Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 17, 1925, Page 2

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PAGE TWO esct GARY [FOUND | SELES ELEP AER CHLOROFORMED INOTELOUITE Chicago Crime Holds| Puzzle for Police; Doors Locked. din John ¥ rme Winter weather rivals that of Call- f ww is a good tifne to go. Gay lanterns and strange signs— t here silks and curios m the hills, the blue s, then China and argest, fastest and son th —the Emnr 7 local ral Pacific, St. Louis, Agent, Mo. rid’s Greatest Travel System Ww area | alle; e dead t's crib blankets and oth- e: furnishings were disarranged. Det es conceded that a pass key would have opened the locked door while the mother was in the second room beyond, and her nurse, Miss Caroline Forgren, was in the middle room, The polic an cuestioning the who had attended the everal months, ember of a firm of elec- ipply dealers, had talked in is with a business associate unul late, then went below and put 1 r in the g 1d rejoined nurse fe mother teal nis room went to the far room for a good-night look at the baby :and found it dead, apparently smothered by the covers, but later a cloth that had been saturated with chloroform and mall bottle were found, and . physician declared the child had Killed with the drug Late Sports Noy. 17.—@)—The r Athletic Unton, nnual convention to- Murray Hulbert of re-elected New York City as president, without day, fon. William F. Humphries, ncisco, was named first vice president and Fred L. Rubien of New York City, secretary-treasurer. The t convention will be held in Baltimore. oppos San NEW YORK—Eddie Anderson, Wyoming featherweight, defeated Edouard Mascart of France, in 12 rounds, Benny, Hall, St. Louis ne. gro, outpolnted Billy Levine, New York in 12 rounds, PHILADELPHIA — Benny Philadelph featherweight, beat Jose Lombardo, Panama, in 16 rounds. Joe Bashara, Norfolk, Va., won a decision over Marty Powell, Ne wYork, in ten rounds, Cleary Chicago, won from Al Wink- Philadelphia. Bass, NINE SEIZED IN ROUNDUP OF GANGSTERS YORE NEW , Nov. 17.—()— Three women and six men were ar- rested today in the roundup of an «1 robber band held responsib'e the police for more than 25 hold: and robberies throughout the elty during the past four months nd in which the robvbers obtained oot ted to total $200,000. The! roundup rivaled in importance the by ups king up last month of the no- us “Cowboy” gang. a Se. ed to be specific as to the ce of attempted influence, Par. quoted Mrs, Lansdowne as say- Foley had sought to have her testify falsely as to several things. Headaches’ from Slight Colds Laxiutive BROMO QUININE Tablets relleve the Headache by curing the Cold, A Safe and Proven Remedy. Che Casper Daily Tribune The Berth of a Nation Yo To FOLEY CHARGE BEING PROBED (Continued From Page One) and said to her: “Don't tell him a damned thing. He 1s not here for your good.” ATTORNEY EJECTED FROM HEARING. WASHINGTON, Nov. 7.— (#) — Joseph: Davies, counsel for Mrs Mar. garet Ross Landsdowne was ejected from the Shenandoah naval court of inquiry today by a marine quard. Judge Advocate Leonard objected that “witnesses are not in the status requiring representation of counsel” and the court, after a conference an- nounced that it objected also td the time and manner of the lawyer's ap- The box bears the signature of 1 W. Grove. _30¢ C x RET = Pr nearance your Hear You don’t fronted w \exists for You don’t gry childr riors and OPENED TODAY ““Suppose Nobody Cared?” Dig into the Gold that’s in into the gold that we can divert to the needy. side of life to know that it cities’ unfortunates. infants, old women, helpless and hopeless old men, stricken invalids and crippled war- struggle for existence— You don’t have to see these before your eyes to pity and want to protect them. Pity them with your profits. Protect them with your prosperity. ovide for them with your open palm, HELP THE COMMUNITY CHEST Casper Community Fund Campaign t and convert it have to be con- yith the seamy many of the have to see hun- en, under-nour- shivering wayfarers in BUT WHERE U GOING GET IT? ae | DON'T YOU Wr THINK WE OUGHTA GET Subconscious Mind Is Measured by This Man Father ©. M. de Heredia a BY MARGERY PIC. RD ral Press Correspondent YOF Noy. 17,—Can fous nality me ar the ubcon ured by be Sclentists are ssing ton, inspired by t ven in New York loped by Father C. ittention beir to a deyice ¢ M. de Heredia, suit priest, by which he claims to e able to chart’the “inner mind” of humans. The machine, which the priest ad. mits to be an adaptation of the Rus. stan ouiji board called a micro- vibroscope, consists of a brass pen- tulum hanging by a silk thread from 1 joint in a brask disk. The subject aces his fingers on the edge of the rass disk and apparently communi ates vibrations to the pendulum, | causing it to swing and ribe geb a nd his “microyibroscope.” metrical figures, which, according jto the priest, form a sort of mathe- | matical analysis of the subconsclous person of the subject, lit Noted as Ghost Breaker “For ev person,” he said, “the pendulum gives a different response, I ings strongly for some and y for others. It gives a differ- mbination of curves and loops each person, and it same combination for the same per- son every time one tries it. ent for th are registered. If you take grain of sajt on the tip of your gue, While your finge are on | the brass disk, the effort wil] be reg- istered in a change of the curves," iclive as a Ehost-breaker/and dupll- itor of the tricks of mediums; such TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1925 _ jAIRTH CONTROL POLICY URGED TO CURB MISERY Former President of Medical Association States Opinion. CHICAGO, . Nov. 17.—)—The practical application of birth con- trol would eliminate from the world much more misery and immorality than it would bring into it, and would in addition promote harmony in married life, declared William Allen Pusey. former president of the American Medical Assoclation. He was addressing’ 200 women at a birth control: conference. Sane legislation which will permit scientific study of the merits of birth control and permit interchange of Information on thesubject among medical men will clear away. many of the clouds /of misunderstanding of the moyement, said Dr Pusey. Dr. Pusey declared there need be no fear of depopulation as an after. math.of birth control. since the love of children, age-old Instincts desire to“perpetuate the’race and the de- mands receivel by physicians for relief from sterility indicated to him that a sane effort to protect future generations from the afflictions which ignorance has permitted to exist and multiply. JACK DURAND e Jack Durand Is Taken to Prison WAUKEGAN, IIL, Nov. 17.—@)— Jack Durand, adopted son of wealthy Lake Bluff parents who was sen- tenced to three years in Joliet peni- tentlary for robbing the home of F. Edson White, president of Armour and company, left here at 7:40 o'clock this morning by automobile in cus- tody of Sheriff Ahlstrom of Lake county, a deputy sheriff and the sec- retary of Scott Durand, for the prison. Boy Scout Court of Honor Will Meet Wednesday Eve The monthly meeting of.the Boy Scout of Honor will be held We nesday evening in the club rooms of the Mountain: States Power com: any. This monthly ceremonial is looked forward to.by all gcouts qnd is largely attended. Parents of scouts are invited to participate in the meeting. as spirit writing and spook photo- graphy. “I am not one of those who deny nsychic phenomena,” he sald, “and T am not one’of those who account for it by diabolism—that is, by sup- posing that spirits are about, caus- ing these effects which we do not understand. T think {t may be that the psychic has subconscious powers which enable him to produce me- chanical effect at a distance. He may for instance, be able to subcon- sciously direct vibrations to a spot in the table which will cause it to siveja crack or rap. TI believe that. in some manner, the psychic force of the Individual may be transfated into niechanical force, causing phencm- ena which, quite naturally, unedu- cated persons attribute to spooks or spirits. Experts Skeptical “Some of these psychic phenomena are undoubtedly directed by an in- telligence,. It is not, however, the intelligence of spirits but the sub- conscious intelligence of the psychic. “Now, {n the microvibroscope 1 have something which seems to mea. sure the subconscious personality. Peing the same for each person, ex. cept as affected by his mood or state of health, the combination of figures which the pendulum makes for each subject seems to be a chart of his personality, I do not pretend to gives the| have worked {t out well enough to tell a great deal about a subcon- although | «cious personality from these figures. changes of the mood and state of Tt will h take time to use it safely ‘n that respect." Some experts are skeptical of the machine’s powers, declaring that {t is no more deserving of serious con- sideration than the “wee-gee board.” Father de Heredia long has been] Others say they're willing to be con- vinced, provided more nroofs are presente significant EATER STRENGTH Calumet i ee all the leaven- ing force needed to raise. any baking properly. Use half the CALUMET THE WORLD'S GREATEST BAKING POWDER 2'/, TIMES THOSE OF ANY OTHER BRAND A. Grace chose a career she décided to be a When Mary ager of the Lindsley, man- Dodge hotel, dietitian because the only woman she had met who was doing that work was*so attractive and. made ‘sO many delightful contacts in her work. So Miss Lindsley went to the Pratt Institute, New York. “At the time I finished my work there I felt I wanted to be a specialist in dietetics, consulting with doctors and doing as much work with the medical profession as I could,” she says. When she got into hospital work, however, Miss Lindsley found that the work of a dietitian was much more than prescribing food for the hospital patients. It meant looking ifter the maids and other employes. keeping up the housekeeping of the VIOLATOR OF U.S. MANNACT IS SENTENCED A sentence cf two-and-a-half years in the federal penitentiary was met- ed out to Daniel W. Webster in the federal court at Cheyenne on his plea of guilty to a charge of vio- lating the Mann act, according to word received today from Sheriff Alex McPherson. Webster was ar- rested in company with a girl, not yet out of her teens, whom he ad- mitted bringing here from Nebraska, Harold Morrison, arrested here on a similar charge, elected to contest the case and his trial was scheduled to bogin at Ch Montana Sends First Turkey To President WASHINGTO; Nov. ol7.—(@)— T twenty-pound turkey gobbler for President Coolidge's Thanksgiving dinner has been recelved trom Mon- tana. It {s a gift of the Pondera county Poultry Growers’ association, and was brought to the White House by Representative Leavitt. The association also sent a turkey to each member of the cabinet and to Representative Leavitt. Artist-Author Dies in Denver DENVER, Colo., Noy. 12.—()— J. Campbell Cory, author, artist and artoonist, of the Rocky Mountain News and Denver Times, died short- ly after noon today at his home here, following a long illness. Hope for his recovery. was aban- doned Saturday when he suffered repeated pulmonary hemorrhages. His sister, Francls Cory, of Chi- cago, nationally known artist, is on her way to Denver, and is expected to arrive here today. | LATE FLASHES re PHOENIX, Ariz, No. 17.—(@)— Jessa F. McDonald of Leadville, for- mer governor of Colorado was se- lected ‘as prerident for tho ensuing yead by the western division of the American Mining congress which 1s holding {ts closing business sessions of a five day conference today. M. B. Tomblin of Denver was selected as secretary. Apple Blossom Butter 138 South Center Street Cheating Death 20 Stories Up ASCO Bored with favorite sport of New Yorkers, taxi-dodging, Sig Smith and Lillian Hart satisfy that “urge” by performing some ic stunts from girders of a craper under construction: Smith is a steeplejack; Lillian isa trusting girl friend. {| hospital, etc. She grew interested ' in the lines of work and industry: that contributed to public institue ons and decided that there was a broader field for activities than that of a specialist of dietetics. So she “drifted into the field ef labor,” as she puts it, developing employes, trying to see what could be done to train working men and women to a higher type of work and more responsibility. This work brought her into contact with other prob- lems of a large institution, such as the furnishings, etc. “I believe,” Miss Lindsley says, “that in this type of work the aver- age woman finds a more complete expression of herself. It offers op- portunity for the development of her artistic sense, her sense of jus- tice, and her sense of hospitality, as well as for that old asset which we all cling to—practical judgment. “My experience has been in hos- pitals, in schools and in the. hotel field. In each position I feel that the interests have broadened. I have tried to cover more and more In. every position the fields that re- late to the home—even to the ex- tnt at present of having a very lovely garden!” The Grace Dodge hotel was con- structed in Washington during the World war and was originally planned as an exclusive woman's hostelry. Now guests of both sex are welcomed. ‘Tipping is not al- lowed. Miss Alice Supplee, a Seattle + school teacher, was marooned in the ice near Victorialand, in the north of Canada, for many months. She taught the native children to read, but was forced to translate the word cow into caribou and chicken into ptarmigan for their understand- ing. She was the only white woman in the land the natives came miles to see her. Mrs. Frank 8. Rogers of South Portland, Me., has in her posses- sion a glass tumbler that is more than 50 years old. The glass was given her by Dr. John H. Sanborn, who was stationed at the army barracks at the camp ground in Civil war time, where it was used. This yenr, for thé fiftieth consecu- tive time, Mrs. Rogers filled it with Jelly made from apples picked from the same tree for the past 50 years. Mrs. Rebekah Greathouse has been appointed to the position of assistant United States district at- torney by -Major Peyton Gordon, district attorney, She is the second woman in Whshington to hold the office, and her appointment comes as recognition of her ability as a lawy Joseph Marr Gwinn, superintend- ent of schools of San Francisco, de- clares that school teachers should be well dressed for the effect on the children. “The clothes of the teacher are the ornament upon which the eyes of the children are bent more fresuently than anywhere else,” ‘said Mr. Gwinh. ‘‘Also it is generally proved that wheneyer one is dressed properly and well he or she is more optimistic and does better work.” Miss Isabel Whitney, of Brook- lyn, N. ¥., is the only woman Al Fresco painter in America who is not afraid of great heights in her fresco painting. She recently deco- rated the walls and ceilings of the Brooklyn museum to serve as a background for renaissance art) Delicious Candy! There’s nothinglike Car- nation Milk to make rich, smooth-grained, delicious candy, Try it and see. And try Carnation, too, in other cooking and with coffee, fruits and cereals, in place of costly cream. You'll like it— every way. Caaxaniox Mitx Propvers OMPANY 1639 18th St. Denver, Colo. "From Contented Cows” © 1925, Carnation Milk Products Co (@ineation NOTICE If you fall to receive your Tribune, call the office. Phones 15 and 16 and a special messenger will bring you a Soby of your favorite paper. Calls must be. regis. tered before 8 p. m. week- days and noon Sundays, CIRCULATION DEP’T. yal 4 S|

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