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Casper Star-Tribune from Casper, Wyoming • 10

Location:
Casper, Wyoming
Issue Date:
Page:
10
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Wedneaday, August 1, 1934. CASPER. WYO. THE CASPER TRIBUNE-HERALD WYOMING nSSl TPage Ten THE JONESES TAKE A VACATION TAX LEVY FOR STATE PURPOSES LETTERS FROM 1Alolia Wanderwell th New Mate nnrr Drum ml Launches Another Adventure Cruise ESTABLISHED AT 4.1320 MILLS Wyoming Rancher to Accompany Bride on Ill-Starred Yacht ruLi nrjLnLLu Doke's Attorney Secures Missives Total. Valuation Fixed at Natrona County Valuation Is $34,454,527 CHEYENNE.

Wyo. 1. W) 1 By LEONARD ARNOLD. (By Central Press). NEW YORK, Aug.

1. The pages of adventure turn swiftly for Aloha Wanderwell. She soon will set out from this port aboard the yacht Carma to continue the search for thrills that the pursued with Cap The tax levy for state purposes for State Tax Total 88.277 29.37 Aloha Wander-well and her hue-band. a 1 1 Baker. "WOODLAND.

Aug. I. UP) -Possession of two letters assertedly written by Lamar Hollinshead was disclosed today by A. C. Houston, attorney for Judson Doke, who taid the missives will have a material bearing on the defense of the teriai Dcanr.g on ine ceiense 01 n.c 619; NJT I I'iir A 36 93 tain Walter wanderwell for many San Lcandro city Inspector charged yearn until a mysterious uhe nde with flaying the young Berkeley Me on the same craft that was the year 1934 was fixed at 4.1320 mils today by the Wyoming state board of equalisation on a total valuation of $307,157,835.

Taxes due from the 23 counties for the year today, $1569,176. The state levy include the following items: General fund levy, 3.1659 mills. Interest on highway bonds, .1661 mills. their Argosy Now she Is the bride of Walter Eaker, young Wyoming rancher whom she married shortly after the taxes is as follows: Valuation Albany $21,364582 Big Hern 9.503,933 Campbell .862.336 Carbcn 22.528.343 Converse 17.7S7.847 Creek 5,511529 Fremont 12.0E6.422 Goshen 12,571,832 Hot 6.131.855 Johnson 6.673,855 Laramie 29.121,449 Lincoln 11.713,014 Natrona 34,454.527 Niobrara 5.647.776 Park 9.456.816 Platte 10,509.714 Sheridan 19.594.887 Sublette 4.168,162 Sweetwater 32526.768 Teton 2583.C71 Uinta 12,578523 Washakie 5.345,949 Weston 6,421,412 73.4S3 22.772 49.941 51.947 25.337 27,573 120.320 485S8 142.336 23537 39.076 43.426 80,524 17,223 136.054 9.454 51,973 22,050 26,533 poet. Houston said he had obtained the letters from a "go between," who he declared he had delivered other correspondence between Holllns-head and Mrs.

Doke before the poet was shot and fatally wounded In a cabin here July 26. The attorney said he knew nothing of a reported reconciliation between Doke. awaiting a preliminary hearing on the murder charge Aug. 22, end Mrs. Doke.

"If there has been a definite reconciliation between Judson Doke and his wife I do not know about It." Houston stated. He ako revealed that Mrs. Doke Experimental farms, .1000 mills. University maintenance fund, .3750 mills. University building fund, .1250 mills.

Certificate of indebtedness fund, 5000 mills. The 1933 mill levy was 45422 on a total valuation of $321566.625. County valuations and the amount each county is to collect In state authorities at Long Beach, were obliged to label Captain Wan-derwell's slaying "unsolved" a3 William J. Guy, the man they accused of firing the fatal shot, was acquitted by a Jury. Revenge.

