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Rolle N £52, 0 Ae a Re. thi ‘ AMERICAN FLAG UNFNRLED OVER BALKAN STATES BY MARGARET ROHE (Writen for the United Press.) If you have a little gilet, Brocade, tricolette or filet, Montenegro Tastes Benefit of| You'll be swagger, willy nilly; Yankee Enterprise and Gen- Though what really knocks ’em silly erosity with Advent of Relief 5, th¢ girl behind the gilet. Measures — | NEW YORK, May 2. (By United Press.) -ETTIN gro, He (By ee Montene ; coat suit will be a total waste without allest, poorest and most bar-| 4 waistcoat. ren of the Balkan states, is tasting| 4 little gilet is a dazzling thing, the fruits of American enterprise and | particularly when it is made out of generosity. The United States Food| one of those gorgeous metallic bro- AEE tion cue ae aces Red j caded ribbon lengths. Blazing il pat ross have sent hundreds of tons of/ and silver and hectic dyes, it helps flour, clothing, shoes and medicines the modern maid areacnt a brilliant into this desolate little country, which} front to the world, even though the nas Pan ie ee eepestNot indigo serge surges all § o ted) i: around her. mouneninedts who make their homes Indeed, every well regulated and up-to-date coat suit opens up over a The presence of America’s two big|giet and opens up at the same time relief agencies not only has amelior-| such endless possibilities of divers and i aeoma lone among: P00 oat scene | different gilets that it’s no wonder e in the prices of all the ne- of life. The Food Adminis- tration is selling a part of its flour at cost. To those not able to pay the flour is given freen. There are two companies of Ameri- can troops here, whose principal work has been in putting down incipient revolutions among disaffected Monte- negrin soldiers. Recently a large body of Montenegrin revolutionists surrendered to a small detachment of American doughboys. The revolu- tionists were disarmed and then press- ed into service by the Americans to unload supply boats from the Ameri- can Red Cross. They were compen- sated in flour and were eager after that to secure permanent employment in the Red Cross. Each man received six pounds of flour a day. Cettinje, which formerly was the capital of Montenegro, is situated in a little valley almost completely sur- rounded by high mountains. The town has much the appearance of a Mexican city with its wide streets and low red-tiled buildings. Near the center of the city is the palace of King Nicholas, who although now in Paris, is struggling hard to retain his throne. In a sumptuous building for- merly occupied by the Crown Prince, the American Red Cross has estab-; lished a hospital. ! In one home visited by the cor- respondent, there was a mother of three children lying on a bed of straw on the floor and dying of pneumonia. A girl of twenty rested on a mattress | - of bags near the door. Her hands were tied. She was insane. The other two children, suffering from malaria and mal-nutrition, were hud- dled close to a feeble fire of charcoal embers. The father, who had lost a leg in the war, sat disconsolately ona log. There was not a morsel of food in the house. | In the town of Podgoritza, where | the American Red Cross has a hospital and soup kitchen, the correspondent | noted two children gnawing raven- | ously on a dog’s bone which they had picked up in the street. | To help the American Red Cross in} relieving the wide-spread distress | among the poor, United States army officers and soldiers, recently re-! leased from service in France, are be- ing employed. A number of female} mad. sewing shirts for soldiers, she is feverishly busy making up gilets for herself out of odds ends in the family scrap bag. these fascinating little vestees that lend such charm and piquancy to the severest suits are positively evolved out of anything and everything. Wool and silk jersey, hand em- broidered in vivid yarns; broadcloth stitched in silk, or even stenciled in and of hand tucked, ruffled and lace in- serted: organdie are but a few of the 57 varieties. There are quaint little changeable taffeta waistcoats that present a double front and show a dainty inset of ivory toned batiste, lavishly tucked, ruffled and lace front of the long ago male fop. Still others are quilted like the spare room bedspread and other have eruptions of colored beads in intricate designs. Braiding, too, adds its decorative fouch and often a bit of hand paint- the face above the gilet. the proud possessor of one gilet doesn’t at all suffice. The really smart ‘woman owns a whole collection. One for each day in the week. They run} the gamut of all the styles and also all her emotions. When she is f _ to the mak phys ached to the American | Women's Hospital, New York, also are being use Of 15,000 Montene- | grins who migrated to the United ates, more than half returned to t for their country. The influ- of th Tontenegrin-Americans is felt everywhere. How completely the Americans have penetrated the country is shown | by the fact that in every large town} American fla may be seen flying from storehouses and soup kitchens | blished by the American Red = GERMANS ARE SEEKING AFTER | WAR DIPLOMATS (By Un BERLIN (By men who can sa eapitols as amb: lem perplexing the German Foreign |y office. The Germans are anxious to) get men who will get as favorable} standing as possible with the Ep tente nations. The question is to find Germans who are not comprom. sed in foreign e England and America, According to inside rumors from the Foreign Office, Count Bern- storff is to name his successor at| Washington. There is no one in diplomatic circles who is consider- ed entire sfactory. The Radi- cal elem are boosting for Max. N Back of Grand Central Bar. | especially for | imilian Harden, but Harden has not the confi ce of the Foreign Office, who say: is too blunt. | Prince Lichnowski is not a possi- bility, according to both the For- eign Office and the Prince, too, who} says he might go back to England, | but cannot go so far as America| € where he would be out of touch with | 3 his business interests. Theodor Wolff, newspaper owner, is talked of for| : | Bernstorff will probably be sent to} Italy, according to rumors, since Rome is the only capital that would | & tolerate him, it is felt in Berlin. | GAS ENGINES gp Save your money—eat at the Har- vey. iN 'A GILET—DON’T YOU KNOW WHAT _ THAT IS? IT’S ‘A CUTE VEST FOR THE WOMEN AND IS ALL THE RAGE all the feminine world is simply gilet suit that we are Now that Sister Susie has ceased | coats with hat, parasol and hag h For and neither omission a bold design; linen and pique mascv- |}. linely buttoned, plain and close, with weight. pearl, sheer, frilly, feminine affairs to be sa trimmed, like a much befrilled shirt | It is perfectly obvious that to be / ling | WANTED A reliable man with reference at once, to be : sales agent for the best selling device ever offered ublic. It sells itself. Our agent here can $20.00 every day of the year. You do Hive to be a salesman to sell our product. "GALL FOR L. F. MOTT AT HENNING HOTEL, CASPER, SATURDAY & SUNDAY MOTT & LOGAN OF DENVER, COLORADO BEST BOWL OF CHILI IN TOWN 15c AT THE CHILI KING LUNCH popular prices. Quick service, highest quality. NF IID AIPIPAP PAPO OOO EL EVERYTHING IN BUILDING MATERIAL RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY | FARM MACHINERY ; Phone 62. Office and Yard, First and Center. Keep Your Pledge—Buy War Savings Stamps A | THING BUT THE FISH” ing vies with the similar treatment of | :feminine and meltingly alluring, dons a soft and frilly vest or ,gandie; a bit devilish black and white striped aff: \feta is her choic haughty and se plain pique effect of and s: one wistful she , and a striking ir of taf- ‘AULES BEING RELAXED, PARIS ON HOLIDAY TO CELEBRATE CAFE LIFE a dove grey jersey splashed with! ning today the cafes are permitted! beaded tears of steel; or, scintallating to remain open an hour later in the opulent and full of pep, she presents evening, until 10:30. a metallic brocaded gilet to the fore. V I —You just Think what a helpful hint to hus-| must invest in a vest, for your new) hands it key to wifie’s every mood. Not only are our suits all vested jate blouses too are being done with simulated gilets. Capes have gilet fronts and, yes, they have even in- vaded the realm of the undergarment. When we take off our gilet at night it is only to slip on another in the form of a vestee-fronted nightie. The newest chemises and combinations | with their distraction pinkness and sheerness, show, among other things, the gilet influence. As these gilets are practically ‘born to blush unseen, however, it is with the gilet of the most concerned. | Matching up these ubiquitous wais become a favorite sport. So you can endless Plainly see that a suit quiltless of a gilet, is like a slipper saus the buckle is permissible this ‘season. In weighing as much as a wagon load of grain in some parts of India, {when regulation weights may not ‘easily be. obtained, the weigher re- sorts to the practice of substituting is elbow for the 5-pound weight, and half-bended knee for the 10-pouna Both buyer and vendor seem fied with this method, which ‘is remarkably precise in the hands of the adepts. Steel Fishing Rods “WE FURNISH EVERY- Ae! e House . N i All kinds of Sandwiches at CALL 74] : See Ben Transfer Co Stunley Overbaugh, Prop. Light and Heavy Hau'ing._ Furniture and Piano moving a specialty. Baggage transferred. QUICK AND SATISFACTORY SERVICE rm mn The Nicolaysen LumberCo. WAGONS COAL A SAMA uld be to possess a gilet;duced by 30 per cent in consequence | up. Our one-piece frocks and separ-| Music again is} lowed, and the popular restaurants | ved “national” dishes at prices re- of the action of the Food Ministry | which has placed frozen meat and cer-| tain classes of vegetables on the mar- | jket at moderate prices. The cheaper meals proved so popu-/} lar that most of the restaurants were | jsold out at noon, and crowds of work- | ers who had been eagerly looking | forward to some relief from the bur- ‘den of dear living found themselves! charged ut the eld exorbitant rates. | In the evening, the grand: boule- | vards