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Caspet Dailv Cribune :- Bonds -:- Stocks -:- Grains -:- Livestock -:- All Markets AND QUOTATIONS BY LEASED STOCKS RALLY (CLOSING DULL AFTERDEGLINE} IN WHEAT NAAT Omer do NEW YORE, Jan. 8—Protessional| CHICAGO, Jan. %.—Although spec- Readily Absorbed |G. lose of Trading in New York. ains Scored in Morning Rally Are Wiped Out in Late Trading. short interests endeavored to depress| ulative buying catried the wheat|s™edoen *® prices in today’s stock market.using | market upward in the early dealings ‘American the unsettled foreign political and/ today, the strength failled/to icst. The economic situation as an excuse but| temporary display of bullish senti-| s+onison te i: thetr offerings were well absorbed} ment was based largely on estimates|‘.t) Guit and Weet Indles and the géneral. list was inclined to} that 1,000,000 bushels for shipment to] halawin Locomotive — move upward an aggressive pool op-} Europe had been bought in the south-| ;itimore and Oblo erations and buying of special in-} west during the last fow days. Dis-|pRethiehom Steel “B” dustrial stocks for individual reasons. | quietude however, as to financial and| Canadian Pacific _ mated 725,000 shares. : == 8.50 pate igh of 1 to 1% took] ‘otal. The close was unsettled at the} riinois Central ---.--—-------- 1108 * Dlace in American Locomotive, Bald | *4me es Saturday's finish to Hic lower, | tnspiration Copper ----~----— 34%! Pryied win, Allis Chalmbers, Chandler, Pan: | With May $1.17% to §1.17% and July} [nternational Harvester -----— 11.47 ° x California | $1.10% to- $1.20 Int. Mer. Marine pfd. ---—--- rel Corn and oats swayed with wheat.|rnternational Paper ---------— rate . | After opening He to %e off, May 70% | tnyincible Oil. ------—-sa-----—— ; 5 ae ae a 13.00 SPR ee eee cea bunts to 70%, the corn market scored al <eiley Springfield Tire - i ao Posy Suser, Corn Products, United {ttle wan and then descended lower! Kennecott Copper ~ encemet Tht OL Seas States Alcohol and Delaware an¢ | than before. Louisville and Nashville ———- bet ‘{Hfpdeon, the losses. ranging, from % te. nearly one point. changes early losses and pushed @ number 0! |} tow 7014 72. labove Saturday’ 1: Gats No, 2 white 434%@44%; No. 2] Ray Consolidated Copper - cures. Marked strength brs Bk not ed tt Manhattan Blectrical Supply | 14 soqi1 80, up XM: Steel and Tube. preferred ur ROR 2%; and California Petroleum, ear a peuke: ana Obie, Panamerioan, Ar Piva, OPM® MER Low wociated Dry Goods, Bis preferred, — Strom’ ‘Wells Fargo, North American Publ’ | . Service of New Jersey and Conti: i on dite sy NEW YORK, . land a a steady; electrolytic, apot end near by|demand 2.76, Argentine demand 37.62, 3 atures 14% @14%. “Bh firm, spot and ner by 38,37;|9-16. ateady; 1 northern 37@ 20;No. 2 northern 27@28; wouthern 24@26. ‘Lead steady; tutures 33.50 Tron Zino Quiet: tnegr by deliverey $707.10. Sales approx! NEW YORK, Jan. 8.—Prices con-jand industrial conseq tinued to sag at the opening of to-| might follow French occupation of|Cnicago, Mil., and Bt. Paul —- Gay's stock market on a resumption | the Ruhr led soon to increased eelling | Chicago, R. I. and Pac. -.-.. of Saturday's short selling and:profit/ and to new downturns in price. The| Chino Copper taking. Motors, ofl and copper shares} opening which ranged from ‘% to ‘3c|Co:orado Fuel and Iron were among the first to yield. Stu-| lower, with May 1.17% to 1.17% and|Corn Products éebeker and Sears Roebuck each| July 1.10% to110% was followed by|Grucible Steel LS dropped a point end large fractional|a moderate advance and then by aj Erie .--..-. wh lospes. were recorded by Central Leather, Royal Dutch, Pan-American | finish, ba a epee ard tend Tat 1 ive selling spread over 2] tendency later owing more or|/General Motors «. Seer ater lst hetero the end of | lees to an increase of 2,909,000 bushels| Goodrich Co. =. Cructhle. broke 2%|'" the United States visible supply|Great Northern pfd. --. : seneee acy | set finished unsettled at % to %4c] \tiddle States Ol easier, around 464% and Frenc! ‘Ung selling francs at 6.85 cents, oh Ave PEt ugher, May 41 to 44% and later un- German a bunéred, another new low recor¢ ¢ supporting order: anak sebewaice ‘pool @pérations ir Yoewened” the” pypvisions: market. Pork nominal. Lard 10.92. Southern Pacific. ~-----. | a.) Southern Raflwey _-. Big Muddy ,.---------—-—---~—--- 1.05 Standard Ofl of N. J. ------, {Salt Creek ----—-—~-——------- 1.05 studebaker Corporation Rock Creek oat pOverian WV tay 11th iasm ring 1.50 “uly 110% 111% 110% 1.50 1.07 LO7% 1.06% Tobacco Products 1.60 Transcontinental Ol ---------= 70 10% 671 70% ‘Inton Pacific - own awe 1.50 70% TL 70% United Retail Stores -------- 1.60 U. 8. Ind. Aleobol” ..-~s---2--- 1.08 i No. 2 pot 7.25@7.50, t. Louls spot and Anaconda Copper southwest during the last few days.|Central Leather Disquietude however, as to financial! Gnandler Motora juences which Chesapeake and Ohio -.-.....- tback to slightly below Saturday’s| Famous Players Lasky -—--— General Asphalt ~----------.— Prices continued to have a down-|General Electric -—---- Mountain Producers -$ 17.00 Country offerings remained light.) Mexican Petroleum - Wxport demand was slow. The mar-| \wiami Copper decline, with May 70% to T0%c. Midvele Steel — Osts started unchanged to % | \iesourl Pacific lerwent something of a sag. . Y. N. HL, end Hartford -- Downturn in the value of hogr| Norfolk and W% Northern IC --enmnn nn —~ and Ref. —_.— Pan American ¢Ptroleum --——— Pennsylvania -.-----.--—---— No. 2] People’s Gas Pure, Ol .-- Cash Grains. CHICAGO, Jan. 8.—Wheat No. hard 118% 01.10. ; Corn No. 2 mtxed 70% @70%; white 4344@48%. Rye No. 2, 86%. Barley 69@70. Timothy seed 6.00@6.50. Clover seed 16.50@20.50, Reading - Rep. Iron and Steel - Royal Dutch, N. ¥. Sears Roebuck -. snelair, Con. Olt nn So) wewstnnnceewwecee= 1.60 44 44% 48% United States Rubber --.-.-+-- 41% 41% 41K Cnited tSates Steel ---.---.--- 40 Stah Copper —-------------=. Vestinghouse Electric ~------ an, --- 11.00 11,00 10.92 Willys Overland ~----~--.----- May - 1120 4127 a7 American Zinc, Lead end 6m. ~ Tan. --- 10.68 Butte and Superior ---.------- Cala Petroleum -------------- Montana Power Shattuck “Atleona ----—-—--- $%| CHTCAGO, Jan. 8—4U, S Depart Great Northern Ore ---------- 31% iment of Agriculture.)—Hog receipts Chicago Northweatern -.. 19 73,000; market slow, 15c lower; bulk Maxwell Motors B 11 | 160 to 190 pound averages 8.75@3.80; Ges 122%) top 8.85; bulle 225 to 275 pound butch. 30 Jers 8.45@8.55; general bidding lower; bulk packing sows 7.50@7.75; desir. able piga 8.25@8.65; heavy hogs 8.35 @8.50; medium 8.45@8.70; light 9.65@ 8.85; light light s.s6@ts6; packing sows, smooth 7.70@8.10; Packing Surplus Lower ers sous 130077; xing. vise 8.25@ 8.65. receipts 26,000; beef steers slow; few early sales about ‘steady; Didding unevenly lower; early top ma- tured; steers and yearlings 10.50 some held higier; most beef steers of |Danube Wheat _ Eggs lywer; receipts 5,762 cases; ‘lrsts 40@41; ordinary firats 35@37; niseellancous 38@39. | ainsi Kah Ra RRCE aeagEaEaE! CHICAGO, Jan. 8 — Potatoes steady; receipts 56 cars; total United States ehipments 671; Wisconsin sacked and bulk round whites 75@90 | swt; dusties eacked 90@1.00 cwt; dusties bulk 95@1.05 cwt; few best at L10 cwt; Minnesota sacked round whites few at 80 cwt. 4.65 @4.75. Sheep receipts 22,00 fat lambs weak to 250 lower; early top 15.00 to'packers and shippers; feeders peas eee 61 pound NEW YORK, Jan. §—¥Foreign ex- feeding lambs 14.75; sheep weak; fat changes irregular. quotations in 308: pound slipped, aged. wetbers-8.00; tf Europe may some-| 110 pound Sere ette: BO day anata, 484%] what otfeet the drop in the exportable - basi salu. | rr na a enn a Foreign Exchang Cattle receipts 9,800: quality plain; beef steers 10@25c lower; bulk 7.00@ 8.50; best steers 9.50; she stock steady to 150 lower; bulk 4.00@ dojogna ‘bulla 8.26@4.00; veal top 11.00; stock- ers and feeders 6.00@7.38; top 7.85; If Standard’s getting brash, all other classes fully steady. Tax oil. Sheep recetpta 13, + © killing If the state must have some cash, San, tmostly 2ho lower; lambs top : Tax oll. ; @wes top 7.50; feeders about And just have to twist « tai, steady; top feeding lambs 14.85. Almost always, without fail, It is of, 0055. Slovakia IS OIL TO BE THE GOAT? Brazil demand 11.25. Montreal 99 he EE ee Prices. DENVER, Colo, Jan. 8—Cattie— Receipts 2,100; market steady to 15c 3 beet steers $4.50@8.65; cows and heifers $3.50@7.75; calves $5.00@ 9.60; stockers and feeders $3.5097.60 Hlogs—Recetpts 1,700; market 5 to! ba? higher; top $8.40; bulk $8.00@6.85. NEW YORK, Jan. 8—Prices of Wyoming oils at 2 p. m. today were Usted on the New York curb as follows: When somebody needs a job, Tax ofl. : Ou inspectors the mob, Boston-Wyoming 1 1-16; Fenslend! ax oft 16%; Glenrock 1 1-16; Merritt $%i|qhen the agitators yell. Mountain Producers 17%; Mutuall Ana begin’ to hand out hell, 12%; Omar 1 1-16; Galt Creek 21. ‘You can always know, full well, ewes $4.0007.25; feeder lambs $12.00@ It's on off. be SUGAR In the sround and from the well Tax oll. Where the filling stations sell, NEW YORK, Jan. 8—Sugar fu- Tax oll. . a tr - SILVER tures closed stead: sales 6,500 tons. T' market for re- Approximate | Catch {t all along the lin Stick it while the stickin’s fine, NEW YORK, Jan. 8.--Foreign bar MARKET GOSSIP AND FIELD NEWS TEXAS PLANT NEARS COMPLETION Dom. of Can, oi % notes, 1920 French Republic Ly French Republic, 7% Owing to repeated delays in the arrival of necessary ma-| Kingdom ot Be.gium, 7 terial, work on the refinery of the Texas company east of this} Kinsdom of Belgium, 6s city, adjoining Evansville, has Kh by ‘a - been delayed and its comple-|t Mor Goes tion will be-much later than was first expected. Practically |U. K of G. B. a1 all the necessary equipment is now on hand and with a con-| American Susar, American Tel.,and Tel tinuation of good weather the first crude will be run through | American Tel!“e Tei, col. tr., 5s the stills on February 1. It will be some time later before che pressure stills are ready for use but it has neyer been expected that they would be ready for use by the time the bal- ance of the plant was in operation. Good progress is being made with the building o! rage tanks. Four of 55,000 barrels capacity each are completed as well as four of 64,000 barre] capacity and several of smaller size, It will be late in the spring be- fore the entire amount of tankage is erected which when campleted will have a combined capacity of 1,500,000 barrels of crude. This tankage is in addition to that which will be used for the storing of refined products. Colossal Setting Casing. Excellent progress ts belng made with the well of the Colossal Oil syn- dicate on the northeast corner of the northwest quarter of section 32-39-78 in the Teapot field and casing is now being set at 650 feet. A small show. ing of gas was found in the Shannon sand which was taken as a favorable indication of ofl in the lower sand and production in quantities is expectec in the second Wall Creek when this horizon. is penetrated. Montana Ofl Notes. Beardsiee & Dutton have spudded in their well on section 28-24N-1W 0 | Teton Ridge structure. Well is being Grilled to get supply of gas for Great Falls. Greater Great Falls Oi] company arilimg on Benton Lake <Anticline north of Great Falls reports oi] show ing in lower Colorado between, 26° and 385 feet depth. First Kootena should be encountered at depth » of about 485 feet with Madison limestone at 1,000 feet. Mid-Northern-Sunburst known a+r Swears No, 2, has 1,250 feet of oil in the casing ving nm completed at & depth of 1.672 feet. This well is in ection 9-85N-2W. Kevin-Sunburs' field and production comes from the Ellis sand which sand is very tight and will be “shot.” The Montana Giant well on section 23-23-N4W near Flume is down over 1,000’ feet and expects to get produc: tlon at 1,700 fect. Twenty-Dollar Bil snydicate an® Hager-Stevenson company have spudded in a well ou section 9-25N fined was quiet and Ust prices were unchanged ‘at 7,00 for fine granu- teh SS ‘ From the crude to the refine, wilver 66; Mezican Gollars 60°. ‘Tax the ofl, | Sereno ~ inact a —The Oil Weekly, Houston, Texas lose Tribune Want Ads and get results | 9©, Loma’ structure, Montana Northern Oil company ha: located a well on section 7-3iN-2W south of Shelby. Drilling will be resumed at the wel’ of the Fowler Oil company, 12 miles Aorth of Conrad about January 15 This well is now down 1,500 feet. Busy Future for Baxter Basin. Owing to severe westher condi: tions in-that district, work has slowed down, considerably in the Baxter Basin field and there will be little ad ditional work there untill the coming of spring. The Associated-Montacal {s drilling At below 2500 fect and it is expectes that the first) gas sand will be. en ‘countered in this hole about the 15th of this month. ‘The Midwest is having trouble with a water supply for drilling. As 1 was impossible to break through th: frozen earth at the time the supply Ines were laid they were placed or top of the ground and have been frozen for some time. Snow is being melted from which a supply is ob tained. ‘With ‘the proving of the field for oil, thousands of dollars will be spent by the operating companies in the to} building of roads so that transperta- ‘tion lines. may be kept open at all around/ times of the year. Producers & Refiners has closed down its operation in the field for the winter and nothing further will be done st its locations until spring and better weather arrives. ‘The Dutch Shell is reported as hav- ing. its geologists in the field with the view of entering next spring and everything points to an intensive drilling campaign by many of the country’s largest operating com- panies during the coming summer. In a recent talk before the mem- ;] bers of the Commercial club at Salt Lake City, Utah, W. R. Colvert, chief geologist for the Utah Refining com- pany, stated that {t was possible to estimate the exact amount of gas pos- sible to attain from any gas area, and that the Baxter Basin field would yield approximately 350,000,000,000 cubic feet of gas or « sufficient sup- ply for 48 years usage, rating a sage] sumption of 20,000,000 cubic feet a day. He also stated that these figures ‘were very conservative and had been! cut almost fifty per cent. General Trend Higher. | The National City Bank of ew! York says in its review: “Notwith- standing the critical situation over! the reparations question and the caused politically and economically by the Turkish embrogiio, the general trend of economic development over the past yeer in Burope and over the world had been toward improvement. Sirplus stocks of gooda were con- gested, all of the markets have been reduced.” California Ofl Going East. ‘The cut of 50 cénts & barrel in Cal {fornia of] has » direst bearing on the Mexican oll situation. For the first ime Callfornia crude is competing ‘With Mexican crude and contra are being made for delivery of Calil-;Armour and Co, 4%s fornia oti in the east, but these deliv. | Baltimore and Ohio o: eries can be made only at prices| Bethlehem Stocl ret., which make {t profitable for eastern | Ret" eet lea Guinee kat refiners to go to the expense of "3m and St. Paul ov. transporting the of] there, Standard Oil 4s bearish on the Mexican oil sit: vation and is arranging for the Cal: fornia product to replace the lors in the Mexican output. Mo, oKn. & Texa: Mutual Dealing for Merritt. Missouri Pacific gen. 4s The Mutual Off company ts negoti-| Montana Power bs A - ating for the properties of the Merritt] New York Central deb., O11 corporation in the Big Muddy.| Northern Pacific pr. len field looking to the consolidation of | Oregon Short Line ref, 4s .—. the swe companies. «Dns Merritt hes | Tocu Ne end Bisctric, be ———— approximately 6,000 acres in that|Reaging Genoral 4s. field of state and patented land, all|siandard Ol of Cal. 4 of which is producing. It is also re- inion Pacific first 4s — ported that the Mutual is negotiating|U. 8. Rubber, 74s ~ for the operations of Midwest Refin-|U. S. Rubber, 5 ing company in the same field. The|Utah Power and 1 . - later corporation does all the operat-| Western Union, 6 ing for the Merritt there where a| Westinghouse Biec legal objections be made thereto. large amount of production has been 4g Dated this 2nd y D. fooa. nd day of January, CRUSHED SKULL, | on pRognaM TUESDAY |. ss comme, unty, Wyoming. —— ~~» J NOTICE FOR: The Casper Chamber of Commerce SE EREICN TEES . forum meeting to be held at 12:10 to-|_ Department o: Wife of Wealthy Coal Man Says} inorrow at the Henning hotel will be|Lend Office at Dongen’ Wrou es Gibbons Killed Man with given over to the presentation of qachary 8, 1923. ‘oad some reports on legislative matter: Notice is he: given thas Hammer. One escinton which will be pre-| George D. Car oF Ole Wyo sented is considered of vital import-{ ming, who, on Feb: OWENSBORO, Ky., Jan. 8—Extrn| ance to Casper and other communi-|made homestead entry ratrols guarded the county jail here| ties along the North Platte river, as|for all of section 13, township 35 over Sunday where Ollie Gibbona. 34,| Wyoming will be greatly affected if} N., range 80 W., sixth principal recused with Mrs. Gus Noffsinger, 29,| he meager appropriation for the] meridian, has filed notice’of inten- af the “hammer murder" of her) fiscal year for the Guernsey dam is] tion to make final three-year proof, wealthy husband, Southland Coa! com-| ailotted without change. ih claim to the land above pany official, awaits investigation by] ‘The Casper Motor club w' s » before Marion P. Wheel- 2. grand jury. sent a matter suggesting inc: er, United States Commissioner, at Gibbons, who flatly denied the ac-| penalties in the Wyoming st!» tute: asper, Wyoming, on the 17th day msation, was brought here from Hen | tor parties convicted of stelpping au-} f February, 1923. lerson, where he was arrested today] tomobiles or stealing any part of an Claimant names as witnesses: following an alleged confedsion. by|antomobile. or its equipment teft| | Matt Wieland, Ed. Wieland, Ar Mrs. Noffsinger that she and Gibbons] standing on a street or highway. hur Sengebusch, Earle Fassett, all nlotted to dispose of her husband so] Time has algo been reserved on t of Casper, Wyoming. J hey could get married on his insur-|{orum program for special Buy Scou B. J. ERWIN, rand Trunk Ry of Can., 7 3rand Trunk Ry. Great Northern Great_ Northern mentary issued unless Proper and ance money. activities *, “Ollie crushed Gus’ skull with a os | Publish Jan. 8, 15, Stns miners hammer,” authorities quote Feb. 5, 1928. » 29, \ins. Noffsinger as confessing. MISSING LIST ar : “We wanted to go away from every- body in Hnderson and live as we wanted to live.’ xtra guards were ordered to the jail here tonight following reports that workers in Noffsinger’s mine planned to revenge his death. Police said they had arrested Mrs. NOTICE OF INCORPORATION. NOTICE is hereby given thei AT KELSO CUT LINDSAY, WEBB AND S PANY was incorporated in thaot fice of the Secretary of State, Cheyenne, Wyoming, on the 30th te se Tribune Want Ads and get resuite If you'd enlarge, your factory forea, . And all the grief, you would divoroes Then here's the plan you should endorse, Sohngs of December, 1922, hai Noffsinger and admitted they were y of . , wing hiding her for “reasons of cur own, been incorporated under and he Cowlitz river bridge] Wyoming, with a capital stocl A special grand jury, called for| missing in t! 2 | Wy" re capil k of carly next week, will investigate Mra,|(saster was reduced to 19 today when |ONE HUNDRED THOUSAD DOL- * bt Mrs. E. C. Hanna of Baker, Ore., who} One Hundred Thousand (100,000) igs hp mae he back of his head| ‘vere belleved to have been lost, wers| shares of the par value of. ONE ’ srosecu s for] >f existence of fifty 4 his garage in Henderson last Sunday] effort to prosecute the search fo existence of fifty ($50) years. Merete’ A, blood stained miners| bodies was mado yesterday owing to] The number of directore seit pe ss di eh ah ad cr lected i picked up a few feet from the body, lected for the first year are W. J. pinata iE aroha Lindsay, J. 3. Coapman and LEGION URGES |ix’ 4 ze ONE SLAIN IN rporation are to engage in “and conduct a general merchandise’ and WASHINGTON, Jan. 8.—Congrese | [Fanches incident thereto, ea. Dest /Aesed . by the \ Amerie’ | Gustness: pall, he. Jooated cat , WICHITA FALLS, Texas, Jan. 8.— : Wyoming, and J. J. Cha Ana 4 onsthe Bursum bill providing for re » Pr M. L. Lamar, phonograph salesman, | % 0008 CP ainabled emergency arms {0° the statutory agent in costes of a music store here early today. company may be carried on in such Major W. L. Culberson, attached to| Tho letter sald the disabled emerg | ther places in the United States as id” and charged inspector for Texas, and commander | ©) . LINDSAY, WEBB AND CO., of Pat Carrigan post, American Ipg-|Consress to act on the meaasure By J. J. CHAPMAN, weaker wn Agent Cormick. Domestic trouble’ causea| for more than three years, was a) oiprHAan & LOWEY, Attorne the shooting, officers said. ‘shameful example of the tnability of hob January 5, B and 10, 1998, een oo COUNTRY SHOW BIG GAT i, WASHINGTON, Jan. 8.—Invoicel Of Liquor Closed A the United States during 19/2 umount Down by Officers) ea to $359,718.934 or a gain of 20 per made public today by the department SHERIDAN, Wyo., Jan. 8—With| Oe commerce. ‘The 1922 gain over the Italian, and tho confiscation of 1,000] ites of exchang: gallons of corn mash, four 40 gallon - Principal source of supply of moon-|witL AND TESTAMENT OF shine for the city of Sheridan is be-/-RAYMOND ROUAN, DECEASED. somewhere in Henderson.” KELSO, Wash.. Jan. 8.—The lst of| virtue of the laws of the State % ffsinger’s case jointly with that of| it was definitely learned that Mr. and}LARS ($100,000.00), divided into battered in, was found at the door of} Safe and en route to California. No/ DOLLAR ($1.00) each, and a term hammer belonging to the victim was|the flooded condition of the river hree (3). and the names of those BURSUM BILL | :x:xertion sce to cures it ond TEXAS DISPUTE lepartment store with any and all The principal office and place of v7 Legion to take action before Marct was shot and killed in the doorway Biinets. hereof, but the operations of Sint 7 “has been left in the the Ninth infantry, a national guard] *"¢y, officer “has in failuve “ni | he directors may determine. ‘on, surrendered to Police Chiet Mc.| Which had been awaiting final action congress to function.” ° 3 Sheridan Ss oource BRITISH EXPORTS TO THIS exports from the United Kingdom t cent over 1021 ‘aocording to figures the arrest of Giuseppe, Argin, 35,| previous year massasnin.bNsthanesdavs stills and 75 gallons of whiskey, the| NOTICE OF PROBATE OF LAST Meved to have been closed down. The| Mquor was being manufactured at a] To Edward F. Rouan, Mary Eliz- small ranch house just east of the! sheth Wheeler, Katherine M. Rou- city Umits and the raid was conducted | an, Dorothy M. Rouan, Ida M. Rou. by federal and county officers an, Rose V. Rouan, and Jean Rou RRA spams an, and Carrie Fort, and to whom it _ Cotton. |may concern, heirs and divisees at NEW YORK, Jan. &.--Spot cotton|law of Raymond Rouan, deceased quiet, middling 26.60. Notice is hereby given, that Car] —————_—— |H. Anderson did, on the 2nd day of January, A. D, 1923, file with the Clerk of the District Court of the Sixth Judicial District of Wyoming sitting within and for Natrona County, his petition in writing praying the Court for Letters T tamentary be issued to the said Carl H. Anderson, as Executor of the Last Will and Testament of the said Raymond Rousn, deceased, and that aid petition is set for hearing by Court on the 22nd day of Jan- 28 the hour of ten lay, or as UNDERREA th AT YOUR SUPPLY *STORE AT. YOUR eard, at wt SUPPLY aid last Will afo be ad iBiupe mitted to Pr 1 , oon thereaft ame can be|