Aloha declared that the motive for murder was revenge; that some enemy of the man who had roamed the world and rubbed shoulders with strange characters In his Journeys had done him to death while he was outfitting the Carma for another quest of adventure. She told the authorities: I can think of a thousand men rvA tar tyf had rccruested Paul Hollinshead, brother of the slain youth, for permission to view his body In the morcue and attend his funeral. HINDENBURG GROWING WEAKER HITLER MAY SEEK PRESIDENCY who might want to kill him but for Syr if zr 4 yy Fx tw I i iWi i the life of me I cant tninic wmcn one It might have been." Paul Holllngshead, Woodland photcurrapher, related a call from Mrs. Doke last Friday after the had But that Is behind her, now, as The cabinet is still delaying ac- .1 1 i TT. vlEited her husband in Jail.

she plans her travels with Baker and four friends who will cruise the (Continued From Page One) man said, would create "a very aif licult situation." won on uppruvai ur rejecuuii ui vkc Chancellor Franz ven Papen as a oceans with them. In First they are sailing for Australia The same anxiety prevailed London. Although the revolution is appar- FLYING BOAT SETS RECORDS Theie they will leave the water for the air and explore the Jungles of Sumatra in a plane. Then the Carma will weigh anchor for North China ently crushed except for sporadic bombings, the Fascist government headed by Dr. Kurt Schuschnigg IIITLER CALLS OX mXDENBURG NEUDECK.

Germany, Aug. 1 continued its vigorous anti-opposi- and after that they'll have other plans to visit other lands. Trip. Mr. and Mr.

Robert Tyre Jones "We'll be gone a year and a half, nerhacs loneer. It's going to be a great trip," Aloha says. champion, and Mrs. Jonc3 enjoy, ing ak needed rest tn Asheville, X. win re the Joneses maintain r.

jmmor home Most folks would think a famous golfer is always on vacation but it's rot po. iJohby Jon former farr.cd r.i;d oi-lm BRIDGEPORT. Aug. 1. The giant Sikorrky flying boat.

S-42, established four new world's rerords today n.s it, completed the frcond lap of a 1.242 mile flicht over sprnial t.oun-e around Long Island. At the rnd of the second lap the plane was traveling at 157.9 miles per hour, about 20 miles faster than any of the previous four records at thr: latest recording. no President Paul Von Hindenburg. with 86 years of life behind and oeath believed close ahead, was visited by Chancellor Hitler today. The former field marshal, his physiciin said, had grown weaker during the night but retained full consciousness.

The chancellor the man who once served In Von Hin-denburg's armies as a corporal came to his bedside from Berlin by airplane. At p. m. the physicians announced "Condition as compared to this morning is unchanged. Full remains.

Toward noon the patient took light nourishment." It was shortly afterward that Hitler and an entourage arrived by automobile from the airport at The weekly attendance was won by William (Scott y) Jack Guests included John B. Hall, new manager cf the Montgomery Ward company; Herman abler of Washington, D. and W. L. All perons who hear disturbing political rumors were ordered to report the sources to authorities.

What action will be taken against 14" Nazis, companions of Planctta and Holzweber in last Wednesday's capture cf the chancsllcry, was not revealed. They are prisoners in a barracks here. A startling interview was given by Franz Winkler, former vice chancellor under the late Chancellor Dollfuss. in which he charged the Fascist Heimwehr (heme guard) had planned to overthrew Dallfuss until the Nazi putsch beat them to it. The Heimwehr is now a most important cog in a truce government wUh its leader.

Prince Rudiger Ernst von Staremberg, serving as vice chancellor. Winkler, who is "somewhere In Czechoslovakia," keeping his exact location a secret, denied knowledge cf the Nazi putsch before it took Behind her. too. is the romance that led her into a life of wanderlust. Her lather.

Ma J. C. V. Hall, was killed at Ypres during the World war, and Aloha was educated In a Belgian convent. When she was 18.

she walked Into a little Belgian village and was attracted by the posters of a lecturer. She heard the man tell of the lure of travel and she talked with him. with Captain Wanderwell. made a pact to travel as companions, as if they were brother and sister. Aloha donned the mannish attire an explorer and went off with him.

Wed After 13 Years. For 12 years they kept their pact for $8 ,500,000 Program LATE FLASHES WEIGHT Gftl8S Report on Camp Given at Luncheon Preservation of I TURNER TELLS OF AIR RAGE PLANS NORMAN, Aug. 1. (rtV-Neal Myers, runaway college boy. pleaded not guilty at arraignment today on a charge of murdering Wav Waterfowl Under Marian Mills, zo-year-oid campus and then romance caught up with them.

Captain Wanderwell had been married three times previously. In "The president had a quiet night. There is no fever but his weakness increased. The president is fullj ccrEcxus." A cordon of black -shirted Schutz beauty at the University of Okla lioma. place.

nas Deen ouut. xne iana around is being d2veloped. 'However," he said, knew that Gtaffel (picked Nazi guards) men thrown about Von Hindenbure's i Mud lake. s.bcut 35.000 acres cf a much more radical plan to cver- water, is bsins restored in Minnesc- nccstrcl seat early this mornine. hrow the Dollfuss dictatorship had The 63 children attending the Lions club rrcupsration camp cn Caster mcvnf.in ths past two weeks have r.

gain, it was ie-r: zi ct today's luncheon me3tii rf club. Soma of the cliilr -e i shown a gain of as rntt eh et re-ven and eight pounds rlrc; crrival at the camp, which v.lll contirue in progress for three it ere v.eelLs. A program of entertainment was been worked out by the Heimwehr. Neudeek castle is now sealed from ATLANTA, Aug. l-(p One entry, the Goodyear VIII, was down In an Atlanta suburb today and threo other gas bags were fclowly moving eastward from here and the fifth balloon was unreported In the national contest to decide America's three entries In the Gordon Bennett International trophy race at War-paw, Toland, In September.

I knew very well that Heimwehr leaders had submitted plans to Nazi CHEYENNE, Aug. 1. Turner, the Epeed flier, intends to use a low-wing twin-motored plane in the McPherson-Rob-ertson air race from London to Australia in October, he said here today. Turner stopped off here a few minutes enroute on a scheduled transport trip from Chicago to Seattle. At Seattle, he said, he will confer with Boeing officials regarding the construction of his racing ship which will be similar to the transports being flown by United Air I ir.es cn the transcontinental route.

leaders to this effect. As a matter WASHINGTON, Aug. 1. (JP) J. N.

fDing) Darling tcday told how the government is giving an new deal to migratory waterfowl. The cartoonist who became chief cf the biological survey said the work of saving water birds from going the way of the wild pigeon is "proceeding nicely." On the Pacific coast, the Atlantic ccast and in the north central drought belt the government is restoring1 shelter areas where good food, cover and water will help of fact they had many secret meet ings together ta and eventually rbout 150,000 acres of nesting ground on its borders r-Cl bs used. Tro projects, the locations cf cr? recret, will brinrr about r.c" back to w.rd fowl use. "We discovered." Darling said, "thtit eve? conditions were fir.e for nsrting this year, with pood fcod. cover, mi rrne' the nesting grounds were on'y p.bout half occu the cuter world by both secret police and the S.

S. men. preventing correspondents from getting even a glimpse of the residence. Official bulletins on the condition cf the 86-year-old president were suspended last night with the explanation that his condition had improved slightly. But the public has been warred to "expect the worst." Nervousness sppeared to be growing among the deeply concerned 1925.

he and Aloha wre wed at: Riverside. Cal. A year later their daughter, Nell was born and then, a sen. whom they named Nile, for his birthplace. In Egypt.

They traveled through all of Europe and Asia Minor; through Asia and the Islands of the Pacific; through the Congo and the Amazon region of South America. They kept going, always. Then one night in 1931 when the Carma was tied up in Long Beach harbor, Cal being readied for a new flight Into adventure. Captain Wanderwell was alone aboard and the unknown assassin struck. His last trip aboard the Carma was to a point three miles off the coast where Alhoa consigned his body to the ocean he loved.

Behind her now are the days of the police investigation, of the glare of the publicity spotlight as she "Wednesdays putsch was a very Eaiton, accompanied by foolish interruption cf a ripenin? cf virgene Rusrell. and specialty the fruit which meant the natural tn nr. pnrrnrh death cf the Dellfuss rcRime." ticurc. BISMARCK. N.

Aug. 1. William Langer, deposed governor, tesigned today as Republican nominee for governor, setting Into motion machinery for endorsement of ll.i rife by the Republican central committee. Swanson Favors Present Ratios pied because cf the shortage ducks." He said that wes a sure sign the measures to save tbe birds from extinction are people of the nation. Many asked, ducks and other game birds to multiply.

Just now construction work is concentrated in the north central states so farmers impoverished by the drought can get money by helping. "Why are we being kept in the dark about Father Hindenburg. He is being attended by four famous physicians. Eut Von Hinden iifiii Imp iM? my Nazi Minister burg yesterday called in Dr. Riets, a country doctor, The curious were sllowed to pass tne estate but were not permitted In North Dakota and South Dakota the biological survey Is completing concrete spillways and other improvements on 500 small lakes.

Around each lake the government hopes to acquire land for nesting and breeding. A larger project is under way on the Mouse river of North Dakota where a lake of about 80.000 acres to loiter even momentarily. Photog fhroif.iii I iSHIlSfi mm raphers were refused permission to take pictures. In the nearby town of Freystadt. cab drivers were warned they could not cmvey newspapermen to testified in the trial that ended in acquittal when Guy proved his Innocence with an alibi that showed he could not possibly have committed the murder.

"I thought I could never marry again, but I found Waiter and the future looks bright again," Aloha said when the wed the rancher In New Orleans. Behind her are many leagues of voyaging for adventure. Ahead now is the open sea, all the glamor of the quest to which she has devoted her life and a new companion by her side. mm WASHINGTON, Aug. 1.

WV Eecretary Swanson told reporters today he was willing for naval utrensth to bo reduced 20 per cent In all categories of ships, but was convinced that existing naval ratios between the leading naval powers should be maintained. The navy secretary said he was expressing merely a personal opinion. His statement was made in reply to questions ns to his attitude toward a statement by Keisuke Oka-da, Japanese premier, expressing dissatisfaction with the 5-5-3 naval ratio between the United States, Great Britain and Japan. "If we abandon the present ratios there is no tilling where we shall go." Swanson said. LEGIOiTSsfwILL NAME NEW OFFICERS AN OLD GOLD SMOKER SINCE 1932 LOS ANGELES, Aug.

1. Charged with stealing the affec-tiov of Leo Richards, theatrical employe, Mrs. Daphne T. Read, wealthy former Salt Lake City widow, admitted today in Richards' wife's $15,000 damage suit that she traveled with Richards through several western states. CHARGE HURLED AT GERMANY (Copyright, 1934.

by the Associated Press) VIENNA, Aug. 1. Austria officially pointed an accusing finger at Germany today for the blood which flowed from a Nazi attempt to seize the government one week ago. An announcement approved by the cabinet said directions to Austrian Nazis were sent into the country several weeks ago from Germany. The plans, which included the possibility of civil war, said Walter Adam, propaganda chief in a radio address, were seized in the shoes of a man arrested in upper Austria.

held at 8 o'clock Friday night by members of the George W. Vroman post, American Legion, at the Mountain States Power company halL There will be entertainment by a visiting legionnaire from Pennsylvania, M. S. Phlieger. 1-r AN ACTOR plays a few two-fisted characters on the ecfeen, some people get the idea he's hard as nails all through.

"But that's not always true. Take my throat, for instance. I have to watch it like every other movie star who works in front of the mike. 'That's why I'm for Old Golds-they never rasp the throat. And what's more, your taste tells you that they're pure tobacco plenty aged and not 'fancied-up with artificial flavors.

IEAT GUTTERS AND BUTCHERS III CHICAGO J0H3 IN STRIKE Livestock Commission Merchants Threaten Action in Courts in Stockyards Walkout Election of new officers and cf delegates to the Wyomln? department convention to be held here Arg. 15-16-17 will feature the program of the annual meeting to be m. This man confessed receiving $100 for delivering the documents now partially decoded. Adam said. Another government announcement stated Franz Holzweber and Otto Planetta, who were hanged yesterday for their part in the putsch, died with the cry "Heil Hitler," on their lies.

She Loses 200 Teeth Franz voa Papc Chancellor Hitler of Germany is credited with a diplomatic bulls-eye in the appointment of Vice Chancellor Franz von Papen. above, as the new minister to rebsllion-torn Austria replacing Kurth Rieth who "arranged" the proposed safe escape of the Nazi assassins of Dollfuss to the German frontier. The new envoy criticized the German Nazis a week before the famous "purge." Old Heidelberg in other marke's will continue to ship there, even after the strike is ended. Officials of the striking stock handlers union were working with federal department of labor conciliators in their own efforts to settle the difference. irritated throat is one tough fcreak' that I won't risk.

So III keep right on 6ailing smoothly with Old Golds." (Signed) JAMES CACNET I STOCKMEN TO REG YE IT Brew -Dated HIGH PROOF OB IKK Do" 82.75 per case Small deposit en case. 8 bottles for S1.00 Blatz is delivered free at any time. Ice Cold. CHICAGO, Aug. 1.

Livestock commission merchants threatened tcday "crack down" on the handlers' union to end the spreading unicn stockyards strike. Tlie commission men demanded that the matter be taken to the courts, just about the time members cf the Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butchers cf C. A. Burnett and company walked out last night. This strike was rot so much of a sympathetic gesture, it was reported, as an internal depute over seniority rights.

The demand of the commission men was based on the ground that they are the heaviest losers in the strike which has lscked the yards for more than a week. Leaders cf the handlers union previously rejected the suggestion of officials of the union stockyards and trarisi: company that Federal Judge Philip L. Sullivan be called upon to construe an award he made May 31 at a previous arbitration hearing. Some quarters hold that the position of the commission men their ALLOWANCE E00 MOVING CATTLE e'd like to emphasize this point, Mr. Cagney: No better tobacco grows then is used in Old Gold.

And it's pure. That's '-V-Wt-S -y Old Golds are easy cn the tSi ond ft I At Your Dealer or John Tripeny Co. 241 S. Center. Pkonee 72 99 CHEYEXNE.

Aug. 1. CT" Senator Robert D. Carey was informed by the regional agricultural credit division today that a limited allowance for moving cattle and an allowance for grass in a new location will be given ranchers under the emergency feed loan division. Instructions for such allowances was available for their cattle but were unable to move them to the new acreage.

This condition had obtained In several instances, the senator wrote, where Wyoming ranchers in the drought area had located good acreages of grass in Montana but were unable to finance the movement of their cattle to the good grass. By aiding ranchers to move their cattle to good grazing districts rot otherwise being utilized, it is hoped that many a rancher vrill be pb to save his "fcundatVn the choice breeding stock which he retain as a base on which to build up his herd again. are to be Issued at once, the senator ntj'vio -1 1 Martha Larson. The subject of an unusual operation by which a dentist removed refusal to accept shipments of I was informed bv A. T.

Escate. act- Se James Cachet in Warnw Bros. Comes the Na ock since the strike started has I ing director of the regional agricui- 200 small teeth freni her mouth, i hren the yards. The new ruling came as the re- itav.ng ncr sun equipped witn a full set. is 16-year-old Martha Lar But tae commission men ex- suit cf the senator's Drotest thpt no America's 2rmxcrtJi0sT.

in.n son, above, of Kansas City. Mo. Each t.hp fVvir that- tV r-Vii- I a i i of the exacted teeth is about the caco market closed, some of their ranchers who had on their own init- OI emn or rtce- 1 CiienU who have been selling stock iativ found out where pasturage.

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Pages Available:
1,066,498
Years Available:
1916-2024