Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 16, 1922, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR N. Y. CENTRAL STRIKE PEACE DELCARED OFF Be Resumed, Says ‘Announcement Issued in New York Today NEW YORK, Sept. 16.—Negotistions between officials of 7 tral railroad, representatives of striking on the es operated by thu: system, were broken without a settlement and it was announced that no Fair Weather Forecast For Coming Week 2 Sa WASHINGTON, Sept. 16. — =i Weather outlook for the week be [POKAN? Sept. 16.—F. 8.| ginning Monday erinten: souri valleys generally fair, cool first part of week and normal tem- perature thereafter, Rocky mountain and plateau re- gions « lly fair and normal temperature. acific states generally fair tem perature above norma! in tnterior and normal on the coast. BRITISH READY O FIGHT TURK LONDON, Sept. 16.—(By The Associated Press. —Great Britain is prepared to fight to maintain the freedom of the Dardenelies, it wus authoritatively stated today. The statement came at the end of a week of protracted cabinet meetings arising from the Near Eastern crisis which has given rise to fears that the Turkish nationalists might ~ turn from thelr successes over the Greeks td attack the neutral zone With this in mind, Great Britain |'s reinforcing her troops in Constan- tinople and has ordered the Mediter ’ ranean fieet to oppose by ¢yéry means jany infractit of the neutral zone or jany attempt by the Turks to cross |over to Europe. SeeyS Greece, Rumania, JugoSlavia and |the British dominions to give their Warden Frank Hadsell ieft over-| land for, Rawlins this morning with |*#siatance in this 1£ negessary. France nd Italy are said to agres with Great around Constantinople. Great. Britain also has invited two men who will bo guests at the! pitain on the necessity of maintain “saa lrcounretas located there for ing the new ty Of the straits. oes 9 | It ts indicated\however, that Great Chas Boyce who was convicted Britain has not abandoned the origin- al agreement that the Turks should have Constantinople if other matters were satisfactorily composed and the last week of stealing cattle from the Sanford ranch was one of the party ‘and will serve a sentence of from two to three years, | Upper Mississipp! and lower Mis- | ~ Society Movie for Widow's League | friends, and many wealth; anything he ever witnessed there. reservations were made, the exhibition} in the latter. hall overflowed with products in which} pig Horn |London govrnment proposes an imme- diate conference to effect peace with the Turks, Walter James was the other who will serve from 18 months to two years after having been convicted on a grand larceny charge of steal- ing money and diamonds from the proprietor of the Hong Kong cafe. pb cals Sn Abo SMYRNA} Sept. 16—(By The Asso ciated Press)—Smyrna no longer ex- ists. The fire which has been raging for three dayé with unabated fury has Swept the city and is extending to the suburbs, Only blackening masonry and a small vestige of the shat ioe quarter romain. Harding Okehs Promotions for Army Generals ‘DEMPSEY’ IS SLAPPED--NOT THE FIGHTER WASHINGTON, WASHINGTON, Sept. 16.— Presi- Mient Harding approved today the se- lection of six brigadier generals to be promote? to major generals and 13 colonels to be brigadier generals the largest promotion list of high ranking army officers ever announo- €d in time of peace at one time. Brigadier Generals to major generals as given in the li Andrew Brewster, Sept. 16. The sion during roll call late when Representative Oliver, Demo- partment reti Dempsey, Republican, New York, two| Edward M. Lewis, 7 -| blows with this open palm. Friends) ond 1 at Camp Travis, Texas.|/rushed between, and prevented a Robert Howze, commanding first| further outbreak. cavalry El Paso, Texas. er, assistant chief of] WASHINGTON, Sept. 16. — The steff, George B. D nent. i joan, commanding the fourteen infantry brigade, Fort Omaha, Neb. Ernest Hinds, on Cuty war depart: first of the two bills originating In a mins bill designed to check profiteer- ing in fuel was sent to the president \the second day of the fair, it was after house was thrown into great confu:| today | named plun -jerat, Alabama, strfick Representative | |which embraced sheat grain, threshed result of the coal strike, the Cum.-/ pride. The available space was insuf- ficient to accommodate the exhibits properly placed. Evidence of this was found in the fact that while judges usually com: plete their work on the afternoon of the Inst entertainment had closed on the fourth and last day that all tke awards were recorded. The good fel- lowship and frigndly rivairy which marked the attitude of exhibitors came in for much favorable comment by Mr. Mosteller, all \h with the awards given them. The counties competing with or ganized exhibits were Goshen, Crook, Big Horn, Fremont, Platte, Niobrara, Converse,’Natrona and Johnson, The University of Wyoming also exhibited. The prize of prizes—the sweepstakes ribbon awarded the county taking the most sweepstakes prizes—went to Big spectively brara, in In Niobrara Horn county ich exhibited more| fruit display. than ever be This county took} great credit, th 93 first, 93 pd 64 third prises. Thirty of standard included in afdi- wer tion to 10 varelties propagated in Big Third prize Horn county. Big Horn took first in the best|in which t general agriculture exhibit—including | eral agricultur: fruit, agricultural products and apiary.| Individual Goshen was second and Natrona third. In the general agricultural display| tables follow: grain, grass seeds and vegetables, Big Horn also took first and Goshen sec- ond. play of cheaf grains and second injard second on epent sled “ee board. the conference report 37 to 12. Latest Type of German Glider This birdlike glider is a pl: fess recently Mrs. Frank Townley Brown, wéalthy society widow, ig financing ana_ is actively engaged in the production of a photoplay in which she, her Chicago homes will be featured. profits a may accrue from the finished play will be donated to the Widows’ League. Figures Prominently in Awards More detailed announcement of prizes awarded to coun- ties and individuals in the agricultural, horticultural and apiary departments were available today with the return to Casper of William Mosteller, an enthusiastic worker for the success of fair exhibits, who declares the exhibit excelled was Wyoming growers could justly take| boxed apples and Fremont second, while in the gener: Big Horn was first, Fremont second, and Natrona third. first on crabapples. Goshen: county on general displa: Second and Fremont third. Included in the sweepstakes awards third on Whitney crab. were dry farm products Niobrara taking first and threshed Johnson and Converse fir and Johnson third. Natrona county's success in the fair awards-was due largely to the efforts! of County Agent G. M. Penley in mo- bilizing exhibits and assistance rend. ered by Frank Jullen i Both are deserving of, worked industriously to secure the co- operation of county residents. awarded to William Mosteller assisted materially in the sweepstakes award county prizes won by Natrona’ county exhibitors on fruits and vege- Silas Brooks—Third and Ben Davis apples; Alex Mills—! First on McMahon, second on McIn- tosh and Peerless, third on Patten’s i hen county captured third in the| Greening, Iowa Duty, and Strawberry today after the senate had adopted! dispiay of vegetables, first in the dis-|crab apples, also first on Whitney crab €be Casper Daily Cribune | mine. j the |workers are | day. | setbacks, hence lis conceded, howe level will be thi stricken Such jent awarded first on display of fruits licious apples. The latter svon/pear. Mr: of plums, B'g Horn| tam Cony se and| green peppers. dry farm exnibit|on peppers. T a. m. Sur Official figures of progress isstied at 10:30 a. m. today give 19 feet made in the rock from the since last night, leaving 60 to, go. Fred L. Lowell, safety engineer of Caltornia industrial commission ,announced that rescue now blasting round jn each six.shour shift instead jof two and that no trouble is being jencoutnered in. removing This nitens that 15 feet will be made jevery six hours ang that 60 feet will have been made about |,600-foot level Officials allow for a few hours of the prediction o! |breaking through about 10:30 a. m.| On the 3,300-foot level a total of 12 eet has been made during the last 4). hours, leaving 67 feet to go. How-| jever, five feet have been drilled but! j blasted, leaving a nef of 62 feet. It } that the Argo: |naut crews working on the 3,600-foot first to reach théir rs. TANK WORKER IS NEAR DEATH AT HOSPITAL HERE Charles Davis is in a very serious BIG HORN COUNTY LEADS PRIZE = Sick See AWARDS FOR PRODUCTS OF SOIL Upstate District Takes Blue Ribbon For Mos' Sweepstakes at Douglas and Natrona Also | ,Da, "4.200" in by a sheet of {ron with which a tank was being constructed at the Chicago Birdge and Iron Works northwest of the city at noon today. Davis was taken to the county hos- pital and was operated on there by Dr, Allen McClellan who reports that |the patient has received internal in- juries of such nature as to greatly {|endanger his life, He is at the pres- time unconscious. Davis is @ boilermaker and a man Emphatic repudiation of all revolu- |tionary propaganda, foreign’ or domes- tle, was a leading feature of the re cent anntinl convention of the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada. —— During the last eleven years one of the largest American corporations ¢n- Despite the absence of gaged in the manufacture of carpets Park and Sheridan counties, for whom | threshed grain, Big Horn taking first|has distributed a total of $3,638,000 |in bonuses among jts 7,000 employes. Speas—second on McIntosh and De- Al Menice—First on | Worden’s Seckel and second on Seckel Mabel Starks—First on Hibernal and Iowa Duty applet | was awarded first Kearns—First on Wolf plums. Mosteller—First cherry, second on Opata plum on Charles Swingle—First on cauliflow- second, re-|er and table carrots, third on celery, grains; Nio-|rutabagas, egg plant and rhubarb. Ea | Kearns—First on rutabagas and cel-| second and third on sheaf grain; and|ery, second on table carrots, and third, ng been satisfied/ Converse, Niobrara and Goshen first,}on. table beets, table cucumbers and} second and third on vegetables. the general was first, Silas Brooks—Second} the rock. 1.200-foot three Ea wil Compass | and) wharves of the United St ¢jquentitie) of army |cofmercial commodities would reach between five and six million dollars. that five RESCUERS TO /iatesports [=z REACH MINE DU) Sea MEN SUNDAY | JACKSON, Cal. Sept. 16.—(By The Associated Press,)— The rescuers will break through before noon tomorrow into ‘the Argonaut mine where 47 men have been imprisoned since August 27, according to a unanimous statement made at 10:30 a.m. by government, state and mine officials. It is ow predic d that about 10:29 a. m. Sunday will see the first hole made in the level of the burning Argonaut mine by the crew working from the 38,600- foot level of the adjoining Kennedy NEW ORLEAN WHARVES BURN, MILLIONS LOST NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 16. Cestroying the long stretch gov {ment commodity warehouse and vast Reportd late last night ives were lost during the conflagra. tion had not been confirmed today. ls SUMMARY OF NIGHT NEWS CHICAGO—A ‘mutual agreement eral ing a new schedule of rates of pay and working rules has been reached between “direct representa- tives of the present shopcrafts em- ployes” and officials of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy railroad, Hale Holden, président, announced. BALTIMORE — A peace pact signed by Charles W. Galloway, vice president of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, and representatives of the striking shopmen employed by the B. and 0. : LONDON—The victoms at Smyrna number at least 120,000 up to Thurs- day morning, says a dispatch to the ‘Times from Athens quoting John Manola of the American relief as its authority, TAMPICO—John H. Clark, Amort- can cashier of the Atlantic Gulf and West Indie Petrolenm corporation in ‘Tampico, was seriously wounded and his Mexican chauffeur killed when six bandits held up their automobile Jess than a half a mile from the city and robbed them of payroll finds amoutiting to 42,000 pesos. . CONSTANTINOPLE—A message from Angora announced the fall of Panderma the Inst foothold of tho Greeks in Asia Minor, to the Turks, . MEXICO CITY—The chamber of deputies unanimously approved the agreement reached in New York re- cently by Secretary of the Treasury De La Huerta and the International committee of bankers of Mexico re- garding payment of Mexico’s na- tional debt. All the 181 deputies present voted in favor of the agree- ment. A BARGAIN It was eutimated early today that the loss from the fire which+raged along the waterfront from three hours last night ot ordnance and ‘Two lots on corner of Kast Yellow- Franco streets, only SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1922. | NEW YORK, Sept. 16—Sally’s ley today won the classic fut Face for two-yearclds at the Bel- Park. Zev was sccond and Wilderness third. The winner's thme was Ill. - He ¢ i iy ifte i aS ae, ATLANTIC CITY, N. 5. Sept. 16. —Jimmy Bonner, 13-year-old marks. New York, The new republic of Ceecho-Siova. .|kia embraces three-fourths of TODAY ONLY ROY STEWART. j | six races with a British team. car. | ABOARD DESTROYER MAHAN, OFF OYSTER BAY, N. Y., 16—The team of four American & British boat, finished first today, but the total for the British team was less than enough to overcome BOND BOSTON, Sept. 16. — Edward A. Gourdin, the former Harvard ne- gro star today retained by the nar- rowest of margins his title as Na- A. A. U. ion =cham- OF FEAR” | Never is the desert small, elther ; its cruetly or in its romance, and often the romance is cruel. It was almost that for Mary, the woman who felt compassion. for the Judge whom whe trusied. In “Bond of Fear,” « stirring production. Also Two-Reel Comedy “FOR LAND’S SAKE” fion of five eevnts he won with a score af ten points pressed closely by 4. J. Plansky. a south Boston sand lot athlete, who had a score of 11. PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 16.—The Argentine federation polo team, the American open champions, gave « strong Shelburne four, 13 goals to 8. The defeat eliminated the Shelborne four from the present tournament, OGDEN, Utah, Sept. 16.—John M. Browning, Ogden, mmventor, has. de vised a chime target for the use of his friend, Gus L, Becker, local trap- shooter. It is possible with the use of a .£2 calibro automatic rifle to play ny tune on the chime target. Browning is said to have stopped work on a new gun for the French government to make the chime target and also enlarge the rfle magazine to hold 22 shells. With the enlarged A REAL PARTY, A bunch, of good fellows and a lot of charming girls; a floor like glass and irresistible music, You'll find all this and more at the ARKEON ' ‘TONIGHT Come as early as you can and stay as late as you wish. Get acquainted with our regular Saturday night “hops” and you'll find a new joy in life. ~ Admission Two Bits and Two Tickets LADIES FREE Dancing Every Night TOMORROW A stirring, red-blooded drama of mountain folk who resent the coming of the law? “Ann of Little Smoky” “It charms with its beautiful scenery. Converse second arranging the county agent having) | on extracted honey figured in gen- which included aplary. on. Duchess Bartlett pear. Den hela te Getinerrene belonging to the Berlin Aero Club which covered a distance of three miles in the astqunding motorless plane con, ! it ENDING TODAY W A Bishop-Cass THE JOLLIES CO. PRESENTS —-Also— FEATURE PICTURE IRENE CASTLE “The Night Clerk’ A DANDY FARCE COMEDY, WITH VERY UNUSUAL STAGE SETTINGS. The plot centers around a terrible’ mix-up ‘that takes place in a city hotel. From the hotel lobby (first act) you shoot up the elevator to adjoinii rooms (second act) where the trouble. all bering * —In— This coupon will admit L. H. BICKNELL and one to Iris Theater today. “FRENCH HEELS” Matinee Today 2:30; This Evening 7 and 9 T. Sept. 16. DAY AND NI BILL PLAYING SUNDAY ONLY WwW ‘THE JOLLIES REVUE | CONSISTING OF VAUDEVILLE SPECIALTIES AND NOVELTY ACTS. Those who saw last Sunday’s revue will surely look forward to this one. Every one in the Jollies Com- pany is an act, or part of an act. —Also— FEATURE PICTURE CONWAY TEARLE —In— “THE REFEREE” Matinee Sunday at 2:30; Evening at 7 and 9 This coupon will admit B. I. BIGGS and one to the Iris Theater Sunday. T. Sept. 16. T

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