Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 23, 1925, Page 2

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PAGE TWO SHIPS ESCAPE. HEAVY DAMAGE. N COLLISION Radio Calls Fill Air for Time as Crash | Is Reported. | Wreck WPQRT, ss)—The and | that | and | Harvester had putto. pea fore | folowing s that swept two squa cipal apron | mated at $500,000 se anthe abet ict was of | facilities rated on pla WH Wyoming which saved many frém IAT IS be sent and the rd cutter Cassin started for the | By REV. WILLIS H. Then ca w r to er eded ar I R said that the R the ¢ w aged while for Z bef or € of fu t porary re i appears the n avert t rh Se FS | wh ci | d t bi as a 1 La | , This i t in ¢ | industrial i sti } “Under t eclal GERMANY, THE Mi! Exploitation by White Worl ing Company Wrecked by Flames " se aetapg anagem ape blocks of building , machinery and lumber. Explosion of 1,600 gallons of gasoline spread the blaze over a wide area, c The loss is esti- d Blamed VPTER IN CHINA? by Local Minister uth. In all justice, ‘There is a gross orelgners fixing the r goods for tariff collec the tariff rates, collect from themselves, keep- their own hands until they at is due them as in yal from the Chinese nt, then turning over to ment at Peking what is this oppression the Chi- | idents are rebelling. These js are the buttress of China's ‘ They are the embodi- Y ne Chinese resentment at foreign aggression. Behind the stu- Bn nd the merchants, behind nts are the artisans, be- tisans are the farmers.” 1e ip utterly dense as to the on- | ward sweep of progress to think that n conflict would not finally result between these opposing forces. Mr. nd Mrs, General Public have likely read how that war is raging in China, {gnorant of the background which made open conflict inevitable. The following trustworthy reports will indicate something of the tense ituntion. In June the New York | World carrle@ this dispatch, “The | trouble started when a foreign mill guard killed a Chinese striker. Chi nese students, armed with handbills, | paraded in protest against such a ruth method of handling an in- a ed th | le t uv n their pr en to t tinct disac From Page One) th of’cheap labor n k to her bables, a girl] jn China no labor 1 pro d Heathman confessed tg her | without regard to | in t pois when cor hun involved, Tt hav nted with a letter she had written | worked women and children Ic to Amos telling him that {f he sent| hours for a m pittance. Ther € he soon wo eT hi it ums and ammu ir way.” | nitions, Much r war material ! as infatuated with | was 1 ( de ut at her husband's | mana unned! to elope. | supply 1 detectives that Mrs. | nations i ingly 1 Heathman had confessed implica-| ested in t China Investment r Amos admitted his part in| ‘rhe race for wealth pr apace “I was under her spell,""| without regard for’ Chinese right Hundred of foreigners in China seem hman became fll ten days ago. | to do business on the theory that ns say he will recover. China has no rights in the matter This fudgirys on Chinese sovere!, AOBBER SLAIN ty is further evidenced by what known as “Extraterritorial Rights that is en ¢ ts and laws ar cities. That the ¢ e are smart under this is evidenced by such sen: | timent, “If a n chooses to live in | another eou has right to do ' filled with 1 Seer on earth. They tom 1 tra (Continued From Page One) | ; ect! ‘ i te M automobile windshields of America, and. yet, when they | were sha 1 by bullets and some | ,. America ts th | machines led with lead. Beeler | by American laws was the bystander hit by the | f es to live in of I 1 i t Several auto riders probably saved | Gwr jaw y 1 hman t lives by lying down on the| iby I 1 rules, the Eng s of thelr machines until the English rul d th Two other members of the bandit The tari t another biis F who escaped during the ex-| tor festering of progre « ment of battle were sought by - — dustrial issue. such a pretest and arrested a num of students for taking part In it. The studerits then demonstrated in front of the police station, demand- the rele of their fellows. n they did not disperse at police nd, a forelgn police inspector dered, ‘Shoot to kill’ Firing by 1 controlled police continued x days. in At least Chinese) w nd 300 ‘It is interesting to ob t not a single foreign name ed in the casualty list! New World under dat rries a dispateh. from al of China, Feng We Chinere have been red ruthlessly by British po- id trooys. The British have fla disregarded the ‘sovereignty und have treated the Chi people as though the latter were than hens and dogs. Grieved a unfortunate lot their the students conducted a campaign, but the British tion without any jus nristi Yu Hsiang, bu th of fellow turing police toc of 150 heavily armed offi- toni; Soneepeere=neetitieeeteess MATRIGIDE 13 FOUND GUILTY r that she | ted m score of times | rt room and on one oe- | } a paper cup full of | of her attorneys, Sy! er IcAtee. He withdrew from er det in the second tri | al which was ce pital mmitted to and disc cured on dicitis and further | ~-—__— SUOPEGTO ARE t ds pre been an attempt to} ince three ¢ whis und fn th © a masseuse and m i ‘ uined s well as perfor re ties. Kor fashior 1 eye on thick unfortunate them arlety of red ndaging the ankles nightly. ate } are seen working in the debris, Tank Collapse Causes Fatal Delug Thirty thousand gallons of water deluged the stree killing and injuring several persons, when a water tank collapsed at masaag a manufacturing plant in 27th strect, New York e t suddenly, City. Firemen Foreign police forbade | ufication and fired upon the un- armed students. As a result, the bod- jes of the dend and injuréd Jay in a pile at Hankow and Canton. Now the British are engaged in perpetrat- ing relentless and inhuman acts by means of their superior equipment of machine guns and cannon.” Raymond Thomas-Rich, of Boston, instructor of economics and soci- ology at Canton Christian college, gives this graphic account of the Canton tragédy, “About 4 o'clock my afternoon nap was cut short by the sound of gun firing from the di- rection of Canton. It was not long thereafter that I heard excited stu- dent voices, saw a stretcher being brought up the path toward the in- firmary, and then to my utter amaze- ment, saw stadent after student come straggling into the campus with mud and blood stained clothes. Upon every face was written con- sternation and horror, They had been fired upon by the troops on the French and British possessions.” Can it be possible that any Ameri- can fails to see the parallel between what is going on in China today and what transpired in this country dur- ing those pre-Revolutionary days? Those colonists fired a shot which was heard around the world, and when the smoke cleared away we were an free and independent peo- ple. China is passing through that same evolutionary stage, China {s in the throes of a new birth, The white man had best withdraw his interest from petty material invest- ments to a winning of the good-will and friendship of this mighty race aborning, else the stone which might have adorned the corner will become a millstone about his neck, and the powerful backward nations, having come into their own, falling back upon the white man's chief defense —force—will grind him to powder, $< AIRPLANES OF “WMILLAN ARE ALL USELESS WASHIN! NY, Aug. 22. — The same cruel and lonely arctle—but more so, This was the motif of a long ra- dio dispatch received by the Nation- ol Geographic society here tonight from its correspondent, Maynard Owen Willlams, aboard the MacMil- Ian expedition ship Bowdoin, Pan- dora Harbor, Greenland, Describing the hardships and handicaps of the naval flyers who fated to reach the Polar sea in search for a hypothetical arctic land, Willams sal “Under the conditions we had this summer, it almost seemed aa if an alrplane flying over the beach where the Charles Frances Hall arctic ship, the Polar } more was w helples teen men 100 mi recked, is actually than were the nine nd women who floated nan ice pack to the coast ‘ador." sESdtdeasp: shrd shrd shrd shrdl Ocean Flight Plane On Way To Frisco Base NORTHHEAD, Wash., Aug. 22.— (United Press.)—The flying PB-1 enroute from Seattle to San Fran clsco left Neah Bay, Wash., for Coos Bay, Ore., at 12:50 p, m. today, ac- | cording to advices by wireless re ceived by the radio station here this afternoon. ‘The plane is one of the three which will undertake a flight from San Francisco to Hawaii, A broken off line forced the PB-1 to descend at Neah Bay, where the dama was repair without trouble in about two hours. The machine encountered heavy Weather just before landing The message said the plane would remain in Coos Bay over night, Livestock ATLANTA—The stafe {s now en- Urely free from cattle tick, and cat- tle raising has increased tremend ously The value of hides alone gained $250,000, When a British judge is first ele | vated to the bench he has to pro- vide himself with different sets of robes at a cost which may ex ceed $2,000, Reven be Casper Sunday Cribune MMA STRIBLING [o INJURED Ao CAR OVERTURNS Twenty Stitches Taken in Head; Auto Tour Is Delayed. 2.—Injuries sus- Ma” Stribling, mother of Young Stiibling, Geor whiz, here | this morning. will keep her in this city for several days causing a de- | lay In thelr transcontinental tour in Senator their mobile bungalow, well equip: ped trav bus. Young Stribling, | who is scheduled to fight in El Paso | Monday night continued their trip this afternoon with other member of the party with “Pa! Stribling re: maining here. The accident | occurred when the| roadster which she was driving hit | sand washed into the road from heavy rains at 7:30 a. m. this morn- ing twenty-five miles north of Tuc-| son. roadster was traveling | just ahead of the large touring bus. “Re tzsImmons, who was with her at time, was only slightly injured. Twenty-four stitches were taken in the cut on Mrs. Stribling’s head. The accident is the second to mar the present barnstorming trip of the Striblings, as three weeks ago Mr. Stribling and-C, P, Bethea the chauf- feur were {njured when an airplane in which they were riding in. Salt Lake City fell from an elevation of 100 feet. GAS PAIGE WAR 5 OPENED IN MIDDLE WEST Week-End Motorists to Find Bargains in Motor Fuel. CHICAGO, Aug. Press.}—Motorists of half a dozen western cities today prepared to take week-end outings on gasoline bought at baygain prices as a result of a “War” between ofl companies which became epidemic in- widely separated localities as the day wore on. Two price cuts within six hours were reported from Lincoln, Nebr., where a municipally-conducted fill- ing station succeeded in bringing gasoline down to 17 cents a gallon. The municipal station in Indian- apolis under cut the Standard and other blg companies enou to bring the price down to 19 cents, In South Dakota, where the state government Is retailing gasoline in attempt to break the “oll trust,” all except two small town of Woodsocket, were forced to suspend business because tne state: owned station was offering gasoline at 17 cents, In other cities the war was t tween big companies and independ ents at Decatur, Ill, this compet! tion drove the prevailing price down to 15 cents per gallon. Residents of Wichita, Kans., were enjoying all the gasoline their tanks would hold at 15,8 cents and in Kansas City, Mo,, the price was forced down to 19 cents. the 22.— (United stations in the What dry agents thought at fi out to be a rich capture when the coal on the bunkers of the steamer and found 3,000 cases of whisky, indicute another 2,500 cases | examining the find, z were landed, First yielded only 16 bottles ef liquor. Phillip Eltin, the pdrt of New York, and an aide, @ Mrs. Rizpah S. Ladd, widow of the late senator from North | Ladd’s Widow in Line for Appointment as Succes SUNDAY, AUGUST 23,-1925 (FAST COAST IN Dakota, may be named to succeed her husband and becomé first | woman to actually sit in senate, was taken at the Ladd home in Washington. it is indicated. This new MAN FALLS DOWN SIDE OF HILL WITH TRUCK | AND TNT AND LIVES) SHERIDAD Aug. Rod McDonald, truck driver, fell 20 feet down the Big Horn mountains with a thousand pounds of 'T. N, T.— and is living to tell the tale. The driver, who had been a ranger on the Big Horn national forest and for the past two years has been driy- ing a truck for construction work on the Sheridan-Lovell highway, drove off the road about eight miles south- west of Dayton. The truck, the T. N. T. and the driver fell straight down 20 feet and stopped against a tree. McDonald crawled out and made his way nearly to the road before he collapsed. Shortly before noon a Dayton man named Neese found him, and took him to Dayton. Thurs- day morning he was taken to the Sheridan County Memorial ‘hospital The patient hag no broken bones, but has severe bruises and lacera- tions, according to Dr. C. EB. Stev- enson, his physician. McDonald is badly shaken and is unable to tell a AUTOISTS WHO CHASE HIRE TRUCKS TO BE PROSECUTED, WARNING Autoists who follow fire trucks will be prosecuted, under the pro- visions of sections 34, 35 and 36 of the traffic ordinance, A. T, Patrick, chief of police said. Considerable danger arises from the practice, since it makes it difficult in case ofa nd alarm to send out other apparatus or to rush an ambulance to the scene, Twenty-five cars fol- lowed trucks to a fire yesterday it morning. Rum Raiders, Balked in First Search Find 3,000 Cases Under Coal in Second rst to be an empty catch turned y dug dgwn under 2,000 tons of ugusta,” seized off New York Papers found aboard the vessel 1 earch of the craft ip I ge (left), collector of » William R. Saunders are seen of the accident. It is er, that the steering | gear must have locked. McDonald's watch was stopped at 10: ‘clock and it is believed that | that Is the hour the accident occur- | red. If the load had happened to be dynamite instead of I. N. T., the} truck and the man would have been blown to atoms, forest officials say. Unlike dynamite, it {s difficult to discharge T. N. T. by a blow. Us- ually it is set off by No. 8 dynamite Donald is believed to be about ars of ad ee te SHIP LOCKED IN ICE THREE YEARS IS FREE NOME, Alaska, Aug. 22.—(United Press).—Coming out of the Arctic sea, which once nearly crushed her, | the Amundsen ship, Maude, was oft | Nome tonight, her long cruise near | an end. | The vessel was sighted 15 miles off this port this evening, proceeding under her own wer and sail, Ar- rival was apparently several days ahead of her schedule. Results of the scientific angles of the three-year trip of the vessel through polar seas drifting with the ice, may not be known for some time, but it is reported all the crew are returning well and unharmed, and the vessel is undamaged. pin athe hede lls be Passengers On Ferry Leap To Escape Blaze NEW ORL (United Press.) werd forced to Lake Ponchar the ferry b« tween New in late today, ithland ply Orleans and on the return ve ge by fire. © lives were lost bu: persons were injured The fire which started in room was discovered by which had been trailing in the wa of the ferry boat. The yacht p alongside the Southland and the alarm, Two life boats lowered from the burning the 75 passengers transfer: other ferry boat the 8, T, 16 ofl cht gave were easel and d to an Tammany, | which was in the vicinity. ‘The Southland. and its furnishings to gether with 15 automobiles, were | destroyed. —.—_____. LIGHT AUTO HAS BEST OF THAFFIC. CRASH | Driving on the wrong side of thy street, car bearing an Ontario | license, collided with a light car this eve on Center street. The light but the | Canadian cy battered The light car was driven by Jake Mackin of Salt Creek here were no injuries to persons, rests were made. A eal a A crane is called a derrick from the name of Derrick, a famous Lon- don hangman who made gibbets in the seventeenth century. and no ar The prisons in England and Wales now number about forty in all. More than a score of prisons have been closed since 1914 —————____ Tell the Advertiser — "Saw Mt in The Tribune, photo | °! Me 22 GRIP OF COLD WAVE, REPORT Warm Temperatures in West as Atlantic Feels Chill. CHICAGO, Aug. 22.(United Press) An unseasonable cold wave‘ls skip. oss the country, Striking un in areas where the heat most intense and leaving ares far aboye normal in uke, the federal weather bur- u here announced tonight. Following three days of the hottest uther since early June. in © the middle west, brisk northwester: the temperature 4 s and forties yesterd The wave of cold then ack eastward, reaching the eaboard today, hill breeze pa an climbing until thr central states. today temper aged six degrees higher al for late August. neously another cold aren in the region of Barker tish Columbia. The ‘weather nouncement indicated the aperatures and’ win the last several days left “un. s the only safe forecast. region of the great lakes and Missour! valleys ed showers and turned antic Jealous of her beauty, Joseph Ga» comb, Pittsburg, Pa., slashed his wife's face from mouth to ear with) a knife._/ Casting Pearls’ Before Bring Jewels with the bathing cal tume? Why not? What coul be more appropriate than the @earls Joyce Compton, screen player, wears when she goes “communing with the sad sea waves? ‘Tis said beach jewelry, will be fashionable at the resorts: this winter. Side SO the name of a town in OK: Loaf is Jahoma,

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