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PAGE TWO. DAY POLIS OF OAUGHERTY PROBE SUBLECT Committee Will Call More Witnesses in Investigation. @be Casper Dalle Cribune Agreement On Bonus Reached |. Rey Palmer preached to a’ fine congregatio: at the Emmanual April 30.—Agreement was ‘reached | revival. . H Several came forward to confess today, by senate and house conferees on differences over Guise abd oneruneea the caption the soldier bonus bill. The choir and Booster band did Most of the provisions in dispute were of minor nature excellent ‘singing. | Dr. ‘Palmer’ took and early ratification of the conference report by the sen- ate and house was predicted by the conferees who agreed unanimously on the report. ‘The , probably would be submitted to the bill then will go to the president. | Senate tomorrow. The conference rejected the sen- Senator. Corts, hepnbileey ens ate amanOaane extending from Jan- sas, sponsor of the bill in the sen-|yary J, 1925 to July 1, 1925, the ate, said the Conference report GREAT JUDGES OF ENGLAND REVIEWED BY RINER; COURT CONGESTION RELIEF SOUGHT “The Five Greatest Judges of, approval of all the attorneys be- England” formed the baeis of a|ionging to the bar association and scholarly and entertaining address | committees will be selected to study ' " delivered by Judge William A. Riner| different portions of the bill and before the members of the Natrona| make a report at the meeting in County Bar association which held | May. its monthly meeting at the Hen- Several suggestions were put forth Everybody cordially invited. ning hotel yesterday evening. Dis-|for the proper manner to relieve Le Sate Et cussion of. possille methdds to do|court congestion here. It was sug- away with the congestion in dis-| gested that Fremont. and Hot < = trict court here and discussion of a| Springs county be combined into , ederal prohibition director, and for- By ROBERT T. SMALL house for the past three months.| minimum fee schedule for lawyers | one district and that Natrona county 9845 1G - NEW ORLEANS, La., April 30- ner Judee Charles Williams, before | (Copyrigh, 1924, Casper Tribune) Pinuticed ernie was ci] Were the topics of the business ses-| form a separate district. Another! Archie Rennyson, superintendent of the senate committee, investigating] NEW YORK, April 30—Too kind dates, malted milit,-eineer not pete sion which followed Judge Riner's | suggestion was that a judge at large |the Orleans parish prison today re-|+ WEDNESDAY, ‘APRIL 30, 1924, ‘THE SILENT SINNER _ /PILOT DEAD IN AT THE JUDGMENT PLANE CRASH SAN DIEGO, Calif, Apri 0— “Listen, my friend, you may paint| Lieutenant BE. A. Musk, an aviator id nava) was killed ded with anotine TRIBUNE FIRST IN STATE TO PRINT NEWS PICTURE ON DAY OF ITS HAPPENING ‘The Tribune scored again as usual yesterday. The first picture of a local event that was ever printed in a Wyoming paper the same Cay it occurred was given to Tribune read: ers in the front page picture of the Townsend block fire. The fire alarm was turned in at 1:25 o'clock. Bert Bell, official photographer for the Tribune was on the job with his big Graflex 10 minutes later, Elghteen minutes after the exposure was obtained the print was in the hands of the Wyoming engraving company. Forty-five minutes later the engraving was in the Tribune front page form, e Two and a half hours after the alarm was turned in the Tribune, with a picture showing the firemen fighting the blaze and the huge crowd that congregated, was on the street. Everywhere downtown yesterday afternoon and last night were heard comments congratulating the Tribune on itg resourcefu!ness. The Tribune ‘aims to give its readers the best, both in news and picture. service. Watch the Tribune in the future for up to the minute pictures of local happenings. Baptist church WASHINGTON, Santa Rosa, Cal! has. a church built entirely trom one slant “Will you tell God, at the judg-] into hell with all nations that forget} redwood which, while standing was ment, that you did not believe in| God. 18 ‘feet in diameter . This grea hell? and that that was the reason “Again, will you tell God, on the|tree produced. 78,000 fect of lumber you had never become a Christian?} Judement Day, that you were an/ besides many thousands of Shingleg “No, you never will, A lady em-} infidel and therefore, you could not| with which the church was roofed, ployed an artist to paint her hus-} be a Christlan?. The editor of the [TR pa AS band’s picture, but she 6 to the} Néw York Methodist Advocate tells SEND IT To THE ftudio, day after day, making many |of an old infide] and his six sons, SRA ES earTe, LAUNLRY * Suggestions as to how she wanted} @l els, The youngest ONE. 1702. the picture painted. ‘The artist re,| but became a Christian “before he fused to put his name on the paint- ing. The lady asxed him why? He answered: “Madam, that is not my 7; you never saw me moved ideal of a painting. You would not| before; I am moved now; let us let me have my way. You desi pray.” They all knelt around that that I should paint the picture ac- cording to your ideal and now if you want anybody's name there, you| knees the father said: may put your own, but I would not] Want you all, to promise me you will put my name on that painting, for | ™éeet your, brother in heaven."’ Four a thousand dollars! of these sons promised they would.” Dr. Palmer will preach tonight on “A. Thief Crucified, but Crowned.’ He js preaching every day at 10 a.m, and 7:45 p.m. Church on 15th and Poplar. Dr. J. T, Hanna pastor, WASHINGTON, April 30. — Fur- ther testimony bearing on the pro- hibition enforcement policies of the department of justice under Harry. M. Daugherty, was heard by the senate Daugherty committee. James A. Finch, the department pardon attorney, was questioned about the release of Phillip I. Gross- man, sent to jail by Judge Landis at Chicago for one year for violat- ing a court injunction in Nquor sales. The witness agreed that Grossman never served any time. Attorney General Brundage of IIll- nois sent a letter to the department of justice, he said, recommending executive clemency but in 1923 President Harding refused to con- sider it until some part of the sen- tence had been served. Chemist Shows Clemency To Animals in Carrying Out Poison Test on Wife TOWNSEND Casper’s Newest and Most Modern Fireproof Hotel CHICAGO, April 30. — Forthwith subpoenas calling for the presence of former Federal Judge K. M. Landis, Roscoe Andrews, former NOW OPEN f y G ot y i ts on talk. be appointed who would be able to | celvs te Rms Apornsy, iene ere Ho Sard ate to iy his eaican o, | juice, ete. It was not until yester-| Judge Riner took Sir Edward hold ooyirt when the regular magis- coer eea Seienal: Gite Rashes Btaten Maralal Lavy. ; Fa ee eanen eetct te tatioved | ORY that state troopers: discovered coke, Gtr Mathew Eales Bic aba | trate. waa called tormormerothien part |perintendent of the New Orleans po- Furher Judge Landis sentenced |Ps tans tort nreenia and Aiothertes| Soe cutute) tubed: alléged: to\ havel tore, William Murray, Earl of Stars. lot the elise, aE ee olen eee lie department $25,000 if they Philp Grossman oa dallicosca cokes a Snadinela garinn th Waka reaee contained diptheria and pneumonia field, and Lord Ellenborough as|gested that an inferior court with | would permit the escape from jail of| THs town has been made the per- SANITATION- HELPS To Mfbition violation but a presidential | Gia wite. ‘The amateur. chemist is| °°; those whom ‘he considered the | powers between that of the present [five of the six Itallans condemned | ™anent homo of the Big Horn basin f President Coolidge ar- | 39, : Is wife have quarreled| goin, vrere Baring obtained the] greatest of the British magistrates. | justice and district courta be estat: |to dio mt-aihite May 9. corn show. Wyoming's first annual TE berebaliitbesraca’ leven iad Ree ae Raine Ek tous Serpik te coe 'ot the unsolved phases! His speech was enlightening not | shed. . Couple with the offer was a|°rn show as held here last De- : oe he case as yet. Baring is said a t t. * plies of 10 Groseman was taxen to| ow she: in outeging bint wih ab] tn cavewirued fa bis laboratory site! Cian Vat “algo an: thelr peivelatatie:| weditaa titan tamriagitin teor belie MISE TE ne Fag huotgoy et inoereatinet : Geen bari eanmhact ee Sire ey Rede ee and fidgety”) He gave his hearers intimate |the past season, sang three songs.|which the convicted men would be ; ssi é 2 y an s his experiments may rs t New Ort ai r , “litve, $s very much wrought up over|ing him to try his theories’ out on ee 2 missioner of baseball, still was on|the’cass which promines to he one| bis wife, the men of whom he spoke. | Attorney. James Y. Kem presided eset the bench. of the strangest with which the au It was found that the mi imum |at the mesting. in She labeence ci RAREE SOS ae thorities have had to deal. White fee schedule did not meet with’ the President. WORLAND, Wyo, April 30.— BOC TORS SAY THAT’ BATON ROUGE, La. April 30.—. Governor Parker, who fixed May 9 Plains is in West Chester county, and West Chester county is to New SURF RIDING POPULAR AS HAWAIIAN SPORT, SAY GASPER PEOPLE An interesting account of life tn Hawalt is contained in. a letter re- cently received here from Ernest Marquardt who with “His “wife is bound for Australia, Excerpts from this letter follow: “The most popular of Hawallan sports is surf riding or heenalu. In this sport the swimmers use a light board made of koa, With these they Swim out to sea diving under the rollers which they meet until they reach the outer line of breakers. ‘Then, lying flat on their boards, they balance themselves upon the forward slope of the highest breaker, and ride with the speed of a race horse toward the Shore." In order to go ashort at Honolulu, Mr. Marquardt says it was neces- sary for the passengers of the ship to have their shoes dipped in a dis- infectant to ward off possibility of the foot-and-mouth disease entering the island. A number of Hawatian institutions were visited by the Marquardts be- fore resuming their journey to the orient. —_—>—___ FRENCH FLYER GETS PROMISE OF FULL HELP PARIS, April 80.—Splendid for- eign cooperation waa secured for the Paris to Tokio flight of Lieutenant Pelletier D'Oisy, French airman, be- fore he left Paris, it was explained in an official account of his exploit is- mued by the aeronautic department of the ministry of public works to: day Ideutenant D’Olsy left Paris April 24 and today was on his way from Bender Abbas, on the Persian gulf, to Karachi, Brindi, “The Americans,” the official statement says, “authorized us to make use of gasoline and oil stock placed by them at stopping points along the route of their round-the- world aerial voyage, one section of which is identical with that of Lieu- tenant D'Oisy. “French diplomatic representa; tives abroad were informed with perfect and kindly courtesy what landing grounds were fit for use along the proposed route, and Eng land, for Mesopotamia and the In dies, as well as Slam and Japan, granted Lieutenant D'Olsy the use of thelr supplies of oll nd gasoline.” — MINOR ACCIDENTS ARE REPORTED TO POLICE; Two minor accidents were report ed last night and this morning to the police. Wd Shuck, 242 North Beech street. reported tht he had run into a litt 181 North Have you-seen t vgle gas range, with the Lorain oven hoat regulator. Harned Furniture Co. 284 8. David. York what Hollywood has often been to Los Angeles. The county can generate more queer criminal tangles than all of the other metro- politan suburbs put together. It was in West Chester that young Walter S. Ward, son of the millionaire baker of this city, shot and killed Clarence Peters, the ex- marine, and the county spent some- thing like $80,000 in a fruitless at- tempt to convict him. Then came the case of Mrs. Charles Webb, who died last September at the fashion- able West Chester-Biltmore Coun- try club, and whose friends accused her husband of having been crim- inally responsible through the,admin- istration of strong antiseptig, solu, tions, “Mr. Webb was promptly ex- onerated by the grand jury and his wifo's $2,000,000 will was decided in his favor. Next followed the drowning of Angier Duke, who in the midst of a merry party, fell out of a launch. He came up under