Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 14, 1919, Page 1

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5 RT. SSE TR ee OVER 4,000 COPIES of The Daily Tribune sold and | delivered to subscribers every) - aSPER, WYOMING, MONDAY, JULY 14, 1919 ‘THE DAILY TRIBUNE Member of the Associated Press, and served by the Unit- ed Press. NUMBER 225) ‘every large city,” - OPPONENTS TO LEAGUE PLAN BiG! MEETINGS meeting in protest to the Les Nations has been arranged in nearly according to an announcement by the league for the} preservation of American independ-| ence. PRES. WILSON LEVY OF NINETY BILL OF PARTICULARS START ON.” JUR BILLION MARKS ON TREATY IS SOUGHT JULY 23, Ouf0 TOS PROPOSED BY BE FIRST STOP TEUTON LEADER Leading Citi Cities from Capital, , Jewels and) Cincinnati West to. Metals to Provide' Be on Itinerary of| Funds for Meeting Speaking Journey | War Obligations (By United Prem j (By United Press.) WASHINGTON, . July 14.—The | LONDON,. July 14 — German itinerary of the president’s tour prob. | | Finance Minister Erzberger expects ably will be; announced early thi week. According to tentative plans, ito raise 90 milliards of marks by | the tour will start July 23, with| levies en capital, jewels and met- Cincinnati as the first stop. It is practically assured that |, according to a Weimar dis- speeches will be made at Indianapolis, patch. First payments will be due} Cleveland, Chicago, Kansas City,|in January. Wichita, St. Paul, Denver and several| Persons taxed may remain indebt- Pacific coast cities. ed for 30 years, during which time five per cent will be charged toward paying the war loan. Many Germans believe American capital will enable Germany to cap- ture the Russian markets, excluding the Britishers. SHANTUNG SITUATION Is CONEERENCE: TOPIC Associated Press.) WASHINGTON, July 14.—Presi- dent Wilson discussed the peace trea- ty at some length today with Sena- tors King and McKellar. It is un- derstood that particular attention was given to the Shantung situation. Senator King said he was convinced that the question eventually would clear itself. King called primarily to urge the appointment of Abbot —_—_—>___ McGinnis of Salt Lake City, as ~r- 300 COMPLAINTS ister of Bolivia. King said he un- derstood that President Wilson would speak in Utah on his forthcoming IN BISBEE CASE tour. (By Asnocinted Prensa.) ATTACHMENT IN DAMAGE SUIT IS | DISSOLVED HERE , povcras, Avisoub, July 14.— | day filed additional complaints in the| A motion to dissolve the attach-| Bisbee deportations case alleging kid- ment against him was sustained Sat-| napping against. approximately 250 / urday- in the district court in the persons, bringing the total to more casé of R. L. Carpenter against/than 300 defendants. He said that Charles Vroman who is asking $1,-| 5 000 for damages he claims Vroman| main to be filed. did to his property. Mr. Vroman| Jn addition to individual complaints had asked that the attachment be dis-| there are seven corporations operat- solved. ing in the Warren mining district: The petition in this case states] the Phelps-Dodge corporation, Shat- that the defendant was in possession | tuck-. Arizona Mining company, Calu- and operating as a farm, the prem-| met and Arizona Mining company, ises of the plaintiff as a tenant from | Denn-Arizona Copper company, Wol- July 6, 1916, to April 1, 1919. verine Arizona Mining company, the | | Warren company and the El Paso LE ONDON PA PERS es Rainer aiete railroad charged PRINT PICTURES | CARRIED BY R-34 a IER BEFEAT VETO OF LONDON, July 14.—Photographs| my taken in the United States and brot | THE PRESIDENT to England by the R-34 and carried > Germany should join the the League | of Nations and try to obtain a re- vision of the peace treaty. He ad- vised the closest cooperation with the United States. to London by airplane from Pulham are published in the morning news-| papers. This is looked upon as the first step toward the prediction by| Viscount Northcliffe that quick inter- change between New York and Lon-| goad issue for the present, by the don newspapers and photographs by) faijyre of the house today to pass aerial post was a possibility of the/ the agricultural appropriation bill near future. lover the president’s veto. The vote aA =f was 247 to 135, proponents of the TRAMP CA UGHT repeal mustering 23 votes less than AND MANGLED ie required for a two-thirds majori- The agricultural bill “ful be nessa vith the repeal rid ted. BETWEEN CARS| wi i that no attore would be made ——— to pass the repeal measure as a sep- CHEYENNE, Wyo., July 14.—H. | arate bill as undoubtedly it would be Gloreda, a tremp ,who is believed to| vetoed by the president. have fallen asleep after climbing on} e » fell bet t t Gaile ‘Canyon sod was ears TERS. SHOCKLEY mangled. One arm was mangled, all DIES SUNDA y but the thumb of the other hand was taken off end one leg crushed to the Mrs. Minnie V. Shockley, 28 years = old, ‘died yesterday at a local hos- f extent that amputation may be necessary. ee Lohn A. Brenner and son, Fred E. pital. Mrs. Shockley is the wife 0; Brenner, of Marion, Ark., and Miss George H. Shockley, who owns a Brenner of Muskogee, Okla., are garege on North Beech street. The guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs.! | body will be taken to Cheyenne, Wyo,. A. J. Woods. “tonight for burial. MARTIAL LAW IN LONGVIEW, TEX. ARMS CONFISCATED BY OFFICERS (By United Press.) LONGVIEW, July 14.—Martiallaw prevails here following the shooting of another negro yesterday. Militiamen and Texas rangers (By Associated Pre WASHINGTO July 1 Repeal of the daylight saving law became a Count von Bernstorff declared that} 50 to 100 more complaints yet re-| Minor Resolutions Introduced at First Day’s| Session of Senate Committee for | Consideration of Treaty. | (Ry Assoc: Pre WASHINGTON, July 14.—The senate foreign relations com-| | mittee, beginning consideration today of the peace treaty, re- ported three minor resolutions bearing on the Versailles nego-| tiations, but took no action on the question of asking President Wilson to take part in committee discussion of the treaty. The resolutions reported would call upon the president and | | the state department for information regarding the alleged secret treaty | between Japan and Germany; regard-! iny the protest said to have been made | by General Bliss, Secretary Lansing |and Henry White against the Shan- fees settlement ; and why Costa Rica} GASPERTOWEET ee the League of ‘Nations’ convenant Fifth of Five-Game Series with) as “one of the world’s greatest docu- ” 1 || Thermopolis Scheduled for | ments, Senator Swanson, Demo. ¥ |cratic member of the foreign rela- Home Grounds with Honors _| tions committee, told the senate to- Even on Total | day that if the United States reject- | ed the league it “would mean that Casper is ready and fit to meet the| she would skulk in the greatest world Thermopolis baseball team tomorrow | cTisis that ever occurred.” , afternoon at 5:30 o’clock in the de, He defended the league against ciding game of the five-game series | ! objections that it would sacrifice | being played between the two cities.) | sovereignty and American traditions, Each team has won two contests to| and asserted on the contrary that it date, Casper copping a couple here} would result in an immense material and “Thermop” scoring as many vic-| gain in the protection of American tories on their home grounds. | integrity and preventing war. pee The local nine looked fit at bat yes-|_ ‘““The pathway of our duty i is plain, terday in its game against Manville | said Senator Swanson. “Let us not and the whole team played errorless| be frightened by our own prodigious ball and handled many hard chances| Shadow as it projects itself into the in the field. The players were dar-| World affairs. Let us not be deterred |both at bat and in the field. MANVILLE GETS SHORT END OF “TO-6 SCORE Poor Fielding Offsets Star Perfor- mance of Manville Twirler, Allowing Locals Victory in Sunday Game Manville played sioppy baseball in the field and Casper's representa- tives were out there taking advan- tage of all the breaks and won yes- terday afternoon on the high school athletic field, 8 to 5. It was no fault of Holly, the star Manville hurler, that his team lost, for he allowed only eight scattered hits and permit- ted only eight runs from his assort- ment in spite of eight bad bobbles by his support. Maples on the contrary was rather wild for the Casper nine but his sup- port saved him atthe critical mo- ments because the whole Casper nine was playing great ball behind him The Casper hurler allowed six hits and several brilliant plays in the infield and by the local outer gardeners rob- bed the visitors of almost sure safe blows. Both hurlers held the opposing bats- men safe for two innings, Holly do- ing this in spite of some feeble field- ing in the first stanza by his team- mates. In the second he fanned Free, Bornstein, and Maples in rapid suc- cession and whenever Holly came to ing on the sacks once they were on,from our manifest duty and destiny and got away with several steals in} by a craven. fear-of becoming great spite of the fact that Holly, the Man-| in giving service and direction to a ville hurler, is a great player to keep} world in a direct hour of its need his men close to the bag once they eet and distress.”” an : He pointed out that the war had With an even break and a good} Vee the social order to its founda- | brand of pitching, the local ball fans, tion. The Virginia senator said it !are looking for great things tomor-| Wa8 the paramount obligation o% re- row. A majority of the fans claim, Sponsible statesmen to prevent an- that there will have to be some im | other such conflagration, which would provement in the hurling in tomor-| return the world “‘to the same rule of row’s contest if Casper expects to brute force and barbarism as in the h d sized chance in keeping ark ages.’ the championship. BG AMPLE PROTECTION FOR The game is to start about an hour| UNITED STATES, IS CLAIM. and a half later than the usual time) genator Swanten, Se i bays ot starting {beigames hee Bs tha allt note of the administration’s defense Yu of the league: eo nee ene game, Tucsdey, at | “The requirement for the concur- liginiecm opolinuicomestibarstiatter | sance of the United States in every nlavinetGwolbandiemmeslagainstiliale decision of the league council abso- and Manville. Manville was taken | ately guarantees the nation against aoe surrendering its sovereignty.” Be ae eb ran he itehed| , Senator Swanson answered every against Casper in two other contests, |°PJection to the covenant. In each bat after that the loyal Casperites, al- ways awake to a real player, gave him “the glad’ hand: ‘And the plucky slab man came thru twice, once with a single and in the final inning with a double. Another time he got on thru a fielder’s choice and scored one of the few Manville runs. McNeil walked to start the third inning. Holly was going good but Shaw at short made a bad bobble and Card in right field chipped in with another misplay. Hayes singled and the final count was three scores for the stanza. The fourth was almost a repetition. Vinquist was asleep and another mis- Shaw mixed with a health blow by Arbogast brot in Two hits came in the next inning but Whittle was out com- ing in home and the rally was cut short. Two more runs came in the seventh for the home team when Whittle and Hayes hit good singles after errors had placed two mates on the sacks. look appearsito\be thelfavorite to start the|°a°° he pointed to the provision that ezch decision of the council must be game here against the local aggrega-/ 7 onimous, itieluding tha United tion. ichols and Maples loom up on. sclbihitics ‘for the home tenn States. After the council has acted unless Manager Arbogast has a dark|COmsress is still empowered to® re- <r council’s advice, he declared. morrow. necessery to world peace because it lis unwilling to accept, because the council simply advises and the ad- vice may be rejected by congress. noon at the home of his brother, 747|Clared. This is important, in view The body is being held at the Bow-| reserved in the covenant as it pos- | world controlling influences, can (By United Press.) LONDON, July 14. — General Desperay will head the Allied opera- tions against the Hungarian soviets, according to a Paris dispatch. The horse ready to step into the box to- fuse American acceptance of the Free and Tepe, two likely young-| He said the interests of the United |clared that article ten is absolutely C. W. - JOHNSON is a solemn pledge by all league mem- ' States no obligation this government “When under this article we guar- Henry Johnson, died yesterday after-| guarentee for ourselves,” he de- South Beech street. Mr. Johnson) o¢ our possession of the Philippines COUntysMAanYeveets 20> |trine was as expressly recognized and man chapel awaiting the arrival of sibly could~be. this week. | States, “having become one of the STRYCHNINE IS | successfully aid in the settlement of LARAMIE, Wyo., July 14. me GEN. DESPERAY nine, have been brot here for burial. | Union Pacific. | pany, was here over Sunday. Mr. A fs States were amply safeguarded un- sters, probably will be in the line-up A to ‘ aoata tomorrow in the ¢ initha outfield. der artiele eight (disarmament). De- {bers to abstain from wars of con- jjatent: It imposes upon the United on antee the territorial integrity of other Gitbert W. Johnson, brother of ations we receive from them a like was one of Casper’s oldest and best) 4nq the Panama canal.” known residents, coming to Natrona| He asserted that the Monroe doc- friends from Nebraska. The funeral mad ea ti hi will be in Valentine, Neb, sometime |, H¢ ured the senators to give the | world matters urgently pressing for FA TALTO TOCHILD 2 remains of little Ina May Boyle, who died in Denver from eating strych-| LEADS ALLIES eee father of the child is a fireman | on the Denver-Laramie division of the | ER HUNGARY ——_— H T. W. Jaycox, tax commissioner | ‘of the North Western Railway com-| Jaycox lives in Chicago, Ill. | es 8 ¢@ are collecting all firearms, over 1,000 pieces having been turned in. All civilians were kept off the streets last night. ia over Sunday, L. L, Bender was home from téa!l rte attack is-expected to begin to- ‘dey. aii | Another bobble made things rosy again for Casper when Shaw e another error around short stop. Another Shaw misplay coupl- ed with a single by Bostick and a| stolen base on some poor playing| around second by the Manville play- ers gave the home nine its eighth run and the game. Manville did not look good at bat and the best the visitors could do against Maples was five runs in spite of a big threat in the eighth and ninth. Two walks, a field’s choice, and a single by Card followed by a sacrifice by Wilson brot in two in the fifth. Three hits and a walk only meant two more runs for the Manville in the eighth. Casper was showing a great game in the field and playing heady base- ball on the bases. The ninth inning rally by the Manville players was clipped in the making when Hayes | and Free caught hard hit flies in the outer gardens. With the average fielder these might have meant hits but there was no hitting past the outer defense yesterday. A walk fol- lowed by Holly’s two-base blow brot in the lone Manville run in the ninth. Nesbit’s long run and spear after a hard one in the sixth for the visit- ors should not go unmentioned. Hayes was the handy body with the prover- bial willow yesterday, crashing out three singles. Whittle also looked good with two safe one-base blows. Arbogast gathered in a single and a two sacker just to show his boys that he was still lambasting the pill. It was Nesbit’s long run that cut off another possible hit for the Casper catcher. The score by innings: RHE Casper --00320021x—8 8 0 Manville -_.000020021—5 6 8 Batteries—Casper, Arbogast; Manville, BREST, July 14.—The steamship Rotterdam, with Secretary of State Lansing aboard, left for New York this afternoon. Maples and Holly and Hans. |) Guns were firing at one-minute in-| VICTORY HOSTS PASS IN REVIEW IN PARIS AS CLIMAX T0 PEACE Tribute Is Paid Allied Dead in Great March and Wreaths Placed at Foot of Monu- ment; Wounded Soldiers Lead Parade; American Generals Are Acclaimed. PARIS, July 14.—The triumphal march of Allied and American troops through Paris began at 8:00 o'clock this morn- ing. The weather was brilliant, being more like October than mid-summer. One thousand wounded soldiers with crutches or in wheel chairs and clad, for the most part, in civilian clothes, led the wa FORD RECEIVED NO ADVANCE BY ° U. $. TREASURY a Press] N % N N . N ; N N K \ . N ® ® tervals as President Poincare placed a wreath at the foot of the cenotaph ft the Are d’ Triomphe. The empty easket, place there in memory of the Allied dead, also was decorated by other wreaths, these being placed by Premier Clemenceau, a French soldier, a French sailor, an Alsatian girl, a girl from Lorraine and Colonel Edmund Gros, in last memory to 72 members of the Lafayette escadrille, who lost their lives during the war. [By Associat Marshal Joffre, victor of the first. MOU NT CTEM battle of the Marne, passed the Arc | !4.