Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 7, 1919, Page 6

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a ce en ID Pa Te PAGE E SIX_ 5 the Day’s News 1 RAL TRADE | e Casper Dail ere |FEDE 5 Ee y The Tae Pot im In the Day’s News a STORE ADVERTISING TO GET OUT}! KES PAP AT. Issued every evening except Sunday at : 5 v: maa trona_ county, Wyo, Publi- ~~ 5 ie Win vieW of the rumored qatention Closing ‘Out Sale Brings First Customers to Store | TA ‘SHOST cup IS | MYSTERY ation offices: Oil Exchange Building. Princess Robbed Sunday Eve. i ae nn eee Bouse saver svat Chote Chan ity forthe dome _| LEATHER FIRMS| BUSINESS TELEPHONE........... 16 ning,’’ headlines a a as pap’ oe crati presidential nomination pees “There is a store in Pittsburg jand we're not going to quit banging ~ MEXICO Wi BE Enter at Casper (Wyoming) Postortice jthen immediately shatters reud-|year it is interesting to note that the! ending more money for advertising |ahead and meeting conditions as they _—_—_— 2. r of bs a ape is (Oth year an age greater than that) spent to stay in business—and the ‘This is not a fairy tale. It’s the | hundred an y-nine o} an TOKIO. — (By Mail.)-— Chinese REPORTS FROM THE USITED PRESS | ails of a movie burglary. of any president at the time of his pay has been esablished over thirty |truth, and the name and conditions | members of the Wholesale Pal 20 are reported active off the , Business Manager Dene os 2 bo oer f the Pittsbur; fee J or was found swimming iti the se: d J.B. GHiREITY sa late Editor MoM LauWetatel sheepeinspectur |United States house of representa. |si9g manager o: ie Pi | STABILIZA TION | dered by the federal fata commi \brought back to Japan: Sth on EERE eee Edis ee tives after having filled the ortice| ~ “The closing-out sale is crowding sion to stop trade practices which, the one of the crew of eight who sailed = Advertising Representatives is numbered among the business visit-/through four congresses. He is a lensueesen eee ne pat RGR PAN OF STEEL, AIM commission held, constituted con- pre oe ee trom rei j UtSalh ce ede aici. Ave ors in Casper from Sheridan today.) Kentuckian, was educated at Bethany | acer to ‘parti.with oodles Notliresl | spiracy in restraint of trade. |Off the SHERCuy count Phres thats ; Ray Higsipeaver, Colo. '9®" He is here on an official inspection | College and at the Cincinnati School | oney, which has caused the proprie- . OF REDFIEL D ia |junks drew rapidly alongside and 30 Denve! Eas A . F of Law, and for a time was an educa. | lnfrates armediwith. pistols’andiaword : pBSCRI N ES trip in connection with the coming of ier But the practice of law was to|t0F to wonder why the only real suc- MODERN WOODMEN. pirates arme P jords : ones matilerr Carstae : Be <¢,~. (cess in the store’s history came after boarded the schooner, looted the ves- the sheep dipping season. “Cooks and waiters be his calling, as a preparation for new! politics, and, in the course of time, Regular meeting Friday evening, |sel and put the crew to the sword. - Six Months the had decided that he was ready! ° ; Business ; ‘The only survivor jumped overboard NEW YorK, , March 6.—Action of | Six Months - fi ae jfor membership in the ancient ofder ‘Secretary of Commerce Redfield in; March 7th at Moose Hall. On> Monta . 0 Sadli ye? s 2 lit e Per Copy... union,” runs a local headline. We're [which he at eale home Green fags jof down-and-outs. ‘seeking to stabilize the steel industry; of grent importance that will inter [sae kept afloat until rescued. 1 ae 4 No subscrip r Wiss PORE less period than three months. lost.—Peoria Transcript. “The funny thing is the way the in anticipation of possible future ad- All subscriptions must be paid in ad: AE Tes est every neighbor. All visiting neigh- | {value of advertising has to be choked verse conditions vas characterized to the present time he has been ay Hoveiaraipaqueetedt (olla tect) We make a special of salary loans anc * The Daily Trib: ill not member of congress. In 1912 he was 4 u Insure delivery atter subscription be- The chief objection to the various|the closest rival to Mr. Wilson for down this merchant's throat. It must 2s tending ‘to affect business pro-| LOUIS H. SCHMIDT, | Security Loan Company; Suite 302. u comes one month in arrears. i casntialiioni have left an awful bitter taste when gress” by Elbert H- Gary, chairman}, ¢ 5 ¢ Clerk. LOS. Bldg. _ 1-2-tf ' ——ooOOO—— brews of near-beer is that they are!the demorcratic presidential nomina ‘it. was finally and violently kicked of tke United States Stee! corpora-| - ~ = — Member of the Associnted Prean fi Sachvijje | tion. ey ddi bef mbers, 4 The Associated .Press is exclusively SO near and yet so far —Nashviile) ——— home to him that he couldn’t even tion in an address before me: 3 LISS MPP SH HHS ¢ a entitled to the use for republication of , z . | —_—_—______ {quit successfully_without advertis-;of the American Iron and Steel in-| 1 alt hews dispatches Gredited to it or not Southern Lumberman 1 y A * W | jing. = stitute. Manufacturers, however, ac- rw re is paper an x . areettekt c Biso the local news published herein. : j! ear go in ar | “The proprietor didn’t know, the cepted the secretary’s invitation to A ee Turkey’s interest in the proceed-) ¢&———#————_ | British house of commons votea vtising man (?) didn’t know and “co-operate with his department. ae SS u GIRLS WANTED ON FARMS. Collec-. + s { chattel jecu- Eleven persons killed in night air|tively they thought they knew. 1 ens Oe Foe era asians raid on London by German airplanes | ““Here was a ‘nice’ store. Every Ide. 1-2-tf British chancellor of exchequer re-|™man connected with it agreed that it Bldg. adv ings is now merely a mild curiosity ithe salesmen didn’t know. war credit of $3,000,000,000. as to who gets what.—Chicago Daily * The Woman’s Land Army of | u News. America is not to be demobilized. On Sr 83 the contrary it is seeking many more The returned soldier isn’t fully re 320,000,000. |was beautiful. The kind of people it | rted war loans to Allies totaled; Was ‘nice.’ The store atmosphere | T 0 rs FOR honored as its patrons had to be recruits. The national director of turned until he is returned to his a ET 2 \handied with spotlessly clean kid =~ ; \ oa | nandled | government, is organizing branches! set ye | ‘by advertising. Yes, mortally offend- | i ; of the farmerette army in the states; Every nation in Europe and sor ¢)” Birthday greetings to Champ Clarke ed, who today enters upon his 70th year. that Through these in 5 ' rolled by, and, incidentally, as other | branche: d girl: lever, if it can get its terms adopted.|_, The Roman Catholic diocese of z hi li 4 b ches many women and girls wi | 9 Helena, Mont., celebrates its 35th an {stores in the same line of business jgrew up, the ‘nice’ customers of the | most. Asia want to see peace last Tor: “But, one by’ one, as the years You don’t have to rub it in to get quick, comfort- need it be placed on farms this coming sum-| mer, in units and in smaller groups. Last summer many units of student workers to the farms as an emergency measure. The young colleges sent women made good. Farmers want more of them in the coming season And the girls themselves enjoyed the work, became interested in agricul- ture and wish to receive further training in this work, There are at seasonal trades who either are idle many women working during the summer, The college women, too, have nearly three savings, or work at odd jobs. months which many of them would rather spend in some useful occupa- tion than as purely pleasure vaca- The both groups of young women a chance to tions. land army offers make a living wage during the farm- er’s busiest season. If working and living conditions are after, the land a properly looked should become more popular as knowledge of its possibilities spreads, The physical exercise in the open air should do a good deal to refresh their minds and bodies wearied by study, indoor life and sedentary work. a Bead PROFIT LOST IN SMOKE. Municipalities or industries could make money by abolishing smo} cording to C. W. Rice, secreta the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. He says: ‘Present en- gineering knowledge shows that smoke is only particles of coal made up of carbon, and that it can be abated successfully and will pay for itself i by-preducts. One hundred een tons of fertilizer goes up in smoke frem the industries of the country year.’”” J jentally there is a good deal of wear and tear on clothing in com munities where the smoke nuisanec still s in all its wasteful blach- ness. Sunlight is shut out, injuriag veretation, The atmosphere is pol- mful effect on the he of people in the vicinity, Houses and buildings look shabby and dingy all the time even when paint is frequent- ly applied, and whole neighborhoods are rendered ugly and dismal by th unchecked outpouring of smoke from es, railroads, buildings anc To change all this—letting in sunshine and pure air, brightening up the appearance of the town with aer- ial cleanliness, increasing the health of the population—would be enough dle to make smoke reduction worth while, if. only citizens had energy to tackle the proposition. But th more are still further benefits of a material nature accruing from the abatement of this nuisance. Prop- er combustion reduces the amount of Smoke re- smoke and conserves coal. duction also yields various Bernro ducts which, authorities will fully pay the nee of the It is business sure us, expense plain, com proposition, acy process. mon-sense way you look at it, and some day no truly enlightened comunity will per- this public nuisance and great waste of resources. living on small corkscrew.—Rochester Post Express. y Otherwise, otherwise.— Pittsburg Dis- niversary today. New: faper publishers of Arkansas, ; M pi and Tennessee meet in Memphis today for the annual con- ' patch, * 8 @ The great problem of the next de vention of the Tri-State Press As cade will be to obliterate the es- sociation. Yrangement that has come to exit, Senator Knox of Pennsylvania, and F Congressman Kelly of Michigan, are between mankind and the plow- ccheduled to speak tonight at. the handles.—Houston Post. annual banquet of the McKinley clui: * * * of Canton, O. A meeting is to be held in Phila- delphia today by the committee o: Canada will soon have a population organization of the proposed coun- of 50,000,000. And if they repeal cil of organic union, which contem their plates a tangible organic amalga- mation of twenty-five protestant de- Cleveland Plain Dealer. nominations in the United States. 2 Texas Cotton association, W. W. agitators find 'whose membership handles about 96 ¢ per cent of all the cotton exported from Texas and Oklahoma, is to meet them strenuously object to being de-\at Galveston today for its annua: ported to their dear old homesteads. convention. The senate committee investigating radical tion in the United States has tentatively set today for hearing knocks at the’ Ambassador Francis, who has but re Here is 2 cently arrived in the United States 5 ;. from Russia. New York man who is said to have The premier of Manitoba says that dry laws, there’s. no telling — Bad as the I. this sadly governed country, many of —Boston Transcript. es 2 8 Opportunity often door when it is too late. _>- REALTY ACTIVE Somebody lectured tast night on LN CASPER, SAYS THE “LOT MAN” “Our Dough-gir What, we need are dough-girls in the hoines knead the just received a patent for a perfect ’ in France.. —girls who dough more 1 H ' More real estateetransfers have and need the dough less.—Houston occurred in Gasper during the past Post. two months than during the whole year of 1918, according to the state- ments of Harry Free the well known real estate man. Besides local en- deavor Mr. Free has secured the agency in Casper of the Midwestern Investment company which is putting on the sale of lots in the High School the Japanese and the and Niobrara Park additions at Lusk. Fagan and Russell have charge of the sale of these properties in Lusk and evidencing the fact that Lusk people have great faith in the future of the properties the Lusk agents in one ‘day sold lots to Lusk residents. sful It is the conjecture of an inmate of Washington, D. C., who reads The Times of that ¢ that the next is going to be between the two gr yellow races, followers of the Hearst press.—New York Tribune. ‘ Today’s Anniversaries | ¢ Harry Free reports suce 1802—-Sir Edwin Landseer, England’s sale in the additions in the new oil animal painter, born in Lon- center. The Niobrara park addition don. Died there Oct. 1, 18 is located about 300 yards or less 1814—John Howard Raymond, than three blocks north of the North- ond president and real organ- western depot which is virtually in izer of Vassar College, born|the center of the town. The High in New York City. Died at School addition is in the more choice Poughkeepsie, N. Y., March 1, residence district on the south side 1878. of the town. 1844—Anthony Comstock, whose life Lusk is experiencing a growth at work was devoted to crusades the present time that possibly has against vice, born at New Ca- never ted a town in Wyoming. naan, Conn. Died at Sum- The de: tion of Lusk as the di- mit, N. J. Sept. 21 1915. vision point in Niobrarg,county and 1863—Entry into London of Princess the increasing? commercial _activi- Alexander of Denmark bride ties in the Lance Creek field supply elect of the Prince of Wales. center have established the growth on 1869—Governor Holden of North g steady basis. Caroli declared Almanace The e of the lots will continue county in a state of insurrec- for a while longer, a definite date for tion, us a resull of Kuklux ac the closing of the sale in the addi- tivities. tion having not yet been decided on. 1902—Lord Methuen, the British The commander, wounded and tak en prisoner by the Bo —Great battle at Piliea between the Germans and the Russians. 1916—Germans at Verdun captured forces in great drive against the French. 