Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 4, 1922, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

AC [ vir ir ie ste sO 6 a 9 0 o ste LO in hy st al or $7 PAGE TWELVE FAL TO OFF 1,500 MEN AT IRON PLANT Hundreds to Be Thrown Out of Work With Completion of Last Big Rail Order at Pueblo. DENVER, Coto. mately 1,500 workm Aug. 4—Apprexi be released Colorado Fuel Pueblo, Colo., by oun. here by t the com dent pany The Colorado Fuel ané@ Iren com: pany will. fill ite last orders for r for the current year thie week. Welborn stated, and the rail mill w: stut down as a res Two of © blast furnaces at Pueblo and one of th furnace de partmen will also shut down, leaving half of the latter department and the merehant mille tn operation Reopening of the rail mill will de pend upon the railroads, Mr. Welborn stated. When orders for rails are re ved the mill will reopen A considerable amount of coal will © released for other uses by the par 1 closing of the Pueblo plant, Mr. elborn potmted out Between 4,000 and 5,000 now employed at the and Iron company pla open hearth men are Colorado Fuel tt at Pueblo. STRONGHOLD OF INSURGENTS IN RILKENNY FALLS; Callan Occupied by Free State Forces in Continuation of Sweeping Suc- cesses. DUBLIN, Aug. 4.—Callan, the most important center heid by the trreau lars in county Kilkenny, has heen oc cupied by the nationals. It was the niost norther!y n the bne heid by the irregulars and ite evacuation seems to indicate that they intend tc fal back toward the river Suir In county Donegal the irregulars are said to be compl demoralized One of their most prominent leaders has surrendered to the nationals Capture of Tipperary by the Free State forces is looked upon by the mil itary staff of the provisional govern- ment as a-stroke of enormous atrate gical ue in gene campaign against the ern Ireland. By the occupation of the town the Free Staters have been enabled to strengthen their lire and have placed the irregulars in the Cashel district in a dangerous position. Cashel is regarded as the strongest point held by the trregulars, being the last post: tion of importance protecting Clonmel. A traveler from Clonmel says that Eamonn De Valera prevented destruc: tion of the barracks there, declaring he intended to make a stand. The same informant declares that for miles in the vicinity of Cork oity the ronds are mined. IRISH SUCCESS IS CONTINUED DUBLIN, Aug. 4—(By The Asso- ciated Press}—Further progress for the Irish national army in its drive against the irregulars in the south, is reported in a message from Thurles which says the town of Cashel has been captured by the nationalists., The fall of Tip- perary enabled the Free State forces to advance on Cashel, thus paving the way to a further advance on Clonmel, republicans in southwest ‘the irregulars’ stronghold, where Eamon De Valera is making his head. quarters, Overnight reports were that the in- surgents were in general falling back toward the south and southwest. In Dublin tsolated disorders are con- tinuing. oo BIG FLOOD AT HOT SPRINGS HOT SPRINGS, 8S. D., Aug. 4— Flood waters of the Fall river, which flows through the business section of 2 town were receding today, follow- ing a 16-foot rise yesterday as the re- sult of a cloudburst Additional details of damage caysed by the cloudbarst was reported to day from Buffalo Gap, advices saying 14 railroad bridges between that point and Hot Springs had been washed out Televhone and telegraph ‘ines were disabled and much damage to other Property was reported The town of Hot Springs was saved from damage by a concrete retaining Il, erected to keep the river within bonks Gne section of this wall cotiapsed, but the greater part of it heid firm Bituminous coal ty-eight states —Pennsyivania. is mined twen, hracite in but one IS A REAL FUNMAKER. WAIT AND SEE A SCIENTIST, ‘NOT A COMEDIAN PUBLIC WHILE WHITE TALKS OF “MUZZLED’ TO DEFEND POSTER ORDERS ALLEN SEEKS . CHICAGO, Aug. 4.—“Henry and Me,” in letters to the Chicago Tribune, just published, defend their respective positions in the controversy over the placard recently d played by William Allen Whi te, the “hie” of the combin- ation, in the window of his newspaper office. ‘Henry”—Gov. Henry J. All ter, “I observe that you are laboring under the impression William Allen White is being prosecuted for viola- ton of some law which relates to free speech. This is not the case. The prase the law which Mr. White volate’ was that which guarantees to every man freefom to work. He entered into a conspiracy with othe: to intimidate the men who are work- ing.” The Tribune tn a published state-| ment answers the letter of Governor | en by saying “His opinion may be based on some facts which we do not} know and which he doses not state. Mr. White put a placard in his win Gow expressing himself 49 per cent) in sympathy with the strikers. How/ that in the faintest way was part of @ conspiracy to intimidate men at! work we cannot #-e. If he did not have the right to make that state- ment In his paper or otherwise then he 4i@ not have the right to free! specoh in an industrial controversy which admittedly is not yet settled | even as to the equities involved. The Kansas law, prohibiting strikes in certain exsential industries, makes the method of theb yrotest fllegal in that state, but tf ap;lied to prevent an expression of opinion !t is tyranny.” | Mr. White's ‘etier says in part: “My utterance did no: need a poster. Bi what hurt me was my friends on Commercial street, business men, bankers. doctors and private citizens who own no newspapers and who were muzzled by the governor's order. That I might have the test with the sting out—I mean the sting of being a radical strike sympathizer—I cut down the per cent of sympathy to 50 per cent, which being translated. wre the average man's view. Then I de- fled the law because the legislature not being in session, I could not take part in a fight to repeal it. Annul- ment was my only course. But after the case was filed I took down the poster; it had achieved ite end.” He continued by saying that the in- dustrial question must be settled by reason and not by force JOHNSTON WIKS | TENNIS TITLE SEABRIGHT, N. J., Aug. 4.—wil-| tam M. Johnston, of San Francisco, defeated R. Norris Williams IL. Boston 6-0, 6-2, 63, today in the final round of the cup singles at the Seabright Lawn Tennis and Cricket club. In winning, Johnston duplicated his feat of last year, when he also de feated Williams in the final round in straight sets. Both are former na tional champions. — $< —— Embassy Where! Bielaski Stays Being Watched MEXICO CITY, Aug. 4.— relv detectives are stationed about the United States embassy to guard the movements of A, Bruce Bielaski, who with his wife have been the guests of George T. Summerlin. the American charge d’affairs for over a week. It is learned that the hos- pitality of the embassy was offered so as to relieve Mrs. Bielask! of em. barrassing police surveillance. Bielaski finished his business af fairs a week ago but the failure of the Cuernavaca court to announce a decision in his case delayed his de- parture. Senor Barcenas and Mme. Milo have both been cleared of com- plicity in the kidnaping case and | now are here. Montes de Oca, the chauffeur also charged with com- plicity, remains in jail, while Colonel Goldbaum Padilla, who was detailed by President Obregon to investigate the case, is said to be facing court- martial for exceeding his authority in ordering the pursuit of the ban- dits called off. None of the mem- | bers of the kidnaping party have been identified Dancer Would Annul Marriage) LOS ANGELES, Aug, 4—Dorothy Clerk, the 16-year-old da:i-er, in whose behalf her mother, Mrs. Ethel E. Clark of New York, has brought suit in Los Angeles for $200,009 damages against Herbert Rawlinson, motion picture ac lans to take action soon to ar ecent marriage to Kar! Elms of Boston, according to a story the Angeles Examiner published. Miss Clark arrived here, according to the Examiner, and said she had come to take action in the annuiment matter and also to watch the trial of the suit against Rawlinson, who, her mother alleged, attacked the girl in a New York apartment nearly two yeare ago. The girl was quoted some time ago as declaring her mother's allegations against Rawlinson were untrue. Raw. linson denied them IRIS en of Kansas—says in his let- INSURGENTS tN IRELAND FLEE FROM REGULARS Three Hundred Take to Hills After Destroying Bridges at Carrick-on-Suir, Report. DUBLIN, Aug. 4—(By The Assocl- ap- ated Prees).—The !tr.egulars bave parently abandoned int. utlons to @ stand on the banks of \he r=, National troops entered Carrickon. Svic yesterday, the 300 irregulars who had occupied the town fleeing across the hills toward Dungarvan. Before the evacuation they destroyed all the Suir bridges As the government troops have pre viously taken Cahir, west of Clonmel hey now dominate the way east through the Sutr valley toward Water. ford and Clonmel, which menaced from two sides, cannot hold out long The nationals have already captured Butlerstown Castle, near "">terford Mulifnahone, county Tippera’ Wondgap, in Kilkenny, and other small towns also have been taken by the government forces. Fenit, where a force of nationals yesterday made a surprise landing from the sea, is «tuated on Tralee bay in county Kerry and hes a station on the Waterford and Limerick raflroad. The Free Staters’ coup is suddenly placing this force in the rear of the scattered frregulars is expected to have an important bearing or the final outcome of the campaign. Ifenit is about 65 miles northwest of (ork, the most important city held by the irregulars. The official announcement of these operations says: . “The national army troops occupied Carrick-on-Suir at 2 p, m. Thursday on the way clearing Callan, Mullina hone, Nine-Mile-House, Kilmogany and Windgay of irregulacs. The 300 trreg- ulars at Carrick-on-Suir retreated hur: riedly across the mountains toward Kilmacthomas and Dungarvan, blow- ing up the bridges at Carrick-on-Suir. The town did not suffer appreciable damage. “Early _yesterday the national army Ready to Wear, Hotel Henning Block for Claude Tucker, ee ee eee Chemist Wills His Remains to | Surgeon Friend| quest that his body be offered to Dr. Malcolm Harris of Chicago | search and examination with regard to my liver, operated on 30 years agr. tn the will of Dr. Job f- famous Japanese cher ist, recently in{New York. Should the body not be wanted by Harris or if Mrs. Takamine ob ts to the disposition suggested, the doctor requested that it be cremated. part of the ashes to’be buried in“Wood- lawn cemetery, New York, and the re mainder in Japan. The wll, filed today for probate, sposed of an estate understood to be worth more than a mililon 6-'lars. There were a number of bequests to friends and institutions and the rest was left to the widow. Part of the estate is in Japan. “for re- particularly which was 's embraced Takamine, why died D PATTERSON, N. J.. Aug. 4—A re- captured ten frreguiars occupying But lerstown Castle near Waterford city together wit, 19 rifles and Lewis gurs. A band or frregulars earty today en tered Sifgo in an armored car and ex ploded a bomb at the Ulster bank al- most completely wrecking the build- ing. No lives were lost. The armor- ed car engaged by a machine gun post of national troops finally retired. Union barbers in Elizabeth, N. J., suspended work to enforce Sunday closin, OE rove Scotia by “two hundre@ striking rail workers at Childress, Tex.. ere working overtime—and for no pay. They're helping sick farmers werk their crops, Here are some of them who in four hours worked $9 acres of cotton SUNSETHOUR 200.000 Heart is CHOSEN FOR Balm Is Sought BELL FUNERAL SYDNEY, N. 8, Aug. 4—The body Dr. Alexander Graham Bell will be laid at rest this evening from the home on “einh Breagh mountain which he had occupied for 35 succes- sive summers. At sunset, interment will be made in a granite tomb blasted in the summit of the mountain, a part of the Bell estate. The body will be borne to its rest sng on the highest point in eastern the members of the Bell estate. There it ‘tll be laid away on the lofty lockout with simple cere monies and to the singing of Robert Louts Stevenson's requiem: “Under the wide and starry sky. ig the grave and let me lic; 1 "Glad did I ve an’ gindly die— “And I Inia me down with a will.” WHISKAWA IS NOT SOLD of SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y. Aug. 4.—Harry Payne Whitney, owner of Whiskaway, declared to- day that reports he has sold the conqperor of Mervich were without foundation. “Whiskaway has not been sold, nor ts he for sale,” Mr. Whitney said, WATERMELONS They look “Red Hot” but they're “Ice Cold”—by the slice a dime. Halves or whole as you like ’em.. AT THE Watermelon Garden 140 WEST SECOND AND DAVID Half Block West Stockman’s National Bank. Phone 20 The National Sample Cloak & Suit Store Opens Its Doors to the Public ‘ou will find most everything in Ladies’ and Misses’ at popular prices. LADIES’ FURS, COATS, SUITS, DRESSES AND MILLINERY. 112 South Center St. Woodward NEW YORK, Aug. 4. — John B newspaper advertising man of New York and Chicago, was sued for $100,000 today by Edith L. Ransom, secretary of George Creel, when he was wartime director of the bureau young Ww of public woman contends ‘codward twice promised information. The that Mr. to marry her and failed to do so. Mise Ransom, who is 23, alleges that Mr. Woodward, a widower with nevi ised to make her his the cities of the south in the value of its_manufactures, 1 grown children, whi twice prom- a Winston-Salem stands first among BASE Good Shoes at Reasonable Prices Men’s Dress Shoes Brown calf blucher, lace, Goodyear welt, rubber heels—a pair. Women’s Patent Oxfords Soft. pliable patent lace Comfortable toes, Cuban heels—a pair.,..._-___. Women’s Strap Slippers Black or brown kid skin—one strap, tlexible soles, Baby Louis heels— a pair. IGGIN “YOUR ECONOMY SHOE SST IRE nam FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1 CHICAGO WANTS, BUS OWNERS TO. OPERATE CARS | CHICAGO, Aug. 4.—Mayor Wiliam | Hale Thompson's plans for relieving} the street car strike situation with mo-| jtor busses, operating on @ five cent| | tare basis resulted toay in a general) invitation to bus owners any place in! the middlewest to bring their cars to/ Chicago to ope-ate. No licenses will) be reautred, #> long as the fure is fiv+ cents. { The mayor is now operAting fifteen| Dusses, and expects 34 more to reach the_city tonight, nine from Rockford, Dl., and 15 from Toldeo, Ohio. | Yesterday the mayor asked the city council to appropriate 3,000,900 to buy | a permanent fiset of $1,000 motor) busses to be operated by the city. | ‘The fourth day of the etreet car! strike saw an improvement in the! makeshift transportation system which! has ceptaced the surface and clevated | cars. With practically all downtown! streets limited to one way traffic and| motor cars running six and eight abreast the congestion and tangles of the early days of the strike are dis- } appearing. | Thousands of jitneys are settling down to regular routes and handling the 3,000,00 passengers daily with prac- tically no delay. ——— A servant girl found a live monkey m the letter-box of a hotel in the city of Leemington, Engiand. The! fa’, escaped from a sailor, sought! refuge in the hotel, put the cat to fight, and then retired te the letter- box MENT full round toes, $4.98 Oxfords or Strap Slippers. ____ $4.48 _— B4.$8 SALE ngs YW IGGIN THE STAR CLOTHING C0. || 260 South Center St.

Other pages from this issue: