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ay PAGE SIX ‘OLAIN PRIEST | LAID AT REST, SSPGTTREED Man Held at Sidney as An- drew Rolando Released by Authorities on Establis' ing His Identity. MURDERER IS HELD INSANE WARSAW, Ind., Noy. 3.—Harry Long, who killed his brothers Kenneth, 3, and Russell, 5, by beat- ing them over the head with a piece of pipe was ordered to the colony for the insane at the Indiana state prison yesterd: vat “Crap” Game of Former Service Men Broken Up KANSAS CITY, Nov. 3.—A “crap” game in an upper corridor of the Baltt- more hotel here was broken up early this morning by the police, and the participants, some of whom were wearing army clothing, were thrown into the street. There was no prop- erty damage to the hotel, J. R. Du- mont, its manager, said today, nor wore any of the police or the dice game participants injured. The police after breaking up the game released the men, PLEDGES RING TRUE AT RALLY (Continued from Page 1.) Drought stormy house. “If Mr. Blackmore is elected you will get a chief of police who will be capable of cleaning up Casper and for whom no excuses wil be neces sary. He will be a man who knows the duties of a police officer and will be capable of fulfilling the duties of the office. His hands will be support: ed by patrolmen of like caliber.” More lengthy talks of indorsement were made for Mr. Blackmore and his party and councilmunie ticket by Messrs R. C. Cathers of the Wyoming Trust company; Harry B. Durham. Prominent attorney; Earle G. Bur. well, manager of the Casper Gas Ap- approval from the pliance company and by Mr. O’Con- nor. Mr. Cather ples that oratory had no place i 8 campaign but that the candid be analyzed in ssues should businesslike way. He urge qualifications of the men aspir to the office of mayor shi e examined the same as one person would examine the qualifications of men who were aspir ing to a position in his own firm. “I know t if this attitude is taken that ive at the same co’ conf'den the © f. Because of impreg position he will be abl to ‘devote am portion of his time to watching the sts of the elitr. He will also have the support of | men who know when the city is get ting a dollars worth of benefit for a dollar spent and that is a big Iter when it is realized that Casper is now spending over $1,000,000 of icipel funds. its mun. Mr. Blackmore {s a good sclid, so substantial citizen and he will st us a good sound, and substantia! busi ness administration as well as carry | With a nation-wide rail str ing daily conferences with gov ition, Here he is shown leaving the ‘Commission a a conference. r | CONFERENCE 0 i her reward for ousting the from Kiachow and the Far But that brought the rub. Would | the Japanese be content to te | as the Germans had? Indeed, the Ger-| mans entered into working agree-| ments with British and other Buro-| pean business men in the Far Bast. It was purely a commercial not a po Ltical proposition. Would the Jap- anese keep it commercial uge it to penetrate China politically and get a hold on the administrative independ- ence of China? The Chinese thought so. They open ly said so. That's the basis for their opposition to Japan's acquisition of one inch more of a foothold in China. Germans l It's a question of faith, of trust or suspicion. The Japanese protest that they never break their word, that they have only disinterested motives and seck merely @ piace for commer cial expansion for their already ‘over. populated country. But the wili not listen. Sharing the ¢ suspicions are practically all the Bri ish, French and American business in terests in China. They are violent antiJapanese. They expect their re ctive governments to use ral and physical power to ke from overst nds of commercial nec t that the open door s an open door and noediscr Who will keep the’ “open door open? Who will enforce the under standing? The Brtish g ment knows it cannot do it Will the |stimulus it give Che Casper Daily Cribun THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1921. ident Harding is hold- alifig with transporta- offices of the Interstate Commerce CHINESE PROBLEM TO SRIF BIg F WORLD POWERS (Continue@ from Page 1.) 1 States help? That's why the a not t anxious to announce this time what they will do with the AngloJapanese alliance. One school of thought insists that the al lance be abrogated because of the the Japanese polit. lily and commercially, but another school of thought In the British gov¢ ent wants to know first whether Bri r ° : Wilson covenant because it was in- tended to guarantee the territorial in- tegrty and political independence of member states tn the league of na* tions including China, the query is/ whether enough water has gone over the dam to make President Harding and Secretary Hughes ready to apply the doctrine of article ten to China. Back of it all is a desire to pre- vent war, In favor of the guarantes of China's territorial integrity is the! argument that if all the powers ir-; cluding Japan sign on the dotted line, & pledge to let China alone, the agree-| | ment will never have to been forced. It is the same line of thought which ac-} tuated Mr. Wilson in urging article! ten, namely that a profession of te-| spect for territorial integrity made in! a formal treaty would be too difficult |@ burdle for any nation to jump no matter how strong might be her mil- itaristic elements or how far gone might elements or how statesmen. | The drawing up of a treaty or con- vention which would insure all na-| tions the “open dour” and ‘pledge all! countries to respect China's territor- jal and poljtical integrity is the big aim of the conference. When once such @ compact ts in effect, what use| would the AngloJapanese alliance ba?| Great Britain might be reluctant to} take the initiative in abrogating it) |but other powers would not hesitate to ask for the incorporation of a pro- vision stating that all agreements and) uiances or understandings entered which may be incon-/ treaty shall be automatically idered as denounc. ed or abrogated. That wo save England the necessity -of denouncing | the alllance and would absolutely re- move any obligation on the part of tain to come to the defence of Ja- pan in the @vent of future trouble in the Far Bast. To all this the antiJapanese ele- ments in our own country as well as n the European powers shake their heads dubiously. What good, say they t» any treaty with Japan. She has adopted, they claim, the German | political systern. What the foreign j office may say is no doubt sincere but | what the military party does is the nporta thing. Feeling that Japan! is ruled by a military clique that the! Japanese general staff does what it pleases with the edicts anese foreign office, just as the Ger-| man general staff used to ride rough shod over the foreign office and the! German admiralty made a scrap of! paper out of the pledges of the Gor- man Foreign secretary, there is little} faith on the part of some of our army and navy folk in the value of any treaty or compact. Suspicion and mistrust is a hard thing to combat. It runs‘ all through the Japanese-Chinese controversy as well as our own relations with the Far East. But the United States govern- | | of the Jap-jant fin: | Japanese ment cannot officially take cogni- +; od § - be ed on if|Z@nce of that mistrust. It is true our United States can. be count upe | rmy and nayy officers who have the alliance is given up. In other : been in the East constantly talk about words, it In contended by the latter |peen in the East, ye group of statesmen that the Anglo- (~ +5 Shed: is, enoug! gon! ss aillance gives the. Britsh|t#on of Japanese militarism has come government which makes it possible /t? Washington to convince the most to hold Japan back gently but firmly|Skeptcal that there must be some-| jthing back of it all and that it be-| moral and physical help of the a exercise an influence Which might ever, be publicly. ac:|200¥es America to be prudent. knowledged or heeded if the alliance} The Japanese Foreign office whose were broken and if Japan felt that‘ sod faith is not being questioned has she must, eventually seek the hand|® pepsin he anes hadnt Sens of reconstructed Germany or PesUB-| hen ue "fepatese: covenant ee piesteer assist in foteitins aye Ainesitna! havincte fant hake i can newspaper men as publicity to enter/agents, there ‘s no frowning on the pose cer-ipart of our officials. No, the hope at Britain is that every opportunity wi! be The Un.ted States|given the Japanese government and under McKinley's ad-| people to see that America is not an- and has reiterated herixious for war, not anxious for the iy tim 2 to ons in the Far East. d ready : ublican secretaries }controversy but wants @ clean-up of of state to maintain the territorlal in-!anglea and disputes which have: led tegrity and admin strative independ-|to the rapid rise of a mischievious ence of China. Will the Harding ad-|jingo spirit in both Japan and the ministration say so in a formal treaty?| United States. ‘“ Mindful of the fact that the Republi-| It is npt entirely a political prob- can party denounced article ten in the lem. For America it has an import: — Hoadley Dodge. @ hotel are we doomed to han ker in vain after home com Real Home Comforts in This Newest Hotel For Women, | | Says Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, Jr. ince under Mr. |building up of insessant mistrust and #n or Germany or Franco. 3.—The alleged slayin |yards near here y. H. West of Colorado Springs, hoax. 's Nicholas Golitzin on’ his way to work at Hurst Farm, Sur ngland, pick over his shoul He is one of the Russian princes who fled from Soviet Russia. neial aspect. Not more than a@ year ago, Thomas W. Lamont of J. P. Morgan and company went to China and Japan and with the moral support of our department of state negotiated an agreement known as 7. “consortium” whereby the capitalists of Great Britain, France, Japan and the United States agreed to a certain et of principles for ‘the financing of enterpriseg in China, It was another step in the open door policy of the United States, Everybody knew Eng- land didn't have, much capital avail. ble and that even though other pow- ers were included in the agreement to make it more impressive, the bank- ets of Japan and the United States alone were concerned. Bu§ capital hag not been forthcoming &0 easily Why should money flow to a region of the world where political condi tions are unsettled? To make the consortium worth while, a political gompact between na tons has been d med essential. The agreement to come out of the forth- coming conferenco whether it be a treaty of convention will be of im- mense value as a moral support to the consortium. ‘There are valuable rsources in Chinn which American capital would like to help develop— railways, and mines. Americans have been complaining for years that they were not given the same backing by their government in the Far East is given the citizens of Great Brit- The new compact with reapect to the Far East is designed to remove inequalities and give the American an equal chance. MINERS AWAIT STRIKE ORDERS (Continued from Pago 1.° received D.C. Mr. Van Mater sald his advices said the order applied to West Virginia Indiana, Ohio and Iilinois. Mr. Van Mater did not state the source of his information in Washington. Slaying Story. Develops Hoax, Colo. § prings today from Washington, COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., Nov. in the railroad erday of William is a Authorities found him at work as CHILDREN TAKE TOWOODSLIKE |efrigerator Co. _ ANIMALS IN FAMINE DISTRICTS Not Beneficiary Under Rail Act RIGA, Nov. 3.—Children are li in the woods and fields like young animals in some parts of the famine district of| wasHtNGTON, Nov. 3—Provisions tov, says an official wireless dispatch from Moscow. They | of the transportation act guaranteeing are little waifs who have fled from famine stricken cities and |ratroads, generally agains on roots and grass. When adults ap-|¢psrations for the tie months of 1920 proach they flee, showing every evidence of fear. Over-| nent control were held by the inter villages and subsist BIG WAREHOUSE I DUANED WITh ENORMOUSLOSS, LOS ANGELES, Nov. 3.—The shij ping warehouse of the Los Alimitos Sugar company was destroyed by fire of unknown origin today, the loss be-| ing estimated at $1,500,000 by Man- ager E. C. Hamilton. The manager said 175,000 sacks of sugar valued at $6 a sack yere burned. The refinery and other buildings of the plant were saved by the com pany's fire department assisted by two companies from the Long Beach | department. | The blaze was discoveréd about 7} o'clock. The company firemen fou: it for more than an hour, when {t ap- peared to be getting beyond control and a request for assistance was sent to Long Beach. The blaze was check- ed shortly before 9 o'clock with the warehouse a heap of ruins. The greater part of the beet sugar produced in Orange county is refined at this place. 2 MAIL ROBBERS UNDER ARREST NEW YORK, Nov. 3.—Arrest of two men wanted by postoffice author- ities in connection with the $2,000,000 mail truck robbery the night of Oc- tober was announced yesterday by the police of Jersey city. They were recorded at Jersey City head- quarters as Michael Arbesi, alias Ra- faclo Derosa, and Frank Calabrese, hoth of Hoboken. They are being held in $5,000 bail each on technical charges of being suspicious charac- t| the identity of the driver of the auto against losses in crowding of children’s homes had/ state commerce commission today not been carried so far in the Syrzan and}, apply to the Chicago, New York & ‘f= districts that some of the tnst!-/ Boston Refrigerator company, a sub- tutions are sheltering four times a5/ sidiary of the Grand Trunk railroad. many children as they have accom-| The decision was said to provide a modation for. In these places chil-| precedent in the claims filed by pri. @ren take turns in occupying such| vate car and railroad facility corpora- beds ss are available, one small fa-| i075. mine crawling into a v8 the neater moment another child vacates it. NATIONS MADE. “Entire families are jumping into agree: rivers and cases are reported of pa- WASHINGTON, Nov. 3.—Nomina- rents strangling their children rather | tions sent to the senate today by Pres- than see them die of starvation,” says|taent Harding included: Robert E. the dispatch, which also gives the! rewis of Denver, to be United States first of disorderly migration. 4rout judge for the eighth circuit; “Over the roads in the Irbit district. | Teste Jeneen of Hot Springs, §. D.. is moving a band of disorderly | +, be collector of internal revenue for refugees from starving Volga. the South Dakota district, and Henry ee H. Errett of Clayton, N. M., to be reg- SLAYER FREE |{1CHING BURNING Festered and Scaled Over. Face Disfigured, Cuticura Heals. mobile that last night ran down and killed Sister Mary Rosalita and Sister Mary Virginia of St. Joseph's acade- my. A 13-year-old boy was the only witness to the accident and he told the police he was so frightened t he did not notice the driver. Charges Made Against Marines Are Under Fire WASHINGTON, Nov. 3,—Charses that Haitian natives were killed or in- humanely treated by gendarmes, act- ing on order of American marine of- ficers were challenged today before the special senate investigating com- mittee by Lieut. Col, Alexander 8. ‘Williams, who acted as assistant com- mander and later as commander of pimples or other a pleasure to use, as is algo Talcum for perfuming the skin. ag the gendarmes between August, 1916 and July, 1919. ‘ The new Grace Dodge Hotel in | Washington, the latest project of the National Board of the Y. W. C. A. which has named the hotel after its founder, the late Grace ing out his pledges of cleantag up the objectionatte vice conditions of the Grace Dodge Hotel in Washington, Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., clty. Mr. Blackmore's life has been D, C, the model hotel e a8 for Chairman of the Grace Dodge an open book here for thirty years} women, which ts unde: Hotel Committee. or more and his integrity is attested| | ment. Designed to mect strongest by those who know him| ments of the woman tourist as we beon spared to make the guests erase das base the pro ess women feel at home. Suites especiatly b whose political take them equtpped for mothers: travelling with Sp (see <a quien the , young children are one. innovi GERMAN MARKS ON TOBOGGAN.| {57° first of its kind ever Instead of the time-honored cotton, Sarw. YORK, Nov Se nees in Washington, is a pioneer of upholatering a baby with pillows, marks tod: ropped to 48 cents, a yrciteum ea Titekontng tai asa hentlon snetitice new low record. This was a decline efeltor's personal for baby's bottle, For the ‘young of 1% points from the previous low} direction chatrman of, hotel woman travelling in a multease, record, made yesterd: committee, the eponsors of the hotel meriy restricted te stealthy makes sash iaaessah have not been content to provide shifts such as the use of electric $k RaWAnL, merely Model hotel furnishings and bulb as & current and a bureau dr ay 3 di ment for the lands recor ng board, th 26N 2, tol and I Streets, ulrectly ¢ rooms with pressing privileges. ‘There Union station. No effo ate shampoo booths with ele > Grace Hoadley Dodg usual today_at his ranch near Ramah, Colo. Peter Mahael and his wife, de. tained by the Canon City authorities last night, were released today. A telephone message received by Lester West, saying that his brother was “seriously injured and probably murdered” in the rafircad yards caus- ed the detention of the Mahaels. pea Si VISCOUNT DEAD. 7 LONDO?’ Nov. 3.—William Mans- CE eee eh ried tel, first ‘viscount of Sandhurst is beards will be provided at the Grace Dodge Hotel in Washing- ton for the young woman travel- ling in a suit case. dead. He was undersecrotary for war in 1886 and again from 1892 to 1894. ‘The heir to the title is John William Mansfield, a brother. , | riers for the use of guests, without | charge. H “Every effort has been mads to make the hotel comfortable and pleas- ant and yet moderate in price,” says Mra. Rockefeller. “The Grace Dodge | Hotel is designed to care for business | and professional women and tourists. All the rooms are outside rooms with = | telephones and het and cold water.” | ‘Transient rates on the European plan are from two to four dollars a day. Many women prominent politic- ally in Washington have endorsed the need for the hotel and its splendid facilities. Men guests will be admitted to res- taurant, lounge and other public rooms on the main floor. The hotel ts the latest project of the National Board of the Yeung Wamen's Christian Asscclation which hes named the hotel after its forrder, the tate Extra! Here’s Town Without Any Candidate TAYLORVILLE, Il, Nov. ‘Without candidates there can be no ‘glection, the village trustees ot Pal- mer, Gecided this morning. That Iittlo town of 450 inhabitants will forego all election joys November 8, because none of them are anxious for office, although their mayor, the city clerk and one of the trustees have left thelr village BURNS FATAL TO CHILDREN SCOTTSBLUFF, Neb. 3.—Two chil- dren were burned to death and an- other is in a criticol condition In a hospital from burns received yesterday When a chicken house in which they were playing was destroyed by fire. The dead are: Lawrence Day, 5 years of age; Walter Huffman, 4 years. The Huffman boys' younger brother was seriously burned when he was rescued from the flames which are believed to have originated when one of the Boys ignited gasoline with a match. ‘The parents are prostrated. po Santana CARD OF THANKS. I want those who expressed so. much kindness to me at the passing of my dear daughter, Antoinette, to know of my deep gratitude and love MRS. LOVELY HUDSON. 11+ SLOAN’S RELIEVES NEURALGIC: ACHES tain. , Call or soe Mr. McCrea bd. o AOR forty years Sloan’s Liniment has been the quickest relief for . neuralgia, sciatica and rheuma- tism, tired muscles, lame backs, sprains ‘and strains, aches and pains. Keep Sloan's handy and a; freely, withgad raiding, at the fine Gwinges It eases and brings comfort surely: and readily. You'll find it clean and non-skin-staining. Sloan's Liniment fs pain’s enemy. Ask your neighbor. At all druggists—35c, 70c, $1.40. Sioa Liniment when inflated are ri in the bi ound. But when deflated only the Mic’! tube life and economy Tube remains curved. others become perfectly straight. ‘Come in and let us explair why this exclu- sive Michelin feature means so much in Ask your dealer for Natrona County Honey. WM. MOSTELLER ‘THs picture illustrates an important : difference in inner tubes. All tubes ing-shaped like the tube All R. M. MOSHER 316 West Yellowstone Have You Taken Advantage of Our Temporary Re- 513 Oil Exchange Bldg. ducton in Coal ANNOUNCEMENT We wish to announce that we have opened offices in Casper and are now ready for business. Ha vernuaRetoy to Sat OF trade, eiephone and we will look over your pr . also have renters for houses and Bene ye he3. Be Consolidated Realty Co. If you come in and see us or Phone 1720 Prices? Yo n fill bin f eee ee uu cal your or es ae less if you place your order Moral and Financial Casper atonce. Prices may be ad- Support the i vanced again at any time. Casper Supply Co. PHONES 913 AND 914 JOHN J. HANCOCK, MUNICIPAL ELECTION, REGISTRATION DAYS, [Political Advertisement] AMERICAN TICKET | ROBT. J. VEITCH, For Mayor. HENRY C, POSEY, Councilman, Ward 2. ROBT. E. M’ELVENEY, Councilman, Ward 3. TUESDAY, NOV. 8, 1921. Councilman, Ward 1. OCT. 18, 19, 20, 1921. ‘