Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 5, 1920, Page 1

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)

BOLSHEVIK VICTORIES REMOVE LAST PROP FOR ALLIED POLICY fe (By United Press.) LONDON, Jan. 5.—The Bolshevik defeat of the Denikine and Kolchak forces has removed the last allied opportunity for indirect military action in Russia, British authorities agree. The allies must make war themselves or obtain peace. Moscow Donetz coal basin. POLICE BARRACKS RAIDED AND BURNED IN IRELAND ON SUNDAY * (By United Press.) LONDON, The serious situation in Ireland complicated by a series of outbreaks Saturday and Sunda A group of 300 men raided the police barracks at Carrigtohil, confiscated the arms and ammunition and dy: dan. 5 was mited the building. Attacks on police barracks were carried out in two other villages of Ire- land, according to reports reaching here. reported that the soviet armies had occupied the vast Baku dispatches report the reds active in the oil districts. today | The Casper Daily Cribunre | Aw ann WEATHER FORECAST Generally fair tonight and Tuesday. Colder in east portion tonight and north ast portion Tuesday. NUMBER 71 VOLUME IV. CASPER, WYO., MONDAY, JAN. 5, 1920 CONGRESS ASKED TO ENACT LAW AIMED AT PARLOR BOLSHEVISTS COUNTIES OF ULSTER rl es p cae: | | Long-Haired Men and Short-Cropped Wo-| men Out of Reach of Statutes, Palmer) Says in urging Prompt Action on Measure to Curb Dangerous Menace to Country | By Associated Press. WaSHINGTON, Jan. 5.—-Unable to prosecute the so-called parlor haired men and short-haired women, who encour-| rompote sedition as a pastime, Attorney General an appeal te. coneestis action on the} Palmer today. é 'Wets Lose Again in Final Ruling Upon’ | Volstead Act; Beer | Sale Prohibited (Ny Associated Press.) WASHINGTON, Jan. 5.—The | prohibition enforcement act, defin- jing as intoxicating any beverage | containing one-half of one percent or more of alcohol, was declared |constitutional today by the su- preme court in an opinion on which the By Earthquake \Two Villages Known to Have Been Wiped jcourt was divided, five to four. Pro-| |ceedings: brot by Jacob Rupnert of New| Out with Severe Loss of Life; Violent brewers to in the government from} . . . |prohintings tne sato of 2.75 percent veer! Tremors Destroy Wire Cofimunications jwartime net. Me Siecet thar sas ee| with Stricken Region Near Mt. Orizaba cent he was non-intox ing, but that a ee beer manufactured under regulations MEXICO CITY, Jan. 5.—Ten states were shaken by an a ES as Ratna a igor "| earthquake which Saturday night destroyed at least two vil- ’ |lages and caused many deaths in the state of Vera Cruz. These states were Mexicbh, Puebla,’ Vera Cruz, Caxaca, Guerrero, | Morelos, Jalisco, Tlaxcala, Hidalgo and Queretaro. The center of the convulsion was in the neighborhood of BREWERS RELIEVED FROM PROSECUTION (By United Press.) I, SyASEINGTON, ao: After BP-| Mount Grizaba, 70 mites west of Vera » voleano, was virtially destroyed |holding the Volstead enforcement APS similar f. befell Coustlas, « . ruled that the bureau of internal! Vera Cruz and Puebla, The most seri 3 were torn down by the vio » had no right to stop the sale|ous dam t neighborhood. lence of the tremor and only men- of cent beer Te a miles northeast |tary reports have reached this eity hefore the passage of the Volstead law. —~-. ee from prosecution brew-| who sold much beer be-| war-time prohibi- 1 Gctober 28, neys for the government and Rhode Is- land postponed until Monday their ar- land postponed until Moray wax on Mayor-Elect Pelton and Three Successful constitutional prohibition. ; A ff ———— Candidates at November Election Assume Place in Administration LIQUOR INHOME © | COURT DECIDES 1 when tic m fe when the law became effective. he court held that while it could} j not liquor containing over one-| percent alcohol was intoxi-| undoubtedly has that ion on this point was} half of one cating, congr The de the decisions the attorney | | general of New Jersey announced that | the state would not consent to a suit bbeing brot against o hibition by the New Jersey Hquor deal-| ers. ‘After the decisions were read attor- en and Mayor-elect Ben H. Pelton will take bt at the city hall. The first session of the new council wiii be catied to order about 8 o'clock tonight. Asa Sloan, city clerk, will administer the oaths. Leading members of the Chamber 1 | of Commerce who approved the present candidates elected in the fall bill suabruitted by him several months ago which w engthen the | (iy United Press.) | election; will Be interested spectators at tht ceremony hands of the department of justice in dealing with American citizens | DENVER, Jan. 5—Accltizen, of |, The Old ‘councils sitting: in Sts clos (office, axe WV. AV. Keefe, W. F. Dunn considered dangerous to the nation. now is in the’ Hands of a sub-commit: | | Colorado hag the right to keep liquor jee owas ek patsenn a MOney | Brig ees DOn iia eagfeenee Coming on the heels of the most suc-| tee. Epitomized, the bill after properly | in/hisgown home, according to a, de- | Dilla and only, thei closing business mie jyaving and at present as head of the cessful nation-wide raid ever made in|defining acts of sedition would provide | cision of the Colorado supreme court fers! occupy the Attention o: ae aes Pie Pn ed Ge ae, this country on centers of radical prop-!for a fine of not more than $10,000 or handed down today in the case of Ed |0Utsing counc! ‘ Sa rapa ies Waa aganda, Mr. Palmer's statement was re-, imprisonment of 20 years or both for Julian of Rio Grande county. Julian |_ William Kocher, Perry A. Morri puey ce. th : read with unusual interest by mem-{&hy person guilty of sedition a fine of THE PLAN OF IRELAND—Prime Minister Lloyd-George has suggested in the | was convicted in 1918 of having whis- |T. A. Dean aro the retiring members| i. Dunn was a member of th hers of congress. |hot more more than $10,000 or impris- | British house of commons that Ireland be divided into two states, and each state | key-in his home after his attorney had | f the council. Mr. Kocher is a dentist] 1. committee on the old counc ‘At least one of the men taken in the/°™ent of not more than ten years or | be given home rule, with a parliament of its 6wn. The two states would be on | contended that the information ern Sollee ln a ppoeeianonag ot the | fhekonaea period sasha, elt kotrivediand: nuagrous! (Continued on Page 3) the model of those in the United States. | charged no offense against the state. aera doniore ioe cas ‘one BEOrES | sonservativenes . others are natives or haye taken out! . = SS ie IE: | i big stockman of the citizenship papers. It is these Mr, ¢ 9 | | 2) s county, has been act on the retiring Palmer. desirés to handle thru the fed fe - | The imitial session of the new coun) council in dealit I problems for eral courts rather than to leave their ell probably will be brief, most of the | what he considered to he to the best punishment to state tribunals and in | businessgbeing taken up by the appoint: |; yitic interest the absence of a federal law he is un- jment of new city officials, 1. M. El - thorpe’s appointment as chief of police at the department of jus-| . statement said, ‘‘may deal forcibly, effectively and quickly} with seditionists who are American citi- zens but who are seeking to injure or| destroy the government, I hope | earnestly that congress immediately up- on the reconvening on Jan; 5 will en-) act into law a measure adequate to meet able to do so. In order t tic Mr. Palmer COLOR TO PROGRAM OF LENINE OF ROTARIANS W FOR OVERTHROW OF THE WORLD cunvev (F CONDITIONS IN GASPER will be acted upon by the council will the appointment of R. M. Boeke as ty attorney. The remaining city of aa cials probably will be retained in of: Practically all of the new members of the eouncil have good records as busi- ITH PRELIMINARY ness men and it is expected that Casper | will see iness administration head-} ed t b oung’ men. the ‘grave situation now confronting! > x 4 ‘ | ama Pour Radical Organizations of America|——._. ; way | are He: Pelton. new mayor, ts a youns| dglipnititepteneartnet origuch ar lae| Investigation Being Conducted by Local Club Will tir: iica'tc'run for me orrce mcoaune | WASHINGTON, San: “—rresident and I confidently expect tha there will Recognized for Membership in Body Lead to Plans for Developing the Best in Youth of his success in private undertakings. wil _ ‘ of greeting” to the Democratic dinner i be none. That seditionists should be | Earl C. I one of the new coun- punished is denied by no loyal citizen} That Seeks Universal Revolt | z B cil members Hiaile- an “Untmtinl mice |) oo eeeeto te cote emae. Bente eee nd esent laws are inade- " Jit gone : May binelivede >) announced at the White House toc dunte'da; questioned ‘by vena familiar Here thru Assistance for Parents and Society [seas in ‘the automobite vusiness here) “Phere “is wlde conjecture. as vith th 8. = | os [isesey sree ok Lins al “| whether the president will discuss a bi acyeeateionihe ago in appearing be-| (By, Ansociatoueereea { In li ith th li ursued by Rotary clubs in all parts |" “Fred oe mee be department}, Litas term, | Some ‘of ithe) presiient’s : ‘ G n line wi e policy p | : is a department) friends have insisied, tho, that he not fore ate committee I made clear} = | as vs Spee oral , tho, tHE TEGbiTRAD’ ihe departuien oman e| WASHINGTON, Jan. a The pera orc of Lening and Trot of the United States, the Casper Rotary club has taken up the Punter i ree ccmmerel com | be # candidate. They regard it as unable to proceed properly against | zky recognizes no national lines or state boun aries ut aims at €0-| boy problem thru a committee which consists of M. P. Wheeler, | por circies her provable Cy he will make this clear itionists because of lack of statutory | gulfing the entire world thru establishment of a “dictatorship of PYO-\L. A. Reed and Dr. J. C. Kamp. Chester M. Bryan has served as city meste definition of the crime and I also sug-/ gested the kind of a law which I thot} id meet the situation. ince that time the bill I outlined s been introduced in the house by Representative Davey of Ohio, and it R i G ra | Of WA ¥ W Hi EN Usts, seven minister . eight employ: abor, seven bankers, and two r | letariat,” according to the “essence” of sovietism prepared by the} Bolsheviks themselves and included in a collection of press utterances, | translated from Russian newspapers for the state department. (Continued on paze Hight) ent incomplete, returns from a Boy