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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1919 | EXPERTS REGISTERED FOR JOBS “SKF W01N8 OISTILLERS TURN: cried ere emreetccr ree UETS ERED IMGT SALOONS War Department Announces July receipts of 457,619 sheep and | jambs were the largest on record for “To date, 1700 officers and ex-officers of the American! fee omontn st tie 1Ghicego — Unions a army, the greater portion of them men who have seen ser-)~ °° Yards, exceeding by: 1,906 ani- , | mals the fi § vice with the Expeditionary Forces in France and elsewhere, | desshaine to devouiion ate ome have registered with the War Department in Washington as partment of Agriculture. This ye: The Casper Daily Cribune , Seventeen Hundred Officers and Ex-Officers of American Army (Ry United Press.) applicants for position,” it is today announced by Colonel! run exceeds that of July, 1918, NEW YORK, Aug. Distillers Arthur Woods, assistant to the secretary of war, who is at/ 117,277 animals. The increase ig at-,27¢ Wondering what they are going, present conducting a nationwide drive for the reemployment) ttibuted to the mild weather to do with the huge stock of liquor left on their hands when the nz tion went into its prohibition peri They believe, according to O |favorable spring which resui!ted in hae Ca ay in the number of mark- ble lambs and also to the fact of these men. The salaries which are expected; hy these men vary between $750 aa y i fK thet aoe Upeeiol and marketi Weattien, who) ss 7heed. of Kentucky's app s if o continue in that whiskey will come back some fe Northw est range district t Vana’ inertave start of Tennessee and of these days; but even they are firm Kentucky lambs marketward 1 against allowing if to come back in E re factors in swelling the July ‘he old way. | receipts if “We don’t want saloor Wathen Mike Hentyiiasivis has visited the city today. “We would have liquor jail twice in the last two days City 300 DIE DAILY IN ftake its place as acommodft on each occasion it has been on a! CITY OF 60,000 »¢ disposed of at the groce lional mien: OP attadctatechateal inven charge of drunkenness. Sunday! — department store. We ha led tmiembate: St fa SaatEty ef tothier morning he was arr sted about i A startling picture: i tience with the saloon It got us lines Of activity. “Some of the ane (O clock for being well “tanked-up.”|in the Russian Cauc to all our trouble. A man used to ines of y. D Pe He was released on payment of ajis drawn in deter from an Ameri- ‘Top into a. saloon, begin consuming cimen histor of these officers are/giy fine. jean Red Cross nurse se 4y.| Whiskey, and walk out a gering ziven below. ; : This morning about 7 o'clock the{menia and eet who rev irunk. He went home and annoyed 1. A graduate OF a leading East-|.nme Mr, Mike Henry called at the|rate at one place of two hundred d. his wife, the neighbors saw him and ern colleg pe of 1911, taught from | po! ce station or rather he was car-|in a refugee population of 60,000 pitied him. The drys pointed to him 1911 to 1913, did insurance under-| ried in very much intoxicated, accord-| Alexandropol. Patt of the town a horrible example, and whiskey writing from 1913 to 1918, during ing to the police. He was unable to! blown up by the Turks when the ok all the blame. We believe whis- part of which time he was manager appear at his trial and it was post-| left and the refuge: swarm over the key can be handled right in this of the Bridgeport, Conn., branch of poned until later. ruins. The refugees k i craw] Country, and we are going to make a the United States Life Insurance Co., James Garvey was arrested about| over the muddy, fithy stre blind fight to that end. Abolish the sa- U. S. army 1918-19, with the 301st /§ o'clock yesterday on a charge of{with starvation, while those who can loon and let the householder buy his Field Signal Battalion. Thirty uid Mlisturbing the 1e peace and being drunk. |see go with their eyes glued to the Whiskey and take it home. That's old; desires to enter into export |ground hoping to find a morsel of What we want to happen, and we ay work in which they have had ex- | peripnce before the beginning of the war. Others, on the basis of their | military training, desire to enter into new fields and are willing to accept correspondingly low salaries until they have proven their worth. The list includes business men, profes- “of cond nN mountains in in; or factory work, willing to begin at LOUISE PETERS | GRANTED food. Boys grub the cemetery for want to do away with the bad whis- $15.00 per week. /roots of grass to gnaw key that made physical wrecks of’ » 2. A graduate of a leading East ern college, class of 1904, test vane with the Miller & Franklin Co. in-| Hl GE IN COURT HERE. |stalling cost system work, seven years | ‘sdperintendent of the factory of the | ++ Morley Button Mfg. Co., three years | Louise Peters was granted a divorce! selling agent for same concern. Thir-| yesterday afternoon from Carl C. | \ty-seven years old, married. Desires, Peters in the district court. There | work as factory administrator or sales! was no evidence introduced by or on! »manager, at $5,000 per year. behalf of the defendant and Judge C.)| 3. Graduate of a leading Eastern| E. Winter allowed the divorce as re- | college, with degree of Bachelor of | quested. Science, did his major work in the; The two were married at Billings, French language and literature. Saw} Mont., February 23, 1918, according} » service as an American volunteer’ to the divorce decree. The plea for} with the French ermy. Was wound- divorce was that the plaintiff had} ‘ed, received a citation and the Croix | suffered such indignities as to 1rake .de Guerre. Has taught French here | her condition intolerable. One of these) +. and abroad. Has read French litera-| brot into the case was that Mr. Peters | 4. ture widely and speaks French fiu-| had been under arrest several times. | . work, editorial work, engineering, ex-| IN MOUNTAIN DISTRICT cial service, tobacco business, arth ae ge rine insurance, accountancy, work in| iipiateodd anowinginhelDenver din’ virture of their experience in the| the statement issued this morning by with punctuality, reliability and exe-|®" opportunity of receiving gratuity | these men. discharge. He will also be given an the same advantages. The men are SYRACUSE, N.Y. Aug. 27.— ng into the New York state legisla-~ 314 medical attention which is sup-| known to oppose this legislation wil! year, opens and closes at the same fare bills.” flower. ently. . Twenty-six years old, single, | Mrs. Peters was restored her maiden “&nd desires work as master in French; name of Louise Dilts. in an academy or private school. | EEOC Pas oP _ -These are only a few specimen PAGPER NAVY OFFICE cases of the large number. The list | . port and import, research and or- _ganization, tutoring and _ teaching, bond salesmanship, mining, newspa- tecture, law, rubber business, chem M f ae 1 b cal or dyestuffs business, salesman-| Ay CTT? CONE ENE? ship, aeroplane work, wool business, | 2%@ taking advantage of the wond- (erful opportunities in the naval avia- Japan, shipping, automobile work, ad-| /"" . miralty law, manufacturing, chemis-| trict by sending a large share of the try, etc. men to this office. The men are all “ee good physically, he reports. This is army end because of the responsible | Curtis B. Starnes who is an ares of positions they held during their ser- Teton Ss ee ae eres 2 vice are fitted to be first-rate exe-| The former bluejacket is given pref-| sutivi 3 t ly di-| Pay for each year he re-enlists for | cues Erte ars orped Colrotas with the privilege of going back on| qhure Woods. Washington, D. C., in the same rating which he held while 8, , D.C, ern opportunity to take an examination for a corresponding rating in the WOMEN TO DISCUSS aviation. N. ¥. LEGISLATION given a choice of nine air stations The Women’s Joint Legislative Con where ey yee prey ature they a S Fas Bee IS AYO. oes list. en the men have been ad-| ference, and State Federation of La- vanced to the rating of seaman sec-| ‘bor, in session here today, were ex- ond class, they will receive pay of ure bills to provide workmen’s in- plied all men by the navy. “esurance, an eight-hour day for wo- eS =jmen and a minimum wage bill. Can- In Brazil there is a variety of mag- be discussed. A drive also will be hour every day, regardless of both | made on essemblymen accused of fol- light and temperature. Certain of | lowing the program of Speaker Sweet the natives, who have neither clocks We have under contract several thousand tons of the best hay in the country, and can sup- includes men desiring managerial MAKING GOOD RECORD » per, magazine or publicity work, 80- | SS, HRS CEO CEN Getcha eal tion school and Casper has been mak- Employers needing men who, by cutives, men with a sense of order, | Crence in these schools. He is given order to be put, directly in touch with ! |in the service before receiving his Former soldiers are given almost | Ry United Prens.) _,pected to develop plans for introduc- $35.90 a month plus board, clothes, | Sdidates to defeat those office-holders ‘nolia, which, for a few weeks in the looked upon as an enemy of “wel- nor watches, gauge the time by this ply you in car lots at the very lowest prices. } ! j We can also supply you with all kinds of grain in car lots. BEFORE PURCHASING, SEE US RIEL I SETAE We Buy Hides, Pelts, Fury and Wool. The Casper Storage Co. Phone 63 or 97 Casper, Wyo. i, eee Reine: Good whiskey won't hurt any/and Scotch whiskies one unless he makes a pig of him-}ping some abr self.” deal, and with Wathen estimated that there is avenue, w nN it off $77,000,000 in whiskey tied up in the: government warehouses. The govern- | gee: ment agents hold the key to thi stock, not the distillers. A grea‘ | Like Case arets, the deal of it represents the capital of | you sleep that’s Tribune W distillers. They want chance to get ae rid of it, and are hoping that con-| @ress will in some way declare war prohibition at an end and give them a chance to sell off the accumula- tion. | “If congress will allow us to start in September to get rid of our stocks,” said Wathen, ‘we will come near disposing of it by the time the national prohibition law goes into} effect. I think we are entitled to some consideration “We can’t get insurance on stock prefer w A \ sk tor HERE X The New Malt Beverage unless policies had been issued be- le Creat \ fore prohibition went into effect. In- t Creates an Appetite surance’ companies fear destruction of the liquor by some fanatic, so we are facing more than merely a loss - If a fire Sherex is delicious and through confiscation to start in some of these p! would wipe out the men who are holding the Wathen ernment banr barle Brewed with easily extreme assimilated and burld hat when the gov- the use of corn, in the manufacture of whiskey as with the under. standing 1 -time prohibition would be lifted in time to allow the Sherex is sold in bottle New Dealers Wanted dealers to dispose of their stocks. This promise, he declared, has not Profit possibilities are unlir been kept MOM Psifon oti Dea lees oes Asked if export business was re- lieving the situation any, the dis- tiller said the effect as hardly Laren Sheridan Eres’ Company “They don't cere for American Sheridan, Wyomin whiskey in England, I * he said. 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