Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 13, 1925, Page 5

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FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1925 er and a special trial jury venire of at least forty names will be called later from the body of the Great Falls district, to report in court April 6, with view to supplementing the first venire of 70 names which will be called to report in court the WHEELER. CASE SFT FOR TRIAL morning of March 24. WASHINGTON, March 12.—Ad- ised today that the trial of his case | in Montana has been et for April 16, Senator Wheeler d he was pleased that an ear y has been ———pa hosen. . hd The senator’s Montana colleague, Hearing Upon Indictl fier wen oo as his chief counsel. fo Sa TYPHAID SFRMS ERE STOLEN (Continued From been such a lett ment to Come Up at GREAT FALLS, March 13.—The trial of B. K. Wheeler of Montana was this morning set down In the federal court by Judge Charles N. Pray for April 16 in Great Falls. ‘The trial will be before Judge Frank S. Dietrich of the district of | Idaho and Judge Prey t orning wired him of tho date set, the Idaho judge having night wired Judge Page One) but neither could ast remember wh ad become of-it Pray that any date from the middle) varchand ed Faiman with of April until.the first of May would| knowing what had become of it, be satisfactory to him. Judge C. N.| which Faiman denied and several Pray and Judge George M. Bour-| plows were struck before they were quin, federal judges of the Montana | parted, district both disqualified themselves!“ ‘Phe letter, which Faiman sald in the Wheeler trial, because of the! shepherd had written in the fall of} alleged statemer of nator | 1923, according to prosecutors, was Wheeler while the was United | destroyed with other applications for dtes ¢ for Mon | information regarding courses and because of a personal According to Fair story, as cation from him read by state attorn: told it, in the open senate use of the | Shepherd afterward attended Gisqua'ification of both judges on about a week their own motion, Judge Dietrich jon and never was named by the presiding judge of the United States circuit court to Shortly afterward, Falman said, preside in the case, he looked in an incubator where a Wheeler is ¢ J a Uni y of germ cultures was kept States grand j indictment h was aécessible to stu- turned here one year ing taken a retainer 0, with hi and done legal dents and found three tubes missing, one of which he was sure contained work for Gordon Campbell in the | typhus bacilli. The others also may Kevin-Sunburst of! ffeld north of | have held typhoid ge he said. Great Falls looking to the secu’ About three months ago a man ernment sted a | cases ‘alma at know 1 he did not school about our 1 been ele to 6 the nted United States sen: against Gordon © the man | ords. alleged to have Wheeler | “He later sald,” Dr. Faiman add. who was ed, “that if I had something on file the se he wanted, it would pay me Wheelk or something like that.’ ils to defra e been ing t a So {1 10, in the firat count | Et the man searched the schoo) Apr set for files, without assistance from him he is joined with C. F omhuff} Dr. Faiman said. This man told and E. J, Daley and in the other | him he would be well taken care of with L. C. Stev . head of the |{f he turned the files over to him Sunburst companies, and associated | but he never saw t an again. with Campbell for a brief time be-| Shepherd at his suburban home fore the opening of the Kevin-Sun-| when informed over the telephone burst field’ and who divided the ield with Campbell about the time that the latter struck the first ofl in of Faimi all a lie.” “I bad never heard of the univer- n's statements, said “it's the field sity before." Shepherd sald. “I had 8. C. Ford, former attorney gen-| never seen Faiman before until the eral of M and attorney for hearing of the inquest. I Wheeler was pi this morning Idn’t have taken any typhoid when the Wheeler case was set and | bacill! because I was never there. stated that the only attorneys of rec-| Marchand and Faiman have been ord for the defendant Wheeler wero adicting themselves. himself, Senator T. J. Walsh and J According to thelr statements, H. Baldwin, the latter law partner | the letter sent to the university has of Wheeler in Butte, and that so far] been at different times purported to as he was aware there would be no | have been signed and sunsigned.” other attorney: | ee ae ease It ts figured