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ba The Circulation of The Tribune Is Greater Than Any Other Wyoming Newspaper. WEATHER | day, possibly showers in 1 in ‘ portion; not much change jr t ature or ie ee TE os MEMBEROR ASHOGTATED PRESS ii Torrerin| -) ! $< aaa MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS CASPER, WYOMING, THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1925 VOL. IX NO. 242 Delivered by Carrier 75 cents a month Publication Offices On Streets or at Newstands, 6 cents Tribune Bitg. 216 BH Second st DATES FIXED FOR TAX PROTEST HEARINGS CONFLICT WITH TRIAL | FLOOD BRINGS DISASTER TO TRINIDAD, COLO. {tii | $400,000 L058 “sut.setyee FOUR KILLED BY|=2"=® ro) S SHIP SALE STATE BOARD | SEEN AS. TOWN LIGHTNING ON) "1 cae MAY BE CALLED AUGUST § TO 7 | © of wife murder but never and Morgan May Not | People Returning to| | Be Able to Attend Homes Today; Rail {Roof. of. Canada” Conquered 1 on trial, will face a judge Crops Are Flattened by cage wilh speaking tubes it tr Meeting Today Takes| Driving Storm in president of the Louisiana state Up Ford Offer for board of health, is granted by pros | Session at Cheyenne. Lines Demoralized. TRINIDAD, Colo., July 23.— (By The Associated Press.)—Fair skies and a warm sun today greeted in- habitants of Trinidad and the surrounding country as they returned to their homes and prepared to check up prop y dam- age resulting from cloudbursts late yesterday. No casualties are reported follow- New England. ecuting officers. NEW YORK, Jul Associated Press) — Four persons wer killed by lightning ‘in Metropolt- and south New Jersey Crops of tobacco, hay and grain were flattened by a severe rain storm in New England and up- state New York. A l4-year-old boy was Killed. by Ughtning in Brooklyn when he at- tempted to climb a tree to dislodge The negro. George Beaurepaire, alleged to have killed his wife more than five years ago, is an in- mate of a government leprosarjum, Efforts made by Dr. Dowling to bring the case to trial have met with the objection that to do so might spread the disea: INDIANS ASK 200 Vessels. WASHINGTON, July 23.—(By The Associated Press)—Tt shipping beard hs for the present, sink { struck a snag that may, whole policy of disposing of {ts huge fleet of un- servicea t vessels. The possibility that the Ford bid may be thrown out on the ground that junking the vessels would be war County Commissioners j Jac k Scott and Guy T. Mor- gan may not be able to ride their pet hobby—tax valua- tion increase: the judge’s stand. sh in dates set | c ng State Board c at the hear oll companies a ty and the al of the two com n charges of r duct has ra bar- a kite. A woman was killed at h contrary to the merchant marine act sewing machine in Somers Point, {s understood to have developed on fi “I = eee - 7 . N. J. A laborer was killed under a + 'An expedition of 11 men, five of them Americans, is on its way the eve of the board meeting called | to tree at the Siwanoy golf club and a for today to consider the bid. "back to the United States after having conquered Mount Logan, | start in the argumer “ot poiecceiae oe 4 while on duty LAIMS COURT harman O'Connor would not dis-| ‘highest peak in Canada. All of the members of the party, led by | xoti¢ tthe. Gai hae at Fort Slocum. . | ing re ed 1 ing the heavy rains that sent the Purgatoire river out of its banks ast night, but damage, it is estimated, the $400,000 : mark. Fee Central Press Photo Property loss and damage {s cor There were no fatalties in New cuss @ messi he is said to have| \Captain M. McCarty of Summit, N. J., are amateur climbers. >t : ete 2 sent to President gland but the storm late yester- tein ; brid aera swept down barns, flooded ae ASENES N, July 23:—(By The (Contittued on vised to put binge waenoute SP eee ive Jon Wrich streets, and cellars and washed out| Associated Press) The United ‘airs’ in sh highways and in flooded basements| Mrs. Olive Joy Wright, the | Stipes, ane Delitre tee Mvice. and | Sta 5. Wallets 4 es has been made defendant in e ty ‘ in business houses and honfs along] new president of the National | {iro communication were impeded. |the Court of claims in a suit involy- ee a ie the river bottoms. Federation of Business and Pro- President Coolidge and his party |!"g land claims amounting to $63, more definite ur tance Train: service on all railro fessional Women's Clubs, is an |on the Mayflower were caught Jn the | 707-343 by Indians jn Montana,.Wyo- e a probable that the Casy c enteritig the city 1s practically de- 7 torm during thelr trip to Pemberton, | Ming, Idaho-and Washington. may find at %; tg ‘ insurance i . : ral ental Scie ractlealy ce agent in Gleveland,-O, | torm-during thelr Ino to Pemberton, | Mine: Late and Washington. dive to prompects of delay in obtain of track and a steel bridge gone enacted March 13, 1924, by which ing a jury and other factors tha between here and Raton, New jurisdiction of adjudication of dis- a slow 't @ Mexico,, the Atchison, Topeka and : ' putes over land was conferred upon Midwest Refining Santa Fe railroad today was unable ‘ the court of claims. The tribes tn- und affiliated concerns w to maintain service over its main a S raps volved are the Blackfoot, Blood, Pie- j rotest against incre ‘Mount Logan, shown above,;.rears up 20,000 feet ter ‘ lines from Chicago to California gan, Gros Ventre and the Nez Perce Smaller washouts have likewise in- Some of the lands are parts of the terferred with service on the Cold- Yellowstone and Glacier national rado and Southern and the Denver | mers e and Rio Grande systems. It was claimed by the Indians’ that Reports dribbling in from out their rights in the common hunt lying communities indicate that the ing grounds in southwest Montana in Plans for Walkout Is Blow at pad th froperty Tose and damage may © sia beep 1 deepest Pending Program eieenl early today by Trinidad busines them shortly after the treaty was NATIONAL LEAGUE. ee ouster tr signed. They also charged that cer-| At Pittsburgh— R.FLE. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., July 23.—(By The Associated |!" wi rcokea: of: families, forced to flee \Fears Entertained for Safety Of “Meftiltain tends to Montane were taken St. Louis ...-.000 001 010—2 8 1 0 gs 1|Press.)—Much of the sting appeared drawn today from s amounting to s ton dollars, will be asked to y Refusal of Hard Coal Workers to Join | %0',:'s 239 before the state boars on August ta the uplands last night, we under the then unratified treaties of | Pittsburgh 000 001 002 th 1 1 strike: tk i tl akin: turning to their homes tod r , . July and September, 1868, and that] Batteries: Haines and O'Farrell; the general coal strike threat made to the government on | specifies that | of such cases a night spent in uptown ho 1 Entombed by Explosion While some other lands in Montana were | Yde and Gooch, Smith, Tuesday by Van A. Bittner, chief union organizer of West | ' held within so from th rooming houses. Many of the floc ‘ * taken from them and restored as ‘ Virginia of fil ‘ ter’ petitions eft housed in the Cer z public domain by an executive order| At Boston (Ist game)— . H. E. . ‘ A Scott ar n in equalizatio tonite eonoen brilicSitn on the nort! Fighting Mine Blaze on August 19, 1874, New York 000 006 102. 10 0 Hard coal miners themselves were said to have exploded | , a Picher ot at a tof atar H side of the river, which was thrown Aes = The contention was advanced that | Boston 000 105 00x—6 12 | chance of any serious danger when = at giana open ag a shelter after the first congress by an act of May 11, 1910. Batteries: Bentley and Gowdy; oud anety esterd hat pie, branch sD i 000,000 that had been cloudburst drove hundreds of low ROCKWOOD, Tenn., July 28.