Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 5, 1921, Page 3

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MONDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1921. at Banquet. . here f the 40, ching the Delta .Gammas the first Saturday noire tae Se hag on berike|,, The frst call for police came from| "way better thats any other strike” | in Januaryg More defimite details 4 Naucidans, seniors, the Swift plant wiere 700 men gath-|the company here had ever be announoed —_ PERSONALS according South Gt. Paul, Maan so waiting for jobs. The police] rienced. As @ guest of the luncheon, Miss P eos from pain ‘thire little trouble in keeping them in Ed Phipps, superintendent at Swift Margaret Cornell, field worker of the indicated more than 2, bam hed Cross, gave an impressive talk were an interesting straightforward] Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sherman of | 2000 Riverton spent several days here en | Fort mi er. The luncheon tables in the banquet nail of the Henning hotel were pret- of Christmas, = Mrs, Lever nounce the birth of a son yesterday | City, Is Hostess. morning at the Private hospital. The A 1 o'clock IzncHeon was served little boy has been named after his afterncon at the home of Mrs.| proud father, Hubert G. Summers, | that owe ris, tutes were guests of the club. ese Boag Hr years are leaving for Des Moines, I2.,| aoes at > The members’ of the Fortnightly] Suring the Christmas holidays. After ge club met with Mrs. C. H-ltnat they will leave for the south, Townsend at her home, on Wolcott where they intend to locate, probably street, Saturday afternoon. in Texas. Mr. Elmets has been asso- A dainty luncheon was followed by| ciated with the Smoke House. an afternoon of auction bridge. ) Smoke Mrs, Lathrop to Entertain the ©. and N. W. Olub, he Chicago and Northwestern Rail- Woman's club will meet at the me of Mrs. Lathrop, 905 South Cen ter street, Tuesday afternoon, Decem. ber 6 at 2.80°0'clocks ~ Mrs, Frank Clark will assist as hos- tess. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dormer have as their house guest, Cecil Henry of Douglas. ha eee Raymond Darby of Douglas spent Sunday in Casper visiting with his cousins, the Misses Ruth and Fannie Belle Beggs, teachers in .the Casper schools. the ci that there hee Mrs. John A. Holdgn, who has been Pi Phi Meeting visiting in the northern part gf the for Tonight, state for tho past several months, is stopping in Casper this week with relatives. Mis. Holden is on her way home to New York. ‘The members of the Pi Beta Phi alumnae club will meet this evening th Mra. A. A. Schulte, assisted by Miss Matherine Dunn and Hedwig Se Bayer, at her home on East Second ‘ street. Tho ustal business and social ||| - hours will be the evening's promram. CITY BRIEFS eee Cabper Clio Club C. H. Townsend is spending several to Meet Tomorrow. days in Cheyenne where he will at- Tho Casper ‘Civic club will Bave 2) tend the consistory. Out’ of the 40 regular session tomorrow afternoon at|irctings which huve been held te the o'clock’ ‘in “the Natrona County -)—acitol city, Mr. Townsend has been ar: ‘Tho officers elected at the last meet-|" Attendance at 38, meeting will preside for the first time at the gathering tomorrow, eee Maccabee Meeting for This Evening. ie Ladies of Maccabees will meet this evening in the T. O. O. F. hall for he purpose of electing officers for the coming year, Initiation will be in or- der. Following the business session o shower will be held in honor of the members who celebrate their birth anniversaries during the month of December. there be shi J. FredSchmocker spent the week-end here from Alcova where he has been spending the past months. He left Pe last night for Douglas where he will visit with friends before returning to the Alcova region. . place! ‘wo ee M. P. Wheeler, United States com- missiner is leaving this evening for Cheyenne where he will be in atten dance at the Masonic consistory. ee John Lind, lately connected with the Casper supply company has estab lshed @ collection agency with offive at 14 Ardmore apartments and num Dinner Tonlgh¢ at bers with his clients many of the