Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 16, 1919, Page 9

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1919 THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE LEANER OF BRITISH BOLSHEVIKI TELLS REVOLT PLAN DQUTFUL IF ONOTIONS WIL EXTEND TO AMERICA By EDWIN W. HULLINGER (United Press Staff Correspondent) “These shop. stewards were men LONDON.—(By Mail.) — The/|from the bench. They met in work- United Press today discovered the|ing clothes. Delay was just as dis- seat of English Bolshevism. astrous to them as to their fellow- Its unofficial capitol is alittle! Workers. : papercluttered suite of two tiny| “They acted, while the regular chambers, up three flights of narrow,|trade union officials, constitutional- winding stairs from a dingy little|ists (he always pronounced the word blind spur street in the heart of Lon- don. + Here the National Administrative Council, the Bolshevist directing body of the Shop Stewards movement, holds its secret sittings. own responsibility. They elected shop stewards. waited for arbitration. “When the war ended the shop stewards decided not to wait longer. They bezan direct action. “In the meanwhile these shop In one of these rooms, the smaller|stewards committees in all parts of of the two, “Billy” Watson, council-|the country had been affiliating in a lor and veteran shop steward’s leader, | Powerful national socialistic orga- told the story of English Bolshevism | nization, of which the national Ad- —told it as he stood beside the/| ministrative Council is the head.” caved-in fireplace. “I do not know whether Bolshe- “The shop Steward movement arose | Vism will spread to America or not,” in England largely from war condi-;he continued, “perhaps not. Indus- as if it carried a certain reproach) / ued, “but our ultimate aim is com- jmunism. For instance, our present fight is for shorter working hours. The wage question is not important. | Present wages are satisfactory. “But wé hope eventually to abol- ish the wage system altogether for a communistic exchange of products. Lenine intends to develop that in Russia, you know. “We believe in the Bolshevik phi-! losophy. It is probably true, of course, that not all of the men striking today have reached the point jof subscribing openly to all of this program. Many of them do. I know it to be the platform of the leaders of the shop steward movement. | A: tall young woman in a blue V./ A. D. uniform entered excitedly with a@ newspaper telling of riots and the! arrests of Bolshevik agitators. | “They may suppress us for a while,” she cried, her eyes snapping, “but they can’t suppress the Idea. It will only blaze out again some- where else.” Watson read, smiled, buttoned his overcoat. “No,” he said deliberately, THREE SENTENCED TO —William Matthews was sentenced | ;by Judge Metz to from fourteen |months to two years in the peniten- |tiary at Rawlins, the minimumi sen-| tence depending upon his behavior jwhile in |charged with grand larceny, having stolen a diamond and pawned it in Casper, hiding the pawn ticket in the stem of his pipe. | oners who broke jail last August, and | who was recently picked up at Riv- erton, | years to twenty-six months at Raw- | lins. returned to jail, having been at lib- erty about seven months since his es- ! cape. “the | q i icini i Idea is going to, play a bigswole inl paren the vicinity of Thermopolis ‘SUICIDE PUTS MRS. BROWN A WELL STATE PEN BY JUDGE © 7*¥,7RY AGAIN WOMAN ONCE MORE : | INTO PRACTICE Was Conimeciio uber Bed and METZ AT THERMOPOLIS MANVILLE, Wyo., April 16.— Chair for Over Two Years THERMOPOLIS, Wyo., April 15.| After having tried to commit sui- vey. THE HUB TODAY Before Taking Tanlac. side by throwing himself from a rapidly moving passenger train, Harry Ussery, printer, was appre- “Some strange things happen in |this world and the change Tanlac |has brought about in my wife's con- hended in the act of slashing his | dition is one of them,” said J. L. wrists with a pocket knife in Brown, # resident of College effort te cut the veins. ‘A physi- cian called to attend him had to battle for hours with a snowstorm and drifts but the man’s life was saved. prison. Matthews was r- over two ye; he con- tinued, “my wife had so much trou- ble with her stomach that she could hardly take any nourishment at all! but a milk diet, and she fell off till She was little more than a_ living skeleton. She got little rest or slecp , at