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Tribune Circulation Yesterda 8,332 VOLUME VI. CASPER, WYO., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1922. 25,000 WO HANDS OF TUR MEN AND GIRLS IN KISH SOLDIER RITISH FIELD Ford Plants Are Closed, 100,000 Men Idle “We, Who MARSHAL GOING TO GENTER Of NEAR EAST WAR Freedom of Dardanelles} GREAT RADIO |, STATION FOR | CASPER SEEN} to Be Maintained by} Crs of represnatatis ° Pittsburgh, wt Fleet; Bombardment of} Pc*tars".. : nounce thelr | Smyrna Denied Today | ime | ee | The officials of the company fee! | that as Cas s the commercial CONSTANTINOPLE, capital of yoming and Is sur- Press)—-British headquarters! portant work can be done here. The aie | ease ~ane siveness t announced that Field Mar-| oo eerie act arm shal Viscount French, Earl of! instatied convinced. Thomas of the ‘pres, is expected to arrive| =P!scopal chur some time ago <ore se *P s } th dio coulé be used in broad > peop, : teraay| caMting sermons into small and B oes ac 3, eurregt aa woes fsolated communities. This ‘station Mien 2 sate rc: nom | was to be st Lara e. barding Sm put investigation mia = caieia etna 5: proved thi ia caamending wee theless oe gical place | ‘or a broadcast stati i 8’ coast batteries for a broadcasting station since the SEER of the Kemal numerous industries which are lo- Here are the men entombed 4,000 Are About to Die, Salute You.” | - tant” 000 men will have been rendered idle for an indefinite period. ‘The plants affected include the five) Were factories in the Detroit area and nu-| °F & merous assembling stations through- out the country. Other concerns, the =. coke output of which goes chiefly to the Ford company, also are expected to suspend operations. In amnouncing the contemplated closing several weeks ago, Mr. Ford decw¥ed ‘no coal shortage that brokers were holding enough coal | 5 “AL 1 the method of apportioning «oat. officials asserted yesterday, but this, feet deep in the rocky vauit of the Argomiut gold mine; Jackson, Cal. direction of Hobart Bosworth about one 's of horror have moyed behind these smiling faces in the suspension order. of the Roman gladiator, “Morituri te salutzmus" (We who are about to t reres slouie abate tere tata itt: naces, ployed. ‘When which were attacking the remainder + ; % cated here and the importance of | This photograph was taken by a motion picture company under the of the Greek forces evacuating the] (00. a5 2 market center would | Week before the catastsophe. What thoughts and feel Chesme peninsula. naturcily all for heavy radio trat- | Which mow seem to speak the phrase The British authorities appealed to] f° ''t, cutaide «the reports | ae salute thee.) the. Migs a dl pigs | of the United States weather bu- aeryee caiigas he wi reau and the latest market reports combatants but helpless refugees. i i and the ‘Turkish (action they deciared| Cit Pe. secstvediby_ pexsans: inter DISCHA with : ae Somber ested by the simple process of in een a tecational iow, | stalling, an inexpensive receiving RG E OF NON-U N ION ate | set which has swép the country ad The Kemalista, however, ignored] Quring the past | the British plea for mercy. and the] q+ has been suggested by the-rep Greek vessels retired under | resentatives of the radio company fire, with many wounded | who are now in Caner, that the ek, =a | new station here be known as the : im LONDON, Sept. 16.—4By The Asso-| Casper Tribune Radio service, | L ciated Prese.)—The British govern-| whereby not only e latent devel- | i SE ee ett de tai| opments tn this center of acme (LA UIN CARNIVAL - ASSURED eaders of North Western Shop Crafts In | the effective and permanent freedom} can be sent to the outside world | - : . ° state Dardanelles {s 2 vital neceaslty,| without Celay, tat also the intest sisting on Dismissal of All Men Who bulletins and news flashes can he received hourly through the day and night and he placed on the Tribune bulletin board for the edi fication of the nublic of the city. wie ide hat for the sake of which it is prepared to make exertions, it was authorita- tively stated this afternoon CO-OPERATION OF | | | OTHERS ASKED. Tho picturesque garb of the old LONDON, Sept, 16.—(By The Asso * 7 ciated > —Thi itis! * days when Casper was a cow-town é c | a Taare dees | will predominate at the Slippery Gulch show, which is being given by the American Legion at the Ark- edm next week Modern cow-punchers are expected to appear at the hig show all decked in an effective defense of | uutral zone, it was learned offi-| today Great Britain also has clally invited her dominions to be represent-! ea by contingents in the defense | those interests, for which they have | cut in their finest’ wild west attire, already mayo enormous sacrifices, it! | ten gallon hats and all. The at was also authoritatively stated. | tendants at the various games, a | which are part of the carnival ‘of joy, will be dressed to fit their parts and some of the substextial citizens ‘SCHOOL GIRL BREAKS | SHOULDER IN FALL FROM BANK LATE FRIDAY Mary Margaret Clark, little daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clark, 308 East Thirteenth street, suffered a fractured shoulder yesterday when she fell.from a high bank where ex cavating is being done. near the South Side school. A companion with som she was playing found her un nscious at the foot of the bank. She was removed’ to the\Women's and Chilcren's hospital on South Dur. River, Mass. : : bin, where her shoulder was. placed The office of Haggens and Murane| Sa byt hence taken’ as he| in a cast by Dr. H. R. Lathrop. Her be closed Monday afternoon on|nomic congress at Hemburg on An-| condition today was aa good as cou! unt of the funeral. gust 18. be expected. FATE OF ENTOMBED MINE VICTIMS TO BE KNOWN. IN 24 HOURS, IS BELIEF that the drilling rescuers could not bore through before late next week { Posting ‘of an official notice bar- ring the general public henceforth from setting foot on the Kennedy] mine property is taken to indicate that the final stage in the fixht to pierce the Argonaut’ is imminent.| Drills are whirling on both the 3,600 and 3,900-foot levela of the Kennedy} mine whence tunneling. operations! have been in progress since the plight of the inhumed men known. ‘ Less than 70 feet of rect remain to} be penetrated, Officials estimate that | 30 feet a ¢ may be negotiated. MAS, A.B CARPENTER AD, FUNERAL MORON Mrs. Annie B. Carpenter died F day afternoon at the home of 1 daughter. Mrs. James EB. Lynch of} this cite, Death was due to a compli-| cation of diseases. Her many friends| in Casper and Cheyenne, and her for-| mer home, Fall River, Mass. will re-| gret to hear of the death of Mrs. | penter. Funeral services will be held from St. Anthony's Catholle church where high requiem mass will be sol-| emnized on Monday at 9:30 a. m. Ir be terment will be in Highland cemetery. | f Mrs. Carpenter leaves surviving | daughter, Mrs. James By Lynch, | i = Whe of Casper.and three sisters, Mis } ree i beet y \ © ma Barney, Mrs. Charles Fish and! s. Eva Hoar who reside in Fail] This is the latest photo of Presi- ace Rescue Crews Work With Renewed Vigor| as Less Than 70 Feet of Rock Remains to Be Penetrated JACKSON, Cal., Sept. 16.—(By The Associated Press.) — With the expectation that the fate of the 47 miners walled in for 19 days would be revealed within 24 hours, suspense took a new grip on this mining town today as rescue crews with drills were boring through the final barrier of quartz and slate almost a mile down in the Argonaut gold workings. Puo3 y the knowledge that t hatte at 5 camer a the ‘knowledge that the) bear ont a pridiction that the impris-| dealt another blow when a San Fran was nea feverish, ceaseless labor |oned men would be reached late to-| claro casket compaty announced it r Pp rescue crews fell | morrow or Monday. Others | opt i ‘ wit } ‘J a hers less had ei a tentative order from aia to work with a vigor that promised to th gh é u 7 fc were of the opinion however, | Jac Aaitanee tae were of th pinion however, | Jacks dertaker for 40 coffins. In “SLIPPERY GULCH” FETE SCHEDULED HERE which more suce ola days when there were only two kinds of men—tho dead—an‘ Jaw was administered by a kangarce court, so harsh and se- vere in that there were few dishonest men in the community. sheriff and the justice of the peace first became New Hope of finding the men alive was! Took Jobs During Walkout CHICAGO, Sept. 16.—While several railroads today were negotiating separate agreements with their shop crafts work- be transformed into rough ap ready }ers in accord with the union partial settlement plan, and hard-eggs of forty years ago. others were preparing to meet representatives of their own It i= possible that many prizes will rt 45 rs be given for the different costumes | €™Mployes outside the settlement plan, it was learned that; ssfully portray the |Some. of the shop craft leaders on the Chicago and North Western railroad were demanding the unions’ settlement plan did not call dismissal of men hired to fill the|for discharge of employes at work places of union men who went on|when the settlement plan was ap- strike July 1. proved by the union policy committee; ‘The hitel in the negotiationg with} last Wednesday and that the road the North Western, which had gen-| would not dismiss those emplv;.s. erally been believed to have been ‘The Chicago, Great Western and completed yesterday, would not pre-|the Chicago and Alton railroads soon vent return of the.men to work by|are expected to follow the led of the. Monday, road officials said. At the| Chicago, Burlington & Quincy which same time it was mada plain that the} yesterdzy reached an agreement with of this metropolis of the west, will quick ard the its “treatment of criminals The mayor of the fun-village, the have all ween selected from local characters and wiil be on the job during the entire week. The ‘camp newspaper—a tri-weekly, that is, it tries to get out three times a week— will appear on Monday, Wednesday and /Saturday nights and will be skilled mechanical crafty _ were granted a wage rate ranging from 63 to 85 cents an hour in place of the railread labor board's flat 70-cerit given away. free to the patrons of rate. The Burlington was one of the, the piace. Many features have been roads which flatly refused to enter arranged to make this paper a snap- the partial settlement agreement py, live sheet, with certain up-to- known .as the Warfleld-Willard-Jewell date features. plan. fio olde a Arai ie Passed 97 Enrolled At Ohio Camp Schoo | BY METHODIST Campaign Plans. Approved| Reports from the South Ohio camp are to the effeot that there are sll by State Conference in Ses- ils enrolled in the school ther sion at Powell; Casper ae oe rata 5 hich consists of two one-room build-| Showing Is Good. ings. ‘Another teacher will have 10} * be hired ané it is probable that an-| other building will have to be con-/ | | POWELL, “Wyo., Sept: 16,—A. cam-| tracted, |paign for raising a permanent fund | of $100,900 is to be begun immediately te the Methodist Episcipal church, it} | The ee et Ee igs oe tines jwas decided yesterday by the annual by whom or where they were woved. | state conference of the organization| ©" have been handed down from|tice |e ater ee eee. ars sopters one, {generation to generation by word of} on “the endowment fund for confer. |™mouth- 1 }ence claimants—the retired ministers, widows and minor children of former |members. The annaul reports of the} district superintendents were j read. y» As an Indication of) the improve | ‘ment in financial and industrial con-} ditiors {t was reported that a large [increase has been made over | year's. mark |The Casper both have raised their full quota for! the work. In nearly all the churches lan tncreage in membership was noted | and.closer attention is being given | to the preparation’ of young persons | for ‘membership. ‘A love affair is now belleved to| Conspicuous service has been ren- have been a ‘motive for the attempted|¢ered by the pastor of Chugwater, sulclde: of Miss Donnie Harrisan in| who traveled more than 5,000 miles York. Before taking poison the|in his work lest year, and by the artist left s pathetic note EC, Pastor “of. Rock Springs, the Rev. C. lating her weakness for drags. Phy-)y, yfartin, whose church ministers to sicians have pronounced her past the crisis and on tho road to recovery, also | OUT LAST nationalities. DT more m The Rey. twenty Ww. T. Dumm, o The United States takes one-half! advance could be seen in the payment of Brazil's exports of sugar, coffee! of church debts, the purchase ‘of new rubber, and. more t thiee-|property anfl'the erection of bufla-|crowd that was present Derby day. fourths of her hides and skins: ‘ings and parsoiiages. The Casper Daily Tribune Shutdown in Protest Against “Exorbi- Prices for Coal and Steel Carried Out at Detroit Today DETROIT, Mich., Sept. 16.—(By The Associated Press.) —As a protest against paying what he belicyes to be exorbi- tant prices fer coal and steel, Henry Ford today began the process of closing up his huge industry. With the susperision complete when the last shift of work- ers leave the various factories tonight, approximately 100,- the workers turned in their tools thousand men are to “be retained at to cool. night fcrce went to work but completion of th enight’s' work/tian women and girls have existed,| brought the same notice given the 4 have to supply the needs of the country |" ht forces were’ to be'checked out He algo} 40,000 me nare ant that the public was being;in a “gouged” ‘by the dealers. criticized government agencies for} plant. ‘The remainder of the workers at.|Paner. who bas arrived on the island The past week brought some im-| fected are employes of the Dearborn provement in the fuel situation: Ford} Traptor factory, the Lincoln plant, a factory r they said, will not warrant a chang=|cities outside’ of Michigan, Most of the factories likely to be The first layoff occurred last mid-| artected by the closing of Ford in- night at the River Rouge blast fur-/ qustries, through the loss of thelr chief market, are situated in Detroit 4 were changed.|or nearby Michigan cities. Since deciding to close his factories Mr. Ford has held daily conferences solve the fuel lem but in every market considered, he said, he found prices higher ‘than he believed they should be. The rail strike cut off fuel supplies shipment of coal from other. non-un- ion fields over the Ford railroad, the Detroit, led to charges by Mr. Ford that the federal fuel administration was not funetionin gas it whould, and that the interstate failed to meet the rail and coa! crisis. There was no alternative, the manu- facturer declared, but to “pay profit? eering prices.” Rather than) do that, he declared, he plants closed indefinitely.” Dies With Maynard Jibes at Movie NEW YORK, Sept. 16.—The Keith vaudeville circuit has forbidden jokes poking fun at the Hollywood motion picture colony in its theaters. No- by E. F. Albee, head of the circuit to] of being burned alive or of {acink the managers of its theaters. ‘GOOD RACE CARD USHERS Festivitics at Douglas Brought to End Yesterday Before Diminished Crowd; , Weather Conditions Unfavorable BY ROSS M. GRANT. DOUGLAS, Wyo., Sept. 16.—Despite the good race card! 'and the added attraction of the Douglas-Casper high school Cheyenne-district, said that a. decided | football, the attendance at the track at the state fair Friday,| \the closing day of the meet, fell considerably below the huge }rooters accompanied the Casper team, which was accom- Weather Forecast Generally fair tonight not much change i, AUINED CITY OF ASIA MINDER | SWEPT BY FIR OF MACHINE GUM Sultan Joins in Celebra- tion of Late Victory; Entire Country Being Devastated by Army LONDON, Sept. 16. — “Twenty-five thousand Chris- nd told not to return until notified resumption of operations. Two plant, however, ‘to attenit the ovens, which cannot be alinred the Highland Park plait the a3 usual, been conveyed to the interior and distributed’ among the Approxtmately| Turkish soldiers,” says a dis- employed at this| patch to the Times from M. Lascar editor of Kosmos, a Smyrna ne workers. The day and early simflay_ manner. Mitylene. New refugees from Smyrna arrived n | bere this morning (Sept. 15) includ man Americans and English. 7 say tue Turks are using mach guns at the street corners killing in- @iscriminately, the dispatch adds. Ke at Northville and thoi CONSTANTINOPLE, Sept. 16.—(Dy Tho Associated Press)—Renewed cele. brations were held throughout Asia Minor yesterday to mark the sweep ing Turkish victory over the Gree Friday is the Turkish Sunday \nd t! éntire Meslem population ceased i ‘usual’ pursuits and repaired to the Mosqcves to offer prayers of thanks- giving to Allah. For the first time since 1453, when the Turks captured Constantinople, the sultan,went to the tomb of }; hammed ghe Conqueror in Stambo: and paid homage to the momory of his illustrous predecessors. Seve’ miles of exulfating and jubilant Turks with, flaming flags watched — their sovereign pass, He nade the trip in an American lMmousine. The sultan’s passage through th» open streets has had no precedent in recent yeurs, and the people gave him the] a stirring but reverent ovation. Here- toforo has confined himself to the fpalace~at ‘Yildez, and observed as much privacy as the poyve in the vatl- his executives in an effMrt to and materials prob- the ‘Ford mines in Kentucky transfer difficulties prevented Toledo and Ironton. This commtres commission had would “ ——— rm. can, 4 Americns who attended the cere in Stamboul observed that the sultan, although thin and slightly bent, ap peared alert ard. vigorous. He sa: ‘uted the group of American visitors plasantly as he emerged from prayer. Constantivople iss forest of crim- son flags with the familiar star and erescent.. The colors even fly from the four cummanding minarets of the famous mosqie of St. Sophia, whose recapture. has been the dream of the Greeks for centuries A wave of enthusiasm has swept over the Turks’ and everwhere one hears the declaration that the Chris tians must be driven out and the a ‘cient glory of the capital re-estap ed Many Greeks and Armenians prehensive of the occupation of city by the forces of Mustapha Kemal Pasha, are leaving. ENTIRE REGION NEAR SMYRNA LAID WASTE. LONDON, Sept, 16—{By The Ass clated Press)—Succeeding dispatches from Constantinople, Athens and « er centers of information in the nea! east only tend to magnify the tale of the tragedy in Smyrna. x The greater part of the city Is 9 ruin, Infi waste iy a conflagration of incendiary origin, and the flames according to latest reports, bid reached the water front, where quays, were crowded with’ fear-c Christian refugees who fied to city as the nearest port of escape ft the Turks. Many have thrown themselves in(? to this effect bas been forwarded [the water, rather than fun the Stars Taboced tha (Continued.on Page Ten) DAY OF THE BEST panied by the school band: The oi! program ushered out a highly succes” ful exposition which will go dows : history a.one of’ the best the west has ever witnessed. A heavy wind, which blew ali after noon, slowed up the horses and stirred ‘up the dust around the track. It w's the [ret bad day, elimetically. duriné tre week. and this may have affect’! the ettendance. Vex Hardee, an aiizd stqrier f tte J H. Bain string «f Codr the feature running race of the 4 jnoon, a three-quarter mile, with jof May second and Delco thiré | Hardee yras out in front all the ¥ (Continued on Page Ten) _ First ve About 150 high school