Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 8, 1925, Page 1

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The Greatest Service Ever Offered by an American Newspaper---Tribune Accident Policy---Is Open to Tribune Readers WEATHER Generally fair tonight and Wed. nesday except local thunderstorms in northeast portion this afternoon or tonight, Slightly cooler tonight. VOL. IX, NO. 276 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation == The Caz ~ per 0 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS CASPER, WYOMING, TU TUESDAY, ; SEPTEMBER 8, 1925 Delivered by Carrier 75 cents a month On Streets or at Newstands, © atly Crilnme Tribune £ 16 orr E. Second St INVESTIGATION OF MITCHELL CHARGES OPENS CELEBRATION IN CASPER GIANT PARADE OF LABOR HOST AND ADDRESSES ARE FEATURES Large Audience Finds é Inspiration in Ad-| dresses by Governor! and’ Congressman. A typical and_ pleasing parade, appropriate ad- dresges, an athletic meet, aj banquet, and a dance—thus! did Casper observe Labor | day which was marked mainly by the presence of Wyom- ing’s chief executiye, Governor Nel- Ue Tayloe I her address before public gatpering, and the delivered by ngressmat that was id added | much the opportunity here of | observing the day in the way t had: been plafned and in following ouggp « detail the program which the Ca$per Trades: and Labor Assembly | hud, prepared The parade in the morning started out the festivities, The various la cott streets until the marghers dis- ber organizations were well rep- resented. and from the time that the, marching “started from A and Wolcott streets until the marchers disbanded the city hall, there was a ay stream of uniformed wor beautiful floats, and gayly decorated autos, seer in such numbers as to indicate unusual interest in the day which | was being celebrated, Governor Ross rode in a car at the head of the parade and was greeted enthusiastically by the throngs that lined the sidewalks on either side. The) Elks, auditorium at Seventh and Center streets was packed for | the program which followed immed. | jately, ‘There the governor gave the principal ‘address. i “There are now, I believe, few reqgpnable people who do not ac- knowledge that it was only by unl- son of effort, which comes through organization, that labor could have enforced the consideration to which it was entitled, and only the most unenlightened or selfish would now question its wisdom in organizing,” she said. Speaking on the relationship ex- isting between capitol and labor she remarked, “The people generally, I believe, understand that labor does not oppose wealth or business en terprise, What it desires is coop ation, and what it resists is explo! tation, and in that position it the suppo: of a ipatt public, Its leaders would, p be the first to admit tha like all human institutions has rm mistakes. Welare not here to cele- brate this day by reviewing labor's mistakes but rather to contemplate its wonderful achievements and pos: sibilities of the future. Undoubtedly its greatest accomplishments so far haye been the shorter working day and Increased wages. Incidental to these have come benefits which must immeasurably increase the happiness (Continued on P;¢ Five) Weather 1 to st ion now has ups, LABOR DAY MESSAGE DELIVERED (duos HERE BY CONGRESSMAN WINTER I congratulate labor on this auspi- clous and significant day, The fact that there is such « day set apart by the state and recognized by the nation and all its people is of itself ® great tribute to the part which free labor has performed in the achievements of the Republic. I congratulate labor on its universal high standard of education and in- | telimence, its steady employment :t good Wages, its prosperity, ll un- ualed in all the world. In a sense we are all employers and employees, No one’s status is fixed forever. The employee be- comes the employer. We are all PALL SCORES R.H, EB. 0 1 12 0 Gon- At ‘hieago Pittsburgh— 300 000 000—3 Vittsburgh — 001 000 100—2 Batteries: Alexander and Yde and Gooch, Pets r. --100 0—* 000 1—* and Krueger; .E. s. Brady Reinhart At Brooklyn (2nd game)— R. H. E. Philtadelphia_.100 020 000 0—3 13° 2 20 000 010 1—4 13 0 Ring and Wilson; Grimes and Tayl At New York (2nd game)}— R, H. E. Boston 30—35 9 2 New York OOL 101 100—4 7 O Batterie: Graham and O'Neill; Scott and Devine. At Brooklyn (Ist game)— R. HH. E. Phitadeiphia -..000 000 000—0 1 0 Brooklyn -.000°100 0OF—1 6 0 Batteries; Vance and Taylor; Pierce and Wendell, At New York (1st game)— R. H. B. 001 000 010—2 9 0 Boston New York Batteries: Greenfield and $ AMERICAN, LEAGUE. At Cleveland— R. H. BE. Chicago 110 000 000—2 6 2 Cleveland 100 300 00*—4 10 0 Batteries: Robertson, Kerr and Crouse; Uhle and L; Sewell. R.H.E. 010 000-—" *° * Detroit 021 130—" ° * Batterie: Girard, Falk and Har- grave; Stoner and Woodall, At Detroit— St Louis R.ILE. At Philadelphia— Washington 00 000 01—* Philadelphia 010 122 00—* Batteries: Ferguson, Russell and Ruel, Tate; Harris, Gray and Coch- rane, At New Bosto: id -003 020 2 00 200 00— nnock and Bengough; Genewich and Bischoff, Gib- RW. E. Boston (2 York game)— Paschal hit homer last of 7th, Rut hit homer first of 7th. At Boston (ist game)— R. H. E. New York 932 000 000—5 9 1 Boston 021 000 100—4 8 1 Batteries: Shawkey, Hoyt and Luebbe, Bengough Ruffing and Picinich. FOUR MISSING IN CLOUL- BURST Toll of Twelve Lives and Half Million in Property Damage Taken in Tragedy a WENATCHEE, Wash., Sept. 8.— (By The Associated Press)—Workers continued thelr own today to uncoy- er bodies of victims believed to be burled under the debris of the cloud- brust which swept west Wenatchee late Saturday, taking a toll of 12 ives and causing damagé estimated at $500,000. Four perfons are still missing. A force of 150 workers has been added to crews that have been dig- ging into the debris. Steam shovels, cranes and derricks have taken up t Wenatchee — the task, Two objectives are being centered upon today, one a pile of rubbish that accumulated near the Great Northern round-house, and the other a pile of debris against a string of freight cara. Most of the bodies have been found near the round-house and one has been found by the freight cars. Another search is being made along the bars and shallow places of the Columbia river, The main line of the Great Northern has been cleared and trains are again running On sched- ule. . | consumers. ‘“Labor’’ in early times was applied to those who were em- ployed in toilsome outdoor work, but later came to include workers, then to include the application of skill, and all those who engaged in indoor industrial occupations. Tech: | nically today the term laberer or workman is not applied to those pos- sessing scientific or professional skill. As a matter of fact we are all engagéd in seme form of labor, physical or mental or both, The term has ever br me broader and more inclusive There has lUkewise been a-steady advancement and improvement in the general rights of labor as is shown by the history of labor legis- lation. In early England the work- er, under the law, was a bondman. Even after the form of bondage, known as Villeinage, was abolished, laws made labor compulsory, con- fined workers to an existing. place of residence and -fixed a minfnum w As men’s minds and hearts we enlightened and broadened these tyrannous laws became obso- lete and were finally repealed. In- voluntary servitude is no more. Subject to the restriction by the state, in the interests of all the peo- ple, the right to dispose of one’s la- bor is a right entitled to legal pro tectfon. This right is not superior, ef cor to the same rights In oth- e American courts have ree ognized the fact that the earlier Eng lish legislation aud decisions were made solely in the interests of the employed und accordingly they hare not only-held labor organizations, to improve their conditions, lawful, but meritorious and praiseworthy. By federal legislation in 1914, la- bor of a human being is held not a commodity and Jakor organizations not’ in restrain€ of trade and not subject to the ‘anti-trust law. Thac (Continued on Page Five) re he \ ¥_ he ag o LABOR DAY PROVIDES TREAT MONTCLAIR, N. J., Se years |INSANE KIDNAPER WHO MURDERED CHILD TO BE GIVEN LIFE IN PRISON Former Harvard Student, Hopelessly Demented, Confesses Seizure of Girl but Denies Killing Negro Taxi Driver: Trial May Be Dispensed With pt. 8 HONOLULU, 8.