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SUPERVISED PLAYGROUNDS ARE ISSIRED OR GIY TH SEASON Christine Dodson and Dean Morgan Retained for - Summer to Take Charge of Work Made Pos- * sible by Rotarians and Schools Through the co-operation of the school board and the Rotary club, Casper will have supervised playgrounds this year, with two experts in charge of the various features of child endeavor. According to the plans outlined this week, the public playgrounds will start some time during the mid- dle of June, shortly after the close of the schoo} terms. In onttining ‘the playground pro. , gram the Rotary club has solved the * |most important question that was z r: reported on the questionnaires which H were returned by chamber of com- ey = merce membtrs this spring. 90 2 per cent of the members that replied 40 th questionnaires sent out by the chamber of commerce specifically mentioned the need of supervised ‘ laygrouni | Al COHEDULE den of arranging for supervisors for fe the playground and equipping it with jthe devices that will be required to make it a success, several individual So Says M. P. Wheeler, Former} make 1s ruse club agrocd to furnish here ¢ Council, in Ap- |aaditional equipment and material to il ie make the playground complete. These Ea! er fees ms Com offe: were received first from John ing Campaign Jourgensen, J. L. Biedermann, Karl SS VANE? Me Jourgensen and O. L. Walker. tine Dodson will have charge of girls’ endeavor and Dean Morgan will be in charge of the athletic features for boys. When the plan of the Rotary club is finally carried out, the playgrounds will be complete in every detail from athletic courts of all kinds to shade houses to protect the children during the hot summer months. MOOSE AUTHORIZED TO . (By M. P. Wheeler.) Several years ago Howard Wilson organized one troop of Boy Scouts, A little\over a year ago the Rotary club of Cusper started in to try and get More Boy Scouts organized, re- sulting in John W. Piper, chief exe- cutive for this district, investigating the field and organizing the Boy]. Serats of the city of Casper. They put over a Boy Scout drive, raising ajproximately $7,700 in three hours— organized a first class council, elected a scout commissioner and appointed an executive committee, At that time the writer hereof was elected president of the councit, and chairman of the executive board. We Playground committee of the Rotary club offering to bear part of the bur- are being made to have certain hours for children of all ages. Miss Chris- iT. N. T. Used to started out with the determination of organizing six troops. About four months thereafter we employed Cap- tain Black ay scout executive, and asked him to raise the organization to ten troops within a year. He did When the report was made by the Playground in June arrangements it and gave us one troop extra. The Boy Scout is a law-abiding, useful, thoughtful, young American citizen. THe history of juvenile courts show that there is a very small frac- tion, or almost no Boy Scouts, who, at any time, disobey the laws and get into court, Boy Scouts keep oth- er boys from doing wrong, training them in their habits, teaching them to think straight and right; at all times standing ready to help out the rest of the community, by being good to them. Last week one of the scout offi- cials was walking down the street, unseen by two boys sitting on tho running ‘board of a car, when one of them ripped out a string of oat! the other turned around with this “Say Bill, don’t you know swearing don't get you no place? What do you do it for?’ As he did so, the citizen on the walk saw’on his coat a merit badge of a Boy Scout. Standing in the depot at the Bur- lington station, a man at the window buying a ticket dropped a dime, and did not notice it. A small boy ran sup, picked it up and handed it to him and tol dhim it was his. The man keep it, but the boy refused, saying he was a Boy Scout. To sum it up in a@ nutshell, the Boy Scout is an orderly, self-reliant and conscientious worker, for the bet- terment of himself and his associates. With this idea in mind it behooves us all to exert every effort in trying to make the present drive for Boy Scouts @ success, In February, Cheyenne organized a first-class council and went to work to raise fifteen scout troops, There are enough boys in the city of Casper to organize nine more troops of Boy Scouts, which can eas- ily be ‘done if the community will back up the boys and the scout offi- clals in their efforts so to do, With this number of scouts ‘in the city we would reduce to a minimum the de- predations and petty misdemeanors of children. Let us stand shoulder to shoulder and work through this drive, secur- ing our twenty troops and the things necessary to take care of their sum- mer camp, week-end camps-and equip- CHEYENNE, Wyo., April 20.—Mrs. Warten Richardson, Sr., mother of Clarence B, Richardson, prominent Casper and Cheyenne oil man, is critt- cally sick at here home here. L. J. PERRAULT Foot Specialist Apt. “B” Wyatt Hotel MEMORIAL DAY I have erected forty curbings in Casper cemetery in two years and not @ crack in one of them. Hun- dreds of satisfied monument cus- tomers throughout the state testify 40 my workmanship and fair prices. Place your order now for Memo- tial Day work. Simpson CASPER MONUMENT - WORKS 505 E. Second St. Casper, Wyo. Phone 957-W “ would not take it and told him to See Midsummer Madness OPEN REST OF WEEK Happy Kanyon, the concession which was operated here last week by the American Legion, is being op- erated for the remainder of this week by the Moose lodge. Permission was given to the organization to operate the concession at Monday night's meeting of the city council: A greater part of the funds de- rived from the concession will be used to finance the Casper delega- tion which will attend the annual convention which will. be held in some eastern point this summer, ‘The Casper delegation by reason of its successful activities at home al- ways gets prongnent consideration at the annual conventions of the organ- ization and it is making arrangements to get full advertising advantage for this city by right of the prominence of the delegation this year. Special consideration is given the Gasper lodge at all meotings of the Moose because of the successful un- dertakings of the local organization. The money will be spent at the na- tional meeting in advertising Casper and its successful industries. FOUR BOUND OVER ON LIQUOR: ACCUSATIONS CHEYENNE, Wyo., April 20. — Walter and May Williams, Elizabeth Kays and J. W. Harding, arrested at a camp near here recently on a charge of having liquor illegally in their pos- session, have been bound to the United States grand jury in bail of $500 each, Eleven pints of liquor and two auto- mobiles which were seized at the camp are held by the United States marshal. The cases will be laid be- fore the May grand jury. INSURANCE RT. Kemp Company “INSURANCE— THAT’S ALL” 212-213 Midwest Bldg. Opposite Postoffice PHO. 3 870. Don’t” CORONER'S JURY FAILS TO MAKE SERIOUS CHARGE Blows Which Killed Frank Sinon Break Way for _ Train Service DENVER, April .20.—"Jigger" pas- Songer serviec was in today on the Denver & Salt Lake road, which has been tied up by a sonw Ddlock- be and rock slides since last Thurs- ay. The rock slides, which blocked the line at the west portal of tunnel No. i be. stoared away by next} Struck “Without Criminal In- esdas', it was said at thé gen- PS ict in Kili eral superintendent's office today. tent,” Verdict in Killing Train gangs are toiling night and day’ Case Says in an effort to clear the line. T. N. T. is being used to break tho rock. The slide was 100 feet long and of an average depth of 30 feet. Tho blocked tunnel is 1,709 feet long. Bare- ly enough space was left open at the tunnel portal \e permit @ man to got through. (Special to The Tribune) CHEYENNE, Wyo., April 20.—Al- though a coroner's jury Tuesday -re- turned @ verdict that Frank Sinon, 62 years of age, pioneer rancher and hotel man, “died from a blow on tho 1 jaw struck without criminal intent, the sheriff and prosevuting attorney's | Joffices continue investigation of the! case and it is forecast that the charge of assult and battery now standing against Sinon’s assailant, Edward F. Geesa, 2¥ years of age, will be mervly Manslaughter, or the graver one of murder in the second degree, will dé-{ |pend on the trend of additional infor miation, it is stated. Meanwhile the! bail of $1,000 given by Geesa when he was arraigned on the assault and bat- | tery charge has been continued. Geesa, his wife, George Carter, a taxicab driver, and Rthel Van Sickle, the woman alleged to nave been slapped by Sinon, were among wit- nésses who testified before the cor- oner's jury. Their combined state- ments formed substantially the story Theretofore reported, includiig sub- 151 i Carter of the claim \of Geesa and Mrs. Gecsa that Sinon slapped the Van Sickle woman and that when Geesa remonstr@ted with him for such behavior, Sinon struck {him in the face, breaking his eye» glasses ard precipitating tho tight be- veen a corpulent, 62-year-old man and @ 22-year-old man of sturdy physt- que which resulted in the beating to which Sinon was subjected. Mrs. Van Sickle, a divorcee despite her youthfulness, however, was unable to substantiate the clatm that Sinon had struck her. She had had a couple of drinks, sho said, and was in such condition that she was unable to recol- lect what took place. Sho had no rec- ollestion, she stated, of having been struck by Sinon, or of tho fight be- tween Sinon and Geesa sald to have jbeen Precipitated by the allaged as sauit. Other witnesses included Dr. L. P. Desmond and Dr. W. K. Mylar, who performed an autopsy on Sinon's body. Sinon, it was stated, mani. festly had been severely beaten, the injuries thus sustained sctting vp a condition which a man of his age and physical state was unable to overcome and which led te his death. Funeral services for Sinon were hela at St. Mary's cathedral at 9 o'clock TRIO HELD FOR FTOWING WITH CLUBS, REPORT Alleged Game Law Violators to Be Given Hearing in Justice Court Tomorrow on Offi- cers’ Charge Charged with clubbing fish which had been caught by low water in’ Can- yon creek, W. H. Watson, Ralph Brooks and Tommy Atkins will be tried in justice court tomorrow for this serious violation of the state fish laws. The three fellows went to Canyon creck Sunday to fish but the water was so low the fish wouldn't bite. It is said that they clubbed the trapped fish and were rewarded by a much larger catch than they possibly could have secured under legitimate tactics. Ranchers in the vicinity of the creek became acquainted with the unsportsmanlike conduct of the fish- ermen and reported tho matter to lo- cal authorities. Tho police kept watch on the roads leading to Casper and as soon as the three fellows came within the city limits placed them un- der arrest and turned them over to the county authorities. The offense charged is punishable by both fines and imprisonment at the discretion of the court. BOY KILLED BY BASEBALL BEAVER CITY, Neb., April 20.— Hilding Hockinson, 8 years’ of age, was killed when struck by a ball thrown by a playmate while they were playing on a school ground near here.‘ x go-ege-os x x work and solving the labor problem. farm—it is increasing production at lower costs a Apply this power farming idea in your threshing. More and more farmers are making ‘ themselves independent of unfavorable condi- tions by using the Fordson Tractor linked up with a light thresher. By seizing the right mo- ment and being able to do the job without waiting and in quick time, crop losses are avoided and profits increased. The Fordson operates with kerosene. When used on belt work, running at full power at 1,000 R, P. M., the fuel consumption does not exceed 284 gallons per hour. It will run the 125 to 137 North Center Street this morning, Rev. Father Hartman Po teste to te-ste tote dete tote te tata tate ha ste cte-cte- toes Se a a OI Sr 4---DAYS---4 Special Wednesday, Thursday, Friday; Saturday, April 20, 21, 22 and 23 $5.00 Off On Any Suit Pattern in the Store FEATURING ALL-WOOL SUITS AT $29.50 $40 to $50 Values Strictly Hand Tailored—Select your pattern ‘from the largest stock of woolens in the State cf Wyoming. Cleaning, Pressing and Altering Done by Workmen Who Know Their Business C. H. WHALEY Casper’s Leading Tailor Union Label in Every Garment 116 East Midwest Avenue. ‘ Se-eie eho o-oo tho ote sho ele shoal ahe-ato- teach ate-ates os $39.50 $60 to $70 Values Sooke Soege root 2, " 8 t " >of 2, S o xa so o "? os Pn he Sack oes ,o, “s oo Poot Secs t Soho Pooh coax Ro so eof 5 Sanat xX. e s Ss 0 of 3 ot Oot er % o-4, o, o Sots so-so efoes , 2, ate ‘- a - ae afoeg oe Me oh slo ehe-+5s R - Phone 48. retest 6 $625 f. o. b. Detroit Power Farming wate Fordson taking care of every power job; it is taking the drudgery out of farm petty Srvdogp oc rabeers sr Power farming with the Fordson ie se TER i Imost one-half what it would be with horses, and saves a thir a half of the eS ag What Saatdinaes does for the factory, the Fordson Tractor is accomplishing on the nd making farm life attractive. electric light plant, operate the milking ma- chines and straw baler—will take care of every kind of belt work. The Fordson plows 6 to 8 acres ina 10-hour day, handling two plows with ease in the aver- age soil. It requires an average of only 144 to 2 gallons of kerosene to the acre. It is the ideal year-around tractor. pay for its fall and winter keep in many ways, such as road work, hauling grain to the eleva- tor, pumping water and moving granaries. EARL C. BOYLE CASPER, WYO. PAGE SEVEN Se ee officiating. cemetery Interment was at O1 ivet showing the oondition of the federal reserve board and the federal reserve banks will be tssued at the close of business on W b Fridays, it was announced tuday. The WASHINGTON, April 20.— Begin-|statements will be released Yor publi: ning April 27, the weekly statements cation tn morning papers of Friday. MRS. REIFENSTEIN. AGED 7, GAINS 25 POUNDS Declares She Would Like to Put a Bottle of Tanlac in the Hands of Every Sick Man, Woman and Child in This Country — Never Saw Its Equal. Aa Ss 28 Ce STATEMENTS CHANGED. “I am sixty-seven years of age, but in all my experience I have never known a medicine like Tanlac. Think of it! At my age to gain twenty-tive Pounds in weight, but that is just what I have done,” said Mrs. Emma Reifenstein, bf No. $37 Webster ave nue, Syracuse, N. Y. “If I had it in my power,” she con: tinued, “I would put a bottle of Tan- lac in the home of every sick man, woman and child in this country, for I_ know what this wonderful medicine would do for them. For almost two yeurs I was almost @ nervous wreck. I did not dare to leave the how even £0 up town unless my husb: went with me. I was afraid to even cross the street and had a fecling of dread ali of the time. “My stomach weak and easily upset. For days at a time I would go without solid food. I could not rest at night to do any good and felt tired and worn out all of the time. Some days I could hardly drag myself across the room and was so weak and miser- able I was ready to give up. “My health is fine now and I eat MRS. EMMA REIF! 7 Webster Ave., Sy id. ‘Yes, happy sur- ll. A few weeks ago I anything I want and never have a| had no idea she would be able to pull touch of indigestion. I have never} through, but now sie is in better slept better than I do nowy. My re-| health than I have even seen her and covery is the talk of our neighborhood, | the credit is due to Tanlac. We have as it w married fifty-two years today not last but a few weeks longer. This grand medicine has brought me health and I don't believe I have ever seen as generally believed I could} beon [sn looking any better.” A Carload of Challenge Refrigerators and Ice Boxes All Sizes Priced $ 1 & And Up Felt lined construction, large circulating air space, seamless enamel and porcelain lining, sanitary and economical. Fifteen Styles and Sizes Chamberlin Furniture Co. Corner Second and David Streets . Phone 37 JAP-A-LAC Makes old furniture look like new. We sell this in all colors. See our stock of Paint, Varnishes It will Phone 9 and Brushes, and get our prices. Visit our kitchen utensil department. New labor-saving devices in aluminum, tinware, and graniteware. }jouds- Oliver Hardware \/7 Company “Where the Best Costs Less” 105 S. Center Opp. Henning Phone 714