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PAG y i } i RE aT indice tions yerity Sont, tw pet ar o u lo a tore ere oe PAGE TEN Negro Wielded Lash In Colorado Prison Floggings ‘Administered to Prisoners at Tynan’s Orders Described by Former Guard at Hearing Held Before State Civil Service Body. CANON CITY, Colo., Feb. 17.—(By The Associated Press.)—A tale of floggings administered to prisoners in the Colorado state penitentiary again was reacted on the witness stand today by W. W. Thomas J. Sweet. n by Tynan'’s counsel, who were the state civil service ore which the case r more than an hour Ireland q vi of many “trips to the which was the prison Zh You will be startled how quickly and thoroughly you canstopskin eruptions and beautify your complexion with S.S.S. ppuee ras are the first thing one notices in another person's face. It is too often cruel in its misjudgment. It judges from what it sees on the outside. Pimples are easy to get rid of. More red-cells! That is what you need when you fee pimples staring at you in the mirror. Red-cells mean Clear, pure, rich blood. They mean clear, rud- dy, lovable complexions. They mean nerve power, because all ‘your nerves are fed by your blood. ‘They mean freedom forever from pimples, from blackhead pest, from boils, from eczema and skin erup- tions; from that tired, exhausted, run-down feeling. Red-blood-cells are the most important thing in the world to each of us. S.S.S, will aid Nature in building them for you! S. has been known since 1826 one of the greatest blood-build- ers, blood-cleansers and system etrengtheners ever produced. Start taking S.S.S. today. Its medicinal ingredients are purely vegetable, E- S. 8. S. is dola at it good drug stores in two si Tl larger tise 18 more econosleale = SS S Fetes Bost ‘BloodMedicine PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW for Lawn Fertilizer Direct from sheep ranches Immediate deliver PHONE 829-W Salt Creek Busses Le Townsend Hotel id op. m Leave Salt Creek 8 m. and 2 p, m. Bus ves 2:30 Dally Salt Creek Transportation Co. BAGGAGE AND TELEPHON ve Casper, physic! At called spectat mate ¢ thirty land The with a a I counse! knev The be Ireland floggin old.”* counsel “Cal Whe wind-e ful o sons, and wi or ove! taste. Ask “Califo full di and ¢ | Printec vere whipping of uny or fifty Controverting Monday by Dr. R. B. was present one juncture, land testified, two ‘occa’ “Yes, were placed on ths punishment t with-bali and chatn : kles after the floggin Efforts of S. testimony proved, MOTHER! tongue, Syrup" whipped for #9 recejved d testiticd testimony offered Holmes, prison leclared no doctor of the floggings. Sweet's counsel from among the court room tors, George Kelley, former in of the penitentiary, whom Ire- he had helped flog on ions. Kelly received about hes on each occasion, Ire- . who was fellow prisoner, blows Tre's on fa , Irela id. ex-convict walked forward perceptible imp. s Kelly lame when you first him,” Ernest Morris of Sweet's 1 asked. but not as’ lame as he is now,” Ireland answered. “Did Kelly yell when he was spanked,” Morris asked. “They All yell when they am spanked,” the withess responded. None of the pris + ged ever was accorded medical examination before, nor medical attention after the floigings to the of his “knowledge and vellef " Ireland 6 Most of the dis-pilned privon > thelr 1 hel about 60 ails usually pounds ond the gham was riveted about the leg, Ireiand destared. Jim Pate, the negrq guard, who, 1 said, wielded t probably le lash atthe Bs, weighs 180 pounds and “might be about 60 years . Harrison White, chief 1 for Tynan, to shake Ireland's on cross examination for the most part, futile. ifornia Fig Syrup” Dependable Laxative for Sick Baby or Child en baby lic, is constipated, has feverish breath, coated or diarrhea, a half-teaspoon- f genuine “California Fig * promptly moves ths pot. gases, bile, souring food te right out. Never cramps racts. Babies like its delicious your druggist for genuine ornia Fig Syrup” which has rections for infants in arms, hildren of all ages, plainly 1 on bottle, Mother! You must ‘alfornia”’ or you may get ation flg syrup Coal Creek Coal $8.50 Per Ton Mine measure Moore & Morris Phone 1734 CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE CARS LEAVE Saves you DAILY apuissiciatah 12 AT 9:30 A. M purs* wlins FARBE—$12.50 travel between Casper WYOMING M OTORWAY Salt Creek Tr TOWNSEND HOT L portation Company's Office PHONE 144 Phone 2300 and 62 THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER CO. Everything in Building Material RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS ' Distributors of | KONSET Three- Day Cementing Process for Oil Weils. Treland, former prison guard, at the trial of Warden Tynan on charges of prison mismanagement brought by former Governor FBALITY OF NEW CITY LAW TO AGE TEST Crime Charged to In- mates of Resorts Ie Challened The constltutionality of the cently passed city ordinance, which makes inmates of any place where liquor or gambling violations occur, labie to a fine, will be tested out in the next term of district court. Four cases, in police court last night, in all of which Judge Murray assessed fines of $15, were appealed by Tom Curran, attorney for the defendants, with the idea of taking one of them into the district court a8 a test case. All four defendants were arrested when polfce raided a store last Sat- urday. They claimed that they had stepped in to make purchases when the officers descended oh the place and found a small quantity of liquor. Their defense was that they had ho intimation that Hquor was being so!d and that a door between the part of the store where they were and where the Hquor was found, was closed. The cases appealed were those of, 0. L. Swanson, Michael Speelop, Fred Oliver and Edward Rogers. peeiieiaeec o FIFTY-GALLON STILL SEIZED One automobile, one man’s over- coat, one 50-gallon still and consid- erable mash were found yesterday afternoon when officers raided a shack about 26 miles out on the Al- cova road, The condition of the shack indicat that. tenants had left hastily a few minutes previously, evidently warned of the. raiding party's approach. _ Officers on the raid were Craft and Easley of the state law enforce. ment department and Jake Carter, deputy sheriff. ee ge ee CARD OF THANKS. We wish to thank our many friends*for the beautiful floral of ferings and sympathies jextended aftor the death of our dear husband and father, William Kummer. Mrs. Kummer and family. re Casper, Wyo. Office and Yard—First and Center Sts. CASPE Yo, 816 West Mi dont Ave, HEALTH WORK DESCRIBED IN An informative tall: on the activi ties and the results of the work of the Natrona county health depart- ment was this noon at the chamber of commerce forum luncheon given by .Dr. Ralph J. Malott, director of the department. An outline of the various functions of the organization, with a list of personnel and duties, was present- ed by the doctor. The feature of his talk was a reci- Detailed description of the use of the lash was given by Ireland in the face of objec-| tation of vital statistics of this the lash, Ireland declared Herbert} ———H+—+————_| county for the year 1924, In which Litge, who was disciplined in No. he showed the total of deaths to be vember. 1920, ecelved the most se- 380-and the births, 868. Emphasis man IJ ever was placed on the significance of various sets of figures in the tabula- tlon along Hnes followed in a story on vital statistics in the Tribune January 1. Particular interest was attached to Dr. Malott's story of a case of chicken pox which last month re- sulted in the beginning of a small epidemic in this city. By, this illus- tration he was abla to make pointed his contention that considerable care should be exercised in handling and quarantining such children's dis- eases. The department was represented at the forum by practically Its en: tire staff. A number of the mem- bers of both local and out-of-the-state dairymen were also present at the meeting. SHARE IN OL FUND: 3. SAVED TOUNIVERSITY CHEYENNE, Wyo., Feb. 17—The University of Wyomin« triumphed this morning in the virst legislative skirmish bearing upon the financiai support which the instititive shall rerelve during the conilac Liennium The committee of the who'e senate, after prolonged debate, indefinitely postponed senate M, providing that the bulk of the untvers'ty's income cerivea from tts nine t share of federal oil per eral expenses, Under the ‘present law this nine percent is devoted to building expense. Debate on senate 81 grow hered at several times. The b!tl was sup ported in debate by Senator and Spear and wos op uters Wanerus, Jenkins, on and Myers. As conglder 1 progressed oppone. oft eait.e forced. incorpurs several amendmens ad B she University. On Jha final tet strength, that which gave s:nate approval to Indefinite postponement of the bill, the division 18 for indefinite postponement and nine against that action. Ta2 division is regarded in legislative quarters as providing an indication of support for and stren@th against several other impending measures affecting University financ NEW YORK—President Coolidge has decreased by two-thirds the sen- tence of a"ydar and a day imposed on Carlo Tresa, published of Il Martello, New York anti-fascisti organ, for publishing allegedly @bscene matter, the World said. FORUM MEET be Casper Daily Tribune HERBERT WYATT NAMED FOR APPOINTMENT 10 U.S. NAVAL ACADEMY WASHINGTON, D. &., Feb. 17.