lead Worthington” Home, ing mercantile firms of the city. Mr. and Mrs, Worthington will en- aaa ® tertain at thelr home on East Sec- Edward Wentz and Noah Williams. ond street this eyening at an informal] oyiciais of the Iowa-Wyoming Ol dinner to be served ‘at 6:30. Twelve company and connected with Wyo- Suests will be present. ming Victor, are expected to arrive in apt Casper this week from Iowa, to look Party Enjoyed at after oil interests here. Holman Residence. ee Mrs, Minnie Holman entertained at} 31155 Jano McDonald, deputy county her home on North McKinley street | troasurar who has been absent from Saturday evening in honor of her s0n.| the office for the past two weeks is Benton Holman. The evening was spent in dancing. About twenty-five. Buests were present. Delicious re- freshments were served toward the close of the evening. Mrs. Holman was assistad by her daughter, Mrs: Barton Rabun. see Mrs. Edwards to Entertain Mrs. Philip K.- Edwards -will be hostess to. the members of St. Mark's nurgae at a regular meeting. to be ld Tuesday evening at the rectory, 1015 South Wolcott street. erie Interesting Program at 6. and P. W. C. Meeting. The Business and Professional Women’s club of Casper will meet at the Presbyterian tabernacle tomorrow ening at o'clock. Mrs. Ida May ‘opkins will preside during the busi- ess session and matters of import- ance will be discussed. Yollowing the business hour the evening ‘will be spent with singing under the direction of Dr. Edna omas and with*dramatic work! un- der the direction of Mrs. C. A. Wil- son, eae Dinner Is Pleasant Affair, Mr. and Mrs. George Jarvis pre- sided at an infromal dinner served at thelr home last. Saturday night in Chicago, Il. honor of Mrs. Lowey. of Boston, who ‘s visiting here with her son, A. R-| “Only a medicine of truly wonderful Lowey, and Mrs, Simonds, who {s/merit ‘could have done what Tanlac here from Lincoln, Neb., visiting at] qia for me and there is nothing: hal: the H. B. Durham home. g00d enough for me to say about {i American Beauty roses were used/said Miss Frances Newman, 2639 for the table decorations and follow-| Firsch St., Chicago. ing the dinner a delightful social} +t don’t think anybody ever suf- evening was mpent. Yored any more from indigestion than Places at the table were laid for|T aid and for over a year I was in the guests of honor, Mr. and Mrs. A.| wretched health, I had smothering Ry Lowey, Mr, and Mrs. H. B. Dur-|epolls and my heart palplated a0 yio- ham’ end the host and hostess. lently I though I had heart trouble, but I know now it was all caused from my stomach, "Since taking Tanlace I feel and The Woman's Auziliary.to the Amer-|}jook-like a different person, -I have ee | spiendia appetite and my digestion Is just perfect, I sleep clght or ine hours every night and get up.in the Follow the Crowds) morning feeting fresh and happy. My friends tell me I’m always smiling To Mednick Bros. |. si,ins"it mosis" °°" © 7 - ‘Tanlac is sold in Casper hy the Cas- First Annual Sale per Pharmacy and by leading drug- gists every whore.—Adv, ¥ ci mitely 10-per cent in all lines had beemerdered by the packers. This cu lean Legion will meet in regular ses-|!" the shop representation council by sion tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock | Committees of employes and represen-| work. At the council meeting of the Pan-|in the rooms at the ¥. W. C. A. All|*#tives of the plants. The reduction Hellento association, which was at-| members are asked to be present and| Went into effect last Mon@ay morning. tended by 32 members of Greek wom-| business of importance will be pre-| TWo-hundred extra policemen were n’s soroirties, plans were laid for a/ sented. assigned to the stockyards district! route to the south where they will| Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. and Den- spend some time before returning to| Ver. Colorado. ty decorated for the occasion in red/their home. They made the trip in| Cornelius Hayes, president of the Kennedy, a watchman employed by and green with poinsettas used as the/ their motor car. Mr. Sherman is man-|butcher workmen, said the men/per cent of their employes had re- a followers and _surroundeded _ with | ager of this district for the Union Oll| “walked out 100 per cent in East St./ported for work. was caused by electrocution, when {t greens. Place cards were suggestive| company of Cal!fornia. Louis, Ill, Wichita, Kansas, St.| John E. O’Hern of Armours, an- s ‘eee Joseph, Mo., and other points. nounced that 7,760 ofthe 8,000 Ar- Mr, and Mrs. H. G. Summers an-| Mayor Harry B. Burton of Kansas, Henry T. Zinuwer, warned the pack- ing house workers there yesterday : Beech street.|Jr- Both he and kis mother are do-| lawful. aS weed “a Mthe tranibere of| ine nicely while the members of the| Union leaders said they would obey| here today. a onday bridge club and following| Beta ‘Theta Pi are specially congrat-|the summons of the Kansag court of| 4 rarer the afternoon was de-| lating Mr. Summers upon the ar-/ industrial relations and appear before rs rival of a future member of the fra-|it today. A > . ed to playing mei (ed bd es ad yb ge i A statement tssued bytw. B. Fag,[“T MANY PLANTS. es of cards were played. Several superintendent of the), ST. PAUL, Minn. Dec. 5.—Picket- ; ing of the plants of Swift € Co. and Armour & Co. at South St. Paul to- lay where ¥ employes went on SA RESMNAELTY | NAD) COPE Gl gtrike: “prevented a runiber-ef' oot, Ployes from entering the plants this morning, representatives of both em- ployes and company officials said. was precipiated when a group of com- Swift @ Co. annound¢ed 400 men had} lesion men tried to break through reported for work while the Armour announcement. Union officials said they “‘wers more than satisfied” with the result. ‘ Mr. and Mrs. William Elmets, who] sforris plant this morning said: Fortnightly Entertained =“ have been residents here for many] ‘We are killing 100 per cent. (This where they will visit with relatives! output, as the packers supply of live- stockgVaries froin day to day and and when the entire day's buy ts kill- ed, the plant would be “killing 100 per cent)’ As far as our plans are concerned, there appears to be no in- ication of a strike and our gangs ur employment offices are be- sieged with men Jooking for work.” Farris) reported that advices from| arrests usual.’ ‘The employment office at the yards! cont ‘of the m of Swift & Company reported that Officers of the company said that about 90 per cent of the regular force had reported for work this morning. The defections were in the wool de- partment and the barrel cooperative department. Company officers said but they were expected to be in opéra- tion again by noon. More than 300 men were lined up ss reported to be convalescing and in all probability will be able to report back at the office by the end ofthis week. ee as as bureau, has returned from Sheridan, this morning where a large per/ever, responding to the strike call,|| 2. A. Cudahiine. at Kansas City, Kansas, 2,000 at | line. Worth, Texas, and 600 each at} E. A. Cudahy, Jr, of the Cudahy ing company, sald that reports from the compan: variot eaihag’ samaice pthlintss rh Fy go | ception of the sudden death of W. P. Kansas, and Chief of Police/ usual this morning. Kansag law made picketing un- PICKETING USED general officials made no all reported for work. company’s western plants were lants in South St. the men reported for work “as| 1) F were “two men for every job.’ on strike. jut down indefinitely if necessary CAGO PACKING HOUSES MT SSS AFFECTED BY WORKERS’ STRIKE (ontinues From Page early tn tie iapoatna“iek the employ- ment office of Armours, but few of them were given jobs. At another en- trance of the Armour plant, about 500 men waited, also looking for Police details were on duty early, With 160 men in reserve at the stock- yards station. None of the patrol- men were sent inside the yards, how- mour employes here came to work as In outside plants there was “about a 50-50 break” he said. Shipments were very light to. “é day, Mr. O’Hern said, and there was |no necessity for filling the vacancies ST. JOSEPH, Mo., Dec. 5.—Several for picketing Joseph followed the strike today of some oc tue. work- were departments which could rian eOuaNe wots out until the fight was won,” no matter- how long that would be fticer of the union district council | nad member of the general sirike committee, declared the walkout was “practically 100 per cent,”” adding that what few men had reported for work rould not return tomorrow. Morris & Co. estimated 50 per cent of Its plant. employes were working. Dold Packing company 40 per cent, while M. R. Murphy, general man- ager for the Cudahy company; said that between 50 and 60 per cent of. later this figure dropped to 49 per| cent. Mr. Murphy adGed@ that before the! & Co., at 9 a. m. said it was too early to make any estimate. = Additional police were assigned to the affected area but there were no early unusual incidents, with the ex- the Cudahy corapany, whose demise {s believed he came in contact with a live wire dangling from a pole. A number of women were among the union pickett. NSAS CITY, Dec. 5.—Sixteen ficlals of the five Kansas City Kan., locals of the Amalgamated Meat Cut ters’ and Butcher Workmen appeared this afternoon before the Kansas court of industrial relations in Kan- sis City, Kan. The unfon officials, who ignored summonses of the indus trial court Saturday, presented them- selves upon orders issued by the dis- trict court of Wyandotte county. ST. PAUL, Minn., Dec. 5.—Eight or ten men were injured in fighting that strike picket lines around the Swift and comany plant in South St. Paul today. 65 PER CENT WORKING IN OMAHA PLANTS, OMAHA, Dec. 5.—Various estimates S¢ the number of employes on strike in the packing industry were made the packing ers. Union leaders clairned 60 per} toda by company heads, but M. R. were out but the} Murphy, general packers sald the strikers did not num ber more than 25 per cent and that the plants were operating with new employes, the union leaders professed to be disappointed with the number ager of the lahy company, said he thought ft would be a fair estimate to say that 65 per cent of all workers in the five lants affected were at work, while es claimed that only 10 ent remained on duty. the Cudahy plant, howeve: hy estimated that about 80 per were on strike, and the union Mr. OMAHA, Dec. 5.—Both company men | predicted that that by y Thursday the: they spokesmen~and union labor leaders were predicting victory for them. selves as the strike in the packing for INFANTS ana INVALIDS plant industry as a protest against Tecuced wages became Omaia at 6 o'clock this morning. That the walkout would be of short duration was the prediction of-com- C. Ross, head of the veteran’s| pany heads while on the other hand the-unten forces through Jacoh H. where he had been stiperintending the| Davis, president of district. council ment of five men in ‘training.]| No. 5 of the Amalgamated Meat Cut effective in \ ae of the men receiving the voca-| ters and Butcher Workmen union, de. tional training in Sheridan have corg-| clined to speculate pleted their courses. ————_+—- to tho strike's | MorTafante, Invalides and Growing Children length, but declared “the men wot see, Origioal Novae bosses peta Re STOP! A REAL, HONEST DECEMBER REDUCTION SALE There are ars sales going on, in fact, some never stop. But we don’t believe in continuous sales, but now we are offering you our regular December reduction sale---think it over. We always lead in dependable merch- andise at right prices. 20 Per Cent Reduction ON ALL Suits and Overcoats 20 Per Cent Reduction Workand Dress Pants 20 Per Cent Reduction ON ALL - Dress and Work Shoes Ralstons Included. Armour & Co. 70 to TS per cent, the} day was over he estimated about 25| per cent would be at Work which| | thelr men came to work, but that|Today’s Efforts Highly Suc- exPe-| mas seals was highly successful and | Mrs. Harry “foung with her workers, ‘numbering near to 400, counting the ‘will be ‘at the headquarters in the BIGRESULTSIN |? | provement projects have been outlined. Rich milk, malted grain extract in Powder | Ne Cooking — Nourlahing — Digestibie SEAL SALE ARE were taken from their homes near| Snow Hill in Oconee county late last night and lynched and Aaron Bird- song, who ts alleged to have shot and wounded two white men, was shot and killed by a posse. cessful and Large Showing Is Predicted by Workers. The first day of the sale of Christ Boy Scouts, were pleased with the wel come the seals received and are ex- pectant of unusual results for the week. ‘The workers Are in charge of the hotels, places of business, as well as the streets, and report that they sel dom met with a refusal of their of ferings. Each of the women doing the work has pledged a certain num. ber of seals, and are so confident of their success that many undertook to pell a whole package. It was neces sary to wire for more seals in order to fill all of the orders left by those who will attempt to sell their pledged quota, Mrs. Harry Young, who is in charge of the city committee, Mrs. Wallace Leavitte, Mrs. Anna Leeper, Mrs. P. C. Nicolaysen or Mrs, Harry Young Taylor and Clay offices where any in formation as to the procedure of the saye can be given out. Members of the committee will be at the headquar. ters all during the day, where the seals will be given out to the workers and where funds resulting from the sales will be taken in. cial pric COMMISSIONERS CONVENE. Only routine matters have come be fore the county commissioners who are now holding monthly sessions. Al. lowing bills, consideration of Casper's new hospital project and making plans to meet the committtees appointed by the chamber of commerce for im- would have “all of the plants shut down.” Both company and union “men 3-ibs. fancy Blue Rose Rice. ...... . Fe agreed that only a few men reported 5 Ib. can Dark Karo Syrup. . wee eene for work at a Nebraska City, Neb., : plant owned by Wilson & Co.. accord: 5 Ib. can White Karo Syrup....... wees 3 406 ing to a report from there, which said the plant was virtually shut down and ylwas receiving no hogs for slaughter. ee ASK FOR Horlick’s the Original Avoid Imitations end Substitutes Extra Special Attention Standard and Midwest Casper’s finest grocery store has extended the spe- our mutual benefit. In addition Loose-Wiles English Style Cookies, Ib... A Good 4-Sew Broom Crepe Toilet Paper, 6 rolls for...... aes Fancy 30'to 40 Santa Clara Prunes, Ib.......... 30c Fancy Seeded or Seedless R 4-Ib. bag Red Moon Pancake Flour. The Grand Grocery We Deliver Anywhere in the City. Money Back if You Are Not. Satisfied. PAGE THREE | Anyhow, they shouldn't lock up the | peace parley until they are good and sure the dove got in.—Detroit News. -DEATH iH GA. To Mednick Bros. Follow the Crowds | First Annual Sale BEING WELL DRESSED Quality in a handbag ts as essential to the well dressed woman as any other article of raiment. A shabby handbag Often kills the effect of an otherwise beautiful costume. We have a very few special quality rich leather bags—one of a kind—no duplicates—just what you want. Ask to see them at etther of THE KIMBALL DRUG STORES Employes! s advertised in Friday evening's Tribune for 55c SPECIAL 3, 10-oz. pkg... .30c Phone 13 228 BAST SECOND STREET Opposite Telephone Building READ! STAR CLOTHING CO. IS RUNNING 20 Per Cent Reduction On Mackinaws and Leather Vests 20 Per Cent Reduction ON ALL Silk and Dress Shirts In addition-to the above 20 per cent reductions we have checked over our stock and find a few odds and ends. them at MOTHERS—We carry a complete line of boys’ shoes. Come and get 20 Per fet Reduction Make This a Practical Gift-Giving Christmas and Shop Early We are displaying on tables some Work and Dress Shoes At prices that will astonish the most conservative buyer. Come in and see the Work Shoe we are selling at 2.95 The price will satisfy you. It is the biggest bargain in Casper. “ANOTHER WORK SHOE AT $3.45 Elsewhere they ask $6.00 for this shoe. A DRESS SHOE AT $3.85 Worth double. 260 So. Center St., Eee Wyo. ——And Don’t Forget That the An Extra Special For the young or small man. A Few Suits Left \* Sizes 34, 35 and 36 only. In these lots you will find suits that sold from $25.00 to $45.00. LOT 1 LOT 2 $14.50 $18.50 Arrow Brand Collars Hose Supporters__________ 15¢ Wool Mixed Sox ______-__1l5c Blue Flannel Work Shirts ___-__-________$1.85 All-Leather House Slippers _____________ $1.45 . LEARNER

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