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a { “ \ »ehowing what Natrona county 1s TRAINS NEXT MONTH: September 15 Set as Date for Beginning of Operations On New Haskell Line to Great Oil Field District Announcement comes today from the New York City offices of the Middle States Oil corporation, or Governor Haskell interests, that its new Wyoming North & South railroad will start operations September 15 over the di- vision from Casper to Salt Creek. Traffic on this line will take care of deliveries to the Teapot Dome, and Salt Creek ofl fields, It is expected that the opening of «the Casper-Salt Creek division will greatly relieve the heavy freight traffic over the Salt Creek road. Offices of the new railroad will be opened in Casper early next month with Mr. Foley, formerly as- sistant general passenger and freight agent of the Milwaukee lines as gen- eral manager, Producers to Co- Tn Oil Exhibit for Fair Secretary Stafford of the chamber of commerce returned from Douglas yesterday evening, where he spent the day arranging for the oll ex- hibit which Natrona county will have on display at the State Fair. The exhibit will occupy a space 16x36 feet, and all the different grades of ofl produced in Natrona county will be shown, as well as every phase of the refined product. All the producing companies have co-operated in making the displav complete, and the distributing com- panies have also lent assistance in doing in the way of supplying the on the Salt Creek holdings of the Marine O!l company for immediate drilling. Work is steadily progress- ing on other operations of this com- pany. Full report of these is given as follows: Salt Creek—Section 5-89-' verine CR-1 at depth of 2337, with 1907 feet of 8%-in casing in hole. Wolverine CR-2—Rig has been completed and tools moved in. Wolverine DS1—Section 8-39-78, cleaning out and searching for lost tools. On is to bave been en- countered by the Union Of! company of California in the Amsden-sand of Hale Dome in Hot Springs county where a test was being made. Black oll sanés above the Amsden were Continuation of development oper- tions in the Poison Spider field and he test on Gothberg Dome near the Midwest test on the North Casper reek structure, wag authorized at the annual meeting of the California Man Hunt Is Continued But Hopes of Suc- cess Are Low. DENVER, Colo., Aug. 80.—Beliet that the slayer of Mrs. Lillian Me- Glone and her chum, Miss Emma Vascovie, found shot to death In the McGlone apartment Monday, has killed himself and that the search for him will end with the finding of his body, was expressed by Captain of Detectives George Dyon, in charge of investigation of the case today. While authorities are continuing thelr man hunt through Denver's “little Italy,” and underworld haunts for the mysterious murderer who apparently slew one of the women $m anger and the other to hide his trail, a note found on a table in the room in which they were killed is faining added significance. The note, awied by an’ unlettered, bloodstained hand, declared, “I want him to go where I go.” Tho “Him Marine Makes Location For New Salt Creek Well One new location has been made, Wolverine DS-2—New location. ‘Wol- Oil Struck On the Hale Dome Near Thermopolis —-——_— California Company to Test the Gothberg Dome Ol! company of Wyoming here this | Salmon: eek. Among those present at the!son, Al Rosenfeldt and J. D, Hanna, “SODENVER SLAYER NOW BELIEVED TO AE SUICIDE erate world with motor power. Friday, September 14, will be Cas- per day at the fair, and arrange- ments are being made to take care of an unusually large crowd of Casperites. Secretary Hale of the State Fair. predicts one of the best fairs in the history of the State, and claims that the exhibits will exceed all former years. Secretary Stafford returned with his car all decorated with geudily colored State Fair posters, very much after the fashion of an Indian in full war regalia. He has a supply of these posters which he will be glad to furnish free to boosters of the State Fair, New York Stocks American American American ican Smelting and Refg. American Sugar ~..---.--. Atl, Gulf and West Indies __ Baldwin Locomotive - Baltimore and Ohio -. Bethlehem Steel 54% | California Petroleum —. 20 canadian Pacific Central Leather --.. Cerro de Pasco Copper -. Chandler Motors Cheasapeake and Ohio -_-___. Chicago and Northwestern -- Chicago, Mil. and St. Paul pfd Chicago, R. I. and Pac. -. Chite. Copper ~----------_ Chino Copper Consolidate: Corn Cosden Oil .... Crucible Steel 2. Cuba Cane Sugar pfé ----. Erle -. Famous Players Lasky .. General Asphalt General Electric General Motors ~. Great Northern pfd ~. Gulf States Steel -----.._. Illinois Central -. Inspiration Copper -.--.----. International Harvester -... Int. Mer. Marine pfd. .-... ‘International Paper -.---.--. Invincible Ol -. General Electric — Kelly Springfield Tire - Limo Locomotive .. Louisville and Nashville -. s7B Mack Truck --..-.. 8045 Marland Oil ~--------. 29% Maxwell Motors --. 13% Middle States Oll ~-...-.... 6 Missouri, Kan, and Tex., new 11% Misepuri Pacifico pfd -------~ New York Central - N. Y. N. H., and Hartford Norfolk and Western Marine 4—Sectfon 17-89-78, total depth 2694, Well shot with 80 quarts nitroglycerinp. 4-in shell, 81 foot long, 11-foot anchor, Top of shot 2652, bottom of shot 2683. First 15 hours production 27,40 bar- rels. Taylor 8—Section 20-89-78, well is being cleaned gut to bottom; depth 2663 feet. Sheldon Dome—Section 8-5-2. Shel- don No. 2 has reached depth of 380. feet. found to be unproductive and it was decided several months ago to aban- don the test, Whether or not pres- ent findings will be of any import- ance has not been determined. yearly session of stockholders were J. T. Brockett of San Diego, presi- dent; T. J. Brownrigg of Pomona, Cal., vice president; M, W. Mason and W. J. Buerman of San Diego, fiscal agents of the company; and the following stockholders: Frank A. Edwin Mayer, Harry Ful- is believed to have referred to one of the victims of the slaying, and the sentence is interpreted as mean- ing that the slayer intended to take his own life, Another mnt of mystery, thrown into the case by the an- nouncement of George Bostwick, deputy coroner, that the women were not killed at the same time, was being probed by detectives to- day. Rigor mortis or the rigidity induced by death, did not appear in the body of Mi McGlone until three hours after officers arrived, while the body of Miss Vascovie al- ready had stiffened in death when they arrived. This fact hai strengthened the theory that Miss Vascovie was killed first and that Mra, McGlone was slain as assassin attempted to make his getaway, FIRST TROPHY RAGE FIZZLE GLOUCESTER, Mass., Aug. 30.— ‘The fishermen's contest for the Lip- ton trophy was declared no race to- of failure to finish within the time limits. The Henry Ford was two miles from the finish when the race was called off with the Elizabeth Howard and the Shamrock for behind. The boats will race again tomorrow. ira adn Sits Princes Edward Ir'and farms devoted to the breeding of aring an!mals. day beca’ has 422] Northern Pacific Pacific Oil —--.. Pan American ePtroleum B ~ Pennsylvania People Producers and Refiners 25% Pure Oil ——-----—------ 19% Reading -. RTT | 7} Republic Iron and Bteel —. Sears Roebuck -.. Sinclair Can Ol} Southern Pacific Southern Railway .......-.. 32% Standard Oil of N. J. 28% Studebaker Corporation ~.--. 106% Texas Co. -..-.--... 42% Texas and Pacific .—. it Tobacco Products A --—---- 83% Transcontinental Oi! -. 4% Union Pacific -. Marae ty United Retail Stores -....... 76 U. 8. Ind. Alcohol -..-------. 58% United States Rubber ..-.. United States Steel --. — 92 Uah Copper - oe 60 Westinghouse Blectric --.... 59\% Willys Overland .....--...-- 7 American Zinc Lead and 6m. 9B Butte and Superior -......-. 16 Colorado Fuel and Iron ~--- 29 Montana Power --......... 1b National Laed ~---_-______ 130 Shattuck Arizona .-. 5% a an Standard Oil Stocks NEW YORK CURB Anglo --—. EES Buckeye ——-—________. Continental cumberland Calena. Illinois - 53 55 Prairie ON ---. - 173 175 Prairie Pipe -.------. 101 102 Solar Ref. Sou. Pipe -. 8. O. Kan .. 8. O. Ky 8. O. Neb. 8.0. N. Y. 8. O, Ohio -... Union Tank ag | 88 Vacuum - 45% 45% s. P. On - 121 124 S. O. Ind. 52% 52% cesanedl .- Crude Market Cat Creek Lance Creek Osage - Grass Creek Torchlight Greybult Nock Creek Salt Creek .. the |i Metals NEW YORK, Aug. %0.—Copper, easier; electrolytic, spot and futures, 13% @13%. ‘Tin, firm; spot and f tures, 41.00, prices | unchanged. |6.75@7.00. Zinc, Louis spot and nearby delivery, 6.42@6.46. Antimony, spot, 7.50@7.60. —_— Flour Unchanged MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Aug., 29. —Flour unchanged. Bran 26.50 00. os Send your automobile n “Spark: Plug,”—Care Tribune. a to Stocks LOCAL OLL STOCKS Bessemer ae 323 Big Indian .. ee IPS As Boston Wyoming —-. .80 .85 Buck Creek -2------. 11 Sti Blackstone Salt Creek .31 32 |Chappell --_..... ae ah a jColumbine ~---.... | aL {Consolidated Royalty. 117 119 { et 08.04 55 BT Teo". ar as |Frantape——————— ab0 B00 Gates 5... 08 09 Jupiter . .... 02 03 Kinney Coast A) Lance"Creek Royaity. .00% .01 Marine —-... 4.00 4.50 Mike Henry «. —= 00% 01 ; Mountain & Gulf 113) 1.15 Picardy -.. ar ae. Red Bank . 3.00 4.00 Royalty & Producers - .05 .08 Sunset wennnna—-- 01% 02% Tom Be yalty -. .01% .02% Western Exploration ~ 3.1 3. 14% Western Statea - ¥ on -. 08 10 NEW YORK CURB CLOSING Mountain Producers. 14,00 14.25 Glenrock Ol! ~~... 69 Salt Creek Prds, 16.87 Salt Creek Cons -. 115 7.87 New York Oil __-___ 11.00 18.00 Marine — 4.00 4.50 Mutual ~....--..-.. 9.25 9.50 S. O. Indiana -.--.. 63.75 62.87 Cities Service Com. 133.00 Agric Receipts 30,000; mostly steady; spots strong; bulk good and choice 150 to 225 pound butchers 9.20@ 9.40; top 9.40; bulk desirable 230 to 325 pound butchers 8.60@9.10; most fed beef cows and heifers strong to 150 highr; bulls uneven, weak; veal- ers about steady; country demand for stockers and feeders rather nar- row; market steady; bulk veal calves to packers around 11.00; few 11.25; bulk feds 7.00@8.01 bulk stockerg and feeders 5.50@7.00; few meaty feeders 8.00 and above, Sheep— Receipts 17,000; better srades fat lambs strong to 25¢ high- er; others and sheep around steady: good and cholce western lambs to killers and shippers 13.25@13.50; bulk native 12.75@18.00; early top 13.15; some held higher; culls large. 50; aged three car string veraging § around 125 pounds 8.25; good light weight ewes upward to 8,00; early sales feeding lambs 18.45, Omaha Quotations OMAHA, Neb. Aug., 30—U. 8. Department of Agriculture}—Hogs —Rece!pts 12,000; slow; early sales to shippers around steady; 190 to 240 pound butchers 8.75@8.85; top 8.90; 250 to 825 pound butchers 8.25 @38.75; other grades dull, packing bidding 15@26c higher, spots held steady; mixed loads quoted 7.65@ 8.25; packing sows 7.25@7.65. Cattle—Receipta 3,700; better grades fed steers and yearlings Steady; others weak to 10@150 low- er; top matured steers 12.40; she stock steady to strong; bulk gras cows 3.75@4.75; grasa heifers 4.50@ 5.50; all other classe steady; practi cal top veals 9.00; few sales range feeders 7.25. Sheep—Receipts 7,500; all classes steady; western fat lambs 13.00@ 13.10; natives 12.15@12.50; ewes downward from 7.25; beat feeding lambs 18.25; one deck yearling breed. Ing ewes 80 pounds at 11.50. Denver Prices DENVER, Colo,, Aug. 80—{U, 8. Department of Agriculture —Hogs— Receipts 1,800; slow; generally steady to 10¢ higher; close weak top 9.25 paid for 192 pound averages. Choice 205 pound offerings 9.15. Bulk of sales 8.80 to 9.00; inferlor to p'ain grade 6.75 to 8.25; packer sows steady at 6.50 to 7,00; fat pigs unchanged, few 7.25, stock pigs strong to higher best 7,50. Cattle—Recelpts 1,400; calves 100; market alow; all classes around steady; few grass steers 7.25@7.85; several loads young cows 4.00 to 4.75; canners mostly 2.00; plain calves 5.00 to 6.00; strictly good vealers around 8.00; common stock cows 2.75 to 8.00; stock heifers 3.85 to 4.25; common Ught stock steers 5.00 to 5.50, Sheep—Receipts 8.00; market ET Sheep — Receipts 800; market stendy; good 73 pound Nevada lambs 12.25; plain natives 11.60; common ewes 4.60; odd wethers 8.00; few year- lings ; feed lambs held around 12.28. Silver NEW YORK, Aug., 29.—Bar a! ver .62%; Mexican dollars 47%. SHEMICAL ISSUE] WHEAT SCORES STOCK FEATURE, SLIGHT GAINS Davison Marked Up 20 Points, Drops 22, In New York Trading Covering by Recent Sellers Lends Strength to Chicago Trading NEW YORK, Ang. 30. —~ Erratio fluctuations of Davison Chemical which advanced 20 points, dropped back 22, and then see-aawed up and down within a ten-point area, fea- tured today’s stock market. Rails held firm but changes in the indus- trial group were mixed. Sales ap proximated 325,000 shares. CHICAGO, Aug. 30.—WWheat was {irregular at the start today with only fractional changes tn price tak- ing place during the early dealing: The general news was decidedly mixed. Wheat cables were reported higher, local elevator workers have threatened to go on strike Saturday if their demands for an increase in pay are not granted, and with weather conditions generally more favorable, the market was more or lees unsettled. Trade was mixed and light and values eased off short- ly after the opening on increased offerings. Opening prices which ranged from %oc lower to a like ad vance with December $1.04% to $1.05 NEW YORK, Aug. 30.—The up- ward movement of prices met with more resistance at the opening of today's stock market but gains largely exceeded losses in the initial transactions. St, Paul, preferred, opened two points higher and Davison Chemical climbed 1% points to 53%, a new high record for the year. Ralls were again in good|®nd May $1.10% to $1.10%, were fol- demand. lowed by 9 slight general easing off Davison Chemical spurted 20)" All deliveries. points to 72, jumping nearly ten| Covering by recent sellers, brought out by the strength in corn, later gave the wheat market a firmer un- dertone and the close was % to %c higher with December 1.05 to 1.05% and May 1.10%. General commission house buying gave firmness to the corn market. After starting a shade to %o up, with December 66%@%o to 66%c corn prices held close to the initial range. Strength {n cash corn and some short cover!ng improved the tone of the corn market, which closed at a net gain of %o to 1c, with December 67% @.67%. Oats were steady, opening un- changed to %c advance, with De- cember 39%c, and holding close to the opening figures. Provisions were slightly better, of ferings being light 2nd packers {n- clined to support September lard. points on one transaction, and then fell back to 50. Delaware and Hud: son advanced five points. A brisk advance in the Market Street Rail- Way issues was another feature, the common, preferred and second pre. ferred each rising two points, the prior preferred 1% and United Ratl- ways investment preferred 1% Prices stiffened in other sections of the list. Foreign exchanges opened irregular. The erratio fluctuations of Davi- son Chemical had a sobering influ ence on the trading in the usual in- dustrial leaders, which showed only nominal changes. Pool operations were reported to be under way, how. ever, in other sections of the list. Ralls, particularly New York Cen tral, were in steady demand, buying being attributed {n some quarters to the favorable nature of the latest batch of July earnings reports. Latin Spel Bid 24 1 Pier eeae ens | Houston Ol! advanced six and a half Open High Low Close @9.10; medium 8.60@9.40: 11 ti 7 go} Points, American Agricultural Chem: | Wheat— Ught light 7.60@: a: igo ical 4 and General Asphalt, Beech | Sept - 99% 1.00% 99% 1.00% ‘ling sows abn 7.15@7.75; paced nut Packing and Virginia Carolina | Deo 1.04% 1.05% 1.04% 1.05% ing sows rough 6.90@7 a8: sila oe “| Chemical preferred 8 to 3%. Davi-| May ---- 1.10% 1.11% 1.10% 1.10% pigs 7.00@9. ra 48; slaughter | son Chemical climbed again to 58% | Corn— Cattle—Receipts 12,000; bare and then eased to 55 Call money|Sept -—-- 83% 83% 82% 88% tive; killing qualltion mache ne mee |oened at 5% percent. Deo (67% 06% 87% to Becki hee einere nem aisha var], Weakness in a number of indus-|May ~ 68% 67% 68% value tosell above 11.00 10 te igs trial shares cropped out, especially | Oats— higher, quality considered; 1 ower the coppers, which lost one to two | Sept 37% 31% 37% gra and grassere steady 1, | Points on the unfavorable trade | Deo 49% 39% 89% strong; top matured steers Maa: situation, sales of the metal being|May - 42% 42 42% numerous loads 11,00 to 11.75; best |TCPOrtet Made at tho lowest figures | Larc-— long yearlings 12.28: bulk fat: tas of the year. A pressure was also | Sept 11.72 11.65 11.72 and yearlings 10.25@11.75; about Hy applied to certain of the motor, Tex-|Oct ~ 11.80 11.72 11.80 loads’ western. graseera ‘uns ey he| tile and off shares, Cosden preferr-| Ribs— stock largely steady to stro! ‘old; sheled losing five points. Meantime the | Sept 9.00 8.90 9.00 gely steady to strong. grain | rubber shares were bid up strongly, | Oct —— 9.05 8.95 9.05 also American car, American Ex- press, and Gulf States Stee! ,the later mounting to 89%, a rise of 4% Speculation Cash Grains and Provisions. CHICAGO, Aug. 30.—Wheat—No. in Davison Chemical|» red, $1.03@1.03%; No. 2 hard, was quieter, the prices rising again | $1 03@1.08%4. to 60, falling to 55% and rebound Corn—No. 2 mixed, 86% @870; No. ing to 68%. 2 yellow, 83% @88%c. The closing was irregular. Bullish Onts—No. 2 white, 38% @41%c; demonstrations were staged in the | No, 3 white, 37% @38i6c. late Cealings in International Har Rye—No. 2, 67% @6de. yester, Famous Players, Loose] farley—58@67c. Wiles Biscuit and Central Leather] ‘Timothy seed—$6.25@7.20. preferred but Cooper and Automo- tive issues continued heavy. peacetime nena d Clover seed—$16.00@19.00. Pork—Nominal. Lard—$11.77. Ribs—$8.87@9.75. Foreign Exchange NEW YORK, Aug, 30.—Foreign exchanges irregular, Quotations in cents: Great Britain, demand, 4.54%; cables, 4.55; 60-day bills on| MARKETS—MONEY as banks, 4.52%. France, demand,| NEW YORK, Aug. 80. -—Cal 5.64%; cables, 5.65. Italy, demand, | ney firm; high, 614; low5%; rul $2934; cables, 4.30. Belgium, de_|'ne rate, 5%; closing bid 5%; offered mand, 4.62%; cables, 4.63. Germany, | ®t 6%; last loan, 6¥4; call loans against acceptances, 4%; time loans, firm; mixed collateral, 60-90 days, 5% @5%; 4-6 months, 5% @5%; prime demand, .00009; cables, 000010. Hol land, demand, 39.31; cables, 39.34. Norway, demand, 16.26. Sweden, de- mand, 26.67, Denmark, demand,|°°™mercial paper, S14. 18.67, Switzerland, demand, 18.04% Spain, demand, 18.48, Greece, de mand, 1.78. Poland, demand, .0004%. Czecho Slovakia, demand, 2.94% Cotton Jugo Slavia, demand, 1.05. Austria | demand, .0014. Rumania, demand, | 46%. Argentine, demand, hollday.]| xwmw YORK, Aug. 30. — Cotton Brazil, demand, 945. Montreal, | spot quiet; middling $26.60. 97 21-32. SE See oe Flax Seed. | DULUTH, Minn., Aug. 80.— Close | P flax September $2.27% anked; Octo- i] toes ber $2.25% bid; November $2.26%; ota’ December $2.25 askde. CHICAGO, Aug. 30,— Potatoes, weak; receipts, 58 cars; total U. 8. shipments, 649; Idaho sacked Rurals, U. 8. No, 1, $210@2.15 cwt.; Minne sota sacked Early Ohios, U. 5. No. 1, $1.656@1.75 cwt.; ditto, bulk, $1.50 @1.65 cwt.; Wisconsin bulk round whites, U. 8. No. 1, $1.80@2.00 cwt.; ditto, sacked, $2.00@2.25 cwt.; No- braska sacked rount whites, U. 8. No. 1, $2.25@2.36 cwt. [sr | NEW YORK, Aug. 80—There was no improvement noted today in the| Dr, Frank Carll returned Inst| demand for refined sugar and list| evening from a seven thousand mile| prices were unchanged as 7.75 for| automobile tour of the states west. fipe grauniated but one refiner was| Hoe left Casper June 15 tn his Pack- reported selling at 7.60. {ara touring car, accompanied by Refined futures were nominal. | Mrs. Carll, their young daughter Sugar futures closed firm; approx!-|and Miss Mattern of Chicago, who! mate sales, 37,000 tons. September,| remained with them to San Fran Butter and Eggs CHICAGO, Aug., 29.—Butter high- er; creamery extras .44; standards 43%; extra firsts 41% @.43; firsts 39@ 40%; seconds .87% @.38. Eggs higher; receipts 6,474 cases; firsts .28@.29%; ordinary firsts .26 @.27; storage pack firnts .30%. Dr. Carll Returns From Long Tour 4.44; December, 4.42; March, 3.81; | cinco, May, 3. | ‘The Carlls covered all of the Pa “aheleee tye NIP RPOR IRS |cific const states, visited their for Poultry Market. | mer homes in Calffornia and Oregon | CHICAGO, Aug, %0.—Poultry,|and revisited all of the natural won allye, lower; fowls, 16@24%c; broil-|ders that they had not seen since ors, 26c; springs, 25c; roos! 14c.| they were young folks. | — "They took no camping outfit, but Flour Market. lived at hotels along the way and MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Aug. 20.|are generous tn thelr praise of th |—Fiour unchanged to 150 lewer;|comforts supplied |family patents $6.36@6.60; bra - 1526.60@ . lL wribune Want Ada bring results| Grain : Livestock : NEWS AND QUOTATIONS BY LEASED WIRE PAGE SEVEN. : Liberty, 101.10 200.00 Liberty 98.80 98.30 Liberty 98.13 98.10 Liberty 98.14 98.i1 Liberty 98.31 98.29 Liberty Fourth 44s ——_ ——— 9816 98.12 U. 8. Government 44s somes” (SNES 99.20 Czechosovak Rep., 93 any Dominion of Canada, 5s, 1953 93% oo got Japanese 4s 100-9914 100 Kingdom of Belgium ’ y Kingdom ot Norway éa 3% 8h ae State of Quneensiand 6s 100%5 100% 100% U, K, of G. B. & 1, 5% 102% 102% 103% RAILWAY AND MISCELLANEOUS American Smelting 5s American Sugar, American Tel. col tr., Anaconda Copper, 7s, Anaconda Copper, 68, 195 At. T. and S. Fe. gen 4s --—— 88% 88 % Baltimore and Ole ev 43a co = hk tn He Bethlehem Steel con 6s, Series A os ~ oT% 975 Canadian Pacifié deb. 4s 80 8 80. Chicago, Burlington and Quincey 7% 97% 97% Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul. 5815 566% Chile Copper 6s _. Goodyear Tire, 8», Great Northern, Montana Power Ss A — Northern Pacific ref., 63 B Northwestern Bell Tel., 7s Pacific Gas and Electric 5s Penn. HS Finclair Con Oil part Southern Pacific 924 Union Pacifio First 93 = U, 8. Rubber 5s _ 87 Utah Power and Light 6s 88% Western Union 6%8 109% Westinghouse Electric, ts 107% banian frontier. lows: “The Greek, Italian and Albanian missions left Janita on Monday in {seperate automobiles for the Alban- fan frontier, The Albanian mission | Went first, followed by the Itallan j Mission, the Greek mission being | last. PREEK ANVALTY ‘The Italian mission had arrived at the outskirts of Delovinaki on Greek territory when it was stopped by an armed band of Greeks who fired on American-Born Wife of Prince Christopher Answers Call. General Tellin, Major Cort!, Lieut: enant Bonacin! and the chauffeur, LONDON, Aug. 830—(By The As-| sociated Press)}—The family of the Farnet!, and killed them all. “News of this crime has aroused late Princess Anastasia of Greece, formerly Mrs, William B, Leeds, deepest consternation through Al- bania where the victims are looked upon as martyrs tn the national cause of Albania. It is an infamous calumny to suggest that the erlme was committed by Albanians.” who died Inst night, was making plans today to send the body to New York. ment has called on the newspapers Some of the members of the Greek | “"d the Facisit forces to assist in royal family favore@ burial in Athens| the maintenance of order and dls- but {t was held that the present po-| “Pline, litieal situation there, which has al-| ready resulted In the exile of Greek} PARIS, Aug. 80—The Inter-Allied royalty, including Prince Chiste-| council of ambassadors will meet pher, Anatasia’s husband, would pre- here tomorrow to consider the aitua- clude this step. see Lake by. the assassination of Moreover, the princess herself be)? [lan mission in Albania and fore ane died expressed the wish that| ‘2° demands made upon Athens by she might rest with her fatber and|‘"® Rome government. mother in the mausoleum which she LONDON. oy ERAT built in Woodlawn cemetery, New| sociateg ON, ANS: 30-—Ciy Thee York. }lers familiar with = ¢ the region Memorial services will be held i!/the assassination sion where The statement fol- LONDON, Aug. 380—Demonstra- tions against Greeks are reports from all parts of Italy, says a Cen- tral News Dispatch from Rome but so far as is known, no acts of viol- ence have occurred. The govern- of ¢ one of the Greek orthodox churches| members of the @ ay aie in Londan before the body is sent/frontier mission fds be: hae to the United States and prayers will be offered in the churches of Greece, Almost every royal house in Eu- rope has tendered its condolences to Prince Christopher today. country as extremely primitive and desolate and the people as illiter and unversed in the ordinary ameni- tles of life, Tho rifle and dagger is the rule jot the road there. Grievances of Up to the last, the princess main-| *!! kinds are avenged by swift death tained the stoutest hope that she|'® the offenders for the natives, would recover, Before her iIness| Who have been under the armed heel took @ serious turn she told the cor-|°f the Turk for centuries, scarcely peeponabatt know tho elements of civilized life “I have been in the valley of the|An4 they are no respectors of pe shadow before and a great spirit has|°°"™ gulded me out of the darkness. see that light still burning, and I am sure {t will give guidance to my otsteps once more.” But from the beginning her phy-| ——————__ siclan, who knew the malignant ture of her malady—she t na = fered ¥ from cancer—held out no hope. | There is much speculation to what extent Christopher will share in his wife's fortune. The princess al ways maintained that she had never| — (Continued trom Page Ona) settled @ dollar on the prince and|posals for settling the main con- that she was powerless to change|troversy in the anthractte region. the terms of her previous husband’s| will, which tied up the entire Leeds fortune in a trust fund. | It thought by the friends who) knew the deep affection existing between Anastasia and Christopher that the princess provided an ample sum to enable him to live comfort- ably. It ts also thought that she may have made some arrangement) for the support of the scattered members of the Greek royal family who now are not in affluent circum stances. ITALIAN FLEET READY FOR WAR (Continued from Page One.) PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 80.—An- thracite operators arrived here this afternoon to consider and prepare thelr response to the proposal of Governor Pinchot for settlement of the wage controversy with the mine workers. Besides the members of the sub-committee of the operators’ polley committee, mine owners from several sections of the hard coal ‘elds were here, Samuel D. Warriner, chief spokes- man for the coal companies refused to comment on the governor's peace plan, ONE SLAIN IN GANG FIGHT NEW YORK, Aug, 30—Gang fight- ing In which one man was slain and hope was expressed that Italy would he broke be satisfied to suspend her demand | out {n Brooklyn this afternoon, Two for satisfaction until an inquiry] gangsters shot upon « third man could be made at nd avenue and 49th street fatally wounded him with pistol ALBANIA she As he fell he drew his pistol RESPO and wounded one of his assaflants. ROME, Aug. 30—The Albs er he was dead, gation here issued » ata - that General 1] t cargo of anthracite coal 4 from VW t armory at Car