt. The men them, in dugouts on sidehills, and in| your radiator. r by Julius Barnes,| were now 5 miles from the firing line. | ravines, the Germans made a most de- ‘ood Administration ter,” by John P. Frey nicrnational Moulders Jour: innati, Ohio. Thursday Morning, February 20 Address: ‘‘The Red Cross in Eu- ope,” by Gov. Henry J. Allen of Editor al, Cin- Address: “Agricultural Problems in he Great We: Touston, secretary Vashington, D. C. Thursday Afternoon Adoption of declarations made at he 22 group meetings and codified by he Clearance Committee. of agriculture, “Labor During the War| "by Hon. David F.| Vavincourt is four mile northeast of Bar-le-Duc. Most of the places mentioned above | and most of those mentioned in cas-| | ualty reports, are too small to appear | on any but the best of French maps. | | The division’s journey from Monti-| gny-le-Roi to the front may be fol- | lowed fairly well, however, by draw- | ing a line on the map from Montigny- le-Roi (a point, as stated, southeast of Chaumont) almost straight north | thru Neufchateau, Bar-leDuc, and Clermont. These last four towns are ‘shown on nearly all maps. | _ The men’s fifth stop was jn a series | of villages ten miles back of the front, ; to which, one pitch-dark night, they | first. termined resistance to the Ninety- They did not send out infantry to fight, but posted scores of rifle (nipers and machine gun men, many of whom would shoot’ until the Amer- icans got right to them, then would ery “kamerad.” The country was roush and hard to fight thru, the advantage being with the defender. Yet under such conditions the men made mile after mile in spite of many casualties, fter a short rest ten miles north- erly fgom Bar-le-Duc, the d vision entrained for Belgium. The dntraining point was Revigny (shown on most maps.) The destination was Roulers, in Belgium, 15 miles east of But it’s easy to keep him from.getting a death grip on your battery. Keep your battery charged right up so that whenever you take a hydrometer test the reading will be Then your battery even if the thermometer goes down to 20 below. If you don’t know just how to make the hydrometer test we'll be glad to show you. AUTO ELECTRICAL CO. up to the 1.285 mark. will be fully protected CASPER DAIRY CO. PLANTS + TREES Ihave both. Trees are scarce this season and prices are high. Place your order for trees before March 1st or you may get left. I refuse to sell trees not suit- able for planting in this locality. ‘WM. MOSTELLER ————<—<—____ made a long march from Vavincourt.| Ypres and 50 miles by rail from Spark Plugs ys . i ; i A jone 1 F 3 or 557-M Evenings Thence they marched a couple of! Revigny. The men left Revigny Oc- Accessories > “i nights later to a large woods directly, tober 17. NEARING OF UNIFORMS BY DISRHAREED MEN [5 SUBJECT 10 U. 6. RULES The following order has been re- eived from headquarters at Fort Rus ell touching upon the wearing of back of the lines. These woods are known in France as the Forest de Hesse. They are straight west of Ver- j dun some 15 miles, and about 150 miles east of Paris. The Ninety-first reached the Hesse | forest before dawn on the 21st of. |September. The men put up their {Pup tents. They were thot allowed | out of the woods. Great trucks brot in their food, and other supplies. 2 From October 17 to the men re- mained back of the Belgium front, in or near Roulers, Issegehm, and Ingel- munster. On the 29th they began to go forward again. With the old men now were several thousijnd new men, not from the country west of the Roc » but principally from Ohio, Indiana, Mlinois, and lowa, good men likewise. Orders were to attack at 5:30 a. m. W. S. WRIGHT, Mgr. 111 East 1st St. Phone 968-J We test, repair and recharge storage bat- teries, and always carry a full supply of bat- tery parts, new batteries and rental batteries. EERE EEEEE: HERRERA ETE EE: CASTLE & MECHALEY CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 141 W. Second St. » Telephone 20 YOU BUILDERS. SEE CASTLE & MECHALEY 5 7 ; “ for delivery of gravel niforms by discharged soldiers,| Under cover of night, and eve October 31 thre 1 one-h For gravel and exca Our price e ‘hich is of interest to many’ dis"| day, hundreds of uns were being Mile front, running roughly from. ah | MUMIA UN spaioend| Oh SO) mer] Yardii dell Yery, SAYiz aro town: barged een 3 | moved up and put in position, These Mile front, running roughly from the | = ae ——— = — = We give you good service Present law authorizes a discharged guns were so cleverly hidden that City of Waereghem to the hamlet of | er or soldier to wear h om the place of disct ph A mile ahead (Waereghem should appear oft good Val roduce Man , within thre Frenchmen held the front line, while ™8ps of Belgium.) The objective 0 an tanger é ley Es ate of his di hi 1 the serv- another mile farther dn were the Was the large city of Audenarde, on e Ve Hay, Grain and Farm Products. . / e. erenfter may wear Germans. At this ti that t the river Eschaut, ten miles to t = i 1 eremony. camp was disturbed but little by In less than four days the division, The enlisted man must return his niform within four mdnths of date f discharge; but can wear it only us tated above. i | Don’t Neglect that Knock of Un- An act is now before congress,’ xbout to ji . iver Esh: u - An 3 i : F zo into battle. The writer|Tiver Eshaut. On November 4 the t one ais shich if passed, will authorize enlist- watched many of them that night and|™en Were again relieved and. sent \$ familiar noise in your motor. d men to keep the uniform which hey are permitted to wear home, and o Wear that particular uniform, only, wrovided some distinctive mark or asignia, to be issued by the war de- artment, shall be worn. It will thus be clearly seen that either under existing or proposed * aw will a discharged soldier be per- pa searcely detect them. ssersby on the forest roa Ss could shells, and had no casualties. On the evening of September 25 the men were ordered to “strip their packs,” by which they knew they were was struck by the determination or most of their faces. It was certain that the Ninety-first was about to do itself credit. Early that night the units began to move thru the Hesse forest. Just before midnight they stopped behind the front line. In the morning the St brugge to the southeast. aided by British on the right and the French on the left, with other Ameri- cans on the left of the French, had driven the last German beyond the back to billets 12 miles from Audep- arde. There they lay until November 10, Then came orders to go forward again, apparently for a third offen- sive. ie The third drive was not needed. At 5 a.m. of November 11, before the The Nicolaysen LumberCo. EVERYTHING IN BUILDING MATERIAL RIG TIMBERS 4 A SPECIALTY THE LIFE OF A CAR © Catch the trouble before it develops into anything seri- ous. Let us give your car a thoro inspec- tion at least once a month. Our ‘ ; Z French were to step out, and the| Ninety-first could get into action, the expert atten- = aitted to wear uniforms made by Americans were not only to step in,} German government gave up. F tion will save , ivilian or other tailors. Theyt may but to go straight ahead. The home address of the writer is} nn jee dol egally jwearionly ithe particular unt. East of the Ninety-first, and west| Seattle, Washington, care of Univer- oe ate ~~ orm which they have been permitted of it, other American divisions had| ity of Washington. He expects to be| He “] | ers enc imeer o retain. taken their places similarly in a long| at the University after August, 1919. | FARM MACHINERY WAGONS your car in “ 5 RSPR! F line. The drive was to extend over| If further information is then de- . jl pec Brora Ly teas time,” sayy 240 mile front. It was to streteh| sired, a letter will reach him there, GAS ENGINES COAL spléndid shape v4 fr. Dooley, and it’s here Paes from east of Verdun to west of the| 2nd the information will be furnished nocking at. your door, telling you Argonne forest. There Were some| if he has it. No inquiry should be S : o buy a lot in the new High Schoot French to take part at the east end|®ddressed to the writer, or to the eS pee and at the west end of this 40 miles, | Red Crome,” Tegarding. location of , e Wa a e 1IDWESTERN INVESTMENT Co,, >Ut mostly the line was American. | &Tave, however; all such inquiries Owners, | ©°"| “Soon after midnight on the night of| should go to the Grave Registration | Phone 62. Office and Yard, First and Center. 221 OIL EXCHANGE BUILDING. | the 25th a wonderful artillery prepar-| Service, United States Army, Wash- : My HARRY FREE, Agents, 157 So. Center St. ealacou| | ation began along the whole 40 miles, Just as hundreds of guhs of immense size, and hundreds of smaller size, lay ington, D. C. COLVIN V. DYMENT, | Lt. A. R. C., 91st Division. i Keep Your Pledge—Buy War Savings Stamps 123 West Second Casper, Wyo.