Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 9, 1922, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT NDIAN CRISIS RAISED, — SECRETARY RESIGNS No Reason Assigned for Resignation of Montagu Following | Demand From India for Rev ision of Sevres Treaty ish Journals Cail for Ghandi’s Avrest LONDON, March 9.—(By The Associate d Press.) Edwin Samuel Montagu, the secre- | tendered his resignation today and it was accepted. tary for Indi. The resignation was announced in the be ska? commons by 7 overnment leader, who assigned no reason for the secretary's action. < 7 Me Chamberiain said he understood the telegram sent to Secretary Mon- tagu from the government of India, setting forth the feelings in India regarding the neces- announcement, he treaty of Sev. nd the allies, was dian government sntagu's sanction, no ision of Mr. ether minister haying been consulted regarding ft with onl LONDON, March 9.—(By The Asse uaa Pre India’s appeals for h urged revision of Turkish richts whi the Sevres treat tense Mohammedan has created e in that view of feeling in ed resentment in press against the roy of India and bis council Every London newspaper today vis- condemns the message. It is complained that India's demands are calculated to cause the British govern ment serious embarrassment in its dealings with the signatories of the Sevres treaty. English editors take it for granted that this movement has been launch- e141 in India to Influence the proceed: tngs at the conference in Paris on March 22, when Great Britain. France ani Italy hope to discuss settlement tm the Near East. Certain newspapers emphasize that @ majority of the people in India are not Moslems, have no concern with the sultan of Turkey and know Nttle about him. These newspapers assert the claims of the Turks gain prom!- mence in India only through the ex Pioitation of Mohandas K. Gandhi, who they declare ts the real trouble maker in India. Gandhi's crities.In England. say he shouid have been arrested long ago. TRUGK DRIVER MEETS DEATH (Continued from. Page One) ler from controlling truck through the use of his brakes. The remains are betr Bowman monts com service he bod, from Salt Creek Efforts are being mac touch with Mr. Mishler Mishler, senior who recently left here is reported to be en route to Oklahoma to vistt relatives. It is probable that no definite arrangements will be mace on the funeral services until these rel attves have been heard from. M. J. GOTHBERG BUYS 1000 HEAD OF SHEEP M. J. Gothberg has purchased nearly 1,000 head of sheep which will erously was rem be shipped from Douglas to Casper| 7®5 2t that time in friendly relations| pearing in today’s issue of the news: earty next week. The deal was ne- gotiated by Alex Marshall of the Mar shalt & Brown livestock exchange. See EE ADDRESSES WANTED. Anyone knowing the whereabouts of Art L. Sturm, last heard from in 2920 “*ACt date. when he left Wichita Falls, Tex, for Casper, wiM confer a favor-on the man by requesting that he write his sis ter, Mrs. C. B. Bartlett at Mannington, ‘West Virginia. Mrs. Bartlett recently wrote the Mid west Refining company here to learn if her brother was employed by thc company. Efforts to locate the man have been wnavailing, although it is believed that he is employed as a driller by some company operating in Wyoming. Efforts are being mafe to locate the man to set at rest the fears of his mother and also to acquaint Mr. Sturm that his father is in critical condition following a recent attack of influenza. ——_ a NEW YORK—Goeorges Carpentier, WETICE ee en | ey Meek from] $1.76 for the equtvalent if the gas me Beis was ham- | 7 ere ers and step out into the aoe Casper consumers for 50 : Do not judge _In Sheridan the domestic rate ts . sensation here. | .: Brit- j Austen Chamberlain, the Before making the ACCUSED WOMAN TELLS STORY OF LOVE AFFAIR ON WITNESS STAND, (Continued from Page One) harshly. time of her arrest. Prosecuting they were in the tru letters, she «aid. Kennedy advised her to stay in Chi cago and wait for him, that he was planning to get “away from every | thing here and going abroad until his | parenta would become reconciled to |the marringe.” Later in the letter, she testified, Kennedy said he had arranged for their marriage at fan Francisco, June 14, she went to San Francisco, |she said, and July 6 came to Los | Angeles, where she met Kennedy every day until July 11, when the break occurred when Kennedy's mother visited Mrs. Wilson Kennedy telephoned and apologized Can you not hear the wild cries far, far out on the desert’s ye!-| low sands where the blood red sun is dipping now to sleep. “God bless you, Talapsha. “Talapshone.” After counsel had presented to the court their viewg on the admissibil- ity of evidence, {twas discoveredythat no direct offer in evidence was made by the defense of the letter that brought tears to Mrs. Obenchain’s The defense cleared the matter up by stating that as it alrendy had been read to the jury no effort would be made to introduce the copy in evidence. the | eyes. |shown by @ heavy black line on | and sald he did not believe he should |see Madalynne for several days but would telephone soon, she testified. He @id not telephone untf July 17, | when she hung the telephone on him, belle that he was false, sho sald. Blind Son of Land Receiver Is Making Progress in School It was about this time, she maid, that she made the entry in her diary. Mrs, Obenchain then testified that | Kennedy urged her, during the sum- mer of 1921, to go to Santa Ana and marry him. This was after sho had! obtained her divorce, She said she refused, telling him that she wanted to talk to his parents. She sald that during this time, early in the sum- mer of 1921, she corresponded from | Log Angeles with Arthur Burch, the | dant, who was then in Chi- CHEYENNE, March 9.—I. B. Yo- der, receiver of the federal land of- fice here, Tuesday exhibited with pride to intimate friends a flaviess example of thé finished typist’s art— & letter written by his son, blind but a remarkably successful student at the University of Nebraska. In the letter young Yoder informs his moth- er that a few days previously he lec- tured to a university class on mathe- LgO. matics, He also referred to success- Mrs. Obenchain said she also re-|ful completion of his examinations, sived two s from Burch during|in which, in four studies, the lowest mark he made w letter says in part: The time and that these letters were, 92 per cent. r belief, in her trunk Alexandria hotel when she was| “School work is going very well and| cr fter the shooting. She said|I seem to be getting along better ‘er had seen them since. These] every day. This week I ha’ taken offered in evidence by the| four exams and I got $2 in one, 95 in 1 the defense then began to tents by Mrs. another, 96 in another and 97 in the other one. One of them was Logic, and that is the hardest subject I am heated| taking. That is the one that I got which] 96 in.” halted by excusing the ntil 2 o'clock and then letting the attorneys discuss the admissiabfl- ity of the evidence in the absence of the jury. Mrs. Obenchain sald her letters to Burch told him of the “slanderous” statements Mrs. Kennedy was report- ed to have made about her to Mrs. Wilson and Mrs. Demond. An effort to prove the contents of these letters| To the Editor of The Tribune: also was being made. In the report of the joint commit Mrs. Obenchatn, in testifying on her|tee of the Standard and Midwest in- correspondence with Burch, sald she| dustrial relations departments, ap prove their cc chain's evidence tempt precipitated with the Burch family and with] papers, the statement is made that Burch himself but had never been| Casper is found among the highest in Burch’s sweetheart, or he hers. She|rate charged for gas. We are in- said she knew that Bureh intended| formed that the comparison ts based coming to Los Angeles during the| upon the rates charged in Cheyenne summer of 1921 but did noc know the}and Denver. In all fairness the people of Cas- It was at thts point that the evi-| per are entitled to full information |dence was halted and the jury ex-|on this point. Domestic consumers cused. It was expected by counsel] of gas in Cheyenne, Wyo., are charged that the court also would role on the| from an initial $1.60 per 1,000 eubic admissibility of the first letter the] feet to $1.30, an average of about efense had sought to offer, whieh had] $1.45 per 1,000 cubic fect. Cheyenne been left undecided. gas being a manufactured gas, con- Tho letter, which brought tears to}tains about 460 B. T. U. or heat | Mrs; Obenchain when ft was read by| units. The rate at Casper is 60 cents | hetYattorney, was as follows: per 1,000 cubic feet and the B. T. U. |_ “Dear Talapsha: How heantifutly|or heat units 880. In other words, you have remembered me, dear Mada-| based on heating or fuel value, the lynne. Everything you have ever| Casper consumer obtains for 50 cents done for me will always be cherish-| the gas fuel for which the Cheyenne a. Do not think me cold, ungrate-| consumer pays $2.70. ‘ Ah, no, ’tis only that I wander the dark and oh, Madalynne, I can- not see the light, but the darkness is {smothering me. If only I can |the black mantte away and up I know it Ives,| manufactured gas containing smothering, | 500°B, T. U. or heat units. lft{ fuel value In Denver the rate for domestic con- sumption is $1 per 1,000 cubic feet for about Based on Denver consumers pay be Casper Daily Cribune Range of temperature and tverages for Casper as registered cy the recording thermometer &t | —Faaecx] angie —| ar — | ame ear | AUBERT) the New York Of] company, are shown by the shown Uy ine sccompanzing | | —7 ees The rerage tor the month tele | fg LZ 2 = — ae Be which the average temperature for the month {s written in fig- ures, The aversge temperature for the week is shown by the zig-mag line, so that by referring | ,, to the sale on the side of the chart the average temperature for any week may be determined. ‘The month of February started with: an exceedingly cold week. Then we had a period of exceptionally mild weather from February 7 to February 21, and closed again with exception- ally cold weather. The coldest day in February was the 22nd with a temperature of 3 de- grees above zero for the 24-hour pe- riod and a minimum temperature of 10 degrees below zero tn the early morning. The month of February, 1922, was very much colder than the month of February, 1921. PRODUCTION OF COAL ON SLUMP INNORTH PART Mine Inspector Says Output Is Not Up to Average of Last Few Years in Northern Wyoming. R. V. Hotchkiss, state mine inspec tor of Wyoming District No. 3, is in the elty on a brief stop’on an inspec- tion trip over this district. Produc- tion in the northern part of the state is not up to the record of recent years for many reasons Mr. Hotch- kiss says. The big production of war gears which continued up to 1920 makes present production seem tame in comparison. The mines are all working but none of them to capac- ity. I am not looking for any tm- provement until general business gets back into the old pre-war swing. “I had the extreme satisfaction of testing out a new safety device at the Gebo mine of the Owl Creek Coal company on my trip down state. It Is known as the ‘safety man trip,’ and was invented by a company Diack- smith named William H. Greet, who has applied for a patent on his de- vice. It is for use on the car for lowering and hoisting men in the mine. It consists of two dogs at- tached to the car, one on each side, set above the rafl and so adjusted that if the ropo breaks or any acci- dent befalls the car the dogs are su- tomatically set upon the rails and hold the car from moving. All acci- dents known are provided against. ‘“The improvement has been thor- oughly tested by practical men and has stood up under every trial, The Owl Creek company has afforded PRICE OF GAS IN CASPER ONLY FRACTION OF COST ELSEWHERE $2.75, the heat units approximately 600. Casper secures for 50 cents the gas fuel for which Sheridan pays $4.04, THE NEW YORK OIL CO., GAS DE- NT. Young, Generel Mer. KEEP LOOKING YOUNG It’s Easy—If You Know Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets The secret of keeping young is to feel young—to do this you must watch your liver and bowels—there’s no need of having a sallow complexion: rin CHART SHOWING RANGE OF TEMPERATURE IN CASPER Pz EE. DAIL MINISTER iS BLAMED FOR LIMERICK COUP Guilty of Breach of Trust in Failure to Keep Irish Army Intact LIMERICK, March 9..—-(By The Associated Press.) —A proclamation extensively posted in Limerick today asserted that Richard Mulcahy, minister of defense in the Dail Eireann cabinet; “by a breach of trust, is alone responsible for the present Limerick situation.” The proclamation declares that Mr. Mulcahy “solemnly guaranteed that the Dail Elreann) ———————__ would keep the Irish Republican army as such intact until the ele He spar tS FAMOUS MINSTRELS TO BE low the Limerick brigade of the Irish Republican army to occupy vacated barracks in Limerick city because | they would not take them over on be- half of the provisional government but insisted upon maintaining their status a part of the Irish Repub- Probably certain people have for- lican army. “He drafted troops into the Repub- lican army, namely, Limerick and Kukenny, in the interests of the Free Sfate army. * * * Ho officers these troops by men who will obey his in- structions without questioning. * * * gotten that they are minstrel fans because ft hus been so long since they had an opportunity to ® really first-class minstrel aggrega! ‘how: ever the minstrel microbe will get them when the Famous Georgia Min- strels make their flash dress ‘parade He seeks to insure that, no matter|over our main streets aunouncing their how the coming Irish Republican army convention dectes the provis-|and Monday. € fonal government will hold all areas|Sunday, two Monday. Yor the Free State party, The repub- lic still lives to prevent this insidious | time was a common theme for debate, attempt to suppress the republic. * © © Will they, who fought and suf-|with a minstrel for never since the fered for the republic, now take part in destroying it?” every opportunity to Mr. Greet to perfect and improve his device at their mine. I, myself, made the trip down and up on the car and we sub- jected it to rigid tests and it answer- very one of them in perfect shape. “Officials of the federal bureau of mines have been invited by the Owl 3-9-1t* Creek company and Mr, Greet to be present and witness further demon- strations of the safety device and they have signified their acceptance. “In my ‘opinion Mr. Greet’ inven- 3-9-6t tion is one of the most valuable|moR gALE—Gentlemen's dress suit, safety appliances ever designed for| ize 40, extra fancy vest, worn twice saving human life.” $40. Phone 563. 3-9-2t THE COMMONSENSE, REMEDY FOR SICK HEADACHE ‘A sick, nervous headache tells ef physical disorder of some sort. Mout often it me: uto-intoxica- which is a gei 1 poisoning of the aystem from collected waste 0 ve in matter. The result is ofteutimes|ASPIRIN cleanses the system of ® dull, throbbing headache. the poisonous waste, and relief First of all you seek relief from | quickly follows. the pain, and then attack the| Be sure to ask for TINGLE’S cause. This is logical. 1t is just] LAXO ASPIRIN, the impro the 'y TINGLE'S LAXO ASPI-|pirin which contains all thre RIN dients; the aspirin with the The genuine aspirin relieves the|three points: -—It’s absorbed -—It relieves pain —It’s a gentle laxative J <‘TINGLE’S LAXO ASPIRIN {Ask Your Baaractted the ee Point Box* Dherapeutic Research iboratories, ‘Washington, close in; basement; reference given. I ‘Tribune. 3-9-2t* neth McDonald, Arminto, Wyc. pain within ten minutes. The di- gestant, which has been added, counteracts any tengency, to heart. burn or other stomach: discomfort. ‘The laxative {i 'S LAXO gs under your e imples—a_bilious look in your fooe—dull eves with no sparkle. Your doctor will tell you ninety per cent of all sickness comes from inactive bowels and liver. ._ Dr. Edwards, a well-known physician in Ohio, perfected a table com- ind mixed with olive oil to act on the liver and bowels, which he gave to his patients for years. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, thesub- stitute for calomel, are gentle in their action yet always effective. They brin; about that natural buoyancy which al. should enjoy by toning up the liver and clearing the system of impurities. Dr.Edwards’OliveTablets are known { -by their olive color. 15¢ and 30c. Columbia Theatre Gift Night Tonight THURSDAY, MARCH 9, 1922. the minstrels fs increnasing*until it is impossible for the management of a first-class company like the famous Georgia minstrels to fill on@half of the dates ogered. People want to be en- tertained to ugh and thus their nerv- ous systems are better tuned to the times. ‘With hé Fumous Georgia Minsrels are associaed some forty people, all consisting of the very cream of the negro minstrel profession, and after all the negro is the*natural musician! , and minstrel of the human race, and 146 ? : 257 S. Center St. . Center St. Phone 1750 Phone 256 News Depots MAIL ORDERS given prompt attention ‘ Pep’s Prices travel with the Market $1.45 Per Carton MATCHES with every Cigarette Purchase Pep’s Mail Order Business growing every day See list of Tobacco Prices on another page Omars, 20 Cents at PEP’S PEP Believes Make a Penny Profit every minute Make the Tobacco Business good Make it good for Everybody Make the Matches really burn Make ’em burn for Everybody While Smoke Em lights the way GUNNISON oe OPEN EVENINGS SHOP AT NIGHT iSO REAL cde ey |

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