Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 19, 1926, Page 6

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PAGE SIX The Casper Daily Tribune MANU fo ALLL FRAUD E Cons piracy With Wife | to Beat Creditors Is Charged. MAN 0 OF ther sult company “no the tigation of certain the execution. | @ to order roperty including real prop- of A. subject to nted the VET BUREAUS. PROGRAM TOLD From Page One) made mis: | nd had to car- tremendous volume of bus!- Tt had at one time 50,000 em- number has been re- The bureau is do- »d work te it do bette Wyoming the spe ize of its counties tions, ch with vet tance has been in this work zations are asked compensation can be it is required by lan be appointed. | » presents a problem, and| of reliable guard an important part of It is the opinion of Majo A 1 that attorney who also of the World War ts ardian since he is sym the applicant and e understands the s of the case. tment want men who lean te nt and fga t the wart bu > the Tribune-Herald oth industrial edition. A com ey of Natrona county and z in 1926, attend the and | Drink what you like let. That gives the the result i A new slomach Jor twee runas five cent: FORTS Coke tened | This st fellow miners carry were at work {sonous black dar RS 8 TO6 y ] > Jamison Coal « ed when the explosion « hours np for Are Phils Reads to Ditch roan, Man Who Caine Clean” in Scandal? S4wo Now comes the report from Philadelphia that Art Fletcher and dwner Bal ker are looking for a new shortstop, having decided that Sh Basi Yed “Helen Blauvelt” nic Sand, the courageous gent who exposed the O'Connell-Dolan ought for two days and esn't stack up to big Tes ating. Heinic’s future d tle, Basin, | ey Pai dle SS al xe rat ) indicate quite clearly the measure of gratitude the { i | ARNT Mra TQnn MUP y, a ame will indi quite « & | : thelr Brooklyn home last night ! n their systems | t) yed Gertrude Frances Mur re | two and If years old, has | at ts hl se eneantaly turned oyer to the children’s so. pus: | tior olr Her y ts and Me, and Mrs | | if gi ¢ ball, The | tion to the po Murphy oan | LATE SPORTS |" o, | e Magistrate McQualde in MORTON *y night court, Mr. and Mrs, Murphy said the child had never been lost or CANNES, France, Jan. 19.—GP)—| stolen % 4 | M ¢ he A we For more than two years, Mrs MENU HINT corn starch, yolks of | ry her first ten-} Blauvelt led her husband t seliavel Breakfast and grated rind of t on to-| the was the father of a child being 1 I h have been mixe lay di N BE. M. ¢ » of | boarded with relatives in Allentown, t r I un until thi Put) eneglar They w } ng| Pa. When he insisted on sec = the } I Toast | 1 t two egg jin the retropol tourney baby, she became desperate, police for meringue, and brown ——__—_ say answered an advertisement Luncheon 2 mai Industry, business, sheep and| offering Gertrude for adoption, rf | Grati Tuna Fish au Gratin — Flake attles mining—developments in 1925] The Murphys said take had of. Trine tun and make a cream suuce, | wil] be exhaustively covered in the | fered Gertrude for adoption because : ; \ ne tablespoon of flour, one] Tribune-Herald industrial edition | of il find poverty in thelr fam: : : tablespoon butter, one cup milk, Cook | jut soon, | ily ntil thick season well, add tuna Dinner | tish ng dish, cover ton | ans ads | with crumbs and bake about | ~ | VEWCISTLE ANERTON TODAY'S RECIPES DYSPEPSIA TABLETS (OOS b ind EEE Er +] first five teams in the livestock and| mother repented, Mrs. Blauvelt told crops judgii sts: kidnaping to hide the deceit Scotch Steak r ™.,: : : ‘ neh and. ua SHARE High KG HONORS The Tribune-Herald will give a can of . . “B-K” Peas free with each paid- -over-the- ESubs deere IN | ARAMIE CONTESTS counter Classified Ad inserted in our Sun- Kle a pinch of day edition January 24th. r bake and or w over About a LARAMIE, Wyo., Jan, 19.—Riv and add potatoe t¢ it estock judging contests eld grown in high altitude and are extremely tender. ‘ at Laramie under the nus They are canned by the Bozeman Canning Co., and geaetauie | nice Ga, bet gl Ar oa when you try them you will say “they are the best hait teaspoon |of fifth place In the livestock judg | et.” While grown in Montana, they prove that Wyo- ur mili, one tens|ing contest, took firat honors in|/# Ming can also produce this high grade quality of peas ve ae i cana | org pm Judging Alons with the thon and there is no reason why we cannot have a cannery one-ha pound offor « having won fira' co a 0 Flour to make stitt| stock Judging contest In which nine | i” tis state. batter, Roll medium thickness, | other Smith Hughes teams partici and. t pated, The Riverton team alro n ‘ 4 Gna tnd cne-pait| Mere Reste ronrrente Wyorniny Bring in that Classified Ad and receive cer, in| Poke it Boncations Western |B a can of these choice peas. thre Following is the ranking u Communism in Ohio U. Probe COLUMBUS. —Investigation of ations was 19.—P) d liquor law completely — over: shadowed by that of charges of com- munistic activities of Ohio State unt-|t versity professors as the com composed of university truste morning continued {ts inqui the two charges. Testimony lice officers w Expressing his opinion of faculty bers mentioned as communistic, said “These professors are among the t in the Umted States, I don't < that a single solitary member J faculty is com- yesterday, the of TOLD 10 COVER UP AER DECEIT and ‘that they of no violations faculty Woman Who Purchased Baby Confesses to sp ae | Falsehood. and | this | of into ven Columbus po: s introduced before kne Dr. Maris, Columbus physician and’ political writer, and | Senator James R. Hopley of Buc cyrus, sponsor of a resolution intro: duced at the last regular s the state legislature, proposing an investigation of “red” activities at institutions, were at the ssion 0 the princlpa munistic inquiry ye com Ohio, Jan Inw tommittee* on nffairs at Ohio State unive ‘0 Tutt! an of the professor NEW » 19.—()—Mrs. | a baby YORK, | Werley Blauvelt gave $20 for he university trustees investi-| and, when she feared exposure, an. » to t was “per-| nounced that the baby had been kid to say there is no|napped, the police asserted today drinking 5 students The reasons werd mother love and a “IT do think, however, there Is less | desire to hold her husband's affee drinking in ‘this body of 10,000 stu-| tions, dents than in other groups of simi-| yfrs, Blauyelt has confessed, police lar kinds," he said say, that she paid the money to the 's real parents, When the child's r husband, Livestock Ju STORE HOURS 8 10 6 == a ees STORE HOl STORE HOURS 8 TO 6 OR TOP COAT IN TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, agz6 STORE HOURS 8 TO 6 This story was taken fromthe Daily News Record of New York and republished by the Midwest Merchant of Kinsas City, A Casper Merchant Gives “Handout” Today, and Next Year Sells You a Dress Suit! in every month nakers in Casper Their business has shown a £ since, becanse there are dres: who are busy all the There {8 a clothing store in Casper run by a man named Harry His trade mark is "The man in the barrel,” because when this me to town he didn’t have much of clothes. He has another No man in Casper goes hungry,” and he lives up to it. Anybody who is “out of tuck” legitimately, can go to this merchant and get the price of a meal, and there are men liv- ing here who have done this and less than year later have bought full dress suits and fur- lined overcoats from Yesness. There is a ready-to-wear shop in The Fuchs Co.,' where no garments or chandise of kind can be seen on enter There is one shown in the window but gantly clad saleswoman brings out oth cabinets and shows them one at a they are purchased and paid for silver dollars. If you for y YASPER, WYOMING, one of the most inter- / esting cities in the West in a retail wa presents a paradox in many respects. It is once a desert and yet a paradise in the wilder- ness, A bare ten years ago it was a town of 3,000, today it has 25,000. Six years ago Cas- per was in the hope of a boom; today the boom has passed and left the city that reeks with oil the stamp of sound, basic prosperity. perity. In the business streets of Casper on one hand are the real motion picture type of Westerners. men with wide brimmed hats, women with cor- duroy skirts, and on the other are specialty shops and department stores that carry mer- chandise which would do credit to a metropolis Casper ships more oil by rail than any other sity in the world, it is claimed. There are ready-to-wear shops in Casper that pay $800 a month rent, and make money. Four specialty stores display one or two garments in windows lighted by crystal chandeliers, At a recent ball at Casper one Rolls- Royce from and time often, with per money in rolled up to the door. Women garbed in bro- | change they raise their eyebro ays iyon caded gowns and men in correct-dinner coats— | mean tou ‘st money? Yes. we e it to apparel that was bought in. Casper—stepped | you, but wouldn't - out of other costly cars, gold?” Gne store pays all its employes in g You can buy 10-gallon Stetsons as well as | regularly, and they wouldn't take anything e's dinner coats in Casper. Casper is an oil, sheep and coal town by d One store, Richards & Cunningham, threw | a society vortex by n per’s slogan out all of its women’s ready-to-wear about a | “Where Opportunity With as year ago and concentrated on piece Hammer.” LAST WEEK Of My GREATEST SALE Which Ends Saturday, January 23rd Your Unrestricted Choice of Any SUIT, OVERCOAT, goods. THE HOUSE Providing You Purchase Another Garment at My Regular Low Price. Bring a Friend and Get In on This Phenomenal Offer as the Time Is Short NO MAN GOES HUNGRY IN CASPER TORE HOURS 8 TO 6 NOH AYOLS 9OL8 Su 100 (U0.1S aa ee 9 OL 8 SHOW AUOLS 90L8 SU

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