Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 7, 1919, Page 8

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& t ‘ i iv 1 j PACE RicHT REFINERS COME BACK AND TAKE. | CASPER. A.B. H, P.O. 2 | McNeill, oh = SS e hai <0 Wome a os 0 WITHLOSSOF $250,000 | Bostick, ‘ss > {HER I VR: be) bMéte! ib iss.5 +b 1 3-9 ° 0) 0 | Whittle, ee free 67981 2) 10) SHERIDA ., July 7.—Plans | Hayes, = 5 0 1 © O are being formula ai for the imme- Gaut, en = 4 0 2 O O diate rebuilding of the J. W. Denio vo De F Bornstein, ef ——- 4 1 3 1 1 Milling company’s enormous grain Two Denver Pitchers Knocked Out) tor cls, pwn... 4 0 7 1 O elevators and flour mill, which were of Box by Casper Sluggers ; Offman, x —- __ 0 0 0 O O!destroyed by fire, causing a loss of Arbogast Gets Homer with — — — — $250,000. Bases Full Totals_- eae 10)'27, 2 Many thousands of bushels of : : xRan for Arbogast in the fifth. t and hundreds of sacks of flour 5 aaa DE NSE A.B. H. P.O. A. E. were destroyed in the fire, whic Casper played real baseball Satur-| Walsh, ss ----- __§ 2 1 5 © completely gutted the elevators, will | and aided by Denver errors and/ Morehead: af i= 5 1 0 O 1/and offices r pitching scored a 12-to-5 vic-| Hornsby, 3b -.---- 4 9 1 2 ©) The fire, supposed to have been fast Denver nine. The) Cochran, ef, p _ 4 0 2 2 1 caused by spontaneous combustion, counted three in the first,! Go)ins, 1b __------ 4. 2.18 1 1, was discovered at midnight in the top econd, and four more in| Healy, 2b _--____- 4 1 2 1 0 of the elevator. Low water pressure the yame was VeTY} Morton, rf ——- 3 0 0 O 1 made it impossible for firemen to much Casper’s. The fourth added one! May, rf 0 1 © O reach the flames, which licked down more cou but it was merely| Waller, c - 1 2 1 O and spread until the entire structure SCpenparm Chars Severni, p _------- 0 0 1 1 @ was a sheet of flames. De vas minn the services of | Samide, p, ef nea Ve tiat wipes! ~~ he s i Ider, and Captain a = righ weak point at bat, and aeure ee innings: F sro » team work of the | Casper 8.44100 00x—12 102 : WORKER DROWNS, ; the game would! nenver ___.002300000— 5 pe is apes) Gasper Wilken The summary: Two-base hits, eee 7 class of hurling that the vis gast, Metz, Walsh, Waller. Three- AT FT. STEELE src ____} base hits, McNeill. First base on balls: 1 inning against} Of Nichols, 2; off Samide, am RAWLINS, W July 7.—Clyde | Casper batters |Cochran, 4. Struck out by Nich : Brady, age 25, Western Union pitch two days in} 7 Wild sae lineman working out of Denver with | asted only part of the Then Cochran took He walked several workout and then aided ver Sluggers pro- ee phen Se petted Se a te remain over Sunday for a third j;game but the Denver pe had | made full arrangements to leave and | three or four of the visitors could not }remain in Casper Sunday to play. A. ‘GRAIN ELEVATOR RAZED. BY FIRE AT SHERIDAN everni, 1; Cochran, 2 cre w sent here on improvement and z, Bor Nichols. Stolen bases: Metz stein, Gaut, McNeill, H Passed repair work, lost his life by drown- ball, Arbogast. Sacrifice hits, Bostick, mr whe ized with cramps while] | Hayes. Time of game, 2 hours, 15 swimming in the P| e river below} the bridge at Fort Steele. Com-! | minutes. une Smith and Daily. re powerless to save hin. | ver the Casper Paevars made Bathe kept them scattered except in the third and fourth when the five Denver runs came in. Not only that] but he ned s n and only walked | k of this neat job of pitching. ne home town boys were out there dine the willow, and they were| : when the hits meant runs. Th started in the first and bom- barded for four innings—until they had t gume safely tucke y were also 5 ing the four Casper players getting | ags tole n bases. The team played baseball in the! field where the showing was a draw-| back in the first game. Only two errors chalked up against the heme pl s and only one figured in the scoring. McNeill led off in the first against Denver with a three-bagger. Arbo- rast followed with a single and Bos- tick sacrificed. Metz was there with n two-base blow that scored the two ahead of him and himself when the Denver