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a Ross Entertained. Gov. and Mrs. William B. Ross Max Ball, president of the Western and their oon Bradford, were guests Monday at an informal dinner giv by Judge and Mrs. R. R. Rose at the family home on South Center street. . Reception for Mrs. Sinclair. Se Mrs. Burke H. Sinclair, who was elected state president of the Amer- ican Legion Auxiliary at the annual convention in Laramie last week, was complimented yesterday after- noan by a reception and tea at the home of Mrs. Charles EB. Winter. ‘The members of the local unit of the Auxiliary were the hostesses for the afternoon. The final picnic of the summer for the Girls’ Reserve Corps will be given tomorrow evening at 6 o'clock ‘All young women of the high school are requested to call the Y. M. C. A. oifice today for information con- cerning their share in the arrange- ments. eee Celebrates His Ninth Birthday. Tedty Nelson, nine year old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Nelson of West First street. celebrated his birthday yesterday with a party at the family home The young people present, who spent the afternoon with games in- cluded Elizabeth Martin, Harry An- derson, Floyd Andersan, Kenneth Anderson, Robert Anderson, Flora Anderson, Dorothy Logan, Bettey Gerber, Dorothy Mower, Jack Schul- te, Billy Schulte, Francis Brady, Mary Brady, Norman Ryan, Byron Dye, Tecdy Nelson ard Betty Nel- son. . Will Entertain With Luncheon. Misa Edna Smith and Mrs. Ed- wartl Donohue will be hostesses at a lunchecn to be given this after- noon at the former’s home on South Center street. eee Many Attend Kaycee Dance Several Casper families attended the dance and supper held by the Progressive club at Kaycee Satur- day evening. Mr. and Mrs, Ed. Scherck and family and Sevey’s orchestra were among the Casperites present. Scherck’s ranch near Kayceo was an {deal spot for the party, the big barn being fitted out with electric lights and decorated with flowers and leaves. There was a very large attendance. Initiation Postponed ‘The outdoor initiation ef the de- gres of Pocahontas which was to have been held ‘Thursday evening, August 30, has been indefinitely postponed. An indoor initiation will be held at the next regular meeting ‘Thursday, September 6. See egereeateaes | Personals Gov. and Mrs. William B. Ross ar- rived in.Casper Monday from Chey- enne and will be the guests for a few days of Mr. and Mrs. BE. E. Sturm of Salt Creek. euitige Miss Jean Bradner, who has been visiting here with relatives for the last six weeks, returned to her home in Chicago yesterday. * Miss Josephine Shaddy, with Mrs. Joseph David, who has been her house guest for the last month, has gone to Rushville, Kan., where sho will visit with friends for the next few weeks, eee Mayor John Whisenhunt has been called to the family home in North Carolina by the illness of his father, . Mr, and Mrs. F. J. Chamberlain of Denver are visiting friends in Casper for a few days while on an automobile tour of the state, eee W. R. Sherman and his son have returned to their home in Cheyenne after a visit here as the guests of Mrs, L. E. Blanchard. eee Mrs. Gilbert T. Thompson, who has been the guest of her sister, Mrs. R. R. Rose of South Center streetfor several weeks, returned on Moncay to her home in Muskoges, Okla. City Briefs Joel F. Longnecker, attorney, and George Harnsberger, chief of the fire department, both of Lander, ar- rived in the city Monday evening on business. eee A. C, Allen and O. N. Gibson, Riv- ton attorneys, are in town today, oce Harry C. Brome of Basin, one of the leading attorneys of Big Horn county, is in the city totiay in the interests of his firm eee William C. Mentzer, former judg> of the first district, came up from his home in Cheyenne last night on private business. e- Stanley Griebel of the Casper Sta- tionery company, left this morning for Thermopolis on a business trip. Medium Brown Hair looke best of all after a Golden GNnt Shampoo.— Advertisement, a Pipe Line company and the Marine Oil company, is in town on company buxiness, eee AEE: T. Blake Kennedy of Cheyenne, federal district judge in Wyoming, is in Casper today on court busi- ness, oe EB. N. Luikart, president of the First State Bank of Riverton, ar rived in the city yesterday after- noon. George S. Scott returned today from Guernsey where he had been a witness in a case being tried in the district civil court. see Hugh Patton, U. S. marshal for Wyoming, arrived from Cheyenne this morning andi wil! spend a few days at his: home. eee Cc. C. Sisemore of Jonesboro, Ark., has joined the sales force of the Calloway Furniture company. pare aic Sates ee EDWARDS FUNERAL TO BE HELO HERE TODAY The funeral of James Edwards, employe of the Burlington ratiroad, who died at @ local hospital Sunday evening, will be held at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon from the Muck Fun- eral home. The Rev. Chas. A. Wil- son will have charge of the services and burial will be made in Highland cemetery. ‘The deseased was 48 years of age. He {is survived by a brother, Alvin