Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 14, 1919, Page 7

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SORE 14, igi9 WOMEN OF WYO, ANISE BIG SUM FOR LAST LOAN Total Is Above Three Million Mark and Women of Natrona County Second in Record of State Chairman. More than three million dollars was} $51,! raised by the women of Wyoming in the Victory Liberty loan campaign. The final report of Mrs. T. S. Talia-| 350. ferro of Rock Springs, state chairman of the women’s committee shows the total was $3,388,450. The amounts secured in each county, together with! the names of the county chairmen,, follow: | Laramie, Mrs. Charles D. Carey,! $906,850. | Natrona, Mrs. Oliver G. Johnson, $452,900. il CE a CUPID TRIES BUT FAILS, CIVIL LAW OF GERMANY HALTS A. E. F. ROMANCE, IN THREE LANGUAGES 850. Sheridan, Mrs. Horatio Burns, $! 550. Big Horn, Mrs. L. V. Stryker, $95,- 250. Park, Mrs. R. I. Volekmer, $86,450. “Give Us a Chance,” Pen, a well-edited Nttie puldjcation, Carbon, Miss Mazie Doty, $404,200. fs : rs Albany, Mrs. E. H. Knight, $329,- 600. Sweetwater, Mrs. Cora B. Wana- : | * + + + ° maker, $239,000. Lincoln, Mrs. P. J. Quealy, $207,-| 500. | Converse, Mrs. J. P. Keller, $114,- MEN SHOULD BE WORKED ON ROADS Under the appropriate heading of; traveling thru the state often won- the Wyoming der why the tax-pa Cie Casper Daiid Ctibune PLEA THREAT TOMOVE > * CAPITAL ot of this state teiseo. Mrs Mary D. Jackson,| ++” Rawlins, contains the following| only desire of the tax-payers, to Plum; Submission of Crook, Mrs, C. S. Smith, $58,050, | *ditorial which is so timely and fall build as many road possible with Not Unlikely. Washakie, Mrs. C. F. Robertson, of good sense that we reprint it in convict labor, » is much more Es EES: 0. *) fall: § cheaper and sav the tax-ps WASHINGTON ink: Mrs F. A. , $41,500. “In letting our minds wonder back ers and the sta’ d now is ed Pr Goshen, Mrs. G. Gannon, $41,- > o.-|% mere wave of ether in the fast Mirage Mrs. E. C. Raymond, $40,-' teeting atmosphere or time. With 4 the exception of one faction, ‘The Hot Springs, Mrs T. B. Hood, $40,- 000. Niobrara, Mrs. James E. Mayes, $34,050. Campbell, Mrs. George Gibson, $17,500. over the past history of this institu- tion, everything seems but a glimmer, Road Gangs’ that ha produce their ¢ stantiate the jtravel, thruout the State of Wyom- ing. When w need, and great demand, of the im- e gone forth to nffort, to sub- ays of public higiv think of the grea Johnson, Mrs. J, C. Van Dyke, $7,~| mense traveling public, for more and 550. notoriety, he only asks to be let alone. Dan Cupid, even when aided and} abetted by a German burgermaster| and an American army chaplain, | sometimes fails to get results. Some of the difficulties of getting married | in two or three languages are recount-| ed in the May 15 issue of the Long Range Sniper, brigade newspaper of the 148th and 146th field artillery} regiments, stationed until a short time} ago at Hohr, Germany. The account) follows: '“Dan Cupid may be a member of| the army of occupation, but rules| and regulations of Germany concern ing his activities do not jibe with hi: wishes at all. No siree, Witness; Tuesday night at the headquarters| for Montabar aoppeeeg! Soe ne | We be company, 148th F. A. officers’ mess,| day stands is the program indefinitely. |... de godt i : . 2| What chance has Daniel Cupid? Nary Nia Db Fe 8 ng about this attitude be | the open 7 oe + | allowed to mix and mingle with the Virginia R. Hicks and Lieut. J. B.| ously suggesting that additional in-| jutside world. gle i a-dinner party. Guests, Miss Laura Cadett and Lieut. D. E. Rorer (keep them in mind by couples, please) and Burns (couple number two), aided and abetted by _Miss Mabel Aber- crombie, all members of the ordnance qorps and of the ordnance revue show troop playing the area. Couple num- ber two was no less averse to being joined in wedlock than was couple number one, in fact both were strong for it. It was not a rush attack of that young mischief, Cupid. either. Couples Meet Difficulty. | “The two couples have been trying to become married for the last two ‘weeks, and no sooner than being ad-| jised of the civil laws of one nation, thee the travels of the show have) takes. them, to’ another—sans, cere- mony, In ‘Goblenz. an ‘army chaplain told ‘them that. an army ceremony would suffige. That. was easy, of course. Captain Neufeld of head- quarters company had invited the Party to dinner, not have the chaplain of the 1 do the deed?) pon arrival at they asked if ¢ chaplain was able. He was, Chaplain Marsden’ came right But he wouldn’t marry them! at.all averse to it, the chaplain ’t but it seems that German ¢}vil laws are still in effect as af- feets marriages, and had that been at- inded to? .“It had not, bus by the great ied spoon, it would be tout de ite. Captain Schade, 148th, the Atest living authority, probably, inarriages as performed on Ameri- chin this period in Germany, was ap- Healed to, the captain only ew weeks before having been married} With all the German laws and Ameri- can customs adhered to. Captain Schade immediately turned out the burgermaster of Hohr, and assisted by Lieutenant Reed, explained things in detail. Burgermaster Proves a Sport. “The burgermaster showed hiniself leeremony. Chaplain Marsden perked! of Coblenz was head burger of these parts, and his permission was first necessary. Phone call# poured over the army «nd the German wires to Coblenz, ut nary a head burgermas- ter could be located. Meanwhile the dinner party and wedding gu waited.. Rumors drifted in that they would and they would not be marriec right away. First the burgermaster had, and he had not, performed the} up at each rumor, and time passed | swiftly. At 11 o’clock the party re- turned to the dining room, downcast, and unmarried—again. Great deep) a chance with an army of occupation Meanwhile the unhappy four are se: demnity be added to the German war | debt.” ee POLITICAL UPHEAVAL ber of automobiles now in the state, . and the cheap method of travel thac 5 could be ¢ PARIS, (Correspondence of the] Associated Press.) —The political up-| heaval in France, predicted as an af- termath of the war, appears to have) begun. After the modification of| factional lines in the Socialist party, | the former extermist minority has be- come the majority. The new Socialist majority, taking a far more extreme position than the element led by Albert Thomas and} Marcel Sembat, former war minister, does not yet openly pronounce for| Bol: ist principles, though in the majority there is a still further ex:} termist minority than that demands immediate adherence to the doctrines of Lenine. F Several new political elements ap-| pear to be in the making and in some of them tie soldier will, for the first time, make his influence felt. Soldier candidates are likely to be} numerous. There is already talk of | Colonel Raynal, the hero of the fort of Vaux, as a candidate against the Socialist leader and Bolshevist sym- pathizer, Jean Longuet, grandson of Karl Marx. M. Caillaux, whose can- didacy for re-election in the Sarthe has been announced, may also have a soldier opponent. General Man- gin’s name has been mentioned in this connectioh, but probably without au- thority. | ee | to be a sport and started right in to}, abolish the bans in the name of the burgermaster of Hohr, when it oc- curred to him that the burgernipster business. Casper Private School BOARDING and DAY SCHOOL ' Management Mrs. Nye Roberts OPEN MONDAY, JUNE 16 Tobin Residence 516 South Durbin Street Hours: 9:00 a. ' LUNCHEON SERVED N : N N N N N | ) : Beginners’ Class, Primary Grammar Depts. FRENCH AND MUSIC FEATURED » BACKWARD STUDENTS TUTORED PLAYGROUND ACTIVITIES IAP PAZ AAA A AAA AAA Adhd J Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Crossman and} pon Bennie, of Pinneo, Colo., are Bpending a few days in Casper on | | N | POWDER RIV Phone 339 m. to 4:00 p. m. DIAL LLLLALLLLA LAA A nA OPEN AIR CLASSES And our opinion of a penal institu- tion, is that it should have such basis of r his ters the circles of society, he must enter with the feeling that he has ests| Paid in full for his folly or crime, as the case may be, and feel thay j| he is as good as any man, and a lot | better than those who have paid labor disclose his obligation and duty to the | dency to create in him, self reliance |and encouragement to hold up his head in the midst of society, and feet gobs of gloom. The show troop leaves! sae he is one of them and not merely public, we hope, to when Wvoming will have macadem- ized roads from Montana to Colora- do. and from Nebraska to | When we think of the enormous num- SOLDIER HAS VOIGE | better roads, it seems instead of send. ing few men to do this great piece of work, there should be many form, that when a man has paid ebt in full, and once more en- never Not only will this out-door state, but it will have the ten. jer that has just entered. ieve that the best and quickest isoner and sogiety is in work where men aro “It is the earnest desire of the see the time Idaho. cuted by them, if the; “Tourists SYNDICATE time to begin if Wyoming expects to come up to the stan that her neighbor forward.” SAVING FORCED ON ENEMY NATIONS “ LONDON, June 13.—The has authorized the transmi persons and firms resident in enemy of the war. Phone 703 520 East 3rd Street [WINONA ng the ard of progress teers are “ tates are pushing Senator Sherman, Til hairman of the Distric THEPROFITEERS are not trying to do more toward Congress Aroused by Profiteering and the Washington monument. Since Sherman made his remark, offers have come from several states (made quite unofficially of course, |: but in some cases y influential | s citizens) to have a honest to goodness capital p in those commonwealths, w n ad guarantee against 5 ng. " Senator Kenyon Towa would do Senator Reed as is be not overlooked ASBESTO Blocks and 859% Magnesia Blocks 4 that the After Bill lumbia committ started it all wh RESIDENTS _ 0 said if Washington landlords ond “" _ merchants didn’t stop charging se The following paragra om The h for things, congress ought to Literary Digest is worth nsidera » and take the capital place aw I here. Washingtonians took it Sherman has sai treasury ssion to “In the road ¢ e me al- Fi a eects pa pe Hang territory, of easements of their ac rious things about profi- a banker and we were sitting in teid, thas batter fitting cain toe Sie unts, Payment of money to enemies teering here, in senate speeches. The partners; the conversation was about aceatVATCALeta that inte aGise tone remains prohibited and statements president of one of the numerous! buying. The major had not seemed tc fa. life Gams ts Harn of accounts sent to them must be ac- “civie pride’ organizations which versation, but all at once he put s hand u “Wh iceve tated companied by notice that persons and flourish in Washington hurried to said: “Weil, boys, I may be wron en a man is convicted or re-! firms in enemy territory will not be Presidential Secretary Tumulty to things we are talking about—with 2 leased, he does not want any undue| permitted to dispose of funds or se. learn whether there really was a world and is still coing on—it seems curities held for their account in this possibility of congress and country at the date of the beginning ernment departments goin eaving nothing here but the For Anything Electrical We invite your inquiries. Our business is things electrical. May we not serve you. ELECTRIC CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIRING OF ANY KIND ELECTRIC SUPPLY & CONSTRUCTION CO. Room 1 Mokler Bldg. Telephone 483-W imp of fear whispere DON’T TAKE A CHANCE—YOU CAN MAKE NO MISTAKE NOW IN BUYIN _WINONA seriously tion of every man city out ay from “The other day I was talking with a friend id some in the service as a first lieutenant the money-changers in the temple." the Lab “That is the spirit the American se if west, as he returns to civil life. He did his Potomac tion and loyalty id it because he be it in this way he got a vision of what is worth while, of the difference it makes his part, no matter how small, to heip feeling that his little push, tho it be an inch, is a push in direction of Here is a worthy cause and a “b do your share. We are selling all the A can make. We need more machinery, I shares of my personal stock at one-half the will use the money for enlargement. The cents per share, $1.00 par value. I will sel cents per share if taken immediately bars Gpomerag a desire to see the asbestos will M grow very fast if we can sell this P. Wheeler and subscribe for what y ness get started right. Mr. Wheeler will handle the money and for an increased capacity Asbestos Chimney Blocks have ing, easy te lay up and infinitely better thar chimney. You will never have a fire caused you use asbestos. It is the only chimney ventilation. It is cheaper than brick when laid in the ch one of many things we will mak Wyoming 906 S. Oak St. d “y Powder River Syndicate Units FOR THE SIMPLE REASON BOTH ARE ON THE VERGE OF MAKING GOOD Seeing Is Believing—Landscape Photos of the Powder River Field, Showing Operations of Winona--Ohio and Midwest ON EXHIBITION AT THE CASPER PHARMACY—NEXT TO CASPER NATIONAL BANK. THESE PHOTOS SHOW CON- CLUSIVELY THAT WE HAVE OIL IN THE REAL POWDER RIVER FIELD For Further Information Which Will Be Cheerfully Furnished, Address C. KIRCHNER P.O. Box 1117 CASPER, WYOMING ome to stay - —_————— Asbestos Phone Fred Patee, 693-J Casper, Wyoming For Sale at All Lumber Yards INONA IF YOU COULD SEE AS FAR IN THE FUTURE As you can in the past, you would probably huve all the money vou would ever need. But time after time, the chances are, you passed up opportunities that looked good—AND WERE LATER PROVED GOOD—Just because the little ALVOIGNAS AHAIY SHdadMOd én » _ ey a ee ee

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