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TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1924 — OIL PROMOTERS Wate: He Hest —_ | Legislation Assured Win iinsen TEXAS COURT | On Livestock Grazing 222: <2.< state, is taking place since the las, WASHINGTON, Jan. 8—Early ac- conditions, addition to the national used without regulation by the live-| jegislature, which provided an open Heavy Fines Tacked Onto Prison Terms In Federal Court at Fort Worth % on tion pertaining to the/forests of contiguous unreserved stock industry, he said, resulting !m season on the little sur-bearers. ao pt ng "OF livestock. on ranges of| public lands chiefly valuable for, string deterio-ation in the produc- cording to Stanley Jewett of thy the national forests, was forecast| grazing livestock. Creation and des- tivity gf these areas. In addition United States biological survey. today as a result of a conference be-| ignation of national ranges compris.) approximately Hie-eto.s90/ “There are ten traps set for every tween secretary; 2 and sena-|ing unreserved public lands valuable acres of land within the na-|peaver in the state.” he declared, | ° tors and rep! m West-| chiefly for grazing, under the ad-) tional eeely ores prs ge (after Sexe a pean A : Ee is doubs. 7 tates. ministration of the secretary of ag-/ acres of private and state lands and fy) that 10 per cent of the presen, For Fraudulent Operations : Tene to ‘cOndition | riculture also fs sought. other federal reservations which are} peaver population will be left oy | of the livestock gin the range| The perpetuation and conservative) Capable of belng grazed. | Tesui-j the time the next session of th | states, ‘feels use of the vast forage resources on */0n of the unreserved public | State lawmakers is hel FORT WORTH, Texas, Jan. 8—Twenty oil promoters shouldbe bo Ing| the public domain has been almost! WOU!d make possible a better contro!| «Before many years stockmen of pleaded guilty yesterday in federal court to using the mails to defraud. They were sentenced to various prison terms and fines ranging from one,year and one day and from $10,000 to $100 by Judge James C. Wilson. The majority of the defendants were members of the Bucher-Smack- over Oil company. The fines and prison sentences were as follows: | H Bucher, one year and one day and $5.000; E. J. Dailey, one year and one day and $5,000; W. P. Elwell, $10,000; Rachael A. Shipp,! indicted as Rachael A. Gossage, $5,000; Walter L. Marks $2,500; V. O'Dowd, $2,5007 William Perry $1,000; A. Leroy Gribben, $500; Wil- S } Nam Muchnic, $1,000; J. Samuelson Dr. Joel Boone, shown above with his [ites aaa of President $500:, H. Spiro $250; Jack Adair, @oolidge’s personal physicians. Photo taken in ton. t $1,000; J. Friedman $100; Al Mar- — j cusson $250; L. Friedman $500; 8S. EA é i M. Livingston $250; H. E. Kops $500; Adjusted Compensation} 5. 4. %rott $100: c. A. wooas $2,000; RESOLUTION AIMED AT WH T Jesse Tinkle $900. : Vote Is Postponed | ansis. min tne "Semen ee, SPECULATION PASSES SENATE: W ert E. Lee case, tried several months 3 Cc By Veterans. ago. ae REA SS Hie oh FARM AD URGED ON CONGRESS The casting of votes of opinion | ™ssed. | justry | disregarded an n the! spring, fall and winter ranges the state will realize'they have mady arrange ena Me nde ik eed in- eee aeayWeapania raat ee] and would remove one of the great-| , mistake in encouraging the killing crease will be mAd@tmtil the grazing | the livestock industry in the west at/ St handicaps to stability in the live-| of peavers. Beaver dams in the season of 1925. atso has rec-| the present time is due to tnaction) Stock industry, agricultural depart-! mountains of eastern Oregon have mmended that Ing on all state! on this question. Secretary Wallace| ent officials said. from time immemorial, stored great and national public lands should be| informed the members of congress. oe quantities of ;water, which: tri j coordinated in the interest of effi-|| There are some 175,000,000 acres! J. McMahon of Sidney, Neb., is|down into grazing country in tn cleney and. he desires legisiation| of open and unreserved public range|attending to business affairs here|long, dry summers, and made the which ywould permit, under certain! iands in the west which have been for a few days. ranges habitable for cattle." ANNOUNCING OUR JANUARY CLEARANCE --SALE-- yor oe the meeting last night of the Mones | ac Asresred Bray | 3 to | corporation ito A peeeMeaee EIN “cell T. Hawley post can Le aid the farmer was taken today by| farm supplies with a view to in- me gion, has been until the the senate when {!t adopted the] creasing and stabilizing prices. Lew next meeting two weeks hence. |} Ladd resolution regarding wheat An export corporation to dispose t of the executive commit- | sp “ eculators. of surplus crops was urged in the | present vening. The me cts Secretary | house by Representative Leavitt lace to publish findings of the | Republican, Montana, in discussing | sure tl c ing t The police court case Seat leg s were Dr. A. P, Kimball, Dodge and} (ris Bliewas, proprietor of the| grain futures' administration as to| farming conditions particularly in = Ben Poster. Y yv,| Reliable Jewelry company on Cen-| the position on the wheat market | the northwest states. The invitation of the George W-| tor strect, which was appealed last|taken by the “well known profes-| Wheat farmers have been and are Vroman moat pase tne er ie. ¥ by his attorney, Alex B.| sional speculators and the members| losing their farms or suffering set- Bliewas had been fined |of the large ‘futures’ commission | backs hardly less severe, he said. Was rejected by vote because of the! s25 on two counts, hus been dis-|hauses of the Chicago board of'| because of a decline in the price of feeling every, ‘etfort, should | be,| vr sabia bik Suited rte tenia tates their products while a relatively made by the n ganization to h Jentite las opted Hite Meantime both senate and houee| high level has been maintained in provide itsel ; quarters of secondhand shop without a licen. sultural committees heard rep-| the prices of commodities they must its own,, and. was not due to any) sa giso of banding stolen property. reeentatives “of tarm organisations! Buy “and in tall ara Geen ion itor na ‘mpaigna are hold-| 42 investigation of the. case,|on the Norris-Sinclair bill for crea-l which they must pay, . ‘ ° « RS competition between | license last April and also to ha me becoming more | fered to return the stole - Y > het erty to the nightful owner, as we Be as he found that the property Alarmist Must oi, ear KNOCKOUT FROM MOONSHINE Leave France Gun Discharged, | LARAMIE, Wyo., Jan. 8 BELOW WE LIST A FEW OF THE MANY BARGAINS. READ THEM CAREFULLY AND SEE WHAT YOU CAN SAVE Kuppenheimer Suits Adler Clothes $47.50 $50.00 $55.00 $35.00 $37.50 | Values Values Values ues Values ALL GO AT ALL GO AT OVERCOATS - Nettleton Shoes AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES Hanan Shoes Good Run of Sizes and Widths A dis-) up by the roadside 37 miles south patch received here from | of Holly, Colo., by a rancher who A Stanley Jones, at Holly, Colo, a| kept him until he recovered from 2 Man Is Killed Laramie-garage mechanic who mys-| stupor after which -he came »to | teriously disappeared on December | Holly and wired to his wife at | 26, last, declares that an unknown | Laramie for a8sistance. He is now person called at the garage and|on his way to Laramie, returning COLORADO SPRINGS. .| asked him to accompany him to a| by passenger train. Jan. 8—W. Bartlett Chew, Jr., 35,| Point outside of town to repair a] Jones was robbed of all personal formerly of Houston, Texas, was ia-|car and that after he had accepted | belongings and also the automobile. stantly killed at an early hour this| drink from the stranger he re-|'There has been no clue discovered morning at his home here by tho| membered nothing further untl]ieading to the identity of his Loveigfincekarba ererehadsA. accidental discharge of his revolver | two days later, when he was picked ' abductor lice to be unable satisf: tn his sbea Toor. "a explain their presence in the foreign Chew, according to officials in- exchange room of the stock ex-| Vestisating the case, had apparent!y E Stakes secured his revolver to investigate A ‘These moves marked the opening] SUsPicious noises in the lower part of the house and had apparently of the government's campaign | fs ‘ it 1 cocked the weapon. Coroner How- | pede hostile speculation’in| j4Swan declared the death acci- | yi 2 dental. Chew was married a few ' we ago to Miss Ruth Gresham —__—_—_—_. of Long Beach. Calif. { SAN LUIS OBISPO, Callf., Jan. ; | 8.—Policies of the “Benevolent In-| | surance company” protecting boot-/ =f BE EPORTED NEW BUREAU 5 leggers from loss through prohibi- Bresomm t PARIS, Jan. -The Dutch bank- .:Duyson, been ordered ex- pelled from France by thé minister of the interior, because of alleged alarmist statements regarding the fall of the franc. Announcement of the expulsion followed the arrest today of three a! ° 2 R T™ tion officers’ raids have been dis- covered at Arroyo Grande, near IS CREATED Military Is Ready to tr, oa" © 6. Matian re 3 SEATTLE, Wash., Jan. 8.—Ap- ve * ™m prokimately lens will be deport- pte bh Ni An Attem: t on The Shy bootlegger, not so trust- e e 11 ed from here tomorrow, according t é ip ly 18) ing as he once was, however, is ae immigration officials, "They will be |; WASHINGTON, Jan, 8.—The sen- : Se iy 9 reported to be suspicious that the WI 0 ar an S y font to. Tray, Finiand, Breland, [We enacted today’ for the tirst'ma-/ —_» Hirohito’s Life ingdaksioedie| quekot (halpsnacae ron : ¥. = . ind.| jor item of legislation of the new} ‘ . Canada, Sweden, France and Ger-|°,ite™ OF Texislation of the new iy ottiberdl th, gat intoraateee BIG SELECTION AT a A many on account of various infrac- ing a bureau of civil aeronautics in| TOKIO, Jan. 8—(By The Asso- - fal tions of the immigration law: Four of them have been declared i by immigration officials. —— the commerce department. The ciated Press}—Cavalry men “= JAP VESSE measure now goes to the house, drawn swords guarded Prince Re- L x so |gent Hirohito this morning when he| & 3 WASHINGTON, Jan. 8.—Appro-| went to the Yoyog! parada grounds IN DISTRESS ot Proof of Progress priation of $300,000 for rural post|to conduct the annual military re-| As proof of progress we submit as construction and $30,000 for; view of the imperial army. | that modern th would be bored|forest roads to cover a period of am addition boy grounds were’ per stiff by the novel that was|three y . beginning in 1926 was) {ly guarded, ing surrounded with} ss Ny H considered to youth of y: propc bill today by Represen-|a cordon of police and gendarmeries| SEATTLE, Wash., Jan. 8.—Three tery San Francisco’ Chronicle. | tative Dowell, Repub'ican, Iowa, | forces. | tugs are rushing to the assistance . - The elaborate precautions taken to Of the lumber laden Japanese protect the prince regent were the! freighter Hakuho Maru, grounded result ofthe recent attempt by a| 0 sandy beach off Willapa har- youthful socialist to slay the former, bor, in southwestern coast of Wash- while he was on his way to a-meet-| ington, accordimg to wireless. re- ing of the diet. ports received here by the local SAFETY OF DOZEN MISSIONARY |. sw tm ser an TOKIO, Jan. 8.—(By The Asso-' The Japanese ship is of 6,397 ay |clated Press)—The new © Japanese] gross tonnage and was enroute from cabinet, completed early this week,| Tacoma, Wash., to Kobe, Japan; will adopt budget estimates for the| with a cargo of lumber. S 1 ; Regular $13.00 to $15.00 Values r O O O”D | OTHER ASSORTMENTS AT ponnell S hoes BIG DISCOUNTS $ 4.85 Silk Shirts Other Lots of Work Shoes, $9.95 sio.0 vaLuEs AT 7 DH Stetson Hats s ssovaLuEs AT SG OH $12.50 VALUES ATT. s a00vaLvEs AT. G4 GE | 5 r00varuns a : 4 : 5.00 VALUES AT. VF [s 5.00 VALUES AT. BSB OO 100 Pairs Ladies’ Silk Hose In Brown, Grey, Blue and Black, per pair____ S$ ] OO coming fiscal year as made by the ministry of former Premier Yama-|. PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 8.—The moto, which resigned following the! Japanese freighter Hakuho Maru, attempted assassination of Prince| which went aground on a sandy T- | Regerie Hirohito, according to an} beach off-Willapa Harbor last) night, interview given out by Kazue hoda,| got off under her own power early minister of finance, ars1 published in| today, according to a wireless mes- the Vernacular newspapers here. | sage received by the Federal Tele- the successor of Dr. The new cabinet, however, intends| graph company here. entative of the Vine | to resort to foreiga loans quite free- i Street church. He volunteered to|iy when capital is required for useful d over inability to get word | go into the dangerous mission sta-| productive undertakings, for which r from the party, Dr. Royal J.| tlon as soon as news reached Nash-|estimates of the previous misitary Bryan Booms field secretary for the board of | ville of the death from plague of | failed to.make provision, he declared: LOS ANGELF were expres Jan. 8.—F and three children, Dr. W. H. r today for th Duncan and wife uso of the safety of a party of 12 missionaries | eign Christian Mission E t « na by ary | J. P. Morse and wife of the Unite the Christian church and ities commission. abelieved to be not far from e Dr. Hardy ent depredations by | Loftis as repr fons, has ¥ the general] Dr. Loftis several years ago. A slash of $50,000,000 in the esti- Fl id M arters of the Christian chure! Dr. Loftis’ death was followed in| mate for reconstruction purposes ort a an . Low King that immed t the death of Dr, Albert | was forced through the diet at the eo a efforts be made to get in touch with | Leroy Shelton, several miles from | demand of the Selyukal, the majority F P ‘d t them. Batang on February 17, at the | political party. in opposition to the or restden —— hands of a band of robbers. Dr. | Yamamoto cabinet, shortly before the Jan. Shelton was buried beside Dr.| recent attack on the prince regent. Sense of Thibet, “the | Loftis. THis death came as he! The reduction was accepted by the] MIAMI, Fla., Jan, 8.—William' may be the]returning from an unsuccessful at-| cabinet at the time, although what|Jennings Bryan, who is a candidate | NASHVILLE The eastern border root of the wor nd Nashville | tempt to enter the forbidden terri-| apparently was a critical situation] for delegate from Florida to the life in the] tory of inner Thibet. Was averted when the prince regent| Democratic national convention, to- P — effort ristianity and The last word known to have|was attacked and the Yamamoto| day declared in a statement that it modern science to the forbidden} been received from Dr, Hardy was | ministry resigned. ejected he would present the name i land of the yellow people, if the city |a letter to C. H. Wetterau of this = — of a citizen of Florida for the Dem- of Bat. Western Szechuan, Wetterau is treasurer of | CANTON, 0., Jan. 8.—Jack |ocratic nomination 4% president. China, is ta the Thibetan ® Street church and a per-| Britton, former welterweight |The statement did not give the name = bandits, who 1 surround it, ac-| sonal friend of Dr. Hardy. The| champion of the world who won |of the citizen, but stated that it cording to press dispatches, It is] letter was dated June 4, 1928, and| the title here on March 7%, five | would be given to the public before ’ @ Delieved the bandits hold as prison-| he reported the receiving of hos-| years ago, has been matched for | the rneeting of the national commit: ’, ers Dr. William M. Hardy, repre 1 supplies ordered in 1921, show-| a 12 round bout here on January | tee, January Sentative of the Vine Street ‘Chris-| ing. the difficulty of. contact. with! 21 with «Fred Archer, English — HEAD TO FOOT CLOTHIERS tiau church of this city, his wife] the outer world. welterweight. Tribune Want Ads bring. resulta