— Herbert Russell Wyatt, son of Henry Wyatt of Casper, Wyo., was today néminated by Senator Francis E. Warren of Wyoming as one of his candidates for the April naval acad- emy examinations, He is at present a student at Western Military acad- emy at Alton, TIl. ONE-ACT PLAY: PRESENTED AT: HIGH ochOOL Success last night attended the presentation of Sir James Barrie's Play, “The Twelve Pound Look,” by students engaging in the third arnual Kiwknis one-act play com- petition at the high school auditor- tum, Two other plays, Manikin and Minikin” and ‘The Florist Shop,” were presented In the contest, both teing for second place. The hail he'd an exceptionally. large audience. Awards ot $10 each to the actors in, ths winning Barrio play were made by the Kiwanis club. The cast of players in this production follows: Sir Harry Sims Lowell Davis Lady Sims - Mildred Daly Toombes, the butler -. Harry Davis Kate, a typist ----- Beulah Batley Judges were Mrs. McCrorey, Mrs. Kohler, the Rev, Charles A. Wilson and Mrs. Brown) 7 iFiy 6. & NW. ANNOUNCES ATE TO INAUGURAL The Chicago and Northwestern railway announces special rate ‘of ene and one-half fares for the round ial inatgurgtion. Tickets will be on ale February 27 and 28 and March 1, with return limit March 11. THE SPARK PLUG Vitamins to nourishment | are what a spark-plug is to a motor. To sustain vitality, the body needs three thou- sand calories of food daily, yetif this foodisnot activated by vitamins the body is un- | able to thrive in health or strength. Scott's Emulsion brings to a weakened system vitamin-activated nourish- ment of highest degree. A little taken regularly helps wonderfully to build strength and resistance. If you would keep strong and vital—ac- tivate your diet with Scott’s Emulsion. Bcott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. On Ice-Coated Pavements or greasy streets, the Series 80 can be brought to a dead stop with ease and certainty. Pierce-Arrow four-wheel safety brakes —adopted from a type used successfully in Europe for 15 years, improved by Pierce-Arrow engineers and built into the car—give this perfect control. Ask for a complete demonstration. Financing ai offered by the Pi Arrows Pesancs Corbaretontie benkarh teguinntite iu JERCE-ARROW THE KUMPF MOTOR CAR COMPANY COLORADO SPRINGS DENVER Twelfth Ave, and Acoma 121 East Bijou EXPRESS RATE CUT ORDERED Continued from Page One. ordinary merchandise, Fruit and vegetable rates from producing and distributing centers are found by deducting 25 per cent frdm these figures. Wyoming. Lander, Riverton, Lusk, Thermop- olis and Wheatland, merchandise from $2.28 to $1.55 per 100 Ibs., mak- ing fruit and vegetables, poultry trom $1.71 to $1.16. Basin, Deaver, Greybull, Powell and “Worland. Merchahdise from $3.05 to $2.10 making fruit and vegetables from $2.29 to $1.57. Cheyenne from $2.70 to $2.10. Rawlins, from $4.08 to $2.85, Rock Springs, from $5.05 to $3.50. Sheridan, from $4.36 to $3.10. Senate Votes Confirmation For Kellogg WASHINGTON, Feb. 17—Thp sen- ate yesterday confirmed the “nomi- nation of Frank B. Kellcgg of Min- nesota to succeed Charles E. Hughes as secretary of state, March 4. Con- firmation was voted withgut a roll call, at ee CHICAGO—Daniel Gumbinsky, for- mer president of the Daniel Boone Woofen Mills company, dropped dead today, On the announcement of his death, quotations on the company’s stock felt to 2%c per dhare. Death was dto acd as Se heart disease. POISON PLOT ARREST REAR SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., Feb. 17. —Police detectives atterapting to de- termiife who put poison) in milk de- red to the breakfapt’ table ot Mrs. Lavina J. Hotaling, wealthy San Francisco widow, expected to: day to make an arrest spon. Analy- sis of the milk showed st contained enough poison to kill several persons Mrs. Hotaling and otlker members of her household, Fred 4°, Hotaling, and her daughter in law. Mrs. Myrtle Hotaling, were saved from drinking the poisoned milk by Taugo Naki- muri, a servant, who tasted the fluid on his breakfast food. Investigation revealed that the milk sent by a dairy cémcern here for delivery to the Hogalings was LONDON, Feb. 1 (By sociated Press)—A bull etin issued at Buckingham Palace thig afternoon sald that King George weis suffering from an attack of bronchitis, due to influenza. Despite a restless night, it added, his general condition was satisfactory. 