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PAGE TWO WOMAN'F OUND INSANE: LIVED BY PRIVATION trict court occu when Mrs. Jennie has been living on & stead on the 5 was found insane Judge R. R. Rose The medica’ he privations she had the homes suffered from living on tead. During the years she wr been there she had many times beeh out of food and with barely enough clothing to keep her from freezing to death. There was no wat er than half a mile and the woe te urned she dragged Sree! ts fle to her house. a of Guy ‘The jury Was compose: Gay, John G. Jones, J. F. Crawford, George B. Nelson, O. F. Steffen -n y, M. Boyle. % rs. Schwartz will be taken to the state institution at Evanstoy and her three-year-old child given over to the Wyoming Childrens’ Home Finding society. * gravated by t City Briets ide of Pine mountain, by a jury before 1 testimony in the case woman was suffer- | college in Helena, Mont., two years > Casper’s football season has been made ® complete blank, and the Na- trona County High school stands in the same position it would have stood if it had never played a game on the gridiron this year, with the revelation that Glenn Stanton, star backfielder for the local squad and considered the best player ever seen Stanton faked the ‘credentials presented to the local high sc authorities, according to C. her, principal of the local high school and president of the Student State Athletic association, who has sent notice of this fact to all mem- bers of the association. ‘ Stanton fs said to have been graduated from the academic high school department of Mt. St. Charles ago. He was accepted here as an eligible player because his complete record was not known. His ability on the gridiron was such as to arouse admiration from all fans who viewed his work. He was picked for the all-state team. Following is the letter which Mr. Fietcher has circulated: “I am hereby reporting an un- witting violation of the rules of the Athletic association. Glenn Stanton, who played on our foot- ball team most of the season, not lig He ‘faked’ the dentials he presented, and it wa not until the Christmas holidays that I found out that he graduated and it Bryson hes returned from the east, where he has been spending tho last two months on @ business and plea- sure trip. Mr. Price spent the holl- days with his son in Toledo, who is ‘an automobile dealer in hat city. eee iL. H. Horton is a Denver bust- ness man who arrived in the city last evening to spend several days here. Ww. H. Price of Black, Sivalls eee H, M. Hay, who spent last week in Rawlins on a business trip, re- turned last evening. oe Dr. A. C. Cannod of Tulsa, Okla... arrived in the city yesterday and will spend some time here and in Salt Creek on business. oe Cc. W. Addison is attending to business affairs of importance for several days in Cheyenne and Den- ver. eee Francis Moore spent yesterday in Douglas on a business trip. ee L. B. Murphy and son will leave this evening for Denver to be gone for several days on a business trip. eee J. F. Gibson is spending the week in Denver on business. eee L. M. Brown is spneding several days here from Salt Creek. cee Rolan Filmore left yesterday for Rock Springs, where he will spend two or three days on business. owe M, C. Blair is among the out-of- town busines callers spending a short time here this week from Den- ver. eee J. P. Bollar is here today on bust- ness from Mammoth. eee C. A. Johnson is spending several days here attendin to business af- fairs from Laramie. eee R. H. Dutch of Salt Creek is at- tending to business affairs here to- day. eee Frank Wise of Basin was a busi ness arrival yesterday. Sarr W. H, Owens is a Casper visitor here today from Cheyenne. eee C. M. Holiness is a Billings busi- ness man in the city for a few days. eee Dr. Hylton of Douglas spent yes- terday here attending the meeting of the Natrona County Democrats last evening. e- Robert Veitch, former county cammissioner, is here today on bus- iness from Kirby. eee F. N. Sanford is a Casper vis- itor here for several days from Greybull. ° eee R. A. Gardner came in yesterday on a business trip from Salt Creek. eee J. M. Curtis is a Chicago bus!- ness man who arrived this morn- ing and: who will spend several days. ee Jack Junior of St. Louis is at- tending to business affairs here for a short time. * 2. John C. Pickett of Cheyenne ar- rived tetlay and will spend several days here, lee Joseph Walter is here on busl- ness for several days from Clayton. oe. J. D. Kelly of Florence. Colo. ts a business man in the city for a short time. see Daniel Fraser is an out of town man here on business from Kay- cee, ose Jack Hi!] came in yesterday from Powder River and expects to spend several days here. eee Julian of Omaha, who has been visiting here for the last month with friends, left this after- noon for his home. He will visit for several days with relatives in Lin- coln en route. M. L. For Colds, Grip or Influenza and as a Preventive, take Laxative| 4 BROMO QUININE Tablets. box bears the signature of E. Grove. 80c.—Advertisement, The w. from the academic high school de- partment of Mount St. Charles col- lege in Helena, Mont., two years ago. Why he did this I do not know. No one in school knew him. He entered and was a good stu- dent. When he found out that I ‘was after his record he ‘beat it.’ I find that his good scholastic record here was due to the fact that he had already had this work at Mount St. Charles. Of course, the least WORLAND MAN [3 COMING HERE WORLAND, Wyo., Jan, 11— J. Ashby Howell who has been a resi- dent of Worland for the past 18 years and who sold out his business in that ‘town several months ago, will locate in Casper, to engage in| the real estate business and repre- | CASPER GRID RECORD OF 1923 WIPED OUT ON DISCOVERY THAT STAR PLAYER WAS INELIGIBLE Only Two Killed OME KILLED ON U. S. HIGHWAYS In Last Year on English Trains CHICAGO, Jan. 17—Every time the cloc® tolled 28 minutes during the last year, a person was killed on the highways.of the United States and each time 2.5_ minutes were ticked through, some person was injured, N. M. Isabella, as- sistant maintenance engineer of the Wisconsin highway commis sion today told the American Road Builders Association convention. 000 lives and caused 1,700,000 involving loss of life during according to the Railway Gazette. ‘This was at Diggie in July when two passengers were killed. r Since the beginning of the pres- ent century there have been two years, 1901 and 1908, without e —— single fatality to passengers. In only thre years have more|in 23 years the number of deaths than five persons been killed and/tctals only _73- thing we can do is to forfeit all the games won this year. Besides | that, I am willing to abide by any penalties that may be imposed. I haye sent the facts of the case to the secretary of the State Athletic association, with instructions to take the matter up with the board of control. Please send to Morgan P., Davis of Upton, the secretary any formal complaint you may wish to make.” 000 of population in 1917, to deaths per 1,000 in 1923. der. Phone 9863. Exceptional Buying Opportunities Right ‘at this time—between style seasons, as it were—the women of Casper are afforded ex- coeeoney buying opportunities at the Frantz op. Winter apparel is being cleared out at prices which take no consideration of cost, or the loss to us, but which do mean astounding savings to customers. EVERYWOMAN’S STORE EXTRA SPECIAL! Fur Coats and Capes From a Bankrupt Stock $ $98.0 125% Rare bargains at prices impossible to du- plicate. See our windows and come in. STYLE QUALITY And also this period is marked by special offer- ings of advance spring styles at low pre-season prices which will not be duplicated when the season actually begins in earnest. £ 00 Marmot and Ladies—Your Special Attention! Coney Capes We have just received from two of New York’s most fashionable designers a group of lovely SPRING HATS Which We Are Offering for Friday and x Saturday asa : Buckskin Seal Coats and Capes Buckskin Seal Coats and Capes sent the Western National Life In- surance company. During the past | few weeks he has been receiving in- | structions in this line of work from | John M. Fairfield, home office .rep- | resentative and will be prenared to enter the new field as 4 first class | man. Mr. Howell isa live wire and | a booster for any comraunity where | he may locate and while Worland’s | loss is Casper’s gain it is felt cer- tain that he will make good and be | an asset.to the city of Casper. ‘The company he will represent is | a Wyoming institution and one of | the best insurance. companies doing | business in this state, | =e | White-Skinned — Indians to Be | Hunted, Report NEW YORK, Jan. 16.In an at- tempt’ to run down finally stories of travelers during the past few decades that a tribe of Indians with white skins and fair hair lives in the recesses of Central and South’ America, the Margh-Darlen expedition has sailed for Pananta where it “will penetrate the terri- tory of Darien which has deen governed by the Indians since the failure of an attempted Spanish conquest in the early sixteenth century, Leading the party is R. O. Marsh of Brockport, who claims to have met the “white Indians." Smoker’s Teeth Bleached. White New Safe Way No need for dull, yellow, tobacco- stained teeth now. For a new safe treatment—Bleachodent | Combina~ tion—bleaches| away stains, and makes teeth flashing white—often in just three im 1 ‘Treat- ment consists of a marvelous liquid, which curdles and softens the stains and a new kind of paste which gently removes the softened stains and prevents the formation of new stains. Safe and harmless as its mild ingredients are espectal- ly combined to act only on surface stains—not on the enamel itself. Onl safe mild preparation like Bleachodent Combination should be used on children’s teeth which are naturally soft and sensitive, and which are especially subject to stains and decay, Fine for the ums. Get Bleachodent Combina- ion today for few cents at all good deaiters such as: Casper Pharmacy, Kimball Drug Co., Smith & Turner, Wryomin rug and Supply Co., John Tripeny , Midwest Phar- macy.—Advertisement. Twenty garments in thig lot. Apparel For Large and Stout Women At Spectal Low Prices Dresses in New . Materials - Stylishly made of Tricoplaid, Pineapple stitch, Souletta and High-lustre in black and colors. Sizes 42 to 50. $22.50 Other lines in crepes and satins. to 54 at $44.00 -» $35.00 + Midwinter and Early Spring ‘ Dress and Sport Coats ‘ Instyles that captivate you with their slender- ieee lines—black, brown, blue, grey, tan. es 42 to 56. $21.75 $32.50 $35.00 $45.00 Fur Coats and Capes In Extra Large Size Nemo Self-Reducing Corsets $5.00 $7.50 $10.00 _ With a world-wide reputation for large and stout figures. s Netheralls In Large Sizes $5.50 $10.50 $7.50 H. & W. Tréo and Nemo Brassieres—$1.50, $2.00, $2.50, $3.50 and up.. Outsize Hose—$1.25, $1.95, $2.50, $3.50 Regular $2.95 House Dresses at $1.95 Sizes 42 to 54 y Satinette Blooms and Pettibockers Outsizes in Kelly Green, Cerise, Black $2.00 Silk Knickers in Colors Outsizes in Jersey, Tricosham and Radium Silk $6.00 and $7.50 Pe Suncy: Special On the Mezzanine at Zz $12.50 Lovely Styles and Colors in the Newest ‘ Materials and Combinations Sizes 42 $55.00 Pre-season Subway Hat Special Three Dozen Pretty Spring Models $4.95 ' New Shipments Of r ; For Late Winter and Early Spring Wear —All Bought to Sell at Special Reduced Prices Every style—every color—every wanted fabric is shown. A good selection with fur collars as well as newer styles without fur trimming. 0, ain Floor $38.50, $45.00 (SUBWAY) ” $12.95 and $21.75 It Will Be a Pleasure to Show You EVERY 28 MINUTES OF YEAR Highway accidents claimed 15. out that the death rate from automo biles has increased from approx: imately. nine deaths to every 100,- —<——— CASPER MONUMENT WORKS 508 .South Conwell. Phone 2542 ————— Prices on special or- Hunter-Goll Furniture Co. | VShop high shades. Sizes 14 to 48. Misses’ Evening Dresses ~ At Special Low Prices for the High School Cadets’: “eer Military Ball In Bright Colors and Charming Combinations 13 England will celebrate next year the centennial of the opening of the first public s§eam railway in that _country. _ : Reduction Squirrel, sable. SERVICE PRICE ' ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW - Low Pre-season Prices , $22.50, $25.00, $28.50 Bright taffetas, soft-toned crepes and satins, striking rosh- anaras, and other charming materials combined and trim- med for effective styles in both dark colors and the new A liberal assortment for Friday and Saturday. a 11g a $22.50 to $44.00 For Friday and Saturday the Subway Offers P Dozens of Pretty New Dresses In Wool Velours of Fetching Checks, Plaids and Stripes— Taffetas in striking effects; Crepes and other materials. at $16.75. baum Of interest to every woman and miss looking for pre- season price concessions is this showing of Scores of New Dresses Copies from famous models recently developed by noted designers of New York and Paris and reproduced for offering at these and stone marten, fox and THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 1924 AS. KARL L. SNEIDER [WOMAN GIVEN DEAD; FUNERAL SUNDRY) LIFE Mré. Pearl Sneqler, wife of Karl oueiaer, died at her home, 643 South Durbin street, last night fol-}Emma Skillian was sentence ;, owing an extended illness. The re- mains are now at the Shaffer-Gay chapel. The funeral will be held at 8.o'clock Sunday afternoon from the Baptist church. The deceased was 47 years of age. She had been a resident of Casper for many years. ————<——— BY COURT PADUCAH, Ky., Jan, 17x life imprisonment today on a char, of being an accessory to murie, growing out of the killing of 1. Rosetta Warren and her sticks of dynamite under ren's bed. oh Wes pee Be Expert watch and Jewelry Ing. Casper Jewelry Co. 0-6 Tig” New Spring Blouses! A lovely array in the new high colors and clever styles. Sizes 86 to 44. Specially priced ~ $10,00 ,, $16.75