Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 10, 1923, Page 1

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Weather Forecast Far tonight and probably Wednesday ; not much change in temperature. * \ OLUME VIL. standings were brought out at the meeting of the chamber held tn the banquet room of the Henning hotel this noon. * ‘The meeting was largely attended by 150 members of the opganization @25 well as other business men and all these showed remarkable enthusiasm for the project. It was stated by ene speaker, A. B. Stirrett, that the ques: tion at hand is just how much Casper is wil’ing to give to the Haskell inter- ests in return for bringing the rail road nto Casper. The discussion of the railroad ques tion opened with a report read by Charles B. Stafford, secretary of the chamber of commerce, which showed what the board of directors had been doing for the railroad and how it had been trying to get together with Gov ernor Haskell on.a definite tion. The discussion closed with the chamber passing a motion made by B. Richard Shipp that it be the sense of the forum meeting that the raflroad matter be left entirely in the hands ofthe board of directors. It was understood that this motion did not take the subject out of the hands of the peop:e but that it merely gave power to those men who have been working for the interests of Cas. per during so many weeks to continue their work and obtain the best possi ble results. propost Charles W. Barton, editor of the Casper Tribune, was calied on for a talk on the subject. Mr. Barton stated something regarding his ac quaintance with Mr. Hakel! and said that the latter was a man of the greatest integrity and generosity. He also showed that the word has gone forth from Casper that this city does not want the raliroad. ‘This is an en tirely erroneous idea, for the city is extremely enthusiastic in its support of the enterprise. Mr. Ba mended a committee of half a dc representative business men to go to New York and thresh the matter out With the governor from Oklahoma. It is understood that the board of Girectors of the Casper Chamber of Commerce were given a definite prop sition Sunday by representatives of Haskell, The proposition asked for a bonus of $500,000 and for a right way that would lead near Center street This proposition was with drawn by the Haskell interest Mon y ‘with the request that Casper make its own proposition. Many fine talks were given today that showed a familiarity with the subject and a wholehearted interes! for the good of Casper. Among thr speakers were G. Rt. Hagens, A. E. Stirrett, R. 8. Ellison, W. W. Sproul, I. G. McCann, and H. B, Durham, Jack Leary and others. Fo'lowing the meeting today, Con gressman James McClintic of Okla-| homa stated to the Tribune that the| Haskell interests were filling to meet} the people of Casper half way on any! fair proposition and that the reason| he withdrew the proposition he made Sunday was because it seemed to ipa with opposition In some quarters. oo on rec BOCHUM—C strations as the first car load of | grain sent by Soviet Russia for | Ruhr relief arrived. | | The Casper Daily Tribune CASPER, WYO., TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 1923. NEW RAILROAD WANTED HERE Chamber of Commerce Unanimous in Fa- vor of Co-Operating With C: N. Haskell; All Differences to Be Buried That Casper and the Casper Chamber of Commerce want the Wyoming North and South railroad to come to this city, that the time for long distance letters and telegrams is past and the time for a heart-to-heart conference has arrived, and that Casper and C, N. Haskell, ‘former governor of Okla- homa, should bury the hatchet and forget past misunder- DR. ANDERSON APPOINTED TO STATE OFFICE CHEYENNE, yo., April 10;—Goy ernor Ross today appointed Dr, G. M Anderson of Caspgr to be state health officer and secretary of the State Board of Health. ‘The original appointment was made while the Legislature was in session this winter, but was not confirmed, It, therefore, was found necessary tc make it again. The Guaranteed Circulation of The Casper Daily Tribune Yesterday was 10.497 FINAL EDITION “NUMBER 157. “Bluebeards”’ Silent, Face Severe Fate CHICAGO, April 10.—Two silent brooding women slumped listless! on a bench in the county jail this morning. With a long vista of | years before them one is facing a life behind prison bars and for the other the state if preparing to de- mand the death penalty. The two—they are cousins—are Chicago's women “bluebeards.” Tile Kitmek, staring emotiontess- ly into space, is waiting the su- | preme court's review of her life sentence to prison for the death of three husbands by poison. Beside her cousin, Nellie Sturmer Koulik, on trial for the murder of her first husband and twin bable by the same poison, was waiting the call to court, where yesterday three sons and a daughter took the stand and falteringly aided the prosecution which is demanding her Ufe. The four children Cid not want to tell. Their stories came reluctant- ty, and at times one son refused to answer questions. As each left the stand he joined the other on a hard bench in the rear of the room and when court adjourned, they crowded forward and cried over the mother they were testify- ing against. She called them her “little babes,” although the four | are grown and the daughter mar- | ried. =e ae It fs reported in Catholic church RIGA—The anti-Jeweish agita- to wa the Homel district has | Visit the,famous shrine at Lourdes, |ing power. No confirmation of t | Vatican, If Pope Pius leaves the | pope has done so in recent years. caused emigration of more than 800 Jews, destined for the United States or Palestine. O-YEAR FIGHT AGAINST OTHER NATIONS 1S WON Hugo Stinnes He Up by Searchers DORTMUND, April 10—(By The magnate was forwarding to his rep ssociated ss).—Hugo Stinnes and resertatives in Muelheim. s wife arrived in this city toc n BERLIN, April 10 { ter having been detained at Scharn Ated) Hirese) Whether | t i] who rst by French military guard mer intended to perpe them ‘from their berth in a n Hugo Stinnes when t = ‘3. tain wie ered olaet and detained him with his wife sea had searched the! vere entering tho Ruh cholate baat searsiea thet Day [enter bathe are Mosuel Oil Development NG PON ge to retain him as a hostage . see »sleener in which Here fo saarace Hoste | Wanted by Bnitish Is ; wite Abas Last ralist: here Vy: to the train from Berlin Ponta Chepanaaiete oct - Included With Great ° n| ney had left Berl 4 cee He fal airport ee boee . RMAN DEAD Rail Psi Siid i . he Sgt ULOGIZED. SaPbe tsi tive (ercin ter Waitrose a rameciae alway Froject, Sal r the ¢ sled zone and it was here ess),-@he thirteen Krupy ———_— Bt the: saaenata, Ad) Hieewile We rs who met death in the clash] ANGORA, April 10.—(By ro nee sida oY . nch troops on March 31 were!The Associated Press.)—-The 6 1 | eulogized by Dr. Gustav Krupp Von) Turkish nationalist assembly seta Santearctd Sablon Hiaaw bench Hees. 16 ‘ {has ratified the so-called o had just arrived| works, at memorial services held at| as __ ratifie e so-calle in from his cou home factory today lives and|Chester railway and mining took the night train for Muelheim deaths, he dec! “would | concession. where his chief industries constitute a foundation stone fc Negotiations for the “Chester econ- uted. When the train rea Germany's future.” cession” in Turkey, which Includes arnhorst, which {s the first rail attended by 9 services were the development of the Mosuel oil under French control, four Fren¢ small circle of relatives of the dead) region, and the construction of 1,200 railway guards entered the a uborers, members of the Krupp ad:| miles of railroad tn the Mesopotam: and demanded to know the number of] ministration and government off!-} jan fields, was first instituted by the Stinnes compartment. They rous | ciats President Roosevelt. It takes Its ed the industralist and his wife and] pr, von Bohlen said tha common|name from Rear-Admiral Colby M them to the baggage car where | .orrow might so well serve the en:|Chester, now retired, who was sent couple were locked up. tire Krupp personnel that it would Turkey in 1908 to obtain for the ‘This is Herr Stinnes’ second trip| make “all of us stand closer together ited States certain valuable prop- drotes in France that Pope = may | '° Pe Halire nes Acne pe Bee n pres be eens eaayacnonne the er abt ie Shey aia aod i - 6 French orities are sald tc rdship of the presen lucing district, The former - credited with having marvelous heal- been watching for him and He the temory. of the falleny!