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~~" } ‘ WYOMING FIELDS WILL BE VISITED Members of Petroleum Institute Accept Invitation to Visit Fields in this State Alarmed at what it considers a near crisis in the railroad situation of the country, the American Petroleum in- stitute, at its meeting yesterday morn- ing in Colorado Springs, adopted a resolution providing for a cordial ex- change of stock and any other co- operation looking to supply the trade if the transportation facili of the country become demoralized. The resolution further included a clause providing against other possible in- dustrial upheavals, which places oil producers in the same relation to each other as existed in war time, in so far as co-ordination of effort is con- cerned. Another resolution by which the institute becomes affiliated with the United States Chamber of Commerce was adopted and at a session this afternoon is expected to elect dele- gates to the International Trade con- ference to be held at Atlantic City late in September. By a unanimous vote the repre- sentatives present decried fraudulent advertising and false stock promotion and adopted a resolution approving the recent stand of the Advertising Clubs of America, insisting that ad- vertisements tell the unqualified truth. Henry L. Doherty, president of Cities Service company and of the Empire Oil and Fuel company, was appointed a trustee for the institute to cooperate with the Advertising clubs in conducting an effective war- fare against such practices. The institute voted to accept the invitation of Henry M. Blackmer of Denver to accompany him on a trip thru the Wyoming oil fields tomor- row. ———-_——_—__ CHARTERS GIVEN TO A LONG LIST OF CONCERNS CHEYENNE, Wyo., Aug. 29.—The Shoshoni Development company, ar oil concern capitalized at $100,000, has filed articles of incorporation in the office of the Wyoming secretary of state. The company’s capitaliza- tion is divided into 500,000 shares of the par value of 25 cents each. The directors for the first yeer are J. W. Hedenberg of Chicago and Harry L. ‘Kuykendall and James M. Rumsey, both of Rawlins. Other concerns chartered by the state follow: Keller-Brow Live Stock company, capital stock $100,000 divided into 1,000 shares of the par value of $100 each, business to be conducted in Converse county, directors for the first year Thornton P. and Godfrey P. Brow and John P. Keliar. | Rock River Lumber company, cap-| ital stock $100,000 divided into 1,000 shares of the par value of $100 each. | Directors for the first year P. C.| Nicholaysen of Casper and Neal and) Maren M. Tyler, both of Rock River. | ENUSTHENT NOW OPEN IN CAVALRY PLATOGN HERE | | _ Enlistment papers for men joining | the Casper cavalry platoon arrived jlast night and the first work of ens listing 25 or more men started this |morning. Twenty-five men must be | enlisted’ within the next five days oy |Casper will have no platoon of na- | tional guards, according to Capt. Vir cent Carter, in command of cavalry | troops which includes the local unit, Captain Carter will be in charge of jenlisting the men at night but men may fill out practically all of their jenlistment papers during the day av jthe Army and Navy club under the |direction of Secretary Harry Fisher. | As many as 35 men may be enlist- ed and those in charge of the forma- | tion of the platoon here are strivine |for that goal. At least 25 enlistments are needed to make the platoon an \ actuality. | $$$ AATRONA FRUIT CROP AUST FAIR, SAYS EXPERT | Frank © Julian, well known fruit |Srower of this county, leaves today S23 Basin where he will judge the horticultural exhibit at the Big Horn county fair. From there Mr. Julian |will go to Douglas as department |superintendent of the fruit exhibit at the state fair and to judge the jsecond, third and fourth classes. Mr. Julian says the fruit crop in ‘ |this county is far from being up to standard this year but he hopes that Natrona county will be able to have! an exhibit deserving of some of the prizes to be awarded. |MISS SWEET MAKES | HER SCREEN ‘RE-DEBUT’ | “The Unpardonable Sin,” which is| |to be shown at the Lyric theater Sat- jurday, will be of interest to local |moving picture devotees for a num-« ber of reasons. The picture is a |Screen adaptation of the Major Ru- ‘pert Hughes’ book, by the same} name, which has had such a tremen- dous sale during the past two years, {and has stirred up merry controver- |sies in various parts of the country | because of its fearless handling of a timely subject. The star of the photo-play version is Blanche Sweet, who is making her “re-debut” on the xereen, after ‘having been in retirement for the past couple of years. Miss Sweet | will be remembered for her splendid| |performances under the direction of |David Ward Griffith. The director lof “The Unpardonable Sin” is Mar- shall Neilan, whose work with im-| portant sta’ others, has won him a place among the foremost directors of his day. |The production is one of the most |elaborate which has ever been given | a screen story. | FT, RUSSELL PUBILIST BAGKED WITH S800 PURSE CHEYENNE, Wyo., Aug. 29.—Ad-)| mirers among the garrison of Fort |cently discharged from Camp Grant, | like Mary Pickford on | Ini egational Church of _ th ase scone stock, Alessio Giasell of “Kid eRoneoe mete ie first year B. F. Heister, Ella! pound boxing sensation of the wee! ly for ane G re J. Snyder, George|!ournaments held at the post this| A eagee, Mi caida |summer, have raised a purse of $500, een aittst Church of Powell, no| With which they will back their fo-| inst Bapistrectors for the first|Vorite against any fighter of his| eo on A. Litterell, William A.|Weightin the Rocky ountain region. ee Boy H W. an der, D.,Johnny Stopper or some of the other | cheeses ate Stech pid? “|Colorado serappers are expected to) ledge a SaWis : Certified artciles of incorporation| sit up and gake notice when this| were filed by the Mountain Motors|come to their attention. Fontana, company, a Colorado corporation cap- italized at $50,000. | who is an enlisted man of the Fif. jteenth United States cavalry, is very | fast and possesses a wallop of power} Hh ifn were’middlewéights. | jentirely disproportionate to his | BARBERS HERE PLAN BIG ==" SERGE MEN ARE DVSAPPOUNTED IN QUEST FOR LAND Required to Pay Company $100! Location Fee Tho Such Was Not Mentioned in Circulars Six disappointed ex-service men re- turned to Casper today from Gilette Avhere they had gone to locate on homestead land. They went in an- swer to advertisements and letters sent to Casper and other parts of the country by the Military Livestock company, which is headed by a Mr. Tyroller, they claim. \ When they were asked to pay a $100 location fee after paying expenses to Gilette they refused and returned. The six former service men have notified M. P. Wheeler, land commis- sioner here, of the case and action is expected. , ts ; The story one disappointed sol-| dier tells is that the proposition is to furnish lease to the land so a man leaving the service may secure | a homestead in a short time and| locate on it. The lease is to be paid | by the locetor in improvements, the| soldier states, A brother of the company presi- dent is in a navy uniform. The loca- tion fee of $100 is the first thing the company wants, according to the six ex-service men who went to the! ground personally. However, they say they could not find anybody who! had located on any land. } On the strength of the promises} of the company minus any mention | of the location fees, two captains re-/ Ill., and one navy man on furlough | from the Great Lakes Training Sta- tion made the trip to Gillette only to be disappointed. They told the homestead seekers from Casper all) they were out was the railroad fare because they did not pay the loca- tion fee. The six ex-soldiers admitted they were leery and refused to pay the fee asked.’ They are out the expense of their trip overland. They say advertisements of the company appear in the official camp papers at Camp Grant and at Great Lakes, where many service men read the notice with interest. AS agrees S A Tribune Wantad will sell hot or iced. from Dubois, spent the day here yes-! terday on business. | An important feature of the Labor | Day parade, which is expected to realize a substantial sum for the Sal- vation Army, will be staged by the local Barbers’ Union, an organiza-| tion which is always ready to turn} good deeds for a worthy cause. At the head of the parade the tonsorial artists will carry the huge | American flag, spread out with one) or two men at h corner, and aval people along the line of march are invited to chip in silver coins of any and all denominations, all of which will be turned over intact to the Sal- vation Army building fund. 4 When the flag passes in the line of march, dig down and chip in whatever you feel like giving, and the | Barbers will see that every penny | goes to the building fund. “HEINE” ENGLE WINS TWO FALLS FROM JOHN PAPPAS, And how to cut it. You will pound 9 bars White Laundry Soap (By Associated Press.) DUBUQUE, Iowa, Aug. | “Heine” Engel won two out of three | falls from John Pappas of Chicago, in,a fast mateh here last night. Both 5 Rolls Toilet Paper for Shikany’s 29.—| Casper Joan Office rill iu money of LA oe bag, and Suitcases : =: ¢ Reliable two deliveries daily. Phone 903 Successors to the Wholesale Senply Co. The High Cost of Living find the solution in these items. Saturday Specials Brookfield or Meadow Queen Fancy Creamery Butter, per 3 lb. can Mt. Cross Coffee with China__ No. 2 can Sugar Corn, per can No. 2 can Early June Peas, per can_ No. 2 can Thomas Lima Beans, per can 4 oz. bottle Monarch Flavoring Extract, per bottle_ 5 |b. pail Pure Country Sorghum, ‘per pai for_ ¢ 3 bars Rose Blossom Glycerine Soap for_ Cash Store REMEMBER—No matter where. you live we give you 143 Second Street ce awe north. }of his campaign in 1917 and was — “0 SR esac Daily Cribune WILOGAT LIND BRINGS — LAFOLLETTEATTACKS BIG | FRECKLE-FACE TWELVE-FIFTY AGRE. INTERESTS IN WARNING TO sx ans srs What is, so far as known the high- est price ever paid for wild cat acre- age in Wyoming was paid last week by the Penn Oil company of Phila- delphia to the Wolfrang Oil company for 800 acres in the Split Rock field 40 miles norteast of Douglas and 18 miles west of the Lance Creek field. The price was $12.50 an acre. or $10,000 for the tract, which does not lie in the best part of the field, recording to persons familiar with he structure. There is no drilling yoing on in this district at present, vhich makes the high price paid more remarkable. The Wolfrang compa- ay controls the greater part of the lome. = Ne AGITATION AGAINST CHINESE EL PASO, Tex., Aug. 29.—Agita- men and Mexican women is spread- ‘ng in Sonora, Chihuahua and other west coast states of Mexico. This has long been a source of much ill-{ feeling against the Chinese as many} have married Mexican women in the Villa gave this as his reason for killing many Chinese at the time credited with saying the Chinese were trying to make a “yellow race” of his people. “A Product Properly Packaged Is More Than Half Sold” Have you ever noticed how to a distinctive style of package or a label, and that if you find one article under that label which gives you satisfaction you acquire a confidence that any other goods displayed under that label must be ofthe same satisfactory quality? Therein lies the secret of the wide distribution of all NO-VARY PRODUCTS—a trial alone leads to the use of all. This is the season for Bo-Ka English Breakfast Tea—prepared either TRY IT YOURSELF NO-VARY PRODUCTS 60. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. 143 East Second Street Choice Pot Roast, per Ib. .... Plate Boil, pertlb:? kt Choice Bacon, per Ib. ..... Pure Lard, per lb. ........ Pure Lard, per 5 lb. pail .. Pure Lard, per 10 Ib. pail A fine lard substitute, per per 4 lb. pail $1.40 per lb os Fancy Calves’ Liver, Der -Iby tion against the marrying of Chinese! SATURDAY ONLY Jewel and White ‘Cloud Shortening, Try our Fancy Pork Sausage, Ranchers—If you have i ai young hens or springs, I will pay you market price J. SANDISON, Prop. GIE LEASE BILL THOT (By A a | WASHINGTO —Renew- jing the attack against the monopolis- tie control of the country’s nature) resource Senator LaFollette warned ithe late esteray against und haste in passing the oil land leasing bill and charged that the Brit-| ish government was behind a big oil company which was getting a hold on America, | NEW SOUTH WALES PUTS UP BARS 10 IMMIGRANTS: | SYDNEY, (By of New South Wales the Commonwealth government of Australia that it will not permit any nigration for ress.) 1.)—The state has informed one year, in order ore successfully cope with the em of repatriating its soldiers and sailors. This ban against imm} gration includes the British Isles, de ite the fact that all other states of the Commonwealth have opened their ‘doors to emigrants from en easy it is to get attached Sandison ‘Market Co. F Telephone 428 ode | it will not cost you a pen { Veneer } | PARIG, Aug. 28-The general ! quarters of the French army, es- g Out Ugly Spots! ished August 2, 1914, at Viery to Remoye Easily | le Francois, soon will be discontinued - | after five years of varying fortunes, 2's ) Freckle-face/ vicissitudes, reverses and victories. to try a remedy for freckles with the] It will now be superseded by the old guarantee of a reliable concern that French Supreme War Council, with unless|headquarters at the Military School if itjin Paris. plexion the{ Marshal Petain; it is understood, expense of trifling, will drop the title of commandet-in- Simply get an ounce of Othine—| chief to take that of chief of staff, double strength—from any druggist! which Joffre held at the beginning of and a few epplications should show |the war. you how easy it is to rid yourself of the homely freckles and get a beaut ful complexion. Rarely is m P it removes the freckles; wt does give you a clear com the ounce needed for the wor e. tr Be sure to ask the druggist for the N. na Fi IC }double strength Othine as this a 0 ue 0. Phone 949 strength is sold under guarantee of money back ie it fails to remove 3 J..L. BIEDERMANN, Prop Edward Murane lett ieae nights co ‘oop J urane le ast night for Seattle, Washington, where he will hE 5 s. Cue attend his seni ir in college, He % City Office 157 has spent the er here with his Street Parents, Judge and Mrs. C. M. Mu. % Gen. Office Sth and Beech rane. Mr. Murane will be on the Streets college football team again this year Last year he played tackle. t Kimball’s Saturday Specials Toilet Articles 75¢ Bottle Colgates’ Toilet Water $1.50 Williams’ Toilet Water $1.00 Williams’ Toilet Water 30c Peroxide Vanishing Cream = 60c Soul Kiss Face 42 CO) S11 foe hsp dtl eR aise er = Cc 60c Palmolive Cold 48 Cream poms Cc 60c¢ Williams’ Shampoo Liquid DeWitt’s Toilet Cream saa $1.65 Bottle Oriental 33 Cream eae $1. 25¢ Lilly’s Tooth te . > Colgate’s Shaving Powder ” ‘ 50c Williams’ After Shaving Lotion 40c Rikers’ Tooth Powder 25¢ can Colgates’ Taleum Powder Soaps 20e Cake Maxine Elliott Soap, 2 for. : 30c¢ Cake Cashmere Bouquet Soap . 15c Package Lux ra 15c¢ Ivory soap Flakes Stationery 15¢ Linen Tablets 15c Linen Envelopes 40¢ Box Linen Stationery .. Patent Medicines 50c Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin Fletcher's Castoria 60c Sloans’ 48 Liniment Cc 10¢ Package Epsom Salts Extra Special $1.25 Solid Back, Bristle Hair Brush 15c Package ElVampiro Insect Powder $2.00 Real Rubber Fountain Syringe »0 Female Whirling , Syringe 50¢ Size Liquid Liggett’s Famous Jam Regular 45c; Special 29c TEA and COFFEE - Regular 60c, Special Liggett’s Opeko Coffee, 9e Liggett’s Opeko Tea, Regular 55c, Special 9c Limit of Two Articles to Each Customer PRESCRIPTION | The Rexall Store DEPT. im 83! | ids ia STORE PHONE Fite: ALL| 2 26 WwW HIMBALL HANDLES THE GOODS <-sseveeswrevvvescoeeee: — a ee ae eee oe een