Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 1, 1922, Page 1

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‘ EXICAN P a eT, Ba. eoton) Che Casper Daily Crit CASPER, WYO., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1922. FRE venertit “owis STOLEN CATTLE INTERCEPTED IN NEBRASKA, MAN: FACING ARREST it | Warrant Is Issued for| William Comstock of Owl Creek Country in Stock Rusfling Case. Three head of cattle, al- Teged_ to have t:cen stolen from the Bar G end the Will- iam Brownrig raaches, north- west of Shoshoni, and shipped on the C. & N. W. from Lu- cerne, Wyo., yesterday, were inter- cepted last night at Alliance, Neb. A ‘warrant has been issued for William Comstock of the Owl Creek country, near Thermopulis, who is said to have shipped the cattle from Lucerne to the market in Omaha, Neb. Bpec Bailey, livestock inspector, left Casper yesterday afternoon and ‘ton his atrival at Alliance found that the three bead of cattle had been cut out of the car by the Alliance sheriff's office on advice of the sher- $ffs office here in Casper. Bailey 4s holding the cattle pending orders form the owners for their disposition. It is probable that the three head will be sold and tutchered in A)- Vance and tho hides returned here for evidence. The case wi. Grobudty bo prosectted by the state iepart- { mont. The were a bull, &-years old. trom the Bar G ranch, the prop- erty of and ay Marquis, and a’ cow is owned by William Ambassador to America From Italy Resigns ROME, + 1—4{By The Associated Press—Vittorio Rolandi Ricci, Ital- ian ambassador at Washington, has presented his resignation like his col-) leagues, Count Sforza, ambassador at Paris, and Sen@tor Frassati, ambas-! sador at Berlin, wishing to leave Pre-| miler Mussolini free to choose his own | trusted men for such important posts. Suicide Leaves Dollar Bill to | Pay for the Gas PATERSON, N. J., Nov. 1.—Beside} the body of Mrs. Carrle Kinsdall in ® gas-filled building house room today ‘was found a note addressed to the proprietor: ‘Enclosed is gas I use.” a dollar bill for the BUILDING SHOWS GAIN IN , | Whe number and size of the bulld- ing permits during October showed @ marked increase over those issued during September. The permits for October amounted to $137,970, which Was $41,634 more than those of the Previous month. Eighty permits ‘Were issued, an increase of 23 over September. The largest one to be given out was one for $25,000 to Stanley Ben- edict of the Benedict-Dodson Motor CASPER plays boosting the health cam) milk products. Market during the } days of inten: sive campaigning and workers in the} health movement are busy. today ar panging exhibits for tomorrow. { DRIVE USHERED iN HERE TODAY Casper’s greatest health campaign epens today. sentatives of the Woman’s Departmental club of Casper have} arranged with numerous local merchants for window dis- Campaign headquarters will be maintained at the Public | Wife Not Surprised | Speaks Here Tonight “Wiliam B. Ross, Democratic candidate for Governor of Wyom'ng, wht | ‘addres; & public meeting at the Elks auditortum at 8 o'clock this! ovening. MAN INJURED AT REFINERY LECS BROKEN Centrifugal Renovating Machine Goes to Pieces and Flying Iron Hits W. W. Smith, Plant Employe W. W. Smith of 671 West Yellowstone highway, had both legs broken and may possibly be injured internally at 2:30 o’clock this afternoon in an accident at lubricating plant No. 8 of the Standard Oil company’s refinery. A cast-iron renovator used for cleaning rags and driven by centrifugal force went to pieces:and waste and parts of the iron, flying through the air, Otherwise the building waq unin- struck Smith in the lower part of his | Jured- te body... He was taken. in the company ambulance to the Casper Private hos+ THOS. NELSON | = pital. RICHMOND, Va., Nov. 1.—Thomas The renovator was in a sheet. iron building and ono of the pieces of| |Neison Page, former amwassador to Italy and widely known author, died iron caved a ‘hole in a side wtll and another crashed through. window. at the home of relatives in Hanover |county, Virginia, toda yaccording to a report received by the, News-Leader. Mr. Page's death was sudden. The first intimation Richmord’ relatives had of his iiness came this morning, company for a concrete stecl brick | when they were called to the planta-, garage on A street between Kimball | ton where the former ambassador had and Beech. }gone for a rest. The only details re T. A. Cook. Mrs. Hildebrand ia con- | Two Republican enth and Eighth streets. Mr. Cook “ Fourth streets. | Permits of $10,000 each were is. |coived here was that the end came structing a two-story brick apart ig building a concrete apartment on | C. li lates to ; sued to Mrs. Carl Hildebrand and | at 1:20 p, mi ment on South Durbin between Sev South Lincoln between Third andj ARGO, N. D., Noy. 1,—A_ situa- tion showing the unusual condition ©f politics in North Dakota was made public I-:re to Two Republican congressmen of North Dakota, both Pseeking re-clection, have taken a stand for election of a Democrat es United States senator, it was an- - | nounced at the headquarters of the | Independent ‘Voters’ association, an Repre- | anti-Nonpartisan league organization, The Republican congressmen are ©. B, Burtness ané George M. Young, who endorsed J. F. 'T. O'Connor, an- paign and stressing milk and tinonpertisan and Democrat | -R. W. Frazier, a nonpartisan, as chairman “of the Republican state Arrangements have been made ittee, recently issue ant. at she was une | SPORTS IMARKETS NUMBER 27. L LEADER EXECUTED at Murder, usband “Had It Com ing”DEATH PENALTY Attention to Other Women Case, || Report GREAT FALLS, Mont. Nov. 1—Mrs. John H. Dozier, whose husband was killed at Gilman Tuesday afternoon by Carl Shiffer of the same place, is a resident of Great Falls and waitrews in a local resteur- Mre. Dosier expresses no surprise the kiting. She says Dozier ex- pected that he would get him, and that she belleves “Dozier had it com: ng. “because of his al red relations with .he wife of Mr. * M Dozier says she has received everal mysterious telephone’ messages given In the yolce of a weman during the past few weeks telling her to keep off the streets of Gr Falls or he xilled, and further, “I went to Augusta during the fair in September and askd Dozier to come back to me, we had been living apart sx months. Mrs, Shiffer came to mé if, and said I could not have him—that I had no right to him and thay she cared more for him than did. She stid I could not have him—and I guess! right. I can't have him now.” Dozier was a member of the Great Falls lodge of Elks, and of the Ma son. Mrs, Dozier left this morning for Augusta to be presen; at the fun- eral serviczs over her husband, Phillips jury. Front row: Eddy. Top row: Hamilton, W. D. Y. Dunham. Arctic Ocean Too Warm For Seals, Report WASHINGTON, Nov. L.—The Are! ocean is warming up, ‘ice- bergs are’ growing scarcer and .in H L 339 tome. braces the eenis are eoaing || FPCR Lays the waters too hot, according to a report to the commerce department today from Consul Ifft, at Bergen, way’. Eggs In Year degrees, 29 minutes. Soundings to | ‘Xing feat reported trom’ Tacoma, the other 335. The two hens were Pearson from H at many points well known glaciers have entirely disappeared. Very few seals and no white fish are be- | b; Cec!l gee CONSULATE IN Mrs: Hardin Again Better, WASHINGTON, Harding was said to: Noy. y at the White Charles E. that she remain in bed several days, opened today Reports from fishermen, seal Busters ana caplocerer ar poleral Another 335 all point to a radical Bree § in cli- matic conditions and hitherto un eRe hae . derheard of temperatures in the Se fai te sala Arctic zone, exploration expeditions | One Ancona hen owned by reportin gthat scarcely any tee has | Pearson, farmer residing near been met with as far north as 1 | here, exceeded Lady Jewell's oss asdepth of 3,100 meters showed the | Wash. yesterday, during 365 days sehities “oat puat-seartn | ending-in March, 1922, while an- Great masses of ice have been re- | Other of the same breed equalled placed by moraines of earth and | !t @ccording .to’ local. poultry men. stones, the report continued, while | One. hen's record was 339 eggs and purchased Shep- Re. | N.Y. REOPENED Sawyer, thought it best: American Trading company was re-|ney, Timothy M. Pfeiffer, TRIBUNE’S CIRCULATION HAS DOUBLED WITHIN SHORT TIME THROUGH EXPANSION POLICY Circulation is the lifeblood of m newspaper. Its advertising is an indication of how fast that blood courses through its veins, The number of Tribune readers has been enormously increased re- cently, and is steadily growing today. The noon edition, praised by all the merchants, catches the lunch hour crowds and helpa to vell the street sales of the paper. The mumy fine features.added to the daily, through our policy of expans‘on, have done their share toward bring- ing in new subscribers. The Casper Sunday Morning Tribune has the most. Putting out a big metropolitan Sunday paper which everybody reads and enlarging the scope of the daily have added materially to the overhead cost of production; but it is more than gratifying to see tho response of the public to a bigger and better paper. The public knows what it wants, and subscribes to that of which it approves—as our bounding circulation 1s proving, The circulation of The Tribune has DOUBLED since the last raise in advertising rates. The Tribune is a member of the A. B. C., and its figures are accurate. One can not go behind these figures. Thay are not ours, but ere vouched for by the Gibralter-like reliability of the Audit: Bureau of Circulation. The Tribune's daily circulation {4 now touching ppg our books are open to inspection if proof of these statements s desired. with] central comim’ local motion pie! stateme: calling for loy iaoving pictures in and endor these two congress Health campaign will be shown. 1 men. Read the Tribune. Advertise In the Tribune. It ix the greatest medium in the whole Rock. Mountain d'strict;-exclusive of Denver, Mixed Jury Hears Hammer Murder Case ‘Three women are members of the Los Angeles jury which is hearing the evide aecrsed of killing Mrs. Alberta Meadows with a small hamnsr H, Sutton, J. ©. Mehler, R. George McWilliam lest | summ: A. Neuberth, “J. M’ss Mary E. Dewess, W. J. Blackbi 5 METED OUT TOGEN. MURGUIA AFTER CAPTURE Was Found Hiding Be- hind Altar of Church and Speedy Justice Or- dered by Mexicans. EL PASO, ,Texas, Nov. 1. -—-Gen. Francisco Murguia was executed by a firing squad at 9 o’clock this morn- ing, accordirg to a telegram from Mexico City received at the Juarez. « pl at Tepe- yatoms house t The execution toc C7 huanes, Durango, where General Mur- gula was captured last night Paulino N_ Guerrero, collector” of customs in Juarez, ived the t gram and gnnounced that it was an official message, but declined to reveat s signature, waiting for the news t so through military cha: “The execution rec against Mra, Clara Phillips. er. This is the first picture of the Mefiwain, J. BR. Cunningham, ©. €. urn; Mrs. Francis Garland, Mrs. Daisy took place under LETTERS FIGURED IN DISPUTE LEADING TO HALL-MILLS MURDER | ‘Mrs. Jane Gibson Heard One Call for Ex- planation Before Shots Which Killed Rector and Woman NEW BRUNSWICK, NW. J. | Press.)—In her eye-witness account of the Hall-Mills murder | on September 14, Mrs. Jane Gibson, farmer, told the authori-| ties, it was learned today, that a few moments before the| fatal shooting she heard one “Then explain these letters.'” This part of Mrs. “Gibson’s came to light through. a conversation her statements to investigators Ther was a moment or two of heat- ed argument,, it was sald, after the ing found in the eastern Arctic, | P’rd, of Berea, Ohio, who after | explanation was demanded, then with while vast shoalg of herring and learning of their egg production | out warning the shooting. smelts, which have never before | ©@pacity, came to Groveland 1 | Notes that"were said to have passed ventured so far north, are being en- spring to autenticate the records | between the Rev. ward Wheeler countered in the old seal fishing | 874 bought them for a price which | Hall and his choir leader, Mrs grounds. | exceeded all known figures for | Eleanor R. Mills, the murder victims —_——.- —__ poultry'in Florida. bodies | were found strewn about thelr | under the tree. HALL IGNORANT OF KILLING, SHE SAYS. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J.. Noy. —(By The Associated Press ing her silence today for the t'me, Mrs. Frances el Hall today told reporters that she wrs absolute! House to have recovered from a slight| NEW YORK. Nov, 1.—(By Tre As-|ignorant. ot how her husband, Rev relapse she Suffered a few days ago) soc! Press).—-The Mexican consul-| Edward Wheeler Hall came to meet an cto be able again to sit up for|ate closed last Friday cs a protest|his death with Mrs, Eleanor R. Mil brief periods several times a day, —_| against the action of New York courts|choir singer on Phillips farm Septer The relapse, it ws sid, ws cused by|in issuing a writ of attachments on|ber 14. a cold. It was not considered acceata ite property in connection with a The reet< wife an interview her physician, Brigadier General] civil action brought by the Oliver/in her home artanged by her attc eerted t she had polutely knowledge the shoot'ng, that she was not on th farm the night of the double shooting that she bore no enmity toward either Dr. Hall or Mrs. Mills and that she had no knowledge of any love letters having passed between them. Asked if she were holding anything back in order to protect anyone n and dear to her, she replied: “Positively no." She asserted she still believed husband had been true to her. A her feeling toward Mrs, Mills, replied “I don't know what to sa } Asked why she had offered no re war for solu“on of the crim pi at no | ked she she “E think it would be awful.” When she was asked If she did ne wish te see the murderer punished s replied: “I don‘t wish tu see punished.’ | Salt Creek Home Is Saddened by Death Little Clifford: Barrier, son of and Mrs. 1. died at a focal he ‘i body ja bein held chapel. story |she had with a neighbor after making miiit andthe report’ {s co¥- rect, nnounced at the Mex> ican consulate in El Paso. MEXICO CITY, Nov. 1.—By The Associated Press.)—General Francisco Murguia is being held at Durango City and his fate will probably be a¢ttled today, following his arrest last night at Tepehuanes, Durango. Th rebel leader was hiding: wr small room behind the high altar a ehureh when taken. is The identity of th definite! @stablis He made resistance, being surrounded sleeping by federal soldiers General Abraham Carmona. Father Casares, in charge of the church, at first protested to the troops that he knew nothing of Mure gula's whereabouts, but Inter 1 the rebel’s hiding priest was not detained. ¢ capture created a sensation here. BLACK HANDIS aa ho while under , Nov. 1.—(By The Associated of the women under the crab “EBhen sata hee eee IGNORED HOME | . ! } : | 9 “4 Widow “Sold” to | Bank Employe Is DY ITE | I Chi :, CHICAGO, Nov. t.—“Black hana n Chicago, Said) 20430. Nov, ts pisck hana life Josephine Collure, 14 year | high school girl ut the members DES MOINES, Noy. 1.—Mrs, |0f the Collure family, including Jose- Ruth nastier! » had the shox ee of the lives to. : “ a bomb w cked jthe{r who offered to se \home. Jos d intercepted sey. for $6,000 with which. she eral letters ssed to her father aJakilied*mantehi ts ent to re. | demant of $500 and $1,090 B Pa and ma can’t read En ish any. ustained when she was shot by her | way, so it w no use g ing them husband t been jall excited Josephine said in ex. accepted. by < Rogers, a Chi- |Plaining her destruction of the let- Tago bank employe, the woman tas | tT didn't think anything wou'g announced. T Chic: Can hes | Collure, a fruit mer and his agreec © give her a ye which | family were tossed from their beds to reg n her health and fulfill her [when t bomb wrecked the porch part the contract—marriage to | and the windows and broke windows hin in neighboring houses. , LA FOLLETTE IS REFUSED CHANCE TO GIVE SPEECH MADISON, Wi%s., Nov. 1.—Governor Blaine in a telegram today to Governor J. A. O. Preus, of Minnesota, said that he “wished to express the greatest regret of the people of Wis- consin that the authorities of Minnesota have seen fit to deny. a United States senator from this state the right to speak in a public building there on the ground that his political views m from those of the publi and it will be our in the future. r Blaine’s message, inspired} MANKATO, Minn., 1.—Senator by usel of the Minnesota state | Robert La Follette, isconsin, who fair board to permit Senator La Fol- | is tour! he interest lete to speak on the fair grounds of | of the c ck Ship- that rtate informed Governor Preus | stead, farmer ate for Uni r jals of Wisconsin would 4h |ted States r, was led .the ways extend. every courtesy to the | use of here he waa high offic!als of Minnesota. schedule ch tonight. | “Our view of the constitutional | Colonel W of the Minne: right of . free ssemblage and free|sota natior jared he took speech wil al s ad us to accord | all he refusal of very courtesy to the high officials of La Folletts, wish to ex 1s “from: telegram as been 0 ade for speak at a captive has been

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