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Vw | eather Forecast | Genera fair and Tuesday Colder tonight tn north and east por fio with freezing tempera’ VOLUME Vil. warmer Tuesday British IRISH IGNORE RECENT OFFER OF FREE STATE Period of ‘Amnesty Expires at M idnight and Crimes Are Again Punishable; Republicans Issue Warnings | Transmission Of Power By Radio Is Seen NEW YORK, Oct, 16. — Trans mission of power from Niagra F to New York by radio is a p of the future, in the opinion | of Dr, E. F. W. Alexanderson, chief engineer pf the Radio corporation. This prediction followed the success of a 16-hour test of electron tubes in place of large alternators in transmititng wireless messages across the Atlantic ocean BAN IS PLACED ON WET GOODS BY THE TURKS DUBLIN, Oct. 16.—(By The Associated Press.)—The Free State government's offer of amnesty upon their sur-| render of persons illegally bearing arms;‘holding stolen prop-| erty or retaining premises unlawfully occupied, expired at} midnight. Beginning today the military authorities are em-| | powered to punish offenders with death, deportation, im- jPrisonment or fi and the constitu.) CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct. 16.—(By tion of new courts to deal with such|The Associated Press.}—Tota] prohi- joffenses can proceed forthwith, The | bition of alcoholic drinks, one of the ‘government’s offer appare: has |tenets of the Mohammedian religion, |been ignored and yesterday there was| will be applied throughout eastern posted surreptitiously throughout Dub.| Thrace as soon as the Kemalist auth- |lin a proclamation purporting to be)orities are instailed according to di issued by the “Repubhiéan army execu-| patches recetved by the local news- | tive” warning the public that any one| papers from Angora, seat’ of the {giving information leading to punish-| Turkish natiogalist government. HEARS g ( OVELL ment of Republicans by the new courts| The same rule will be applied to j be regarded as a spy and dealt | Constantinople immediately after the with accordingly, while those acting! Kemalist occupation of the capitol, it j / s members of the courts will te pun-|was announced and those violating q ished for their “offenses against the|the law will be lable to punishment ' 1 | | republic.”* \consisting of forty-pine lashes, three iy BELFAST, Oct. 16—(By Morning Address on “The |ctated Press.}—An intensive search Sn eV God of Peace” Followed by |being conducted by the police for an Religious Drama at known man who on Saturday nigh Attack Made On EB *, Ss rie 2. ed to Ssmauit “~ fet mayor of Peaeeree <c “taser” "| Constitution Of | |months in priscn and a fine of from | 60 to 200 Turkish ‘urkiah’ pounds. The Asso: ng A bom» in But his residence Standing room only was the order the vigilance of the police, - s et the day yesterday at the Methodist] (he assassin would have succeeded and Illinois Flayed y : - as it wag he barely escaped in the church at both services when Ben) o caped in the ness/ Boovell, the dramatist and humor'st, speke, In the morning he spoke on “Tne God of Peace” and described his expertences at the front with the) Canadien and English soldiers as an} entertainer. He spoke in -highe terms of the work of the Young N Christian Association in their work. At night he gave the famou yeligiuos drama, “The Cross," by Wilson Bari presented in five scanes and held audience spell bound throughout. Ths co lesson learned from thg persecutions’ tr URBANA, IL, Oct. 16.—(By one |Assoclated Press}—Charging that |deliberate attempt !s being iach tof [Prejudice the people against the pro- {poset new constitution before they have an opportunity to study it, {Henry I. Green of Urbana, chairman the committees on submission, day replied to a statement given to \the press yesterday by Henry Hooker |Van Meter, a dibie league organizer.! LOS ANGEL! Oct. 16—Another |The Van Meter statement charged tinuance was expected by the dis-|that the words “in the year of ‘our t attorney's office today with the! Lord” had een omitted from the! Continuance of ° Burch Trial Is | Held Probable « war of the eazly Christians by Nero were beginning of the third trial of Arthur {draft of the constitution. Sabet ienpreasive: |C: Burch, of Evanston, Ill, for the] “Hvidently the gentlemen . who ‘The pastor of the ch H.| murder of J, Belton Kennedy, young!signed this statement were misled,” Los An ¥, Carter, in commenting on the work °s broker, August 5, 1921.|Mr.gGreen said. “If they will go to of Mr. Scovell, says, “Ben Scovell] Set to begin Odtober 9, the trialithe office of -the secretary of state, has been In our city for a week. He|was postponed a week because an-|where the official copy of the consti- has spoken before the Chamber of|other trial was in progress in the tution as adopted by the convention Commerse, the Kiwanis club, the High|same department of the superior 1s on file, they wiil find tha the clos- School and the Business and Profes-|court. ‘That trial has not be com- ing words of the text are as follows: sional Women’s club, and has lectured | pleted. { “ ‘Done in convention at the capi- twice at the Methodist church and| Mrs. Madalynne C. Obenchain, joint|tol in the city of Springfield on the sented the drama of last night. |ly indicted with Burch for the mur-|twelfth day of September in the year rt, der ef our Lord one thousand nine hun- dred twenty two." For all this he has mot received any compensation except half of the pri Kennecy, also her former sweet- is awaiting a third trial. Che Canper Daily Cribu CASPER, WYO., MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1922. U. S. HOSPITAL WORK FLAYED IN LEGION Conservatives Meet to Decide Cabinet Tssue' EXPENDITURE { Armour Demurs J, Ogden Armour is seen here as he left the hearing of the federal trade commission in Chicago after he had refa_zi to divulge certain details re- japzcinn: irading in grain futures, Mr. rmour stated it as his opinion’ that \euch 4radiag, was need barmatabtte cus | which he haa only two staunch sup- jlost in underworld warfare here in| the top [Industry or market, or market Coast Mayor Knighted By Italian King 16.—Mayor George, E. Cryer of Los Angeles has beeri knighted by the king of Italy. Because of “his fair and consid- erate treatment" of the Italian pop- ulation of!Los Angoies, he has been made @ knight of the Order of the Crown, The formal presentation of the decoration was made at a banquet attended by the Itallan consul gen- eral, the vice consul and a number of prominent Italian-Americans. LOS ANGELES, Oct. coeds of the recital given last Friday She and Bureh are in the county ail night and a freewill offering at our| Juries disagreed in the former. triais| church last night. Five times he has of each. 1 spoken absolutely gratis. He is one | of America’s great dramatists. fe is also a humorist, but ‘UNIVERSITY STUDENT iS > best talent as that of a dramatist.) | His rendering of Shakespeare and th drama by Barrett are superb. I re-| call seeing Mr. Scoyell in Syracuse N. Y¥. over twenty yeears ago in th Merchent of Venice.” His uncle Sir Henry ing, played Shylock t TORRINGTOH HO TORRINGTON, Wyo., Oct. 16.— Wyoming's first Potato Show will be! |held in Torrington, November 22 toj 24 inclustve, and it will be in charge DEAD FROM FALL WHILE BREAKING SADDLE HORSE, night and Mr. Scovell played Antnolo.| For years he has been in Shakes-| pearean plays and recitals and thus) » required unusual ability in that P dears. __.,|9f Roger W. Morse, county agent, R. vole, Mx.’ Goovell: baswen' LARAMIE,, Wyo., Oct. 16.—Lowell| R. Crowe and Fred James. The first! | O’Brien, student ct the University of | |two men handled the Goshen county tri in C: by his droll humor} fs a arya es ow os Wyoming, who was thrown and/agricultural exhibit at the state falr SIH % |kieked by an unrly horse he was|at Douglas. Mr. Scovell, prior to his departure) attempting to break a week ago, died TRe best speakers available will from Casper this afternoon, expressed) at the Ivinson hospital here. He never! discuss the various. phases of potato appreciation’ of his visit here and/ regained consciousness from the time} raising during the three day program’ the treatment accorded. lor the accident. O n-was can-|and the practical and Shegrenealt “You can tell the people that I like| sidered one of the most erpert riders| ides of the crop will be taken into| Casper," he stated this morning very|in the city, and had extensive ex-| consideration. An opportunity will be emphatically. perience in handling horses. given the growers in Wyoming to form GRAND OPENING OF NEW RIALTO THEATER HOLDS INTEREST FOR ALL CITY |Danteis, Julia Faye and Conrad Nagle. The new manager, M. H. Todd, for- |merly of the Princess in Cheyenne, jhas booked a series of features that | seceatan to put the house on the map as a center for the highest class at- |tractions. “Grandma's Boy,” the new- lest Harold Lloyd five-reel comedy, ir! |an early booking and other high class an expenditure of $50,000 has/pictures such as “Reported Missing,” Doors to Swing tineudae Open Tuesday Afternoon| From One of Most Attractive Movie Houses in the Mountain Region Five months of rebuilding, renovating and redecorating the Rialto theater building at resulted in the theater being turned into one of the best fitted |“School-Days;" ‘Harry’ Carey in his moving picture houses in the entire Rocky Mountain region. : oe aap! preter The theater opens Tuesday afternoon with “Nice People,” & hgiomestead" and °“Wild Irish Rose" Paramount ‘first-run picture featuring Wallace Reid, Bebe| (Continued on“Page Six) | Burke, | from local ranchers, pleaded guilty at! FIRST POTATO SHOW SCHEDULED ST To GROWERS permanent organization to study the factors that influence the growing and marketing of their crops. ‘This organization is expected to take over the management of future Potato Shows and have them in towns par ticularly interested in this crop. Liberal premiums are to\ be in all classes of dry rigated potatoes. In addition thé state board of ‘immigration will offer at- tractive premiums for county“exhib‘ts. pater canto anette BANK OBTAINS WARRANT offered land and ir FOR ALBANY STOCKMAN, LARAMIE, Wpo., Oct. 16.—John B, charged with stealing cattle! his preliminary hearing and was held to the district court under $1,200 bond. Burke is a single man and has been in the Medicine Bow country recently. He is said to have implicated three other men in the cattle rustling op- erations. Aaa se MATERNAL MORTALITY GROWS. WASHINGTON, Oct. 16.—Maternal mortality is increasing and no pro- gtoss ts being made towards its re- duction despite extensive research and development of modern methods, Dr. W. T. Bell_of Toronto, pediatri-| cjan'to the maternal and child welfare bureau of the Ontario Provincial! rd of healh, told the National Id. Hygiene. association. | Passengers and Crew Questioned Before Pole Hopper Specie: of Coalition Cabinet Headed by Lloyd George Up for Determination at Conference Scheduled Today LONDON, Oct. 16.—(By The -Associated Fress.)—The jconservative members of the government have been sum-! jmoned to meet today to decide whether they shall continue) |their support of the coalition under the leadership of Prime! | Minister Lloyd George. The meeting, which was called by} | Austen Chamberlain, lord privy seal and government leader} in the house of commons, inclu@ed not and the Daily Telegraph, only the Conservatives in the cabinet The Chronicle said that notwith. but also the undersecretaries beléng-| standing the bitter and persistent ing to the party. * | slanders to which the - premter has It was belleved that Mr. Chamber-| been subjected in the last four years, lain wwould be backed by the Earl of] he retains a great personal hold upon Balfour, Lord Birkenhead and Sir} the masses. The newspaper pointed Robert Horne in his adhesion to the! proudly to the ovation he received at premier, but the attitude of several! Manchestcr ° of the others was regarded as more| The Telusraph commented ir: a sim- than doubtful. | ilar vein and prophesized further dem It wus stated in well informed) onstrations of popular admiration. Alt quarters that there would be a_de.| the other newspapers had nothing but j mand from the majority that the Con. | condemnation for ie Cie Premier. servative rank and file be consulted) -* | at a general party meeting before any | dec'sion is taken, and that if this was | not done there would be many resis: | nations from the ministry—enoagh, according to some predictions, to/ cause its fall. In uny case it was believed that to-| y's menting was likely to have a decisive effect upon the political tu ture, although the possibility of some arrangement which will hold the party togther for a time was not ex- cluded froin consideration. All the morning | newspapers through their editorial columns re- peated the'r conviction that an elec- tion must come sgon but opinions dif- fered Rs to the probable date. Some expected a definite announcement in| ae ROCK ISLAND, Ml, Oct, 16.—Po- Meeman James Green and Evtvard Minor an @ Robert Scott, a negro are! dead as a result of a gun battle last) night fn an underworld drug den The ;Pollcemen sought to stop a quarrel [between Scott nnd his wife that was| jdisturbing neighbors. Scott turned \this respect within a day ér two. [his gun on the officers. Green was’ Mr. ‘Lloyd George's Manchester|Iilled {nitantly and Minor ane eri mpeech! was roundly condemned by the|died In a hospital bulk of the morning papers, among! ‘These deaths bring the toll of sive Photo shows une of the airplanes by hich Amundsen hopes te fly over} of the world being lowered porters, ie Maud. namely, the Daily Chronicie'a few months to seven. from t¢ ‘CASTAWAYS ARRIVE IN PORT Being Permitted to Land; One Man Saved from Sea to Be Arrested . LOS ANGELES, Oct. 16.—The transport Thomas acl the crew and passengers of the burned steamship City of} Honolulu, was in Los Angeles harbor early today, the S45" |cora 0 Decker, Hit by Train at \sengers awaiting the usual health inspection before being| Crossing, Sues U. P. for permitted to come ashore. A federa! board to investigate | $23,000 Damages. {the burning of the City of Honolulu also expected to inter-| view the passengers before permitting day while federal officials investigated | BOSLER: Wyo., Oct. 16—Cora them to land. |the disaster, The crew and the pas- | Deck: ¢ Bosler hb t sengers arrived at San Pedro, Cal., er @¢ Bosler has flied a damage SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 16,—Radio,|about midnight aboard the ‘Thomas.| Suit. in the federal court in Cheyenne which saved the life. of Leslie Dewey jafter they had Been rescued from small] for $28,900 as the result of an accident Atkinson last Thursday, when the|boats by the freighter West Faralon|:October 14, 1921, when her automobile liner City of Honolulu burned at sea,/and had transferred to the Thomas. wai stra. 1, by a» Union Pacific loco- yesterday turned against him ‘an “My hatr was_a fright,” said one of! I caused his arrest. Today he was in| the feminine passengers rescued fro: ool Ing at IZosleer. Miss Decker claims that the railroad | custody on the charge of leaving with|the perils of fire, shipwreck and the army funds from the post exobaage deep when she tald of her experiences | at Pearl Harbor near Honolulu. jin getting back to dry land. permitted the locomotive to be operated | Kinson’s experience was recited in a! That'was the keynote of the com- lat the “dangerous and recklesa” rate copyrighted dispatch published by the! ments. Nobody took the experience) of 60 miles per hour, where the view San Francisco Chronicle today. lee seriously, and while unconyen-|!8 9bstducted by a deep cut. The According to the account, Atkinson | tional garments were in evidence and Plaintiff asks $3,000 for the destruc- had left Honolulu aboard the Hono-)many comfcrts and conveniences were| Hon of! her automobile and $20,000 lulu, and when fate placed him on the} eagerly sought, there was no > disposi. | for bodily damages and disfigurement. rescue ship, the transport Thomas, /}tion to complain, nor did any Dassen. The aw states that the defendant! marines identified him. Radio com-|ger display any evidence of nervous) failed to maintain a proper ‘signal de- munication between the Thomas and|strain or personal exposure. vice at ithe crossing and that no bell army officers at Pearl Harbor result TERE S SoS or whistle y sounded. She claims €d in the order Zor his arrest. ‘LARAMIE i AL g |she was driving slowly with due cau- } Passengers on the City of Honbjutu} \tion and care. described Atkinson as “the life of tee shipwreck.” They said he | | arrest of W. | A. Robbins of Marshall, sistently cheerful. ie GUILTY 10 AUST one ofithe large stockmen of the NO COMPLAINTS eas Part of the county, FROM PASSENGERS. It is! alleged that Marshall. repre- LOS ANGELES, Cal. Oct. 16.—The} lacttat to ‘the bank that he hac: a large Etricere and chews ot the ateaiehip|, LARAMIB, Wyo, Oct. 16—ciaimn| bunch: Of. catlie and secured (a oan City of Honolulu which was destroyed|ing that he obta'ned money under of $2,000 on thom. ‘The bank ts said by fire off Haaolulu last week were| alse pretences, an Albany county|not to)have been able to find the held aboard this transport Thomas to- bank has ‘obtained a warrant for the cattle in question. - CHICAGO GLAN | roaien.| Both said they were _ kid- | mapped, drugged, mutilated ‘and left on*thej street. In same respects the two cases di i widely. Joseph Kozniak, 34, one! eft the victims, lost one gland through an operation whic! medical men said! was thé work of an expert surgeon. Harry Johnson, ati employo of the CHICAGO, Oct. 16.—Police and the Chicago Medical so-| city electrical department, ste ¥s {two glands was’ mutilated by ciety aiding in the investigation still were baffled today DY} aiainue eckeoret rig to auirgeone: ithe mystery surrounding the city’s gland robberies. Several theories were advanced by At least two men were known to have been subjected to} the police, who sald that Johnson at) joperations in which vital glands were removed from their| revenge. One Man Operated Upon by Binert an Other One Mutilated by Amateur, Sur- | geons Say in Investigation of Case an, least may have been the victim ef! motive wit the Lincoln highway ‘cross-| lost} identirs in. 1920, The Casper Tribune Two editions daily: largest tion ‘of ‘any newspaper th Wyomin; NUMBER 13. EPORT MILLIONS ASKED FOR BENEFIT 0 UTE WAR VET ego s Fight for in. * pensation Only Begun, National- Commander Declares NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 16 —-Request for a_ten-million- \dollar appropriation to equip |hospitals now being con- structed and to build addi tional hospitals for neuro- psychiatric pat'-=ts was container the report of ‘the American legi commigvion {jr rehabilitation bet fourth annual convention of t legion today by Colonel A. A. Sprague head of the rehabilitativ: commis: |The veport criticizes: the governmen: achievements to date in caustic lar guage. “The story of hospital construc by the government up to date,” clared the report, “judging by actual results, is a tragedy for the sick, a, {@iscredit to the government, asd af affront to the American legion. There jis not a redeeming feature in it; po’ jitice; promises, plans, failure to p pare anything but alibis in advanced < tape, excusYs and contentions. con |spired to defeat the actual providing of headed beds.” | ‘The report, after commending con (gress for enacting beneficial laws, ex coriates individual congressmen and senators for what it t=rma “their on deavors to locate hos, *als where they cannot be used, and to ‘keep hospitals where they are not needed, and to #0 cure employment for their friends Président Harding, the report a+ serts, decided after conferring with the United States veterans’ bureati, to ap point “co-operative committees on re habilitation " in. various districts, to be made up of representative citizens and ex-service ‘men. “These co-operiitive committees,” the report declares, “would have helped to make the success of the rehabilitation |program. The request for approval jof this resolution has been om the desk jut the president since June. Up ty the date of the writing of this report no action has been .taken “At the end of five years; declares the Sprague reyort, ‘the government will have spent as much in hospital construction and rental as was origin ally requested and estimated in 1918 In the meantime during the when *these Beds were most y needed, when they would have helped |to pay the debt this-country owed the men who had given most, they were lacking. What was the substitute? Hotels, sanitariums, nitrate plants. |private homes, inebriate asylums and orphanages were purchased and re jmodeted and added to public health | hospitals, army -contonments an posts to constitute the present gover! mentowned hospitals. “On September 35, 1922, there we: 5,222 beds in leased hospitals and 1,8 beds, temporary facilities, on gover |ment-owned properties. There were 7,974 patients in contract hospite 2,695 In tuberculosis hospitals, 4,123 in neuro-psychiatric hospitals, and {1,186 In general.and suiggica: hospitals “Unoecupied beds? Yes, a lot them. Ten thousand of them at date. Most of them useless, beca badly placed. On armistice day (1918) the report declares there were 334,000 men sick and wounded in army hospitals in th's jcountry and with thé American expe ditionary force in France. { COMPENSATION FOR DISABLED IS FIRST, iW ORLEANS, La., Oct, 16.—A declaration that the American lego" Continued on Page Three) D THEFT UNSOLVED ee Killed Last | Year In Metal Mill Smeiters WASHINGTON, - Oct. 16.—Meta! faills “and smelters, . excluding last furnaces todk a death toll mployes in 1921, -:cording to anaounced by; the bureau of from statements of the operatin panies. The Companies