were crowded more than ever ! as a consequence of the relaxation of the early closing rule. But a down- pour of rain and the sudden failure |of the electric light in the central | KEELEY | and Curtis Sts. | Cor. Eighteenth | DENVER, COLO. LIQUOR AND DRUG ADDICTIONS ; cured by a scientific course of medi. | ,cation. The only place in Colorade | , where the Genuine Keeley Remedier | | are used. | | Office: 985-J = 4 = : = districts, plunged everybody into] gloom. One French soldier, his face | the picture of boredom, was address- ed by a companion: ‘You don’t seem pleased at all at being demobilized.” | “No, I didn’t think it was going to be! so dull,” was the reply. normal life. |opening day of the first after-war PARIS, March 20, (Correspon- Salon; to be precise, it was varnishing | when cold and dence of The Associated Press.— | day of the Salon du Cercle Artistique | those | This has been a red letter day for the |¢t Litteraire, othgrwise known as the! , ordinary work-a-day Parisan, Belgin- Salon Volney. CHICHESTER s PILs \ N \ \ N N N N N . N \ N N N N Stocks and Insurance Active Representative of The Equitable Life ot New York STOCKS BOUGHT AND SOLD * Why speculate with your life insurance when you can get a policy in one of the strongest and oldest life insurance institutions upon the planet? e Better be safe than sorry. Call at the office and let me explain the latest policies upon the market. J. J. GIBLIN 312-313 OIL EXCHANGE BUILDING i | House Replenishing Sale The time is now here. The needs of the home stares us plainly in the face. It may be material for new curtains, perhaps a rug, then again on looking thru your linen closet you find the sheets are beginning to go and the table cloths are getting thin. At any rate bear in mind that we have a beautiful new assortment of the necessary home making materials. Axminster or Wilton , Sizes 8:3x10:6 Priced $37.50 © Sizes 9x12 Priced $30.00-° $100.00 Colonial Rag Rugs Sizes 27 in.:by 54 in. 1.7 $1.75 Sizes 30 in. by 60 in, $2.00 *° $3.00 Richards ree ‘ ASBESTOS BLOCKS This wonderful material is the same fj f analysis as the very highest grade of | MAY 3, 1 AY, = SATUR' But Paris is regaining slowly its, March 20 was also the! spinning fibre that is worth today $2,000 per ton. In rock form such as we make these chimney and building blocks from it stands a very much higher fire test than in fiber form. The Wyoming Chrisotile Asbestos fiber stands about 300 degrees higher fire test than’ the — ——_—___ { Try our Want Ad column. | a Home cooking at the Hr:ey. | | treks: | best Canadian fiber and the rock as- ae PASTS ee Geld anit | bestos stands more than 2,000 degrees = Brees pe aan higher fire test than the best fiber does. - yonsahcaoease Bert Setset aloo bak We have had these blocks tested in the SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE largest laboratory of Chemical Research in the Western Country, in Chicago and up to 5,280 degrees which was the greatest heat that could be applied; it was not affected. When you stop to think that manganese steel which stands the highest fire test of any metal is melted at 3,000 de- grees you can realize that no fire would ever reach a degree of heat above 5,280 degrees. If you are building specify these asbestos chim- ney blocks. They are made in Casper; cost you less than brick and last forever. Address e Wyoming Asbestos 906 S. Oak St. Casper, Wyoming or Phone Fred Patee, 693-J. For Sale at All Lumber Yards BRING YOUR KODAK FINISHING The Casper Phatinagy “The Home of the Picture Shop” One Day Service Work left before 1:30 p. m. delivered next day 1:30 p. m. Work left before 7:30 p. m. delivered next day 7:30 p. m. (No Work Finished Sunday) | Read the Mineo in The Daily Tribune and Save Money i = GRAND OPENING White Bungalow Grocery 345 South Beech Street - Saturday, May 3rd We will have on display a great variety of Fresh Fruits and Vegetables at remarkably low prices. A full line of select Fancy Groceries at reasonable prices. We invite the housewives of Casper to inspect our store and allow us to demonstrate our , 30 Minute Delivery Service CA £AAA LAA d de. SELLLAIZIZZL LLL Watch for the White Bungalow at the Southeast Corner of South Beech and Linden Streets CLL LAE A ALAA AA LL A Figured Cretons IN LIGHT OR DARK GROUNDS, PRICED 75¢ TO $1.75 Hemmed Pequot Sheets Large Assortment Wash Cloths at 10c Bed Spreads, $3.00 to $11.50 each. Curtain Nets Figured Damask Plain or Figured For Side Drapes. Price Per Yard 65e° $1.50 $1.00 $1.25 $1.50 $2.00 reUG SS 50c each, dozen .... we $5.50 72x90, each . $2.25 each, dozen . $1.10 Hey sack . pany Glass Toweling from 25¢ to 40c yard. | WiHemimeddPequotiCases) | | Crash Toweling, from 15¢ to 50c yard. 42x36, each 50c 63-inch Mercerized Table Damask, $1 yd. nee Ce eae Sc 70-inch Pure Linen Table Damask, $2.50 yd AcaEn come owe $4.00 Hemmed Mercerized Napkins, size 18x18, = Hemstitched Huck Towels (Union) 18x36, (MOD ee pet | Pure Linen Damask Napkins, size 20x20, 50c each, dozen $5.50 Extra Heavy Ba ‘owels, size 20x45, dozen . $4.50 $75.00 & Cunningham Company AN “ccc