Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, February 18, 1919, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Seapine c- 1 18, 1918 PE ete ___THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE z : ae WULLION MEN IN ANOTHER ‘SHOW ME" JUDGE GOES FRENCH HAVE RIGHTS IN DESTINIES OF THE NEAR EAST “= bi. FILE AND PAY | TO PRISON FOR REFUSAL TO PAY * hanor and Armenia-Minor, M, Gut BOLSHEVIK ARMY BY MARCH 15TH’ | Bovp Bonus voreD iv year 171 $0 SAYS DIRECTOR FO ASIA IN FRENCH FOREIGN WORK thought it) nece to give to all t neland while the under which France ony KANSAS CITY, Mo., (B Mail.—!federal court directed the Dallas PARIS, (Correspondence to share of France in the public debt o1 rate (ih hide ALLO OTS But The surrender of former Judge J. S.| county clerk to call a specail election Associated Press.)-——The “rights’ y sixty per. waite i ail ve rents ' ane tity, Evans, to begin his jail sentence for|to vote bonds to pay $70,000 of France to guide the destinies of § he share of | countries the oe : 1 Sain leontempt of federal court has added |the interest. With that action, the Lebanon and Armenia-Minor were ex- England before the war was ten or Mae a fo ae aR another chapter to the tangled his, county clerkship was added to the Pounded to the Associated Press to- twelve per cent, that of Italy five a Tea Association Secretary Returns | Individuals and Corporations Sub- terviotithe tient te compel ateouty list of recluse officialdom of Dalla: CS, M. a oirector for an percents and Germany had all the Titis not posililerto jive 5 = % in the Missouri hills to pay a bondeq | county. in the French Foreign office. MM. /res tries uncontrolled ind . From Russia With Report of ject to Income and Excess indebtedness for a railroad never con-, Efforts to serve summons on the Gout asserted that it had long been «Phere is another important phase Hae ieee ny * Their best peopk Conditions and Strength of Profits Taxes Have Vital istructed. |jurists were redoubled. Posses ot the role of France to protect the help- of the question. You know about the neces to have, not a Enemy Forces. Duty to Perform. It was in 1871 that Dallas county, deputies from the United States Mar. , less peoples of the Orient and recalled yreat number of monasteries and re at r trator and | with other Missouri and Kansas com-shal’s office in motor cars rolled along | interventions by France in Syria and jigious institutions in Jerusalem. For yuide to. civilization munities, saw visions of tremendous the trails through hills and woods, Lebanoon to defend the Christians our French Catholics Jeru : —— LONDON. (Correspondence of the) | Income tax payments this year are| industrial development. Strangers ap-| Others, disguised as fishermen and and that France had played @ great second Rome and the 200090900 0090009 0909000000 Asspelai cs se aan abek due eatlies oat seelore. tne firs. peared with a “pen and paper” rail-| hunters, tracked thru thickets and part in the dgfense of the Armenians sent money and m to pro- sheviki have a well equipped and dis-/payment date is March 15, simulta-lroad from St. Louis to Fort Scott, along creeks without st in 1895 and 1896. mote the Catholic influence in this N F | C ciplined army of one ‘million men neous with the finl due date of the/Kan., and Dallas county voted $255,.; Federal Judge Van V: “France,” he said, “worked not joly town. atrona ue 0. and will have doubled its size and return required by the new revenue! q99 fonds as a bonus to the promo-|sued an arder of contempt 1 st only to protect Christians but sne Phone 949. effectiveness in another six or seven law. 2 at ters, lthe three Dallas county judges last #so_sent missionaries into all parts “This sums up a large part of the or months, says the Rev. Cyprus Rich-| “File and pay by March 15,” is the) ‘The road was never built, and Dal- March. Judges Monroe Quigley and Of Turkey, not for the purpose of claims of France in Asia Minor, and J. L. Biedermann, prop. ard Mitchell, American Young Men’s new slogan of the internal revenuelias county’s “paramount issue” was J. E. Thomas sought the safety of Proselyting but for teaching ana I believe that M. Pichon, (Frencl GEBO COAL Christian association secretary who/bureau. Collector Mark A. Skinner|}orn when the first interets payment the woods. In the night, deputies Charitable work. Before the war there Foreign Minister) was entitled to was in charge of the association’s|is preparing to handle the flood of in- work at Kazan on the Volga river and who has returned from Russia after fifteen months of service in Bolsheviki Russia. Dr. Mitchell has just filed his re- port on the Russian siutation as it applies to the American Y. M. C. A. work with the headquarters for the United Kingdom here. The gravest danger to the Bol- sheviki regime, Dr. Mitchell believes, | is famine. If the Bolsheviki can feed Russia for the next six weeks, they will continue in power indefinitely is the conclusion reached by Dr. Mitchell. “If the Bolsheviki can hold con- trol until the end of February they will probably carry on for another | 12 months,” he said. “In spite of the fact that I am not a Bolshevik, I do not believe it is possible for any non-Bolshevik party or combina- tion to overthrow the Bolsheviki with- out a very liberal Allied assistance. But the Bolsheviki have no right in Poland. . Should the Allies take contro] from the Bolsheviki and hand it over to non-Bolshevik Russia, I question very come tax payments that will reach him between now and the close of business on Saturday, March 15. “Early payment of income tax is ot the utmost importance in meeting the \treasury’s debts brought about by the Skinner. “The new law names March |15 as the first payment date because ithere are large obligations outstand- ing in the form of certificates of in- debtedness that must be met on that date.” | “The earlier payment this year |should cause no hardship to taxpay- jerS, who generally speaking, have an- ticipated the enactment of the new law and have set aside a reserve from 1918 income to meet the government tax, “What is needed now is another practical display of ‘that great spirit [ef co-operation which has carrieu over the top every big governmental objective that had to do with the winning of the war. The persons and corporations who are called upon |by the new law to pay income ana |war excess profits taxes on 1918 in- comes have a great, vital duty to per- form. That it will be done in the thorough American way is a fore-} seriously whether these other parties gone conclusion. could keep pace among themselves, The ;do so is urged to pay his entire tax| ing is completed it will be the boast thing that makes the Russian situa-|when filing his returns, on or before|f J. G. Nicholas, tion so difficult is the fact that the | the Russian by which one-quarter of the amount to leave the building for anything) for more than a few months. Russian peasant and “Every taxpayer who can possibly March 15. The installment method, fell due. In all political campaigns, cried, “We will refuse to pay the bonds.” After election suceessful can. didates have gone to the hills to avoid taking action. | The bonds eventually went to an eastern capitalist who resumed the litigation of his predecessors to col- lect interest. Judgments had been entered into from time to time in federal court. ation in the county, it was said. ‘surrounded Judge Ev. candidates for county judgships have|he was brought into F By 1911 the princi- pal and accrued interest had reachea! Springfield, Mo. $1,028,000, payment of which would |sere his sentence is still somewhat in take 18 cents on every dollar of valu. | doubt. dera where he refused to agree to a levy and was sentenced to six months in jail for contempt. The Court ot Appeals recently affirmed the decis ion and the judge, who had been re. leased pending decision, appeared to begin serving senten Judge ns, Who is now out of o. fice and therefore has no power to act on the tax levy, was taken to Whether he mus, Meanwhile, Dallas county is without A judgment was obtained and the 'a railroad. DWVERSIFIED BUSINESS LENSES OF THE HENNING Arrangements to complete the con: nection of the two former hotels here will be carried out just as soon as the tiling is received which is expectec some time this week. When the build- manager of the in or will not have stitution, that a workman will not fullfill his usual|may be paid at that time, followed by| that he wants in Casper. obligations, or carry on his work. He | quarterly payments on June 15, Sep. is lazy, selfish and refuses to espouse |tember 15 and December 15, is in | been made by the Henning company the cause of either the Bolshevik or tended for taxpayers whose financing | include a billiard and pool room, + the non-Bolshevik. I know this to be|of