Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 14, 1925, Page 1

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The Greatest Service Ever Offered by an American Newspaper---Tribune Accident Boy Open to Tribune Readers WEA VEATHER & Pale oak V guna. 8 ) aa pr Ps ng Fair tonight and Sunday. Not r DITION: much change in temperature. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS Member of Audit Goreav * D - VOL. X NO. 27 Br urauaties tawos) _ *G» SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 14, 1925 Sa SHRNTAP ERR Newerunde 8 Sets See ee st ALL HOPE ABANDONED FOR SUBMARINE CREW _Al Jolson and Irving Berlin Dragged “= «s | at Neots FINAL SALUTE In as Mythical Rivals of Rhinelander esl SERVICES WORK (5 KEY iil Love Letters of Negress Bride Bring The Old Farm Ain't What She Used to Be -« oletiag tepals (IN SURFACE If) New Names Into Limelight; One Ad- ae ee Ls a GGe SS CHEN) mirer Described by Girl as “Grad- ae er ae ead a ‘ ’ uate of Harvard, but Refined” | | edo teal ete of vance Sekt ycesck, § a tio at tho prospect of seeing. his ixty-eight Members of hild was barely em. Ts | Crew Are Given Up s oid Tho | For Lost by British CROWD [5 TOL WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., Nov. 14.—(4)—Scores of other love letters remain to be introduced i rd Ki in Leonard Kip € , : _-Lec t was four w Rhinelander’s annulment suit when the trial is resumed F too w to do A : Monday. = even: had she been ° sts g ‘ ge ; ave. tract chide admiralty Icla rd Salvation Found Thru Already 52 fervid illiterate epistles have been read | ae I ee igi hsiy y ; S M H aloud and Al Jolson and Irving Berlin have been dragged | LOOK MA, } a er ee patie neat yen ary Tt net otha ms ame Wieans, Marper | in as mythical rivals for the hand As Isaac N. Mills, attorney for < | f : : tba tlensake, og ,ONDON, Noy —(/P ? I He i bled veteran off to Fitzsom- Ny N, Nov. 14.—() a of the negress whom the young arls-, Rhinelander, read the -comedian’s | AIN? HE_ IKE | hospital in Denver, and made |—‘“The admiralty deeply Says in Sermon. tocrat, married last year. name spectators laughed. Mills look-| | (| OLY MORTGAGE f An’! KIN REMEMBER Raltlal iene tatiosovtde. ivate tha ; rh ah Although the main contention of | ed up “who is he?” The \ LEER Tho 2 WAEH He WAS JUST tor tha little tuna dicing vit ate [ooo coat ehey can no:longer the plaintift is that his bride de.| spectators laughed again | d : | AS COMMON AS hie sence. Meinwhile the local wory,, | roid out any hope that the ‘s Last night was the biggest week | ceived him as to her blood, the evi-| She also wrote, “well, my darling e V ResT oF US ers ure keeping in touch with their |Crew of the’ M-1 still sur- \ night yet. at the tabernacle, every BS fi fi far has Se to esiiah talk about men up here. All a girl 4 eae \ ® yi wards to see that they lack for | Vive.’ : hat she was constantly urging rm wants. Berlin, the musical chap has : c 7" ( This t sally seat being. filled with somo people | riage, partly by recalling thelr | gotten.a camp right next to ae He tex yaa pect anaes officially announced / standing. Mr: Welch, the big singer, | visits to hotels and partly by jeal-|is a swell c! started the song service a lttle | ousy. here.” early in order to get the big chorus Yesterday young Rhinelander left Her letters tell of many times she It is for cases like this that the | this morning was taken as definite! Community Chest campaign, which |S¢#ling the fate of the 68 offic begins here next week, is con- |@"d men entombed in the monitor p and lots of actors} the stand a few minutes for Ed-| repulsed admir oma : alw: ducted, subm are Pay Gk h_ disappe oft Space well filled. During the after- | warg Holland, a fireman, to testify. | true to her “Darling Lani” ae take the Devonshire coast during Thurs- noon volunteer workers had met at) Holland denied that he had. ever | he captivated was a “graduate from | 5 the big shed and installed more seats | siven Alice Jones Rhinelander any | Harvard, but refined.” | Be also sent to the for singers, and by 7:30, 168 singers | presents, or offered to marry her, ; © crew the following were in-place. Mr. Welch had every-| or to. live with her. His testimony Reale a jee boy suging and whistling again, followed {ntroductin of a letter in gure creemitancen tn -whlow\the | and after the ladies present had| which the defendant threatened to ° jubmaring disappeared leaves ro whistled a number, he quoted the| marry “Eddie” or share an apart- Rain, Normal See es Sour Re aOnES OO AG - well known saying about “whistling | ment with him if Rhinelander did | pend) ibaa tose he at | girls and crowing hens,” and then | not return from Arizona and marry | 11 Oe ee te " changed it to “whistling girls and | ber. || Temperature || | Now foughout the might the fleet ¢ thoroughbred. sheep, are the very While employed as a house maid | $ | | cece ud a peraee s « os best stock a man can keep.” There | at a summer resort the girl wrote: % | pwede I wasi a large section of high school} “I was talking with Al Jolson to- Are Forecast } | rae girls on éne side of the chorus and|day. He.was swimming. but ho is le 2 section for men also. After the |some ¢irt with the girls.” - | ate a evening service the big chorus went Rs aay WASHINGTON, Nov, 14.—The | Hi | re a7 a in effort ship Mat rchers wi! lecting ap stance and object to be stone also joined t Zoning Commission in | s! 2' soi the Meeting Last Night paratus, enabling the = to the First Baptist church for a , Northern and Rocky Mountain and party. There they were royally @nter+ «| Plateau regions: A period of tained. by Mr. Welch and Mr. and rains during first half and again Mrs. Willis, of the Harper party. latter half; normal temperatures direction of a magnet Taking ts text from -the Book : most of the week. \ q ot Nehemiah: “For the people had Southern Rocky Mountain and } 2 \ i ; ate hatte a mind to work,”-Mr. Harper took plateau regions:” Mostly fair,. at | S | Makes Change. perch 3 td some broadside, swipes at all man-| | beginning and temperatures near { w QA x A Bet Saleen ner Of laziness on the part of church- NOVEMBER normal thereafter. 3 NWO = ee DA) Rom am the intention of the authorities t members, and people in general. He x Ree ‘ auth 3 to Avoeatad.the-idea that ainiiet | The Casper zoning commission] try to raise the big submarine but advocated the idea that a man mus' a lordinance’ providing for buildings on| they admit it would be almost ¢ work or ought not to eat. He review- Ce ordinance providing for buildings on | hopeless t to try to bring up ed rapidly the history of Nehemiah! NORWALK, Conn, Nov. 14.—U®) the rear ends of lots in certain in-|from such a great depth. _ rebuilding tho -walls of Jerusalem | _Gerala Chapman, under sentence nees: Any property cwner who} It fs understood that .next we saying that things were accompllsh- | t be hunged at the state prison on has built a house on the back of a 1 Sir Henry Oliver, con ed always when people have the| tecember 8 for the marten nt, lot with the Intention of erecting the home fleet, will steam spirt of co-operation and joy in the |New Britain policeman will be or- . engrhent Tuldio sg on the front. for all his ships in Une to job they have to do. dered to appear in federal court at a income purposes will not be required st salute to the victima. lifting ap spot, indicating A See pat Aine neste Keon on November 25 when a jl ° ate ee orsae Fie lab perl ie \ burial service will be held on the nearing on his petition for a wri oye . > + : + | ceptions will be made. ve ruling | spot tomorr and ‘a: memorial” ser acquaintance, once referring to Theo- | of habeas corpus will be given, KING TUT’ 15 YEA RS |Conditions Approaching StEWAbON 171 | 02 the commission is only tor houses | vico in. the tiny aturch et ihe dore Roosevelt and his ability to put Special counsel for Chapman ap. au 1] already built on the r of lots and | land docls yard. across the Job in mind, When once ® | peared before Federal Judge Thom 7 || Besieged City Prevail as People jthess houses may not be replaced oe asked how he could d hs Hel aes-hie home jaat high ee x1 | by others. * Sones: “Decnomn fam wun on my [sepets name, tact nies onesies! OE AGE AT DEATH, IS *|| Dhait MasAD melee nent | rhe a pune| Reopening OF | job.” Hr, Harper then made a strong | turned over to the United States at the salty. hall next Friday Bins fr chatiag wis ar tink o@ Jeorcranent compe ess ear|| GY PTOLOGISTS’ CLAI M| cot : wut pomeresommar, =<" 1° French Debt he commission will he | Kinley street and south of the Ohi he sald: "The hardest boy on top of | ‘The w: - oe i supia. N . pee | Nortin wks. God's dirt to save is the boy whose AGREE SA abtctame Zor ae NEW YORK, Nov. 14.