Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 13, 1923, Page 1

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Weather Forecast WYOMING—Generally fair tonight and Saturday. Colder tonight in east and south portions. Somewhat warmer Saturday in north and west portions. The Guaranteed Circulation of The Casper Daily Tribune Yesterday was 10,534 \ OLUME VIL CASPER, WYO., FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 1923. Che Casper Aaily Critune FINAL EDITION NUMBER 160. RUHR COLLECTIONS ARE SLOW: PREMI rm £ aig =— aw PAI HELD FOR PARISH PRIEST SLAIN EXECUTION CLIMAX MURDER TO SEEK BAIL, MOTION 10) BE PROTESTE Sons of Gun Inventor in County Jail Following Information Filed by Salt Lake Prosecutor. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, April Mistreatment at Hands of Superior Is Given as Reason for Killing Late Yesterda yot Kalamazoo Priest KALAMAZOO, Mich., April 18.—Armed with a revolver and a phial of holy oils to administer extreme unction to his victim, the Rev. Father Charles Dillon, assistant rector of St. Augustine’s Catholic church, last night shot and killed the Rev. Father Henry O’Neill, pastor of the parish, following a! quarrel at the dinner table. COURT FIGHT LOOMS OVER CHL WAS, THOS, BATY SEEKS CUSTODY Mrs. Roland Grace, the daughter, children, | Following a conference this morn- and | ing with their attorney, W. G. Harris, | state humane officer and E. H. Fos. Tansey. Anna with two other | were awarded to the father, | BY ASSISTANT RECTOR TO TRAGIC ROMANCE Paul V. Hadley Maintains Innocence to Last as He Goes to Death for Alleged Murder of Arizona Woman HOLD CONFERENCE OCCUPATION 10 HUZLE UNLESS PRODUCTION {3 GIVEN IMPETUS | | FLORENCE, Ariz., April 13—Paul V. Hadley died on New Plans Considered in the gallows before sunrise today for the murder of Mrs. Anna C. Johnson. was pronounced dead at 5 The condemned man maintained to the end his claim of The trap w. :22 s pulled at 5: 10 o’clock and Hadley | Franco-Belgian Parley | At Paris to Map Out 1 ter, prosecuting attorney, Mr. and|and the mother subsequently married, innocence of the crime for which he was executed. He met| = The Rev. O'Neill had ordered him As the priest's body slipped to the| Mrs. Thomas Baty of South Wolcott| Thomas Baty. The couple moved to] his fate calmly without display of over the Arizona desert in November Reparations Program. from: the house. floor, Dillon according to his story| street have decided to make a strenu-| Casper some time ago. —-- Tho killing of Father O'Neill cul-| cove Father McCullough a phial con- ous fight to retain the custody of| The grounds on « vhich Mra. Baty fear or bravado. j 2921. In the group of 88 persons who wit- 13.—Marriner and John Browning, | minated what Rev. Dillon told police| Mrs, Baty's. daughter, fiveyearold| will make her fight to retain the giri| Tadley mounted the platform with-| PARIS, April 13.— (By : : | 8 e ‘ nessed the hanging was Peter John- - y eer eemen Wo, tices Wemrod stm. | Nae oe ree nian a oC, 1 trent | EE Py, pete ie rgb iid ‘Anna Grace Tansey, for whose alleged | is that in 1922, two years after the| Ut hesitation. He had eaten no| tise’ | ot lank om wat | viel «Oi mhe Associated Press.)—The der in eerre roo ny tne heat iot oe ae pectin pie ae te ¥ tea wee a sag ies reme| \idnaping from a Pullman sleeper | original award, that a second court | breakfast but had dressed with de- jat the time his wife was killed, was| premiers of France and Bel- ‘Tuesday, are to be arraigned this and assumed toward me the attitude “I knelt before God and prayed that last Saturday night Mr. Baty was ar- rested. order gave the custody of the girl to State Land Commissioner Haven and} Uberate care. a am innocent and ready to meet} i... |the state's principal witness in Had- with gium, their principal two trials, inisterial/advi ti afternoon, according to announce- | f & czar something would happen to that| ‘The farther along the case has gone| his wife of Denver. The cou; | death,” was h's only statement. ministerial advisers, met here : et ple are|my dea’ ( ; ment. Attorneys for the defense | . Rev. Leper eran ersatryt man,” Father Dillon was quoted as|the more complicated it has become the foster parents of Mrs. Baty.| Hadley at his own request was| Not until nearly mid-night was|today in an important confer- this morning withdrew proposals to t ecuto! Cltiough were at the table he’ said.| “Yims in a statement to Prosecutor and at the present time there are a Mrs. Baty also declares that Judge| baptized during the night by the Rev. hope abandoned for a stay of execu ence on the reparation question, have the Brownings released on ball Stephen H. Wattles. Jozen officials ‘from two states, the | Dunn, of Littleton, Cote., who J. W. Henders: prison chaplin, and|t!on for the condemned man. His at { : "N é , ‘ granted enderson, pr! r phen a 5 Ono of the main objects !s the de- as is permissible under the Utah pats O eit pe iar pp os #0 5°) st had no right to kill winced Gaateme and several interested|the divorce, was prejudiced in favor| Dr. James Hunter, a former chaplin. pega la e529 vente egrercen fees ng of new measures to make the laws. Stead Dillon went to his room, ob.| O'Neill; not one right in the world,” | friends involved. No further action|of Mr. Tansey through friendship | Dr. Hunter remained all night in the | 10%, Ruhr occupation productive. It is SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, April 18.—Attorneys for the defense of Marriner and John the statement said. “I took that in my own hands and I killed him. I want to go to Jackson (the state prison). I'd rather have the chair. “I never did any harm in my life; tained a revolver and returned. I intended to give him a chance to confess and repent before I killed him,” police report Dillon as saying, “put as I advanced into the room, will be taken in prosecuting the case| with the latter's father who is the until a conference is had with the| mayor of Littleton, and this may have Colorado officials. \been partly responsible for his giving A recital of the incidents in the case the girl to the father. reads like modern fiction with the end| Wyom‘ng officials entered into the cell Just before the mask was adjusted | Dr. kissed Hadley on the cheek. Hadley, and sang hymns for Hadley. Hunter offered a prayer anc | unsuceer an escaped life termer| ssful. to Governor Hunt for a further hear-| ing on the plea for a commutation of sentence to life imprisonment but was Hadley's body unclaimed by rela-| contended that as long as the Ruhr is unproductive of coal it will be dif- ficult to persuade the Germans to ao- cept the Frarto-Belgian viewpoints. While the French and the Belgians Browning, Jr., charged yes-| with the revolver extended, I saw) never took a cent from anybody. The| of the story not yet In sight. |case for the firs. time last Satur-| from the Oklahoma state penitentia | tives, as buried on the pr ison| are issuing figures to show that since terday with murder as the re-| him grab a salt cellar to throw at me,| gentle little childrren all over Mich-| The trouble gained its inception in| day when Mr. Tansey arrived in| was convicted of murdering Mrs. eeopneee Bo ee roast tbe aaa! | he Brussels! ooriference:the daily. coal sult of the killing last Monday | 274 I fired twice.” |igan will tell you they love m the divorce in Colorado in 1920 of Mr. (Continued on Page Five.) ‘Johnson during an automobile trip | Was not removed from his face. Helana coke production has increased of Benjamin Ballantyne at his feo ie : | from: 3,000. tons) to. 6,000 tons, the home here are expected to appear in the district court today and make application for the admittance to bail for the accused men, it was an: nounced last night. Chief counsel for the prosecution District Attorney E. A. Rogers and County Attorney Arthur E. Moreton, both. made assertions late last night that they would oppose the motion tc free the defendants on bond. Earller in the evening both prosecutors had made statements to the effect that they would not fight the motion. DEMAND CIRCULATION FIGURES IN PLACING ADVERTISEMENTS; THE TRIBUNE FURNISHES THEM half, a third or a fifth of that fig- ‘The guaranteed, net PAID circula- No Chances on 13th, Man Will Remain in Bed-+- MACON, Paraham, Macon business man, an- nounced that he would spend today, Ga, April 13—J. A. Drops of pure, soft water, EVERY WATER ORDER HOLDS A MEANING ALL ITS OWN; HILL “CREST IS IN ON GREAT SECRET So it transpired that after a little cording Hadley, with ht tiary, to his attorney. the second wife, who served | in ed im secur Mrs. divorced wives and two children, ac Ida the Oklahoma peniten a divorce The first wife and two children are} | living in New York, but the attorney ' pefused to disclose her name. Okla., April 13.—(By The Associated Press)—The execution LAST CHAPTER IN TRAGIC ROMAN MUSKOGER, Ee recently. German reparation delegates in Paris declare that after three months of occupation the two allies are obtain- ing less than 1,000 tons dally. Those who are in touch with the lofficial German viewpoints declare that Germany will not negotiate so long as the allies occupy the Ruhr and they contend the two allied pow- ers are “killing the goose that lala the golden egg,” since the Ruhr now {s unprofitgble art’ Germany's ability |to pay any reparations ts diminish- , : i - of Paul Hadley ends the most tragic) ing. ibune is now rapidly ap-] Ure. Friday the 13th in bed, in the ho} With t t amateur Sherlocck Holmes work,| ey ° } "The change in their attitude, the rea | tion of the Tr 4s a ents Satalaies took y 2 pe a yeasty ration Jromance ever recorded in official) ‘Th, ° son for which was not divulged, fol- | proaching the 11,000 mark. Figuring ‘ince the pres: Dr that he will get through the day with a toucch of Hawkshaw thrown | dontiinente 6e’Oklahoma: ¢ explanation offered of the suc- lowed a conference between the two which lasted several hours Under the Utah statutes a defend: ant charged with an offense punish- able by death, may be admitted to ball at the discretion of the court. Both the Brownings were removed yesterday from the city to the county jail following the filing of an infor. mation charging murder before City Judge Noel 8. Pratt, and the formal over the paper, the Tribune's circu- lation has virtually DOUBLED. And this circulation 1s guaranteed by Audit Bureau of Circulation reports. Advertisers should demand circula tion statements from newspapers. The Tribune will always be glad to furnish you with figures that admit of no “Jockeying.” doubt as to their correctness. an average of four readers to each paper—which is the customary basis for computation—that means that about 40,000 persons daily are read- ing the Tribune. Ninety-five percent of the people of Casper, and more than 15,000 outside the city itself, are Tribune readers. Think of what that means to the advertisers. As anyone realizes who knows any- no padding and no! Do the things they oughter; Makes for fermentarxm. —Ballads of a Home Brewer. “How come,” said the manager of the Hill Crest Water company, look-| ing over the available supply of ten\ gallon glass containers, “how com all these ten gallons orders late! I never see s0 many families want to) get ten gallons at one time, They safely. He gave as his reasons: “While working on a machine tn his garage a steel splinter struck him in the eye, destroying the sight —on the thirteenth of the month. “The following month, also on the 18th, he broke an arm while cranking an automobile. “Then in the next month, also on the 13th, he slipped on grease in his garage and broke his leg. in, ti certain local home brewing activities. Now a manager for a spring water| cone revenue or enforcement officers al!) he k | fly impart such information into the} shell fs nothing compelling him so to do, and he Hill Crest manager learned of) giiog | bride, ern does not have to tell the} pair hac ows, and he doos not customar- say 3 Their led like ear of the sheriff. There despair. naturally he would not do it. It Ida, 1916, a he story to tragedy, fully and then when Hadley and his| were tried in district court | here for the murder of Sheriff W. 'T. Giles of Jefferson county, ‘Fexas, the 1 a unique in the place of crime of the st hope that today to death and ate, was one of love that) lived fit-| cess of the German passive resistance is the attitude of the workmen who, it is asserted, will not now, and never will, work in the presence of French troops. When the French and Belgians en- tered the Ruhr early in January the allies as a whole were receiving a to: tal of 1,600,000 tons of coal monthly, of which the French share wag 1,- 000,000 tons. It is sald that Italy, issuance of warrants. The complaint] thing about advertising, the PAID . Re anata dWe lenaccoi eee, 105| socio Souls 0 tt. Tt) ‘Tho trial perhaps was the most sen-| is receiving her full quota of coal ax was filed by County Attorney |circulation js the only kind that Airplane Takes newer ire santas ieneceettr, bys) EE Iunwticay tracts ie atl ab giise Late the be md baer ee lestional ever held in the state, provided under the 1923 reparations Moreton; it was sworn to by L. L.| counts. It is only the small-timer, the wings extra Been he gi Meney ‘can't dink that, much al et ee ee en eee crbe cihed tne, Adley wan belng returned trom| schedule Beals ape ech Had nia with 8 Dy by night. propelling ‘ once; and when I te!l them I can only| same day. But the Tribune learnea| ®*n88s City to Texas to answer a/ Germany has been able likewise to The preliminary hearing of the de-|or the merchant on his last legs who t P t ‘Then the 13th rolled around 3 ne es same day. learned) minor charge when Sheriff Giles was| aber F fendants was set for today in Judge|trusts to the “handbill’ type of ad- 00 0 ar y again, and while he was watching | 8nd a five-gallon container, or some) from the officials of the Hit Crest) jie, continue her shipment of coal to Pratt's cour,t ut officials sald that|vertising for getting his goods before | mechanics at work on an automo: | half gallon bottles, they blow right) that this 1s about what happened: Gilad, tie father’ of w large! tamtty, Ort eeapee lat petals meee ‘® poscponement was probable as the/the public. No reputable business In Everglades bile a block broke loose from its | Up and get sore. Same months ago e gentleman of| could not refuse the pleas of Taa| fom ere necara te mecations hearing would have to await the|house in all America which adver fastening, fell on his foot and | “Maybe they want to bathe in {t.| pleasing manner wandered in to Cas-| Hadley that she be allowed to accom. . court's calendar. tises nationally uses anything but a mashed it. {t don't make you itch all over Uk6| per, In his pocket he had a Uttle| pany her husband and permitted her pte eee newspaper with a PAID FOR circu- “Last month, on the 13th, his | this hard water does,” suggested h's|jeather case, containing vials of var-|to be with him on the trip. FRENCH PLANS lation. And no reputable business} MIAMI, Fla, April 18—In an ef-| garage was destroyed by fire." assistant. fous kinds and colors. The vials con- | As the fast Missour!, Kansas and| BEING COMPARED W MAN KILLED a ae pci ares rata Petite Mad gaa e pegpenee “Yea,” answered the manager, sar-| tained samples of a grape concen-| Texas railroad train crossed the line| PARIS, April 13.—By The As ig | oqunting that; thay.saay)be sure;they'}.perty) of, Taner oe ee novel es lcastically. “Maybe we'd get a good|trate—nothing but the juice of thal pecreen Muskogee and McIntosh | sociated Press)—A re-welding of the Are spending their meney where they | stranded about 60 miles west of hare Delu e of Rain market in Russia selling !t to the! grape, concentrated without heat,| counties, the woman, mad with the|interallied front 1s expected to result will get returns. fn, the} aatniags 265 nei ver RIAs Ma. Ast g | Bolsheviks for baths, too! People been| with fermentation properties tntact.| thought that Paul might be taken| from today’s meeting of the Franco« You would not think of going into a ign hn, Ween ae bas nent | bathing around here for a long time| ‘There {2 no alcohclic content in| from her, shot tho sheriff, jerked the| Belgian ministers heree, at which a . big deal without examining the books |i, 7¢rPesa"” ‘Rain and. low. hanging Sweeps Texas sa never sot vo suadeniy struck on| txong vials. No ‘test. can be made| bell cord and, as the train camo to| reparations plan drafted by the clouds prevented the relief plans yes- swimming in spring water.” wh'el h reveals more than half of one-|% Stop, jumped with her husband, ench experta will be compared to DES MOINES, Iowa, April 13.—| going to buy an interest, say. That}? oy). “Perhaps the indies are using it| ercentam of forbidden stuff, Nolther| ‘fom tho car into a nearby thicket. "| one drawn up by tho Belgians. Mra. Delia Dickerson, 28, was sho] Would not be good business. And it —_———>___. for shampooing.” returned the asaist-| te ther any alcohol in the five gal.| For 24 hours posses from Muskogee| It 1s understood that the two differ and killed in her downtown rooms|{s equally true that ir ts not good FORT WORTH ,Texas, April 18.—} ant. “It's god for that." tona of concentrate sent to anyone|®4 MsIntosh counties searched the| only silghtly, inasmuch as Premier here last night. George Lewellyn to buy advertising without West Texas, drenched with rey “Say, they don't neea ten gallons|;n a fifteen gallon keg, on payment |CUntryside. Finally the pair was ar-|Poluscare through Louis Loucheur, arrested several hours later, and held NG what you are getting. breaking spring rains, is fa to shampoo with,” indlmantly re-| or a few coarse American .dollars.| ‘ested In McIntosh county: and the Belgian government through by the police, denied knowledge of] An A. B. C report is your protection. ' ' transportation difficulties because of! torted the manager. “With ten gal-|-herefore the gentieman of the pleas.|__ They were tried here. She was ac-| its representatives in London, havé te shooting. He was arrested on| The A. B. C. INVESTIGATES for you. neveral missing bridges and culverts.| jong you ‘could shampoo Godiva, and|jne manner, who shall be nameless, |@Wutted, but the husband was found| sounded the British government aa to information given the police by Mrs.| You have neither the time nor the | A [In some localities the downpour] 11°" Danderine Dame, and Mulaified jo ’peiine nothing illegal. | guilty and sentenced to life im- | {ts attitude toward the question, Vivian Dickerson, sister-in-law of the| facilities for knowing whether a |measured two and a half inches in| ‘te Denderine Dame, and Mulsitiod is selling s | prizonmene. IibA Pveniah GUAG weno PESCATEA TSG dead woman, who says she witnessed | newspaper's circulation {9 what the ~ da aura: | , Afallte, the Cocoanut Ol Lady ant of course, if you get ten gnilons ot] Taa begged to accompany her hus-| the foriegn office experts in close eal: the shooting. paper says it is, or whether it is a The Kansas City, Mexico and) s arent To till have | Water—it must be soft, spring water|pand to the penitentiary, Her pleas| laboration with the reparations com- Orient railroad reports the loss of| Hushes'’' whiskers and s nave] —and add it to the five gallons of| unvailing sho led an attempted jail| mission, Le Matin, which | meveral bridges between Sweetwater | S°me left over! That is, ou oougn't | concent ix) Caan ade (OMIIER UM URGES os Gapiased aut centadeae tot cure of the AFAtA: oaxmlt leavansine and Chillicothe. Creeks and. rivers| because they would not let you. But! i, at 4 tepid temperature with the/the penitentiary. Peace officers total German Anidebtedness at’ 183,000, ‘BUCK’ PASSED BY OFFICIALS IN F. C. Burke of the Wyoming Na- are bank full everywhere and a con- they could. Anyhow, it could be | done, Say, when you go out on your addit ion of a few yeast cakes, certain! clared 1 was only a plan to ot ain | 009,000 gold marks, but provides for a tinuance of the rain may result/ dor things are bound to happen. Dame| her entrance into the st ateprison.|a method of payment which would Ut the Powder River powt of the Vet. | seriously courte eet fl aire aa ton Nature is a careless old party, and’ Her sentence was ten years lessen the burden of the debt and at erans of Foriegn Wars at the regular|, Grain farmers and ranchmen have | how come ali these ten = +I thinks nothing of breaking the law. At the penitentiary, guards often|the same tme accelerate the install. meeting Thuraday evening. ‘The elec: | been benefited, however. will you? One would think some times that] found tt necessary to lead her to her nts during the next few years. If¢ tion was necessitated by the resigna- Dame Nature had never heard of the/ husband's cell and let her calm her- ance in that period is able, through SPRINGFIELD, Ill., April 13.—With two state officials | tion of J. Ee Yunek, who has gone to HONORS VERY EVENLY DIVIDED panes Amendment. ey (Si ee ales ch ot interns ational ‘rid aoa: ma, to: aye It Creek. Vear E. elps was he gentlemen of the pleasing man- a ivy, then a trus-| 2 000,00 ©) e Egadlitent: Gensel Gerlog Black and ree the ti Fae lected to the office of chaplin’ of J ner warns you that eee nid ten | ty, Was released from the penitentiary | ing the “A” and “B” German bonds —each accusing the other of responsibility for the fatlure to) jin fallona of boiling water to the five|t© perfect an invention. He never ro-| as well as her past and future expen- prevent the Herrin mine troubles last June, the state legisla-| "pth, were discussed for the poppy A PREPARE T0 MAKE sallone of bolting water {0 che Ove | turned, ‘The firat word trom him | diture for the devastated regions, she tive investigating committee recessed get night until next} campaign from May 26 to 29 which ment. 80 of course you heat the wa-| ime from Tucson, Ariz, where un-|{v ready {0 make concessions for the its wor! will be a national event, The flowers ter to a balling point. Of course! But{ ‘er the name o} mS. Estaver,| remainder, says the newspape: Wednesday to consider further steps in will be sold with the proceeds to go on this point the information of the |4¢ was on trial for the murder of Mrs | Part of the German debt. mobilize ATT PLEDGES HELP T0 ta the aid of disabled veterans of the Hin: otfiolaia! giv eal Gut: (Continued on Page Five.) (Continued on Page Five.) wee eee “T ain't saying nothing,” observed The membership campaign of the . caspincediene LP herp... cral new members were initiated Iast| With honors thus far about evenly) narrowing down to a limited few each | |v» “put If 1 was to aiden ton galloha " ry of the favorites are more determined | ° . ppt a now famous prize campaign are Pre-| nist honors. I wouldn't boil it. Bofling spoils Sas TROL EL paring with feverish haste and in-| Interest in the competition is run-| things. And besides, Hill Crest Henry Wyatt, president of the In-| been a movement of community inter CHARGE AGAINST KEAR tensity to make thelr final stand for| ning high and strong. And it has not | Coesn't need it!” hai ace aii cal caatis ependent Supply company, and a/est, and in this particular Instance victory before 10 o'clock this coming| been confined alone to this locality,| And tf, after adding the tepid wa- Casperite has entered into an| Stfetching @ point in assuming all of , | Saturday night—the close of the sec-| but has reached out until there are|tor, nature should take {ts course;| Four men were arrested in a raid] Included fn tho haul was 20 gallons pioneer Caspe I the expense connected with this added Y J ond period schedule of votes. hundreds, yes thousands of eager! i fifteen gallons of Burgandy, or|in the Bessemer Bend country Thurs-| of Mauor, 14 barrels and a large sup- agreement with the Rodeo Assoc!a-| improvement to the Rodeo Grounds. | | Surging forward at the rate of sev-| watching friends who are awaiting | sautelle, or Rhine wine, or Sherry,|day by the sheriff's deputi | ply Ot coed Mnditaadh.= Wie SORKIN tion to build upon the Rodeo Grounds} When interviewed yesterday, Mr. |eral thousand votes a clip, all of} the final outcome with intense in-| ¢. port’ or Chianti! grew in your cole] 22 PY the sherif's deputies and) who were arrested are booked at the an up-to-date conerete and steel gas-| Wyatt sald, “that after looking tho the leading candidates are dashing | terest. een eae errr Ce romed, | three stills and thelr accompanying | sheriff's office as Lee Hand, Charles Oline filling station that will cost up-| situation over with my contractors) Cy B. Kear, who was arested by the | through the final days at top speed— False Stories. ccoholic fluid bloomed before, woula| Paraphernalia confiscated. All three| Ron Ht Johnson and Theo wards of three thousand dollars and| who are bufiding my present gasoline | police department Tuesday evening on! straining every nerve in thi final] It 1s no doubt natural, with such} 0. object ) stills were in a room which had been | dor will have adjoining it a building with| filling station in Casper, I must say|the charge of reckless driving. ‘h/ efforts for supremacy intense interest being shown in the bas ickviied in a '¢ide hill ee T 4: ws masuchs. afetiee shower baths, rest rooms, and other/ that from all indictations the Rod having alleged that he struck a small | Action Grows Faster. great race that some candidates No. ‘ e chances are yc would ob-| teading from t room to a small! Albe , = ia paid conveniénces that will be an asset| will be a success and beneficial, not| boy and did not stop afterwards, was! More general and concerted action | would attempt to discourage others | serve the r arvels of Mother Nature] entrance at th of the hill y a e \ raid to the Rodeo. only to all the merch dismissed by Judge John A. Murry|should take place during the next| by circulating rumors more ingenious| with what calmness you 1 com:| location was about thre mil Vacaeonathe Mr. Wyatt ha ways been closely | but will be an invalua last night No witness appeared few days than at any other time since | than accurate. One hears of tmmense Ver and w av am H.] of the Menelce ran ds Beane ‘ Manis sot: WIG associated with every enterprise that| community !n general.” [against Kear. ‘the contest began and with the race (Continued on Page Eleven) Anderson was getting on, Polson Spider creek. he graiitey: f

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