Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 8, 1924, Page 5

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THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1924. MOUNTAIN VIEW CTIMITY GROWS ‘PUSSYFOOT’ TO BRING. MESSAGE OF . ‘DRY’ LEADERS MONDAY . Great development work is going én west of Casper in all lines. The Wehway department is resurfacing the Highway beginning at the end 6f the pavement. This will put {nto first class condition. for iy miles west: In Mountain View suburb twelve miles of streets have graded and work including ~ the ness, One store building on 40 by 50 feet, both ments. proof. Mrs. McLeod has a first class home. bakery on the highway just beyond the Producers and Refiners Absorption ‘plant. 2 From five to ten new residences are being started each week. Several are large, one being 30 by 44 and one 28 by 42 feet. The New York Oil compdny has Been working for about two weeks Stringing gas and water pipe and connecting them up ready to put into the ditch, there being one crew | | screwing the, water pipe. together and-another welding the gas pipe. There is approximately fourteen thousand feet of gas inains and eight. thousand feet of water mains to be laid right away. Yesterday, the ditching machine started work. A prominent business man of Cas- per made the remark a few days ago, “Isn't Mountain View growing fast? J never saw a place grow like it has, You know, my wife and I take a ride out that way nearly every Sun- day just to see how many new houses are being built.” With over 900 lots sold since the first of July last year, with nearly 100 houses being lived in or under construction, with over 25,000 feet of water mains and over 17,000 feet of gas mains, bus service and tele- phones and electric lights a thing of the near future. Mountain View bids fair to soon be a good sized town within itself, REBEL CHIEF ISSET FREE MEXICO CITY, May 8.—Fortuna‘ to Maycotte, rebel general and 35 men were taken prisoner recently by volunteers at Pinotepa Nacional, a small port in Oaxaca but Maycotte gained his freedom, according to of- ficlal advices, by paying the munic!- Pal authorities 100,000 pesos. The accused officials will be arrested. New Treatment For Varicose or Swollen Veins Swollen-veins are dangerous and often burst. Sufferers’ are advised to get a two-ounce, original bottle of Of (full strength), at Smith & mer Drug Co., and start to reduce the veins and bunches at once. Physicians recommend Emerald Ol; it is used in hospital practice ‘And 2 small bottle will last a long time, becalise it is very concen- trated and a little goes a long way. Apply night and morning with a soft brush as directed until the swelling is reduced to normal. It is guaranteed. So marvelously powerful is Emer- ald Oll that. enlarged glands, wens and even goltre disappear when used steadily. Mail orders accepted. —Adyertisement. NOTICE OF INCORPORATION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Wyoming Engraving Cor- poration was incorporated in the office of the Secretary of State of the State of Wyoming, at Cheyenne, yamine, on the 6th day of May, 924, at nine o'clock The object. for which this cor- poration formed is to carry on the business of photographic print- ers, photo-lithographers, —electro- typers, engravers and photographic vers, and the business of tak- ing, making, printing, developing fine dengraving Photographs and the making, printing, developing and engraving of prints, cuts and mounts and to do and perform all acts necessary for the conducting of such business. _ The term of_existence of this corporation shall be fifty years from the date of its incorporation, Its capital stock is Twenty-five Thousand Dollars, divided into twenty-five thousand shares of the 3 value of One Dollar each. its directors shall be three in num- ber and the names of those direc- tors who shall manage the affairs of the corporation for the first year are J. B. Boyer, J. B. Taylor and S. E. Boyer. The operations of this corpora- tion shall be carried on in the City of Casper, Natrona County, Wyoming, and its principal office shall be located a’ Room 11 in the Consolidated Royalty Building in thes City of Casper, Natrona County, Wyoming, and the agent in charge thereof will be S. E. Boyer. Dated this 7th day of May, 1924 WYOMING ENGRAVING CORPORATION oy J. B. BOYER, President FOSTER & WEHRLI, Attorneys. Publish May 8, 10, 14, 1924. ~ Wiring Supplies FIXTURES, LAMPS, ELECTRIC APPLIANCES Redio Supplies Motor Repairing Electric Supply And Construction Co. 142 E. Midwest Phone 483W Estimate Gladly Furnished n in many other Ines being pushed forward rapidly building of many structures both residence and bust the highway is 20 by 40 and another is ith full base- These buildings will be fire: Wm. E. (Pussyfoot) Johnson who will lecture at the Presbyterian tabernacle at § o'clock Monday night under the’auspices of the World League against Alcoholism, has just returned from a six month's tour of Africa. He started in at Cape Tow: the most southern point, and trave sed the entire continent from south to north, traveling a total of 6,350 miles in 66 d and making 107 ad- dresses. . He wv where gr ed by vast multitudes. The wets heckled him and the drys shouted | themselves hoarse in his honor. Back | in America he has a story of thd) growing demand for the Dark continent. Last year Pussyfoot Johnson tour- ed India. In six weeks while there he traveled 7,000 miles and made 200 addresses which were listened to by an aggregate of 1,500,000 persons. prohibition in| JOHNSON Johnson first became known as “Pussyfoot” when as chief officer in the Indlan service under the Roose- yelt and Taft administration he per- sonally arrested hundreds of outlaws who had defied arrest for years. As a detective he achieved national repu- tation. As an author his several books in the interest of reform have received wide circulation. As a representative of the Antt!- Saloon league of America in London he lost an eye when a member of an audience to which he was speak- ing threw a bottle at him, His sportsmanlike attitude toward his misfortune won over the British public completely and thenceforward his reputation was made. The subject on which he will lecture Monday is “The Cross and the Crescent." The public is in vited. NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE. WHEREAS, E, B. FOSTER and LULU FOSTER, husband and wife, as mortgagors, by a mortgage deed dated June 10th, 1919, recorded in the office of the County Clerk and Ex-officio Register of Deeds in and for Natrona County, Wyo- ming, in Book 17 of Mortgage Deed Records on Page 213, mort- greed to The Wyoming National jank of Casper, a banking corpo- as mortgagee, the follow- escribed real estate and roperty situate in the County; of Ragens State of Wyoming, to- wit: : The Northeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter (NEMXNW%), the South Half of the Northwest Quarter (S%NW%) and the Northwest Quarter of the South- west Quarter (NW%SW%) of Section Thirty-five (35) Town- ship _ Thirty-three (33), North of Range Seventy-eight _ (78) West of the Sixth Principal Me- ridian, in Natrona County, together with the privileges, here- ditaments and appurtenances thereunto appertaining or belong- ing, which said mortgage deed was given to secure the payment of a principal sum of Twelve Hun- dred and Fifty ($1250.00) Dol- lars, payable to the mortgagee therein named, according to the conditions of one promissory note, dated June 10th, 1919, due one year after date, together with eo sig thereon at the Tate of it per cent per annum, an WHEREAS, no assignment has ever made of said mortgage deed nor of said note and the under- signed is now the owner and hold- er thereof, and , WHEREAS, said mortgage dee: provided among other things that “It is hereby further provided that in case any installment of princi- pal or any part thereof, or any interest moneys, or any part there- of hereby secured to be paid, shall remgin due and unpaid for the space of ten days after the same shall, by the terms hereof, becgme due and payable; then, and in that case, the whole prin- a sum hereby secured to be paid, together with the interest thereon, :shall, at the option of taid party of the second part, its successors, heirs, executors, ad- ministrators or assigns, become due and payable forthwith, any- thing herein or in said promissory note contained to the contrary not- withstanding. And in case default shall be made in the payment of the said principal sum of money hereby intended to be secured, or in the payment of the interest thereof, or any part of such principal or interest, as above provided, then it shall and may be lawful for the said party of the second part, its successors, heirs, executors, ad- ministrators or assigns, to sell and dispose of said above-described remises, and all the right, title, penefit and equity of redemption of said parties of the first part, their heirs, executors, adminis- trators or assigns therein, at pub- lic auction, for cath, according to | the statute in such case made and Bed successors, executors, administra- tors or assigns, and in any pro- ceeding in equity to foreclose this mortgage; said solicitor fees shall be taxed as costs in said action,” and, WHEREAS, of the principal sum evidenced by said promissory note, to-wit: $1250.00, there re- mains unpaid, due and payable, the principal sum of $1100.00, to- gether with accrued interest there- on in the sum of $37.40, being in- terest at 8 per cent per annum from Septembér 6, 1923, said in- terest and the whole thereof be- ing now due and payable and the Repeal balance sum of $1100.00, eing now past due and payable, no part of which said interest or said balance of said principal now due having ever been paid, the sum of $150.00 having been paid in reduction of said original prin cipal and_ interest having been paid to September 6, 1923, and that there is now remaining due and owing the sum of $1100.00 principal, and the sum of $37.40 interest, and by the terms of said mortgage the whole principle sum secured by said mortgage less said $150.00 together with interest thereon, having become due and payable forthwith at the option of undersigned, and WHEREAS, the said mortgagors have wholly defaulted in and failed to make payment of the amount of pansipa above named and the said amount of interest of said promissory note, and WHEREAS, there is due on said mortgage and said note secured thereby, at the date of the first publication of this notice, the prin- cipal sum of $1100.00 and the total amount. of interest thereon, $37.40, eight”per cent interest on $1100.00 from September 6, 1923 to April 9, 1924, and $150.00 at- torneys fees, making altogether now due from said mortgagors to the undersigned mortgagee, the sum of $1137.40, no part of which has ever been paid and no suit or proceeding having ever been in- stituted at law to recover the debt secured by said mortgage,or any part thereof. NOW, THEREFORE, public no- tice is hereby given that pursuant to the statute in such case made and provided, and by virtue of the power and authority vested in said undersigned mortgagee, The Wyo- ming National Bank of Casper, does hereby notify all persons to whom it may concern that it will on the 29th day of May, 1924, at the hour of ten o’clock in the forenoon, cause said premises and property described in said mort- gage, or so much thereof as may be necessary to be sold at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash, in hand, at the south front door ofthe Court House on Center Street, in the City of Casper, Na- trona County, Wyoming, to pay Che Casper Daily Cribune DAN FRAZIER 5 ACQUITTED (Continued from Page One) crime and the holdups to the wife who was about to become a mother. Yet he has been ignored completely by the authorities. No one had delved deeply into his past. When sentence was imposed the judge addressed the girl alone. She has been the spectacular figure, but as she herself has said, banditry does not .pay. To other girls, who are “running around” she would seek to it was easily deducted that the cause] give a warning. The judge better of the trouble.lay with “Smith,” the) served her desire in that respect. man sent from Cheyenne to make an/jn the severity of his sentence he _[ investigation. While an attempt/took no heed of the fact that the was made by County Attorney F. A. girl's baby had but recently died, Michaels to keep it out of the case| he took no account of the sad story on the grounds of irrevelency and| of her early life laid before him. he was sustained by the court, yet} yet the east side teems today {t was. shown in the testimony of|with more families Uke the 6ne several of the boys and Grace Kim-| which gave the “bob-haired bandit"* ball, a near graduate, that the com-|to the world. A recent report of the duct was wholly revolutionary, and| miserable housing conditions shows seemingly to incite insurrection, that as many as 14 persons are Ii “John Speer, a paid patient and aling in two rooms. Some in cellers cripple of twelve years, of normal) and others in stables, It freely has mind and sent to the institute as a! neen predicted that these conditions Protege of Mrs. P.C. Queally of} jead inevitably to great immorality Kemmerer, told of young Booth tell-| ana vice. {ng him that Smith had said the boys he “bob: ” : ald not need to obey tho attendants, | yyaen tie patna ober Rea eee ~ LAST DEFENSE jump in and help the boys out. (Continued from Page One) Mike Uran, the iad captured at Cheyenne, testified that he had run away for