the tax at one time would tend| true in the conflict between the Bol- sheviki and Czecho-Slovaks along the | |to upset locai financial conditions. “Don’t wait until the final date, Volga and I have abundant evidence | March 15, for filing your return e2 to inspire me to believe that this is true all over Russia. “The Intellegentsia and Courgeois are totally incapable of doing any- thing against the Bolshevik power. They take it out in talk and abuse. Personally they are fine people and my Russian friends are all numbered among them, but patriotism and nationalism with them are wards which havenot the connotation which we attach to them. I met one man in my 15 months in Russia who seem- ed to have a suspicion of what these words mean. They are learning now but learning very slowly. “It seems as if the capable and effi- cient Russian woman will have to stem the flood of disorder and compel this Russian tumult and chaos to take on order and power. It is there. It will come. But it will come slowly and only after the heart of Russia is tortured by the tragedy of its pres- ent situation which it has not yet fully began to feel and realize. Today and tomorrow morning it is theatri- cals, the outpouring of the native dramatic instinct of the Russian, but tomorrow noon will begin the serious sober reality to which we can build an international structure.” ———— RAILROADERS PIONEERS IN GERMAN MICCUPATION WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY OF OCCUPATION. — (Correspon- dence of The Associated Press.)— In its march across Rhenish Prussia toward the Rhine, the American Army of Occupation was preceded by two railroad exploration crews of engi- neers, whose duty was to make sure that the lines of communication .were ready to operate. The engineers traveled in special trains. In one instance the special train of Colonel Albert E. Pierce, of Eau- claire, Wis., commanding the Thirty- Seventh Engineers, was fired upon by snipers on the initial trip of an Amer- ican force over the rail line between Trier and Bitburg on the day when the Americans first stepped across the line into Rhenish Prussia. None of the shots took effect. Company E of the Thirty-Seventh Engineers did the pioneering between Trier and Coblenz along the Moselle valley, while Company F. explored the northern route traveling by way of Bitburg. 2 —_>—. POOLHALL AT GLENROCK IS ENTERED BY BURGLARS might have’kept a bowl of punch, for Burglars forced an entrance to the| selves. Liberty Pool Hall at Glenrock by breaking a window and turning the lock on the rear door from the in side. was concealed behind some tobacco, but were unable to open the cash|for them, as the attendance of boys | &% 3 $1.00 PER PLATE register which contained about $20. The deed was evidently committed by some person who was acquainted with They stole about $30 which| attend the public schools only during paying your tax. Let us eliminate the last-minute rush, so far as possible By evenly distributing the load be- tween now and March 15 every tax payer will have a chance to get any needed advice and aid in determin- ing his liability and preparing his re. turn. The Ifternal Revenue Bureau has placed its entire energies into meeting the needs of taxpayers ir: this respect. Also by distributing the load, the government machinery will be better able to stand the strain that this great efort entails. “Co-operation is the spirit of the time. It is vital to the Income Tax. Let us all get together and establish! another record for Americanism.” FAILS TO SEE ENGINE. = [5 GROUND 10 OEATH GREEN RIVER, Wyo.—Wright Hershey, engine hostler, was run down and killed by a switch engin; piloted by his best friend, Engineer Eastman, while approaching the round house on his way to work. Hershey was facing a stiff wind and failed to see the engine, which passed over him and eevered both legs just be low the hip. Death resulted in less than a half hour. eenteragee a8 JAPS BUYING UP ASPEN TREES FOR RUSS EXPORT VLADIVOSTOK, (By Mail.) —The Japanese, profiting by the low value of the ruble, have bought up all the aspen trees.in the Ussuri region and this has caused a scarcity of fuel for the use of the Ussuri railway, says the newspaper Dalekaya Okrain, which adds that all the local inhabi- tants have been mobilized by Japanese to prepare the wood for ex- port. A proposition is under consid- eration to increase the tax on ex portation of the aspen logs so as to stop the Japanese from shipping them out of the country. Ancient E First Soldier (in “How's your egg, Bill? Second Soldier—‘I’ll match you to see who goes back for the gas- masks.”