Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 6, 1920, Page 8

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Pe ee ee SRR AAR ee cee ae A a a a owe UD, STATE. DECISION GWE PEOULERS. ONLOCAL WATER. CHANGE TOU RATES FAS 10. COST OF LIVING Street Vender's License SD in Casper Commission Is Asked to Ss Retiring City Attorney H. B. Dur Review Findings : That: ham told the council yesterday that he believed in helping the people reduce, r the cost of living if they were able to Increases Be Reduced to do so thru the purchase of vegetables M bl from street vender The tatement ore Reasonable Jump) fim. 20s" esate er me. present cost . | nd county peddlers’ licenses. 9 F ‘Attorney Durhat advocated a reduced The order issued late last) jemnmm—at pro aif the full cost— month by the slate utilities sor yedaaiers of commission thru THI. M. Hunt-, ; A 7 5 * summer months. ington was considered unjust WO" Dunn thot it would he better to and inequitable by the City! protect the who do business council at its meeting yesterday bere year in out. afternoon, and the commission was re-| Attorney said the grocers pay less tg: any other citi Bs wished only to sell during the quested to send a representatiy its body to further investig in Casper an Dunn if condi and rates in Cas that was the case they should oe a recent ruling of the commission prac-| more but the “come-and-go" merchant tically doubled rates in should not be allowed to endan, which was in keeping with the request | established merchant's business. of the city that it needed higher ra * @f think the city should not throwga etual eost of supy hinderance in th | the cost of living; Dur. The commission ordered the free use| ham, “if the people can cut this living of water abolished and the ecouneil| Cost by buying produce from the street heartily approved this: action, 0} nder in summer months. ‘This vender being given that all lodges, churches, | Sls his produce here anyway, th schools, voluntee hd all other, Only difference being that if we ons which hi uter to put in m D re to! cer.” y as all other citiz > been} SEF A | It was suggested that volunteer fire-| men be repaid in the | volunteers w with the present paid fire dep nt ¢ Under the incre tes made by the commission, it was stated by mem kd bers of the council would have to pa The big of tion to the increase made by the council was-that the high rates would eliminate the watering and WASHINGTON Jan Governor upkeep of lawns Cas tasper ; : reser’ Ton: become the saree the ca ber Harding of the federal reserve board Tanania nt : . pig ee: me warned the bankers in meeting lands about i rding to the opinion aio lirtiaetineeadelin the of most counci B . men. It was considered hetier to have the city pay u deficit in supplying water to patron it would keep lawns green in-the city It was sugg es of the federal reserve cy which must be reckoned with, This means thi to cont ted that the member nearly read. of the co fromiGhavennounes y Is oni ata at nat heyenne meet! put the brake on spe Sto belliz SnlaRIGHE Mail SitvaTh Ll: com: business back to its peace time stand- id ci a sec esate ond inves ing. It would me » that the nation’s rz Ee: inflated during the mitracted. This infla- ARE DISCOURAGED (By An » WASHINGTON, f appeal sto the bankers of the country not to raise interest rates én deposits in a out-f-town balances was mr ernor 1 Reserve board, at the opening con ference today of representatives of ring house asse ions from all parte of the country rding warning that the fed erve bourd did not recognize any between. st of the L story aturing th vorite, Willia is the special attraction at the $ iday and Sat urday, This is Mr. farnum's latest picture and it is sald by critics that it Is one of his best, The Zane Grey | stories carry a real punch and there is probably no other star capable of car- rying the lead than Mr. Farnum. “The | !€ banks on aeposit, and gave mot Last of the Duanes” 1 tale of the that the. board would be free to ra west and is even more colorful than 0" lower’ its rediscount rates whenever “Desert Gold” and other masterpieces the industrial and commercial situa- ary Ge. | tions require action ——_—- | pesca al | | ENTIREVILLAGE $500 000 FO n here and Denver (iy Annociate an.) was a possibility of the immediate fu MEXICO CITY, Jan. 6.—Only two | ture with the coming of better weather houses are left standing in the village | and the arrival of these huge Curtis of Coutzlan,'Vera Cruz, where no es- | E planes. timate has yet been ‘placed on the | He estimates that his flying time be- number of d i injured resulting | tween here and the mile-high city would from Saturday night's earthqu: he about two hours, He has made the popular =n fa rved banks and interest rates paid by mem- | leer service betw cording to reports reaching here. [distance in a little more than three Eleven bodies were recovered in the | hours in a less powerful plane. river co de la Pe Vera | The planes will also be used in serv- Cruz in addition to 24 at Raconda. ‘ice between here and the mining camps. TWINS, 86, THEY WANT TO DIE TOGETHER.—Photograph shows Amanda and Amelia Esterbrook, 86-year-old twins, reunited in the Oak Forest Infirmary, Chicago, after years of separation. Bot h are widows. They have talked, dressed and acted-alike-since childhood. The two were born in Chatauqua county, N, x.| e | ables and fruits if |} ,|OUR DISTI way of cutting down | free | him off the streets, he sells to the gro | rding of the Fed- | rediscount rates of fede reserve lin the country for good or evil % Sr Gi ly) ADMIRAL SIR JOHN JELLICOE TR. ° SHED The distingu LEGION FRIEND OF ThE UNIONS (Continued From Page 1.) ss the pay to the of Cheyenne, did other sta cally every state in the union and the work before the national legislature pn in the Sweet bill becoming a law. “As state secretary Wyoming, T will do papers, bonus, inst ters which the « titled to. now before congre: be another import Legion secured for you. sper is not the targ present, but if ¢ more member from ong st this city as prs. cit should have. eres of th state executive committe: post towns 8 national convention :n Minneapolis. “If a woman in Caspe teach Americ canization movement and push board and for years a memb board as well as being activay conne ed, with the school work of tlfo city, t gu: E educated in the Is in the schools that yi and T have come to 4 ance of the school 8) tem. ment of industrial welf: of the Legion in ¥ nas being the “You should get into polities but not partisan polit 1 posts in the country should haye in mind one word—Ame nism: » you will stand always for Ame eaniam as members of the Legion or ater, in, his thoro-coing ing style showed d the school to educate for- eleners in Casper. 11 the large number of people who remain years in this. country without acquiring any, knowledge of the American form of government. To be- come naturalized, a pyrson should know ried on. ‘The worst of the troubles from I. W. W.s and Reds recently has come from the uneducated. It has been the labor. VISITOR— | under consideration. Hearings before itish admiral who | the committee brot out that the crops will pay us a visit in the near future, never before been known. This bill in- ° permanently dis- 1 man from about $30 to $80 month- lof sand hills ,which the present main y of the Legion in! ¥ Min my power to get things which service men should ve whether they #e lost discharge rance, or other mat- vie@’'man is Jistly en- “The student volinteer fund bill is and if passed will nt thing which the t post in the | ch man here) tonight will go out and get just one! ami your friends | y will ve the largest post in Wyoming. We =. C. Calhoun, speaking as a member) ¢ and} (By described by Doctor Anderson as the) WASHINGTON, Jan, 6.—No further n who got off the train at Van} qdepor 1, Wyo., on his way home from! dertaken until the experiment with the sirlsorganized ©) transport Buford; the first “soviet ark” e and started several other nd cities to organizing in the commissioner general of Washington. touched the high spots of the, ‘The Bufo is willing to) for Ru: anism to the foreign ele-/ permitted to land her passengerg has ment as a volunteer, we fellows ought not been determined. to be willing to get behind this Ameri-/ W. O. Wilson attorney for the school 000 : r of the ty of New York state alone are open- of the need to educate the fewcomers}the Bolshevist leaders of Russia, Sena- in fundamentals of the Efglish lan- “There are 13 million that need to be| tion activiti ish language. Tt! ung men develcp ulize the import- Furke Sinclair, head of the depart: re of the Mid- Réfinine Co., delegate ‘from the} Third Army to the first formative meet-| BY SNOWSTORM s, spoke of the power Before T joined the 4d to be sure what the oing to be and what the, on was going to do. T) S| ing men who have in a large part | we should see that some place is pro- about the government and how it is! SPECIAL Winesap Apples per box $3.75 CITY FRUIT MARKET. Phone 247 5 ri wi) i AMERICAN CANAL TOBE LARGEST Golden State Representative Plans ito: Release His State From | Mexican Control of Im- : perial Valley WASHINGTON, (By Mail.}—Construc- tion of an all-American canal along the California border to remove from Mexico control over the system of the Imperial Valley, the largest irrigation project in the United States, is contemplated in a bill Representative Kettner of Califor- nia plans to introduce in the house.’ Tt will make provision for opening to pur- chase or settlement by honorably dis- charged soldiers, sailors and marines with war seryice of, 200,000 acres of pub-| lic lands on the east mesa of the Valley, which will be irrigated from the pro- posed canal. The Dill is a redraft worked out dur- ing the holiday recess by a subeommit- ;tee of the house committee on Irriga- | tion of arid lands, which has had sey- jeral measures designed to relieve the tuation existing in Imperial Valley of the Imperial Valley, Which residents sald reacht a value of $60,000,000 annu- ally, are* dependent upon the uninter- rupted flow of the mstn canal of the ir igation system which, from the diver- sion point on the Colorado river, swings \thru Mexican territory for 40 miles be- |fore distribution is made to the Ameri- can ranchers. The water users on the Mexican side, where over 100,000 acres lare being irrigated, do not wish to join in the maintenance uf the main canal and the protective works in Mexico, ac- | cording to testimony presented to the | congressional cgmmittee. | Relief is sought thru the building of a )highline canal entirely on American soil, |making necessary a cut thru a low range! canal avoids by the detour into Mexico. , Approximately 400,900 acres of with- | drawn public lands, similar in quality! |to that of Imperial Valley but lying! jabove the present Imperial canal system, vill come under the proposed all-Amer- an canal, according to reclamation service estima: Under the Kettner bil 200,000 acres would be opened to purchase by war veterans at $1.25 an acre, at the discretion of the secretary |of the interior, he reserved for opening under such soldier settlement legis!a-| |tion as the congress may enact. SOVIET ARK MAY TO LAND CARGO Axnocinted Preas.) tion of radical aliens will be un- is completed, said Anthony Caminetti, 1 is enroute to northern’ Europe with 249 radical aliens destined 5. but whether shé will be i (By Axsociated Press.) W_ YORK,’ Jan, 6.—More than 20,- jen enemies in the Communist par- lly organi the govel nment under the direction of, jator Clayton P. Lusk, chairman of the |legislative committee investigating sedl- s, declared today. eee ‘NORTHWESTERN | TRAIN STALLED | | ’ | The afternoon train due here about noon from the west on the North- western railroad was reported stalled by snow drifts this afternoon be- tween Moneta and Richards, Wyo., about 75 miles west of’ Casper. A snow plow was “started from here early this afternoon ¢o clear the road. The temperature is reported fairly high with the lowest readings east of. Casper. The Northwestern train from the east was reported on time. quieted these troubles. “Because this Americanization school system affects your welfare and mine vided and funds furnished to enable the schoo! to be maintained. The school board, city authorities and county com- missioners should provide the place if teachers volunteer as they have. “In politics, I think we ghould go this far—we should see'that the wrong man lis not elected but that the right man from the American point of view is placed in office.” State of Wyoming, with stock of $10,000, divided into 10.000 shares of the par value of $1 and a} term of existence of fifty (50) years. | The number of directors shall be three | and the names of those who shall man-| age the affuirs of the company for the! first yeur are Wm. Landers, Harry} Bial; and Henry Bostick Lifsit. The | object of the incorporation is to engage | in cafeteria business, to sell wares and A cTOgY OF SIX Complaint agente Divorced Wife Alleges That Education of Young Children Is Be- ing Neglected. « The case of Raymond Rowan against hia former wife, now Mrs. Robert Crane, in which he seeks to’gain the custody of their six children, occupied thie attention of the district court fnost of. yesterday afternoon and today. The Rowansa were divorced severel years ago and divided their property. Because the children were taken on 2 trip to Oregon and California this year, the father alleges that they are not at- tending school regularly and asks that the court place them in a school allow- ing him to support them. The children are a boy and five girls, ranging in age from 5 t6 18 years. The boy, who is the oldest, is said to have worked for three years. —$ $a NOTICE OF INCORPORATI Notice is hereby given that the Mid- west Lun Cafeteria Company has been incorporated under the laws of the and carry on the restaurant and merchandise, and to lease or purchase ¥ found neces- The operations company may be-carried on in| Yyomning and elsewhere. | é ‘ahd principal place of busi néss= shal} he in’ the City of Casper, ~ AY FATHER HERE jonal propert teal or pers in \‘tives in the TRE MIDWEST LUNCH CAFETER sees i ¢he home of Pirs. O. A. Twiggs, Mrs. |}'A, Wright as assistant hostess has nry Bostick Lifsit, Pres. aera % been postponed indefinitely. - Pub. Jan. 6, 7, 8, 2 oMBUS, m CcOoLU 3, dan. era bh confident that -the strike settlement will be endorsed. | Silver Tea Postponed The silver tea which was planned by the Rebekkah organization for Wednes- day afternoon from 3 to 6 o'clock at FRAME KEN IRENE RIE EH IE ' LYRIC THEATRE CONTINUOUS 1 P. M. TO 11 P. M. i : TODAY: TEN REELS “THE HEART OF A GYPSY” A beautiful romance and a baffling mystery atty Arbuckle NEW TWO-REEL COMEDY : —_——then____ PATHE REVIEW and ae HAROLD LLOYD COMEDY COMING—“SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE” _HHHHHA KAA K AIA HAA ASIA AAAS AIA SAA AAAS AAI AN H- the capital, HHK KHAN t MATINEE @ $ a Tris Theater ez i 2 Ray ENID BENNETT in “The Virtuous Thief” Many thrills, smiles and tugs at your heart in this gripping romance of a gizl’s love and sacrifice ADMISSION—10 and 25c TOMORROW: A dramatic story of how beauty tamed a beast. When the rough Western cowboy first sees the beautiful Eastern City girl he determines to possess her. George Walsh “THE BEAST” A story of intense dramatic interest, depicting Western life in the raw Western style. Also Mr. and Mrs. CARTER DE HAVEN in “HONEYMOONING” — en THE, HOUSE OF QUALITY PICTURES THE STATE e a toby plenty overthrow «A Money Clothes is the in value for your money Get More — For Your Kuppenheimer answer. They give you the utmost An exceptional clothes display awaits men and young men at this store. The finest ready-to-put-on garments made in America. And there’s : a big advantage to you in their price, because they are priced lower than their present market cost would justify: Represented are the newest devel men’s suit styles. Some have belts, which are removable new treatments.. Smart looking fabrics, opments in men’s and young 3 Waist seams; all the = NOTICE! Customers, please ask for your duplicate sales slips. We will give no = * credit on returned goods without the duplicate slip. fs . N Windows Phones 13 and 14 R=

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