by court officials here| The number of medals issued by that the Wheeler case will take at | Great Britain in connection with the totals about 14,000, “Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN is the only thing that relieved me of constipation” regularly. Two tablespoonfuls daily, or in chronic cases, with every meal. Doctors recommend ALL-BRAN. It is nature’s own way of cleaning the intestine. It is a bulk food which sweeps the system of constipation’s poisons and stim- ulates normal, healthy action. Kellogge’s ALL-BRAN is guaran- teed to be permanently effective, if eaten regularly, or your grocer re- Beware of the dangerous dis- eases which are constipation’s toll. mstipation is dreaded, not only ‘or its insidious self, but for the erious diseases which may be raced to it. Mr. Palludon tells us’ he helpful story of his relief: turns the purchase price. Eat i Doing hard work whi ted ; i rsd a brought on pile fromwhichTsutered With milk, cream, fruits, or try for two years. I tried almost every the recipes printed on the package. remedy without success, Finally I tried MS dlacouan pad In has east ae Made in Battle Creek, Michigan ft again. It if the only thing that Served in leading hotels and restau. pelved me and T want everybody to rants, Your grocer sells it, (Signed) Joux Parcuvow, Clementon, You can get sure, prompt, per- ganent relief from constipation. imply eat Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN aah sh PIGGLY WIGGLY Rulletin THRIFTY PEOPLE ALL OVER THE WORLD ARE SAVING BY BUYING FROM PIGGLY WIGGLY The secret of our success is our large purchasing power, our small profits, the elimination of large sales force and the quality of our goods. PRICE—Low as possible, QUALITY—High as can ve had, and money back if not satisfied. Buy Your Groceries, Fresh Fruits and Vegetables from Piggly Wiggly EGGS, Fresh, doz BUTTER, Finest Creamery, |b. PINEAPPLE, Solar, No. 214, Broken Slices, per can TUNA FISH—Light Meat, No. 4----22¢ MARSHMALLOWS—Small size --_-J1e@ Large size CRACKER JACK—Per pkg. Chocolate Bon Bons All fresh stock, per |b. PIGGLY WIGGLY “ALL OVER THE WORLD” 412 East Second 736 CY Ave. 900 North Park “T'se destitute.” This pleading wall greeted Desk Sergeant Guy Wright at police head- quarters this morning when he took the telephone receiver off the hook at 10 o'clock and answered a long distance call from Denver. Sergeant Wright is a very patient and ami- able police officer and so after about ten minutes of alert listening with his ear glued to the telephone trans mitter, he was able to decipher the stream of voluable sentences utter> ed in the liquid tones of the planta: tion dialect of the colored race, | which fssued over the wire. | The lady telephoning from Denver save her name as Mre, Harry H. Davis. She sald that she was the wife of H. H. Davis, colored owner of a 32-room house at 357 West A street. A man by the name of Harry H, Davis, colored, opera! a room- ng house at 357 West A street and esides on the premises, The colored lady, who claimed to be Mrs. Davis, poured out her tale of woe over the telephone into the patiently listening ear of Sergeant (Copyright 1925, Casper Tribune) Automobiles DETROIT—Final production fig- ures of the domestic plants of Ford Motor company for 1924 are 1,790-, 278 cars and trucks and $3,010 trad- | tors. This compares with 1,915,485 cars and trucks and 101,898 tractors produced in 1923, Retail sales in- creased 87,736 to 1,873,581, absorb- ing most of the 1923 surplus. Agricultural Implements NEW ORLEANS — &Spring-like weather which has prevailed for the past week has sharply stimulated sales of agricultural implements and hardware. | Machinery WASHINGTON—Exports of ma chinery from the United States for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1924, totaled $130,000,000, or 14 per cent more than {n the preceding year, ac- cording to figures issued today by the department of commerce. Brit: ish exports for 1923 fell off 40 per cent and German 33 per cent. it HAMMOND, La.