Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 18, 1920, Page 5

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T SECOND —_ Venire Drawn for District Court Includes Men Who Will Sit in Local Murder Cases Transferred There. DOUGLAS, Wyo, Mar. 18—The trials of Hugh Armstrong, Charlies Moore and Roy E. , charged with murdér’ in connection with the killing of Deputy Sheriff Tom Majors in n- bootleg’ raid at Casper last Novem- ber, hoid first importance on the crim- inal docket for the April term of the district court. Both the prosecution and the defense anticipate some difficulty in securing jury for the three trials, which be headed by that of Hygh Armatrong, Who is alleged to have fired the shot caused Major's death. ‘A yenire of fifty jurymen has been drawn to report for April 7. and it is likely that some ‘will be selected among these to help make up the panel which wil sit In the case, The names of the first venire follow: Douglas—Claude McDermott, R, L, Swan, George Ullman, W. D. Jamieson, IPA GIRL STRUCK BY TRAIN AT LUSK INJURED LUSK,* Wyo., March 18.—Opal Hene Robertson, — seven-year-old dapghter of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Roberts ce is' in the hospital here suffer- from. injuries received when hurled front the track by ‘a locomo- tive. It is believed that she will re- ver, ee Pat nattered severe con- ont ead and a bad cut. The ttle girl, in company with her father, was walking up the track. Neither heard the passenger train engine because of; the high wind blowing: .The was picked up -alongside jthe track where she was the pilot struck her. MEKSON'S HOLE SEEKS LIBEL AUTHOR THERE JACKSON, Wyo,,’ Mar, 18.—Jackson residents are watching ‘the post office closely with the intention of identify- A. R. Weston, Waldo Bolin, Oliver D, ing ‘thé person who claims mail ad- Roush, Warren Powell, Charlés E, a to "Iman H. Wilson.” Re- Clurk, PB. BE, Neuman, H. BE. Wagner,| tly communications signed with J, Wy Foster, S.'S, Call, James Mars- den, Percy Brockway, O. T. Freeman, Alfred Lass,“ J. Logan, 8. E. Niel- son, W. H; Storer, B. W, ‘Thurston, Oliver. Cannon, Frank Bunker, J, C, Loyett, William I, Winslow, F. W, Thomas, O. Fredell, E. M. Clayton, L. ). Bostwick, George Arnold, Frank Vhelan, H. R, Russell, Glenrock—George P. Clayton, J, J. Putnam, James Devine, Jathes Lam, John Miller, J. E. Kimball, John Engel- king, John E. Clayton, Earl Clayton, G, Cy Bock, By #. Phibrook, Shawnee—Harry Haas, J. G. Swick- hamor, J. W. Piekenbaugh. La Bonte—Luther Freeman, Walter Nunn, Gordon Fitzhugh, Boxelder— Tracy Bartshe, Higer, Frank Philbrick,: Tost Springs—M,. Barnes, J, A. Can- non.) vs bs $ Careylurst—Charles Nollings, James Orin Junction—Fred ran, Bill—Lealie ‘Osburn, Beaver—John Stinson. Ellas NOTICE: OF DISSOLUTION: State of Wyoming: County, of. Natrona Public, notice is hereby given that at a special’ meeting of the stockholders of the Leener Brokerage & Investment. Company, a corporation organized and existing under and ‘by virtue .of the lawa of the State of Wyoming, and held at Room’ 11, Oil Exchange Bldg. Cen- ter’ Street, hour of 10 o’clock A. M., at which ae ‘of the stockholders repre- senting all. of the, capital. stock of said of: @igsolution was ywere. present, a resolution a, ously adopt- ed ‘by said stockholders dissolving gaid corporation all of its: indebtedness hav- 4ng been: fully discharged and satisfied, J and distribution of assets of said. cor-}. poration having been made to its stock- Hol legally entitled to receive the ‘same.’ ‘terminating business of the. cor- noration and surrendering’ its: charter. and- franchise -and corporate name and authorizing the officers uf the corpora- tion to take the necessary and proper ateps~to effectuate the~ dissolution of said tion...’ and-stockholders and to close the fajts of the company, are C. H. Hort man, M. I) Gehres #nd-C. E. Winter, t-directors -in. charge of, it ent of the corporation just prior to. lution. : That a record of such) proceedings, signed by the president of the corpora-, tion, verified by his affidavit and ‘at- tested by the Secretary of said corpors- tion under its corporate seal, has been duly recorded as reqaired by law. Dated. the 12th day of March, A, D. 2920. (SEAL) Cc. H. HORTSMAN, Prenident. Cc. Ee -WINTER,. Secretarv. WINTER & WINTER, Atts, Pub; Mar. 18,25, Apr- 1, 8, 15, 22, 29, Casper,. i) the “Phe statutory trustees for creditors}. that name, and regarded as libels on the citizens of Jackson Hole, haye been appearing in Denver and other publi- cations,” No “person named Iman H. Wilson is known to residents of Jack- son Hole, ‘but mail addressed to such a person: has been arriving at the local Post office, asaumedly coming from the publications in which the alleged. libel- ous articles were published. If this mail is chiimed it is in prospect. that the claimant will ‘have an interesting experience with indignant residents of the valley, — ORDINANCE NO. 138-A. j|AN_ ORDINANCE AMENDING SEC- TION ONE OF ORDINANCE. NO. 113-A: aes Be it ordamei by the: Mayor and Coun- cil of the City of Casper: Section 1. That’ Section 1 of Ordi- nance No. 113-A.of. the City of Casper, Wyoming, be amended and reordained to read as follows: “It shall be unlawful to charge more than the following rates for transporta- tion of passengers in the City of Cas- per, by taxicab; automobile or other ve- hicle: For fourteen (14) blocks or less, fifty eents (50c) for each passenger and one piece of hand baggage for each passen- ger, and ten cénts (10c) extra for each additional piece of hand baggage. For distances in ¢@xcess of fourteen (14) blocks, within the City limits, twenty- five cents (26¢).additional to said charge for each six blocks, or fraction there- of, for one passenger, provided, that if ong, passenger, each a passe jal bevcarried for the’rate prescribed for fourteen blocks or less; provided further; that ten cents (100) “extra. may be charged for each piece of hand” ¢arried from the starting point to-destination. . If the e or passengers return with a delay,of not more than five min- utes, 4 like charge can be made. All distances shall be computed from the place where the p&ssenger is re- ceived, to the point of delivery by the shortest practical route, For waiting time, due to the request of delay.of the passenger a charge of not more thai five cents (5c) per min- ute shall be mate for each minute after the first flve minutes, whether there be on or more passengers. No charge shall be made for children under five years of age accompanied by :]} parent or companion paying fare. If service is desired by the hour the rate shall not exceed three dollars ($3.00) per hour for the use of any taxicab or other yehicle.”” , ‘This ordinance’ shall be in force and effect from and after ten days after its passage. Passed and approved this 15th day of March, A. D. 1920. (SEAL) B. H. PELTON, JR., Attest: Mayor. ASA F. SLOANE, City Clerk, Pub. Mar. 18, 1920. 4 If Uncle Sam wants to get out of debt all he needs to do is to turn his shipyards into ouija-board factories.— New York World. 1920,. Mothers should see that the whole nsing Fiz-! spring. NOW IS THE TIME. The family wil pe cgi ot along better if the blood is given a thoro ping. i cleaned oi the germs of winter accumu i C) STE Ws ROCKY MOUNTAIN TEA is one of the jer, happier, and get cA fe3 system, drivenaway. HOLLISTER'S very Pad ~and: surest in the whi family. and happy SMITH-TURNER. Warning to. Mothers family take a ynoro, purifying system , 1 be health- the to take, Get it and see the difference Their color wil be better, they'll feel fine and be well Ice Cream Parlor Pears ues 146 South Center 7 Fresh Cut Flowers Every Day LIVE NEWS OF WYOMING | (CHEYENNE HOTEL MAN | FEARFUL LEST. LIQUOR. CASE BE TAKEN HIGHER CHEYENNE, Wyo., March 18.— Chris 1. Cherstopohls, proprietor of the | Dyer hotel here, apprehensively is not- ing the approach of all strangers, fear- ing disastrous sequels to his conviction in police court here Monday of illegal- ly selling liquor at the hotel, He was \fined $75,00 on the municipal charge, ,but tie fine is bothering him less than j the realization that he may be .pros-} ecuted by both state and federal gov- jernments on the same charge and that \the evidence which resulted in his con- viction in the police court may be used against him if he faces state and fed- eral charges. AMERICA’S INDUSTRIAL’ TROUBLES ONLY STARTED SAYS ENGLISH LEADER (By Associated Press.) LONDON (iy Mail)—‘America’s in-| dustrial troubles are only beginning,” | said W. T. Griffiths, of the Iron ana Steel Trades confederation, who has, just returned from a trip to America, to @ news agency interviewer. “I have heen most impressed with the dire lack of machinery in America for! settling industrial disputes, especially in the fron and steel trade,” he went on. “In that respect we are years ahead of; America.” Mr. Griffiths added that he/ found general chaos in every industry. | Fear of. American competition, he con- tinutd, was more fictitious than real, and he was thoroly convinced that Eng- Jand had a wonderful opportunity for} recovering its former position in the} foreign markets. y “In one thing America excels,” Mr. Griffiths concluded. “The output of their } steel mills would be almost incredible | to the average British iron and steel! worker.” MORMONS PLAN $50,000 CHAPEL FOR EVANSTON EVANSTON, Wyo., Mar. 18.—The Evinston ward bishopric of the Church! of Latter Day Saints has authorized the construction here of a new ward; chapel at a cost of approximately $50,000. RAILROADER IS FRONTIER DAYS _ COMMITTEEMEN: ‘ARE APPOINTED CHEYENNE, Wyo., March 18.—Dr. B. F. Davis, state veterinarian, Tues- day was appointed a member of. the 1920. Frontier days. committee, and Goubtless will be elected chairman of the‘organization which will arrange for Cheyenne's annual wild west show, Ad- jutant General Timothy F. McCoy, who staged ‘the ‘Treat ‘em Rough” celebra- tion at Thermopolis last year, is an- other member of the 1920 committee, the remaining members of whom are Charles PD. Carey, brother of Governor Robert, D. Carey, Jack A. Bristol, a newspaper man, and Ed. Storey, a bank- er. The Frontier days. celebration prob- abiy will be held the third week in July. K.C.STAR TAKES IT ALL BACK ON COBB’S CLAIMS The following reference to William B,| Cobb, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Cobb, and former resident of Casper, as pub- lished in the Kansas City Star, will be of interest to his friends here; “In this humble department of the Star a few days ago, some facetious and foolish rémarks were made in con- nection With the fact that a picture of| William Allen White had appeared in| an article in the Saturday Evening) Post which was written for that pub- lication by Goy. Henry J. Allen on the, subject of the new industrial court law} in Kansas. “In a burst of amazement we com- mented on the fact that our old friend from Emporia was made to appear in a military uniform, on. which. was strapped an arsenal of shooting irons, and that ‘Glad Bill’ was made to appear as standing at attention, ready .to go over the top and charge a nest - of| enemy machine guns—Old Bill White, | who wouldn't know which end of a gun was loaded, and who never sought to cripple anything in the world except a nest of political jobbers, in the act of carting off the statehouse dome at | tween an officer's military garb and the plain and simple uniform of a | peaceful *¥" man, . “Of course, we never saw the Em- poria editor standing ‘et attention.’ The military editor was justified in making’ | that mistake, for;it is the nearest ap- } proach to ‘attention’. Bill White ever reached.”: We have seen him only in actidri—whether on the field of gory political" battle, ‘in ‘the conduct of a Bull Moose convention, bearing aloft | the flag at Armageddon or carving | Toast pig at his: own table for ‘those | present,’ he’s always in action, “As to the rest, we stand ‘at atten- tion’ and in humiliation. .We acknowl- edge the bonehead on every point ex- cept the main point, which our friend from Lawrence fails to make clear: What. the deuce was Bill White's pic- ture doing’ in the article in the Satur- day Evening Post arid what was the meaning of the cut line: ‘Naw is the time: for the state to shoulder its re- Bponsibility?! ” PIMPLES ON FAGE FOR TWO YEARS Itched and Bumed. Face aMass _ Of Eruptions, Cuticura Heals, “My face was affected with pim. ples. “They were large and hard and would fester, and were Scattered over my face. At 9 times my face would be a mass of eruptions. They itched and burned, and 1 would lose sleep, Cuticura Ointment I was healed.’’ (Signed) | . Mrs. Philip Hein, Box 303, 903 Lake St., Sandpoint, Idaho, Aug, 22, 1919. Promotes and maintains skin purity, skin comfort and skin health often when all elsefails. The Soap to cleanse and purify, the Oint- ment to soothe and heal, the Talcum to powder and perfume. You can do no better than make these fragrant, super-creamy emollients every- day toilet preparations. aoa every- where at 25 cents each. Sampleeach free bY. mail. Address card : “Cuticura, Dept. R, Malden.”’ SBEF~Cuticura Soap shaves without mug. “Topeky.’ “We wondered what dear old Wil- lam was doing in the picture, anyway, no reference to him having been made in’ the governor’s article (more’s the wonder, since it was written by Henry), and our ainazement almost turned to indignation when we read under the picture the cut line: ‘Now is the time for the state to shoulder its bbe Pte sibility.’ Lawrence, William B. Cobb, to file a -PICKED UP. BY cross-bill, interpleading to show that the military editor of the Star has pulled a sorrowful bonehead, The uni- form in which the artist had ¢lothed ' “But, comes now our friend from WYOMING GALE Mr. White was not military at all. It | CHEYENNE, Wyo., March 18.—C. B. was merely the togs of a Y. M. G. A.t Carter, a Colorado & Southern fireman, secretary, and the thing that looked running north from this city, is able like the armament of a ninfantry bri- to sympathize with victims of recent gade was nothing more than 4 Sam Kentucky. and» Mississippi tornadoes Browne belt, and Mr. White is not who were reported by the press dis- standing at attention, He's only a) patches to\have been bodily picked up ing still, | by the wind. While Carter was stand- “This department stands corrected ing on the tender,of a locomotive at and the military editor has been re- Iron Mountain Sunday night, durmg duced to the rank of corporal and as- a gale, he was picked up by a gust signed to kitchen police. The idea of of tornado-like volocity and hurled to such a mistake occurring in a news- the ground alighting nearly 40 feet paper which has aroused the ire of all from the locomotive. He sustained a the pacifists in the country as an or- fracture @f the lez and other Jess seri: gan of the fire-eating “epiiitarist ous injuries. arty, not knowing the difference be LAST ‘WEEK OF THE BIG RED TAG SALE Women’s and children’s garments and millinery at the most sensational prices -ever offered. All new spring merchandise. THE LEADER 146 East Second Street FRE right balance of costly Turkish and Domestic tobaccos, propor- tioned by experts—-that’s why Chesterfields ‘‘satisfy.”” Ev uff brings you the full, rich Gavie of genuine Turkish tobacco and the lively relish of choice Domes- tic leaf. \ And the blend—the manufacturer’s private formula — can- not be copied. Every package enclosed in glassine, moisture- proof paper that seals in the flavor. CIGARETTES “Nothing wrong with our balance” . —Chesterfield ania lea In India, as long as their parents are/rather short and below the normal : alive, the sons, tho married and with | Weight. - children of their own, da not separate, but live in the same house and under SAREE NE “ AUTOMOBILE OWNERS—Save a fw hundred this year. See our ad this isstig, the pee es of their purents, UNIVERSAL CHEMICAL CO.— t _The best type of man for long life is _ va “3 316 = 3 iS . 2 The Story of 4 : a Package t t Perhaps you have noticed that some potato flakes come | 3 in unsealed packages with ‘‘slip-in’’ flaps. But not ““M & G’s’’! fy | « We want to deliver M & G ft _ ; E Potato Flakes to you full weight Pork | £ and crisply fresh. So we not only place them in a moisture-proof glassine bag, but we seal air-tight the outer pack- age as well, Be sure to get ‘M & Q's.” Your grocer has~them. Colorado Potato Flake & Mfg. Co. Denver, Colorndo “By Sealed Package-Al Bl eBRA> 1 wha 1 UPR RO RIK A IRA IRORLR weirs © a cc) % ot it Sze: The New Spring Models CAre Here Tailored hy Hart, Schaffner & Marx And every man who knows good clothes and wears good clothes realizes full well that there is none better to be had. 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