Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 29, 1919, Page 3

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Farewell Party for Ed Slater Father Mullin will entertain at a dinner dance in honor of Ed Slater tomorrow evening at the Mullin club. Covers will be laid for twenfy- eight. Casper Amusement | Club Dance Te Casper Amusement club will giv. its weekly dance at the Ma- sonic Temple tonight. The Iris or- chestra will furnish the music and a good time is anticipated. -_* * The Pepper Club will meet to-/ night at the home of Mrs. R. H. Nichols on South Pine street. iJ * * Father Mullin has as his house guests his mother, his brother Wil- liam and his aunt, Mrs. Gillespie of Newcastle, Pennsylvania. - % | Mrs. Murphy Entertains at Luncheon. Mrs. L. G. Murphy entertained at | ‘the second: of a series of parties yes- terday at one o’clock luncheon. Pink and white was the color scheme that was artistically carried out. Covers were laid for twenty. The afternoon was spent playing auction. 8 * The past matrons of the O. E. S. will meet tomorrow afternoon at the | home of Mrs. J. S. Mechling, 736 South Durbin street. ! “+ One of the most important social; events of the week will be the} “Apron and Necktie’ which the; Mothers’ League will give at the Sol- diers and Sailors club room in the} Oil Exchange building on Thursday | evening. The following invitation has been given with a small ging- | ham apron to those invited: An apron, friend, I’m sending you, The pocket notice well, For that’s the point of the brief tale ‘That I’m about to tell. The Mother’s League would have you take A tape line, long and slim, Place it with care about your waist, We hope you’re not too thin. | For we would like a penny, friend, For each inch that you measure, Then the pennies go :n the pocket, please, We':e sure ‘twill give you pleasure. Now on the évening of May first;'® 1 To our Club Rooms kindly come, The. apron’s your admission , And we hope you'll like the fun. a o——<————__—_——9 | CITYNEWS ' (et | Dr. Sidney Sweet of Lander spent | the week end in Casper, returning to | expects to return to Casper as soon | infantry, from which he was a: his home yesterday afternoon, = 8 Miss Eva Ferguson, who has been | visiting Mrs. E. S. Troxel, will return | to her home in Riverton today. | “* * C. H. McGuire of Denver arrived | yesterday afternoon from Lusk to spend a few days in Casper. | * * Mrs. A. H. Beach of Lusk is spend- ing a few days in Casper. | “eh eae Mrs. Perry Elswick of Thermopolis is visiting a few days in Casper. oe * Bert Wilhelm is in town from Salt | Creek. | | W. W. Jones is in town from Lan- | der, * * *“* | G. C. Neice of Lander is in Cas- ; per on business. . * # C. S. Sollars of Thermopolis is spending a few days in Casper on business. * * * | Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Roberts have returned from a motor trip to Chey- R. P. Pearson of Basin is a Cas- per visitor. * Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Marquis of Ar-| minto are spending a few days in Casper. A. Larson is in town from Lusk. *“* * H. H. Greene of Lusk is a Casper | visitor. * * * C. D. Hemry went out to his ranch at Woolton yesterday afternoon, | where they are shearing sheep. i ar Frank Connor, manager of the Clay | Robinson company of Chicago, re- turned to his home yesterday, after | attending the meeting of the Explora- | tion Oil and Gas company here on! Sunday. “+ * W. L. Lawson of Billings has re- turned to his home after attending | the meeting of the Exploration Oil) and Gas company, which was held in Casper Sunday, i 1 Henry Johnson, postmaster at Ly- site, has returned to his home after a visit in Casper, Salt Lake and other western points. * Onion Sets—Any kind 15c quart, two for 25c at Wholesale Supply Co.., | I, O. O. F. Building. a-2p 88) t yesterday. ociety Events’ | Mrs. Tom Daily left yesterday af- ternoon for a visit in Hot Springs, s. D. * J. .C. Snook left yesterday after- noon for Lusk. * H. W. Grapes returned yesterday hfternoon from Lusk. + * J. A. Delfelder, who attended the meeting of the Exploration Oil and Gas company here on Sunday, has re- turned to his home in Riverton. <2 # _ * * * Ivan Price, son of Mrs. J. W. Price, returnéd home yesterday afternoon. Mr. Price was in France for _ ten months and was transferred to Camp Taylor, Ky., after his return to the United States until his discharge from the army. Robert Pearson, a prominent bank- er of Basin, is in Casper and will go to Denver before he returns to his home. * Robert Cohen returned from Lusk * * John Bingenheimer has returned from a visit with his mother in Ne- braska. . Jack Garret, owner of the Poodle Dog, has returned from France. * * * * * R. E, Wertz of the Producers & | yasion and the necessity of keeping | Refiners Oil company is in town from Denver. E. D. Lorimer of the Lorimer Min- erals company, left today for Lusk. sos @ H. C. Bretschneider left Sunday night for Cheyenne, where he was called on business. * * V. Jessen is in Lusk on business. ** « William Weeks, a member of the | State Highway commission, returned | ‘to his home in Lander yesterday. . + C. W. Sparr has gone to Denver on business. * John D. Wodrull, a prominent stock man of Shoshoni, is in town on busi- ‘ness. * * * s William Stubbs, a prominent stock man of Kaycee is in town for a few days. soe P. A. Hume of Lead, S. D., is vis- iting relatives here. * Word has been received that Oscar ewton, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. G. _* No ‘Newton, has landed in New York. Os-; car Newton is a Casper boy who has served with E company, 11th engin- eers, for 14 months in France. He as he is released from the army. Mr. |Newton was formerly employed by | fought at St. Mihiel, Me the Natrona Power company. . 8 8 Seed—Early Ohio Potatoes, $2.25 |per 100 pounds at Wholesale Supply | Co., I. O. O. F. Building. 4-29-3t MR AREY I HOOVER WARNS BERLIN THAT DISORDERS MAY GUT OFF FOOD SUPP There was published in Berlin, | April 21, a message from Herbert ing a warning against a continuation of strikes and disorders, saying that | they endangered a continuation of the food supply. The message has caused a serious discussion by German news papers, as indicated by the follow- ing extracts from an article in the Boersen Zeitung: “Mr. Hoover says shortly and sharply ‘America has no desire to re- strict itself in order that its grain | ships may be sunk in the Elbe and its fat kegs may disappear through |the riot of a few thousand Sparta- cans, or that its potatoes shall ruin in | Warehouses because they cannot be transported.’ “America has the good will to save all from starvation, provided there is assurance of a state of order in Ger- many. Otherwise there will be no more supplies. That is Mr. Hoover’s ultimatum, which just now for Ger- | many is of equal importance with the peace conditions of the entente.” Hoover's Statement on Russia. In a statement made on Ap |regarding food conditions and req’ |ments in Russia, Mr. Hoover says in part: “Hundreds of thousands of people |are dying monthly from starvation. |* * * There is little hope of set- |ting up any orderly government in | those places and of getting their peo- | ple back to production unless they can |raise food and necessities for next ‘year; unless they can be relieved of the constant threat of Bolshevist in- ! of * | armies in being out founded on misery. resources eehe * | brunt of this famine in Russia is be-|4 | ing thrown by the Bolsheviki upon the skilled workmen who refuse to a cept their doctrines, upon the mer- chants, the storekeepers, and the | professional classes, and un food | is put into Russia all these classes will be dead before the next harvest. —— | MUSIC COMPANY INCORPORATES | Articles of incorporation for the Richter Music company have been filed with the county clerk. The com- pany is capitalized for $25,900 and ‘the directors are given as J. A. How- | lett, Wade Cramer and Geo. E, Rich- | ter. | —_—_—___ | Influenza is not confined to man- | kind, but affects many other animals, | particularly man’s nearest relatives |—the monkey tribes. At present the | disease is reported to be rapidly wip-j: jing out the baboon population of i South Africa. | Miss Edna Adriance, who is em- | ployed at the telephone company, is spending her vacation in Cheyenne. = * * Paul F. Braden arrived in Casper | last Monday from overseas. Mr. Bra- den was twice reported missing in ac- tion. He was in company D, 364th igned ; to the Intelligence department. A: | and Lys-Scheldt and was | once. | * Miss Blanche McCauley | a few days in town from K * * Honest People may make Easy Terms with us MR. EDISON has said that music, next to religion, is humanity’s greatest solace. No life is complete without music. No home is a real home without music. The NEW EDISON “The Phonograph with a Soul’’ brings into your home with absolute fidel- ity to the original the songs of the world’s greatest singers. The New Edison is the world’s supreme musical instrument. ‘It is capable of brightening and enriching your home life. Why do you delay? Why not fill your home with the influence of good music? elevating and inspirin, Does Money Stand in the Way? N Perhaps you are paying for Liberty Bonds, Possibly for some other re Mr. Edison has said to us little bit hard up. Treason you are a —sgive every honest man and woman a chance to have good music, We say to you—if you love music and if you need music, come in tomorrow, select the instrument you want and tell us how you can most conveniently Chamberlin Furniture pay for & UN 139 East Second DERTAKING CO. Phone 37-W | Hoover to the German people contain-; e_ Casper Daily Cribun ROMANCE THRIVES IN LARGE CITIES OF U. 6. Big cities may be hard and cold. but there is romance in them, too. There may be just as much poetry \in asphalt and bricks as in the coun- jtry lane and lonely woods. Take Chicago, for instance—the | | | le y of stockyards and meat. On the {surface it seems a mighty prosaic sort of place, with abundance of crime and crookedness. But in the nineties men with imagination call- ed C o “the windy city.” Then came Mr. Dooley—or rather, Peter Finley Dunne—who loves Chicago for the very ugliness that grows out of its materialism. * * Just so with New York. brick and stone, its matter- Its prosy f-fact six-dollar-a-week slaves, all are touched with the rosy glamor of ro- mance by the pen of O. Henry. To him New York seemed like a great Arabian Nights adventure, cruel and wicked though it be. The very slums of the big cities have their poetry and ro: ce. “Pit- falls of a Big City,” a photo- play pr x, in which dys Brockwell is starring, is the story of 2 romance of the slums. It shows the misery and wretchedness of lowest tenement life but also reveals the human souls of the honest and dishonest folk who live there. the Iris theater tomorrow. eo ARRESTS STILL MAINTAIN PACE The police department continues to take a large daily toll of minor of. fenders of ci statutes, completing the largests number of arrests on a re that was ever attained nence in number in during the quiet winter the oil fields were not exp the elopment that is being upon them at the present time. Drunkenness continues to be the | of disturbance except on most of ing speed- e made 3 s preferred unkenness. This morning six | {the c¢ | in for d arrests were m For busy men who want quick service when buy- ing clothes, this is the store. We can show you a dozen patterns in your size in most no time, and fit you perfectly in a few minutes. Here are the new styles and models, in grays, blues and browns, in a great variety of patterns. Shirts, neckwear and hats all ready for you. Underwear in just the weight and style you de- sire. Shoe & The Li ‘ 2 n n h IFTIPLLEALALLLLALLL c friends to try them. H eral different blends a’ for the money. h for money, its sweatshops and Sta The picture is coming to} x to the enforcement | ions when it is superceded | other department owing to) i Several ar- | de, and the charge | TAP POPP OOLCCCCECLCLLCCL LAL LEE SSL. Investigates the things he uses. When somethin If he finds it is good, it’s a safe bet that thousands of COFHEES yourself. Any one who drinks NO-VARY COFFEES wants his SAY “NO-VARY” TO YOUR GROCER OSOSOIID IO OOOOMOL LDL, c ‘BANDIT REWARD ' OF $1000 MAY BE SPLIT 25 WAYS CHEYENNE all the persons n: of police who were i Y the capture of the three who attempted to rob Trust & Savings bank part of the $40 each for the HUMANITARIAN ARMY OF AMERICAN REO GROSS INVADES NEW REPUBLIC BELGRADE, Serbia, March 9 (By Mail.)—There has been an American in n of Jugo-Slav ter- ritory. In ever ity from Durazzo, in Albania, to Strumitza in Serbia, and reaching from Belgrade to Zag- reb, the jewel of Jugo-Slavia, A’ can Red Cross officers, 3 and nurses. and representatives of the food administration and of the army, may be seen. All are engaged in the big task of feeding and clothing the people in the areas which have suf- fered most by the war. The United tes has been likened to a bountiful mother caring for a flock of small | children—the children being the many Balkan countries comprising what sone day is expected to become great- er Jugo-Slavia. At a hundred points in Serbia. Montenegro, Bosnia, Herzegovina and Croatia, the American Red Cross is giving the people a taste of Ameri- | can generosity. Food. clothing, shoes and medicines are being distributed to the destitute. American physicians and nurses are caring for the sick | and wounded. By their work and their example, these Americans are in- oculating in the Slav, new ideas of thrift, self-help, cleanliness and hon- esty, which must have a lasting in- fluence. = | The population of these countries is composed of many diverse races. The individual ambitions of the dif- ferent Slav countries have been sac- lrificed in a desire to keep Italy from obtaining Dalmatia or any part of the Eastern Adriatie coast. ‘The eyes of all are turned to America which they regard as the greatest spo.sor for the unity and integrity of the Slavic nations. April 23.—If the chief on men will re work they did. Chief Embery has prepared a re- port for submission to the bank. He sets forth the facts of the robbery, and the tracing of the three made the attempt, and submits a of 25 persons who were in tal in the capture of the trio. FRESH EVERY DAY Milk, Cream, Whipping Cream, Butterm‘Ik, Cottage Cheese and NATRONA BUTTER All Casper Products “GET THE HABIT” Natrona Butter Shop 112 N. Durbin—Phone 943 ———__ NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC. Anyone found tresp: ng on my jland on So. Lone Bear will be prose- cuted. Buy Victory B MRS. JAS. KIDD. iy Victory; Bonds 4-29-12t A Few Pointers on the Market Can Be Obtained at the Casper Pharmacy on CHAMOIS, small, medium and large. SPONGES, all sizes VENEERS, large assortment. BOX STATIONERY, a large assortment of the bert. TABLETS; and pound paper, a large line to choose rom. FOUNTAIN PENS. CONKLIN and SHAEFER. PRESCRIPTIONS, and your DRUG WANTS, filled by competent DRUGGISTS, at the CASPER PHARMACY DRUGS Prompt and Efficient Service 110 East Second | Ever | Thought of a Tire Bonus, Mr. Truce Owner ? “Say; for example, you gave your driver $1 on _ every Ssinglo tire and $2 on every dual for every thousand miles’ over the maker’s guar=; antee, How advantageous such an arrangement—you save from $10 to $20 per : thousand © miles,: just by spending a dol-) lar or two. And fancy your driver—=} how careful, How he, would ease the truck over. bumps, how he would refrain: from spinning the rear, wheeis,’ for instance, lest he grind off dollars, ith GOODRICH DE \LUXE= Truck Tircs under your load and) ‘ ,100% co-operation from your driver, you would; write off your original tire * investment seve! eral times. —for,DE LUXE Truck Tires, have in) their deep, specially-tough ‘ened treads a natura thrift, that-can easily be broadened by the ‘method advanced. Applying ‘Stations: Pasaeas La JEWELRY Casper, Wyoming Attention Elks No. 1353 And Candidates There will be a regular session of this Lodge on FRIDAY EVENING, MAY 2ND at promptly 7:30 o'clock MEP SS SE Business, Installation and Initiation. Your attendance is earnestly requested. By order of the E. R. ROB'T. COI HEN, Sec retary. ESSE ES SS EMS SS FLAP ME EM, & Sy Wise Consumer g ew is offered him he examines it carefully, and if the aw thing is something to eat or drink, he takes some ome and gives it a thorough test on his own table. thers will do likewise. That is why we urge you to try NO-VARY e likes to pass the good word along. There are sev- t prices to meet your wishes—all of them big values ad

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