—Shipment of strawberries from this section has begun and the fruit is bringing fancy prices. The crop {s estimated at | 1200 carloads, or 70 per cent of nor- mal, and the movement will be In “ull swing another two weeks. SAN JOSE, Calif—The California Prune and Apricot Growers’ associa- tion is distributing to prune grow. ers $1,500,000 as a second payment from the marketing of the 1924 crop. Total payment for the crop is ex- Dig a chunk of rock out of the ground; mash it up into thin, tenu- ous fibres; spin and weave it into cloth to make fireproof sults {or men who must work in the vicinity | of flame; roll it out into felts and impregnate it with asphalt to make roll roofing; compress it under great hydralic pressure with Portland ce- ment into stone shingles; weave It into brake Uning; into Uning for bollers and smoke stacks; into grate backs, stove boards, tubing, automo- bile packing, electrical insulation, and a hundred and one other things. Impossible, you say? It can't be done? But {t can be done and ts being done every day. A single kind of ock {s put to use by manufacturers or these purposes and many others. \nd we use that rock, in its manu: actured form, every day tn the ordl- ary course of our lives and never hink anything about it. The name of this strange rock {s isbestos. And although it was prac: tleally unknown, in a commercial sense, as short a time ago as half a century, it {n really just about the Idest thing {n the world. General. ly speaking, it Is as old as the world. Back, m millions of years ago, tne the wholesome spread for bread NUCOA fine as shortening in high grade pastry the original - always sweet Rosenthal & Shelquist Bungalow Grocery H. H, Fitchie Grocery Plea for Money Carried To Police When Husband Fails Asbestos Is Rock Of A Hundred Uses And Number Is Increasing Wickman’s Fancy Eggs Fresh Candied, Clean, Full Size Look for the “W” on Each Egg Sold by Rialto Fruit Ca, @be Caspet Daily Cribune Wright. She declared that she had gone on a visit to friends in Omaha and on the return trip to Casper had stopped over in Denver. She said: “T’'se destitute, I'se heah in Den- vah brawke with no money to pay miah bills, I'se wiahed by husband and called him on the phone byt cannot get In touch with him.” Mrs. Davis said that when she left Casper her hurband had a telephone. “Now be done had the telephone re- mévahed,” she declared in inform: ing Sergeant Wright that the long distance operator had told her that Mr. Davis no longer had a telephone. According to the story told by Mrs. Davis, husband has disregarded her pleas for money to use to return to Casper from Denyer, Wires and letters sent him have beén unan-,. swered. Mrs. Davis rald. Sergeant Wright finally had to ring off {n order to stop the out- burst of effusive thanks into which Mrs. Davis launched when the desk sergeant informed her that he would have @ patrolman go to the Davis rooming house and nottify Mr. Davis of his wife's tinancial depression. | Commodity Trade News pected to pass the $15,000,000 mark. Packing House Products CHICAGO, March 12—The price of pork loins has advanced 10 cents here in the it week. They now are 29¢ and higher figures are pre- Gicted. Those in touch with the market say that the marketing of hogs this year will be nearly 40 per cent under last year. Livestock FORT WORTH—Lifting of the embargo against Texas cattle by Mexico completes the reopening of markets closed since the outbreak of hoof and mouth disease {n southeast Texas last fall. Many shipments held up by embargoes now will go forward. Shoes BOSTON—Rising prices for hides and leather are perplexing shoe man- Ufecturers in figuring prices for their fall lines. Most New England manufacturers are asking 4 to 5 per cent or 15 to 20c more per pair. Dry Goods EANBAS CITY—Dry goods whole- trade exceptionally good. Recent wash goods sales have been the largest In history. Hos- ‘ery. underwear, blankets , work clothing and flannel shirts are double the volume this'time last year. NEW ORLHANS—Retail dry goods dealers report spring sales broadening out satisfactorily, Best sellers are linens, silks, ght-weilght dress goods and all lines of summer goods and millinery. when the earth was passing through ite birth pains, volcanic fires and tremors compressed and tempered the strange rock down in the bowels of the earth. Water, fire, time, heat, cold or light—all these had no effect upon asbestos. It remained the same. And it is the same today {t waa those count! gee ago an almost everlasting substance which nature has been all this time preparing for the use of man. ‘There are many interesting things told about asbestos. A representa- tive of Johns-Manville, Inc., asbestos manufacturers of New York, talk: ing recently on the subject said: “For a Jong time before the useful. ness of asbestos was recognized it Wes considered something of a freak. There was some reason for this, see ing that asbestos seems to upset the laws of nature. It {s at once the hardest and the softest thing imagin- able. It is @ rock ag heavy and Gense as marble and yet composed of delicate eliky strands that look as if they could crumble under the touch. “The appearance of a mess of carded asbestos wool gives one the impression of a most inflammable material; yet touch a match to it und sbsolutely nothing happens; it is fireproof. It does not appear to be enduring, yet nothing has ever been able to destroy it. Steel may rust and decay as the result of ord!- nary weathering; asbestos remaine absolutely unaffected by atmospher- ic conditions. “In this advanced age of sclenti fic knowledge men have not been slow to appreciate the usefulness of asbestos. In 1870 there was prac: tleally no commercial use known for {t In 3910 there wére some hun- dreds of commercial uses found for asbestos, By 1920 asbestos mining and manufacturiny processes had been so perfected that there were a number of large mines-—principal- ly in the Province of Quebec and in Arizona—and a dozen factories tn different parts of the country manu facturing asbestos products. “To get one ton of asbestos fibre of various grades, it {s necessary to blast, mine, convey and put through the mill something like 15 tons of rock. The rock is blasted out with dynamite. The best long fibres are dislodged by workmen, by hand. After that, the rest of the rock which has been loosened by the blast is loaded into cars by steam shovels and conveyed to the mill. Here the fibre is separated by means of shaking screens and air suction from the rock where it has been imbedded for long ages. “The fibres are graded mechanic- ally into four grades, according to the uses to which they are to be put: . 1 is used for asbestos tex- tiles; No. 2 for asbestos paper and mill board; No. 3 for asbestos shingles and roofing; No. 4 for as- bestos cement. “In the roofing field particularly has asbestos demonstrated its use- fulness. A covering of asbestos shingles on a roof is a safeguard against roof-communicated fires. Not only that; when one's roof is covered with usbestos shingles it means that one is done with roof troubles for as long as the building stands. “The word ‘asbestos’ should be sy- nonomous with ‘protection.’ It stands unique—a world old rock which in this util{tarlan age ts put to use for man’s protection against the forces of nature YW. GLASSES TO HE OPENED FIRST OF WEEK Educational _ Subjects Will Feature Instruction Plans have been completed by the ¥. W. C. A. for the presentation of @ group of courses on educatfonal subjects for the benefit of those who would like to avail themselves of some form of study during the spring months. The classes will meet weekly for periods of from six to ten weeks and will bé open to any girl or woman interested. It {s an- ticipated that the plan of short time courses will be popular with those who came to the city too recently or for other reason have been unable to use other night school opportuni ties. * Any of the following subjects wi!! be given for which sufficient inter: est is shown; Social Psychology, a study in Personality, Business Wng- lish, Perplexing questions in Per- sonal Religion or other Bible study, Current Events, Reading Circle us: Ing plays of Ibsen, Barris or other authors as chosen by the group. The organization of the classes will occur Tuesday evening, March 17, at 7:30. The subject matter of course as contemp’ated will be out- ined and the time of meeting for each group will be arranged. Regis- trations for the various groups will also be made at that time. Business women are especially invited to join some one of the classes but others will be equally welcome. It is im- portant that all who desire to regis- ter shou'd do so at once and etart with the first meeting of the term. YEN CLUB WILL BE ORGANIZED TONIGHT A specia] gathering of the men of the First Congregationa! church and all others interested is to take place this evening in the form of a ban quet in the Salvation Army dining hall on North Wolcott street. The banquet is to be provided by the ladies of the church, and a fine mu- sical programme is arranged to {ol- low, Rey, E. Cooke will give an address on “The Church on the Fir ing Line," and plans will be laid for the organization of a live-wire club of the men members and adherents of the church, which will meet regu- larly and carry out @ definite policy and programm which it is expected will strongly appeal to the men as an outlet for the’ C tes in the days ah Tickets are on sale for tt at 75 cents each, and c from members of the church, the door this evening. All me sted in the church and its invited to be present. a ‘Office-Church’ For Washington Is Projected WASHINGTON, March 13.—Plane to replace the present structure of the First Congregational church here which {s attended by President and Mrs. Coolidge, with a ten story “of. fice-chureh” building are being con sidered by the church officials, The church, a sixty yeat land mark of downtown Washington, t# to be torn down for the constructior of a new place of v Pp. POISON CASE IS PROBED MEDINA, Ohio, March 13.—Coun: E. R. Williams Stores W. H. Brown Grocery W. W. Anderson Grocery ty Prosecutor Joseph Seymour today awaited a report from the Elyra city chemist on his analysis of « Package of coffee found on the farm of Fred Glenke at Valley City, to de termine whether {t contained polson that caused the death of Glenke and his wife and the serious illn of three of thelr sjx children, SPREGHER'S JEWELRY STORE TO OPENFOR BUSINESS SATURD Saturday morning will ona t proprietors of Sprechers’ Pharma in sole possession of thelr jeweiry department, immediately inside the right hand store entrance. They have placed the new department in the hands of 1. W. Pope, a jewelry ex- pert of many years’ experience who NEW PRESBYTERIAN fe aves so oe sow emo: | CHURCH PICTURED IN d thelr bargain prices in connec: rst was formerly the location of the Ayres Jewelry company, and is | Ideally situated for a high class jew- elry establishment. The stock {s not quite complete but enough new art- {eles have been received to hold the formal opening tomorrow morning. A silver tea spoon will be presented to every lady who registers at the Sprecher Jewelry department on Sat- urday. That's a real in cement, isn’t it? To celebrate the opening of the A beautiful and attractive publica- tion showing different views of the new building of the First Presbyter- lan church of Casper will be distrib- member and friend of taberna mo lea ter, e accompa g descrir the ar setting forth hitect PAGE FIVE RAIL WORKMEN ARE ROBBED BY BANDIT TRIO LOS ANGELES, Cal., March 13.— Three armed men early this morning held up a Santa Fe work train at Wiseburn siding, between here and Redono Beach, lined up 100 of the company’s laborers after routing them out of their bunks and robbed them of money estimated at between $1,000 and $5,000, according to a re- Port to the sheriff's office here. The laborers offered no resistance and the robbers escaped in an automo- w bile PERSHING TO BE HONORED WASI for a tri {arch 13.—Plans phal parade for General | Pershing on his return here Mond: from his South American trip have new “store within a store,” Spre- cher’s will stage a smashing sale of everyday drug items which should bring crowds of bargain seekers |: the store. Standard remedies everyday articles carried by eve! drug store have been cut ir until many of the {tems are quoted absolutely at cost. There is a half page ad in today’s issue of the Trib- une Which will tell you all about prechers’ formal jewelry opening this fino struc: at Eighth and price once. been made here by Washington pe- triotic organizations. | Government officials, eclvic and nercial representatives will the navy band will play 1 there will be speech making. An le parade on Pennsylvania d and twenty miilien y square mile of the Brain and brawn pay tribute to this coffee of the West As you hover over a cup of Hills Bros. Coffee, the aroma that floats upward sets your whole being astir. Eagerly you lift it to your lips and dash it down . . - drain every drop. That first savory sip tells you the aroma has not held out false promise. Stimulating alike to mind and muscle, Hills Bros. Coffee is the favorite drink of the coffce-loving West. Just break the vacuum seal of a tin of Hills Bros, and liberate that wonderful aroma! Brew a cup and taste that marvelous flavor! Any wonder they call it The Recognized Standard from the Coast to the Missis- sippi? To insure this rare flavor reaching your table in its original freshness and strength, Hills Bros. originated the vac- uum pack for coffee, It is still fresh when- ever you break the scal—days, weeks, even years later! Hills Bros. Coffee is economical to use. HILLS BROS In the original Vacuum Pack which keeps the coffce fresh, © 1025, mi Reg. U. S, Pat. OF COFFEE ere ena E EUR EEE

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