Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 19, 1922, Page 1

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EXECUTION OF SOLDIER BY FIRING SQUAD IS RECITED ‘he avilay ENTIRE WEST IN GRIP _ nnessTeus Che Casper Daily ene com Seay We miter $08 continyaa | Crihune cry Minimum Reading at Casper 10 Below While Mercury. ° ‘ps to THE COMMITTEE ing temperature by noon. ; EDITION 48 at Worland; Train Behind Schedule on Most Re Pay NUMBER : Nothing Unlawful in Ast VOLUME Vi WYO., THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1922. ———_——______ CARER, WYO., THURSDAY, JANUARY 19,1922, NUMBER 86. ‘Report of Freezing Tragedy Not Confirmed STS TRUCK DRIVERS [RUNAWAY Lats OWE Lives To Ten degrees below zero, aggravated by a stiff wind which subtarcted several more digits fre, ‘ temperature insofar as personal comfort.! is concerned, was the minimum reading here last ’ : as the culmination of a cold wave that swept the western region from north to south during» .< WASHINGTON, Jan. 12.—The last 24 hours. The temperature moderated greatly here this morning. shooting of:a soldier by a firing Snowfall here was comparatively light, amounting to less than three inches, but it drifted before squad in France was nee “During heavy shell fire near Che morning due to intense cold. Mint-| ‘ alleged illegal executions today suing foreigners armed with shotguns during a running fight b 5 per taiflbe recap Nea et Mare Tooeceat va the taaccah Weak Roanoke, Ala., who sald he was: act FINISH WO A K AY teau Thierry,” said Yarbrough, “I WAS going up the road with other men z ; covering five miles, undoubtedly saved the boys from death ACQUIT TED BY COURT shoe aod recerien pieces peer set tha bene Sarena ree Three Suffering From Frozen Hands and Pj | CAPTURE AFTER RUNNING GUN MISSING, DEATH “ ATTLE WITH SECTION HANBS eee aes een eo ee ae NOT REPORTED 22s seco TSUN |e: = ’ Pomiagstenn witha decierdariiiadial helt oft eeaee thee Northwestern train schatulee were es utroexing tm a 1osnelow Sern: ipa ey sat tae capture 35 below today, At Chadron it was 20 below zero. the woods. The sight was so unusual it distracted our attention. ‘There Léndenmeir. 18, Marvin Maus, 18, Jim|armed Lindenmeter. Nobody was = cae ea earn Wremtes rem: Sasie panbone Goes : Feet as Result of Extreme Expos- ttm it cs vo Durgiariond ths| "The Daya say: they ran away from|JU'7. the. United States dintiat| Tad (race TMported to be running be ! tay nr cee ets , Mumpowe aa 2 Sn Ramat § sary, IR tease beget i ; they started to. shoot. the solder, ..= lowed! to 1 pei « Sos tts goin here fudge the temperature to be rising rapidly a ' white boy about 20 y, ot ure to Zero Cold on Highway cat jorado an | Southern ae iene = home aotey. because © there |B Kennedy Tuesday to return a ver- today. Mondel! Lines Up Legislation | askea that he be not, bitadtenson? occupied by « gang of foreign laborers.) They headed for Fort Laramie, Wyo.,| “ict “# not guilty in the case of Leon| ‘Temperatures at! several points. fol- f s, Shaw, charged with having transport- 5 That Must Be Enacted Be- The witness said he was 20 steps Reports prevalent hefe today that two men had been frozen to| TB* foreigners observed the boys Tye ate at Glenna eer amd MEE Cam etcten’ ented reek bitline: $0; Cheyenne ahd: Toliognene wEs'|' fore Adjournment Next. |swar ivhen the command was tee death in the Salt Creek country are. unfounded according to the able to reach Fort Laramie on foot|Mont., to\ Casper. The complaining | 99° Summer Is Taken. to fre. He was: positive the exeau- tton ‘was in July, 1918. s es “ties Caen before nightfatl. Fort Laramie is 150| Witness failed to appear. Reports that two truck drivers had ralteon: findings resulting from: extensive’ investigation "by many Casper |7ounsttere eighteen Gina Fen Ra frozen to death on the Salt Creek mother ‘thagebad’ Bose eine Spencer Not Out for WASHINGTON, Jan. 19.—Express- fing the earnest hope that congress| th: th th deen agencies. oxchenes ‘The youngsters had only a singts road could. not be confirmed’ today: wr Cuero: had ® trial and ; he knew of no other erecution. = 2: Be setae Bei icetater arnt en anets The _Wnerif's office. sent an. officer} might adjourn by June 1 and ‘predict-| Fe testified thet he had ‘heard’ thi n n < ’ to death had they not been cap- to investigate the rumor without re-ling that the house wouldibe through | soldier wee axe and Ralph Pitt, two truck drivers in the employ of the Mid-|in’sn catometiie tee he ee nel Gece } Secretary of State | sus. With ste program in ample time to do| Fe ala not snow to. eee co ei r, Who left, Salt : > this, Floor Leader Mondell has out- comman: the man shot was attached ‘but. sai { 7 DENVER, Jan. 10.—The cold wave|lined the more important legilative he ui t CHETENND, Wyow Jan. 12—Percy| which yesterday and last night #wept|mattora contemplated for the balunce| fey nc Gas oe teres f C. Spencer, executive secretary of the|over tho Rocky Mountain region set-| of the session. regiment ‘of the Third vate i Rep’ ublican state committee, recently | ting low temperature records for the} “There are a number of: measures aivisian. “I was cloge to'the squad, all mem. ° ° @ ° 2 2 (? 2 reported by northern Wyoming news-| year is moving southward today and J : INU. 5 LAND BUSINESS =z eis cs ie ste foe wy 2 erin poet he tata ‘y te bs srccihend o. | temperature, according to J. .M. Bher- the officer-walked ver, felt. "hie "paee State, today depreciated the report.|ier, Aistrict weather forecaster, : for a moment, and tumed away. Mh TST stating that he was not at this time) Tander, Wyo., with a temperature Its. reasonably early | 0 he way, Then , CHEYENNE, Wyo., Jan. 19—-Wyo- during the night of 84 degrees below|enactment is highly important and entered squad to move on,"*.> “Was there anything «bout 8 zero was the coldest point in the|earnestly hoped for. Other measures i. the ‘eastern Rocky Rlotntiin ‘ragtiee Ctey-]0f importance which we hope to see| srecution fe make you belleve it was Gesparrt ot nacted during the session, are-the biii| 42 Sbuse of power “ Chairman Bran- for refunding the foreign debt and that | 7°se? asked. for tho classification of federal em-|), Nothing whatever, but T felt that ployes. epson Io epee @ equad to-kin Denver was the coldest point in Col-| “I think it is now generally under- oh could have detailed a thas | orafo last night the Seaveratare Oro: Stood that we shall proceed. to the| "ded to bury: him. . ping to 10, below zero which was fol-| e&rly consideration of, and in due'time : aatiana Sinclair: n€ ‘Weatyitle, Oita, lowed by a gradual climbing of the|!n this session enact, an adjusted? com- that he saw. three public mercury. pensation act for veterans: of, the Sur-Tile, «, world yrar. It is highly. important. that that we-atall before the eitwe of Salmon Supply secsion outline «program of piper participation in highway construction, $ ‘bed. > covering @ period of two and perhaps three years. It ts, in inion, irn- Being Depleted) ince rm im cite, te shall at this session enact proper legis- of So 2 Wag 1. s 5 _ 3 < te re z WASHINGTON, Jan. 19—The: sah! sentation in’ congress under the lest | Sur-Title, ; Y ; q is mon supply in Alaskan waters will be| tenons, ““Hardbotiea” ae is. aie z eae pt Ecole All igar dt $h “Other legisiation that will be sched-| the inquiry, said ¢ Re i é oe : William “Paul, an fia! uled for consideration during the ses- See lithe iotee cane " 4 u} L: .. y chant marine and fisheries committee. p FIT. Premier Poincare Sets Forth National | se". sn tie 074 ftterice comamstion leeiiation ‘making further. proviston | with clubs, : Li southeastern Alasks had subscribed a| °°" o. @ ° ° of Indian: descent told the house mer-| "0", includes a permanent .: policy ing- that he never 4 ' ——_»— PTO of Aims In Presenting Platforiie to | tina to cond wim 4000, mites to ax |e comattions ta agricaiture, RESIDENT EXCITED BY «i Hi iy touching our merchant marine, and|heard of a soldier being killed thene plain the situation to congress. shall be working in the matter of ap- CANADIAN PREMIER TELLS FACTS! ther Chaiime o Pepatics sits Gans cares ara | megane eran | MONCH THREATENS bs A Speier a ete 0 o “i these thi accom| c W nw ic. me ey oh Gi Bie PARIS, Jan. 19.—(By The Associated Press).—Firm treatment| “fraps piased at advan fares fhe oun is soneared, hy the WILLIAM CLAYTON IS = | usm br tales inthe province of usbec wil ay off te |manded by Pronir Poscare todas i oroenne Eine bce |fat e tay otena eae comenes te] TO) SHOOT UP FAMILY Dire destruction was about tebe pone eae ASE AS visited upon the family of'a-man whe is listed at-police headquarters as BE. Deshay, a resident of a section,of ‘West Casper, when Det ay : N y 3 a s, 3 5 ~ possible that we may complete thi CHT HIN OF POLIGE ‘hee se Stag sconane nie geo Haagen otto ere soe ~ parliament and reading its-statement of policy in. the chamber Batre Asi tac Sod pep hpet Re tac ec adjourn sine die ; eee Tascherau for submission to the legislature in. its present |° deputies ee session. sumption of wine, ratter than push| Premier Poincare accepted an immediate discussion of inter- arr pet anche tee REEF FOUND IN SEARCH UNDER ARREST Schmidt and McGrew ‘having bbek called by neighbors interfered. According to. information obtained Basing his finding on the business | *D® sale of spirits. To that end aj Peliations, thus delaying the appeal to «| >. > at police headquarters today Deshay, Gone since. May, 1931, when the liquor |PUchesing office will be establishea| the chamber for e vote of confidence. BUFFALO, N. Y., Jan. 19—Collu-| apparently under the influence of @ sion between’ car thieves and railroad| quantity of bad moonshine, riled et ‘The ministerial declaration declared re. that the problem of reparatione.domt'|| Aung Offers to detectives was. charged following the|S0me fancied offense threatened to nates all others and that if Germany ‘ 3 yered to consumers in Quebec at} fails to fulfill her undertakings, upon Besides $28,000,000 Joanee muntet- : b Replarement of Mr. Gaston repre-| palltics for rosd bulldine ana penne [little mere than cost. such capita question, the #rench|| EOL Menagerie; arrest here of five New York Central| take the life of his wife and their gon While searching for a still which | officers. and then commit suicide. : Provided wes cain ae parlinment must, after consultation sents the first change in management |for by sinking fund. Quebec's debt tn with the reparations commission, ex-{' e. I M t ©f the police department since Chiet| $23,000,000, JOSEPH GAREY GOES amine measures to be adopted to on- Cincy n Mar bd i} 7 he] _ ‘The men arrested include Sgt. John| His intentions miscarried, howayer, Pel patpanbelge' ipaee ‘of fei ee oe J. Walsh and William Jones. Both| due to the early arrival of the police Alexander Nisbet took ct The government sold $9,848,727 force fulfillment. The first of these % Toth Bt hicoee fromm May, 1 to Decem- measures, the premier declared, will r A oe 1921, t be the establishment of serious and| SOFIA, Jan. 19—King Boris of A Pppropriation For. ‘Much of the Nquor.” he explained, EAST WITH GOVERNOR etfactous control of Germany's budet.| Bulgaria is the modern “man with 4 outsidera, hundreds of —— her issuance of paper money and her] an elephant on his hands” £nd he | ratives of ths sheriff's office here vis-| Wore the uniform of the New York| representatives. Deshay was exports. wants to sell part) of his private |ited-the homestead of Ole Dickson and| Central. police force when they. were| ed of a .82 caliber revolver, in police The declaration emphasized that} menagerie to.an American z0:'ogical | in maki: if @ serch of the. place found| captured. Twenty barrels of alcohol,| vernacular termed a suicide gun -be- “wae sold ta Air Service’ Seem | emmnts of vuttors onion into the Sati From the moral, as well as financial] CHEYENNE, Wyo., Jan. 1$—¥For other clauses of the treaty of Ver-| Park or a circus. In particular he Poonsiaerable