Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 5, 1919, Page 9

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SATURDAY, JULY 5, 1919 THREE AND HALF |FoRMen sovoiens oF MIRUTESBRINES. sm ay force of Italian extraction have : : been besieging Consul Francis Unexcelled Service of Associated| Keene's office here recently request- Press and Western Union Puts ing passage back to the United States oS eat F on the grounds of being United States News in Tribune Office in ed in the Record Time. United States army. Employes of the office attending to the lot of these dis- charged soldiers immediately demand a to see their discharge papers, After is pilerd throws up sponge at end | examining it they indicate to the men 2 that they have waived the responsi- Se nere ann one bale pipes after! bility of the government in providing had refed to lee homer champion| transportation when they received Seed ce Mlk Olaeae dite rt another) their discharges, for there is one eyead of, his, BS y defeat at Toledo) clause on the back of the paper which 3 y, the ebove message, flashed | clearly explains that procedure. over the Associated Press leased wire “Oh,” reply the men, “but my com- aged Sresrinesis to Denver, relayed| manding officer did not explain that ‘ aa : re rn Union office there,|to me when I asked for a discharge. Last Setar at and carried on the) «That will do, old-timer,” retort the a e Hs a une office, gave Casper! consul general’s assistants. “Your br ignastad uae erene Dene on which} commanding officer certainly told you nd won, that 1 7 ing Im front of the Oil Exchange build. ar and now we can do nothing about ing a crowd of 2,000 fans filled the The men in every c i } filled th ery case secured their street and the sidewalks, drinking in| discharges to visit their parents or every word of the results megaphoned | other relatives here for an indefinite from one end of the block to the other | period and thereby waive right to re- / and as a result of the efficient and] turn transportation. rapid-fire service of the Associated oo Press and Western Union, Casper knew the results almost before the BIGGEST AR ringside witnesses had finished mop- ping their faces of the sweat started] MIULSEUM IN U.S. under a broiling sun and encouraged by the excitement. AT WASHINGTON a With the clash of the gong when the champion and challenger stepped ares into the ring an average nine-minute 7 y a service was maintained between the saan ee eaataes 26 Unie. Liew struck for the title and the meg-| | .mental National Gallery of yi -aphone announcements from a sec- ‘ i i Cae Rory window of the Oil Exchange odin aiphhg pone soon ches inate uilding. as circuit was maintained | «Work on the Freer Building of the ' aintainec | Smithsonian Institution which was by the Western Union and care had] aiteq during the war, previously been taken that there S; ‘ thould be no Jnterruptlon fn !fhe service. An instrument installed in the Associated Press headquarters in Denver clicked off the returns just . ati a second behind the continuous stream ane haba ay ners themvevone iat he from the press stand at} Detroit, Freer, himself for twenty- ~ - 5 five years an ardent collector of Ori- aipreoves, aibune returns, wich ental art masterpieces, has already C e in Casper, gave All| deeded his collection of 6,200 pieces entral Wyoming its first news of]i, the new gallery. the fight in detail. Great bundles of] Representative Hicks, New York Tribune “Sport Extras” were on their] 159 would like to make Washington | way to towns east and west an hour|ihe center of a museum of history after the conclusion of the fight while and art, in memory of Theodore all records for sales in Casper, re-| Roosevelt. He has introduced a bill Sis of ‘a 6: avs war and peace} in congress, appropriating $5,000,000 cu ie past two years, were! for the erection of an institution of broken. , Thirty-two hundred and eighty- Thi: f A s is bill, however, has been re- ea cone ee 2nd/ ont of |ferred to the committee on public ? ~ | buildi y tavesetithenbiaiattiene At the ball] poeapeeeeneeeeeaee aaa aa grounds they sold so fast that many =] refused to wait for their change and | = the newsies reaped the first big has been re- sumed and the building will be com+ pleted in September, officials say. This new institution will carry a complete line of Oriental exhibits his cheracter. Chater said aster eld WYOMING GARAGE LOCAL LS n * =a JACK NOBLE WYOMING DISTRIBUTOR CC. JAIN UA Manville Salesman Casper and Lusk, Wyoming Hesniogs Hotel = Tribune : ___ To Fight Bolshevism j |much prefer the ‘ealizing of the)any one in Doug liquor traffic with the consequent obtain liquor. At . revenue to combating the increas- certain Mexicar ing number of bootleggers Of thendship invite The liquor situation in Agua Prie- the line to visit ta is a troublesome one to the bet- t class of Sonora Mexicans and) The Me» der towns. It is pointed out that make a Agua Prieta offers easy access to cians Tr Some Truck Record PASO, Tex has propor Mexico, across the border Dougia Arizona . Americans who ha quor conditic Open saloo or no ef he author quor traffi say. 4 U Fi ‘ saci W Clits, somber of|° Cogsitance of te situation. has HAULAGE COSTS ON A DOLLARS AND SENSE BASIS the new House Rep tives, been taken b . how who says Congress will act « ever, to the ¢ bill 18 to curb B. y g introduced the laws c ond ber of depu against the government of the ablishment © States. sale of light strict state the payment o ~ . F STARVING, SAYS . wunicipai SIZES: , “ Well i 1s believe RED CROSS MAN under th = eat new y contend | 1-Ton oO BU United Frese) » Ge ae of (Hanke Calles, JONDON. M )—“Unless »vernor of Sonora, is 4 yak E r the people he would 1 Ton death within twelve ies LONDON, (By Mail.) —Grad 2-Ton ; pe ‘hea rites nent here tad of industry 0 aeut. Meiville Cha y ork 1, City, novelist and American Red 31-Ton Cross worker, who has just returned from a tour of Armenia and the! purchhsed the | 5-Ton ‘Trans-Caucasus. now understoo “Armenia is for the future be no crops t entire country is sult of the i ion by the “At present, Armenians country are eating hum didn’t see this personall fied it through membe relief comm the Island of Together the i y larger estate in the king- t of the Duk of Suthe: The above is a picture of a two-ton CLYDESDALE Motor Truck ons in bread, or menians are without me Cee ne a eee en Tee —owned and operated by Baxter Rarie. Ask Rarie about his truck fields and used to make soup. The ‘ famine does not extend to the towns or any other CLYDESDALE owner. They are making money—be- where there is some ood, sut it P, costs seven and eight dollars for a plain meal. Some flour was brought in by American commissions, but only nough to make 2 thin sprinkling. I e Armenia twelve months more to live unless food is brought in.” Thirty’ thousand Armenians were massacred at Baku, on the Caspian sea, last December by the Turks, ac- cording to Chater. “The Armenians consisted of ref- ugees fleeing before the Turkisn ad- vance during the fall of 1918,” Ing. cause the truck is one of the few “making good in Wyon Buy a Clydesdale “NO BETTER TRUCK BUILT” harvest of the year. RUSSELL BROS. SHOWS HERE WEEK OF JULY 7 ARE GLEAN AND DECENT “There are some things in whose moral character the public naturally has a right to be interested.” Promi- nent among these stand the traveling amusement organizations. There is every chance in the world for a bad show to do moral injury to the peo- ple who patronize it. People have a ‘right therefore, to insist on knowing the moral color of a show before they partake of its entertainment. It is a pretty well established fact that people must have a_ sertain amount of amusement. There is a place—a large and legitimate place for an amusement enterprise that > INNA ii iA A There Are Two Kinds of Families These Days —the world of one consists of two rows of onions, a bed of lettuce and a few radishes in their back yard and a knowledge of the outside world of vast rolling plains, great gorges and insists upon clean attractions and tolerates nothing of a questionable character. When such>an amuse- ment organization goes upon the road it should have the support and encouragement of the people every- where. It is useless to say that such an organization generally does re- ceive such support when once the public realize its true character. In the light of these thoughts we want to say a word about Russell NM “Watch for the Supreme Test” tremendous mountains gained thru seeing scenic films at the “movie.”’ The other kind has a BUICK and at the end of each busy day—and on Ssandays--and holidays, “the whole world is theirs.”’ They may journey a few miles to @ particular place or scores of miles ‘just going nowhere in particular,”’ but all the while swept by cool breezes as their fleet, graceful, com- POOSSOSSPS OSS OS OSS OPO OOOOOD OOOe fortable BUICK unfolds an_ ever Bros., Shows, which will exhibit in this city the week of July 7th, not as a fayor to the show, but because the management wishes the commu- nity to know the character of this or- have used the utmost care and have exercised the greatest discrimina- tion in the selection of the shows ans attractions, guaranteing a total ab- sence of objectionable features. This is an age of progress. The projector, Russell Bros., armed with vast financial resources, will keep abreast with the times. | Russell Bros.’, aim will be to make | every department of this wonderful | amusement enterprise distinctively individual and to set a pace impos- ‘sible for institutions less fortunately constituted to attain. It would be) difficult indeed to draw a pen pic- ture of Russell Bros. Show. Sun fice it to say that those who witness the attractions will be afforded a degree of realism never before at- tempted by any similar enterprise. —Advertisement. hits th eS For the purpose of engagins; in| business at Qasper the Craddock)-| Clark-Maxwell Sales company has filed its incorporation papers. The incorporators are George L. Crad- do it gracefully and with in the Maxwell. 167 South Ash = dank Key -Cradoek vita NNAAAAN lization is $100,000. MOTT Rea TTT tiiiiiil Many people laugh at the idea of a motor car climbing to the summit of Muddy Mountain, but just as sure as the sun shines and the roads are dry this little ,car is going up the side of old Muddy on Sunday, July 13th, and she will the state who fully realize the wonderful power that lies under the hood of the little Maxwell. All we ask is a fair chance to prove what a really wonderful lit- tle car we have to offer the motoring public. It is a real pleasure to own and drive a Maxwell for you feel so sure of your ear and of your ability to meet any emergency. A real pleasure car means a real business car and these are just the qualities that you will find embodied Everybody come out on the 13th, it will be worth your while. Maxwell Garage MCL U CLLCLLLD LLa changing panorama of nature beau- tiful. Truly a BUICK means MUCH to th family who owns it. : % ASPER MOTOR C0. little effort. There are very few people in this part of IA | fl Phone 643-W eeguuaguyuneggunneganaassuss austen im ee Te Fe ed

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