—()—That ent DAMASCUS, Syria, Nov. 14.—-(F)—Damascus is like 2 | P “[ dad never taught him to do an Qon-| scott of the state prison to produce King Tut-Ankh- “Amen, who died in pars ict only Siete a a onde | Deslesad cit rybody emneny fpeemilitaryanustibe:in- ay ey Looms est day's bi arene oa Sa 6 he Chapman in court. It will be Chap-| Egypt some 3,000 years ago, was | to acquire tetits ‘of st Hearn doors by 8 o'clock in the evening and during the day thera| | Rox, Esbuattnare x patentiices petites coors cae carte renn ae ie ola. when hits body was] husband, In : descent | are SO many soldiers in the narrow thoroughfares that one | pani d P)—I tive: Woeins Maver egmipathlas withil Eeieee ae geen SPE BES a a bey vauiey of Foe basse d through the daughte is almost continually bumping into rifles, or stumbling Paduleve, and. Voreigh Mininver Bel the man who has to work—he x the his appeal to the state supreme |ed by the Egyptologists. The finding of the high gold crown | across sand bag barricade i ke "oe eae ee only’ really happy man we have. court. mee on the head of Tut-Ankh-Amen {s a] At the curfew hour the stree 1p: ) bu ledkiveeeatin: a Washitheton: There iz hope for any man or*hatiow 2 pent 28° of the dead pharaoh had | discovery unique in archaclogy, cease rannir ple di ja » city, rald chewy a ‘“ y ’ the wodko Met ela atonbte ofrtiine Dr Te t been the basis for much Speculation | also was the discovery of the swords |i ee a tne mi Is other depre- | IN COLORADO this : rebates) to fool with a fellow. who wont I ‘ s those who uncovered the] q of the royal alia | Rapes sate Blas : tion | be a - a work.” Tho evangelist then told of a y 8 n nie near Luxor. Carter, | aisp< und thieves ran: | of Syrian : coat , so x young “buc . who was the chic nt to the | sa 1 ris " nf Che Ky ab M | q iis Indy fel U.S. Watched |'°. 27,98 carve: work | that general > rai a} ail ta the Malliand sala: an of excavating the tom trippe wrappin ( : rabeay ana! | DE j A sn ~ there you $100 coat;’ he then bung ec was I< € ola | — a - | sth Honulist@allle wn | stele ke ° his hat on a peg-and said: ‘Hang By the World n he passed away I pert = — | : ; ; fee | De k \ there you $15 Stetson;’ then he stood | When, however, the mummy was | |an the : acre ni 1 | q ‘his cane in a corner,. remarking: taken from its golden human-shaped | Does Youth Always Defeat Age || north to Der : c was eral throu ‘Stand there you $10 cane.’ About ssa coffin and thé wrappings about St || Fifty thou scl tout r | INDICTED | that time the old*man poked his JETROIT, Mich., Nov. 14.—()—| Were removed until the golden Hh + y ee Soubte c | head through the portieres, saw the | The eyes of the world are watching| sheathed body came into view, the ut the Duel of Love? | | the force now in Syr I bo re- | | fellow, kiéked him out onto the pave-| the United States in {ts test of| experts after an examination estab J | quired to remorse, order in‘tha coun, on’ Buena | ment and sald: ‘Lle there you 10-|atfonal prolibition, Miss “Anna| lished the age. try, competent observers declare wid | | cent. scrub.’ This story brought a| Adams Gordon, president of the Na-| On the head of Tut-Ankh-Amer Workmen are clearing the det m extended Inte Wyomt z. | hearty cheer from the crowd. “Say | tional and World Women’s Chris-| was @ tall crown of gold. The hands nL she: PbePal Te Raentares pe snows reported’ at er | girl,” continued Harper, “fight shy | tion Temperance Unions. sald today.| were clasped across the breast, On are rebuilding the ruined nne, At Lande of, the fellow who won't work. Class |The national organization is holding |the side of the body were strapped the street called Straight ' pped 4 degre nbove } I P)—s, him with a counterfeit “bill or sa Sist annual convention here, two ‘gold-hilted swords and | two e's paralyead, andino buyers | 34 ju hi plugged cent, Cut the fellow who| The success or fallure of this test, knives, the handles of which pene m welcGepriediot it also re to} r { stands around dressed. up— doing | will determine future action of other | were gold, On the breast golden stare ith { ta}! ; nothing. He may play the plano and| countries in securing temperance! were placed to mark the he a Ir devastated resider juar xf Mere all siriteronar t know the latest jazz, but after you}and abolition of the Uquor traffic, | lungs. ab arlstoc: pro- | w nied lerate tem-! te f (Continued on Page Six) she said Mb RULA man ATA eiek ant mr visit thelr ruined ¢ erature ‘ il 4 throne of Khun-Aten through his’ Sousehe r ae ‘j MITCHELL HEARING IN REGESS (oso pope mh ar VALENTINO DIVORCE IS PENDING J Ankh-Nes-Pa-Aten, oBitars sure ¢t populace t t » rre h-Nes-Amen,’ two y ¢ tionists . make » attempt. to} her royal father had ‘pa pture the ‘city ywinte that e This was during the reign of Pha S Se is 5 gst st | raoh, . § his brother-n Meenoh . bal aut iphd '?t | NSDOWNE CHARGES PROBED Sy ens "5 SCREEN STAR WANTS CHILDREN mated 2 ned from elgh immistakable alr of tension | to sixteen y r this evént be Bendel asetanta berwal lite. fae mee hnk SU0es sign of | omething to happer people con- | WASHINGTON, Nov. 14.—(#)—| make his reply at once as a witness | anise te ae 4 tA 2 sy tala |tinue to leave in the direction of » “4 The | A Before the next session of the Mitch.|Defore the body. Secretary Wilbur| tine scare The ‘formes tie at the Mediterranear s. | thr marital mn” of}at t ! ‘ has taken the request under advise- tA et a rmer “gure. is) : American commer { ria, | Rudolph nd his wife is|talked with C n her, says ell court-martial {s ‘held, the Shenan-| 1" Ho ‘s and the latter Sir "You KNOW YOULOVE | wich had been steadily developing, |on the verge 0 nie farsentiattel| Ha fi i ete ale Rb doah navy court of Inquiry wilt] ‘The Shenandoah court, with sev-|P!nders Petrie’s. Sir Flinders 1s a HET YOU CANT LIKE has recelyed a decided setback, from | because rk has not visited | disagreed: t . ters probe for itself the incidents to|cral other witnesses*summoned for | "ld Esyptologist. which {t 1s doubtful if tt can recover | them gato. babl which Mrs, Margaret Ross Lans-|'nquiry Into the matter, will meet| Thus, ff Tut-Ankh-Amen were 15 DED, for many years. The largest Amerl-| The screen st to the tie downe testified before the Mitchell] Monday, The Mitchell court re-| Years old at the time of his death, _STRUGGUNG WITH LAUREB [can business was in automobiles, |on the Leviathar ll ch t e wh } court as constituting an attempt to| cessed yesterday until Tuesday, af-| be would have been only five years Ilustrating « scene from “Methuselah's Wife.” This has come to a compl stand-|has announced influence her testimony in the Shen. | ter refusing to strike out «Mrs,| old when he married on a basis of, | still, owing to the y of mo-| Pa to accept a 1 n t andoah inquiry. nsdowne’s testimony, as sought|the lower figure, w the larger Noble Harwood was well preserved, attractive to women, a com | tor traffic outelde as. Ake | filed th Octobe t r M Denied an opportunity at this time the prosecution and later to hear | figure would seem to } | versationalist, a lover of the arts, an epicure, and he was gallant and wise the ation of American | entino. >) 1 1 { to reply before the Mitchell court ptain Foley out of order. The|mark, Five years of | chivalrously attentive; moreover, he was wealthy chinery and kerosene r t to Mrs. Lansdowne’s charge that he| latter asked that he be permitted to| riage apparently. is {line with | so he won the heart of the beautiful and vibrant 1 1 had sought to influence he testify now as a matter of “personal|the customs of the royal houses of | despite bis 52 years, But then there reappeared her forme neerns niohy in the statement el privilege and fair play.’ but the} Eaypt, for few. tf of the phar! Wyman Holt, neither wealthy nor a social satellite, but young Freng , ‘ 1 make before tho naval ce defense e2 on the ground that married before the age of 12 handsome. Soe youth and oge engaged in a duel for her aftection. 1 cla ; “ tain Paul Foley has asked Secretary | rebuttal. testimony should not be|They did nat become of age until 16| Which won? The answer Is in “Methuselah's Wife,” the extraordinary They are to in thi Wilbur to rellevt him as judge advo-| permitted until the defenee con- | years old, | new novel by Edgar Poe Norrls which begins daily serial publication | the Vacuum Of company, the Binger | Hollywood to N 1 be a cate of the court @#o that ho can! cludes its case, On the female side it wae differ-| in The Tribune beginning November 16, (Continued on Page Three) just before Mrs, e

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