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

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WEAIHER Monty fair tonfght and Wednes- day. No decided change In temper- ature. VOL. X NO. 46 Member of of “reutation , PRESIDENT OUTLINES LEGISLATIVE NEEDS Message Includes Tax Reduction, World R PROJECT BILL -) rE 35 | a aes Audit turean MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS CASPER, WYOMING, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1925 INTX<ODUCED BY WINTER WHY IS THIS YOUTH A KILLER? SEAL SALE 10 PROVIDE FUNDS FOR FIGHTING WHITE PLAGUE: Campaign Begins Here in Full Blast With Solicitors. Working and Booths Open. The sale of Christmas seals which has been started here ‘is meeting with a hearty response on the part of the’ Casper public.. The workers have their stands in hotels, banks. the Consolidated Ro; alty building and the Table Supply company. Persons familiar with the work of the Wyoming Public Health association in the past have requ'red no urging in giving enthus'astic support to the Christmas seal idea, a plan whereby tuberculosis is fought in this state, No other méans fs at hand'to take eare of the situation except by sale of Christmas seal, and the. method has ‘proved the’ best that. has been used in a state which makes no provision for eradicating the disease. The proceeds of the sale will he distributed ag they were last year. The Women's Departmental ‘club will receive 25 per cent of the money gained through selling seals in Cas: per and vicinity. The Departmental club will use {ts share of the re- celpts either in buying milk for un- dernourished children in the schools of Casper, Mil!s. Mountain View and Evansville, or will use, the sum for some other authorized form of tuber- culosis prevention. Mrs. R. W. Loucks,. 65% CY ave- nue, is chairman of the committee | MA FERGUSON REFUSES. 10 SALL SESSION AUSTIN, Tex., Dec. 8.—@)— Governor Miriam A. Ferguson to- “day issued a statement declaring that she will not call a special ses- sion of the legisiature as request ed by Speaker Lee Satterwhite and other members of thg house. She said there was no necessity for putting the people of Texas to this expense as “every effort , Should. be made to hold govern- ment uppropriations within. due bounds of economy.” Every effort is being made to put the new highway law in full force, she said, “and to convene the legislature when the atmos- phere is surcharged with prejudice and political agitation together with the prompting of political ambi- tions in cerlain quarters would undo legislation passed after years of study. “Should it appear there is need for a special session, I will not hes- itate to take the legislators into my confidence and ask their ald, in any matter involving public | good." eile ie ore ee OKLAHOMA CITY,. Deg. .8.—() +D, P. Connolly, prom'nent Okla; homa , oil -many~pepped *dead Jast night while addressing an audience in a local hotel. He was speaking in the interest of a hospital campaign when stricken. Connolly was -president. of the D, F. Connolly Agency Oil’ Well Sup- ply Dealers. He was about 60 years, old. Mr, Connolly was well ‘known to oil men of Casper and the Rocky Meuntain region, having made fte- quent trips into this territory. His last visit here was about a month ago. OKLAHOMA OiL. Delay in Starting ‘New Reclamation|> Work Opposed by Wyoming Solon WASHINGTON, Dec. 8. —(Special to The Tribune.) —Congressman Charles B. Winter today introduced bills in congress for the con- struction of the Casper-Al- cova and the Saratoga reclamation project: The Wyoming congressman along with Senator John B, Kendrick and other. representative western men has been invited» by’ Comm!asioner of Reclamation Elwood Mead : to speak at the reclamation conference to be held.in Washington December 14 and 15. His views on reclamation were personally. presented to President Coolidge recently in opposing Me pol'cy of delay in the construction of new projects.and in behalf of Uberal treatment of settlers under old projects. WASHINGTON, Dec. 3.—)—The payment of construction charges on federal reclamation projects would be extended over a period of 35 years under the provisions of a bill intro- duced in the senate today by Chair- man Jones of the Commerce com- COLORADO mittee, TIRARINGS, nea MED. ome aed — 28 sige on trrigation and. reclamation. met- today. to re- sume hearings on the ‘Boylder Gan: yon project and thé deyelopment of the Colorado river. The committee's marning session wus devoted . to hearing E. B. Merrill, executive sec- Tetary of the Federal Power commis: sion, . Three days of hearings have been ‘scheduled with Secretary Hoover to appear tomorrow. oo Italian Senate Ratifies Debt. ROME, Dec. 8:—()—The Itallan senate today ratified the Ttalo- American debt funding accord and also the $100,000,000 Ican arranged with the Morgan firm by Finance Minister Volp{ during his American trip. from the Women's Departmental club. MEXICAN ARMY IS IN MARKET FOR HORSES DENVER, Col., Dec. 8.—The Mext. can army is planning to buy approx- in imately 3,000 horses and Colorado, Wyoming and mules Monta General James Carrillo, chief of s 5 ; ret le cy D, : > of the army, who ts visiting these | on Congress on First Day eee iyear-Oid Violet, Bohra mith.| Wyoming State Poultry and Pure Seed states for that purp unnouneed ; ; here tod: | DUBLIN, Dec. 8 —()—Fifty. re Goodby, 8 or 48 ‘ou Weds | > vy Ovenine Here 7 1orrow PS Sa AE: | WASHINGTON, Dec. 8.—()—With the new’ con- publ rr lap Anotidlag tl nied fa 1} t pk a he left Show O pening Here Ton orro AR TIST DEAD); gress only .a few hours old, the Volstead act and its parent unanimously ~ adopted a rv olution | Sho and Gordon were not syeet-| law, the The anes a ie alreadis haye drawn a flocd of opposing the Trish boundary ‘agree pans as Rescieky fellow,” Violet |, LXhibits were arriving today for the Wyoming State proposals tor amendment and repeal hare One of the alesse fella t| Poultry and Pure Seed show which will open tomorrow at | “ ” A committee including De Valera,| says. “One of tho nicest fellows | try ¢ Peas § 4 i F be OF INJUR IES aos the preponderance of these are liberalizing Tom Johnson and Austin Stack was |ever knew. He never needed a shave |the Elks hall, Seventh and Center streets, and which will FR oO M F A L E proposals from the wet side, the drys have nearly balanced | appointed to devise the most eftec-|or a helecut, the come ent » Friday night. The poultry exhibits will be made in ue. pane with ae bia for oe wou karti ea gor bag Vol} tive. means of defeating the pro-| never said anything to auditorium on the second floor of the building and the tightening up prohibition enforce-| stead act by repealing existing re- 18, Yontinue e Nine 7 r eI ment. ‘y ee foe Bens Hor sce CARS WY0e) seed displays will be in the sement. NEW YORK, Dec. 8.—Paul Goold, artist and contributor of humorous drawings to many magazines, ts dead as the result éf a fall yester- day from his studio on the twelfth floor of Carnegie Hall through a skylight to a landing four floors be- low. He died from a skull fracture. Police found a letter addressed to hig wife on his table in his rooms. The contents were not revealed and Mrs. Goold declined to discuss the case, Mr. Goold was born in Maine, 50 years ago, The house first felt the agitation with the pouring of more than a score of prohibition bills into the hopper at the opening session but Senator Edge, a Republican of New Jersey, moved today to bting the senate into the question, The New Jersey senator had two Proposals, one of them to increase the legal alcoholic content of bever- ages from the present maximum of one-half of one per cent to 2.75 per cent by weight. This was the strength of war time beer fixed by presidential proclamation, INJURIES LEAD TO COURT SUIT Injuries received by Miss Dorothy | Meyers were riding to the. railroad Byars in an automobile collision at | station. Boulder October 8, have resulted In| Miss Byars.was the more rely the filing of a damage sult for $8,000 | njured of the to young ladies. In Miss Byars brought the action |*he petition, which was filed In the through her father, Dr. 4. B, Byars, {heigl Gee ee feet Col ado, against the Yellow Cab company and | /!Nl0 Mt colts Psp cigs dae David E. and Rhodora Wilson, own | 4 riba, a cut.on the head, and ers, and Richard MeLaugiilin, driver | jvulses’ and other Injuries, of the car which struck the cab 19) Both Mits Byars and me: Mey which Miss Byars and Miss Pauling Portland, are residents of Casper, ‘., Flood of Appeals for Amendment and Repeal of Volstead Act Descend First Guns Fired in War on Prohibition (Continued on Page Nine) —__— Sy tet HE Ily This is WILLIE GETTIT, aytetew of farl EB. Shen i ‘a six but want heart. Wi: 4 slicker, and sport roadster. 15 mane |\Boundary Fight I according. to the law. t --» « By*\MARGERY: PICKARD Central Press Correspondent NEW ‘YORK, Dec: 8 Why is Gordon Pirie a kil ALIENISTS UNABLE TO AGREE A closeup of Gordon. Pirie as he waits in jail to be punished ler? The youth who is waiting in jail for Blind Justice to jexact its.toll for the cold-blooded murder of his best friend, George Nye, Jr., seems to be a normal-minded, healthy looking ‘ ‘regular fellow” with no suggestion of morbid or} degenerate interests. i | Investigators find nothing In Gor- don’s family history, his boyt his school record to indicate normal twist of mind. y welgh on Gordon Pirie’s 1 nood or an ab: During three years in hizh schcol bis average in studies was.about 85 per cent, His preferred reading is Dickens. His favorite movies are comedies, and his pretty ALWAYS SOMETHING HORE | Some, people take the Herald, others take the Ther only a lmited number of news items happening in the twenty hours of the day. They prepared and published in the newspaper printed after the hapbening. They ar written, tog with any additional facts developing meanwhile, and a next paper off the press. Morning or evening, The subject of news, world news or local news, may and does c but the story of news is continuous. It until it Is all told, That is why the thoughtless or careless read the news in the Tribune is duplicated in the Herald. Lf news ap ing in the Tribune was never touched upon in the Heruld, readers would be the losers. in keeping up with march of ey and would march to the office with loud and ig complaints, All matters Known as news, are presented both Tribun Herald covering ‘the twenty-four hour day previous to publicati Some days the one paper has the advantage of first publi On other days it in the reverse. The one and only point to note, is that each paper elds, world and local, as they deserve to be Ld, doon their Heular watch. And to see to it that their readers, t reade te paper or readers of both, are served in briet or extended as the case warrants at the tine The object is to keep the complete story of human life run througli the columns of the Tribune and Herald in a stream, You shall miss nothing, and what you may think is dupli (ls amptitiention, , There Is always fv te more to be told a everything. pune are as the ma never ceases to be e are ‘Tour first ether » printed in the y be nEe} news sometines thinks pear: Ad nts; and on. ition, vers the two par rs ot form ning continuous jon bout -—~ Ohe Casper Daily Trina | | favorite star, Tom Mix. He knew nothing about t Loeb-Leopold | crime or the more recent Noel kill- ing.in New Jersey except to remem- ber seeing headlines about them. Apparently they had not interested : him DeValera Leads Went to Show in Evening | So lttle did the murder of his . | friend, .Geerge Nye, earlier in> the nind in ADS Deliverea vy Carrier On Streets or at Newstands i cents a month 5 cents AUTHORITY FOR FULL TEXT OF LABOR DISPUTE ied Congress: constitutional ‘re informing the Con ess upon the state of the Union xceedingly gratifying to re that thé general condition is eof pro} ind prosperity, Here and ther comparatively small and apparently. temporary. difticul- ties nee adjustment and im : ) istrative methotls such Scpeifions’ to New)? iin expected, tut . n the f s of government Congress Deal With | 200s Hpeneeaeega é rate th ng in the righ 1 WBS f S I On. The country does not aps ‘ from the policies already adopted | at oR nsic these policies and the u ee {improvement of detalls. The age of WASHINGTON, Dec. 8.} perfection is. still in tho somewhat —(?)—Renewing a number | distant it It eae i dan. “ahem andations Har nl. jeer of: bein rded by mistaken of recommendations he al- Reninenteactislerithas io aabtron ready had made to congress on: We: are: by, fat President Coolidge, in his} the most likely to accomplish perm: annual message. transmitted | enent good If we proceed with mod today hou senate, out-| eration ne lomisiative | country the people are ptedel 1 and independent, © and is probleniesr i! c resulting responsl- \ d bilities ir duty to support Paeiredertion: aha themse nd support the govern. GUniby tie touke VW M ment is the business of the cobhiittes nation, whatever the charity of the Adharentnt tothe Wosla: cue tion thay require. ‘The functions Continued effort to strenstt ch the congress a aviation, without Veal « rey of the orga € my and it of 3 navy air f Curtall 5 prevent any encroachment Bo. < the ‘states or thelr | ment. fleet t itso} ot’ .n I subdivisions. Local | .singte’ execu: one of our most Titredeen rity 16h the precious p ns. Itis the great Aint and Saiaetmner Commerce | est» contribt factor to the® s asd) Zatiby to"'deat PAE bility, strength, Mberty, and) pro- | putes in the coal in y f the nation, It ought not to Encouragement of, co-operatives De infringed by atssault or under- marketing as an aid t6 Agriculture: | mined by pur i, It ought not to The President devoted, a section} abdicate its power through weak- to the prohibition question, appeal-| ness or resign {ts authority through ing for the pub-| favor. It does not atvall follow that Uc And vigorous action against vio-| because abuses exist’ it J# the con- lators by enforcement als lcern of the federal government to He also renewed his a ney of | attempt th reform. afjroad: consolidat’ons svolop iety is in much mote danger | from encumbering the national gov- nt beyond its wisdom to com- ment of inland mended retention, waterways. re for the om present, of property seized from aliens dur. | prehend, .or its ability to adminis: rie thi Saat 4 that reorgan-| ter, than from leaving the local com- ization of government departments| munities-to bear their own burdens should be authoriz nd declared | and remedy their own eyiis. Our lo- that states and local communit al habit and custom is so strong, must. co-operate mor with the] our v of race and creed {s so federal goyernment in reclamation} gre uthority 1s so ade tenuous a within which |° UWreing sile of Muscle Shonls to| it can function successft is very (Ce 1+ y (Continued’on lon I eht) tinued on Page & Exhibits Pour In Today for Show Opening Record Entry List in Prospect for the| ’ [EDITION "publication Uifices: rripnne Rid~ %16 H Secana St Court and Aviation CALL TO HARD WORK RECEIVES REAL RESPONSE IN THE HOUSE Tax Bill Called for De- bate at Conclusion of Reading; Deluge of Measures Offered. WASHIN —(P)—A work was suggested to the new’ congress today | by President Coolidge, and the house, at least, took the hint. YGTON, program Dee. 8. of hard Scarcely had tho final words of the executive's annual ‘message fallen from the Nps of reading clerks in senate and hou before the Repub- lican house managers called for de bate on the gigantic tax reduction bil! framed befo® hand to fulfill one ot Mr. Coolidge's major recommen- dations, The more deliberate senate, however, continued leisurely to mull | over the message and take its bear- ings after long re th |. Unlike his two immediate prede cessors in office, and contrary to his |< 1 some past occasions, e did not deliver his rec ommendations by word of mouth to the two houses. of congress. Short after his return from a speaking trip to Chicago, he dispatched | he long message to Capitol Hill by messen. Ser, und along with it he sent more than 1,000 nominations to public office and a batch of war debt agres- ments negotiated during the mer. sum- Read simultaneously in senate and house, the prerident’s review of the state of the union ‘and his proposal of an administration y m of leg islation were greeted b: equent bursts of hand clapping. Immediately at the conclusion the house turned to the tax bill, while the senate in dulged in receiving and referring to committee a deluge of bills and rev olutions, the fruit of the cogitations of its ninety «ld members during the long recess, and dealing with ev subject under the sun ; s—» The fountain legislative proposals continued t flow today in both houses of congress. A new child labor amendment prohibiting chil- dren under 16 from working in in proposed by Represen- iffin, Democrat, New York. Chairm: Jones of the senate commer ommittee offered a bill to divorce the fleet corporation from the shipping board and another creating foreign trade zones American ports of entry foreign — commerc to Republican utright shipping board. An anti-seditior en t r ir nything int 1 to cause ‘th erthrow of ernment! was: intro duced by Representative McLeod } Repu Michigan, who 80 sought a reapportionment of the house and establishment of a stand- ing committee on aeronautics with 17 members Another constitutional amendment | proposed b: presentative ‘Griffin would give the president power to | make treaties only with the consent inued on Page Eleven) The show will open from each morning until 11 o'el No program is planned dur. | there will be addr euthorit om variou phages of i two Indu will he fol ed An er iment | which will { musical ‘ © will be x 0 t “PROTECTION OF RIGHTS JECTED podbmone the ra who ha pane etm of Association Author- specialists, wman, direct . ° ohestinnl ep ized at Forum Meeting Today of Wyoming; 0. C. Hu it . 4 potiltryman of the Colorado Agri Som ee tural college; Robert D. Car for: | (eps to form an association to in-| stands as a recommendation to the kovernor of Wyoming, and A. | mmunities along the North | board of directors; was taken at the commissioner of o ae } Plat for common protection | conclusion of a meeting which bad ture of the state-of Wyoml ement of water rights | for its general tople “Community Co: nome of the mon who wil deliver ad: | taken today by the. Casper | operation.” The Casper Alcova Irrt dresses. rge 8. Beott of Casper | Char ot Comm at its lunch. |} gation Project and the possibility of will be chairman of th nrog 1 leon the Hotel Townsend. The | ratsing su r beets in this vicinity ening. also avent on re das favoring | were among the main subjects dis | ox oposal to send Charles B, Btat- | cr ln low | for cretary-manager, t h wmon of Laramie, dire | usper; Art Gaylord, |ington to attend the re ton | tor of the extension. work of the Unt | Casper; Jame Rerinie, Sheridan; | 1 ing which will be held there on | versity of Wyoming, speaking on en Otto Bteinkraus Noba BE. D. | ve cr 14 and 15. Both proposals the chamber to Hill, Baton, Colo. Adams, Glendo; | were madeby R, 8, Ellison, vice pres: | » s other towns be | A. C. Nelson, Denver 1 Ww Ha je Li Tidweet efining ce lor arper ag far as the tat line mon, Lovell 8. H. Dad ‘I por 1 both were unanimously | in order that when the Ca Moov: ime: Carl ‘Ci Qixen, Dough Cota a Irrigation eproject comes up for ac | (Continued $n Page Eleven) Set t yt aamber, which (Continued cn Byse Blevend é

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