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one =a 2 nnanaaeeocos PAGE TWO. i DENNIS. SHEEDY OF DENVER |S CLAIMED. TODAY Pioneer Stockman, Bank Official and Business Man 77 at Death. DENVER, Colo Sheedy, 77, widely known through: out the west in the early days, as a cattleman and mine operator, and later as a banker in Denver and president of the Denver Dry Goods| Company, dled at his home early this morning of pneumonia. is survived by . for Miss Theresa B ce of F Burke of the Catholic diocese » Joseph and two daughters, | Mrs. Robert Livingston an, both ge but after remaining here © went to Montana where essfully In placer r enterprises and in and o his early twenties had acquired a considerable fortune Later he went into stock raising on a large| scale and maintained great ranches | in Indian Territory, Texas, Nevada Colorado and Nebraska. | In 1882 he again came to Denver and acquired an interest in the Colo-| rado Nationa! Bank, cf which he was vice-president for many years He also was vice president of the International Smelting Company of New York. He was instrumental in the organization of the Globe Smelting company here and served as its president until! it became a part of the American Smelting and Refining company. oo AUTOMOBILE. WYSPERTOR RETURNS TO NITY Warren Dailey, state automobile inspector, arrived in Casper this morning following a month's work | in Campbell, Weston and Crook counties. He will be here for some time and any car owners wishing | to straighten out bills of sale and} assignments or to obtain licenses, | may soe him at the sheriff's cle pee eee GAS POISONING, JURY'S VERDICT An Inquest into the death of Ran- som D. Howard, who was found| 4 in his room yesterday morn- , Tesulted in the leceased had come to nceidental s death by soning. The jury was compo: ries H. Li J. J. Laville, and 8. 2. Moore. 1 same men ere retained by Justico Henry F. Brennan to sit in the in quest of Lee Weathers, who appar- | ently committed suicide last night. ‘The inquest into the death of Weath- ers was td be opened at 3 o'clock thie afternoon. | No inquest was held in the death of Mrs. Vernon Sundwell her child who were poisoning ea An autopsy mains bel night, Ay was held, the r pped to Denver 1 Drinking Record Held by U. S. Is | Sought by Finns CHICAGO, (United Press-—"Fin- land {s the only country in the| world where there {s as much drunk- enness as there {s In the United said Dr. ederick A. Wels, Copenhagen, here. Less = dronk s prevails in countries under state monopoly than the in co tes. ere prohibition law, “There are no fishing smacks that engage in fishing in this country now—the: ‘run b s you call Mt. If secret drinking keeps on In this country, all respect for law and| d order will be lost. | bes more whiskey smug-| only on “There ! gling into Norway, where heavy al-| coholic drinks are barred, than ar other of her s' nk with your meals rather than drink ‘healths.’ Person- ally, I believe in the Danish plan of ruoning up Mquor prices with heavy taxation } Dr. Wels is in this country study: ing economic cond! —— Jeremiah Mahoney for a few days attending to bust- ness affairs and visiting with hia family. | arrested Thousands regain and retain bounding health this way. Very Simple. Read how reasonable —« FREE book. Call for it For SMITH TURN DRUG CO. 131 South Center Street. ™<clusive Photograph ; Miss Almira Rockefeller Gaughter of Mrs, W. G) Rockefeller, 1s rarely photo, graphed at a public event, The photographer caught », her, though,‘ on a new pola a p dela at Greenwich, Conn. Gustaf Oscar, prince of Sweden, whose father’s brother is King Gustaf of Sweden, was snapped in the guise of a gar- but he forgot to re move his jewelled wrist watch, GO ra 1 BIG TRIAL t for divorce from his| Elwood Stokes. nse counsel to sub- the statements Untermyer, deft d testimony of Miss Anna said. j she re osh had made the state red that to the D NOT te, gations. To en BRUNER (5 FOUN GUILTY IN JURY TRIAL is in the city | possession ing a nuisance, was found ested at the same LATE FLASHES NEW YORK, Oct. 16—Armed men teday held up Carmine Darengela n the heart of the busy warehouse section and forced him to abandon to them a truck loaded with $60,000 worth of silk. SAN BERNARDINO, Callf., Oct 16—Robert F, Sanders, 20, one of the three youths arrested yesterday Ludlow on the Mojave desert while driving the car of Police Offi-: cer D. H. Crowther of Salt Lake} City, found shot through the head Sunday by the Jordan river, Utah, confessed today that he murdered the policeman after the latter had befriended him, according to a state- ment by the sheriff's office. ., Oct. 16—In- formation received at the local air mail field this afternoon was to the effect that James J. Davis, secretary of labor, would reach Rock Springs Wyoming this evening on the reg- r mail airplane, take tho train there for Cheyenne, and leave by plane for Chicago early Wednesday morning. Secretary Davis is hur- rying east from San Francisco to meet David Lloyd George in Chicago. WASHINGTON, Oct. 16—An In-/ vestigation was instituted today by the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion to determine whether present rates on grain and grain products are justifiable, LONDON, Oct. 16—(ByThe Asso-) ciated Press)—In deference to Eng- lish sent!ment, Dr. Thornwell Ja cobs has decided to withdraw the request of Ogelthorp University that the body of James H. Ogelthory, founder of Georgia, be transferred to the proposed shrine on the Camp- us of the University in Atlanta, ies WELLS STORE PACKED TODAY A packed house greeted Prince | Let Lani at the store of the Charles Wells Music company, 282 East Second street, when the great Haw- alian tehor gave one of his most in- teresting and probably the longest program he has given in Casper. In addition to a series of solos that could not keep from meeting with the approval of his audience, the Prince gave several Hawailan songs and also delivered a talk on Haw- ailan music and Hawailan customs. The following ballads were sung in the course of the program: “Forgotten,” “A Dream, Me Back to Old Virginny, “My Honolulu Hula Girt Read to Mandala: The song “Aloha? was sung to the record on the phonograph. L, I. Gulick, manager of the store said this afternoon that one smal! ad in the Tribune and a reading notice had done the work of getting the crowd there. — “Carry * “Aloha” Warren Dailey, state automobile Mcense inspector, is here on business from Worland, . B. C. Skinner, purchasing agent for the Producers and Refiners cor- Sacbk i Si! R. L, Craft, automobile insurance adjuster, is in the city from Denver | having arrived this morning. KLAN MENBERS IN OKLAHOMA HOUSE MAY BE EXPOSED, SAID OKLAHOMA mine whether. he belonged to the Ku K'ux Klan, and authorizing the summary expulsion of all members found to be klansmen probably will come up for consideration of that body at its next session Wednesday. Che Casper Daily Cribune French Nation Peculiar Bird BY JOHN O'BRIEN (United Press Staff Correspondent.) PARIS, (By Mail to United Press) —What is “luxurious living?” President Millerand has just sign- ed a decree which explains at least iby the tax collector's views on ject as far as inhabitants of ce axe concerned. It has to do with what is kngwn as the “luxury tax,” Well, to come down to details, you are “living in luxury” if you eat truffles, although your next door neighbor, who stuffs himself with oysters and lobsters, im set down as an ordinary citizen, exempt from the special impost, You may keep a menagerie of bears, wolves, tigers, elephants, ringtailec: monkeys. and giant rhinoceri and get away with it, but look out for the tax collector if you -happen to have a parrot (a male) as a pet. The parrot’s wife will pazs, but not the bird himself. Then look to your taste in jeweél- ry! You can wear a silver or nickel watch gr a gold ring, but you'll .be taxed if you wear a gold or platin- um timepiece. When you order a piano order a “Baby Grand.” The other is taxed as are the modest phonograph and the zither and the lute. As for clothes, you are permitted to buy a hat for $4 and pay your wife's millinery bill as high as $6.25, Your suit may cost as much as $33 and ydur wife's or mother-in-law’s $38. Tholr “nighties” must not ex- ceed $6.35. You can go as far as $10 for your pajamas though. Finally, when you are giving in- structions for your funeral, tell ‘em not to rpend more than $10 for flow- ers. Otherwise your heirs will feel the heavy hand of the tax collector, ae Americans Turn Relief Over to Japs Saturday i | BY JOHN GRAUDENZ (United Press Staff Carrespondent.) MOSCOW (By Mail to United Press.)—Senator La Follette and members of his patty had a chance to appraise the military strength of Red Russia when with other Amer! cans visiting Moscow, the Wisconsin senator watched the graduation of 3,000 young Russian “shave tails, ' The exercises were held in the his- toric Red Square about which many |Czarist and Soviet tales of valor and success are woven. The budding generals were parad- ed and addressed by Kalinin, and Budjenny. The 3,000 youngsters have now jbecome ‘Red Commanders.” No matter how hich they may go in military rank, thelr titles. will re- | main thesame. From Trotsky down jall commissioned officers are “Ret Commanders. Divisions of rank are recognhizabie only through the number af men fh an officers command. There ts no {titular grading of authority. These 3,000 young soldiers: must henceforth salute every private sold- fer they may meet. The privates may return the salute or not, as they wish. It is part of Soviet milf- tary discipline to require officers to salute all common soldiers but not to require common soldiers to recip- jrocate. Another %.000 “Red Com- |manders" will be graduated in a few |month: Lady Winttred Pennoyer 1s prob- ably the only titled woman of the U. S. embassy. She {s the wife of the attache at Berlin. Her son is the present Earl of Shrewsbury, _ WOMEN! OYE IT NEW FOR te: shack | poration, is in the city from Denver. | Ski: Kimonos Draperies | Waists Dresses Ginghams Coats Sweaters Stockings Diamond Dyes Don't wonder whether you can Jaye or tint successfully, because perfect home dyeing is guaranteed with ‘Diamond Dyes" even if you have never dyed before. ~ Drug: gists have all colors, Directions in edeh 7 —Allvertisement, | ' Luxury Tax in |BONUS, LIQUOR, SHIPPING AND KLAN PROBLEMS LOOM BIG IH oat TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 192 now a manufacturer of patent med igines in Waterbury, was tak, \Indians Refuse to Give UpChild to |» vy George Hu pla fal Former. T r-t b'e| thts -acsueue aaa tee | of tl DEVILS LAKE, N. D., Oct. 16—| ‘He carried what he claimea ———— re ‘ By LAWRENCE MARTIN (Copyright, 1923, by United Press.) WASHINGTON, Oct. 16—(United Press.)—Congress peers with un- easiness at some of the controversial questions it must wrestle with this year. The K. K. K. issue will come up. Investigations are to be demanded of this, that and the other phase of the K: K. K. issue. It may fig- uys in an attempt to keep Earle Mayfield from being seated as a senator from Texas. The prospect that this will be injected into a crowded session, on the eve of a carapaign, is not relished. But some- body will start it, and then some- body el will keep it alive, and it will plague legislators all session and beyond into the campaign. There will be a demand for an inquiry about Muscle Shoals—why the war department sold the Gorgas plant to the Alabama Power com- pany; whether Secretary Weeks was so powerless as he claimed to be, or whether he didn’t have the power company in his control under a con- tract which some claim was over- looked. Refuses to Tell Price. Sale of shipping board vessels to the Dollar steamship interests will turn the searchlight on the shipping board again. A “scandal” ts scented there by some legislators because the shipping board, in conformity with a policy to which it has adhered, refuses to tell the price Dollar paid. Prohibition enforcement and at tempts to get the Volstead law amended will also trouble some. Moral issues like prohibition always cause grief to some politicians. The soldier bonus, for which some men will have to vote who will be beaten untoss they get taxes reduced or help the farmer or provide a new postoffice for the home towns, but who must vote for the bonus to get these other things in return, will again be among the early arrivals on the legislative calendar. Then there is the international issue—the world court and possibly America's position as to acceptance of an invitation into an European debt conference. With fourteen senators and scores of representa- Evening Gowns Dinner Dresses Taken from our regular lines of new fall and win- ter modes at $98.50 to $150.00. —it may be hard to believe, but it’s true. Come in this week and select your new evening costume and save the dif- ference. ’ Fe 110 E. Second St. Everywoman’s Store “A Frantz Shop Sale is a Genuine Sale” tives among the visitors to Europe this summer there will be oratory! Consequently when Chief Two enough on world affairs to fatten| Moon Meridas, traveling de luxe the congressional directory. passed by June 80 next or present appropriations continued so that the government departments may con- tinue to function, The immigration law must be extended or a new one passed. A few other matters must ‘be attended to. Everything must be done by carly June, because the national conventions of the Repub- Heans and Democrats are due. until January, Five or six months sounds like a long time and much can happen. But experience with past congresses leads observers here to believe that with the tremendous issue impending of whether Demo. | S22¥!draped squaw with a papoose erat or Republican or somebody else shall have control of the gov- ernment for the ensuing four years in the White House, and two years in congret a brake upon speedy action, but a ‘ : veritable stumbling block in the path of any action at all on most questions, SETS COURSE IN EMPLOYMENT New York university has this year installed a new course on labor and employment. J, D. Hackett, who is| ~ designated by the management as “an experienced consultant on la- bor problems for many manufac- turers,” will be in charge of the course. Hackett says that education of the employer {s the only insurance against continued labor disturb- ances. time in Parkerton on business today. Neb., business caller here for a short time. = NA. ONAN AAA A A HAL AAA (United Press)—The parental devo-| letters from Governor Charles tion of the Indian js not to be tempt- | Templeton of Connecticut and May, ed by gold. or William Dever of Chicago. pee with his Irish wife, secretary and | ‘This is strange when it 1s conside: Surveying the possibilities for|@iamonds, representing himself as|that an overwhelming pr&portion o; definite accomplishment in the com-|& manufacturer and capitalist of|tne Chinese in America are ing session one finds that all indica-| Waterbury, Conn., came here in|in laundry work, tions point to a grand carnival of| obedience to the call of childhood political discussion, and very little|to visit his birthplace at Fort Tot- accomplishment, —<——— The St, Lawrence river discharges 1,000,000 cubic feet of water per sec: ond. ~ ten, established by the Government as headquarters for the Cut Head Sioux, he found his tribesmen ready to receive him as their own, but un- willing to give one of their children to raise. What Must Be Done, The appropriation bills must be Sealed Pure and kept pure in air-tight container The chief, whose arrival was heralded by a ‘telegram’ reserving “the best suite in the house” at a local hotel, was forced to return to Connecticut, his mission unfulfilled. He found no trace of his parents and he took back no copper-colored Stoux boy. But childhood memories were awakened when he visited the In- dian farms where some log hous and tepees still stand, and when he met on the streets a buxom, Nothing much will be stirring on her back he atways stopped to talk to her in Sioux and to chuckle the black-eyed baby. According to his story, the chief ena cane a aneneatnt hare iene , Politics will be not only ——-—.e----. CROSS EVAPORATED MILK Sold and recommended by all Grocers NEW YORK, (United Press.)— A. L. Corder Cc. 'T, Akers CASPER ELECTRIC APPLIANCE CO. Mazda Lamps Appliance Repairing 231 East First Street “Across from Central School” Phone 19933 Free Delivery —_—_—__ George Vance is spending a short —_——— Cc. W. Charleson is a Lincoln, 0c Mid-Week | Selling Event For Wednesday and Thursday Our Offerings Are Real Money Savers SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY 27x54 VELVET RUGS Here is a wonderful opportunity to buy a splen- $ = Os did velvet Rug at much less than the regular price. The patterns are exceptionally good. ee You will find just the particular coloring you wish to match at only... Third Floor Silk Hose Women’s rib top Silk Hose in black, 36 Inch Percales Light patterns only. The selection I is ena and the quality is the bron and white. -These are of usual kind that sells ordinarily at eleven strand, pure silk with a fine 25c. For Wednesday and gauze lisle rib top. These features Thursday ......—.-__. ae | 7¢@ will insure long wear. $1 45 Third Floor 1 i er ° First Floor Table Covers Silk Lace Edge Some beautiful lace ‘ edge centers, 42, 45 and Bloomers Scarfs 54 inches, Some with Made of plain linen fin- | filet lace insert; others | a: ish suiting, with cluny| with heavy cluny edges | SU Minguette Bloom- h all around. Size . ers, extra heavy quality, 1en4e. tkee gelltor all around. Priced at well made, in all the more than our price. $1.59 ae colors; full run rwaiet69C| $4'@G | etki’ 94.98 Third Floor Third Floor Second Floor Mi Boys’ Blouses Boys’ school Blouses, made of fine grade chambray, sateen and cotton pongee. All sizes 6 to 15 years, For these two ’ beta nil amine |). Main Floor Hallowe’en Novelties Get ready for Hallowe’en now that our showing is complete. LEvery- thing to make the day complete: Pumpkins, black cats, masks, fay- ors, nut cups, tally cards, etc. HORSE HIDE VESTS Men! Here is a vee in eal Boe ae best $ 95 friend this er. We offer a blac orse- hide vest, wi nit collar, leather cuffs, fully ae A va wool lined, inches long, four pockets. A dandy at —.. AERA A) TPO Main Floor Golden Rule Den’t Store LINDSAY & CO. NAA al