Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 31, 1924, Page 10

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PAGE TEN. BENGH ATTEST FOR MEANS PUT OUT BY JUDGE Bail of Former Agent Forfeited in Federal Court Case NEW YORK, March 31,— Federal Judge Garvin today ordered a bench warrant is- sued for the arrest of Gaston B. Means, former agent of the department of justice, who is under indictment for con. spiracy to violate the Volstead law, and whose trial was to have begun here today. When Judge Garvin called case of Means and his former s Elmer W. Jarnecke, both ommit- epartment of iram C. attorney bail of $1 Todd, assistant deputy general, moved that Means’ 000 be forfeited and that motion. asserted a to ap- 1 and had given illness pear for tr as his reason. He declared the district court here took precedent committee. The tains four counts, the ne entered into a. con: release of 12,- cases 00 barrels of whiskey from vernment ware- houses The second involves 55 barrels of whiskey, the third 88 barrels and the fourth charges conspiracy, and the use of the mails to defraud in connection with an attempt to obtain $75,000 from a man in Chicago for the release of tiquor from govern- ment warehouses as Se ANSWERS BY DR. KARR Mrs. O. A. B—Yes, eventually a chiropractic doctor will help him a great deal. ent business, continue with same. 3.—No not as s00n an you would desire. Better of- fer will be made later. E. 8S. P.—Can see no immediate change that will greatly benefit you now. BANDIT SLAIN 4E8, Calif., March 31. *—One bank robber was slain and his companion crippled by gun shot ‘wounds and $12,000 in cash taken from the Security Trust and Savings bank branch at Slauson and Cen- tral avenues was recovered today during two revolver fighters and a long chase. One of ths robbers was fatally shot by a civillan who saw the two men commandeer an auto truck and forced the driver to sped them away The second robber was shot and captured at Huntington Park, near here, by a de y shert From him the loot of th nk was recovered. : dis ic Furs Displayed Here to Be Sold The furs now on display at the Casper Dry Gods company will re- main there for tomorrow only since in the evening Robert Rosenthal! will return to New York with all that have not been sold. Mr. Rosenthall is the representative of the Great Northern Fur company. He is wind ing up a tour in which he has used the furs on sale here as samples in taking orders. Not desiring to take them back to New York he decided to sell them to Casperites at attrac tive prices, Many Casper women took ad- vantage of the opportunity thus af- forded though there is still a wide selection to be drawn from. Coats make up the greater part of the stock. Hudson seals, Northern seals, mink, squirrel, muskrat, and rac- coon are among tho furs exhibited. Sri na Bond Ny Snow Fails Almost} Every Day In Butte} BUTT: March 81.—Snow ys in March ave been second oo! in the past ten years, The tem- s at noon was 38 with br it sunshine promising rising mer. EW YORK, March 21—ttberty ROBBING BANK | ; At the left ts Eddie Collins, sec- pnd baseman. extraordinary; in the center Willie Kamm, crack third baseman, and at the right Maurice Archdeacon, outfielder and fastest man on the bases in baseball. De- spite his years of service, Collins is | ington, D. C. MOFFAT ROAD TRAIN STALLS DENVER, Colo., March 31.— Trains over the Denver and Salt Lake railroad (Moffat road) were annulled today because of the high winds and shifting snow on the right of way test of Tolland, officials announced. Although the snow had stopped falling at_an early hour to- forty mile an hour gale was reported at Corona: The storm has been raging in the vicinity of Co- rona for ten 8. Snow plows will be sent from Den- the storms abate, officials an- nounced. Passengers numbering 127, who were stalled on a westbound train near Tolland Saturday returned to Denver last night when officials of the road abandoned their plan to at- tempt to break through the drifts at that place. Bless Se Rta | LATE SPORTS NEWARK, N. | William L. (Young) "Stribling, Geor- | light heavyweight pug | hope, will have an advantage of pound and one half over his vet- eran rival, Mike MeTigue, the title holder, in their 12 round match to- night- _Stribling tipped the scales at 16644 and MeTigue at 165 when they weighed in. March 31.— PINEHURST, } March $1.— Walter Hagen, veteran profession- al led the early field in the annual North and South open golf tourna- ment here today when be turned in a card of 68 for the first eighteen holes. Hagen was closely followed by Jim Barnes, MacDonald Smith, and Emmett French, each with 70 for the morning round. One hun. dred and two players teed off. Sa A a Vanderlip Answers Marion Libel Suit NEW YORK, March 31.— Frank A. Vanderlip retired banker, today filed his answer in federal district court to the sult for $600.000 dam- ages brought by Louls H, Brush and Roy D. Moore, owners of the Marion, Oh{fo, Star, who alleged re- marks made by Mr. Vanderllp in an Ossining, N. Y., address nt wore TAKE $15,000 DETROIT, Mich., March 31.—Your armed bandits held up the West Fourth Street branch of the Com- monwealth fefleral savings bank to- neld two employes and a cus- bonds closed: 3%4s 9 first 4%45 t bay while they scooped up ‘ et sienee Ba, ot 5 4 4%s/all the m: sy in sight and escaped fourti: 4s 99-20; U. 8, ver: nh an automobile, The amount taken qnent 4%s 100.14, 4 4# eatimated as §15,000, ver today to clear the road should| considered the peer of all the sec- ond sackers. Kamm went to the White Sox last year from the Ver- non Clud of the Pacific Const League, the purchase price being $75,000. He made good from the start. Archdeacon, who went to Recovering Senator Frank L. Greene of Vermont at home after leaving the hospital where he was taken Feb, 19 with a bullet wound In the hand. The senator was shot by a stray bullet fired during a battle between bootleggers and prohibition agents just off Pennsylvania avenue, Wash- Butter Shop To Operate On Cash And Carry Plan In order to provide better service to its customers at more reasonable rates, the Natrona Butter Shop, on Second and Durbin streets, will be transformed tomorrow into a cash- and-carry grocery, The new methcd of handling business will mean lower prices on goods. The Natrona Butter tion that it years. During that time it has gain- ed a large patronage and hopes to c inue giving tk same satisfac. tion that ti has done in the past. It specializes in green vegetables an¢ groceries and will handle the same high qua‘ity of articles that it has previonst;. done. : A present will be given to every- one who visits and goes through the store tomorrm The Casper Provision company, a meat market locatec in the same building, will carry on business the same as usual. SBD STE NEW SHOP FOR WOHEN OPENS Ladies of Casper will be inter- ested in the announcement of the opening of the Grace Shop, Casper's latest addition to her family of la- dies’ ready-to-wear stores. * Mi; Grace Finnegan, who has been con- Shop nected with the Frantz Shop, and with the mple Cloak and Suit Co., for several years, is in charge of the new shop. The Grace Shop has already found favor in the eyes of Caspe: ies, and its ideal location on st street near Center makes it an ideal spot for the attention of Milady of Fash- fon. Chicago from the Rochester In- ternationals, is to be a regular this: season. He holds a record for circling the bases -and last season| compiled one of the highest batting, International | averages in the League. COMVERSE MILK SUPPLY PROVES CF nlGh GRADE Large Source of Supply For Local Dealers Show Pure Quality Under the direction of Dr. R. J. Malott, the Natrona County Health officers working in connection with the Converse County Milk Produ- cers’ association, which is one of the largest sources of Casper’s milk rupply, report that this milk is af high grade and produced under very favorable condition. A meeting was held with the association Saturday in Glenrock. Dr. G. R, Dafoe, food and dairy inspector, had charge of the meeting and gave a fine dis- course cn the proper methods of producing and handling clean milk. Dr. Dafoe in his talk emphasized the importance of c’ean milk and the fact that the greater portion of all milk is consumed by children. F. M. Sheehan, bacteriologist, gave a demonstration of laboratory methods used in the control of Cas- per’s milk supply which created a very Ceep interest. Dr. Sheehan in his talk explained by demonstration the modes and methods of the sedi- ment test and its value to the indus- try. also the various steps and pro- cedures used in present day meth- ods of obta'aing bacterial counts and how by these methods he deter- mined the quality of this milk. The meeting was largely attended anc a vote of thanks was extended to Dr. Malott and the Natrona has | County Health department for their done in the past. It] interest shown GAR STRIKE IN LONDON ENDED LONDON, March 31.—The London tramway men today voted to accept the terms for settlement of their strike reached by the union dele- gates and representatives of the companies. This will result in the strike which has tied up the Lon- don car Iines for the last ten days being called off. Building Permits Record Increases Building permits for the mouth of March in Casper approximated 9 which is about $14,000 more th the permits for February. Building is apparently holding its though nothing phenon:enal has noted during the lest three months. ‘The largest permit issued In March was for a $23,300 garage to be bullt by W. F. Dunne oa In- dustrial evcnue, For sified results try a ‘Tribune Clas. Ad. i Drummer Prodigy ‘Walter Roman, four, of Wilmington, Del., is the world’s youngest (rap drummer. He plays in bands and orchestras of adult players. One of the most notorious and serous radicals in the United States isc. E. Ri executive sec- retary of the National Workers’ He bas just issued a statement to radical workers and sympathizers in which he says, in part, as follow: “Our propaganda must make it clear that the Teapot Dome scandal fs not a case of individual corrup- tion, that it {s inseparably bound with the essence of the capitalist government. We must explain that it 1s not a cnse of kept men in the government, but that the United States has a kept goverfment. We. must utilize the Teapot Dome scan- dal ta expore the connection between capital and government. We must make every effort to destroy the Democratic illusions of the masses. "The fortunate circumstances that the Republican and Democratic parties are at the same time equally involved in the scandals gives us the best opportunity to make it clear to the masses that the Republican and Democratic parties in equal measure are the parties of big capital. This situation gives us the best and the unexampled opportunity to increase and broaden the propaganda for a class party of workers and farmers. “We must take the Teapot Dome scandal as materia! for a gigantic nation-wide and continued political campaign. We must tie up the re- velations of Doheny with the United States’ intervention in Mexico in 1916 and 1924 and with intrigues cen- tering about the recognition of Mexi- co. ~ “It is very important to make it clear to the masses that the national- ization of public utilities, etc., is possible only if a workerg’ and farm- ers’ government is set up. “We shall arrange as soon as pos- sible mass meetings in every big city and industrial center. We must pre- Pare the mass meetings so carefully thgt they shall be real mass meet- inj ‘We must show that what we did in the Lenine memorial meetings we can also do against the Ameri- can government.’ Ruthenberg is an associate and an intimate of “Big Bill Dunne” and D. €. Dorman. Both Dunne and Dor- man ,are-members of the same radi- cal outfit to which Ruthenberg be- longs. ~ Both of them are members of the Nationa! Workers’ party. Both of,them are radicals with criminal records. Dorman hails from Mon- tana, and most of Dunne's radical activities were conducted in Mon- tana. “Big Bill Dunne,” Timothy Nolan and United States Senator Burton K. Wheeler were: the leaders of the Non-Partisan radical outfit in Montana. Nolan was an attorney for the I. W. W.’s of that state at the time he Wheeler and “Big Bill Dunne” Were the triumvirate of the Non Partisan radical outfit. At that time he was held tn the. United States courts for perjury. He and his friends boasted that he would never be tried because of the influence which Wheeler and other Non-Par- tisan leaders in Montana and other northern states had at Washington. “Big Bill Dunne” first came into notoriety by his lawless acts in Cana. da. He was run out of Canada in 1916. He went to Seattle, where he began his campaign against law and order and the government. He was run out of Seattle in 1917 . He then went to Montana and finally settled in Butte after a short sojourn in Helena, In Butte he became. along with Nolan and Wheeler, head of the radi- eal outfit. He was a member of the Non-Partisan party, the Workers’ party, that I. W. W. and a number of radical and lawless organizations. He sometimes went under the alias of Driscoll. He gained fame among radicals by being the author of the “I. W. W. Ten Commandments.” He was editor of the radical publication in Butte known as the Bulletin. Through its columns and in public meetings Dunne neglected no op- portunity to denounce the courts, the authorities of the American gov- ernment and its institutions. He is repeatedly on record as stating he preferred soviet Russia to the United States government. «He was convicted of sedition in the Montana state courts, He was convicted of being a “fence” for stolen goods taken from interstate commerce. He was disfranchised. In 1921 he went to Russia and at- tended the First- Red Trade Union Internationale. He was arrested abroad for traveling without a pass- port. He returned and was ad- mitted to this country under some- what hazy circumstances. He attended the Bridgman (Mich) convention of the Communist party, was the “Editor of the Convention,’ was arrested at that time and place, and is mow out on $10 000 bail, charg- ed with criminal syndicalism. He is so radical and notorious that al- though he’went to the American Federation of Labor convention at Portland, Oregon, last year he was refused a seat as a delegate. He is now in Chicago as the editor of the Daily Worker, a radical communistic publication in that city. As editor of the radical publication in Butte. “Big Bill Dunne” was the leading supporter of the candidacy of U.. S. Senator E. K. Wheeler when Wheeler ran for governor in 1920. D. C. Dorman ts the leader of the Non-Partisan League of Montana. He is 2 member also of the execu- tive committee of the Conference for Progressive Political Action, of which William H. Johnson ts the chair man. Dorman {s a notorious radical. He is a member of the Socialist Party. He is a member of the I, W. W. In 1912 he was the candidate of the Soctalist party for state senator in the Minot, N, D., district. He was one of the leaders fn the Minot (N..D.) I, W. W. riots, for which he spent some #7 In Jail. It was in connection!with tiie trial of Dorman and his associates in this riot that’ evidence was introduced, which was not contradicted; that Dorman swore he “did not, believe in the American Constitution, and was opposed to the flag of the United States; that the flag was nothing and that “the but a rag,” or words to that effect, government was no government at all and should be des- troyed.’ " As the head of the Non-Partisan tege of Senator T. J. Walsh, of Mon- tana. He was appointed United States attorney for the Montana district on Walsh's recommendation During his incumbency as United States district attorney, Montana became the hotbed of treason and sedition, the leaders in the treason- able and seditous movement being friends of Wheeler’s, such as “Big Bul Dunne.” Treason was openly preached on the streets of Butte, Wheeler's home, where the radicals Were aroused to a frenzy by anar- chists who openly advocated that the United States government be de- stroyed. Wheeler refused to inter- fere, and this treasonable conduct continued. Finally the decent, patriotic Ameri- hand, hanged one of the leaders, ran the others out of Butte, and then called a meeting of the Montana State Council of Defense for the pur- pose of trying Wheeler for his ac- tions, The Montana State Councl!l of De- fense consisted of the governor, eight other men and one woman. It was evenly divided politically, being composed of five Republicans and five Democrats. The governor was a Democrat. Wheeler was put on trial. During the trial “Big Bull Dunne” and a number of other rad- icals charged with treason were heard. The result of the trial was a@ unanimous verdict deciding Wheel- er was guilty, and he was condemn. ed as an unpatriotic citizen, A meeting of the Democrats of the state of Montana was held tn April, 1918, and resolutions were passed condemning United States Senator T. J. Walsh for allowing Wheeler to longer fill the position of . United States district attorney because of his failure to represent the govern: ment and his open sympathy with the radical anarchistic and seditious elements of Montana. “Tige,” most celebrated cat in| history, wandered away from the White House the other day and President and Mrs. Coolidge be- came alarmed for its safety. Word of its absence was broadcast over the radio. But Ben Fink (above with cat) of the Navy Department found ge" in the munitions building and returned it to. its home. Couple Returned To Denver Facing Larceny Charges DE}.VER, Colo., March 31. — Frank Cameron and his wife, a! leged members of an inter-city burg- lar gang, recently arrested in Omaha, were returned here today by city detectives. They were re- turned here on.a specific charge of automobile theft. Cameron is alleged to have ship- ped goods stolen in Kansas City to Denver, where he disposed of them. A trunk addressed to “Jack Hard: and said to have been shipped. by Cameron were claimed by Philip Judelovitz, Denyer jeweler, who now is under bail facing charges of receiving stolen goods. Detectives who returned Cameron and his wife brought back a note turned over to them, by Omaha police. The note wns dated March 21 and is declared to have been’ sent by Judelovitz to Cameron. FORUM MEETS TUESDAY NOON The Casper Chamber of Commerce forum luncheon will be held Tues- day noon at the Henning and w be addressed by J. W. Steele, acting deputy superior of the Bur- eau of Mines at Casper. Mr. Steele will discuss the development of some of the mineral resources of tais sec- tion. He is well qualified to dis- cuss this subject as he hes had raverat years of exporiencs in the mining industry. | Approximately 19 years ago Mr. Stevie conducted a research strvey party for an ewtern manufacturer which perty made an extensive study oc the ns- testos deposit of Casper mourtain. —_—_— Tribune wantads bring results, MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1924. TO PICK OUT YOUR NEW SPRING CLOTHES - ALL OUR NEW MERCHANDISE IS NOW MARKED AND ON DISPLAY Open Evenings Until 9'o’Clock Open For Business In Our TEMPORARY LOCATION In the Turner - Cottman] | Building ) Two doors west of our old : “No Man Goes Hungry in

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