—(By The Associated |tock away trom the Indians thelr | Cooney and Seimer, OF the indhatry was not’ to’ be count: l , to ach turned in’ by th i ; Sere hanh ‘ ’ re . c ; ed in on any strike plans ‘ nd dwellers to higher ground. | yo.) William J. Snow, superintendent of the Roane | ‘shts to hunt and fish and cut tim pip ieo aay etre eC 23P anes At it ahd’ fetinine 7 borbantek,- Attire _— | x : ber in what is now Glacier national| At Boston (2nd game)— R.H. E. miners said ‘definitely they hearings extending over riod of Iron company coal mines, and a party of six men who went | park. New Wack 001 010-5 12 1] ere one with the operators in the x ; hearing 5 r a perio Boston 9 010 000-3 11 1 | Understanding that hard coal and soft Chian Field a wpe: One earee nee Knight Templar into Bryson Dip on No. 7 entry to combat a mine fire last the Knights Temr ———___—_ |night were trapped behind an explosion early today and 2 Batterie rr pe and Snyder; aed sien TURE he Sams separate _ ke ire ° : (9) grave fears are entertained for their safety. bagi: Ms - 20! ne! breach negitiated to replaée the one In One D A the state board Chief Dies TU)” ars Dip is the scene of a fire, damp gas, It 1s said that he only AMERICAN LEAGUE expiring August | , AY | | 10 the form ot « me $5,000,000 in t me time ago and | managed to escape by leaping into a At Detroit— R.H.E,| The operators have asked thnt the | pe that r enennes rey 24 « v 1 up in an att mule-drawn mine car and out-run Chie 3 * 6 | miners 6 toc work after ef oe A Loess Tt ie Drote os ’ Visit to Par nono ee | miners agre aie ae t s t. 1 f »-| ning the deadly gas cloud, and that Dee oe T77Tog0 o1—*_* * | Septembe egarc of ether | ,, | w presence of| when he reached the main stope Batteries: Thurston, Connally and | ntract ned it y|° v > | : r ‘ a eens warty, Danaea hy, 78 es | At St. Louis— RH. E. | Phe t | | aa <ing went | y to save the - Cleveland eer an 1—* © © offer, w be s ted by ¥ 1 A and ala 1 | entrapped men today. LARAMIE, Wyo. 3.—) : ae) @ ©] Cool . ae , | In "Babe i 4 : as sc in Glac nl }| <A doctor has stationed at] Earl I er of I a4 a} h and Myatt; Gas- | gree themselve eld | aix tr | ‘ x te dispatch received here from| J the mouth of the mines to ad-| school teacher enroute to ie | con; Vandeléer aul Dixon, Oi ale Bee 1 the huge Martin bomber that TREAT toxe8 ¥ area spatch recely | < ‘ : for the second term of the univer-| ‘ | y} Stopped her ran hed hurriedly a at M “, ‘ember of his part ul K. K minister first ald .if anyone is | ht ek h SI B , i a DAE Teer ta Opnolare| f brought out allve. Officers are keep- | 8ity summer school, was fatally in:| 4¢ New: York= RHE F ather rot y 8 m § Mount Sheil, 16. chavesh at Seattle. ing back crowds from the mine |Jured in an automobile accident on | washington 031 o20—" © © ight. | board was being bor , z and was loft } mouth. Excitement in the city js|the Lincoln highway, 14 miles east | New York Dunbar’s mes {ng home with Commander mainder of e said he was!to 1 is re terday after 1 up by the filers on their cal hospit running high, This {g the most | of Laramie late y |" Batteries: Zachary, Marberry and | - Girl in Defense ocker, Shawkey and Ben- to t { the fire shortly | serious accident in the district in}and died in a sn explo-| the fifty years the coal mines have|™orning. Mrs. Parker Mrs. W. C. Vernon of Douglas were] Ag phitadelpl RULE making the trip from Dough Boston ..._....000 001 210—1 10 1 3 Laramie in a lght car, Mrs. Vernon | philadelphia ..002 010 20x—5 11 1| 8T. LOUIS, Mo., Ju By The | mercial § (Continued on 'Page Ten) driving. In turning out io peri Batteries; Ruffing and Heving; | A%80ciated Press)—In defense of her a two other cars to pass, the car! Rommel and Co mother, Dorothy Holmes, 15, bobbed | driven by Mrs. Vernon skidded in oe aN haired high school student, last =F | IG HTEST iH '@) PE loose sand and turned over, cc ing night shot and serious! inded her4 to rest right side up. Mrs. Parker father, Burton Holmes, 60, a pharm. | sustained several broken ribs and a cist, at their St, Louis count | om span abled ex-service man, was painfully nded in the left shoulder. attri injured, but Mrs. Vernon escaped uted the shooting to the reading of .