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2 Ley w a r € e r 2 alae pe caught st @ cated he 4 PAGE E!GHT The Casver Daily ocrifune Fro abinet Forecas portant Dipl Ww t ASHINGTON, Kellogg at London resignation takes e ct Mar of a more or less general sh posts in line v he prom cession understood to remain at Pa from The appol had killed one of thetr broth Since then, another con tingent of policemen has the hanging of another pol: a bandit wh ice killer 1 tnessed | ppointment of Ambassador Kellogg to| ts Shifting of Im- omatic Offices of Ambassador cretary Hughes, whose rch 4, points to the possibility ifting in important diplomatic —Selection otion policy seen in that suc alternately surly and threatening for months, Last summer Mrs. Mer ris left hi going to Spearfish, S. D.,f some we #. Morris followed he and rsuaded her to re casper with him, but the reunion brought no better feeling | Only two weeks azo Mrs. Morris had called on B. H. Foster, then dis- ict attorney, told of her husband's | that some action | t him from put ting them intc of the children had noted | particular menacing emeanor ester da neighbor, com mented that PE ete an a riasal had been work- | rei os emo court la ex.|ins,the yard most of the afternoon, | favorable action in | Wiis with apparent cheerful. they wasiel ts talon ness. According to Mrs. Kelly,.the |first she, came without warning. | A | The isses had been sratrieal| BAe +3 for about six years Morr: pn r : |had been married previ and ee be fe had four children, Mrs. Kelly, Oscar, | dit tA : c recuesta |2nd Ione, and an older daughter, | «4 nees oe en innovation | Mrs. William E. Ames, who was| Wee enone OF rom Goren Los | married December 20 and !s now in Several months sepa ast style | the east on her wedding trip. avet . r vied the hanging ot|.,Coroner Lew Gay took charge of ners tE s . z pe | the bo He said toda uld be necessar- At the county hospital Mrs. Mor ris’ condition was said to be satis factory, with every indication that | that no tn- quest w Friday morning, shortly before| Raesttn rear Yesger started march to the ——__— | affold4, twenty-one San Joaquin! ° 5 | valley motor cops rolled toa stor] Pe Mille Quits | before San Quentin's massive gates. ushered into the execu tion chambers. Then Yeager, coat- less and co that the noose might work better, was led forth. As Yeager stood on the trap, he ht of his untformed audi hey were gMence. His back stiffened, his teeth | Zi clinched and he cursed those who S = had come to exult 2 = Down below there was a humming ) murmur among the watchers as the 5 «21 speed cops, not #o audibly, cursed vg him back. Then there was a dull y ZB thud and the Iaw had filled the tw scriptural role of avenger. i “That's that," called one of the traffic cops as they filed out of the {death chamber t's get back to work 3 SSeS .= ta att E b a 1 * ‘ — ¥ (Continued trom Page One) R @raggred herself from ne snow and > sChalf-staggered, half to the house on the south, ter by Walter W Kearns. Here first ald measures y > Were applied pending val of he ambulance wt nveyed her to the county hosp where she Is "* onder t 6 of Dr. N. EB. Morad S Despite the gr her own fr o Mr. Kearns, was for the safety 3 rm af 3 ashington © of $1553 fr bureau, elerans Lasky Players For Own Work HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Jan. 12.— (United Press.)—Quitting the Fa. mous Players-Lasky corporation after twelve years’ association, Cect! B. DeMille, one of the screen's lead ing directors, today announced his intention of entering the independ ent production game. DeMille is now in route to Europe on a vacation. The statement came from local officers of the Famous Players company. For some years, DeMille has been w York, en- director general of the Hollywood studios. Many tars, including Gloria Swanson, Vera Reynolds, Pauline Garon and Bebe Daniels have first blossomed under his direction Alma Ruben Files Action For Divorce I | LOS A Cal, Jan. 123—| (United Press.}--Alma Goodman, known on the een as Alma Rubens today filed sult for dl- vorce from her husband, Daniel ©. Goodman, wealthy rettred bust- | ness man Miss Rubens alleged her hus- band commenced beating her up ng thelr honeymoon in the Adirondacks following the mar- age at Greenwich, Conn., in nd never gave up the tice He knocked her unconscious he actress claims, beat her they were stopping at the h in New York, and th ne to Hollywood, re- | 1 his attacks | ple separated a year ago, nt sets forth. The ed detide on the AR BEGINS WOLVES| Jan. 12.— wolves township eeks has been and townspeo ere. Heavy have been we against netted 97 7 cubs ee paid She is Hines, director received the first adjusted compensation om General Frank T | | SEVERAL POSTS BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG 'DUE FOR CHANGE \ i WELL, HERB We ARE IN i NEv) ORLEANS ~~ First Time WEVE SREN IN THe OLD TOWN IN “Wo Y@ARS © IM GLAD NONE OF MY PALS DOWN HERE KNOW IM BUSTEO © THEY PROBABLY THINK IM JUST AS FiusH Now As I usta BGs WELL SHOOT RIGHT CER “To THE HoTeL So Nou SPARKY HERE oO TR me gC ga WELL , BARNEY HoW Are You — 2 AND NORE GoNNA ENTER SHALL L GWE YOU THE SAME SUITE OF ROOMS You. GASOLINE ALLEY — FINALLY CAME BACK — IN “THE RACSS DOWN = THATS FING tt ISCUPIEO TWO CHARLIE -- MY BAGOAGE AINT ARRIVED TU SOME SWELL. JowT FoR \ GuY “To GE LNING \ IN AFTER HES | BOMMED Hie WAY | FROM NEW YORK AND AIN'T GoT A PEG To PUT HIS HEY— SUNSHINE t NOU AND SPARKY AND RUDY WAIT DOWN “HERE = \TLL TAKE MS. A Few HOURS ESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1925 THE RECEPTION COMMITTEE DWINDLES DOWN TO ONE L STOP AND GET PHYLLIS AND WE'LL GO DOWN ANID MEET SALLY. HER ) TRAIN 16 DLE IN 5O | MINGTES. WE'LL TAKE | Hea TO THE FRIENDS SHE'S TO STAV ae a pl ij AGRICULTURE OVERSRADOWS BUSINESS AT CAPITAL; MARKET ASSOGIATION HOLDS SESSIONS By DAVID LAWRENCE farmer. Since thelr entry into the (Copyright, 1925, Consolidated Press at the big banks of New Association) |York and Chicago have been com- WASHINGTON, Jan. 12 ture overshadowed all else week in Washington for while pe | ig to lend money to the farmers, " unprecedented development rh ommission has ing spectacular was done, the | 8 > usion on the pres left by the meeting of the Na-|tiijor ny aie neat rae ev gee aner pales Criedah vapera-|will exaroine every phase for the tive Marketing associations will be! next sayeral months, in the hope a lasting one. The national council had a satis. factory session with the agricultural commission which was appointed by of presenting a really worth-while report to the country. It is expect ed, however, that within a week the J commission will have something to President Coolidge to make recom-/say about the cattle industry, in mendations with respect to the en is hich there has by a depression tire agricultural! problem. While Action fs to be taken on this because the commission is still in tts early |i {s the most acute problem before stages of work, there {s no doubt| the commission and pective of that tt took to heart the edvice oflthe {ne t any legislation would the cooperatives, namely, that|have to cted on before March what is needed is more specific|4, the « ion 1s represented as legislation but a much more sym:| being ¢ of getting a remedy pathetic administrat by ern: | started at On the whole, agri ment agencies of existing laws culture is recefving serious consid The co-operatives‘ said frankly |eration in the national capttal and t n't want t he subject to | th outstanding fact about the meet- t regulation, that they were|ing of the National Council. of Co getting along very well w- avid | operatives that Washington has that the government could best help| been civen to undersand {n unmis- them by letting them work out their} takable terms that proposals for own problems | price fixing and subsidy are not re- “President Coolidge,” said Judge] lished by some of the most tnfluen- R. W. Bingham, of Louisville, who | tia! leaders in the agricultural fn fs at the head of the national coun. | dustry today cil of the co-operatives, tak RT pa very strong ground with respect to f co-ope! ive marketing the » r partment of agriculture } ; ‘J the problem. It has Heb Abe bid f hended before but most harmonious @ government to in an int | rat than a regulator Heretofore, the department of ag ntinued f se One re has been devoted large! g. Tt sion appears to have the production and has not, as now. | toliowad jourse the gas begun to devote itself to marketing. | pipes, ripr pre floor lfke We are receiving valuable aid from | jindli 4 in both places the bureau of markets of the depart. | { the firemen and rese’ ment of commerce and we look | squad was seriously hampered b uport the federal trade commission | ii. milting, jostling throng which as A 5 Protection Pa it unfair gathered within a inute after the Euetnons ene Pow the largest farm |tBUNder-clap of the blast had warn ed downtown Casper of the event organization in America, more than | -r),, explosion oc \* 850,000 dues paving members. Tt 18| Matas at ots see Ge the oepree a non-partisan organization, devot-| Vere pouring forth thelr throng ed entirely to the business of mer-| ly contr erect was fammed tot chandising farm products in a acten-| 2"! nae aineatas tific and intelligent way.’ . Asked about the corn and wheat), Dans! > is belleved farmers and thetr problems, Judge | te hve elatives here, He Bingham said the co-operatives had|W8S % Comparatively new arrival in to the corn pelt, | C25? ving como here from Salt not vet extended HW med with b that a amall number of wl Ht hes gechan ball room: growers were in tho co-operative |?! ‘ 4 hey er Gay inced thi movemer ed ts “Tt has been successful in wheat | ™°" an inquest would whereever it has been appited as in| 0" {3 Rave attesey to Oklahoma, Indiana and Texas,| 1% \ ibility When we market at least half of the! cotton and wheat, we will be in # ss osition to get better results, al-| Feaui we are ecine soot soot LEAD PRICE on the smal! percentage now hand! ed. We marketed about $500,000,000 worth last year The most active opponents of the co-operative movements are the In dividuals engaged {n speculation for sh the co-operative idea seeks to elimi YORK, Jan, 13.<-The Amer nate the !mposition of profits to lting and, Refnine com middle men whe take advantage of| pany tod vancadithe. weaahae the farmers’ crude methods of mar-liead from 10.25 to 10.50 rents per | keting his producte | pound There is no doubt that, so far a eee | credit situation fs concerned, | tHe rat ut eecuer, whe wae x{TOO: LATE TO CLASSIFY ber of u co-operative organten- | —————— — = ea ort? has the benefit of extended er, + ns T-Two xh ekeey credit ft thea, The intermed'ate (nie of’ i nat 1, ‘ credit banks, for instance. recent!y ay 2 : established by congress, were apo} FOR 3 Moumebonn) Steele sored by the co-operative soctetios | house, one block from bus line, and ere proving a bulwark to the! $25, 94a WHY WALT } vou LOOK YOST WONDERFUL } Han CUT AND PLASTERED COwNn, | KEW SCARE, NEW MUFFLER! WHAT'S “THE GOANID OCCASION ? THIS 1S THE DAY YOU GO YO THE STATION WITH ME TO To Nee Saas ve COURTESY LOT AMONG SOLON (Continued from Page One) commentary or not, ft is neverthe less frue that senatorial debate late ly has degenerated into little more | | | | } whole as an added touch of ll |temper. The good natured and high | minded arguments of old ssem to be & part of the days that are gone forever. Of course, there was a time in the past when two distin. guished senators from South Caro- lina drew knives and started at each other on the senate floor, but that was just a belated echo of the onetime cherished code duello Nowada. the senators just get up and call each other names. than the rudest sort of personalities, with bitter invective poured over the A Ss. BUT IM 65RaI0 YOU MUST SxcUSE ME. I'M NOT (62LF TOORY ano LO BE AWELLLY COMPANY &NYBOOY cently and has bad many unkind things to say about the administra- tion and tts dictum of “party regu spared the feelings He has been par- tlew harsh with the ‘lame ducks" and has accused them by name of “lining up before the pie counter,” intent upon getting a “soft job” for their declining years by doing the bidding of the adminis. tration rather than to follow the guidance of thelr own consclenca. Senator Norris has tauntingly re- ferred to “the ancient and barbaric theory that a senator should vote his convictions.” “We as regulars,” snarled the senator from Nebraska, ‘know it is the duty of the party man not to think, but to obey, and now comes the voice of our party leader, de- manding obedience.” Twice during the past week, sena- tors. literally were driven from the floor, Senator Bdge, of New Jersey, fleeing before a storm of questions as to bis conception of “party regu- larity” and Senator Dial, of South Carolina, who started out to amend of his colleagues. | BUT PHYLLIS, IM SURE SHE'LL BE OSADDOINTED HES THE THE wor ght, snappy and peppy reading, let him subscribe to the Congressional Record, once so sombre and dead. << CHICAGO, Jan. 12—(By The As- sociated Press}—Federal Judge Wil- Kerson today for tlie second time upheld the, right of the United States railroad labor board to com- pel witnesses to appear and testify before it. Counsel for J. Maguire, the defendant, local chairman of en- gineers on the Chicago and North- western railway, representative of the Brotherhood of Locomotive En- gineers, indicated they would appeal. WASHINGTON, Jan. 12-~Mis- sourt’s franchise tax law as applied to corporations doing business with- in its borders was held unconstitu- tional and invalid today by the su- preme court. Soaks Right In And Limbers Up SHE WOULDN'T come ,OC went TS MEET So.ty FIRST THING RE BOTH SUCH IDERFLL SCOUTS Shoals Problem Will Be Debated By Senate Today ‘WASHINGTON, Jan. 12.—Dtspo- sal of the Muscle Shoals’ problem: in the senate before adjournment to borrow was the task to which lead ers set themselves today as an issue entered another day of the long de bate that has blocked the path of other pressing legislation. The general expectation, was that the entire day would be consumed in debate on the only major alter native now remaining to the Un derwood bill—the Jones amendment proposing reference of the entire Muscle Shoals question to a com eission which would submit recom mendations to congres: The Un- derwood measure provides for either leasing the property or government operation. . ° —_——__ The senate debates of the past/2 recent speech, taking his own Stiff Joints , few davs have been typical of the|party to task, being led at last, — new spirit among the elder stat under fire, to withdraw the entire) stit¢, swollen, inflamed, rheuma- men. Senator Bruce, of Maryland, | speech. 5 tic joints should be treated with a for Instance, says that some of his! In the old days, when a senator| remedy made for just that purp: Democratic olleagues are trying to! got beat in the primaries or at the! only M FA “bait” him and he casually refers | election, everyone was considerate Remember the name of this discov to them by inference as a “lot of/of his injured feelings. Today it is|ery is Jolt-Ease and it will take out s Hitle dogs.” mentioning in particu |the senatorial pastime to rub salt|the agony, reduce the swelling and) TOKIO, Jan. 12.—(By The A, lar “Tray” and “Blanche” and|into the wounds, to refer to the de-|limber up any troubled joint after|ciated Press.\——As the intensity of “Sweetheart Since then, there |feated gentlemen as “sore heads” ordinary cure-alls have miserably|winter in Korea increases, moce has been meuh speculation in the/and ‘job hunters.” Not only that.|fafled. Just rub {t on—60c a tube] than 3,000,000 persons are repo: 4 galleries as to which senator was|but some senators have gone so fer}/a; John Tripeny company or any suffering from a famine. ameriles “Tray ani which was “Sweet:/as to predict that certain of their ask for Joint-Daee to word received here today trom heart.” |brothers will join the “lame duck remember, when Joint-|the Associated Press Sorrasponden | Senator Norris, of Nebraska, who|calony two yeats from now se ge joint agony gets out—lat Zeoul has undertaken the role of stormy| If anyone nowadays wants real | quick.—Adv. Baiiea THE. DRY WATER-HOLE oo reports received at Zeoul | indicate that more than 650,000 ex | treme cases of starvation exist in |that district alone. The peasantry jis attempting to stave off death by "ing on tree bark roots 1 Government relief measures’ ars ‘Olly inadequate. It is inevitable, the correspondent reports, that suf ing will increase with the ad ance of winter. fannie 4 ed INAUGURATION FULL OF POMP ~ SPRINGFIELD, Tl., Jan. 12 More pomp and ceremony will mark | the inauguration here today of Gc je r Len Small and other state off | cers n has characterized any si | ‘ nin recent years A precedent of many years stand ng will be broken when tl vernor | takes the oath of office in the state | arsenal building instead of in th state house 'B rings Youth To Old Folks f Tani. ® greatest blessir s tt life and vigor it. brings > old 3. Me and women up ties and eighties. are ‘ondr to thank w ‘ous benefit natural tonte, It ons from the fi liver a puts’ digestive rking order. the famous Tanl barks and rare is nature's own tanic and | mless to man or child boly is weakened and | rund if you lack ambition r t or sleep, you'll be de 1 with Tanlac's quick results | Take Tanlne Vegetable Pills f Constipation TANLAC |POR YOUR HEALTH