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PAGE TWO Scores Left Homeless by Tornado WOOL TRADING | ONE 1S FATALLY INJURED, MANY HURT IN KANSAS .Damage From Greens- burg Storm Is Esti- mated at $150,000. GREENSBURG, Kan., May 23.—One person was near death today, more than a score were suffering from in- juries and more than 100 were homeless as the result of a tornado which struck Greensburug last r Damage was estimated at $ 7 which swept from the south the northwest through | the outskirts of the town, destroyed 50,000. 17 houses damaged mre than a score of othres. Dora Hall, 10, daughter of T. O. Hal ected to live, OKLAHOMA HARD HIT BY STORM. OKLAHOMA CITY, Ok —We: tern Oklahoma was today from the effects nm but the flood waters coursing down streams from that sec-| tion of the state were expected to bring further damage to central and southern Oklahoma. Millions of dollars’ worth of crops have been washed out in 15 counties in western and northwestern Okla- Che Casper Daily Cribune Madame Borsirlo Bonet, wife of the commercial attache of the Cuban legation at Washington, ner @aughter, Evora (left) and her sister-in-law. Berta (right). WOMAN SLAYS U. S.-.MADE POPPIES ON SALE ONLY MASON CITY, Iowa, May American girls will sell American- made memorial day poppies here. This was the decision reached at & meeting of the legion auxiliary | executive committee called when it ‘Former Legislator and Army Captain Is. [3 SLOWING UP, ALES REVEAL Growers Still Holding for Higher Prices, Says U. S. Report. WASHINGTON, May 23.—Wool marketing in the range states slack. ened last week as buyers were not| willing to pay the prices asked by| srowers, the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture reported today. The situation in Montana ig re- ported as unchanged compared with the preceeding week, said the depart- ment review. A few sales of wool have been made at 50 cents to 52 cents per pound. A deadlock has ap- parently arisen between wool buyers and wool growers, the latter indicat- ing their confidence of better prices: by holding and asking prices higher than the buyers are willing to pay. It is evident on'y a small percentage of the total clip has been sold, Practically no sales were made in Wyoming. The prices growers are! asking range from 45 to 50 cents and! wool buyers are offering less. About| 80 per cent of the clip has been sold or contracted at prices ranging from | 40 to 45 cents. Absence of buyers is| quite apparent. No offers had been recetyed for the Soda Springs wool pool in Idaho. Only a few sa'es are reported in New Mexico. ‘The shearing season is just beginning and growers have an- CAR SALESMAN, TRIES SUICIDE pee WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1923. many, by American commerc'al houses for use in eSmmemorating so). dier dead was declared “an insult -, the heroic dead of the World war" by Lemul Bolles, national adjutant of the legion last night. Mr, Bolles’ statement followed re. ports from Cedar Rapids and Meso» City, Ia., that legion auxiliaries had discovered a quantity of the sili poppies marked “Made in Germany.” POLICEMAN ON | German Poppy GUARD TODAY | Dealers Draw Legion’s Fire Ind., Sale of cloth poppies made in Ger- INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., May 23.—A Policeman stood guard to day during the funeral service and burial of, Joseph T. Davis, a contractor, while his two Wives, Mrs. Dorothy Davis, aged 47, and Mrs. Mabel Davis, aged 26, each with a son attended but did not speak. Davis died suddenly and the coroner announced he would hold an inquest tomorrow but would make no attempt to straighten out the domestic tangle. The first wife, Mrs. Dorothy Davis, said she knew of her husband's seo ond marriage, but did not report it to the authorities because she “did not want~to make any tro him.” She said it was nobody’s bus! ness but her own why she did not sue for a divorce. Both wives live here but had never met until the funeral. The funeral plans of the second wife, with whom Davis had been living for the last seven years, were carried out, al- though the first wife had sought to obtain the body. NO WORD FROM BRIGAND CAME (Continued From Page 1) tion of the plight of the captives the! government had been without advices You Cant fool EvenaCGowLong stuff: old suit of clothes to look YY fike sma: but afte awhile the knowing old birds wise. A scarecrow isn’t a man an Imitation Is not Darcova. Darcova Composition Val: eiseasecs Judge them by the fact that they have wear and pumped the oil to the satisfac canniest oil men between the North se geanine Dareova Cups. ‘They sre made of that wears. They outlast any other cup won the market. Asle Anybod: Complete Closing Out Sale At the Public Market Clothing and Shoe Store. Every-} thing goes at wholesale cost. Sale starts Wednesday morning at 9 a. m. and ends Saturday, May 26, at 10 p. m. Come to the Public Market and save 50 per cent on your Shoes and Clothing. Don’t miss this sale. Just across the track from the North Western Depot and one-half block from Minister Schurman for more than 24 hours. It approyed Secre-| tary Hughes’ action in awaiting recommendations from Mr. Schurman, which are expected to disclose the; decision of the diplomatic corps in Peking whether there should be for-| eign intervention in the negotiations to secure the captives’ release. Some of the delay in further advices is Shot to Death at Phoenix by Woman _ | nounced their intention’ to agk 45 Held for First Degree Murder othe east on Fifth Street. Public Market Clothing & Shoe Store assumed to be due to the difficulty in determining whether this should take the form of negotiations through some unofficial delegate or a direct meeting between the bandit leaders and offictal spokesmen for the gov- ernments whose nationals are being held by the bandits. | It was stated at the White House after yesterday's cabinet meeting that even though the undertaking of! was discovered the cloth flowers It had purchased from an Indiana house bore the label “made in Ger- many.” “It woul@ be an insult to the men who fought to sell them," Mrs. F. M. Riley, president asserted, homa. The crest of the flood in the north Canacian river was believed to have passed Oklahoma City. Damage in| the city was confined to lowlana». A tornado that struck in the went: ern part of Wooda county yesterday resulted in one death, ‘The small daughter of Mrs, Mary Broth was kiiled north of Freedom. There {s no material change noted in the Arizona wool situation. The movement of the northern clip PHOENIX, Ariz., May 23.—A charge of first degree mur-|"* Cin, Unwistive of the finer grades | der was filed in justice court here today against Mrs. Lelah | constituted ths bulk of sales in Texas, | | Crandall who has confessed she shot and killed W. B. Rem-| Shearing in Oregon is probably for: jington, prominent Phoenix automobile salesman, last night.|tY Per cent finished. CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa, May 23 —The famous Boston tea party is to be repeated here Friday night in | —— MAS, CURTIS. 5 RECOVERING Mrs. Harriet Curtla, widow of the Yate Frank G. Curtis, who was serious: die in’ which e atruck by a train at " Jamestown, N. Y., is resting well and probably wil recover, according to messages received today by Earnest Marquardt, vice-president of the New York O!l company.. Mrs. Curtis and her companion, Mise Augusta Harn- den, with whom she was riding in the I n nobile, both suffered weve cuts and brutses. Although it was at f impossible to determine the extent of body injuries, today’s message id that the condition of both was improved. SPECIAL MEETINGS OF Te SILITION AMY ames McHarg 1s and will con. gs in the rday night and eight o'c a.m, and 8 p. m. is the general nec yoming and Colorado at Denver. He is Captain McHarg is In charge of the local work. y school at 2:30 Sunday after at noon => Mayor Heads Raid On Gamblers In Wyoming Capital CHEYENNE,, W y 23.—J, R. 1 i face munt abl: as the re. raid Fit wded and gamb: x, he states, whon he was recognized and rush for exits but he ned six persons. away while party to a public bonfire on the mun island when 75 gross of paper poppy | emblems, valued at $180 and “ in Germany” will be burned by the women's autxiliary of Hanford Post. American Legion, which pur them for sale Poppy Day, May 2 Emblems made by Fren | soldiers and their dependents will be sold for the benefit of the legicn’s relief work. Vet Instructor | Pians Fete For | Former Pupils CHICAGO, May 23.—Misa Cella Sargent, an Evanston achool teacher who resigned today after fifty years of continuous service, will bs the guest of honor atja banquet at the Evanston Women’s club to which will] be invited all Hving former pupt | “Since I began teaching in 187: Miss Sargent said, “I have had some 21 hundred pupils. ooo ‘NEW DISCIPLE? AT THE RIALTO “The New Disciple,” a dramatiza-| tion of John Nelson’s book combined | with an interpretation of Woodrow! Wilson's “The New Freedom” will be headliner at the Riato theater to-| y and tomorrow where it is being shown under the auspices of the Cas per Trades assembly. Supplementing | the program is Vernon Osgood, the boy singer, with the latest novelty] ilustrated song slides, and Jos Belsky, novelty entertainer and imper-| fsonator, who claims to be the atrong: est man of his » in the world. The diversified program, headed by the| big picture attraction, is expected to |and killed Remington, a former state legislator and army} Mrs. Crandall, who, according to her own statement, shot Home Is Saddened By Infant’s Death captain, and then shot herself through the chest, probably will re- cover from the effects of her wound, physicians sald today. The shooting occurred in Mrs, Crandall's room at a {local hotel, where Remington aiso| was living. Two other guests of the| \h | ‘DOLLAR ORY" The home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray-| mond Leffel was saddened this morn-| el hearing several shots in rapid| ing by the death of their infant 7 |s'ecession, rushed to Mrs. Crandall's| daughter which occurred at the| bat rcom and found Remington dead on| family home, 640 Midwest avenue. the floor, Mrs. Crandall wounded} The funeral was held at 4 o'clock this " above the heart, was screaming “I| afternoon from the Muck funeral peer pieedhy. lait olae andi beth pile ft." according to statements by| home. ‘The Rey. B. F. Dunn offi- 3 ¥ "*\the two men to polic ciated such is expected to draw the Breatest) crowd that has been in this establish-| ment since its last great sale. Casperites are never slow to take advantage of Dollar Day, for they ize that it means to them excep- tional values at an extremely low price. Many things that could not be obtained on other days without breaking into a second or third fron man can be had on dollar day for the price of one. The Golden Rule store ts offering things on every floor for a dollar. Outstanding are the wonderful ivory toilet articles, the bed room slippers, the vanity cases and articles of chil- dren's apparel. There is mo member : *, : of tho Panis who cannot profit py|/ Conflict with the police. F looking over the Dollar Day sales.| According to reports received at French headquarters only are there the dainty things) here thirty thousand striking miners held a demonstration much cherished by the welllin the square in Dortmund. ~The dressed, but there are things of) Dortmund police, in endeavoring to economy for the workingman, such| disperse the gathering fired into the| Utah-Colorado . Water Rights H Are Discussed SEVERAL REPORTED DEAD TODAY IN GUN FIGHT BETWEEN POLICE AND COMMURISTS AT DORTMUND DUESSELDORF, May 23.—(By The Associated Press.) | —Rioting is in progress today in the Dortmund district.) Several miners have been killed and others wounded in a| as overalls, etc. pene Killing several persons and| * = wounding many others, ‘ i vds attac! ie Permits for Two | putas or Rien nearer eteee| Residences Issued a Similar demonstrations occurred at the Scharnhorst mine nearby whero | several workmen were killed and] | others wounded by the police. Two new residence buildings are} ‘The miners: strike was brought to 50 up in Casper immediately.| about by communist agitators on de- Wi€eler and Worthington took out &| mands for higher .wages and they permit this week for a $5,000 house! now are reported to be trying to on South Jackson between Second) ofect a general strike throughout the| and Third streets. A. V. Forbes! Hortmund area, affecting 200,000 filed a permit for an $8,000 residence | workers. on South Spruce between Fifteenth) and Sixteenth. The first house will be of two stories and the se¢ond of DENVER, Colo., May 23—(By The| Associated Press-—Delph B. Carpen- ter, interstate rivers compact com- missoner for Colorado, was in confer- ence with Governor C. R. Mabey of Utah at Cheyenne this morning rela- tive to the rights of Utah in the Colo. rado, formerly known as the Grand river, according to a telephone mes. BERLIN, May 23.—Sharp Aghting| between police and communists oc-| sage from Cheyenne to Hale Smith. | one story curred at Dortmund last evening. | secreaary to Governor Wiliam E. En 4 The communists, after a meeting,| sweet, James T. Russell is here for a L formed a procession and attacked the| ort time from Colorado Springs. While details of the conference were | police station, Police reinforcements sh PRIME MIRISTER STRIKES POPULAR CHORD IN BRITAIN, MAJORITY SATISFIED. s"s.c0n LONDON, May 23.—(By The Associated Press.) —No in- coming prime minister could w the press than that accorded Stanley Baldwin. newspapers ay the appointment is in accordance with popu- lar wishes and is the best solution under the circumstances. not known here, it is understood that Governor Mabey conferred with Mr Carpenter ‘in behalf of a Utah power company which is seeking to erect a/ plant on the Colorado. | Governor Mabey met Governor Sweet in Chicago Monday and dis- cussed the Colorado problem, accord. were greeted by pistol fire and four| of the officers were wounded. ‘The attacking force suffered casualties but the exact number ts unknown.| Order has been restored. | gee APPOINTMERT HEAVY CANADIAN EXPORTS. OTTAWA, Ont., May 23.—Canada| the meeting wa not made known, ——_—_o~. Mother of Two Dies At Casper Hospital Mrs. J. W. McHale, age, died. early local hospital. | the world in the per capita value of| | exports with $100.63 for every unit of | population, according to a report) = | issued by the Federal department of! 1 for a better reéeption from) trade and commerce based on figures The morning) up to March 31, New Zealand is first with an export| } value of $152.54 per capita, the report 26 years of this morning at a She leaves a widower 7 shows and the United Kingdom ts/ and two children, Frank, age 5, and Reports from conservative quarters throughout the country) thira with $63.36 per person. The| Gladys, age 4 | ‘onfirm nion re his constituents at Llanfairfech-| United States is fourth with an| The body Is being held at the Muck opposition critics re. | a last night in which the former export value per ci ta of $33.96. funeral home pending arrangements. a triumph prime minister, renewed his promise - = —~ —— fon of the co to refrain from criticlsm, made it Chron ear’ that the le, on f Ljoyd receive less George, says Lioyd George “It testifies to an orientation of Ronar Law's. p conservatives which is full ‘of nace for the nat Lord Curzon, negotiator got Mr. most Baldwin ia credited with being dostrous of eruntled cc coalition hayir ervative 1 the dis. | n Seoul apd bated evinces giy aby 7 17 blatk degrees—and 3 copying ‘ ‘ Lami at American Lead Pencil +, 220 Fifth Ave, New York | ’ pF Dealers | train raid as a move in their political ing to Mr. Smith, but the outcome of | ff new ministry would For economical pencil luxury use | r forbearanc from . the following than did| One outcome of the change of eel c 12] try much Ciscussed as-a probability, | ie) is the hast of a reunion of the two wing lfberal party. Unt- it fieation of the divided conservatives | # even more talked of. s of the} ts to th zy F ; ° | For direct negotiations with the bandits would in effect waive the question of the responsibility of the Peking gov- ernment for the safety of the for elgners, the American government would not hesitate to take that course if the situation demanded. SITUATION IS GROWING “WORSE.” SHANGHAI, May 23.—(By The As- sociated Press.)\—The situation with regard to the foreign prisoners held by the Suchow bandits is “growing worse,” according to a cablegram sent today by the Italian Chamber of Commerce of Shanghai to the Italian foreign minister at Rome. | es | WASHINGTON, May 23.—First re- ports recetved by the state depart- ment from China in the last 48 hours said that the diplomatic council in Peking had decided at a meeting held today to send an international com- mission to Tsaochwang under in- structions to investigate and report to the council relative to the bandit situation. ‘The advices added that the council in deciding to create the international investigating commis- sion had adopted the suggestion of Jacob Gould Schurman, the Américan minister, | Appropriate for The Girl Graduate You Will Find In Our Store Many articles the graduate will appreciate. PEKING, May 23.—(By The Asso- clated Press.\—It is understood the) foreign diplomatic corps 1s consider- ing demanding the outlawing of cer- taln high placed Chinese officials who| the diplomats have every reason to. believe instigated the kidnaping of a| number of foreigners in the Suchow| Pearl Beads_.....—.... Hand Bags. Bertha Collars . Vanity Cases... srseee $1.75 to $15.00 $1.00 to $3.50 schemes. —_—_—_—oeo—— i Ne aia Ga GANDA ARS: Silk Hose, all shades, per pair................$1.50 to $6.50 ST. PAUL, Minn., May 23.—Gov-| Ear Rings... .$1.50 to $6.00 ernor J, A. O, Preus today announced that he will file as a candidate for, United States senator to succeed the late Knute Nelson. Hand-embroidered Voile Teddies and two-piece Suits... ...$2.75 to $5.95 per set Silk Teddies and two-piece Suits... $4.25 to $12.50 Hand-embroidered colored Voile Gowns, $2.9% to $5.50 $6.50 to $19.50 -$1.74 to $5.02 Silk Gowns, each. Japanese hand-painted Parasols... New Imported Garters, Parisian Maid models, make nice gifts, or a beautiful Comb in any desired color. Then, too, you will find here a beautiful line of Sweaters. The Sweater as a gift combines the prac- tical need as well as a pretty gift. THE CASPER DRY GOODS CO. Phone 1981 120 East Second St. ‘Tas Wei! Famous RECEIrT Boox AUTHOR PILES! ‘There ie no suffering Ifke the tor. tare from piles. This contineal blackheads, chafing, chapped hande,chilblains, fri te and all ekin irritations, Read what Arthur Fleury of 69 Bt, New Bedford, Maca, Is CLEAR SOFT AND PURE “Tased Dr. A. W. re avd . Chase's: for Plies and got rellet hose bout fifteen Order by the case or 5-gallon bottles. HILL CREST WATER WE DELIVER 425 East Second St. Dr. A.W. CHASE MEDICINECO, 287 Washingtod 81, Buffalo, N.Y, Phone 1151