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Weather Forecast WYOMING: Fair tonight and Sunday. Slowly rising temperature. _ VOLUME Vil PAIR FIRED. BY “GON. WALTON IN OKLAHOMA ROW Bombshell Hurled Into Legislative Ranks by Executive. OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., Oct. 18—(By The Associated Press).—A state- ment declaring that “the klan fight must go on,” and that he was “glad to be free to continue the fight unhampered” was issued here today by Aldrich Blake, former executive counsellor, \. Who was removed last night by Gov- “ernor J. C. Walton. OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., Oct. 13 ~(By the Associated Press}—Facing the crisis of his political career, Gov- ernor J.C, Walton today had cast aside two of his foremost Meutenants re the administration ef Oklahoma With a legislative tmpeachment court already inyestigating his offi- clal conduct, the goyernor threw a veritable bomb shell into the ranks of the followers of the sittiation last night when he ordered the remova! from office of Aldrich B'ake, the ex- ecutive counsellor and Dr. E.. T. Bynum, state bank commissioner: both of whom since the days of tho primary campaign have been his chief advisers and constant attend- ants, The two ousted officials went im- mediately before the house commit- tee inquiring into !mpeachment charges against the governor, and while the nature of their testimony was not made public, their appear- yf snce before the body was Becepted, / as sufficient indication that their, break with Governor Walton was absolute, LITTLEFIELD 3 HoT TO REACH FINALS IN GOLF Fair Weather Forecast For Coming Week WASHINGTON, ‘Weather outlook for the week be- ginning Monday: Northern Rocky Mountain and Oct., 13. Plateau regions; Generally fair ex- cept occasional rains west of divide. Temperature above normal. Glenn Littlefield advanced to the| Southern Rocky Mountain and finals in the Tribune City golf cham-| plateau regions; generally fair, ris- Pionship and a chance at the silver|ing temperature first part of the loving cup by beating A. C. Riker,| week and normal thereafter. 1 up on the 19th hole in a sensa-| pacific States; Probably, fair in tional match on the Country club | south and central California and oc- links’ Friday afternoon. Littlefle!d! casional rains elsewhere, tempera: ill meet the winner of the J. 8. | ture near normal Brown vs. J, B, Sutherland match a for the cup. The match, 36 holes, will be played tomorrow, the Brown- CORRECTION. \\Sutherland match for today. In the second round of the con- solation, the greater number of matches of which are slated for to- day. H. M. Brant beat Don Phil'ips 2 up and Guy Gay tied with Billy Johnson at the end of the 18th hole. Darkness made it necessary them to finish the match today. FOLLY OF YOUTH being scheduled) 4. H. Lidderdale stated this morn ing that a report to the efféct that hin wife had listed a piece of prop- erty with a real estate dealer “with. out authority to do so” was incor rect. The repcrt was in connection with a story of a civil suit in which Mr, Lidderda’e and the Martin-La- ftor|mar Realty company were the prin- Fortune Paid Out to’ Blackmailers by New Jersey Man Who Won Honor ‘After Penalty Paid In Youth IRVINGTON, N. J., Oct. 18.—The tragic story of a man who erred in his youth, paid the penalty and then set out to regain the respect he had lost, only to succeed and have his early folly once more brought to life, was un- folded yesterday when.the prosecutor began an investiga- tion into the motives that prompted the suicide on Septem- ber 26 of Mayor Edward R. Folsom) Jt was in Hammondsport, N. Y ef Irvington. that the story had its beginning. It Mayor Folsom's life reminded those| was tho age-old tale of wealth and who heard its history of Jean Val-| poverty and love. Folsom's family Jean. was poor, Tho girl he loved was the YANKS POUND 0 Ousted Official Continues War on Klan TO SMITE MAYOR; LATE SUICIDE SOLVED, CLAIM CASPER, WYO,, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1923 UT First Picture of First Run of the 1923 Series The Giants won the first game, but Babe Ruth scored the first run of the series for the Yankees when he scored on Bob Meisel’s double in the first inning. Picture shows Ruth crossing the plate. in front of the plate, hoping for a throwin from the outfield. Hank Gowd WHOLESALE MURDER PLOT | sat Prominent Residents Marked by Crippled ‘Astrologer of Marshfield, Oregon, According to Confessions Ob- tained In First Slaying by Nephew MARSHFIELD, Ore., Oct. 18.—Plans for the deliberate slaying of prominent resi- dents of Coos county, with their families were laid by Arthur Covell, 47, a crippled astrologer, according to his reported confession to aut}orities here. With his 16-year- old nephew, Alton Covell, he is held in the county jail because of his indictment by the grand jury on a murder charge in connectioi with the death of Mrs. Fred Covell, Sep- ! jinfluence of his crippled uncle. The|is said, has admiteed Having a part 2, while she was at work tn her/ out the Pacific coast, Arthur Covell, |tember 2, last. | The nephew, it is said by the;band, a chiropractor of Bandon, in-y | authorities has confessed that he kill-|forming him that something was ACCIDENTAL DEATH IS jconfession, it is declared, tells how) in the killing, but just the extent of| the youth, hypnotized by the bed|his confession has not been revealed} bi |ridden man, crept up behind his| by the officers. I; A. T. LINTEGUM CASE |ed his step mother while under the| wrong at the house. The uncle, it | step mother on the morning of Sept. Famed as an astrologer through- kitchen and, clamping an ammonia-| according to his purported admis. soaked cloth over her face, smoth-| sions and to the confession of the ered her to death with the fumes.| nephew, based his schemes for tho| | Then, the confession described how | Kelling of Mrs. Covell and for wip. | | the youth, still acting under the over|{ing out at least a dozen persons of Accidental death by shooting was powering will of his uncle, carried) Coos county, upon the stars. \the verdict brought in b: the bid ata motte (to. Pat ec Shere SF: gis aT |coroner’s jury Friday PES ranged her clothes so as the remove| . . . | jany signs of a struggle and carriea| William, Jardine In| wnich investigated the death of the dead body to the front porch of! the house. It was Arthur Covell, who then hobbled on his crutches to the tele- phone and called the woman's hus- ARISES Currency Issue \Of Germans Hits Mammoth Total daughter of the wealthiest man in| the town and her father refused.to | accept the lowly youth as his son-in- law. The boy was desperate. He forged the wealthy man’s name to several checks and later was caught red handed robbing a bank. His sentence was 10 years at hard | labor in Auburn prison, but the late Theodore Roosevelt, then governor, | pardoned tim after three years had |been served, in response to a peti- | tion of Hammondsport citizens head- led by the girl's father. ee ay’ R. T. Lintecum who shot himself Critical Condition = the head with a .22 callbre rifle z at his home Thursday and died a At Omaha Hospital few hours later. Lintecum is said | to have been cleaning the rifle in antctpation of a hunting trip. William Jardine, proprietor of the) The inquest was conducted by Art Service Printing company in| tarry Cass, assistant. prosecuting the Midwest building, 1s reported to/ attorney and the jury was composed be in a critical condition in an Oma-| ot Harry Medley, Logan Dailey and ha hospital following a major opera-|% Q. Miller. tion which he underwent there. H Mr. Jardine has never recuperatea|, The body of Lintecum ts being trom the operation and hie life hes | neld at the Shafter-Gay chapel pend been despaired of for the last. few | {9s funeral arrangements days. Tho latest reports received a in Casper indicate that his condition is unchanged. esses. a ol ° Red Officer Is e Slain by Poles MOSCOW, Oct. 18.—According to & report from the Polish border, Ey Polish gendarmes have killed an| BERLIN, ‘Oct. 13.—The currency officer of the Red army who acci-| issue now has reached twenty-eight dentally crossed the frontier. jquadrillion, two hundred and thirty —_——— | trillion paper marks, according to the reichsbank statement issued to- WASHINGTON, Oct. 18.—Cotton | consumed during September totalled (Continued on Page Seven.) | today, thirty-four quadrillios. Giant catcher, is shown | lday. ‘The issue trebled the last Folsom and the girl were married | 483,852 bales of lint and 49,687 of |week in September. In the same then and they decided to move away|linters, compared with 491,604 of| period the raichabank’s home gold and start life anew. They came to|lint and 47,998 of linters in August |reserve decreased by 26,000,000 |Irvington, where Folsom established| this year and 494,013 of lint and|marks, while the holdings of dis |a business, won his way into many | 61,474 of linters in September last/counted treasury bills, private | |friendshins and prospered. fe was| year, the census bureau announced|checks and drafts increased by A Newspaper for All the Family, Clean, Unbiased, And a Booster for City, County and State. Che Casper Daily Tribune |, ~ NUMBER 314 SECOND WIN SIX YANKEES TET SCORE IN 2ND BOOZE TRAGEDY anus Illinois Police Hunt A gee © Fugitive Chemist, Is Report. PANA, Ills., Oct. 18. — Police of Centra! Tllinois cities today were |searching for Robert A. Smith, a lo- ----DE 000 OOO Ba rl OOM OOO Ohl aa POLO GROUNDS, New York, Oct. 18.—(By The As- | Sociated Press).—Back across the muddy Harlem today came the New York Nationals and New York Americans Ito do battle in the fourth game of the 1923 world’s series. Shawkey and Schang were announced as the battery for the Yankees while Scott and Snyder went in for the Giants. |cal chemist, who fled the city yes-|Pipp had recovered sufficiently to ond. McQuillan fanned. NO RUNS, terday afternoon before a coroner's; hold down the first sack for the | ONE HIT, NO ERRORS jury investigating the deaths of five | Yanks. Scare men hero in the last few days, pre- FIRST INNING YANKEE —Shawkey singled past sumably from poisonous whisky rec- se IES—s “3 |ommended that he and three others|_ YANKEES—Witt singled past/ Groh, Witt sacrificed, Snyder be held without bafl on charges of | Bancroft. Dugan popped to Snyder Kelly. Dugan filed out to Meusel. | murder for the grand jury in connec. | tf¥ing to bunt. Ruth fanned. Ban.| Ruth fanned NO RUNS, ONE HIT, tion with the deaths. croft took Meusel'’s grounder and| NO ERRORS. |tossed it to Frisch, NO RUNS,| GIAD ONE HIT, NO ERRORS. hot smash and threw him out at first. Groh sent out a long fly to GIANTS—Bancroft fied out to! rfeusel. Ruth made a nice catch of |Meusel. Groh popped to Ward.| ryisch's fly. NO RUNS, NO HITS, Frisch laced a single over Ward's) xo ERRORS. head. Young singled into left.| SIXTH INNING. Frisch stopping at second. Meuse! | forced Young, Ward to Scott. NO) YANKEES—Meusel fouled out to Kelly. Pipp fouled out to Snyder, RUNS, TWO HITS, NO ERRORS. Ww ined out to Frisch. NO RUNS, NO HITS, NO ERRORS, GIANT Young got a Texas The others ordered held were John = Wert On nee Tokoly, operator of a soft drink par- lor and his two sons, Paul and Ste-| Dhen. ‘The coroner’s jury returned a ver- dict last night that the men died as a result of drinking a beverage con- taining fusal of! which was sold to \them by Tokoly. Tokoly testified on the witness stand that Smith had concocted the alcohal which he put jin the whisky, and then collapsed} YANKEES—Pipp singled over \from the effects of the lquor. |second base and went to second) jeaguer into r. Shawkey threw Six men, who are at the hospital! when Ward singled into center.| out Meusel. Young taking second. suffering from the effects of the| Scott juggled Schang's’ sacrifice and. It was no sacrifice. Stengel singled |Nquor are-not expected to recover,|ths ‘bases were filled. Pipp and {hto left, Menwel making a beautiful accorting to physicians. Ward scored on Scott's. single to| stop of the hit and forcing Young jleft, Schang taking third. Scott! to hold second. Kelly uled out to NEW YORK, Oct. 13.—Warm/was knocked out of the box—the Ruth, Young going to third on the weather greeted early comers at the! third Giant pitcher to be sent to the| catch. Snyder forced Stengel. Polo Grounds today for the fourth | bench during the serles. Ryan went Dugan to Ward. NO RUNS, TWO aie of the world's series. It was|into the box. Schang © scored on| HITS, NO ERRORS. cloudy, however, Shawkey’s | v's sacrifice fly to Stengel, eras AeA BARED The Benefits Are Mutual One of the most potent forces in the world is selfishness; inter- est In one’s own progress, Great public service can consist- ently be mutually profitable, Sincere, honest giving of value received justifies recelving fatr compensation in return. Seeond Inning Scott holding first. Witt got a long bl. : hit into left and Seott scored. witt| YANKEES—Schang singled over reaching second. Groh took Dugan's | second. tt fied out to Kelly, grounder and touched Witt. Ruth walked and scored with Dugan on Schang going to second. Shawkey sent a long fly to Stengel. Ban- Meusel’s three-bagger to left. Ryan) croft threw out Witt at first. no Was sent to the bench. McQuillan) RUNS, OND HIT, NO ERRORS, going Into the box. Ses Ee Pipp filed to Stengel. SIX RUNS, FIVE HITS, | ONE ERROR. | GIANTS—Stengel walked. Kelly singled into right. Snyder foulod out to Schang. McQuillan went out, Pipp to Shawkey. Stengel going to third and Kelly to second. Bancroft filed out to Meusel. NO RUNS, ONE \HIT, NO ERRORS. THIRD INNING. YANKEES—Wert strolled to first. Schang macrificed. McQuillan to Kelly. Scott singled into center. | Ward goin to third. Shawkey fouled jout to Snyder. Ward scored on Witt’s double into left, Scott going 91st Division Holds Reunion At Coast City SAN FRA jorganized |with ‘CISCO, Cal.—The first activities in connection the annual conclave of the an Legion, here, which opens ally Monday, will start today with the reunion of the Ninety-Firat (wild west) division which will con- to third. Dugan filed out to Stengel. |+; through tomorrow. At least | nue through tomorrow. Trustworthy advertising and |onm RUN, TWO HITS, NO ER-|fice theuseod voteana se the Pee Penman ity’ on the part of ® |RoRS citi st contingent of the A. 5, ey peg cage cesnccnent da real whe |. .GIANTS—Ward threw out Groh |j> 1 participate in elaborate fer mm + none the iat first. Frisch spun a single into less so that prosperity results. It is by laying before the people tly jeenter. Young fouled out to Schang Meusel struck out vanguard of high officialdom NO RUNS, ONE |of the nation and the legion, here a well selected, properly priced |i, NO ERRORS. me . “bill of fare” from the whole | 22, N° © 8. to attend the annual gathering, ab world that the merchant best FOURTH INNING. rendy has arrived and the arrival of serves his community. It is only by carefully following | thousands of vi other officia erans and scores of is anticipated toda; YANKE balls. —Ruth got a base on Meusel struck out. Pipp hit the merchandising news in the ad- | into left for a single, Ruth going to| - vertising columns that the buying | third, and scoring a moment later pubilo learn the Iast word in real |on Ward's single through Groh, thrift. Pipp reaching second. hang sent Shop In the Tribune before |up a high fly to Frisch, Scott shopping in the shops. popped out te Baneroft. ONE RUN, | TIE IN FOOTBALL CAM —_— TWO HITS, NO ERRORS. | WARSAW, Oct. 13.—The fourth} GIANTS—Stengel walked for the| The mie grid fort of the Warsaw citadel in which | second time. Kelly singled into left, t the end explosives were stored, blew up to-|Stengel going to second. Snyder lof a hard fot F n the Con day causing great damage in the| hit into a double play, Shawkey to|verse county flold rday after clty Dugan to Pipp, Kelly going to sec- ' noor ‘RECKLESS’ ASSERTIONS IN FORD CRITICISM IN ANSWER OF SECRETARY fluences had b | Weeks | tent nis ovta een operated to pre Shoals, Keen Resentment Manifested by Mus t - | The fact t Rasy rd aac ared | Toward Detroit Manufacturer —_ | Wsit.t0 sl oven, Secretary | nat he does not regar he Goi | 'As Result of Statement Natpanateiact an catecenc. co fain the carr out of his plan to pur develop Muscle Shoals nitrate producing | WASHINGTON, Oct. 18.—Declaring Henry Ford's |statement attacking him in connection with the sale of the Gorgas Steam Power plant of the Muscle Shoals project, | was “filled with reckless assertions, Secretary Weeks, in |a formal reply published today reviewed at length the ad- ministration’s course in dealing with the Detroit manufac- in the course of clared that he had est in the develop- itrates In as- y of Musc turer's offer for the prose. Mr.) ply, Secretary Weeks refused to com:| f par Tw thetne | Weeks issued . his statement after] ment on Mr, Ford's stater: there ft Ford's offer to con- wice discussing the matter with] was every indicatlor ~* a feeling of| gress, 1, he never opposed his | President Coolidge keen resentment at the Detroit mant-| sec - f the water power While beyond bis ewn formal re-! ¢ r’s charges that pollti al >| fa