Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 17, 1923, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER, 17, 1923 FOR SALE_HOUSES ——— FOR SALE—Real homes, new brick and frame, five, six and seven rooms, now open for your inspec- tion. Grover C. Gorsuch, owner and builder. Tenth and Grant. Phone 14433. FOR SALE—Attractive well built pungalow, five rooms, large living-| room, fireplace, oak floors, white en- | amel finish, full basement, laundry, | furnace, beautiful location. Phone 2052J. 15-ROOM HOUSE on the pavement all furnished; a good income | close in; priced for quick | $12,000 with $2,500 down.| Phone 381. FOR SALE—Four rooms and bath with finished basement; modern | throughout; also furniture, reason- able if taken with house; corner lot on pavement; garage with cement | driveway; lawn and trees; some cash and easy terms. 612 8, Lincoln. | FOR SALE—REAL ESTATE FOR SALE—Good one block from East Second on Washington street. $1000; terms. R. Kamon, 242 BH. 2nd Tel. 702. RELINQUISHMENTS, ETC. eS eee FOR SALE—Relinquishment with. in easy driving distance vf work in Casper. Cheap for quick terms, Box B90 ‘Tribune. FOR SALE OR TRADE FOR SALE OR TRADE for prop- erty, one Willys-Knight 1920 mod- el; Al condition, 231 West A; rear. Phone 2109. FOR SALE OR TRADE—Forty acres near tank farm; cheap on terms or trade. P. O. Box 1262. FOR SALE— A fourroom modern house with finished rooms in the basement and garage; on Washing- ton street, near Second; $500 cash and balance to suit convenience of buyer. Martin-Lamar. Phone 2214. FOR TRADE NEW BRICK HOME ON THE! PAVEMENT | Five rooms an bath with a ful basement, close in on the pavement cn a corner lot in the best location; a beautiful hums well finished with Lardwood floors and all the modern | buflt-n features. Call and we w.l!| 4 show you this place. Harry Free/ the lot man. Phone 238. FOR SALE—REAL ESTATE ENGLEWOOD. Why not buy a five or ten-acro| suburban lot in Englewood, four and one-half miles north of Casper on the Salt Creek paved highway, and live in the great outdoors, where you can have elbow room, and make a real home for yourself and family with chickens, a garden! and a family cow. Only 15 minutes | drive from Casper postoffice, over the best paved highway in the state, every acre under the Casper Alcova irrigation project, get away from the high rent and high taxes; five acre lots $500 to $750; easy terms. Call us today. dJchn M. England Co Phones 1129-5435 202 S Bide. AUDITORS . H, REIMERTH Certified Public Accountant Income Tax Service a 401 O-S Bldg. Phone RRY F. COMFORT Aadiing and Accounting Phone 2008 Suite 18, Daly R, ©. VAN _DENBERG Certified Public Accountant Income Tax Service Phone 148 GUARANTEE REGISTRY CORP. ime a Business and Professional Directory FOR TRADE — We have several good automobiles to trade as first payment on Casper property or w nell them on easy payments. We: ern Realty, Moose Bldg. Che Casper BARNEY GOOGLE-- rm sorry L LOST MY TEMPER YESTERDAY - BARNEY, SUT WHEN A MAN'S Got $10.000 oNA Tut SHAKE JusT ATP, BUSINESS CHANCES FOR SALE—Beauty shop, good lo- cation, good business, reasonable. Box B-86, Tribune WILL BUILD store room, one and one-half blocks from Henning hote. to suit tenants. Address communica tion to Lock Box 1493. RESTAURANT With net income of about £1000 per month; price $3300 with terms. Montgomery Realty & Investment Co, Phone 1310, ——<—<$<$<$<$<<__ I AM going to California and will sell my restaurant that has made rij “stake” for $1,050. Phone 1310. ee FOR SALE—General merchandise store, valuable lease at low rental; this proposition will clear $1.000 per month; in town near Casper. West- ern Realty, Moose Bidg. DOCTORS hee boss A. Piped ysician an 133 N. Wolcott Off. 113: Hes. ph. 800 one CASPER PRIVATE ‘s an z 542 South Durbin Phone 400 SPITAL 938, South Durbia—Phone 273 ST, SURGERY, GYNECOLOGY N! OBSTETRICS aa Homer R. Lathrop, M. D., F. A.0.& Victor R. oepary B Se. MD. Ntants—Stock | EYE, EAR, NOSE’ and THROAT Auaitogs 20 a uarad afer Agente, | SIT AND Smicn: ML: 8. <aMEN'T 208-11 Ol Exchange Bldg GENITO-UIINARY DISEASES . B. Underwood, M.D. ARCHITECTS NOLOGIST RICH, Architects HOLL DUBOIS & GOOD nsend. Block, 3. FODonnel i112, @ Blocks . F. nell Peet IN PHARMAC M. J. WESTFALL Architect WM ites, Daly, Building. AUTO TOPS R AUTO TOP SHOP aur aint, Upholstering and Auto Paintin; 1084R, + 683 8. Center hone ‘BAGGAGE AND TRANSFER ren ABLRS Tiihice Phone 518 YELLOW (CAB COMP phone 158 NATRONA TRANSEER, STORAGE FUEL. J. L. Biederman, Prop _ Phone 949 BATTERIES PER BATTERY 00. 119 East ith Phone CHIROPRACTORS DR. J. H. JEFFREY SNA GRAHAM JEFFREY sults ais Midwest Bldg Phone 706 DR. B. G. HAHN Chiropractor Townsend Bldg. Phone 423 . INNELL, D. ©., Ph. ©. suite. 18 Daly Bldg., Phone 8493 . EB. HARNED, Chiropractor et North Kimball Street Phone 1457 . B, BERQUIST Taltroniies bias AUpbone 1757 BERT N. GROVE 112 hast Second Street Palwer Office Phone 2220 Res. Phone 17133 DR. ©. I. ARNOLDUS Oste ‘and Chiropractte s10 0-8 | ry Phone 1754 ©. A. THURSTON, D. C. 138 B Wolcott Phone 113 CONTRACTORS TAYLOR & ORCUTT Jontractors, Cement Bulld- General et ‘oat ee oe Phone 1985W CHIROPODIST CORRINNE FE. 0'BRYANT Foot Specialist 116 East Second Phone 1046R CLEANERS SERVICE CLEANERS Bais sit 4 at Jackson Phone 56 DOCTORS DR. G._S. BARGER -- Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat ri t i Fitted 133 8. Wolcott Phone 115] DR. W. W, YATES 8 jatist Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Sulte 2 112 Bast Second M. 907 MARSHALL © HERBERT dD. Private Hospital, 612 South Durbin General Vractice Surgery Obstetrics DR. W. E, Veterinarian Office Ph, 2293 'h. 19983 8. Lot ¢. B, Duncan, D, D a juncan, . he be Uffices in Robrbangh Building 113 East Second Street, Telephone 54 and 55 DR. T. J. RIACH Physiclan and Phone 1219 DR. W. A. MEYERS Physician and Si 200 0-8 Bldg. Office Ph. 699 Tos, 746 LAWYERS AMBROSE HEMINGWAY Lawyer. Room 332 Midwest Bldg. NICHOLS & STIRRETT Lawyers 809-10-11 Oil Exchange Bldg. JAMES P. KEM 408 Consolidated Royalty Blag W. H. PATTEN Attorney at Law 225 Midwest Bldg. Phone 210 HAGENTS & MURAND ers 206-207 Oil Exthange Building BULLACK & LACY 2045 Midwest Bide. Ph. 1200 " WILLIAM 0. WILSON Lawyers Suite 14-15-16 Townsend Bldg. MULVANEY & BARRETT Lawyers. 517 Consolidated Royalty Bldg. OGILBEE & ADAMS 210 O-S Bidg. Phone 2217 elite DONALD GALLAGHER, Lawyer 104 Becklinger Bldg. OSTEOPATH DR. CAROLINE ©. DAVIS eceepathie Physician Suite & Tribune Apart. Phone 388 Dr. L. L. WADE Osteopathy Over Frantz Shop Phone 1125R PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER ETHEL C. LYNCH Public Stenographer and Notary Public Nine Years in Legal Work 301 Consolidated Royalty Buliding Phone Office 203 Kes, Phone 5533 SHUE REPAIRING ° NORTH CASPER SHOE SHOP Hand and Machine Work Ben Suyematsu 235 Kast TAILORS FRANK CANNER Custom Tailoring and Cleaning Suite 8 Daly Bldg. TROY TAILORS AND CLEANERS 248 E. Midwest Phone 968W MIDWEST TAILORS Cleaning and Pressin; 406 E. Second. Phone 707 WAREHOUSES YELLOW CAB CO, _INC—Ware- house & Transfer. Phone 1234. Office 490 W, Yellowstone. | HAS MADE AN wicker t BUSINESS CHANCES STORE invoice plus $500. location. Montgomery & Investment Co. Phone MONEY TO LOAN MONEY to loan on Casper improved real estate. H. Vossback. Room 10, Daly Bidg. MONEY TO LOAN—Small amount of money to loan on chattel se- curity. Phone 2356W. LOST AND FOUND FOUND—Small purse tn the down- tdwn district Tuesday. can have same by calling at T>t- bune and paying for this ad. FOUND—Roll of Mnoleum on Salt miscellaneous articles, Lavoye and Casper, Please return to Edna Riggs, Wyatt hotel. LOST—Dark brown brindle and white Boston Bull dog. to the name of Laddie. Phono 1712R. PERSONAL MADAM WONDER, _ wonderful reader, the lady with the wonder. ful power, tells past, present and future. Call and consult her on any affairs, 450 S. Durbin. Hours 9 a. m. to 10 p. m. ANYONE going to Arizona’ and California will find it to their ad- vantage to call 1153W. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. All parties having debts against the Swan Cafe conducted by G. M. Matteson wil! get in touch with me before October 18, 1923, LENA IVES. LEGAL NOTICES CHATTEL MORTGAGE. NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE OF Whereas, on the 10th day of May, A. D., 1923, The Casper Dairy and Ico Cream Company, a corporation, executed and deliver- ed its certain promissory note in writing to The Wyoming National Bank of Casper, a banking corpo- ration, in the principal sum of $4,500.00 due and payable Au- gust 10th, 1923, with interest thereon at the rate of eight (8%) per cent per annum from date thereof until paid, and as security for the payment of said promis- sory note, principal, interest, costs and attorneys’ fees the said The Casper Dairy and Ice Cream Com- pany, as mortgagor, did on the 10th day of May, A. D., 1923, ex- ecute and deliver to said The Wyoming National Bank, as mort- pagee, a certain chattel mortgage covering the following described personal property to-wit: 2 Coolers, 1 600 gallon pasteurizer, 1 150 gallon pasteurizer, 6 motors, 1 clarifier, 2 scales, separator, ice machine and box, ice cutter, freezers, washing tank, 1 boiler, Plumbing tools and misceilane- ous machinery, boiler room, chairs, desks, new adding machine, safe, typewriter, Ford ton truck, Anderson trucks, Ford runabout truck, nl 8 4 HITCH SPARKY To THE END OF WALT, BUT BLOSSO AWFUL HIT wit I KNOW, Juoee - BUT DON'T WORRY I'LL NEVER A STREET CAR AGAIN = MY WORD - GASOLINE ALLEY—THAT’S SORT OF RUBBING IT IN ON WALT, SKEEZIX Yes, LOOKS AS iF ME HOS A COSE ,1 York ice machine, 1 1,000 gallon Dual churn and motor, All bottles, Milk cans, Milk cases, Ice cream cans and Tubs. said chattel mortgage being duly executed and delivered by said} mortgagor to the said mortgagee, | properly witnessed, signed and ac- knowledged so as to entitle same to be filed in the office of the County Clerk of Natrona County, Wyoming, the county wherein fale mortgaged property was and is sit- uate, and Whereas, said mortgage was on the 12th day of May, A. D. 1923, filed in the office of the County Clerk of Natrona County, Wyo- ming, at the hour of 9:45 o’clock, a. m., of said date, and indexed in the manner required by law as instrument No. 99267, and _ Whereas, by the terms and con- ditions of said chattél mortgage, it was provided that if default should be made in the payment of principal and interest of said mort gage indebtedness, or any part thereof, when the same should be- come due and payable, the mortgagee might take possession of said personal property, and sell the same according to law, to make the amount of the indebted- ness due under said mortgage, to- gether with the expense of caring for said property and the costs of sale; and Whereas, by the terms of sald promissory note, the said mort- gagor covenanted and agreed with the mortgagee that if payment was enforced by law to pay $502.00 additional to cover at- torneys’ fees, and _ Whereas, default has been made in the payment of the principal sum secured by said chattel mort- gage, and the whole balance there- of and in payment of the interest due thereon, as follows, to-wit: sence due at this time in the sum of $4,200.00 with accrued in- terest thereon in the sum of $182.55, said interest being at the aie of eight per cent per annum, and * Whereas, no suit or proceeding at law has been instituted to re- cover the debt now remaining se- cured by said mortgage or any part thereof. and the power of sale contained in said mortgage having become operative, and Whereas, the amount of said mortgage indebtedness claimed to be due at the first publication of this notice is the sum of $4,200.00 principal, and $182.56 interest, stipulated for in the case of fore- closure of said mortgage, and the sum of $502.00 attorney's fees as stipulated for in said note and mortgage, amounting in all to the sum of $4,884.55, Now, therefore, notice is here- by given that pursuant to the terms of said chattel mortgage and note, the undersigned mortgagee will on Saturday, the 27th day of} October, 1923 between the hours of ten o'clock, a, m., and four o'clock p. m. of said day, at the office of the Casper Dairy and| Ice Cream Company, at the corner ‘oad and Kimball streets, in the City of Casper, Natrona Coun- ty, Wyoming, sell the above de- scribed mortgaged property at }public auction, for cash, to make the amount of said mortgage in-| .debtedness and attorneys’ fees, amounting to the sum of $4, 872.65, together with the expenses! of carrying for said mortgaged property and the charges and ex- penses of such sale, Dated at Casper, Wyoming, this 2nd day of October, A. D., 1923. THE WYOMING NATIONAL | BANK OF CASPER, Mortgagee. Daily Cridune bis contracted in the name of the Kopper Kettle Inn or the Child's Gift Shop, unless sanctioned by me personally and I wiil not be responsible fom any bills contract- ed by Mrs. Opal Comfort. ELIZABETH D. O'BRIEN. Pub. Oct. 17, 18, 1923. Ri E OEE OIE A Te EQUALITY INVESTMENT COMPANY BONDS. holders of ment company will rertitin ‘By Vr. ARTHUR G.BRETZ Care of Baby’s Eyes, Ears, Noso and Mouth, ‘The greatest care should be exer. cised when cleansing baby’s eyes, ears, nose and mouth. While it is of importance to keep these delicate or. gans clean, it 1s of equal importance not to cause injury during the cleansing process. The utmost gen- tleness is recommended and no ir ritating solutions or soaps are to be used. For simple cleansing of the eyelids, boric acid solution (obtain- ed from your druggist) is safe and mildly antiseptic. This solution may also be used for cleansing the nose and mouth. If cloths are used to wipe the eyes, nose and mouth, they should be of thin, soft, white material, and sterilized before used. Sterilized cotton purchased at the druggist’s is the nafest material to use for this purpose. Whatever ma- terial you select should not be used for more than one application. In washing the eyes use a fresh, clean plece of either the cotton or cloth for each eye, and do not dip into the solution but pour the solution onto the piece cf material to be used This method should also be used when cleansing the nose, mouth and ears. Bo sure that the hands are thoroughly cleansed before han@ing any of the materials used. Should a slight redness, swelling or discharge appear in any of these organs, do not attempt to treat such conditions yourself—cansult a phy- siclans, or take your baby to the ispensary or health station at once. You will admit that you do not know what has caused! such condi. tions; therefore you should not feel competent to treat them. Blindness or deafness may be the resulting af- fiction to your baby {f you neglect to secure medical attention at the earliest possible moment. The phys! cian can do more for your baby's condition if called at the beginning of the fliness rather than after the disease has reached the severe stage. There are’ certain malformations which are noticed at birth such ns club-foot, harelip or abnormal growt Tt is a serious mistake to allow much condition to g dd believing that he child grow them or !s too your proper treatment. It to huve medical advice on such sub Publish Oct. 3, 10, 17, 24, 1923, NOTICE, To whom it may concern: | I will not be responsible for any s! jects at the earliest mo: ment. If treatment is poned until tho ehild in uld be decided t possible to be port thi ome one cor older, NOTICE OF HOLDERS OF) The Wyoming National Bank of Casper as Trustee for the bond- the Equality Invest- retire $20,- 000.00 par value of bonds of said | company on October 29th, 1923, | by purchase from the lowest of-| WYOMING NATIONAL) BANK OF CASPER. | Publish October 17, 18 and 19,/ 19: | BETTER - IF WE WALK OVER PAGE NINE. By Billey De Beck 1 Ste AUNTIE BOSSOM AND UNCA WICKER! | | | Daby. Theofore Roosevelt was born Oo tober 27, 1858, in a brownstone house at 28 Hast Twentieth street, New York City. On October 27 of this year this house, restored by fire- proofed material, is to be decicated by the Wdman's Roosevelt Memorial association as an enduring memor- fal a museum of Americanism, a rallying place of the patriotic, a shrine of those who believe in the princples to which T. R. devoted his life, Appropriate to the Ife {t memor- ializes, Roosevelt House ts designed to be a living, pulsating memorial Not only is it a place which the pat- riotically reverent may visit, but a place of dynamic usefulness, Its Ii brary, rich with rare manuscripts and with all of the books written by or about Theodore Roosevelt and his times, is at the disposal of his- torians and students. One floor {ts given over entirely to a theater or lecture room seating several hur dred, equipped with motion picture projector and screen—a hall for pub meetings, for lectures on civic matters or for moving picture sub jects on the Mfe of Roosevelt. Ce. ment vaults have been provided as a safe store house for all the Roose velt film which can be gathered in, to be available for perparing his torical pletures from authentic neg ative. Spacious exhibition rooms pro a safe repository for nl! of the t phies, relics and memorabilia Theodore Roosevelt's active divers He petent to make such deciston. Many of the deformities seen on the street today are due to neglect There are meveral special hospitats equipped for the proper treatment and care cf deformities. Tf tn your town there is no such instftution there is most likely one not very fur distant and it ou to Make wil! pay the As our pt fan trip. » or health center } tala—they w é 4 Pte 4 : @ This shows the very bed in which Theodore Roosevelt ‘slept when a It has been placed with the Roosevelt Museum, 28 East 20th street, New York. The museum is to be formally opened Ovt. 27, The Theodore Roosevelt Memorial | rrr I €}| t 4 | 688 OR oe oy, ee fied life, collected since the Colonel's death by the Roonevelt Memorial as. sociation. Spanish war relics, tro- phies of the hunt {n many lands and of explorations furnish a variety of interesting objects. In the replica of the birthplace the student American periods will find much of | the original furnishings, pieces of historical interest, as well as other authentic details which give an ac curate reproduction of the American home of antebellum days. These rooms in themselves constitute a les- son in American history Roosevelt House Tves and breathes with the spirit of Thecttore Roosevelt, as Mount Vernon and Monticello keep about them the aura | of the famous men who lived in them. When Washington and Jef ferson ended their public careers they retired to their homes and quietly awaited the end. Theodore Roosevelt died in harni the final moment in the midst of life and the tremendous affairs of one | of the most notable perioda in his: to born and where he Itved tn the first wo decades of his life stands on no isolated estate, ft is the center of no lorf2y acres. which is New York swept up ang surrounded houne. derwen* The vital pulsing life the old brownstone Its physical appearance un- changes. It was put to y uses. Hut never was it {dl the Weman’s Roosevelt Mo tal agnociation, following Theodore Roonevelt's death on January 6, 1919 reclaimed and restored it, and It back to the nation Into his thirty-seven years of pub- ma Th le lfe ‘Thi velt crowded more ver: han any oth er historical personage, Assembly- man, Civil Service Commissioner, Police Commissioner, Assistant Sec- retary of roldier, Gover. nor af New Y ce President. President, historian, publicist, nat uralist, man of letters, exp'orer, he gave unsparingly of his ability. Al- though he bas passed on, his work endures, his ideals lve. It is not too much to believe that his birthplace will be a shrine of the patriotic, ranking with Washington's. As Calvin Coolidge said following the cornerstone laying of Roosevelt House: “Men bufld monuments above the graves of their heroes to mark the end of a great life, but women seek out the birthplace and build their shrine not where a great life had its ending, but where it had its be ginning, seeking with a truer in stinct the common source of things, not in that which is gone forever, but in that which they know will ain be manif Vitiorous Old HY age with a deep and ever- separato youth and old V widening abyss? The bloom of youth and the hardy, ruddy glow of Old Age—six- teen and sixty—should be separ- ated only by the span of years and not by varying di cal wholesomenes Vigorous old ago {s vw’ rences of physi- grasp of all. 8, 8. hale and hearty feeling back ¥ arush. Rich red blood is the great- est enemy of weak dermining Old A Red I tory. The house in which he was The simplest way to end a cord is Blue-jay. Stops the pain in- stantly. Then the corn loosens and comes out. Made in c liquid and in thin plasters. ’ action is the same. At your druggist ade o f carefully d barks fo. pared Icome Old Be ready to vy | of diseases tha handshake ¢ well being—of a ous, clear t red bic constitution. §. 8. 8. is your friend when Old Age {s seen round ing the corr t a bottle and ry away. All stores carry it. » is the more 8 You Feel e Yourself Again

Other pages from this issue: