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. MRS. KABER HELD GUILTY OF FIRST DEGREE MURDER BiG DRIVE FOR MOTOR CLUS TO HEGIN. TUESDAY, APTAING NAMED Auto Owners Here to Be) Enrolled, Fees to Pay} For Tourist Camp and Maintenance Here The membership enroll- ment in the Casper Motor lub will be initiated Tuesday orning, July 19, at 9:30 by an organization consisting of 5 teams of six men gach, in- luding captain. The membership fee ill be the same as last year, $5 for be annual membership and $2 for he Motor club emblem, where em- lems are wanted. . Each team captain will select his bwn team of five members and it js the intention of the directors to ontinue ‘the membership solicitation ntil the goal of twelve hundred mem- bers has been reached. The follow- ing business men have been selected s team captains. They are all vitally Interested and have a special interest in seeing this drive go over. Team Captains. J. C. Zuttermeister, B. L. Scherck, . E. Seott, E. J. Donahoe, W. J. Lindsay, Lew M. Gay, C. Lukis, H. . Peterson, Harry Free, J. B. Grif- ith, John B. Barnes, Jr., Ernest E. Bruce, R. H. Nichols, J. W. Johnson, . G. Johnson, B. H.. Pelton, Jr., T. LEGION FIGHT FORBONUS T0 BE CONTINUED CHICAGO, July 16.—The fight of the American Legion for the sol- diers' bonus bill will be continued with renewed vigor, declared Maj. John G. Emery, national command- er of the legion, in commenting on the “side "of the bonus bill in the senate here last night. “If the war had ;continued for another 30 days,” he asserted, “it ‘would have cost the government as much as the proposed adjusted com- pensation -program.” . Tonkin, A. R. White, Earle C. le, Henry C. Posey, J. 8. Mechiing, keri G. Burwell, A. L. Wallace, Fred ‘an Gorden and W. W. Winter. Merchants are expected to support is Motor club drive as a large per ent of the money received will go to for and equip the Tourist Camp round which is responsible for a ‘eat amount of money being spent In Casper daily by the tourists. It is onsequently estimated that not less han $590 per day !s being spent in per by tourista driving through jo and from Yellowstone park. At a meetirig--held last! évening: at as srg of commerce about twen- iy ‘the team captains were present d all were optimistic as to the sc s of the drive. HAYNE STORE BURNED, LOSS TOTALS $25,000 AFTON, Wyo., Jury 16.—A message om Thayne, Wyo., near the [Idaho states that fire destroyed the p-Thatcher general merchandise e, causing a loss of $25,000. The ¢ is supposed to have resiilted from accumulation of trash in a large jeater used only in cold weather he- i ignited from a cigarette stub. The .. $5,000 on the building and $20,- 00 on the stock of merchandise, is covered by insurance. —- Attorney C. P. Palmer is in the thfinder country:on a fishing «rip wer the week end. ROAD REPORT ‘The following report/on Wyoming woads is furnished daily by the district Office of the state highway depart- Highway—Good from Ne- braska line to Shawnee, except heavy going through new grading west. of Keeline. ; Yellowstone Highway—Platte coun- ity line, to Careyhurst generally good. ‘Heavy showers fell around Orin yes- terday and should make the roads Biter. Glenrock to Casper, somewhat: ough. Casper to Shoshoni generally ood. Cars in good conditions are \ king Birdseye Pass Route to Ther- opolis without difficulty. Shoshon!-Lander Road—State high- y is again open between Shoshoni d Riverton, a temporary bridge has been placed to carry traffic around ithe collapsed portion of Wind River bridge, which temporary bridge will be used until low water gives an op- portunity. to do permanent work to ood advantage. Riverton-to Hudson, omewhat rough across the Indian reservation, then good to Lander. Casper-Sheridan Road—Rough from nd of pavement to Seventeen Mile, en good to Salt Creek. Road was fair condition from Salt Creek to johnson county line yesterday, but ome heavy showers fell last night eund Sait Creek. Johnson county Ine to Sheridan reported generally tending the convention of the na- tional association of. real estate boards. “The American Legion's program mediately start the fight for the bonus all over again in the house. “We consider’ President Harding all wrong in his attitude, Why, the senate finance committee in its re- port declared untrue the claims that the Sweet bill and the ad- justed compensation program would bankrupt the treasury.” REX UPRISING. IS NOT SERIOUS, OFFIGIALS SAY End of Week to See End of Strife in Tamaulpias State; Follow- ers of Herrerra May Be - Executed ICO CITY, July 16.