Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 13, 1925, Page 1

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The Circulation of The Tribune Is Greater Than Any Other Wyoming Newspaper | WEATHER Generally fair tonight and Tuesday. Somewhat cooler sonight in east portion. VOL. IX NO. 157 EXHUMATION OF CUNNIKa::4M BODIES PLANNED AUNITAH BASIN RAILROAD PROPOSED PRESIDENT’S POWER TO OUST APPOINTEES OF PREDECESSOR [S ARGUED IN SUPREME COURT WASHINGTON, April 13.—The president’s power to | | || Book of Songs Just Issued By Lander Artists ‘ongs” Is the title of a mu- 0.40.6. WOULD) BUILD 191-HILE sical offering just published at Lan- der. These scores were written by | Frederick othroyd and the words | by P. B. Coolidge. 3 | The book contains dis' | oming subjects treated In distinctive | Wyoming verse and harmony. It Ss been reviewed and criticized by authorities of eastern music musical FOR FARM TRADE center those praising the | work jonal Academy of . | Musi ane Galli Cure, Authority Requested tos". . director of setts Construct $7,000,000 ° Road Through Soldier! Summit on to Vernal. l ce HR CAPTURE AT NOON TODAY \Confiscate 20 Gallons And Mash at Home Alb WASHINGTON, April qe —Two projects for extensiv | railroad construction in the | west were laid today before | the Interstate Commerce Commission. The Denver and Rio Grande Wes: | tern asked authority to build into} the Uintah Basin, Utah, by carrying | a branch 131 miles from Soldier Summit, Utah. There are approx imately 750,000 acres of tillable land in the territory which the branch Of F.V. Bolnes. svould reach, the application dectar- ed. The second application, though} 4 police raiding squad at 2 filed under the*name of the Fort) ouock this afternoon entered Worth and” Denver South Plains.|youse at 714 South Oak street, ar indicated that the Colorado, and | rested Fred V, Bolnes on a charge of Southern System intends to. provide about 180 new miles of line for its system in Texas,....Dhe Fort Worth wcompany, whjoh Is a substamryBt) the Colorado and Southern formally violating the drug ordinance and 20 gal- gallons of mash lons_oftiquor and in the process of fermentation. Lieut. Ray Ideen led the police asked permission to bu from raiding a The still, li a i eer vw sranches | Tiding ne still, liquor an Carey to /Flatnview \with branches) ash were certed to ‘police’ ‘head extending to Silverton and Lubbock. all points in Texas. No estimates of costs were filed on either project. quarters where the ywill be used as evidence when Bolnes appears be- fore Judge Murray in police court at 5 o'clock this afternoon. DENVER, April 13.—Construction | *¢ > o'clocl ; ¢ of the proposed branch line Piel The Ford touring car owned by ler 5 it, Utah, into the Uin- | Clifford (Spark Plug) Bond, automo- Soldier Summit, Utah, Le OTe RP RAHI GRS ARIE econ tah basin by the Denvef and Rio Mies Leech 2. s Grande Western railroad would {n-| Which was stolgn while parked in volye the expenditure of ‘approxl- front of the Tribune office around mately $7,000.000, J.'S. Pyeatt, pres: o'clock on Friday night, was re. i i ay,|covered this afternoon by Motor: ident of the system sald he: Bualimnikaes entree’: have beat) (Continued on Page Two) Che Caz pr Dail MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS CASPER, WYOMING, MONDAY, APRIL 13, 1925 |remove from office his own o: was at i supreme court, with the exec court of the presiden’s power under the constitution to remove executive ices created by con ress when the senate intervenes in ypeal of the late Frank appointees to c who was removed as post- at Portland, Ore., in 1920, by President Wilson. Myers sued fo. pay on the ground that his re- moval was illegal. Prior to presenting argument to- day, briefs forming the basis of their opposing contentipns were filed by Solicitor General Beck for the presi- d Senatcr Peppér for tne con grove cress has full nment offices ated by the constitu Pepper in hig brief AIRPLANE MAIL ROUTES ARE TO WASHINGTON, April 13—Post- master General New issued regula- contract#\te.transport mail by air under authority of a recent taw and through which a number of exten- sions of the air maj! service prob- ably would be made during the com- ing summer. The postmaster general pointed out that the first step in bringing air mail routes Into existence would originate with the postmasters by petitioning the post office depart- ment as to the need of establishing new air mail routes between differ- ent cities. After consid¢ring such Petitions he will advertise for bids. Airmail contracts under the law, in addition to mail may carry passen- gers freight and express. completed and material ts being held in readiness for actual construction pending the action of the I. C. C. in granting authority for the branch line, Mr. Pyeatt sald. The line would terminate at Vernal, Utah, Mr. Py- eatt said. . A maximum grade of two per} cent is provided for tn preliminary | surveys, the executive declared. ‘The proposed Soldier Summit-Ver- nal branch its the third proposed branch looking toward tho develop- ment of western Colorado and east- ern Utah. PAN-PACIFIC CONGRESS IS PROJECTED UNITE nary to Sailing of Yesterd the commission to accompan now that I am expected to reade: MELBOURNE, April 1 1 3 a tions were pa ut a co en while you are gone, of the labor of Victoria yester-| of columns every day about yourse a pexecative OF) See t any snap (if you-ve ever tried eo labor © Initiate plans sentatives of the workers and peace | come m the ‘bons societies are to be invited | ‘Give 'em Ed Howe's style—the Briand Plans New Cabinet ‘Asks Socialists to Bind Themselves to His Leadership; Wants No Other Power Behind Government PARIS, April 18.—(By The Associated Press.) —Ex- Prime Minister Briand, asked by President Doumergue to form a cabinet, tonight informed the president he could not give a definite answer until tomorrow afternoon. He is awaiting the decision of the national council of the Social- ist party regarding their willingness to participate in the new government. Upon ‘leaving’ President Dou-Jof Interviews with groups in an ef- mergue, M. Briand told correspond-| fort to form a ministry today, The ents that the {dea of a 48 hour cabl-]alternative suggestion that a pr net whfth would ratify the bill au-| visional ministry be formed to put thorizing the Bank of France to|the Bank of Vrance situation Into increase the circulation to 45,000,-| proper legal form occupied much at tention but found little support, ex cept with M. De Monae, He de- | (Continued on Page Two) 000,000 had been abandoned. M. Briand’s conference with sident came after a fruitless day y the navy to Hawa E EXTENDED tions today governing the letting of Taos) 4 r Fl t a Wired y Crilinw EDITION On Streets or Delivered by C at Newstands, 5 cents ‘arrier 76 cents a month Publication Offices Tribune Bldg.s 216 E. Second St. 1 his predecessor’s appointees ie in a case reached for argument today in the utive and legislative branches of the government represented as contestants. The case became one for construction by the highest | upheld the provision of law pre scribing the “consent of the senate,” as a condition for the president's re- Solicitor Beck, on the other hand| j-, Will Be Longest Voyag: Heavier Than Air Cr Is Set for J WASHINGTON, April 13.— navy de spartment this summer moval of office, second and third] fornia to Hawaii, the longest class postmasters. Concress, in| ver p e Creatine MU Tetne Wha Mee bon, ce ed over water by heavier-thar fix the tenure of the office, deter- Arrangements for the flig mine how the appointment shall be| ith tndications that it will be u made and how incumbents may be|dertaken late in June or early removed, Jul: Either San Diego or declared in his brief that hy “at |Erancisco will be the takeoff point tacking the Independence of the| th Honolulu as the. objective, executive’ the question at issue] The test will follow the fleet and {Struck at a principle involving the| aircraft maneuvers in the vicinity ‘Very foundation of our gov t in the next few weeks ment’. “The responsibility of the| oceed as the navy ts un- president for fa ‘ul fon of | der experiment with . he contended as a/|the exploration of un- necessity, be considered as! know arctic ‘ons In cooperation carrying with it the constitutional] with the McMillan expedition power to remove the unfit or un-| If the new planes fulfill expecta- worthy, with the consent of con-| tions, the flight to Hawaii will mark press. an important step in the develop- CHICAGO, 1 April with a strange death in Lake Sick Student Kills Himself Wealthy “Northwestern University Boy Found Weighted Down in Lake With Bullet Hole Through Head —Robert Preston, 21-year-old Northwestern University student and son of a wealthy Oak Park family, ended what he considered a “life of failures” Michigan yesterday. A bullet wound in the head and a brief case of diaries strapped to him and weighted down with three heavy FOUR WEEKS WITH THE STATES NAVY \Second Introductory Chapter Prelimi- Fleet as Given by Tribune Man Who Will Make Trip CHAPTER II. By EARL E. ay I gave you the HANWAY “inside” on how d received I find tell the Tribune’s family of 's all abouf my experiences. “We'll expect a couple of columns a d were my orders. To write a couple | public eats his stuff up,” were some of the instructions I re ved. Now if I uld even at empt to write like fd Howe, who, by he way is a warm personal friend of former overnor Brooks and J. E. I would sending my | in-storms into \ing Post, Ameri- an, Hearst's, etc. Be that as it may, I am not going to attempt to copy anybody, be he great or humble, but am g to dish this trip out to youwall in just a plain, old-fash- foned w like a le with no frills, r back home. but just Following 1s the list of those who have received invitations to be pres- ent at the maneuvers: Alabama, Birmingham Age-Herald, ick I, Thompson, publisher. Birmingham News, V! tector H. Han- son, publisher, Arizona. Phoenix Gazette, C. Usher, Freder: H, Akers, pub- Arkansas. Fort Smith Southwest American, W. E. Decker, publisher. Fort Smith Times Record, John 8. rks, publisher. California, Fresno Republic born, Jr, publisher. Los Angeles Times, ler, publisher. (Continued on Page Two) P. hase 8. Os Marry Chand- , every day WhloKY ofl FOUND IN GAVE about two gallons of moonshine in their car. The men were taken to jail at Basin, informations filed and the Hauor and car confiscated. Acting on {nformation r from various sources the officers on Saturday instituted Systematic search in the neighborhood where it was thought the men had made their base of operations and were reward. ed by landing the plant, seven barrels of mash in various stages of fer- mentation and all other accessori to an extensive distilling plant ex- cept the still, which had apparently been removed from the furnace and hidden in some other place. relved a Pieces of iron were the conclusions the youth self apparently drew from his confessed philosophy—"when NON-STOP FLIGHT. CALIFORNIA TO AAW, 5 PLANNED BY NAVY | developed long distance scouting type will be tested by the e Ever Attempted With aft Over Water; Trip une or July. Naval seaplanes of a newly in a non-stop flight from Cali- sustained flight ever attempt- n-air craft. | ht are now being worked out | ment of future defense plans | Designed to operate from a land | base, radius, atrol aircraft of such cruising {t is pointed ‘out could be utilized for extensive scouting about the Panama Canal, through the Car ribean as well as’the Atlantic coast and Havwali Two planes certain to be used in the flight have been developed at the Naval Afreraft factory in Phila. delphia and a third which building at the plant of the Boening airplane company In Seattle, will be used if completed In time. One of the planes at Philadelphia already is now has been completed and it is understood the highly satisfactory tests with this plane have led to the |decision that the flight be attempted without the Boening plane at Known as the PN-9 they say the jtwo planes developed at the naval .| factory represented a phase of naval avigtign for which the aeronautics had been several years. The new type was described at the navy department as a “distinct de- velopment from that which has to do with the operations of aircraft from the ships of the fleet. Of the tractor type with twin en- gines, the PN.9 plane normally ries a crew of five men and jaded Welghs 18,125, pounds, of which 50 per cent {s useful load. Its engines develop over 500 horsepower giving a maximum speed of 117 miles an hour and a cruising speed of 80 miles an hour, The wings are of wood and fabric, the boat or hull bureau planning for of DEATH OF FIVE WILL BE PROBED IN EFFORTS TQ |Hand- Shaking | Record Broken | | By Coolidge WASHINGTO. ed Press}—Presider his record by April 1 shaking har 57 persons a minute for 17 min- utes. When the las : my AV \ pre visitors passe - = Ph | his st the White E j Ue a preside ip was apparently | So Xe) Gen Ee SBR 8 ae Ee firm as wh he shook the first hand in the line To make this rec |Murderess Attempts to ldge took . Ne IDeAgue Tea Tete toottam ta Choke Self to Death his right hand to pull his through in double quick tr With Bed Sheet; Plan Pr escriptions | Her Removal to Gary. For Addicts |, cHicaco, Aprit : | Two Gary, Ind., police offi- N ot Limited |cers came here today to take into custody Mrs. Anna Cun- ningham, who has been de- WASHINGTON, April 13.