2B Dee WASHINGTON—Tran#mission by amateur raido telegraphars of a mes sage to President Coolidge from the Governor of each of the forty eight states expressing felicitations and congratulations upon “hfs inaugur tion is planned by the) American Radio Relay League. The As- TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1925 | ye BOBBED HAIR TO DRAW TAX 7 BATH, England, Feb, 17.—A tax on bobbed heads to asrist the munt- cipality of Bath in balancing its bud- get Is proposed by City Coundilman S. R, Lewin. Quite an income was derived from the bobbing tax, he suggested, might be considered a “poll tax.’? PIMPLY? WELL, DON TBE Notice It. Drive Them ff with Dr.-Edwards’ Olive Tablets imply face will not embarrass you RE if, you fab a package of Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. The skin should begin to clear after you have taken the tablets a few nights. Cleanse tH® blood, bowels and li with Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, successful substitute for calomel; there’s no sickness or pain after taking them. Dr. Edwards’-Olive Tablets do that which calomel does, and just as effec- tively, but their action is gentle and safe instead of severe and irritating. No one who takes Olive Tablets is ever cursed with a ‘‘dark brown taste,’* wbad breath, a dull, listless, “‘no good” feeling, constipation, torpid liver, bad disposition or pimply face. live ge area pa vegetable cones mixed with olive oil; you w them by their olive color: vis Edwards spent ao among pa- tients afflicted with liver and bowel complaints and Olive. Tablets are the immensely effective result. Take one or two nightly for a week’, See how much better you feel and look, 15c and 30c, trip to Washington for the preriden-, 13, MEN’S WORK SHOES Milwaukee made—Weinberg’s Best. A regular $5.00 and $6.00. seller. rificed at, “ir S245 BUY YOUR OXFORDS NOW Men's Oxfords, the well known brands, such ‘as Ralstons and Selz Royal Blue. $8.00 and $10.00 values, $4.85 your choice, ‘pair _ MEN’S DRESS SHOES Ralston Shoes For Men You know what the name of Ralston means. Shoes’ that sell for $10.00 and $12.00. Sacrifice price $4.85 per pair -._-____ HERE IS SOMETHING You Cannot Afford to Miss A whole table full of Dress Shoes*-Ralston make. Regu lar $8.00" and $10.00 vastcns ther poe $2.45 EXTRA SPECIAL LADIES’ STORM RUBBERS \Ladies’ Storm Rubbers with high heels, Regular $1.00 values. Sacrifice $25¢ price, per pair ._ rs BOYS’ RUBBER BOOTS Boys’ Rubber Boots. Sizes from 1to 5, $3.50 $1 95 e values, per pair __ We Have Arranged With the Landlord to Destiny Our Store Until Saturday Night, February 21 OUR STORE IS CLOSED TODAY Allowing Us to!Arrange and Slash the Prices on the Remaining Stock for Final Disposal WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Will Mark the Finish of Casper’s Greatest Sale of f SHOES FOR MEN WOMEN & CHILDREN When We Tell You That During These Four Days You Can Buy Shoes At Prices You Have Never Seen WE MEAN IT We Want Nothing Left Next Saturday Night But the Bare Walls EXTRA SPECIAL LADIES’ HIGH SHOES \\Ladies’ High Shoes in black and tan, vici kid or calf. Shoes that were selling|as high as $10.00 and $12.00... Made by E, P. Reed and Boyd Walsh. In military heels. Sacrifice price, per pair— 25c —_—_.____. EXTRA SPECIAL MEN’S LEATHER PUTTEES Men's Leather Puttees \in spring and strap. $4.00, $5.00 and $6.00 values $2.50 * All go at one price —_——.__ LADIES’ BLACK SATIN SLIPPERS Ladies’ Black Satin One Strap Slippers. $4.00 and $5.00 8: ficedl at, per detels sare $1.85 ————— LADIES’ AND GROW- ING GIRLS’ OXFORDS Ladies’ and Growitg Girls’ Oxfords, in black and brown; low and military heels. Values from $5 to $7 85. Sacrifice pric: ———— BOYS’ SCHOOL SHOES Sizes from 9 to 12 and 12 to 2, Regular $2.75 values. Pepstiead at, 1 65 e) ts pad eS > SELES Hundreds of People Who Mare Been Unable to Attend Gur Past Sales Now Have Their Opportunity COTTMAN-TURNER BUILDING SHOE STORE 120 West Second St.—Next Door to Chase’s Cafe Ladies’ White Canvas Oxfords Overshoes. values. ne ra CHILDREN’S SLIPPERS ular $2.00 and $2.50 value, Regular $2.50 to $5.50 values, need them this summe ‘ WHITE CANVAS OXFORDS $3.50 values. Sac- rifice price, per pair OVERSHCES . and Boys’ One-buckle $1.85 and $2.26 Sacrifice ; $1.00, per pair. _ also One-Strap Canvas 350 Men's price, A table full of high gude children’s slippers in patent, kid, black and brown. Reg- $1.45 Other Children’s Slippers In brown patent and kid $1.65 MEN’S WHITE OXFORDS $3.50 value Buy now, put ’em away, You'll 95c OPEN EVENINGS a