no real reason and that he had been sent to the school for trouble at Rock Springs. He con- tradicted the newspaper stories that he had ever been beaten by Frazier and said the treatment was all right. He told that young Booth said that he was to. get $5 from Smith for every attendant he turned in. This ular Republicans would like to lose being half of the amount Smith was|!" the shuffle. to be paid. The president is plainly dissatis James Jordan said that he was| ‘ted with the tax bill in its present told that if Smith were boss there|Shape. He hopes for a change in the boys could. do as they pteased| conference and will not announce an and if they got into trouble he would| intention to veto the bill in advance help them’ out. of consideration of its merits after Grace Kimball, an unusually|it comes to him. But many of the bright girl for an inmate of such| features of the bill are obnoxious to a home, testified that Smith talked| big tusiness particularly that which makes income tax returns open to public inspection that a veto Is rapidly becoming probable. When word however, reaches the senate to her through a window and told her she did not need to stay there and that he had told twenty boys ti run away. He offered to help the girls out and see’ that they got|that the tacking on of mischievous into good hands. provisions may bring a veto, the Fraz'er, on the stand, was quiet|Chances are they will be eliminated self possesed. He gave his oge as 26 and said that he had a former experience as an attendent in an as the senate collectively or in- dividually would not take the responsibility for defeating tax re. immigration bill if it comes to him in its original form. He has taken asked him about the stories that were circulating ambong the boys. “Red”, as he is known at the}pains to explain that he was mis- school, told Frazier that he didn‘t| interpreted a week ago when he an- have to-tell. At this, with fiste|nounced he favored exclusion of the doubled, he pushed Booth into the corner and slapped his face, tell- ing him’as he kicked kim with the side of his foot to get \off to bed. Ho denied ‘striking him or injuring him physically as the sensational stories reported in the newspapers. Concensus of opinion in Lander appears to be tthat while the state school has been placed in an un- favorable light before the people of the state and the morale of the in- stitution was broken down it has em phasided the need of separation of boys of criminal tendencies from those of feeble minds. A number of older boys have been committed to the training school by courts which believed it the best place for Japanese. The Japanese themselves do not object to the principle of ex clusion for they are beginning to recognize that tt is an economic question in the United States and that every nation has a right to ex clude labor likely to be competitive with {ts own. But the Japanese in- sist that the method of accomplish- ing exclusion {s‘an offense to them. A compromise has been effected temporarily on insertion of a clause delaying the enforcement of the act so far as the Japanese are concern- ed until_a year has been given for negotiation and ratification of a special treaty with Japan. Mr. Coolidge’s conferences with senate leaders to point out the perils them, which, while complimentary|of the legislative situation have to the Lander school has to a great/ begun none too soon. The Republi extent interferred with the plans|can leadership has lost control of and purposes of the institution. the senate and the e: ercise of the —— veto power alone will at this time affect the insurge::t Republican al legance with the Democrats on specific issues. MOSCOW, May 8.—The commis- sion formed by the federal central executive committee to commemor ate the memory of Lenine t bidden the use of the late pr portrait on cigar or cigarette labels, candy boxes, jewelry or in other ad. vertising form. Let “Gets-It” CAREER ENDED (Continued From Page One) less husband. He was her first and only “child” 80 far as care and af- fection was concerned. The other children were unwelcome and neg- lected almost from thelr birth. “The bob-haired bandit’? was the last of the eight Roth children. She Co wan gore ie acewser, “c| End Your Corns family lived in one‘ furnished room ‘This was so crowded that at two or three years of age the “bandit” was sleeping on the coal pile in the matr part of the céllar. Eaeh morning she was awakened and sent out t beg pennies on the streets. Not one of these was she permitted