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PAGE SIX. THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE Tribune issued ‘unday Morn- at Casper, is, Trib. opposite Postoffice. The Casper Da (Wyoming), Post- office a ass Matter, No 15 and 16 Connect- Business Telephone h Telephone Exchan ing All Departme’ BATTON FAitor CHAF Presi MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ss is exclusively entitled to for .publication of eWS cr this paper and the local news published herein. w. and The Assoc all also Advertising Hepreeentatives. prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Bi Il; 286 Fitth Jlobe Bldg... Bos- , Sharon B+ ontgamery St., San ¥ram- cisce, Cal. Copies of the Datly Trib- une are on file in ‘ew York, Chi go, Boston an @o of “a and visitors are ome Member of Aud't Burean of Circulation (A. B. ©.) Member of the Associated Prees SUBSCRIPTION RATES y and Sunday nday Only --- 2.50 Six Mont yy and Sunday... 4.50 fonths, Daily and Sunday 2.25 and Sunday -- .75 turn guarantees about the evacua- tion of her territory as binding and| | specific as possible. There can be! :|mo settlement without such an ex-| \change of guarantees. There can be| [no justice done, and no peace. | | “M. Poincare’s demand for sur-| |render without any guarantees is! jan unreasonable demand. It should| | be clearly condemned by all fair- |minded people. For there is noth-| ing in M. Poincare’s record, nothing | in the leng series of his hate-revok-| |ing speeches, to justify any con-! | fidence in his willingness to deal! reasonably th Germany if he! , does not have to. It is therefore in} ithe interest of the whole civilized! | world that the ending of the pas-| \nive resistance should be accom- | panied on the German side by guar-! lantees of payment and on the |French side by guarantees of eva- | cuation. “Nobody is asking France to surrender any of her legitimate rights. France is being asked simply | to recognize the fact that the oc cupation of foreign territory is a Seontinuing menace to the peace of | Europe, and to say in some definite France proposes to retire her sol- diers. For if, as French spokesmen insistently arfd indignantly assert, Neighborhood News— 32.00 Way how, when and on what terms, ~ 05| France does not wish to annex Ger-| nd Sunday- only ix Mor and Sunday 0 hree Months, Dally and Sunday 2.25 Ome Month, Daily and Sunday... .78 All subscriptions must be paid ip advance and the Daily Tripune will ‘e delivery after subscription In arrears. 2.50 not in: hecomea one month Kick If You Don't Get Your Tribrne Call 15 or 16 any 6:00 and $ o'clock p. m receive your Tribune. be delivered to you by ® renger. Make it your duty to Tribune kr m ————$——__—_——_—, a> obs bo ees THE CASPER TRIBUNE'S PROGRAM Irrigation project weet of Casper to be authorized and completed at once. ‘A complete and scientific zoning stem for the city of Casper. A comprehentive mun: school recreation park # cluding swimming pools for the of Casper. mpletion of the established Scenic Route boulevard as planned by the cou commissioners to Garden Creek Falls and return. Better roads for Natrona county and more highways for Wyoming. More equitable freight rates for shippers of the Rocky Mountain region and more frequent train time between | - THE pal and t writer.” so |™man territory, then France should have no trouble in stating what mean to annex, she cannot occupy | lindefinitely. For an indefinite oc- |cupation is not very different from |permanent occupation, and manent occupation is another name |for annexation. — The Chicago Tribune. per- TYPEWRITER’S BIRTHDAY Ilion, New York, will celebrate in |September, the fiftieth anniversary \of the appearance of a successful | typewriter. It was in ion in 1873 that the first typewriter was manu factured for commercial sale. In preparation for the observance of the semicentennial the Herkimer County Historical Scietoy has pub- lished an interesting and well il- lustrated “Story of the Type- 50th Memories of 2 great many people now living go back to the days when cerefully trained clerks, like Sir Joseph Porter in “copied all the letters in a big round hand.” The typewriter is a relatively new addition to business jend professional facilities. Yet the [ service for Casper ens fare conceptions of a writing ma- TSS eee MR. HUGHES AND MR. POINCARE «For the third time the German government has adopted the Hughes plan for handling the repe- ration question. For the third time the German offer has been re- jected by M. Poincare even before its contents had been published. It is time for Mr. Hughes to decide whether he will use the influence of the United States in order to secure some “consideration from France for the plan he gested “M. Poincare thinks th note is ‘ridicuious.’ 1 as if Mr. Hughes were entitled to know why a note based on his own plan is ridiculous. It would seem as if rman know wherein his plan is ridiculous, to know even what plan M. Poin- care has in mind which is less ridiculous. For whoile while there may be some reason of high policy why the French Premier should treat with scorn everything that emanates from Germany, the rea- { son does not apply to the United * States of America ficiently ica'a debtor, morally and financially, to treat an Amer- ican proposal with 4% France has asked and has received 3 charity from this country in respect tto the default on her own debts. 