quantities of beef. alleged to have been stolen on an|cause of the fact that. the .person standpolrit, Quebec’ iquor laws have|mer Governor Joseph M. Carey, who|sailles, such am disarmament esd pun-| ‘would lke to’ «lepcee of ta ele | Upon questioning Dickson he is said | earlier trip to the car was later found| firing the gun generally suffers worse : haa been in poor health tor several ishment of thosegufityot war crimes, | Dlants and severai fine Luffaloos 14, tore Vanteen iMegal Killing of cat-|{n a downtown, warehouse. Aban the person fired upon. Deshay months, Tuesday accompanied his must be fulfilled. which are now in zke grounds of the |¢/,. “Further examination of the pro. ——_—_ was fined $25 by Judge P. A. Mor- gon, Governor Robert. D. Carey, on] nealing with the proposed Angio-| umer palace near Sofia. ; perty is said to have revealed a coil Mail Order Catalogues Again. ris last night, the only charge pushed $m eastern trip. The former gover-|irrench treaty, the precior declorose mhe menagerie was established bY lara other evidence of illicit ifquor| CHEYENND, Wyo., Jan. 19.—The| against him belng carrying concestet Bor, who ts accompantéd by Mrs. J.|" wie wocta ye 5 eas former Emperor Ferdinand and the | Coorations. first/of several carloads of mail-order | weapons. M. ‘Carey, will stop at Philadelphia, “Ppetites of the elephant and buffa- | “Dickson ts now in jail here await-|catalogues, consigned to Cheyenne for| Seven gamblers, sald to have.beex ‘while Governor Carey will go to Wash. | “estined to consolidate the peace could) ioes are so great that King Boris 1s in official action. He is said to have| distribution in the tributary regions| taken from a notofous place om the : ington to attend the agricultural con-| 20° be. signed gg hegre and} hard pressed to feed them out of his | heen the manutacturer Of mocumtine| ot Wyoming, Nebraska and Colorado, | Sandbar were taken in custody by the E ference called by Secretary Wallace. phase berg aol! sein tsee ert ek n-| slender income. whiskey for the sale of which Lee Mor-| was recetved by the postoffice here] police last night and will be given a ne aaornart onbetioes enact Pac oh habe eet anelbe eabe charm ae cresis bene- fited, that one would be concluded Be-| CINCINNATI, Jan. 19.—When Sot. |! 788 Fecentiy arrested. today. hearing tonight. .g y : ; ' 5 tween them on a basis of perfect cong rdplipas U. S. ADOPTS FRENCH GUN 2222 22°s “2h a a ‘ A SS. the guarantees present or future, that! dispatch stating that King Bo R EC R DS F N D ie oy, PY e + ete e - the! treaties accord us would be integ-| king of Bulgaria wishes to sell hic ¢ ° e ° ° ° ° rally maintained.”* private menagerie because of the ex- o o ; % * , 4 3 1 Vv : A The statement refers to the relations| pense of its upkeep, Stephen. sent a AR | ‘ E : ER G VEN between France and the United States} cablegram to King saying that T ‘] L 3 : in'@ paragraph ‘reading: he will buy th hants' ant buffa- “We do not need ald. We seck to} lcs if their «afe landing in New ‘ ; : matntain the strongest and mont| Yrs is gusranteed. ‘WASHINGTON,* Jun, 19—(By | States with the French’ guns. They “Heretofore courses have been. | ¢riendly relations with all the peoples ee The Associated. Prees)}—Training of | pave been accepted as the standard | maintained for regular officers and |who fought on our cite tor ine bhai AUTO THIEF CENTENGED EXPLORER’S NOTES READ OLD TOWN, Maine, Jan. 19.—A , A. Cook. The pages contained since. (It was in 1909 that Dr. hobo on Arctic traits who had with notes on weather, conditions of ice Cook came out of the north with him a notebook and. other relics of | floes and. other memorandum. | the claim to discovery of the pole * light gun for the. regular army and ” ot humanity, and especially with the regular army troops with American the national guard, end in time of | ‘°F PAational guard officers,” it says. iDiitted. Riateay, whoas oo-octetica cae modeled 75 millimeter guns will be national emergency would be Issued | ‘We @re now inaugurating t?i> sys- tributed so greatly tc ‘tue common) vic- ; Dr. Cook's expedition of 14 years | Highty-nino degrees JIatitude. was | on April 21, 1908, which caused. discontinued and training with the | to the organized reserves. tematic instruction of the thirt |+u-y and who has just given us at the ago is described in a letter received | the farthest ‘north » position deci- | heated controversy with Aamirab French 75's will be extended to ar- “The - Americas 75 \militreter | component of the army of the |Wash:ngton conference such striking here from Kenneth M. Clark, a Har- | pheradle, Clark wrote. Peary who characterized Cook’a tillery units of the: regular-estab- | gun,” says an’ official communica-| United States—the organized re | proofs of her rioble sentiments.” i > vard graduate, who is in the tim- Clark said he learned that the |claim as a “gold bsiek."") lishment, the national guard and of- tion issued by the office of the chief | serves.” * Or- | of ‘field: artillery, “is an experi- Sufficient funds are available at ders already have been iasnea by | mental split trail gun, with Which | the present time, the letter con- ; i ‘was | several regiments have heretofore | tinues, for conducting a course of learned ‘today, directing ‘organiza- | been equipped. The shortage of | instruction in field artillery. subjects tions in the regular army ‘equipped field artillery troops makes it in- at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, for a lim- with the American mofels to turn | advisable to continue further ex- | ited number of artillery reserve 5 Te | perimental work with this gun.” corps officers. The plans tentative- SS 1n extsnding the instruction to or- | ly approved call fer two officers Tt 1a. the policy of the fled artil- | ganized reserve officers, the letter | from each corns area to attend the lery -chiet: to: equip all field artil- | says, = new departure in army train: | 10 weeks’ course which begins lery brigades stations’ in the <saited ' ing hasbeen made, ’ March 1. ‘ : ————___ TWINS APRIVE. Caspers firat set of twins in many months arrived here. Tuesday night and are now comfortably housed. in. the home of Mr, and Mrs. C. BL. Goughler, 910 South Jackson’ street. ‘thé youngsters, one a boy and the other a girl. andthe mother are get- ting along ‘niceiy, wt Pd ‘ berlands in the northern Quebec | lone occupant of tho igloo was a The Eskimo said ha was about. CHEYENNE, Wyo., Jan. 19.—Clar-] wilderness. wanderer of the wilderness. He | ready to end ‘his wandertiugs and ta ence G. Brown, member of the so-} Exploring « strange trail with a | had been with the Cook expedition, | turn toward his home igloo further called “Erederickso gang,” of alleged} guide, Clark wrote he found a rough | he indicated—one of the few wiis | north, trusting to pear. and Colorado-Wyoming automobile thieves} igloo, nearly buried in snow. In- | stayed with the explorer after his | knife to supply him with ‘food. on Monday afternoon in the United] side was a lone Eskimo or ‘half | party had been spit by blizzards, | the way. ‘The Pork and coffee sup-+ States district court. here - pleaded| breed, clothed in furs, A-notebook | thinned by scanty provisions and | piled by. the timber cruiser ‘were so gullty of transporting a stolen auto-| in a corner of the hut, together with | forced to turn back when the dogs | much to his Uking however, that he- mobile from Colorado to Wyoming.| papers and bits of metal apparent- | went “mad. attached himself to him as official He was sentenced by Judge Kennedy| ly parts of » sextant, caught Clark's Before leaving, the man said he fame killer. Clark wrote that he to sérvelelghteen months in the Leav-| eye and examination of the book | took the notebook and other arti- | was bringing the aetebook back te enworth penitentiary, dinclosed the namo of Dr. Frederick | clés and had been carrying them | civilization. z

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