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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1921. SEARCH IS MADE FOR GANGSTERS BY AUTHORITIES obbery of Henry Wyatt Following Dur- bin Rooms Holdup Leads Officers to Trail of Organized Band Believing that a number of thief among which were the hold Neal of the Durbin ve Casper Daily Cribune ta er Navy Plan eg Some Battleships Amer: serious depredations here, s oR of bs and Fay Archie rooms an enry Wyatt of 504 South Durbin, are the work of a hank of notorious outlaws, officials here are making extra efforts to apprehend the men wanted PACKING HOUSE tered earlier this month and masked men bound and gagged Mr, and Mrs. Neal after they had stolen considerable money which Mr. Neal had drawn from a bank the day before preparing | for an extended trip. ‘The same conditions were duplicated when Henry , Wyatt was robbed of a ring valued ‘at $3,000 Friday night. P ‘The masked men obtained entrance to ; his home by covering him with revolv- — jers when he opened the door in re che. U. . Qn the left the U. 5. 8, Artzona, one of the eighteen capital slips the United States navy would retain, sponse to their knock. After @ dis-|the middle the U. 8, &. Mexico, and on tho right ihe U. & & Nevada. mond ring which he was wearing was ARBUCKLEISON WITNESS STAND (Continued From Page 1) vost, another guest, also was a stran- ger to him, he said. “I had no ides that Miss Rappe, Mrs. Delmont, Miss Blake or. Miss Prevost were’coming to the party un- tl they a ¥ arrived,” he said. There were bottles of whiskey, sin, water and orange juice on a table in the room where the guests were, he said. Fred Fischbach, his roommate, supplied the liquor, he said. Arbuckle testified in a loud, cledr, voice and seemed at ease {n every way.’ He denied knowledge of the source of the liquor other than it was procured by Fisthbach. He was eat- ing breakfast when the guests ar- | tlved. he testified. The witness “said he drank some “highbalis” after breakfast. Miss Rappe asked that a piano be brought in, but later a phonograph was pro- duced. much dancing after that, he said. Arbuckle said he had made an en- gagement with Mrs. Taube the day before the party “to go out” the next did net see Miss Rappe dance,” 1 with Miss Blake. actor, Sem- in removed he was bound and while ‘the robbers were making their California Canners’ Compla‘ and Ask Modification of Consent Decree Divorc- ing Industries. escape. Not only these cages but other seri- ous depredations including high jack- ing operations, in which houses are being stripped of all liquor, stopping of | auto parties and other bri has WASHINGTON, Nov. 5.—Modition.| Pen whine io with increasing regular- y hore. peed an pee five” pacilera: nich} While refraining." from. ¢iscloaine to thelr separation from unrelated inthe information which has been gath- dustries was urged today before a ape: ered, it.{s wriderstood that the notori- cial government commission by Ver-/0U% Peto Haines, said to be wanted mon Campbell, general manager of the | 72 many sections of the Rocky Moun- Gallfornia Co-operative Canners’ asso | tain Fesion for unlawful acts, 1s want- elation. Charasterizing the decrease ed in connection with the new seriee as an “economic mistake without legat | °* ¢epredations hero, foundation,” he contended it caused a It is believed that he ts leading a tremendous !oas to western frultgrow- gang which {fs making headquarters tn ers and canners. | this vos wane working out new ” series unlawful acts. the ee road Bat Tape eck n> Cnkae | Important ‘remults in the hunt that eclared Mr. Campbell, “Our markets|!® being made is’ expected here. Very were taken away over night, resulting little information however is available qh an actual loss of millions of dollars | Dechtind Officild’on afl sites aro main: that hard to] taining secrecy until the dragnet they have thrown out gets results. . The theorles which officials here partiaent ot justine, ‘before agresing [8°* working on were founded on the 2o the decree, made no investigation as | descriptions of the bandits which was to the rights of frultgrowers and can-[Obtalned from Mr: Wyatt and from ners. Ho aseerted that wholesale gro-| Mr. and Mrs, Neal and others who corse had inaugurated a campaign of|haye been victimized during the past EUROPE IGNORED IN ] | Liquor Still || Found in Home Germans Complain of Attitude Taken by Representatives of Conference in Centering Interest in Navies BERLIN, Nov. 28.—(By The Associated Press.)—Kurope is being treated as a negligible quantity at the Washington conference, in the opinion of the Deutsche Allgemeine Zei- tung, the organ of Hugo Stinnes, leading German financier. It sees evidences in the circumstances that curtailing of naval armaments has been given primary consideration, and that the issue of land armaments {s,Stinnes, in addition to discussing not causing the conference apprehon-| reparations and allied issues while in sion. This attitude, says the newspa-| England, also broachet the subject of | | RIVERTON, Nate P, warden, will on his Wyo. Nov. WORLD CONFERENCE Of Ex-Officer 28.— Wileon, former state game return to the stato shortly be given an opportun- ity to explain to the authorities the presence of a completely’ equipped still and a barrel of mash discovered 3, salesman, while the dancing was in Progress, he said. y kle said he had Sherman ask to the room during louls leave Mrs. Taube came while the party Was in progress said ‘sho would “call back,” he said if asked. “Who are all me, I don’t know,” Ar- le said he replied. Then Mrs. Taube left, he said. Fischbach was out {n Arbuckle’s automobile most of the party, said. “Mrs, Taube seemed, ‘peeved. Arbuckle said. “She probably left because phe was ‘peeved’ at the Guests of the party.” “Mra. Taube was introduced to Miss Rappe,” he said. “Miss Rappe was dressed in green skirt and jacket,” he said. think her hair was down. see her go into my room,” Arbuckle fingered a lead pencil con- tinuously during the examination, tap- ping it occasionally on the court re porter’s table. He answered without hesitation while under cross-examina- tion. The courtroom was filled but the crowds around {t were not as dense I did not em * S eo it court days. Asked to make . per, “gives France an indefinite fran-| creating a Kuropean railway trust.| in his home at Lysite. Sheriff Ww, |%% 0m pas ion canners who favored | two or three weeks. dhise to continue her devastation of/ This, the writer declares, would not| S. Burch and state law enforcement teiigrwntens atioeile ftom ne ® modification of the decree. the Buropean mainland.” » A ? only take over the bankrupt German system, but also that of the other Buropean countries. The reconstruction of the Russian railways, he says, would be the logi- cal outcome of such an amalgama- tion, in which English and American capital would-be interested. Drug Addict Sells Transfusion Blood, Physicians Alarmed officers made the discovery The speech of Premier Briand out- lining to the conference France's need for a large army is characterized as “purely speculation {jn America, sen- timentality and credulity.” It considers as. an , impogsible achievement any_attempt to convert “the capitalistic bears of European civilization into Chinese coolies at the very ‘moment the United States is. en- deavoring to bring the Chinese to the level.of the. capitalistic order of so- ciety. ‘The aggressive manner tn which Chin’ presented her’ case to the con- ference ‘s not warranted by her in- ternal situmtim and can bs explained only on the ground that she is sure of Americin backing,” says the pa- per in discussing tho American Far East policy. “The United States is surfelted with gold; Japan has a sur- plus of humanity, and the adjacont mainland affords her the only outlet for emigration. “Thus Japanese imperialism and American peace policies oppose one another as the natural consequence of gonflicting social considerations. In the final analysis, however, they har- monize; their methods alone are at vartan @ business trip. 'WORLAND SUGAR PLANT Des Moines at Polls Today to Vote Franchise CATTLEMAN ON AOUNDUP KILLED Accidental Discharge of Gun Claims Father-of Ten Children, ° KEMMERER, Wyo., Nov, 28.—Ac- cidental discharge of a rifle at round- nance. high court nullified Dis-| Up camp on Sheep creck, 20 miles trict “judge Hue’ injunstion but al-| west of this place, resulted in the lowed Judge Hume's findings that the} death-of J. By Hatch of . Randolph, ordinance was illegal to stand pend-| Utah, a well known cattleme: why ing | hearing on which will depend | was a member of the roundup party, or nullification of the elec-| Hatch and séveral others were in a ‘The ordinance provides a| sheep ‘wagon when J. O. Rex, who scale of fare beginning at/| had been examining the rifle of a vis- eight cents and varying according to/ itor, set the weapon dow.. against increased earnings of the company, | the side of the wagon. As he did so the: a gun was discharged and the bullet, HIDE INSPECTION LAW after penetrating the floor of the VIOLATED, FIVE HELD) “assists Ses, ten children. a arrests made by operatives of the state enforcement department. The defendents include W. C. Raw- Masey, one charge; Joe Amino of Mill- burn, 19 charges, and Andrew Moretti who is accused of purchasing the wagon, plowed through Hatch’s body. Wyo, Nov. 23—Five| When hit by a bullet a tiger will lins of Lyman, a-deputy sheriff, who eeves. | WORLAND, Wyo., Nov. htudred and three thousand bags sugar were manufactured by |iand plant. year’s production | sacks, which is | sugar content in the beets. INDUSTRIL COUNCIL NEW YORK, Nov. 28.—Whether the transfusion of blood from the veins of a drug addict carries with it to the patient a taste for drugs as a question that 1s causing several New York physi¢lans concern today. Mem- bers of tho narcotlo.squad yesterday arrested James Milo, who sels his blood for transfusion, on a charge of being a drug’ addict. It was learned that one patient, into whose system a quantity of, Milo’s blood had been injected recently, had died 24 hours after the operation, but the patient, according to the physi- cian in charge, was not expected to lve when the operation was formed. Milo has participated in 25 trans-| fusion cases, and his name and adj Joint industrial council to represe: dress are on almost every hospital list| the two plants there, modeled aft in the city. He has received from §35/ the plan in effect here. to $50 for each transfusion. by over BERLIN, Noy. 28.—(By The Asso- ciated Press)—The recent mysterious trip to London of Hugo Stinnes, the financier, and the nature of his con- ferences there continue to be the sub- ject of newspaper speculation. Georg Bernhard, writing in the Vodsische Zeltung, asserts that Herr trini relations at the Casper plants to return to Caspet on Wednesday. Hatch died forty minutes later while was making a fast ride to Cum- berland for surgical assistance. speidents ie aged are facing bose aon dead, but a tigress dies “Big Nine” of Disarmament Congress Photographed at Washington fs charged with selling two beeves 4 ‘Without complying with the hide in- *pection law. The others aro Vic Film An inquest will be held Tuesday, the state hide inspection law, of Fort Bridger, three charges; Louis Pee. BS A eR ENDOWMENT AID FOR UNIVERSITY SOUGHT Rev. Homer Dudley, of Milam!) Fla, Sitar ot ir OF Mana, lish teacher of the Casper high school, is in Casper in the interests of an en church. The campaign ts to raise $1, 387,000 for the endowment of Wesley- an university situated at University Place, Neb. Most of the work is being done among the alumnae of the unt- versity and those who ere connected prominently with the work of the Methodist Board of Educatt photograph t made In Washington shows the “ Big Nin ” of the Arms Parley, and John W. Garett, secret is Dr. H. A. Van Karnebeeck, representing Secretary of States Charlies E. Hughes, U1 : Price Tyesato Tagugawa, nited States; Premier Aristide Japan d_Viscount d’Alte, Portugal. while Mr. Wilson was out of the state on TURNS OUT 103,000 BAGS -—One Great Western Sugar company during ) |the campaign just ended at the Wor. The output exceeds last 10,0004 Taube,” he said. I went into my room ttributed to a higher FOR GREYBULL PLANTS. Don L. Lobdell, directog of indus per-| the Standard Oil company of ‘Indiana, is in Greybull making preparations for the nomination and election of thejroom, which was in the courtroom, but of the conferehce. Left to the Netherlands and president of the league of nations; Dr. Sze, China; Arthur Briand, France; Senator Carlo Schanzer, Italy; never had a watch.” * “Mrs. Delmont changed her dress during the party,” he said. “I saw Miss Rappe tearing her waist and garters,” ¢he said. “Then I went out of the room.”* Arbuckle “showed j on a diagram where he was sitting with Mies Rappe before she is allewed to hers been in- jured. Miss Blake lett “for a rehearsal” during the party, and returned in half hour, he testifiz Miss Blake, a showgirl, was one of of|the principal witnesses against Ar- the | buckle. “T’did not tell anyone that I was go- ing into my room to get dressed or that I was golng out with Mrs. and locked the door.’ He was otill under cross examina- | tion at the noon recess, but Mrs. Jane Walsh, deputy coroner, followed him as @ prosecution witness. She brought into court a jar said by her to contain |@ vital organ of Miss Rappe, said to have been ruptured force applied by Arbuckle. , Arbuckle will resume when it is préved that 'the organ was that of Miss Rappe. * McCarthy's testimony, which was to have preceded Arbuckle's, was ruled out after the defense failed to qualify |him as a fingerprint expert. He had started ‘fingerprint experi- ments on’ the door of Arbuckle’s hotel of ntithe prosecution objected and McCar- er|ty was excused. He is\a former in Hoe expects|vestigator for the United States de | partment of labor. Mex Secretary Of Agriculture Resigns Office MEXICO CITY, Noy, Associated Press’ Secretary of Agriculture Villareal last night followed several weeks of at tacks on his attitude concerning the agragrian law. Hoe appeared before vongress several times to defend his policy after the expropriation ‘of }:rop- erty owned in Mexico by Spaniards. The’ resignation “was forecast at| President Obregon's meeting with the newspaper correspondents Saturday,| when he said that certain changes in the agragrian commission must be made. The president has taken no ac- tion on the secretary's resignation and| there is no intimation who his suc- cessor will be. | oo Le EE Dancing and Skating Carnival No 24, 25, 26, 27, at Smile Roller Rink, one block east of North Casper school. | Skating afternoon and evening. % 1 31-6t | provocation and PAGE SEVEN AVIATOR GIVEN Obregon Asked To Meet Foch ‘Texas, No Mexico has b SAN ANTONI Presid invited by the Texas to meet Marshal Foch when the allied ) » December state commander, to Mexico Cit The meeting ate, the legion offict cause of the tha “seventy- genera! war? w close Preside: American Legion o Ferdinan CRIME UTRKG Cc. Br weastle 14 Mc i] icted at an inv militar: ipa A Mexico. Angeles, ter by Carranza edict, was Spector of n be Fre army STOLEN RING 5 RECOVERED make a stand a, Ww Pyrecell, county at issued a war rant which permitted her detention at the county jail. Some clever work by members of tho sheriff's office who| were wor mn other diamond theft cates here res in obtaining a con-| fession from the woman that she had ra swallowed t of the two trials, it fs This statement was conveyed to th officials and it was decided that an X ray examination would be necessary to determine whether she was tellin the truth or not. Late Saturday after noon an X-ray picture which was tak en in the offices of the Lathrop clinic resuited in finding the ring in the woman's stomach. From that time on she was kept constantly under the attention of a nurse at the county jail until 11 o'clock this morning when the ring Wan recovered. In uncovering the ring theft Charles Shackleford, an operative of the Mid- west Agency was employed to watch the girl, after the police had failed to find the ring at the time of the theft. Shackleford said that he saw the ring on her hand Friday evening and sum- moned a uniformed policeman to make the arrest. After that the sheriff's of- fice followed up the lead with the re- sult that the ring was recovered. —ene—aenpeteeeed be the filing of per Inst witnesses for the JURY BEING CHOSEN TO TRY WOMAN WEST UNION, Iowa, Nov. 28.—Se lection of a jury in the case of Mrs. Effie Ashbaugh, accused of murdering ter husband, Ross Ashbaugh, last summer by administering poison, was scheduled to begin this afternoon. An additional panel of 50 has been drawn, four of whom are women. Mrs. Ashbaugh was indicted jotntiy with A. J. Cahoe, formerly a hired hand on the Ashbaugh horse ranch, whom Ashbaugh «discharged shortly before his last {lIness, because of al- leged attentions to Mrs. Ashbaugh. Ca- hoe returned to the farm soon after Ashbaugh's death, J. D. Cooney, county attorney, is (Be sure fou get] prosecuting and elected to try the woman first. SIX MORE WITNESSES TO BE USED BY STATE INREBUTTAL AGAINST ARBUCKLE, REPORT SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 28.—Another question loomed today in the manslaughter case of Roscoe (Fatty) Arbuckle beside that which for several days has been puzzling court- room attaches. It was whether Louise Glaum, motion pic- ture actress, who with six other persons were nanied in sub- poenas issued Jast night, would testify, and if so to what? AY OREGONIAN |tion but no official of the district at torney’s office could be found who Autrata Had Been Going Down Hill for Ten Years Butterflies protect thelr bodies from cold by folding their wings to the utmost at night-time. 6 die ch chit To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative BROMO QUININE tab- lets. The genuine bears the signature of E. W. Grove. BROMO.) 30c. { | would indicate even vaguely the reason, or what they would be asked on the stand. They will be rebuttal witnesses as the prosecution closed its direct case several days ago. The defense regardiess of whether the comedian ,himself takes the stand, an- nounced itself as planning to close its case. by tonight. Whether {t would és place Alice Lake, another motion pic Before Taking Tanlac— ture actress who has been subpoenaed, Health Restored. on the stand asa minor caused specu- ———_— eiwe aman Court cnetied® “Well. {t's just wonderful how ‘Tan- Up to early today no word had|lac rids a man of that drowsy, goods come from Los Angeles or Hollywood | or-nothing feeling and gives him new strength and energy,” said L. Autrata, . Portland, Ore. 3 I was a victim of e and kept going down the residences of the six others sought as witnesses, regarding thelr appear- ance. os Sena AS Sa ]till I began with Tanlac. Then I be- FX SOLDIER HELD FOR gan to get better and kept right on ~ jclimbing up till today I'm feeling just fine, I don’t think ny one ever h uble worse than I did. | sto could ng fearfully pains in n't eat anything without suffer- | and I also had awful | y Dack. I had headaches flea ee y |til I was almost wild, I was so nerv- oe ree new kaye ns ous I couldn't get any restful sleep inkead, ex-soldier, faces tri: OF and kept growing w: ker all th D. murder in the first degree. foliowing| te agg Aa return by a coroner's jury of a yer-| ay dict that he killed Walter Goswiller, FIRST DEGREE MURDER nd all that is left of my old enemy is tho memory of {t and I wish I coul ex-corporal, lIagt “Tuesday, “without | forget that *Tanlac did me ae Sar h malicious in-\good that my wife took it for rheu- shot Goswiller,/ matism and now she is well.” Tanlac {s sold in Casper by the Cas- per Pharm and by leading drug- gists everyw! dy. tent.” Kinkead, 18, 28, {n a West Cheyenne resort a few| hours after they had been discharged! from the army, the former dishonor ably and the lat vith a clean bill. Positively the Picture Sensation of the Season TOMORROW --- COLUMBIA THEATER “THE CONFESSION” —————e