1 Her politicans might at least in jface of a disinterested proposal } practice courtesy in return. : “Of course if M. Poincare were primarily interested in a settlement he would put his emphasis on the economic facts, the sums to be paid, the methods of payments, the nature of the securities, and so forth. Being interested primarily in vindicating his policy, he de- mands the abandonment of passive resistance. He demands the legaliza- tion of an invasion which most students of the treaty regard as) a breach of the treaty. He demands that Germany should surrender to him and his generals uncondition- > ally do after he has received the sur- refuses to state how the Ruhr. what he will do “ He refuses to state h wha satisfy him. He refuses to give guarantees of any to state ) the Ruhr. * kind that, were she would tary justice. , and there is ng it, that Germany is against ntces of mercy, guarantées possible Mr. Hughes were entitled to! France is suf-) some respect.| at “He refuses to state what he will He| Germany to throw | chine and the first attempts to de-| vise one that would work were made nearly two centuries ago. The first record of an effort to build a typewriter is found in the British Patent Office, dated the year 1714. To Henry Mill, an Eng- glish engineer. a patent was granted by Queen Anne for “an artificial machine for the impres sing or transcribing of letters singly or progressively one after another as in writing.” But Mr. Mill apparently did not succeed in making satisfactory typewriters, though he seems to have been the first man to conceive a typewriter The first American patent issued in 1829 to William A. Burt of Detroit, but it was lost in the Patent Office fire of 1836. In 1833 Zavier Projean of Marseilles built a machine in whieh the type bars struck downward as in some pres- ent day typewriters. There were many other patents in the next thirty years, but credit for the first successful machine to placed no the market is due to was sylvania. Sholes was a journalist and politician, but possessed an imaginative mind with a mechanical bent. It was his machine, which Carlos Glidden and Samuel W. Soule helped develop, that built for general sale at Ilion. TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES 1816—French frigate Medusa wrecked off Cape Finisterre, with loss of nearly 400 lives. 1827—Captain Parry reached spot 485 miles from North Pole, and obtained reward of $25,000 trom British government. 1848 —- The Barnburners as- sembled a Democratic national! con- vention at Utica, and nominated Martin Van Buren for the presi- dency. 1855—-Samuel Sumner Wilde, last survivor of the Hartford con- vention, died in Boston. Born Taunton, Mass., Feb..5, 1771 1870——-Ground was broken for | the Atlantic and Lake Erie railroad |at New Lexington, O. 1894—The anti-cigurette law was declared unconstitutional by |the Ohio supreme court. 1908—-Town of Three Riv Quebec, almost destroyed by fire. 1913-—-Celebration of the semi- |centennial of the battle of Gettys- burg begun on the historic bhattle- ground. 1919.—Nearly 200 lives lost in a |tornado at Fergus Falls, Minn. | ONE YEAR AGO TODAY Japan approved the Yap treaty |with the United States Field Marshal Sir Henry H. W on assassinated in London ~-23484 345 345345 90$ OcOW “Pinafore,” |. be} Latham Sholes, a native of Penn-| was) at! * 4.00 | her intentions are. If she does not! | Ue Casper Harp Trivune “@ NERY one Uv TH’ FELLERS WoT OWNS THESE DOGS 1S PAYIN’ Mé T' TAKE CARE uv EM WHILE Hels AWAY FR TH SUMMAR Mr “d Mas PH biP —By Fontaine Fox Sones CAME Home THE OTHER DAY ‘To FIND THAT THEIR SON HAD sen sy EMBARKED IN THE BoARDING KENNEL BUSINESS. | Shoots Bruin in Yard Ear! Crouch that it is all in the hills y Tuesday morning @ discovered a big around the back his ranch ne on after bear when he black by Fork. Grabbing his rifle, Mr. Crouch cautiously cpened the door and took a shot at bruin, who fell dead within ten feet of the house. It is not often that one can find a |bear so accommodating, but perhaps he did not know that Crouch lived in that particular house, and that Earl is one of the best marksmen in the country pe EE | Veteran Suicides | GOSHEN, vy C. Pedersen, |near_V. snoopir , June 22.—Jeppie had a homestead cide at Scotteblufg, by hanging. His|part of Sweetwater county, at Burnt- feless body was discovered swing- ing at the end of a short rope that he had fastened-to a girder of the grandstand in the baseball park at the Hluffts Pedersen was nearly 30 years old was an overseas veteran and leaves a wife and two children in Gorhen by Wilcox & Co, Scottsblutt under- takers, they having prepared the body for burial after the Scottsbluff county coroner bad decided no in- quest was necessary. es Cabins Looted GREEN RIVER, Wyo., June 22.— |John Ostrom, manager of the shale and petroleum properties in Telephone feanon, returned to his cabin and jfound that about, $200 worth of cloth- ling and other property had been | stolen, James Dallas, who lives at Antelope, Utah, upon returning to a pin owned by him in the s.uthwest ifork, found many articles missing, the |doors broken down and another door jana two window sashes removed Theae are rather uncommon occur+ rences, as the rule of the range is to use such houses and leave them in the condition in which they were found. {strangers understanding that they regraded, This work is 24 miles west of Cheyenn Force Tree Razing SHERIDAN, Wyo., June 22.—Dis- cussion of ways and meana to force property owners to either cut down or prop trees with loose, overhanging branches, or trees rotted from disease or age, which endanger public safe’ occupied the attention of the city commissioners at a special meeting of the elty council Saturday morning. This came as a direct result of Fri- day night's storm in which many large branches and even several full- grown trees were blown down by the high wing, A large cottonwood tn the Caldwell yard on Alger street blew down dur- ing the storm, breaking off a portion of the cornice of the house. On TIill- nols, a great limb from one of the big trees was blown across the trolley wire, hulding up two street cars until it could be removed by street crews. Tornado Wreaks > Damage CODY, Wyo., June 22.— Southfork was visited by a young tornado, pos- sibly the first which has ever per- lor Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Wagoner was almont demolished and several of its occupants severely injured as @ result of the young twister. ‘The roof of the Wagener home-was torn off and a falling timber struck Mrs. Wagoner on the head causing a@ very serious wound, the extent of which has not_as yet been fu'ly de- termined. Mr. Wagoner and son Carl jalso suffered minor injuries. _——— » Many Hoboes Reported CHEYENNB, Wyo. June 22.— Motorists arriving here over the Lin- coln highway, from both east and west, report the highway thronged with pedestrians, the majority of them of the “hobo” travelers ‘to give them a “lift.” In- cluded among the marchers are many women who claim to be walking from ment. | School Funds Alloted CHEYENNE, Wyo., June 22.—Two hundred and forty-eight thousand dol- {tars has been appropriated for the | Cheyenne cchools during the coming |year. This is in addition to funds that will be recelved from the state and is the largest budget in the town's type, who importune | town to town in search of employ-| FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 1923. | Will Attend Celebration | CHEYENNE, Wyo. June “22— 4 large delegation of Cheyenne people | will go to Laramie July 4 and 5 to at. |tend a “wild west” celebration which lis to be held there, The majority of |the Cheyenneites will make the trip by automobile over the Lincoln high. |way, which is in excelent condition. ———_—_—_ } Fourteen new designa chests just Home| tains. RichMilk, Malted Grain Extractin Pow- Tabletforms. formed in this sectior 1 the home buy any coffee by name CWe' recommend Batter Wat) Buy a trade-marked naranteed money hack brand BA ot ep Tastes et Ore sane withthe feeder Butler Nat label "Bulk Coffee means any coffee without ‘an identity in open bins where the coffee . loses its fragrance and strength and ‘takes on dampness and weight 3 4a North |county. Mrs. Pedereen was notified /are welcome when they do not molest the belonging: Paving Blocks Road CHEYENNE, Wyo., June 21.—The Lincoln highway has been blocked at Cheyenne's west gate fur 14 days be cause of improvements to a fifty-foot section of the road at the point where it passes beneath the Colorado &@ Southern tracks. The subway has deen paved with concrete. The block: ade made a rough detour of about half a mile necessary. | Work is progressing rapidly on the two miles of the highway between this city and iaramio which is being Armours | STAR BACON } | | | | “Meat for Health Week” | June 25 to 30 Meat should be prami- nent in your jear-’round diet, for health, vigor and general well-being. — —— Star Delicious in Flavor Other Feods With Armour's Basen itself, Star Bacon adds a flavor to other foods. Serve, for instance, in these ways —bacon gmelette, bacon and beans, liver and bacon, bacon and hominy, bacon and spinach. Also save the drippings for flavor- ing. Star flavor is so tempting you'll enjoy it in many combinations. ARMOUR &= COMPANY. CHICAGO GUANO: DeLici ovs™ iN AGHER ( PAATON JUST RECEIVED Two Carloads Hudsons and Essex WE HAVE A FEW MODELS FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Come and Look Them Over—Prices Are Right Making These Cars Attractive Second and Yellowstone TO THE PUBLIC Owing to the large increase in our business, we are compelled to notify our customers, that beginning on the first day of July, we will deliver our water in case lots of six (6) bottles only (3 gallons) or in five (5) gallon con- tainers. Any one wishing it in smaller amounts, can ob- tain same by calling at our station in rear of 505 East Sec- ond. Phone us at 1151 when you are ready for another case. Hill Crest Water Company PHONE 1151