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PACT MUST BE SIGNED IN TER DAYS, DECISION German Nation Also! Warned to Carry Out Agreement WEATHER FORECAST Fair tonight and probably Thursday; rising temperature in northwest por- tion tonight and east portion Thursday. | VOLUME IV (By United Press) SPA, Belgium, July _ 7—Tur-) key must sign the peace treaty| within ten days after its presenta-| tion, it was decided today at a preliminary conference of allied premiers here. Turkey’s plea for revision was refused. Unless German delegates. g un-| equivocal assurances that disarmament} in accordance with the treaty terms will hegin immediate the allies will dis continue negotiations here, it was learned reliably. Allied German treaty) discussions will open formally this aft ernoon, Chancellor Fahrenbach said: “T believe the allies will make neces- sary concessions so that Germany's in- ternal order can be maintained. German Defense Minister Sessler in-| timated that he would resign unless the} allies allowed iano more favorable! terms. Tt ta understood that Premier Loy George told the Germans to produce their disarmament program today. Fah renbach with tears trickling down his cheeks pleaded for del: said Germany only 100,000 men and 2,000 but had 200,000 men, guns, 12,000 cannon rifle: Gessler blamed German the economic situation for ment of the treaty terms. Lloyd George replied: “We do not mean to be harsh or cruel | but intend to avoid risking trouble) either with German milita man Bolsheviks. 1f Germe: cere disarmament would have been ac- complished long ago.” BOAT DEFECTIE, Lloyd George entitled to machine guns 50,000 machine and millions of strikes and nonfulfill | statement today. Declaring the League of Nations i el PRE-ELECTION FUND RESUMED JOHNSON OUT FOR HARDING Republican Candidate and Platform Only Hope for Those Who Would Preserve Americanism, Senator Declares (By Associated Press) | SAN FRANCISCO, July 7.—Support of the Republican party “with a candidate standing four square upon the platform is the only choice | left those who believe in safeguarding, protecting and preserving our | Americanism,”. Senator Hiram Johnson of California declared in a INVESTIGATION dependent duce injustice, hostility among the nations to \ LURK. AND HUN APPEALS ‘CASPER, WYO., is the question for decision at the lection, Johnson declared, the Repub- party declared the president's ovenant ed signally to accomplish ‘ted purpose and contained stipulations riot only intolerable for in- people, but cert&in to pro- nd controversy h it proposed “Democratic | the party rejected every effort to modify or} qualify the president’s proposed League| of Nations, endorsed the president's at-| prevent,” while itude and took a positive stand in NEGRO SLAYERS BURN AT STAKE WEDNESDAY, JULY. 7, 1920. (By Associated Press) PARIs, normal. BUILDING PERMITS FOR YEAR CROSS MILLION MARK: MAMMOTH TOTAL REACHED OESPITE Tex., July 7.—Danger of | race strife following the burning at | the stake of two with the killing of whites is believed | past. Armed patrols have been with- drawn and conditions app negroes rently are | were burned at the stake here The Casper Daily thu | charged | CREDENTIALS OF SRD PARTY MEN SENT IR (By CHICAG Committee credential: As: D, July bers of the executive of Forty-Eight H here today to prepare for the con- venticn opehing Saturday to organ- Sze a third party. delegates alread ciated Press) 7.—Several mem- board of the ari Seven hundred ave sent in their Yesterday’s Circulation 4,581 NUMBER 229. . 7—Irving and Arthur, negroes, aged 19 brothers, alleged to have lord, H. Hodges and his son latter's place near William, on the ris last Friday, night by a mob. Permits fopnie Last Month | Limited to Dwellings, | Largest Is $5,000. | More than a million dollars’ wth of building was done in Casper during the first six months of 1920, according to figures kept by the city engineering depart- ing as shown in the building permits jissued totalled $1,075,590 for six months jendine with June 30. This is in spite of a big decrease during June. | Construction work dropped off a way ment. The total amount of build- $44,- 226 in June from the total of the pre- Proceedings Instituted COURT FIGHT OPENED ON SUFF AMENDMENT bY LEAGUEOPPONENT in District of Columbia to Restrain Proclamation | Declaring Amendment Ratified (By Associated Press) | | WASHINGTON, July 7.—Proceedings asking that Bainbridge Col- iby, secretary of state, be enjoined from issuing a proclamation de- \claring the suffrage amendment ratified, were instituted today in the {District of Columbia supreme court by Charles S. Fairchild of New York, president of the American Constitutional League. Fairchild seeks to preyent Attorney General Palmer from enforcing the amend- ° “JUNE DECREASE OFFICER HELD | INCONNECTION WIFE’S DEATH ¢ AROLINA L | MEETS | Bickett c {frage COX URG TO RATIFY Cox it |ture to ratify views on suffrage r tained in a telegram replying to Fran! fangs Justice Bailey issued a rule for Col- by ‘and Palmer to show cause July 13 | why the motion should not be granted. ATURE AUGUST 10. (F ssociated Press) RALBIGH Juls -Governor today all for a spe- sion of » to meet Au 10 when of the suf amendment considered. ial ust ratific will be (By Assoc DAYTON, Ohio, July 7.—Governor today expressed the opinion that is the duty of the Louisiana legisla- woman suffrage. tic candidate's expressed tification were con- The Democe chairman of the Democrat ee of Louisiana, cae tociated Breas) ae HICAGO, July 7.—Lieutenant c c Carl Wanderer, whose wife was sae ps killed in their apartment several z gers weeks azo, presumably by a Waliderer ‘killed in a pistol that followed, was arrested today with his Urother-in-law and cousin, pending investigation. The police found that the pistol supposed to |} belong’ to the dead man was once BABE RUTH IS INJURED WHEN i r favor of the league.” (By United Press) “The overshadowing question in the J WASHINGTON, July 7.—William J.|campaign,.therefore, is whether wel Loeb, New York banker and chairman PROBING DEATHS See | Double Drowning at Cheyenne In-; vestigated by Coroner Caused | by Tendency of Craft to Upend CHEYENNE, Wyv., July coroner's jury which is in tigating the drowning of ‘Miss Bresnahen and of General Wood's eastern headquar- ters, testifying before the senate in- vestigating committee, said he was: the depository fe Wood campaign. 000 to Colonel W. angel, | said Loeb. $406,000 collected for the He has returned $6.- Cc. Procter, Wood's “much to Procter’s surprise,” Major A. A. Sprague of Wood's Chi- leago office, was asked what became of|are in Casper for a few days. Mr. Har- the difference between rado leaders admitted lover $14,000 reported to the committee|at one of 7.—The as expended in he did not know. the $300 Colo- receiving and lorado. Sprague said The names of contributors were ex- Clifford MeMichaels at Lake Minne-|tracted from Loeb with difficulty. He haha, Sunday night, when a boat in| said Geo! W. Perkins and H, H which they were riding with Mis Ysa-| Rogers ch gave a large check but bel Bresnahen and N. C. Sea ank | suddenly, today went to the lake cnd observed a series of experiments vith the boat. The craft was manipul sted by a man in a bathing suit, and nearly av possible the conditions under which the tragedy took place were du-| plicated. It was found that the boat under certain circumstances had a ter | denoy to upend, with the stern down- ward and the prow pointing strai;ht' upward. This was the position which! ft assumed when Sunday night's acei- dent took place, according to the tes-| timony of the survivors. Funeral services for Miss Bresnahen were held this morning. Her brother, Harold Bresnahen, fireman, who was| summoned to the scene of the tragedy} to operate a pulmotor in an effort at] resuscitation, and who did not know| that his sister had drowned until he leaned over her body to operate the de- vice, has been prostrated since his hor-j rifying experience. stated the the subscriptions of other: BANNER MONTH were merely passing along FOR DAN CUPID REPORTED HERE! Dan Cupid did a rushing business n,Casper during the month of June and 37 marriage licenses for the month is the record at the county clérk’s office. The divorce business was also good as Judge Kimball untied 24 marita’ knots and tangles during the month, but Dan Cupid won by a long lap just the same. Last year it was a neck and n race and the gcore stood 18 to 13 the end of the month. kk at REVOLT AGAIN BREWS IN MEX. (By Associated\Press) WASHINGTON, July 7.—Revolutionary movements in various parts of Mexica are reported in advices received today at the state de- partment from American officials in that country. The movements apparently are not related and of minor importance, but they are be-} ing carefully studied. Consul Blooker at Piedras Negras telegraphed that General Ri- cardo Gonzales, nephew of Genera: Pablo Gonzales, with a force of 50 to| 200 men revolted July 4 and oe now | north to Berroterran, whre he is now holding the coal mines. Federal Gen- eral Moreles left Piedras Negras with 200 soldiers to attack the revolters. General Ozuna and Larrabe Agadir also are reported rebelling. Reports from below the border yes- terday were that a Mexican govern- ment paymaster'’s train had been robbed of $50,000 in Mexican gold. Bandits are controlling Monclova. Troons were reported hurrying there from Torreon. No trains are running beyond Sabinas. General Osuna is reported between} Tampico and Monterey and Agadir on} the San Luis-Potosi line. ‘There are| also reports at Piedras Negras that} General Jesus Guajard revolted at Gomez Palacio, near Torreon with 300} men and had advanced toward the 1) Ameri ican border over the old Mexican! aminatign International railroad line. “COX AND ROOSEVELT’ SOUNDS — ‘CATCHY’ TO BUCKEYE GOVERNOR (By Associated Press) DAYTON, Ohio, July 7.—Governor James M. Cox, Democratic candidate for president, believes the Democratic vice presidential nominee, Franklin D. Roosevelt, assistant secretary of the navy, will be a good running mate. “Cox and Roosevelt, 's catchy, isn’t it?” commented the governor as he first learned who his associates on the ticket would be from the A: sociated Press at his home “Trail’s mtly returned from Dei p he was receiving treatment the sanitariums. dendorf ver, wh IN MURDER CASE in: |Furniture company applied for a per- al of his brother, John Cordillo, who s convicted of manslaughter for com- y in the same crime, a jury wa: <i without trouble. The opening Youth Driving Car Which Ran Over M |the defense by C. A. Irwin of Denver,| |counsel for Cordillo. director of the! Seven witnesses knocked down! the morning session of the trial today,.| Recklessness Nicholas Teligadas, were examined at |Manhattan Cafe, was |too late it appeared. The Ford skidded Helo and J. G. Cleary testified pagara | about 30 feet across the street to the ing Jenning’s habits, the finding of his west curbing on Center street. Knox|pody and the character of the wounds |was arrested and charge of reckles>|that caused his death. The trial so driving made against him at police far has been merely a repetition of headquarters. lthat of John Cordill Knox was going too fast, according = ee Arrives With Big to information received at police head- Teligadas was taken to the Private hospital. It was feared that he ha Friend Is Anxious at jsuffered internal injuries but first ex- | showed only severe body _— | The fact that he had an abundant) |supply of money on his person is he- |Heved to be the cause of the disap-| pearance of Jim Dafnes, who had just arrived in Casper from Minneapolis, | 'Minn, Dafnes was unable to deposit] any money in the banks Monday end) carried a large sum of money ana with him in his pockets all day. Now Chris C. Steletos of 219 Marion street is looking for his friend. Dafnes {s about 5 feet 6 inches tall, weighs about 145 puunds, is dark) haired and has a dark complexion. He| wore a gray shirt and overalls along | bruises. End.” Governor Cox admitted that he was not intimately acquainted with Roose- but declared, him a “vigorous, jto the permits i uladon of 000 dwelling. There was little of the larger build- The Exchange! activity during May. WITHIN 10 DAYS) DQUBLE TRAGEDY IS CLIMAX TO (By United Press) |RAILROAD WAGE vy statements of the prosecution and de Restaurant Director Placed [finse were concluded last night, the AWARD IS DUE Under Arrest on Charge of former by Prosecuting Attorney George M. Patterson of Laramie: and HALF AS BIG AS THIS CITY WASHINGTON, July Lar: H. Gordon ot the tion company, » today on business. Wyo., Denve 7.—The ¢ pop as an- don Con-| ar ope month, Building permits issued|* owned by Wanderer. in June amounted. tp $87,244 while in shall enter the maelstrom of European May the city nigineer’s office insued per: | CAR TURTLES and Asiatic policies and become a part a3 totalling $131,575. There were | SS Sa of the cyinical impmrialism of the old Es yee 7 49 hermits /iesued during sone Buel 7 world or whether America, shall live! in Mt y there were 72 permits issued. ION FOR | (By Associated Press) her life in her own way, mindful of Large building was at a standstill last| td | PHILADELPHIA, July 7.—Babe her obligations to humanity and civil- month, most of the permits being for j Ruth, champic home-ran ne of ization but free to act as a crisis shall | houses of the smaller variety and ad- WYOMING BAPTISTS 10 | the New York was 5 arise.” |dittons to houses, } ly injured in an automobile xectaent ————-——_—_ The most expensive house for which at Wawa, Pa., today when his mo- A. J. Hardendorf and baby daughter a permit was issued during June was a/ tor car turned over on a The occupants were throw lonely m. making their way to a farm house, they had their injuries dressed and ladelphia in an- OPEN EARLY IN AUGUST oe | A state Baptist ‘Summer Vacation” mit to erect a $5,000 building ve b gh Pp ns ; f A 5, gg to bey, 1 z were brought to Evidence Which Convicted Brother; buitt of concrete block and to be erected | Wil be opened at Hyattville, Wyo. on| other motor car. Later they took eae BAS eutits on W First street between the Bur-|*USUSt 3 to continue for ten days for) the train for New York. of Complicity in Jennings [yee industrial spur and North Ash| Members of the congregation Wy-| Ruth's car was badly smashed. Tt Death Repeated in Trial ae joming, according to announcements) way hauled to a garage in Media, 5 . re} ies! = | made hi he Rev .. )'Farrell.| » hi 3 | Permission to move the Episcopal pa roy bya : not far from the scene of the of Second Principal | sariah house to Seventh and Reamer | An elaborate camp will be maintained | pots } i er |streets included the construction of an| With dining rooms and tents and all) «sell it for what you can get for s_(Special to The Tribune) laddition to the building to cost $2,500.| members of the church will be eligible) i¢ Ruth is said to have told the pro- CHEYENNE, Wyo., July 7—Rapid phe Lioya Building company has the |(2,*ttend. Free transportation to the’ prietor. “I'm through with it.” |Drogress was made today in the trial) contract for this work. Sermp nite, which 1s iattuatodisn en Weel) © at is saidsthat. Rath was) hurt jof Pete Cordillo for the murder of! “phree one-story frame dwellings cost-|PACe {or An OULinE, Will be furnished! about the Knees and limped badly. |Frank Jennings near Laramie the night! ;,,. $3,000 Re dwellings cost-|from Worland, Basin and Manderson. Be 4 lof September 7, 1919, following the em-| .75,4), 5. be aa ee rel Morning lectures by evangelists and! Attorney C. P. Plummer left yester {panelling of a jury last’ evening.) oi ccts 1 ne and © | foreign missio' -s under the jurisdic-| qay for the tt on a business trip of | Despite widespread publicity given the! § according |tion of the North Baptist convention| .eyveral weeks. will be a feature of the camp life with ‘the remainder recreation such A physical directc ——ee the time devoted to, hikes and fishing. will be in charge.’ of take treatment for he will {and run over this morning shortly be- and at the opening of the afternoon ses CHICAGO, July Announcement fore 11 o'clock near the northwest cor-|sion Miss Viola Broughton, sweetheart) of the wage adv: 1 by National ner of Second and Center streets.|of the slain man, whose testimony was; Roailroad Labor a is expected. L | Bruises over his entire body were re-| not reached until the third day of the! within the next ten days, a-board mem ported but no bones were broken. Teli-'trial of John Cordillo, took the stand to] ber, G. W. Hanger,’ stated today. gadas was crossing the street when relate that she was the last person |-board fs in conference daily. struck by a light Ford truck driven by who saw Jennings alive. | 9 |loyd Knox, a youth about 15 years At the morning session I Jen-| Jold, according to eye witnesses of the nings, father of the murder victim, F.| LARAMIE ONLY | accident. |W. Jobnson, Dr. R. M. Leake, B. C.| LANDER, Wyo., July 7.—Jealousy and a . quarrel at a dence held short- | Young Knbx applied the brakes but Bellamy, Theodore Berner, Rev. F. S.| ly before the Fourth of July resulted in a double killing ai Dubois, a town about seventy-two miles northeast of here. Jess Blagg, a man about 40 years of age, who was generally known at Dubois as a quarrelsome character, without warning shot his wife, considerably older thah himself, in the neck, while the two were at a dance. He then turned the gun on himself, dying almost instantly when the bullet pierced the jugular vein, Mrs. Blagg lived about 30 minutes. need by the census bi | ausctersii (One vere; witnees Del over re | \Nesois: Accorauugh tou thee fines; The two Blaggs wero sitting together. As a climax of a heated argument, boxy must para baen soiie coROr el . | this is a decrease of 1; sons | Blagg is said to have pulled firing instantly at her from close range | miles t this dangerous inter-| persons lage is sal o have pulled a gum, = y ge. ae pss eae ae | Roll, Disappears, } sinon 129 10icoqee masons pene: The shooting occurred shortly after midnight. Mrs. Blagg is survived to residents of everal children by former marriage. Blagg was know: ed{ Dubois as having easy habits and a leisurely reputation, DEMOCRATS INDU LGE IN ‘LAST FLING, START HOME SAN FRANCISCO, July 7.—Dem | gates to the Democratic national con. vention, their work done, the big | (By Associated Press) department as soon as he can clear up his desk. Leaders are elated over the spirit loaded to capacity. | Men who will play important roles | in the fight for election of the ticket | \ | ieutanatnier courageous and progress- wie ne on eS et he eal gathering adjourned in a last riot of | were hurrying away to delayed vaca- | of harmony marking the last hours | ive Democrat.” leeatted ortentke aththe Btandard refin-| enthusiasm for the party standard | tions and on sight-seeing tours pre- | of the convention. In the nomina- i He commented particularly upon | oy Tuesday morning. bearers—Governor James M. Cox of | paratory to the struggle ahead. | tion of Roosevelt by acclamation fol- | two addresses made by the vice presi- | Ohio and Franklin D, Roosevelt of | Roosevelt was due to leave during the | lowing the withdrawal of other can- | dential candidate, one before the na- | P. S. Spencer of Cheyenne, George| New York—are scrambling for train for Dayton, Ohio, to consult | didates, leaders saw evidence of dif- | Honal committee in Chicago last win- |, Brimmer of Rawlins and W, 1.| s¢commodations homeward today. | with Cox where preliminary plans for | ferences buried and a determination | ter and the other on Americanization | Weeks of ‘der, are in the city on| Every string of departing sleepers | the campaign will be mapped out. | to work hard for victory in the elec- Dayton. buslnaenl | heading east, north and south is © He intends to resign from the navy ! tion. 4 REFUSED |