Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 28, 1922, Page 1

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conon| Che Casper Daily Tribune VOLUME VI. RADICALS PROMISE 10 LEAVE CITY —e—_—__. LOYALTY TO HOME AND HOME INSTITUTIONS BALL SCORES _| AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston Batteries—Bush and Schang; Collins and Ruel. At Philadelphia (1st Game) — Washingto Phiiadelphia _______001 2109 200—6 11 1 Butteries—Mogridge and Gharrity; Rommell, Ketchum, Schilling, Eckert, Heimach and Per- kins, At Philadelphia (2nd Game)— Washington Philadelphia _____ Batteries—Francis, Warmoth and Lapan; \ Harris and Brugey. FOREST FIRE _ TS SPREADING DULUTH, Minn,, stroyed in the forest tre here late this afternoon, DULUTH, Minn., Sept. 28.— With several forest fires réported in the district north of here, forestry, and railway officiaia kere turned their at- | Meadowlands, to the removal of set- the tention today who might be menaced by fo finmes, More than 30 refugees reached Du- luth durt% the night from Ellesmere, where the flanies approached within 100 feet of bufidings on the outskirts the town. Fire also was reported the Cotton and White Face «1 Recon igeied were contnued to ape eevee. buildings a area“ of northern, Minn wind has risen. to 25 miles an ‘hour,.and a new: Sauairon of the R. H. £. ~------511 001 100— 9 12 2 re been. sas?) the blaze “has broken out, according to aviators on fire patrol, who landed Monnesota ‘ational guard, assigned to duty in the north woods, to ald in discovering fires, 8T. PAUL, Minn> Sept: lg-mile wind. reported Kénsey, a Cotton and Elsmere forest fires near those towne are threstening to, break away from the fire fighters and settlers are pre- paring to wove, accordiny to reports received her today Gnral W. F. fire zone. Several are burning in Koochiching from Adjutant Rhihow, who is in the menacing fires county and 260 fire fighters are fighting the flames according to reports recelved lby W. T. Cox, state forester who char doy by observers attached to the gere acterized the situation as serious. U.S. DESTROYERS ORDERED T0 CONSTANTINOPLE ANNOUNCED; BRITISH ADMIT CRISIS REAR WASHINGTON, Sept. 28.—Secretary Denby announced today that the 12 destroyers ordered to proceed from Nor- folk to Constantinople are the Hatfield, Gilmer, Fox, Kane, Hopkins and Bainbridge, McFarland, Overton, Sturtevant, King, Barry and Goff. The date of their departure has not \yet been announced. LONDON, d Press). Sept..28.—((By The Asso-) At the close of this aft- critical. A third meet- of the cabinet, tt was/| ciated Press).—Colonels Platira: situation was regarded | Gonatas, leaders in the rev this morning and received by the Greek legation here. ATHENS, Sept. 28.—{(By The Aaso- s and en nt tered Athens today at the head & of the cabinet will be held th's/ their troops and were received with 28.—(By The Associ- 4 Press).—A _ prov'sional consisting of 12 officers will rule eece until a clyil government is ¢s- tablished, aceording to a ‘telegram from Athens, “dated 6 o'clock this PARIS, Sept. govern: | enthusiasm. a opfieeet at Sa More than 236,000 women hare re- ceived pensions from the British gov ernment because their husbands fel! in the late war. Of this number 74, 000. have remarried. | CASPER, WYO., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1927. (ED itenial} There is an old habit that persists among Casper folks, formed in the day when Casper bad but few commercial institutions and limited stocks of -goodi order house patronage. There It ~ ‘Th Was excuse in the early di is out of town shrpving. Mail ere is none now. Kerr issue of | the Tribune presents equal or better opportunities to secure the things you desire at equal or | better prices just around the corner from where you live adn furthermore the dollar you pay to your neighbor is passed on by him to another neighbor und figures in at teast a dozen more lc transactions before the year is and the opportunity to secure your share of it through the activity which engages your individual energies, out. Thus increasing, to the exten al t of a dollar, the local circulation With the dollar as the unit, compute for yourself the volume of dollars ard opportumities that will be started in motion for the good of Casper and its people, if Mr. Smith, Mr. Robinson and the thousands of others would do needs in Casper and pay your as y dollar to your ndghbor, Brown, Mr. Jones, Mr. ‘ou do. ox shotld ¢o, supply your There is simply nothing to it, but benefits. You are not narrow, selfish or proyincial, when you assume such an attitude, you are building your home town and the trade of your home mer- chants and other business institutions, which is more to your credit than building up the towns and cities at a distance in which you can have no Interest; atrangers whom you will never know, instead of prospering your neighbor who in turn is con- | stantly aiding you. The Tribune has for years presented this subject for the consideration of its readers. Many have seen the light and have kept their dollars among their friends and neighbors and prospered accordingly. and SPORTS MARKETS NUMBER 299. | Six Defendants Seized for Salt Creek Ac tivities to Plead Guilty and Pay Small | Fines for Disturbance; Must Take First Train Out of City Arrangements were made the prosecuting attorney’s offic |mit six of the seven alleged I. |rested by deputies from the sheri ’s office for disturbance in |the Western Pipe Line company's camp at Salt Creek, |plead guilty at their hearing to a disturbance charge. will probably be fined $25 and given @ suspended sentence on condition Ithat they leave town immediately. The ‘six when arrested gave the Inames of C. J. Sorby, G. W. Smith, | Robegt Morrison, Juiliu Burns, J. P |‘Nelson and David Jones. strengthening the finances of The practice of local patronage and loyalty to home institutions, in no sense implies that we are self-sufficient or self supporting, and that traffic with the outside world mu Tt means rather that, all things considered, a‘tranaction at home on anything near equal terms ENTIRE GARRISON DEAD IN it be abolished. with a foreign one, redounds to the benefit of the town in which you live and rear your family, | and in which local transaction you have a personal interest, whether {t is yoars or your neigh- bors’. There is every argument for Azing business with yo business with your neighbor and none against it. i | hearing 1 Frank Carr, the seventh member, will be held and given a preliminary er on a charge of petty 1 He im said to have stolen sil verware worth approximately $20 from the West Pipeline camp in the ol! fields. ‘The hearing of the s!x men is sched ulead for this afternoon at 4 o'clock before Judge Tubbs: Edward Barrett the prosecution for ney's office, decided that who is handling! the county attor this course! ITALIAN BLAST, HUNDREDS | Engine Cuts _ Auto In Two, Girl Escapes SABULA, ‘Iowa, Sept. 28.—Miss Elizabeth Taplin, 18-year-old daugh- ter of George Taplin, residing néar Sabula, had 1s miraculonts -escape. from injury today when a passenger train. cut off the unoccupied .rear seat of an autumobile which she was driving, leaving her unharmed in the front re: 260 STUDENTS POISONED BY SCHOOL LUNCH GaRHISHHENT ACTION STARTED AGAINST CHAPLIN’S EX-WIFE BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Sept. 28.—~ roll call at Woodlawn high school to- day showed 260 students absent as a result of food po'soning yesterday. While ma were violently ‘ll for a time said that all were out of danger today, with the exception of one. Investigation indicated that the sty dents were poisoned ‘by’ eating sand- wishes made from ground beef, cab. bage. celery and p'ckles at the school cafeteria. Scores became ill in class rooms, while others dropped on the streets while returning to their homes pasta Ta Ne Montana Warm, Records Broken GREAT FALLS, Mont. All heat records since 1907 servations were first made here, have been broken during the first three days of th’s week when the thermom eter has registered 85 degrees o: above Sent. 28.— ‘The closest approach to 1922 was 1917. to 88, Monde: Tuesday greece. the mereury climbed to 87 and Wednesday PENSION INCREASE FOR VETERANS OF CIVIL AND | MEXICAN WARS PLANNED WASHINGTON, Sept. 8A. pen- sion pay envelopa increase from S50 to $72 a month for civil and Mex- ican war veterans, possibly as 3 Christmas gift from Unele Sam is planned by leadets in congress, A bill providing pension Increases already has passed the senate and Senator Bursum, Republican, New i} | Mexico, its author, says he has been | promised by house Republican ledd- crs that it will be passed by the house soon after it reconvenes. He “xpects the bill to become law be- fore the holidays. All civil and Mexican war reter- ans haying served 99 days or any who hare developed disabilities would receive the increase from $50 to $72 s' month under the bill and their widows pensions would be in- creased from $30 to 50 2 month. Other beneficaries under the bill in- clude civil war army nurses who would receive $50 a month, while pensioners of the Indian wars would | receive $30 and their widows $20 a month. The Bursum bill meet the needs of veterans of ad- is designed to | { vanced years, but because of their rapidly increasing death rate, ‘the bill, Senator Bursum states, would not mean actual draft upon the treasury over the present pension rolls. ‘The cost of the Bursufh bill during the first year would amount to about $60,000,000, but Senator Bursum told the senate that revised estimates placed it at not over $35,- 000,000. ‘Ths present pension outlay is abdut $300,600,600 annually. The averageage of civil war vet- rans now. is 78, Senator Bursam added with their expectancy of life only 54 years. of the students affected | it was when. ob- | SPEZIA, Sept. 28.—(By T! ‘tire naval garrison ‘at Falconara fort, near here onthe Gulf ved to have been killed in*an explosion, |caused -by lightning which destroyed everything within a There are many hundreds of wounded. Seventy bodies have already been recovered in the debris. explosives | been assigned to the rescue work. [were stored in the deed tunnels of the ‘of Genoa, is beli jraahas of ten miles. [Witteen hundred tons of ltort. The entire top of the hill on \whicS it is located was blown away. ' The work of recovering | additoncl jdead is proceeding. No estimate has as yet been mace of thar number. The wounded are being rushed to|ror from fire and storm, the despa!r- |the homnitals here, all of which are|ing population is being relieved elready killed. Military forces havelthrough governmental care. Everything Deithoved in Radius of Ten Miles-at Genow Gulf Port by 1,500 Tons of Explosive, Is Report he Associated Press.)—The en- All. Fascist! of the province of Genoa have been mobilized by thelr chiefs to assist the soldiers, The er plosion occurred in .a violent storm which damaged the crons cnd proper- ty of the inhabitants for large areas along the gulf. Half trazed with ter- MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Sept. 25. Garnishment proceedings where- by her salary, costumes and all other personal property would be completely:tied up were to be served late today on Mildred Harris, Charlie ‘Chaplin's former wife, now playing at vaudeville theaters in St. Paul. Action was brought In county a:s trict court here today by J. W. Ru- benstein, Chicago, her former man- ager, who claims that she owes ‘him $1,850 in back salary on a 12 weeks’ contract made in Les Angeles last November, whereby she was to re- ceive $1,750 & week and pay him $200. Hie says she played the 12 weeks avd drew her money, but that so far. he has received only $550 of his share. /Uniess the case is settled out of court, Miss Harris’ salary, clothing and other bélongings will - remain tied up until October 20, when the papers are returnable. ATTACK, G. A. DES MOINES, Lata. Press. )——Commander-i in-Chief Army of the Republic, in a s Army Veterans, replied in Abraham Lihcoln made by meeting in Richmond, Va., “The recent venomous attack upon Mr. Lincoln, madé under cigcum- stances which gave it wide publici does not lessen the world’s estimaia| of his. worth the aged commander} id. “It only tends to awaken the slumbering animos'tles and to rudely | disturb the feeling of peace and good $$ —_ BANDITS MAKE $14,000 HAUL CINCINNATI, Ohio. Sept. 28.—F-ve men entered the Ham'Iton county bank on “Woodburn avenue today. struck the cashler over the head ’and esca with $14,000, according to a | report to police headquarters. Sept. ADMIRATION FORLINCOLNNOT Wriggler In Pillow Found To Be Snake Sept. 28. alive in ‘our pillow: a'sted a young Kensey~ Dariel; it daughter of Mra, when she appeared for breakfast today. The child's statément was con firmed by two other children who re- minded their mother that they had made similar declarations since the big, homemade pillow, was placed on their bed, Monday n’ght. “That's bosh,” replied Mrs. Dariel. “1 stuffed that pillow with nize, clean chicken feathers and I sewed it myself. { “Well—fee! it,” insisted a daugh- ter. The mother did. “Maybe you're right,” she said kly. When the pillow was opened ow side the house, a fair sized blavk snake wiggled away. 50,000 HOME BREW PLANTS IN CHI’, CLAIM CHICAGO, Sept. 28.—A favorable vote on beer and light wines in Mai achusetts, California, Ohio and Llinois this fall would “convince congressmen that the people in all sections of the LESSENED BY CONFEDERATES’ © R. LEADER SAYS 28.—(By The Associated Lewis S. Pilcher of the.Grand peech today before the Grand a measure to the attack upon confederate veterans at their last June. Will between federal and confederate, jwhich had begun to prevail through lout the nation. “Good may come of it, [is awakens all lovers of truth and fatherland to scrutinize more closely the character of the instruction in the} department of American history that} is-given in the public schools of they |1and.” Commander Pilcher recommended that action be taken on the proposed resolution before” the encampment making the study of Lincoln's life! compulsory in tho high schools. however, if} | DES MOINES, Iowa, Sept. LE resentatives ctming from this morn- ng’s business session of the annual Grand Army of the Republic encamp: ment sald that Milwaukee, W had been chosen as the 1923 convention j Jett: = country were in favor of beer- and light wines, est Kunds, president the Retail Malt Beverage Dealers’ sociation, declared y at the| Forts -seventh annual meeting. H “There now exist in Chicago over| Bo 000 home ‘eories—eve: one; \brewing thelr own beer without expe-| rience of any tention— kind as to care and at-| no thought of the science of| Uon, and being consumed to| = injury of the stomach, They of procedure was the most drastic that could be taken, according his statement this afternoon. The arrest! fof the men w~ hxstened by their sud den announcement of quitting their jobs in Salt Creek, and the evidence | |Jn their cases was tunabje to be worked up as conclusively as might have been destred | Attorney Myers. counsel .for the s |per day as | early this afternoon between e and defense counsel to per- W. W. agitators who were ar- to men, announced {ents wou nee fight s afternoon than at-| The ma-| Jority of the men are expected to ieave | for Texas and Oklahoma on the first cases. train. after pleted. Thomas Sullivan, alleged 1. W. W. secretary in Casper, was picked up by the police department last night on a vagrancy charge. he po! were forced to let Sullivan go an he had witnesses to assert that he earned $4 the secretary of an of workers’ union. Sullivan ts believed to havé been the sender of the telegram receivd at the | sheriff's office; addressed to C. J. Sor hy, one of the six incarcerated men {which rena: their hearing is com OF PEOPLE INJURED. CLAIM: =~. ‘The telegram was sent regular Western signed “Si Bee ” DEADLY COBRA through Union office and the | « FOUND ALIVE IN BANANAS HERE In the Second street window of White's grocery, in a glass jar partly filled with alcohol, is a perfect speci men of a South American banana cobra, that until after its arrival in Casper, was allve. The snake, small in diame and covered with round dark snots, is 3 feet 8 inches in length. , fruit and vegetable White store, found the man at reptile cofled up in a bunch of bananas that had recently arrived from a South He seized a club and without American port. dispatched the snake qualms, as it Is one of th onous reptiles found in regions. Although the huge Banana” spider, known as the trantula otten makes the long trip from south of the con tinent to these shores and arrives alive, a snake seldom does, The rep. files either ret fore they are jor out of the bananas be shipped or die on the BIG SHEEPMAN UNDER ARREST Prominent sheen man of eastern Mc tant was today bound over ti the (fs trict court under $3,000 bond on a grand larceny e growing out of t made by Jz | | | | Kunde paid. He added that similar conditions Prevail throughout the country. a complai EF. Markle president the Amercan Natoinal bank Tt is ed that O'Donnel borrowed $3.090 from Markle on | personal loan viving a mortgage on 2,400 head of sheep as securi Markle alleces that no such of sheep | existed rnd that he has been unable} to collect the money. | CHICAGO MAYOR FIRES MINISTER HIRED AG CITY'S LAW ENFORGER? Order of Dismissal Is Outgrowth of Fight Between Pastor and Police Chief, Report CHIGAGO. Sept. 28:—Rey. John H. Williamson, Chi- cago’s $10,000 a’ year enforcer.” was dismissed to- day hy Mayor William Hale Thompson. The minister, who was appointed he unique po sition eig’:t ns letter of dismissal from me ». received a the mayor to. day when he reached his office The ousting of the law enforcer— whose duties have béen extremely vague and undefined—was the climax at differences: with ef of Police Charles ©. Fitrmorrie. which virtually with the minister's appoint. Mayor tioa Thompson created the post. which was regarded as that ® lon He appointed who resigned hig extranrdinary te the maynr the Rev # offic’al family, Williamson, | nastorate at the Auburn Park Method- 4gt-Epiecopal church to ac The minister has had her stirmv career in office, Without. defi nite duties and with no definite office crsianed him, he took porsession of ~ small office off a committee room In the city hall and went to work. He never succeeded in reaching a work ing nereement with Chief Fitzmorris and weveral times had leed in open disagreements with the chief. A few days ago the law. enforcer— the only miunteipal office of the kind in any city Im the country, so far as \known—charged that gambling and viee were flour'xhing and that ft could not flourish-without corruption in the police denartment. Chief Fitzmorris replied famson was getting his that Wul- inspiration from discredited sources. He de- clared that the law enforcer had been visited by fike De Pike" Heitler, once know king,’ nas “a vice and gambling and Fred Mader. a labor leader under sentence for bribing in. labor dismutes, Whi the mi r received the mayor's d'smissal to! comment At the time of his appointment po Utical opponents of the mayor charged y he refused to that+the minister was appointed for political purposes. Ministers them nelves were divided over the value of Placing a preacker in a political post- tion an dat least one body of ministers refused to endorse the office of law enforcer. ies “ Harding Favors Yanks to Take World’s Series WASHINGTON, Sept. 28.—Prest- dent Harding has a hunch that the New York Yankees will win the world’s series this year, ace: ‘ording to Dave Bancroft. captain and short- stop of the New York Giants, the National league pennant winner. Bancroft called today at the White House and urged the president to at- tend one of the world series games. Mr. Harding indicated he would be unable to do so, and added, Ban- croft said, that he was confident the Yankees would clinch the Amer. ican (eague flag and trennce the nts, NISBET JOINS IN SAFETY © CAMPAICN, VIOLATORS OF TRAFFIC LAWS WARNED Definite results for The Tribune's safety exmpaign took conerets form today in orders issued by Chief of Police Alexander Nisbet, who purt poses to co-operate with = drive te | make the streets of Casper safe for | pedestrians and vehicles. Demand for drastic action Is vipe, he- be- lieves, emphasized as it Is by two serlous accidents this week. Traffic violator sare to be treated as deserving the maximum penalties | for law violations. clothes | men will be on duty at tat hours to bring to the bar of justice all who | disregard the ordinances laid down | for the safety of every man, woman, and child in Casper. This week is cleanup week. It will be the most thorough cleanup week that ha sever been staged. It WHI be an effort to caich the man hefere the hespital catches him and before the mortuary catches him The succeas of the safety cam | tious co-operation of every paign will depend on the consclen individ ‘This co-operation is also belag extended by such companies 28 the Standard and the Chicago and North Western railroad. It will be received from every public offi i in Casper and from every citiz who cares enongh about the public welfare te place it above the moment's selfish convenience that may be obtained from gisregarding it, - — PPOCEOOSP POKER ELTYTETT! Peo POTe ee BOS 090599

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