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| a Fe PAGE EIGHT VICTIM MARKED FOR POISONING DENIES STORY Nevada Named by Slayer Gives New Version. W YORK, Dec. 31.—UP)— 8 plot by yer of Edith Burton, a rapher, has come fordw complete denial of Cow “All bh 1 sald las poison rtenog: been not Cj givan's common the slayer has ald. told she was afraid of this man,” Lewi said. “Twice he telephoned her while I was visiting at her home. I heard her tell him to stop r ring i Although I ator,” his on! as a member of the L of 1903 and 1905 He sa; poor,” District Attorney Doda will @ grand jury indictment for murder seek against Cowan, blind as a resu who 1s permanently of his International Broadcasting Friday Night _NEW YORK, ements Virtually are complete he internatio 1 broadcasting ow night featur McCormack a America and the “Big Ben" in London. at 630 p. m., eastern the program will about 11:30. The any will re-broade: itain and over to the continent where the German stations will aid in the dis- tribution News ¢ ches, which will ecimens of the wor! Acsoclated. Pr fox pro ‘am tomo! songs of John Lucregia Bort in chimes of Starting standard time, until continue be will sing sting wil chimes ot the Park Sp ngfield, Mas: burgh; KYW, stings, Neb: Colo.; and KG Chic Motor Busses.To Worthless Gheck Leads to Arrest| Ww. a charge of issuing * to Richards and ¢ unningham Other short checks a 1 to have passed by Whe fore his a Drink Hillerest Water. Phone 1151. Cordial Good Wishes for the NEW YEAR! Hogan’s Spot Grocery 842 East A St Phone 2070 SS ‘Senator’ sought ever a letter before he ot himself. The | Run Late Tonight |, (left), a L bination of shell pink’ kasha ingerts of lizard skin. evening frock (right). feather trimmed chapeau below. and odels stimulate milady’s interest in clothes. is an example, and the dress worn under it, White chiffon velvet trim A Parisian turban (upper ce Sartorial Interest The raincoat of white leather which is from Lanvin, a com- Banding is of narrow gold and gray braid with med with very fine silk lace and beads makes the nter) is appropriate for dress wear, as is the Chinese silk. however, mayor of Howev Dales, as mayor nor doubt his daught ability. It was merely, he explained fatherly concern for her health. He thought his daughter already had too much public and private work and that the increased responsibil | ities might be too much for her. j Miss "cont who ndle better than me ©Y MRS LIDAN CAMPBELL ‘ARTI- SALOON ) LEAGUE TAKES a | NP NEW PLANS Mrs lomat. General Pershing may re-| for nea |turn, There may be an election to Qt Ne ae S | determine possession of the clevtised died tn By ROWLAND ‘WOOD. | provinces of Tacna and Arica. Bu Ps 4 yyright, 1925, Consolidated Press | the chances are that political rhea es Association.) | modation will have to be applied to- 31.—Tacit ad-}solve the dispute and the eminent Mu something | soldier will watch {t all from a dis- | mates of the to prevent pedple | tance. hyn Rages hes been msde by} General Pershing outlined the con: finkne aloon League of New York, | ditions of what He considered a fair where they for hich announced today plans for @| election. Being a soldier who be- pind sorous educational program to con-|tieved tn strict discipline. and Germiatyia 2h eensed woman | ¥inee the youth of the state of the} straight-from-the-shoulder methods, evils of rum. The further admission that it Is the young folk of the coun- ‘y who are doing most of the drink- hh is in sharp contrast to y prohibition argument that pilot, Nollle Beare, recent: | in. Dea- les Boutard, wis, believed (2° ear a 0 q trong enous c vic nm would die out as soon | bea ihe Arirtny aah akectertatee ase he then current crop of hardened jout experience, for b topers died off, also is to be found tween 1919-192 acted mayor- - in the statement of Orville 8, Poland, ess for her father, durt hig last} ess of Monaco} counse] of the league, nnnouncing term of 0 n busy! plans for the educational campaign. with town for the| Mf course,” sald Mr. Poland’s last six “and there ‘0| statement, “there “is drinking ~ at e rank oman “can ties and all that. sort of thing, but these young people have never drunks lying in the gutter he other évils which we took ranted ten years ag is a great body of young men end women in the country to- lay who are shaping {ts public opin- Miss Anna Ohio, the se sineering Univ here nan to hold he Smo ih’ the } in late Amel est dr Wh A } t a near} Uividual clerks of the had yolun: | | tarlly adopter during | « it} pre like ' time t r clothe b tt which. would hav been but appropriate for usin | sed use of soft coal and th | | atten on its uses played a In this fashion vement costumes t changed as t be dily or laun dered us ks are remained as |fresh and attractive at the end of | the business day as when ‘they were | donned | vantage of the move here to furni 1 i every tint and ade workers throughout They count on a lar from Washington and ds of women workers are employed. They say| the fact that a smock will allow the | workers to dress for dinner, theater or party and still present a trim and businesslike appearance during of (ice hours, will insure a multitude | of buyers, | Since the coloring and finish are @ matter of individual taste, the ck can be considered neither a uniform nor a livery, according to the textile manufacturers, and the| to the ‘other women garment makers. Big men execu- tves have adopted the garment as well ag thelr women employes an na | the: personnel, NEW YORK, De ntfon |} of “early Americ: rir * not Dictures, #o fnr as 1 f elt THE STYI ‘Home Building lon, who were too young eight years igo to have any interest in public questions of any kind.” ‘The league, Mr. Poland explained, loes not contemplate any relaxation of tta efforts to bring about more stringent enforcement of the law and it is even contemplating working for a new state dry enforcement act at ES reference. { The Cbe Casper Daily Cribune — AGED WOMAN IN PLOT TO KILL HUBBY SAYS HE BOUGHT HER CHICAGO, -Dec. 31.—(P)—In. the 44 years of their marriet Mfe, her 65-year-old paralytic husband's one kind act was to buy her {ce cream once, while John Walton Winn, a former convict, loved ‘her and wait- ed 15 years for him to die. This was the defense ‘of Mrs. Eliza Nusbaum, 58-year-old grandmother, in a confession, police say she made, of plotting with Winn and three oth- ers to kill er husband, Albert, jose battered body was found yes- | terday on a south side prairie. Winn, at a pistol's point, compell- ed Edward Goff to kill Nusbaum with an’ axe, Goff said in a con- fession. With two pairs of ice tongs, Wonn and Goff hauled the body the attic of the home of Mrs. Delllah Martin, held us an accessory. Afte supper, they redressed the body loaded it {nto Nusbaum’'s sedan and carried it across the prairie, abam = plans to burn the house and body in the back yard. 37, was arrested in Crown Indlana, and brought to Chi- to Held also were | |} Goff, Mrs.\ Martin Marion! | Stringham, whose Clothes were used Winn, | Point. cago early | purse when ICE CREAM ONCE IN LIFETIME Roscas, father of eight children. His son, Lioyd, 20, was then under ar- rest after pollce found a part of the grandfather's. skull and bloodstains in an automobile Lloyd was driving, In efforts to shield his son, Ros- coe told of the love affair of 15 years’ duration between his mother and Winn. She gave Winn $250 a month of his father’s money, Ros- coe sald. Once his father shot Winn through the head. Unemotionally and without regret, the police said, Mrs, Nusbaum told how she and Winn had planned for a long time to kill her hasband, af- ter a.strcke of paralysis had failed to be fatal. A fragmentary diary, in which she <pressed fear that her husband | would kill her, was found in her arrested months ago, she told po- lice, she had persuaded her husband to put title to his property, valued at about $5,000, in joint tenancy with her, o ths her at his de Detectives velved in robbery. He had a small pistol when arrested of the type Goff de- Several belleve Winn was in- @ recent stockyards bank | to garb‘the body, | First accusation against the grand, | | mother came from her oldest son,' | scribed as used to threaten him, He served «2 penitentiary sentence in 1914 for robbery. By DAVID LAWRENCE (Copyright, 1925, Casper Tribune) WASHINGTON, Dec, 31.