Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 24, 1923, Page 1

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OLUME 32. IQUOR SEIZU HEALTH AND BEAUTY ARE JUST Aa ESOENTIAL Ao MORALITY ge Lindsay of Denver Says Morality in Women Will Follow—Maternity and Child Welfare Laws to Take Care of This Problem. DENVER, Colo., June 23.—(United Press.) —‘‘We should be just as much concerned about justice, health and beauty for women as about their morality. What we call morality in women will follow in proportion to justice, health and beauty,” said Judge Ben B. Lindsay of the Denver juvenile court today. “And Colorado, though its new maternity and — child welfare laws, which became ef- TEST TRIP fir fective last wwek, hag taken these HUGE oUCCESS visor of work with and for girls’ will ook after thelr health as well as moralit; and In time the latter will, Leviathian Breaks Rec- ords—Guests Praise Ship’s Ability. largely take care of itself.” Judge Lindsay blames, not the parents of delinquents alone, not the delinquents themselves entirely, but these together with the general pub- llc, which through false traditions, he said, has sought primarily to punish the offender and not to prevent the ABOARD THE STEAM- SHIP LEVIATHAN, June 23. --(By Wireless, .Coprighted 1923, by United- Press),— Chairman A, D. Lasker, of the United States shipping board, pranced the deck of the giant Leviathian this afternoon, happy as offense. “We may now instruct about @ schoolboy who had unexpectedly been graduated. health, food and diet. We may say to parents “If you do not see that your-little girl’s teeth or legs are straight—for these are necessary to make her beautiful and healthy—we The big ship, sliding smoothly northward, due in New York at ® o'clock tomorrow morning if all goes well, ran into a heavy fog sev- enteen minutes after the trial run can get after you for it, for these things are assets in her life more on which she broke all records was completed. valuable than gold, and justic de- mands she shall not be denied them the vessels engines slackened Sed and the great combers of spray because of your ignorance.” “We are going to get rid of much had been rushing by the Leviathians trim bow subsided, friends of the ship- of useless court procedure; we are going to have less of a court and more of @ place of human helpful- ness, We até going to. fight sins— ping board chairman crowded about him with hearty congratulations. Senators and representatives among the guests on the voyage were loud not sinners. We are gding to make in their praise of the performance put it easy to get camght and.easy to tell the truth. We are going to make up by the pride of American trans- Atlantic liners, They slapped Lasker it stupid to le or to do wrong. We on the back and assured him the are going to be better equipped to much discussed trip had wholly jus- complete what we began 25 years ago—to judge less and teach more. tified itself. Reasons given by those who stoutly proclaimed the trip value “That word ‘morality’ has been lsed to cover its multitude of sins. ‘The world has been hysterical over the tnorallty of women. It has done little, comparatively for justice, health included; 1—The speed record for 25 hours shattered by the Leviathian which ran 687 miles at 27.48 knots an hour in the home stretch. nd beauty for women. You would think from the conventional, hypo- critical attitude taken that women had only one virtue worth while—a virtue upon which we should properly place a very high estimate. But my 2—The opportunity for correction of defects, which they said was found necessary in minor instances. 3—Organization and operation of the vessel's first official trans-Atlantic run will be the better for the trial, it experience af years in domestic was said, relations and children’s court con- vinces me that there are many women having the chief virtue who are far worse creatures in society than many of those without it. “So much emphasis has been placed upon ‘the one’ virtue that the impor- tance of others has been lost to view. Penalties for the one are exaggerated while others are ignored, Many girls who haye lost ‘the one’ but who aro still better than half the men are also better than many women who have only ‘the one’ Funeral Today For Victim Of Show Accident —EEE COLORADO-WYOMING LAUNDRYM! IN SESSION The funeral of Little Inez Antrim, who was killed Thursday at the Wor- tham show grounds when she be- came caught in some manner between the car and the trackage of the cater- pillar riding device, will be held from IEYED v i ie wado-Wyoming Laundrymen’s as sociation, concluding a two-day semt June 23.—The annual session here Friday, decided to hold the winter session in Denver. during the Btock show. The annual|the Shaffer-Gay chapel at 2 o'clock election of officers will take place at|this afternoon. The Rev. Charles A. the Denver meeting. Wilson will officiate, WET TREND ISSUE FOR BIG BATTLE WESTERVILLE, Ohio, The Antt-saloon tonight t b June 23—, league of America| assed forces to curb back king’? on prohibitién enforcement state legislatures. Suprred to action by what its lead- ers belleve to be a “prohibition re- Dealer trend," forty state superintend. ent, “to meet the backward step of Westerville, the nations “prohibition pfeil” to plan a counter attack on t drives” said to be under way in a half dozen states, The prohibition parley which opens officlally Tuesday, morning was called by A. Baker, ‘general superintend-| ent, “to meet the abckward step of! w York in accepting repeals of its The renewed “dry” fight, he said, will have the very active support of world league against alcohol and numerous other “dry! organizations throughtout the country, The antisaloon campaigners are firmly convinced that the effort to repeal state enforcement codes is for no other purpose than to aid ig the restoration of wine and beer, Governor A, L, Smith, Baker de, clared, is not a candidate for pres!- nt, ‘except to secure the New York democratic delegation for trading purposes athe nominating conven. tion.” He scored Smith for what he asserted was “a hypocritical plea for states rights.” I ary law enforcement code by Jaunch-| According to the views of the Gen- a determined movement to re-|eral Superintendent Sniith, Tom .Tag: enact a new code.” gart, “of Indiana, and Senator Ea Ve propose to meet Governor Al] wards, of New Jersey to and all other back trackers on| marshal enough wt cot Yotion at every point,” Baker|coming democratic convention to ared loept a ‘wet’ "candidate, eT ee FIRST NEWS SECTION HISKEY SM Casper Sunday Siinorn And WYOMING WEEKLY REVIEW a my Criime | RE British Steamships Here Are Raided By Custom Offi- cials to Test Dry Law BY JAMES T. KOLBERT, (United Press Staff Corres- pondent) NEW YORK, June 23.— The test case sought by Brit- sh steamship lines on their right to bring beverage li- quor into American waters is ready for the courts. Selzure today of hundreds of cases of wine, beer and liquor under seals of his majesty’s government aboard the Baltic and Berengaria put the next move in the “booze war” up to Great Britain, The big liners brought considerable quantities of intoxicating Mquor such as is barred by the supreme court's interpretation of the Volstead act—into port here for the celiberate purpose of having it seized. For near- ly 24 hours, it Icoked as though the local custom offiicals and prohibition agents might disappoint them. Today, however, the challenge flung by the Baltic and the Beren- garia was accepted, and the forbidden Uquor on the former was removed and taken under heavy guard to the Knickerbocker storage. Prohibition officers rode the trucks that carried the contraband and others, in an au- tomobile brought up the rear. Aboard the Berengaria, which was visited at 4 o'clock this afternoon, after the Baltic had been cleaned. up, the prohibition men broke the seals on the store room door. behind which lay an even larger supply of liquor This was formally “seized” and a een Dosted, It.will be removed on Monday morning. The French liner Paris arrived, ajso with supplies of liquor in excess apparently, of what it required for medicinat purposes, adding her defi- ance of the Volstead regulations to that of the British vessels. Her sealed liquor is expected to go the way of all contraband as soon as the busy of- ficlals df Director Canfields office get through with the British booze. The next step is expected Monday —a formal portest on the part of the White Star Une and possibly Cunard Une officials, against the breaking of the seals of his majesty’s government and confiscating the line's property, protected by those seals, Captains of both vessels already have protested. As a matter cf fact, advices from London state the government recog- nizes the authority conveyed by the seals, so imposing in appearance and awe-inspiring in. name, does not e tend beyond British territorial wa- ters, Tho scene aboard the Baltic, first of the big’ visiting liners to have tts liquor stores taken, was one that ‘wet? minded observers found — de- pressing. ‘The ship's crew stood about dejectedly, felgning Indifference and refusing to lend a hand, as customs men attacked the seals of the store house door’ and started bringing forth the cases of beer and spirits, In all 192 cases of ale and beer, and nine cases of spirits were taken, Rodeo Grounds In Good Shape For Next Card People who celebrate the Fourth of July at the Rodeo boxing show will be assured of better seating, better parking space and a better show than they saw June 8. Parking will absolutely free inside the grounds, “eating arrangements will be better and the card itsest promises more real fighting than Casper fans have ever had the pleasure of witnessing. The entire proceedings will be much better in hand than the June 8 show. Rodeo season tickets will be honored at the club office, room 11, Smith block, or at the stedium the day of the fight only where a special office will handle this work, The season tickets must be presented when a supplementary ticket will be holder to ad fssued permitting the mission to the fight, pn tickets which have not been presented at either of these two places will not be honored at the gate, Complete returns of the Dempsey: Gibbons bout at Shelby will be read from the ringwide, A leased wire will be run from the railroad wire to the stadium and round for round results will be announced from the ring. Dempsey and Gibbons will enter the ring at Shelby promptly at 3 p, m The Rodeo preliminaries will start promptly on the same hour as no de- lays are expected owing f the fact that there will be three entrance r cars the grounds and traffic will move much faster in the daylight, CASPER, WYO., SUNDAY, JUNE 24, 1923 FIRST NEWS SECTION NUMBER 48. 1 | LING COMBINE IS UNEARTHED ENDS LEGAL FIGHT RUM RUNNING ON ATLANTIC Motormeter Jag Newest Wet Stunt a better chance before a jury, it intimated, Staten Attorney Robert han announced that he will that the ‘girl bandit’ mer is the first we Chicago,” Thompson posed as th wife” of a@ mechanic and was gn “gee to It 1 Crowe | | , it | [ | TELLEGEN Je Pale herebaied iil POLAR Cf Government Officials fication w 7 ay a ee = Ne A, Mathew, of the Shipping The state law Have Difficulty Sub- Trading company, agents here ro ay partment has rec i © | fcr Captain Raofd Amundsen of the Hy : 200 cars in Caspe duin Li uor Peddlers Temperamental Operatic | {00°02 ea Amnases. of | MacMillan Leaves In|] baa thet motormete 0 E ce would hop off ‘om Wainwri t for the or b n as! Loast. Star Gets Freedom from the polar wastes as | SMall Steamer for Year || i: : sisohot d repair his al!-metal nermometers. of ga! . | s ° ntoxicating effect B . MALLON, Famous Matinee Idol. In Far Artic Region. oxlcating effect of the alcohot||/ BY PAUL R. MALLC hey Dale: JS pine ghee duce a “wild jag ung {| (United Press Staff Corres- Amundsen had attempted his Might aa |] Produce ; according ondert. Cényeight 192 day bt ath id'-no w of | atta eet S | » those who are familiar with the P ent, F £ ve NEW YORK, June 23.— Mees phe io 7 haga Ne WISCASSET, Maine, June United Press). (United Press). — Geraldine | whatever word might be received he RON = Don-| NEW YORK, June 7 r from Amundsen would come by way |4 - MacMillan, Arctic ex-|————— —_—_— - whiskey smuggling combine, Farrar won her divorce which | or Svitzenternen. if, he actually had plorer, left here today on his| |with warehouses in New Jer- she sought from her husband, cts 4 i che iene ait Si etennch little scooner Bow- HEAT WAVE CONTINUES | ccs: and on Staten Island, a 5 Mathew rnid it was his understand- : 2 Say! 1 sey a Ste 5 . Lou Tellegen, according 0) ing that the flight would be attemnted ae ton another voyage | number of speed boats and a announcement tonight by | as soon as the plane. Garonaed te test essere ha : ~«\ INBROKEN THROUGHOUT coe: of financial agents, is - flights could b ired. Mathew be- : wns-people and pb oe eee i? aaa Samuel Untermyer, the diva’s coun-|iesea it porsible that these, repairs friends from all parts of the « Nays Yor ast beat a sel, Referee Mahoney, who heard] might have been made and the flight i aces the water front to wish A Ur r was per the case, filed a recommendation | started. Amundsen withholding an- on men ean ea nes as the Bow MIDDLE WEST CITIES Pe cdeenT Pinto 2 2% , " r 3 hho, tt he: doin moved ay under power of which ‘caf favoring the decree, Untermyer sald.|notncement of the attempt anit in| ber auxiliary engine. uard cu a, which cam Action was begun here two years | mn, 0" tt : The 1 vessel will stop tonight = rae teeta wee the fico ago, three women being named. One - at Booth bay harbor and at dawn she mene foose \triist : . 5 . : will turn northward toward New EDDING, Cal, June 23.—Fresh | 297" of these, Stella Larrimore, youthful G tt foundiand, where MacMillan will| stow falling during the last 24| He deep-sea ships, their decks actress, sued for a jury trial of the |{yQUCYTUMeENt tO make a brief stop before leaving civil-| hours is eight inches deep on the | pled high with key cases, meet divorce proceedings because her name ization behind for more than a year, | level at Bonanza King mine, near | ing t ore boats of the . tle 2 ° l r ‘arriville, ee brig syndicate the smooth, sys wan mentioned, wherstpon ofttisially Ss. ll L I || MacMillan tured by the spell which| Carriville, and 12 inches on the | it was stricken from the records of é UQUor LM i nas taken so many exp n sim-| evel at Shasta forest lookout sta- | tem ansferring liquor the hearing, the action on this count ilar quests will study terrestial mag-| thon between Carriville and Castello. | { aw one rum. ruled out. M My b S netism and the Flora and Fauna of Snow fell ell this afternoon on | mux Untermyer will appeal to Justice anito: aL oon t land that Ves within 600 miles of} the Trinity mountain divide be- | the © a Cohalan for judicial confirmation of the pole, tween French Gulch and Trinity | stories of how the Fur 08 as the referee's report and entry of an 7h yeneral now s0| Center. Rain fell here during the Incidentally, the Dirpatch, a $10,000 Interlocutary decree In Farrar’s fav: : me og | Years old f the most uation of the storm. Qjd }craft was captured last nigh’ nexb anne. rare favor | WINNIPEG, Ben. ped ve |famous Arctic explorers of his day,| titers sald it was a recerd storm | entered the narrow Ne Lou Tellegen, when reached tate | (United Press)—The Manitoba legisle-\came here to say farewell to Mac-| for.June for this part of the state, |barbor and her ot tonight said: Siireita: yp raat July 23 to trae on, | Mian, He gave the explorer a Forest rangers reported that snow- | and crew of fou th “7 Gui gian the taasieot her divdece. [ect system of. government ‘sale ze tablet which will be erected at| —fall in the higher altitudes is not | of the police Inwanted her to Haye.it. trom “the | Cf Nauer as authorized by the provin ahine where 18 of General} am unuspal occurrence during. the | The Disnatch wax frat detected by beelnfing. reais bial, referendum -yeaterdaw: Greeley’s. expedition of 1881-84 lost| early summer, but that the fall this | the Manhattan W stiy night as ee Absolute prohibition will be dis-! their lives. year iomath later than-usual...The | she was. tied ‘i the five carded and substituted with tho plan! [pn the huge bag of mail and tele-| latter part of May usually sees the schooner rbervillier, laden Weather immediately upon {ts formal author-| grams, which was taken aboard the| last of the snowfall, re wines, champagne Wyoming—Partly overcast Sunday | !zatlon. Bowdoin just before she sailed was a} Uquors. ‘The Gerbervillier ly and Monday, with probably local The referendum resulted in ailong telegtam from President Hard. CHICA! June 23.—(United Press.) in the moonit hn t : ; thunderstorms; not much change in| “wet” majority of 30,000 to 35,000’ ing, who wished MacMillan well in The heat wave, taking almost an|!* miles off th abe yas ee temperature, latest returns indicate (his exploration. unprecedented toll of lives in the mid-/ Fling upon the smooth swells of the diewest’ the last. week, will continue | Cran like a child's rocking, hotse over. the work end: atleast, the|, Cases of liquor, plied on deck weather bureau declared here tonight.| D©x®S were vis.ble in t dim tight e ‘Twenty-two persons have died froia | * hazy moon. ‘The Manhattan lay off heat in five a: in Chicago, The| 0? an op ig where she could high temperatu zing sun and| 0 b Aina a aypon little wind have taken a toll of Scores All bade plat cncho ed ye in other parts of the mid-west. ‘ike wisp over the compass to guide The hot wave has broken tempo-| the cutt : A rarily in parts of the northwest to Out on the horizon, lig oes Jay by storms which killed two and) "Um ship ved igh he injured one in Minnesota. mi All 1 other small Thousands are flocking the| # y¥ boats dashed through. “th — northern summer fal | Watney Laldelsastye : . . + | steamers on the ¢ ar he Manhattan. drifted closer. ang . 7 SEM aE ore he | Closer to boat while the rum run President Drives Tractor, Shocks Wheat and Discusses Price Problems in handling ‘row ce the| closer to the oat while the rum fun. : $ af Se SE r champagne and liquor cargo. True Agrarian Style—Most Color ful and Human Episode of Tour ae Mercere ge to ct & . 1200 Million Is | hale full when the lookout sighted That Will Take Him Into Cheyenne Monday. the Manhattan and gave the wagn- aft) os SS ee eee * the speedster wa the - : | Transported In |‘: on a BY LAWRENCE MARTIN, | it nodicnit sr Bak : Siegel ieate, | ired mac guns and called for the (United Press Staff Correspondent). ( f New York Ci | fired 1 ee u WITH PRESIDENT HARDING, HUTCHINSON, Kans., June 23.—President Harding Y | cum runner Seen fists disappear went right into a wheat field today, to get from the lips ofa farmer harvesting his crop the a | iets -apeekt Donte “onsale ade story of American agriculture condition, 2 ; rs , YOR (United |} arbor, thete In the most colorful and human episode of the western trip, thus far, Mr. Harding 8.)—Two h on dollars | au et puses i r gol und u reatest | @ nd, J e ind Man did these things: § 3 Hod yas cota agen Bieta AP rahi $85 scelont Posed for his picture, while holding a chubby Kansas baby g Hiab’ ey ot a ; : + 12 Showed an audience of Kansas “dirt ) audience of many thousand id he was ya BrOUP ahead aan ee beside Fibrin SAE - farmers” that he knew how to shock Tarmers who assembled pra tae RSI WEre| ving up the. ea ide tod: white} The t Aé to he! oper wheat, both In Kansas and Ohio fash. | Sttte falr is to hear him vent Wort the city’s bandit ee| ion, Greeted and was greeted b el ht rh r fv 1 uken | Drove a tractor hitched to a per | hundred sch hildrer face will hund. “x es and cut an acre of wheat out of a 90] It was tn Chester ( r ng plature th a : aS | acre fletd. | wheat field that tho pres! | the land : ot a verdad Discussed. with the owner of the| “dirt farmer’ himself : When Mrs, Harc wi the. bab a Lebrun wheat the problem presented by farm to the farmers : abe: maid at price nd the cost of productior de te a Wacren t your picture take ti fit ita t which|t Delivered a formal speech to an! When the president entered the!) teh. : canieeshtea te ; : F 2 r The pres t took the girl fr ‘ { the bank's 155,000 4. € ' ' sentat her father, a farmér | fo e r Ne “Don't hold | though; w¥eit hee ne eights a Et, were going to dr her,"" said Mra.| Harding The baby looked solemn}y 6 55 at the president and then reached a} & chubby hand for the brim of his stra hat, | = Is this a boy or a girl?” the pres O i Sa Ps ek dent asked the ather | a GO, June 23. (United Press), 12 hours after arrest made detective “A gil; Mary Jane her name Thompson, charged with eve him a woma replied -Dyson. : PROT OPO | PayaAAn, g - him aman.| “Don't you know gtr : bye: the murder of Richard by fe tae Pen aafiyPMEMMKOA | lira arta peel dak ; sisted tonight on being tried as a Ae’ Miia: teat legadllinceemnctntine : |n , leend When Thompson was arratgned and su are the wise | a tani held without bond, Frank A, MoDon Thompson appeared in court today,| Mr, Harding 7 1 t nell, hin attorney, -referred to him AS) 11. bai. marcelled, his cheeks and] ‘Then they t Nie ot t : to 20 “Mise Thompson,” and notified Judge] ii Voiged, the latter in a cuplds| pounded by t Rooney that a part of the defense!) i aig wearing « stylish morning] boys, the, nit Ar wa! wou'd be that his client ts a woman. | oy and green turban. | Jane read runt ne. Is fore In event the state builds a cane at! After his preliminary had been This ¢ 4 not ; the preliminary July 12, the defense | postponed, he wa'ked from the court | president in mock soler y I bolleves that the alleged alayers| poom amid nhouta ¢ ment| of Mary Jane's plump F ae “fom'nine personality” will wtand him | trom .high school poorly fed le Wha > b aby Ma eatern” who crowded @ big laugh for to theni and acknowledge thelr greet n fed" to say the least No ‘st P ; 1 . Ings In a clear soprano volce. The ceremonies with th ra . ' t 1s t b be by a man and woman. Mra. Teasmer| up wheat t a s the #inying fied | shock ' 1

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