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PAGE FOUR Che Casper Daily erivure ‘ WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1922. te 6 ti ar N @ re itr in te 30 bo LIVESTOCK LOS3 H LATE STORM SMALL, REPORT Inquiries Re : Loss in Flocks and Herds Despite Intense Cold in Wyo 6 the present aspect of the sit wation, stockmen of this vicinity an mounce that are prepared for h the situa- this time it holds Refinery Engineer Leaves After Work On New Plant Here Dr. E. F ting p eum engines k who been wor r for several days m h investiga tion of the ation and con. the Wyoming s returned to his has supervised refinery ine work in ted States, Mex enia and arts of the U: Row fect of the visit of Dr. connection with the construction >mpe He is regarded capable refinery the indus- plant east fs one of the mo and pipeline eng tr: ~ ee Mrs. Morton Here On School Visit neers in Mrs. Katherine A. Morton, state sup- erintendent of public instruction, was | & visitor in Casper today, stopping be- tween trains while enroute to Lander where she will attend the exercises at- tendent upon the opening of the ex- tenston school at Lander. ‘Tho service Will be the featus iucational day activities in Lande> ) riday,, During part of her stay in Casper Mrs. Morton was a visitor at The Trib- une plant and expressed her apprecia- tion of being acquainted with the processes used in producing the paper of which she is a constant reader. Two Are Dead From Poisoning | BOISE, Idaho, Jan. 25 tle, 14, and her sister Hazel, Cambridge, Idaho, were dead here to day from botulinos poisoning, said to have been caused by eating pre. served greens, and their Charles W. Tuttle, and three brothers were not expected to live. ae Billings Man Loses Luggage by Theft, While stopping at a local hotel this morning awaiting the Burlington train No. planned to return to his headquarters in Billings, Mont., C. B. the Billing Val Ol company had two grips, which contained yaluable records and personal property stolen from him. The matter was reported to both police and county officials to- @ay and efforts are betng made to lo- cate the stolen goods. Negro Being Held For Disturbance Ed Williems, negro is under arrest charged. with creating a disturbance and Maggie Mack also colored ts held as a witness in connection with a shooting scrape which was staged on the corner of Ash and A streets about 9 o'clock this morn The negro 1s said to have fired one or two shots at the woman due to some kina cf a domestic entanglemert. ‘The have been unable to throw an’ on the case pending final hearing police court this evening. Among the Hindus ft ts consilered exceedingly unlucky for a person to look back when he leaves his house. Driverless Cars Dodges and Fords, Also One Ford Ton Truck. See Virbel, Phone 1589-J other | 5.—Harriet Tut-| 18, of! brother, | departure of 29 on which he Farnum of Mary Bridesmaid to Mary Lady Mary Cambridge, above, wil) be a bridesmaid at the wedding of | Princess Mary and Viscount Lascelles. So will Lady May Cambridge, her |__ ¢ister. Lady Mary is called one of the most beautiful women fn England. VOTE ON GOIN ‘PACKING HOUSE STRIKERS TAKE G BACK T0 WOR | ( Continued from Page 1) Amalgamated Meat utters and Butcher Workmen, calling for a refer- endum vote, were sent out to packing house workers and union officials. The letter said that hope of gov- ernment intervention in the trouble between packing houses and employes had been abandoned and ft wae thought best to hold a referendum of| the subject of ealling off the strike. The letter said tn part: “The committee of conciliation of |the department of labor called at the |general office on instructions from Hugh Kerwin, assistant secretary of labor. and gave out the Information that striking packing house workers should no longer hold out hope for Intervention from the department of lat © letter t ficiald to t lot noon, the o'clock vote by secret bal- Thursday after- before | OMAHA, Jan. {ing plant employes in Omaha today | began voting on the question of call | ing off their strike, it was announced by Jacob H. Davis, président of dis- trict council No. 5 of the Amalgn- mated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen unfon. The strikers here started voting to- day in order to be sure that the re- WYOMING THEATER __ TODAY ONLY _ BERT LYTELL “The Price of Redemption” {been dented by the packers since its ucts local union of- 25.—Striking pack-| sult is in Chicago tomorrow as re- quested by international union off cials, Mr. Davis said. No announcement of the result would be made, however, before to- morrow night, Mr. Davis sald, because of the desire not to influence the votes of workmen in other cities who vote tomorrow. EFFECTIVENESS OF STRIKE DENIED. CHICAGO, Jan. 25.—Effactiveness of the strike of packing house work- ers, continuance or suspension of which will be voted on tomorrow throughout the country under orders of the Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen of America, has inception December 5. In many plants admissions were made that for a few days work was diminished but that recently all the plants have been op- erating with output unimpaired. The pa ee eats ete tei The Greatest Moral Story Ever Taken From the Underworld. union has mainteined that the strike LYRIC Continuous 1 to 11 P. M. Second Big Day The $250,000 Spectacle —And We Don’t Charge 75 Cents to See It. Florence Reed In the Greatest Cinema- Drama of Her Entire Career. e Black Panther’s Cub’ See the raid of the den. See how the gunman was reformed. .. The flash of a pisto the cry in the make s See this wonderful pic- ture. —NEXT— Screen Snapshots has been effective, The strike resulted {: numerous clashes between strike sympathizers and the police tn Chicago, and in the lynching of negro strikebreakers at Fort Worth, Texas, and Oklahoma City, Okla. Yesterday at Oklahoma City five men, three white and two negroes, were sentenced to lite im- prisonment for their part in the lynching of Jake Brooks, strikebreaker. the big plants. They were withdrawn only recently. The strike was called after a me- jority of the members of the Amal- gamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen of America voted in favor! of it after wage reductions tn yari-| ous packing centers had been on by plant councils, the houses not recognizing the unions as existert, but agreeing to negotiate with committees from organizations of their own meployes. Attempts to bring the representa- tives of the union and the packers together for federal mediation fisled when the packers asserted that there was no strike as far as they were concerned, that their plants were op- erating as normal and that they were in agreement with the men whom they had employed. 1,800 CLAIMS AGAINST MEX MEXICO CITY, Jan. 25.—Bighteen hundred claims against the govern: ment, aggregating 250,000,000 persos, for damages alleged to have been suf- tered during the revolutionary per- icds since 1910 have been presented Uy foreigners and Mexicans, according to the newspaper El Universal. The time limit for presenting such c'aims, tn accordance with an execu- tive order issued several months ago, expires January 31. Vets Will Push © Fight for Aid WASHINGTON, Jan. 25, — An- nouncement was made by the Atsso- and in the packing, cfation of Disabled American Veter.) ans of the World War today that they would hold a conference here from February 1 to 3, “in an at- tempt to carry the fight for adequate government relief up to the doors of the United States Veterans’ bureau.” a ARTIST HANGS SELF. AUSTIN, Texas, Jan. 25.—Alberto Fuster, for 44 years Mexican consul in Italy under the regime of Presi- dent Diaz and reputed to be one of the foremost painters of Mexino, end- ed his life hore today by hanging. ea eae lar ‘Tribune Classified Ads Bring Results —$<_<—____. W. F. Dunn Phone 27 HAY, GRAIN AND FEED Best Quality, Lowest Price AGRIGULTURAL LESSON FOUND IN CALIFORNIA RECOVERY, 13 GLAIM ( Continued trem Page | membership terms should extend over! long periods of years. Such organira-| tions, he added, have the best chance for success if they handle enly une crop. Extension of an organization to local communities through small units, he suggested, might increase its usefulness. | “tn the Callfornia Frultgrowers ex- change. eu, rough which 10,500 members | sell nearly $10,000,000 worth of clt the hope that there was no founda- rus fruits annually to the wholesale trafe, the growers have formed more than 200 local associations, each own- its own packing house and man- @ging its local affairs. | “Most of the California growers re-| ceived prices for their fruit crops in| 1921 that returned more than the cost of production. Not only have! these products returned the cost of) Production to the producers, but the trade also has made fair profits. And the steadily sustained demand by con- sumers for California fruits is an evi- dence of the power of continuous, friendly advertising, coupled with sound merchandizing methods, in pro- moting a larger consumption of farm products.” | Governor Parker of Louisiana, ad- @ressing the conference proposed as & means of combatting the present farm depression the opening of ex- port markets through extension of long time credits to foreign buyers, through the federal reserve system. “Have the federal reserve banks,” the Louisiana governor suggested, “send their own representatives to the capitals of those European na- tions sincerely desiring to purchase our products and unable to pay for them. Loek up the standing and “haracter of these purchasers as well as thelr financial responsibility. Sell them not on very short time, as is customary now, but on six, twelve and eighteen months. taking their ac. ceptances, with the indorsements of the local bank and the cooperation f tho great banking institutions of such nation and authorise the spin- ers, manufacturers and dealers to sell their progucts on equally lone time drafts, acceptances und notes in nayment to be deposited in trust un- til the claim of the federal reserve ‘ank shall have been paid in full.” Governor Parker told the confer- ence that this plan “would afford al- most instant relief, would mean tho employment of many American ships for carrying to those nations the cot- ton to give profitable employment Like Mother Makes PARKER HOUSE ROLLS And ROLLS The Wigwam industrial Ave. O-S Bldg. Window .Glass WHOLESALE T 114 E. Midwest Ave. N) 10 Per Cent GLAZING 5 Vv F’ Casper Glass & Paint Co. N A Proof Products Agency MIRRORS Plate Glass AND RETAIL N I Phone 1374 WM Tw Off On All SS (4 You soul, The Sh-h-h-h! Jesse l/Lasky prevents Wallace Reid, GloriaSwanson:< eo Elliott Dexter "Dont Tell Everything!’ her too much of his past. Paramount GPiclure mustn’t breathe it to a but— man she loved had told for example,” said Mr. Pow-. ing permanent institutions in the south.” ‘The associations already Going busi- ness, Mr. Williams sai, arn situated | in Oklahoma, Texas, Mississippi and Arizona, with “huge organizations” ready for business in Arkansas, Ala- bama, Tennessee and Louisiana, WASHINGTON, Jan. 25.—Recom-| and the foodstuffs to keep many of! mendation of repeal of the commonly | them from starving; would ad@ to the|;nown guaranty clause of the trans- value end activity of the merchant’ portation act and retur: to the state marine, would put energy and spirit/ raiiroad commissions of control over inte business, and bring to this coun-|state rates, was voted today by a sub- try the good will of all of the older committee on railway trensportation nations.” jot the general Se me ~ ‘mittee of the national agricultural boned yp tegipeger hd Scer ~ copference. The vote on the repeal | rumors which he said had been heard © ‘the guaranty clause was 22 to 6 and | in some quarters concerning the con-\0n the return o fthe state railway ference that “this is a hchd-picked,| Powers 11 to 6. and ference.”” add Recommendation for the construc- . the via oe aes muon of the St. LawrenceGreat Lakes tion whatever in the rumors. jwaterway project was voted by the |subcommittee on waterways. Governor Parker praised President|" pobert McDougall, president of the Harding and Secretary of Agriculture|cnicago board of trade, who told of| ‘Wallace for disregarding politics an‘ tre part played by his organization in “asking patriotic Democrats from the tne marketing system, declured it was south to sit shoulder to shoulder with| possible “to separate the market- the patriotic Republicans from the /ing problem from that of production.” poetta The board of trade favors a ecien- ‘The governor roused the conference ‘tific agriculture, based on a 50-year| to great applauvs when he called on progrem “rather than on any hand to| them to put the welfare of the na-jrouth adjustment to meet temporary tion above every other consideration troubles,” Mr. McDougall said. and to work to “restore the peace,| Rapid spread of co-operative eleva happiness and prosperity to the whole |tors throughout the grain belt, he| nation and also to agriculture whose continued, was materially assisted by People are now sorely tried.” the maintenance of an open market Carl Williams, of Oklahoma City,|‘in which farmers’ elevator companies Okla. discussing the marketing of cot-|might compete on equa) terms with ton through co-operative organiza-|individual dealers and line elevator tions, declared such organizations had|compantes," by efforts of the Chi- handled: more than $5¢,000,000 worth |cazo board of trade. Fifty six per| of cotton this season and “are appar-'cent of yrain received at Chicago, he ently well on the way toward the com- «aid. comes from farmers‘ elevators. | ee { A DAY AT A REAL CIRCUS Sideshows an’ Everything, but Pink Lemonade. Presented by Sapphire Girls’ Musical Comedy Co. ALSO FIVE ACTS OF VAUDEVILLE TOMORROW NIGHT IS GIFT NIGHT COLUMBIA “A GOOD, BAD WIFE”—In Five Reels 40c-Admits to the Big Top-40c “The board of trade,” he asserted “looks on the farm bureau movement as the greatest forward step taken by .American agriculture im the last 40 years.” He said the board hoped to co-oper- ete in solving marketing problems, ‘Negro Musicians Beaten, Placed On Train Today MIAMI, F'a., Jan. 25.—Guarded ‘by an escort of police, six merabers of a negro orchestra who have bten em- ployed at a tourist hotel here, were veken today to a northern suburb and pla on @ train bound for” their homef in Colymbus, Objo. The muai- cians last night were Icred to the out- skirts of the city and beaten by » gang of men who, the orchestra members said, warted them to leave Milam! within 24 hours. Some of their in- struments were destroyed. Several complains, {t was repottec, had been made to the police that the negroes had not conducted themselves in accordance with southern customs and had sought to mingle with white people. The Mapes Modiste Shoppe FINE DRESSMAKING Over the Iris Theater PHONE 651, A Bishop-Cass Theatre Headed by Three Men and a Girl, in a Musical Offering of TODAY and THURSDAY “THE MUSICAL FOUR” SINGING AND INSTRUMENTAL * THE DANCING BROWNIE MEYERS and NOLAN : Also BUSTER KEATON I “CONVICT 13” 10c and 25c Wyoming Theater Orchestra TOMORROW “The Old Oaken “Bucket” 10c and 30c See Your Favorite Screen Star. —NEXT—- Pathe News It’s the best show in town, of course. It’s spicy ani! risquey. It’s the story of how a down- trodden mother saved her daughter for the pure nd holy. COMING “Star Dust” He’s All the Name Implies CHASE and JANIS Dainty Bits of Musical Chatter And when she discovered that part of his past was present-— Come and see what she did! A real-life picture to please the women and give a few hints to the men. Also LLOYD HAMILTON in “ROLLING STONES” TODAY AND THURSDAY Listen! FEATURE PICTURE GARETH HUGHES Shows Start at 7:00 The story of a Boy who tet his imagination run wild In a onehorse town, From Freeman Tilden’s Story, Pictorial Continuous ‘1 to 11 ee rineinmeennanmenand Song and Step Review “GARMENTS OF TRUTH” ninety-horsepower Unusual Charm Matinee Daily at 2:30 O'Clock. Admission 40c — Children Half Price All Review