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FINAL EDITION BALL SCORES NATIONAL LEAGUE At New York— RH. E Pittsburgh 021 020 010—6 10 0 New York w-000 600 100— 1 6 2 Batteries—Hamilton and Schmidt; Nehf and Snyder. R. H. E. 000 100 o00— 1 41 100 200 00*—3 10 0 Brooklyn . Batteries—Sell, Barfoot and Clemons; Shriver and Hun- gling. At Philadelphia (ist Game)— RB. E: : wenesenneeses: 910 200 500—8 14 2 hia ........ ++--010 000 122—6 10 1 Batteries—Keen and O'Farrell; Weinert, G. Smith and Peters. PP > yeaeaesiness 3 (2nd Game)— R. H. E. Philadelphia. Bai auffmann, Stueland and Wirts, Hartnett; tteries—K: Hubbell and Henline. At Boston (ist Game)— Cincinnati . Boston R. H. Batteries—Rixey and Hargrave; Cooney ‘and O’Neill. ~ At Boston (2nd Game)— AMERICAN Batteries—Mays, Hoyt and Schang; Dauss; Oleson, Old- ham and Bassler. y uth bit home run in seventh inning. At Chicago— : RH. E. Philadelphia .. . : tteries—Heimach and Perkins; Robertson, Duff and “At Cleveland— : -H. E. Boston . a Cleveland . i ok: *, Quinn and Chaplin; Morton, Drake and O'Neill, Sewell. At St. Louis— R. H. E. mr 211 Batteries—Mogridge, Brillhart and Lapan; Bayne and Severeid. LATE FLASHES NEW YORK—Three seats on the New York Stock exchange were sold today, one for $89,000 and each of the others for $83,000. rates were officially quoted at today for the first time since 1915. MORRISTOWN, N. J. — Justice} toaay held eight persons at bay in Mahlon Pittney of the United States | te Packers State bank here and supreme court is a patient at s pri- Wleter’ with $1,500. sanitarium here, tt was learned | oscaped in = wg vie poten The robbers overlooked $6,000 in the WASEINGTON — Great Britain's on ae m — spears pressed today by high treaoury of- | der of Odd to be known as the Loyal Sons was approved today at the annus! business meeting of MONTREAL—New York exchange ! the sovereign grand lodge here. SPOKANE, Wash, Sept. 21— | giornl. August Bongiorn! was in- Giving bis name as Paul Staren, | Ssnély Killed. His uncle is in a hospital at Wenatchee. aged 40, » man who last night beard- Staren denied any improper pur- ed a freight train at Irby, Wash., | pose toward the 13 year old daugh- today confessed to Sheriff Mac | tor, whom he selzed after the shoot- Dycous of Grant county that he shot | ing, and sald he only wanted to take August Bongiorni and his uncle, | her outside the house and show her Joe Bonglorni at the Bonglorni | whst he had done to ker father, tho ranch near Wilson Creek Tuesday | sheriff said. night. A dispute over wages for Starqn was taken to Davenport, work he had done at Bongiorni Preto’. apeseriag seo ge ranrh three years ago’ was the | fff Dycous a charge of first de- cause of tho shooting, Staren is re- | gree murder would be placed against ported to have said. him. He was turned over to officers Staren told him, Sheriff Dycous | at Harrington last might after train- said, that he had not meant to kill | mem-had recognized him the boy, but expressed no sorrow | ing the description of the slayer. of over the death of August Bon- | Bongiornt, re PERNT ie TOWER LEADS | NICOLAYSEN Only one-half of ome match was played in the annual tournament of the Casper Golf ¢lub yesterduy after. noon. Roderick Tower was 4 up on. Clem Nicolaysen at the end of the first.18 holes in the Casper flight finals. The final matches sre 36 holes and this match will be con- cluded this afternoon. Because of the pressure of busi- ness, the participants in the semi- finals cf the Tenderfoot fight were not able to get together and the F. M. Perkins-Art Schulte semi-final match in the Championship flight was not played as scheduled. It ts expected that one or more of these matches will be played this after- noon. or MOTOR CRASH CHARGED TO RECKLESS DRIVING D. 5. Nighbor ts out on $100 nd, chargd with reckless driving ana éut- ting corners. Nighber was driving a Buick roadster and ran into Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ames who were riding a motorcycle at Wolcott and Railroad, 9 p. m. yesterday. It is alleged that Nighbor was driving carelessly nnd that “he cut: the corner in yiolation of traffic ordinances. ; Ames was injured to the extent that he had to be taken to the hospital, He suffered a wrench ‘back, The motoreyele was badly damaged. Captain Clayton of the police de partment made the arrest of Nighbor, who will appear in court this éven- Che Casper Daily Tribune CASPE?, WYO., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1922. The Rey. L. E. Hall left the side of his wife in a beautiful parsonage at New Brunswick to keep a tryst with his choir singer, Mrs. James Mills, Dewth also was there. His body was found in the morning, beside that of the woman. of Tragedy... Einstein Theory ‘Goes On Trial In Tests Today NEW YORK, Sept. 21.—The Ein: stein theory of relativity will be on trial today. The test will be made by expedi- tiona which have gone to Australia to make observations during a five- minute eclipse of the sun. Ameri can, English, German and Dutch scientists are included in the sev- eral parties. The tract of the total eclpse is along the In¢ian ocean and through the heart of Australia, An expedition from the Lick ob- servatory, California, is on the west of Australis. Others are on Christ- mas island, west of Australia, and one has penetrated into the Keart | of Australia. | = pa ef ANOTHER DIVORCE ASKED. Herman Peterson of Casper has| filed suit for absolute divorce in dis- trict court against Margaret Peterson. alleging cruelty and indfgnities such as to render his condition as ayhusband intolerable. The couple were married March 4, 1917 in Helens, Mont., and have no children. Counsel for the defendant is M. W. Purcell. Church In this vine clad Episcopal church at New Brunswick, N. J., grew a strangé love between the married rector, Rev. EdwardW. Hall, and his choir singtr, Mrs. James Mills, wife of the sexton. left their homes and failed to return. In the morning thelr bodies were found side by side in a distant corn- field. The police are seeking to solve the mystery of the tr murder. One evening. both COURT TO RULE ON STRIKE | INJUNCTION PLEA SATURDAY Government and Unions Close Argu- ments at Chicago; Drastic Glauses of ~ _ Temporary Order Are Asked ’ CHICAGO, Sept. 21.—Judge James H* Wilkerson. this afternoon deferred decision on the government's bill for a temporary injunction against the railroad strikers until Sat- jurday and continued the restraining order now in effect un- til that time, In effect, the court told the attorneys the extension is a jteuperary injunction as the restrain-| BODY OF ONE VICTIM MISSING FROM THOSE FOUND IN MINE JACKSON, Cal., Sept. 21.—(By The Associated Press.)— |One body was missing today among those of the 47 gold miners who perished from gas nearly a mile down in the Argonaut shaft. By a whim of fate it was the body of Will- iam Fessel, the man who wrote on the rock with the smoke of his miners’ lamp a farewell! message for all the doomed 47. Fessel wrote “gas gettng bad, 3/above them. And it was Fessel’s o'clock.” body, mine officials announved early This was three hours after tho/today, that vanished, Only his dying miners were trapped by the fire | message remained last night when | ing order itself expires tonight at mid- | } night. z Judge “Wilkerson seid the delay would give him time to study the evi- dence further. He set Saturday morning at 11 o'clote for his decision. Attorney General Daugherty reach-| ed court at, 2:30 o'clock and gave his final approvel to the injunction draft, | j Which his associates had prepared | while Mr. McLaughlin® rinished the government's closing argument. | When Mr. McLaughlin concluded the attorney general read the pro-| posed injunction to the court. Harold Carr, the youth who re- ceived a wound inflicted by a .22 high-power revolver in an alley be- tween Elm and Oak streets Tues- day ‘evening, left the county hospi- tal thiy morning, having recovered sufficiently to be taken to his home. Virtually the’ only difference — be-| Young Carr admitted to Ceptain jtween it an dthe temporary resirain-| William Clayton ofthe police de- i _" Contingec on Page Four) | rariment at 3 o'clock yesterday aft- YOUTH ADMITS | SHOOTING SELF the rescue crew of the United States bureau of mines checked their lists and found that but 46 bodies had been removed from the vault they entered living. It was hoped to find Fessel’s body today. It believed possible that he—evidently a leader of the stricken shift—had crept from the chamber of ernoon that it was through his own|death to a higher level, hoping to carelessness that he received the |find some means of escape for his wound. comrades. The men from the bu- ‘A confession to this effect had |renu of mines were certain, however been sought by the captain and had |that they counted 47 bodies when, been expected at any moment. Why | last. Monday the gruesome Carr should have been carrying the {covery was conside gun at. the not yet been|it more like 's body wae evealed. 1 1 is owned by | buried by since the work rvomma tor removal | Charge; ' } |Roy Williamson Is Wanted Here on Garage Not to Blame Several weeks’ activity on the part of Sheriff Joe Mar- quis’ office, cx-operating with the department of justice, terminated successfully yes- terday with the rounding up of a fleet of stolen automobiles brought into the stat- and several of them sold to prominent Casper men. Four of the cars are Cadillacs allered stolen in Nebraska and and sold to a local motor company by Roy Williauson, one time proprietor of a gambling house here, whose whereabouts are at present unknown but earnestly sought The motor company, an victim in the transaction, sold the respectively to H, B. Durham, Robert Veitch, Natrona commissioner; James Gratiot of Casper Supply company and A. R Schultz, a merchant in Salt Creek The car in which Mrs, Schultz was seriously injured Wednesday night on the Casper-Salt Creek highway acci, dent when Mr. Schultz drove into the innocent jrear end of a truck laden with casing, Was one ofthe four stolen cars. Williamson {s alleged to have told very convincing ste cies the motor company, which '# expected to ivse from $8,600 to 710,000 on the transac tion. He ‘clalired, it Is said, that he came into posstssion of the cars, one through “a gambling debt; another from a man who hed to turn his ma? chine at once at a sacrifice for ready money and @ third was a car that had beet: mixed up in a seizure for viola: that whilevtte is not known stolen the cars, he Will be with complicity in the crime. t is ex- pected that he will be picked up in the course of a few days: Included in the sume category are “ people. One was a Cadillac stolen in Sioux City, Iowa, and sold to G. O. Brown of Casper, and the other a Studebaker, embezzled in Helena, Montana, and sold to George Massee, the defeated candidate for sheriff in the racent Republic . primaries. While the sheriff's office was invest!- gating the Massee Studebaker it was stgien again. A deputy sheriff ix this afternoon investigating the re- port that the car has been driven into the North Platte river not far from Casper. ‘The efforts of the. sheriff's office have resulted in the recovery of five out of the six stolen machines and the possible recovery of the sixth. All the cars recovered have bean tied up by the sheriff until the insurance claims have been settled It {8 believed by the county offi cers that their success in these cases will put an end to the operations of a ‘baad of auto thieves who picked on Casper as an easy place to operate in the traffic of stolen chines. BERMUDA HIT BY HURRICANE HAMILTON, Bermuda, Sept. 21.— (By The Associated Press.)}—Bermuda has been in the grip of a fall hurri- cane since & o'clock this morning. from 80 to 90 miles an hour. Con siderable damage was done to small buildings. At Hamilton and at Bt. further damage is expected. a NEWSPAPER SUPPRESSED. LEIPSIG, Sept. 21.—The state tri- bunal created under the recently en acted law for the defense of the re- public has approved the suppression by the Prussian government of Hugo Stinnes’ newspaper, the Deutsche All- gemeine Zeitung, because of its pub- lished attacks on the Wirth govern- ment. SPORTS MARKETS Minnesota | tion ef the liqudr transportation laws and had been picked up at # sheriff's Accétding to Sheriff “Marquis the eviderice Against Williamson is suet to have charged other cars stolen and sold to Casper inter-state ma | The wind has reached a velocity of George's | the wind abated about noon and no RE BEING SOUGHT Murdered Choir Singer WOMAN INJURED IN AUTO CRASH NORTH OF HERE WILL RECOVER |Loaded Truck Left on | Highway Is Struck by | Auto, Mrs. Schultz of Salt Creek, Victim A heavy truck loaded with | casing and left standing on the Salt Creek highway, 20 miles north of Casper, with- out lights or other means of | warning to motorists last |night was the indirect couse of Be vere injuries received by : husband, in charge ore at Mosher Camp, crashed { la the heavier machine. Although suf. fering from concussion and lacera |tions, including a en-inch cut the neck which it Was stated to Schultz is expected to r ts at the Natrona County hospital der the care of Dr. J. C. Kamp, w happened upon the scene of the ac dent # few moments after tt oecurred Dr. Kamp was approaching the truck. from the opposite direction o: iia return from a‘ consultation at S: Creek when the Schultz car. nea the truck from the other side, xd Mr. Schultz, it ‘s understood, was unable to ply his brakes in time to ayojd @ crash when the truck loomed up ahead and when Dr, Kamp reached the scetre of the accident a minute later Mrs. Schultz was found pinnod in the front seat behind a huge cas- ing which extended through the windsield. The injured woman had been struck in the head and cut by flying glass. She was hurried tc the hopital here by Dr. Kamp and her condition is as satisfactory as could be expected. Mr, Schultz suffered minor injuries from the shock. The work of vandals was in evi- dence when a service car from Cas- per reached the scene of the wreck to take charge of the Schultz auto. Thieves had stripped it of all accessor- jes and removable parts, and a load of repairs.and supplies for the Mosher camp had also been taken. There is ne clue to the identity of the thieves. Ownership of the truck which hed been left standing on the road was to be determined this afternoon from the Hcense tag attzched to it. —_> LATE'SPORTS NEW YORK, Sept. 21—The light- weight championship bout between Bonny Leonard, titleholder, and Charlie White, of Chicago, sched: uled Rt Jersey City October 3, was indefinitely postponed today, An- | other operation on Leonard's jaw for bone infection was announced as the cause. int Ease Catholic Meet Brought to End WASHINGTON, Sept The eighth national ference Cath- [olic charities came to an ‘end today 21. - with the election of officers and an address by the Right Rev. Thomas | J. Shahan, of Washington, president of the conference. - Mdhsignor Shai was re-elec! President. Vice president: cluded Mrs. Mary Young J Angeles. IRIVER GIVES UP BODY OF VICTIM The body of Jim Erica, s laborer for the Central companys, who was drowned close to the Texas refinery about three miles east of Casper on the morning of September 14, was found at 7 a. m. today three miles down the river from the polnt at which he had been last seen, Residents of the district discov ered the body. +The toe of Fi bvot had, caught on a rock just th side of the Burlington bridge and held the rest of the body which was subretrged in shallow water, Jim Eries was drowned when he fell out of a boat that was being used to transport materials across the river between two gangs of workmen. The rubber boots which he wore probably prevented his coming up again. A prolonged and. thorough search was made for the body by the sher- iff's office. The water was shut off at the Pathfinder dame to lower the river so that it might be dragged in an effort to locate the missing man. | After several days of work, the Search was given us as useless.