Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
1. he Casper Daily Cridune PAGE SEVEN. ‘MARINE SPUDDING IN SHELDON DOME TEST New Wildcat in Promising Located ‘Th juarters of Mile From Test loned iThis Year District of Fremont County Spudding in of a new test on the Sheldon anticline in Fre- mont county, Wyo., southeast of section 8-5-2W, three quar- ters of a mile northwest of the former well was the outstnd- ing feature of Marine Oil company’s operations during the last week. E. R. Lloyd, chief geologist for the company, has completed an exhaustive study of the anticline which is believed to justify the drilling of a eecond well, the first test having been abandoned after having en- countered gas in the two Frontier wands. Tools were lost in the hole and & fishing job failed to recover them. In the Salt Creek field the Marine company's Marine No. 5 on eection (P711-38-18, made over 116 barrels during #” the first 24 hours after being shot at 9,715 feet. In fhe same section Marine No. 4 is down 165 feet and Marine No, 6 hag cellar dug and timbers on the ground. Casing has been cemented at 2,875 feet in Taylor No. 8 well on section 20-89-78. Announcement is made at company offices in Casper that the Marine com- pany will operate for Judge James Owen of Denver the Wolverine prop. erties in sections 4, 5, 6 and 9-39-78, in Salt Creek, which Judge Owen re- cently acquired. Camp has’been com- pleted and the first well to be known as CR No, 1 is being rigged up. Crude Price Differential At Lost Soldier Explained RAWLINS, WYO., July 26—Owing to the fact that there has been much somment upon the present differen- tlal existing between the price of crude oll from the ost Soldier and the Salt Creex fields, a representative of The Republican this week obtained @n interview with W. H. Lovesy, pur- chasing and traffic agent of the Utah Oil and Refining Company of Salt Lake City. ~ Mr. Lovesy in explaining the mat. ter from the standpoint of the Utah company said: “On March 1, 1923 the Utah Of! and Refining Company posted a acale of Prices on Lost Soldier crude and feel that they are giving the producers ® fair price for this crude, and in fact if the crude was not there to be Purchased it would be of great ad- vantage to the company to purchase end run on Salt Creek and Rock River crudes. “Utah O!l and Refining Company paid the Salt Creek price for Lost Boldier crude oil during the papioa that there was a very small profuc- tion from the shallow sands and dur- ing the time that the pipeline was not operating in a normal way, but @3 soon as production was found in the deeper sands and the oll was found to be 29-31 gravity and from Jaboratary analysis was found toe con- tain only approximately 8 to 10 per cent of 48-60 gravity gascline as against 25 to 28 per cent of 58 grav- ity gasoline contained in Salt Créek crude, then it was necessary to post Company at Florence, Colorado and others, but apparently these refineries do not want the Lost Soldier crude since they can obtain the Salt Creek which yields much higher refining values and this in itself should be self-evident that the Lost Soldier crude does not contain the refining values that the Salt Creek or Rock Creek -crudes contain. “Some producers and friends of pro- ducers, have from time to time stated that the Lost Soldier crude contains large and extra values in lubricating oils and refiners will concede that it contains only fair values inasmuch as superior lubricants can be made out of Rock Creek and Salt Creek crudes. In other words a higher fire test on the lubricants can be obtained and also a superior grade of wax can be made out of Rock Creek and Salt Creek crudes.. There is not as much amorphous wax in the other crudes as there is in Lost Soldier. "In addition to this, interested par- tles should bear in mtnu that all re- fining plants west of Chicago are running to gasoline and that lubri- cants are incidental by-products. In the East where there are large man- ufacturing plants which require great quantities of lubricating stocks, “At the present time the Utah Of] Company can purchase crude oll in o# Angeles, California and bring it into Salt Lake and make more money out of it than out of the Lost Soldier crude, but we feel inasmuch a3 we are directly interested in the @ price in the field for Lost Soldier rude based upon the refining values. ‘The Lost Soldier crude contains con- siderable sulphur and requires acid for treatment. . It also contains » \very much larger percentage of heavy fuel residium than either the Salt ‘Creek or Rock Creek crudes and this fuel residium fs sold or consumed @gainst the low price of coal in our territory, “Utah Ol and Refining Company does not claim to have any monopoly on the purchase of the Lost Soldier erude ol] either thru contract or any arrangement with the producers and inasmuch as the Utah Of] Refining Company ig @ large producer in the field we have attempted to gell con. alderable of the production ta other refineries. For instance, we have urged the sale of the Lost Soldier rude to the Producers & Refine: Corporation, and to the United Oil SAN FRANCISCO—The stock- holders of the Associated Of com- pany voted to increase the capital stock from $40,000,000 to $60,000,000, It was directed that the stock be divided into 2,400,000 shares selling at $25 par. The stock on th IY ous capitalization was 40,000 s) selling at $100 par, — LONDON—German marks slump- ed by hundred thousand = in the exchange market to 2,000,000 marks to the pound sterling, follow- ing the action of the reichsbank against excessive currency demands. ‘There wes practically no business here, however, and the quotations were nominal. — BASKATOON, Sask. — Premier Id and the Alberta cabinet have decided to support the Sapiro wheat pool plan for the marketing of the west’s 1928 crop, according to a telegram ved by President MeoNamee of the farmers Union of Canada. — SAN FRANCISCO—Twelve car- Joads of delicous California fruit left here for Hngland aboard the Motor- ship Lochgoil, which had been es- pecially equipped with a new refrig- eration system designed to keep the fruit in @ pefect state of preserva- tion. Most of the frult was grown in Merced, Sutter and t4acer coun- ties, _—_— CHICAGO.—Several leaders on the Chicago board of trade, includ- ing L. F, Gates, Joseph P. Griffin, and Robert MeDougal, each of whom has’ served terms as presi- dent of the board, said they favered higher grain prices, WASHINGTON-—Mills of the West Coast Lumbermen's associa tion for the week ending July 14, S| be $1.45, $1.65, $1.80, $1. Financial News Briefs field ourselves and our friends have interests there that we do not want to change our source of supply, but we trust, however, that those inter- ested in Lost Soldier field will appre- ciate the penalties we are under in purchasing Lost Soldier crude as against the very heavy low priced, flush production of south California, which production, including crude, fuel ofl and all of the by-products of petroleum come into direct compet}. too with our rroducts.” ‘The posted field price for Lost Sol: ier crude when compared with prices of Salt Creek crude on the same days shows the following differentials. Lost Soldier crude when priced at $1.00, $1.12, $1.21, $190, $1.42, $1.51 and $1,60 would mean that the Salt Creek prlces-for the same days would $2.16, $2.30 and $2.45. had unfilled orders amount: to 349,761,383 feet as compared with 816,284,089 feet the week previous. re —_— ‘WLEY, Minn. — Congressman Knud Wefsll, in a telegram to pres- ident Harding said farmers, labor- er and business men of the nation face certain disaster if crops are permitted to be dumped on the mar- ket in the usual manner. ae ‘WINNIPEG—Daemage to western Canada’s wheat crop from black rust was reported practically neg- ligible, — TOPHKA—The state board of ag- riculture reported information far- mers intend to decrease thelr win- ter wheat acreage, FRESNO—Two solid trains of California raisins consisting of 89 cars are en route east. ship: ments fellowed the naming of prices on the hold-over crop of the Sun Maid Raisin last Sunday and constitute one of the largest fruit consignments ever sent from the Ban Joaquin valley, BELLINGHAM, Wash. — Tho pe. eed egg shipment ever made here by water is to be taken mext week by the steamship Wheat- on for the Atlantic coast, It will be furnished by the Bellingham and Lynden stations of the Washington and Poultry asso- It total 2,500 cases, The Wheaton also will take 2,000 cases of eggs from Tacoma. ia cag NEW YORK, July 20.—Cotton opot quiet; middling $77.25, New York Stocks American American Car and Foundry American International Corp American Locomotive .-.-.. American Smelting & Refg. — American Sugar -... American T. and T. -. American Tobacco -—— American Woolen Anaconda, Copper Atchison ~~... Atl, Gulf and West Indies —__ Bal@win Locomotive Baltimore and Ohio Bethlehem Steel California, Petroleum Canadian Pacifio Central Leather Cerro de Pasco Copper —__._ 41 Chandler Motors —.-.. 52% Chesapeake and Ohio 51% Chicago and Northwestern -—. 71% Chicago, Mil and St. Paul pfd._ 34% Chicago, R. I. and Pac, —---. 26% Chile Copper ———- 26% Chino Copper Consolidated Gas ——--—- Corn Products ~—---______. Cosden Oi! .. Crucible Steel Cuba Cane Sugar pfd, Brie. ......-----—-=-. Famous Players Lasky -...--- General Asphalt -------—-.-.. 30 General Electric ~—~--------.. 175 General Motors —--—--__--.. Great Northern pfd. Gulf States Steel ---—-—___.. Iinois Central Inspiration Copper International Paper Invincible Oi Kelly Springfie Kennecott Copper Lima Locomotive ~-Louisville and Nashville Mack Truck Sit Marland Of -—. - 40% Maxwell Motors B = 133% Midd’e States Of - - 7% Missouri Kan and Tex. new -. 11% Missouri Pacific pfd. - 33% New York Central --. - 98% N. Y., N. H., and Hartford -.. 13% Norfolk and Western --—-. 105 Northern Pacific - —---- 66% Parttic O11 -— pocmreamane {4 Pan American Petroleum B -. 63% Pennsytvania, -—------~ ——- 43% People's Gas 90 Producers and Refinerg -_--- 36% Pure Oil -. EEO ATS al Reading eienes-auts Republic Tron and Steel -_---. 46% Sears Roebuck -—-----------.. 14 Sinclair Con Of 26 Southern Pacific --—_--.. 87% Southern Railway -_—-—---. Standard Oil of N. J. ------- Studebaker Corporation ~. - 107 Texas Co. -----—-—------.----- Texas and Pacifio -—-..--.--. 19% ‘Tobacco Products A --—----- 81% Transcontinentat Ol --.--.--. 6% Union Pacific ~-------—-----— 182% United Retail Stores ~~... 14% U. 8. Ind Alcohol --------...- 49% United States Rubber - United States Steel ---------- 92% Utah Copper ..-------. —---: 61 Westinghouse Electric --..— Willys Overlana American Zine, Lead Butte and Superior -—---.-—- ColoradoFuel and Iron Montana Power National Lead -. Shattuck Arizona ---_---_. a Anglo 144 1B% Buckeye ~—--------_-. 85 86 Continental .—_-. a7 Gumberlama ----—---- 103 Calena -. —— 104 106 Miinois ----.-----——---- 159 160 Indiana -------------- 98 99 Nat. Tran --.--.---. 238% 4% N. ¥. Tran ee 101 Nor Pipe ---. 104 Ohio Ol —: 57 58% Prairie Ol .. —~ 181 14 Prairie Pipe -—.—---~ 101 101% Solar Ref. ---—--—~~ 115 Sou. Pipe 95 8. O. Kan, -——_-_ 40 S. 0. Ky 1% 8. O. Neb, 210 8.0. N. ¥. 41% . O, Ohio .. 280 Vacuum -. 45% 8. P. ON .. == 123 8. O. Ind. ---------- 54% weecereee ceneecnecensees 1,70 Grass Creek Torchlight Etk Basin Greydull ~~ meen | —-nw-nanvenennie 1:70 Rovk Creek Balt Creek Potatoes CHIGAGO, July 20—Potatoes weak- er; receipts 65; U. 8, shipments 621; Kansas and Missourt sacked Ohios $1,665; poor and heated §1,10; mostly $1.40@1.50; Illinois fancy §1,75; Ill- nois fancy $1.75; Tllinols sacked cob- blers $1,60@1.90; Virginia barrels $5 5.25. —_—_—_— Silver NEW YORK, July 20,—~Bar sliver, 630; Mexican dollars, 4 LONDON, July 20.—Rar aflver, 20 116d per ounce. Money, 1% per cent. 2 Peace oe Blacksteme Salt Creek Chappell ----—-_-_. Columbine Cow Gulch -.. 02 3 04 6.00 83% 06 pe) ee) 22 Jupiter 00% 01 Kinney Coastas -.. 26 at Lance Creek Royalty., .01 02 Lusk Royalty -— .01 03 Mike Henry --_. 01 02 Monntain & Gulf ~__ 1.30 1.33 New York Oil -—...12.00 14.00 Western Of Fields .. .70 80 Western States ----. at ro le 10 New York Curb Mountain Producers -$ Mammoth Olt Glenrock Oil ---——— Salt Creek Prods --.- Salt Creek Cons, —. New York Oil ------ Marine --.... Mutual fe S. O. Indiana 54.75 Cities Service Com, — 134.00 3%8 -—B-—--- ~~~. ae en ae $100.81 First 4s 8 Second 4a First 4%s .. Secong 4%s8 —. Third 4X5 +--+. Fourth 4%s ----------____. oo Livestock Prices. CHICAGO, July 20.—Hogs—Re. celpts, 47,000; fairly active, 10 250 lower; bulk 160 to 260 pound aver- ges, $7.25@7.40; top, $7.40; bulk 275 to 350 pound butchers, $7.00@7.20; packing sows more, $5.75@6.00; best strong weight pigs, around, $6.75; heavy weight hogs, $6.50@7.35; me dium, $6.80@7.40; Mght, $6.75@7.4 light Nght, $6.85@7.35; packing sow: smooth, $5.75@6.15; packing sows, rough, $5.50@5.75; killing pigs, $6.25 @6.90. Cattle—Receipts, 3,001 excepting veal calves and bulls market prac: Ucally at a standstill; killing quality plain; bulle beef steers and yearlings kinds of value to sell at $8.00@9.50; long fed, rather rough 1,649 pound bullocks, $10.65; few early sales year- lings and light steers, $8,25@9.00; prospects weak to unévenly lower on beef steers, yearlings and fat she stock; stockers and feeders, dull; bulk desirable bologna bulls, $3.50@5. bulk vealers to packers, $10,00@10.50; few $11.00 and above. ‘ Sheep—Receipts, 10,000; fat west- ern lambs around steady; three doubles Nevadas, $18.50; other west- ern lambs unsold; bulk good and choice natives weak to 500 lower at $12.25@13.00; top, $13.25; sorting heavy; better grades culls, mostly $8.00; 50; practically no wethers of: fered; bulk fat ewes, §$5.00@6.25; heevies downward to $3.50, Omaha Quotations. OMAHA, Neb., July 20,—{ U. 8, De- partment of Agriculture,}—Hogs—Re- celpts 10,000; mostly steady to 100 lower; bulle 200 to 300 pound butchers $6.70@7.00; top $7.10; bulk mixed loads carrying packing packing sows ie ane iy $5.75@6.10. Cattle— Receipts 1,200; all classes generally atea@y; no choice steers in: cluded, bulk fed steers and yearlings $8@9.78; dry lot cows and heifers at $5.50@8.50; bologna bulls $4.60@5; bulk light veal calves $809, Sheep—Receipts 3,000; lamba most- ly 250 lower; beat western fat lambs $12.15; native lamba §11,75@ 12.2% fed clipped lambs $11 sheep scarce steady feeders dull. ‘eceipts market steady; beef ateers 00@10.75; cows and heifers $3.00 @7.00; calves $4.00@7,50; stockers and feeders $4.00@6.75. Hogs, receipts 500; market steady to 100 higher; top $ bulle $7.00@7.20. Bheep, receipts 500; market steady; lambs $11,00@12.50; feeder lambs $10.00@ 11.25; ewes $4.0006.50, re NEW YORK, Juty 20--Copper, ivtio spot, $6.00. Zinc, quist; Louis spot and nearby, $6.10. mony, spot, $6.85@6.90. = Money NEW YORK, July 20.—Call money, ‘Wirm, high low 5; ruling rate 8; closing bid, offered at 5 last ances, 4%; time loans, firm; mixed loan, 5; call loans against collateral, 60-90 daye, months, 5@5%; prime paper, 5@5%4. commereial STACK TRACING LIVELY AGAIN Short Covering Adds Strength to Buying Movement On Exchange NEW YORK, July 20.—Short cover- ing operations which started yester- day proceeding vigorously in today stock market, the entire list respond- ed to active buying for both accounts. The long period of dectine left a tre- mendous short interest uncovered and their efforts to extricate themselves caused numerous stocks to advance 1 to 5 points. A few of the leaders reflected the customary weekend profit taking, Sales approximated 750,000 shares. NEW YORK, July 20—Prices con- tinued to point upward at the opening of today’s stock market. The early buying covered a wide assortment of industrials and specialties, with sev- eral rail shares showing moderato im- provement. Creation of « more optimistic sent!- ment due to yesterday's substantial rise, carried prices of many shares swiftly forward, in the early dealings. Gaina of 1 to 2 points were register- ed by Ameriwan Sugar, Pan American B, Republic Steel, United States Smelting, United Drug, National En- ameling and Wells Fargo Express. United States Steel was a conspicuous laggard, falling back slightly, and there was also some profit taking in Baldwin and Steudebaker following their initital gains. Foreign exchanges opened slightly lower. German marks falling to. .0002% cents, a new low. Strong evicence af the restored speculative confidence was furnished by the broad charactec of the fore- noon advance in stock prices. Short interest which grew to unwield!y pro- portions during three months of re- actionary prices, found stocks com- partively scarce at ruling figures and efforts at short selling also met ef- fective resistance at the hands of bargain hunters, Mack Truck first preferred advanced six points, Peo- ples’ Gas 3%, General Asphalt pre ferred 3, and National Lead, Loose Wiles and Mack Truck 2% each. In- vestment rails were more active and substantially higher, particularly Union Pacific and Reading. Call money opened at 5 per cent. Profit taking sales caused a tempor- ary setback in the efternoon, Stude- baker falling one point under yester- day's closing end Stewart Warner and Foundation company two each. Placing of Stewart Warner on a def- inite ten per cent annual basis caus- ed a heavy demand for the stock which rallied from 85% to 80%. Brisk buying was then resumed in the balance of the last with the low priced railroad sheres prominent. The closing was strong. Low priced ojls, equipments and motor acces: sory shares were foremost in the late upward swing, Stromberg Carbueret- or jumped 3 points, American Car 4, Pierce Oll preferred 6 and Stewart Warner touched 93%, Foreign Exchange NEW YORK, July 20—Forelgn ex changes irregular, Quotations in cents: Great Britain, demand, 4.59%; cables, 4.59 7-16; 60-day bills on banks, 4.56%. Franco, demand, 5.88; cables, %. Italy, demand, 4 cables, %. Belgium, demand, 4.86; cables, Germany, demand, .000290; Holland, demand, . Norway, demand, 16.18%. Sweden, demand, 26.51%. Denmark, demand, 17.44%. witzer- land, demand, 17.70. Spain, demand, 14.28. Greece, demand, 2.45. Poland, demand, .0007%; Czecho-Slovakia, de- mand, 2. Austria, demand, .0014%. Rumania, demand, .0525. Argentine, demand, 83.90. Brazil, demand, 10.45, Montreal, 1 Butter and Eggs CHICAGO, IN, July 20.—Butter re ceipts, 8,738 tubs; steady; creamery extras, 37%c; standards, 87%4c; extra firsts, 35% @36%4c; rats, 34@35e; sec- onds, 33@33%4c. Eses, receipts, 10,583 cases; steady; firsts, 22%; ordinary firsts, 204@ Bie; storage pack extras, 24%40; stor- age pack firsts, 23%4c. WOMAN FACES FEDERAL CHARGE OF AUTO THEFT Pauline Bush, who has been at Iib- ,000 bonds since her arrest erift's office last week in connection with the possession of a Dodge touring car stolen in Denver, was rearrested this morning on a fed- eral charge for the same offense. A department of justice official ar rived this morning from Denver to| prosecute the cas Sugar NEW YORK, July 20.—Rofined sugar was quiet after yesterday's cut by one refiner to $8.35 in order to meet competition, The demand a this figure was understood to be | WHEAT PRICES GIVEN SETBAGK July Holds Near O Figures But Other liveries Are Lower ening e- CHICAGO, July 20—Increased pres- sure of ‘hedging sales of newly har- vested wheat turned the wheat mar- ket downward in price today in the last part of the board of trade session, Black rust reports continued to come from the Canadian north west, but no actual damage of consequence was noted. The close was heavy 1% to 1%0 net lower, with September 1.01%. CHICAGO, July 20.—Wheat quick- ly scored gains in price today after @ decline at the outset. Comminasion house buying developed on the down- turns in price, and proved to be of sufficient valume to lift values, The initial weakness was more or leas dus to hedging sales and to reports of lib- eral acceptances in Illinois of over night, birs from here. The opening which ranged from quarter to 1%c there, with September 99%o to $1.00% nd December $1.02% to $1.027%, was ‘ollowed by upturns to well above yesterday's finish. Corn and oats swayed with wheat. After opening un- changed to %c lower, September 76%0 to 76%o, the corn market sagged a ttle more and then ascend- ed all around. Subsequently, the fact that July had risen to five cents above Tues- day's lowest figures led to profit tak: ing and this together with enlarged purchases to arriye from central west territory put bulls at a disadvantage in Se late dealings. After July corn had equaled the season's price record, the corn mar. ket weakened with wheat, The close was heavy % to % to 1%c net lower; September 76% to 76%c. Oats started at %o decline to Ke advance, September 35%c, Later the market underwent a slight genera! setback and then showed gains, Lower quotations on hogs eased the provision market. Wheat— Open High Low Clore July --—— 1.00% 1.01% 1.00% 1.00% 99% 1.00% 98% 98% 1.03% 1.01% 1.01% 85 B38 «84 11% .76 18% 64% 63% 63% Al% 40% 40% 6 36 35 31% 36% 36% | Sept. ----10.97 11.02 10.97 11,00 Oct. 11.10 11.36 11.10 11.10 Ribs— Sept. —- 8.67 8.75 8.67 &75 Oct. a congo 4.85 Cash Grains and Provisions, CHICAGO, July 20-—Wheat num- ber red $1.02} %1.03; number 2 hard $1,02% @1.08. é Corn number 3 mixed 86% @) number 2 yellow 80% @89%c. Oats number 2 white 44@45%4; num ber 8 white 41@44%c. Rye number 1, 66@66%4c. Barley 64@69c. ‘Timothy seed $5.50: 50, Clover seed $15.00@17.60. Pork nominal, Lard $10.85. Ribs $8,37@9.25. Flax Seed. DULUTH, Minn., July 20-—Closing flax; July, $2.69; September, $2.33; October, $2.26%; ORY LEADERS INDICTED TODAY (Continued from Page One.) counsel when the indictment was re turned. Anderson @tered a plea of not guilty and was held in $5,000 bet), His counsel sald bail would be fur- nished at once. The grand larceny charges, on which two separate in- dictments were returned, were that Anderson obtained from the league $4,500 in March, 1921, and $1,750 in February, 1921, The forgery indlet- ment eher him wit falsification of the league’ conceal receipt of $4,490 as eplit on commissions due O, Bertaall Phillips, former solicitor for the league. Assistant District Attorney Pecore announced that in addition to the grand larceny and forgery indiet- ments returned, the grand jury hed voted two indictments for extortion, based on alleged collection by Ander. son of “spill! on commiasions earned bf ©. Berteall Phillips, former solicitor for the league, These in- dictments, he said, would be filed next Wednesday. At his arraignment, Mr, Anderson declared in a loud clear voice, that he was not guilty, His counsel, for- mer Governor Cherles 8, Whitman, November, $2.20, obtained 10 days in which to make that one would be for permission to inspect the grand jury minutes, WIFE DESERTER BEING RETURNED FOR TRIAL Gheriff Smith of Osage county, Ok- brisk than expected, Other ref Mist prices remained nominal at $8.75 @0.00. Refined futures were nomina war futures closed firm; approxi | mate sales, 19,500 tons. September $5.04; December, $4.45; March, $3.45 May, $3.51, lahoma, left Thursday evening for Pawhuska accompanied by Fi. P. Ewing who was arrested in Casper lant week by the sheriff's office on a | charge of wife desertion | _ —— ~ | MES pe ah h time here from Che yer is spending a « enne st Czechoslovak Rep &s ctfs Dominion of Canada 6s, 1953 French Republic 7%s Japanese 4s Kingdom of Belgium 89 Kingdom of Norway, 6s Republic of Chile $s, 1946 —. U. K. of G, B. and I, 54s, 1937 —_ American Smelting 5s American Sugar American Tel. an American Tel and Tel col tr. Anaconda Copper, 7s, 1938 Anaconda Copper 8s, 1953 At. 'T. and San Fe., gen 4s Bethlehem Steel con 6s, Series A Canadian Pacific deb., 43... Chicago Mit. and St. Paul ov. 44a —— Chile Copper 63 —____. ies Goodyear Tire &s, 1941 —-—— Great Northern 7s A —__--. Montana Power 5s A —_. . Gen 5s Sinclair Con Oil ool., Southern Pacific cy Union Pacifio First U. 8, Rubber, 5s Western Union 645 Westinghouso Blectrio Wilson and Co., ev., 68 . (Continued from Page One.) the latter three years ago. Trillo commanded the so-called “Golden Guards’ that acted as a personal suard of Villa and was {mplicated in the Villa raid om, Ojinaga vicinity in 1917. Trillo was formerly an automobile driver and joined Villa when the for- mer rebel chief was in Chihuahua in 1916. He was about 27 years of ago and was @ visitor in Jaures, just across the border from El Paso about one month ago, A message from Chihaubeau Friday morning said that Hipolito Villa, rev- voluntionary figure and brother of Francisco, had left Chihuahua imme- diately after the report of the killing with the avowed intention of killing Trillo who, however, had already been killed by other Villa factins. OUTLAW CAREER ENDED IN 1920. Francisco (Pancho vji1 rilla chieftain and bandit leader in Mexico for more than 10 years, de- clared that he had ended his career of outlawry in August, 1920, when, at the head of 900 followers, the remnant of what had once been his army of 35,000 men, he entered 8. Pedro, Coahuila, and, amid the cheers of the populace, announced the in- tention of himself and mon of accept- ing amnesty and settling down as farmers. A few weeks carller, Villa had sur rendered to federal forces at Sabinas. Hoe then declared his adherence to Provisional President de Ja Huerta and General Alvaro Obregon, later elected president to succeeded Car- ranza. Before capitulating, Villa de- manded and granted by the Mexican government, one year's pay and a small farm for each of his men, a grant equal to $2,000,000 gold. One of the most notable escapades of Villa was Ms rata on Columbus, N. M, on March 6, 1916, in which he and.hia followery killed 17 Amer- fcans. It resulted in a punitive American military expedition under General Pershing crossing the border and maintaining a “dead or aliy Pursuit of Villa which lasted more than nine months and cost the United States government, according to a war department estimate, nearly $100,000,000, In a battle at Parral, American troopers were ambushed and a num- ber of them killed, On March 31, however, the bandit’s followers were defeated gat Guerrero. The Americans were successful in a number of other skirmishes and penetrated so far south into Mextco as to moet the Constitutionalist troops of Carranza who, ostensibly, were also tn pursuit of the renegade Mexican leado:, Villa, wounded but always eluding his pursuers, lived in a Chihuahua mountain cave for five weeks. It was located in the center of a per- pendicular cliff which rose 150 teet from a brook on the level plain be- low and from this point Villa said he often watched the American troops. Many times he was reported dend. Upon the American army's with drawal from Mexico Villa renewed his depredations. On April 4, 1916, he was indicted for first degree mur. der at Deming, N. M., on account of the Columbus raid, "They call me a bandit and the worst man in Mexico,” declared Villa when he was welcomed to San Pedro, Coahuila, “but I would preserve our nationality. I surrendered because {further fighting in Mexico meant in tervention by the United States, It is time for peace.” In a manifest he praised the “good faith, honor and patriotism” of Provisional President de ja Huerta and declared it was his purpose to show the Mexican nation that he and his men could “build as well as destroy”. The former bandit went with his family from San Pedro to Las Nievas, Durango, to on his farm there and shortly after wrote to de la Huerta for school books and supplies, Villa wow said to have been deeply affected by the | death of a daughter in San Antonio, Texas, a month after his surrender.| Bixteen of his men, who we 4 number captured by P. onvi of offenses Hy various Mexicn in Railway & Misceliancou: Chicago Bur, and Quincy ref., 5s A -. Utah Power and Light 6s —---___. guer- “settle down'| Foreign . High Low ——s OSHS ———— 99% 90% sus 97% (97% 97% ——-—-—-—. 103 102% 10 102% 101% 102% aaa 679% TON OTOH seen nS 98% 98% Sy 62% 63% PANCHOVLLA. FORMER BANDIT TERRORIST, 16 SLAIN ON RANCH The first real tragedy tn View lfe occurred when General Faipe Angeles was executed as @ revolu- “ontst by Carranza troops in 1919. | Villa admired Angeles not only as a | Patriot and soldier, but regarded him almost as a father. He wept bitterly when he recetved word that Angeles had been shot. He threatened re prisals and later aided in the over throw of the Carranza regime. Villa's Orango. of Peon parentage in the little mining town of Las Nievas. As @ youth he followed the trade of butcher until the death of his father end then sp and his mother and sister went to | Western Chiuhuahua. There he be | came A cowboy. Many stories have | been told as to how he became a1 outlaw but the one most generally accepted is that it was because he killed @ captain in one of President Diaz’ regiments. Diaz then placed a price on his head. It was at this time that he changed his neme to Villa. He organined a band of out- laws and became a terror to the rich land owners and mining men of Northern Chthuahua, robbing them and sharing the spolls with his fol- lowers end the impoverished peons, When the Madero revolution against Diaz occurred in 1910, Villa became military leader in that movement. At one time he was ar ;Fested and sent to Mexico City by General Victoriano Huerte, He was condemned to death by @ military court for insubordination. Madero saved his life. Villa later and fled across the Texas border. Huerta became dictator after Ma dero's assassination in 1913 and when Carranza revolted against Huerta in Coahuila, Villa re-entered Mexico to fight for Carranza and or Sanize @ campaign against the man who had imprisoned him, Peona flocked to his standard and he is said to have gathered en army of 35,000 men. Villa's firet great victory against the Huerta troops was at Ojinaga. After the battle, 4,000 men and elght generals of the federal army took refuge in the United States and were interned. In other fights, including San Pedro, @e las Colonias, Paredon and Torreon, Villa was also triumph ant. Then came an estrangement be- tween Ville and Carranza and when the latter made his triumphal entry into Mexico City, following the retire- ment of Huerta, the bandit leader de- clared war upon the new president, Villa had been one of the independ- ent chiefs who had made and formus lated the plan of Guadalupe whick made Carranza first chief of the Con+ stitutionalist forces. With Emilio Zapata, another bandit chieftain opposed to Huerta, Villa meade common cause, The two oecu- pled Mexico City with their troops, forcing Carranza’s retirement to Vera Crus. General Alvaro Obregon, later successor to de la Huerta to the presidency, and loyal to Carranza, led an ermy out to meet them. At | Celaya, Trapuato and Cilao he de- |feated the Villa-Zapata forees, In | those battles, Obregon lost an arm |4nd Ville lost his prestige as a cam- meander. The Villa and Zapata fol- lowers were dispersed. One disaster followed another and Villa retreated across the mountaing to Gonore where he joined forces with the Yaqu! chieftain Urbalejo. In the years that followed, and up | to the time of the Columbus, N. M., | Villa's influence as a military steadily waned. Defections from Villa's ranks continued, many of his generals leaving him and ae cepting the amnesty of the Carranss government. Villa sent his wit across the border and with only a | few hundred men resumed the bandit raids for which in earlier years he | had been notorious. Then came tho overthrow of th Carranza regime, the rise of the de In Iluerta provisional government and | the election of Obregon, Obregon | had proved Villa's master in the field. On May 27, 192 three federal forces started out to eapture Villa and the following July, as 8,000 men were closing in on him, he agreed to en armistice and surrendered to General I o Mar r | tiea on his own termm