—(Associated Press)—Search Sept for the naval sea- plane PN-S Number 1, which disap peared a week ago after nearly com pleting a non-stop flight from San- F 0 to Honolulu, continued un ceasingly today, Despite the et 8 put forward by the United States navy, there has been no trace of the plane, its commander, John Rodgers, or crew of four other men All naval vessels availavle are scouring..that apea of -the Petite wherein the plane is likely to have drifted. The operations continue in a huge sweeping cirele. Men aboard the ships are on duty many hours daily, © Chaplains, sur- geons, paymasters and other | offi- Plane Search Is Continued clals who deck wat ordinarily do not 8 on duty st stand peer. reaches of trace of an adven s of the are “seeing s during the war scopes on every lo siw submarine pe ‘hana, F parts of planes, planes themselves, wreckage, anything and everything is seen by weary, but still ares: lucination ed activity quadrons, thing"—as such ts the signal for ong the search- nk we see some- 1d such a position and the hers are off on a new hunt, all of which, heretofore, sear —(By The Associated Pres old, Harvard student and escaped inmate of an insane as killed six-year-old Mary Daly because of a craving for $4,000 in likely to be ordered confined for life as were the slayers of Bobby Franks in Chic ago. Noel pleaded guilty yesterday to the kidnaping charge. killed the girl or Raymond Pierce, negro taxicab driver, to get an automobile for abduc- )—Harrison W. Noel, 20 ylum, who kidnaped and ransom money, seems He denied he shot and tion He awaits arraignment on charges of murdering the girl and wounding John Sandin, auffeur, who gave chase after the kidap- ping. Sunday he confes with fulness to 1 of the crimes A. Mason, head of detectives, Noel insane. A committee of alienists is to be sought by A. Bigelow, prosecutor of county, to examine the yout found insane, he will be committed to the state hos Trenton: his plea of ¢ harge exposes sie4 sed al Cs Essex c is James inty hopelessly aptain with the probability o' Insanity, the ials content with a k’ would bo sentence. ‘Three persons h narrowly caped death at. Noel's hands, records of the county insane asylum at Over- brook show. Noel attacked his father, asleep in a tent on a camping trip, with a boy scout hatchet in 1923. , Confined in the Cralg Sanitarium ‘at Beacon, ave es i been unavailing. (Continued on Page Nine.) WOMAN HELD FOR POISONING HER HUSBAND MILES Mrs. Xe here fa being band and t dren, Arthur in this Ottinger denies usation, the authoritie the result casual statements mede to Dr, I Certain, a cousin of the des by Howard Ottinger, 17; Mildred Ottinger, 17, and Vivian Ottinger, 20, believe that they haye unearthed enough eviderice to warrant the trial of th accused woman. Ottinger’s body, buried in Kansas, has been ex, humed and Rudolph Nelstead, - ty attorney, announced that an analysis revealed poison in the stomach, liver and kidneys. MANY PERISH IN TYPHOON MANILA, Sept. 8.—(Associated Press,)—Thirty-flve fishermen are believed to. have been drowned In a typhoon in the Sulu Sea, near the island of Pajawan, constabulary re- ports fromm Occidental negroes prov- ince An account of the tragedy was brought ashore by five survivors who drifted in on a sail boat after battling with a gale for several days. Spanish Forces Sent to Front MADRID, ‘Sept. 8.—(Assdciated Press.)\—Spanish troops have landed on the Moroccan coast, in the}Bay of Ajhucemas, {t was officially an nounced today. . CITY, ie Nel Mont., Sept. 41, is in jail ho died Mrs but of man, elty 1924 as COAL MINERS “We needed this rest, anthracite “About four ir will ¢ he hard coa per f\ mining disagreement over the a new wage contract, cation, but without pay. Anticipating that there would be a period of idleness lasting \from a month to six weeks or more, the miners had their bins filled with fuel before September 1, and are not worried as to how they will keep warm when the cool weather sets in Veteran miners declare that Iready are feeling the good eff of their rest. vo So a aid ar mine worker esh Jo v fon ¢ Mrs, Raymond Protzman turned from a pleasurt trip sp! in Colorado and Missouri has re- ent ENJOYING REST VINTON, Iov —Mrs. C. B. Cook, jidentified assailant. Friends tive in furnishing information A bullet 1 a wink in the first r of her home a she sat about 11:30 o'clock ended Mrs. Ce life an hour and a half after it passed through her left arm and side; She died without aining consciousness. The count Wigs ¢ ith Mrs. An inque ing, ‘and as to the probable shooting has been expected, man’s acquaintances believe that } L-lquor activities were responsible w convention of the W c fi t is belr While no eitis motive the wo Fatal to M. A. Ke WORLAND, Wyo., Sept. 8.—M. A. Kent, old resident of this section, Was killed Sunday night when his car plunged down a bank and fto 4 gravel pit east of /Shoshon! while Mr. Kent was returning here from asper. The body was found pinned beneath the machine when search ing parties went to for him after he had failed Mr, to WORLAND MAN DEAD IN CRASH Automobile ‘Accident Near Shoshoni Is nt, Resident Near Worland for Last 32 Years Kent had failed. turn after he the Chleago gnd Northwestern railroad tracks, nd his left the road. Kent came to wyoming He had been fn the stock business many years, though Inter he interested in ofl ¢ pment was time sneriff of Prem: to ma crossed ke a sharp In 1893. was Me at one mnt county. victim of a bootlegger or rum-runner, W. C. 1. U. WORKER SHOT TO DEATH BY BOOTLEG FOES Iowa Town Witnesses Killing of County Organization President by Slayer Who Fired ThroughWindow ° Sept. 8.— (By The Associated Pre president of the Benton county was shot to death in her home last night by an un- W. f she had been ¢ arrest mé expressed belie she was the as leading to the of ma | coun activit e parts of the manager of the Way compiny. A complaint (Contin Colorado Man Paid Honor By Belgians Dead Colo., pt ciated -Press), — Charles former jorado legislator; horseman and one of the 8 knighted t Bel, by DENVEI E , Denver Ar ndvised toda tubbs left eral years ag Billings, Montana, re from Denver h e nent part In the Wyoming « nt pring to 1918 In 1913 } Albert of Be his work in the deve gian horses. He Importation of America utation Mr bbs se home at departu Denver wit opment of De fallzed tn horses 1 nation-wide a horser Belgian and wor par alae A RERLIN—Dr rke head ahd 1 Los Angele wh disa w kener, Se Ider of th « a pened with uld 1 German \[Chandler Car Sets Record In Hill Climb! | | | | | | MARTIAL LAW ' PROPOSED IN COAL STRIKE Sept &,.—(By Associated tense feeling prevailed here, while a de ed at the Oklahoma state ecapite her martial law shal] be declar: ress),— at Hearts f the Ro as dynamited ated yesterday by and County Attorney Gotcher of Pitts burgh county, tho situation before Governor Trap with recommendations for mar- tial law. Condijions in the Hartshorne dis- trict have Grown worse during the past week, following a fife at a mine ump which it was indicated later, had been smoulderin. for some tim Non-union miners have begun to car. ry arms, declaring that their Ives have been threatened. Union officials s was caused by der to lend for marti —_—_—_—_o—__ 1 sion rest Okiah wills W. E, to lay ma Anderson the explosion mine operators in or h to their + | FOUR DEADIN | EXPLOSION ON U.S. VESSEL SHANG Press.) HAT ‘600 § \TRIKING ia ‘SEAMEN TED 'BE A RRESTED |latest critic 0. INOPECTOR GENERAL TAKES IVER PROBE ON QAMo ORDERS Funeral Services Held” Today for Victims of Disaster Charged to legligence, Stupidity. Ww Ee TON, (By the A ciated Press) —Col. William Mitchell’s m of the admin- istration’s air service policy was referred today to the in- Sept. 8. genera arn’ n- tigation The will ar action of be © war department termined until this n received. Should found disciplinary ng Secretary Davis then whether co: martial wil proceedings shall FOUR BURIED AT ARLINGTON CE WASHINGTON, {By Ths ermath of has fol- Shenandoah The Analey ticism wh lowed the loss of the held the attention of off net s for Lieu- Lar ill-fated the chapel nia, near the « full. military the body to the: gray at escort accompanying A mort was fixed for the at the grave for mmander Louls Han- J. B, Lawrence and Shephard, oreta had before him today an informal report by Rear Ad- 1 ©. W. Dyson, who made an in- yendent Inve ation for the sec- retary, in which he held the failure diagonal brac in the Shenan- : © been largely ng hour separate services Licutenant C cock, Lieutenar utenant E. doah's imander Charles E, gator and senior sur- the Shenandoah also ington toda another su on their in the nant ¢ endahl, na disaster The los: clted by of th venandoah was rmer as- stant chief of th air service, as instance ipport bis sen- charges published Saturday the air administra- ath and navy de- Actir ary Dwight ed a as to what will take charges on sational against tion of partments. Davis fac action the war 1 chell with which urges sinc rtment of ed what M “may be ¢ ‘he is “un- 18 Officer and* hallenge the at- hi t ‘om . & Deemocratie nge Nine.) “TORRID “PARTLY \Cooling Rains Folloy Relief in Carolin Storm Moves Out Into Gulf HEAT IS BROKEN ving Prayers Bring as and Tropical ¥ 1, They cken ethe ed into

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