t spend for candy at the corner shop. The pénnies had to be hoarded until they were @ufficient to. go to the saloon on the other corner. Out of such soil sprung the strange stary little weed that stood in court yesterday and heard the solemn judge ‘send her away” for from 10 to 20 years, In the same breath the judge sentenced the hus- band to a similar “stretch” up the river at Sing Sing. ‘The “bandit” said the husband who had been her “tall companion” in crime was the one good “influence” in her life and she asked that they be sent to the sare prison and not separated for so many years. The Judge took no cognizance of such a plea. The remarkable part of this case all along that he was the arch crim!- nal, that he suggested the career of js that the husband hes contended “TIL” FOR ACHING, This Corn ‘The “Gets-It” painless end coms for- fevers miles ahead of any thing else. Try It Simply apply two or,three drops to any cor ot callous, tn two, molnutes all pain, will ba stopped completely. Soon you can peel the Corn’ oF callous right off with your fingers, root and all, Costs but a trifle. Satislactory te- Its guaranteed with your corn_or money back, EE Lawrence & Co,, Chicago. Sold everywhere, “Gets-It" is sold in this city by Kimball Drug Stores.—Advertise according to the terms of said mortgage and said note the amount of said indebtedness re. maining unpaid, together with all costs, fees and other expenses as aforesaid: Said sale shall be made by the Sheriff of Natrona County, Wyoming, at the time and place aforesaid. ‘ provided and in the manner there- i preseribed, ‘and’ out of the Rie ate Casper, Wyoming, money arising from such sale, to| Be ee ttre Say “ |retain the sald principal and’ in-| , or thepee NATIONAL terest, together with the costs and =e a ™ ” Mort mires. sxpenses of such sale and One Hun-| 5.4, april 10, 17, 24 Me 7) dred Fifty Dollars for attorney,| 15 "22° 1924 APTS y 1, 8, solicitor or counsel fees, and the|*° ““» *"=% overplus, if any there be, shall be pa Sa ES paid by the party making such sale, on demand, to the said par- WANTED—Clean Cotton Rags at ties of the first part, their heirs, The Tribune Office. SORE, TIRED FEET Good-bye, sore feet, burning feet swollen feet, sweaty fect, smelling feet, tired feet. Good-bye, corns, callouses, bunions and raw spots. No more shoe tight ness, no more limping with pain or drawing up your face in agony. “Tz” is magical, acts right off. “Tin! draws out all the poisonous udati which puff up the fee Ti and forget your foot | misery. Ah! how comfortable your feet feel. A few cents buy a box of “Tis” now at any drug or de partment store. Don't suffer. Have good feet, glad fect, feet that never swell, never hurt, never get tired A year’s foot comfort guaranteed or money refunded.—Advertisement. 135—137 N. Wolcott MOTORISTS FOR MOTHER’S DAY Have Your Car Clean and Shiny AUTO SERVICE CO. Specializes In Washing, Greasing and Polishing Cars IF YOU HAVEN'T A CAR RENT A FORD AND TAKE HER RIDING OIL PRODUCTION FACTS GIVEN (Continued from Page One) oil In Teapot Dome below the second Wall Creek sand, Senator Walsh, the committee prosecutor, asked Di- rector Bain about the drilling of a well to the third Wall Creek sand, The witness sald this well was pro- ducing about eighty barrels a day. Seven or eight oil wells Rave beech drilled under the Doheny lease on the Elk Hill Reserve, the director said, and have produced about 1,- 500,000 barrels, Most of them, he said, were offset wells. The actual average royalty pald by Doheny was 28 per cent in December, the witness testified and is now 26 per cent. Hoe said there had been no new drilling under the Doheny lease since the senate investigation be- gan. Director Bain declared the ofl in Teapot Dome is not suitable for naval fuel use, and could not be economically prepared for such use. The natural and right course, under the circumstances, he said, was to exchange the Teapot Dome oll for other oil: which was suitable for the navy. ‘The witness made a detalled ex- planation of the effect of drainage upon nayal ofl properties. Something like eighty wells have been drilled on Teapot Dome under the Sinclair lease, Bain said. He asked whether former Secre ‘all had discouraged B. L. Do- in his effort to get a lease on pot Dome, and replied: cretary Fall told me wanted lease Doheny had upon Teapot Dome, but he (Fall) had discouraged from doing it because a and wanted to take it ovér him Doheny's business was on the Pacific and the Atlantic coasts and he (Fall) did not think it would be a good thing for Doheny to become interested in the Mid-Continent field.” “Was that before or after the © was given to Sinclair?” Asked enator Walsh. “I cannot be positive," Bain an- asylum. He had charge of the 52| vision. Some Republicans think It syered: ; nee IMD ee te men and boys ranging in ages from| would not be a bad idea to carry |*PLINE Of | tiled’ OueebAE a wixty years down to 6. There was| the issue to the country In the com- aorag CMe ae ae itr ee an unusual amount of confusion |!m= campaign, pointing out that the |W&s on April 7, 1922 that the lease while Smith was there and he|Meltlon’plan is. popular-and that the be Binctalr. ‘ sought to fiid the source. From| Democrats and insurgents would be m testified there had been no observation and questioning of boys|held to accountability for blocking heb et os the trouble seemed to center in| the plan ini becpaibel to ay taht ag ba dene young Booth, and he called. him and| Mr. Coolidge ts going to vet. the|S!ncla'r lease was made. ‘There had been some drainage he said, “but it was the impresstoin of the interior departmnt that the door was logked by the making of the lease before the horse was stol- en. —_—>—. TIMBER SALE IS ORDERED WASHINGTON, May 8.—Secre- tary work today authorized the sale under new regulations of twenty bil- tion feet of timber on “one million Teeth Stains Bleached Out New Safe Way Shy Goodbye to dull, yellow, stained h! for a new harmless treatment Does not affect enamel as its mild ngredients are especially combined to act only on surface stains—not on the enamel itself. Only a 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 de- cay. Fine for the gums. Get hodent Combination today, for ew cents at all good druggists.— ertisement. ll two lots on corner in ood addition. See us. Dobbin Realty Co., Zuttermeister Bldg., 226 E. 2nd St. Owner must Coie A a HAY—GRAIN CHIX FEEDS— SALT Casper Warehouse Co. 268 INDUSTRIAL AVE TEL. 27 STORAGE FORWARDING For the best results in raising chickens use Victor Buttermilk Starte® For more eggs feed Victor Scratch Feed and Laying Mash. Phone 2370 acres of land embraced in the for- mer Oregon and California raflroad and Coos Bay wagon road land grants in Western, Oregon. The timber lands, most of which are located in Coos, Douglas and Lane counties, have been re-vested in the government as part of tho PAGE FIVE. public domain and the sale will be conducted by auction by General land office branches in Lake View, Portland and Roseburg on dates to be announced later. Cal! the Tribune for highway 4n- formation. ~ Miller Real Balloons put on quickly Baileons: rims. Miller dealer about once, AKRON, OHIO Miller Balloon Cords cost less than regular over-sizs high pres- sure tires. There are two kinds of Miller 1—A Miller Bal- loom Cord that may be put on your present rims without any whee! change. 2—A Miller Bal- loon Cerd for emelier wheels put on with only a change ef spokes and Call on any authorized to-day putting Miller Balloons on your car at ‘The Miller Rubber Co. of N.Y. BALLOON CORD FOR YOUR CAR with or without changing wheels Pr Distributed By The Specify Miller Balloon Cords oa your new car. MILLER BALLOON CORDS MILLER BALLOON CORDS for small wheels 30x3% 29x 4.40/21 achodent Combination—bleaches * 31x4 31x525/21 away tho stains and. makes tecth Wyoming aera el flashing ve ; ee in dt + Ji 6 Automotive Co. 3324 312525/21 342495 minutes. © Treatment cons'sts of a / mild safe liquid, which curdles and r 32 x 6.20/20 { ae | enttang tbe etatiesand' a. bew kind Wholesale 32x4%; } 33.620/21 | 33*577 of paste, which gently removes the Automobile $3x4% 33x620/21 4x57 ened stains, Bleachodent C Equipment 34x4% 33x6.20/21 35x 5.77 bination keeps teeth white by pre ay venting the formation of new stains. Casper,» Wyo. 3x5 { 33 x 6.60/ 535x660 34x 7.30/20 LOVERS OF NATURE AND TRAVEL The D. A. Tours Inc. OF CASPER Will Conduct a Six Weeks’ Excursion, via Motor Car Around the Famous Park to Park Highway STARTING AT CASPER, JUNE 15— FINISHING AT CASPER AUG. 1 THE COST IS WONDERFULLY REASONABLE Talk It Over With Us at Once—Meals, Lodging, Side Trips, All Expenses Included Special Rates for Casper Booster Party Call at 314 Consolidated Royalty Bldg. PHONE 2310-M Mitchell THE EXCHANGE FURNITURE AND HARDWARE CoO. IS YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL CAMP AND FIELD EQUIPMENT WE BUY AS JOBBERS AND CA} ELL YOU AT WHOLESALE THE ADDRESS IS 215 W. FIRST ST. THE TELEPHONE IS 1086

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