§ ammemee|Dawescers | UN INGHEASE omoscetOUT FOR SCOTT with his wife and child, were visit- 6 been Falls Victim to Bandit Gang in Raid ing Palmer's ranch which ts in the “When father came in,” Dorot f Manchurian pré vince of Kirin, when 10 CHICAGO, July (Asnoctated | told a ity, aheritf, and: starts | ' E i on Sungari River Ranch; Hospital |"satwtrm main 0, | RANCH REST |r Kenai, ose” iol nie nme rca ope soe| Appearance of Brother ‘Alleged to Have Howard last night, was still in - in a report issued today by the Unt] then toc Specialist Taken Prisoner captivity; the others are “safe for] DENVER, Colo., July 23.—Follow:| ted States department of agriculture. | er drawer the present,” but thelr whereabouts | tng his address here last night, Vice-| An increase of per cent In the ——e—___ is not known. The American consul | Preyident Charles G, Dawes today in| lamb crop over Inst year and a per . ‘ N at Mukden, Samuel Sokobin, has|taking a brief rest from his stren-| centage of yearling ewes in breed ssociated Press.) —Mor- | gone to see the military governor | uous tour of Colorado and Wyoming,|ing flocks more than sufficient for the mother and daughter said shown | club and broke it on his head he revolver from a dees] Committed Crime ‘All That Can Save Condemned Slayer PEKING, July 28.—(By The 4 in Palmer, an American, has been killed by bandits at|or Kirin tn an effort to effect the|at the Ken-Caryl ranch near here,|replacements are apparent, accord CHICAGO, July 23.—(By The Associated Press.) —On I his ranch on the Sungari river near Harbin. Dr. Howard, | release of Dr. Howard as the misatvet JohniGAaincer.- ‘aw te the report. EE SAFE BLOWERS the slender thread of remote possibility hangs the chance al 8 ry é —_—— lock to! 3 ce. eased lamb crop is 4 f a1] Se ne " . 5 &n eye specialist attached to the Rockefeller hospital, waS} yew yoRK, July 23.—(Asso-| president, hia wife and members of | increases in the #0 called “native of Tate ae oe to escape the noose, waiting for him on the H captured at the same time. ciated Press.) —Morgan Palmer, | his. party, will Jeave for Cheyenne,| sheep states, the western states — galows tree at sunrise tomorrow. : i The Rockefeller hospital has been advised that Dr, | killed by bandits in Manchuria, for | Wyoming, to attend the Frontier {showing a decrease. The tendency} CHICAGO, July 23—One man This possibility depends on a hearing for clemency , rd'a Eate ate ans to toate on & ree r+ was killed on July| merly lived in Plattsburgh, Y¥.| Days celebration tomorrow to expansion Is most marked In na-| was killed and two injured by safe] which attorneys insist they have arranged with Governor ¥ 2 Y at cred a ding hig property | He was an engineer and after many The party will return to Denver |tive farm flocks and in small flocks | blowers who attacked them in the|@mall and the last minute appea » eleventh } her Per pe ; pe ie SM ee gma Pee years with the Chinese railways | Saturday to rest over Sunda in the western states joffices of the Cascade laundries on! ance of Robert, his brothe Neted 1} t wabinisher, ein’ thane { the ene ee nd his mother, Dr.| joined the American Red Cross for] They will then go to Wagon Wheel| Enlarged production e “nas|the south side. Arthur I er| with t but never four t yee a inmee ad ; alt Administration in Peking} and’ iis wan oiwiee nl service in Siberia and China, As alGap, and possibly to Monte Vista, | tive’ at is mtieibut efly to] owner of the tnund ‘ vittedel tase? bepbedlon , ma } fred some time ago to it 4 named Baldwin of | field agent during the great Chinese] and Rifle, Colorado return: |the incrensed num of f |The robbers esea th an unde-| Josey M irug ‘Ar ' he haves ! Resins: pias - lt Chinll province, together (Continued oo Pugs Six) ing tq Chicago 4 I handling sheep. |termined sum bholdup a year ag | vacaad ‘ ae : ‘ ‘