Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 7, 1919, Page 1

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SOX EAT OUT OF REDS INTENINNINGS Chicago Batters Knock Reuther Out of the| Box in Pounding Out Victory to Over- come Four-Run Lead; Winning Run Is Made in Tenth With Ring Pitching By Innings 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 910 R. H. E. Chicago ........ 000013 00 0 1—510 3 Cincinnati . 002200000 0—411 0 Batteries. “Chicago: Kerr and Schalk. Cincinnati: Reuther, Ring and Rariden. REDLAND FIELD, CINCINNATI, Oct. 7.—The White Sox came back this afternoon . Showing a fighting spirit that brot them from behind when the Reds apparently had the game won and the world’s title in their hands, Gleason’s American League champions battd their way to a 5-to-4 victory over the Reds in ten innings. The result brings t:-< sevies count to 4 to 2, with the Reds still needing one more game to win the title. Today was the best game of this series. There was hitting galore, fast base running, and sparkling fielding. Kerr has won both White Sox victories. Reuther was knocked out in the sixth inning today. FIRST INNING Chicago—J. Collins opened hostilities by popping a high fly in back of second base to Rath. Roush came in fast and got Ed Collins’ low fly. - Weaver singled through Kopf into center field. Jackson sent an easy pop up to Groh. No runs, one hit, no errors. Cincinnati—Rath hoisted to Risberg. . Daubert out, Kerr to Gandil. Groh doubled to right center. Roush singled to Ris- berg, but Groh was caught by overrunning third. Risberg to Weaver. No runs, two hits, no errors. SECOND INNING Chicago-—Felsch flied to Neale. Gandil was out, Kopf to Daubert. Risberg Flied to Neale. No runs, no hits, no errors. Cincinnati—Duncan was safe on Risberg’s fumble. Kopf walked. Neale forced Duncan at third, Kerr to Weaver. Rari- den forced Neale, E. Collins to Risberg, Kopf taking third. Reuther was out, Kerr to Gandil. No runs, no hits, one error. THIRD INNING Chicago—Schalk walked. Kerr sacrificed. J. Collins flied to Roush. Ed Collins flied out to Duncan. No runs, no hits, no errors. Cincinnati—Rath was out, E. Collins to Gandii. Daubert singled to right. Groh struck out. Daubert stole second. Roush chas hit. Duncan doubled to right center, Daubert and Roush sco¥ing. Kopf flied to Felsch. Two runs, two hits, no errors. FOURTH INNING Chicago—Weaver fliedout to Duncan.» Jackson: fouled out to Rariden. Felsch singled to center. Gandil out, Kopf to Daubert. No runs, one hit,no errors. Cincinnati—Neale tripled to right center. Rariden went out, E. Collins to Gandil. Ruether doubled, scoring Neale, Rath was safe when Risberg hit Ruether going to third, Ructher scoring and Rath taking second. Rath stole third. Daubert and Rath were out, Jackson to Felsch. Two runs, two hits, one error. FIFTH INNING Chicago—Risberg walked. Schalk also walked. Kerr singled, advancing both runners one base. J Collins flied to Roush. E. Collins flied to Rousch and Risberg scored. Schalk failed to go to third on play and Kerr ran down to second. Groh ran over and touched Kerr. One run, one hit, no errors. Cincinnati—Groh flied out to Felsch. Roush flied to J. Col- lins. Duncan safe at third on Felsch’s error. Kopf out to Ris- berg. No runs, no hits, one error. SIXTH INNING Chicago—Weaver doubled. Jackson singled, scoring Weaver. Felsch doubled to center, scoring Jackson. Ring now pitching for Cincinnati. Gandil flied to Daubert. Risberg out, ‘Kopf to Daubert, Felsch taking third. Schalk singled scoring | Felsch and tying the score. Schalk stole second. Kerr went out, Groh to Daubert, Three runs, four hits, no errors. Cincinnati—Neale singled. Rariden flied out to J. Collins. Ring struck out. Neale was out, stealing. No runs, one hit, no errors. SEVENTH INNING Chicago—Liebold relieves J. Collins. Liebold out, Kopf to Daubert. E. Collins flied out to Roush, Weayer went out, Rath to Daubert. No runs, no hits, no errors. Cincinnati—Rath singled. Daubert “sacrificed. Groh walked. Roush forced Groh at second,’ Risberg to E. Collins t. Gandil, also getting Roush. . No runs, one hit, no errors. EIGHTH INNING CHICAGO—Jackson walked. Felsch flied out to Neale. Gandil wlaked. Risberg lined to Roush, who tossed to Rath, getting Jackson. NORUNS. NO HITS. N OERRORS. CINCINNATI—Duncan flied out to Gandil. Kopf lined out to Kerr. Neale singled to left. Rariden singled and Neal went to second. Ring forced Rariden at second. NO RUNS. TWO HITS. NO ERRORS. NINTH INNING CHICAGO—Schalk farined. Kerr was out, Riny to Dau- bert. Liebold walked. Liebold stole second. £. Collins flied to Roush. NO RUNS. NOHITS. NO ERRORS. E CINCINNATI—Rath was gut, Weaver to Gandil. (Continued on Page Six) HUNS TOLD TO SLEAVE BALTIC ct. 7.——The Abode 4 lied eeiiestl | bas instructed Marshal Foch <e orth # an ultimatum for presentation to Germany demanding the evacuation of German trogps in t he Baltic provinces. The Germen BH ply to the allied demand that Field M arshal Von der Goltz’ troops youl be withdrawn did not satisfy the council. Von der Goltz and his sta’ have joined Russian forces in the Baltic, reports from Berlin quoting ian advices state, Daubert PRES. WILSON 1S STILL ON MEND, MAYBE ABLE TO ATTEND MEETING Is Hoped That Can Addres dustrial a, ting | Beforesge™ nds nited Press.) AG Oct. Rp provement has contin- 7.—"“The ud appetite is decidedly hetter and“he slevt well,” Admiral Grayson announced at 11:30 today. He is still res begin work. his ttention OVER 4,000 COPIES _| VOLUME 3 “U.S. FORCE WILL KEEP ORDER AT Martial Law clared in Strike Centers as Result of Late Rioting s and desires to Nothing will be brot to however. He probabiy Washington for a rest. able Monday. Stronger Rone dent however. resident to Sauk r before indus conference before it closes, COLO. VILLAGE | IS WIPED OUT BY CLOUDBURST YUMA, Oct. 7.—Quartzite, 1a little town in the northern end of Yuma county, was wiped out by a cloudburst Thursday night, accord- ing to refugees arriving here. No lives were lost but every building except the school house was wreck- ed. About 50 persons crowded in- to the building and supplies were ruthed out. | FIRST GOLD IS RECEIVED HERE FROM GERMANY United Prewn.) NEW York, Oct..7.—The firat direct shipment of gold from German government paying: Foodstuffs and other supplies, to the amount of $5,125,000,. arrived aboard a United States destroyer | yesterday. FOUR DIE, FOUR HURT, AS TRAIN. SMASHES AUTO chy Audactated OAKLAND, we t (Hy Associated Press.) GARY, Oct. 7 cc Aperesenaiey | 1,100 soldiers today have Gary un- der military control. Five hun- dred more troops from Omaha, | where they have been on riot duty, |are expected today. Governor | Goodrich called for troops after thou- sands of strikers paraded and held forbidden megtings. Martial law was not declared at Gary but the governor declared it at Indiana Harbor and East Chicago, where state troops are stationed. _ ‘RIOTING BREAKS OUT AT BUFFALO (Ry United Prex: BUFFALO, Oct. Two men were shot, several beaten. and over 106 revolver shots were fired near th Lackawanna steel plant this morn- ing when a mob attacked a street car carrying workers. . A: lowed the brenking up of a big crowd | earlier in “the fol EO GIRLS GO UP IN PLANE AND COME DOWN LAUGHING Nerve of Helen Gard Gardner and Mg na Burnett Survives Tail Spin and Nose Dives with Liew, tenant Cole ., Oct, 7.—F our | killed and four fatally injured 1s the result of a Francisco- Oakland terminal railway (Key Route) train striking an automobile Platform men to the Key are on stri ee To Helen Gardner and Verna Bur- nett belongs the honor of being the first ,Casper girls to go up in an air- plane here. The two girls went aloft 9,500 fee sterday afternoon in the Curtiss Oriole plane Cole of the Curtiss company of Cas- per. Cole admitted after the flight! that he made three w ed tail spins but that the girls ¢ jown laugh- ing OFFENDER AGKINST DRY LAW 16 GIVEN $200 FINE nat the two girls were about the gamest passengers he had ever taken up the assertion of Cole morning. He told of the time he went up first and the pilot made one tail spin. Cole said that he never knew when the machine landed. Y esterday’, 's flight was the first one, by Cole in his machine sigce the snow of last week. ‘6 Cook, charged jthe prohibition statute, was the only one of eight defendants who pleaded guilty when arraigned before Judge W. C. Mentzer of the Laramie county district court Monday, at the opening of the October term of court. gees The flight lasted 45 minutes and Was sentenced to a fine of | the machine trayeled along at a 110- | Among the defendants pl Ending mile-an-hour clip. Besides the tail not: guilty were’ George Stutes and , Cole showed Miss Gardner and Carl E, Eck, former members of the| Miss Burnett the nose dive when up Cheyenne police force who are charg-| Several thousand feet. Miss Gardner is still proud of the fact that she cranked the machine which took them up 9,500 feet, which is almos a, répord. for ‘this alt) | tude. The flight took the machine over | every section of Casper and over the fgasnen mountain and Bates creek. PLANT BURNED WITH LOSS OF OVER MILLION! ed with illegal possession of liquor and aggravated assault on J. B. Hors- ley, an agent of the state prop bison comm les pte nee acer 's offic (CHEYENNE CITY CITY ELECTION WARMS UP, PETITIONS OUT (Special tq The Tribune.) CHEYENNE, Wyo., Oct. 7.—Peti- tions of nomination for city commis- sioners were circulated here Tuesday | in behalf of-William Dubois, Charles; W. Hirsig and John J. McInerney. The “petitions “Were “circulated by a} | committee of; business men appointed fata conference held at the Industrial club Saturday night while the Labor party of Laramie county was nomi-| nating candidates at a mass-meeting. | Long Msts of signers were obtained on the Dubsis-Hirsig-McInerney pe-| titions. Dubois ig the businessmen’s, jeandidate for mayor. The miaici-| | pal contest, it appears probable, will jdevelop into a contest for control-of the city government between the la- |bor union and commercial elements \of ut city’s population, Press. BALenceeees Oct. TwThe Stan- dard Guano company’s plant burned here today wit with a loss of pugilossiofi$1) 500,000. |H. MILLS ALDEN, . HARPERS’ CHIEF, CLAIMED TODAY ae <a: eipveneintes Press.) NEW" ¥i Oct. 7.—Henry Mills Alden, editor of Harper's Magazine since $869, died today at the age of 82 years, of The Daily Tribune sold and delivered to subscribers every day. Is De-' jot fol-| piloted by Bert! this; The Casper: Cribune CASPER, WYO., TUESDAY, OCT. 7, 1919 RACERS TUNING. UP PLANES FOR AIR CONTESTS (By Associated Prenx.d MINEOLA, Oct, 7.—More than 50 aviators at Roosevelt field are giving a final tuning up to the planes which they will use in the transcontinental race from Mineo- la to San Francisco, starting to- morrow. About 70 in all are ex- pected to participate, The army air service and American Flying club have ranged the race as a test of the various planes used in the war. It was announced that the army had decided to make it a round trip of 5,400 instead sofeds 2,700 miles. EIGHT YEARS TO. OPEN BIG MINES RUINED BY WAR (Ry Associated Prexx.t PARIS, Oct. 7.—The commi: sion of German exnerts who vi ited the mines in northern France devastated during the war believes it will take from two to eight years to restore them to their former condition, according to the Gau- lois. the ar- —_— HUNS DEMAND EXTRADITION OF PARIS, Oct. 7.—Germany has demanded the extradition of Count Otto Bismarck, grandson of the fa- mous ehancellor. He is accused of having 14 inhabitants of the village of Vicoigne shot ‘‘as an example” and of burning several houses there, THREE SLATED FOR RANK OF VICE ADMIRAL (By An WASHINGTO permanent ran Rear Admiral § us proposed in ~ The vice admiral for ns, Benson, Mayo compromise bill was ordered favorably reported today by the senate naval committee. Pr dent Wilson recommended the rank of admiral for Sims and Benson, this was provided as the bill passed the house. The senate compromise resulted from opposition to giving Benson the rank of admiral and also insist- ent demand for equal recognition for, Mayo who commanded the Atlantic fleet during the pare INCREASED CAR FARES CAUSED BY HIGH WAGES (By Annoctuted ATLANTIC (¢ for the increase thruout the country was laid at the! loor of the wage earners and not} ‘the demands of capital by J. H. . Pa dee, president. of the Ame tric Railway association, in his ad- dress to th sociation here toc The nece: of increased revenue arises from wi and not the desire of the railroads to increase their returns, he said. He declared that public service securities no long- er attract UDMERIOVE MAN TURNED OVER 0 increase SHERIFF HERE ESCAPES. Dave King, the horse thief, arrest- ed here last Friday, by Sheriff Steph- jens of. Buffalo, escaped from the >| Sheriff’s custody while being taken to Buffalo, stealing another horse belonging to Dan McPhail of Buck- | man. The sheriff's office here was again asked to be on the lookout for him today in u message phoned from Kaycee. The horse belonging to Mc Phail was black the message stated. request of the ‘was one of the PACE THREE THE DAILY TRIBUNE Member of the Associated Pre and served by the United Press NUMBER 297 ITALIAN KING SIGNS TREATY Parliament Must Approve but ‘Action Is Considered Certain and Treaty Will Become Operative in Accordance With Stipulation Requiring Three Signers (By Axsociated Press.) PARIS, Oct: 7 —King Victor Emmanuel of Italy signed a royal decree ratifying the German and Austrian peace treaties yesterday, ac- cording to a Milan dispatch. es * jon by Italy virtually completes the steps necessary to make effective the pact between Germany and the allied powers signed at Versailles on June 28, which was stipulated to become operative when signed by thr The | British parliament ¢ ati- fied it and it now awaits the French chamber of deputies coproved it last week and the senate is expect- approval of parliament, which meets | December 1, but it is considered cer- tain that concurrence will follow ADJOURNMENT ed to, act Friday or Saturday. sebre sient Over ets ari Will e Again in fie “Atfernoon Vo City Attorneys Instructed to Take} Information before State Utility Commission to Get Order (By Asnocinted Press.) WASHINGTON, Oct. 7.—Secre- | tary of the Interior Lane has been chosen permanent chairman of the industrial conference and will ac- cept. The rules committee pro- vided that all sessions should be open to the press and the public. Voting will by Casper needs higher water rates stem is to be op- without a huge The report read last city council meeting er depart- the 3 showed that the night at be ¢ : Epes groups repre ment was not eve ne 3 senting employers, labor and the pub id Oat Se satiqate sear ‘ lic, but no expression or conclusion rates. Conseq' Brey will be ‘arrived at unless all three of the ci torney was ir rrou reli 7 to go to Cheyenne, Wyo., to appeal Bros ps are an accord. e, Ley heed i Secretary Lane told the conference . arvice CO! s f to the public service commission for that President Wilson probably a better rate and one which will en- aor ? would be able to address the can- able the city of Casper to operate the fornce before adjournment water departmen’ Altho the que ppeared to be ne of the city council | tion was taken to provide for an in- crease in rates, there was no atten- tion paid to the pr ninated condition of the report- ed by Dr. J. F. O'Donnell, county heaJth offic A letter, stating that the present condition of accumulat- ing wells was such as to contaminate the city water supply was sent to ev- ery member of the ¢ council and to Mayor John F. Leeper. at cost. ion of water ssary in the e t night and rates Associated Press.) WASHINGTO. Oct. ie Dis agreement rules proposed for industrial confer. ence a sudden adjourn- ment this morning after Secretary Lane was elected permanent chair man. The conference will meet again this aftrnoon, The adjournment was taken to per- mit individual delegates to consider the proposed rules. John Spargo declared the confer- over the governing the resulted in But the question was not intro-| ence might as weil adjourn if rul duced at the council meeting and con-- Were adopted whereby a majority sequently no action s taken. That vote of any group was necessary be some members of the ci council for a member of the group could in troduce any topic for discussion. Such a rule, he declared, hindered espe cially the public group, which does not represent any homogenous inter ests like the labor group. He objected, he said, because there was no oppofunity for minority ex- pression. The rules stated that there would be no Sunday meetings, indi cating that conference expects to con- tinue for two weeks or more. —_— would have taken action to relieve the present condition at the city pumping station is almost evident. But the rounty health officer to install modern plumbing near the city accumulating wells and generally clean up the premises as a matter of health safety to the city was over- looked or forgotten, But water rates were ten and the question of not forgot- ing them; ‘st matters intro- (duced at the meeting last night. In Robert Cohen and H. L. Cham- the meantime, the city is only partial- berlin who have been in Deadwood, ly_protected by the use only of the S. Dak., on business for the Cham- main water well which is pure, ac- cording to thoro tests made. — —— STEEL STRIKE WEARING OUT Usy United Press} PITTSBURGH, Oct. 7.~The steel strike apparently is wearing it- self out in this district. Every imp ortent plant claimed additioual man- power today and production gains. S trike headquarters declared that 367,- 000 men were still striking. { berlin Furniture company, pected to return tomorrow. are oex- (By As o3 PITTSBURGH, Oct. tix num ber of latest plants in this district re- sumed operations today, but union leaders said that attempts to, operate them were a “failure.” 2 en, tic n's ut far lly al- ts, is ne- sed |

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