—War of- fice authoritied declared: last night that the uprising {nthe state of ‘Tam- aulpias, led. by Gen. Daniel Martinez Herrotra, would be put down in little more than.a week. It was declared federal troops were, being. dispatched into the troubled district, and ‘that the danger would soon be ever. ‘President Obregon met newspaper- men last night and seemed inclined not to treat the Herrerra revolt se- riously, asserting there were sufficient forces to suppress the trouble. He asserted the governmert intended to investigate the situation and deter- mine what influences were behind the revolt and “treat them as -circum- stances permit.” : Z Plutarco E. Calles, secretary of th interior, also- said. the uprising-was not serious. TAMPICO, July 16.—Followers of Gen. Daniel Martinez Herrerra, who are taken prisoner by government forces will be tried for treason, it is announced by General Gomez, military commander here. Gov. Lopez Lara is hurrying the departure of idle — oil field’ workmen, fearing that they may join the reyolutionists. U.P. PUTS ON LARGEFORCE CHEYENNE, July —16.—Authority was received by Union Pacific offi- cials here Frday to employ 1,000 addi- tional maintenance of way men on the main line between Cheyenne and Og- den, Utah. An order increasing the working force in the Cheyenne shops has also been received, SIDNEY TO JOIN LEAGUE, REPOR Sidney, Neb., will on July 20, take j } over the franchise of the Laramie, Wyo., ball club- in. the Midwest league, it was reported from Den- “ver yesterday. 3 4 ‘The Earamie team, one of the three inthe league owned by the Midwest Refining company, has been poorly patronized on its home -groufids,from the first of the season, it being generally conceded that the . town is not large enough to support the team. * .. Sidney endeavored to get into the league when it-was formed, bi if The of the city from the others in the league, however, was the principal reason why it was not admitted. With the entrance of Sidney, there »Will be two Colorado, two Wyoming and two Nebraska teams in the league, 2 Che Casper Daily Crihunte | NIGHT MAIL \Woman Who Plotted Death of Husband, Wealthy Publisher, Draws Life Ter: in Ohio Reformatory; Defendant Is Un- conscious While Jury Debates CLEVELAND, July 16.—Mrs. Eva Catherine Kaber was today found guilty of murder in the first degree but with a recommendation of mercy by the jury which tried her on a charge of plotting the killing of her husband, Daniel F. CASPER, WYO., SUNDAY, JULY 17, 1921 1 Commission Proceeds With Work Instead. of Leaving Movement to Washington | Conference; No Conflict Seen PARIS, July 16.—(By ‘The Associated Press.)—The tem-| porary mixed commission for the reduction of armaments ap-| pointed by the league of nations, decided today that the conference on this question to be called by President Hard- ing would not conflict in any way with the league's disarma- ment move. Instead of adjourning its session immediately after convening, as had been sug- i gested, the commission will continue U S. SLEUTHS expecting {ts work to be useful in im Britain's representative. preparatory way for the Washington deliberations. Repe Viviani, France's representa- | tive and chairman of, the committee, in opening the: meeting declared that OMAHA, July 16.— The United;' During the discussions of the treaty States government has assumed the Signed at St. Germain for the suppres- lead in the search for the slayer of ,Si0n of the traffic in arms, delegates Walter Baldwin, mafiwagon driver, | Pointed out that the United States was, who was mysteriously shot and ‘killed |the only country which was not = while transporting mail in Council Party to that treaty, and the feeling Bluffs, Iowa, early Friday morning.|W®S expressed that the American gov- Government operatives said last,eTnment could not help taking cog- night that as many additional detec-;Mizance.of that fact when considering tives as “are needed” will be called to|the disarmament question. work on: the case. - They are assisted |-—The principsl_work planned for the y.,Omaha and Council Bluffs, police. commission is the preparation of a re- Géridiais are working on tho’ theory Port ‘on: the political, social and eto that Baldwin wag killed by amateur "omic aspects of disarmament, Which holdup men.» Seyeral. persons..ha xi . been detained and ,juestioned but so ef the ly Of thes league of na- far police have learned little, they ad- teers next September. mitted last nigh ae oo DUTCH SEEK VOICE FAIR WEATHER: ‘PREDICTED.’ |IN_ U.S. CONFERENCE: age ue THE’ HAGUE, The chairman's attitude. was ap- Proved by H. A. L. Fisher, Great NUMBER 237 |Kaber. Under the verdict Mrs. Kaber must serve the re- DISARMAMENT DISCUSSION OPENED BY LEAGUE DESPITE U. S. ACTION OUSTING OF POLICE CHIEF IS FORECAST, VICE FLOURISHES; COUNCIL ACTION PENDING That the police committee of the city council had deter- ed to ask for the resignation of Chief of Police Sheffner was the rumor going the rounds in official circles this morn- img, and although the rumor could not be confirmed, it was generally accepted as a fact by those close to the adminis- tration. : statement from any of the members ‘The police committee met behind of the committee was available up to closed doors at 11 o'clock today, and| the Ume of going to press. it is understood evidence of a sensa-| One member of the city council tional nature was submitted by wit.|Yentured the prediction that ‘the nesses. The | committee adjourned Skids had been greased” and that Cas- the Washington conference, instead. ot |" after being In. conference per Would have a new chief of police conflicting, fitted in with such study. Wath Gite. aitorae 5 Bel ‘land no| bY Monday morning. It is believed that action on the removal of Chief Sheffner is being delayed until Mayor i Pelton, who ti ay on a fishing trip, jreturns to. the city. of . | It is stated that the failure of the chief to curb lawlessness, bootleg and underworld resorts to operate unhindered, and permitting women of a lewd character to flock Into the city and ply their trade with- out hindrance of the police, has stirred members of the city council to action, and the fixing of the bia: for ‘such conditions on the chief is the cause of his removal being a mat- ter of hours. It is a matter of common knowl- edge that there are eight pitices on Center street whete bootleg booze |may be bought over the bar, and that {nine such places conduct a flourish- \ |ing business on the Sandbar, while LONDON, July .16,—Queen Victoria) jewad women carsy on their business Of Swedén, who, it was recently an-|in this district without interference. permitting IS RETAINED WASHINGTON, July 16.—The holise today refused to strike the dye ‘g0 previsiéns from the Ford- ~ rae vin; kintig an amendment by. Representative Frear, Republican, Wisconsin, to eliminate the three- | th. Sn bY avote) of 122 to. 106. —— * “QUEEN OF SWEDEN ILL. July 16.—(By The WASHINGTON, July 16-—Weather | Associated Press.)—"If the | proposed predictions -for the week beginning conference at Washington {sto dis- Monday are: cuss problems of the far east, it is fair Rocky Mountain’ and Plateau’ Re-| that: Holland should ‘participate. ‘in gion—Generally «fair except for wide-|the interest of her 59,000,000 subjects ly scattered local thunder showers /in the Dutch Indies. whose territory and’ abnormal temperature. [Borders the” Pacific.” ’ nounced, had suffered. a recurrence of her ear trouble, underwent an op- eration yesterday, says a Stockholm message to the Exchange Telegraph company. The operation, adds the dispatch, is reported to have been successful. The moral condition of the city is declared ‘to be- worse now’ than at lany time in its history, and a deter- | mination to set things right is given \by those who know as the reason for the contemplated action of the police committee. j mainder of her life in prison. Although the jury had not yet re- ported officially /to the court, Judge Maurice Bernon announced the deci- sion to Attorney Francis W. Poul- son, Mrs. Kaber’s personal counsel, so that he might inform Mrs, Kaber In hope that she would revive suffi ciently from a stupor to be brought linto court to hear the official an nouncement. She had been in a stu- por all morning. | Mrs. _Kaber was. sentenced to life imprisonment in the Ohio reformatory for women at Marysville. Under the | Ohio law there is no hope for pardon under such a verdict. The jury resumed its deliberations this morning, having failed to return ja verdict last night after having the case four hours, Mrs. Kaber was said by her attor- neys to have been practically uncon. scious all of last night. She had been carried from the courtroom and had rot eaten during the day The jury began balloting just two years from the time Mr. Kaber was stabbed to death by assassins, alleged to have Been hired by Mrs. Kaber. Though Mrs, Kaber was suspected of being implicated in her husband's death at the time, insufficient evi denve was found then by. officials on which to formally charge her with the crime. For two years Moses Kaber, BOY SCOUTS OF "WA TO REAGH GacER SUNDNY, EGE. TION SET Casper Scouts to Form Escort Tomorrow for Large Convoy of Visi- tors Coming by Auto ie A message from the Clinton Boy Scout party received at Sout headquarters at 11:00 o’clock this morning states that the convoy has made up time lost on its schedule and that it will arrive in Casper Sunday evening. The entertainment during ‘their stay in through as planned. Scout and Scout officials are asked to report at the city brary lawn at 2:30 Sunday afternoon to go out the ellowstone highway to meet the visi- tors and conduct them to their camp at the fairgrounds. Dinner will be served to the visi- tors at the Henning hotel at 8 o'clock and a committee has been appointed to seo whether the Casper band will not be available to lead the Clinton contingent in from the fairgrounds to of the party Casper will go the aged father of the murdered man doggedly kept working on the mystery with the aid of private detectives, sus. picion pointing stronger and stronger toward Mrs. Kaber. Finally a brother of Mrs. Kaber was brought in as a ruse and her mother, Mrs. Mary Brickel, who was suspected knowing much about the murder, was led to believe that the son was to be charged with the crime. The ruse worked as it had been planhed. Mrs. Brickel, to save the son, is al leged to have confessed, implicating ber daughter, Mrs. Kaber; Miss Mar- an McArdle, daughter of Mrs. Kaber; herself and others. The grandmother, daughter and granddaughter were indicted for first Gegree murder, also Mrg, Erminia Col- avito, midwife-purse, Salvatore Cata and Vittorio Pisseili, the latter two being charged-with the actual murder. All are awaiting trial excepting Pis- selll, Who has not been apprehended. Mrs. Kaber was the first to be placed on trial. > Mrs. Kaber is the first woman in Cuyahoga county to* be‘ convicted of first degree murder. the hotel L. A. Reed. superintendent of the Midwest refinery, has extended an in- vitation to the Scouts, both of the Clinton party and of the Casper or- ganization, to make an inspection trip through the local plant of the com- pany starting at 8 o'clock Monday morning to enable the convoy to get & comparatively carly start for Douglas. The convoy. was able to make up the delay in its schedule by chang- ing its route and going through Ba- sin and Thermopolis, instead ‘of through Dubois and Lander as origin- nally planned. meso hat 2k DENVER, July: 16.<Mpur *allegea bootleggers were fined $800 and ees this. morning im police court. They were prosecuted under two sections ofthe municipal code, dnd each fined $100 and costs on each’ charge. OE [ BALL SCORES | William J. Corrigan, Mrs. Kaber's counsel, said he wi isfied with the verdict, The same expres- Seentithicebe lB bedbttictes atest NATIONAL LEAGUE sion was made by County Prosecutor | At New York— . RH. E. Edward C. Stanton. Pittsburgh 101 000 110— 4. 11. 0 When the jury made official report | New York 400 042 21°13 18 2 of the verdict, Mrs. Kaher was lying}. Batteries — Copper, Zinn and ‘imp in the arms of a deputy sherifr.|Sehmidt, Brottem; Douglas and Sny- Colorado Town Is Ordered To Pay Judgment DENVER, July. 16.—Failure of: the Gity of Victor, Colo. to pay a judg- ment of $38,000 in favor of the Fi National bank of Ithaca, N Y., re- sulted in the issuance Friday after- noon of a writ of mandamus against the city council, the major and the city treasurer Lewis of the United States district court. 5 : he writ orders the council to m@ke an immediate tax levy to raise the amount ofthe judgment or to appear in.court September 1 and show cause why it should not be done. Suit was breught by the Ithaca bank several. months ago, the. com- piaint citing the plaintiff held a num- ber of Victor bonds issued in 1915, re- funding part of a previous issue amounting to $350,000. Neither prin- cipal nor interest had been, paid on the bonds held, it was allesed. ‘The defendants named in the writ are George Bromley, the mayor; J. E. Riley, John J. Henkins>and Edward Olson, members of the. city’ council and Blanche Corbitt, treasurer. Reinforcement. _ Of Allies In — Silesia Seen PARIS, July 16.