—Physt-| tained in connection with the clans in prescribing narcotics to ad-|investisation of the deaths of her dicts are not required to restrict | husband and four children in the the quantity called for by thelr pre-|last six years and the poisoning of scriptions to small does for strictly | her son David Jr., now in a hospita curative purposes when the narcot- | here. | {cs are to be self-administered by the| The policemen went to the C ddict, the supreme court held to-| hospital where Mrs. Cunningh: day in a case from St Wash-|tempted to choke herself to ington, brought by Dr. ¢ es O.|last night with a bed sheet A Linder. county physiclan declared Mrs. Cun In the lower courts the govern-|ningham ts suffering from epilepsy ment won its contention that when The move to return Mrs c the narcotics are to be self adminis- m to Gary came while the au- tered: the, physician ‘can’ prescribe tles of Lake County which ine only that quantity which will be|cludes C of Porter count curative of the habit and not place |of Chi were a 5 sufficient narcotics {In the hands of addict to enable him to become a seller of narcotics, or to administer to himself doses larger than those necessary to affect a cure. Methodists Plan exhumation tod one of the bodies of the deceased 1 bers of the Cunnir . for » them LCE Health Meeting| 1d two ¢ Vvulsions.dn..the family The Free Methodist chu W Mills will be the meeting p! Thursday of the regular monthly | health eonference w {ll be held} from 930 to 11 o'clack in the morning. This location was decided upon because it will be easy access for mothers of the Midwest Heights, Mountain Wew and Mil The condit no ham, from Jr, ais 24 n was r Physicians, dentists, © women’s | Changed early today clubs of Casper and Mills, and the] Mrs. Cunningham's attempt at sui Natrona’ County health unit, co-op-| de was thwarted i erming with the state board of| When a police womar u health through its division of watching her her 2 hem ternity and in nd child of a sheet from the and twist glene, make these examinations pos- | !t around her ne When the police sible, to shdw the physical condition | Woman frustrated her attempt the of children examined and to Indicate | ®?™sed woman threatened to try it entirely of metal and the tall sur- faces are of metal and fabric. ain A daughter, May, 17, Is the only ways by which their health and vig- or may be improved. you get to the end of your rope, tle a knot and hang yourself.” Coroner's physicians described the diarfes as amazingly frank revela- tlons of the phantasies of a modern youth. The doctors found a tragic story in the lad’s confessions of his struggle against an incurable dia betic condition and tn his consequent abandon and indulgence in things which a rigorous diet forbade. While a student at Northwestern and for a time the University of Illinofs, he had suffered almost continuously from the disease his parents sald. LOVELL, Wyo. April 13.—The| In a note to his parents which he arrest of two men in Lovell last] {eft in his room in Evanston, young Friday night while in the act of re-| Preston wrote: tailing hooch from an automobile le Pr * |to the discovery of an illicit |. “D Tim "sorry sTIASOR facturing establishment’ in a able, but you -are ae erevter ity i good and I am too creek where it is thoug y that I could not uuthorities that large qu Hon. S08 Aik yan Nquor has been ma Juring the|® LN TGs |past few months, Under Sheri |‘ ; one eorrans.| Leslie Waters and City Marshal R.|°™ not gst 2. the: spur of! the M, Lynn arrested R. Hoffman and a| moment. Diease Tet the mat man known as “Rosey,’'.and found|/» eno, ns that I am at last con. ‘FORUM MEET POSTPONED The regular forum meeting of the Casper Chamber of Commerce will not be held tomorrow, because of the trip now being made by mem: bers to Thermopolis, it was announc- ed today by Charles B. Stafford, secretary of the chamber. AIR LINE; FI DETROIT, April 13.—The Ford Motor company today inaugurated what fa said to be the first commer- cial alr line to be established In the United States, when the “Malden Dearborn,” an all metal monoplane of the “atr-pullman” type, hopped aft from Ford Airport, Dearborn, at 9:24 a. m., with a cargo of company mail and express for the Ford plant at Hegewisch Manors near Chicago. The plane piloted by Eddie Hamil- i FORD INAUGURATES EXPRESS RST IN COUNTRY ton, a former Royal Air Service Miler, {s one of two duralumin planes to form the necleus of an air service to link the Ford company here with plants qt Chicago, St. Louis, St. Paul, Minn,, and’ Iron Mountain, Mich, The second plane will receive its first tests soon. CHICAGO, April 13.—The Ford Motor company’s plane the first com- mercial plane on the Detroit-Chicago air route, landed here today at 11:13 a.m, ROOKIE AS HIJ | BAY SHORE, N. Y., Apri | hijacking by a state trooper r« |his being held under military |ously wounded in the back by he sought to rob. 260,000 worth of liquor was Lieut. J. B. Lynch, in c the state trooper id that recruit Will of here, | Delmadge. urge detachment am while on furlough in Patchogue, Long Island, mpanied three men to the unoccupled Benson estate of 40,000 acres at Ditch Plain, where Frank Dickerson ws wker and that they demanded two automobile loads of liquor. Men hired by boot- leggers to prot thelr unlawf property set upon the hijacke wounding Delmadge and a compan ion From Dickerson’s place the troop. ers removed from a building 0 8 of Mquor and destroyed 1,000 cases found in 4 field. Dickerson said his only connection with the bootleggers was to provide storage Canuck Brides Barred in U.S. VICTORIA, April 13.— Twenty Victoria brides brought into in infancy and who married Cana- dians now employed in the United States have been refused admission to the United States by tmmigration authorities, !t was learned here yes: terday. Ten other brides have been ordered deported from the States AFTER FICHT State Trooper Is Seriously Wounded in Battle With Bootleggers; Arrested by Military His fellow troopers matter drop }furnished by his escapade, made having overstayed a six months vieit, other surviving member of tl fly and she told of being v stricken with a mysterious twice In the last ye: © After Mrs, Cunnin: stioned by doctors HELD ham had been que and alienists A Cc K a R rday, they pronounced her ¢o be euffering from epileptic psychos!s VALPARISO, Ind., April 13.—The bodies of Harry and Walter Cun- ningham were exhumed at Blackley Corners near here today. Three oth- er bodies will be exhumed if coro- her's pbysiclans and chemists find uhything in the bodies indicating poison, Quake Sh ock Hit Jamaica Authorities l —A brief adventure at ,0kie on furlough resulting in | arrest today after being seri- y gunmen of the bootleggers , acting upon the clue raid last night in which space at fift $1 a ‘eed was arrested Booze In U.S. Court Bruce Hubbard and J. A. Strigle Are Bound Over for Federal Trials Under Bonds of $1,500 E ach Bruce Hubbard, allas H. P. Her- ma . feating Mquor bert, perennial violator of the drug | Hubbard and Strigle were arrested ordinance, and Joe A. Strigel, ar-|!" the early hours while darkness enveloped the city on Sunday morh- rested before on federal charges ing while in the act cf moving an were arralgned to before U. 8.|80-gallon s and a tub of mash Commissioner M. P. Wheeler on|from a house at 1717 Poplar str federal Hquor charges and were re-| The two men were arrested by the leased on $1,500 bond In each case. Tae n eae 8 M piewel) wna OH They will be tried in federal court Muck. Although a t at Cheyenne on charges preferred ® officers, they wil ried in by Federal Dry Agent Otto W. Pa ul court er an arr nt which include possession of mash|between Fedear! Agent Plaga and while in a state of fermentation and|Chief Patrick. The bonds fixed the possession of Implements de-|each case of $1 te the se- signed for the purpose and u verity of fod

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