Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 16, 1922, Page 1

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CITY BALLOT _ 1S COMPLETE [Rail Board Exténds| Jurisdiction’ In) Ruling Affecting New Labor Body | CHICAGG, Oct. 16.—(By The Associated Press.)—An’ eight-hour day with overtime, Eight Candidates for Three Vacancies on nearly 2 26 per cont tmcroace, Casper Council Are Made Known ¢ With Expiration of Time Limit Nine candidates, representing four political parties, are seeking election to the three vacancies on the city council as| ordinate officials and swbject to the shown by petitions placed on file at the city haJl. The time limit for declaring such candidacies expired Saturday and in- dications point to keen contests for the municipal honors. Parties represented include the American, Citizens and|yardmasters affected virtually more} candidates and the Affiliated party, represented by H. 1. Seidel, former Casper tickets with two or under sheriff, who is a candidate in the third ward. ler, Casper ticket; Karl R. Williams, | American ticket; John M, Whisen | hunt, Citizens ticket. | Ward 2 (territory west of Durbin street and south of Northwestern), to succeed W. W, Keefe—J, W. Burns, A complete list of those who have! Citizens ticket; Walter Royce, Amer signified follows: Ward 1 (all territory lyiyng north tN st ral Sylvest: ton, Citizens ticket; Wil- agreem: of Northwestern road) to succeed! Sylvester Pelton * fra i’ which “will, ghvern th’ Seas John M. Whisenhunt—Henry E. Mi their desire of becoming the choice of their respective wards | oan ticket. ‘Ward 3 (east of Durbin and south of Northwestern¥to succeed J. J. Gib- Un—H. L. Seidel, Affiljated ticket: Mam. H, Lloyd, American. tieket. ‘POOR WORKING GIRL’ ON EASY STREET IN COMPARISON. WiTH COLLEGE PROFESSOR. IS CLAIM BERKEN‘Y, Cal., Oct. 16.—The “poor working girl” has it “all over’’.a college professor, in the matter of allowances made by employers, for subsistena' according to Mrs. Doro- thy Hart Bruce, wife of HR. L. Bruce of tae faculty of the Uni- varsity Of California. In a letter published in the publication, Mrs. Bruce iskes issue with tho budget for /housesald ex- penses for faculty members recentlv announced by the board of regents. Mra. Bruce said in the letter that the professor's wife must “choose between childlessness or the angu)sh | meniber's family, if he has a wife and| and humiliation of many years‘of debt and drudgery,” if shp expects to live on the salary of hef instructor. husband. She said eight other wives of faculty members agreed with her, Mrs, Bruce said a budget issued re- cently by a San Francisco teacher of home economics stated a working gift reeded -290 a year for clothes to ap- pear well dresseg, ‘That allowance,” she declared, “would look big to a university Chronicle, a faculty professor's wife whose allowance for [eerer is fixed at the. pitiful figure sof 60.” Inthe opinion of Mrs. Bruce at least $350 a month is needed to pro- uide the bare necessities for a faculty ‘three children. | VIOLATE ORDINANCE. ! A, McKenzie ‘and Lucy Gonzolas Were arrested by the police last night |for living together without the sanct!- |ty of marriage bonds. Other bonds |were delivered by them, however, |namely in denominations of $50 for seach of the arrested: parties, Committee on Style Show Meets 1 onight Final arrangements for The Tribune Fashion Show for the benefit of the Red Cross, to be staged at the Elks’ auditorium Wednesday, Friday and Saturday evenings of this week, are expected to be\made at a meeting of the general committee at the home of Mrs. Anna Leeper on Park street at 8 o'clock this evening. A general rehearsal has been called for tomorrow evening at the Elks club when all models are expecied to be| present to receive final instructions for the show. At this time the order of appearance of the individual stores’ exhibits will be announced for each class af’ garments. H. R. Bogan, who ig handling the construction of the booths, announced that this work had been completed at noon today. The additional: lighting and furniture for the dressing rooms is being installed this afternoon. and everything is in start of the show. ‘Two or three changes in the assign: ment of models has been necessitated | because of the inability of one or two stores to meet the requirements in the right sized garments for the young ladies who will exhibit thelr merchan- dise. These were straightened out this morning and all of the merchants ara oS for the opeping curtain. nley Griebel, chairman of the en- tertainment commistee, announced this morning that there would be’ no changes in the program as outlined in Sunday's ‘Tribune. The entertain- ment program contains nine numbers, ranging from operatic solos to a black- |face act, sandwichell in with the mod- jeling and is expected to produce sev- |eral liome talent hits that will equal any similar offering in the pr¢fession- al theaters, readiness for the OGILBEE STATE HEADS LECION AT NEW ORLEANS NEW>ORLEANS, Oct. 16. (Special to The Tribune.)— De. W. Ogilbee of Casper was appointed to head the Wyo- ming delegation to the American Legion national convention, Wipe gpevien its sessions here today. R. M. Boeke and C. P. Plummer of Casper, Alfred Beach of Newcastle and E. GC. Calhoun of Van Tassel, formerly of Casper, were appointed delegates by the caucus to fill vacancies. The big issues of the convention, it believed, will-center about discu sion of the United States Veterans’ bureau and the bonus measure. Au attempt also is being made to secure the passage of a partisan political res- ojution but it is expected to fail as being egeinst. legion pi delegates from both the south and west will oppose it, n pay, were granted approxi- mately 2,000 yardmastera on 26 class one railroads and at six switching terminals by the United States railroad labor board today. ‘Thix is the: firat tme the board has esablished rules and working conditions for yard- inagters who now are classified as sub. beard'’s jurisdiction under. the, trans portation act. j By establishing the eight-hour day | with pro-rate overtime wages, the} have| been awarded a 25 per cent wage ad-| vance, according’ to’ J. 8. Pldridge,} president. of the Railroad Yardmas-| ters of America. The organization is| international in scope, } The ruling affects all yardmasters or the roads ‘nvolved except such general yar\nasters as were classed | 4 official under a ruling of the inter: state commerce confnission last No- vember. On a: least 12 roads yard- masters have ents with “the vases. The Delaware and Lackawanha, the Pennsylvania and the Illinois Central ratlroads were excluded from the de- cision tody. W. L, McMenimen, a Ia- bor member of the board, although eontandiiig that these Uurée roads were! Properly befare the board, in the mat-| ter, voted ¢o exclude them in order to! obin's ---’ decision which _ otherwise | ‘utild Ive’ failed for lack of one vote The rules provile that yar@masters | required to work seven-day a week | shall be given two days off each month, | The yardmasters’ association is said to have a membership of between four thousand and five thousand. Among the roads affected by the da cision are the New York Centraf jines, éast and west; Baktimore and Ohio; Kansas City Southern; Kanaas City. Oklahoma 7d Guif; Missour) Pacific: Sag Anton‘o and Arkansas Pass: D: ver Union Terminal; Fort Worth, and Denver City; Gulf ‘Coast Lines; Sea-| board Air Line; Texas and Pacific and} Wabash. | METROPOLITAN TYPE OF MOTOR BUS PROPOSED Applicants for City Franchise Would Use Vehicle Costing $8,000 With Carrying | Capacity of 25. Busses such as are used on the Streets of metropolitan’ cities like Loa! Angeles, Kansas, City. and Cleveland, will be running on the streets of Cas- pet within a few months, jf Wallace} L. England and Scott Loveland ob-| tain the franchise which will probably | be awarded to some company this evening at the meeting of the city council. | England and Loveland are both lo- cal men with long experience in. the Automobile and trucking business around Casper. They promise a bus| costing about $8,000 capable of haul-| ing 25 passengers. It will have spe} cial equipment, will be electrically heated, well ventilated without draft and will have provisions for safety such as en emergency exit on the rear left side. ‘The Was proposed by these men is{ manufactured by, the White Motor company, # corporation that builds! many different designs. | Loveland and England promise that this bus. can be operated on a five- cent fare just as well as‘ the cheaper busses. There bas been a great deal of ar- gument surrounding the type of bus | which should be used by Casper. The general requirements have been out-| lined by the council but the advisabil- | ity or inccwisability of having an ex-| have the best possible service. and agreed, however, that Casper should both directions. Nearby everyone is pensive bus hes drawn fire from that the busses used showd be of such make aid equipment that they | will be a credit to the city even when! it reaches the size that it will have reached at the end of 2Q years. pax acuity DIVORCE ASKED. Vera Kissick, through her. mother,| Bertha Middleton, is suing Robert Kis. | sick in district court for divorce on} the grounds of cruelty and asking for} temporary. and permanent alimony, at- Norney’s fees and the resumption of her maiden name The couple were married in Casper June 12, 3922, Z j ie jthat' the balance of the day will be Harding Releases Moonshiner Mother and money was scarce, and she had a.dozen mouths to feed, tq say nothing of other in- the dozen mouths, so Mrs. Anna Hozer tried to win by the omshine distillery rout was arrested in her home in Muskegon, Mich., and taken away from her eleven children. She was sent to jail under sentence of six months. When President jing heard nll the circumstances he exercised his execu tive , and Mrs. Hozer has now been released after srving three months In the term. Photo shows Mrs. | Hozer with five of her children. ~ SEIZURES OF WET Goops OUTSIDE OF 3-MILE LIMIT NOT OKEHED BY BRITISH from Great Britain, Report SEASON FALLS, STORM GENERAL mantle of white was spread over WASHINGTON, Oct. 16.—(By The Associated Press.) — Great Britair,, ina communication delivered today to the state depariment, is understood to have declined to agree to the suggestion of Secretary Hughes for a reciprocal agree- central Wyoming this morning in what may be classed as the firet snow storm of the season but by noon the storm was breaking away with every ment for the extension of the right of search and seizure so as to give the American prohibition navy jurisdiction outside ne WOMAN RNS RMUGK ON At the same ‘time the Britisk for-/ eign office tnfermed the American | government that every precaution | would be taken to prevent violation of | | evidence of fair weather for tomor- the Axaerican prohibition law by rum | row. Precipitation was light. The smugglers under the British flag. It | storm was preceeded by a cold wave was said that Canadian and other LU = |last night, the temperature rexister- port officials had teen instructed to are Jing several degrees below the’ freez prevent so far as possible the issu- | g point for firat time this fell “ice of fraudulent clearance papers; She was a woman hard to handie,| Reports from other sections indica and other improper practices’ com-|for she had»been all hootched up by|that: the storm was general over plained of in Secretary Hughes’ pro-|Sand Bar nector and it took several| wyoming and Nebraska. hibition note. | officers to keep her from-tearing out The British communication in reply | her own hair, while they loaded her OMAHA, Neb., Oct. 16.—The first to the one sent to London by the statu! inte the city omnibus, snow of the year was reported falling department several weeks ago, wau That she had created a disturbance} in estern Nebraska and South Da- | presented to cretary Hughes by th prior to her free ride was one of the| kota-today. Weather bureau officials | British ambassador, Sir Auckland | charges against her, and she had to] here said thet the snow was moy- Geddes, Although department offi-|hand over $50 ax a bend to guarantee|ing toward the southeast fals would not discuss the subject|her gppearance before the magistraia| there were indications that the refusal | this evening CHEYENNE, Wyo., Oct. 16.—Ch enne got its first snow storm of the season today, but up to noon the fall had not beon heavy. A blinding storm swept over Sheridan hill, the highest point the Union I railroad Jand the Lincoln highway yesterday. to accord a reciprocal right of search outside the usual mits of territoriai waters would be considered as finally blocking any extension of such thority to prohibition officers. Orders already are in effect, direct ing the proh'bition navy not to opel te outside the three mile line except n the case of vessels in. communica tion with the shore Ly means of their SSeS AMA A 4 ONGN FOLHAL ARE, og at See aed —— | FOUR HELD FOR GAMBLING MRS, Me SMITH, MOTHER on cific cials that no extension would be in| accordance with international practice | “eS SRE ere of the st unless it were made so by, some such| | Word has been received here of ti = specific: agreement as thar proposed | death of Mrs. M cg 4 TAN aaet whe adrentadiat: 4 ‘o'clock: te Miz Yinch Mrs. Harriet Curtis, which occurred} ‘ y Mi. Hughe Yesterday afternoon’ at the famfly| thle morning ona charge of gam He ta Jaibestawn. NY bling. ‘The men Were John Goelz bis Hodges, Gus <<on, and Frank Wil Mr, and Mrs: Ernest Marquard were | OIL PRODUCERS with Mra. Smith at the time of her|istiony took place in the Colon pool death and Mr. Marquard, who is con: | AU0D8 {00K rhaitiead 45 Glaee nected «with tle New York Oll com-|, yond of $150 for his temporary re-| |pany here, sent the message to Cas-| 120 fper. * —o | Mrs. Smith had been an invalid for | Il—Two ‘per- | years one seriously Mrs. Harriet Curtis, her daughter,| injured when two trains of (he Lake is the widew of the late Frank G.| Erie and Western railroad. collided Curtis head-on near Rankin, a suburb. | SPORTS IMARKETS} ~~ NUMBER 13. DOUGLAS CASE IS ON TRIAL IN CASPER COURT Sager-Seasonover Controversy Involving Assault With Intent to Kill Brought to This City on Change of Venue -With Judge J. J. Tidball of Laramie sitting on the bench, the attention of district court here today was occupied with a change of venue case from Converse county in which Mar- tin C. Reasonover is charged with having committed a felon- ious assault on Carl Sager with intent to commit murder. The was once dismissed, according to the defendant’s attor- Jiseph Garst of Douglas, in Con-} ble and ‘that Sager’s beating of Ri werohy Baka. idea Ge up| Sonover was 1 by his anger again for trial on a change of venue.! °Y n incident in which Mrs. Sager The assault is leged to have o aap jeasonover figured 4 The testimony was expected ta be ured May 23, 1921, at the well known | contradicte and for this. Ogalalia ran 65 miles southeast otir ason Judg € uded all Casper, just over the Converse coun-, Witnesses fre ourtroom except ty line, According to the opening|for the actu ey were in the statement of Attorney Showalter of | witness box. Dougias, handling the prosecution,| Both attorneys spent the morming the alleged assault involved the shoot-|{n cross examining prospective jurors ing of Sager through the right arm|and wu: the right of challenge fre- by Reasonover after the former had| quently. The jury was chosen just given Reasonover a bad beating with-| before the court receded for the noon his fists. | how ‘The testimony of witnesses, accord The court is prepared if necessary, to hold a night this evening to conclute the case in one day’s time. Ing to the prosecution, wil! show that session LY ONY AT HSM CHURCH 1s GREAT SUES PASTOR PAYS TRIBUTE TO THE TRIBUNE ADVERTISING which received stress ot @hila training. Hildebrand, pastor of become keenly aware A fine tribute to the editorial policy; The subject of The Tribune and to the value of its! was ‘the question advertising space has been received|The Rev, R. PR. from R. R. Hitiebrand, pastor of the | the chureh, h Christian church, and also from the! that the chik n of Casper need train other members. The following mes-!|ing along religious lines and that the sage was handed to the editor tits| churches of the city have a great job before them in connection with the morning: Here's to a paper of Will and Won't, | Wor To a paper of Can and Do, | Captain Harry Black, who knows A er whose policy {is all that's | boys, gave an addrey he topto; ge The Training of th He ems ee. paris wel willy wre da. phasized three developments in @ boy’ riat t is never wrong; | life, physical, mental and religious, hewrpig’ ia nevet-xiahts | He placed good literature an essen; ‘g boost for the policy of the old {tial to the c noble, growing boy: ‘Tribune Marion Wheeler delivered a splen: And, Casper, get in tune! did address on the religious education “We of the Christian church wish|of the child. He exhorted the fathers to thank you heartily for the at |to make pals of tt sons. He gare help you gave us toward reaching our| some statistics concerning child train- rally day goal, We not only reached|ing in Casper that mad se present 5 (our goal), but went over the top| gasp with surprise for more than 300. ~~ "It has been prov@n to us in a con crete way that {t pays to advertise inj _ WALLA SVALLA, Wash. — Paul The Tribune. Casper Tribune is| Staren, convicted of murder and a real asse ain we thank you."'| Sentenced to tion at the state The rally day yesterday was'a big Peltiteniary on November 10, end- ed his life in his cell by hanging. PACE FOR AUTOMOBILE SHOW TO BE ALLOTTED AT MEETING OF DEALERS FRIDAY EVENING s | Space for cars at the Tribune Auto Show will be allotted at a meeting of the dealers Friday night which will be held in the Tribune office. At this meeting, the plans for the show will be further developed. | Men who took part in the recent booster trip to Lusk re- port that many persons who were met at the different towns signifi pir Inter ing to} ers here are devoting jally fo e they can command in om along the line are things in readiness. The the support of the project. which the: showing realize that while it is in the] is a cred | first instance a boost for Casper, it is|are associated | also a boost for the state, and that it| ness. can lagging jwill ald them materially: in thelr own| behind, no 1 . but whole- business regardless of their place .ef| hearted work for the goos of all con residence. cerned, The. committee of seven appointed at the meeting of operators in the) Salt Creek fidd held here on erober is holding .a meeting the offices of James P. Kem today, with all. members “present except George LL. Ferguson. The forenodn and much of the after noon was spent in submitting reports and in outlining a policy for the future but at the time of going +o press no statement could be had as to the work accomplished. It 1s probable IOWA CITY, Iowa, Oct. 16.—By The Assvciated Press.)—Iowa's vic- torious football team was given a reception upon its arrival here at 4:30 today from New Haven where it defeated Yale 6 to 0, that outclassed the demonstration which greeted the arnustice announc ago. The medi! school, considered the most cons on the university campus, led the way in the demc ened to Cetnoralize classes at the school through: used before the business at hand can eb Aisposedt of and it is possible that the meeting may be continued. until tomorrow or some. day later in the week | The playing of bands and the blowing of wh at 4p. m Those present are L. | end continued for five hours combined with the 6 of lowa S. HL Keoughtn, James P victory. T. Williams, W. T. F A crowd estimated at 7.0€0, including approxima om) stud Foley. was at the station to welcome the homecoming he but ‘ “VICTORIOUS GRID WARRIORS GIVEN OVATION ON RETURN Pointed. Before the crowd of enthusiastic Iowa knew what had hap. poned, Coach Howard H. Jones had his team loaded into a truck and spirited away to their rooms. Only a few even saw the players. The heroes are schedule, make their first formal appearance shoi after noon when they are to be the guests of th mercial club. field for practice Following th! for the I reception, the team will to Iowa The fact that the students saw Gafeated the 1 Yale relebr: ae uc {sr a GIVEN 8-HOUR DAY

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