Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 25, 1919, Page 1

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Resolution. ise Powers (Ry Annoelated Prenn.). WASHINGTON 5 inite “orogeam the presilent @s to the gov- meiit’s attitude on the coal ctrike will be formulated by cabinet this afternoon, it was said at the White’ House. While no definite’ decision” was “madé when the cabinet recessed for luncheon Secretary, Tumulty said the dis- cussion at the morning sion dis- closed that the president's -official family was of one mind and “not a bit, wabbly.” He added that when the program ig vresented to the president, President Wilson is expected to make a public state- ment. wash Oc"2s —Th cabinet: met in extraordinary ses-) sionat LI. o'clock ‘this en, fhe consider the labor situation, meeting is the result of the fa of President ing of the public group in the jn- dustrial conferenée, organized labor's intention to fight the steel strike to, a finish, and the demands of rail- - road workers, The: cabinet will reassemble this afternoon at 4:30 following a ses- sion lasting, two and a_ half: hours this: morning. The whole matter of the impending coal strike will be laid before President Wilson before the, cabinet_reassembles, No agreement ona policy was reached at the morn-! ing sessions+.B Session it is a 1atnt of the’ PR Ko tite be made. Numerous si tees tha wete -offered: at-the- > ‘There was little inchnation to. rec- ommend that the government take over the coal miines. The public group, in disbanding, recognized Jabor’s right to. collectiv bargaining thru representxtives of! their,own. choosing. It also recom- mended that a small committee be named to draw up an_ industrial “peace program” for submission toa new. jeonference- HINES-1S CALLED: 1N- ON’ RAILROAD PROBLEMS Inted Prens.)- WASHINGTON, Oct. 26.—Presi- den Wilson, thru Secretary Tumulty, | summoned the cabinet in. spécial ate sian today to consider the strike of coal:miners-called for.next Saturday. Invector General Hines, of the rail- toad “administration, was asked to meat with the cabinet to present the situation from the standpoint of the railroads, Secretary Lunsing is confined: to his © with a cojd and could not attend, All other members wefe pres- ent. Secretary Baker presided. Sec- retary Tumulty was present to con- vey the views of the president. Some held to the belief that stern; action ‘was necessary in the face of. the Pare industrial situation in the country. RAIL CONFISCATION TO CALL FOR DAMAGES Director Hines was warned in a) letter, from the National Wholesale Cont association that—while the coal} dealers did not question the right of; the railroads to confiscate coal mined for deglers, they would demand com-_ pensation for such action not ent oh 2 basis of the fuel’s value, but algo on a busis of damage to business | and other factors affecting the repu-' tation of the dealers. “1 um for the fight,” said one mem- bet ofthe cabinet. - While apparently there was no dis- position to criticise either the opera- tors or miners for the failure of ne- Zotiations officials discussed the sit- © ¢Continued on Page 8) BULGARIAN REPLY 1S MODERATE ISHELD SE Congress to Call on President to Exer- -Wilson’s appeal to halt the miners*® strike,-the disband-_ OVER 4,000 COPIES: of The Daily Tribune sold: and delivered to subscribers every day. LABOR SECRETARY MEETS - MINE HEAD IN EFFORT TO AVERT COAL STRIKE-—Photo of—read- ing left to right—Thomas F: Brewster, President of Coal Onerators Association; Secfetary of Labor Wilson and John L, Lewis, President ofthe United Mine Workers of Asnerica, effort toavert ‘the threatening soal strike. This body met in’ Washington in an Such an action would mean a Nation-wide tie-up of Industry. TROTZKY'S WAR __ ELEVEN KILLED STAFF IS TAKEN WHENCARS ARE CHIEF ESCAPES HIT BY TRAINS. Bolshevik Leader " Eludes Capture When “Ass ire: Canwht:- ¥adenitch'’ss= © TKiainibly,” comprising’ six per! : Army Yee Fire of Dreadnaught sons, were killed, when a Union {Hy Akhociaiva Press} Pacific train’ struck their en- closed automobile in a m ‘ _covenuacn, aps 25:—The entire out of: Leon Tt Bl Bol- ' shevik minister of war marine, was capt at Tsarskoe Selo, .ac- cording to a on *todav to the National Tidende. Trotzky. him- self escaped by € to a railroad car and later fleeing from the scene in an Troops of; the northwestern army pursued the war minister and ; — fired unon his car but Trotvky sue- | ceeded in reaching Petrograd. NATION TURNS The left, flank of General Yude- 2AM. SUNDAY pik army is reported to be under’ (ite dawariated Prenx.) fire from Bolshevik, the dre adnaught Poltave, which is lying in Neya er, and is shooting oven the hougetops. t WASHINGTON, Oct. 25.