Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 23, 1925, Page 4

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E 5 ; persetes PAGE FOUR pall bea! S, announced today, H. Gary, Charl Charles E. Mite’ J. Beveridge, Thomas Charles H. Sabin, Clarence Macka Gerard, ¢ 1 BlG GnnloT MAS IN OIL FIELD asl A it stmas entertainment r been arranged by the Midwest comps Midwest for eve. J program -will PONGRESS OFF FORVACATI ly at 7 o'clock at the nd of the schoo! house. It] iven for em and subsidiary loyes of tt compan thelr families. tree fif five fel ar in = been placed on the grounds (Continued ¥ age One) ousand boxes of candy, ora as ent tended and nuts will be given away passed division department enacted sever childre hundreds of sie Consideration of proposed An ‘ can adherence to the world court be resumed in the senate after = holidays, while its finance comm : begin work on the tax bill. It Ceptiot time ¢ ned to finallly pass the che \enterte sara usure by March. The foreign mbers of the girl, scout troops ements, which met oppositi . Ch as carols at the their first m u in the off fleld Christ- 7 re part slo} The senate re Y MILLIONS American {pation in the pre to be held at Genev: olution by Senator King, Demoer Utah, was laid aside at his own r quest while that in the house of T MN : MAN resentatives Fish, Republican, > York, and Moore, Democrat Continued’ From Pass Ons) ginin, was,referred to committee avily the stock when it was and in‘time came individual holder, valued at from 100,000. WHITE XMAS eing to $10,000,0 f the many anecdotes related of IE IS Mr. Munsey since-his death possibly IN DIX. v7) K poignant than one told WASHINGTON, De -) —| by 1 iness associate. Keeping IN PRO SPECT Senator Edge 1 ew Jer-| ‘ ntment this associate found | A ald ‘wr | t his office window B ing joint rings ¢ treet. Mr. Munsey m the Various sen house 1 t for his abstraction and ALAN , Dec. 23.—P)—| Posals for modif of the 7 | hibition today was preparing to spe kind of Christmas it often rea ative is a © WET PROGRAM The Casper Daily Cribune fol Britain Surrenders Its Hold On Rhine Company of British soldiers departing from Cologne, as terms Many of them had to leave behind German wives and sweethearts of Locarno tr after the two y ¥ go into effect. r stay, ‘ ns Senator Edge to Call For Discussion of Prohibition. nd ds JOINT HEARINGS” cash nepore eee mes =PAOoED UP IN c : about, but experiences only about | € | > re wr v once in a blue moor white | Christmas. ‘Snowfalls, mostly of the | name a ‘sub-cor e 1 * | ig furry nd low tem-|! € Shee I Mur y, news- t | | LA ney, points x prescrip-| | Mim I 1 publisher who}” “atiata was believed to be the| tion whi | Ey ¢ laid in state to-} Lost southern point having a snow-! © A number of y 1 educators | ( Al of St. John the} fin Tempe Arig a from if} sho } 7 pronint-| US Divin A guard of hon 4 pte ad degrees at Louisville to 55 at Minm! | tion er me 1 ng eral employes who*had been} mp,4 mercury at Memphis,” Birming- | will lat i Fampus wine cellars i i an i ¢ at I 5 ll labor union lea¢ a ott AMOUS e cells in Berlin 0 i 7. in Mr. Munsey's service more than} nam, Nashville and Chattanoo; e omit Nv i| seen by. the public for the first time st a fora kaiser are being 20 years stood beside the hier, hovered bout, the 20 degree mark for the ary forces to] over. as storage space. - ‘This ph Doble te cee ees them pore ae associates viens fe early today and in the vicinity of nititieate o welinns le sninel old Bit hie shows the corner of the cellars v ve cathedral soon after’ the} 5 ‘degrees at Mobile and New —<—___. 4 sal a “piate and gems wi i body had been laid in state... The|-orinnve, & revolution of 1918 a ere hidden during the funeral will be held tomorrow morn-| ~ we EE tS A is ing with Bishop William T. Man: FL ASHE ning, a close friend of the publisher,| ‘Tell the Advertiser—“I saw it in Ld | officiating. ‘The lst of honorary! The Tribune.” — 7 al "LIF = OF E}, (By the A | Loves Poor Boy, Mother Wants'Her to . NEW YORK | : from roar h 4 S549 frvot ie Wed Money Dal ees J | | tug her purse of ciga im: | It's the old, old question—shall| state that makes her, casily-irritated. d for women she ha# coneluc I for love or mon this} She complaing about little things | is some tim: t ks me t she would not notice if she ‘ . voman handlir Deby Thonipednt At ners well. You will have to prac- | says, “but think y these char ng fellow for over | tice patience, and take her criticisms | people are doing for nex creda grown to love him | without letting it hurt -you, remem: | genera My mother approved of} bering ‘that she. really? isn’t. re- | — | : r until she met | sponsible, I think you*should man- | ATTLEBORO, al is of my sisters who haye | #ge some way to complete your edu- | like the jewe le he epee fe money than my~friend has.{catlon,-even if tt makes a heavy f ecord She scolds me for liking him be-|demand*on the time © you aren't] nity, Dur t year it e he hasn't money and says that ceupied in waiting on your mother. eS } en no holdup, robbery | if we ever get married I won't be|-Your: little sister. certainly should Sika abt i : to have the things which T have | 9 compelled to: help you. I think ident I come from a ratier wellto- | tat if you would put it up to’ your We Sak é Don't you believe it is] father in’ the right way, he ‘would! ‘ reais n| better to marry for love than for| “KFec. Forget. the boy” until” your Resin ne nants tae . Should I give up the fellow | Tesponsibilit n't so hedvy. (A Tkavenwort Ir love for my mother’s sake, Ho's | nould I tr get along’ with | sian Aka met MEEOY | A NADA NOW ae 4 ie e nd m re neces Watc is Space For ned hens.) OO EP ETETOR pecia afer arte ge ir] should marry : © money In the aoe ESPINHO, Por 1 ; 4 Beery | WINNIPEG, Man., De the top of a house 200 from | * more {dlotle. was eyer | Whether Manitoba and "Saskatche- | A mighty p cart four | r can live as) Wan, despite the long haulage nec- yessel from the sea ¥ 1D IN| cheaply om one.” However, the|¢ss@ry ean gompete in the potato | r ee, a di of your own| market of the United States, has bes — J outt life 1 . direct bearing | un With the shipment !of 25 car. | RONAN, rar | " : Ba irl necessary | ads of potatoes from Winnipeg tb rewn with barrels of wine lis you and your husband true | Pitteburgh. Jr ‘ ; { h1 | conts per: hune | ad | 1 duty fifty cents NEW YORI SICK MOTHER'S “SUB” ISN'T | in addition to a payment of $2 a ee gs pee | APPRECIATED. ju indred pounds for the pota' . It wil te Tex I Pr. air]. D { psont “I am seyen | ke ; is the steer {Stare abd “three Seaanthen coh F4 : ‘ina | ict that, “home| Wyoming Wi q ursday Lvening s | fet : event does no work at | s , |; |Home whatever. Do you think this) JOURN Conference Tribune : Feo Fhe ee ve wit nim several times) Onn Water Route e's ; cs | : tr ntinually about =P ' 1s ' her food ho is sick all the time. | g7, PAUT,, Minn, Dec. 23 The P | | t t on her, T do not) council of states, consisting of 21 pans " y + 7 + “ | uldv only appre: | states which ate CHIS WILL BE OUR TREAT | H, ¢ Jclato § nt. She says T| route to will | w 1 1 . ne c {ie 3 é don't t > cook her food decent} join in conference when the Great o Kinney. H ; ss Back 9 Imost ol! my time] Lakes.St, Lawrence tidewater con- ae io | f know my house@is not as neat a8] gressy meets in St. Paul, January 1 presumabl I woukl lke to keep tt, My father} 5 and 6, F j takes my part in all the quarrels. states ofticially represented at the NEW YORK—Jir | My mother gives my, sister money | conferente will be: Ohio, North Das ati iw areas | tend of each week, but won't-give | kota, Indiana, lino! Michigan, nde, ny eyy . me a cont and has a quarrel right) wisconsin, Minnesota, - Iowa, .Mis¢ z a tie ak Utkin way doe He gives me] suri, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kan- = mor ut letting her: know t-| sag, Colorado, , Wyoming,« Montana, William tent thal aies hool to do the work) tdaho, Utah, Oregon South Carolina, Be, ; j at home, As I worked most of the) west Virginia and Kentucky. } American Iederation of La In] summer I buy my o thes as I —_—-——~— hington warns workers ¢ rved my Wages then se advise R re | fascism and communiem as having] me what to do 1 don't think I]. French, British, Belgian, “Italian | the same “fangs and hotsor hould be treated as/a chia. My]and. Czecho-Slovakian members of i eae or gi me no pene IL the leaguo of nations council admit Lindsay & Co. Br 1 wrote me before about your | poseibility of United States ot’ lus r ) . how H ' om, H. an only repeat | rpe ‘developing. Jays ls of ¢ r | what T told you then You must nea “ee ee .\ | ember that your mather’s illness | Tell the, Adyertiser—"I saw {t.Jn other 1 Di F {probably as ‘put her in a nervous| The Tribune," BUTLER GIVES UP CITY POST _(Continued From Page One) “Well, I'm out,” he exclaimed. “The mayor hag fired me. Now we can shoot at him.” And the mayor's secretary looked at him in’ #urprise. “There's nothing to stop me now; I'm a free’ man,” the general said. Asked his plans, the brigad{er general, who has seen fighting serv- Ice all oved the world said: “I’m going to my home in Over- brook and I'm going to drive there in a car of the United States Marino corps, The marines can take care of me, and I'd rather be in the marine corps than in fifteen million cities like , Philadelphia,” The general sald he would return here for a few days and added “there may be something doing in that time.”” yeneral Smedley D. Butler's ca- reer as head of the clty police end- ed today as spectacularly.as it be- gan. two years ago, when he was ap- pointed director of public safety and started a drive against liquor selling, vice and crime. that has attracted national attention. Dismissed by*Mayor Kendrick in a stormy interview >after resigning from the marihe corps: in order to remain. here, General Butler at first refused to quit. Then, in a.statement early today, he said he would obey. the mayor's order and turn the office over to As- sistant Director George. W. Elliott. He made jt plain, howeyer, that he would “fight for vind{cation.” Declaring that he had. resigned from the-marine ‘corps in order to keep faith with the police who had “'sood up" with him, General But- ler said -it*was a stunning blow to be informed that “my suicidal sacri- fice was the one cause advanced by the mayor of Philadelphia for dis- missing me from office. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 23,1925 He gave no intimation as to wheth- er he would withdraw his resigna- tion as a brigadier general in the Marine corps, which was mailed to Washington yesterday shortly before Mayor Kendrick had informed him that he would not retain him as a “resigned officer” because he did not want “any other action misunder- stood by President Coolidge,” who had refused a further leave of ab- sence to he general. News from Washington is that Major General John A. Lejeune, com- mandant of the marine crops, will urge General Butler to remain in the service. General Butler incurred the en- mity of certain local political leaders shortly after he took office on Jan- uary 7, 1924. From the start he let it be known that he wanted no inter- ference with his methods of hand- ling the police, who, he said, were to be divorced from politics. He gave his captains and Meutenants 48 hours to sart a campaign to rid the city of vice and crime. Raids followed in quick succession. Butler frequently accempanied the raiders and made night inspection tours to ‘see that the policemen “were on the job.” He raided gambling places and closed ga- loons said to be owned’ or operated by politicians and upon one occa- sion he bodily ejected from his of- fice several political leaders. Dur- ing his first week in office 431 raids re made and 1,428 saloons closed. “T can still spit in their eye,” com- mented the general on the fact that he seemed to be neither marine nor policeman. General Butler appeared at his of- fice today in civilian attire. Unlike other public safety directors, the general from the day he became di- rector wore a public officer's uniform. High ranking officers of the police and fire departments expressed sor- row at the turn of events and. bade him . farewell. They were men he had characterized as “100 por cent Policemen.” George W. Blliott, assistant direct- or, named as General Butler's suc- cessor, accepted the . appointment shortly before noon. His nomination must be confirm. ed by the city council. Acknowledging the mayor's letter of dismissal, General Butler sent a reply in which he charged the mayor with Iack of moral courage and stated that the reason given for his ousting was ‘simply camouflage.” The transfer of the office of director and the keeping of the safety of the clty of Philadelphia was transferred from Butler to Elliott shortly after moon. General Butler throw hi arm around Acting Director Elliott’ shoulders, and tn the presence of 4 foom full of people, said to him: “We have worked shoulder to shoul der for two years and we are going to see each other tn the future,” The marine corps automobile was waiting for General Butler as he left the city hall, He was given a cheer as the car sped away. General Butler said after a few days’ rest, he would go to Washing ton to try to withdraw his resigna tion from the marines. ——_. EXTRADITION PAPERS | FOR OLD RESIDENT OF CROOK COUNTY DENIED CHEYENNE, Wyo, Dec. - Governor Nellie T. Ross Monday fused to grant extradition papers for the reutrn to South Dakota of Thomas E. Livingston, a long-time resident of Crook county, who was charged with having sold mortgaged Property in that state on a certain date. Evidence introduced at the hearing showed that Livingston hag resided in Crook county for 16 and it was proven that not fugitive from justice, therefore the was in accordance with the statutes [aaa 0 et Tell the Adverti: The Tribune.” —"T saw it in SECOND STREET PUBLIC MARKET Come and Watch the Busy Crowds Kernel Walnuts in Tin Ate ‘ Large cans Log Cabin Syrup $1.09 No. 1 Pumpkin .-10e No. 2 Pumpkin 13¢ - Condensed’ Mince Meat per. pkg. 13e No. 2 Cranberry Sauce 29e . 2 Asparagus 27¢ 15-0z. Plum Pudding 42¢e Stayman Winesap Apples, box - Fancy Rome Beauty Apples, box .------.-~ ® Fancy Delicious Apples, box — ‘Fancy Winesap Apples, box Choice Spitzenberg Apples, box Choice Wagener Apples, box Choice Yellow Newton Apples, box —..- Choice Delicious Apples, box- Cauliflower, Mey Large Pascal Celery, «2 bunches’ 2 Colorado Self-Bleaching Celery, bunch — —— A’Few Trees, 8 to 12-Foot, Your Choice ’ crn ..... $2.45 a ..... $2.90 1-lb. pkg, Assorted Peels 5ic 1-Ib. box Glace Cherries 78¢ — 1-lb, box Glace Pineapple 78e Xmas Mix Candy, per Ib. 15e 7 LBS, FOR $1.00 Eggs, doz. Pin ie Creamery Butter, per Ib. 49ce Individual Cans Plum Pudding 10e No, 1 Peas 10c $1.65 Pie Plant, Ib, Diamond Walnuts in Tin 47c Funsten’s Shelled Pecans 63¢c Bulk Mince Meat, Ib, 15¢ Quart Grenadine Syrup $1.04 it Canada Dry Ginger Ale 2ic Quart Bottle Large Olives . 56¢ No. 1 Asparagus 22¢ 5-oz, Plum Pudding Green Onions, bunch <2 Long Radishes, bunch ~_ Sweet Spuds, 4 Ibs. for. California Celery (large), 2 bunches -__ Parsley, bunch $2.35 Ib. Fancy Orang size), doz. Fancy Orang extra), doz. Fancy Orang small), doz. 17¢ 27¢ .18¢e size), each LEMONS, 48¢ DOZ. Bunch Turnips and Beets, Cranberries (large size), 25¢ Mey ( _10e 20e _65e es eee * —56e - es (large es (medium Grape Fruit (large ees

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