—Jersey Journal. * Ce See The elder Dumas probably made; writer who ever lived, and he spent the money he earned with equal free- dom. He was generous to a fault, and it is even said that he kept a dish of gold, as others at that period his friends to dip into and help them- eee In Boston, in the early part of the last century girls were permitted to; the summer, as then there was room fell off during that season. —_——>-— On English locomotives the num- the proprietor’s habit of leaving the money bag on the shelf. ber and position of the headlights denote whether the train is a passe. ger or freight, an express or local, The new space rentals that have model gents haberdashery, and realty |and brokerage offices as well as a bar and model barber shop. The new clothing store which wik be under the management of M. V. Asquith, of Aberdeen, S. D., will oc- cupy the entire space which was for- merly taken by the Henning lobby. Mr. Asquith plans to install one 01 the finest clothing stores possible and will run a fine tailoring establish ment ih connection. The new tution will cater to those who want the best. Paul H. Moore, manager of the Casper Realty company, has leased the office which was formerly occu. pied by the Mahoney & Steinberg company for, a high class realty and investment concern. Henry Sylvester, who has conduct- ed the barber shop and pool hall in the basement of the hotel for a num- ber of years, has leased the old cave et room of the Henning hotel for a high class billiard parlor. The bar. ber shop in the basement of the old enning is being extended and under new management elaborate fixtures and baths are being installed. | Among the plans for the grounc floor Mr. Nicholas plans to have the main dining room concerted into a big banquet room, with the old Hen | ning dining room reserved for spe- cial occasions such as private dances and dinners and lodge and large so cial functions. When the complete arrangements) have been perfected the Hening will "4 foo] ies in the state and will be a tribute ee JAP MINER KILLED AT GEBU PROJECTS INCLUDED IN needed material including lumber an‘, one invited. |or the result of kidney be one of the finest equipped hostler | to the enterprise of the new owners. | . | see what Swamp-Root, the great kid ‘BANDIT WHO TRIED TO: HOLO UP SALOON GIVEN BEATING BY PROPRIETOR ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo.—William Metiver, proprietor of a restaurant in the rear of the Cottage salono was the only man who refused to throw up his hands when a masked bandit attempted to hold up the place and thereby annexed the credit for de- feating 2 bold robbery. Metiver grappled with the bandit and a bul- let from the latt revolver, which was exploded twi the melee, took the fight out of the “bad man.” He was beaten into insensibility by Me ver and then turned over to the au- thorities, giving the name of Bob McKee of Salt Lake City, altho pa- pers on his person showed that he had registered for military service at Bingham City, Utah. NOTICE The Ladies Aid of the Presbyterian church will give a turkey dinner Wed- nesday evening at the church from five-thirty to seven-thirty. Tickets on ale at Holmes Hardware, $1. Every 2-17-2t oo Home cooking at the Harvey. Important to all Women Readers of this Paper Thousands upon thousands of wo- men have kidney or bladder trouble and never suspect it. Women’s complaints often prove to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition, they may cause the other organs to become di 1 You may suffer pain in the back, headache and loss of ambition. Poor health makes you nervous, ir- ritable and may be despondent; it makes any one so. But hundreds of women claim that Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, by re- storing health to the kidneys, proved to be just the remedy needed to over- come such conditions. Many send for a sample bottle to ney, liver and bladder medicine will do for them. By enclosing ten cents ’ home and more money by his pen than any other| ¢ oatoated at MIDWEST HOTEL TONIGHT 3 After Elks’ Minstrel Show at : : The Iris Theater Me 1M Sea” eee ' Patrons May Reserve Tables in Advance were French schools in all section: of Turkey, and in