—With the turning back of the clocks of the land one hour at 2 o'clock to-: morrow morning, the American, FRENCH AGE 18 ce cena! MAKE DEBUT ha Sears mobi Peennban oer te PAPER I. ( A i E the spring and moved back an hour in the fall, but) from now on time- Got 15 Days for Acrobatics Over; pieces will remain on the old ba- sis as the daylight saving law’ was German Lines but Later Down- ed 31 Planes on Fight- repealéd by the nresent congress ing Fronts Eee Uy United Brean) . . HASTINGS, Neb., Oct. 25.— En route to a dan: Ve persons were killed and two injured when a train ‘btrmek their automobile. bet Rl COMPTROLLER WILLIAMS :TO LOSE HIS JOB (Ry? United Treas.) WASHINGTON, Oct. 25.— . The ‘senaté banking. committee by a strict party vote of ten to seven today rejected the nomina- ticn of John Skelton Williams to the position of controller ‘of the curreney. GENERAL: STRIKE THREATENED IF after a bitter fight in which President Wilson took a hand. ‘RAILROADERS ‘TO WASHINGTON, Oct. 25.— Passage by either house of con- gress of anti-strike 1 contained in the pending bill would result in a general | (By. RIS a a2.) — ike through: hi & RECEIVE REELY canis. (br Asigiiated Pree) || staee cate theereee te oe NEXT LE RSDA y’ Fonck only ‘anions tie Freveh air Federation of Labor saniditegsy: fighters in “the number of German machines dawned during the -war, 3s ‘MILITIA CALLED Member of the Associated Press, and served by the United Press. BILL IS PASSED, THE DAILY TRIBUNE NUMBER 12 Must Pay Ransom if r : ~ JAP REPORTED DEAD IS STILL ALIVE, CLAIM (By Axsocinted Press.) TOKIO, Oct. 21 (Delayed).— Field Marshal Count Seiki Terau- chi ,former premier of Japan, whese death was reported Would Direct That WASHINGTON, Oct. (effect the release of William O. er- jans day, is still alive, his physi. announced today. who kidnaped him. DESPERADO'S BOKSTS WILL LEAL TO GAPTURE OF MAN WANTED FOR WMRDER OF FIVE UTAH CFFICERS feneonl Carey Plays ‘Leading Role in Arrest to Be Made in Southwest Today; Inquiries:Made of “Bad Man” Wanted Here Reveals Slayer CHEXENNE,. Wyo., Oct. t. 25.—Because Raphael Lopez, wanted in Utah for the murder of five men in 1914, while suffi- ciently cunning to keep mum regarding his real past yet was \s0 once of posing as a “bad man” that he boasted falsely that he was an associate and accomplice of Tom Horn, the cele- Seated “man killer” who was hanged here in 1903, he will be F i NENOR 5 SUBSCRIBED taurders. Governar Rabert D. ‘Cader? - $1,200 in Treasury and Remain- ‘of Wyoming last night telegraphed to a point in the southwest, whith he der Is Expected before Mon- day Night, Chairman declines to identify, a request that Lopez be taken into custody and held for the Utah officials. Earlier in the day Governor Carey had telegraphed Governor Bamberger of Utalr that he had reason to believe he Knew where Lopez wes and inquiring whether he should cause his arrest. Governor Bamberger hastened to reply in the affirmative. , Sitdations such/as that*leading to the undoing of the five-time murder- ier who for five years has eltided can- ture rarely occur in fiction—they are Reports Today Judge C. Winter announced to- day that rona county has so far contributed $1,200 of its quota of $2,150 for the Roosevelt memori:! fund. He is most hopeful that the entire amount will be raised by Mon- Horn, a desperado of the Wyoming day night. range war times who made a prac-' Seven women who worked in the tice of murdering for pay men ob- banks and the Henning hotel yester- noxious to the big cattle interests. day under the direction of Mrs. Win-| The deputy sheriff wrote to inquire | ters reported good success. l whether a reward was outstanding! jhe largest individual subscrip- for him. tion was $200, received by wire from too improbable for thet; only in real life doés the. incredible, take place. Recently Governor Carey received from a deputy sheriff of a county in a geuthwestern state a letter relatin, that one Manuel Lopez, a Mexican, had boasted to the writer that he had been e friend and accomplice of Tom, | Governor Carey investigated the; Frank G. Curtis at Waghington. records of the Horn case and found} School children contributed gener- that no person nemed Lopez had ously yesterday, altho only small been connected therewith insofar as'amounts were official knowledge existed, nor was he ual child. The total of the school able to ascertain from inquiry out- subscriptions will be announced side the records that Horn ever had) Monday. The speakers in been associated with a person ndmed| schools met with a most enthusiastic | Lopez. He was informed, in fact, .reeeption. that Horn, a Texen, held an anti- At the request of the state direc- pathy for Mexicans, regarding them jtor of the drive, Charles S. Hill, jas beneath contempt and unfit asso-; Judge Winter will go ciates for a “white man,’”’ even in| Tuesdey to address the student body crime. z of’ the university and the citizens of Governor Carey consulted Sheriff Laramie in re to the memorial. |E. J. Smalley of Laramie county re- ed from the individ- shortly to make _his debut in news: garding Lopez. The name wea: Mis 2. one of the WASHINGT ‘per work. He haz been offici Le iliar popular girls in the dry goods de- s Le } °. Re Rig oa r aguely familiar to the Cheyenne ta Gr OF de pit oi anne : of she. train. credited with brin:ing down # ( OUT IN STRIKE sheriff but he could not recall its parunent of the Webel Commercial will meet With: Rail Director, Hines ™22 Slt f his debut RIOTINCA NTON connection with any crime. : Wyo, whe bas desta ee oY alty ah i p' Heagues hope his debu ri ri a. i.» Where she will spend sey Wednesday to réceive an answer to His new colleague es remit oy Friday Sheriff Harry Holdredge of \\ 01/7 meithither spares M sr their. demands for immediate wage in- creases. * Be E-LABOR FACTS PARIS, Oct. ‘eae if gnower to the termé of peace pre- sented, here to the is moderate in tone and adheres ‘< nrbocee aig to clauses: concerning” the League of Nations and labor. 7 The reply accepts the prinsiple of protection of minorities in Bul- garia, on condition that the aqme meneures be applied in other Balkan states. Ht protests aggiuat the total’ sum of reperations demanded ef Bul- garla, acke suppression of igterens gharges end requemty extension of officer in charge. ~ order in the country. will not have the did the beginning of his air e¢arcer After obtaining his commission Nu- ngesser was: ordered to report at a E tre field near Naney. Arriving in sight of the field, Nungesser he-! {gan executing many loop the loops,) upside down stunts, sliding, on the twiigs, and <I] the acrobatics known and unknown to flying men. Landing at last, his superior offi- seer said to him sternly: Green one, \acrobaties aré all right in their nlace but we shall have to sve you perform {them before the Germans.” ; Nupgesser asked his mechanic to (= "(my 4 fill his gasoline tank and half an WASHINGTO » Oct. 25,—“Presi- hour later he was off to the German} dent Wilson is slowly, gaining | in ‘lines. Arriving over the trenches he| strength,” said his physicians’ bulle- {repeated his performancé, in full tin Pome Wr oy view of his comrades and also of the ‘one jeod Perens.) COLUMBUS, Oct. 25.— Two companies of militia were ordered today te mobilize fot duty in Can- | ton, Ohio, om account of steel strike rioting. Six persons were injured there. PRES. WILSON GAINS SLOWLY es mi ited re, sev fig here you axe,” Nongerser said | ett Heirs it 3 te it 00 feet to colonel, ““{t ig done.” or 7, ee letterbox, from {” “Fifteen days in ‘the brig,” or which. 