outfielder took all afternoon getting the ball in. Whittle singled but he was out at second. Bornstein, second player up in t second, singled and~then*st6lé's ond. Samide could not find the plat- ter and walked Nichols. McNeill went thé seme route. With the bases lead- ed, Cochran in center field dropped a fly, letting in four runners, including Arbogast who had hit the ball. Cochran went on the mound and the} next two men were out. The third was a repetition of the second stanza. Whittle walked and was advanced by a sacrifice by An error at first made Gaut fe d scored Whittle. Bornstein as safe on an error in left field and Gaut mpered across. Cochran was not finding the plate very often and MeNeill walked. Arbogast was clean- up man with a two-bagger which scored two runners. One more run came in the fourth vhen an error by the center fielder allowed Metz to stretch his single for four bases and to score. Casper loosened up after that. Two Denver runs came in the third on three singles by Samide, Walsh, and Moorehead and an error. Three more counters came in during the next inning, when a single by Collins, an- and a stolen base fol- two-bagger by Waller Waller came in a few Walsh doubled. seored two. minutes later when MeNeill cut short the rally by catch- ing Moorehead’s fly off third. Nichols held the heavy Denver sluggers hitless the remaining five innings of the contest. Cochran pitched indifferent baseball the re- mainder of the game but the Casper players did not score. There was little incentive. mith and Daily again looked good in their umpiring of Saturday’s game. An effo¥t was made to have Den- FERRE H AALS EEE We Receive them All Orders to the Amount of 114 South Wolcott FIER HEIEIS HE EAE IEE IEEE ILE IEE SE 3 HE aie ee | more | Water for irrigation in the Grey- | nm RESERVOIR, BASIN CATTLE TO MOUNTAINS WHEN GAR TURNS OVER | NDER, Wyo., July 7.—Otto | ones, prominent young rancher of | oy cee i _ the Pilot region, suffered fatal 1n- | BASIN, Wyo., July 7.—Surveyors juries in an auto accident on tre |heve just finished a preliminary sur-|Jivide between the Little and Big y for a reservoir at the head of Wind rivers. The machine over- Gooseberry Creek which will gather turned on a sharp curve and Jones the flood waters from the Wood haq his broken in addition to river southwest of Meeteetse’ The jeing bi crushed. Other mem: ranchers on Gooseberry, like the pro-; here of tl | Pr th ty escaped wit Slain’ thelGreybulleyalley, willl loselacseqea ith minor crops this year for lack of water than the reservoir will cost. injuries. = POLICE STONED | , BY STRIKERSIN . ‘ CHICAGO TODAY ly Amsocinted Press.) cuickdo , July 7.—The first dis- :turbance growing out of the labor} Ati sae cea strike called on July 4 for five days| \|as a protest against the conviction | |}of Mooney and Billings in San Fran-| bull valley is at the lowest ebb for) the past 25 years and the larger ! stockmen are moving their stock to the Big Horn mountain country Eight thousand head of cattle were riven thru Basin last week enroute to. Tensleep, where pasture has been] secured for _them. CITY NEWS @) cisco occurred when 100 policemen| Mrs. O. A. Cranston, 145 West Do-, were called out to disperse a crowd | ver street, has been called to Colum-{of 700 which was distributing strike! betadraresialt eae the serious,.ilness. s. infront of, a_north side her sister, rs P. aH. Phomas. When called upon.to dis- | perse ‘the crowd threw stones and! Daisy pine was Bete for dis-| broke 2. number of windows in the| turbance July 5 when she was caught| building. Several arrests were made. fighting another woman. The cau SS of the battle was one lone man, the, NOTICE police said today. Daisy is out on » The business of the Grand Central $50 bond. S106 16 Bar will continue under new manage- E. I. (Tomm: Thompson, former- ™ent- W. L. Treber having. bought} » Tae the interest of Ed Chadwick. The| ly manager of the Otis company with brokerage offices here, is in Casper for a few days on business. Mr. |Thompson is now with Wilson andj company, stock and bond dealers of Denver, Colo. Mr. Thompson recently | returned from a short fishing trip in the Powder river country. SS NEW COUNTS ON FATHER TO AID HIM IN TRIAL LOS ANGELES, July 7.—Harry S. New confessed murder of his sweetheart, is confidently expecting United States Senator New, whom he claims is his father, to assist in his place will be run as a soft drink and| cigar house. 7-3-6t* fo Subscribe for Tribune NOW! nervousness, is increasing and the police are guarding against suicide. New changed his story in detail when he said he shot Miss Les- ser, not because she refused to be- come a mother and proposed an il- legal operation, but because she re- fused to marry him. Relatives of the girl deny the stain on her honer. New asks to see the fgirl’s body. etal i Hour ordinance waa still in effect and Holmes to Homes Special Prices Balance of Week E FORMER CASPER POLICE DECLAR WAR ON TRAFFIC SINGER DIES IN H DENVER SUNDAY Mrs. E. G. Martin Fails to Recover from Hlness Which Led to Operation at a Denver Hospital. VIOLATORS WHT ARRESTS SUNDA Sixteen Fines Assessed ip, ~ , i This Morning, as Many Mrs. G. Martin, about 45 years! * old and well known in Casper for five More Due to Appear in [y'.iy"years asa church singer, died Court This Afternoon. yesterday in Denver, Colo., following an operation, according to reports reaching Casper. She went to Denver Casper motor car drivers and about two months ago to be operated owners met a big set-back yester- day when the police department, follewis.g inciuctions from Chief on, it was understood by her friends Fred Place, started the strict en- here. | Mrs. Martin was here last winter forcement of the traffic ordinance in the city. Sixteen appeared in but had left Casper about a year ago{ after living here for nearly years. | {police court this morning for speed- ing, failure to burn lights, incorrect For many months she was soloist at} the Methodist church and her soprano | parking, and parki longer than 30 j minutes in the congested district. An- voice won her favor wherever she sang. For a time Mrs. Martin gave other allotment of drivers equally as |large is schedvled to appear this aft- vocal lessons here. Her husband was with the Burling- ton railroad company with offices at Greybull and she also is rvived by a daughter. No funeral arrangements have been made. ernoon at 5:00" o’cloc Following four dangerous acci-} = aa. dents in which pedestri were run Dan O’Brian arrested on an investi- down after dark in one day last week., gation charge was told to leave the Chief Place decided it was time that! city or pay a $50 fine. He chose the the traffic rules of the city be en- country outside of Casper to the large forced. The present ordinance has} ‘ine, He was an undesirable according been in force for more than a year’ to the police reports. but the enforcement has gone neglect- ed for many months. Police officials.egain advised that the correct way of parking a motor ear according to the city ordinance is flush with the curbing, that is with two wheels to the curb. They fur- ther warned that on Center street from the Northwestern railroad tracks to the courthouse and on Second’ = street from Center to Wolcott street} ¢o, the same offense brought a fine car is allowed to park more than! o¢ gor and that the license might be utes at atime without being taken away on third offense for the ble to arrest. This is the congested) motor car driver being a menace to district. blic The old ordinance read 15 minutes | PU iis ect | but it was amended so that the cars} could be parked for 30 minutes. If, the motor car driver desires to park | Transfer company, 0. G. Johnson, John Viskoy, T. J. Wyatt, and Jerry | Sullivan. W. R. Dobin parked his car too long and paid the same fine | other traffic violators. J. M. Probst had no lights on his car. The police took the wholesale |rests as no joking matter. Offi said this morning that second arr go to a parking piace, iilee avi MATE ane ee ape ese ae TONIGHT, 1 ea er BEST VENTILAT. in the center of the street. FIRST SHOW AT 7:30 THE STATE The police also reminded automo- bilists that the speed limit in the city limits is 12 miles per hour except street intersections where it is six miles an hour. It is common knowl- edge that the latter part of the ordi-| nance is seldom observed but motor car drivers found out Sunday much to their distress that the 12-mile-an- being enforced. Eight were arrested Sunday for speeding and paid fines of $5 and costs. Those arrested were Carl Peters, H. C. Ullery, H. C. Wheeler, Hilen Carlson, A. E. Thompson, Joe Fisher, C. B, Yarnal, and C. P. Arbo- gast Mr. Arbogast admitted that he! had been “burnin’ ’er up a bit.” Six were arrested for parking in the wrong manner and received the $5 fine and costs of the case. These included a driver for the Michner said: Every resource of soul and substance into our headwear. tion has been taxed to offer Casper men and young men the widest va- riety in Summer Headwear. The of the elusive been put thing called style have AUSSELL BROTHERS” SHOWS ARRIVE. FOR BIG CARNIVAL HERE. here yester- Brothe After a late arrival day evening the Russell big carnival will be open full blast) tonight at 7 o’clock at the high school athletic park, according to an announcement made at noon by the managers. The big show is being given here this week under the aus pices of the Army and Navy club and a portion of the total receipts are to go to the Army and Navy club, If the long string of trim looking cars— in all—s any indication of the class of the carnival, Casper may expect a full week of real amuse- ment from the Russell shows. The manager of the compaiuy today 1 that the fifteen sow: two riding devises, as well as the i nor amusemert devices will be ready for the publie to. tim are nearly 360 people connec the company. ae Read Tribune Went Ad: MONDAY, JULY 7, 1919 ~ $1,800 WORTH OF BOOZE 15 SEIZED AT GREYBUL BASIN, Wyo., July 7.—The first prosecution under the new prohibi- tion law commenced here Sat urday. Sheriff Wickwire seized , truck load of whiskey in a garage jn null containing about forty ses and a value of $1,600. In con nection with the confiscation of the booze Lloyd Hindman, Wilford Pitt, man and Al] Blake were arrested and given a preliminary hearing be Justice George Harding in ybull. Hindman was bound over to the next term of district court Pittman was held as a material wit ness and Blake was discharged. heriff Wickwire has given it out cold that he will back up the state officials in prosecuting every case of bootlegging and violation of the prohibition law. A number of ar- rests of people having liquor not in their residence is expected shortly -_— Cousin Bill Says: “When a man thinks he has left his watch at home and takes it out of his pocket to see if he has time to go back: for it, I should call that man absent- minded.” IANO & : WA ora De KoHoAno'r NaTIV Plast GWPUGHN)OINGERS 5 PLAYERS? @ COMING TO THE IRIS SOON TODAY ALICE BRADY _ “THE BETTER HALF” FROM THE NOVEL OF - MICHAEL THWAITS——ALSO FORD WEEKLY TOMORROW BRYANT WASHBURN IN THE FAMOUS SATURDAY EVENING POST STORY “VENUS OF THE EAST” New York’s all right—if you take it in small doses. Greeley had the right idea when he “Go West Young Man, Go West.” So quoth Bryant Washburn when he got thru with Hicksville on the Hudson. our organiza- Largest Fruit Market in the State Warm Weather Food FRESH FRUIT and VEGETABLES in Daily Shipments $1.00 or Over Delivered Free “WE HANDLE EVERYTHING THAT GROWS” CITY FRUIT MARKET Two Stores Phone 247 and Get the Best JIE A AIRED 151 South Center on Good Lawn Mowers majestic mowers $990 $10 $12.50 $17“ $18 Electric, Water and Hand Power Washing Machines $12.50 $18 $25 **” $100.00 Florence Automatic—Simons Oil Stoves—are the real oil savers i New lot of Baby Buggies and Go-Carts. Prices reasonable Simons Ball Bearing ee Holmes Hardware Co. “HOLMES TO HOMES” CASPER “ie “i WYOMING Straw hats in just the shape and style to suit your face and fancy. Straw hats— $2.00-° $5.00 Panama hats— $4.50 $12.50 NAY A Watch Our Windows The Big Busy Store am TMA Webel Commercial Co. CQO ———— Speaking of Hats You Never Saw a Finer Display Watch Our -Windows

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