—(By The Asso- ciated Press}—Premier Briand | has sent a note to the British and Italian governments proposing the sending of reinforcements to the allied’ troops ‘in Upper Silesia in order to. make. stre that they are not disturbed and to as- sure respect for the decision of the allies uner the treaty of Versailles be- fore the convening of the allied su- preme council. The French ambassador in’ Bertin at the same.time, was instriicted, to call the attention of the German gov- ernment to the’ still menacing ‘atti- tude of the large contingents of Ger- man defense» troops under ‘General Von Hoefer which are remaining in Upper. Silesia, ™ ¥ Judge Robert. E.|~ Wolsey, S. D. organization. The train was not stopped until it reached the next station, compelled to permit the I. W. slayer was not apprehended. A posse made up of the American| Legion posts of Huron, Woonsocket, ¥aulkton, Redfield and Hitchcock was|ty sheriffs and special citizens posse- dispatched. in pursuit of the alleged mourderer and seyeral hundred men are searching the countryside neam seemed Chick Evans In Lead for Golf Title of West CHIEAGO} July 16.—Chick Evans, aspiting to his sixth western’ ama- teur chanfpionship, was.two up on R. E."Knepper, Sioux City,: Iowa, : at: the end of their first 18 holes today in the finals of the Western Golf association tournament. , Evans scored 39-36, total 75, twd over par, while Knep- per took 37-40 for a total of 77. NATIONAL OIL _ MEET TULSA, Okia.,. July .16—A- proc- lamation was issued here today by the Oklahoma’ Oil” Mea’s' Protective association, the Gulf Producers’ as- sociation and the Kansas Oil and Gas Producers’: association, calling for a national petroleum congress to meet in Tulsa July 25. Slayer Protected by Other Members on Train at Huron, S. D., and Escapes; . Aberdeen Streets Patrolled HURON, S. D., July 16.—William D. Henderson, 24 of age, of Austin, Texas, was shot and killed last night at ., three miles west of Huron by a member of a band of some 300 I. W. W. on the top of.a freight train pull- ing out of Wolsey for the north, when he refused: the de- mands of the I. W. W. organizer, to take out a‘card’in the Tulare, | where the sheriff of that place was) hears and died instantly. w. members to leave the train, and the MAN SHOT TO DEATH BY RED FOR REFUSAL TO JOIN I. W. W. ‘Bridegroom In Despair Tries To Take Life | DENVER, Colo., July 16—F. C. Thompson, 53 years of age, is at the county hospital where ‘he is believed |by..mediecal authoritiesto be near death as.a-result-of Wounds self-in- flicted Saturday morning. Thompson, according to his medical attendants was badly slashed with a razor when he was found in a local hotel. Mrs. Thompson, a bride of two months, told the -police she believed her husband attempted to take his life because of their destitute circum- stances and had proposed that .they ae | both take their lives in a suicide pact. ABERDEEN, &. D., July 16.—Depu-;The woman declared neither’ of them ears Tulare: A large number of suspects | have been rounded up. 3 Hepderson .was shot through the He was an | ex-servico man and the sheriff of this | county fears a lynching if his slayer is apprehended. had anything to eat for several days | men joined. the police today in patrol-land that Wednesday and Thursday | threatening situation that resulted in| Thompson was ‘ound . apparently | the ejection from the city of 103 al-/aying by B. J. Shea, proprietor of the reached here today on a freight train,| ~~ =e =~ greups here. About 100 went north in| FANS WHO BE I There was no sign of any further that no effort to drive the men out} would be made. CHICAGO, July 16.—Fans who lost ing the: trouble will be held Monday.! nati’ will be among the first witnesses when the baseball trial gets under today. C. K. Nims and George M. ;Cohan, the actor, are among the ie Cicotte, made before the grand \jury. ‘The big fight of the trial is ex: [ling Aberdeen’s streets, where all/ nights they slept in one of the city | leged members of the I. W. W. |hotel where the Thompsons stayed which they boarded north of Mitchell, this country and the others, together} with about 100 who were not in yes-| terday’s roundup scattered about the) disturbance during the. early morn- The trial of Harry Casey‘of Chicago,|moticy betting on the White Sox in way Monday, Assistant State's Attor- }losers to be subpoenaed, he said. { The state also will attempt to in- |troduce the repudiated confessions of ° | The purpose of the congress is jpected to center around the confes- normal after last night’s| parks. "Five Hundred alleged I. W. W.|Friday night. S D., yesterday. They broke up into city. ing and Sheriff Henry Alcott decided} T0 BE HEARD who is charged by police with start-|the 1919 world's series with Cincin- ney George E. Gorman announced Clautie Williams, Joe Jackson and Ed- “to issue a solemn warning to the ‘sions, as attorneys for the defense independent industries, and the gen- !are prepared to fight their introduc- eral public of the United States of } tion. the danger that awaits them unless |} Bill Burns, former White Sox the government can be persuaded | pitcher, and Joe Gedeon, former mem- Louis Browns, will te change its policy regarding a {Per of the tariff on ofl.” close the slate’s case. the jail. SPECIALIST RETAINED BY KIMBALL STORES 10 PROVIDE FREE DERVIGE The patronesses of stores in the city will in hearing that Mrs. specialist from the laboratories — in Boston, will visit in Casper for a week, beginning July 18. Mrs. Tal- bot will be here under, the auspices of the Kimball drug stores, where ap- pointments may be made by phone. Mrs. Talbort will call at the homes of the women of Casper each day and will give a free massage as well as individual help and advice in the care of their skin. The appointments may be. made during the morning hours. Mrs. Talbot will demonstrate. the cream and skin preparations of the Rexall Drug company, especially the popular Jonteel articles. Ste Vode ue Northcliffe To Visit America the Rexali be interested Alice Talbot, a LONDON, July 16—Viscount North- cliffe's tour, on which he will start tomorrow going first to the United States, says an announcement by the London Times, is to be extended to include Canada, Honolulu, the Fifi islands, New Zealand, Australia, the Philippines, Japan, China, Korea, the Straits Settlements, Burma and India. His time will be devoted mainly to studying Pacific problems. = a Judge C. E. Winter, who has been looking after Iegal matters in Doug- las returned today. She was asked if she had anything to|4r Gonzales, say. ‘She merely shook her head: {n- Fyn wee dicating that she had not. Judge| At Boston (Ist Game) R. H. E. Bernon then pronounced sentenve. | St- Louls ....001 000 011 1— 4 10 3 Mrs. Kaber was carried to her cell in| Boston O20 010 000 O— 3 7.6 Batteries—Doak, Sherdell, Pfeiffer aad Clemons, Dilhoefer; McQuillan and Gowdy. ee At Boston (2nd Game) R. i. E. St. Louis 000 000 120— 3 11 Boston 100 022 00°— 5 12 0 Batteries—Haines, Sherdell, Pertica, Riviere and Clemons; Oeschger, Scott, Fillingham and O'Neil, Gibson, Gowdy. At Philadelphia (ist Game) R. H. E: Cincinnati... .130 002 010— 7 11 1 Philadelphia ..100 000 000— 1 6 3 Batteries—Rixey and Wingo; G. Smith, Betts and. Bruggy. At Philadelphia (2nd Gamo) R. H. E. Cincinnati 300 100 000— 4 6 1 Philadelphia, 103 000 O81— 5 99 0 Batteries—Napier, Luque and Har- grave; Hubbell and Peters. At Brooklyn (Ist Game) RB. H. E. Chicago 040 010 001— 6 12 1 Brooklyn 000 002 000— 2 3 Batteries — Alexander and Daly; Smith, Mitchell and Miller. At Brooklyn (2nd Game) R. H. E. Chicago « 022 120 200—- 9 15 2 Brooklyn ...002 400 00— 6 9 1 Batteries—Cheeves, Freeman and Daly; Schupp, Grimes, Smith and Taylor. AMERICAN LEAGUE At Chicago— R HL E. Boston -000 022 402—19 16 1 Chicago - 000 000 W0— 0 6 3 Batteries—Bush and Kuel; Wilkin- son, Twombly and Schalk. At Detroit— R. H. E. New York - 000 300 1%— © 2s © Detroit .. - 000 000 OFF © F & Ae Cleveland— R. H. E. Washington 100 010 ae oS ve Cleveland 020 300 — se At St.. Louis — R. H. E. Philadelphia 101 o** — 2:97 St. Louis . Ie. ae. Oe Sundance. quarreled on the road. RANCHER SLAIN, MAN CIVES UP : (Special to The Tribune.) MOORCROFT, Wyo., July 16.—After shooting Louis Pemson, 50 years of age, ranchman, ‘to death Friday afternoon, John Groves gave himself up to the authorities here and was taken to the county jail at Groves declared that he shot in self-defense. The tragedy occurred ten miles north of here when the two men ee nn... re rn.