Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 17, 1920, Page 7

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)

f e ‘ ke * | Pipeline to Deer ‘tion of Problem.by Mayor That the Chamber of number of the minor qu the course of the discussion| of Cas} luficheon held yesterday noon at the Henning. Mayor Ben F, Pelton, who was the leader of the discussion, -had coupled that too many people make suggestions ‘er from to the city council and the mayor with- | Onn we out stopping to figure out the ways and means of working out the suggestions, Me! expressed his appreciation of. the Chamber of Cor merce forums, because questions can there be discussed from all angles. O. L. Walker led the singing. In regard to the water question Mayor Pelton stated that three plans for pro- viding a water supply for Casper which shall.be adequate for a city of from sixty to seventy-five thousand people have been considered. “They are the building of a pipe ithe from r creek, the building of a pipe ne from the Pathfinder dam, and the building of a line from the Delaware springs at Bessemer. system Will not' remove. Drstm: voring the tion arise it took af Gove! Commerce forums, by disposing of a estions ‘which are put up to the city officials. will relieve that-body of afi immense amount of work was brot out by Earle D. Holmes, president of the chamber, ‘He described the water gallery system now being built west f the city where ‘the river will ‘be filtera! 1200 feet’ of gravel hefure being pumped into the mains. The water in the river tests with a fair de- Gree of pnrity under ordinary condi- | tons, he Stated. With the development of the oil greas on Poison Spider creek, | however, ‘Ahere is always the danger - Ben Scherck was the chairman andj that a eleudburst will wash surface oil W. W./®proul spoke fa- ’athfinder dam proposition. He declaraf, that should a legal ques- with all thi propositions, also fayored the Pathfinder dam as « source of Cas- per's future water supply. Deer creek, rhe said, would not be «dequate and he thot the Kewemer S,rings contained too much, gypsum. He also spoke of the. possibility of water power from the upper Platte river. He called attention to the fact that the constitution of the state expressly stipulates that all waters of the state * |belong to the stdte and that others us- in| ing water from the stats do so under| ‘asper’s. water supply at the Vicense onlys There is no such thing Wyoming, he asserted. “Iam immensely gratified that Mayor Pelton is measuring up to the big things expected of him when. he was elected,” Earle Holmes said, ‘‘Let us“help him by throwing all petty questions Into. the Chamber of Commerce forums for dis- cussion. We will soon have’ a-perma- nent>secretary and a permanent forum jcommittee. By bringing these matters here for discussion we will be better in- | formed, and better able to ttell the city | into the water which even the filtration | ofjcinis what we do want. Mr. Holmes read a report on_ the Bessemer Springs which. declares. that the water does not contain gypsum, and that the springs produce 2,828 gallons _ to Casper's right to pro-|of good water 58 degrees Fahrenheit, the dam for domestic per second, an ample supply for a city; Mr. King left yesterday for Chicago ‘hé would like to see Wyo-. much Jarger than Casper. it to the waters within its ed for’ all time even if water conditions, and asserted that the| which the American City bureau now supreme court decision. ‘city administration is doing all that it) na- in progress. B. Brooks who is familiar can to remedy the condition. L.) A. Reed mentioned the present be Caspet Daily tribune as private ownership of the waters of; Dr. J. F; O'Donnell then spoke of th: quality of the water) stpply in Casper > PANNING IN Civic R FORUM|=::'- that at the present time it | j ¥ * * ) * * FOR LOCAL SUPPLY Creek, Pathfinder Dam or Delaware Springs Suggested for Solu- far from satisfactory, The water supply here has nver tested up to government requirements, he stated, Water taken direct from the river has been found to be purer than that taken from the wells. from which the city pumps at the present time, which would indicate that the wells are poluted locally. A sanitary survey re: cently made has dictosed the probable | |sofrce of the polution ,and it is. for | this reason that’ water direct from the jriver has been pumped for the past) week. ‘Water from wells within the city lim- its does not test any better than the elty water, and ‘he urged that until the water if found to test pure, all water used for drinking be boiled. \ The water preserve should be fenced, to avoid jparution, of the water supply. It when'this is done, the water still shows impurities, It should be impound- jed and treated as is done in many large cities, to remove the impurities. | Carroll D. King, who for the past nine weeks has been of valuable ds- |sistance in the Chamber of Commerce ‘ organization bere, was called upon for a |farewell speech, the first he has made | since being here. x | “You'll have the best little advertiser \for Casper going, when I leave,” he said. “A Chamber of Commerce with | 1135 members. in a city this size is cer: | tainly hard to beat. I have spent more time in your town than I generally do, jand I feel that I have a h it of friends | TNO H there said t Unt he asserted, and every precaution taken to fléw to this country a fall In the | cost of living could not be expected, said Sir Auckland. comm: | here that Iam sorry to leave.” ‘and will probably be assigned to work | In one of the middie western campaigns NOTICE! licate slip. turned goods without the | Best Out ‘West F 24-Ib. Sack, 48-lb. Sack, Thrift Price. 96-lb. Sack, Thrift Price... Seal of North Carolina Plug -. Cut Tobacco ‘THRIFT PRICE— 95c Pound Cans Customers, please ask for your duplicate sales slips. We will /no credit on re- $3.50 $7.00. COVERALLS—the ideal boys and girls. Saves clothes and stock- ings; easily washed. Made of blue chambray, trimmed in red. Ages 3 to8 "> THRIFT THURSDAY -Men’s Furnishing Department ‘CHILDRENS | SUITS play suit for Regular $1.75 Value THRIFT PRICE $1.40 No exchanges on Thrift Thursday Specials. ~ THRIFT THURSDAY Hardware Department ~ Aluminum ROASTERS | Regular $2.25 Value, Thrift Price... Universal Lunch LIVING IN EUROPE, GLAIM 2 LONDON.—(By_ maill.)—The present high cost of food in uted by Sir Auckland of the board of trade, gold im America, which he estimated) at roughly? nine times more than be-| fore the wer. Victory Working, Men's club he said currency had gone down with a bang.) That was what they meant when they Phone 1127-R So) ae a ee PAGE SEVEI | Scientists and Inventors are trying to] The people of the United States, co | devise a process whereby sugar beet re-}|Prisiug about one-sixteenthi of the pa Sane lation. of the world, consume alma CAUSE OF HIGH GOST | wood pulp in she manufacture of paper. |Onefourth. of the world's supply fuse may he used as\a substitute for Free Yourself From ‘ope, is attrib ides, president | to the fact that | accumulation | of The Right Treatment Will Break; blood, the further you are Your Shackles. is an enormous ease. And because so many P treat the pain, and not the di * You who are afflicted with Rheu- matism know from experience just how excrutiating the pangs of the disease are. You know also, if you have had rheumatism for any length of time thatthere is no real relief to be expected from the use of _liniments and lotions. Rheumatism is a stubborn dis- at the In an address tism increases by, «hey The most satisfacto: for Rheumatism is S. S. hat cost of living; had- advanced. il the gola now in America began | science. This fine old There was only one | ties, odities. _ seated one; it is not on the sur- face, hence it cannot be reached by external, surface remedies. Lotions, liniments and ointments applied to .the surface may in some cases deaden the pain for the time being, but until you attack the mak STAHL THE CLEANER CLEANING, PRESSING AD bi PATRIN Called for and delivered the same day, no progress toward a/jt cure. any forms of Rheumatism are caused by millions of tiny germs that infest the blood, and until the bloodds absolutely freed of these germs, there is no real relief in sight. In fact the longer you delay treating the disease through the no charge is made. tory, Atlanta, Ga- NOTICE! Customers, please ask for your duplicate sales slips. We will give no credit on re- tuined goods without the duplicate slip. —— THURSDAY SPECIALS Early buying—in large quantities—enables us to help you cut the high cost of living. We foresaw the big advance in the market and bought ahead to protect our customers and give them the lowest prices. ‘So you may appreciate that these are genuine sale prices far be- ‘ Y THRIFT THURSDAY Dry Goods Department TWO SPECIALS THIS WEEK $1.75 Ladies’ Skirts 1-2 Price Silk and Woolen Fabrics, Plain and Fancy Styles LADIES’ BUNGALOW APRONS Regular Values to $2.50 $4.75 $3.50 THRIFT PRICE $5.50 $3.85 $1.45 No Money Refunded on Thrift Thursday Specials Sets Kkegular Thrift / Price Price aoenen The Pangs of Rheumatism £ etting | from ridding yourself from the dis- eople isease itself, is one reason why Rheuma- in severity year impurities, acting as a tonic to the entire system at the same time. It has been used for more than fifty years, and scores of sufferers from Rheumatism give it unstinted ir t ] . S. is sold by druggists ev- 4 disease at its foundation, you are Ss aaNs and any of them will ell you that it is a thoroughly honest and reliable old remedy. “§ You are invited to write our medi- cal department for full informa- tion and advice about the treat- ment of your own case, for which* Address Chief 3 Medical Adviser 12 Swift Laboray remedy = » because it is one of the most thorough blood purifiers. known to medical ) remedy cleanses the blood of all impuri- st nd is a sure antidote to the solution of the present position, and! ‘ease, and its pangs and pains} germs of Rheumatismr Being pure- that was that somehow this country! cannot be wiped out as if by ma-}ly vegetable, without a particle woutd have to largely increase its vol- gic. A disease that is so fall of | of mineral or chemical in its com= ume of production. This, he said, torture and renders so many peo-| position, it works by eliminating” would bring about a fall in prices of} ple absolutely helpless, is a deep-j|and forcing out of the blood all

Other pages from this issue: