Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 30, 1923, Page 6

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PAGE SIX THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE tes government and the Canad- Post. ian government have negotiated a No treaty designed to prevent the pur- it of the fish during the spawn- season by forbidding the Iand- of the catch at American or Canadian ports. The United States senate insisted upon the incorpora- g it applica-| Is of other parts Great Britain The Canadian mister of marine and fisheries signed it for Canada, and the Brit- sh ambassador did not. Now Aus- ralia and New Zealand and all the ain Publ aiiding une Bu tion of a clause mak’ ble to “the nati f MEMBEF Asso elr p i her rest want to know if Canada, with out an approving signature fr imperial government, can bind nd deliver other parts of the em- ire. That is not likely. | W. McKenzie King, Canada’s ul- tra-liberal premier, is very much in politi debt of thu extreme} i ists of French Canada, who ke no secret of their desire for complete severance of political} nds with the United Kingdom.j e halibut treaty is the first docu-| of international importance the dominion hasbeen per-} to sign without the e British \ Associated Press uu of Aud't Bu n (A. B. ¢ SUBSCRIPTION RATE rid wonderir By Carrier or By Mail ed as part of ar pixe $2.00 the basis sor Canadia nee The next imperial conference promises to be a li Beam | i | 1,000,000 CHILD WORKERS The United States department of g a concise | labor con the present time. It shows that 1,- 000,000 children beween 10 and 16 years of age—more than a third | | of these are less than 14 years old were employed in gainful occupa- in January, 1920, the time of the latest census. In the summer months the figures are higher. The number of children so em- let ths | carrie: E CASI TRIBUNE'S pte ba ployed today, the department esti- Irrigat oject west of Casper | mates, would be still larger, because . 1 completed at || the 1920 figurs were obtained at the beginning of an industrial de- lete and acientific zoning pression and in a period during which the federal child labor tax law—since declared invalid—was in effect. Both those factors di aged employment of More than a million children at work in gainful occupations means more than a million children depriv- ed of their rightful share of educa- tion, recreation and health. Scat ies IN DEBT FOR A CAR A business writer says that re our- of the established |) as planned to Completion Scenic Route boulev: by the cou Garden Cri Natrona county and more highways for Wyoming. More equitable freight rates for shippers of the Rocky Mountain region and more frequent train service for Casper. merchants have been deterred| >; MAKE USE OF THE TIDE | from stocking up as usual “by their} There is no doubt today that the| knowledge of the obligations that) United States is in the full tide of | many of their best customers have return to maxim’ prosperity. A|assumed in order to buy the auto- building boom is in progress|mobiles that they use.” throughout the country. Wages| Buying cars on time has been en- ed so m are | CC ch that it is said to} re is|have become a general _ practice.| a demand for all sorts of goods and| And once in possession of a car, the money is gencrally available to pay | ®verage owner will deprive himself for ther tlook is excellent. | of almost anything else rather than But three years ago we were en-| give up his car. foying a sim 0 ion. And in| It is a curious situation, which the meantime business. reached|may have an important bearing on depths of depression at least equal)}the American business situation. to the heights of prosperity. At|Here is one great reason why the one period in the interim nearly |automobile industry has made 80 5,000,000 persons were out of em-|fine 2 record in recent months—its| ployment. There was severe suf-|Javish extension of credit. And i fering among the poor and improvi-|™may prove to have made this record dent. |and given this credit at the expense It is unfortunate, but probably|of the other industries. true, that the tide of prosperity] An obvious recourse of the mak- again l ebb. It has flowed and|ers and sellers of other forms of} ebbed through all the years of our| merchandise is to give more credit} history; Of cou “should not|themselves. But that is a very] If we had su intelligence | dubious solution. and the proper or — | bridge the deprssior | well. Perhaps some have. But there is no re lieve tl we can do so as yet. That being the case, we must ad- mit the probability of a rainy day | “USEFUL WOMEN” Innumerable long-felt wants are to be supplied by the “Useful wom- en” organized in England by a Manchester lady. Here are some of Mickev be Casper Daily Cribune (Himself) McGuire- —By Fontaine sid : } | | | | LIVE NEWS from WYOMING Items and Articles About Men and Events Throughout the State Bank May Pay Out WHEATLAND, Wyo., April 30. — A. Elliott was appointed recetver for the Platte County State Bank by| Judge William A. Riner at the open- ing of the district court sessions here. S. Agnew, Dr. F. G. Huffman and county treasurer Gale A. Lewis were selected at a meeting called for that purpose to act as a committee in the interests of the depositors of the recently closed Platte County State Bank. Judge Riner, it is understoot, will instruct the receiver to work with the members of the committee, who will in effect act in the capacity of a board of directors. In the handling of no bank failure in the west is more being done to protect the depositors than in the present instance. Claims are still made that with careful handlirmg, the assets of the defunct bank shou!d be sufficient ‘to pay out the depositors to the last ing {n this direction. The appointment of this committee, the members of which are among the best business men of the community, is regarded as more favorable tor in the a stil working out of a 100 per cent rep me ti ban detalles Bootlegger Seized LUSK, Wyo. April 30.—Once more the hand of the law took its course when three alleged bootleggers were some time in the future. We will] the things, as yet done poorly or not always remain on the heights.|not done at all, which the women It is common ser therefore, for| will attend t Provide wives for bachelors and conversational companions for eld-| erly gentlemen, give brides advice| about their trousseaus, “fillens” for hostesses at dinner parties, mend bachelors’ clothes and darn their socks, look after children act as guides to country visitors, exercise dogs, look for missing rel- atives, do family shopping, find houses or lodgings, teach langauges, read books, arrange tours and do the packing. Evidently the world 1s still full of new business opportunities, and the economic organization of so0- ciety has hardly begun. Just wait until the business women have h: a free hand for a f rat ——_ d make econo » may come. Each in- n do so by the exercise e self-denial for the mp- ch will put part of pres- ncome into ings banks y bonds, which are almost pay more than 4 be much less 2 of prosperity the ind misery ebb purchase | vers, or patron- pictures and similar} These things are} The working | s much righ she can nd more than some. | they do buy elp maintain prosper- fen | Russia hes not been asked to the second Lausanne conference, and she is peevish about it. If Ri would learn to be a good little and not lie down on the floor scream ever. » is aske very e yea to them that there] en extravagance and isa patl stability i hose who “A are v s of pros perity such If Mount Lassen d stop appro “Irre- it e to change 1 1 be ts name re to erupting, | priat con WHAT IS THE BRITISH E _ Is the 1 ¥ empire, or t Representative Porter’s attempts tions” t rea to snub Sir Robert Cecil must be sional conferer of the ithe best laugh the Englishman ha. of the var lominions be had in his country the seas” have led very 1 eo- | —— ple to believe it an empire, and| the world w hened that] conviction ted States | senate has raised the question in al way that seems to require a defi- nite answer, i maybe it isn’t an empire | The Hal t responsible In t t fish er United furnish | nabbed. The arrests took place at an Tassell and were made by Dep- y United States Marshal R. J. Al }len, The men who were taken up on charge are: Frank Frees, Sam Erlewine and Charles C. All three were arraigned niel FE. Goddard, issioner and after were boun Williams. before |p: | comm! a hearing ict court, the next | which will ‘May 14. a | terms Big Crops Expected WHEATLAND, Wyo., April 30. — | With sufficient moisture now provid. ed to start the crops off in fine shape, nd of more than 4 irrigation water, a record the as: sur prospects mal t for |year were never cent, and there {s a very hopeful feel-| United States | over to the United States of be held in Cheyenne on farming better than at this Addition to “Inn” RIVERTON, Wyo., April 30.— The | work on the big addition to the new |'Two-Gwo-Tee Inn at Brooks Lake will start in earnest this weelo, when a crew of men will get the logs which have already been cut, hau! them to | the hotel and commence putting them in place. The new addition will oc- commodate about fifty more people than the hotel did last summer. It | 4s expected to take care of the over- run of tourists by erection of a lot of tents Hunter Sets Record KEMMERER, Wyo, April 30, — Predatory Animal Hunter John A. Galloway of the Hamsfork district, |has hung up a high record to look at in the future. During the month of March when his work was in full swing, he trapped and took 24 coyotes in his territory. Three of these pests are at the Wade ranch, where he went Monday to finish up the month's work. These he had left until he could go down and get them. The other hidés have been shipped in to c | | Wrong Body Buried | GILLETTE, Wyo., April 30.—ail- lette was visited by a representative of the United States Graves Registra- tion department who Informed Mr. and H. J, Gook, parents of Cary J.| Cook, world war veteran, who was killed at Chateau Thierry, that the body buried in the local cemetery last ear {s not that of their son but is! that of another deceased soldier nam- ed Smith. The mistake occurred in| France when the bodies were remov- ed from the temporary graves of the | battlefield to be transferred to the regular French cemeteries. Only re- | cently was the error ¢iscovered. Cook's body, which was labeled “Smith,” was found to have papers which revealed his real identity. A further verification showed that the so-called Smith measured 5 feet 11% | inches in height, whereas the meas: | urements correspond with the sery-| ice records of Cook. The real Smith measured only 5% feet, Cook's body | arrived from Chicago and will oc- cupy the grave which was originally | intended for him. The body of tho other veteran will be sent to Omaha far further disposition, a| Moment Counts DURANT CARS | soon submit to an operation to secure Homesteader Dead Douglas Sells Bonds DOUGLAS, Wyo., April 30.— The Douglas water bonds that the voters are called upon to favur at the spe- cial election on May 22 were offered to representatives of a numbgr of bond houses and the bids offered show that the credit of the town is good and that municipal bonds are in Gemand. ‘The bond house of Sidlo, Simon, Fels and company of Denver, represented by J. B, McCabe, was the successful bidder, their bid of 5% per cent and a primeum of $875 being accepted. Funds wilt be used to purchase ex- GILLETTH, Wyo. April 30.—Jul- {us Bogner, 23 years old, a homestead- er living sixty miles south of Gillette was found dead in hie bed by a neigh- bor who had gone to the Bogner place to inquire after the state of Bogrier's health, On Monday of last week, Mr, Bog- ner waa at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Date Sievers to whom the complained that he was suffering’ with severe pains in his side. He thought he had appendicitis and stated he woould relief. Against the wishes of his thts between this cil friends Mr. Bogner went to his home ena tnetoaees and the Green Valley spring and to and was never seen again alive. He] isting water rights between this city had Deen assisting William O'Neil | to this city to connect with the pres- MONDAY, APRIL 30, 1923. Lander Beet Test LANDER, Wyo., April 30—Through Ube efforts of Frank S. Brower in making a personal canvass of the farmers of the immediate vicinity df Lander, about ei¢hty acres of sugar seven or eight of these farmers for beets have been promised by soméd this year's planting. Brower himself will plant fifteen acres, the State Training Schol teh acres, Orin Moyers five to ten acres, Elmer Iiams twenty acres, Bert Iiams ten acres, I.H. Freese ten acres, EA Stelzner ten acres. In addition to these men there are several other farmers who are interested and ac- cording to Mr. Brower the acreage can probably be brought to 100 acres which will prove a good test crop for | taling above $5,000. | Should grow less for the individual | for each. Has Built of rich experience, are not only wonderfully depend- able but are so designed that whatever may happen to them can be fixed and their use re- stored in less time than ever before possible. * £72 TOWER'S~” FISH BRAND SLICKER It's the Patented Features 1 she Special Materials ent Workmanship sharmohe #e Big, Difference DEALERS EVERYWHERE “OWER’S: ANTOWER CO. ~ | efor | 775 BRAY CASPER PRICES Standard touring - Standard roadster - Business coupe ~~ pny BOSTON For Sale |} At One-Third Value Concrete brick plant earn- ing $100 per day. Small cash payment will handle, 2061 E. Second St. THE YELLOWSTONE MOTOR SALES | Second and Yellowstone Phone 1381 J ener ene I a this year. “H-Y” Boys Meet while the latter was in Gillette, ent system, Property owners only will be allowed to vote this election. Need Paved Streets —- CHEYENND, Wyo. April 23.— That Cheyenne is the only state cap!- tal with unpaved etrects, was a state- ment made at a dinner attended by members of the chamber of com- merce, at which the impending street paving here was discussed and ap- proved. Patents Numerous WHEATLAND, Wyo., April 30. — Two hundred and fifty-two home- steads have been patented and enter- ed upon the tax rolls of Platte coun- ty the past year. These add a quar- ter million dollars to the taxable val- uation of the county and including school levies bring in new moneys to- Tho state and county taxes alone in this newly en- tered property, approximate $3,500. The bringing in of added taxabd! values and the settlement of the coun- ty by more people constantly divides the tax burden in smaller portions and with care in the management of the county’s business, the tax burden CHEYENNE, Wyo., April 28.—One hundred and fifty youths from south: ern Wyoming towns are attending a “Hi Y¥" conference hen. which opened Friday evening and will be concluded Sunday. ———— : AUCTION. Don't forget the auction sale Tuee- days and Fridays at 2p. m. We have nice lot of goods to sell next Tues- Jewelry and watch repatring by ex-| day We aiso will sell anything you pert watchman; all work guaranteec. 8. Ash. Phone 1660. City Furniture Casper Jewelery Mfg. O- SBI4 Co. eee ent from this tima forward. In other words, the more people there are in the county to shoulder the tax bur- den, the less that burden will become Pian New Building CHEYENNE, Wyo., April 28.—The Cheyenne Chamber of Commerce has appointed a committee to obtain tentative plans for a chamber buili- ing that shall combine club rooms with an auditortum and several floors of office buildings. A six-story struc- ture, to stand on the site of the pres- ent chamber building, probably wi! be recommended. To make the structure {n part an office building, is considered because of the scarcity FOR MILADY’S TOILET We're especially proud of our perfume department the home of rare perfumes as well as all the popular powders, cold n the city of office rooms, a situa- creams, etc. tion that has caused several large i Sil Goatersa tial obutantgintaatotoy The Wyoming Drug and Supply Co. ing headquarters here to locate head: Second and Wolcott Phone 51W quarters in other towns. TAKE A LOOK BUTLER HEIGHTS And you will decide to own your home there. An improved ad- dition with graded streets, sidewalks, gas, water.’ Good homes already building. Only one block from city school, with a beau- tiful view of the city and mountains. We are on the very edge of the best and fastest growing section of the city. These lots sold on easy terms without interest. Besides, we help you to build. Come, let us show ing fast. Mountain Realty & Title Corp. 306 O-S Building—Phone 564-W M. Elma Butler-Cromer, Pres. C. W. Mapes, Sales Mer. you these lots while they last. They are go- | Mr.BusinessMan A saving of tim> means money. Higher efficiency means money. Health wealth. Hill Crest Water MEANS PURE WATER A special cooler in your office means a small cost offset by the above good reasons, Phone 1151 Quick as a Jiffy. means

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