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PAC MORE RECLAMATION WORK PROMISED FOR WYOMING — Girl Slayer [§<8%2223 22.0823" CONVICTED SLAYER DEAD (iS)(A [00KS ditional Wyoming government irri- | ¢duipping farms of $1,000,000 to $1,000,000 to $1,500,000, ‘The esti- gation projects but “when they will ‘ e be built will Zepend quite largely“on | mated annual crop return ‘if these t ults of the settlement and | ‘rms are fully improved 1s $400,000. ent to Prison’ (03 822" re wortts.”* believed that’ with “careful selection ONDAY, JUNE 22, 1928 PAGE EIGHT Che Casper Daily cribune me of settlers now provided by law with ‘ j a In piaeon the see lene Oro no special provision for financing or CHICAGO, June 22. — (By The Associated Press. )—Bernard Grant, fearful of the (I AL] etic i ie oe i a bo 2 fae | otherwige alding farmers, not more f th fforts of thousands of persons throughout the country, felamation projects in’ Wyoming. | than 50 per cent of the land would | hangman’s noose, in spite of the efforts o P atonayt . ive O} rf e ea Kp At hota tead pha seelent an | Be settled in the first five years after | who had signed petitions.urging clemency of Governor Len er refused to ay 0 Ter ? : river and the Shoshone c Va the ‘Shoshone river,/Dr; Mead. re | PYVUC notice. mit physicians to perform an operation in the hope of saving his life and die Fails to See Evidence . viewed the costs of operation and ir- Hart Mountain Division. later, He was stabbed five times Saturday by Walter Krauser, once sentenced with Grant ‘ : tenti \\ sibilities of each pro-| “The {rrigable area of the Hart/to hang byt later granted a new;ed prisoner, “so why prolong my Ralph Saunders in a Loupe Wes: -Of Depression on 2 Bie iT | mpuntain division {s estimated at | trial, life when it’s going to be taken from | probably woul Pt anata ited 1 Dorothy Perkins Dra WS Pent ELEY “The Riverton project has an {r-| 38500 acres. The total cost is esti-| Grant was very weak from thé] me anywa’ or’ his: sentence» comniunted ito. If i Visit Here « . aoe) able area of 100,000 acres, the | ™ated roughly at $4,850,000;-or ap-| wounds in his neck and chest and| Dr. Frank Jirka pleaded but| imprisonment had oe T which t Term for Mu rdering Her Suitor, rrigation works will cost $8,850,000,"" | Proximately $125 an acre, Settlers | physicians at the house of correction |Grant’s resistance did not weaken ips. lg nected ee Ms! 2 ie said, “but the/area when fully | fF this division must be secured | hospital insisted on a blodo trans-| A half hour later the prisoner died. | was set recen Ser ni eae CHEYENNE, Wyo June 22—Up- “ Lames et Be 4 | from older agricultural districts and | ¢usio: Grant, who always insisted he was | supreme court had allowed Kra on his return to Cheyenne from the Ja W - settl Il have 1,500 f 1 usion, , eit : Jersey City ar Veteran pee ans ocbs papa te “ap | this settlement will be facilitated or| “L'il be dead in a little while it] innocent and that Krauser alone was |a retrial but denied a second he Lions club convention at Riverton, pons proximate value of $2,000,000." The | Tetarded 4n proportion to the ar- | you'll let me alone,” sald the wound-! guilty of the killing: of Policeman | to Grant. Mayer Archie Allison commented on ge the raw land | '@"sements made for giving ald and total capital to c the oy and trip that he made en ; NEW YORK, June 22.—From five to fifteen years’ con-| Into farms, he stated, will’ require a ineat -Somaliecteaeeaee eae would enosider developing raw land| als will be-pald. Such a settlement | too great a human waste, too great | route tas Cb eorryed es ee pee ‘ finement in Auburn prison was the sentence imposed toc cou eth fe DE between, ale Bnd nine | sis eee irigable lind im this | #"@ scarce , Feats weer ila rice ovaries |" The dient ‘ utling yeecite on the} in the growth and develop. t upon Dorothy Perkins, charged with killing Thomas Tem- | i Mi vias lement and de-|UMt Will require approximately 500 Reena Ont: tae fo sepia San. ee Ee claoae tate smth? (olde Gedieete, Lave’ thelr n in| ment of that wonderful city, Fifteen «, 8 pleton, Jersey City war veteran and her suitor. | wattomebt ca find dp thasriibek ee _ Tf this development is to Sore a ack: Saat Toate reas | Kendrick and Congressman Winter, j accepting unfit settlers and leaving ago-w pend bullets ate hos. ’ or The girl appeared e ntirely y pomioned as Judge McIntyre | serious problem of the project, he are thst arose Paice pibacan: or less; 18.6 per cent between $1,500 [of this state, attempted to se eure |the good ones to. struzele e nee SHOuLSE EOOt he ples WI ele hs ge said ) add|that name, Or, Mead declared, but ca heroatine it te believed Hi a Bas capital’ can. bo “obcnea’ Ans reagon- | 28d reauired Che settler. to“haye not |merity on operation expenses are in Sa “te aie solte weatsctienitaas, 5 ou have | trrigatic i an estimated cost | siderable:portion ofthis money tage: | able numbers but would need! ad.| 08 thon: $1,800 capitate tarmex>) arrears, | to Tap om 4 ecu et | teabsonnd eivenstine impression of au alread nt ase a3: “Was| bat yrovibel te, ieeMBEE PUNE: | TRUE rhein fearon $3,000 | Perience. Provision was made fer a | continu stnted' the land | {tas ones. gives, Che: ting ofa etd einot ’ 000 | tiental ofganiantiona* the: setiler (td complete the d opment of their | {tm adviser who would! be at the|Is-good. the ‘ci giaicenuarnerd MRP Ss ae oa lac ; Ther pro-| wht -notbring it'¢0' the project baaras ttler’s. elbow to help bring about | valuable crops can be. grown, but t ided looking for some ey teamwork between settlers in get-| under the kind of farming now prac- | the entire un nto GB areas two of Oregon Basin Division “A plunned development is needed dence of the depre that It % F ¥ . s ma jal needed for their im-|ticed, which results in an average | “€ c je, depr ion that had el have been settled, Dr. Mead} ‘The Oregon Basin division, when | to prevent this division duplicating | UPS Material’ needed ‘fo “AD .‘ on ; than $15 heard existed there. I saw three o ; h . srovements, at wholesale prices | value ot crops-of less than $15 an ° Fnt AY l PLANT. ut the other divisions, all} completed will constitute the larg. |the experiences of the Frafnie divi. | Provemen : a let 1 oun oe matich eorane ders, and to payments can be met. The | four empty store buildings anda few [ le wit bun-}of which is in government owner:|est single unit of the Shoshone pro.|sion of Shoshone project and | through ‘community orders, an: : : ot | Shipp, will require 1,800 settlers who] ject, It 90,000 acres of irri wnt 1 drawn from Butside the}iand and will cost approximate thou | or the most part $9,630,000 or about $110 an. acre 2 ree undeve ped div |Rich Merchant thrye undeveloped 4 ss m were provided, the settler to| bringing to pass the present very much impressed ahd please The committee recommended. ut up $40 against each $§0 advanced [tion. It caused the project to with the business activity of which ed in accord with their from the reclamation fund. The set-on the wrong foot by accepting too|¥oU find evidence on every hank |tion requires, he sald, the annual] this area would t of ee on $6,00 en : rit ah a sale sk esivabie Uer's own money would in this way |large a proportion of men who did ze Har vee aR ceab BN eh t Or te! | Of I 1 I T 5 | production will approximate’ $6,000.-|00 and sie pun, soe ed hg He Ey apart aed 3 . rable | underwrite the advance. and as the|not know farming and did not in-|™any beautiful homes, the splendid } shit dadano OUn |: : n will approxi ; + 00 a $ 1,000,000. Without or. | ar necessary characteristics, the land belonged to the United States,|tend to_ become fgrmers. Business | Public buildings and schools, the ex ] 000, while the Increase to the s' ganizec nancial ay 2 F avi : rk vacant houses of the poorer, type or { For worl: out cultivation and marketing | letter sald further Y 0 y n that of the Fort Laramie division programs. Advances up to $3,000 for] “The government contributed in| the outskirts of the city, but I wa of the North Platte project. sions, | The capital requ for the exy ed as Irriga:| ti “That settlers be carefully select land is cu us developme cking for set-| Selection of the setlers to be made ur valu 1 $5 Dd] ters b } 1 t b 1 1 f citi. | the government weuld be doubly s2- | and professional men, clerks, school | cellent hotel) facilities, the pleasing s of 7 resources’ value will eed $50,000.7| tlers by which money woud! be pr »y 4 board composed in part of cit . naa tbochetatt ana‘ tratesr er" {.] landscape effects about the muni — 4 000 “ ei Na . zens 0 om cured since the improvement would E men in this y y _ tf The engineering features of this long terms cf repayment, the That provision bem ; farms so that in the collapse of |#cross the street from it, with the nent.” Dr. Mead de essful development of — this | homes for farm laborers, in tr “It seems to be a sound, commen ; hundreds of 1 ent no in8urmountable | would undoubtedly be delayed |4PProximately five acres sense, business: like pln, but it was Viies epimie he aa ave mar- pacts aitptunitgart «ar a into fi EWISTON, I J =| the social and e ny years, with a consequent econ-|€reuped at conveniept locations | opposed by those who did not realize | Ke additidh to thin genteel class the |that 2 Wyoming. elty could have ae : ¢ wil I pione f this d ich remain to ¢ loss to the state and: the na-| Where employment is most likely to] how hard ‘it will be to secure his genteel class the | © : RSs ps i t emai and: the na- 5 8 F ne where water rights |Project Tecelved ‘a horde of discon-|complished so much in so short a a c r Idahy n should be tion; With this area fully developed | be had. tlers on projects wher tented workers whose experience | time.” oO us f lead thi r when Program has be and farms properly {mproved, the hat a competent irrigation ad-| will cost from 100 to $15 would fit them for anythin; y but { ‘ fyi of Dut & Co. wasl|a which settlers can be} annual crop va'ues should be be-| Viser should be provided by the|and by those who object, to \ Asciat 1 a d | rfgation agricult opene Mr. Dwye 1 u telephone | secured and given a real opportun-| tween $1,500,000 and $2,500,000. Bureau of Kec lation whose duties | money cut of the re on fund | re agriculture, The negligible f 0 crt be hy ey : tilpon ee “The ain all three of the unde- | Would include— ~ | to heip devélop farms, believing this pst iaisal pea gir Sor ie ance : ‘ater ¢ was caused by a yr. Mend ed the state “to take| veloped divisions is mainly govern. | (a) Preparing and seeding son | fund should be kept entirely for © Fabel Sate end ee oe ee Pa § pel luri ele storr burden of settlement and de-|inent land, not susceptible of agri unsold land struction, I believe a better unde| Tbe Coltehoe” cevinik ee . t e t lopment from the bureay of- re-| culture without {irigation be (by Ce 2 s happened on se new pro- june of rresponding with and ass! standing on what has thai be gah aby Aart saralted ene Ron new porn 1n | have not been requested of congress u better ened , 621s. more 002° Hon .atstatanel vie aareieeit teenie 4g f A £ flood y J capital, a rd of for the construction of the two la (c) Assisting settlers in ma and make one project a success than | 00 ©! kind that will meet. the . t r € of Wyoming to make the se-!named divisions, and no. definite Selection of farms to meet | build two failures. If this measure Is |) 7 costs Involved in the prepara- Sees ection datejean he set: when. work. will be vie sk Deeds. tes Wie dae suite | (not to be Sadenied) eben We AUS on fod seta ian ditarid eaeoeraineae WII ’ . \ ely: throuzh the advice and What will be done «will 0 and other | have scme other. oa tw com. | tet: We will best assure these re (Continued From Page One) a, WL | iH uene urren i] ne} on the cess of 3 : ; bullding | Another plan consid ais Mate) | sults if we base our future plans »oard, who is out of the city. This 7 ae terri rettler’s repayments 1 urmiste layou gress is to make sett ement andl making these communities places|report showed a total of warrants = of the project al m and equipment and in | farm development a state matter.| where the land js cultivated by its issued during the year amounting HEI l THIS AFTERNOON A citizen o for scttl Working out {nancial and | On three projects this*year's appro: | owners. We must elliminate: the |te. $900156.7¢ to e Le i t n double that | me jeultural programs. jations conditional ihe | tandiora and impoverished tenant| C. H. Townsend, treasurer, read hein ar “On ie Si ¢ 4) Helping them from co-vperati states entering into conracts with | farmer, On the older projects in|his report showing receipts during ae oe. chia dices ceitap Da rau relat and. in’ trans: | the Interior department under which | Wyoming, where an many settlers |the year of $14818601.12. This re iz 4 i by endur: | res of desert rring their holding the state’ will subdivide the land, | have lost their farms through ‘the | port stated the total balance on hand ; , ing t | ks practically ‘e) 1p of failure to new find the settlers, and advance money | ure of mortgages, improve. be $396,904.89, distributed as fol- — és luted ta he } T e y | than 200.000 additional | 4 peg lag As needed to improve farms. Under th’s | ment in cultivation is difficult. Out|lows: Special fund, $67,661.28; teach- tae aw Shafter 6 4:30 | Wyoming £ t which works have tb eded to be usoe in-making j plan we would have to advance net lor the $28 farms on the Shoshone | ers’ fund, $266,105.46; building fund, eee _ 0 te developm of the state's | partly constructed. To settle and] t? Settlers to ist’ In completing | less than one million dollars for farm a } ‘ ternoon, th : 4 Pie i lee age aenient project. 412 are cultivated by rent- | $63,138.16. 1 \) cart fr pa ip aber dvi Ss ae cts | DEOPerly develop these two projects | cauippiang trent cf thelr farms and | development of land about ready for | ers and out of the 2019 farms on the| Distribution of the school tax fund H : and ¥ Jepend on this being | wit} require the labor of three th j paupping them with livestock and |rettlement at Willwood and River-| North Platte proje 1.021, or ]of $150,000 authorized by the meet- { a ma agricultural state. Mines lend families and jin investme r | Such advances should not ex: | ‘ | «0 r more than half, are cultivated by | ing was given as follows: at Off, 1 $15,000.000 to $25,000,000 « w | ceed t ent of the value of such | What we do at Willwood Is des t wilt ; sorocemanl tenants General control .. Rndot “wis live on tigger] Cail for = thecclemrovement DT eto be eats eat. liveatock and | tined to ‘have great significance as! “Tt would relieve. the bureau . of|tretructional service”. f OMA ine T The kt v b » live on these | equipment of farms. alone should be secured by a first lien, The | jt will be the next area to be thrown reclamation of an arduous and t Operation of school plant 1 ' J the Kind of agriculture), «the annual production, if the | ettlers to provide tho 40 | fol Jetermine the cl ver cent. J open to settlement in Wyoming. Nat- | ing regponsibility 1f the state would | Maintenance of plant oliow will determine the chur-| jan is cultivated as Irrigation re-| The advances should Admission $2.20, $3.30, $5.50 r | ar 4 per cent:) ural conditions make it possible to|take charge of settlement and farm | Miscellaneous expenses - ri G aia wi oie p. | eter of the stuie's civilization and | quires,. will approximate Interest and be advanced for three | create a farmi community which | development. Whoever does it will | Capital ou th ad t iret half j its mat pass prospert a part) and the increase In value years to not exceeding twenty yea: will be an inspiration and example | have a ‘difficult task because they | Promotion of health — thre qu 2 Wok s of shat clopment, the federal rec: | state's resources will exce Repayr to be amor half. | for. future development. Wyoming | will be in touch with people engaged s0) Cana | {eeation eas l nog: th 000,000. The engineering fe yearly ought to be a leader in this agrarian |in hard and trying work under new} Total —..- $150,000 [projects in: thisis In addition. |this great«development present no| “That ft uitable house | advance because its menibers of con-/and strange conditions, but we are| A motion carried authorizing tl | Investigation being mite insurmoun p obstacles, It is the |} Plans, se barn plans, and sey-|sgress have been framers of impert-|forcea by one of two alternatives. | board to transact business of the | theme soaltonel Biggs A i, ia social and economic problems which cen erie, “armstead layout plans |ant legislation dealing with the de-| We should either assume this bur-|district until the next annual meet. ane } I pita camer Arbon ple oars |remiin to be wore i 4 esi oad BO Thatine ns be p 1 velopment of the arid region, and|den or quit building canals.” ing. This motion stipulated that PAI chek oie poe tepulie ct aattiapentias | should therefore be deferred untit al “T is be provided to secure | the man who has done more’ than ee the board 1s not authorized to in \ | ea f A Winkel aitae eereron program has been adopted under and domestic water for each y other singie individual in rural Paper was manufactured in China | crease the tax levy except by a vote nl ‘ b e+J | t'. from’. Fe ah : | which settlers can be secured and | farm, (well water at Willwood {s un-| organization and in measures to hefp | ; bout 100 B.C. the taxpayers. we | auvar Stine ‘ We desire at this conference to | given a real opportunity fit for use) the cort of providing | poor men become farm owners, once cir with ‘aie | special consideration to the set Settlement Plan for Willwood. such stock and domestic water sup-| lived in this state. I refer to Sir Hor- mt we Core ine otel:| Uement problem the Riverton | «tt was the unanimous opinion of | Ply to be added to the construction |ace Plunkett. : ar k Rk rison men, blew up his| Project on Wind gdh five boards which last summer con: | cost. ‘ These results will not come, how: e » A ted I I t use e. Franco-Moroos| *20n® Preiect on the ’ UYSF | sidered the settlement conditions on That the C. B, and Q. raiircad|ever, unless there !s a carefully | Bes "| 3 id kather thar be J Riverton Project. | new projects that unless conditions| and the Great We n Sugar com-| thought out program of settlement. k. npn : v2 Be - “ih opikiirebdan toutaeel The Riverton project has an irri- | tor getters are made more attrac-| pany be apprised of the fact that | T hope, therefore, that you will make 1's “4 ; pea ge ns of Abd-El-Krim’s | Sable area of 100.000 acres, | 69,000 | tive than they are under the exist-|@ spur line is needed to open this|thia your problem, Consider what hé a} t torie j res of which ts public land, and | ing jaw, settlement and agricultural | area to beet growing is necessary in order t we may , f d YORK—Prehistori Hon about $100 an acre. | discredit every new development.| vented by suitable laws and regu-} $3,000 and wants a home for him: ‘t 1 ases with 12 t le rooms ‘rst unit ts available for | Aitnough they did not agree fully a lations. No farm should be sold, aub-| self and his family. ‘Here js a reel s ! ( by Fred | bettiement ¢ vernment will have | io what should be done let, or aseigned without the permis-| opportunity. We have arranged & Make a bee-line for our store Tuesday. You have : } r aa sted $2,800,000. When the works | settlers and promote sion of this bureau, all arrears to| program of advice and ald which iout 6 E . fad H 0 farms will be | they all recomme! the government to be paid before the | wilh enable any industrious, thrifty |fJ 20 doubt attended many dollar sales, but we promise ii 4 tivate the | vt hat tsp sale is approved. I¢ profit is made |man to succeed you that tomorrow you can buy the greatest bargains s I bs ation £ 1 this in esent for ti t least one-| “The future of federal reclamation you have ever seen in y ; lal | nee ‘ mine rived the ¥ epen the kind R program | ‘ is ed that these confe es and| Federal or State Aid Necessary. | t hich confronts us can not be 3 t| eve ve ner ground wil It {a not | the things it recommends are pro-| must not repeat in these new areas ro a ih aietas a 4 oy 3 he . ia ~_ ee b ever needed to/ iy purpose e to advocate vided, qualified settlers will be at-|the methods followed at Garland, ; Read the items as quoted below and get here as : Psycholog 1 sin Da Tenn,, | Make tt Cit for human habitation re-| particular act or plan, but to pre-| tracted and that the money advane-|Frannie, and on the North Platte] SOON as you can. ” hours best for fon tr Poy nae be done i ipment | Sent this matter to you for discus: | od and the construction costs of can- project. On all of these there was ; ne impro’ and equipment | tion ‘To ‘ smi : wt of these O.acre farms will coat trom | slot Te this end I will eubmit. a Fe CHILDREN’S PATENT ABOUT 30 PAIRS pAS $5,000 to $8,000 a farm and the to-|gettlement plan which was prepar: SANDALS MEN’S OXFORDS c tal capital required to change the | oq last year by George C, Kreutzer, S ° e e raw land into farms will be some-| ‘ho has had experience both in Aus. For Tuesday $1.00 Tan or Black. urns where betwoen $6,000,000 and $9,000, | tralia and America, Andrew Wels, Sie 17 If settlement is to be unaided | for many years in charge of the Sizes 1, 114 and ar | has been in the past, this de | North Platte project. All these men $ ev Sap | velopment will be slow and the re-| ave for years had a personal fa- LADIES’ WHITE Per Pair. aol jt s to the government disappoint | mitiarity with conditions in this KID OXFOR % 1 , , > of > jing. The successful settlement and | state, The summary of their report DS LADIES’ AND nen he mos rious problem connected A! V4 om Re moet’ sesious pint they belleve should berdone. | A heels. All sizes and’ GROWING GIRLS With this project. “The soll is fertile acks - 3 i : Shoshone Project Seep Meebo Heeehisea cee Cate For the Thrifty Housewife widths. WHITE OXFORDS AND ° The Sho project is inte art of the. program on ¢ rm. Wi d Cham ionshi “ar Match Lilize the water of the Shoshone | “ararm unite whould. 9 in size ALUMINUM f $1.66 tet ; river, The estimated cost of the irrl | from 60 to 100 acres, Subdivision PEROOLA TORS 525 ate bes e PAIRS gation works ts $23,536,000, Water | tines should. conform to topegraphy, FOR ° Benefit Elks Charity Fund be delivered to 216,000 acres of | utilizing irrigation In and drain: ALUMINUM 4 00 LADIES’ SILK HOSE " an nd, making the average cos ‘ ches, and o atura 4 i . ae ; water'Fight more than $100.0n norm| STARA here eae Ure aE ROUND ROASTERS 20.1... __$ . Regolas $100 Vals. Mother, being your The project Is divided into five dl “The gross annual crop return of De 1 00 daughter—both of you 1 fons, two of which, Garland and]an s0-acre unit in the second year A NEST OF THREE ALUMINUM 1 00 FOR $ . get a pair. - ac k ; a lo r have been settled, The un-| may ‘be safely estimated at $1,600, | SAUCE PANS --__ Pepin wo evi developed portion comprises an area | or 320 an care, which may be in- . y | of 144,000 acres lying in three divis- | creased to $2,400, or $30 an acre in GLASS GOBLETS— .oncn corre 3 FOR ONE TABLE OF LADIES’ SHOES ions 4 follows: Willwood with 15,600} the fifth year, and when all forage Regular 50c each. - e r acres, Hart Mountain with 38,800, | is fed to lyestock on the farm and Patents: .Ciolaneaie and Oregon Basin with 90,000 acres. | good agricultural methods are. fol GLASS PLTCHER AND atents, Colored Kids, in high and low $ e = Approximately all of the undeveloped | lowed, a larger return wt follow $ TUMBLERS $1 00 heels. Values up to $8.00. Z P I t area is in government ownership and | ‘These crop estimates. are larger : YOUR CHOICE 2 will require 1,800 settlers who must | than have been received on the two a ri n es | n a be drawn mainly from outside the | older divisions of this project, The 10 ROLLS TOILET PAPER— 1 00 state. average on the Garland diyiston Regular 2 for 26c value___ : h Willwood Division, from 1920 to 1924 was $23 an acre: OPEN EVEN NGS “The canals and laterals on the|on the Frannie division, $12 an acre. ak oe 7 Willwood division are sufficiently! “The cost of developing nn ROacre RESERVED SEATS Lavatieed.\e ioture, wate nfbes halt | Aaa ceiatnaittg sieee Ce ta Shoe am - that area during 5, and for com: | fences. farm sipment. and live NOW ON SALE AT THE SMOKEHOUSE Siva deb inatian cuineebe:tonse tae Rae anes saea e urner 3 0 all Saati’ sill} be about saaeeceibaraniies (ier ta t 133 South Wolcott—Just Off Second 120 West Second Next Door to Chase's Cafe Full settlement of this division will} with this amount of cnyd |