Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 19, 1921, Page 6

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i PAGE Six GREAT MAJORITY 3 4 b a aw be _ Grades Shows 1,520 Out of 1,780 Need Atten- | OF PUPILS IN ~ SCHOOLS HAVE DEFECTIVE TEETH Examination Just Completed by Dental Clinic in Six} ion, which has just completed th grades, inclu- school board, teachers, nurses s tion; Service Free to the Poor Fifteen hundred and twenty out of 1,780 children ex~- amined in the Casper schools have defective teeth, according to the Casper Dental associat and examination of pupils from the first to J; sive. In co-operation with the P 3 r K and parents, the dentists of Casper are donating their services the teeth of children in caring for re financially unable whose parents to have the work done at the present traveling dental equip: provided by the school and ve the they s_ office. made to the san 1d receive E q Every child with defertive teeth re- J geives an examination rd howing § — xact condition of the tecth and just can be a e to put the child in good shape. This card to with a note from the super- ent’s office is sent to parents or guardians of the children who have heen examined, This note is simply th determine whether or not the par énts are financially able to have the recommended work dons, also if they q@re to take advantage of the free @ntal clinic. Every afternoon. two @pntists are present at one of the @phools to do whatever work is neces- gry for the children, ted by the gehoo! nurse. Erne desire of the dentists, who are : @iving their time, is to perform a real wi MBrvice to the child and educate it to si the fact that a clean mouth fs the ni Grst law of health. They are receiv- T tig splendid co-cperation from parents p teachers, nurses and school officials. fc ‘Though the work started as late as m Webruary much has been accomplished mi aiready as seen by the following re- pb wort on file at the school office: mn Number of children examined. » Number of children with defectt m ffteeth) -__-____.___-_------___- 1 bi Number of children with normal lior filled teeth.--------------~ =. 260 bp: Wumber of reports sent to par- pb otients 5 # Wumber of dental clinic cases to R jidate — : Number idate —-_.. Number of children with b licompleted —--- ft umber of teeth extra F Number of teeth filled- 2 Number of children wh r {have been cleaned. 1 © i!"Phis free dental clinic in Casper is h ppt entirely new, It is the outgrowth B gpd continuation of work started here $ 1915, when the late Dr. C. W. omas suggested at » meeting of the Gasper dental society, then consisting éf four members, that a committee be appointed to wait on the school Beard and offer to examine the teeth @r the school children and do such @pntal work as was needed by those tmable to secure the services of a den- fist. Consent was received from the bpard and @ surgeon of the city of- red bis services in establishing a ¢linic for the removal of tonsils and @Menoids in conjunction with the den- fal work. Preparations were being aade to carry all the plans into effect when the war made it necessary for the doctors and dentitsts to turn thelr ARE YOU GOING TO THE DEVIL? ee a) ‘Threaded Rubber Insu- the same. | Our service is here for you to fuse, and when you do make full Muse of it you'll find your battery “not only lasts longer but serves t Hfation outlasts the plates. | i ij Drop in. Ask about Willard ded Rubber Insulation, id why it means so much to ‘users. Auto Electrical Co. 6 East Midwest Ave. Phone 968-J verneqegreta’ NOTICE The Reid Construc- tion Co. Now Located in Room 234, Midwest Building Office Phone 935-J | attention to the nation’s fighting men, d. With and the plan was dropp an jon of ten new mem to the} i per Dental So the work was/ started again in the spring of 1920, aving equipment furnished by the school board. Work continued nearly two n when it bec fent that if any- thing was t omplished it m' be done in « matic manner. So @t a meeting last fall it was decided to examine the teeth of the children and to extract all teeth beyond saving thus relieving many children of pain and diseased oral conditions. This is the general plan for the year but con ditions in nome schools have made it necessary to change the plans to fit special cases give the bi TANFFIC VIOLATORS 10 GET LIMIT OF LAW FOR FAILURE TO KEEP ATES Many Casper auto owners when ar- rested on a charge of violating traf- |fic rules, often evade responsibility by not appearing in police court at the time assigned. This evasion will be ended, according to the statement of Judge Perry A. Morris by invoking a stiff fine when the offender does ap- pear. Hereafter traffic officers will be sent out to round up those who do not appear and the penaity will be sufficient to warrant voluntary ap- pearance the next time they ure told ONE-CENT SLE CLOSES AT KIMBALL STORE The one-cent sale, a feature which draws to a close today in the Kim- ball drug store, has been one of the most successful that has ever been staged, according to the statement of W. S. Kimball, Jr., who attributes the success to. results of “advertising in The Tribune. A “I am gratified with the results ob- tained through advertising this sul« in ‘The Tribune,” Mr. Kimball eas. for] needs of the the Park school | t of service Mass Meeting for Mills Troop A-mass meeting of the residents of Mills will be held next Weanescay ev- ening at the new confectionery store building in the interests’ of the new troop of scouts recentiy organized out there. The troop has grown so rapidly. and the attendance at each meeting is So large that the school building is no longer large enough to acgommodate the 40 to 45 boys” who regularly present themselves at the ‘Tuesday evening mect- ings of the troop. The object of the mass: meeting is, to crystallize a sentiment among the residents of the community for ‘the |Pprovision of adequate meeting facilit- ies for the troop. The incorporation meeting ‘of the town, of Mills is to be held March 29, and Scoutmaster Hun- ter is taking steps now to put the scout ‘troop before the community with the idea of providing for the boys the best the town is able to afford and as soon as it is able to afford it. Handbilis havo been distributed ad- vertising the meeting and it has been announced that a free lunch ‘will be served after the meeting. Several educational talks on the subject of Scouting will be given dur- ing the meeting. Among them are the following: Benefits of Scouting to a.Commun- ity. T, Kemp,: president Casper Scout Councit. Benefits of Scouting to the Boys— A. A. Slade, superintendent of. schools. How a, Community. May. . Support Scouting—M. P. Wheeler, ex-president Casper Scout Council. Principles and Aims of Scouting— Harry L, Black, scout executive. The ‘Local Proposition—J. Hunter, scoutmaster troop 10. Troop Notes Troop 5 announces the following promotions: George Weinsiger, Lyle Parker, Gerald Welsh, Maurice Welsh, Lafayette Hagens, and Patrol Lead- ers Roland Hurst and Jesse Owens to the rank of Second Glass Scout: Jesse Skinner, Clyde Small, 0. Als- man and Dan Salisbury to the rank of Tenderfoot, Tom Cooper and. Robert Hargis are new members of troop 9. Merton Boyd and Howard Farris, of trop 4, have passed their Tenderfoot tests. Frank Carey and Patrol Leader Ike Stoddard of troop 7, have been ‘trans- ferred to troop 4. Troop 4, under the- leadership of Scoutmaster Frank Taylor, inspected the telephone office last Saturday, Af- terward the troop enjoyed a hike out west ef town to the the site of old Fort Casper. The Pirst ‘and Second Patrols of troop 5 inspected the telephone of- fice Tuesday. The remainder of the troop was shown the workings of the plant this morning. Trop 5, together with several me: M frum trops 7 and 11, enjoyed out west of ‘the fi grou Virst ‘and Park Streets, WITH THE CASPER BOY SCOUTS A Department Devoted to the Interest of Local Troops and Their Activity in All Lines of Endeavor Here last Sunday. The boys served them: selves with camp fire lunch, and, spent @ part of the afternoon gather. ing ‘interesting ‘specimens of birds’ nests and hornets’ nests, Changes in Registration Plan « Following the plan of decentraliza- tion of work that has been the policy of National Headquarters for some time, a memorandum bas been issued giving authority to First Class Coun- cils, such as we have in Casper, to} issue locally certificates of member- ship and merit badges. The new plan gives a greater responsibility to the! local councils and cleminates the ne- cessity for much correspondence with National Headquarters on details con- nected with the registration of scouts and the granting of merit badges. The plan will work an especial benefit to scouts of the Casper troops because of the fact that” promotions and advancements as well as new registrations’ are coming, thick and fast, and much delay has been’ ocea- sioned- heretofore on account of the necessary correspondence. The memorandum states that a shipment of blank forms to be used under the new plan has been forward- ed from New York, but as yet it hey not been received at local headquar- ters. Wea, Scouting Elsewhere ; Scouts in Battle Creek, Mich., are in charge of winding the town clock, Scouts in Fort Smith, Ark., raised | nearly $2,000 by the sale of tubereu- losis seals last Christmas, At Syracuse, N. Y., scouts assisted | in a sanitary survey of the city. Scouts of Moscow, Idaho, made a 200-milo hike into the mountains afoot with two full Pine Tree patrols and equipment, the trek carts being made | by themselves. They averaged 15 miles’a day. In Berkeley, Cal., Scouts collected 13 tons of waste paper for the Red Cross, and secured nearly $300 worth ot memberships. Boy scouts in Reading, Pa., saved a recreation hall on the top of Mt. Penn from being destroyed by fire. Scouts in Roseile Park, N. J., have for three years been in charge of the daily raising and lowering of munici- pal flags. ee Bird Books For Troops Through the courtesy of Scoutmast=) jer Howard Wilson of troop 1, Scout Headquarters “fas received a number jof interesting bird books for . distri- bution among the troops of the jeouncil. The book includes. deserip- tions of various kinds of birds, in- structions and plans for building bird houses, of many different kinds, and many other points of useful informa- |tlon regarding mird lite. _——— — DR. REICHENBACH / sutte ADE strictly to win your un- qualified and contin- uous approval. Next Time—BUY FISK EAST SIDE GARAGE C. L. Thompson G. J. Janes Phone 79. Announces’ his removal» to 315-329-380 Midwest Refinery Co, | Bldg. |Office phone 1548, Residence | Idea} | Apartments, phone 1236 3. i LL Dear Doctor: olores. and gloom. express. to me. Chiropractors Are Being Persecuted for _ Doing Just Such ‘Things as the Above : Suite 2, Townsend Building Daly Building Dr. F. Curran, Chiropractor, % 2612 Thirteenth Avenue, South. I wouldn’t feel right, doctor, if now before I leave T wouldn’t leave a message of thanks to you. i I well realize that words can never express my gratitude and admi- ration to you, doctor, for the wonderful achievement you have accom- pithed in doing that of restoring complete health to my darling baby, But there is a sa: my darling baby’s life. humanity for a long time to come. Thanking you again, doctor, I remain, It is a feeling Minneapolis, Minn., June 28, 1917. Your grateful friend, CHIROPRACTORS CHIROPRACTORS ; (Signed) MRS. JULIS COOLEY; Care Charles A. Johnson, To many who knew baby, Dolores, it is almost unbelieveable to them that she not only is alive today, but that she is well and strong. My, memory goes back to the time when b; age, when she was first taken peeously ill and operated upon. From that time until a year ago February, life was despaired of and all hope for her was. gone. Durin; thirty-eight: (38) of the most promin state attended baby, and e: yy was thirteen (13) months of when I first called on you, baby’s ig that period, ent physicians and surgeons of this of them gave no hope for her recovery, but declared that sooner or later baby Dolores would die, as a result of the immense growth having formed on her neck. Medical doctors proclaimed it as a “cancerous tumor,” the worst known tumor to the medical profession, emphatic in the belief that it would burst. Among the thirty-eight (88) who examined baby was Dr. Mayo, world famous and renowned surgeon, founder of the greatest known hospital in the country, located at Rochester, Minn. nation by. Dr. Mayo, he shook his head and said, “No chance for her, she will slowly choke to death.” i During all that'time my life had been’ nothing but disappointment g ‘‘that every cloud has a silver lining,” sure enough in this case it did. I-was recommended to you, doctor, and the first real sunshine and happiness that has entered otir humble home since baby’s illness crept in for the first time when I visited you and you said to me; “J’ll cure your baby.” ny stories to the contrary, it was hard to believe, and I discounted it seventy- five per cent. But, thanks to you and God, my baby is alive and healthy, Do.you remember the first time I took baby to you? forget it. Baby was three years of age at the time and weighed but thirteen pounds, of which the tumer weighed at least three pounds, measuring from the spinal cord to throat, seventeen inches. Today she weighs 3814 pounds and she plays and does whatever she chooses, with no fear or danger of injury to herself. Oh, but whatever few words I say, can never express what feeling there is deep down in,my heart. th: , and all were unanimous and After the exami- Naturally, after hearing so ma) T can never at. no words can « There is a hope and desire within me, buried deep in my heart, that you may live long to help any others that may become afflicted with sickness and disabilties. I shall always remember you for myself and my darling baby, and for the kindness shown to us. Today I leave for Washington, but with me I carry all that you have done for me and the thoughts of all your kindness and, above all, How can I ever thank you enough? It is my sincerest wish, doctor, that you will be able to serve I shall always be ready. to give you a recommendation, doctor, and my address follows so that anyone who may desire to know more of my case may do so by addressing a letter Skamania, Wash. Drs. B. G. and E. E. Hahn - Drs. J. H. and A. G. Jeffrey Office Phone 423, Residence ce 1235 Office Phone 706, Residence 93

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