Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 13, 1922, Page 1

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At Philadelphia (1st Game)— St. Louis _--632 020 000—13 17 0 RH. E. Philadelphia _______003 010 000—4 9 1 Battcrics—Pfeffer and Clemons; Meadows, Smith, iSngleton and Henline, Withrow. At Boston (1st Game)— ee. Pittsburgh -----310 000 004—8 8 2 Boston -_.._.2.----010 000 000—1 6 0 Batteries—Cooper and Schmidt; Oeschger, Houlihan, Greenwich, Brarton and O'Neill, Gowdy. At Boston (2nd Game) — R. H. E. Pittsburgh _________300 010 002—6 9 Boston ___._-----.-100 000 000— 1 At New York— Chicago _____.-_-_-.003 000 00— * New York _____-__..003 000 41— Batteriés —Cheeves and O’Farrell; Ryan and Smith, Snyder. At Brocklyn— R. H. E. asia ---------002 000 000—2 5 2 Kklyn _..-- 000 010 J#*#—3 9 2 er iratterioeRixey and Hargrave;, Vance and Deberry. aba At Philadelphia— R. H. E. St. Louis ------040 101 00—* * Philadelphia ________ 001 000 00O— * * * Batteries—North and Ainsmith; Hubbell and Henline. AMERICAN LEAGUE At Cleveland— R. H. E. Washington _-__.----000 201 0—* * * Cleveland _______-_-.000 000 0—* * * Batteries—Mogridge and Picinich; Boone and L. Sewell. At Chicago (1st Game)— R. H. E. New York ____.--_-300 000 000—3 5 2 Chitago: 255. 2 200 003 20*— 7 12 1 Batteries—Jones, Murray and Schang; Faber and Schalk. At Chicago (2nd Game)— New York __---___ oe Chicago __..._--- pean Batteries—Hoyt and Schang; Robertson and Schalk. At Detroit— R. Philadelphia _________002 000 0— * Detroit -202 100 1—* * Batteries—Naylor, Schilling and Perkins; Johnson and Bassler. At St. Louis— Boston —- St. Louis -.-.---=5--- Batteries—W. Collins and Ruel; Shocker and Severeid. R. H. E. | i) E.| * | * | } | | | 1 | | | i Coal Commission Is ebIvion | Che Casper Daily Tribune SPORTS MARKETS Vital Need---Hoover NEW YORK, Sept. 13.—< Continuity of coal production “ander righteous conditions of employment” must bé obtained if the welfare of the nation is to be maintained at all, Sec- retary Hoover declared last night in an address before the Salesmen’s Association of the American Chemical Industry. Mr. Hoover contended that the solution of the problem lay in the creation of a natignal coal commission empowered to get at the bottom of the troubles in the coal industry. While there was much veutilation’ he added, the two most important questions were the relation ship of employsr and employe and the economic re-organization of the industry. “I believe,” Mr. Hoover said, “such & commiesion would” find that col- KIPLING DENIES UNITED STATES IN WAR HELP “that needs publiclective bargaining, conciliation and arbtration upon their pres»nt basis of organization have in sekuence bro: ken down in this industry, as witness the long stoppage in which all these processes are | posed to end. | In this connection, sup- CRITICISM OF LONDON, Sept. 18.—(By The As- sociated Press)—Rudyard Kipling. rtplying to an inquiry regarding his utterances as quoted by Clare Sher!- dan in the New York World, sent the Associated Press today the fol- lowing telegram: “Bateman’s, Burwash, Sept. 13: “J @id not give Mrs, Sheridan an Intervitw. I did not say things which I see she ascribes to me, and have not discontinued the habit of saying what I wish to say over my own signature. (Signed) “RUDYARD KIFLING.” Sussex, A brief message from Mr. Kipling denying he had given the intervitw | or sa'd the things he ‘had been | averibed to him war printed in the ‘Times of London this morning. In the interview printed in the World, Mr, Kipling was quoted as strongly | evitfeizing America’s lattness in en- tering the war and her course at the | clogs’ of and since the Buropean | seule ee |TIRE EXPLODES, M. | BIG PID Wyo. Sept. 13.— jMatt Sali was unconscious for 20 [minutes after he playfully strack a pneumatic truck tire with a hamhi The blow caused the tire, with pounds of afr pressure, to blow out and the explosion bouneed the ham- mer on Sall's nose ltwo places. HURT. Production | if we examine, tthe inside workings of this recent strike we will find situations new in industrail relations. Under free dom from the restraint of trade’ laws the workers’ organizations have grown in strength, solidarity and des. \olation; they have shown able leader- ship, where as the rganization of em |p'oyers for |hargaining has been to a large de igree destroyed by the action of these very laws Without entesing into the history of rights or wfongs of this phase, the bare fact exist—that the recent agreement in the bitumin ous industry was determined by 0.1!s 15 per cent of the employers, and this minority'’s decision controlled the whole.’* Present relationships of employer jand employe in the coal industry, he declared, comprised “a periodical na. |tlonal danger,” adding that since the public through subsequent prices |Pays the bill it had a right to a voice in the business. In addition to tmprov sant i? em Hoo: | Bonus Measure Scheduled for Final Ac- tion Tomorrow; Ovponents of Dye Embargo Lose in Last Fight WASHINGTON, Sept. 13. than usual, planned to take final action on the administra- tion tari bill before adjournment late today, the way for its final action to bill. The first order of procedur GRIFFITH AND SWEET WIN IN COLO. PRIMARY the purpose of collective | 13.—B. DENVER, olo., Sept jamir Griffith of Denver, Republican, and William E. Sweet of Denver, Demo crat, will fight it out for the gover: ship of Colorado at the polls on No vember 7. Based on returns received by The Associated Press from all parts of ehe state at 3 o'clock this afternoon, Sweet .and Griffith have rolled up such leads in more than 1,000 precincts that they cannot be headed off. j ———_ —_ — SLAYER HANGS fracturing it in! ployment -relations, Mr. gedfed that van: annual “storage of 30 per cent of railway consumption would go“far toward correct! Seasonal fluctuation in coal tion. Larger storage of public utill- ties and “the possivility of permitting, SALEM. Ore. Sept. 18—R. M the co-operative system of marketing |Btumfield, convicted of the murdtr of developed by the farmers, also were| Dennis Russel lin Douglas county, put forward by the secretary ~ as|committed- suicide by hanging himself | Promising beneficial resultg. {in hig cell here today: LODGE GIVEN BIG MAJORITY INDIANAPOLIS, —Charges that the United has failed to do its share in aiding the rehabilitation of the world were answered today by Comptroller of the Cunvency Crissinger in an ad- Ind., Sept. 13. States dress here beforé the Indiana Bankers’ association, with the statement that in -th elast eight years this country has sent abroad nearly $22,000,000,000. “I feel,” he said, “that the pres- ent is not inappropriate to refer to this truly: gigantic participation by our country in sustainng and sta- bilising the finances of the world. ‘There are some people in the Unit- ed States who persist that doing its full part, and that the world cannot be restored and re- placed on the way to prosperity and order without American assiat- ance. “My reply to this is broadly that in the last eight years our country has, made a contribution to, these ends, so great that if we ourselves fully appreciate it, if we were given fair credit for it by other peoples, it would win us the. bright querdon of helpfulness, of willing co-operatio nand of splendid unself- ishness. Mr. Crissinger summarized Amer- ican contributions to the financing © fthe outside world since August 14, 1914, as follows: American securities repurchased } from abroad $8,000,000,000; Ameri- can government loans, $10,000,000,- 000; interest on goyernment loans, $2,000,000,000; + commercial’ credits extended abroad $2:000,000,000; dol- lar securities brought from foreign countries, ° $3,631,000,000; foreign money securities sold in this coun- try, $620,000,000 and foreign our: have discovered in Lower California two One, he said, is about 200 miies.southeast to prospect of Mexicali and 72 miies from the coast of |nia, DISCOVERY OF TWO VAST FIELDS WHERE. THE OIL COVERS GROUND CLAIMED CALEXICO, Cal., Sept. 13.—B. Enriguez|the gulf of California and the other about 500 of Calexico, has announced he and Robert) mile’ southeast of Mexicali and between eight Norton and Ramon Ovsen, algg of this city,|and ten miles from the gulf. The three men have filed with the Mexico “vast oil fields where oil lies on the surface.’’| City authorities an application for permission the territory of Lower Califor- AMERICA HAS DONE ITS SHARE OF THE WORLD’S REHABILITATION WORK our | country has not done and is not | rency bought from America $500,- 000,000, he point I a making,” he said, “is that whether we have received reasonably certain. to be paid, or been and may never be pad, or | currency Whose -value has faded | @way to nothingness; whether we have received or have failed to re- We have exported this_vast amount of wena es - ‘TURKISH ARMY SEIZES BRUSA CONSTANTINOPLE, Sept. 12.—(By | The Associated. Press).—The occupa- tion of Brusa by the Turkish nation-/ |allsts which occurred last evening, | marks the end of the Greek cbreloar~p in Asia Minor. Before evacu: city the Greeks set it ablaze =§ peda Places, but the fire was controlled and only a singit quarter of the town was destroyed. At Mudania, the port of= Brusa, which the Turks:now have occupied, French troops were landed to protect the French establishments. pis Rabi 0a FARMER IMPALED ON PITCHFORK. MAY OIE SUNDANCE, Wyo., Supt! Charles Whitney is in eritical condi- tion from a \vound im the stomach sustained when he-slid from a ha: stack and struck a pitchfork. A tine ‘of the implement penetrated his in- testines. He was taken to Deadwood, 8. 1., where an operation was per- formed. Judge Kennedy To Return to Hospital Judge T. Blake Ke Kennedy of the) ‘United States court for the district of Wyoming. who has beer critically il at Governor Carey's ranch at Careyhurst, continues to gain Cheyenne this weck. — Women buy 76 per cent of all the Mierchandiss svld in ‘he. stores. securities on, which the interest is | other securities on which it has not | celve real value it is still true that | 13—| ‘au Republican Incumbent Senators Are | Nominated by Decisive Majorities in | Tuesday's Primary Vote CHICAGO, Sept. 18.—The three Republican incumbent senators involved in Tuesday’s state primaries overcame strong opposition by. apparently safe margins, according to incomplete returns available early today. Senator Townsend of Michigan led the nearest of his.three proximatly forty per cent complete. ! Senator Lodge of Massachusett rolled up a majority of more than; INGREASE 1S ORDERES! precincts jout of 1,407. | Senator Poindexter of Washington! jhad a large majority over the nearest of his five opponents arf is appar: ently nominated. | Redfield Proctor was apparently! UUSK, Wyo., Sept. 13.—Taxable certain of victory over Liet. Gov. A.|property in Niobrara county will be E. Foote in the Vermont Republican |arsessed on the same basis astaxable gubernatorial contest Senatorial roptrty in ¢ « Caen cedwgcauncrpceet DropHty in ‘other. “Goantite: of Wo, Former Governor Cole L. Blease of| ming. This ts established by decision South arolina, was defeated for the 0 fthe state board of equalization set- |Democratic nomination for governor |ting aside a horizontal reduction of 26 |by ‘Thomas G. McLeod in a bitter con-|Per cent in the county assessor's val- |test. ;uation ordered by the county board of REFINERY WORKER FALLS ereinte ate ae DEAD ON WAY TO PLANT; SUNSTROKE 1S. CAUSE STATE GANOIATES AT itats board has ordered an ebdiolee of | per cent in he vattiation of the | lignaa in the la the death of A. J. Lyon who ftll dead| at 3:30 p. m. yesterday while going to his, work at the Standard refinery?! CHEYENNE, Woo, Sort 13.—The | Such’ spells. before. \las\a mecca for politidians this week. ‘The deceased-leaves a wift and two | Nearly all candidates for state offices, jehildren in Casper who reside at 1115 | including both Democratic and Re Box Elder street, also’a brother in Cas per and two brothers and a mother in ‘Chadron, Ntb. | Publican cancidates for the governor ship, will attend the fair. sowie Gane tm eure oe) SATE FAIR THIS WEEK Lyon is sald to have suffered from} Wyoming state fairits making Doug-| LEPERS MAY BE CURED GY NEW The house, meeting cartier thus paving morrow on the soldiers’ bonus} e was the reading of the 162- PROGESS, GLAM mse conference. report t General Wood Holds Out 3.496 senate amendments | Hope for Efficient Cure Treatment called for four hours of ge bate mollowed by a final vc WASHINGTON, Sept. 13. —H ne that many of the | lepers assembled in the larg- n}est leper colony in the world on Culion island, Philippines. vill be mate: ally. benefitted ercl de WASHID pt. 12—Oppon ents of a dye embargo lost today | the house In the first phase of th fight to have that provision out of the tariff bill Speaker Gill oveFruled a > forder by Representative Fish ana: vane! Geant ined - By fereva xicceaied Qtheir authority in| worked out is expressed in ® ciroular writing the pmbargo back into the |ieter signed by Governor Geners bit after both house end senate had teonard Wooc, honorary president o 1 it out. An appeal was taken|the Philippine AntiLeprosy socle trom that but by a vote of 150 to 147| made public at the war depaetment the appeal was laid on the table There are now more than 5,100 lepers —-- nthe colony, neral Weod a WASHINGTON, Sept. 13 The | Under efforts of the conference report on the soldiers’ | gover: sottety’ ‘all isp bonus bill was presented in the house | ers in silippines are to be con- today by Chairman Fordney, of the| cent ated at this point house managers. It is the plan of| “In urging that Americans aid in the leaders to call it up tomorrow) the work, General Wood said the up- with the hope of final action then. keep of the colony, (axed to the ut After disposal by the house, the re our available resource. part wi" ent to ihe senate. “If the American people could’e > uaa see this great group of unfortunstes” he added, ‘I feel confident that the money would por in from all aides." al Wood to the hopes for many cu an accompanying from Willi T. Nolting of Manila BUREAU HERE 1S surer of tho seciety, said marke: Kress beer made in working out the Procese of treatment known as “ethylether,” method cinsisting of {n- tra-muscular {nj of Chaulmoogra BY. G. HOFFMAN ===: tion of an emulsion . T relieving many and is actuall encouraging percentage of proces3 sut |ferers from leprosy uring an \Labor Commissiorer Brings} —_ Information of Appropria- SIX FRAPPED tion to Aid Employ- | ment Services, IN DEATH PIT. | J , Harry C. Hoffman, state labor commissioner and federal director’ of employment or Wyoming, is in Cas- per on business in connection with By the work of his office. Today Mr.| iZUNTINGTON, W. Va., Sept. 13.— Hoffman’ was in eonerence with|Six men believed to have been trap- chamber of commerce offi in| ped in a sand pit this afternoon which which, ofice is functioned the C er| collapsed when a gas main exploded. free employment bureau, and aswured|The main was uncovered by excavn O. L. Walker, president of the cham-|tors. Flames were leaping thirty fe s}ber of commerce, that a substantial] when firemen arrived and they had Bepceecacen had been made the lo-| difficulty apr paching the pit Price of | Rails To Go Higher bureau through Francis 1 Graitor general United States ployment service, Washington, D. C. “The federal department's disposi- | tio nis to assis tthe state 2s much as | possible,” aid Mr, Hoffman, “but the Jones, em department must be governed entire- liy by the appropriation, which we all know is a very limited one, distrib United { utea ov United States in five Announced | aiftere: ‘ons.”” today thac it h amended to } | Mr. will submit to the| subsidiary companies that the pri | United States employment service|of seandard rails be Increased. con: \the name o W. B. McAdams, who 1s|mencing October 1 to $3 per gross {at present in charge of the employ-|ton base, f. 0. b. mills for delivery in |ment bureau, to continue as man-|about equal monthly installments a | ager of the local office. to June 30, ‘BROWN GIVEN MAJORITY OVER | THREE CANDIDATES FOR JUDGE 1923. or Complete return from the primary election contest Mean nomination for judge of the sixth judicial distric 3 trona, Converse and Fremont counties, show that Jud Brown, present incumbent, received more yotes than the combined totals given Bryant 8. Cromer, Hench and Longenecker, his opponets. Judge Brown received 4,399, the*other three 4,068. The vote for each by counties follows: the Repub: | Cougty — Brown Cromer Hench Lang’er Converse +1308 135 | Fremont 955 570 | Natrona 1,061 | ! Total ‘The rémains are now at the Shaffer- Gay chapel. ‘The coroner's verdict bas ngt yet been announced. PART OF STOGKADE AT ‘AGAINST CHEYENNE, Wyo., Sept. f3.—The |Unton Pacific has leveled a portion of| | PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 1 the stockade erected at its yards here : . when the shopmen’s strike became ef-| @ations that the Right Rev. fective July 1. The stockade has been| retired bishop of Arkansas, cut in order to facilitate the hendling! of material for a $50,000 addition to} | struction at eh eR The Can: 1 Wederation of Univers) Copal church in convention here tod. sity womneuMias 1,35¢ members: = 4 The report on Bishop Brow ‘trial on a charge of heresy and if convicted, strength and is expected to return to/the depot here which is under con-/be deposed from the ministry, was made in the house of bishops of the Protestant Epis-!tion as the result of crit HERESY CHARCE BROUCHT BISHOP, MAY BE _ DHETEME SHOPS 00H DEPOSED BY CONVENTION 3.—Recommen- . M. Brown, be brought to a committee headed by Bishop J. R. Win= chester of Arkansas, which recommended that such action be taken “in view of the an- tagonistic attitude towards Christianity,” which Bishop Brown has recently shown. Bishop Brown retired from his jurisdic- ism of a book he published lately discussing Chrisie and communism, n was made by D.

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