Life jsurvey which was sent out last week jto more than 50 Casper men together {with a personal letter asking the views jof these men on the kind of pleasure which should be provided for a grow- ing boy, and the manner in which sex jrousing morbid curiosity. | The survey blanks and the letter were |sent to 13 lav doctors and den- |business men. Each of the city school teachers will be asked to fill out a sur- At the noon luncheon of the club today at the Henning |hotel, Mr. Wheeler presented to the club the first, but at pres-' The city fathers, who will remain in Breisch, 836 > information should be imparted without |} | clerk and his showing with the oil com- panfes marks him as a dependable man. da; St. X evening t the hom STRIKE SUBMISSION INEVITABLE, MINERS DECLARE IN REPORT Had Developed Into Test of Strength Be- }proposed by President Wil. which vey blank and eventually the Re | re i elub will BRobabig make a house-to-} festesese an immediate increase of 14 { . | flood the congressional records during | hous nvass to secure the information prercent. House Expected to Reject at Once and for tie coining months. lee | tween Government and Workers, Say |: tne mo wo acceptance wax mate, The senate soon will begin work on Having completed its survey, the lees th BoE cae teed = bic pest cy \the house water power development |measure. The Victor Berger election case is the principal of today's program | jin the house, where leaders plan to re- |Ject immediately the re-election certifi- ; jeate of the Milwaukee Socialist, ousted (By. Associated Press.) |i the Inst. sesalon” and promptly: re: elected. WASHINGTON, Jan. 5.—Congress reconvened promptly | pho senate returned today in’ the at noon today with the treaty of Versailles still the foremost | hope of disposing of the German peace i ‘i < ‘, treaty this month, but without sut ' subject and months of hard work in ht with adjournment | {n'y thie mon at write su i = expected by fe’ w leaders before the presidential campaign next tions during the holiday recess. Some fall. The only recess looked for is a brief one in summer when immediate move, how je expected: the national party convent . : : 4 en al of the |!t may ‘be launched in debate. ions are in session. Renewal | The motion of Senator Underwood, treaty debate | but in the sen: club plans to aid, existing agencies for the betterment of boy life in their work and to encourage other activities which will most readily meet the needs of the community. ‘The survey is intended to place in the hands of the club ‘information showing the leading nationalities and faiths in the community, the number of boys in school, in offices, in trades and not in school, the number of delinquents, the number sent to correctional institutions, jand the kinds of agencies Mr. Wheeler, who is chairman of the qommittee, feels strongly that there isa decided boy problem in Casper. In too many instances, parents are neglecting their responsibilities, he believes, Second Time the Eléction Certificate of Victor Berger; Hard Work Ahead expected at,any vi congress, With partisan politics of the! neme t, Alabama, for appointment | today the sedition bill! ...,ing presidential election prominently | of a conciliation committee, is awaiting | as Senator Sterling of South Dakota had) | 1. fore. Political speeches of presi | Cores ition and on the calendar, a8! society also has a duty to perform. the right of Way. tie and. interna-| ential candidates and members of con-| '* the resolution of Senator Knox, Re- nesindidete: Wich ‘have’ 6ome"to Innumerable domestic (Continued on page Eight) tional problems await the attention of Stess uP for re election ‘are expected to (Continued on Page Four.) j had passed a mere controversy between | the operators and miners over the ques- y Asnociated Press.) jtion of wages to an issue between the supremacy of the law and the ability n. 5.—International officers of the United o¢'ye government to enforce its man- orkers in agreeing to declare the recent miners’ strike at an end, | tates and decrees. “In other words, Leaders in Convention Report (B | COLUMBUS, Ohio, Jai |Mine Wi +‘“decided to submit to the inevitable, tho protesting in our hearts) ...-ovoray hotween th | against what we believed to be an unjust attitude of the government,” | the employe, but inst |according to the report today of Acting President Lewis and Secre-|1"","(r-"%"" ° tary Treasurer Green at the special miners’ convention here. There) : ‘was not the slightest hint ther another of the comm on were highly praised! it was no longer @ employer and a test between up of working men nment itself.”” — strike fs contemplated ul declared WASE | The international off 1 must stop compelling port stated that “high en- ¢ + ib | boy a large amount of ther that decisions to be reached, The r tice their re-' to obi ar, commission of three appointed | port stated they realized ter th: fedoral trade commission today ordei ‘Hy President ‘on “will be fair and! membership of our unions the purpo: ed. Such trade practices constitute just as to meet with the general ap-/of determination of the federal govern-! commission |provel of our membership.” Members|ment” and decided to accept the plan unfair competition, the held.

Other pages from this issue: