Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 17, 1924, Page 5

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)

THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 1924 SUGAR TARIFF HEARING RO MG SUBSIDED, WASHIMGTON, Jan. 17.—The row in the tariff commission over the competency of Commissioner Glassie to participate in the sugar rate inquiry having subsided at} least temporarily, the commission proceeded with its hearings. outline of the complicated a tions on which it seeks light ~was made public by the commis- sion, which included many inquiries on cost of production, transporta- tion, capital investment and similar subjects. : The views of native Cuban sugar growers were laid before the com- mission by Senor Luis Perez, com- mercial attache of the Cuban em- bassy. who presented a brief for the su; manufacturers and Cane Growers’ association of Cuba, He asked that the commission, !n ascer- . taining production costs, consider all United States territory, includ- ing the Philippine islands. as a unit. In this event Cuban costs would be accepted as another unit and the basis for comparison reached. Senor Perez also suggested that the commission use the production year of 1922-23 as the basis for com- puting costs and urged that invested capital and transportation keting costs be not coi the computation of co: duction. ——.___ GRAIN TRADERS FIGHT SUBSIDY ON WHEAT which One of the first photos taken during making canals of Parisian streets, It of the city that KLAN TO FIGURE IN SENATE INVESTIGATION OF MAYFIELD ELECTION, PROBERS DECLARE By PAUL R. MALLON (United Press Staff Correspondent.) CHAPTER I. WASHINGTON, Jan. 17.—(United Press.)\—The Mayfield election in- vestigation before a special senate sub-committee is expected to center about the Ku Klux Kian. Political power of the order will the investigation committee, and the backers of George E. B. Peddy, who was defeated by Mayfield in the last senatorial race. ‘The Peddy men want to prove: 1—The klan furnished and’ spent great sums to insure victory for Mayfield in the first and second primaries before the election—sums they contend may reach things as a member o. tne senate interstate party candidates in the two pri maries which are provided for under Texas law. He formerly wai a member of the klan, although claims he resigned before he en- tered the race for the senatorship. Im that election Mayfield polled 264,260 130.744 for Peddy Peddy, Who is a 30-year-old attor- ney of Hi was sup- posed to be the ‘coalition, of dissatisfied publicans. . Even before the election, Peddy's friends set up a cry of “fraud” and brought the matter to court... NEW YORK, © \theso terms. amd Reine the very time. was made to induce-the secretary instead of Mayfield’s. Tha attorney general of the state the most recent flood typical of the entire section | peddy’s name could not be placed | is under water. upon the batlots. It was contended play. that no candidate could run in the | pathos, election unless he had first been ‘horror, ve, vention of the coalitionists. Asked Injunction. Peddy al: petition after the primaries stating you. Mayfield’s campaign claimed he had spent only a little more than $9,000 and filed that amount with the sec- retary of state, ‘Testifying in the injunction pro- ceedings Mayfield admitted that he had been a member of the klan, but that he had resigned soon after Joining it. All efforts ‘of Peddy to. get his name on the ballots failed and May- fie'd's name was the only one printed. Peddy stumped the state, urging that the voters write his jsomething that $100,000, while only $10,000 ts legal under Texas statutory restrictions. | 2—The election itself was “illegal,” because the name of Peddy falled to appear on the ballots which were handed to voters when they went to the polls. 38—The oath of the klan would not permit a member to carry out the drop of the And why? made the be the subject behind the extended | his oath as senator of the United | nome in The play has but one setting the Ribs dol a Mose lesion a iora tong ¢ 3 : ; adh re y prevent pneumoniain your inquiry ordered by the United | States. When the count was taken elec-|®™Uker of a steamer. Throug’ To Mothers: Musterole is now States senate into the election of Mayfield is preparing to enswer tion day, announcement was made | this flit two waver ng lovers, seek Adana milder forse for Senator Earle B. Mayfield as junior | fully all theso charges. that only 134,000 had done so. |'nE thelr way to tho cabins. ‘Comes! made in milder form fo: Senator from Texas. While the case fs only a little Peddy claims that he received more | drink-shatiered youth named Pri- Aslefor Children’s Musterole. These are opinions of senators in| more than a year old it has ali been | than this mumber, and a recount r woman of the world, fought out in the Texas courts and in special sults filed since the primaries. Mayfield himself is a calm, easy- going man of 42. He served his political apprenticeship in the Texas state senate and was iaver a mem- hen lof the state eolread commis- sion. He is a student of railway aes wees 10 ww wie will be demanded as the first step in the investigation, a CARD OF THANKS. I wish to thank tne friends for the'r kindness and sympathy shown me during my recent bereavement also for the beautiful fioral offer- ings. SMEs. MAX_T. HOFIUS. class.” first senses the BY ALICE ROHE (Written for the United Press) Then it baffles one bluff cleic, who sends them to their nature of its subject | “rewards,’ for precise description. Here is a play with the most su-|@nd cannot ‘iand.” : perb cast, the most perfectly chos-} To the serubwoman, who has en, the theater has seen in a long given up her son in youth so that And here is a play dealing |he may be a gentleman, (s entrust. | with no lees a sublect. than seers is r great infinite which, throug’ ie | Yout SL NRA ee ETE wieinent ‘Of sinpeigan 0d you 0} s'eht, no mystery play of less evasive sub- Heaven! that {s|ruled that under the existing law, |J°¢t has ever done. And of course it is a mystery | gested, Into its making has gone | Bound” | comedy, all the emotions and steered hi chosen as his party nominee in the moods. of everyday human life, pro-| roeks of the cheap sp’ primary, Peddy was not in the pri- jected in dramatic mary. He was nominated by a con-jfrom this mingling rises that in-|0ne can afford to miss. |tangible mist of the inexplicable— iso filed an injunction |footlights and does queer things to gant prais, so indeed does every It stirs your heart, for there/ delineat on — Charlott Garnville as js never a trace of maudlin senti-| Mrs. Cliv-den:Banks; Beryl Mercer, mentality. It stimulates your men-|——————____ tal functions and with its eyrie un-| canniness wrings your very soul, till, you sit weak and quivering at Because Sutton Vane has done the impossible. increditable creditable. He has excited the element cf mys- tery in the minds of the audience, without any projection of that idea from the actors themselves. n-Banks; a man. The request 6 have the scrub- woman shown the way to the steer- age brings from first definite knowledge of “strange- ‘his boat It ia the tormented Youth who Gove Casper Dally Cripune “OUTWARD BOUND” |S o22 aie “We are all dead,” he cries to the! steward. “Yes, but most of ‘em don’t find Jan. 17—{United Press}—To say ttht a play is orig.’ !t out so soon, sir,” is the reply, inal or interesting is realy to say Then the passengers, forgetful ot | feo) mothing at all fluminating. Yet; bow they got aboard, hazy as to jthe stage, in “Outward Bound,” by their destination, are told that they Sutton Vane presented by Wm. | are bound “For Heaven and Hell— | —_ Harris, Jr., at the Ritz, achieves aj it's ail the rame place.” success which commands the une, of Comes “The Great Examiner,” a ail but the young lovers, “the half ways who are suicides the, ed again the wasted, tormented she cries, “Ah, this is For a play depending upon sug- nyib’e things, “Outward attaned mile post in The author has so well phantom from the ualism and It ts a’ play no tenderness Ddluff,! the drar form. And super-intellectuality. Although Alfred Lunt's fine per- steals across the formance as Prior demands extrava: 9, Don’t Neglect a Cold Mothers, don’t let colds get under way; at the first cough or sniffle rub Mi on the throat and chest. Musterole is a pure, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. It draws out congestion, relieves soreness, docs all the work of the good old-fashioned mustard plaster in a gentler way, with- out the blister. final curtain. He has curate; a 35 & 65c in jars & tubes;hospital size, $3, bombastic business r the steward the carries but one answer. PORTLAND, Ore. Jan. 17.— (United Press.}—Representatives of ain trade here, the second wheat port in the United » have taken a firm stand Inst wheat subsidy plan of the American Wheat Growers Asso- ciated, Inc., in a brief drawn up and sanctioned by the Merchants Exchange association They oppose the plan on the grounds that: - 1—It is nothing more or less than arbitrary price fixing. 2.—It will not provide assurance of profit to the farmer. 3.—It will encourage production in a field where there already is over-production. 4.—It will provide an unfair Vantage to co-operative associations. ‘These arguments are made at a time ‘when ‘exporters ‘have been a =} m4 = =I i 1 doing little business, while ware- | one of the northwest's largest wheat |" crops, Normally Europe, one of the big- , houses in the interior are holding gest buyers in the ‘northwest, has taken little wheat this season be cause northwest farmers refuse to accept low prices offered. p‘By tar the biggest part of the “trade this year has been with the Orient. Count?’s Heir Now ) Plain Stable Boy At Country Club. LOS ANGELES, Cal.—(United Press).—If the horses at the M!d wick Country club seem to hold heads a little higher !t is not because of an inordinate pride of the blue blood coursing through their veins. Not at all. It is be- cause they know that the stable boy “who rubs them down, feeds them oats and gives them chum- my pats on the nose is none other than’ Count Danneskiold Samsoe, son of Count W. Samsoe and Countess Margaret. Samsoe. ‘The count, who on his mother’s aide ‘s a direct descendant of King Christian V. of Denmark, is work- ing a horseman because of his love. of horses and the thri’l he gets out of “being on his own.” His family in Denmark 18 of the landed class, with plenty of re- sources, some of which would be his if he so desired. The other stablemen call the count “Dan,” and think that he ig a good enough ecout to be classed as two-thirds American, — et Irrigation Fact — Finding Body to Launch Hearing SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Jan. 17.—irration fact finding commis mion delegated recently by Secre tary of the Interior Hubert Work to investigate governmental poficies and methods of rec'alming lands ill begin a series of public hear- ings on reclamation subjects here today. The majority of the commission reached Salt Lake City teday. It is announced that Julius Hi. Barnes, of. Duluth, Minn., pres!- dent of the United States Chamber of Commerce, and a member of the committee, will not be here. ; —— CARD OF THANKS. We wish to thank the friends and American Legioh, for thelr kind- ness and sympathy shown us dur- ing the death of Mathews Zipko. Also for the heautiful floral offer- ings. MATHEW SHULER MR. AND MRS.,C,. A. WILSON, ETT Have Partner-Employees Working for. You Over eight hundredemployees will work for you every day in the Burgess-Nash Store. Over 83¢ of them are already partners in the Burgess-Nash Company. Many of them own several shares. -This means that the big army of men and women work- ing in the Burgess-Nash store have more than employees’ interest. They have a partnership interest as well. Our employees became our par Profit-Sharing Preferred Shares, which pay 7 to 10 per cent With the shores of Hell in RT ee PAGE FIVE. the curate; Dudley Diggs, the Ex aminer; Margalo Gilmore and Leslie the scrubwoman; J. M. Kerrigan, the Howard, the young lovers. Give your family this unusual ity, flavored coffee — they cash be P but praise it. The moi roof car- ton keeps the flavor in and saves the money too! Your Grocer sells OLDEN Ora wae "COFFEE TRAIN SCHEDULES Chicago & Northwestun Westbound : Arrivna No. 603 2... 2:15 p. m. 2:35 p. m. _Easthound— Arrives Departs Sgr lane eg gi 4:45 p. m. 5:00 D. m. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy SALT CREEK BUSSES 3 Busses a Day Each Way LEAVE Recht speed Sek Le Leave Salt Creek jaggage an: ress 8 a.m. Called for and Delivered 8 a. m. 9 a.m Salt_ Creek Transportation 2 p.m Company Tel. 144 Bp. m. This “Employee-Partnership” arrangement makes the Bur- gess-Nash Company one of the strongest department. store firms in America: More business means more profits to the employees as'well as to the shareholders, Our “Employee-Partnership,” with the high merchandise principles that prevail in our store, assures continued ravid growth of this to increase. great business... Our volume will continue tners by buying Burgess-Nash on the Investment. They Know the shares are a good Investment undreds of Others Also Purchased These Shares ‘We are selling these Shares at the par value of $100 each, either for cash, or on partial pay- ments of $10 per month per share. ° THEY ARE TAX FREE— If you live-in Nebraska, you pay ° no city, county or state taxes on: money you invest in these shares. Also, the dividends on these shares are free from the present normal federal income taxes. THEY ARE PREFERRED— These shares are preferred, both as to dividends and as to assets. They receive dividends ahead of common shares at all times, \ RESERVATION BLANK ¢. Date. cooseoccevmrsecses 1924 The Burgess-Nash Company, Omaha, Nebraska. Kindly reserve for me.,.........Cumulative Profit-Sharing 7% to 10% Preferred Shares of the Burgess-Nash Company, which 1 desire to purchase at $100.00 per share. ‘Payment in full I will make i 7 a payment under your payment plan ODssrccveccserscncccccscveessl924 BURG In all its long history, the Burgess-Nash Company has never failed to pay regular dividends on all of its securities. THEY ARE CUMULATIVE— These ‘shares are cumulative. That means they must receive their dividends before one cent of dividends is paid on common shares. ; FILL OUT AND MAIL TODAY — ESS-NASH CoO. A Safe, Sound, Secure Investment, 7 to 10 Per Cent THEY ARE PARTICIPATING After these shares receive the regular 7 per cent dividend, they participate in additional profits of the store up to a total of 10 per cent on the investment after the’ common shares receive 7 per cent. #4 Omaha, Nebraska “ONE OF AMERICA’S GREAT STORES” m1 GOLDEN GIFT SS: q ; C2) 6

Other pages from this issue: