Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 10, 1925, Page 1

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The Greatest Service Ever Offered by an American Newsp« ver---Tribune Accident Policy---Is Open to Tribune Che WEATHER Partly overcast tonight and Fr probably showers in north por ton. ture, Not much change In temp: VOL. IX. rf ] CZ: Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS asper Daily Critnme HF Readers 1Of Te On CASPER, , WYOMING, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1925 by Carrier eeta or at 75 cents a Newstands, Tribu ‘ECONOMY SHOWN BY RAILROADS IN APPEALS rurR RATE INCREASE CHEYENNE-DENVER AIR MAIL OKEHED MAXIMUM RATE OF SURTAX 10 BE CUT DOWN 1020 PER CENT Secretary Mellon Will Confine Activities This Year to Suggestions, | He Declares. WASHINGTON, Sept. 10. —(3By the Associated Press) —The treasury’s tax recom- mendations to congress now are expected to include a re- duction in surtax rates to a cent, repeal. of ction and an entire elimination t¢r minor changes will be sug- gesiedy to close up loopholes in the present | . ‘ Secretary Mellon declined to say how active a part the treasury would take in urging {ts recommendations on the house ways and means com- ‘mittee when ot meets next month, Ne previously had indicated he would make no formal proposal that could be labelled a “Metion Plan” and might only advance verbal sugges- tions in response to questions the committee might ask ‘The treasury holds tp its often ex- pected belief that a minjority of the taxpayers favor repeal of the pub- licity section, Officials say masses of letters of protest have come in since September 1, when this year's ‘payments were opened for public in- spection. Treasury officials have not com: mitted themselves finally to a 20 per cent surtax maximum but Mr. Mellon believes the volume of re- turn on that rate will be immediate- ly greater than at the higher rate. eed BURLINGTON ANNOUNCES ONE CENT A MILE RATE TO FAIR AT DOUGLAS The Chicago, Burlington & Quincy railroad has announced special round trip excursion fares for the Wyoming State fa at Doug! September 15 te 19 ickets will be sald at the rat ft cent at Burlington st om Tor ton. Tickets will be o: on September 17, with return midnight September 19. The round trip from Casper will be $1.06, from Powder River, $1.86, and from Ther- mopolis $3.74. RIVER GIVES UP BODY OF 14TH VICTIM WENTACH Wash., Sept. .10.— (Associated Press).—The body of an unidentified child, the fourteenth vic- tim to be removed from the toll of the. cloudbiirst at Appleyard, near here, last Saturday, was taken from the wreckage during the night. The body of Mrs, D, R. Smythe, wife of a Bia Uneman, was found yes ne ions fr Mmit HOMESTEAD ENTRY CANCELLED TENT USED FOR HOUSE, CHARGE CHEYENNE, Wyo., Sept. 10. — Mart T. Christensen, register of the Cheyenne land office, announced on Wednesday that he has recommend: ed that the homestead entry of Charles BE. Barnett on land in Na- trona county be cancelled on the ground that Barnett did not estab- Nish a bona fide residence on the Jund. Barnett Is sald to have put up tent In which he lived for two ‘ taking away the es of tangible prop ch might have enabled any: Twenty-Four’ Hour Service Between New York and Colorado Capital As- sured by Plans for Extension CHICAGO, Sept.'10.—(By The Associated Press.) — Two air- mail routes in addition to the nine new routes al-. ready proposed will be advertised for after thé return to Washington Saturday of Second Assistant Postmaster Gen- eral Irving Glover. They are Denver, Colo., to Cheyenne, Wyo., and Washington, D. C., to Jacksonville, Fla. Mr. postoffice on his way Denver, where he hgd conferred with | the aviation committee of the Den- ver Chamber of Commerce, ard with Senator Lawrence Cowle Phipps, a member of the joint congressional committee on postal rates. Senator Phipps has been interested tn obtain. ing a Denvér-Cheyenne route. A [petition for the house had 200 sig- atures. Bids for elght routes previously advertised for will be opened Sep- tember 15, and Henry Ford's ships} are expected to begin carrying mall between Detro{t and Chicago within two weeks, Local air mail officials said that the volume of air mail handled on the overnight service between New York and Chicago had nearly dou- bled since it was opened last July, and that Chicago was furnishing more patronage than New York. The opening of the new route and the proposal of elght additional routes were among the last acts in the incumbency of Mr. Glover's pre- decessor, Colonel Paul Henderson, who resigned August 1. back from 1 DENVER, Colo., Sept. 10.—(Ass6- clated Press).—Letters addressed to Denyer dropped in New York post office slots’ will reach their destina- tion in 24 hours and be on the bus- Iness man's desk here by 10 a, m.,, when the government establishes its Cheyenne-Denver air mail of the air mail service. Glover stopped at the Chicago letters. mailed at The new service also means that night in Chicago wilk be on hand here the next. morn. ing. Outgoing eastbound mall leay: (Continued on P19 Fivey TWO AIRMEN’S COATS FOUND ONLONE BEACH HONOLULU, Sept. 10,—(Asso- elated Press.}—Two aviators’ coats found on the Keaukahakeaa beach, seven miles from Hilo, today ‘gave hope of a clue to the fate of the crew of the missing seaplane PN-9 number 1, which dropped from sight with a crew of five men on Septem- ber 1-in mid-Pacific. The plane was on a non-stop flight to Honolulu and indicated in radiocast messages that her fuel supply was. low and she might be forced down .into a stormy sea. Authorities were also. investigat- The a repdtt: sent to thes tiger” from lis Hilo’ correspondent vbich said: “Two Kapok life — presérving jackets marked ‘U. S. Navy’ were found last night on the beach at Leleiwi point, 10 miles south of Hi1oy" The jackets were ordered delivered to a battleship today for inspection. FIFTEEN MILLION LOST IN LIQUOR RUNNING BY BRITISH RUM BACKERS LON ¥, Sept. 10.—(Associated | Press.)—Fifteen million dollars is the estimated loss sustained dur- ing the ‘past year by English financiers who dispatched ships filled with liquor intended to assuage the thirst of Americans. swift boats of the dry 2 off the shores of the United States not only have ob- literated famous rum row but also have cut deeply into the bank of the financiers. Masters and crews of rum run- ners ave seeking other employ- ment.. They aver that their days of opulence have passed and that they are looking for. more law- abiding methods to. eke out a living. Since January exports of Hquors destined ultimately for the United States have dropped almost 50 per cent and available figures indicate that liquor exports from ,Great Britain this year will fall far be- low the annual 2,000,000 gallons sent out of the country during the last few years KIDNAPER-SLAYER LOOKS ON BODY OF HIS VICTIM: LK WHEN NOEL LED POLICE | TO MURDER SCEN eimest man in the group, 1 (coatless) in th ‘ounded by detectives. im lies the body of Tittle y (arrow), six, whose | ing and murder he has co he was the He is First Indictments Returned Against Es-\| caped Asylum Inmate; Arraignment Is Set for Next Wednesday p been re | el for the mur- nd the kid is pending Arraign NEWARK, N.J., Sept. 10.—(By The Associated Press) —Harrison W. Noel, lawyer's son and eseaped asylum in-} mate, was indicted by the Ess county grand jury here yesterday for the murder of Raymond oes negro taxi driver, and for kidnaping six-year-old Mary Daly a week | ago. der of the taxi driy naping, and anothe rls mur ment is scheduled for Two Slain as Tong Killers Renew War en National Officers of Under Arrest After Violation of Truce Recently Agreed Upon NEW YORK, Sept. 10.—(By The Associated Pres Chinese tong warfare has broken out anew here, Three officials of the On Leong tong, including the national president, conspiracy to bring about the s Sing tongsmen are dead. with c Less than two weeks ago ‘one to connect any bona fide act of settlement on the land. A hearing was conducted before Marion P. Wheeler, United States commissioner, at Casperin the land case of Harry J. Starks versus Bar. nett, and the recommendations of Christensen followed on the evidence Introduced atthe hearing, tt fs un- derttood. Unless the deelsion appeaiow the tase will be gent to Washington about September 15 and reported for appropriate action, Christensen said On Leongs Placed Hy ae Two Hip are in jail charged ngs. national officers of the Hip Sings and On Leongs signed a truce In addition to the tong offic: one Chinese is in jall as a ki The other slayer escaped. The killings came on. the a serles of F by in which nine pistols of tity of oplum were selzed. Two. Chf nese were arrested as gunmen and drug peddlers. Deportation proceed Ings against them are planned. A Chinese cook was shot and kill ed going to his room. A few hours later the body of another Chinese was found in a market heuse, his skull crushed by a hammer. On Leong officials held are Gee Min, national president: Lee Ten police | ie 1,000 roynds | Dpo, local secretary and Wenry Moy: NEW 10. KE \GTON ed by police to have been inued on Page ll by eteel-Jacketed bullets anf a quan: | THOUSANDS 0} KILLERS AR ROWLAND WOOD. Casper Tribu Se HOOL HEAD N. . H E, Wyo, * 10. iF rat was appointed superint ent of schools for tho Burns district A. H. Quick at Carpenter, Fred D. Conner at Egbert and F, O. Ruc Hillsdale, it was announced Tue Miss Anna M. Dobbin, superintendent of schools with which politan 9 sary in count LONDON, Oliver Henry -Wallop, -Sr., nounced that he will ¢ jin succession to his elder |do so without fore going ; his qu Sept. 10 Nee il | Folic Take a peep behind the scene t themselves dally Into the } “Polly of the F the New « Follies girl. | new ¢ of Life.} i purveyor of hunor in this country, will apy every day | |j, except Sunday ly the Tribune William K, Zlegfeld, Jr member of | the well-known family so prominently {dentified with Follies fame, ix| | the oath ¢ the author of this latest contribution to the world of humor, and he event. he Americ nm m the office has landed with a home run right off the bat The humorous situations in which our Polly finds herself ea her almost pathetic struggle for fame and fortune cn that cruel like" avenue, Broadway, are all unfolded before each evening. Chuck full of good honest t writes, home each evening to her with tlic kerosefie lamp of doubtful age, ‘Thien. the’ accor ing pictures tell w tale “Polly of the Follies” 1s already a part Tt Is land ® newest and be nt jt to {ts large reader famil his A number of rl the Tribune goodness humor ar tng fn th oy the al e the lett Uttle farm ho 1d mahogany tat Tribune Com nd the next Wed-| | \Citizenship To., Be Retained by: W yoming Earl = (By ime the brother Ameri ‘EFFICIENCY AT PEAK, TRAFFIC HEAVY, FEDERAL “BALL SCORES NATIONAL LEAGUE At Cincinnati— KH 7” Chicage _--.000 000 300—3 i i 3 000 OLF—& Jones, Milstead| and Hargrave ake, and Hartnett; Mays At St. Pittsburgh nis— R. E. ooo—* At Boston Philadelphia Boston Batteries: dell, Wilson; id game)— RWB. --000 000 003—3 IL 0} Meh, Bette and wer! No Solution in Sight Ulrich, Betts and Wen. Smith aud O'Neill, | aan = ; for the Problems of t Boston (Ist ROHL ae Western Roads, Says Philadelphia 000 100 O12—4 7 Association Leader. Bost 3 -.000 000 000—0 7 Batterie Carlson Benton, Anderson and ( CHICAGO, Sept. 10—(By The Associated Press) —In- tending to show that the in- terstate commerce comm sion’s suggestion of 1922 that the lroads took to “effi- and Dixon; At Philadelphia (2nd game)— R.H. 010 201 000 000—4 12 c 100 100 020 001—5 12 1) py Jones and Luebbe,| s<. hang; Rommel, Baum- ris and Cochrane. At Chicago (2nd game}— Louis New York associa litions of the have eve in the gartner, RW 2 oo—* + 30—* * and Dixon; At Det Cleveland nd game)— R.H.B. -100 0—* «© Detroit -000 1—* * atteries: Buckeye and L, Sewe Wells and Woodall. nue freight, 0,000 cars in 1 and 951,000 c: these record fact that load- past have million cars a ample sur- und loco- At Philadelphia (ist game)— R. H.E. -000 330 100—7 10 0 Philadelphia —_100 000 002—3 11 2 Batteries: Hoyt and Bengough Gray and Cochrane, New York weeks lb af one at Detroit (ist game)— R.H.E.| --010 000 000—1 7 1 --203 000 10°—6 8 1} Speece, Cole and Sewell; ther ie i id. Bassler, r 1¢ efficl d been an same in econo! eee ring the we appears that uced their fuel almost 1920. PHILADELPHIA, Sept s).—Bat thesé lines in in the fre | | 10, y| | Ruth con hitting by hammer nd home run of the| * fourth inning of the tween the Athletics This was Rt homer of the se hal also hit a } The Athletics’ Eddie Rommel, w In the here was almost uth's teent 80 mer In this i pitching st ling reductions ‘om in and dam. Sept. 10.— |! 1920. TI York de- i PHILADELPHIA, (Associated Press.)— feated the Philade in the first game of a doub today, 7 to 3. runs by Bob and Lou Geh the fourth largely to Athletics unted to app Successive $21,000,000 Meu! home Ruth gs off Sar y in ing, Contained downfall of the s than in the SECURITY HOLDERS GET NO RETURNS. |to a € ey invested in |t t ervice witho | \Surrender of American Rights Unneces- Accepting Title, Says in Wallop Discussion London The Associated Wyoming, title Press.) who has an of Earl of Portsmouth recently deceased, ma ne ‘itizens ship which he ~ JAMS SEIZED HERE RETURNED aoe “ DENVER MAKERS FURNISH BOND CHEYR

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