Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 25, 1922, Page 12

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) Weather Forecast Genurally fair tonight and Thurs day. Warmer tonight Im northeast portion, Cooler Thursday tn extreme north. TRIBUNE AUTO SHOW SCORES AGAIN TUESDAY Increased ‘Attendance Marks Popularity) of Great Display on Second Night; Models to Change Again Today A crowd even larger and more enthusiastic than that of| the night before gathered at the Arkeon last night to wit-} ness the second evening of the Tribune Automobile Show, | which was marked by many changes in the models of cars exhibited, the buzzing conversation of prospective buyers, the clear voices of the Denver entertainers, and th success- ful rendering of a concert by been changed owing ‘to the fact! arrived lo. j not Some of the models last night hadjthat new ones had r {from the factory although in many] jeases they were en route to the Aeal-| lors here. The Wyoming Oldsmobile compax:y | will have a five-passenger touring or lrondster model this evening The Coltseum garage changed from ja Dodge all sedan yesterday |to a Dodge roadster. | _A four-passenger touring Marmon and @ seven-passenger tou Page Nine) WYOMING GETS CASPER MOVIES AS BIG FEATURE Pictures Filmed in Casper to Be Featuved Thursday and Friday of Every Week. a (Cintinued on Hud-| court after being freed, -Her ‘Cleveland sald nothing had been show t H An opportunity to view local events through the medium of motion pic- tures will be given to the people, of Casper by Bert Bell of the Bell studio each week,taccording to an announce- ment this morning. The first pictures will be shown ‘Thursday and Friday of this week at the Wyoming theater, at which time 2,000 feet of film will be shown. The pictures which Mr. Bell has} shot to be shown at this time are: BUSINESS SITUATION ON MERD IN EUROPE, IN LATIN-AMERICA AND THE NEAR EAST, REPORT pata ot Oct, 25.—Business in Europe, Latin-America p73) and the Far East is steadily on the upgrade, and, with few ‘The Labor Da: de, jew of é , , * sub abek rhe, Sabere. goit links, «/ exceptions, is better the world over, delegates to the conven- local moonshine raid, local crowds,tion of the American Manufacturers’ Export association watching the Tribune's score board.| were told today by Dr. Julius Klein, director of the United Casper from the clouds, Dare Devil CASPER, WYOMING, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1922. LADIVOSTOK LOOTED BY ANTI-REDS AND JAPS Pure Food Show Plans Approved si tlt “Doll” Mother Released of Murder Charge The Casper Daily Tribune The Casper Tribune Two editions daily; largest c: tion of any newspaper in Wyoz. NUMBER 21. Tribune. to Stage Spectacle First Week in December for Benefit of the Woman’s Departmental Club of Casper WITH JAPAN & | The board of directors of the Woman’s Departmental club! | of Casper, at a meeting held at the home of Mr, and Mrs.| - olaysen yesterday afternoon, decided to accept TH E NIPPONE Tribune’s offer to stage a Pure t'ood Show in Casper on De-! Cragg |}cember 4, 5 and 6. One-half the proceeds of the show will Delay ae Occupatio . Mm of t ‘This photo shows Mrs. Hazel MeNally shaking hands with Judge other, Henry C. Cleveland of the Hammond city Mrs. Emily Hills is standing on the other side of the magistrate. Judge n that a murder had been committed. ° |E. E. Smathers Case Involving Compound Interest on Mammoth Rentals Is Reversed Again in Litigation NEW YORK, Oct. 25.—A jury in the supreme court yes- terday emerged from a haze of compound interest figures for 99 years and gave a~Verdict to E. E. Smathers, owner of the property at18 Broadway, against the Standard Oi] company of New York, a tenant, by which Smathers, his heirs, exe- cutors or assignees, will be save d$6,500,000 in the period. ‘The sult rested on whether quarter-] $371,250, then when the experts com- ly rental of $62,000 shouid be paid by | pounded the steadily increasing the Standard O!l on the first day of paign were discussed and it was de: | Casper merchants to arrange window cided to extend the period of {nten-/ displays of Milk ad dairy products, sive. campaigning from November 1] Following the board meeting, Dr to 1%. A special day added to the pres-| Dafoe, city pure food and sanitation jent program will be devoted to tuber-|inspector addressed the members) on culosis and the methois used to com-|the subject of clty sasdtation and bat !t. A special program is being|hoalth campaigns. -Cleanup, rakedp arranged fcr the evening of this day./dny during the campaign will! be on |Prominent speakers are being engaged| November 9 and on that Gay the lo- and the Casper schools are arranging |cal chamber of commerce will furnish to give a modern Health Crusade play.|wagoug to collect the garbage and ‘The Women's Departmental club|rubbisn collected and disposed ut con- announce that the Wyoming Exten-| venient places in the alleys. sion service has arranged for Miss] Amorg other subjecta discussed at Hall, a representative of the Federal)the musing Were: Tho necessity of } Healt) department to come to Casper|curbiny (ae practice of erecting sign to assist in the’ health campaign. Miss| boards al_ng the principal streets of Tall will be accompanied by Miss|the city: the present tendency to be Rokahr, state home demonstration | careless in the daposal,of rubbish and | agent. 2 garbage; the evils of spitting on the In addition to takng care of nu-|streets and on the sdewaiks; Casper merous campagn details -co/ninittees| water rates and the effect upcn many were appointed to arrange the dairy} home owners who desire to miaintain display at campaign headquarters in| presentable lawns and flower beds. STANDARD OF WN. Y. LOSES $6,500,000 SUIT LLOYD GEORGE WILL SUPPORT POLICY OF PEACE, ECONOMY AND PROGRESS, HE DECLARES LONDON, Oct. 25.—(By The Associated Press.) —“I will support any party and any government that pursues a policy of peace, economy and steady progress, neither revo- Intionary nor reactionary, and does it efficiently,’ former Prime Minister Lloyd George:told the coalition liberal. mem- amount on the 6 per cent basis, the} bers of parliament at a meeting this morning. Dunean doing aerial acrobatic stunts over Casper, Mosher camp celebration, States bureau of foreign and domestic commerce. The con- vention which opened today will con-}'sfble effort to old their position in tinue through omorrow. ) this field as scpn as conditions be-| “Conditions almos everywhere show|CoMe more stable. * decided improvement,”” Dr. Klein de-| “American trade with Latin-Ameri- clared. “In the Orient, conditions are| can countries for the first eight! better now -than they have been at! months of the present year was eight | any time since 1920. Japan is pulling| per cent. more in vals. than for all herself out of the slough of economic) of the fiscal year 1913-14, and only depression and business in China ts! 14 per cen) less on the same basis! getting better." !than' for tle corresponding period of China's recovery, he added, wou'd| last year wi ipments were still be aided as the foreign demand for| being made at hifh prices on old) that country’s products improved and | Comtracts. Of great and far reaching} the strain on Chinese purchasing| Significance is the fact that American | power is relaxed. Anstralian investments private enterprises | and other interesting local pictures. ‘The current events of Casper will ‘be shown hereafter within four days of the time they occur. Dr. Kendall Speaks ‘At 7:30 Tonight At | Methedist Church, The Rey. D. E. Kendall, D.D., of 3 and in Denver, formerly superintendent of} New ‘Zealand wool and wheat aceu-| and in the bonds of the governments! the Sheridan district of the Methodist | ™ulations are being liquidated at f; of Latin-America have amounted ‘to s and imports are incre church, will speak at the Methodist! rable pric s-| over $500,000,000 since the early part church tonight. As he must leave on/| ing, he aszerted of 1921, the 8:35 p. m. train ‘the service will] ~‘Business is picking up in western| “The sound banking condition of | begin promptly at Many; Hurope at a rate varying in different | Atgentina, which is making the most people in Casper kn Kendal!| countri Klein said. ‘Deflations| rapid progress back to better time and will be pleased to hear him. has run its course, stocks have been| Of all the Latin-American countrie: Sax PE SEE ae ORT SR EE reduced and merchants have taken| has been a strong contributory fac- their losses; Jabor hag taken its cut|tor in this betterment. An amazing Pewter Neck Piece Of 1830 Placed In Pharmacy Display and has shown a pronounced tendency | change for the detter has been wit- to cooperate. Production, always the} Messed in Chile during the last few fundamental bas’s of economic de-|™months, due principally to the move- velopment is incr throughout | ment of nitrates. | the entire area. “Sale of the bumper crop in Cuba, |. Since 1921 the balance of trade in|at prices permitting a profit has en- } has shown an/ couraged a revival of purchasing ‘An additional relic added to the col-| astonishing 1 rd its nor-; throughout the Islan‘. Tho large Jection in the window of the Midwest | ™mal status; t is actually of merchandise heic ‘s, bonded pharmacy this morning is a Pewter, Show! exports over| warehouses in Havana avo . been neck piece picked un Octo! 1 near‘ import favorable | very materially reduced by Ye expor-: Hell's. Half Acre by an employe of; balunce tation, and local. consumption. The the Christensen Construction com-/ degre | Urst gleam of optimism in the Mex!~ pany at Salt Lake City, which is re-} monet: uphe course,|can situation was" evidenced during surfacing a section of Yellowstone| continued to’ r stabilization | September, largely due to congres- highway | of her trade po: sional action on the De La’ Huerta- The neckpiece bears the date 1630,; ‘Eastern Europe, apart from Rus-) Lamont agreemen Tt is very little worn and may have} sia, is in ‘gene! ing gradually | —— belonged to a member of Captain] from the rave r and should CHICAGO, Oct. 25.—More than Bonneviile’s party. [offer incre: opportunit! for) 600 students at colleges in the United —— | American trade and investments. States and Canada ‘have entered the To coal one of the largest transat-| “At present the disturbed political { for prizes for the best essays lantic steamships takes five Lundred| condition in the Levant interferes! on “the world movement against men five da it can be refuelled! seriously with trade with that re-| alcohol,” the Intercollegiate Prohibi- with with oi] by twelve men in twelve’ gion although it will behoove Am-| tion association announced | today. hours, erican exporters to put forth all pos- Forty cash, prizes wit] be awarded. each quarter, which Smathers con: tended was stipulated in the lease. "The Standard Oil company argued that the lease, which provides for.a rental of $24,750,000 for the 99 years, did not say anything about quarterly pay- ments in advance and that Smathers was not entitled to rent until the end of each quarer. Mathematicians got busy and fig- ured that if the Standard OU could sustain its argument, Smathers would lose the equivalent of 6 per cent on $62,500, or 50 a year. Total loss of interest for 99 years was given as $6,500,000 apparently impressed ‘the In another part of his speech heby Mr, Lioyd George in his 5 jury. made the declaration: “Great Britain This is the fourth court to hear the] must pay America all her debts.” case. Supreme Court Justice Guy first decided for Smathers. pellate division decided for the Stand- Referring. ta the coalition govern- The ap-|ment which he had headed, he said: “We have stood for national untty— ard Oil, holding that the ambiguity 9f/for unity of the men of all creeds, the leases’ wording did not warrant] parties and sections. judgment for Smathers. “Our object first was the winning ‘The court of appeals sustained the} or the war and afterward extricating appeilate division and sent the case|tne country out of its after-war difti. ack for trial before Supreme Court] cates. Justice Wasservogel and a jury, which today wont against the Standard Oil. ‘There may be an appeal, LATE FLASHES NEW YORK, Oct. 25.—Lioyd Warren, head of the Beaux Arts School of Architecture, fell to death today from a window in his sixth floor apartment in West. Sixty- fourth street. He was 48 years old. CHICAGO, Oct. 25.—Willie Dal- ton, 17 years old, former bank mes- senger, laid aside his school books ence more today to face his third tria? for stealing $772,000 in bonds from the Northern Trust company in February, 1921. In the first two trials the juries disagreed. WASHINGTON, Oct. | 25- minous coal loadings on Monday as reported by the car service division of the American Railway association were greater than for any other day in several years. The output was Anthracite loaded amounted to 6,398 cars, an amount equal to the maximum output for any day this year. DETROIT, Oct. 25.—Organic un- j ion of the large Protestant denomi- nations is favored a resolution adopted by the Detrcvit Association BONAR LAW’S CABINET iS SWORN IN AT BUCKINGHAM New Government Functioning in Great |uxoxPons, ot, tee ane : 4 |resigned Lloyd George governmen;/ Britain Following Formal Ceremony Performed at Palace | this morning attended a privy council} jin Buckingham Palace to surrender} their seals and portfolios. . Whiston Spencer Churchill, former ‘ secretary for the colonies, owing to nila a ‘ z! Jitiness sent his senls by proxy. LONDON, Oct. 25.—(By The Associated Press.)—The| ‘Phe retiring ministers entered the| cabinet of Prime Mini rn in| Palace honors,” supplied | at Buckingham Palace this morning. +a result of the tak- bers ing of the oath of office the members of office began to func-| ,. ion as the new government immediately, at the palace. King Geo hey were re separately. t ' As the retiring ministers were sur- rendering their seals the new mints- ters began to arrive to be sworn in the privy council. = Wales attended the council meeting. eS ace ere Earning his living by playing a tin whistle, an Englishman is’ walking from London to Constantinople, a dis- tance of about 1,500 miles. —_—.—__-- No rent or taxes have to be paic of/for land in Lord ‘Howe Island, in the! pers South Pacific; it has an area of only fivy mles and a population of 120. / The Prince of of Congregational churches, in ses- sjon- here. The denominations men- tioned are the Methodist, Presbyte- rian, Baptist, Congregational, Pro- testamt Episcopal and Evangelical churches. MADISON, Wis., Oct. 25.—Modifi- cation of the Volstead prohibition act. to permit ight wines and bee: would. appeal to University of Wis- ¢onsin students, a~poll completed today by the Commerce Magazine, a student publication, indicates. Of questionnaire expressed themselves in favor of modification. Bibiana Sua Woman Mayor | She has been a public school physi medicine 1! clan and has practiced years. _ : re In the cemetery of a Pennsy town the following sign appears >nS are prohibited front picking iftowers from any. but their own graves.” AN} It was our policy then’ and it is our policy now,” Referring to the conservatives who broke away from the coalition and by their defeat of Austen Chamber- tain as conservative leader brought about the accession of Andrew Bonar Law to the premiership, he sald: “I can understand the revolt of the under-secretaries. They were subal- ternates who would like to be captains, and captains who would like to be made colonels or full generals.”” t another point he sald: “The country’s interest is the thing that matters at the beginning, and all the time. ‘The peril is not over. .Alone the conservative party cannot defend the great interests which are our com- * |mon concern.” “The conservatives may win the new victory. I doubt that, but, sup- posing they do, that is not the end of the war between the two great con- the men 54.0 per cent answering a | ticting ideas of the organization v- society. Our business is to see that this blunder shall not do hiss. to our country."* Unity of action between Great Bri- tain and the United States was urged “T am for the league of ni tions.” he said, “but until you get the United States and all the great nations’ of Europe as well as the srmll, the league will be crippled .and cannot serve its full purpose. “America and Great Britain must work together.” On the question of. German repara- tions he: said: ‘We shoull not atterapt to impose upon Germany any payment which is beyond her capacity Wuat’ is within lec capacity she ought to pay.” Ho expressed himsy:t with some def- (Continued on Page Eleven) OPEN HEALTH On December 4, 5, and 6, the Cas- Daily Tribune will stage a Pure Food Show, one-half of the proceeds ‘ of which will be turned over to the Women's Departmental club of Cas- per for charity work. . As it is the purpose of next Sun- day's Health Edition of the Casper Sunday Morning Tribune. to pave the pay for Casper's Health cam- paign so it is the object of the Cas- per Daily Tribune to furnish a prop- er ending to what promises to be {go to the Woman’s Departmental club for charity work. Port »Also Mentioned Details fur the coming health cam- the Public Market and to call upon in Nowe: White Forces | Escape From City | MOSCOW, Oct. —(By |The Associated Press.) ._ Charges that Vladivostok js being looted by the white guards of the Priamur goy- ernment with the assistance [et Japanese ' officers and soldier {made in a Joint note sent to Japa ithe Seviet government and thie , Bastern forces, contending tha: : ‘is due to the attitude of the Jas (which had given the white guards Opportunity to rob the city by evacy: {ting goods to foreign ports. The cor munication placed-all respe.sibilit on ! violationg and losses on che Japan ROKIO, Oct. 4—4By Tine A ated Press.)\—Through the «id of Japanese, General Dieterichs and his little band of ant!-Soviet supp. hi been enabled -to escape { Viadivostock, according to official + Ports from that “city. When evacuation of Viadlvostok Is completed ‘Thursday by the. Japenese, and the ity is taken over by the red there will be none of the whites anti-Soviets, present on which tho So- view troops can wreak venge: General Dieterichs and his ed forces kept the czarist flag flyig over Vladivostok in the face of Soviet proclamations and threats of dire pun ishment, A special dispatch to the Jiji Shin po from Nikolsk reports that a number jof whites haye been killed there by the reds, a ALLEGED AUTO THIEF , ARRESTED BY SHERIEE James Winfrey, colored, was ai ed Tuesday evening by the sh: office, charged with the theft of two new Goodyear automobile tires trom the garage of the Wyoming mobile company, at corner East Yellowstone and Kimball streets. Winfrey, it is alleged, attemp to sell the tires to the Schulte Hari- Ware company. He has been employ- ed as an extra night man at the Oldsmobile gara: i TRIBUNE'S BIG EDITION WILL CAMPAIGN HERE the greatest health campaign in the history of the entire state. The Tribune is calling upon all Casper merchants handling food Products in retail or wholesale to lend their support to Caspers! First Annual Pure Food Show. It will be necessary for all thoss desiring booths at the show to & in touch -with the Tribune at once and secure reservations for this the Greatest food event of: the yexr. And don't forget the dates—De cember 4, 5 and 6, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY LAST DAYS TO REGISTER | | istered | there are consequently many next day if they wish to hav wheh or where he or she registered before, ¢ The registration buoths ere vin the regular polling places throughout the elty. The complete/list for the vari- ous precincts is as follows: North Burlington precinct—At W. T: Davis store, 102 West J -street. North Casper precinct—At~ North Casper pctiool” house. Welson’s precinct—At North Casper Icé Cream Parlor, 560 East H street. | ‘Nichals precinct—At Nichols garage ast Casper precinct—At East Cas- hool house. street precinci—At Bik | pe Bik school house, street The last opportunity for registration for the | che voters tomorrow and Friday. Failure to re on the regular five days early this mon’ | The registration was exceedingly light on the gist th, will cost y: yoters who must vi ea vote. South Butler precinct—at 520 Divine ‘street. Kenwood precinct—At garage 1147 South Jackson street. Reservoir precinct—Aat school house. Mills precinct—At Milla and Baker school house. High — school high school. Jourgensen precinct—At John Jour- Sensen garage, 1104 South Davi. Reservoir precinct—At | City Hall precinet—At City Hail, Cors precinct—At gurage South Oak street t Casper precinnt—At West Cas shool howse, garage Court house precinct—At | FOR NOVEMBER ELECTIO general election in November will be give" er on these two days, if you hyve not res ou your vote. regular five days, October 10 to 14, and § sit the registration booths tomorrow or the Every person must r egister this year regardless court use. Fire Hall precinct—At Fire Hall om David street. Central school precinct—At Ce | school. Bryan 148 precinct—At | garas® North Lincoln street. Muddy precinct—At Muddy house. Teapot precinct—At pumping ** tion. South Salt Creek preci: a | theate | h Salt Creek precinct

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