a yacht club float and could not fight his way out to clear water again. On top of all this comes the queer Baring case. In New York City Mr. Baring, a pale, thin, undersized man with big spectacles is a man- ufacturer's agent, handling the pro- ducts of the Minneapolis Heat Reg- ulator company—for many years known as a successful business man At his home in West Chester county, Mr. Baring was very much the use. He had a laboratory in his home and spent most of his spare time over test tubes, spirit lamps, rubber stoppered bottles and all the queer paraphernalia of the chemists shop, He was‘by way of being an inventor also, having per- fected a thermostat and an incu- bator. It wa# a chicken incubator, but the authorities allege now that the amateur chemist also was incu- bating deadly disease germa. Be- ing of the experimental, turn of mind, he is said to have wanted to see just what there was to the germ theory, any way. Mr. Baring was very fond of ani- mals, according to those about him, and they say his sensitive nature would have rebelled at the thought of vivisection or torturing the help- less creatures usually used by scien. tists for thelr experiments, Both of the Barings are described as neu- rotics, Mrs, Baring having been un: der the care of ‘physicians for the greater part of her adult life. Both also are described as independently wealthy in thelr own rights, Mrs, Baring recently having come in for an added fortune which makes her probably the richer of the two . The accused man's attorney today said his client would have a “strange but complete” defense to the charges of poisoning and the administering of germs. Barir mother, Mrs. Walter Stroud of Baltimore, who has arrived at White Plains, also declares that her san was innocent of any in- tent actually to harm his wife. Bar. ing admitted having arsenic in the = Don’t Neglect a Cold Mothers, don’t let colds get under way; at the first cough or sniffle rub Musterole on the throat and chest, Musterole is a pure, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. It draws out congestion, relieves soreness, docs all the work of the good old-fashioned mustard plaster in a gentler way, with- out the blister. Keep a jar handy for all emergencies; itmay prevent pneumoniain your home, To Mothers: Musterole is now made in milder form for babies and small children. Ask for Children’s Musterole. 35 & 65c in jars & tubes;hospital size, $3, BETTER THAN A MUSTARD PLASTER M. D. Barnett Here In Connection With Yesterday’s Fire M. D. Barnett of Denver, pro- Prietor of the Barnett Outfitting campany, arrived in Casper this morning to look after business for the local store made necessary by the fire in the Townsend block yesterday. A great deal of ¢am- age was done to the stock of the establishment. \ Basis of Appeal Advertising is not just a recita- tion of the details regarding a num- ber of things some one wishes to dispose of, Advertising {s the connecting up of a wanted thing or service with @ responsible human chord. Advertising is not just publicity but it must make a positive appeal to a necessity, a love of beauty, an increased convenience, a desire for pleasure, comfort, etc. Advertising is service offering; The Casper Motor Company, lo- cal Maxwel!-Chrysler dealer, has en- tered its organization in the Na- tional Sales Contest, which began April 21 and will continue until June 30. A thousand or more Prizes are offered by the Maxwell Sales Corporation to salesmen, dealers and sales managers making the best records. ganizations Maxwell has, “This mak Curing the contest wil! be presented with a Chrysler brougham. The next highest three will be given a Maxwell club sedan, club douse and touring car, respectively. Six other prizes, the smallest a high: priced Victrola will be given the six other salesmen making the next best records. The 42 dealers making the highest percentage of their quotas will get valuable prizes. The six sales managers whose or-| tors. ganizations register the greatest number of salesmen with 100 per cent or better of their quotas will also recelve worth while mementos. none the leas so that the service |_ This makes every: Maxwell dealer yields a profit to the merchant.|#e8 manager and. saleaman, as who serves. well as every other person employed Leading merchants advertising | PY ® Maxwe!l dealer in the United in the Tribune offer this com: | States, eligible to’ compete, munity their great services in that “The country has been divided they have provided a menu of the | into six classes, giving every dealer latest and best of the creation of |and every salesman equal oppor- the world’s industries. tunity to win one of the highest Shop in the Tribune before shop- says Mr. Johnson. “The 17. ping in the shops. are for salesmen and and June 30. —_——~—. Ady. Water Damage Insurance Did You Ever Stop to Think That You Can Get Insurance Covering This Hazard for a Very Little Money ? For Instance, We Can Write For You 1—50 per cent of your value for a net rate of $.65. 2—-$25,000 on Stock of Dry Goods for Annual Premium of $128.50. 8—$25,000 on Stock of Furniture for Annual Premium of $180.00. 4—Similar Reduced Rates on Dwellings. 6—And all other classes of risks. These Policies Cover the Following Hazards, and Many More Plumbing Leaks; Steam or Water Heating Pipes; Elevator Tanks; Standpipes; Roofs; Leaders and Spouting; Rain or Snow Through Windows or Skylights; Brine or Ammonia Pipe Systems; Broken Street Mains; Faucets Left Open; Rain Down Elevator Shafts; Bath Tub Overflow; Frozen Radiators and Hundreds of Others, SPEARS & CHAPMAN, Inc. (LARGEST INSURANCE AGENCY IN WYOMING) J.B. TRUMBULL, Manager Oil Exchange Bldg. Phone 370 MAXWELL-CHRYSLER DEALERS IN BIG AUTO SALES CONTEST dealers who make various records. ‘The factory is making up equit- able quotas’ and every organization stands an equal chance with eyery other one, and the winners can hon- estly be called the best salesmen, sales managers and best selling or- it possible for every Person in-and about Casper to, help this. organization -and its salesmen The leading Maxwell salesman | in ane of the big prizes offered, either by taking’ delivery of a new Maxwell or one of our used cars, regardless of make, between now “Quotas for each dealer will be established as quickly as possible by J. E. Fields, general sales man- ager of the Maxwell Motor Corpor- ation, assisted by J. J. Plath and S. D. Briggs, Maxwell sales direc- Greetings from an_old friend! Van Duzer's Certified Flavoring Extracts All progressive grocers carry them. RroNcHins chest thoroughly with— Vis: as the date for the execution of the six Italians for the murder of Dallas Calmes, received several alleged “black hand” letters today threaten- ing his Hfe unless the lives of the six men are spared. Mountain View Suburb has houses, South Dakota jaa OCTORS ought to know —much of their prac- tice is due to some folks’ dis- regard of the importance of cor. sanitation in the home. e surest way to keep your home sanitation at all times is to depend upon the advice 6 our Diambing ae sanita- ion 5 eep our *phone number ty Bank Robbed WATERTOWN, 8S. D., April 30.— After cutting wire communication, burglars last night robbed the ybank at Stockholm of an undetermined sum of money. A check is being made to determine the loss. + —— ee ANNOUNCING The Organization of SCHANK upalye SHEA ATING CO. INC PHONE 7Ii WEDNESDAY EVENING, APRIL 30, 8 P. M. MOOSE HALL On West First Street Non-union Painters Invited LANSING, Mich., April 30..— A proclamation of quarantine againat California designe¢ to prohibit ship- ments of livestock or other possible carriers of the foot and mouth dis- eases in Michigan, was issued by Governor Grosbeck. The Risk Is Too Great tor the Small Premium There is no safety without. fire insurance—no one can afford to take the chance. The morning after the fire and we are back on the job in our offices. Yes we were badly damaged by the fire, but fully covered by insurance. You may be the next one to have a fire. We represent the largest insurance com- panies and can give you full protection in all lines. Let Us Call Upon You At Once Marion P. Wheeler Agency Room 6 Townsend Bldg. PHONE 678