the great town: there were French hospitals for the care of, the poor. In Syria especially the number of French schools was considerable. In Beirut we had at large university, and I must add that the Americans also had one, work- ing for the civilization of the Svriar people. A great number of physi cians were bred in the French uni- versities. M. Gout called attention to the fact that French capital and industry had created three of the four ports of Asia Minor, and pointed to the lgreat railways built and controllea} by the French. The first road opened | between Damascus and the coast, the Damascus-Beirut line, was French, he isaid. It was also a French society} which before the war undertook the! repair of roads in many parts of the Ottoman Empire, and a French com. pany had a concession for a big rail- | way in Armenia, The important silk industry of Syria, he added, had been fostered and developed by France. “We may point out also the great “Where are my reading glasses?” Mischievous daughter has pick- ed Daddy’s pocket and watches him gleefully as he searches in vain for his reading glasses. {f Daddy wore KRYPTOK |] Glasses, he would be freed from the “off-and-on” nuisance of the two-pairs-of-glasses bother, '] because KRYPTOKS (pro- nounced Crip-tocks) would give him, in one pair of glasses, the necessary correction for both reading and distance. And KRYPTOKS give him this convenience without that draw- back of other bifocals—the con- spicuous age-revealing seam or hump. KRYESC K THE INVISIBLE BIFOCALS are crystal-clear—their surfaces smooth and even. They cannot be distinguished from ordinary lenses, That’s why KRYPTOKS are called “the invisible bifo- cals.” We are competent to meet the optical needs and tastes of the most exacting patron. Call at your convenience. BURNETT-HYNES Optical Co. Ground Floor, Midwest Hotel speak of our rights th the more entitled to do so in view ot the abomniations committed against the Armenians and Syrians by Tur- kish Unionists early in the w f = Referring to the treaty He was COKE wooD City office 157 So. Center St. Gen. Office 5th and Beech sts. ned by OSes Do Not Be Afraid to feed your babies CASPER DAIRY MILK. It is clarified and pasturized, bottled and capped with an electric bottling machine. If you buy tickets it only costs 15c per Quart 9c per Pint We deliver to all parts of the City Just Phone 471 You are cordially invited to visit our plant at all times CASPER DAIRY CO. REJUVENATE YOUR CAR! DON’T BUY A NEW ONE! During 1918 nearly every automobile fac- tory in America produced just about one- half of the cars manufactured in 1917. New machines are are high—deliveries —materials are infe ce—prices e uncertain ior. Here’s your cue. Keep r the car that you now a own in trim. Don’t tin- f ker with it. Let our ex- perts put it in condition and add several hundred more miles of service to its use- fulness. It will cost you but very little to have your car running like a new one. Drop in any time for an estimate No charge or obligation. The Highway Garage PODOOSOOOOOOOO i Coho te tn le Sete toda otictintetotc tes Lote tote tate ate tote Moste tom Doorteetoateatoatocge-eo-ete afoeto-sse-eSo-alo-ahoetoele-ae-ace-sio-ace-ale- ele se-ace 150 060-050-450 40 45e soe sce- 4s <) 1M 1M oe, ¢ iM Segoe ¢ o ote Me ho e% eeaho eho So-eSe The Electric Iron will take care of all your pressing needs and make your ironing so easy. Just phone to have one sent out for your approval. ATRONA POWER CO. Ce i te te EO Phone 69 a F eal hs % Jack Harada, 36, a Japanese minet | to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. | 3 63 2 7 zs 7 % e “eo employed at the mines in Gebo, was| Y., you may receive sample size bot- >¢ $3 killed last Friday when he was caught tle by Parcel Post. You’ can pur- | ¥ in a cave-in in one of the levels in| chase medium and large size bottles ee which he was working. at all drug stores.—Adv + a CAP 7 ay RB 4 ee ae 1% ote te to te Mo Mote te tee ete Mote ete teotetoted thal DOmreodortossostostessessecsosse niente eee eee sees ee esr oe 2% a od + + . a 24 Rae Sd o a: On aM nee "04, % ++ 2 ra? hes Me Me te acts ete state ee a eee ¢ ° Me aM oe, Co oars Oo % oe oteee, % ? 4, K2 o, RPA Normerees ? ? Me CCC OH OO Merv Loko Meteo Mote tovtetewm Bo-efo-afocte-sSo-elo-aheofe-ehote-ese-ose-ete-ese-ate- eles’ ye a A Want Ad will sell it. and so on, Pee Sedat ae SATA Penns, CRS ’

Other pages from this issue: