Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
MONDAY, JULY 21, 1919, ARMY AND NAVY CLUB IS LEWD! PRACTICAL AND 3 Z a Mr. »nd Mrs. N. A. Tyler of Rock Pive. Wen. ore visiting 2t the home _of Mrs. Tyler’s parents. Mr. and Mrs P. C. Nicolaysen, Third and, Wolcott WELCOME AID | ine tomorrow for Denver. where’ Mr. Nelson hones his new Premier car Soldiers Needing Financial Help Invariably Refund 37. yoy erties te Chesenne te sons will then drive to Cheyenne for Money While Club Promotes Interests of Men and {Jn 1s" vuingarene pena ™" and Provides Entertainment, Recreation Not every Casper resident Navy club the first night they returned service men, located every worthy soldier or sailor h the aid. ‘fifty men were provided with lodging. In the same month 150 meals were provided for hungry service men just arrived in Casper. In almost all cases the money has been refunded, the club only losing $10, half of which was paid by the Mother's League as its part of the war work. "But this is only a part of the many duties performed by this ser- vice club. In one week thirty let- ters were sent out by Secretary Harry Fisher for those who had not } received allotments, bonuses, or ad- f ‘ditional pay. One night lest week in te ‘three hours, six men came in and ij tasked that letters be sent to Wash- if, ington in regard to back pay, allot- ments, and compensations. Recently the secretary of the Army and Navy Club has been kept busy converting old status govern- ment insurance into the new status 4 insurance. The result of this new ¥ little service club’s work is that suc- cess has marked its efforts in’ at- tempting to convince business men and the city in general that the club is straight and above petty things. In this connection the untiring ef- forts of Secretary Fisher should not © unmentioned. —_ The club’s membership has shown a big increase and now the total is rapidly nearing the 300 mark set by the club workers about a month ago. \A week ago in the space of seven days of time, 1,250 men used the club rooms. During the same period the returned service men who called at the club rooms or who were mem- bers wrote 500 letters. Worthy returned soldiers and sail- ‘ors have received positions and start- ed work soon after their arrival in i Casper. Casper mothers who have boys in the army of occupation in ‘Germany want their sons to join this service organization., Recently two esked about their sons joining while still in Germany. With the ad- dition of these two, there will be five members of the Army and Navy club who are still doing duty in Germany with the American forces. All army matters are handled by the Army and Navy club and the prompt results secured through Sec- retary Fisher have astounded the most pessimistic soldier or sailor. Only when the returned service man wants to borrow some money on his discharge is he sent to the local order of the Red Cross. A dining club is part of the pres- ent program of extension of the club. There will be ten to twenty-five club members in this club which is to have its meals cooked and served in the rear of the club rooms in the basement of the West building. The cooking is to be done at cost and family style. The club expects to be in operation this week. Better ventilation for the club rooms is to be secured through the installation of a big fan. This will result} in a fresh current of air “through the club rooms every twenty minutes. A new pool table will be placed alongside of the present table within the next few days so that club mem- bers will be provided with proper and adequate amusement. This winter the club will have Paul M. Walker, well known Casper wrestler, in charge of the wrestling work of the organization. Another known athlete will be in charge of the box- % ing for the service men. “Fae club now has a victrola and the recent addition of seventy-five records, 2 club gift from Mrs. M. C. Clarkson, has made this an attrac- tive source of amusement. Casper has a real club for returned service men although this new organization was started only about five months ago through the efforts of the bus- iness men of the city through the ‘Mothers’ League. epee Horse Is Deceived. A horse sees everytht per cent larger than de a man. So . that a six-foot man looms up a little short of seven feet six inches high The fact has, of course, er been proved, but a favorite jon of the large image in eye ts that if a horse knew man’s exact size ho would realize his power and pass beyond his control. Magp‘e Superstitions. The magpie has 2 lot of stories con rected with his care What 1am ing to tell you s norsense, but ft is a straight fact. ‘Th of magple was originally Mare or Margaret, simmering down inte a nickname, just as a lot ef huian Margarets are affectionately ¢ i “Mag” by their friends, Of thet 4 ft is said that to see one Is a 8 Ind luck, two good luck, thee death, four d wedding.—Exchange. Sailors secure a good place to sleep through the Army and! of funds. But through the efforts of this enterprising club for! During the month of June some - |taking in Yellowstone park. te ar | | An interstate commerce car. cnr ling officials of the railrond »dmi iooatine r | tration xpected to arrive here to- t returned soldiers or| morrow over the Northwestern on a tour of inspection. * 8 © are in the city if they are short) Charles P. Becker. anditor of the in the West building basement, | mountain division of the American as been taken care of if he asked ing the local chapter’s books. eat at - SOCIET { | beauty parlor in the Smith block and Che Casper Dailp Cribune ook, ee | ‘ re t o- Red Cross, is in Casner today audit-| weeks’ visit with her brother, Ernest Miss Delia Lenehan has sold her} nc, Watlan, BCom» eseied al YEARS QF TROUBLE _| eae ENDED AND SHE HAS | GAINED 15 POUNDS: '“My Friends Say I'm Looking} Years Younger,” She Says— Tanlac Brings Relief «uieutenant Cobb, of th yion, will land in New Yc * 8 @ Joe Marquis of Arminto is here on | business. * *# * Mrs. Martha Mahoney, who recent- ly underwent 2 serious operation, is at her home, and is recovering rap- idly. Mrs. Blanche Riley has returned, , “When T began taking Tanlac I from a visit with her mother, Mrs. had been down in bed for three} John Zurick, and her son, Thomas,! months and just think of it, I'm feel- Jr., in Lead, S. Dak., and is now em-| ing as strong and healthy as I ever | ployed at The Leader felt in my life,’ said Mrs. Mollie J. ere ce Lord, who resides at the East Den- Mrs. Ed McGuinn and daughter|¥er High School, Denver, Colorado, | have gone to Colorado, where they in an interview recently. Mrs. Lord will visit Mr, and Mrs. A. L. Becks 5s lived in Denver for the past 25 and tour thru the state. years, her husband has been in charge * * of the East Denver High School } 1,93. on Miss Grace Larsen has returned to building for 22 years and they are her home in Nebraska after a two pews respected by all who know them. Ee “Years ago,” continued Mrs. Lord, “I had an attack of bronchitis from Lysite, Which I contracted catarrh of the - head and stomach. The trouble got Larsen. ‘o) \ouee Geo. Wolf has gone to Wyo., to visit friends. realized I was in a bad fix. My nose and throat were feverish and the mucus collecting in my throat would nauseate and almost choke me. My stomach got in such a bad condition , I couldn’t even eat potatoes or toast In fact, everything would sour al- most as soon as I had eaten it and the gas caused such a burning and fluttering around my heart that I was afraid I had heart trouble. Sleep seemed impossible for me. I would toss and roll in bed and e to jump up every little while so I could get my breath. My kidneys worried the constantly and my back hurt me so bad at times it felt like it would break in two. “I doctored and took everything I heard of but kept getting worse until I just had to give up and go to bed. I never got any better until I began taking Tanlac 1 it certs ly has been a Godsend to 1 can tell from the way my clothes fit that I have gained of fifteen pounds and I have not only gotten entire relief from the catarrh in bot I |my head and stomach, but my kid- neys are also in perfect condition me sure now to is leaving Casner to take a much- AS £ dirmigrip cnime: because ora) one) | ~———© needed rest. She plans on visiting Earl Schidler has returned to Salt time I tried to make myself believe jand I don’t have | Former Society Editor in Nebraska nd Colorado for the! Creek after visiting a few days in | Tries Aviation Thrills next few months. Casper. | s Margaret V. C. Douds, for-| os as ne ne society editor of the Tribune, arrived from Los Angeles Sunday morning for a visit at the home of her Douds, while in California, enjoyed all the thrills in airplane flight at an army aviation field, viewed the land- scape from loop-the-loop angles per- mitted the aviator to throw the ma- chine into trip. She ects to remain in C. per for some time. eels Gratiot Reception Saturday Afternoon M T. Gratiot gave a recep- tion Saturday afternoon at her nome. 944 S. Wolcott street, from 4 to 6 o’clock in honor of her mother, Mrs. Charles Gratiot, of .St. Louis, Mo. The house was decorated with white carnations. Delicious refreshments were served. The innovation of a three-piece or- chestra to furnish music during the evening dinner hour, from 5:30 to 7 o’clock, at the Wyatt Cafeteria was enjoyed by a large crowd Sunday arrangements so that there were no long waits, altho the tables may have been taken at time of arrival. ‘ o* & Titsworth-Allen Marriage Today The marriage of Gilbert Allen and Miss Marietta Titsworth of Tulsa. Okla., was solemnized today. Mr. Al- len is the son of J. J. Allen. Mr. and Mrs. Allen expect-to live on the Allen ranch south of here. * 8 @ Powder River News Since Casper went “dry” people do not care much what hapnens. Even the old superstition about passing un- Jer. a-slanting ladder-does not-phase them. Saturday morning a ladder stretched over an East Second street sidewalk just around the corner from Center street. An average of twenty sister, Mrs. Earl D. Holmes. Miss{ spin ‘on the downward! evening. The management had made | ‘one to Den- | Miss Katherine Dunn will go to| John Whisenhunt verland Cheyenne, Wyo., this week for several] ver and will drive hi ‘days where she will attend the an-| back. »nal Frontier Days program. Mis¢ . |Helen Carlson, county clerk, exnects| John McMahon left for Edgemont, to oto Frontier Days later in the |S. Dak., yesterday. week. rhe sag Of | 7 ee Mr. and Mrs. A. Hackstock of Salt The Charles Carlson family mo/5r- | Cree spending the day here. od from Casper vesterday to inspect Cio ag the Pathfinder dam. . Hayes Smbith of California, presi- 1 dent of the Wyoming-Montana Oil Mrs. A. Leo Johnson of Dunsmiur. | company, has gone to Denver, Colo. California, is visiting at the Carlson ny ranch three miles south of Casper. L. A. Parker, bookkeeper for the ns Consolidated Royalty and Jupiter Oil |. Sheriff Pat Royce went to Lender. | companies, was taken suddenly ill | Wyo., todav to take Mrs. May Madi-| last Saturday and has been confined on. recently declared insane. to the|to his home since. State Institution for the Feeble Mind- ed. Sheriff Royce will return Tues- \ day. { ene b] Miss Anetta Ford spent the week end at Douglas. Wvo. . * * | James G. Stanley is in Denver on business. | L. F. MeMahon has returned from ae his v in Denver and Colorado |Report for Wyoming-South Dako- Springs, Colo. ta District Shows Progress in Ridding Range of Enemies to Livestock Industry so * R. Hagens drove to Salt Creek morning in his Cadillac. * * * | Miss Isabel Johnson has gone te} snend ¢wo weeks in Denver, where she will meet her sister. fee Government hunters in the Wyom- R. H. Nichols is back from Denver | ing-South Dakota District took 2,318) 2 animals, or an average of ten ani- mals per month per-man during the last fiseal year, according to the an- nual report of Charles J. Bayer of Lander, chief of operations in this dis-| trict. Association hunters, whose work | R. C. Wyland left for Denver last night. i 4 # A. F. Stirrett. who has been in the east for some time, is now in’ Cas- per. es Ee C. M. Deardorff, the Western States attornev. ic here. e .s 2 , took 266 animals, or an aver-| age of animals a month each. The | latter were engaged largely in poison} work, some in districts that had wits | C. F. Clay, general attorney for is linked with that of the biological. any more pain in COUNTRY SCENE FROM WINDOWS OF OUR GREEN BAY PLANT Fresh from Sunshine and Pure Air Council Meats have been a revelation —they have answered your table wants with a variety of delicious ready-to- serve meats that come to you from ideal surroundings. Put up in vacuum packages that retain all their purity, flavor and goodness. They solve the meat problem for every meal. ‘The following is a partial list of Council Meats, put up in convenient size: Corned Beef Hash Veal Loaf Vienna Style Sausage Roast Beef Hamburger Steak and Onions Corned Beef Potted Meat-Products Tripe Lunch Tongue Sliced Dried Beef Sausage Meat Ox Tongue Ol Mammy Hash INDIAN PACKING COMPANY GREEN BAY, WISCONSIN veovle, old, small, tall, fat and skinny! iyo Merritt company, is here from —they all seemed pass under the Denver. = ‘adder unperturbed. Computing at this rate, we estimate that nearly 14.-| * * * Mrs. H. R. Lathrop, who has spent nessed similar activiti for two years, and the record is considered unusually good. | about 22+ 400 neople would pass under the lad- der in one day. What if the ladder had fallen? Powder River! sok of Carlson-Dunn Picnic Sunday Miss Helen Carlson and Miss Kath- erine Dunn entertained at an infor- mal picnic yesterday afternoon at Garden Creek falls. An imposing luncheon was served in the open. Miss Rose Ryan and Miss Mary Tobin were honor guests. “oe & The Victory circle of the Methodist laid announces an ice cream social to be given at the home of Mrs. Amy T. Hanks, 225 North Wolcott street, Tuesday evening. «© * McFarland-Hall Marriage Sundav Miss Elsie McFarland and Clarence Hall were married at 1 o’clock Sun- day afternoon at the ranch home of }C. T. McFarland, 7 miles west of Casper. Only the intimate friends jand relatives were present. The Rev. R. H. Moorman performed the cere- mony. “ * 8 Mrs. Gorham Is Hostess at Tea Mrs. F. H. Gorham entertained Miss E. Burnett and Mrs. M. R. Bur- nett of Marshall, Ill. at an after- noon tea Saturday afternoon at the \Gorham home. Miss Burnett and Mrs. Burnett stopped in Casper for a short time on their way to Yellow- tone Park. They resumed _ their journey today. * * Mrs. M. ©. Price of Cheyenne, ited here Saturday and Sun- y with friends. Mrs. Price is 2 | former Casper girl and was Natrona county clerk for three years before she was married. so 8 & It Is a Blood Infection. Doubtless like other sufferers, you have often asked yourself this question, which continues to re- m unanswered. Science has proven that Rheu- matism is caused by a germ in your blood, and the only way to reach it is by a reneedy which eliminate and re these little f mons, 3 explains why lini- What Is Rheumatism? Why Suffer from It?) | °c: Sufferers Should Realize That) ments and lotions can do no per- | | * A new record was established in | three months in Denver. has returned]... °iGdance of wolves,-a total of tial | with her son and dauchter. | ene S having been taken as against a high) | H. B. Durham, R. K. Stalev, 0. A record of 98 ny previous year. | ‘ ae |Graybeal, and A. E. Biglin have re-) h hey have | Fact and Fiction. turned from Denver, where they have TaPAaTaarAinnninentisealvayalmarcl| been on business. * res the right woman. And he suc | ceeds in doing so shout half the time | In real Hfe—Topekn Centtat, chet FE. D. Larmer of Lusk is here on business. s 2 ; | A baby bov was born to Mr. and FoR SALE OR LEASE—Some of Mrs. Otis L. Thompson at the Private| the oldest Oil Placer Holdings in hospital this morning. the heart of the Lance Creek Field Cash and Royalty, Cash and Stock| in substantial Company or all cash deal considered. E. H. Werner, Room 6, Mokler Bldg. 7-19-3t* Ex-Goy. B. B. Brooks is spending the day in Theromoplis. .« A baby boy, Robert Ellwood, was bern to Mr. and Mrs. E. I. Breisch, 826 Natrona avenue, last Saturday. . 8 * Lawrence and Gilbert Davison left yesterday to visit their old home at Antioch, Ohio, * oe * Pat Mullen is here from Great Falls, Mont., and is visiting at the home of Mrs. Gertrude Sullivan, 315 !S. Beech street. | ** « Mr. and Mrs. Webb Davison drove np from Glenrock to spend Sunday | here. sees : | | E. W. Bailey, manager of the Al- |eova Mercantile company, and Mrs. Bailey are in town today Before you buy your \] ticket for that trip—busi- ness or pleasure, let us fit you out with the right things to wear. The best store in the best little city | ‘n the west solicits. at ieast. a share of your trade. We are the onlv s‘rictly Cash Store in Casper Al! voods must be paid for before leav- ing ovr store or on delivery. All are treated alike. Pay CASH and Pav) For business—suits of fine wool, worsted and serge in new and _ novel TESS. We eater to quality av welt} styles and patterns; shirts, as price Groceries Meats and Hard neckwear, straw hats, ath- ware letic underwear, socks and CASPER COMMERCIAL CC pajamas. i Phone 10. + For pleasure—Outing suits, Palm Beach suits, flannel suits, white flannel trousers, silk shirts, silk immer neckwear, soft collars, caps and straw hats. manent good, for they cannot pos- sibly reach these germs, which in- our blood by the millions. S. S. S._has been successfully used for Rheumattsm for more an fifty years. Try it to-day, and you will find yourself at last on the right track to get rid of your Rheumatism. For treatment of your individual case address ef Medical Adviser, Swift S FRESH FROM SUNSHINE; AND Wash-day Does Not Look Like this When You Have 2 r Western Electric Washer and Wringer ‘O matter how your washing is done, each week it looms up as a great, big, troublesome problem, doesnt it? Either you can’t get a wash woman, your laundry tears your ch your maid objects to the hard labor, or, if you do it yourself, you time and strength which in these times, especially, are precious The Western Electric Washer and Wringer makes wash day | different, for electricity does the hard work. All you have to do 1s in the wooden cylinder, which revolves and by this motion, works hot matenals, cleansing them without wearing them. While the \ washing, other household tasks can be done her When the clothes are washed, you can wring them electrically, too, and the washer with the swinging wringer you'll find especially convenient because you can swing the wringer to any position you wish. You'll find this washer an economy—it will soon pay for itself, and about 3 cents’ worth of electricity will do the average family wash. Stop in and see it—we know you will like it | Phone 69 Natrona Power Co. i ‘ i streiafitaereimeinin