Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 19, 1925, Page 1

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/ “ution and religion, B Che Cazper . VOLUME 34° 34 900.333 IN ROYALTIES °°MING TO NATRI MAIN NEWS SECTION CASPER, WYOMING, SUNDAY, JULY 19, 1925 uimMary Crilnuwe a MAIN NEWS SECTION NO. BRYAN-DARROW VERBAL CLASH IS BITTER” AFRSONAL [RE CELEBRATION SCHEDULED HERE STANDS OUT IN STATEMENTS OF BOTH LEADERS Bryan Brands Attorney | Foe to Christianity and| Is Called Bigoted in} Return. By WILLIAM J. LOSH (United Press Staff Correspondent.) DAYTON, Tenn., July 18. —William Jennings Bryan and Clarence Darrow to- night engaged in a_ bitter duel of statements, filled with personalities and the issues involved in the Scopes evo- lution trial, The wor battle was the only incident in an extremely quiet day at Dayton, rela the Scopes t which stood in ad. journment until Monday when it will enter its last phase. E nm assailed I fessed agnostic and me ment {: ~ “the flitant anti-Christian senti the country.” The Scopes case, he asserted, “uncovered the ¢ Christianity petus to the fundament t ve inspired religion. We are making progress,” he sald. Darrow replying, admitted his ag nosticism, taunted Bryan with as suming to be “the only interpreter of religion in the world,” and de- clared he was interested in the Scopes case only that states whose wish to pursue truth shall be left free to think and in- vestigate and teach and learn.” Both*men discussed at length, ev- ninst im: fight other ‘an declar- ing that evolution robbed those whe belleve in it “of the pity and mercy that come with civilization.” To this Darrow replied, ‘ the law of life through past ages has been cruel” and that “man has a bloody past and he has a bloody present; what his future nnot be safely prophesied.” e just emerged from a great war, where Ch ans have beer. killing each other,” he sald, “a war which shed an ocean of blood, more than was ever dreamed of on earth befo: Not only this, but ministers of all sorts were each praying that thelr side might suc- ceed, and seeking to align God to their cause.” “The world is of what evolution r the Scopes trial," Bryan sald is learning—most of it for the time—that ¢ ¢ clentists teach it ning its eyes to y is as a result mr pothe 1 relative of every other livir i animal ife and makes man A ‘io reiative of them all—elther r or cousin. If this hypo: re true, we would all be irderers if we swatted a fly ¢ Med a bedbug, for we would be killing our kin and we would be Ibals whenever we ate any of the are included with copes’ teachir nan in the litt ram in the “But that itionary 1} me fre y @ cruel law under whi (Continued on Page Two) ed during a lull in| doubt | 1 of the] JULY 26 WILL COMMEMORATE HISTORIC FIGHT WITH INDIANS listahiedt Society Announces Plans for| Fete Based on Battle in Which Caspar Collins Lost His Life By IL PENSEROSO, JR. | Commemorating the Platte River Bridge fight and the Red Buttes fight of July 26, 1865, resulting so disastrously |to the troops stationed at Fort Caspar when attacked by Indians, Natrona County Historical Society will sponsor an informal celebration somewhere in the vicinity of Besse- mer Bend on Sunday afternoon, July 26, at 3 o’clock. An invitation Is extended by the society to all persons to attend the informal gathering. Persons inter- ested in the romance and traditions | of the early west, old pioneers of Natrona county and elsewhere, and all other citizens who feel interested are urged to be present. There will be no admission fee or other expense attached to the affair. Today a committee composed of President Thomas Cooper, Vice President R. S. Ellison, Secretary D. W. Greenburg and Director G. R, Hagens, will seek out a site Bessemer Bend where the rende: fe , vous will be held. The eite In re- Evangelistic Campaign garded as particularly {deal for such f a gathering. Aside from the historic settlement of the Bend, Red Butt Scheduled Here in is but a stone’s throw, the Old Oregon Trail. traverses the, region. November. The historic Platte River wends its eek! way, Goose Egg ranch, a remnant of the colorful cattle days and made ine churches of the city, through | famous {n-fiction as the. place where | respective governing boards,| “they changed the babies” as re+ .ve, unanimously extended an in=|4ated by Owen Wister in his novel | vitation to the Business Men’s Gospel | rhe. Virginian," and nearby ts the team of Fairfield, Iowa, to lead in a | site of probably the first cabin built tabernacle evangelistic campaign in|in Wyoming when Robert Stuart, the city of Casper, beginning Novem- | the explorer and fur trader visited ber 8 or 15, and word was recetved | this section In: November, 1812. No the past week that the invitation | more wonderful setting for such an s been accepted. The team 1s led/event could be found within the A. K. Harper, a manufacturer. | porders of the entire state. Cc. W. the president, who} At a meeting of the board of owns a nent store, months | directors of the society yesterday ago investigated Casper. The team | afternoon preliminary plans for the is composed of about twenty-five | gathering were worked out and the business and professional men, none | affair will be under the personal of whom accepts any pay for his {direction of President Thomas services, but they are said to have | Cooper. An {nformal program will finest and most successful | be arranged which will include some paid singers and helpers, extemporaneous talks by relating to A large frame tabernacle will be|early Wyoming by pefsons well the most central location | versed in the subject and some of obtainable, and every convenience | the early settlers will be called upon will be provided for the comfort and |to recall and relate some of their fety of those who attend, Casper | personal experiences, will not be asked to guarantee any | All those who attend are urged. to money for the erection of the taber- | bring along their lunch as the affair for the expenses of the (Continued on Page Two) but all of thig will be © tabernacle, after the the ver erected nacle, o meetings, raised in t meetings ministers and laymen wherever they are known speak of them in the hest terms. They have been con- 1 is an unusually im STATE TROOPS PASS IN King Greets Amundsen sentatives of the the left with Amun Raold Amundsen tuous. greeting on landing making his way through the worth his American ec v > ae: we ae SHERIFF'S OFFICERS ON TRAILIIC SHARE OF (OF JURY VERIRE OF 150 DRAWN FORSCOTT-MORGANTRIALHERE CULHAL FUND Vames Withheld by Authorities Until|Crude Production for : Se cils oe | First Half of Year Process Serving Is Completed to | Totals 14,750,825 Prevent Much Dodging Barrels, Is Report Summons are being served by sheriff’s officers on 150 Ww July prospective jurors drawn for duty in connection with the | , ee, ‘ fetes : hearing of ouster proceedings against County Commis- | to The Trib- sioners Jack Scott and Guy T. Morgan, who stand accused une Natrona county will of misconduct and malfeasance in office. Due to the fact |receive 26, or the that the veniremen live in all sections of the county it v will bulk of $63,188.40, whi take some time to secure pr 3 per cent of the amount tk | wing of the jury venire was | ancdantd abate ¢ . : mpleted Friday by Juc sryant |-xoy t S. Cromer of the 2 dis- | $6 shave trict, who will retire for Judge H. P. lllsley of the seventh dirtrict to take i Saotatlad Sa ‘ the bench when the commissioners ioniclts “x are brought to trial. init ; aps ; Due to difficulty In securing. pro: The ney must be exper .| cess where p: stive jurors have 1 | the cot the. construction knowledge of their liability, no }and ma ee , anent arrows. nar will be available until all bain: atid hie? Se. facrehel aint have been served with summons. port of public sct , of ether pu ess 02 | ———— t Both the clerk of the court and the He educational {ns . the 's office were advised against legislature may 4 ling to r names public. M if 945 the fede leasir furore will report’ on August 3 aximum o HUAN C2) eh ces fee nchiten Bench “fae ond eo. 1c day, mepllewed i by... |e moe oF hones att ad th wind that, carried t alvend | night and 94 yes fe - Last night found the n DENVER, Colo., July 18.—(Unit- | tobo; with no m ed Press)—According to information | mal temperatures forec ee bil received here today by postal in-| last of this week 7 ene Orne spectors, $500 of the $5,800 loot ob- The last two we 8 1 ; tained in the alleged fake holdup of | tablished a record f " je John T. Richards, rural mail car-| warmth, the temperature ssi rier, has been recovered at Topeka,|the 90-mark every day with three| ¢ tion In W Kan exceptions and then hover just | ing during t t six 4 c The money was alleged to have| below that point. The aximum— | this year ax 1 14,750 been placed in a safety deposit box] 106 degrees—was ached on Tues-| barr t lay by Harry J. Duncan, under arrest | day after climbir for 8 by A, B, Bartlett, state g here on a charge of theft and con-|eral days This ar ts version of government funds. forecast for calls? the pre t t int Duncan, accused of having p for cooler weather ar early , that th 4 nf t last six the part of a bandit in the in the week and for ry] months of tt ! fake holdup of the mail carrier, during the n slight ¢ It t ed celved a tumul-| fessed here that he had taken $1,000 ; that ¢ ed where he was arrested. E gin, by free-will offer- manames 0s Lied ts of ings. All the team askg is Christian IN W L KO U T paploek ; are A \ A Ly , 1 , co-operation, aredg ; For years this team has been con- ducting in other states similar cam- See | a PET paigns with great success, and both QeENRIETTA, Okla. July 1 f | \ “= [Wealthy Man’s Advertisement for Child | 1:4: trsins i thn mine who Dict aHAR it poh ay | to Adopt as Companion for Daughter | is miine i Inspires Printer to Bold Plan Gr ee eto. il | IN JAIL pwerinpeaver || ROSS AND ‘BIG CHIEF’ DAWES NEXT THURSDAY | | CHEYE YE, Wyo., July 18 ' WE) will be made an Indian chief and vernor Nellie T. Ross will be | rowned a princess—provided they | t decide to accept the honor which 200 Sioux Indians have offered to | -- confer upon them when the vice ' president comes to Cheyenne, The NE, Wyo., July 18—(BY] crowning would be carried out United Press}—The first occasion in} with full tribal ceremony. The offer of the Sioux Indians Is America when a woman Commander yee eee nie ‘Weoming | the first of its kind on record In , Hen a in review In| this tribe. Vice President Dawes t Governor Nellie Taylos|, att 4 thelr attention on a visit to the northern part of the state lant fall while the governor came in for similar notice on a recent visit to the formal opening of Yel: lowstone park enne * for the wo which she f colors. Vice President Dawes will be ex 1s presented with a stand hei Mia) ON LIQUOR LIST MAIL ORDERS SHUT OFF NEW YORK, July 18.— (United Prese)—Having snuffed out many of Broadway's bright lights by turn ing @ prolibitory key in the doors of cabarets and night el quer wa sold, U. 8. Attorne a wh Buckner now intends to snup the padiock on tha mail box Discovery of an alleged e. which he cor 7 bootleg how turned lette ers, caused Buckner tO issue an oF riers Into bar tend der that may lead to the prosecution | Claire, Madison and Milwaukee, all co! rned Wis.; Indianapolis and Elkhart, Ind.; An order list, containing the} nenver and Colorado Springs, Colo,; nares of 20,000 patrons, found in P oon eentlishiment, indi. PCiNichnnatt, Cleveland, Columbus and cates that a thriving businesn was| Toledo, Ohio; St, Louts, Bt, Joseph, done in 20 states, including the Dis-| Kansas City and Joplin, Mo; Topeka triet of Columbia and Wichita, Kans.; Oklahoma City, Cities and tows represented in| Tulsa and Guthrie, Okln.; Dallas | (a include Omaha and Lincoln, | and Fort Worth, Texas; Low Ange: a raid up Neb.; Sloux City, Cedar Rapids and | les and San Francisco, Calif; Casper | De Moines lown: Peoria, Gales-| and Sheridan, Wyo.; Detroit and ©. Chicago, Freeport and Chiea-| Ishpeming, Mich., and Wheeling, | go Heights, Lilinols; Kenosha, Bau w. Va. shild to adopt a chairman of the co: PIONEER DENVER MAN IS CLAIMED r business man, an operation BIVERNOR ROSS WILL DELIVER ‘gm DAY ANDRESS IW cagpeA ALL WORK IS REVIEWED Governor Nellie To at the mammoth furthe the labor unions to BY MINER S\ tet Bist 2 eet they were formerly emr instead of armed pt in the (By United Press.) —His atten 3 ard W. Browning advertised fo : companion for his lonesome aiatite: fr; MAYOR “SHOT | Browning, Phillip Siegel, a printer on a | | spaper, launched into an attempt to black- Browning ° 50,000, police announced he had | BY OFFICER aie Wisin and Cy oon. way with what he belie was a| . : . Oa ee ter a | fortune rod 10 date ning and “Browning was wealthy and I] ytrami, Pla. July 1 J. H. Wend. ! 1 dolla r long corre. | wanted money,” w legel's explan. | joy Yecantly. named Mayor | 1 ¢ ed , t n Casper mail and]ation of pis attempt at blackmatl | yy @ new duburb of Miami, | The Caspe ented ron which n here | fat nded | turd t A w or The plot was caref worked out. | a special constat f r ¢ 10 a. m learning how Browning. was| According to mea ‘ I 1 ¢ th | desir of making bis litt arrest f ' I { a ar ter happ by getting J n paper|for her, offering th be | ment has la fat s ‘ half dozer (Continued on ¥ tie /REPORT ON CHEST FUND The Casper Community Fund has} nating duplication of effort and e 1 the comp d the first half of the per - ty ond year of its existence, and th The agencies receiving support | w 1} mer, story of | directors thereot wish to present|from the local fund submit to the| Mr, H 1 leputy to the Casper citizens, who have t ne following repor oe has operating | given so erously of their tire 1 oute—At the end J bee 1 pens ttee of the | money, @ report of the activities there were, in Casper, 17 t eon ! 1 plans |the various beneficts as | tive troops registered with a m 1 a j nster par statement of the receipts and dis ship of 441 boy One troop has} J Ly t easful, labor Day | bursements for the period n registered at Midwe » Gom- op ‘arm The Comunity Fund. plan for|membership of 46, w t more | nd . tenday ake ber | communit ice needs no explan:| troops a being f f € 4 in t vicin: | has been ed ¢ t has resulted |r ntive'’s office sad) Te in greater efficiency through elimt-!through the resig , \ , i *) i \ ‘

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