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“All Thinking People Will Support The Red Cross- Casper’s Associated Charity.” The Casper Daily Tri Weather Forecast Fair tonight and Thursday; not much change in tempera- ture. | Pm VOLUME VIL. c é — ee ee : Pian ate it Socialists’ Refusal to Participate in Coali-| tion Ministry Brings Crisis in Govern-| mental Affairs; Chancellor Lacked In- spiration, Is Charge Made BERLIN, Nov. 15.—(By The Associated Press.) —The i German cabinet headed by Chancellor Wirth has fallen, The +; ministerial resignations filed last night, were precipitated by § the decision of the United Socialists not to participate in a} é coalition ministry which inciuded members of the German: 3 = Pe people’s party. But the friends of Chancellor V/irth were} n , o i, 1ot oblivious of the feeiing that he} that a truon might bey orfected. es-/ 2 ‘Quick Charity of America Asked to had outlived his usefulness and now | pecially in view of the government's! r - . . has become a victim of a policy of|}new reparations proposals which a Save Lives of Christian Hordes Indecision and inactivity which} were drafted by the cabinet which b . found {ts culmination in the gov-[included fvur socialists, | r ornmont's failure to mako @ practie-} Chancellor Wirth had hoped his Driven from Homes by Turks ai axvangerneht with ano alld ep: | new’ reparations’ nate sn tenons - arationg commission bei the} tute the rallying point for an en} . 3. | course of Its rece: ~4#it to Berlin. largement in the government coall-| ~ WASHINGTON, Nov. 15.—The Greek government is Ever since ’i% assassination of | Pon, especially as it had the" ap-| asking ‘‘the utmost help’’ from every nation in its efforts to Foreign Ministvr Rathenau, the chan-| Proval of the clericats, democrats t care for the hundreds of thousands of refiigees which con-| ce:lor has aipen described as a man antares beard hr ens Bren. the » tinue to pour out of Asia Minor as a result of the Turkish who sapareatiy, posmsagnd OF Town | haaspaity trieragl ta ceal Gee eee military successes, according to a cable to the American Red | vive added wight 26. tir. easertion | fovernment have tesa: unavailing. tt Cross from Dr. A. Ross Hill, director of its Near East relief | fice fn late foreizn minister was| The procedure of the radicals last operations, The cable, graphically | period, it has been suggosted that! wirth’s inspiration, amd the férce| night in bringing to a: vote ir a telling of conditions in the refugee | commercial treaties could borframed | which urged him on. stand on the’ comii:‘on ministry which camps, declared that the fate of &/and put in operation between Turkey 4 thena uld include repregentatives' ‘of* the ~ million Christians, “driven into the|and the various countries trading in Re jetar term gaye tes bab imine German people's party waa . viewed q nea by the Turks," ‘hangs largely on| (hut tani. with his cabinet colleagues. As a| Wholhy as a ~tacticaY maneuver cal- * the “quick charity of America,” for! pred result the support given Wi “policy culated to impress the fadical voters ; c many other pecuics are unabie to! é 4 oft fultitiment” diminished day by who have been told by their leaders | heb, Investigation Hday. He admitted the collapse of | M4 thelr press for ‘months past that | M Dr. Hill also cabled the thanks of| policy ‘lakt wusnniee: Cathet ibe? ws pei) alliance ee fednstriat-| te King George, of Greece, who asked eye . nced the government's s'0- | #t_party was unthin 3 that the Red Cross thank its workers | Of Philippine n had become “Bread first, then] Throughout Mondey and Tuesday a and the American people on behalf of | regacatlone?® parties comprising the redical wing | his subjects for the afd extended B. . Srolan: Getticlonn <at?--teait biogas (Continued on“Page Five; 52 Slirals ars cians toes aor ank Is Asked) 202 20 co therete gees are filling the ¢ k cities 4 from London as well as Berlin dur- 18 islands,” the cable reporte “The; a ing the last few days, contributed to + consist largely of mothers with child-| 4 5 3 nundermining ,the chancellor's pos! : ren, who with old people, are the sole| MANILA, Nov. 15.—(By ‘The Asso- tou’ evan in the ranks af the couth ¥ Fesinants of once flourishing popula-| ciated Press.) —Investigation of the tion’ party. Iis belated eapousalp_of | o. ° “@ tions driven into th’ sea by. the|Phiippine National bank “by a com-liny peoples party. as necessary Turks. ¢ °° The M6 children are| Mittee of six members ofthe legiela-| cajunct to the government. definite- Se oniy hostages for the future of that| t's 4 proposed in @ resolution in-/)"“aitenated the support he hath been | large element of ¢ people who} troduced Jointly in the senate and| + nciving from the socialists. be first established themselves in As‘a | house. | “‘Waver since the assassination of ie Minor three thousand years ago. * *| The resolution instructs such a| pr. Rathenau, the chancellor has |— *Sialipox is spreading from one}committes “particularly to ascertain) been obsessed. with fear for his per- ie . sencent:r tion camp to another. Mean | the truth of the reports of fabuious, | sonal safety. During the last few while Greece in awaiting new floois| exorbitant salaries paid bank officials| months a heayy guard of plain pe be ab of refugees. American Red Cross supplies and| these fresh ship loads, The Greek government has telegraphed its repre sentatives in all courtries asking the| utmost help from every nation immed iately.” JAPS INTERESTE! IN TURK TREATY LAUSANNE, Nov, 15.—(By the As- sociated Press.)—Japaf, like the United States, has a vital interest in the question of Turkish capitulations, sure to be considered at the Near! Bastern peace conference here next | week. Sweeping denunciation of the| capitulations, whicti are extra terrt-| torial rights granted to foreigners in Turkey, and which the new nation- alist government in that country wants abolished, would affect Japan ese plans for the extension of econ- omic relations with Turkey. Recent installation of a Japanese Jegation at Athens arid the launching | in ‘the Greek capital of a bl-lingual! magazine, “the Near voted to fostering \commerciai H cate the aspirations of the Japanese| 4 | to expand their trade in Near Eastern zones. The Japanese have no treaty with ‘Turkey. Therefore they benefit from the capitulations only as one of the s.gnatories «f the treaty of Sevres, There seetmag ‘o be a general idea that the whole sub‘ect of capituiatiens {s| too vast ard of such portentious im-| pertance that it cawnot be settled atl lausanne. Some of the advance dele: gates to the conference mention the possibility of appointing a permanent} international commission to study ways and means for gradually abol- the capitulations in something like the same manner as the Washing ton conference handled the matter of| Chinese capitulations and the accom | panying question of customs an‘| tariffs. During the transitional The race is on betweer: | and employes.” E. W. Wilson, general manager of the bank, in a letter to the leg’slature invite its members to look quics!y into the banks affairs. He writes that “rgports of expert | countants made within the last two years are the most astounding ¢ocu ments presented concerning any bank in any part of the worl) during the last neration. The jess publicly they get the hetter fov te bank, the Philippine government and the Philip. Pine islands. At all events, it ts un- necessary to hunt quail with a’ brass band insofar ag information\is con- cerned.” LONDON, Nov. 15—(By The As- sociated Press.)—The electorate. of Great Britain swarmed to the polls by the millions today in England, Scotland, Wales and Ulster to elect the fourth parliament of. the reign of King George V. The polls opened at'8 o’clock—an hour earlier than that In some big conters—and by 9 o'clock tonight the new house of commons will have been selected. No eleventh hour development has lessened the uneertainty of the re- sult, The few prophets who ven- ture forecasts tie strings to their predictions. It is, therefore, some- thing of a surprise to the public that Prime Minister Bonar Law in his final speech at Glasgow yester- industrial | BRITISH FLOCK TO POLLS BY MILLIONS TO ELECT MEMBERS OF HOUSE, RESULT DOUBTFUL | clothes men has constantly surround- ed him, Chancellor Wirth’s efforts’ to ex: tend the government coalition +o in- elude ‘the German people's party reelly foundered on the unrelentns antagonism of the united socialists to any participation in a. cabinet in which the Stinnes-Stresemann group also. would be represented, ‘The vote which finally precipitated he crisis came last’ night, the social- ists in the reichstag deciding by a ‘arge majority against any extension of the coalition to include the party of the industrialists. Throughout the day there was hope day discarded his native caution and declared that he had “very consid- erable confidence” that the electors would give hin} a working majority today on which he can depend. He made it clear that he would be dis- satisfied with anything Jess than an independent unionist majority. Ex- perienced observers nowhere ex- press sirong confidence in such a result, however. Gamblers betting on the election results in the London © insurance market yesterday had to pay a rato which indicated that a majority of conservatives and independent un- fonists over all other parties was re- garded as almost certain, but tho odds were 7 to 3 against the ex- Yeetation that conservatives would get a majority of 80 or more. NO HOUSES STANDING IN QUAKE STRICKEN RECION | OF NORTH CHILE Death Toll in Two Provinces Is Over 1,500 and Full Reports of Disaster Are Expected to Show Increase SANTIAGO, Chile, N —Scareely a house remai in northern Chile as the + distur: whic bances of last week. tan sult of the earthquakes and marine The full extent of the disgster, entered upon the provinces of Atacamia and Coquim- hg became more iully known today with the re-opening of (By The Associated pleas.) ding in the Vallenar; val'ey , REPORT telegraph communication with north Chile. In these two provinces the victims number 1,500, so far as known, but it is expected the number of dead will be substantially increased when com- small villages in the interior whose fate remains unknown. told of serious damage which the} earthquakes inflicted upon the Topo m owing to the looting by ban-| munications are resumed ‘with many], Dispatches today from La Serenal’ HANG UNLESS GIVEN PARDON elated Press.)—Eleven’ non-commis- stoned officers in the Philippine éon- stabulary will be hanged unless Gov- srnor General Wood pardons. theni, /since the supreme wvourt of the Unit- ec Btates yesterday declined <o re- ew their cnse. Sixty‘six privates will sentences. The Philippine supreme court will await the. officint mandate of the United States court before f'xing the Cate for carrying out the sentences. The men were sentenced following a riot in which the constabulary mem- bers attacked the city police of Man- fla. serve life Pr Adopted “Pretty Rosalind V. Kendall, a musician of promise, has been adopted by Hillis Wainwright, wealthy New York bachelor who will further her musical education by placing her in leading Europeas schools. lS A new safety razor..designed on. the lawn mower principle. has been in vented. "By electricity two blades are al Martial law bas been declored in} Vallenar and in Copiapo. * made to revolve at 8,000 revolutions per minute, and shaving ts made a quick and comfortable operation. ASPER. WYO., WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 15. 1922. IGHT IN JAIL FOR PI huine ~Mrs. M. J. Foley. _ The Casper Tribun > Two editions daily: largest eft ;ula- tion of eny newspaper in Wyon jing. NUMBER! 39. CKETING NINE TO PLEAD . Secretary of the Navy and enlisting in the Red Cross. Secretary Denby Surrenders Penby, who once enlisted in the Marines, ts shown here surrendering to the der:ands of four-year-old Beverly Moffett Miss Beverly, daughter of Admiral ‘Moffett, is the youngest Red Cross worker. . ny Falls, Cabinet Resign Robbery Victim Beaten Unconscious in Alley; Assailant Is Picked: Up on Sandbar Several Hours Later Following a brutal attack at 6 o’clock last night on Mike Kall, from whom the assailant tock $150 in cold cash, 2 man ; giving his pane as eee Sancley a sitested four and a ¢ i 1: is alf hours later by patrolmen from the police department. pester GACT ane stealer eh making “he capture they have obtained the man respon-| sible for many ‘major robberies during the past two weeks here, according to the belief of Cap- tain AVi}iiam Clayton. The victim» of last night's attack was waylaid in rear of the Maverick pool hall and commanded’ to “stick up" his hands. Hesltation and at tempted resistence on the part of Kail resulted in his being Beaten over the head by Hindley unti] he was uncon- actoup. It was styeral héurs before Kall, When. he regained coh- sciousness he made his way out of the alleyiand was taken by friends to Dr. ©. Keith, who discovered 11/nasty gashes' made by the butt of the .45 caliber revolver of Hindiey's. Kall gaye the members of the po- tice" department a description of the ‘andit. With this description, Patrol- men Carter, McGrew, and Warren, were able to pick up their man on the streets, @ the Sand Bar-half an hour later. Hindley was armed but did mot offer resistance. When taken to the police headquarters he was found to be covered with blood, as was also the gun which he carried and which had been use@ in the attack DUTPose of raising money to buy over- on Kall. C,H, Lidderdale was hela up near the Nislaysen Lumber yards on South® Durbiry street about 9 p. Monday, agd $12 was taken from him, When Mr. Lidderdule was given the oppostunity of viewing the man who had been arrested last night he stated thar the build was about the same us the man who had stopped him, but that the darkness of the street “had prevented his secing the man’s face. Other robberies, Fesidentiai district, haye been com- mitted during the rdst feiv day authorities believe that at least a few of these could be explained by Hind- ley were he disposed to talk. Teacher Sent To City Jail At Portland PORTEAND, L. H. Morgan, principa: of the Sell- wood school has been sentenced by Ore.,~ Noy. © 15.—~ Municipal. Judge Ekwall to- serve pne day in jail and to pay a fine of $50 for beating George Claus’ 11, a pupil at the’ school. Test! mony Indicated that the boy beaten on two consecutive day with a heavy strap. } m.} | especially of the Calcutta recently, when several hun- and wal UG CAPTURED BY POLICE ERIES MAY BE SOLVED ' TIGKETS FOR THE POLICE BALL ARE IN GOOD DEMAND The ticket, sales for the Policemeu’s rst_annual ball which will,be held at the Arkeon- on November. 22, were started’ yesterday with very good re- sults coming from the efforts of. the members to seetre public interest in the dance. Many tickets yet remain to be sold, however, and the cam-! paign will be cOdntinued. for several days yet. The policemen’ intend to put on an’ affair that will in every way uphold the standard set by the. best*dances! given at the Arkeon in the past, and will do ‘everything possible to make the few hour# of the night of Novem- ber 22 to be excejitionally enjoyable. The dance ts being given for thie coats for members of the force. STEAMER EN TOW NEW YORK, No¥. 15,—The steam: ship West Hematite, bourd from Hambprg to New Orleans, has been taken in tow by. tha steamer Saucon after sending. out distress signals, She-carries a crew of .33. The first strike of women workers In the history of India took place in} dred women. employed in a jute mili} Iked out in support of their demand for‘a higher wage. } op hemes Sans New York city has more than 3,00! printing and “publishing \ eatxbifsh- ments, LOS ANGELES, Noy, 15.—Still ‘another day of the trial of Arthur Cc. Burch for the murder of J. Belton Kennedy was expected to | be taken up largely with efforts to | prove an alibi for the defendant. Mrs. “mina Fbertson, of Long Beach, Was the latest witness to | testify she had seen Burch else i where than. at the scene of the Kalian, charged state prohibition act. “The spectators in court when case was called. asked if they would Uke to act as jurors. All were cager to serve. convict the man,’ after the Jury dict According to wireless messages,|the threé police captains, six © 1int- flashed over 1,000 miles on the At-| formed officers and ten plain clot bes liantic and ‘intercepted here, the mgp who arrived “to seize their 1 an- !Monte Grappa was listing-to port in ‘handje the s!tuation,’ | than $80,000,000. i] EFFORTS TO ESTABLISH ALIBI — FOR ARTHUR BURCH CONTINUE 222 S'se- NOT GUILTY 1M ARRAIGNMENT 1K FEDERAL GOURT jo Law Violated, Wid ow of MacSwiney and .All Others Declare; Change WASHINGTON, Nov. 15—PI tan of nat guilty were entered by M irs, Muriel MacSwiney, widow of 1 \er- Lerce MacSwiney, former lord ma for of Cork, and eight other won in errested yesterday for picketing the British embassy when |. 29-Month-Old Baby to Vote In Elections LONDON, Nov. 15.—A baby 20 months ‘old will be carried to the polls at Barrow today to cast a vote 4 the parilamentary elect/ins. The infant was one of many whose names appeared through errors in the Ust of registered voters. The baby will be iaken to the polling place by Its mother. GIRLS ACQUIT MAN ACCUSE OF ’LEGGING AKRON, Ohio, Nov. 15.—Sixtee: girl members of a local high schoo! class in civics mat as a jury in police court and acquitted Rucolph with violation of the ‘ria. were Kalian Judse A. Fi O'Neil —After a night spent in house of detention, Mrs. M iel MacSwiney, widow of Tr: ence MacSwiney, former l “or mayor of Cork, who died prison on 2 hunger strike sand ¢ ht wther women, two of thent electe f to refuse bond and remained in con: ine ment with her, were propared < ap pear before a United States corimm's sioner today to answer charges lor &ed ogainst them for picketing the F rrit- ish embassay here. The womien + tere arrested yesterday during aden ton stration before embassy in protes!} of the detention of Mies Mary . } lac: Swiney, sister of Terence, who it @ prisoner of the Irish Free State. As counsel for the women, John P. Finerty, pres'dent ‘of ‘the ..meri san assoc’ation for recognition of the Lijish republic of which the eight. bes‘ es Mrs, MacSwiney are members, s' ‘efore the hearing today that t hey would plead not gufity on the gro:jnd that they had violated°no law. ‘Bhe women were arrested, after disreg: ird. Ing-a warning against picketing the embassy, by order of United Stades District Attorney Gordon under a {ed- eral statute which he said was an old one invoked two years ago a: four women picketers ted dutfe an Irish republican demonstration at fr “i “There wasn't enough evidence to ‘ene girl explained had ‘returned {ts -ver- Judge O'Neil dismissed’ Kolian, the embassy, Asserting in a statement ls=* nj ght BAR HARBOR, Me. Nov. 14.—A! that the charge on which ghe was mr- radiogram received here early today dala woe By a gra i hho .| Swiney declared she would “ing‘st jon Pangh honne eee Now Work voc}an immediate trial betaiise abe wn pid Bremen, was standing by and giving| 2t remain under the imputation of all necessary’ assistance to the Italian! Violating the hospitality of a coun try steamship Monte Grappa, which had, Which hus afforded asylum to so tix my broadcast 8. O. 8. distress signals a/of my race.” i The women submitted amiably te few hours before. ners and march them off to po‘§ce heavy. seas. | headquarters yesterday, laughing + \nd Latest radio communications said! chatting wth them on the way. Of that the Pittsburgh was “able to|the two besides Mrs. MacSwiney vine ‘and “no fur-; refused bond and spent the night on ther help” was required. a house of detention cot, one was N Irs. eae cars: Mary’ Ann Nolan, ‘of * Jackaonvi fie, Tha yearly output of common brick’ Fia., who is over eighty years of a ye. in the United States amounts to more) All of the others gave “Washingt mm addresses, MARY NUSWINEY NEAR DEATH IN - TRISH PRISON Condition Serious at End of Eleven-Day Hunger Strike at Mount Joy; Cardi- nal Logue Asks Release DUBLIN, Nov. 15.—-(By appeal to the Irish people Swiney, who had been on a _ The Associated Press.) —In rm on behalf of Miss Mary Mar- h hunger strike for eleven days |n Mount Joy prison, the other women political prisoners in th st institution declared today that she had undergone a gre jt change for the worse and that it was feared she would die. Rumors that she had died were 7\st confirméd by the prison authoriti DUBLIN, Nov. 15.—(By The As i ciated Press.)—Cardinal “Logue, ¥r Mount Joy prison, where she 1s i been = hunger strike for 11 days. 113 . ion i? eine at the time the young broker |gran ta Kevin. OHigeine Free a was shot down at Beverly Glen, 2 jminister of home affairs. The mr* suburb. She said thatvat that time |sage ‘nald that: more harm would. > Bureh wag returning to her h dime {caused by detaining the women p1)* she'had dropped on “the Pike,” an ere. in Ireland than by Iberat! ‘nf amusement thoroughfare at Long | them. Beach,-atid that because cf alleged | Pearaiaes ce me pore manual peculiarities she was later } Venezueld js one o! jaw col able to identity at the-Los Angeles |tries of the world Pi becs tate are wt county. jail. labor unions. re