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: | Che Casper Siumay @rthiim0e VOLUME34_~~—~—~~—sSOMAIN NEWS SECTION CASPER, WYOMING, SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 1925 MAIN NEWS SECTION NO, 46 Ee ee OEE dee A rr Ee FRENCH PREMIER ON R'FFIAN FIRING LINE BRITISHJAP CONSULATES BURNED "*"*"iih" ii 13.—Mliss Ni WANY JAPANESE "xd Quast So (Our Flag jee BPROGRIM se SPECIAL SHOW Scopes Case Te aa dictment alnst John : COMPLETEDFOR aps ano ezer FO, PINLEUE i | ns CE AVIGE TOIAY JERKED OFF IN Said He Wanted to Go ) resi/ct for the F Na of our country W here hb le Could Feel ARE DESTROYED = itl pa he aero dreat principles for whieh the fatale, and to event All Citizens Requested 20- FOOT FALL Battle; Marshal Says overrule it. | them to a becoming use of the F ‘ ODAY, June 14, is National Flag Day. This day has been set aside by proclamation as one day of the year on which the people of Amer ag. It Would Be Idiotic. ; ie) — The thirteen stripes side by side represent the thirteen colonics, or the original To Display Emblems CALUMET, Mi WASHINGTON, June 13,—Thom tart tandi i ide ‘ : 1 1 bitt la for tibet 1 ard Tie 10, fell 20 feet as Scopes, the country school teach stutes, standing side side in their long and bitter struggle for liberty, anc $ 3 than mile down a shaft of t “Kill the Forei ers 99] er and storm’center of the evolution | exemplify the prineple, “In union there is strength,” At Residences. Calumet and Hela Consolidated By at L. BRADFORD BNETS, | controversy, hax telt for his home Each star represents a state of the union, and records a great event in. the - Mino Friday night, tt was | (Unite a Coreen I C f Inf . d town of Dayton, Tennessee. Qn Ju!y : F same ith ley tee 2 ° > naly Flag I a WI r H PREMIER PAIN- § LUry oO Unlated|1 ne wil go on trial for familiariz history of the country—the birth of a state and its joyous weleome into the tiaeae Gains ; SY oe LEVER ON THE FRANCO ae ing his biology class with Dary ‘ami , Ini etievo! rde Ar of Bi ehatt BER + Sr aN 1 tANCO- Citizens as Troops offi. 00 SS Pa STW, Oh tHe, aver pro rao veing found | RIFFTAN FRONT, MOROC- DO eee eat The red proclaims the Courage which the men and women of America have proneate: wervi fe hemting btuc| OO. ‘Ve ebZ, , 29 : Before leaving, Scopes said he g v'clock thi rr i € z s:|CO, VIA FEZ, June 22.— Feng Tien Enter City. Bae Ab sens ¥ in the alw shown; the courage that inspires patriots to face danger and to suffer The y mouth of the pit, timbs | (Delayed in Transmission.) expect io-eet the ch noe ae da sacrifice for home and country, ‘ ena hin Roos tec.| Premier Painleve of France He was due to arrive in Ashville The white stands for Liberty, In describing the Flag, Washington said, “We rvanee of this patriotic occasior [89 the t shatt, ‘ toni it the roar : . tonight. | take the stars from heayen, the red from the mother country, separating it by | The committee in charge reque ry 3 SMANGHAT, June 13.—Shang- raed ut all residents of Casper displa p to the front | white stripes, thus showing that we have separateil from her, and the white Vie beter aod. Biel, pees aD | pans Yee ek Po his Baeeee Governor Ross stripes will go down to posterity representing Liberty.” | tier homes phe nabecy | y of: inspection—vin ‘train, aie. i ¢ P J i ie | ne An : The blue stands for L ty. It is the blue of the heavens, the true blue, the | sectto city will be decor ated k and auto from Par hai has been through a little bit 1p everything these last two | weeks, but it got the real crush- ing blow today. The Jaundry ° : : - SOloRR aha: @ vhs cued ort re Sot men went out on a strike. usts oomis kind of blue that signifies loyalty to the Flag at all times and under all cir mee ae every | PR cama f Beatie Yielders of starch and iron de- | cumstances. to put it out. ta hoped thatthe ants to report back to Parle, staged elded to work no more for the] | —_—— | ti s x ; sks public will enter into the spirit of nosy show fo _ | lag iS S 4 reedom, equality, justice and piri Premier. | foreigners and joined the general CHEYENNE, Wyo., June 409 ipiie Flag of the ‘United tates:aymbolisss thatefrecdom, equality, justice occasion and co-operate tg. t E It r Pee | strike, declaring that the for-| | Governor Nellie Tavloe Mosk Satur. | humanity for which our forefathers sacrificed their lives and their fortunes. fullest extent in the celebration ot| i € sent Riffians eigners should iron their own] | day announced she had concluded ‘to | Yoday the Flag represents a nation of oyer a hundred million free people, its F ne - ) skulking t to silence remove from office Sheriff William conatttatt Ste dnutitutt ttm achi ea yee) fe ee a Thb ¢ program to be t > Pattie H. Loomis of Park county and had constitution and its institutions, its achievements, its hopes and aspirations. | by the Elks at the Elks auditorium LNeeatae + M m sent q letter of'removal to the coun at 3 o'c < th afternoon as an t ac avid ; nouneed bye 2, Dune ari erst By EDMUND BUCKLEY |? commissioners and to Loomis to- ; brig cate ai Usha an 3 & days of ‘17 anc ialtach Presa {Gea Coreeapoagent) |: mnacsharl Maetetteh a! fibncis When freedom from her mountain height, charge, {s printed below | picturesque nor hi SHANGHAT, June 13,.—| vefore the governor at Cody Anti-foreign spirit, bursting since which time the governor, here and there in China for|'@ 584 the matter under ax n ment. Loomis was charged-with hay- more than a fortnight, flamed | ing yitttutly tattea, ea -and out today i in the British con-| refused to perform’ duties imposed cession ef Kio Kiang on the | >y thevlaweand had been guilty of Yantze river, ending with the burn-|4runkenness and gross violation vf of the British* and Japanese | Prohibition laws. An appeal to the r Spangled Banner_. Unfurled her standard to the air, Introductory Exer¢ She. tore the azure robe of night, And set the stars of glory there. Then mingled with its gorgeous ds The milky baldric of the skics And striped its pure celestial white With etreakings of the morning light. = She Hated Him While | \strite, Mesa In Heaven City. | scevir'moressed, & Ive t shite Cali: | Mate Says| ths rand air } Painleve © Promise | hard M. Boeke 7 the end squire and Officers | ir ryt HARVARD, Ill., June 13,—(United| The ¥ for th sulates and the wrecking of oth-| Courts will probably follow. Ang Sine -oa-— | Press).—Nina. Roundtree, pretty 15-|¢ront earls Jey elie buildings. DESIR Ge oar Tr 45 onan EMKS | year old girl from the mountains of | °F ids Whee Sitere The: mob whiai-dkove onthe A t D | He Virginia tonight was a central figure aN iy guava consulates was enflamed with antl: | via or rops Medley (Southern Ait EAS Yee neesrentene bp Coxmetning led. tato whether immorality has been prac- ticed in the little atriotic Address - atta #leayen City near h American Flag Wins" Ser British and anti-Japanese spirit, | 300 Feet Into After attacking the consulates, the b put the torch to them, and then | S d si oeniedapalaate cine Hoairied | ea an Lives -Apollo Club udge R. R. Rose ve colony at re. . One led the ip to the rear, Apollo 61 f lence was ahather fafens : ib and Audien pursued the even tenor of thelr t which the rioters tore down, Ways on their 130-necre farm for two planes hummed on In the course of the orgy, the mob} NEW YORK, June 13.—Dropping | years until Nina—her common lav | 2!" lookout for foes of the Freneh, attacked and injured many Japan: 300 feet into the sea after the mo- Colorado Faculty Heel eA A pace calles gg pee Tt would not do for 1M to- betan Ba tor of his seaplane had “gone deud”| BELMONT “PARK, New York, {lengths over Dangerous and with {out and had to be forced back by pn gia incense ath becca hee Japanese marines were put ashore | Vlllam Byrne, New York police} June 13. — Looking just like his| Bud Fisher's Swope in third place, | special policemer Men Will Resign coroner's jury returned a verdict ot| © were mounted after the attack started and suc-| leutenant and: student aviator, ‘ex-|4.aqy and running like him, Ameri-|- American Flag equalled the'track |, American Flas was so heavil death from natural causes. Aral men they ares os tricated. himself from. the sinking ; a3 ? ; . ceded in restoring order. played that the returned the short ‘ slung across thetr wreckage and kept’ afloat. can Flag, the handsome son of Man | record of g:16 4-5 for the mile and ates Attor A. H. Pouso ha prizes of 1 to 2, 1 to 5, with slow SOULDER, Ce June 13.