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FINAL | EDITION | VOLUME Vi Che Casper Daily Tribune Perce a CASPER, WYO., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1922. "EARLY QEC/SION ON PROVISIONS HELO PROBABLE Partisanship to Have no Part in Consideratin of _ Measure—Mondell WASHINGTON, Sept. 1.— The soldiers’ bonus bill was to conference today by the house under a special rule and with very little discus. sion. A wave of applause swept over the house when the meas- ure was returnod from the sonate, which passed it yesterday by a vote of 47 to 22. Conferees named by the house are the same as those on the tariff bill. _ MANKILLEDBY ' FREIGHT TRAIN IS IDENTIFIED WHEATLAND, Wyo., Sept. 1.— The body of the man found dead in ac. B, & Q railroad tunnel Guernsey has been identified as Louis GC. Wallace by his *rother, C. D. Wallace of Ross, Wyo. The dead man was stealing a ride on a freight | | 1 train from Casper to some point east. The local sheriff's office is investi-| gating the theory that the man may thave been murdered and thrown off the train, His neck, right arm and coliar bone were broken. Wallace said to have been seen in the Guernsey yards in company with two negroes and the three are thought to haye boarded the train together. bs TAYLOR MURDER + LOS ANGELES, & pt. 1.—An in- | vestigation of the mysterious slay- | ing of William, Desmond Taylor, | film direoter, who was found shot | to death in his home here Feb. 1, last, 1s being carried on by his for- mer wife and their daughter, who have been lying quietly in Los An- geles for several days, it was said today. New and authentic evidence has Ween obtained, according to mem- bers of local film colonies assisting | Min, might be painted at various pla Rodeckodi: result of fin by haunts. He found ths beceape oe quer and acted according to the| entire coytents of the bottle, prob-| ably soveral ounces. /4 years of age, got dead drunk last night as a i what was probable a partly empty bottle of moonshine near his home on West B street. | Mitchel had left the house and had wandered according | to his custom In his various neat|to be very fll and the parents wore summoned. He home and@ Dr. nan species When he drank the called. eral hours, but {a reported to be much He was discovered by his playmates) better this worping. BY EDWARD M. THIERRY. NEW YORK, Sept. 1—New vigor being infused into the almost dormant Prohibition party with these strangely conpled aims: To elect dry onngressmen dry state legislator: reatical parties—w the Anti-Saloon Lengue from * ning prohibition.” This is the statement of John icKee, recently elected New York state chairman of the Prohibition nd FY ve ct party. McKee is a Brooklyn real estate man, 70 years old, a temperance worker all his lite. He ts also tress- urer of the Native Races Anti- Liquor Traffic association and treasurer of the Prohibition Trust Fund which has-$28,000 left in be- quests to tight booze. Plans Party Slate. “The Prohibition party in tris state as in other states,” says Chairman McKee, “will put tickets into the field at the coming elec- tion but though the party machin- ery will be preserved the tickets wil contajn the names of dry can- aidates of the major political par- thes. “In other wort we are not fight- ing for our party ticket so much as we are for dry officials, no matter what their political affiliations. “Our aim is not to set a fox to guurd the geese. The man-who likes beer isn’t fit to enforce the dry law. It the real prohibitionist, who drinks dry as well’ as talks dry,who ought to enforce it. “PEACH TREE’ | BANDIT HANGS | ATLANTA, Ga., Sept. 1.—Frank B. Dupre. self-styled “Peach Treo county jail here at 2:04 p. m. today for the murder on Deo. 15, last, of Irby ©, Walker, private aetective, who tried to stop him in his dash from a Peach Tree street jewelery store with a diamond he had snatched from a tray. EVIDENCE IS UNCOVERED BY FAMILY PROBE the former Mrs. Taylor amd her daughter, indicating that the clew to the slayiag lies somewhere in the lence = and. cancelled checks of the slain man. The former Mrs. Taylor, now married to 2 wealthy eastern manu- facturer, is credited with the belief that the slaying was committed or instigated by some woman. She ex- pected to find checks drawn in this wonnn'’s favor among Taylor's ef- fects. 1 CHILD DRINKS MOONSHINE FRO BOTTLE FOUND NEAR HOUSE ON BAR, SERIOUS ILLNESS FOLLOWS “Bury your bottle,” is not an inappropriate slogan that ces on the Sandbar. itchel | was taken to | 0. H. Horrail his The little fellow was sick for sev-| ~ | Life, Fights For Dry Leaders “We are also against We Anti 1 Saloon League. It may want pro- | hibition, but it wants to run it and maintain its members in jobs ‘as | censors of more. | ‘Phe Anti-Saloon League is one of the worst enemies of the Pro- hibition party. It ts a dominati: tyrannical crowd, and-it should | compelled to render a public | countvof the money {t collects and | spends.”* ‘This, McKee was told was exact- ly the proposal made by Governor Edward L. Edwards in his cam paign for United 8 senator from New Jersey. “I don't care if it is, eafd Me- Kee, am a dry—but I agree with him in his opposition to the Antl | Saloon League. Drys Held Numerical Power. “The big fight between the drys and wets is on national and state legislators. The drys are in the ma- jority 2 to 1, nd we mean to hold our own and increase our numbers ‘= if possible. | “We are against light wines and heer because the Mquor traffic can- net be regulated—it must be absl- isned. T think the wine and beer agitation will die out in two or three years an@ bootlegging will cease within ten years. Only death can cure the old drunkard. “All this trouble and controversy | and enforcement faiture and break- ing of the lew are due to the fac’ that the eighteenth amendment was not properly written. “The amendment says “intoxi- cating Mquor. If it had sald alco- holic liquor we would now prohibition in fact instead of the- ory. We shall have it eventually, and without changing the amend- ment, too. The, biggest force in bringing it will be the Prohibition party, not the Anti-Saloon League.” McKee predicts the -return- to congress of Randall of California in the next election, and the vic- | i ‘ congressmen in Ohio, some In other states. as well as SPORTS MARKETS NUMBER 277 Lawlessness and Violence Together With Tieup Costing Millions in Damage and | Protective Measures, Attorney General | Says in Plea for Injunction | CHICAGO, Sept. 1.—“The underlying principle involved in this action,” Attorney General Harry Daugherty declared in concluding his plea for a court order today restraining railroad strikers and unions from any kind of interference BAL NATIONAL LEAGUE UPREMACY OF COUNTRY ‘AT STAKE IN ENFORCING URDER IN’ Rai BONUS SENT TO CONFFRENCE Prohibition Party Comes to LKUAD STRIKE, DAUGHTERTY ASSERTS L SCORES i | a fe have | tory of at least two additional dry | with operation of the railroads, ‘is the survival and su. premacy of the government of the United States.” The attorney general addressed the court immediately following the read ing of the formal complaint by Assist- lant Solicitor General . after jwhich Federal District James H. Wilkerson issued the porary jrestraining order requested by the | government |His plea for the injunction, Mr.| Daugherty said was made necessary by the fact “‘that there comes a time in the history of all nations when the people must be advised whether they have a government or not.” | “No union, or combination ofgunions jean, under our laws, dictate to the |American union," the statement con- JOHNSTON AND "AUSTRALIAN IN ~ TENNIS MATCH FOREST HILLS, L. 1, Sept. 1— With the United States one match in the lead in the defense of the Davis cup, due to the victory of Walliam Tilden IT, over Gerald Pat- | torson, in straight sets, William M. | athe ef San Francisco, and | dames ©. Anderson of Australia, took the courts at 4:10 for the sec- ond singles match of the day. | The gallery had reached a capacity | throng of 14,000 spectators. SEVEN CARS PILE UP IN RAIL CRASH ‘No One Injured in Freight Wreck West of THREE DEAD ix Casper but Contents of Four Represent Total Loss Cars | Seven cars were derailed from the middle of an extra Chi. bandit,” was hanged at the Fulton cago, Burlington & Quincy freight train a mile east of Powder River at 11:15 | No one was injured in the accident and the wrecking crew, which was ispatched to the location early this morning, is expected to have the deb- j1ls cleared up and the right of way free by 2:80 this afternoon, The wrecked train, which consisted of 31 loaded ofl tank cars, was in charge of L. C. Merwin, engineer, and R. W. Ackerman, conductor, and was west- bound at the time of the accident. ‘The cause of the wreck is unknown, but an investigation is in progress and a report will be made late this afternoon when the wrecking crew re- turns to Casper. he train was given departure from this city last night, it is said. - ‘The contents of four cars will be a tetal loss, but the other three derailed tankers are not damaged materially. ‘That the track was not faulty is ‘adi- cated by the fact that cars in the mid- die of the train wero the ones which left the track. The Burlington pas- senger train, which left Casper ono |hour late this morning, went by way of the northwestern tracks as far as Bonneville, the junction, from whence lit resumed the Burlmagton route to Bil- lings. No loss of time was expected on account of the rerouting. meade tae Se Anarchists To Finish Terms NEW YORK, Sept. 1—James P. Larkin, Irish leader and former As- semblyman Benjamin F. Gritlow, who were convicted two years ago of crim- was, {nal anarchy and who hive been ont} on a certificate of reasonable doubt were ordered returned to S Sing prison to finish the remainder of thely ., Bentences of from five to ten years, the customary inspection prior to its/ TWO KILLED IN TRAIN WRECK CAPE GIRARDEAI » Mo., Sept. 1. when. a trestle it was’ crossing gave way. HUNCER VICTIMS | JACKSON, Cal., Sept. 1.—Rescue work at the Argonaut { | TRAIN WRECK | CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo., Sept. 1 —(By The Associated Press)—Three persons were killed, eight injured t night, causing a blockage of the |*!usly and 23 slightly in the wreck road which resulted in this morning’s Burlington passenger train, No. 29, to be routed over the Chicago & Northwestern |railroad tracks beyond the scene of the accidént. of St. Louis-San Franciseo passenger train No. 805 near Wittenberg, 36 miles north of here today, according to a check up this afternoon. The ‘train, en route from St. Louis t |Memphis, enn., was wrecked when | trestie collapsed. Profiteering | Bill Taken Up tee haa withdrawn his coal commis- sion bill with the statement that he thractte ¢ t IS ONLY ENEMY OF MIN ; BELIEF | gold mine, near here, where 47 men were entombed Sunday night, “has far surpassed expectations and everything possi. ble is being done,” | work, workers said that a seepage of cool | alr is coming from the Argonaut mine |!mto the 3,600-foot level of the Kon nedy mine, in which workers are try- ¢ bulletin issued by the council of engineers and rescue ably are alive, providing they have been able to survive hunger. The United States signal corps de- tachment from San Francisco com- ing to clean out to get into the Argo-| pleted installing a telephone system jpaut. connecting the Kennedy and Argo- Fire in the Argonaut, jt is believed,}naut mines above ground. Wires {eid not extend below the 3,000-foot|/were strung from the Argonaut to ‘level and if the men did not ascerid| the Muldoon shafts and Kennedy jfrom the 4,500, 4,600 an@—4,80: foot | works and also to the federal by leve h they were w i }tinued. “When the unions claim the right to dictate to the government and to dominate the American people, and deprive the people of the necessities of life, then the government will destroy the unions, for the government of the United States is supreme and must en: dure. | “Tomorrow it will be said by some more malicious than thruthful that proceeding is intended as a death blow to the unions. In my judgment |this movement (the injunction- is nec essary for the projection and preser- vation of the unions themselves. “So long, and to the extent that T can speak for the government of the United States, I will use the pow |of the government within my contro! |to prevent the labor unions of the |country from destroying the open shop. “When a man in this country {s not Permitted to engzge in lawful toil, whether he belongs to a union or not, ‘the death knell to liberty will sounded and anarchy will supersede | organized government.” | The attorney general told the court |that because of lawlessness and vio- lence against railroad - property and railroad workers hig department had received urgent requests for no less |than 40,000 deputy marshals to keep |down the strike disorders. Already some 5,500 marshals have been s0 assigned, and in addition, spe cial servien men of the “fepartmest bave taker up similar work througti- jout the country, the attorney’ general | said. a ‘The cost of such speciai-service, he jsaid, already expended was more than $1,000,000 for the eight weeks’ duration of the strike. In California alone, Mr. Daugherty said, more than $75,000,000 worth of |fruit and produce already had been destroyed because of the failure of transportation systems to move the crop. In Somerset, Ky., he said, 25,000 cars of bituminous coal were cougest- ed the railroad yards yesterday. Vandals had tampered with more }than 5,000 cars there, he said, and as |a result the nation was faced with suf- be fering for want of coal. Fifty per cent of the engines of the | nation’s railroads have been rendered useless by lawless acticities since the strike began, he said. The Chicago and Alton railroad has {been forced into recetvership by the rain upon its resources caused by he strike. > What the loss has been cannot be jestimated, but the transportation sys jtems must be rebuilt.. For that, the | American people must*pay, he said. |" The department of justice repre- }sents the American people, his plea continued, and while it was regretted | that such broad action was necessary, no other course remained for the gov- jernment to preserve the interests of jmore than 100,000,000 citizens. | There was no doubt In the attorney {general's mind as to the legality of the government's position in request- |ing the injunction, he went on. The attorney general prefaced his [femarks with this statement. “I deem it the duty of the govern- qos GS Ger orgs Pac {ment in undertaking this responsibil Bat tes tne ee BE WASHINGTON, | Hept.. 1. — Theltty involving the findamentel ‘prin, fared totaly When a St. Louis andj house anti-profiteering coal bill was'riples of free government, that the San Eacisiess pers? passdnger| taken up today by the senate after, court be appraised of the circum rain m St. is to} Chairman Borah of the labor commit-| 5 . : eee tere stances which make this unusual | Prayer necessary.”” The I. W. W. was co-operating with the strikers, not on call, but because | the opportunity to strike at the gov- ernment was presented, to aid in what- lever way possible in the obstruction |of transportation, he said. Already more than 1,000 mail trains | have been taken from the railroad schedules throughout the nation. | Untold suffering has resulted to | both commerce and the people, caused by the various forms of lawlessness { manifest since the strike, s | Government agencies fixed the | schedules and the rates under which ‘ailroads operated, Mr. Daugherty | said, adding that it necessarily fol- |lowed that the execution of that obli | gation by the railroad should be aided according to W. J: Loring, president of |>¥ the removal of all lawless obstruc- | the American mining congress, who is assisting in the rescue ' tions~to normal transportation. “There are many who believé,” the jattorney general sald, “on account of | the arrogance of certain officials o labor unions, that the unions t |selves should be destroyed. | “I do not think they should, but I think they should be corrected and restrained. “It the are insp' cts of violente ed by the unio nor organization or associa ny kind will be permitted by (Wontinusa oa Page Seur} | will t At Brooklyn— New York _ -020° 100 1—* .* Brooklyn -000 005 O— * . * Batteries—McQillan, Jonnard, Ryan, V. Barnes and Smith, Snyder; Vance, Mamaux and Deberry. At Boston (ist Game) — Philadelphia _______ 7 0 Boston _ ---000 200 00*—2 5 0 Batteries—Ring and Henline; Watson and O’Neil. At Boston (2nd Game)— Philadelphia Boston Batteries—G. Smith, Singleton and Henline; Withrow, Houlihan and Gowdy. R. H. E. * * RE: H. E: * * * R. * At Chicago— Cincinnati Chicago _ * Batteries—Luque, Couch and Hargrave, Wingo; Cheeves and O’Farrell. At St. Louis (ist Game)— Pittsburgh __ 900 328 03s—* * * St. Louis _____ 101 100 12-* * * Batteries—Morrison and Gooch; Doak, Per- tica, Barfoot and Clemons. AMERICAN LEAGUE Ro * * * a At Cleveiand— R. H. E. Chicago -000 0— * Cleveland 000 0O—.* * * Batteries—Rebertson and Schalk; Uhle and O’Neill. a ‘ At Detroit— St. Lovas R. 000 200 2— * a 000 000 0— Batteries—Shocker and Severeid; Ehmke and Bassler. At Philadelphia (Tied in 10th)— Boston 100 000 002 0— Philadelphia ____011 006 001 0— Batteries—Quinn, Karr and Ruel; and Perkins. H. * * R. E. * * * oe Rommell TILDEN AND JOHNSTON DEFEAT AUSTRALIANS IN TITLE PLAY FOREST HILLS, N. Y., Sept. The United States lawn tennis play- ers triumphed decisively over their William T. Tilden LL., of Phila- delphia, the national champion, de- feated Gerald Patterson of Australia, 7-5, 10-8, 6-0. Australian, rivals here today when William M. Johnson of San Fran- they won the first two matches in cisco then vanquished James 0. the challenge rounds of the 1922 Anderson, in the second match, 6-1, Davis cup matches in straight sets. 6-2, 6-3. CALL IN SOUNDED FOR NATRONA HIGH FOOTBALL SQUAD, HARD SCHEDULE BEING FRAMED HERE Between 60 and 70 gridiron aspirants from the Natrona county high schoo] are expected to report to Head Coach Dean Morgan next Monday night for the first practice of the season. Eight veterans of last_year will be among the number. An ambitious schedule is being arranged for the loc team, with the majority of the games in Casper. The big date of the year, Armistice day, No.| bull and Torrington will be played, im yember. 21. ‘will rddition to the game with the Doug- Fi sh school, which will featuro final day of the strong Chey gation enne here, while the Thanksgiving Dluyed with Sherida: It is expected th Dou Coach on t Mc Mont., I Thermopolis, Worland, rformer n Univer yoming and Rob- Ward of the high schoo! facultye i breps, Lert :