Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 30, 1918, Page 1

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NO ALLIANCE WITHOUT LEAGUE, SAYS WILSON Che Casper Daily Any Combination of France Backs Great Britain | World Power Must Include “Us All” if i © sescesccacenscccocccsonvccccoccocesecocos America Joins > Only newspaper in Wyoming THE DAILY TRIBUNE Pe een ‘2 H Reaches a dozen towns of MANCHESTER, Dec. 30—Pres- ident Wilson gave warning today = ae. A . that America would join no com- Chamber of Deputies Votes Confidence in tates ornailliance except @ = Premier Clemenceau, Who Says Har- siete esc’! mony Will Preval at Peace Conference, Unite for the waintenanee and te; Despite Fact That “Wilson’s Ideals Are Not Those of Man Whose Wrecked” served by both the Associated Press and the United Press Central Wyoming the same day it is published, with all the news of the da NUMBER 61 eeeeecceee: @ribune CASPER, WYOMING, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30., 1918 MAY ABANDON BERLIN TO BOLSHEVIKI BECAUSE OF FACTIONAL FIGHT, RUMOR VOLUME 3. unite for the maintenance and tri- umph of right. Wild applause greet- ed his remarks. U. S. NOT INTERESTED IN EUROPEAN POLITICS [By Annociated Preaa} MANCHESTER, Dee. -—Amer- ica is not interested in European pol- |! ities, but she is interested in the [By Axsocinted Press] PARIS, Dec. 30.—In addressing the Chamber of Deputies today GOAD RUSS . yon es sm Albert E. Sitt, aged 52 years, died yesterday at his home at 207 South Pine street,-the cz pneumonia. Mr. Stitt is survived by a wife, one British Sailors Meet Arrest of Anglo-American Newspaver Men Is Proposed as Means of Forcing the Allies to Occupy [By Anne German Cavital ted Prexs] partnership of right between America and Europe, declared President Wil- son, in receiving the freedom of the City of Manchester here toda Amer- ict is not interested merely in the peace of Europe, but in the peace of the world, he added. “If the future had nothing for us but a new attempt to keep the world COPENHAGEN, Dec. 30.—As the results of riots and general dis-/°¢ the right poise by a balance of e of death being! order in Berlin, the government is considering abandoning Berlin to| the Bolsheviki and establishing headquarters elsewhere» said Berlin, powers,” said the president, “the in it, because she will join no com- Premier Clemenceau made it plain that it is his intention to support Creat Britain in the peace negotiations on the question of freedom of the seas and declared that his attitude was approved by President Wilson. tBy Unit ed Presa) PARIS, Dec. 30.—-“‘I would be lving if I said that I agreed with President Wilson on all points,’ Premier Clemenceau declared in the Chamber of Deputies today. “President Wilson’s ideas are not the United States would take no interest same as those of a man whose country has been devastated for four years and which in justice must be restored.” 3 5 son and two daughters who live in| reports today. lean papa GUI Ge Cena Premier Clemenceau declared that with Demonstration Coaper: Interment will be made i ees lGEIGRDEREBROKENIDOWN: President Wilson co ulated him on Landing at Riga snsments have uot been com. BERLIN, Dec. 28—(Saturday, Delaved)—The German political NEW PLANS MUST BE MADE NIAKE Gasrst feat Gomencectunraitieeae g 12a reted. group which favors allied occupation of Berlin to overthrow the Bol-| There was a feeling of cordial fra- RGB . Hesticaee sheviki plans to force this move by/|ternity and friendship between Amer- n the f : and Are Forced to arresting all Anglo-American news-| ica and Great Britain, declared the - 5 r papermen. Conditions are unstable| l’resident, which was based on the Brench however Put Down Disorder C = here ot. *| principle of friendship and patriotisth } A caendi cont tras yee : ocialists and the Bolsheviki are| that led men to give more than was wae ildEngt aria ny . ihe ewe ee still struggling for power. Both fac-, demanded. The partnership of inter- eer Rane iT EokaE eae (By United Presn) | tions called forth. demonstrations | ests which had attempted the zov-- played! in¢the war ee Seg COPENHAGEN, Dec. 30.— Sunday. Disorders with casualties|ernment of the world had broken = wo British forces have landed at Riga ' are reported from Dresden and plun-| down, he said, as the interest did not STORMY DEBATE FOLLOWS aes 5 4 dering Hamburg. | bind men together, but separated 5 Spray ale aed j Afterward Bolsheviki agitators ae per B (iemel Cammntdeyetion taieigititte : SEE See [PO NOUNCE MEN OnGEOrICY goaded the crowds assembled out- TWO NEW FACES IN the only thing, he insisted, that could) Window “‘Jimmied’” and Guns, paris, rey Cle- i side the building where the British HUN CABINET ARAREUE jens men together. Stolen Early This Morning HEI Nebo PAC Nek Gh etal were conferring with the local au- —_———_——- COPENHAGEN, Dec. 80.—The] GENUINE CONCERT OF Without Detection on Part oe Depetias Souiegiateeete pet thoriti sti ery Ce 7 ? im 1 a i i i ‘horities until the ery of “away with’ Amendment of Workmen’s Compensation Act and Central Council of Soldiers and)” tn the settlement which is just of the Police Patrol debegte duving whighatha’ estes D s sed. A - a! 8 i i - France were ined by Stephe: break followed in which several per} Extension of Commissioner's Authonty Are Aso «| Her.Noske sovergor of Kiel; Herr than has ever been attempted before, Thieves gained entrance into one Pichon, foreign minister: and” the re ceeMi HanARS PISA tw Wig Sew a aie Kocher eaitr of Ge breniew Vols: nad co be secompliied x genuine of the dimpiay windows of, the Cat- prance had indicated his adherence av Lara ae ? nterview Here Peete f ’ concert of mind and purpose—the Sou enter to the “ok stems of alliance te sets pes ccr ae ivocated by Labor riead in ePaper ag Ba ad President said, but a keen interna-| Street ty he 1 eins pe called : E of power.” KEowns ‘ t Ss a la 2 en —— eplace F y ste? Se, | ronscienti ake Morning and made away wi ‘our indicated b t sremier F Narva. The British routed and forced A straight eight-hour law for women worke amend- Minister of Social Policy Barth endl ereese onneeaTinteeaet sea mak: rantamatie revolvers and a pair of Léuene: "0k Nation: Sane oe ; ound the Bolshevik warships which’ ment of the workmen’s compensation law and the changing of Demebi vor Minister Dittmann,) manity abroad in the world which he| field glasses without being detected. | out concordantly with the drafting of ere discovered shelling Wulf Island.| +6 labor commissioner law so as to widen the scope of this de- Who retired Saturday. who cannot hear is deaf,” he added,| Chas. Mednick, proprietor of the t - as yartment, is given by President Harry W. Fox of the State Fed- : “We are not obeying the mandate | Store, valued the stolen articles at made by Al- VIENASCABIURERREN, eran of ices as the most important legislation’ to be asked | STRIKING SUNER GWE: of parties or politics,” the President | $108. , that he BATTLE AT DUSSELDORF |MIND AND PURPOSE NEEDED Mednick and his wife sleep in the ad kept the THE BOLSHEVIK FORCES : : ; ; A continued, “we are obeying the man- Chamber wtihout infor- : .: ) PC ogislatur 7 ranized labor Wyoming. P u WADE. Ue man ; : - . se TORTS Seen ae ; oF the Comings sta ASUEE bs Organized aber, OFWs E AMSTERDAM. Dee. "30-—Strik-|date of humanity. If the world is to rear of ete store, end the fest inti- . Premier Clemenceau said: OD} N, ec. 30.—Vilna has PS 2 w OX, a e ‘3 ances mary bet <a hréa ns = ny i i e mation 1 a hat anything was 2 GU c of peace is 2 | = on) captured SbysiBolahevist)-torees:| Casner Saturday to apend/a‘few days) ten the general. conditions) of | all| Wie minerallin) thal Dusseldarfidiatmet | Woe yin eck: OF erends:) Ne Raid Ta SHEA hegiwerelivave cdl) anaete Li Ieae REGGE RR SREaE di ‘a’ Copenhagen’ dispatch:| ; : : have fought a pitched battle with . Sea enna ae tet eet Caen 1 . ae F ro according to a Copenhagen dispatch. jn the interest of labor, when asked labor. method of conference so that trou-'by the bark of a pet dog. A brief of the most difficult ever submitted soldiers protecting the mine, accord— period later, Mednick says he heard _ by The Tribune to submit a list of “At the last general session there ; ‘ ‘ bles could be taken when they are! to a.nation any time. Wiel ; 2 sao : $ ses ing to advices received here. The en- > L fea zht it might be; “Pr = PLOT TO SEIZE POLAND bills which labor onlay sk the com were enacted into law two laws'fun-|counter’ resulted’ in several persons pee suds apt allowed to grow until| three rans Pr ee abs _ “The cuger! y 2: remier Lloyd- FRUSTRATED IN WARSAW ing legislature to enact into law, gave Aaenteieton alle nimanitarianule being killed and wounded before the ‘hey are big. aoe Ga Liel ion Ev eigtnee oes George has spoken, President Wilson (By United Press) the following interesting interview: ; soldiers surrounded the arrested} ‘I Wish we could, for the whole|°t up in his night clothes and went spoken, but you have said noth- COPENHAGEN, Dec. 30.—A ze control “We have read and heard much The shorter work day employes, and one lation: for female cre- miners. world, enter a league and covenant | and declare ourselves the friend of | to the door and on peering out d covered that one of the windows w reat Bolshevik plot to concerning the reconstruction pe- =) Lihavertiven. exalanationsteien of Poland has been discovered in pid, immediately following the world| ating the office of commissioner of MIP RCINCIDROCELOS mankind.” |half-way up. After calling the po- eyer you have asked me. But it is Wa Many were arrested, in--| war, the steps taken by the federal| labor and statistics. In addition to PU-LAGING PROCEEDS == inpivIDUAL TERMS CAN llice, he discovered the loss. The| not hecause Premier Lloyd-George cluding Leon Trotsky’s daughter,| government to avoid any undue in-| these laws the workman’s compen- NOT BE SATISFACTORY |thieves effected an entrance by pry- has spoken or because Mr. W : » had six million rubles, says a by di dustrial distr ation law was amended as to rates [By Ansoctated Prem} | The President said he was not! ing up the window with a ch from arging men} r 7 i : n i report received here. fcomithe Thana wailitate service, | of compensation. ‘There is every rea- ; DON DONE Mee ee orne on hopeful that individual items of set-| The police have not ded that 4 oT with due rd to industrial needs|son why the coming legislature ® ite ¥ Pale, Sen Reus Thee tlement would be altogether satisfac-|®yone yet, but believe th ea n mys¢ Tokio, Dee. 30.—Japanese reserv- and the n of the work-| should enact a straight eight-hour eae sararices is retant 2 aie tory. jclue that will lead to an arr he sae ts on the Siberian front will be re-) ing star established during the} law for women in all employments, na Fe ave a ede dis oi eal “One only has to apply his mind,”|T®bbery was made in plain view of — “Franc cially dif- CAs emergency period, but very little has] both in justice to the fact our wo- Ink to 4 Central News dispatch from he continued, “to any one of the|the lights from the Manhattan cafe ficult situ annexe Aa! been said about the legislation to be | men have played in the war-program "TM CECLM: | “rooms z questions of boundary of altered sov-| ®"d other street lights in the vicinity . Eng at once to the W asked for by the representatives of | and to the further fact that all med- rohit ae ereignty and of racial aspirations to| Late this afternoon about 3 o'clock cull of Mr. Asquith. We suffered and | the thousands of working men and] ical and social authorities are united jdo something more than conjecture | ® man stepped into the pawnshop and fought. Our men were mowed down, | women of the state at the hands of| in the belief that a longer day than CHINA T0 ASK |this. There is no man and no body| W®* recognized by the proprietor as our villages destroyed. There is an | the coming state legislature. this is injurious to the health of of men who knows just how they| °° of the trio who had been in the old em called a balance of : X | “We take it that there have beer | womankind, lought to be settled; yet if we are to| Vicinity when he went to investigate power. If such a nee had pre- | certain well-defined standards estab “Without commenting on the va- make a satisfactory settlement we| the noise made by the robbers when ceded the war, the war would not | lished in legislating for the inter | rious causes that have tended to must see that they are rendered more} they raised the window. have occurred. WERESDAY EVE ests of the workers, and we knov | hold back such legislation it is pass- and more satisfactory by aed The Proprietor immediately cover- s ae that our state will not want to lay Jing strange that a state that was adjustment. We must provide the| ed the man with a gun and held him WILSON IN ACCORD WITH behind in the procession of states] first in granting wonren common E U L T A machinery for readjustment in order until the police arrived. The sus- ERENCE VIEW. OF THE SEAS | (Hy Astocialcdlierenal that have given ear, to those whc | suffrage with man should be behind LOvhave a machinery of good will and pect ante the name of Cliff Ellis at ou know that reservations have PARIS, De President Wil-| speak for humanitarian legislation | n granting ans tnvelebechony Oey woe ee riendship. e police station. (Continued on Page 6) on will leave Paris for Italy next| For, be it understood, while certair | by statute. Every human impulse [By Assoctutea Prean) ? Wednesday night. Definite ar-| bills may be presented by the au [| should cause us to at least grant| NEW YORK, Dec. 30.—China will . rangements to this effect were an--| thorized representatives of organi J che women by law what male labor|ask of the peace conference the re- | ounced today. zed labor these are all aimed to bet- PADEREWSKI ; HEADS POLES Will Be President of New Revublic to In- clude East Prussia; Protest from Huns Greets His Arrival at Warsaw [By United Press] has generally secured by collective agreement with their employers. “The present compensation law is sadly deficient in its provisions for he payment for certain injuries and in its provisions covering the com- turn of Kiao Chow, the former Ger- man--controlled province captured by Japan early in the war, and a read- justment of international trade rela- tions to place China on an equal foot- ing with other nations, Lu Cheng- Chang, Chinese foreign minister and ALLIES TO PAY OWN pensation for single men. While) PDADB) Ct far ‘ : there can be no general criticism | Read of nis eee A setae | concerning the administrative fea- 109, declared here today on his way tures of the present law there should be provisions compelling an early ad- justment of pending claims. “The labor commissioner law should be so amended as to give that department authority to enforce the laws passed for the benefit of the man and women who works and for the collection of claims for wages. As the state increases in industrial im- portance the need of such a provis- ion will become more apparent. There should be no room in Wyoming for (Continued on Page Six.) to Paris. ——— I By Ansociated Preas} WASHINGTON, Dec 30.—Ap- pearing before the House Naval committee today Secretary of the Navy Daniels said that if a league of nations was organized the United States should be prepared to con- tribute as large a unit as any other) police! nation to an _ international force, and that without an interna. tional agreement governing a reduc-- tion of armaments the American naval expansion policy would be con- {tinued indefinitely. DEPORTATION OF ENEMY ALIENS WAR COSTS, Agreement at Armistice Signing Fixes Only Reparation Damages on Germany Says Erzberger in Berlin Speech [By United Press} AMSTERDAM, Dec. 30.—Chairman Erzberger of the German armistice delegation declared today in Berlin that Germany will pay ‘for all damages caused in Belgium and northern France. He said REPORT TEMPERATURE HOVERS NEAR ZERO POINTE Weather fore and lower tempe’ of “local snows atures’’ during the early days of the k in the North- ern Rocky Mountain and plateau re- gion were realized on schedule late Sunday with a light snow and cold ; re. ? . wave that is general in its scope in LONDON, Dec. 30.—Ignace Jan Paderewski, pianist, is pre- teat ra = and Germany were agreed on the general question of ("| The mercury eontinuea Parin i f a Polish republic to include Danzig, amages. — 4 h ae (at fe to fail thruout the night and at 9 East Pra Lee penanadly ‘ War: . His arrival in Posen| | } “Each nation will pay its own war bill” said Erzberger. | “‘Ger- o'clock this morning reached the mini- russia, Silesia, Pomerania an arsaw. 3 PF { many will pay for damage done im mum mark of one degree above end the subsequent protest of German soldiers against his speeches | Belgium and Northern France as well tween Germany, the United States snows are reported fro ‘esulted in machine _gun fighting in the Posen streets Friday with over 100 casualties. [By United Press} | WASHINGTON, Dec. 30.—Deportation of most An American flag raised by Paderewski was fired upon by the thousand enemy aliens now interned in the United Stat, Cermans. ed to congress shortly by the department of justice o! ‘icials, ff the three or four ne ews will be recommend-| BERLIN, Dec. 30.—The question) as civilian losses. The details will | be settled at the peace conference.” and the Allies, and the German dele- gates signed the armistice on condi- tion that there would be restrictions to indemnities, according to Mathias lof indemnities has been settled be-|Erzberger, speaking here today. ns and trains are operat- ing on schedule altho the wind that prevails in thei face of the cold would prove demoralizing to traffic in the event of a resumption of the storm,

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