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PAE TWELVE ss MAKE GOS 0 ELD NE AMGLE CREEK PIPELINE IN USE AGAIN Tank ears have arrived atthe loading rack at Dakoming, Wyo:, from which point Mule Creek oil is shipped, and the first run of Mile Creek oil since March, 1921, was made yes- terday. "Ue Ohio Oil company and the Western States Oil and Land compatiy are now active in this field and all wells will be produced to dull capacity in a very short time. For the present there "i= gene sew drill- clair Consolidated Of] corporation told ing tm the @ieM. fge operations being] its stockholders at their annual meet- confined to produ ot of only. ing that the company was in a very satistactory condition and in a posi- tion to pay dividends any time that its board deems so doing advisable. ‘The increase of $1,000,009 In 1921 de. Preciation charges, were $12,000,000, against $11.000,000 tn 1920, a smaller total of business. Mr Sinclair said, was the result of the corporation's po- licy of being liberal in its writeoffs. E. R. Thayer and J. R. Simpson were ded to its directorate. Stneialr Meeting. Prestient H. FP. Sincair ot the-Sin GRAIN PRICES OAG IN MART May Wheat Sustains Heaviest Loss in Chicago Trading Today CHICAGO, May 19.—Wheat prices Vv. ad Gross domestic crde ofl stocks held In pipeline and tank farm storage in the United States ircrease’ 9,552,000) barrels in the month of April acco: ing to the weekly summary of Ameri can Petroleurh institute. The increase eust of the Rockies was 7,703 009 b: relz and in California 1,820,000 barrels. | Daily average cross crude oi! pro- gage Petz duction in the Un:tcd States increased Nr ce Woe crake mete tavge| 14960 barrels for the week ented May} im the September delivery than in] 1% totaling 1,422,400 barreis. as com-| cther months. The selling appeared | Pred with 1,407,450 barrels the pre-/ to be in the nature of liquidation on | C*ding week. A the part of foreien holders, ‘The May| OklohamoKansas shows a datty av- Goltwery, which made a steep decline|°T8S@ &ross production of 46 ny. was able to rally somewhat| lS. an increase of 6 559 barr this: morr here today Sac EAE 00 carloads. De- north Le les on acts totaled 145,- b is In Okt ) bushel ening which va bar tne eS to ie advance|°% the Osage nation ‘s shown at 95,100] with May $142 and July $128% to|>arrels, against 100,000 barrels, and $1.26. was followed by @ slight general |CUtput of the Lyons-Quinn pool was 38,400 barrels, nst 800 ‘The Mexia pool, central Tex: ported as 86,500 barrels, agains 000 barrels. Haynesville, north Louisi- ana, 49,150 barrels, against 44,150 bar- rels and El Dorado, Arkansas, 26,300 : aah barrels, against 36,050. In the Gulf : pecneoneenest nos iene Coast field, West Columbia shows no state report si jen Fe Fy “| cha and Ors 000 bushels larger than that indicatea | Chane RSEO Conny Se xepck eed at 17,900 barrels, against 19,000 bar by the federal May 1 estimate. There | reig, 2 was \gtssip too that St Louis was! ‘he tmports of py-roleum (crude and| loading 76 cars of wheat to send to! refined oils) nt the principal United Chicago. Closing prices were unset-| states ports for the week ending May tled, % to 4%c net lower, with May/13 totaled 2,873,200 barrels, a dally av % to $1.40 and July $1.24% to/ erage of 410,457 barrels, compared with 3,278,500 barrels, a daily average of and then something of a reac- Wet weather delaying field op: ms in the corn belt gave firm. ness to the market for corn and oats. Subsequently the market underwent A pronounced setback owing largely wag, barrels. | higher, July 64% to 64%c, corn eased a trifle and then scored slight gains, all around. Later the market sympathized to some extent with the weakness of whent prices. The was steady y's finish to y 64% to 644 ‘0 Yc higher, July 4c and then kept near to initial figures. Provisions were neglected but nomi nally steady in line with hog values. 500 barrels, a daily average of 468,3 barrels for the week endef May 6. Petroleum statistics for March show an excess of domestic production and imports over indicated total consump- tion, including exports, amounting to 15,710,058 barre ——__ ORDINANCE NO. 263-A. AN_ ORDINANCE REQUIRING THE LABELING OF ALL CLOTH, FABRIC, GARMENTS OR ARTI- S_OF APPAREL SOLD OR ERED FOR SALE IN THE CITY OF CASPER WHICH CO. TAIN WOOL OR PURPORT TO‘ CONTAIN WOOL, AND OF ALL SAMPLES CONTAINING OR PURPORTING TO CONTAIN WOOL DISPLAYED IN THE CITY OF CASPER IN SOLICIT- ING ORDERS, AND PROVIDING FOR PUNISHMENT FOR VIOLA- TIONS OF THIS ‘ORDINANCE, NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT OR- DAINED BY THE MAYOR AND} CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF CASPER: Section 1. Every person, firm or corporation selling or offering for sale in the City of Casper any cloth, fabric, garment or article of appar\ containing wool, as herein defined, gr purporting to contain wool or Asplaying in the City of Casper any*sample of cloth, fabric, garment or article of apparel con- taining wool or purporting to con- tain wool, shall place thereon in Gosing Quotations. Open High Low 11.82 12.02 11.90 Butter, Eggs, Ponltry. CHICAGO, May 19.—Butter lower; creamery extras 34c; first 31@33%c. seconds Eggs unsettled; receipts firsts 24@24%4c; laneo plan view and in plain readable let- ters and words a conspicuous label in one of the three following fprms: 1. ord! ise All virgin wool. 2. Not less than virgin wool. No virgin wool. | Virgin wool as herein defined is | wool which previous to its use in the labeled article never has formed any part of any cloth, fabric, gar- ment or article of apparel. In the event that any article is labeled in the form indicated as No. 2 above, the blank in such form shall be May 19.—Sec-' filled in with the real percentage Chaplin and used in said article. Provided, red H. Blume of | however, that in labeling any gar- e court Thursday, ai)ment or article of apparel which 1 the Kiwanm| contains lining, facing or trimming, ved,| the label shall not be taken to refer be and shall not refer to the lining or "| facing or trimming or the percent- t age or percentages of wool con- » judges of the) tained therein. Section 2. Any firm, person or > |corporation who shall violate any NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION part of this ordinance or who shail i given that at a| by label state that the labeled arti- of the stockholders|cle contains a greater percentage of Wood and Foshay Company, a|of virgin wool than it does contain Wyoming corporation, legally called shall be guilty pf a misdemeanor, and held at the office of William'and upon conviction thereof shall O. Wilson, Townsend building, Cas-|be guilty of a misdemeanor, and per, Wyoming, on February 4, 1922,|upon conviction thereof ‘shall be ced IGES DISAG per cent AEE IN TEAPOT (HOME DEBATE at 10 o’clock a. m., at which meet-| punished by a fine of not less than ing stockholders re owning more than ty Hi of resenting and five ($5.00) dollars nor more than thirds of the| one hundred doliars ($100.00), or capital stock aid company by imprisonment in the City jail issued and outstanding, or all of for more than ninety (90) days, or such capital stock, were present, by|by both such fine and imprison- legal resolution unanimously adopt-| ment. It is hereby provided, how- ed, said company was ordered dis-|ever, that all persons, firms and said company having ceased corporations affected by this ordi- to do business, all corporate debts|nance shall have thirty (30) days having been paid, all corporate lia-|in which to comply with the provi- bilities discharged and the corpor-|sions herein from and ate assets and property distributed | passage of the same. among the persons entitled thereto. | ereas, The statutory trustees for creditors|and such is hereby declared to be and stockholders are Frank Wood,|the case, this ordinance shall be in Wilbur Foshay. and Henry Bayer.|full force Dated this 4th day of February,| after the date of its passage, 1922. assed, adopted and FEANK WOOD, this 16th day of May, A. D. 1922. after the {international Harvester | TUCKY PETROLEUM COMPANY an emergency exists, and effect from and approved New York Stocks Associated Press Leased Wire AST SALES Allied Chemical & Dye Allis Chalmers American Mmerican | American | American | Amertcan American Ameriman Smelting & American Sugar ... American Sumatra Tobacco American T and T. ... American Tobacco ..... American Woolen = Anaconda Copper .- | Atchison. . AtL, Gulf acd West indies | Baldwin Locomotive | Baltimore and Ohio 22222222: Bethiehem eet HI oo. coe, - Canadian Pacific ..—22=22: |Central Leather 22-2 i> Chandler Motors . Chesapeake and Ohio | Chicago, MM, and St. Paul | Chicago, R. 1, and Pac... .. | Chino OPPOT «a+ onan. - ColoradoFuel and Corn Products Crucible Steel Erie | Famous | General * ale 35% 102% | m | 13% 81% yers Asphalt .— General Motors .—.. Goodrich 14 40% Med Inspiration Copper - | 10335 83% 52% | 18 | 51%! ssh 19 Mer Marine pfd. International Paper . Invincible Of] . Sprinefield Tire . Kennecott Copper . Louisville and Nashville - Mexican Petroleum Miami ew York Central _ \.-H., and Hartford and Western Pacifia Oil Pan American Petroleum Penns Peopl Pur inclair Con Ol uthern Pacific uthern Railway Standard Oil of N. J. Studebaker Corporatio: ‘Tennessee Copper Texas Co. Texas and Tobacco Products -.------——~ Transcontinental Of] ...———. Union Pacific United Retail Stores United States Steel Utah Copper .. Westinghouse Electric - Willys Overland . American Zinc. Lead and Sm. Butte and Superior -.. Cala Petroleum Montana Power Shattuck Arizona Great Northern Ore 40% | NOTICE OF DEFERRED an.| NUAL MEETING OF STOCK- HOLDERS OF WYOMING-KEN.| Notice is hereby given that the| deferred annual meeting of the stockholders of Wyoming-Kentucky! Petroleum Company will be held at the office of the Company, room| 583 Midwest Refining building, corner Second and Wolcott streets, | Casper, Wyoming, on Monday, the) 29th day of May, 1922, at the hour of 10 o’clock in the forenoon of said day for the purpose of con- sidering a proposition of merging the capital stock of our said com- pany with the capital stock of Roll- ing Fork Oil and Gas Company, a Kentucky corporation, upon the terms in said proposition contained; for the purpose of election of di- |rectors, and for the transaction of {such other business as may come | before said meeting. WYOMING-KENTUCKY PETRO- LEUM COMPANY. By GEORGE H. WILSON, Secretary. Publish May 17, 18, 19, 20, 22, | 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 2. 192: | NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION OF | THE TIME APPOINTED FOR PROVING WILL In the District Court, Sixth Judi- cial District, in and for Natrona County, State of Wyoming. State of Wyoming, County of Na-| trona, ss.: | In the Matter of the Estate of Robert T. Kemp, Deceased. \ To all person’ interested in said| estate, notice is hereby given that Thursday, May 25, A. D. 1922, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day, at the] court room of said court’ in the courthouse in the City of Casper, County of Natrona, Wyoming, been appointed as the time place for proving the will of si Robert T. Kemp, deceased, and for hearing he application of Ruby Kemp for the issuance to Ruby Kemp of Letters Testamentary,| with will annexed, when and where | any person interested may appear and contest the same. Dated this 4th day of May, A. D. 1922. HAZEL CONWELL,_ Clerk of the District Court, Publish M 12 and 19, 1922. Locust Plague Close On Heels Of Russ Famine { | | | MOSCOW, May 19.—(By The Asso- ciated Pre: A plague of locusts, promising greater destruction than that of last year, has developed in the Caucasus, Baku, Kuban and the Cri- mea. It is a serious blow to south | Russian’s hopes for successful crops and the peasants have mobilized to fight the pest with gasoline. Airplanes have been used to drop poisonous bombs in the breeding area, ~ = | States and Bethlehem Steles. Coal- ntire List Shows Strengthen- ing Influence, Call Money Plentiful. | NEW YORK, May 19.—OM shares resumed their recent leadership at the session. tions to 2 points were made by Mexican Pet- troleum, General Asphalt, American Cotto OM and Producers and Refiners.| Independent Steels, were next in fa- vor, Republic gaining 1 point, with active purchases of Midvale, United ers continued to feature the rails, Del- ware, Lackawanna and Western ris- ing 1% points, with substantial ad- vances for Reading and Lehigh Val- ley. Favorable trade conditions oc- casioned further buying of sugar is- sues, Cuban Sugar and Puta Allegre tiring 1 to 1% points. Postum Cereal 62% | Was the only stock to show compara-| tive heaviness, falling one point. The entire market strengthened on! very active dealings during the fore-| noon. United States Steel was among} the conspicuous issues which advanced | to new high records for the year on Inde-| its rise of 2% points to 1 Pendent steels rose 1 to 2 points with similar gains for leading equipments, and coppers extended their advance, American Smelting being heavily bought. The most popular domestic jand foreign oils were ont to 2%4 points higher and sugars, including the Cu- ban group made like advances. Mo- jtors and their subsidiaries were in demand and ralls continued to be fea- tured by coalers, Delaware. Lacka- wanna and Western showing a 3 point gain. Offerings of call money at 3% |Per cent were in excess of the de-| Li | mand. Operations for the rise continued to be aggressively conducted in the} afternoon with the general market! taking its cue from the action of the investment industrials. Special buy- ing operations were on a large scale in certain stocks, notably General Mo- tors, but the entire list gave evidence {of a more confident feeling than for ; Some time. Fg Fegistered gains of from 2 to 3 points. Quite a number of shares Among those which were in demand after mid-day were United States Re- tail Stores, Tobacco products, Mary- land Oil, Standard Of1 of New Jersey, United States Alcohol, American Car, United States Realty and Nova Scotia Steel. —_——— a Moncy. NEW YORK, May 19.—Call money easier; high 3%; low 3; ruling rate 3%4; closing bid 3; offered at 3%; last loan 3. Call loans against accept- rnees 3. Time loans steady; 60 days and 80 days 4@4%; six months 4%. Prime mercantile paper 4% @4%. 19.—Copper Metals. NEW YORK, May firm; electrolytic spot and nearby 13%@13%; later 13%@13%. ‘Tin steady; spot and nearby 81; futures 81.12, Iron steady; prices unchanged. Lead firm; spot 6.50@5.75. Zine firm; East St. Louis spot and nearby delivery 5.15@5.20, Antomony spot 5.50. NEW YORE, May 19.—¥orelgn bar silver 71%; Mexican dollars 54%. London Money. LONDO! per ounce. money 1% per cent. Dis-| count rates, short and three months bills 2% per cent. NOTICE OF SPECIAL HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT ELECTION The State of Wyoming, County of Natrona, Natrona County High School, ss. Notice of Special High School District Election. Notice is hereby given to the qualified electors of the Natrona County High School, State of Wyo- ming, a high school district duly incorporated and organized, estab- lished and existing under and by irtue of the laws of the State of Wyoming, that, in pursuance of a resolution of the Board of Trustees of the said High School District, providing for the submission of the question to said qualified electors, as hereinafter set forth. a special election of the qualified electors of the said high school distriet, will be held in said High School District beginning at the hour of one o’clock in the afternoon and ending at the hour of five o’clock in the after- noon on Satirday the twenty-sey- enth day of May, A. D. 1922, at the respective school houses in’ the respective school districts compos- ing said high school district, here- after set forth, except where r polling places are hereinafter designated, to-wi School district Number 2, at the Central School Building, situated on lots 8, 9, 10 and 11, in Block 11, in the City of Casper, in said School District Number 2; School District Number 8, at the Ranch house of the Little Medicine Live Stock company, at which place one of the schools of School District Number 3, is ‘located in said school district Number 3; School District Number 4, at the Bessemer School House, situated in said School District Number 4; School District Number 9, at the Willow Creek School House. sit. eater in said School District Num- er 9; Schook- District Number 11, at the Muddy School House, situated in said School District Humber 11; School District Number 12, at the said School District Number 12; the Powder River School House, sit- the Wyoming & Northwestern Railway Co., in said School District Number 16; for the purpose of voting on the Trustees of said Natrona County Have your portrait painted by well known artist at exceedingly moderate SE | r 1 . A. BLACKMORE, WILBUR: SEAL Mayor. [SEAT] Secretary. | Attest: H. H. PRICE, Publish April 28, May-5, 12, 19, | City Clerk. 46; June 2 1922. - .2 Publish May i9, prices. Call 577J for interview. 6-19-2¢° High School, State of Wyoming, shall issue the negotiable school house coupon bonds of said High | May 19.—Bar silver 36d) Greenlaw School House, situated in| School District Number 16, at! uated at Powder River Station of question whether the Board of be Casper Daily Cribune School District in the amount of Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($500,000.00) for the purpose of providing funds for the erection of | building for high school purposes and the equipment thereof, and for a suitable site therefor, the said bonds to bear a certain rate of interest, to-wit: five per cent per annum, said interest to be payable semi-annually on the first day of January and of July in each year, such bonds to be of the amount respectively and to be num'wred und payable and redeemable as fol- lows, to-wit: said bonds to be each dated January 1, 1923, te be num- bered from one to five hundred. |both inclusive; to be in the sum | of one thousand dollars ($1,000.00) }each; bonds numbered from one to | twenty-five, both inclusive, to be payable and redeemable January 1, 1924, and on January first of each | jconsecutive number shall be pay- able and redeemable until all are |, for the purpose of providing tands for the erection of .a_ build- ing for high school purposes, and for the equipment thereof, and for a suitable site therefor, in.the City of Casper, the County Seat of the Government of Natrona County, in the State of Wyor-ing, in said High School District. - By order of the Board of Tras- tees of the Natrona County High School, State of Wyoming, made on the Sist day of March, A. D. 1922. C. H. TOWNSEND, President. MAY HAMILTON, Secretary. Pub. April 28, May 5, 12, 19, 1922, —— os NOTICE BY PUBLICATION In the District Court, Sixth Judi- cial District, in and for the County of Natrona, State of Wyoming. Katherine L. Le Prix, Plaintiff, vs. Eugene P. Le Prix, Defendant. State of Wyoming to Eugene P. e Prix: Take notice that you have been sued in the above-named court by said plaintiff for divorce on the grounds of abandonment and gross neglect of duty, praying for the restitution of the former name of the plaintiff, for the custody of the minor child, Patricia Anne Prix, and you, said defendant must an- swer the petition filed herein by said plaintiff on or before the 24th day of June, 1922, or said petition will be taken as true, and judgment for said plaintiff will be rendered accordingly. Dated this 28th day of April, 1922, HAZEL CONWELL, (SEAL) Clerk of Court. Publish April 28th, May 5, 12, 19, 26, June 2, 9. pesmi ssataho A EGS DISPATCH BEARER DEAD. ASHBURY PARK, N. J., May 19.— Mrs. Jane Vanderhorst Bowly, wh served the confederacy during the civ war as a dispatch hearer died at her summer home here today in her nine- ty-third year. 4 Mrs. Bowly, widow of Edmund Bow- ly, formerly of Baltimore, was born in Charleston, S. C., and her body will be taken there for interment. Bho} is survived by three children. ; FREE! To some one of our 40x8 Truck Tire. With each Tire sol be given. When er of the lucky num Market | Liberty The Liberty Garage Is Going to Give Away a Spic Span New $45()-Automobile-$450 have sold 350 Tires, any size, 30x3 to a giant numbered coupon will Tires are sold the hold- will win the Autcmo- bile at a public draw- The Tires We Sell Are The B. F. Goodrich Rubbér Co. Semi-Pneumatic Truck Tires The Most Remarkable Tires for Service on the And Silvertown Cords The Aristocrats of the Tire Family. WE FURNISH ‘RUCKS FOR TRUCKING Chicago Prices. CHICAGO, May 19.—<United States Bureau of Markets)—Cattle receipts 2,500. beef steers and she stock steady to strong; top yearlings $9.00; bulk beef steers °$7.75@8.35; bulls weak to lower; veal calves steady; stockers ‘dull, bulk top,she stock $5.65@7.15. top bologna bulls around $4.75; bulk rvealers to packers $9.00@9.25; hand Weight to shippors around $10.60. Hogs receipts 25,000; lighter weight, steady to Sc lower; others steady to strong with Thursday’s average; pigs about steady. mostly $9.50@10.00 $11.00; bulk of sales $10.55@10.95. Sheep receipts 4,000; market steady to 26¢ higher; good and choice Cali- fornia spring lambs $14.75@15.00; some seconds at $12.25; good 94 pound shorn lambs $12.25. good 95 pound Colorado yearlings and twos $9.00; good Callforria ewes $7.00. Omaha Quotations. OMAHA Neb, Many 19.—(United States Bureau of Markets).—Hogs re- celpts 7,000; market active fully 10c higher; bulk 180 to 249 pound butch- Cattle receipts 1,500; beef steers steady ta strong; top $8.50. classes steady. Sheep receipts 4,000; lambs strong: best natives spring lambs $14.00; no choice California lambs here; strong weight clipped lambs $11.85. sheep and feeders steady; clipped ewes $6.25; Cal- ifornia feeding lambs $10.50@11.25. Denver Prices. DENVER, Colo., May 19.—Cattle— Receipts 2,700; market steady, 10c higher; beef steers, $7.50@8.25; cows and heifers, $5.25@6.25; calves, $8@ 11.50; bulls, $3@4.50; stockers and feeders, $6@7.40. Hogs—Receipts 400; market 10c higher; top, ‘$10.30; bilk, $10@10.20. Sheep—Receipts 900; market stead: lambs, $12@13,25; ewes $7@8. ptf At WOLF-OOG5 USED IN PRODUCING FEATURE Twenty-two wolf-dogs were engaged. for the porduction of “A Virgin's Sac- rifice,"which is now playing at the America threater. These dogs were exceptionally expensive, and their combined salary for a week was great- er than that of any member of the company, save the star. Surveying and Locations Geologists Oil Experts Oil Field Maps, Blue Prints WYOMING MAP AND BLUE PRINT CO. / O. Box 325 Room 10, Daly Bldg. FREE! customers when we 005" onite 009, 20060) da oo °) OOcr S 200 Co 350 oo 0.00000 ber 55000009 OO 6 1500099 So G00000000 19500999 00 Today. Garage Phone 983 other! ~ SHOWING AT AMERICA =] ONDER FIXING GUT INNAASTATE FREIGHT” FIAMTES 15 NOW PENDING naw Wyo. May 19—Ange Ww: Public service putting into effect de intrastate freight rates ere decided on more than a is to be issued next week. mn of the order has been poses only six \dogs were in the pack they é viciously. A member of Nick Thompson b- through the hand in an arate the pack for picture pr “A Virgin's Sacrifice” off Griffith as pleasing a role as ever had in her long and, success ful career in her screen work! She is top|#bly directed by Webster Campbell, i }Griffith, includes Louise Cussing, Nick |Thompson, Miss Eagle, George Me- withheld pending completion of an ex- amination. by Chairman Claude I. Draper of the Wyoming commission of records in the office of the Inter- State Commerce commission at Wash- ington. STRA’ AND SUGAR are cheap this week. Buy your ber ries by the-crate a nd do your canning now before it is too late 5-18-2t and the stury is one of dramatic in tensity and filiea with the human in- terest element. An exceptionally strong cast, which surrounds Miss Quarrie and Charles Henderson. <a ae GERMAN DEBT GROWING. BERLIN, May 19.—Germany’s float- ing debt increase between April 1 and/ May 10 by 10,655,000,000 marks and now amounts to 252,590,000,000, says the Allgemeine Zeitun; FOR RENT Front office rooms Zuttermeister Building. Phone 109 in Jewelry and watcn repatring dy ex pert workmen. All work guaranteed Carper Jewelry Mfg. Co., 0.8 Bidz. Pipe Follows the SWAN Down The body of the Swan extends below the cutters far enough to act as a guide when the tool is underreaming. This is of great value when the formation being underreamed is of alternating stratas of hard and soft struc ture. The guide then keeps the tool in the center of the hole and reams a perfectly straight hole, instead of offsetting or key seat ing as is the case with undem® reamers not so constructed. : IT IS FOR THIS REASON A THAT THE CASING ALWAYS” FOLLOWS THE SWAN DOWN You Can Buy os Rent One THE BRIDGEPORT MACHINE COMPANY General Offices, Augusta, Kansas Underreamer Factory, Marietta, Ohio Augusta, El Dorado, Florence, Tulsa, Rising Star, Ranger, South Bend, Tonkawa, Shidler, Fort Worth, Breck- enridge, Underreamer Factory, Mar- jetta, Ohio. LEAN UP SALE FOR ONE WEEK Velocipedes $1.75 and Up Express Wagons, $1.25 and Up Doli Carts, 75c and Up Kiddie Kars, $1.50 and Up Automobiles, $8.50 and Up Roller Skates, $2.50 and Up Coaster Wagons, $7.50 and Up Holmes HardwareCo. Lowe Bros. Paints and Varnishes Second and Wolcott Phone 601 Building Materials Weare equipped with the stock to supply your wants in high grade lumber and build- ers’ supplies. Rig timbers a specialty. KEITH LUMBER CO. Phone 3 nF