Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 5, 1924, Page 1

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Thre Casper 3 Daily rif VOLUME Vill. : : : CASPER, WYO., SATURDAY, JANUARY 5, 1974 RECORD BREAKING CO EY LENA: rete mae The Weather —— WYOMING: Gen: tonight and Sunday. temperature. © fair (didos) Nore. FE ones PRINCIPALS IN DINES CASE RAIL }- AT ‘INJUSTICE’ OF ‘SITUATION’ NE ARRESTED!‘ 22gee me Tat You Hear > WM BOUNTT 1§[Compticrions 19 SENTENCES IN AND UPON) AsCtimesteaprest——NEWPRESIDENT L_OF 014 rom|TQ. STATE PEN heavy overcoat, his face was drawn with the heavy striin of the last few days. The corres- pondent has excellent reason to believe that his relations with the Egyptian government are getting LONDON, Jan. 5—The corres- dent of E: le. under what they termed the injustice of a situation cre: = ie Tora) sa by the shooting here last Tuesday night of Courtland es the following dispatch: Dines, Denver oil operator and club man. “Following Howard Carter's They were Mabel Normand, motion picture actress, | Miagnificent d scoveries of the con- y, tent: id z : her chauffeur who fired the shots; be «Shades wis -- ache ntlaamrigy gee is Horace A. Greer, her chau shrines in the Tutenkhamun tomb Pore ands Two Auto- $|Dines, who was hit by two bullets, fof the party and its dranfitic climax Trades haut irs hes "eniaraesdden sins. omplete Equipment Is ip Miss Normand, recuperating from | It is known now that D'nes has aet ctterEatioan tiring aiae a File F d10 Mil East an operation for chronic appen | which may yet prove a, tragedy. Elects Officers ee the highest tension lately and the | MmObDuue 1eves oun les ~| dicitis, awaited at the Good Samaci-] een in Los Angeles for more than culmination of his brightest hopes i Ce : tan hospital the effect of an appea! | ¥x months and that Edna Purviange | Friday Meeti has been followed by a reaction. Pleas o} uilty. On River ank, she addressed last night to the] and Mabel Normand have been plgy-) nday iVieenng. “Ag he walked through ths val American public to “withhold their | ‘ng around with him for that peried.| ee WE Ae ot Kinde yemterday atternton judgment of me until all the facts] He is not known to have had any| i ehatetenie’ srattcne coe One bad check writer and two noo v1 ft jectrica! es ht wear'ng @ | automobile thieves who pleaded Federal officers Friday afternoon | are known”. Dusiness connections or relations Wm. Gountt of the Electrical automobile a iwhe _plealted uncovered a partially complete] «1 feel that I am particularly un: | bere but he lived like a man of large Workers was elected to head the ass cated Ais nig speach ro moonshine manufacturing plant 10] fortunate in reaping most of the Ape Soy gO Di S Casper Trades Assembiy for the Sudge RR. Rose. oe the oe Te Reape and i a an’ | iutonaire. ‘ifie- father tune’ ayhe attended, meeting: 6, that. bode: eae given from 21 months to three years who was in charge of the brew and] just of the censors or anyone else ft f ing a chetk on the Roberts who claimed to have ro partners in| to condemn me before they have “lap ieee sae mcent en ny evening ‘at. Labie Weis," Cours. ture, tatolerable: all “the:.time, for Sorsing. & chek: ¢ Sansa he the business venture was arrested.| heard my story. nes to see his parents in Denver officers elected were: John ‘King. which coupled with the ever-in. check which was for $76.45, was forg- Tho still, of 125 gatlon capacity,| Greer, whom police described as | Was believed to be for the purpose Of Carpenter, vice president; Chas,! creas’ng responsibility of the tomb. Sa NovaiaMar 18 last anil’ coahed at a was cleverly concealed in a dugout|“a self constituted hero who shot | °>taining a loan from his father to local bank. Sbaner has a prison re- cord behind him having been sent to the Preston Industrial school in California in 1921 for similar ac- | tivities and also having spent a year in the Nevada penitentiary at Reno for a bad check. Robert Brennan and John Thursdy who confessed to stealing an auto- mob'le belonging to Dr. H. R. La. trop a few weeks ago, received sen- tences of two and a half te four years and four to seven years re- spectively. The men were caught in t Srnencere in possession of the ma- the history of the movement in from the Bay of Islands to Glou-| the republic is anxious to encourage cester, Mass. tg ment regarding the loan, but Sena:| call. They have seen their tax/ vestigated the case, found that the! sert that they can imagine no motive tor Walsh, Democrat, Montana, in-| burden mount three hundred an‘ man had evidently brought the rifle! for the suicide. The only motive so sisted today that the publisher be} ive hundred per cent in the brief | with him from his home this morn-|far ascribed is that Mr, Cook may led for persona! examinaticn. A| space of a few years, and while re-|ing, had fastened a wire to the trig-|have had some financial difficulties brains and printers’. ink and live to see their dreams come true. The Tribune is justly proud of the part it plays in helping local merchants realize their visions, is affecting his constitution, which on the north bank of the river and| ‘n outraged dignity’ when Miss Nor. | FeDJentsh hia puree. A Paes sane Sa ae has not been robust for some years. almost completely covered up with| mand failed to take seriously h: Neither Edna Purviance, who ad-| workers, secre Nevertheless he is continuing his bull bushes. A thin stream of] efforts to “rescue” her from Dincs' | Mts @ private understanding ~'th tary; Tom Freshney, Carpenter, re- work which for the next few days smoke led the officers to :t. — The/upartment New Year's night, occu: | Pines, and who calis him her lay, cording secretary; Wm. Dittman, must be robbed of its glamor. egout was two miles off any malt, | pied a cell in the county jail after | Mate.” nor Mabel Normand will tll 100s etal Workers, serdeantat-/) Mr. Carter believes he will be ablo eee e a how and when they met Dines. They to reach the paint where it will be | traveled road but fresh wagon|his arraignment yesterday on a Ke het /arms}E. Moore,-Cullnary. Wo! tracks indicated that Murphy had| charge of assault with a deadly | Ut met him somewhere, found that = “* possible to raise the lid of the had recent callers. The moonshine] weapon, and clung to his original | h Was 4 good sort and began to play W. Burkett, railway carmen; C. S. sarcophagus a fortnight hence | was evidently hauled from the st!'l| declaration that a noble desire to ae with bine Ph Set! thie! irises Carpenter, trustees. dramatic by horses to a neighboring ranch] protect the screen actress, coupled helock’ title “atbub athe eendes oe man,| The labor movement in the past! and there transferred bed motor/ with an equally laudable desire to Dines was interested in Miss. Pur. Year has gained considerable ground, transportation to Casper, save his own life, constituted his via: d the othe: ‘ust have A number of new bet; or- Murphy was low on whiskey wher. | sole motive for pulling the. trigger | ianice and the other man must have sander age? the federal men arrived: He had| of Miss No! d's automatic pistol | Pen ihe. teal ae 2 sation Pat ihe ganized in the city. Among ae all about five gallons. Four} and sending a bullet through Dines* “ppaty Dasy ‘09 mat the who have been granted _ charters| china: "s sentence was con- Eoaei, ole Pierce aris eateanes Se SHIP SINKING 222 Sec lo were ques: tens: it’ Mi Ww hewn ope brine bien 5) gs Ae 3 <ienaon ae eit ti Angunica of the tioned by police, the two motion ple- Chaviffeurs and Teams! i gee oP rese | blame « "or tneuguraing the theres See ceameiaes of liquor. evident, for be said ‘I don't know pisd are ae yieed kept Raat" men and Assistant. Brey yc BR fied with mash which | why in the world that fool shot ie }Ond man th the ‘groun le In taking office ‘ast ieredlng: Mr.| GUILING,,.N: F, Jan. 5.—The| GERMAN' the vats were tobe worker ‘Known to have been a member of a Gountt said that he honed the dif-| Joss ofthe ‘schooner Donald Silver! MOSCOW.—(United Press.)—Etght was just about ready yacht'ng party to Catalina with just ferent crafts would get closer to-|with her crew of seven men. last ‘hundred Germans. largely farmers, A pressure.tank, geveral drums of motion’ pletute — actress the four members, a trip which pro- gether in the coming year and that | Thursday off “Heatherton, 60 miles have applied to the Russian govern- Easoling, a complete cooking ‘outfit | Tin sp course events have taken |duced some very unconventional all the locals would have delegates southwest of here. was reported to- ment for an allotment of land, where and a bunk made the stilihouse in| since the New Year's night affray, | Photographs found in Dines' apart- at central body 0 that they can day. Wive of the bodies have bees | they will settle with their families eae: sopeitioe on res varrcact yee was not revealed, she having re. reset. This second man so zealous. make 1924 one of tho best years iz recovered. The sh{p was bound They will probably get the land, as Ha: mained silent since her, recent | !¥ Pro ynay bave been the good pi Lease agpantin tilt had ‘been in| statement: admitting that she and (Continved on Page Eight) Casper. nericulture. cera ion as that he purchased the|Dines were “engaged, and yet not SEE uitt complete a short time ago| °saged. 1f you understand what I fxn a man named Erickson and| ™ean.” iat the present was his first run} To the police, however, the com | tf whiskey. As evidence the officers brought] inns case of the shooting "| im the still, colt and pressure tank) Courtland §. Dines is officially eigenen Sn ate eg tine | closed,” said. Assistant Captain of place was) saturate, Sasolne| Detectives Herman Cline, who di- And set on fire. rected police investigation of the alleged attack on Dines. S Li “The man charged with the shoot: | I7UUL ing o y ‘WOOD SILENT SHIT GREEK WOMAN |ine'tsmaccnssesé."ens as ggtung So Says Senator Borah of Idaho In Ad out. “He has admitted he did the : ° Shooting. Complete statements tave| J €lDELry Costs dress Opposing Compensation, for INJURED IN ACCIDENT been taken from all parties con- World W Soldi cerned. The physical condition of the victim ot Gree atack in| Man $150,000 orld War Soldiers HE HOSPITAL proving slowly and he apparently | ISLARD KD PROBE is out of danger. A warrant charg- 4 LEAVES T ing Greer with assault to kill has} NEW YORK, Jan. 5.—Greater ac- NEW YORK, Jan. 5.—(By The .Associated Press).— bg aba at i Sins Papen cal Pas alin ene carton attion,, Declaring himself in favor of tax reduction and re) in ign on e charge | infor iry de! official! v ‘Mrs. Pauline Pennington of Salt|#nd January 11 set as the date for | of gem purchases by wealthy Amer: tO the soldier bonus, Senator William E. Borah of at be beans ia e-Gr.tbe Asoo: Creek, who was injured In an auto-| his preliminary hearing. He has|icans abroad today was expected to in an address today before the National Republican clu Sarthe wondit ono ieeeiean tt mobile accident on the Salt Creek] been transferred to the county jall|result from the announcement yes- of New York, said this issue could not be avoided or side- dumritik, today, to loWink “ait. Inspea! highway late Thursday evening, was|—and there 1s nothing more for the|terday that co-operation betwen stepped. | seeditens sossoamaloy intipatenet' pos: able to leave the Lavoyo hospital] Police to do. See ale ian Lee toeanertny | pOnaia either fon tam telucon ery: {fWhat \doceuch tax burdens, ince; declined ta.make.any conment Friday. Her principal injuries were the : - ara A Fei vice tg | he Talabaltiotit.uhe eattts mean? They mean imperilled and Tesarding the resolution introduced bruises and cuts from flying glass. | DINES NOT WELL ‘Sion We | Bien Ptnvestinant a right to be for the bonus or he has! rorreitea homes, they mean dissatis- PY Representative Frear, providing Mrs. Pennington was returning to] KNOWN ON COAST psn dd f $150,000 in duty and % Tight to be for tax reduction. But Q Sov. for a congressional investigation of her home, from Casper. with her By FORREST WHITE enalty for failure to declare jewelry | He cannot be for both. fled and discontentment in domest'e hig administration in the Islands, uncle, Richard Vance, deputy sheriff | (Copyright, 1923, The Casper Tribune) osc ann ‘trom ‘Burope last, Novem.| “You cannot take off’aitemporary | 'ife, they mean less educational ad- | ze at Lavoye, when the Dodge coupe he| LOS ANGELES, Jan. 5.—Court.| Prousnt this amount the person way | burden. of $140,000,000 or $150000-| vantages for the coming citizen, MANILA, Jan. 5—(By The Areo- Was driving crashed into the rear} land 8. Dines, victim of the trenziea| Per. Of roan patton ates receive | 000 and lay on a permanent burden | they mean separated and demoral- ciated Press}—The Philippine legis- nd of a loaded truck, stalled beside | jealousy of Mabel Normand's chauf- asus ast, a eit or obligation of $4,000,000,000 to| ized families, they mean energy lature will resume its sessions Mon- the road. The coupe was smashed|feur is known to only a limited circie| $27,500, or 25 per $5,000,000,000 and call it tax reduc-j thwarted and enterprise sterilized. day, following the hol’day vacation. up but Mr. Vance was uninjured. |in Los Angeles. Since he was re- tion. It would be a dangerous poli-|and last of all, they mean thrift- The appropriation bill is expected The truck, a Duplex bearing the} moved from his luxuriously turnish-! Reclamation tical experiment. It would defeat] !essness and improvidence an to be the first business taken up by 1923 Wyoming Ucense number T-| eq apartment in North Vermont ave- any party that would undertake it.*| moral breakdown of a great and the legis ators, 1806, is listed az belonging to F. E.|nue to the hospital he has had no Senator Borah quoted figures in-| proud citizenship.” Keeler of 1119 South Jackson street.| callers except Mabel Normand and! Work Is Urged dicating the ‘rate of increase of “Have we the courage to do oust PROFESSOR DEAD J Mr, Keeler is at present employed| Edna Purviance, tue motion picture t taxes in the last elght or ten years | plain duty?” Senator Borah asked.!- GRONINGEN, Holland, Jan. 5— at Lavoye and left Casper for there| stars who were present in his apart- declaring they “represented the|“I beg the people to understand Dr. H. J. Hamburger, professor of early Thursday morning. ment when he was shot New Yea: ; most searching tragedy of Ameri-|that {t is not alone a question of physiology at Groningen, University See she at night, WASHINGTON, Jan. 5.—An Ore/can life.” In eastern tndustrin}| reducing the taxes. It is also this: is dead. In the fall of 1922 he deliv- Not only has Dines had no other.gon congressional delegation accom-| centers the situation was serioux| Can we throw off this national dis- ered a series of lectures in the Un- visitors but no inquiries have come’ panied by a group of business men| enough, he asserted, but In the agri.| ease of extravagance and waste?” ited States, some of them at the A Substitute to the hospital concerning his con-|urged Gecretary Work today to be-| cultural regions of the west, “they (Continued on Page Eight) Johns Hopkins. University. dit’‘on except by telegraph from his g'n construction work on the Baker! aro losing faith in the govern- relatives. Mabel Normand is now in! Reclamation project, already auth-| ment,” because of unbearable taxes For A € the same hospital where she was orized by congress and to extend|and “the mad saturnalia of spend- operated on Thursday for chronic ap-|further re‘let to Oregon water users] ing,” in which the speaker declared pendicitis. Edna Purviance has been through the building of an addition-| the government continued to’ la: In former times in England a | slow in recovering from the effects al project in that state. dulge. buriness was considered eminently “Out in the great agricultural respectable if it built up slowly : areas,” he said, “where, in the last from father to son for » century analysis, must be found the source or more. of national wealth and contentment In this country’an empire had i & —the place from which we are fed— be set in order in less time E there is going on a patient, dogg=d t efore what we p struggle for the preservation of lacked ieithe net ready made up e e homes and farms such as no man| George W. Cook, 56 years old, of placed the rifle barrel against his in intensity. can appreciate who has not wit-|529 South Jackson street, and a long cheat and pulled the trigger. ; What formerly was done in a nessed it. Men and women whol time resident of Casper, calmly sat Dr. M. J. Nolan, who was called 10 en tere tae, CO eae, asth ? maspapiyertenihads: *sba aa down on the ground at the corner of sop ipreneses by Bem bales, West ed by intense and. scientific ad- sacrificed, denied themselves, and =) Yellowstone avenue plumber, who vertising in two or three years. under the most adverse circum: |ASh street and Industrial avenue at) found Cook lying on the ground, Mep are in a hurry. They | WASHINGTON, Jan. 5. — After|view in the Teapot Dome nvestiga-| stances opened up farms, now with|8 o'clock this morning and com. found the man dead. There ae be don't want to wait and talk back | oonsiderable argument, the senate|tion in the senate. 0 years of struggle behind them, | mitted suicide, by shooting himsel: nO ‘nquest ey the tase according to to Sir Conan Doyle or Sir Oliver fs ted today| . Recently Mr. McLean's attorney | stand in mortal dread of the coming | through the heart, with a 25-35 le. Coroner Gay. Lodge to learn that what they |PUbIc lands committee vo' YA. Mitchell Palmer, made a state-| tax collector with his ever-increasinys | Lew Gay, county coroner, who in-| Members of Mr. Cook's family began has become successful, to ask Edware B, Mclean, the Therefore they .mix energy and | Washington published, for a sworn statement regarding the $100,000 Reston gad: to “bees 3. Wellestocroee: clan's certificate was filed say-| flecting over what has happened.|ger and the other end to a nafl.|If this was so the difficulties were secretary of the interior, whose fl-|ing Mr. McLean's health demanded| :hey are even more anxious about|When he was all ready for the act|of a more or less trivial nat o nancial affairs, have come under re- that he remain at Palm Beach, Fla,! what may happen. he unbuttoned his coat and vest,j cording to the-fs nily. |eoln and Mrs. W. D. Stepp. Fair Weather Forecast for Coming Week WASHINGTON, Jan. 5.—Weath- er outlook for the week beginning Monday: Northern Rocky Mountain plateau regions: Generally temperature near normal. Southern Rocky Mountain and plateau regions: Generally mi temperature averging below Pacific states: Generally fair but with a probability of rain or snow on the north coast by middle of the. week; temperature will average below normal. ASPHYXIATION CLAIMS TOLL COLUMBUS, Neb., Jan. 6.—John C. Hager, 86, said to be th oldest member of the Masonic order in Ne- braska, and his wife were asphyx- iated by coal gas that escaped fro: a base burner in their home at Bel- wood, Neb. Mr. Hager had been a Mason for 65 years. He was born in Cobbleskill, N. Y. One of his laughters, Mrs. W. B. Henry, re- des in San Diego, Calif. “antes ate mae a Handicapped by Moonshine, Two GRIPS MIDDLE WEST DEATH TOL TAKEN BY ZERO ~ (COLD SUFFERING = MSO REPORTED Low Tongeeanates Pre- vail in South; Ohio River Passes Flood Stage Before Halt. CHICAGO, Jan. 5.—Cold weather records of a decade were broken in Chicago to- day, with theremometer ex- pected to reach 15 degrees below zero before the prom- ised end of the cold wave tomor row. Beginning at ten p. m., last night at zero, the mercury dropped steadily until ti reached the low ree- ord point this morning. Be'ow zero temperatures prevailed. throughout the Great Lakes district. In the northwest and upper Rocky Mountain states as far south as Arizona and Colorado, the trend of Minne- the mercury is below zero, a A re Arrested sota, the Dakotas and Nebraska are John Heger and F. E. strike each other, A pollger along, he led headlong into = snow bank. “You need warmer quarters,” the He as- sisted them to police. station where they were arraigned before Judge John A. Murray last night and were fined $25 each for the ilegal pos- Despite the. fact that one of: the bottles was labeled officer remnded the-men. session of liquor. Hanks stumbled blindly as a stiff January wind tore at the face ofeach. Two bottles clinked as Heger who held them in his hand permitted.them to in the grip of a cold. wave that brought marking of from 20 below in Minneapolia to six below in North Platte, Salt Lake City tem- perature is below freezing, Freezing temperatures or below Prevail in many southern states, and-weather reports indicate a cold wave ‘through the south. In tho Vicinity .ef Memphis; thermometers registeréd In the twenties, Texas points reported recessions to. below thirty degrees, and Shreveport, Louisiana fast night, anticipted ico today. Along the Gulf of Mexico cities reported temperatures near the halt century mark. Ga'veston, Texas, had 52; Mobile 60; New Orleans 54; ‘pop,"’ it was found on examination and Montgomery, Alabama 50. Jack- to contain a stronger. BOUND OVER IN AXE ASSAULT Dodge Shannon, who waived his preliminary hearing on a charge of refreshment assault with intent to kill, was bound over to district court Friday by Justice Brennan under bond of $2,500. Shannon was arrested November 9 charged with having hit 8. C. Wenta in the head with an axe as the latter lay asleep on a davenport inthe Rhinesmith apartments at Evansville. The incident occurred n the early morning hours follovy- ng what the sheriff's office de- scribed as a “wild” party. Wenta has almost fully recovered from his wounds which included a fracture of the skull. Restriction Put On Radio Use By the British LONDON, Jan, 5—The British ad- mirality has issued an order restrict- ing the use of its radio, telegraph or telephone apparatus by fore’gn war. ships when in or near British har- bors. If the harbor ts a naval one such ships must obtain permission from the nava' port commander before employing any of these services. George W. Cook Takes‘ Mr. Cook was born in Indiana and had been a C.isper resident for the last 16 years. going to work for the Standard Oil company at the local refinery in 1915. Up until yesterday he was em- ployed at the acid plant and he start- ed as usual to his work this morning. Mr. Cook is survived by his wife three sons Lyle R. of the Home Mes- Warren and in school and three senger company, Wayne, both married daughters, Mrs. R. E. Mc Grew o Robert O'Bryan of 142 much 243 North Jefferson, Mrs. sonville, Florida had a drop of 14 degrees, Two men were found frozen to death and a woman and another man were partly frozen here early today. George Simitzes was taken to a hospital by policemen who found him frozen hand and foot, and a Woman, struck by an automebile was frozen when she was left lying in the street for half an hour be- fore being found. Official temperature reading at $ a. m. registered 16 degrees blow zero. OHIO TWO FEET ABOVE FLOOD STAGE CINCI TI, Ohlo, Jan. 5—Con- tinuing ite steady rise of one tenth of a foot an hour, the Ohio river at Cincinnati today had reached a Stage of approximately 54 feet, two feet higher than the so-ca'led flood stage. Weather bureau officials expected the rise to continue until late tonight or tomorrow, but at a diminishing rate owing to the spreading of the waters over a wider scope of territory. LOUISVILLE, Ky., Jan, 5—A eur- vey today of high water and flood conditions at various river points in Kentucky disclosed property dam- age attended by inconven'ence to dwellers in near-river lowlands. So far cases of actual or impending hardship or danger apparently were lacking. The Ohio river parsed flood stage 28 feet, here ‘ast night and contir- ues to rise slowly today. A num- ber of families in Shipping port, river front district, quit their homes, but others preferred to awa.t actual flood conditions before retreating. OMAHA, Neb., Jan. 5—Omaha and the surrounding section of the Missouri valley are today gripped by wir.ter’s most frigid blasts, crystal es and whipping winds bringing temperatures ranging from zero to 20 below. Predictions are for more severe temperatures today with no‘let up in sight tomorrow. t night was the coldest since Towa, reported seventesr below. Valentine, Nebraska, reported six- ‘teen be'ow; Grand Island Nebraska, 12 below, and Logan Iowaf/15 below. He worked for the TWO DEATHS city, for a number of years before yy ST. LOUIS ST, LOUIS, Jan. mercury at nine degrees below zero. police reports today showed two persons dead and a score suffering 5—With the from exposure as a result of the cold wave. _ The dead are Patrick Don- 67 years old, and Peter Davis, ST. PAUL, Minn, (Continued on Page Lighy | } =

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