Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 17, 1922, Page 4

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 FOUR NOADOITIONS ~CRISIS IS RAISED TO STRIKE IN | | stationary Engineers and Fire-| men Already Out; Twenty- | Five Men Working at | Burlington Shops. d engineers in shops called for js morning ndhouses as hy men are are on dut been experience! a: ed, Train No. 30, F was > inte § due to a stalled freigh of-we. th no shop men on reps . The tra ed for the work ar at the job. Not a man fs at work in the North western roundhouse, according to Gt Holmes, division superintendent. § tionary firemen and engineers on that system left with the others. There seems no immediate prospect of ob taining mechanics for sheporafts po- |TePr sitions. TERROR REIGN at work as live months rr alle to fi (Continued from Paza One) troops captured about 500 prisoners from the Republican insurgents, 4 t a was announced today. These included |MANCHURIY 300 captured at Dundalk, 70 at Col ee eas Jonney, 54 in and 21 in North Tipperary gar, operating near Kinnegal, this morning captured 12 irregulars in a deserted mansion. A number of rifles |!" Prominence is g he does this, the SPER TODAY yx CHINESE MILITARISTS Opposed to Peking Government Now PEKING, July 16.—(By The Associated Press.) —A majority ® strike of all stationary firemen | Consider that a grav American rasiroad| parliament assemble promptly and th. tound| to e en in the newsp racy com mn and i mously s that Presi-| es to en be | litarists appear in strength.” sts that Li assemble (Coutinuea rrom Page One) ing tions by the shortage of freight equip. nenc due to the shopmen’s s for a railroad settlement y dat red to be t upon the attitude of Mr. Grable, ity to strike. BY inate Rebellion and Warfare of the Fival Leaders Demanded by Journals; Southern Confederacy Projected (B: 5 of the Chinese newspapers e crisis has arisen as a result of internal disorders. walkout and asking for autho~ and Eastern -Ilinois © Casper Daily Cridune They urge that} at President Li Yuan-Hung exercise drastic measures erminate the militarists who are declared selfishly to be fomenting trouble with a view to making the Peking government helpless to overthrow them. apers to reports from Chekiang concerning the move- TRAGK WORKERS JOIN STRIKE A canvass of the strike! € vote of the same organization on the Chicago showed 98% per cent of the workers favoring a walkout, according to rep- resentatives of the union. Strike ballots are being circulated by | road|the track yesterday at Lovilia, Mon- “No exiguncy as yet make necessary the use of udditicnal planes,” Leuder said, “but the department should be ready to maintain tts service in the fact of all conditions.” Seventy new shop e.nployes of the Chicago, Milwaukee aad St. Paul rail- road and seven city policemen were suffering today from poisoning as a result of eating food served to railway strikebreakers. These men were jstricken during the last three days, 10 of them yesterday. A scoré of health |department workers were assigned to | cover every railway yard in Chicago to | rigidly inspect all food served to work- \ers to prevent recurrence of the trou- |ble. The policemen stated that they jhad eaten lunch in dining, cars pro- | vided by tHe, railroad. It was indicated today that Dr. |Louts J. Veit, in charge of the investi- jgation into the origin of the poison, had information which he expected would lead to the discovery of the culprits., Examination of. the milk served to the workers had been made C. 8. Christopher, superintendent of terminals of the vallway company is jsued the following statement today: “We cannot imagine how the food ‘ould have been adulterated. We fed 300 men on the day the first reports of illness came in. Forty of them complained and we immedi ately started an investigation.” President of the United Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes and Railway Shop Laborers, said this morning. SHOPS ABANDONED. DALLAS, Texas, July 17.—Attempts | ANNOUNCEMENT ‘I hereby announce ntyself 2s a candidate for the office of County Commissioner of Natrona County, for the two-yesr term, on the Republican ticket, subject to the will of the voters at the regular primary elec- tion, August 22 1922. Earl C. Boyle action was for the moment withheld while everything possible was being done to straighten out the coal tieup. The coal situation in West Virginia. it was pointed out to Secretary Weeks geday by an operater from that region, has become complicated by the shopmen's strike on the railroads. Mines which have been increasing their production despite the miners’ walkout, Mr. Weeks was informed, now are feelin gthe. shortage of rail equipment to move their product. po cntcaith~ at as ANNOUNCEMENT. I hereby announce myself as a candidate for the office of County Commissioner of Natrona County, for the four-year term, on the Republican ticket, subject to the will of the voters at the regular primary elec- tion, Augus: 22, 1922. Charles A. Cullen ; CARD OF THANKS. To all of our friends whom I can- not thanx personally I take this means f<- expressing my Geepest ap- preciatim for the kindness shown us MONDAY, JULY 17, 1922. ; {Political Advertisement] ¢6¢¢¢600oeereoees tendent of the Ra‘ E ay Mail Service| Moose the Ladies of Mooseheart Le- Tew on oe er at Chicago notified Hpatonneten fevge ner besa nee CASPERS FAMILY neral Work today that Chicago, "DONNE! Burlington & Quincy train No. 27 Tet ET Nae coree ee J Bu aJ LLY, AND THOMAS, JR, roe county, Iowa, and that striking coal miners and shopraen sym- |Pathizers had persistently refused to permit, wrecking crews to clear the TODAY tracks. The Shun Tien Shih Pao after say. oil through which the republic | A a is drifting 1 ch sooner or later eign lo ‘© benk- n order to - | quiring ers work Ano ous 10 years Henning, argues that the next few | federated sh fill expectations. ives of the people. Unless|who came to Chicago today from a aper continues, his on where on Saturday he unification will prove “airy | held a conference with Presifent Hard- The paper con-fing. Mr. Grable said he would confer abers of the railroad labor board in an effort to get support of an prevent carriers from re- intenance men te do strik er indication of a drift toward peace was seen in thé statement of R. general chairman of the ts of the northwest, st dectde whether China is|that only the refusal of eastern roads |to agree to reinstate striking shop- the brotherhood of railway, steamship Passengers, train and wreck- clerks, freight handlers and express|!2S crews have been driven away employes to its members employed by|from the train, he added, and the the Southern Railway and affiliated|track has been blockied, thus delay- lines. The employes charge that the|ing the movement of ma: company reduced wages in defiance of the railroad labor board. 25,000 MAINTENANCE Topeka, Kansas unions of the big|MEN GO ON STRIKE. four brotherhood and the switzhmen's|, CHICAGO, July 17.—Approzimate- union petitioned their officers for per-|!¥ 25,000 maintenance of way men mission to go on strike July 20, have struck without permission from Clerks and station employes on more j Presid Grable, J. C, Smock, vice than 60 of the 201 class one roads have| President of the union, estimated to- e Stowaways Presented by CULUMBIA STOCK CO. A Program of Real Joy and Excitement. sounty Donegal. pope’ ‘National army troops from Muflin-|Hous Manchurian super-Tuchen, still is SS . k holding onto the roliing stock he took from the rai and Mu afts workers with thefr full senior- - | rights, was preventing a settle- ee |ment on the roads in the northwest section of the country. A message to E. H. Fitegerald, head | of the clerks, frelght handlers, ex- press and station employes union, said a strike vote of 8,000 clerks on the Chicago and Northwestern railroad} showed 93 per cent of the men favor-| UIPMENT. July 16.—(By The As- Press)—Chang Tso-Lin, rebel- ‘oad lines between Pek- den when he made peace and large stores of ammunition were |and aya pS ag as Pie at 2 Alay amounts to about 75 per cent 5 F foun sh Se, Sel sie aaa Iine’s available equipment, resumption | sphere of Chang's influence. of norma? traffic is impossible, ce the more peaceful conditions DEBS (SoUEG APPEAL: (Continued irom Page One.) racy in the world or go down in hu- millating defeat for another histo: cal period of economic bondage de pends entirely upon the capacity of| the workers to muster their forces and stand together, strike together, vote together and fight together, all) along the line.” | GOLLEGE SPIRIT ABOUNDS | IN TRIS MUSICKL COMEDY AM the spirit of the good old college days is portrayed in vivid color by | Hunter’s Bouncing Babies in the pres. entation of “The College Widow,” a comedy of young folks and old, with a couple of millionaies thrown in for good measure. This time, the audi-| ence sees more of tho six chorus maidens, and the production is mora| of a musical comedy than any pre- sented in the past. | Claude Radcliffe and “Rube” Ferns have the “funny bone” roles, as thb millionaire fathers of a young college | couple. Their mutual tnfatuation for| a dashing grass widow, and their ef-| forts to spend their’ millions to please | her, form the hinges upon which the humor swings. Mr. Hunter again distinguishes him- self in the straight part of the college boy, and he ts ably supported in th role by Pauline Avis. The ‘widow’'| herself, is Elia Claus, who now and then steps from her part to lead the| chorus in a song or two. | The College Widow, will be repeated this evening. Viola Dana is a clever comedy of puppy love and final mar- riage. The Fourteenth Lovet, adds the final touch to a thoughtfully| Prepared bill. oS } CARD OF THANKS. ‘We wish to express our sincere thanks and appreciation for the kind- ness and sympathy shown us in our recent bereavement in the loss of our dear daughter and sister, Lois Sandlin. MRS. B. J. SANDLIN AND FAME TAT-1te I Am the Law| TYPEWRITER BARGAINS |Underwoods, Remingtons, L. C. Smiths, Royals. Repairs and Supplies. Typewriters for Rent. CASPER TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE 230 E.2nd St. Phone 856 spite Jare “British subjec! to within his withdrawal. ation is costing the railway in addition to the dam pment may suffer while ss hands | now has decided All foreign en y, most of w vill be recalled Chinese wall, them from th against China. ‘The effect of this withdrawal of em-} probably will the great ‘ould _remov compelling him to abandon his trucu- lent attitud: YOUR FRIEND a new sensation awaits. Second and CN Yan Land Yellowstone CASPER, WYOMIN®: NORDYKE & MARMON COMPANY Established 1851 11 INDIANAPOLIS for You We Have Everything to-Keep You Cool. CROQUET SETS SPRINKLERS COUCH HAMMOCKS ICE CREAM FREEZERS GARDEN HOSE Special Prices on Screen Doors and Windows. Two Refrigerators to Close Out Below Wholesale Pris, Holmes Hardware Co. Second and Wolcott eat wall, in which region alone [taile Chang retains any influence, thereby | Leuder, nounced today aft heads of airplane operating companies. who owns a Marmon to let you drive it— To steer with such gentle touch and to brake and shift gears so casily is exclusively Marmon. ° MARMON CThe Foremost’ Fine: Car Phone Let Us Make the Summer Comfortable x j taken strike votes, according to in- formation received here. Reports of cancellation of trains be cause of shortage of coal or equ!p- ment continued. Reports have been received in Wash- ington by the war department and the Postmaster general on the situation at Denison, Texas. no actual d by the railway strike, Arthur C. postmaster of Chicago an: 1406 Phone 601 There has been some delay in the delivery of mails, interruption and the/ not be expelled from the union for t!.> public need not fee! disturbed, accord- It 1s expected that any who refuse |ing to Postmaster Generel Work. Goy- to obey the recall will be dealt with|ernor Neff of Texas has ordered Cap- under a British order in council, which| tain Hickman of the Texas Rangers makes liable to deportation any British | back to Denison, but has given no in- subject patricipating in any rebellion|dication that he would send troops there soon, Arrangements for the use of all air- be to paralyze) planes available for mail service have e ration of the railway north of\been made, should the service be cur-| Casper Dairy © conference with ' ' Everybody's Theater Six Spicy Musical Dancing Acts day. Mr. Smock said the strikers prob- ably ‘will be outlawed ‘ba thee e,| Continuous 1 to 11 P. M. : PHOTOPLAY tonal offi a x osek Serene. 110e-25¢ 10c-25c ELAINE HAMMERSTEIN ORGANIZERS TO PLEAD ’ —Irn— FOR. RETURN, REPORT. CHICAGO, July 17.—‘Members of the maintenance of ‘way union who engage in an unauthorized strike wil! LAST TIMES TODAY | WM. 5. HART “Between Men” ~—Also— TWO-REEL COMEDY “Wet and Warmer” “REMORSELESS LOVE” moment,” but brotherhood organizers will be sent to interview the strikers and attempt to persuade them to re- main at work pending final decision as to a national strike, B. ¥. Grable, || Your Baby Will Thrive On A Bishop-Cass Theater LAST TIMES TONIGHT “THE COLLECE WIDOW” Presented by GEO. HUNTER’S Anita Stewart | BounciING BABIES COMPANY —In— —And— VIOLA DANA In Her Latest Picture “THE 14th LOVER” The Romance of a Fickle Flapper. " —Also— i Hall Room Boys’ Comedy __. “START SOMETHING” ‘Two Shows Tonight, 7 and 9 Admission 550 TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY 4 ACTS OF CIRCUIT VAUDEVILLE —And— THE BOUNCING BABIES CO. “4’ NIGHT IN TURKEY” Matinee Each Day at 2:30—Admission 40c Milk Lowest Storage In Casper Guaranteed Repair Work. Gas, Oils and Grease. Day and Night Service, Willis-Hackett Garage 363 S. Ash—Phone 1891W THE CHICAGO BURLINGTON & QUINCY RAILROAD Is Now. Employing Men for Its Shops, Roundhouses and Repair TOMORROW “THE MORE EXCELLENT WAY” 10c-25c 3 Tracks at the Standard Wage and } Overtime : Machinists eastern 200 per hour jolaneriaitn alee OREM OREEEIGS hous A Bishop-Cass Theater acksmit Beste adeleae .—-—-75¢ per Pieceaa and Acetylene Welders... .75c per hour LAST TIMES TONIGHT Pipe Fitters, Tinners, Plumbers and Coppersmiths —______... .....-70¢ per hour Coach Builders and Finishers. —__—-—-75¢ per hour Coach Painters.......—-_-.-.. .68¢ per hour Electricians —_. 70c per hour Electric Crane Operators Car Repairers..._....__-.~.---—..-. ._.68c per hour Brass Moulders —. 70c per hour Round House Servicemen..._._........._..--.38c per hour Stationary Engineers and Firemen...._.4554c¢ per hour Laborers—Coach Cleaners... —37¢ per hour Apprentices and Helpers. ies (3 per hour Apprentices and Helpers after first 6 months receive 2c increase each 6 months thereafter until appren- ticeship is finished. TO COMMENCE TODAY APPLY TO C. E. MELKER AT CASPER wees 0 per hour —IN— “THE DEUCE OF SPADES” In a wild, wild shootin’ town, the only thing he knew how to shcot-was biscuits—but what a biscuit shooter he was! THE BEST PICTURE RAY HAS MADE THIS YEAR. “MILE-A-MINUTE MARY” Two-Part Comedy —And— CURRENT EVENTS 1 toll 10c and 40c jecareistaes Rat ian ENTERS ah 7 SRT TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD’S “| AM THE LAW” —With— ° ALICE LAKE—KENNETH HARLAN— ROSEMARY THEBY—GASTON GLASS— NOAH BEERY—WALLACE BEERY— HECTOR SARNO AND A HOST OF OTHERS Standard wages and overtime conditions will be paid; hours to be those necessary for maintenagce of the service. Board and lodging, under ample protection, will be furnished. A } Young, active men desiring to go into railroad serv- | ice will be given an opportunity for training in steady desirable employment. eee

Other pages from this issue: