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8 PAGE TW Che Casper Da FE EXISTED. ON EARTH FOR GREAT PERIOD Deep Sea Creature Was hension at the state department here | dentiy a thing of the past. H. 500 Milli Saturday. Latest developments in] On the other hand there appears to * ere Muon the Chinese situation include: be u certain ferment in the proy-|* Torrid Heat. Weare Ago 1.—Americans are leaving Canton, | inces Sag 5 where civil war is momentarily ex-| Students strikes and démonstra ; : 1 eS pected between Yunnanese and Can-| tions are reported to have ‘occurred | 1,1, par ‘peepee Raat) tonese troop: 1K to ¢ pra 10ug AEN EL ot dl hae aid rah rlacpipepelcodal By EDNA MARSHALL. rtrd Lae Poot cl SAW He ee otted en without) “WASHINGTON, June 8. — ‘The | (Copyright, 1926, Consolidated Press | Prt : y cn regres He hha theless is giv. | Heat Wave will continue to burn the ation.) | ; wy ta Autharltled vad best, | United States east of the Rockles, NEW RK, June &.—Further Ag from Shanghal have | ing concern to authorities and bust: | aving heavy tolls of ilfe and crops light on ti sti f ual | arrived at Amoy and are precipitat-| ness men here, since it is felt the ? : ght on the question of the actual t precly over the week end, but probably etigth of Ub te haw Gstacka soe thforeign boycotts and strikes, | mindr outbreaks may develop into| {it preak between’ Monday and the earth nay it from a recent Consul Weber more dangerous manifestations with | weather Bureau predicted Saturday. expedition of éxplorers headed lence of alleged communist | Possible damage to forelgn life and Wouter Bureau predicted today, Dr. Cheste associate ct ympath as been found among | Property Moderate temperatures for | the ator ine geology depart- | Cantonese troops, Shanghai strikers 3 he Ey | north Atlantic states and the upper ment of t n Museum of] and the army of the “Christian Gen-| PEKING, June 8.—In a second! srississipp! and lower Missourl val- Natural H the depths of} eral” eng Yu Helang in the north, | Note, conciliatory in tone, the joint | javg starting Monday, for the mid: thas ‘ Satcy s foreign powers haye infornied the sal} ; u 4,—TWwo additional American war | (0 / 7s BER. : dle Atlantic states and those north a ships ar ute to Shanghat and | Chinese afr a: ie shah? a ke Ohio river either Monday or more are on the wa in Pe mS enenepet 6 and for states south of the stile’ Sa Minteter John A. Van Mmdatues stigate the recent trouble there. or ‘Wednesday. are Ke about a}ray left Washington today for cates “ ake ae cha everd promised in the official outlook, , Dr. Reeds came | } lal police have been instructed not)” inhe scorching “Bermuda high,” a tail of a trilo- e United States is consider | t? use arms unless in Imminent dan: | ern for the condition which results ure which Dr. | ing call with other powers a uni- | 8°": in a visit of tropical heat to the na- ed 600 zpiilion {ication conference’ of different Chi- A SRS ae TES tion will disintegrate slowly before added proof | nese factions if Peking next fall in the attack of the cool zephyrs from d progressed | connection with the proposed Chi the southwest, officials’ sald.” ‘The and intricate | nese customs conference. Bermuda High” is high barometric further Aiscov-| Great Britain and other interest- pressure which this week has com- expected to be rn ‘| ed nations are also »studying posst- pletely blanketed the country east be possible to com: | bilities of a unification conference, of the Rockies, causing a great in- put ; efore that life in! Its] though formal negotiations have not flux of heated alr from the tropics. simplest had {ts inception yet been launche When the mercury touched 99 de- Dr, Reeds and his party, includ grees in official thermometers here ng Horace D, Ashton, Merle Lavoy SHANGHAI this afternoon, it set a record for Major E. T. Brown and Gordon a continued hot weather, this mark I A y. WASHINGTON, June &.—Hawali| having been reached for four days in tinhelleneoue ed, fifty thousand work ot be defended against attack |in succession. The capital with panty | core hes se | bo are how out on generallerom hostile sea force without more | Baltimore, Philadelphia and Lynch- a ¢ eam, through caverns, | strike and this state may continue | troops and alr crate, Major General | DUrs, Va. set new high marks for tastinattyrapabea _ nnienued *a)-! for months, John L. Hines, chief of Staff,. indi- son at 100 degrees each on siisallyehabed Wate reds Otherwise the general situation in| cated today in the first official ¢ 423 i x cara Bed : Was apparen wel] in hand, | jque of the recent Pacific joint ma The weather bureau reports that ! : mia é -the some worry about | euvers of whick he was an ump! crops are withering all over the world and a silent ae - f at rn \the situation developing in the prov “A commander (of the Hawailan | Country and that damage so far in- S usowaneeee ne | inces garrison) must not only have enough | flicted upon both major ang minor The adventure-seeki public | 4 Shanghai defense now conan troops to hold the essential positions | Crops can be repaired fully by obey allowed to penetrate the endless ca.| lf # total of 5,000 volunteers and/ang to man his armament," Hines |The wheat and oat crops are partic: ad if , a a said, “but he must. have enough |Ularly hard hit. The “warm spell teuibies? aa ie bathe Kies LS v4 t O 1 troops left to form an adequate re-|!8 estimated to have cost the eine \ t i t t| serve. In this instance thb com-|¢r® many millions of dollars. Rains coiorers ett that |) CLL CO PEM — |eerve, 1m this instance, thi com: [ere many millions of dollars, alts carr, w candles with | ¥s x 7 reg’ Batt 3 y : force was not adequate for the task | in the great farming regions. peciectores(@utueinieal wale e iA New Drive On signed to it. Ho did all that he| 2” the capital, the wheels of the OVER CIVIL WAR IN CHINA: AMERICANS LEAVING CANTON By LUDWELL DENNY. reg lars with 22 warships, includ (United Press Staff Correspondent) ven American destroyers, rid. WASHINGTON, June 8,—Consul-| ing in the harbor ready for eventual lar reports of imminent civil war in| calls. This show of strength has had atte Canton, China, and the spread of}a salutatory effect in calming. the T : ] Wj d M anti-foreign demonstrations from | spirits ofthe natives, and the riot ropica Inds Ov- s hal to Amoy, increased appre- | ing which started a week ago is ev! could do with the CAUSE OF HEAT IS REVEALED IN SERMU ing North Bnng ernment stopped by the were DA nl’ ily Cribune ; MONDAY, JUNE 8, 1£25 HARNESSING OF OCEAN TIDES, DREAM OF. AGES, SOLVED AT LAST FOR INDUSTRY Shown at right is John A. Knowlton, who Is given credit for harnessing the tides, dream of man for many ages. The photo above shows the experimental plant at East Saugus, | Mass. At right the hydraulic mo- tor is seen linked with a dynamo, BY FRANCIS A. GOODALL (Central Press Correspondent) Copyright Central Press Asso fon BOSTON, Mass., June 8. — That ages old problem of harnessing the tides of the ocean to assist in the| work of man appears to have been solved at last. The actual generation of electri- city for heating, lighting and driving of industrial units by utilizing thru the operation of a hydraul! motor, the tremendous lifting power of the tides, is now being accomplished at | East Saugus, Mass. | The man who has made this pos: sible is John A. Knowlton, fi nd of the late Dr. Charles P, Steinmetz, the electrical wizard. Knowlton was born in Rockland, Me., July 25, 1859. He began an in-|1 | 44 was necessary to strensthen tensive study of hydraulics 20 years| — " iat 3 He first demonstrated the|the plant's equipment before com ago idea of utilizing the lifting power of pleting the tests. the tidal waters by producing a| ¢ gears and steel shafting re- working model. Then came the placed the weaker metals Then struggle to obtain funds with which | power was transmitted to a newly in. to construct an experimental plant] stalled dynamo connected with an where tests might be. made. elaborate electric lighting system, Capital fought shy of the propo-|when it was speedily learned that sition anks refused to do any-|the load was far too light for the thing In time. Knowlton suc-| tremendous power developed. It céeded in organizing the Universal | was then discovered that one of the Tide Power Co,, and the erection of | giant floats, weighted with 400 tons an experimental plant was begun at|0f granite boulders, had been weak- ast Saugus, Mass., five years ago.|ened to the extent that Disasters Spetl Succe threatened. It was Within the last six months strengthen all the mechan much more power has been 1 | expe nental station before attempt oped than had been conside ajing to again produce electric light possibility that some portions of the | heat and power. ‘The inventor experimental plant have — been|he might have been thoroughly dis- wrecked and rebuilt to withstand | couraged if every disaster had not greater strain, On one occasion cast: | spelled almost unlimited power pos: iron gears were stripped of their|sessed by the tidal. waters when teeth before the power could he | properly stored and utilized through reduced, and a heavy tron shaft four Inches in diameter, was twisted In! hydraulic motor. , rces given h Phare gee de Wine mae th Sangerous)| oeee + He oould-not do ite lintcable Bim: | heat today, the federal empinres Be r he water itse artillery or even field machine guns|ternoon sun would endanger the : t in, the parts cannot be relied upon for the major | health of w Tee aay 1 large pool in a big = defense of the island of Oahu, which} Five deaths and more Uae two | here the fossils were . found \NDAYE FRANCE-SPANI8H | depends upon. mobile troops and alr. | Score prostrations occurred in the ; I Juine 8—Spain, according | craft, counter last 24 hours here. ‘Three were SADR We Rete matt t reaching here Saturday, | and wher drowned and two succumbed to heart n curved surf We to, Jaap intact Settvtan|| 6 disease superinduced by the heat y i ee mpaign anew | cy “s have Wam-| Hospitals are deluged with hun: | oO i‘ terfall—which». can intends, said the advices, t | their subscribers. Ask the | dreds of Cony, only asking for 50 pakiedprerentaatenete | ete France's drive on Abd Wampum on vice on how to treat minor prostra Dine turihe Krim by landing forces at Alhuce tions and “heat sickness 2 Sipps mas bay on the north coast of the == — y ‘i | Bit regidn. It was indicated that | | | French and Spasish boats would be Tey 7 thug enabling a bombardment from | the water, followed up by putting | + 1 FROM HUDKINS © | BE POLICY OF JAPAN The proposed co-operation is bo | | ; eA ice negotiations between French Interior ASCOT ARENA, LOS ANGELYS ae ter Malvy and Spanish Dictator | June 8.—(United’ Press.}-Tommy | prime de Itlvel ie il i‘ O'Brien, eastern lightweight, won —__——__—_ | By J. FRANCIS MISSELWITZ. Canton and other cities. from Ace Hudkins of Nebraska or | (United Press Staff Correspondent) poeta aap SOU IE Abe SEL of their| | TOKIO, June 8.—Jupan will cons} SAN FRANCISCO bina en seheduled 10round fight here Sat | tinue @ policy of “watchful waiting” | sympathy of Sun F co and Cal upoay sah eee rs rd 9 | toward the Shanghai strike situa-| {fornia Chinese is plainly with the the fhe erates roby ir i ae ‘acs : i Shanghal strikers and student dem Francisco stopped the fight | en eee emanated in posi-|onstrators, Dr. Ng Poon Chew, edi Sseceger eal Later pa tive form from the foreign office to- | tor of the Chinese newspaper Ching sap eran pene day, apropos of London reports Sat-| ai Yat Po, told the United Pres ee ae aA a | urday that Toklo had sent a brusque | today, fore the it Hudkins! AKRON, Ohlo, June 8—Two avia- | Gt EMERY Cah oe aon of forces! unds are being raised among the | en floor ‘and was| tors were injured, perhapa fatally, | St, Shanghal and -re-occupation of| chinese hero by a secret organiza. | in to finish his opponent] when thd planes crashed at Stowe | jisation had beet forwarded, was | Hol for the benefit of strikers out of when the low anded |itieia ‘yearchibcpimatut Pilot Omar | strictly denied. employment, he said apd several —>__—. | Lee Woodson, of the Woodson En-|" Japan it was explained, will act {thousand dollars have been collected SAN ANTONIO—OlI in the ground | gineering “company, Bryan, Oblo,|/4, the Chinese situation only in | 24 forwarded. | i the property of no one, not even | and his aide, Al H. Kinsey, of Cleve-| agreement with the other powers;| Cable advices have led San Fran- | the person under whose land it Hes, | land, were taken to the hospital. | ang ghe desires only the fullest co. | cisco Chinese to believe the overbear: | ding to a decision of the fourth | Little hope was held for thelr re-| Orecation with then ing attitude of the foreign police, es: | art:.0f Civil ARP PALE Sores? A handful of marines from the | Pecially the Japanese, in Shanghai, | Tee Pee The plane was to haye taken part is to blame for the riots which have Ww w at the Fun Auction. »pum } buy an automobile | in the tw Cruiser Tatsuta has gone ashore at nghai, but the government fs op timistic that there will be no further day oviation meet being held here +s Chinese riots there. Thought it an- r Mrs. Elinor s, Roscoe Arbuckle Mrs. Putnam (below) By MARGERY (Central Press Cor (at top), Nina and Wilcox PICKARD respondent.) PROVIDENCE, R. L, June 8.— A hundred eastern couples, man of them prominent and wealth: ike to know tf they are bigamlst. Investigation of Rhode Island’: ‘divorce mil has st a over the marriages scores s all over the countr inor Wylie, fur t, figure in a sensational el t, three marriages and two ¢ in now fighting the annulment of her last divorce, which authorities are at tempting to vacate on the ground that the Rhode Island domicile she claimed was fictional now ts the “Lucy ne” wife of William Rose Benet, poet and critic, going under the name of Elinor Wylic although that ts her maide name, in accordance with Lucy Stone League « Her it The divorce the authorities Ww declare is iegal separated her Morace Wylie of Washing As Fiinor Hoyt, daughter of wealth ahd prominent socially, she married fhilip Hichborn in 1908, Wour years later she wag the center of m tibn following her elopement witt Horace Wylie. She had one chi apd Wylie hed four. Hichbern agked a divorce, but ended hie lit while the proceedings were pendlig After Mra. Hichborn obtained a di voree, Mra. Wylle married Wyle jn Thrice Married, Twice Divorced, Now Fights Voiding of Her Decree, ceful demonstrations at Wylie Benet (left), Mr) Coral attorney, who was recently indicted for divorce mill operations, was Mrs Wylle’s lawyer when she obtained | | her divorce from Wylie. ‘The depost 1, where they were living with | three children, In 1919 they | ' rated. Three years later Mrs, Wyle obtained a divorce in Provi dence, giving it as her home, and married Benet Francis P, Dougherty, Providence tions were sworn out before Leonard W. Horton, master of chancery, who, with Dougherty, ts In Jail + i —_’” More than 100 diverces in whieh candy delights they figured are under scrutiny. efore the present inquiry started, dec granted Mrs, Nina Wilcox Putnam Sanderson, author, and Mrs. Minta Durfee Arbuckle, wife of the banished movie comedian, were vold ed on the grounds of fraud Pe seme Ratt paid wperep bch tna, ing candy bar that has ever Pomatutilin tha Baggs Pie smelt | candy-loving public. be set aside. . Many of them ha GBut to make it even better, the Brecht Candy remarried. Company is offering, for the best names sug Opportunity to deve a “Alvorc gested by its patrons for this new bar, mill here arose fr the law's} beral provision for an informal $200 in Cash Prizes trial proceeding and its numerow And 20 Other Awards ahh sib Wah io3ya DB aap G Read the details on the wrapper you tale a eee eee : get around each bar — how towin one of a decree for “neglect to pro Liwera Sree, vide Horton and Dougherty it ts charged, opened an office in New Glt’s a great candy. rk and went after this business. ’ ft Ferd iad ny gic Eat One and Name It! the Rh Tel 1 law Is its accept > ineseer Alvatoe evidence 10 tie tae Brecht Candy Co of sworn sta nt The partten | Denver Colorado themselves and their witnesses need t go near the court and there Is no requirement for crose-examina tion DISTRIBUTED BY WYOM ‘ She—"I know P'll itn He—"I know I’ve got a prize.” G And he’s right, for hjs teeth are willingly and regularly biting into one of those new Brecht GYes, it’s good.” It's the most delicious and most satisfy cost reveral lives, sald Dr. Chew. Dr. Chew agrees with press re- | ports that Soviet propaganda had much to do with the situation ig prize.” been offered a discriminating Everywhere 3000 quote the price on the other one énd of America to the buried like Kish. oe ee ING GROCERY COMPANY the operation of a specially designed | Knowlton’s hydraulic motor makes use of the lifting power of water, one cubic foot of salt water being able to lift 64 pounds. The mechan!- |eal {dea involved is similar to the mechanism that drives a four-cylin« der automobile engine except that in the latter the power is derived by the downward stroke of the pls ton, forced by explosion, while the Knowlton method is based on power derived from the vertical motion of a large float, or piston, lifted by water, The larger the float the. eater th r plant has three 8 ‘outer storage i i coffer dam, within which are the floats J all other gener. | ating mechanism, and the spillway into which the water emerges after having perf its work. The | floats alternate in. motion as do the stons of a gasoline éngine. . By means of notche cks and units 1 motion of the shaft motion, turning the motor and giving forth the power derived from the tidal waters. Tentative plans are in readiness for the creation of a 50,000 horse- power plant that would use Boston harbor and Quincy boy, with an area of 55 square miles, for a stor- age basin. Lynn harbor and the bays adjacent to Revere and Win- throp would form the spillway basin, with an area of 19 square miles. Locks for Ocean Craft If these plans are ever carried out it gvill be necessary to build a dam across the expanse’ of Broad Sound, from the estate of the late Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, at East Point, Nahant, to the coast of Hull. a distance of 7% miles, The power nnits would be established between the dam and Deer Island, covering an area of 2% equare miles. There would be no interference with the arrival or departure of ocean craft, for vessels would pass through glant locks similar to those at the Panama canal. It is esti- mated that here will be developed power sufficient for the operation of railroads, street car lines and many of the industries in this part of New England, in addition to heating and lighting cities and towns at a min- imum co: Divorce Suit Is First News Of Marriage t } HOLLYWOOD, Cal., June 8.— Vera. Reynolds, motion picture star, anounced her divorce plans Saturday, revealing for the first time that she had been married. The defendant, according to Miss Reynolds, will be Earl ‘T. Montgomery, film comedian, The actress said she married Montgomery many years ago. They have been separated for nearly four years and {t was gen- erally assumed !n film corcles that the star was unmarried. Salt Creek Busses Leave Casper, Townsend Hotel 8 a. m. and 1 p. m. and 5 p. m. Leave Salt Creek 8 a. m., 1 p. m. and 5 p. m. Express Bus eaves 9:30 Daily Salt Creek Transportation BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS TELEPHONE 144 is transformed into a rotary B. C.” side of the globe. other. “Vanity cases used Scientific excavations in the ancient city ‘of Kish, so we are told by a news dispatch, show that women carried vanity cases forty-nine centuries ago. Why did not the luxuries of that old civilization spread to the rest of the world? Why were the delicate and pleasure-bringing things of life buried and hidden away for so many years? Without the printed word, information could hardly be spread to other countries, and the knowledge of events and things could scarcely be preserved. Today, if a better rug is produced in Kurdistan, it is soon advertised for sale in American newspapers. If a better necklace is made in China, a printed advertisement will shortly describe it and Advertising publishes the secrets of good things from The newest and best products of forty-eight states are told about, fully and truthfully, wherever the public press is read. Read the advertisements and you keep from being ADVERTISEMENTS TELL YOU WHAT IS BEST TC BUY—WHERE TO GET IT AND WHAT TO PAY FOR IT