1917—Irish nationalists demanded an “ prices, however, will gradually jincrease with the inc ed building ‘of houses in the district affected. _ A recent invention in France is an electric clock that runs without at- | tention as long as its battery is in good condiion, began 1915 ee mee I WANT YOUR BRICK WORK ne rule lan On Contract or Percentage Call for Estimate PETER CLAUSEN Soegeegoes & Today's Birthdays | . ee O |) 416 So. Jackson { Champ Clark, late speaker of the al United States house of representa- 066 0O499O5OOOR es, born in Ande: 69 years ago toda Henry Mayers 1 of the National NatronaFuel Co. Phone 949 on county, Ky., 3 ndman, chairman Socialist party o: Great Britain, born in London, 77 ‘ youra’ego today. J. L. BIEDERMANN; Prep: Dr, Ira N. Hollis, president of Wor- cester Polytechnic Institute, born aby Moorestown,, Ind., 68 years ago to-| : woop.’ day. City Office 157 S. Center Sewell Ford, one of the most suc- Street cessful of American short-story writ- Gen. Office 5th and Beech ers, born at South Levant, Me., 51 > Streets jyeurs ago today. |Soees SCb842O06-000606008 ing relief nice’ store said farewell to old mother h and quietly went to their last’ lresting places. Dry rot became’ in- Once you've tried it on that : stit grown. Curtain, finale, flowers and joint, sore muscle, sciatic pain, 2 rheu- wreaths. matic twinge, lame back, you'll find “Oh, what individual effort could, a warm, ing relief you, never thought a ‘iaiment could produce. — Won't stain seat leaves no Zanes Wastes no time in applying, sure give quick results. A large bottle scoonomy. Your own or any other "has has ‘it. Get it today. Sloan's m ime mt I< iS Paim 20c, 60c and $1.20. have accomplished! Oh, what could have happened had theré been one man to speak out in a loud. voice, wave his arms and put some pep into the institution! “The reformers tell us of the lovely lthings that are going to be when as-| sociations and organizations rule the | roost and individual thought and ef- fort are relegated to the ash can. But we are not going to mi meals or hold our breath w: NOW LISTEN! : Never placed Our Butter is fresh made every day. me in storage or jobbing houses, b, “SAY NATRONA BUTTER” > “It’s Always Fresh and Made in Casper.” Whipping Cream Every Day EEE You Tried Our Cottage Cheese? - It's Delicious - Natrona Butter Shop 4 112 N. Durbin Phone 943 +9 099050-000006000000000005 “BARNETT’S OF COURSE” Saturday and Monday Specials GREAT WESTERN ALL WOOL MACKINAW COATS These garments have been popular with the trade for years, because of the splendid quality of materials and excellent workmanship. xu double breasted style, 34 inches long with igh shawl collar. Made of 30-ounce all-wool Mackinaw Cloth. These Coats are made with a feat half-belt back or all around belt. reg It is a “service” coat in every sense of the word. We have many colors and sell regularly for $12.50. shecialy 9 85 @' Now ... Great Western Leather Sleeve Vests Outside shell fine quality drab moleskin, heavy weight. Body lining and sleéves of extra heavy quality brown mocha chamois. Patented shawl knit worsted collar. All worsted knit wristlets, trimmed with ivory buttons to match outside shell; 22 inches long; all sizes. Regular $10.00 vests, now ... Regular $13.50 vests, now . Regular $14.50 and $15.00 vests, now...... Regular $16.50 vests, now . $13.85 Regular $18.00 vests, now $14.95 All Suits and Overcoats 20 per cent Off Special Reduction on all Odd Dress and Work Trousers It. D. Barnett Outfitting Zo. 121 East Second Street 1M ° > —M 3 \ bry: | mm] es E P CASPER KO ¢ eaeeeee _ Preliminary Game EAST.CASPER BOYS __ vs. + PARK BOYS . High School Gym noo vs. be LARAMIE HI. . : VF dialalelahelehetated ERK REA KAMA IIE ERIK EI The MANHATTAN CAFE Phone 34 Casper, Wyo. 140 South Center Strect 2 Our aim is to please the most particular. Clean and well cooked food is health. Health to our patrons méans success to us. The meats used in our establishment are the best procurable. The milk, cream and butter comes’ from our selected dairies. Coffee, highest grade, especially prepared for us, fresh daily and served with absolutely pure cream. Our pies, cakes, puddings and all pastries are home made. Soups, tempting and delicious. Absolufely pure. Steaks, of quality and quantity to satisfy the hungriest. Orchestra entertainment dinner and supper hours. HHKKHEHRERERRELEE: UKE NRE HHH: N SOIT TTO TESTO TIO, \ BEST BOWL OF CHILI IN TOWN \ ._15¢ AT THE CHILI KING LUNCH Back of Grand Central Bar. N gael fan All kinds of Sandwiches at / N Quick service, highest quality. Ia asd CALL 74.) igus See Ben Peanstex Co Stanley Overbaugh, Prep. xine sod Heavy 1 Hea. Furniture and Piano moving a GUISE AND Si AND SATISFACTORY SERVICE WHY WASTE TIME AND MONEY BUYING NEW PARTS? _ Ship or. Bring Us Your Broken Castings or Parts to be Welded. ; : BRAZERS OF: CAST IRON, STEEL, BRASS, DO! METALS—ALL Yeerwesererreees

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