Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 24, 1922, Page 7

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1922. BANQUET NEXT M FOR ELECTION VICTORS . WILL BE NON-PARTISAN Successful Candidates of Both Parties for! National, State, County and City Offices To Be Guests of Honor The Casper Chamber of Commerce will be host at 6:15} Monday evening at a banquet in, the Henning hote] to the successful candidates, national, state, county and city, in the} recent election. The local committee has the assurance at Sees aah bpd erg will be attended by Senator John . Kendrik, Gov.-Elec Villiam Bs $ veg 20 Saag Rapier a item B. Ross and Congressman state, county and city officials elec ere being in and it is expected that a’ very percentage will at. tend. Contrary to ar reached the Cha this will n The Chamber Ue pos act as their agents in the t of important business, and that bo! the people and the agents a expression that has| to learn something of the rc of Commerce, partisan mee’ Cormmerce ion that the people of and eas ye De made later WYOMING LIFE INSURANCE MER TO HOLD CONVENTION SATURDAY The first annual conven ion of the Wyoming Life Under- writers’ association, the membership of which embraces all the active life insurance representatives throughout the state legal prosecution « of Wyoming, is to be opened in Casper Saturday with a lunch-['he federal governme: eon at 12 noon at the Henning hotel. Headquarters have been established in the Henning in charge of one of the mem Dern of the association of Casper to! Every life insurance representative welcome all che whether a member of the asroc!ation $ - not, is invited to this convention A ey Or tether et as the affiliation of the Wyoming After the noon luncheon, there will/tngorwriters with the National Life be informal speeches made which|association is of exceptional import will be “of interest to the fraternity/ance to hose engaged in the busi and the public in general. A later/ness in Wyoming, session and dinner in the evening, M. B. Moen, of Thermopolis, is the will elose the convention and busi: first presicent of the association and ness meeting which will be held in Guy Gay, of Casper, its first secre- the afternoon of the same day. tary. ATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE CELEBRATES ANNIVERSARY OF - OPENING, SUCCESS IS MARKED ine n= mer ery Courtesy and individual attention to customers and un- usuai co-operation among the officers and employes are re sponsible for the remarkable growth of the National Bank of Commerce in the brief three years it has been in existence, according to one of the members of the board of directors. The bank is today celebrating its third anniversary and pre paring for bigger Uusiness. in the who are in Casper to stayoand {t {s years to come. to these. substantial oi The day*the bank opened in 1919) bruh must look for !t Prognost you can be certain that the years to SUES SWINDLERS Dailp Cribune Che Casper separate actions were in prospect The initial cas ‘e to Involve con struction of € > Upton, Yaphank N. ¥.; Camp Jackson, Columbia. 8. C Camp Sherman, Chillicothe: and Camp Funston, Fort Reilly, Kans. j Unofficial estimates place the total | sum that will be sought in all of the recovery suits contemplated at morn than $75,000,000. In one camp cost-| ing $13,000,000, auditors were said to have found indications of an excess expenditure of $5,000,000 | In. the first group of four suits in which action is to be instituted the the fnereasing business that government seeks to recover a total come to Casper of $21,500,000. The Camp Upton suit ‘The officers of the Bank of Com.|!nvolving $6,000,000, the Camp Jack-| merce are Arthur K. Lee, president:/0" suit $6.500,000. the Camp Sher-| Ira G. Wetherill and Hugh L. Patton,|™an sult $5,000,000 and the Camp vice-presidents; Joseph E. Denham,|Funston suit 0. cashiers: F. D. Stearns, T. C. Daniels, 3 = Ralph Buckner and W. I. Christian assistant cashiers. UNITED STATES ation. of the future but ot come will tind the bank abreast n McMahon | Careyhurst or (Continued from Page One.) clos to forty per cent of the whole Jacks a bsuiness visitor few days lings C. 8. Stoc city for u f 7,620 and Camp Funston William Potter of Wortand is spend: | ing a few days in the city on bust ness. | Attorney | In _ their General Daugherty and his assistants investigations working in every part of the United Biates, already havo examined into} mor than 15,000 of the 1£0,000 war construction contracts to which the government was a party, and it was| evident at the depar,ment today that | the four sults alrvady filed was re garded as only & beginning of what promises to be th cee Kobert Simpson left today overt for Douglas where he will attend PEP SAYS: “You TELL’EM 24.—A series of moneys ex-| n of war can WASHINGTO of sults for. recovery yended for ccnstru tonments has been step in the gover paign against alleged ar contracts. The number of suits to be filed has not been definitely decided but it was | “idy that a dozen or more frauds under Clemenceau’s Rival peed op — Hard Times are not coming— its soft times | of Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap | the deposits amounted to $129,480.49 while the deposits up to and includ $1,418,874.28, In hard figures that statement means a lot, but back of| the actual cash transactions has been a world of executive banking ability and an aptitude for making and keeping new customers, Henry M. Cady, president of the advertising firm bearing his name in Billings, Mont., and publicity direc- tor of 43 banks in Montana and Wyo: ming, is in Casper today to attend the anniversary of the opening of the local institution, “The National Bank of Commerce,” | sul said Mr. Cady in discussing the mat- ter this morning, “has had one of the most remerkable growths of a’ bank that has come under my obser vation. growth has been that it has been in no way @ boom as they say in the oil sable Ing yesterday's business amounted to; “T feel assured that this remark growth of tais institution has been largely due to the fact that the board of drectors and officers have worked strenuously for the interests of the bank. It has often eutailed sacrifices and has interfered with thelr other business but whenever they have been called on they have been on the job. Arthur K. Lee, the president, is a Thermopolis man, but he has spent about es much time in Casper as he has in his homo clty looking out for the interests of the institution and its customers. That ia the kind of work that brings re and the ey'dence of it is here. “The Bank of Commierce is ‘for tunate in having an unusually effi yjclent staff. They fot only know how to do their work and do it well The best thing about the! but they know how to meet the pub lc in a way thet makes people like jo business with them. M. Longuet, grandson of Karl Marx, ome of the most prominent Socialists n France, has arrived in the United Sates to deliver lectures in an effort ‘o counteract the doctrines spread by he former French premier, | Pep's 3 Stores Every day, from now until January 1, Mr. Pep will sell one dozen different items at SATURDAY ONLY Slashed Prices Watch ’em—Buy ’em— Every Day. will _not attempt to make fie! The bank today thas customers ESTELLE TAYLOR AND LEWIS STONE IN “A FOOL THERE WAS” Any time wifie sits at the window listening for the rattle of the taxicab, and hearing instead, the rattle of the milk tans, she visualizes hubby enmeshed in the silken coils of a lady exactly’ like the vampire in “A Fool There Was,” the 1922 version of Kipling’s great poem which plays at the America Theater Sunday and Monday. 6s vw Came | They Lame, | J Pepsodent 34c e aur Dassekes? |/| creme Angelus .. _...T5¢ Saw, ey Bought \! Armand’s Talcum...........27¢ eh grata ays ? Armand’s Cold Cream le hought your goods, spies they must jad yy id them a. Powder 80c pan i a Stacomb 60c hey saw them they must REET have come into your store. Odorano, '35e size afc m pie: “ ie Armour’s 10c Toilet Soap....5¢ pnd they came into your Pear’s Scented Soap, “They must have read you ge) Ne hey re your fT i ads in the ‘Christmas Gift Sug- |{|Signet Mechanic Hand gestions’ column of this news. Soap Z “ 6c paper's alphabetical classified |/]50c Luxor Cream... 27c section.” Melba Face Powder. Mavis Face Powder It’s better than a Mail Order Business. ‘That's the way a good many Christmas stories will run this year. Use your Credit Call 15 or 16 and give Miss Classified your Want Ad—we'll send bill later— no extra charge for credit. Use your ’Phone Do You Realize That There Are Only 24 Shopping Days Until Christmas? Buy Your Gifts NOW in Casper Dougias-Cheyenne footba! son ts confident 6f a good ® | married pair . . | dismal Spurlock is in the c! ity from the Buxsard ranc NOTICE! Nov. 24, 1922. Water will be shut off the. following streets: Second Street from Center to Wolcott Streets, Wolcott Street from Midwest to Burlington Depot, Friday night from 8 p.m. to 2. a.m. Close all water faucets and shut off all gas water heaters. . H. JOHNSON, Water Commissioner. R py rash wont healit Attempts to conceal compl: blemishes usually fail, and only are to draw attention to the defects, Underneath most unattractive skins is a clear, pleasing complexion—all that is needed is the proper treatment! It is surprising how often a brief use ‘ V will clear away blotches, redness and | roughness and give the akin its natural freshness and charm, Ask your druggist for Resinel, Resinol BLOOM’S ARMY STORE Biggest in Wyoming Army Shoes of All Kinds Red Cross Army Nurses’ Shoes made by the Pediform Shoe Co. The finest shoe in the world for comfort. Ladies’ do not miss this chance. You will in all probability NEVER have another opportu- nity to get this shoe again. This Shoe sold for $14.00: Our price is only Pershing Trench Boot. 18-inch top, triple soled, waterproof, $8.50 HOBNAIL SHOES We have purchased 4,000 pairs of Field and Hobnail Shoes, 600 pairs only have been allotted to this store. They wil] not last long. Better get a pairnow. The gov- ernment has sold all the surplus shoes of this kind. There are no more to be had. We were lucky to get in on the last buy. 0. D. SHIRTS Army Shirts we sell are genuine. Beware of imitations. Our Shirts now come from H. D. Bob, who purchased all the government Shirts there were to be had. Mr. Bob recently obtained an injunction preventing wholesalers and retailers from sell- We are the only concern in Wyoming te whom Mr. ing imitation Shirts as genuine. Bob is selling the genuine United States Army O. D. Shirts. Flannel Shirts. We were fortunate in Breeches, Our stock 6f this item is obtaining the salesman’s samples of the complete. It includes genuine Bedford Cords, made in England for the Ameri- can Army Officers. We are selling them for about half the current market prices, some as $7.50 low as famous ‘‘Town and Country” and ‘‘Bost- wick’s” lines. We have marked them down as low as $2.95 for the regular $5.00 values. Special for the Rest of This Month "$1.00 BLOOM'S ARMY STORE Everything in Army Goods 246 SOUTH CENTER STREET Pairs Wool Army Sox, fOF voces

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