Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 12, 1925, Page 2

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7] PAGE TWO MILE OF TRAGK | WASHED OUT ON. UNION PACIFIC All Trains Held Up by Flood Between Rock | Springs and Rawlins. LARAMIE, W 2.—All trains on the Union Pacific main were affe this enoon by mile. westbound of between bridge near Da persons nd er and intermed points compelled to go by way of Cheyenne PRES, LYNCH OF TYPO UNION 1S, AENOMINATED KALAMAZOO, Mic! i) M, Union wil 8 for re-election if he will a nomination offered him by the ministration campaign committee, and, statesmen, and she may Fred N. Cornell of New York an-| Once more plutige-Burope into war nounced today following a meeting | J0S8t-as,the assassination of Arch- of the committee. Selection of the international offi-| in 1914 broug cers will be made by referendum | European war next May. A majority of the admin-| may istration candidates are seeking re-| Complete Buroy election. | Would Me The administration candidates From the will run upon. the record’made by} Herthern Spain Mr. Lynch and his executive coun-| ceasele we cil,” Mr. Cornell said throne of Hur ticket of the admin-| 59M. Otto, 13, The complete Ist y ration pe y agreed upon at today’s meeting follows Lynch for vice presi-| 4 der Seth I le Angeles;| ™ second y lent Austin How-| ? son, New York City; tory-treas. | | urer J. W, Hays, Indianapolis; del. egater the rican Federation | of Labor, John C. Harding, Chicago: | P' William Young, Philadelphia; 'Theo- | jore W. McCullough, Omaha; Max eland and James Simp. Ont; delegate to the| cor s of Canada, | Que trustees of | e union printers Lewis M Yo: > French Quake | Upsets Chair OUR TRIP THROUGH TH MOUNTAINS |S GOING To } ‘ MEAN A SAVING ‘TO ME- f& t UM GoING To LET Nv AND ULL BOY IT COMING BACK BECAUSE WE CAN COAST A LOT / canned s __ EUROPE FEARS EX-EMPRESS ZITA WILL START NEW WAR al Pre ine of owing her w SPREE ROE so. SSS = aring a Hapsburg crown, and a of her s on, “King’’ Otto, By JACKSON V. JACOBS ss Correspondent) | 12 WOMAN ign off: c jore | an p le woman Is the woman in Europe ne st ambitious, | mined and the most women ex her schemes runs ht abi ut the e's ru age ¢ the rking during his minority Hungary still call iral H 1 ists are ri 7k upon Zita's elde htful } The ack in Budapest ated by being made ‘ move —THE ss of Austria the plans of the powerful duké Franz Werdinand at Sarajavo out Zita’s next Balkan ‘Trouble of Lea ex-e get t r he st son dream with ufter MOST y EL | on] nd rred great plot one and sitio pre in r eldest s regent the of them the him Horthy Paladin.” formally heart and high hopes. crowning Otto would be an attempt to overthrow the republic of Aus- tria and join it to Hungary under crown. Austrian has several times indicated her desire to unite Germany, but the allies won't y it. They would probably be s much opposed to her union Hungary, »umania, Czecho-Slovakia and Jugo+ ja would probably go to war rather than allow Zita’s son take the thrown, back hugé slice: These states got of Austrian and Hungarian territory that formerly belonged to them. They fear an ag- gressive Hungary under an ambi- tious woman like Zita would cause trouble for them, Nobles Back Move ‘The Hungarian Royalist move has the support of the two proudest and most powerful Magyar nobles in the county—Counts Apponyl and An Apponyl publicly stated recently that monarchy Was the only possible regime for Hungary if it wanted to wvold anarchy on one side and dic- tatorship on the other. He claimed monarchy conformed to the “‘demo- cratic aspirations” of the people. In the meantime Zita {s living in enteel poverty in a house supplied her by the king of Spain. Her ‘COU consists of two or three faithful retainers who followed her into exile and who have helped her with her elght children. Today she is a weak woman, save for her stout MENL I HINT Breakfast, Luncheon. dinner Coffee TODAY'S RECIPE twelt. gar ONS to make Canned peas mixed with with powdered ter nickel squeezers, follow the events pictured in “MOM'N POP,’ f Starting on August 15 the Gunn s 1 Intd « Tyte families agree to share exper \ , trip. Pop Gunn's trou collect from Tyte form the basis , of fun in th mie strip miss the laughs, EHO - MORTON an at or in bak- | nough in any creamed make an easy and nn to gather a dish or Yaspberries k them with thelr ar picked, Wash a dish or bow! sare picked, Wash ugar and let them hing the petais | th gasoline. | To fit any candle to any holder dip it for a moment into yery hot This will soften the wax easily inserted water. T that can t 1 bed with a m th ghiy and yet will not cracks that appear in floor steep white tissue pa- per in water until ft is soft. Then kneed it thoroughly into a paste with glu and color it with orchres to match as nearly as possible the floor on which it is to be used. Add 1. ide magnesia and stuff the mixtu into the cracks or holes. A tiny corner of mint planted with the rest of the garden will furnish mint sauce for lamb, mint flavoring for jellies and a pleasing garnish for summer drinks. When in a hurry to serve’ baked potatoes, wash and boll them for about 12 minutes. Drain, Pop into a hot oven and in ten minutes they will lously done—light and meally GOLD FIELDS CONCESSION IS APPROVED be del MOSCOW, Aug. 12.—(Assoctated Press).—The Lena gold fields conces- sion, provisionally granted the An- glo-American syndicate by the Rus sian Soviet concessions. committee in May, was ratified today by the uncil of commissare. The Lena gold fields concession ie the largest concession yet made by the Soviet, It takes the form of a fifty-year contract with the British | Lena Gold Fi@lds corporation for the | of the Le | which are a gold fields estimated to | more than — $100,000,000 rth of gold. American banking téreats participate to the extent of per cent In the investment, SUCCESSOR TO WARSECRETARY 5 CONSIDERED Weeks Retirement This Fall Held Certain by Officials. SHINGTON, W. Aug. 12.—(By The Associated Press)—Renewed in- dications that Secretary Weeks will retire as head of the War depart- ment were followed today b prep- arations in several quarters to before President Coolids quali fications of various potential candi dates for the vacanc It is likely that a great number of names will be submitted to the President by Senators and party leaders. The first question Mr, Coolidge will have to decide is whether to go out side his cabinet in haming his new secretary of w Among the cab inet members are two whose names have been held in mind in such ten- tative consideration as he has given to the matter. Secretary Work, as head successively of the postoffice and {nterior departments has made an administrative record of which Mr. Coolidge thinks highly and has some knowledge of army adminis. tration through his service in the world war. Postmaster General New, a Spanish War veteran and a former member of the senate mili- tary committee, likewise Is regarded by the chief executive as a man of demonstrated fitness for the war | portfolio. Some of the Republican leaders have pointed out to Mr. Coolidge however, that a shift of elther Mr. Work or Mr. New to the war depart- ment, would, by creating another yacancy, make it necessary that two members of the reconstituted offi clal family instead of one would have to learn the particular ins and outs of the official machinery placed under their care. Among those outside the present cabinet , Charles D. Hilles of New York 1s conceded to rank high among the availables, but one influential section of the Republican leadership in Washington will advise strongly that the President look to the west to supply the cabinet appointee. Western senators have a number of names they want to present, WIDOW. FROWNS ON MEMORIAL DRIVE: PROGRAM Nation-Wide Campaign for Funds Opposed by Mrs. Bryan. NEW YORK, Aug. 12.—(By The Associated Press)—Plans for a nation wide drive to raise funds for a mem- orial to William Jennings Bryan in Florida have been frowned on by the Commoner’s widow. A memor- ial in Arlington Cemetery at Wash- ington is the only one she has ap- proved Announcement of the Florida me- morlal was made here. yesterday by Miss Dionesa Bryan Evans, who sald she was Mr, Bryan's god-daughter. A site on the shore of Lake Okeech- obee, Clewiston, Florida, she said had been donated and the monument would picture the fundamentalist r standing erect, surrounded by children Mrs. Br ggeste WOMAN DRAWS JAIL TERM FOR HURLING LYE POWHATTAN COURTHOUSE Virginia, Aug. 12.—(By The Asso: clated Press}—Mrs, Maggie B, Nich olls, w enced to three months in jai] and fined $500 in circuit court yesterday for throwing a bucket of lye water into the face of Mrs. Hor tense Y. Mitchell Testimony developed Nicholls hea the Ife Mrs. Mitchell, who is superintendent of the Rocky Oak Methodist church Sunday school, r husband, J. E. Mitchell, and their two young child ren, when she met thém May 10 on their way to.church. All were badly burned. The trouble hetween the two wo men was alleged to have arisen over a letter from Mra, Mitchell to Frank C. Nicholls, the defendant's husband teacher of the men’s bible class at the church, FLY-TOX Ecoay BOTYLEG wiih al that water Mrs Here is Imperial! Wizard Hiram silk n° Washington, D. C. PITTSBURGH, Pa., Aug. 12.—(By The Asfociated Press). — Facing death from a sudden {llness to; Kavanaugh Jacobs, night telegraph ope for the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie railroad at Monongahel here, threw on the red signals to stop all trains'a few minutes before robes leading the parade of Klansmen down Penni W. Evans, center, and his aides in ylvania avenue OPERATOR STOPS ALL TRAINS BEFORE FALLING DEAD AT KEY he" fell across his “key, dead, from an attack of acute _ indigestion. Trains on the division were “halted for.more than an hour until an- other operator could be sent to man the wir Earlier in the night, Jacobs had summoned a physician, but had de- clifed to leave his post.. YOUNG MOTHER DRIVEN OUTSIDE GIVES BIRTH | TO CHILD AT ROADSIDE CHICAGO, Aug. 12.—(By The Associated Prees).—Deserted by her husband and father and evict- ed from her only home. Mrs, Anne Cooper, 19, gave birth to a child as she Jay on the roadside in the village of Phoenix, southwest of baby died in a few hours r in an infirmary where it and the mother were taken in a hearse because no ambulance was avail- able. Physicians there attributed the death to exposure and prema- 800 Casualties To French Army Are Reported PARIS, Aug. 12.—(By The. Asso: clated Press)}—The French suffered total of $00 casualties, including killed, wounded and missing, in their recent engagements with Druse tribesmen in the Jebel Druse district of Syria, Premier Painleye announ- ced after @ cabinet meeting today. These figures were based on a dis- patch from General Sarrail, French Righ commissioner in Syria, received by the ministry of war-today. ture bjrth induced by the sight of a pistol in the hands of the evict- Ing constable, Investigation by the coroner will be asked and an inquest held. The mother is in q serious con- dition, Mrs. Cooper is one of eleven children, Since her father de- serted them three years ago, their mother, Mrs. John Max, and the elder children earned a pittance by working for farmers. They fell beldnd in their rent. Then Mrs. Cooper's husband left. Mrs. Max said the constable had evict- ed them after telling them they were squatters and giving them a week to move. No matter how severe or deep seated the skin trouble m. be, it usually responds to the comforting, healing toucho Resinol WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1925 SPORTSMEN TO ROLO MEETING IN THT CITY State Association Is Sponsoring Plans for Gathering. T. C. Thompson of Cheyenne, field secretary for the Wyoming State Sportsmen's association, is spending a few days in Casper, ar- ranging for a meeting with local sportemen to renew interest in the state-wide association. , “The sportsmen all over the state are awakening to a realization that only by concerted action can anything in the way of educating the people to respect the game and fish laws and securing needed legis. lation be accomplished,” said Mr. Tilrompson this morning. "All the clties down the line, including Douglas, Glenrock and Wheatland, are organizing associations, arrang- ing to stock the streams in their territory and seeing that the game laws are respected. The State Sportsmen's association is non-politi- cal in character, and will receive into membership any good citizen who wants to help protect our game and fish and. perpetuate our wild lite, which is the state's greatest asset.” Mr. Thompson is laying plans for a big meeting of sportsmen in Cas- per some time next Week, to which the public will be invited. He is jens this afternoon for a meeting in Wheatland. James Seller Laid 'At Rest Today Funeral services were held at the Lorton Funeral homes at 0 this afternoon for James Seller, aged in- mate of the City-County home who died early in the week. Burial was made in Highland cemetery, Sa Dr. M. C. Kelth moved to rooms 7. 8, 9 and 10, Stockmen’s National Bank Building. German Towns + Are Laid Waste By Tornadoes LONDON, Aug. 12.—(By The Ans- sociated Press}—The tornado which swept through eastern Holland Mon- day night with the loss of twelve lives and. the destruction of several towns continued into northern Ger- many yesterday. Meagre reports in- dicate further destruction was wrought fn villages and farms in this sparsely populated district. Wetersen, 15 miles northwest of Altona, in Schleswig-Holstein is re- ported almost entirely demolished, The storm continued to the .neigh- borhoods of Hamburg, Bremen and Lubeck, causing heavy property loss, Two persons’ were killed at Neuen- deich by flying tiles from roofs but thus far no other deaths were re- ported from Germany, although sey- eral hundred persons were injured by falling debris. The injured in Holland now num- ber 400 and the homeless more than 24,000, Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION SELL-ANS 25¢ and 75¢ Packuges Everywhere $6 Photograph $6 Special Nine regular $12.00 per dozen Photos and one Panel — threw | different positions. $6 CREDELL . STUDIO Phone 2702. 131 S. Center St. DOWN STAIRS Under Sprecher’s Pharmacy Breakfast Room Set Wicker Library Table Duofold ~.-.-_____ Electric Washer _ Wardrobe Trunk ~ Refrigerator © Alec Do Packin 242 West First St. HUNTER-GOLL NEW AND USED FURNITURE and 8 Rockers_ jg and Cra\ Every day some tired, prosperous or otherwise travel- \ inclined man says to his wife, “Let’s go to California!” And such is the power of advertising that, although neither of them may ever have been there before, they | know just.how to go, approximately what it will cost, and where they will want to stay. The same with anything you may need or want. You already know all about it, by whom it is made, what it costs, and where it is for sale. Advertising is the modern intelligencer. It keeps you informed, advises you of new things, suggests new uses for articles you already own, and prepares you today for wise and useful purchases to- morrow. It does all this for you, almost unconsciously, during the half-hour or so you spend each day with your news- paper. Little by little—the best and surest way to learn— advertising makes you informed of what is going on in the world that is useful to you. . ee READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS. GET READY FOR TOMORROW. (act

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