—General J6hn J. Pershing, hero of the world war and master of the many awkward and embarrassing situations that de veloped in the inter-allied command in France, has fallen a victim of the irreconcilable temperaments of Chile and Peru. His patience is exhausted and his sense of fairness will not pér. mit him to compromise. Coincident with this is his illness. < | Under these circumstances, the military man gives way-to the dip- he framed a plan that would have ensured absolute fairness. But the kind of election he prescribed prob- ably would not haye been accepted in many parts of the United States. The political and human equation, even in the United States, does not always permit of strictly fair elec- tions in every sense of tye word. Thero ts electioneering and other forms of persuasion designed tq win voters. Fancy an election in South Carclina in which the democratic party, in possession of the machin- advance to withdraw its officials anybody to vote without belng ap- proached from. any. side ahead time. Chile has been in possesston of the disputed territory for many years. She finally agréed to withdraw her military forces. Peru insisted that every form of influence, potential orgptherwise, be withdrawn. Firat, ru objected to the election, then Chile appeated from the conditions lald down. ‘The provinces aren't re- ally worth so muth to either coun- 7 text all varieties ich | Albany, but the bulk of {ts effort*is| try, ‘but national pridé démands a m pular in the|to be centered on “education” victo! Jered comme cabarets| Bolivia, which needs an outlet to examp! Naturally, it 1 be mpanied by a whic h} Skin Shoes, d leopard: now. ts in Leop hun u LATE Et popular, i ht than CHICAGO, Dec. 31.—(P)—Pitcher y t ¢ harles Robertson of “perfect game” in 4 © a. was release by the t Fe ar t ox to the St. Louis inserti ola | are Robertson, who 1 to 1 the White Sox five 1 1 and ¢ 1 with ri the fifth pitcher to rh in a no-hit, no-run, no-player i rea when he blanked the Tigers April YORK, De P)—An that Luis Angel Firpo has - the 5 tur definitely an offer from cud fashions. Th to fight the heavy: . different shad }y nin a title bout at of the gown: 4 they) Tia Juana, Mexico, in July vas made ° t cate of| today James Douglass, motion 1 ure director, upon his return Buenos Aires eee PENSION. CLAIM ALLOWED, A telegram from Senator John B. | Kendrick to E. A. Pelletier, com- mander of Lieutenant Caspar Collins ». 15, Spanish War Veterans, # the allowance of the pen- laim of Joseph F. Pugh at Week Planned For Colorado DENVER, Colo., Dec. 31.—(P)De- a month to date from September laring that “home-owning cittzens!; y995. Mr, Pugh s a member of are largely responsible for the high | jie local camp. standard of our civilization and pro: ates ah Aba gress,” Governor Morley widay { sued a plamation dei The Classified ads can do wee ary 17 to ‘. much that a salesman can do and it serves you at such a ing Licsults. small cost, prepara: a party }th the sea, could probably make better use of them, but while Chile has at times been {nclined to consider not had that idea Just now, Peru the. election and Chi the Pershing conditlo a loss of the territors f The' president ‘of the United States is the arbitrator under whom the election is “being conducted. It would be difficult for the United States to send any one in General Pershing’s place. Yet'a new set of clroumstances may arise to settle the problem. The new foreign min- ister, Senor Mathieu, has just left Washington where he held the post of Chilean amVassador. There distinct hope here that he will work out a settlement. In other words, diplomacy takes a hand again and when Gen. Pershing gets back here in the middle of January and takes a rest, the time may be opportune for his commission to resume work RADIATORS Damaged—Frozen Repaired just like new. Good work! Right Price! 24-Hour service for out-of-town trade. Sam, the Radiator Man 938 East A St. Phone 1381 Saves you approximately 12 ' and & ‘PERSHING BESTED FOR FIRST TIME IN FAILURE TO BRING PEACE IN TACNA-ARICA ROW ery of government, should ugree in! | trom all election places and permit"! under the altered conditions, and {t may be that his health will not per- mit him to return and a wore flex- {ble individual will take his place. It may be said in advance that no election will be considered fair by the losing side, and officials here are beginning to feel that it would have been much better if the United States had not ‘accepted the job of arbitration, passing {t on instead, to |the World Court. ‘Col. Coolidge ~- Gains Strength PLYMOUTH, Vt., Dec. Colonel John C. Coolidge, tather of the president, was able to sit up for \a time today and to transact a little | business, his physiclan, T. W. Cram, jot Bridgewater, reported. Colonel Coolidge had been bedridden several 31.—M— THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1925 RETURN TOU. 6. OF PERSHING [a GIVEN APPROVAL WASHINGTON, . Dec. 31.—U)— Secretary Kellogg announced today that President: Coolidge had author- ‘zed General Pershing to return to! the United States for medical and dental ‘treatmént. The date-for his return has not been communicated to Washington as yet, Mr. Kellogg. added, but the head of the Tacna-Arica plebiscitary commission is expected to return on or before January 15, The condition of his health, with dental troubles having affected his blood ‘preasure, and general health, Mr, Kellogg sald, was the only reason, for General Pershing’s return. Secrétary ‘Kellogg's statement “General. Pershing has had seriou: trouble with his teeth which has at- fected his blood pressure and general health so that the doctors have ad vived-him to return, I think only temporarily. “General “Pershing has been of course advised by the presidént to return when be thinks best. ‘That Is the only reason for his return. “L-have not yet been advised of the exact date of his \departure but understand that he will sail. about Tanuary 16, nor havo I been advised how long he expects to stay, here.” During General Pershing's absence from Arica, tt may become necessary to appoint some one temporarily tn his place in the event that there is a meeting of the plebiscite commis: son, where the exercise of his. vote would be necessary. No decision as to that appointment has been made as yet, as {t isnot known how long the treatment General Pershing will undergo will require. Four large volumes were required to contain the will of a woman who died recently in London. Altogether, the document: comprised _ nearly 100,900 words, :more ‘than there are in_many novels, days since he lost the use of his lower limbs. ee Four years ago Mrs. J. F. Price, an Englishwoman, went to Rhodesia to seek a fortune by farming. Her only experience of farming had been gianed in England during the war. Yet she has successfully developed a. large area of country; her farm, in fact, has become one of the show places of South Africa, It was viaited by the Prince of Wales on his recent tour. GREETINGS Pollyanna Spreads Good Cheer In every home throughout the coming year. past. The Made With Honey. Qh, So Sweet! The better bread for you to eat. QUALITY BAKERY “Makers of Pollyanna Bread” 1105 S. Poplar—Ph. 2290 RADAR AR ARS ee eee Salt Creek Busses Leave Casper, Townsend Hotel 8 a.m. and 1p. m and Sp. m. peel oat eng Ha Ate ress Bue’ eaves 8 9:80 Dally ree! BAGGAGE AND EXPRE | E. XPRESS” TELEPHONE 144 ) I CASPER:TO RAWLINS STAGE “ARS LEAVE DAILY AT 9:30 A, M. FARE $12.50 hours travel between Casper awlins, WYOMING MOTORWAY Salt Creel (OW NSEND HOTEL Transporta' tlon Company's Office PHONE 144 Twelve months of unprecedented Prosperity , and Joy is our New Year's hope for you. WYATT HOTEL — Henry Wyatt, Prop. HAPPY NEW YEAR We wish to extend to our patrons the wish for a sincere and Happy New Year. We shall always strive to make this wish come true by maintaining the prices we have always quoted in the biggest, best and greatest year in all industries | in history. | DON’T FORGET ~ Williams and Humble Oil Both Good Buys Today. BLAS VUCUREVICH STOCKS AND BONDS All Kinds of Securities : 208 Consolidated-Royalty Bldg. Casper, Wyoming Capital Gossip Upset When Ball Is Called Ofi WASHINGTON, ° Dec. 81—(?)~— Washington society was disturbed for a while today to hear that two of the capital's society leaders, Mrs George T. Marye. wife of the forme: ambassader to Russia and Mrs. Jo. seph Leiter, wife of the Chicago ¢ naincier, were to give rival Ne Year's balls tonight. .The gossip yvas that it would tr gurate a war tor social loader: and ‘that the lesser “Ughts wou Rave to use great discretion and f sight in choosing where to g¢ those attending the Marye ball wo: in future be persona non grata a the Lelters and vice versa, It developed later, however, that there was 4 misunderstanding as ¢ dates, and a wave of relief swept-ov society circles. Mrs. Leiter announce ed she would have only a dinn party tonight — a more extensive party belng planned by her for Jan uar, would later go to the Marye ball. Mrs. Marye disclaimed Intention of starting a social war, WOMAN DIES AT EDGERTON Mrs. Auvelia J. Callahan, 70 years of age, wife of J. P. Callahan, dicc last night at Edgerton. The body at. the Shafter. chapel pend! tuner: arrangements. A son a daughter in Montana survive t dead wo: 1. They will come her. for the’ funeral services. Mr. Calla han ts engaged in church work Edgerton under the direction of Bishop N. S. Thomas of the W ming-diocere, Episcopal church. — According to the. latest report there are 27,469 women in the fed eral civil service in Washington, of which the. largest number are em- ployed in the treasury department. Phone 166 Phone 8000 |