8 do nowt makes geveral col- ‘worlds to that effect, ' said the col, Jections. daily, onel. _above the sea level, ij Dearly 1 000 feet®as far as he would go in régard to fot Springs county, * Wyoming, |’ called at the governor’s office on offi- cial business. In the course of a conversation Go®ernor Carey asked him whether he ever had heerd of a man named Raphael Lopez. “Sure,” was Holtlredge’s instant: response, “he’s that Mexican wanted |®, in Utah for shooting up a whole | flock of officers several years ago,” Governor Carey's communication with Governor. Bamberger, and his action to cause the arrest of Lopez followed. He hourly is expecting a R. H, Hawks and C. Jackson, ayto telegram notifying him that the fugi-' mobile thieves, who broke jail hore tive is in custody, | Wednesday night by sawing their way Governor Carey declined to iden-|thru the bars of a window in. the tify the name of the deputy Sheriff | county jail, made a second writing hin in regard to Lopez, OF | ot Gidirdek veatardays. Fh r even to name the state in which the tibwi Delitved (to tsteh hele. | oid fugitive is, fearing that premature Ciovgnne and guthorities there have puplicity wilght put Bopez on bis ) been gqsked to watch for them. wayrd and“ guable his ‘ta escape.! The’ pair stole a Ford belanging “Soniewhere ip the southwest," was) to Ted Evans in thaking their es cape from Casper and they were benught as they neared Glenrock ir r her vacation yn in the store. Crae will return af and resume ker po escape the whereabouts of the fugitive. Jenkins Unharmed, Note States, Resolution Offered in Senate by Myers ‘agent at Puebla, unharmed, even though it | Mexico to pay the $150,000ransom demanded by the bandits the! to Laramie, ‘DemandsMade on Mexico for Release Agent Necessary to Return While Army Cross Border 25.—Demands were made on the |Mexican government by the state department today that it Jenkins, American. consular is ‘necessary for While the note was going forward, Senator J : Democrat, of Mon- tan introduced a resolution askine F ident Wilson to ‘use all the frmed forces of the United States” in ring the release of Jenkins The measure will be culled up Mon- doy. The resolution would direct that e for the abduction d punished. Myers action on the reso- lution but Seuator Smoet of Utah oprecter, on the ground that a mat- “such broad action’ tive of Jenkins left Puebla yesterday to confer with the bandits regarding his release. CAREY CONFERS WITH MINERS ON BEG STRIKE Action of Cheyenne Conference on Friday between Governor and Unionists Not Given Out ismecin 5 tot " he ‘Tribune. CHEYi Oct. Governor Care held ference with Young and Jz tive president, vice-pre seer urer of the Unite d Mine Workers of America, District (the to the impen Wyoming district), r ng strike of the 7,000 unionized soft coal miners in this state in sympathy with the eastern strike set for November 1. Neither the governor nor the union officials would discuss what took place at the conference. $10,000 DAMAGE CASE TO THE JURY TONIGHT | eed |. The of Roy |Henry Miles, which w: district court yeste will probably afternoon. case Boatman heard in the lay and today, to the jury late this arguments of the vs. The attorne: were heard at 1 o'clock this afternoon. Boat seks to recover $10,000 damages from Miles for injuries to his left arm when he was bitten by a stallion owned by Miles, nearly 'two years ago. The arm is almost useless. . * A large number of witnesses were called by both sides and evidence both for and against the character of the horse was introduced. The stal- lion wes killed after it had bitten j other men beside Boatman, it stated, ‘but the defen: sought to prove that it had not been ‘vicious previous to the attack on Bostnan Scag. LOCAL THIEVES BREAK JAIL AGAIN NOW ON WAY TO CHEYENNE, BELIEF (eee car’ Instead of lodging them in jail, the al at Glenroek quarter: ed the men in a reom of a hotel until they cou be sent for from here. After taking them to breakfast yesterday morning, He left the din- and the pair made good "Shevifte W. &. Kilgore and Tow lors, sent to Glénrock, got trace of the men at Douglas and be lieve they can be recaptured with the help of the Cheyenne authorities. strne exce] he s hee 1 wit a in ar er d » 119 r val se. e cal » hea t it larm rilro: n bo ve 20 cam, Itic gs, all t tr in t rhe 8, s¢ iprai

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