Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 28, 1919, Page 6

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PAGE Six of M Mrs. John R. Drexel of N Anthony Drexel of Philadelphia, and A., with whom she eloped recently. the bride's parents. NATRONA AGENT READY 10 HELP STOCK RELIEF Much to Be Gained by Cooperation in Meeting Drought Problems; Agricultural Agent Tenders Assistance sagem By G. M. PENLEY. (County Agricultural Agent.) Almost every farmer in this part of the country is at this time con- #fronting a serious problem. There ® practically no feed on the range due to the long-continued drouth so what is the farmer to do with his stock this winter. He must either bship his stock out or ship feed in. As a metter of infPrmation to fvinnine stock out for the winter the United States railroad adminis- authorized that stock originating Wyoming west of Neweastle may be shipped out and | at two-thirds of the regular rate (some stock must be returned) | that is, they will assessed the regular full tariff ri on the east- bound trip and upon presentation of ftration has be original in-bound freight bills and} davit from owner showing that he ne animals ure returned s Eshipped in, gqne-third of the in- Pound rate will be assessed on the ) in-bound movement. # Authority is also given to pub- ts h one-half tariff rate subject to| fa minimum of 20 per cent on feed, | from points on the Bur- lington west of the Missouri river to points in Montana and Wyoming ubove and on cottonseed cake, car- loads from points of origin in the southwest, a rez of 50 cerjts is oints on the Burling- ; 0 cents per cwt. to points on the Great Northern and Pacific. Taylor, county agent, Neb., will have consider- ve hay and alfalfe. for sale at $16 to $18 in stack, others hold- carloads Uinberger, Manhattan, Kan. of Extension division) con iderable alfalfa hay at $16 to § per ton f. o .b. loading points. All crop, in states mentioned above are exceptionally good. bras! has a large hay crop year and should be able a considerable amount nd Moniana. Let’s get together if we are go- ng to ship in feeds. Pool your or- lers with the county agent and save -ime, money and bother. If you do not care to pool your orders let me know the kind and number of stock or approximate amount of feed, hay, rain, € you will have to ship in ind I shall be glad to put you in ouch with men having such feed if r0ssible. Very truly yours, G. M. PENLEY, County Agricultural Agent. — this to supply to Wyoming Social problems affecting women hruout the world will be studied by women physicians at a six weeks’ in- ternational conference to be opened in New York City the middle of september. The conference will be aeld under the auspices of the Social Morality committee, War Work Coun- cil, of the National Bofrd of the Young Women’s Christian ion. — Miss Fern Bauersfeld, of Coffey- ville, Kas., nan car di. is said to be the only wo- ributor and tracer in the United State: She is in the employ of the Missouri Pacific railroad and tas a territory of 500 miles in the wheat and corn b of Kansas. eee nae gene The Wisconsin Industrial Commis- ion has set a minimum tvage rate of 22 cents an hour for experienced women workers which, figuring a 55- your week amounts to $12.10, and a * ate of 18 cents an hour for learners t’or a six-months’ period, amounting 0 $9.90 a week. >_— Read the Tripune ads. HEIRESS AND AVIATOR HUSBAND Their marriage “shocked and surprise ee ordon Drexel, one of America’s greatest heiresses, only daughter nddaughter of the late rett, air force, U. York and gr: pt. William HELPS HUNT TERRORISTS — ‘The work of Dr. Charles E. Munroe, explosives expert in the United States bureau of mines, is expected to be one of the most valuable uids in discover- ing the bomb terrorists. Once the wu- torities establish definitely the ma- terial used in the bombs they have a better chance of finding out where they were mad Why Short Hours Are Best. That men accomplish more in short spells of severe labor broken by longer spells of rest is Illustrated by the story of © wager between two officers at t front as to the thine necessary to ¢ two equal lengths of 2 trench eneh with an equal number of men. Major A. C. Farquharson told it to the Brit- ish house of commons in a debate on hours of labor. One officer let his men work as they pleased, but as hard as possible, The other divided his men into three squads, to work in rotation, each squad digging {ts hardest for five minutes and then resting for tea. The second squad won easily Valuable Trainload. One train left Monte Vista, Colo., recently loaded with hogs and pota- toes with a market value of $82,450. It consisted of 18 cars of fat hogs from the Monte Vista sections, six more cars of hogs brought in by the San Luis Central, and 19 cars of pota- toes. The hogs were worth $3,000 a carlond, and the potatoes $550 a cnr. > = Mutual Weariness. “Heh-heh !” cackled old Riley de “The Hon. that orated Chautaugua last week gave you hot shot in the Whillersville paper day before yesterday. He sald that a more mizzable roost than this hotel would be hard to imagine. He mentioned by | pame the broken fiy screens, tattered curtains, hard beds, grimy towels, cracked looking glass, sticky salt cel- ‘grs, and so forth, which he said con gpired to give him a feeling of mentai and physical depression that he could Rezzi- at the hardly shake * grimly replied the landlord of the Petunia tavern. “It appears that the honorable liked my hotel al mpst us much as I did his lecture.” Kaneas City Star. Poetic Typewriter. There are authgrs who cannot com: pose on the typewriter, but apparent: ly Kipling is not among them, He | wrote to the manufacturer of his ma- chine: “It's a dandy. My greatest joy in life ts to rise early and ofl t. I can do poems on this machine without the trouble of thought. I just start something at the first line, pull | open the throttle valve und go ont for a walk round Rottingdean. When | IT come back I find a poem of any de elred Jength completed and the ma | ebine finished and happy, waiting mod- | getty for my applause.” “THE SHEPHERD OF THE HILLS’ AT THE IRIS. TODAY AND TOMORROW simplicity of the kind aches grandeur is the in- heme in the picturization » Shepherd of the Hills,” the which will be seen at Iris d tomorrow. The Pastoral that appr theater rugged Che Casper Daily Cribune GREYBULL FAILS TOLOCATE HUNT, LOSES BY 10 1 Visitors Let Down with Four Hits While Locals Slug Ball for Eight Runs and Back Up | Again in the sixth, Bostick started | things by getting a single. He stole second and went to third on a passed ball. Caught between third and nome, he claimed a balk and the umpire upheld his contention. The Greybull players could not see it that way and Umpire Teale had ;to hold his watch on the visitors to induce the team to come back and finish the game. The play and de- cision were unfortunate, but had lit- tle effect on the final result, Bostick merely scoring on the play. Two homers and a_ two-bagger did the work in the tween the rain storms. men aes - sane. oe ie Pitching of Hunt The same teams play again this uestered Ozarks are graphically E ; afternoon starting at 6 o'clock. ‘depicted. These men, tall and up- Casper went out there to win yes- Greybull is out for revenge and the standing, ere the same type as the terday, and when the celebration game promises to be the best of the sturdy fine trees t reach up to- Was over, the score stood 8 to ! /season. Jackson looks like the wards the stars from the- eterna} in favor of the local Midwest nine. starter for Greybull in the box, hills. The same type of men who Greybull was the vietim of the while Nicholy' M ples and Nelson landed upon Plymouth Rock and Slaughter and it must be said that are Casper possibilities. daid the foundation for this land of the visitors did not look good ageinst The score: - ours. In this great photoplay are Hunt's superb pitching snd _ the Casper— AB R H APO E shown these truly American people, heavy onslaught of hits madet by McNeill, 3rd - 5 0 0 2 2 0 {living today 2s their forefathers did, the Casper batters. dD aeyeeee ABS 12 1-9) 0 \éen of viant strength and the kind- Hunt hurled iy “regular _ bal Hayes, If -- ik St ove OC} liness of children. The people in Same yesterday, letting the Grey-’ Arbogast, ¢ rh eC) ah 0) \this play really live their lives. There bul! sluggers down with three Rose, cf --- Tal 0 is no sham, no affection. They love, Measley singles and one double. The Bostick, ss 604 08)08) 00) e and have their being ail un- best part of his performance was Whittle, 2nd hw 2 0) conscious of the fact that they are that he kept the hits scattered so Free, rf ----- 600 0 0 por! ng the great drama of life. ue visiting Sa sou ish put oe Hunt, p-—--— 0229 0 The scenic backs is grea hit per inning. nly a tendency pe a eS a drama ic supplied from a resion’rich let up in the last’ stanea allowed, Totals ..-—- 38 8111227 0 in nature’s beauties and a ofthe lone run to come across. It was Greybull— AB R.H-A PO E the country which has been a hit baseman, a fielder's chbiceh Piper, 2nd --. 4 0 3 3 2 2 photographed. The play co’ and a long single that scored the Wifinert, & -. 4 0 0 1 0 0 10 reels with especial music one run. Piper was there in the Sherrard, If 40001 9 pretations. pinch and came through with the Qhnimus, ss _. 3 0 1 3 3 0 hit that meant the lone counter for{ Dorenburger, Istl1 0 00 2 2 i e Greybull. 2 Benjamin, Ist 2 0 0 0 6 0 Only Wiateen an vomieeas melt- ither Eddleman nor Jackson Kunklg, cf -- 3 0 0 0 0 0 {ng xinciers und snow caps Is known Seemed to have much on the local’ Scott, rf _-.. 3 0 0 0 4 90 as White coal, while other water pow- batsmen in the way of hurling. Ed-| Bain, 3rd. — 3000 9 0 ers are termed coal” But dleman was touched for nine blows Eddleman, p-lst 3 0 0 3 5 0 re is anothe cf power, in six and a half iimings, while’ Jackson, p --- 1 1 0 0 1 9 derived Jackson allowed two safe hits inthe; 8 «© — — — — — — the inning and a half he worked. But ‘Totals __._ 31 1 41024 4 biue most any pitching would ha Score by innings: looked feeble yesterday tht way Ccsper __-02020130x—8 11 0 Hayes, Arbogast, Metz, Rose, Bos- Gyeybull 000000001—1 4 4 tick and Hunt were caressing the Batteries—Casper, Hunt and Ar- proverbial pill. bogast; Greybull; Eddleman, Jac Mildred hud accompanied her father | Bostick was the particular lumi-| som and Weinert. .Umpires—Dafly «o the near-by village and on her re nary with four safe ones in as many! and Teale. Time of Fal CDA SECU SUT Ta wom times at bat. Not only that but coe Poors & Rie EE, Tale as the hero in the second with Women conductors are employed UT Nido. ih EARS Mil 2 two-bagger that scored Rose aft- led about | minediately repliet she looked newer es \ 1 : : 3 H. Newberry of whose seat Henry Ford Mr. Newberry avy in the eabi- sevelt To Senator Truman Michigan, f¢ Is making Was secretary of the net of President 1 a contest. ume and was commander of the U. S. 8. Yosemite in the Spanish-American He was once governor of Michi ~ Two rare pearl earrings, low-neck- blouses, oblong collars of gold, set with jewels, and false, red hair, were some of the things Queen Eliza- beth wore in her 67th year. one A Littie wantad will sell it. America er that player had got on through 2 healthy single to center. Twice Bostick laid down perfect: bunts, once in the fourth and again in the seventh. Besides his hits, he scored three runs, stole a base, and got ay with a balk in the sixth, In the field he handled three assists without a bobble and made three putouts. But the whole local nine was playing basebell Sunday and it did the fla capacity crowd good to see a ashy exhibition. During the fracas, Casper players pilfered four bas Hayes won a name for himself in the seventh with a homer to deep center. Arbogast got his first and only hit of the game when he pasted a long blow to the outficld for 2 double. The rain stopped the game ‘for a few minutes, but it did not worry Metz, who smashed the ‘pill far into center for another home run and scoring Arbogast ahead of him. Eddleman pitched good ball . at, times, but his support was wobbly | and the infield was weakened by the sence of Read, reguler short- stop, who broke his nose just before the game started when a ball was fielding made a bad hop. Jack- son looked better, but four errors and 11 healthies would win most ‘any game, and they did yesterday. After Bostick had doubled in the {second as before mentioned, Free got on through an error by Piper. Hunt his then did e2 little playing for own benefit by hitting a long which brought in Free a sweet little bunt. An error by the first baseman let on Whittle. Whit- tle stole and Bostick was on third| when Free hit a long sacrifice fly which scored two. RUISES—CUTS Cleanse thoroughly — reduce inflammation by cold wet compres- ses—apply lightly, without friction- MACKS VAPORUBS) SO YcUARE Sor REGUS PAT. OFF. ’s Greatest Beverage —the distinctively new soft drink that makes lasting friends every- where. Refreshes and satisfies be- cause of ualities. its wholesome, nutritive The rich, appetizing avor appeals to natural taste. Luxus has just the snap you’]I like. In original 12-ounce Brown Bottles at Fountains, Cafes and Restaurants. ' Any Grocer will supply your home. Fred Krug Products ho., Omaha, NU. $.4. \ Distributed by” BOURK-DONALDSON-TAYLOR CO. Casper, a on Cott, réZeomare Starthandiers Lites or cask Bie Promte Cose We, and} he | on auto bud lines recently established in Manila. BASEBALL TODAY 6PM. GREYBULL ~ NS. MIDWEST ae eee eae ea! inew ruling seventh be-; 0 ae The Casper Storage Grocery quent ‘WAIL FOR GERMANY IS. ACCEPTED BY UNCLE SAM Postmaster W. W. Sproul ceipt of official notic Germany will be rec offices under the existed before the war. go at five cents an ounce at the regular eighth zone rate follows the genera mai t all ed ANNOUNCEMENT TO BOCKKEEPERS AND PENMEN from An opportunity s in Busine ttering will be 7 to 9 p. m. Tuesday and for those who wish tu write in ame conditions as Letters w nd parc Penmanship, 1 MONDAY, JULY 28, 1919 E sumption ish w ° United States and ¢ Veils were origin ven with the f business rman —_—— up their hair. betweem the ily worn by Jew- idea of covering | for post The t the Ca better. years known | SOLD BY DRLGGISTS EVERYWHERE Ornamental W of each week Opening October 1. Ny BAND. HIGHESTER S PILLS ee ET ee ee 1000000000000000600006F6 OOO COFOOOSOOOSDOOOOOSOSHOS OOS ELECTRIC FIXTURES—FIXTURES—FIXTURES We are in the Field to Save You Money on Fixtures Phone 1042-J and our representative will call. THE CASPER ELECTRIC OUTFITTING CO. 500 a Nh on. | MR see teases ence eaas C. Y. Avenue. THE RICHELIEU STORE Special Tuesday and Wednesday Richelieu Yellow Cling Peaches, No. 2 1-2 Richelieu Peeled Apri No. 2 1-2 Richelieu Bartlett Pear No. 2 1-2 cots, S, 45e 45e 45e Casper Storage Company General Storage Car Lots Canned Goods, Meats, Fruits, Vegetables Handled, stored, re-shipped arid Checked in a Business Like Manner BUSINE=% Users will tell you that repair and replacements down. 127 East Linden them, that =—@)= almost are infre- unknown. For that reason it keeps almost continuously 4 in service, and the cost of delivery is held It will pay you to virit us and examine this car Coliseum Garage Phone 724 ment for labor. “Roads are the tools of industry. Build industry may furnish Or} *OxOarI eee wee employ- 3 : $ 3 ~~ a oa

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