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PAGE EIGHT GUL, MITCHELL [2 IGNORED IN HINES’ REPORT Universal Draft Law}*. Is Recommended by Chief of Staff n knowle of the ty pe hopeless: ndful of t beer present field pie increase an with enthusiasm anti-aircraft machine e of ousing the problem last congress. He called because us t re an effect on Uvities, the pro nel, the more a ve is : | Founder of First Penny Newspaper Is Dead, Aged 83 Torpedo Stores Menaced by Fire > ste 00 dam: CARD OF THANKS WORDS cannot t ¥ s the ¢ 11 flowers und death and fat sand F Let the Service Cleaners Prepare You For the Holiday Season The Service Dry Cleaners will gladly help you prepare for your holiday social f delicate pieces which mak Her fine Jooking but deli —his formal clothes and all m cate evening gown and wrap de to sparkle like new. PHONE 56 Our Service Is As Near As Your Telephone The SERVICE Cleaners unction. Especially those e up your formal attire. crispy white accessories— ||} aE Said Father Time to Young ’25 Through that glass of mine passes all knowl- edge, all experiences, all dreams, all realities. Mark you well the writ- ing on that glase—'it pays to save.” Remember, in y THE CASPER TRIBUNE-HERALB CABINET CRlalS LOOMS IN PARIS ‘ON MONEY BILL | Radicals Will Present Opposition Plan Tomorrow F —)—The gov- d parties which compose in the chamber of dep. ing the e le of a frantic h other in the pre- financial program to of « ion gives rise to the hat the new year will start! with another cabinet seriousness of this 1s htened by Premier Briand’s de- artial ch s in Finance Minister re rejected it will mean n of the whole cabinet. | The issue may not come to a head, ntil the regular session of pout the middle his ministry Doumer's yp the the past week three groups cartel ha been working on bills designed to bal- budget. That they have out- ment in the race by their an- | nouncement that their bills have been | ° will be introduced in t r Monday morning. , the cabinet remains dl. M. Doumer’s plan for a v on 1 | double tax on business turnover and will be unable to settle this matter before the cabinet meets again Tues- By that time, it is believed in lobbies of the chamber, the groups of the left blocjwill have sup- plied rigid discipline to all their members and have made approval of the government bills, whatever they may be, impossible The bills which the left groups will push as substitutes for the gov- ernment measures provide for econ- omies in - official administration amounting to 800,000,000 francs; in- the income taxes payable by foreigners; institute grave penalties for tax dodging and reinforce the means at the disposal of the fiscal adminstration for the detection. of false declarations. One of these bills provides that no person can vote until he has sat isfied the authoritids that he ed with all the laws Bae tot is cre ‘GOSPEL TEAM TO HOLD MEETING AT 3 TODAY Members of the gospel team organ- ized here to follow up the work done by the evangelistic services conduct- ed last month by A. K. Harper will hold a meeting this afternoon at 3 o'clock in the First Christian church. A cardial invitation is e::tended to all who are intereste Ses Sk aay \CHEMISTRY EXPERIMENT FATAL TO 2 NEW YORK, Dec. 26.—(United Pi }—A chemical experiment which he was said to have been studying at Columbia university, 1s lleved to have caused the death of Oscar Hoffman, 82, and his 24-year- old sister, Selma, in their uptown lodging ho’ today. Their landlady discovered the bodies. Hoffman's room was filled with the fumes of illuminating gas and of an unknown chemical Neither the brother nor sister had been seen since they returned yester day trom a Christmas dinner at the el our case it pay time to make your start. eG * v home of.elatives. >=, £ ’ to save and now is the CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK Consolidated Royalty Building When an Engine Slid Down a Mountain r3 once ‘This remarkable photograph shows a part a locomotive and its tender #liding down a mountainside near after the Philadelphia Night E Cresson, Pa score of persons were injured. ANDREWS FINDS LITTLE TRACE OF SMUGGLING OF SOUTHERN INSPECTION TRIP By WILLIAM J. LOSH (United Press Staff Correspondent.) ABOARD COAST GUARD CUT- TER MODOC, OFF CAPE FEAR, N. C., Dec, 26.—Steaming south to the newest theater of the rum war, As- sistant Secretary of the Treasury Andrews and his small party of aides tonight were off the North Carolina coast, with Charleston, 8. C., the next port of call tomorrow. A moderate sea was running and the weather was a bit cold. Andrews’ inspection tour of the southern coast as far as Havanna, opened auspiclously this morning at Wilmington, N. C., where he ar- rived after an overnight trip from Washington. Conversations with federal officials there were confined principally to the customs situation, as little smuggling actively is re ported ern ports are taking an in- importance from the cus- toms viewpoint and Andrews ig plan- ning an expansion of customs facili- ties. He was informed that Wilm- ington exports this year amounted to $15,000,000 and imports to $ 000,000, from which the government collected revenues of $6,000,000, Wilmington pridefully claims an ectromy record with the lowest cost to government per dollar of revenue collected of any port in the country 47 of a cent fob each $1 collected. ck of smuggling and prohibi- tion activities on this coast are ascribéd to the distance from the important bootleg markets and the absence of good avenues of communt- cation inland. Along the coast further north the inhabitants prefer moonshine and corn whisky of their own manufac- ture to the expensive imported pro- duction, and hence there is no de- mand. The real MAYTAG MANAGER GOES TO JOWA FOR GENERAL CONFERENCE OF AGENTS prohibition features of B. Hamnett, local manager of the Maytag shop, left yesterday af- ternoon for the factory at Newton, 1 branch managers throughout United States and Canada embling there for 20, a n rs to meet demand. doubles turn ¢ teadily inc added facility former capacity Mr. sing now This the expects to be gone Ly 2 May You IR nu press on the Pennsylvania ON FIRST LEG ne trip are expected after Savannah, Georgia, ‘s ched Suni night From there south bootleg trade is re ported on the increase and Andrews will talk with officials with a view to perfecting a plan to stop the leaks which Will be presented to Secretary Mellon on his return early in January. ‘The present trip fs the first of a eries of inspection tours planned by the dry r to oc r the country. He contemplates later surveys to the Canadian and Mexican borders, the north Atlantic coast and perhaps the Pac spi was A er living in a London sub. urb shocked at the language used by two men repairing telegraph wires close to her house. She wrote to the company on the matter, and the foreman was asked to report. This he did in the following way: “Me and Bill Fairweather were on this job. I was up the telegraph pole, and accidentally let the hot lead fall on Bill. It went down his neck. ‘Then he said: ‘You really must be more careful, Harry.’ The son of the family was home on his first vacation since he had attained to the dignity of college instructor. He and his father were discussing affairs of the day, and finally the boy remarked: “Dad, TI hope when I am as old you I'll know more than you do.” “I'll go one better, my boy,” the father replied: “I hope that when you are that old you will, know as much as you think you do now.” as The Princess Pignatelli d'Aragon, formerly Miss Ruth Waters of Phil- adelphia, said as she embarked on the steamship to spend the winter in Cannes with her sister, the Bar- oness Meyronnet de Saint Mare: “Riviera fashions this winter are going to be ultra, Skirts especially.” The princess smiled and added: “You might say that skirts will be knee plus ultra 2 Christmas Babes Are Born in Casper seVen-pou slighted at any time of the ye n when it comes on Christmas, y what better gift could be asked? T son was born at the Natrona ¥ morlal hospital at 10:45 o'clock Fri- day night Mr. and Mrs..Manio Alamos, 823 £t, John street, were greeted Christ mas eve with a nine-pound son et ae) Casper Business Coilege Enroll for Winter Term January 3 Six months’ training before hot weathor. oe eee ee eins. € Happier and Make More Money Is the New Year Wish of the derailed. FENG BETWEEN TWIN FIRES IN CHINESE STRIFE ‘Christian’ General Faces Attack b Chang and Wu WASHINGTON, Dec Capture of Tientsin by railroad More than a 26.—(P)— the military dictator of north China, Feng Yu- Hsiang, and the simultaneous vic- tory by forces of the Manchurian war lord, Chang T’so-Lin, near Muk- den, apparent oring Chang to complete power north of the Great wall, have left China's military po- litical warfare still in’: serious con- dition American 4 ets are en route to Shang? unila, but the movement elieved ‘to have any § ice in view of naval advices to the effect that the foreign quarter of Tientsin had not been troubled during the fighting there > outstanding feature of the dev victory week's mi opments, aside from the of Chang, which was almost as sudden and unexpect- ed as his apparent complete collapse a few weeks ago, was the extension of Feng’s control over the entire northern zone of China proper, from the Mongolian border to the sea via @lentsin. Despite the apparent great- ness of his triumph, however, a strong feeling prevails’ in military and other circles in Washington, which are watching Chinese events most closely, that Feng 1s now ex- posed to attack from both sides and is in a more dangerous position than he has been at any time since he rose to the first rank among China's rival war lords through betrayal of Wu-Pel-Fu. Wu presumably still stands as a threat against Feng from the south just as Chang’s victory puts him in & position to strike at the so-called Christian general from the north. That military aspect of the situation alone, it argued, would forbid any serious attempt on Russia's part to expand friendship with Feng for the purpose of gaining a rail corrider to ice-fre> terminals on the Pacific. Macbeth, Noted Chicago Singer, Has Operation CHICAG De 5.—(By United a Macbeth Or c was taken he el to @ ital today 1 jon for an intestinal ause of her illness, a change in the program was nec ary. Mary Garden, farnous* Chic diva, also is incapihitated by severe cold, but her condition is not serious, nS TUT CLAGUUA ' SUNDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1925 IRE TRAFFIC ABROAD BROLY T BY oTORM Rains Inundate East of France and Menace Railway Lines PARIS, Dec. 26.—(?)—Telegraph and telephone lines have suffered much through the storms of the last few days and a communique issued from the ministry of commerce to- night admits the situation is serfous. Although communication ywill be re- stored to some extent soon, complete reconstruetion of certain sections of Viestroyed lines will require several weeks. The three-masted Finnish vessel Rauha was towed into L’Orinet to- day, having lost two of her masts. "Tho vessel had been tossed about on mountainous waves and severely pounded. Reports from Chambery and other eastern points of France tell of great damage through unusually heavy rain storms and premature thawing of rivers. The countryside {s flood- ed, the railway line to Italy is com- pletely submerged in the Chambery region and trolley cars are unable to circulate in the town of Chambery. ‘The rain is still falling. Various parts of the town of Char- olles are inundated after days of torrential rains. At Aix Les Baines, swollen streams have burst dykes of several tributaries of Lake Bour- get, cutting all communication with neighboring towns and menacing the railway line at the Culoz function, through which trains for Italy and Switzerland pass. Woman Gets $990 ‘Conscience Fund’ as Christmas Gift NE WBRITAIN, Conn., Dec. 26.— (#)—Mrs. Stanley Kriscunas re- ceived in her Christmas mail a small package, bearing no return address, containing $990 in bills, without note of explanation, She believes {t was sent to her by the person who foond $1,000 which she lost two and one half years ago. Old Cripple Uses Shooting Gallery { Gun to,Kill Self LOUISVILLE, Ky., Dec, 26.—An aged cripple, believed to be Charles J. Smith, address unknown, hobbled into a shooting gallery here this af- ternoon, placed a nickel on the counter, fired two shots at the mov- ing decoys, then placed the muzzle of the rifle to his temple and fired. He died on the way to a hospital. A note found in the man’s pocket addressed to Mrs. Frank Smith, Rosedale, Kansas, read: “I can't stand the life I am Jead- ing. There seems no chance for better so I quit. I can't make the grade.” ear al th Troops Patrol “ African City in ' Strike Crisis JOHANNESBURG, South “Africa, Dec. 26.—({United Press.}—Troops pa- trolled the principal streets of Lou- renco Marquez, capital of Portuguese East Africa, Christmas day, follow- ing an attempt of the gorevnment to deport strikers, The effort failed because Portugueso seamen refused to transport the strikers, The situation {s regarded danger- ous, as negro infantrymen are being used to over-awe the laborers. .The lab say thelr leader w ret ly risoned 60 Doomed to Die in Cathedral Blast Pardoned SOFIA, Bulgaria, Dec. 26.—UP)— King Boris has extended a full don to sixty persons condemned To death for complicity in the, con- spiracy leading to the bombing of the cathedral Inst April. oo ae cae ae AF GUY GAY SELLS INSURANCE. Ciassified Ads WANTED—SALESMEN WANTED—Three good used car salesmen. Apply Stanley Bene- dict, sales manager, Van Sant Motor company, phone 1406. NEW men guaranteed $40 weekiy against commissions. Retailers live-wire novelty. Good men make $200. 8. Appleton Confection Co., Cedar Rapids, Towa. “ MANUFACTURER offers necktie sideline. Opportunity for salesmen with following. Complete samples. Low prices. Novelty styles. SEID- MAN NECKWEAR CO., 111 Fifth Aye., New York. MAKE $200 weekly, well retailers lve-wire speciaity.,” Salary and ex- penses guaranteed against commis: slong. STANDARD MFG. CO., Cedar P 3 towns in entire state or more; mak- ing drug stores, confectioneries, etc Continuous commission; no collec Uens, no sales, no samples to carry. State line carried, territory covered. Dean Novelty Co., Box 192, Mus kogee, Okla. Pat Royce has two grades of gaso- line, high test and regular. No dif- ference in price. Open all night. sik aandaed> NA = BARBER wanted at 226 West First. BE A BARBER. Big money. Steady Moler men. Write. COLLEGE, Mth St., Denyer. MEN wanting I Forest Ran: ment positions. I jokan y Mail Clerk, and other Governe Write for particu- very town and mples, ad- Yo selling. Outdoor LIABLE M4 in ¢ city to distribute free s vertising matter, etc. Experience unnecessary. work. Average $8 per day. Write quickly for co! Super- visor Colombe, 5153 North Clark St., Chicago, Ill. WANTED—AGENTS I NEED an agent to sell my candies, mints and gum to dealers: Large profits. Experience unnecessary. nples. Write today. Milton { NE CENT! Post card from you brings free solid gold stud offer to ag Rajah Raynbo ¢ celves expert Salisbury DIRECT 100 store route. distribute and unnecessary. weekly, Box Herald. POSITIONS WANTED EXPERIENCED deliveryman, truck driver out of work, willing to go nt, this county No selling, Just collec xperience Should net salary $70 Bll, care Tribune- any place or do anything. Phone Job as hous Keeper for bachelor or widower. P® O. Box WANT work cooking or small hotel or Phone 722-J. SERVICES OFFERED Remodéling and Repairing W. Y. Johnston, The Carpenter Phone 2406 HARPER method scalp treatments for dandruff, falling hair, marcel. Mrs. Colby, 449 CY. Phone 259. _ $25.00 Reward * - IF YOU HAVE A FROZEN DAMAGED # RADIATOR That Cannot Be Repaired to .° Your Batisfaction “4 Sam The Radiator Man’ 938 East A St. Phone 1381 VAN SANT GARAGE BLDG. GAS FITTINGS of all Kinds; stoves! installed and adjusted; estimates! given; reasonable rates. Earl M Hin. “Phone 2663-W. 1705 ©. ‘Third.! MARCEL, complete, 50c; retrace and shingle, 35c.. Phone 2524-W. Mrs. Barker, 162 North Kimball. { in oll fields, housekeeper. WANTED TO BUY } WE BUY, sell and exchange used furniture, stoves and trunks. Fry's Furniture Co., 249 West Yellewstone, hone 1278. WANTED—Your old coal range or heater in exchange for a gas! fange or heater. Phone 1086. | WANTED TO BUY—Discarded cio-) thing and shoe, guns, tools, tents, tarps, saddles and chappe. Phone! 2061-W. The Two-for-One-Store, WANTED—We will buy or in your used furniture, also whi guns and rifles. Koler Furnit Co., 220 8. Wolcott. Phone 138. WANTED TO BUY—We pay more) for coal ranges, heaters, dressers, euaroen all household goods. Phone For Sale—AUTOMOBILES | FOR SALE—FORD COUPE 1925 model, new oversize tires lots of extras, guaranteed—$375.00. Earl C. Boyle, Inc. . ‘The safe place to buy your used car- FOR SALE—Equity in Willys st. Clair touring car. A. C. S., care ‘Tribune. FOR SALE—FORD COUPE 1924 model in excellent conditiong Sold with our guarantee—$340.00. TODAY ONL) A REAL BARGAIN Plenty of extras, including water pump, heater,, shock absorbers, K’axon horn, big wheel and lock, tire carrier and spare, ofl gauge, new battery, good tires, Koom 203, Virginia Hotel Until 5 Pp. m. today only, and Sunday. FOR SALE—FORD TOURING 1923 model, {n A-1 condition, guar. anteed—$175.00, Karl © Raw! Tre Earl C. Boyle, linc VJ i&, Uilve ur used car FOR SAL Studebaker, stand- 1 ard six; priced right. For demon stration call 2391-M. FOR 1 SAL Haynes touring car, 24; gloss inclosure, 5 balloon tires, snubbers, motometer, other ex tras; Up top condition; bargain, $750. Great Northern Motor Co., 333 N. Wolcott. Phone FOR SALE—FORD TOURING 1922 model, in good running order —g00d rubber, Hassler shock absorb ers—$120,00, Earl C. Boyle, Inc, The safe place to buy your used car FOR SALE—FORD RUNABOUT 1924 model, Buaranteed— $200.00 Earl C. Boyle, lnc; The safe place to buy your used car. 229 ¢ . . ; {of wit