Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 26, 1919, Page 5

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a eRe SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1919 Che Casper Daiiy Cribune EAGLES ON WING HEE, BROOKLYN BUNCH IN GITY National Park Touring Party Gets Brief Glimpse of Casper and Makes Friends on Brief Stop This Morning Mr. Easterner in the person of more than 125 members of the Brooklyn Eagle National Park tour- | ing party saw Cesper early this morn- ing and liked it. The eighteen-car special arrived this morning about 6:30 o'clock on the Burlington _rail- road. Sixty to seventy of the large party of eastern newspaper men and officials aroused themselves that early to get a glimpse of the metrop- olis of Wyoming in a motor car tour. This seme party returned to the train about 8 o'clock satisfied that Casper was making the biggest strides of any city in the west, and that the east did not know it. The touring party was taken by Casper autompbile owners through the business and residence section of the city. Both the Standard and the Midwest Refining company plants were visited and the visitors were surprised at the huge business be- ing done by these two enterprising companies. Ex-governor B. B. Brooks was Ps A GREAT LIFE IF YOU DON'T WEAKEN— IT MAKES No DIFFERENCE LADY —You HAFTA PUT FIRE ESCAPES ON THIS HOUSE TO PROTECT THE SAFETY OF THE TENANTS OF ic NEW (T ON THE ANSTALAME NT. scheduled to make a short speech to the park tourists on the Burlington station platform but he thought they would enjoy breakfast more than the talk. Mr. Brooks was satisfied that the Brooklyn Eagle party was xreatly impressed with whet they had seen of Casper, and the s hortness of the stay here and the difficuity in getting the large party together made him urge the elimination of his speech, The Brooklyn Eagle party left Cheyenne, Wyo., last night after a strenuous day of seeing the Frontier Day program. The party started from New York City July 18 and will be gone from there one month and two days. H. V.’Kaltenborn is man- ager of the party and he is accom- panied by nearly eight writers of the Brooklyn Eagle. The party was formed as a re- sult of the suggestion of the motor transportation boosters’ plan of trav- eling between the National Park of the United States. The Brooklyn Eagle, as one of the prominent fam- ily newspapers of the east, took up the suggestion and planned and made arrangements for the party to create an interest in national parks. The Rocky Mountain, Yellowstone, Glacier, Mount Ranier national perks und the Canadian Rockies are to be visited by this touring party. Ex- cept for a short distance by boat and motor transportation, the trip is be- ing made in a special train composed almost entirely of compartment sleep- One car on the train, known as car B, is termed the “Breeze.” On this car is a bath and barber and the Brooklyn Eagle club. In maping the route of the party, Cody was list- ed as one of the important points of the state. It was not until one of the Burlington railroad officials in- formed the managers of the party what Casper really was that this city was placed as an important point on the party’s itinerary. The return trip will be made from Vancouver through Canada until Toronto is reached when the route will take the party into New York state. E, M. Bassett, a New York city official, and J. S. Brenner, sec- retary of the tour, were prominent members of the party. THIS REPUBLIC BORN WITH EQUAL SUFFRAGE AGUE, Czecho-Slovakia. (By m —The new republie of Czecho- Slovakia may have many trials, but will never be its “White House” picketed by “votes for women” camp- ers, or its stre blocked by suf- frage parades. r when this new- est of the world’s democracies was born, women came into the same po- litical privileges and powers as the men The municipal elections will see women not only at the polling places, but in numerous cases standing as candidates for office. The new gov- ernment has announced that ‘while it is true that woman’s place is first and foremost in her home, it is also tvue that there are many political, economie and social problems affect- ing all classes which will be all the better solved by the presence of wo- men in the council chambers. Members of the American Red Cross unit, which is distributing food to thousands of under-nourished ¢hil- dren in the new republic, find wo- men taking as unusually prominent part in all governmental activities. At all the local town-council meet- ings, there have always been a large proportion of women representatives. EXTENSION OF ° TRADE RULES FOR BRITISH LONDON, July 25.—It is impossi- ble to give legislative effect to the vovernment’s trade policy, Premier Lloyd George said today. He sug- gested that trade restrictions expiring in September should, therefore, be extended. BOLLEGE BOY WANTS CHANGE AT DEMPSEY, COMES FROM DRAKE HAMILTON (United Press Staff Correspondent.) | NEW YORK, July 26.—Drake uni- | versity, Des Moines, Iowa, is about to} set a new record in pugilism. | You can count back as far as you like, but you will be unable to find| in the history of fisticuffs any mauler | who ever attained any greatness who| sot his schooling within the walls of | a university. Now, Drake students are out to batter that record into| ymall pieces through the presenta-! tion to the world of Carl Broadley. Broadley is a delicate youth of| ix feet, four inches, and 246 pounds. | his home is in Texas, where they! make ’em decidedly rough, and he wants to fight for a living—rather a high-flung ambition for a mere col-| legian, since box- fighters have begun | to make millions in the game. Off-seasons, young Broadley slays| and rounds’ up steers, whips the| country-side, and trains for footbal!. | Coach Mark Banks, old-time foot-| ball star, believes the youth he is training daily in the Drake gymnasi- um can take the measure of Jack He declares that in spite Broadley is faster than any) heevyweight the world ever has seen, and in this class he places the new champion, even in spite of the things « has been doing to championship aspirants for many a day. Banks probably hasn’t given much thought to how hard the big boys! fall when they stop wallops with their chin from fists carrying the weight of a Dempsey, but he can be excused for that if he really thinks he has unearthed a champion, for champions are practically as good as a young mint nowada “Broadley is championship ma- terial right now,” Banks said in Des Moines, “but proper handling within the next year will bring him around I believe a session on the gridiron! this fall will harden him a bit and make him a greater boxing possibil- ity he big fellow is just crazy to fight, and you can bet he’s going to exhibit around here this winter.” Charles Spurlock is in from Buz- zards ranch bringing horses to the sale to be held her British Sammy-- “Over in America we gotta lilac bush fifty feet high.” The Tommy—"! wish I could lilac that.”.—Cassell’s Saturday Journal. Se aan Salt used to be the ordinary money of the Abyasinigns: The Poor - Fisht I hear you are going to marry Archie Blueblood?” said one society woman to another. “Is it true?” ‘Marry him?” exclaimed the other. “Not likely. What on earth could 1 do with him? He's rejected from the army, he can’t ride, he can’t play tennis, golf, nor, for that matter, can he even drive a motor-car!” “Oh!” said the friend, “but he can swim beautifully, you know.” “Swim, in deed! Now, I ask you, would you like a husband you had to) keep in an aquarium?’—London Blighty. CHICHESTER S PILLS BUY Toto ve years enowe hs Best, Bolst Al wave Kell i SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHE OUTFIT — | BouGHT oT + vont uF UNDERSTAND — THiS 1S A FURNISHED ROOM HOUSE AND iT WOULD BE A CINCH FOR ANNBODY WHO OWED ME A FEW WEEKS RENT TO PLAN Le Roy Sisters, Wire Artists and Athletic Girls; Above, Gladys Gorman All with Carl Hagenbeck-Wallace Shows in Casper ‘oday. ASBESTOS Blocksand 85% Magnesia Blocks For years and years and years people have deplored the loss of a home through fire caused by a defective flue. No matter whether it was a mansion or a humble cottage they are all alike in the grand total of fires caused by defective ues. More than one hundred million dol- lars worth of these fires from this one cause alone in the United States every year. Is that the way you are going to build? Are you going to carry the same old risk by using brick where there is absolute security from loss by the use of asbestos” Don't you know that no flue is defective when it is new? but ALL brick and mortar chimneys are liable to become defective at any time? And the fact that they do becom fective is proven by statistics published every year by insuran companies showing a fire loss in the United States of more than one hundred million dollars per year from the one cause. When you buy secure absolute immunity from defective flues by insisting on asbestos chimneys Don’t let a contractor or builder sell you a house or a building of any kind without asbestos chimneys Mortar will freeze and thaw and contract crumbles and falls out, ten times as quick place else because of the sudden and great ¢ ‘There is no expansion or contraction to asbest Once in the house it is there for all time and everybody knows it's FIREPROOF. BUY ASBESTOS CHIMNEYS it is the only chimney made that furnishes ventilation It is cheaper than brick when laid in the chimney. This is only one of the many things we will make of Wyoming Asbestos Phone Fred Patee, 693-J—-or 803 906 South Oak Street Casper, Wyoming For Sale at All Lumber Yards id mortal and expand in a chimne UNTIL THE INSTALL MENTS ARE PAID mine agree CANT HELP (T LADY ; Ts THE RULES OF THE FIRE DEPARTMENY AND "RULES 1S iTS A GREAT Lite \F You Dont /! WEAKEN BECAUSE \_ to {ou WANS THEY HAFTA ~ ¢ BUY YouR CLOTHES éNE ME THE | \F THE Grea) Note CEI ee @LorHes to LAST DON'T yze many industri has been set- tled The official report issued after a c conte ence between Premier Lloyd orge and the executive body of the federation, said that an t had been reached and that aid down by the g in its proposition had been —_— Lost Opportunity. tient called on me young doctor. “He h, gratulations!”” replied doc “What w the eld AN ELGIN Discard FOUR GROUPS— $20.00, The materials are Palm Beach Tropical All strictly tatlorecl, v« blue, black and fancy mixt 09 6eoeeoeoe4 Shop Before 6 P.M. Today POSSESS OOOO ee CREAT LIFE now wearing and purchase op Cool Summer Suits de hb he bk bk ae COLLECTOR. | can A IS STAVED OFF BY AGREEMENT CASPER PRIVATE SCHOOL a MANAGEMENT MRS. NYE ROBERTS EBX Associated Press.) 516 South Durbin—Telephone 339. la Saas eae reer es Boarding and Day School. Children 4 to 12 years coal mines that threatened to para- If you can afford the best for your child, why not patre nize a quiet, refined home school with the diet, study periods carefully supervised. Do ed class-rooms, where a student has students to recite? Perhaps you believe in airy rooms, out door study when weather permits and best of all, rapid advance instruction which naturally results ir strain brought to bear out any mental eternal effort to ~ more than one child. FRENCH AND MUSIC upon the ct has ruined the health make a grade FEATURED An Antidote for Scorching” Days SUIT OF ZEPHYR WEIGHT that hot, stuffy one you are these They will keep you comfortable and they are priced so reasonably that it is the cheapest way imaginable for a man to enjoy the sum- mer. $22.50 = ~ $25.00, §: Cool Cloth Serge Worsteds Flannels, Ete inforced seams, piped armholes, colors are tan, gray, ur All size veescesoooos Circus Day We Close at 6 P.M. PeSOOCOOSSO® DIP DT manners and you believe in crowd- to wait for thirty or more ndividual ent with- d. The PIM SIMI SDT I eS II PPLLPLLLLLLLALLLLLLLLBLMALLLALLLLLLLL LLC D LSE

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