Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 1, 1921, Page 6

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)

PAGE SIX Che Casper Daiiy Cribune SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1921. ARE YOU A FAN? THEN ATTEND THE WORLD’S SERIES AT THE TRIBUNE JAPS ACCEPT ioc eecoee e202 NEMUNTSINSTALEDAT POWER === === = VINSON | | : Py ° , - 4 - ‘we have right : t Thing in Electric Scoreboard 5 I NisskG at tale Gna; can wall Commemel Fans, howdy! joes Shem war el K Pp R Mi Hs 1 s rename race; the pemmanits: kaye been won—}| : . Say but they have Drowteesed. proba-! (Continued from Page 1) ; ! the Giants in the Nationa ague and the Yankees in the! (); . . bly as fast as any concern in Cas-| or a 8 | American, and the two New York titleholders will fight it out | Oil Combustion Engines Added to Equipment at the] per. ““rney have at ‘present. several way but they have progressed proba-| | ealesmen traveling out of here all over| at first, Galloway threwiout Meuse! a: in the world’s series. | . ¢ first. Pinp singled to cetiter. Pipp stoi The fight over the pennants was one of the hottest in eev., Natrona Plant in Installation Just Completed {the oftte, pod alee have an tnetaiintion| ST JT 20 rent ite tai Gn Pertis zie ors of any season in the past. Thi Co: wild throw to center and) scored » jequal to any in the weat. The stock. |W! est of fans has been more keen this of any tn e By Casper Supply mpany |holders of the company are all joca}| Welch threw wild past |third. G. year than any other since the war.| Giants hare been nosed out of the | é Washington Conf A nts | oaa th hi own | world’s championship almost oe ee ee 1 \¢ too, e women ave shown ‘8 cl Pp! al y os, { id be ia as ington Conterence on Armame pe invest, Tm a nettle a the Year ana it te : wate Mee thie yeur| | toa Bie AA pont neseeeaey Eas suneractonly: completed | as Sey sont Ent 2 ag We do| hiadaphie—Ga tawny ot a alngie | two leagues this year. Probably due| that they are going to make ft their pted, the Cas; pany need y|to left. Mays Galloway and Far Eastern Problems Adopted _ | in'carper to the ture that tne women | sreatest Oght-that le if tate hoons| terday: finished Work oy ite $6000) econ ee ee ae 1 Oa Oe ee ahoney pola %o sone Mavs have had as much pleasure out of} town rivals, the Yanks, don't spilll| horsepower additional equi: ment for the Natro: P such as the Casper Supply company Also threw out Brazill at/first, —_—_ | the Midwest league games as the} the dope the last minute. j » The th, ‘dan P: 1 ie Natrona Power) .., nandle. as their contract with us|Wiy going to third. Peck thi TOKIO, Oct. 1—(By The Associated Press.) —The Jap-| men But to get back home, ’way out| Company. e three additional units installed have been pui f , was carried out in a most satisfactory Sullivan first, 3 t, after lengthy deliberation yesterday, decided | battle in the worl here in Wyoming. | in place in the last 60 days, and are now waiting the snapping] way and we are certainly pleased that| New York—MecNally Walked. Schon: s = Hone New York Ww "| Every fan in Casper would like to|on of a switch to furnish electricity we contracted with them on this work] ¢ingled to center and McNally by , according to the 9sahi Shimbun, to accept the he Roce ag Athens ord take in these worid’s series. There's|for the needs of Casper. The ma-|@ndling the three unit, 600 horsepow- whicly thay have just finished.” ing base running scored, Schang ¢: suggestions as to the agenda for the Washington two teams to be pitted| POthing like actually seeing the boya;chinery is housed with the two Diesel|€™ equipment. Pree es: eae Ae to second on the throwin. Mays ss: on limitation of armaments and Far Eastern t each other are bound. to put]! action themselves But of course| units which have beep used here since), The “Natrona Power company now > rificed, Brazill to Dykes, Schang ¢ J there is the expense to be taken into| the birth of the Natrona Power com-|h#* & total of five units, 1.600 horse- Locomobile To to third. Schang scorel on Mil | < consideration. It costs a heap of alpany, in its plant at the corner of|/POWer equipment which under the single to left. Peck walked. FR Ku Klux Klan to Be Investigated ——— Jot of money and a lot of us can‘t| mast Fifth and gimbal streets, healthy, normal growth expected of : fanned. Mensel flied to Witt spare it. The Natrona er company, in in-|Csper will take care of all needs in Be Reorganized Eighth Inning: It ts for the beneft of the fellow| stalling thie. equipment, is following|#" ¢lectrical way until the summer Philadelphia—Witt flied) to Ruth who is going to stay at home that| ie policy inaugurated at the time of /° 1922. If the growth continues it! NEW YORK, Oct. 1.—Reorganiza-|Miller took Dykes’ fly. Ruth ¢ The Tribune has made srrangements| organization, to not only keep abreast | ill be necessary at that time to make|tion of the Logomobile company,| Walker's fly on the run. | to give him as near the REAL as of present requirements but to keep |®" Additional installation. AG;mobile manufacturers, with a| New York—Pipp hit a logg li ference on the limita-| 4 Possible. With direct wire communi-| weil in advance of their needs. Al-| 7: C- Tonkin, manager of the Cas-| plant at Bridgeport, Conn. is an-| Welch. Ward fied out to Witt aodbarte anil Lk : - ~ q i ection with the ball park, m-huge elec-| though the equipment formerly used/P°? Supply company, had active} nounced here. Elmer H. Havens :of|> walked. Schanhg filéd out tric scoreboard designed and\mantpu-| would have been sufficient to handie/SPArse of the installation, and com-| Bridgeport, was elected president, | Welc lated to show the fang every move| the load power required here, the com.|Pleted the work within the time limit] The company declared that it had Ninth Inning. made, The Tribune will give the fans Kanda ru in Kato, mer | minister to . members of the house of peers, wi! Prince Tokugnwa as, pe: , a’s son, Iyemana ed from Peking, ¥ at the Japa-| accompany his father across the Pacific, being en| route to London, to which city le has been transferred. Prince Tokugawa, who will act as| head of the Japanese delegation at the | Washington conference, a statement to the p says he realizes the grave respons!- bility placed upon him, but wishes to assure the people he will do his best in the cause of the empire. Undeterred by her 89 years, Mme. Kajiko Yajima, president of the Japa- nese Women’s Betterment assocta- tion, which has a membership of 500,000, left Tokio yesterday on her way to America, where she will work in the cause of humanity and peace. She sailed from Yokohama today on the steamer Korea Maru, which took the army and navy delegates to the Washington conference. Mme. Yasi- ma carries the following message of peace from the women of Japan to the women of the west: “Japanese womanhood prays for the success of the Washington con- ference, and the dawn of a new epoch of higher and better understanding between natio’ . November 11, she} Skim eS Col William Joseph Simmons, “Imperial Wizard” of the “Invisible Em- pire” of the Ku Klux Kian, whose organization is to be investigated by the federal authorities is seen here on the left greeting a fellow Klansman on a of Casper this year FREE something never possible here before. The board will be practically as complete as any ever used by metropolitan newspapers and only pmphasizes the desire of The Tribune to give the people of Casper real honest-to-goodneas sery- toe. Fans, howdy! <<» The keeping of pigeons in England was introduced by the Romans, who used them for carrying, as well as for the table. Spaulding, missionaries, with wives stopped here, 1836. Father De Smet saw it and owing to many names upon it called it the Register of the Desert”, 1840. Gen. John C. Fre- mont camped here with U. 8S. army, Aug. 2, 1842. Fifty thousand emi- grants passed here in 1853. It ts the most famous landmark on the OLD OREGGN TRAIL. i The tablet was prepared at a cost of several hundred dollars and un- der, in on the face of the historic cliff will be carved in the granite: “This tablet presented and placed by Henry D. Schoonmaker, 1921.” Robert Simpson of the Casper Monu- ment works left this morning for In- dependence Rock to erect the tablet i do the carving. At least three lays will be required to complete the work. pany felt assured of the continued|®°t b¥ the contract. | In speaking of the work, one of the Natrona Power company officials ga: growth of the town anc anticipated) future needs by buying the new units. That its faith in Casper is weil war- ranted is brought out by the fact that 116 new customers were added to the iist of patrons during the month of August. Although accurate figures are not available for the month of September it is estimated that the number of additional users of clec tricity will total about 100. These figures compare favorably with cities several times the elze of Casper and according to men in close touch with the situation show @ growth hi: eleo- tricity users several times as fast as Cheyenne or Sheridan. i The feature of the new units Is that they are one of the first crude oil burning of their kind to be installed in the United States, The Fairbanks- Morse company, the makers of the engines, have. entirely eliminated the old starting torch usually found in in-) ternal combustion engines and haye replaced it with an electrical starting [Ss equipment. When the current is pees on it heats an element in the mgine and the resulting combustion éarries the engine through the opera: tion by heating its own running tube. ‘The cooling apparatus is also new and unique being the first satisfactory ap- to be devised’ that gives per~ {bility without the use of glass. The contract also included the: In- stallation of a switchboard suitable for terminated its contract with Hare’ Philadelphia—Perkins fied out Motors, Inc., under which it has been | Miler. McNally threw out Welch QUESTIONS led: "The Messenger ot | the “Imperial Wizzar t ite In Washington 5,000] mountain in Georgia. Insert a recent pheto of Col William Joseph Simmons, aR Ta TG earn cae ON TRIE, 08 | Seige ‘ OF It will declare Japanese written! | ' GET CASH FOR IT Do you know what you are doing when you allow Furniture—old Clothes and Junk of every description to accumulate? You are HOARD- TNG. You are like those people who are fearful of trusting thelr bank or Hunting! n i | or country and le their money in: ot ing in into active use. Seiler Soe tETER aan You no doubt looked with contempt on the man who refused to buy his the Goddess of Peace.” have a strong aversion to war and - believe in the supreme importance of : the conference. Viscount Uchida, foreign minister, | ¢ d is quoted as saying that the number 0 : of Japanese delegates at the confer- ence will not necessarily be limited - 7 7 t to three, but may be increased, ac-| id ’ cording to circumstances. He sal , : that he could not at present : P whether Japan would propose discu: i 2 = sion of the emigration question. : “he racial problem may be intro-| Commemmorating anew for the benefit of present and fu- duced, but T can say nothing defnite,”|ture generations the historical association of Independence the fexvign roiniater te asmipal en ety Rock, located some 60 miles southwest of here on the Sweet- submit She creation oe tha tela Be relat as the “most famous landmark of the Old Oregon ri ven if negotiations with the| Trail,” a second bronze tablet, presented and placed by States are not completely set-| Henry D. Scoonmaker, pioneer resident of that region, is DO YOU USE MEDICINES OR DRUGS? NO! If the general Pacific manda-| being imbedded in the rock. The spot/into the bronze tablet donated by Mr. DO'YOU USE STRETCHING MACHINES? NO! rar ueadon is settee Tan Seen picked out for the new tablet, which’ Schoonmsker concerns interesting his- must be submitted to | measures two feet by three feet, is 10/ torical facts: DO YOU USE ELE CITY ! supe powers. 2. Dey peas eet feet from the ground tinmediately west DEPENDENCE ROCK. CTRI ITY? NO! Bharting matterg ait ¥ | of the bronze plate erected by the Cas. Probably discovered by returning 2c ~ z . DO YOU PRACTICE SURGER’ ! means than submission at! i. ioage of Free Masons on July 4, Asi sats’ catia tee ae eS = Y¥? NO aneke, whe presided at {181% When the anniversary of the first| emigrants who celebrated Indepen- RUTH ABOUT HUSBANDS DO YOU RUB, SLAP OR MASSAGE? NO! seen ene reat Churies | Masonic lodge meeting held in Wyo-| dence day here July 4, 1825. Cap- = Se myer 33 set evican “are {ming was celebrated by the order. tain Bonneville passed here with DO YOU HYPNOTIZE? NO! ceca he ustpesnandas: ieee “Je. | the following inscription written first wagons, 1932. Whitman and Iared the Washington conference DO YOU MESMERIZE YOUR SUBJECTS? NO! would be a golden opportunity for Japan to clear away misunderstand i DO YOU PRACTICE OSTEOPATHY? NO! ings, and to state frar y and straight- forwardly ber national aims\and aspi- | DOES THE PATIENT NEED TO HAVE FAITH? NO! rations. a Se Geckired thet, the late dtmpanee DO YOU BREAK PEOPLE’S BACKS? NO! (IF WE DID THEY ‘o kept on a mantlepiece tn WOULD HANG US.) 5 the original of a letter Do You GIVE TMENTS? No! : a a country’a bonds. You are doing practically the same thi Iy in} DO YOU CURE? NO!_ WE DON’T APPROPRIATE CREDIT which Washington discussed the “Ja- CY Santen: sytian soe ator tal ugh gpatorees bec orriss SOREie gurnba inte WHICH CLEARLY BELONGS TO NATURE. 4 . After presenting a | Feady cash. , c py of the letter to the} count Kaneko said: The WANTED MISCELLANEOUS column fn this paper contains ads WHAT DONOU nO. THENT WE ADJUST THE CAUSE OF — -— | street, has been the Prime Ministers of Eng-| land for almost 200 years. FABRIC CASINGS. CORD CASINGS. Guaranteed 6,000 Miles Guaranteed 8,006 Miles | Non-s) | and Ribbed Pao a i cee S CO0¢ o a Ps Drs. J. H. and A. G. Jeffrey CHIROPRACTORS But Don’t street, Buntay 102543 ates ToT ate| Vactors FOR RENT—Two rooms. 816 zal Rough Be Brutal Third street. Phone 1481W. 10-1-3t* Excellent phonograph for sale, first ae Baus. "= The Beeler Nidy Motor Co. cir. 550 East Yellowstone Phone 1473-W Casper, Wy: . ; a ; anes : DISEASE. sraance to the eaten Deid by | CORD & FABRIC TIRES-RED & GRAY TUBES [hij trom relate desler who, will cat at your home and gira yous alr eg CAN THERE BE ANY EFFECT IF THERE 1S NO CAUSE? URE above the plane of this struggling wi ere ne! he black: Sead oe ana ante noe eae FO F- FO re D CA RS SENSE APPLIED TO THE HUMAN MACHINE. aeiig smell of human blood can te Srisinaat 16 eae THOSE W3i0 SCOFF AT OR SPEAK LIGHTLY ABOUT NEW consecrate In one voice the names of MR. FORD OWNER, here is what you Washington and Mutsu! 0,"" an ON A SUBJECT WHICH IS DEMANDING GENERA — MUST PASS AS IGNORANT. DON'T BE EITHER! EN TION | al to another. | | See eee ime WHO SAY “IT CAN'T BE DONE” ARE CONSTANTI: 2 nh 30x3 | $12.00 [ = ; 30x3%4 —— | i PER HOUR TERRUPTED BY SOMEBODY DOING IT. ¥ BEING IN: | west Height. 3 2 2 tablish good business; ay can attend | to store during nquire Mid- The motoring public now has the opportunity to qe a SE ects ’ FOR SALE—1921 *ge touring car,| Treat Em NO JOB TOO LRGE, NONE TOO SMALL ington, let u pe the Unite: pho: aud caver’ sthy piace aiangteeetiee % READ THE WANT ADS IN LY NOT! The Casper Daily Tribune WHAT IS CHIROPRACTIC? IT IS THE SCIENCE OF COMMON turb the tranquility e friendship ID WHICH Y HAVE between the two na , and there EAS THE NOT INVESTIGATED BRAND THEM- » | 1 SELVES AS BIGOTED, WHILE THOSE WHO HAVE NO aie have been waiting for, a tire that surpasses c adr OE nati i Zeperted that a Vienna doctor Mf all other tires for road resistance and price. INVESTIGATE! | gYieree eps Nonsekda ens q THINGS MOVE ALONG SO RAPIDLY NOW THAT PEOPLE © salesroom ani 30x3% |» $14.50 2.56 Sind | 323-25 $3.25 west Heights Realt So., 233 Midwest} building. 10-1-1t | bd secure guaranteed repair work at a figure heretofore unheard of in Casper—90 CENTS PER HOUR. WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER 1431 South McKinley Street Phone 1365-J 3 Mn Midwest Building, Suite 318 to 323 Office Phone 706, Res. 93 | | | | | | ‘

Other pages from this issue: