Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 15, 1923, Page 1

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Weather Forecast and Tuesday except probably rain er tonight. Wyoming—Generally fair tonight Che Casper Daily Critune extreme northwest portion. Warm- e in CASPER, WYO., MONDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1923 ~ A Newspaper for All the Family, Clean, Unbiased, And a Booster for City, County and State: _ EDITION! NUMBER 315 CARBON MONOXIDE GAS FATAL-T0 THREECOLD DRIZZLE CHINA TAKES NEW POSITION jing a period of a little more than 24 hours. The deaths came in two separate instances, one where a woman and | jher child were found dead by the husband returning home Absence of Ventilation In Apartment! On Spruce Street Is Cause Of Double Tragedy Asphyxiation from permitting gas to burn in a closed room caused the death of three persons in Casper dur- \ from work at 12:30 Sunday morning, and the other where Tribune Golf Championship Playing a brilliant game all through the 36 hole final match, Glenn Littlefield de- feated J. S. Brown 4 up and three in the final for the city championship and the Tribune Littlefield Is Winner Of HURTSCROWD POLO GROUNDS, NEW YORK, Oct. 15.—The New York Yankees are the kings of the baseball universe for 1923. Coming from behind in the eighth inning when de- feat seemed certain, the American League champions crushed McGraw’s last pitching ace, Art Nehf and scored five runs. young man was found dead in his, ated in the room since {t was well silver lovi fale ; : 0 lovin, y ‘ 7 " In the three previous games the spectaibrs to the marrow. Where Orientals to Some} ‘22m at 8:30 o'clock this morning|shut off from the rest of the house. al] th sy CUR On the Country club links Sunday afternoon. The match was close]. Im the three, Previous Genes ne aecterdag the craw bowed In mame when his uncle went to wake him|The window of the tom was found |@i_ the way through with Littlefield shooting a trifle truer than his opponent. All of |’) deciding factor, but today Man-|mer-like weather they shivered and D mands Made B: up. The dead are Mrs. Vernon|c'osed as in the former instance) His rounds were made in approximately 40, which is good enough to win in the ma-|ager Miller Huggins, emulating | shook in the cold October day that le) ry Sundwll) nee son; Elmer, and Ren- mac fe8) gas was burning. jority of the matches on the local links. Manager John McGraw of tho|c antly threatened rain, . som Howard. he deceased was an employe of} Brown had advanced to the final] In the consolation flight, the win-, mains to be played today between }Giant ixed in some strategy and| The ti ° J sols . plas y Hants, mixed tn ! ey A short time after the rain stopped Foreigners ip dennrieenteocs carbon monoxide) the Casper Motor Bus line, having| by beating John Sutherland 6 and 5) ner of which will be given a hand-| Paul Ingraham and F. 8. Knittle, |*0 bewildered Arthur Nehf that the| oozing a small group of desperate pe oe partment 5 na driver of the Kenwood bus.|in the semi-final Saturday. Barller t lant southpaw went completely to! appearing nts trickled th 1321 South Spruce st#¥ec, when two|He was 21 years of age at the time|in the week he had eliminated F, w.|%me suede leather golf suit, there! The semi finals in the consolation |" tu Ce a ee was lost appearing its trickled out on the PEKING, Oct. 15.— | piates of a gas stove were turned on|of his death. He is survived by a| Hamilton, the Country club cham-| Were some interesting matches Sat-|are scheduled to be played .off by DorSeMITE inca’ tA, Cerotbimch nit] the’ line wenkon. cate China’s reply to the second |2"4 the windows remained closed.| brother, Robert Howard as well as/pion, and he was the favorite for|urday and Sunday, W. B. Maxwell| Wednesday night. The players re-lters and ‘tee, extea HunnerS iin. the! Bound them inte a Be jo ke note of the diplomatic corps caused the death of Mrs. Blanche| by his uncle. the title when play started yester-| ton from Leo Dunn 3 and 2; Duke| malning in the play for the prize in-| jecisive eighth Inning and the Yan-| soja) ; = ” 5 Tine the Lincheng hans’: Sundwell, wife of Vernon Sund-| ‘The remains are now at the Muck|day. Littlefield’s hardest match in| Wheeler beat Guy Gay 6 and 5 and|clude W. B, Maxwell, Duke Wheel-I ees scored five runs on two hits, |v, heey coon. rollewed squad ol regarding a h well, and their three-year-old son|funeral home, They will be shipped| getting to the finai was with A. C.|H. M. Brant beat Ed Slater 2 up.|er, H, M. Brant and the winner of|ihree bases on balls and a third ¢joiy Secies ok followed onto ed dit outrage, delivered to the | Elmer, early Sunday morning. Mr.|to Manville for burial. Riker who he beat in the semifinal,'In this round one more match re-|the Ingraham-Knittle match. h ‘ the Fervor: GOL eee rent tO WOK along. fe tod: verses the | Sundwell, who is a stillman at the aac hit, helped along by the erro It was a quiet, tense crowd legations today, re sf Standard refinery, was returning Cunningham, Giant centerflelder, | that huddled under the grandstand former uncompromising attitude of the Peking government toward some of the demands. The latest not vide greater security for foreigner: The Chinese government has is- sued a mandate dismissing from of- (military governor) Tien Chung-Yu, under whose juris- diction the Lincheng bandits operat- it May when they held up an express train and kidnaped numer- This disposes of one more point in the negotiations. fice Tuchun ea ous foreigners. China previously had declined to admit the right of the forelgn na- meets in large measure the stipula- tions designed by the powers to pro- from his shift. He reached his ¢| home at about 12:30 a. m. and when hea opened the door he was ‘ver- come by the escaping fumes. Mr. Sundwell found his wife and child lying on the bed overcome by the fumes and apparently dead. Seeing the tragedy tnat had en- tered his home he did everything possible to let the gas out of the room. his impression that they too had come to a certain extent under the influence of the escapmng capbon FIVE ARMENIANS KILLED TRYING TO CROSS BORDER Cnkoned cay: Gea 224| TEAPOT DOME [Steamer Strikes Rowboat In Detroit : es The Origin of River—Canadian Pilot of Row- monoxide which had spread through- PROBE HELD Opinions who overthrew the ball tn trying to set @ runner. Nehft had pitched wonderful base- ball, allowing only two hits and root and w |into trim. tched the athletes get he brave early specta- tors were sung into a high state of indignation by a super-patriot who stood in the upper and sang the Ranner" for two respite, waving © fing the while. ather was the worst of the series so far. The sky wore the gray of the pallorsof death, the sun had gone into a complete eclipse as the Giant hitters, and the wind sent chill breath into the horseshoe enclosure. striking out two men. He was given the the most brilllant support by ant infield, particularly by ach, “the Fordham flash,” made three brilliant features of fielding. Frisch also distinguished himself at bat, making three consec- ve hits and scoring two runs. The aunts went to the field in the eighth Inning with the game on Ice. They had rolled up a lead of three runs, one of them a homer by Frank Snyder in the first inning. But in hours without a small American The following box score tells how i] Bg = ut - To tions to demand the punishment of/ out the house, 4 boat Also Drowned | the eighth the Yankees batted all|the Yankees dia it by a score of officials deemed culpable. FE on ad Sora yc mi - We do not always know by what Joround, the second time tn the se-\5 to 4 The new Chinese communication} '°, De Of assistance. WASHINGTON, Oct. 15.—Chair- é a 7 + process we have come to think |rics that “Murderers Row" has ac YANKEES agrees in. principle to the supple-|, The Sundwell family tad Deen Iiv- man Smoot of the senate public DETROIT, Mich., Oct. 15.—Five of six Armenians in @) \iat wo DO think. complished this feat. AB. R. H. Po. A. mentary indemnities asked by the tom Ie Sita ‘House Ga aaa Siphte lands committee called the commit-lrow boat, piloted by a Canadian, were drowned in the Féevle "Whs' ‘tiers Yaalted Tearful perhaps because at least| Witt, cf. .-.3 6 0 3 1 9 r » i i berg [C aseba i jugan, 3b 1 2 foreign powers, but bea ea pe aah aan torrent Tita in pale 5 hel eoeset eee ses saneitee m9 Detroit river between River Rouge and Ecorse, Mich., early turity have accumulated, subcon- mg a oe a pil sats caus fe eet ia ie ie = : q 2 1 o ve Py eo kee y y wi a a 8 they eraseeewne te ee siallway | nouses on West Yellowstone avenue | direction of Oeste ne by tre today when an unidentified steamer struck the small craft sciously, many definite convie- | 5's Ihe IAT ME Nepramel Tey Menee ity 6 Weds 2 40ND Sition under foreign supervision |Delonging to the Standard company.| gated conditions at the Teapot Dome / and precipitated the human cargo into the water. The oa} cat iacresre oh which |yent his barnacled old form over|Pipp, 1b 724° 50. 0) 181 6-0 proposed by the diplomatic corps. ee ene! score pt Fi weak naval oll reserve. Canadian pilot also was drowned. Abedes Godoshian, 40 Aas y devi Med by {the Polo grounds today and cried | 2 SAU Oaidlad Ode tanto, Poking exprenses appreciation of| "isan (ie basement, had been per-| Today's session was behind closed! years old, of Delray, Michigan, was rival there. He sald ho did not) | 1 ikea lsh | Mote Pe tien con, | Copiously. | Wp dimit Ts Ob 8 | th adiness of the dipl t ‘0 die out and during cold/ doors but the committee plans to) know the name of the Canadian. service, plants con- He may have Been crying for 6 3— 11-0 cordibarntonn: eds paths! ipa A weather there was no other way to| begin later in the week a series of| "® Only one saved. Godoshian is being held for Amer-| Viction in the subconscious mind | tne owners of the New York Na- S000! 67 aD Cana: | Warm i) small basement apart-! public hearings to Inquire into the| The dead are: Elmas, 22; Ozts-! ica, immigration authorities. of Uae Mehares public and uncon |tiong and the New York Yankees 6) 10°30 10. 8. ment, which consists of but two|lease of the Teapot Dome reserve|anma, 18 years old and Hasgart, 16, fclously an impulse and favorable | who get most of the coin poured in| O42 POL. 9° 0." |rooms, than to turn on the gas in/to the Sinclair Oil interests. The| children of Abedes Godoshian, and = See = po ste Soky implanted. today, because at noon time it didn’t|***Bush, . _..0 0 0 9 0 0 the stove. }lease has been criticized by Senator|Fraig 14 and Vageney, 16, children Comics ‘Arrived: is is what is cated good will, | joox as though the magnates would|****Johnson,.1 1 0 0 0 06 | Apparently the deceased did not! LaFollette, Republican, Wisconsin, 3 ei ’ | the great by-product of sincere | cot broken backs carrying away the, Jones, LN CEE Whale hho | understand the great danger that | and others who are expected to take | °f Godoshian’s brother, and the un- . | advertising. money. The rain, which fell in a Sa Me si, OFF ON TO UR would attend the burning of the|a prominent part in the investiga-| !dentified Canadian pilot. Everybody Happy) The Casper Tribune is particu- | .teaay drizzle all morning up until] Totals. 31 6 65 27 13 © gas with no inlet for oxygen and no} tion, Government immigration author! j larly eaeroeee in these adver- | oon shooed away the early risers| *Batted for Pennock in eighth, outlet for the carbon monoxide gas No progress was made at the| ties and Ecorse police expressed the aS | tisers who are regular and con- | anq fellows with $1.10 had mo trou-| **Ran for Hofmann in eighth. SAN DIEGO, Calif, Oct. 15—| ‘Army, navy and marine corps are represented in a big fleet of air- that would be createa. It was be ause that she was unaware of this | fact that she went to bed without | opening a window. sistent, Such advertising not only en- hances the day's sales, but is form- ing favorable conviction in the meeting today, and because of the absence of several committee mem-|Dellef that the Armenians were be- bers from Washington {t was de-|ins smuggled into the United States ¢ided not to attempt to reach con-|from Canada. This bellef was | Although several days behind| their regular schedule, Walt and Skeezix final'y arrived in The Trib: for Witt in eighth Bush in ble getting a good seat in the bleach-| ers at one o'clock. There was a! fringe of customers around the up. eighth. per tler of the double decked grand: 3 AE craft that 1s roaring away from| besides her husband, the deceased | clusions regarding the geologists’| strengthened when it was learned|une office this morning and immedi-| Bund of the rising generation and J iands but only about halt a dozen|Pancroft, ms, .4 0 0 1 7 oO North Island today for San Fran-| {s survived by two sisters in Den-|report for another week at least.|that the Armenians had made ap-lately went to their accustomea| Molding a place with the genera- cosh patrons in the reserved seat|Groh, 3b 4 ted) Dee, cisco, Camp Lewis, Washington and! ver, another sister in Greenville,| ‘There will be another meeting next|Plication to be admitted into this piace on the comie page, where they | *om that now fs. Jsect*on at that hour. Frisch, 2b 4. 8 9° x oer fe the West Indies. It is the first | Pa. and by foster parents in Conifer | Monday, and meantime the plan for| Country a few weeks ago but due/ wil! be found keeping company with | Stee aes | And despite the possibility that) Young, rf. -.4 0 2 0 0 0 time that a combined army, navy | Colo. public hearings will be held in|to the Armenian quota being filled.|parney Google and Spark Plug. | ’ |the world’s series of 1923 might end| E. Meusel, If. 4 0 1 1 0 0 from North Island. fer-Gay chapel. The casket will —————_—_ The lake steamer was moving! arrive at the Tribune it was rumor- | ‘The drizzle was damaging to the! K 40 019 0 Oo San Francisco and the American | be open from 4 until 7 o'clock this } down the river when the accident | oq eedcisal that Walt and Mrs. Ble | size of the crowd but it didn't seri-| Snyder, c. -..4 1 2 4 0 0 Legion Convention will be the first | evening at that place, after which | | happened. The rowboat was travel-\som had eloped and Skeezix had ously injure the diamond. When the nf, D. -----3 0 0 0 B O objective of the entire fleet of 27 | the bodies will be shipped to Denver. | ing without lights and was undis-|peen left in repay of neighbors until tarpaulin was peeled off the infield| Ryan, p. 0 0 6.0 *6" Yo Planes. The navy planes will go| The funeral will be held from the | tinguishable in the dense fog that/their honeymoon was over, but a, the turf looked soft but playable|*Stengel, cf. .1 0 0 0 0 0 no further, but the army attach- | Olinger chapel in Denver on Wed: hung over the water. The steamer wire to the Chicago Tribune, home | eo |and after a critical examination **Bentley 1° 6120 008 t0 ment will go on to Camp Lewis to Prepare for an attempt to lower the speed record from the Canadian to the Mexican border. Yhe marine nesday. Ransom Howard, who had been rooming at 242 South Grant street, was found dead at 8:30 o'clock this struck the boat and hurled its oc-|or the Gasoline Alley family, elicited cupants into the river. It kept on|tnhe information that they were! {ts course apparently unawareofthe merely delayed in the mai’s and accident. ANAHEIM, Calif., Oct. 15—Rela tives of Mrs. Florence Kling Hard ing, widow of the late president IS POSTPONED Owing to the fact that the Cham- | been conducted by a squad of ex: - — — - perts on loam, it was decided to ple Totals 4°10 27 19 1 today. *Batted for Cunningham in eighth. | The gates to the Polo Grounds! **Batted for Ryan in ninth. corps airmen, after reaching San-|morning by his uncle, H. B. Gahn| co" i there teil trrauce the | Abedes Godoshian was pulled trom| "In onder that Trinune readers may | Harding, have received word that | were opened threo hours before ore by inni Francisco will head eastward over | who went to get him out of bed. Oc-| (°F 01 ion meeting of Set Gla ze 25 Wel i D 1 oe tained one oe the may! she has abandoned plans to spend|gamo time but there were only| Yank fs 100000050—8 the transcontinental air mail route|cupants of the other part of the| crsanization meeting of the Casper) the river by Luke West, a resident | "ot le Lae one viewing comic, the winter in Southern Callfornia | about three hundred persons in line 100111000—6 with the West Indies as thetr final | houso did not notice the cagfwon| Gorter ie at the Natrona County on oh ela ct Mise San piped Pu oy aera oe and will remain in Washington to| waiting to enter. The rain had| Three-base hit Pilani: ‘Hiaes objective. monoxide fumes that had been ere-| 1}, ccnool auditorium, the rei oF Rota of the river, who heard the today. complete the settlement of Mr.|ceased and out of the north came! runs: R r. Double plays. te ; gular} frantic cries of the floundering per Harding's personal affairs. |a cold damp wind that chilled thel Cor 1 or Page Seven. RECLAMATION IS IN DANGER WASHINGTON, Oct. 15.—The entire scheme of gov- Tuesday noon forum luncheon will| sons. He went to their rescue in a be dispensed with. All members| motor of the chamber and others who are|the scene of the collision only Interested in the Community Fund| Abedes was on top of the water launch, but when he reached LEGION ————_»>—__-_ movement are requested to attend| ‘The bodies of the other six were not LATE SPORTS the evening meeting at the High| recovered, rf ea EES Ecorse police were notified and| NEW YORK, Oct. oday . | Abedes was taken to a hospital. | was one of comparative rest for Chicago Teams | Questioned by the police, he sald) Zev and Papyrus, rival | the party of seven left Sandwich,! and British * Ont., at midnight last night and| Each Win Two rowed stealthily up the Canadian! | side of the river. Spotting a desolate| day at Belmont park. | place along the river they put out| Both were out on the tracks for | straight ahead until hit by the} light exercise but, following their | CONVENTION IS ernment reclamation development is endangered by t CHICAGO, Oct. 15.—Tied at two-| steamer. gallops of yesterday did not at- SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 15.—The fifth annual convention of the American Legion present situation of the more important projects, Secré Rel seme ster ger tte Na| Ho sald he had bargained with| tempt real time tests. Zev opened here officially this morning with more than 900 delegates, representing virtually tary Work declured today, opening the initial session of | tic tor the ofa game of the city ‘"® Seopeporge oe Windsor for the} *” falls Baars race romper ie every state and territory of the United States and thousands of visiting legionnaires in the fact-finding committee appointed by him to formulate | series this ufternoon at the Na-|(@Usslns of his children and his seed ipomsaw tat dleappolciting 2 attendance, : f ( a new reclamation policy. Radical reforms and improve-|t!on«l’s park. The White Sox’ states and was to pay him several| observers who declared the colt Final plans for the submission of resolutions and the transaction of business which ments must be effected, he said, it, otherwise had been mado which | evened the count yesterday by win-| tyousand dollars on their safe ar-| seemed “all out’ at the finish, |is to come before the delegates were completed at a meeting of the national executive the settlers were to be protected | added materially to the cost of con-, Ding, 6 to 8 es EAE) ee committee yesterday. thore of the cit — t a colorful | re from loss and the government's! structed projects, that others had} It was estimated by legion offi-| parade, rit ] 1b bedecked interests safeguarded. been undertaken that should never City G clals today that 10,000 members of | cr 1 ‘ triling Pct rates nclicsn encoveed| Saya) Geen itececsthaetthel tyes) EK QNSAS ity ame the organization arrived Sunday, | convention ring t 3 and tin of nols a be and we 1 thousand others arrived| Bi! this morning on special trains which had been delayed en route to this city. Among those who arrived yes nor 'T’. B, Campbell, of Arizona and r. John A. Widtsce, of Salt Lake J City. J Complaints from various groups vitally interested in development of arid lands began to reach him soon) after he assumed office, secretary Work told the committee, the com- plaints covering almost every phase | of activity, ‘The complaints in- cluded charges," he said, “that in many of the projects the original es- timates under which settlers were head costs of the service and many | of the individual projects, all borne by water users, were burdensome and excessiv “Under the system used in the| KANSAS CITY, Oct. 15.—Today's reclamation service I have been un-| game between Baltimore and Kansas able to get figures that appear de-|City, the fourth of the junior world) pendable as to the cost of individual | series, was postponed on account of/ ering embers in the hills and the) other sections and in various ways. projects or the total expended on/rain. It will be played tomorrow,|charred ruins of many buildings in| A dozen houses, four industrial all projects. weather permitting. {and about the city were reminders | plants, and oil well swelled the total “It is represented, taken from the aap stg. ke Te today of the week-end of fire which| of ‘Sunday conflagrations. One of records of the bureau, that the gov- visited the environs of Los Angeles| these, the blaze which destroyed a ernment’s total investment to June) beginning Saturday morning and|lumber yard and a furniture manu the device ty's bui raucous created ss and ap “the mak lam in tt Postponed; Rain sufficient to 0 that were Alvin of San \1 national commander of the | legion is her establishments to well over the mil- | Secretary of Labor James J rs crowded Mon mark, |Dayis, who is representing president rtually In the Santa Monica mountains,|Coolidge, James A. McFarland, nat west of here, a brush fire in Las|ignal commander of the Disabled Flores canyon was under control to-|American Veterans of the World| rooms day after having burned an area of/War, and General Joseph H. 1,800 acrev and destroyed three resi-|commander of the army of the re- | w Owsley Fra LOS ANGELES, Oct. 15.—Smou!d-, when the fire menace reappeared in s the incomir ates and cked into and DIES AT HOSPITAL Donal Swearinger, 53 years of induced to go upon the projects were | 30, 1923, in round numbers {s $181,-|age, died at a local hospital yester-| was still casting its red reflection} facturing plant in Vernon, *outh of} dences, Ten thousand crea at) public of Poland have been ¢ from 50 to 100 per cent too low, and | 000,000 und {ts total receipts about {day morning. The remains are now|on the'sky late last night. ‘'The| here, was belleved tq have resulted] Palos Verdes, near the Harbor dis-| ‘The legionnaires caught with the | tions f on that the actual cost has been s0| $46,000,000, leaving a balance in-|nat the Shaffer-Gay chapel pending) brush fire which Saturday took two| in loss of life, thou no bodies had] trict, w: swept by flames |carefree spirit of San Francisco en-| great that it is impossible for the| vested and unpaid of $135,000,000. |funera! arrangements which will not| liver in its sweep over a 15 mile| been found in the ruln# early today. Estimates of tho total fire loss in-|tered the city last night and made | ir farmers to pay out within the time| ‘The reclamation service, for|be maCe until word can be received|area north of Glendale and Eagle} Two other plants, a planing mill) volved in Saturday's and yesterday’s|San Francisco's streets merry nc w and manner fixed by law, or even at all; that mistakes, engineering and! from relatives born in Sootland, which this department 1s | respon- (Continued on Page Nine) hardly been yesterday and a glass works, increased the @s- Umate of lows suffered by industrial conflagrations ranged from $2,000,-|1 000 to more than twice that amount. |v f revelry. Tho ane = jammed the prin 108 ‘The deceased was| Rock, near here, had v' brought under control cipal,

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