night, and had no energy at all and ~~’ was so weak and rundoyn that most of her time was spent in bed or in her chair. Her skin was sayyow and unhealthy looking and didn’t seem to take interest in ything. “fn fact she wa bad off John Atkins, one of the eight pris- Just received, a car load of barbed wire. See us for prices. We can save you money. Natrona Lumbe was »sentenced to from two Atkins was the seventh to be Clyde Morrison was given a hear- ing this week and pleaded not guilty to the gharge of issuing fradulent checks. Two other charges have been made against him, one for forgery He claimed that he spent four leaving the country, and had PAGE NINE ——_—____ Sav; your money—eat at the Har- OOF COCCCCCMHACDECCCORCCOCS e i SE as she could be to be alive when tions,” he explained, “‘Dora (the En- | trial conditions seem to be better here glishman’s pet name for the Defense|than in Europe.” of the Realm Act) hobbled the regu-|_ Watson said he worked all day long lar union officials, compelling them to|in the shop as a machinist and then submit all complaints to boards of |}came up here in his office to work arbitration. These boards were gen-|late into the night organizing, plan- erally extremely slow. ning, arguing for this new Bolshe- “The rank and file—the men ac-|Vistic organization he was helping to tually in the shops—got impatient. |create. The injustices continued during the! “We admit.some transitory stage delays. They sub-organized on their will be necessary,” Watson contin- the history of England.” es been employed in a sheep camp in the southern part of the state most | of the time since. and the other for stealing a wagon. sho started taking Tanlac, and just He hes been placed under another a few bottles of this wonderful medi- bond of $1,000 in addition to the cine have made her a well woman Charles Frye, charged with intent|bond of a similar amount. once morer She now eats anything to commit a felony when he tried | Friday morning Harry Watts was she wants, sleeps like a child, has An Instrument of Precision. Dibbs—“Do you believe that there is really something which can inva-! riably tell when a man isdying?” | shoot his way into the colored club given ninety days in the county jail gained twenty pounds and is able to Higgs—“I know it.” {in the south part of town, near the|on the charge of vagrancy. Watts was do all Wer housework as well as she Dibbs—“Ah! Perhaps you have) railroad tracks, was given an in-!caught last Sunday by Sheriff Hol- ever did.” seen one of the instruments?” determinate sentence by Judge Metz,|drege while he was attempting to! Tanlac is sold in Casper by the Higgs—“Seen one? I married | conditional upon his conduct while | pass liquor into the prisoners in the Casper Pharmacy and in Alcova by one!”—-London Tit-Bits. confined in the county jail. county jail. the Aleova Mercantile Co.—Adv. i THRIFT THURSDAY SPECIALS you OUGHT TO SEE what an assem blage of bargains we have to offer you! Candidly, to duplicate them you would have to travel to some of the most exclusive shops in New York City. The equal of them is not to be encountered in this vicinity or for many miles around. ; MAKE THURSDAY YOUR REGULAR DOWN TOWN DAY ANCONA THRIFT P: THRIFT THURSDAY MEMN’s RALL Peeccccccccccociasvecce THURSDAY _ Easter Offerings eORCaIGer ene e es $ 1 a) 0 390C€ THRIFT THURSDAY The Hardware Department Is Featuring for this Thursday’s Special WHITE DIAMOND BERLIN KETTLES SALE PRICE $1.19 4-QUART—WORTH $1.75. SALE PRICE... 3-QUART—WORTH $1.50. SALE PRICE. é - THRIFT THURSDAY Grocery Department Peets Crystal Cocoa “HARDWATER CASTILE SOAP, Regular 2 for 25c Value Thrift Price 3 for 25¢ Crystal White Laundry Soap, Thrift Price 6 Bars for 25¢ AAEM AAA Webel Commercial Co. THE BIG BUSY STORE VOTE YES ON ROAD BONDS APRIL 22ND Ce ecccccccccccccccos Wide Ribbons for Sashes, Hair Bows extra Value, per yard Annual Pre-Easter Sale Thursday, Friday and Saturday The New Things in Ready to Wear, Silk Underwear, J. & C. Stifel Striped Overalls, Oshkosh Make Regular $2.00 Value—Thrift Price $1.65 — Silk Hosiery and Many Other Seasonable Items Priced for Your Easter Shopping Special Announcement Tomorrow SCOSPE SESS HS SHHSSCHESHEHOEHSHHOSPHHHHGHSIT VSS HESS SSH SH HSSSEETSSOMHSHRSHHEHHHELETTOE HED ©00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000008000000CLe WATCH OUR WINDOWS WATCH OUR WINDOWS

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