—The ove d’ Triomphe at 8:45 o'clock, riding " to the i or ce alone. Behind him came Mershal fF war work, according to the testi- Foch and General Pershing. Forty, ™ony of Edsel Ford, president of American generals in line were ac-, the company. Ford claimed by the populace. y suit General Pershing rode at the head nst the ¢ of the American troops which were separated from the French by a space aS was on the of his fath icago Tribune HENRY FORD TAKES | STAND FOR TRIBUNE of 300 yards. General Pershing’s ones VP personal flag, a scarlet field with a! youn? “Cea eMichigdae row of four white stars, was display-| July 14.— Henry F< the stand ed for the first time and was horne! today as a witne libel suit by a mounted sergeant riding direct-| geainst ; i i ly behind the American commander- | cajled forthe ‘Debut in-chief. He detail “e the formation Ford Motor WILSON WIRES MESSAGE company with f $100,000. TO PEOPLE OF FRANCE Editor in 1 Gas were (By Associated Press.) 4 readiand ater = WASHINGTON, July 14.—Presi-| retil. and’ f ‘ = dent Wilson cabled President Poin- deli tall icious Hae ee care the following on the celebration | ‘0rials were in pra Ls | dollar-a-day min of Bastile day: “May I not on this day which com- | memorates the breaking of the chain| FIUME is UIET, which once bound France to intol- erable servitude convey to the people} of France cordial fraternal greetings | SOLDIERS HEL B IN SAFE PLAGE | i P ; Lo 5 A BF AM a a a A LP LP LIP LIP SI IP LPS of the people of the United States and their sense of privilege and joy in having been associated with France in breaking the bonds of the world?” VOTE ON REPEAL WY the scene of dis sorde rs ween } Italian and French troops, quiet with the Italian provost-mars' ‘0 gy maintaining order, according to Few Italian soldie re seen on the streets while the ch remain in panelatcalrress:) their barracks and come out only to WASHINGTON. July 14.—An at- drill. Two French and two jan tempt to force a vote on the repeal) Warships are anchored in the harbor. of war-time prohibition failed in the The city plastered with handbills house today. On point of order, reading “Italy or death.” raised by Chairman Volstead of the judiciary committee, an amendment FIVE KILLED IN CAR CRASH, ONE ESCAPES INJURY (By Aw to the pending prohibition enforce- ment bill proposed by a Democrat from Missouri, was ruled out of order. R-34 LANDS AT PULHAM, END OF ated Press. ) SIOUX C Iowa 14.— PULHAM, Eng., July 14.—The R-| lllineis Central railroad train struck L M : the automobile in which they were 34 arrived here Sunday morning, com- d i ; r a i n-| riding. Mrs. Virgil's husband, who pleting her round-trip trans-Atlantic | Tin | Mrs. V ange flight. eee FOUR DIVORCES ARE AWARDED IN DISTRICT COURT THREE HURT IN STRIKE RIOTS NEAR CHICAGO sae Anno Hearing of favors e cases has taken CHIC NGO. ‘ omen up a large part of the two days of the and a man we njured to- session of the district court which day when str f opened Friday with Judge C. E. Win-| Corn Products ter presiding. Four c of divorce Argo, Illinois, granted and one pending is the rec-| carrying non-union men and ushed ord for two days. with the guards. Friday, a divorce was granted to — Lillian M. Burris from Earl E. Bur-- 4] PS CROSSED ris, She was also granted the cus- eae FOR FIRST TIME tody of two minor children. The same was the case of Edgar L. Bour- land who was given a divorce from mr am Andie M. Bourland. A divorce was BY HYDRO} ue VN iE granted to May Ramsey from O. Ram- sey and to Garsel A. Toliver from sociated Press.) Elizabeth Toliver. The of Laura EV \, Tuly 14,—The Alps were Coulter against Joseph Coulter has been heard and a divorce decrge may | be granted today. the first Taddiolic, d today for 1 hydro-airplane by aviator. BELGIUM TO GET WORLD CAPITAL NEW CITY TO BE ‘BE FOUNDED THERE ed ¥ Swiss BRUSSELS, July 14.—The inter Allied committee on commemora- tion of the victory in the world war has recommended founding a neu- tralized Belgian city to be named Geopolis (world city). It possibly may be the eventual seat of the League of Nations.

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