—(Ur 1} iddle ng guard aga “Kill the foreigners,” was the orgy The accident occurred off South| O’War, won the $50,000 classic Bel- | three-eighths. nahaes out te Press)—Ira M De rune ar 1 pie ‘ serve ay + Lar agape tea oO filter tn fee sreeting the 2,000 Feng Tien troops | Beach. Byrne strapped in the cock-| mont stakes before a crowd of more| There was a tremendous ovation} ‘The victory today stamped Amert-|D, Fleming, veteran professors on | te peepee to. Fumors of Inn | even the wateh under Chang Hsiah Liang, son of} pit with a safety belt, escaped with-| than 30,000 here this afternoon. at the finish when, Sam Riddle, own-|can Wag us the greatest three year |the faculty of the University of Col-| ning eieeie olive compl 4 | ful f Painleve diers General Chang Tso Lin, when they | out a scratch, He was picked up a| Running away-from the field in|er of Man O'War and his prize colt, | old of the seaso the nearest to|orado, will retire in the near future.| ana Intelligent, freely admiteed to| Ther sme the head arrived today to guard the city.| few minutes later by a passing | the stretch, the handsome riddle colt | went to the track to lead the winner | his sire that | n seen since|{t was announced today following a " uaa eitk 18 ¢: Colonel’ Preydentene Pat Thousands were in hand to. welcome | yacht, finished pulled up with a lead of two|to the scales. Thousands. swarmed | Man O'War was 1 to the stud. meeting of the board of regent AERO THEREIN’ BO, aaldcta” be’ a | Ata cA bc T Oklahoma -City olf. man,|_ Here t npre n of American Thang stated his ‘only intention is months. Grinding 1 y i : one. , The to restore order. d her to accept him, sbe sald.|°&™p surrounds the peak whéreon The anti-foreign spirit in whieh sy hore iain Date b s ted the advanced post of Frey China has been stepeed for several ; “He took me tu Texas an¢ y | denberg’s men, In t camp are weeks ia on the increase. to Kaneas City, and then we cam en of mar ons, Here are New outbursts were reported from Sa a MR UMARE Wain Fiseion Rei nega n great numbers) Seen soveral cities today. 7 ' Th t of these was at Kiu Heaven City; I hated him he w | Ara c the latter ‘he worst of thei yas hovetbia | whit ed. Then, too, there are Kiang on the Yangtze river where & fae They put on the gloves and Nina ! f « ~—wan- mob he tore! h and kounine \ ous chased Sec r € e “pare consults, Burne hem AFAL WAR LOOMS IN AUSTRALIA; | State’s ‘Attorney Crowe Promises More Sensational Turns in’ | ma sg conaee BO | atrongar’ that the ell of eaten down, and wrecking other buildings. ‘ ‘Wo are t @ al The Arabs SENN ae a Fenech Teete Coming Days of Typhoid Germ Murder Case; Find m Nina totd | a> en travel right net ind spreading to - | By EDWARD C. DERR tau and Swa on came word that the | Lhree Hundred Royal Canadian Police Dispatched} CHICAGO, June 13—“We gave them a bad jolt today, and we'r: From Li going to give ‘ British Communists had sent a sym T H ] Q il 12 000 S iki Mi them some more of the same thing,’”’ State’s Attorney Robert B. Crowe told the United peths 5 a ba eveah bdo 4 0 Meip Que ’ tr Ing ‘Yliners | Press tonight in commenting on testimony introduced at the W illiam D, She pherd ‘*$1,- doar ceble ded |" A 5 Be spurring them on to creation a | - a! seated hha acaisen SLE militant Industrial organtzation, In New South Wales. 000, Ta germ murder” trial ’ : vigil: eMart ene: Aledked oredaed London newspaper dispatches de- | Jrowe took Shepherd's defense by surprise at the short Saturday session of court ican ATH) em nnbbGer held ° re.Presale clare the state of tension in China A when he placed Dr. Amante Rongetti, director of a medical school, oh the stand: and | « # death, Rouse said. The 1 ‘ for Mas had become such that a spark might| HALIFAX, N. S., June 18.—Criss) Approximately 100 men of the| drew, from him the charge that ““We stunned them all. right,” died of typhoid fever and asked h to find something I t 14 the / start a calamity, cross trenches “and barb wire en-| Royal Canadian’ government has! shepherd had questioned him con-| Crowe sald, grinning bloadly. "They |typhold germs were injected in She refuses to | France's The Chinete foreign office sent a|tanglements and patrols by soldiers | been sent from Lonton, Ontario, to} cerning typhold fever germs. Shep-| #dn't expect Mt, but tl may be a|the hur | or hana ; t| note to the British legation at Pe-| and police, the Cape Breton Colliery | the zone of the serious labor strife. y ven germs. Shep liot of other things they don’t ex We SAV aie oo ; tS it tighting king sting against the Hian-| district was darkened by the shadow | according to word received here. | herd ‘# accused of murder nil pect.” i Gepeets fel: at H The ¢ ao tae fr opidal kow willings. ‘This was taken as a| of real war tonight after three days} A second squad of provincial po-| millionaire ward, Billy McClintock J Bret nil'of stature and (Gbatinied eat Paks Site) | \Cohiinued. of Wive Page *) an of stiffening against the Brit-| of blood shed and rioting among the] lice has left there for Sidney. It|by inoculating him with typhold| » 2 cecabal a (Continued on Page Five) 12,000 striking miners. (Continued on Page Five) germ | | ) "BOY SCOUTS GO TO ) KENTUCKY MINER ENTOMBED; | aycciscciy.ci, SLIDING ROCK HALTS RESCUE jis sim CAMP CAREY TODAY) a he Sixty-Five Lads Depart for 10 Days’ | 4 . ‘ +. |, | mo@ated in the narrow tunnel at ong| It was a dramatic scent t DAMAGES FROM FIRE et 3 ? f Lamarg ! Talks With Relief Party Through Pipe; | time. ‘They are ellved each all lyoon when the worms talked to Summer Outing; New Prospective arrived in Cua. F a rei ws ei Ag Ser buried mate throvgh the narrow ort er, 4 “ ” : | huustio . + ° BESS s the Says He Is “Awfully Hungry,” Will | V0 0%5 ve mianight vetore 14 ts | fiée In the pipe vat bad Executive in Company re 4 z the < i, “ bs iberated, rescuers said through into his mine prisor BAKERSFIELD, Cal., June 13.— e impr 1 with the Foremost in a crowd of townapeo-| Almost completely buried in muck The most disastrous fire this. efty eee” " ith Cas. Reach Himby Midpighe, Claim | pre ie rear ere ake motes orc ot the sogic nes | wn auered 30 years tay ca dpeameiy Fee Fe | mine,'in an eagerly forward-pressing | essary ta, put, It through, the mouth [ed dam estimated at $1,000,000 Tha greativeletan the Boy Scouts of Casper Council will | *** Camp ( He is man maes, wax Mrs, Hill, wife of the man|of the pipe was flat on tho floor | d ing the great freight ware 4 c e Bo) 80 ounce | of f and if jetermines: ai , | who has been Imprisoned since last | of the tunnel, of the Southern Pactfic com | start this morning at 8 o'clock and will mark an important | remains fami! 1 follow late GRASS VALLEY, Cal., June 13.—Hope of rescuing | 7) ii). Her children beside hor as Mil y in Bart Bakersfield a hugolepoch to many of the youngsters because it will be their Robert Hill, imprisoned miner, received a setback this eve-|' Joe Solario, leader of the rescue | flattened herecit in the mud, buried | warehouse owned by the Ardizal-| Sommer vacation in a yrholesome atmosphere and under| More tha pounds of up. ning when the rescue crews struck sliding rock and gravel, | crew driving through the last block |one cheek in the mud nate sent her | Oleese department store, five freight |* f Bia dive i ‘ . | pile 1 to the 4 and resorted to heavier timbering in order to protect the |e of loore rock and gravel, sald he | husky word of cheer through the aden with merehandise and pee mili vie one c tion “ ee Nuria 8. +a pant few " 5 as net certain how far they must | pipe to ther hope-buoyed mute, tou ir automobiles amp arey has been placed in good order 24 ne re 1 © e 1 ¥ Onkers from another cave-in. - | zo to berate Hill, but expected to | serting her confidence that he sul nur of smaller business | ception of t firet contingent ot) rector of commisea Treg: | oa “I'm awfully hungry,’ reported Hill through the pipe | bre rough @t any thm be saved houses und homes were ¢ aged. A | Toy Seoute. & , will | tow , t rp n into his prison several umes} Don't worry,” he added, “I'l be \ the miner's ¥ thelr | *, Hill had been confident tror mall ‘ vorted verlously | make up the (10 dave ‘ from the ful ¢| Mid Midw the past four boura when aeked | alright three ehildr t fd |the start of her. husband's r 1 vod from t fetre Juration t n co will t 1| deput asione ‘ pa x t che ° v he won getting along. | Only three worker 1 he m t ” allve harge of Dean M an ond the i) maste " will journey to +