{itsh, gavecnment ome time pares e report has been received from the| .conts and only recently they inter-|he added. ‘They too died for Ger-| proved the grant, but action by the Vatican it will be the first time any] cepted one of his private courters,}man Mberty, German honor and théefnationalist government at Angora elzing a private paper which the rman labor.” has been awaited he burial services were attended] American capital would be used, 520 ACRES IN EIGHT ADDITIONS SEEKING ADMISSION TO CASPER; - NEW PAVING DISTRICTS CREATED City Council Discusses Important Im-| provements in Weekly Meeting; Traffic Rules Are Revised Fiye hundred and twenty acres of land will be added to the city limits of Casper if the petitions presented at the} meeting of the council last night in which the admission of} eight additions was requested is every possibility of the increase. The land to be embraced in the new addition would in- clude Butler, Butler Heights, South, Country Club, Thorndale, Allendale, Holman, and Park Hill additions. The petitions as presented last night were not acted on but were deferred until a meeting of the council which fs to ne held next week. At the meeting last night two new paving districts were created and her improvement work was agreed upon. Elm street between West Yellow- e and West Midwest streets, Mid- ste President to Be Re-elected, Fess Declares CHICAGO, Il, April 10.—Sena- | tor Simeon D. Fess of Ohio, declar ed last night in a speech that Pres!- dent Warren G. Harding will be re-nominated by the Republican party next year without opposition and will be re-elected by a large majority on the strength of the administration's achievements. Dr. Fess said he was expressing h's personal opinion and had not been authorized to make a cam- palgn speech for the president. ‘The campaign next year he said is acted on favorably. There| wil! be waged fon the basis of the things done under President Hard ing and in this category he listed: Restoration of peace and diplo- that all the rubbish would be hauled} matic and trade. relations with at some day before the end of the| former enemy countries. er the gdad ratly greement to extend the y.to the borders of persons from all ts of the] ur 7 Ruhr, All the shops esen wer Josed and\ church bells were tolled. t the sefvices preceding the burial sia, while rail connections would » afforded to the chief cities of Tur- F mn .-| the-coffing lay within-the inner court ‘Tha Mosuel ofl field haw beet . yard ef the Krupp administration! bone of contention between Gre 9 |builaing where they were surround-| Britain and the United States for ed by « miniature forest of laurels | some time, and at the Lausanne con- nce the British delegation was especially insisent that its claim to the territory be recognized. and palms and heayily banked with | fe hundreds of wreaths and other floral tributes. 20 YEARS OF EFFORT SUCCEEDS. LONDON, April 10.—(By The As- sociated Press.)}—Approval by the a Now that the second period blg|ed fame that is widespread. This vote schedule is almost over the/is the Uberal prize-winning more ambitious candidates are pre-|event ever inaugurated in this state. most paring to go after the business of| ‘The efforts and diligence of t Angora government of the Chester securing votes in dead earnest, and | candidates these past few days should marks the termination of 20 |be crowded with an a che of of effort by American inter- ests headed by Rear Admiral Colby Mitchell Chester, retired, of Wash- ington, to obtain commercial railway and mining concessions in the inte: r of Turkey. frankly that is what they have to 40} +) taands of votes. if they haye any desire to land the |larger awards. The most important part of the entire campaign is now This is the time for candidates to hurl themselves in to the fray. The Tribune is justly proud of the PLEA DELAYED at hand, and that 15, the next four i opiate elles days Line otietanighe aSA-cxator ie ditg exile MEEN UE Ee ADE tore FY Meml neal peapeeala) of Almira FOUR MORE DAYS—These three citing “battle of ve s" for the big: Species to The egies aie yore Chester and. Big’ associates, «who. ins vords have a mig Dig ARRliee Teaming ever Otlered ini werenina. [PME Pee cot Toeecame tae Con} einee ‘Ganeral Geores. W..) Goethals: lwhen we consider the import ‘of | ‘county Tt seems. that each OOlt matter of the application of Frank ¢ builder of the Panama canal, Kermit tans result of the® Tr ne’s big auto-| munity and nel sorhood in the | 2merson for a writ of mandamus di-tF wevelt and other influential men, mobile contest. which is now rapidly|country and. city has. chosen its| ‘ecting State Auditor Vincent Carter) are for the construction in Anatolia Seacineiitn\ condasian: [brightest and most energetlc leader | ‘0 issue a warrant in Emerson's fa-| of more than 2,000 miles of new rail: vor for the March salary of the State|ways, the re-construction of Angora vest between the alley of Ash and|m. and 6 a. m. is to apply only on zm and the alley of Elm and Oak treets will compose ong district paving will be of reinforced concrete, {f the council follgws the wishes of the petitioners. The Market street district which was created last week will include B/ street between Ash and Market. McKinley street from Second to Fifth will also be a paving district. The council approved the petition for a sewer to take care of Blocks 170 and 171, The Casper Supply company, the trucks in the hauling of garbage to promote Cleanup Week to better ad- vantage. Mayor The | Blackmore stated city @ $1,000 bond and a $25 license. ontinues to administer the ia eh Adjustment of strained relations The last of the big votes will un-|for its representative In the election AN ted Carte: aat-| upo: Jines .o! week, It will be well for Caaper's eit-| | Adjustment of atsained relations. | a tntediy be the deciding factor in| And these favorites are well fulfil: | Hheineer, granted Carter ea nddl) doen ie lies ee morte and quays izens to have such material gathered] “"giitimment of foreign controver- | determining the winners of the splen-|ing the expectations of their bun: | Wonal ten dine to Witke Mk athe exploitation of mineral Sights up in order that it may be taken away gies with South and Central Am did array of prizes which have daz-|dreds of friedns and supporters in Sea satag DJ: eet throughout those portions of yes with the greatest degree of ense and) erica. zled the eyes of the entire commun |thelr respective communitics. pales: gene ta | Minor ati aaavel pede t ecause oF eir € eptio v | The thi ish c h , | Dearing for ne = : quickness. Reduction of the national debt acres , ig yee gM valuo.|' Th fig Farg fink 2 si oe: Mien extanpicn i nes unt! April| Payment for this extensive devolp- SaAviel “ De 0 IS YOUR FAVORITE? “second period” approaches is truly extension pos e April ; The matter of a k- Reduction of government expen - ‘. a 2 . @ Sucreme | ment § re-bullding is to be given ing ordinance at oes ‘tae the ditures. For several weeks the contestants; ® “neck-to-neck” affair. No one can 20th the hearing by th Bopeaca by the Turks in the form of mineral streets might be cleaned to better ad- Reduction of taxes. have been engaged in accumulating| date has any material advantage | Court regarding i Pier, cage ©F+} oil and other concessions. It is @x- vantage was also taken up and the Restoration of lberty bonds to | votes and.during this time The Tri-! OV 3 the remainder the ntest . ms ee Cercelag A fi Apes ‘en. | Pected the American corporation, bhi een raaaas) Gases cameine) DAE bune’s grand prize election has gain- (Continued on Page Thirteen) Beamare eos canoe Be i Moun.| called the American Development ordinance on the streets between 1 a. | © daiCasper D.. Stawver, ‘Home! ap: | Co enay irl. Be: cochlea tpeEyaDy nile Casp 1 ars in this work, giving employ | paved streets. | | Another change in the ordinance in-| cluded the changing of the speed lim |{t to 20 miles per hour outside the| conjested district, 15 miles Inside this | district, and 8 miles at crossngs. The Casper Automotve association, through Joe Msnsfield and W. lL. Treber Joe Mansfield and W. I. against the second-hand dealers’ ordi- nance, which they claim works a hardship on automobile dealers. This ordinance requires that all dealers in second-hané articles, wheth-| vestigation following RAIDS WASHINGTON, April 10 | Liberty garage, and the Warren Con-|er cars or not, shall make a report at|department of justice agents participated. A quantity of radical literature seized was be-| 4nd Cosimo Po rmans held demon- | struction company offered the use of|5 o'clock each evening of all business 5 transacted during the 24 hours previ ous and shall also deposit with the In the first raid, ten perso who had gathered at the Typc¢ Brownir Nephew of Inventor of Browning Gun Shoots and Kills B. G. Ballantyne in Salt Lake City Home SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, April 10.—Investigation the circumstances surrounding the slaying late yesterday of| held in the city jall today pending | prowning Jr., the police declared, a Benjamin G. Ballantyne, former teller at a local bank, was ; continued today by the police following their announcement} gation.” Jast night that Mariner F. Browning, nephew of John M.| Mariner, according to the formerly gun inventor, had admitted he killed | conte KILLING OF BANK TELLER PROBED Ballantyne in self-defense. ing a quarrel when the latter drew a The shooting occurred in the pres |Tevolver from a bookcase ence of the Ballantyne family at their kfaet 1 he are eS ie |home in a fashionable part of the| Docc, arew a revolver from his pock=t city. Mr. Ballantyne die 08+ : he Sopa teers] 3 r. Ballantyne died at a hos: phadfit’té fone ot the tc pital a few hours after he was shot John Browning, Jr., son of the In ‘ ._,.|ventor, who lives at Ogden, Utai Fea ip Br Rena itll ace into|and Mariner Browning both “were | iret “I also had a gun,” asserted the outcome of the police investiga-| 4 tion. They were booked for ‘investi: | cs ei handed them a me to | sed he John pointee, State E ment to thousands of natives as well as to many American technicians. Tho project met with determined opposition from the start from Rus- sian, British and French interests, to all of whom similar concessions DEATH TODAY are declared to have been succesively promised by the Turks and it {s fore April 10.—Bo gin en here that today's action by the and national assembly of Turkey at Angora must inevitably react up- abings|on the prospects of c ssionaries UPON RADICALS CHICAGO, F r : ‘ be a =u [easty itsdas: cont lives of two men| and promoters of other nationalities, .—Seven persons were being held by the police today for in-| jj the north side Italfan district. The| It 1s even said that the huge grant a roundup of alleged radicals in two raids here last night in which! deaa are Stanley King, a musiclan,| by the Kemalists to the Americans, umba, is partly responsible for the present 4 . > b api i | While the police attribut! the | tension between Angora and Moscow ing examined by the government agents. : bombings to “blackhanders" there the Russians are deciared to have ns were taken to police headquarters out of more than a Score) was no evidence to show a connec:| been promised a similar economig »graphical temple to attend a meeting in behalf of William Z. | between. the outrages. monopoly . Foster, labor leader, under the aus pices of the Labor Defense Council.) ae EMBEZZLER OF $350,000 IN PUEBLO BANK FUNDS IS CAPTURED IN EAST the meeting, the police were in formed, had been called off by of. ficers of the Typographical Union | when they learned of its na The five held on an investigation charge | out of this group included a man "4 gave his nume Haward J. Irvine. secre! of the t Cuba local of the Workers’ ¥ America. It pices of the district was under the au local that James P. Cannon, chair hie ree we man of the Workers’ party, addressea| PHILADELPHIA, April 10.— | today held In $25,000 bail by a Uni- | ins in @ mnitarium eld = he De a meeting here Wednesday night! Coney Slaughter, arrested at | ted States commiss‘oner for his ap- | MEree! {0 whe at once. ane | which applauded his remarks in ap-| phoe ’ : pearance in the federal jurisdiction | °'E ps BS Ones, | noenixville, Pa., last night as 5 Slaughter is alleged to proval of the action of the Russian | ¢, ity, a, last night a8 ® | of Colorado, Slaughter walved all aughter is ‘alleged tot Haye . Teen, st’ government in putting to| *usitive from Pueblo, Colo., where | rights as to formal Identification sled ‘tihre ‘than 9850800) -ofisee ‘oath Viear General Butehkayiteh, | Be is wanted on a charge of looting | and sald he was ready to go back to cantil Me METER ETT abhor | f ‘ ; ; its cashier in May, 1915 Gfx/mien were taken In a inter rala| *#e Mercantile National’ bank, was, 1 Colorado. | "pnawieeat want -th panitertion: on a book store in the downtown s« a the ‘Pennhurst institution for the tion, alleged by the police to be the feeble min about three months PHILADELPHIA, April 10.—Cone Slaughter, alleged looter of the Mercantile National bank of Pueblo, Colo., and headquarters of a radical group here. Two men were held out of this group. ago. ‘Wit who m was a young woman Jueed as his w aN sae pair had since been livin gat NEW YOR cum. |f0r whom the authorities had been searching eight years, was | mins of San shat- | arrested last night at Phoenixville, Pa., brought here for laughter was under 1 © ‘ n of justice ager I 1 1 er k ( 1 Four.)

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