Edwards, of Kirby, Wyo. | Film Comedies ; Breed Crime, Is Claim of Chiet LOS ANGELES, Aug, 28—Mo- tion picture “custard pie’ comedies are “training schools of crime,” is the belief of August Vollmer, the city's new chief of police. “The constant picturing of police men being hit in the face with ple’ thrown into flour barrels, holding | girls on their knees and receiving schooners of beer from the back doors of saloons makes an impres-| sion upon youthful minds which | leads to a contempt for law enforce- ment,” declared Vollmer. The chief did not indicate whether he proposed to take any steps in the matter. ‘The Georgia, Florida and Alabama railroad, which has just been grant- ed authority by the Interstate Com- merce Commission to make a large increase in its capital stock, has for its president, a woman, Mrs. Cora B, Williams of Atlanta. Four hundred and six applications for patents were made by women at Ennis, Ireland. i - ‘ An immense crowd listens to Eamonn DeValera (arrow, behind flag). Suddenly troops of the Free State rush into the crowd and arrest the Irish Republican leader. The crowd disperses as shots are fived. This, The Baby’s Welfare Reports from all parts of the country show that thousands of babies dies from dirpases which are preventable that an extra effort should be put forth to bring before the readers of this paper important information pertaining \o the preven| common ills and the spreading of disease. Articles appearing in this column are intended especially for those mothers who are so busy with daily household routine that they have not the time to read the many g90d books published or attend lec- tures on such rubjects. No attempt wil! be made to prescribe medi- nor to make a diagnosis of any illness. The articles appearing in ths column have been prepared by a Ucensed, graduate physician dealing with the health and growth of the child. HOT WEATHER BRINGS REAL PROBLEM TO MOTHERS. cal or surgical treatment Summer weather brings with ft many problems having to do with the care and feeding of infants. Each summer hundreds of infants die be- cause of lack part of the mother. the hot weather, providing mother understands and puts | practice the principals of care and! however, many mothers are inclined of knowlege on the| be materially reduced. There is no rea son why infants should not survive! food for their infants are indeed for thp|tunate, for there ts no better food into | than feeding wihch every mother should If every Sorrow Hour by hour, day by day, ertef piles on 3 know. Every family physician knows | with the result that bab: that probably the one great out-|is upset and serious bowel trouble standing problem in warm weather|may follow. is that of feeding. ant, and too much thought cannot/ greatest care in eating proper foods be given it. Intestinal diseases occurring in the | !iness, as it is important for those summer, with their large infant mor tality rate, offer one of the largest fields for an active life-saving cam paign, It is the duty of every mother to begin at once by taking such pre cautions as will prevent these much inventors in Great Britian last year. dreaded diseases. It is most import- mother Peter McKenzie. Search for her baby, kidnaped in New York Clty, gees on throughout the nation, And her burden of sorrow bas brought her near to the breaking point, | having Therefore. fort we many years of experience in would study this problem and take advantage of all that is to be learn: led, the mortality rate of infants during the summer months would Those mothers who have Nature's breast milk. Unfortunately, to be careless in choosing thier diet, 's digestion It is as important for to exercise the nur: ing mothers | and to observe all the rules for clean- mothers who feed thelr babies from. the bottle to select safe food that will proper'y nourish and strength. en their children. Any attacks of vomiting or diar- rhe or even green undigested bowel movements occurring in an infant under eighteen months of age during hot weather’ are to be regarded as serious matters and require immed diate attention, These signs are fre: |quently forrunners of dangerous in | testinal disorders, and a physician should be consulted at once. In the case of bottle-fed babies, the greatest danger lies in an unclean milk supply, and in careless methods of preparing the feedings. Not only {s {t vitally essential that the mitk be clean, but it is equally ntial that it be kept clean. Ali utensils bottles, spoons, etc., used in the pre paration of the mixture must be ster {ized in boiling water be’ they are used. All water used in diluting the food or to be given plain as a drink, must be boiled and then cool re i Casper Daily Cribun ed. It is safer to boll a fresh supply each day . During hot weather it {s not ad. visable to change the infants food, unless such a change is absolutely necessary or advised by a physician During the extreme heat of the day it is safer to give a little less food than the baby usually takes in cooler weather. Few babies are underfed The chief danger lies in overfeeding. In preparing the food, care should be taken that the proper quantities are us When condensed milk is used, it ts better to pour the milk from the can to the spoon, allowing the milk to level itself. This will insure more accurate measurements. Very often fresh milk is hard to obtain, or perhaps it is not always! GIRLS! LEMONS BEAUTIFY AND WHITEN SKIN Mix the fulce of two lemons with three ounces of Orchard White, which any druggist will supply you fora few cents, shake fell in a bottle, and you ive a whole quar- ter-pint of the most wonderful akin softener and complextion beautifier Massage the sweetly fragrant lemon cream {into the face, neck, arms, and hands, then shortly note the youth- ful beauty, softness and whiteness of your ekin, Famous stage beauties use this harmless lemon cream to bring that velvety, clear, rosy-w' complex fon, also as a freckle, sunburn, and tan bleach because {t doesn't irri tate,—Advertisement. Tn such cases condensed milk @ safe food for infant feeding. The Belgian ‘Relief Commiss' » used con- densed milk extensively tn France and Belgium during the late war and obtained wonderful results, The Near Hast Relief is using it almost exclusively in the feeding of over 200,000 orphans. Canned milk has actually saved the lives of many of these unfortunate children in the Near East. The warm weather is here. Get Treacy now and make preparations for avoiding summer complaint. If your baby gets sick and diarrhea, vomiting or has frequent attacks of indigestion, you should consult your family physician at once. Care and precaution on the part of each mother will materially cut down the infant mortality rate this summer. Babies cannot help themselves. It's up to you. Remember the breast milk {s the safest food for babies at all times. ARTHUR G. BRETZ. > BiG OIL SALE NOT DEFINITE CHARLESTON, W. Va, Aug, 28 —Proposed sale of the Humphreys Oil Company to the Pure Oil com- pany, announced last night as com. pleted has not actually taken place, Frank Cox, business associate of Colonel A. E. Humphreys, conceded today. He expressed his complete |confidence that the option held by the Pure Oll company would be ex- ercised. Mr. Cox vigorously denied that there was any exchange of stock in- volved and declared the sale was to be a “cash” transaction. Neither Col. Humphreys nor any other stock- holder of the Humphreys company would receive stock of the Pure Oil company in the transfer, Mr. Cox eaid. , Ohio, Aug. Dawes, president of the Pure Oil company said that his company now owns twenty-five per cent of the stock of the Humphreys Oil company and that it is making ef- forts to purchase the outstanding seventy-five per cent now held by the general public. Mr, Dawes said that the Pure Oil company also owns sixty percent of the stock of the Humphreys Pure Oil company, and that in the event of the full purchase of the Hum- phreys Of] company, which he said he expected, no new financing would be necessary on the part of the Pure Oil company. COLUMBU: 29—B. G. N'S CENTENARY ALS THREE SURVIVORS The centenary of the death of Na- poleon was widely observed in var- fous parts of the world. Paris made it the occasion of a high re- quiem raass, celebrated by Cardinal Dubois in Notre Dame, and the Abbe Hennocque, a war veteran with the rosette of an officer of the Legion of Honor and a war cross with a dozen stars, meaning citations for bravery, preachéd a sermon eulog- izing Napoleon's services to the French nation ‘and its youth. ners of famous Napoleonic regiments taken from their shrine in the Hotel ies Invalides, were paraded in great military review at the Ar Triomphe. Ajaccio, in C Napo'eon's birthplace — Wars Waterloo, Brussels, associated—with his triumphs or defedts—had cele- brations of their own, and at St Helena, where h passed his last pe- riod of exile and where he died, a British battery fired a salvo of 100 guns at the hour of Napoleon's death, 100 years before. From the town of Jamestown on that island came the interesting report that three witnesses of Napoleon's exile still live—two tort that have reached the age of 170 years, and a gray parrot, which, thought 120 ars old, still repeats the name "General Bonapart That his wife attended the theater to see her favorite film star 220 times in one r, is the reason set forth by a I Angeles man for wanting a divorce —— Mrs. Emillie M. Bullowa, president of the National Women Lawyers’ As- sociation, comes of a “legal” family, her two sisters and two brothers practicing law, as well as herself, iG FEAR OF EVIL resulting fron hange of diet, water or climate concerns those who take on the shor p, summer vacation or long journey CHAMBERLAIN’S COLIC and DIARRHOEA REMEDY Readw for emergency - night or day FREE For a limited time only, with each Vacuum Cup Tire you buy, we will give you ABSOLUTELY FREE One TON TESTED TUBE of Corresponding Size A double inducement you cannot afford to overlook. Price reduction on Vacu- um Cup Tires, plus this free Tube Offer, makes an approximate SAVING OF O% Offer limited—better take advantage NOW! Liberty Garage 428 S. Elm Phone 983 Ban-j ‘| consist of that number of handsome] Coolidge Starts Work at White House | The president and Secretary Ch | after finist his first days’ work | cepted Christ 's resignation from public life. ristian leaving the executive office there. President Coolidge has ac GOVERNOR IS BESIEGED WITH APPEALS IN SLAYER’S BEHALF CHEYENNE, Wyo. Aug. 28. — (Spec to The Tribune}—Governor | Ross, Wednesday morning, upon his | return from Yellowstone park, will SUMMARY OF NIGHT NEWS | _ FLUSHING, Holland—Maharaja | Gaekwar of Baroda, mid to be the | richest prince in India, died while | on @ journey from Berlin, TULSA—William Arthur Win- ley, constable of Broken Arrow | and admitted member of the Ku | Klux Klan, was sentenced to two | | years imprisonment for participa in the whipping of Leslie | Gooleby and Mrs. Myrtle Spain on | the night of July 19, 1922. | tion | CHICAGO—Secretary of State | | Hughes expressed to reporters his unqualified support of President | | Coolidge and predicted that tho | | new president soon would attract the good opinion of the entire} country. | ———>—_—_— | | A Chinese women of the wealthy class will have some twenty every. day dresses of ordinary silk and|/ satin, while her official attire will costumes all heavily lined with fur for winter, or silk for the warmer weather. take under consideration appeals for @ commutation of sentence for Clit- ford Mann, 19, under sentence to bg hanged at the state penitentiary on next Tuesday for the murder of Mrs, George Schwerdtfeger in Fre- mont county. Scores of letters urg- Ing executive clemency have been received at the executive office in- cluding several from Mann's moth er, who resides at Doon , Iowa, and three from physicians, who assert that Mann is an epileptic and, there- fore, not accountab’e for his ac- tion. A, F. Michaela, prosecuting attor- ney of Fremont county, is strong- ly opposing clemency, as is also George Schwerdtfeger, widower of Mann shot Mrs. Schwerdtfeger to death at her ranch home when she refused to pay him wages he claim. ed were due him from her husband. Schwerdtfeger asserts he had paid the wages claimed. | Sure Way to Get Rid of Blackheads simple, safe and sure way that never falls to get rid of blackheads, that 1s to dissolye them. To do this get two ounces of calo- nite powder from any drug stor sprinkly a ttle on a hot, wet cloth —rub over the blackheads briskly —wash the parts and you will be surprised how the blackheads have Gisappeared. Big blackheads, little blackheads, no matter where they are, simply dissolve and disappear, Blackheads are a mixture of dust ‘There ts and dirt and secretions that form In the pores of the skin. owder ant The calonite the water dissolve the they right out, ores n thelr natural condition. 1 { ible boning. 2 the support against the support. 4. corsetry 5. PLAN FOR SHIP OPERATIONIS PRESENTEDIL.S, Subsidiaries Owned by Shipping Board Are Included, Said WASHINGTON, Aug. 28—Opere- tion of the shipping board flest through a number of subsidtary corporations owned by the board is Proposed in the government's al- ternate operation plan as outlined today by chairman Farley at @ con- ference with ship owners. Ie would be put into effect in case present efforts to place the ships under private ownership fail. The corporations each would ep erate one or more lines and would have “the commercial form of organ- ization and operation that will be followed by a private purchaser when such purchaser has been found." The shipping board would exercise the same direct control over them that any large private corporation exercises over its sub- sidiaries by the steamship owners that before they could perfect con- crete proposals, they must know what the board had in mind as an alternative. After he had pre- ted his plan, Mr. Farley asked the owners and operators to act quickly. “We cannot brook any delay,” he sald, “but must proceed.” Perfect Shoulders «Arms Nothing equals the deatifel, bared pearly white appearanceGoura’ ed iental Cream ren- ders to the ahoulders and arms. Covers skin blemishes. Will not rubof Far su- Rerior to powders. hite-Flesh-Rachel 10¢ for Triel Size 2 Gourauds Oriental Cream SPECIAL Pears 100 boxes of fancy Bart- lett Pears, while they last, hi $3.2 5 Come in today and see the R & G Elasticside for yourself $4 and $5 at —. 357 N. Beech Street Phone 1883-W Robinson Bros. Produce New 1. BECAUSE the R & G Elastic- side is a common-sense support made with elastic webbing at the sides and with scientifically placed light, flex- BECAUSE it is so comfortable that the wearer is almost unconscious of its presence. BECAUSE it gives your figure it needs and safeguards penalties of insufficient BECAUSE it is the biggest im- provement ever made in the art of and with the style mandate of the day. BECAUSE it is made by one of the largest and most successful organ- izations in the country—the R & G Company—famous fifty years for its style leadership, the superior quality of its productions, and its fair prices. thoroughly conforms for more than Kn CORSET SECTION—SECOND FLOOR Golden Rule Department Store LINDSAY & CO.