Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 16, 1925, Page 7

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ib MONDAY, MARCH 16, 1925 TEAPOT BANS | and guing to Wall by the y of the Continental Trading com- pany, now defunct, which, the gov- ernment charges, wag organized in part as an intermediary between | Sinclair and Fall. However Judge ivennedy reserved in his ruling the 1 right to strike from the records the | bank accounts of Fall when they are tacked onto the rear end of the (Continued From Page One) chain of evidence if in his estima- lishment, should alone suggest -to| ion the Unk is not complete and the court great care and caution in| does not definitely connect in a con- administering rules of evidence. The| spiracy the two principals of the rule of “necessity” and “exigency’ | great ofl reserye tangle. does not seem to have here been Hampered by the ruling but still satisfid. fighting with the determination that Another thing which strongly] no cause is lost until the victory is appeals to the court is the fact that | announced, Mr. Roberts and Mr, at the present time the evidence] Pomerene introduced photostatic which 1s here tendered {s incom-| coples of coytracts alleged to have petent and immaterial, for the rea- son that no attempt has been made to trace the bends in controversy from Sinclair as thelr source, with- out whieh connecting link the whole evidence now tendered would have to be stricken. 4 been made between the Prairie Oll and Gas company and the Sinclair Crude Ol Purchasing company on ong side and the now defunct Conti- nental ‘Trading company of Toronto on the other, under which the two American companies agreed to buy “The court is always inclined to | 23,333,383 barrels of oll from the indulge counse] in the matter of} Continental eompany at a price of order of proof, but here the order | $1.75 to $2.50 a barrel depending on has been so strangely reversed and the evidence tendered so manifestly incompetent at the present time, that If the court's discretion is to be exercised as the books say jn mat- ters of this kind, it would seem to be the court's duty in a case of this importance to at least sustain the objections until such time as it ap- pears that the evidence so strongly contended for {s either competent the quoted price. Another copy of a contract introduced by the govern- ment, alleged to have been between A. E, Humphreys, Texas Oll produc- er and the Continental Trading com- pany, whereby Humphreys was to Produce and sell to tho Continental the 93,333,383 barrels of oil, was in- treduced. Still another contract un- der which the Sinclair company and the Pioneer company guaranteed the or material and such, with the light] purchase of the oil from the Contl- that th urt now has, will be its] nental was made a part of the rec- ruling. ord. Humphreys under these con- In a ke y preludé to his de-| tracts, was to sell to the Continental cision the federal judge quoted from| for $1.25 a barrel and the Contl- rulings on similar procedure mude} nental was to reap'a profit of at by the eighth, second and fourth] least 25 cents a barrel on the resale federal circuit courts of appeal, lay-| to the two American Purchasing con- ing particular stress on precedent] cerns. upheld by the eighth circuit, under According to charges previously which court jurisdiction ‘the falls. Cheyenne CHEYENNE Merch 16,— (By The Associated Press}—Beaten on @ point of law whieh prevented made by the government, the inter- company agreement ceases to oper- ate after some 8,000,000 barrels of oll had been sold, giving the Conti- nental company a profit of $2,300,000 or thereabouts, Of there profits, the introduction in evidence of the] some, according to the government; bank accounts of Albert B. Fall, for-| was invested in Liberty bonds, and mer secretary of the interior, in an| as much as $190,000 of these bonds effort to prove ty bonds from Harry F the parsage of liber- Sinclair to eventually found their way to the credit of Fall. According to the gov- Wall, government counsel began a| ernment’s charges, Sinclair was one new line of attack in the Teapot) cf the organizers of the Continental Dome lea: onulment suit here to-| Trading company. and put witnesses on the stand to trace the bonds from Fall instead of from Fall as it originally set out to Sinclal to do. This move followed the ruling of i Blake Kennedy in objection by defense ank records of Fall Texas and Pueblo, Paso, ing record: of a third party Dall and Sinclair The first witness to be called un- der the government's new line of at- tack was Henry L. Phillips of Tulsa, Okla., president of the Sinclair Crude Ol Pnrchasing compan$. Through Phillips, government counsel further attempted to connect the Continental Trading company as am intermediary between Sinclair and Humphreys for the purchase and resale of large amounts of oll. At ‘the time the contracts were signed between Humphreys and the Continentat and the Sinclair Crude Under the ruling of Judge Ken-| Oi! Purchasing company and the government counsel—Owen J.| Humphreys companies, the Sinclair sand A Pomerene—will be | concern.was half controlled by the to establish a beginning with ven am opportunit chain Of -evidence TAKE SALTO IF AHEUMATISM [9 BOTHERING YOU Tells Rheumatism Sufferers to Take Salts to Get Rid of Toxic Acid Rheumatism {s no respecter of age, sex, color or rank. If nof the most dangerous of human afflictions it {s one of the most painful. ‘Those sub- Standard Of company of Indlana, Phillips testified. The Sinclair and Prairie Ol] and Gas companies made a repurchase contract for the Humphreys Oil with the Continental Trading company on May 2, 1923, the witness said. At that time he was aware ‘that only approximately 8,000,000 of the 83,333,888 barrels of: oil contracted for by the Canadian concern had been delivered, Phillips stated. The repurchase contract cailed for §400,- 000 to be paid the Continental he di clared. The tentative contract between Humphreys and the Sinclair and the Prairie companies for the purchase of a similar amount of oll on the termination of the Continental con- tract was signed for the directors of the two latter concerns by Sin- clair 4nd Robert W. Stewart, Phil- lips said. Neither, he added, at that ect to rheumatism should eat no| time were members of the board of sweets for awhile, dress as warmly | directors of those companies. as possible, avold any undue ex-| phillips stated that the “couldn't posure and above all, drink lots of pure water, Rheumatism is caused by uric acid gr body waste matter, and is often generated in the bowels and absorbed into the blood. It is the function of the kidneys to filter this poison from the blood and coast it out in the urine; the pores of the skin are also a means of freeing the blood of this impurity. In damp and chilly, cold weather the «kin pores are closed thus foreing the kidneys to do double work; they become weak and slug- sish and fall to eliminate this toxic acid, which keeps accumulating and circulating through the system, eventually settling in the joints and muscle: ausing stiffness, soreness and pain, called rheumatism. At the firet twinge of rheumatism xet from any pharmacy about four ounces of Jad Salts: put a table- spoonful In ss of water and ove W lemon 4 ned with lthia, and 1s used with excellent results by thousands of folks who are subject to rheumatism.—Ady, be sure” whether or not Sinclair was present at conferences wher the re- purchase contract was discussed. The witness was not certain as to who directed him to meet Osler, president of the Continental ‘Trading company to terminate the transac- tion, Osler finally met him, Phillips said after he sent a telegram to the Can- adian company official requesting him to come to New York. On cross examination Phillips safd that Sinclair was not in New York when the contract was signed and tigat he believed the oil magnate was in Burope at that time. Cross examined briefly by Attor- ney Chandler for the Sinclair Crude Oi Purchasing company, Phillips said he “had no recollection that the per barrel price of the oll was def- initely fixed “Den't ¥ know that mentione at lips?” Chan the price $1.50 m quired. nus helping “f could not say that I these rheumatic | j¢ the witnes nsive, and ts id of grapes and| LONDON—Ignace Jan Paderew played for the radio, broadcasting a Program of Chopin, Lisz and Sehu- bert and one of his own nocturnes to British Isles music lovers, Shepherds Face Accusers A Airmail Service Mr, and Mrs. Wililam D, Bhepherd, snapped as they arrived in Chi- cago the second time to face thelr investigators in the probe begun into the death of William Nelson McClintock, Bhepherd’s millionaire foster sem. Che Casper Daily Tribune Here is Mrs, Helen Elwood Stokes. Ske answered nearly every WASHINGTON, M ed Press),- rch 16. {Unit- Golf is a popular and not PAGE SEVEN ae Helen Elwood Stokes on Witness Sia don the witness stand question put to her by “Oooh,” “No’ j ha IU. S. Foreign Trade Balance Was Favore ra yle Last Month | | | | WASHINGTON, Ma Which the commerce department 1 trade of the Unite kept statistics, except for the = 1 4mmediately following the avorable trade t tn 1984 F bruary imports were 0,000 for February, commerce de 000,000 while exports were §365,- nent figures today plac ex ) St SEE5.908, 00 imports during Febru: The outflow of gold, which began’ 94,087,024 panint exporta of December, still was in progress Although the gold: move- against the United was considerab than in January, In Decem: gold exports were $39,674,658 ry all of the months during the eo years imports of gold have eater than viitbicaet ii heavily @ export ntire | South on Eve of Big ie ‘Comme reial-Industrial Era t Chic: f against accusation made by > denied e Sporting Goods Houses Are’ Increasing Far East Sale goods’ manufacturers n sporting BY J, ¢. nov load vessels here direct from the (Copyright 1925, The Casy e) | « urs without lighterage. 1 In: | ertputive oubtedly will be Contributions from Ministers for Publication Under This Head the i th Cargs of Georgia. Cotton Are Welcomed; Manuscripts Should Be Typewritten, Not Ea- ceeding 250 Words and Should Be in This Office Saturday. SORA. BESRRSTIA trie regources of this who contemplate exporting goods to . : crowing by leaps an¢ too expensive a game in the Duteh| the far cast. : fs ‘9 /he rns Presbyterian Tabernacle, 06" good. 1 "al : tents laa te East Indies, i¢ tho player takes pre-| While golf balls cost all the way |%®Y: Chas, A. Wilson, D. D., Minister | Were then Ene Rome r procession throug: cautions and does not lose too many | from 66 cents to $1.60 each, they are| In the chaotic contradictions of| nada 2s p a rea Cooper river channel golf balls, according to a pamphlet | seldom lost on the'links because each | Popular judgment, to the question of ae Bee ct involves the cutting of prepared by C. J. North of the spe-j player usually has with him two cad-|Jesus to the disciples, Poter on, Da ae teen erat He canal from tho Santee river to clalties division.of the department of | dies. One of, these is the regulatic with his great confessior » st citizens would live in| CHARLE! C., Mar © Cooper river on whtch Charles- commerce and published by the de-| caddie, who ts paid a standard price rt the Christ, the Son izes, Which {s not true, | Cheap and: t » power ated. Tt ts expected to partment of the interest of Ameri-| of about 16 cents a round of 18 holes. Jesus is the answer | ple of our city do not | quate transportation. and 50,000 kilowatts of energy. The other is known as the “Jaga” or |to tho universal longing for God to Pea eney He tive In| fon are the factors whi n corpany of New watchman, whose dutles ave to go {dwell among men. ‘This longing ta| °° 0M 1ny OF them Tive ih | ing toslitt this gection of ly made # survey of ahead of the player and keep an eye | not alone of the Jews, but is found| {!° ” ep il and dress In into a@ new era of prosperit and final action now on the little white ball, Because the|in the poet Greeks ana| ‘?° nd have luxuries, | Working on. that. theor : pplomentary report b jaga” does not have to carry Romans, the fay: j} & man has but what |ton is putting forth renewed energy ading hydroelectric sticks, he is only paid 12 cents fe tlan worship, and Indian myst geliak rth. If} to develop ite value ay a port and 1e countrys round of 18 holes. T con oe PorOvay Ane |S, distributing center, for a. tromene PATLMENT Interosts in athletics {s slowly | th Son ks Se eecinele copie. 2 gD ee pt SEAGE sprea q @ peoples of} r c mpe movemen is -palculater a , due to the jnfluence of the west cd blood in his veins and you| Mts place industrial Ife an a/as a whole, since the program pro-| and indeed, of the entire Piedmont 3 sce pesididgtacibuwrPhun, and'to eta:|‘will discov the @inapaetancel Ue basis a at leanse. soc jet Tt is | vides for a strenuous eff to cap tian, will not curtall acreage this Yeanonae vin ‘ieeecan Manta aha HEAR nsGE: thels onn | vaternite, RpAlbey Gere eovel mn ston t ie ure h to bring | ture export shipments from tbe mid- ; use oh of how muoh Geena noa cr en ceRe oul. il ceotae aenge caMentin hs eesidones,| line thay’ ite: te. moe the. sda ce, hl ye Fesults to pass by saving In-| dio west ax Woll as the traffic to and the, planters will ralse, how: Political passion and the clamor of} 2road, have ecma in contact with | father and you will discover the im-| .,on from sin, and that is the mis- ate High ae, 2 onbbeigads "Plavtig hae teen Luitermis an. inflaméa public, however, are| the athletic traditions of the United | of paternt It is pre moe the ete ne and. the Carplifas, lata th tite ceneiice. matidnerce eae dead issues now. Judge Kennedy,| States and Great Britair le that Jesus learned from Hi E . Port. AuLnOrves: here a Se aa fh ree 6 reputed as fair a judge as alts on4|° 10 1928, the far east was second|mojier the teaching of His birth. | that Charleston has rem: 1 cute to tlie danthat bite khan federa) bench anywhere, will decide| only to Canada at the top of the list | The diselple to whora Jesus resigne n mnal foallivien, 8. ohanrel Sate erat eat tate te atte ihe. foaepnt<caberonig ane cktie ier | aetna Wrulaa Malas! chetoraets:cor|the care of, Fle. mothe cab the | cp Mf permits entry of shins drawing up tofevity: some growers. have had tn and the evidence. Those in Chey-| ®Porting goods. Unquestionably, the Jerucifixion was John. A significant 35 feet of water, adequae warehouse ans a v 1925 operations, enne who have followed the case/Wamphlet says, the Far East is cap-|phrase “the only begotten Son of | a ire and ndid rail connections,| Moral credit has becomea big fac- closely and with unblased minds are| able wf buying athletic goods in|God" shows John's conception ot | ~ removal’ of the ait at ta. Daves | tor 30, farm «ft - Po RVINCads that Hee ae earn tocet an [nitOh laizwedienniiies ska ile inflate “a Ipod suanetorsie hia }of other Atlantic and guit ports 18} tion. Banks full of money but far has made out an extremely wenk | itants come to realize the benefit |the company of the disciples after | | ected to.aid the ¢ | bankers now are willing to loan it case and that Judge Kennedy's de-|nd entertainment to be derived |the death of Jesus, and it is easy | pede ; "he rail mileage trom Chi Solr’ £2 the Saymer who as) prored cision will vindicate Sinclair and sus.| from sports—and {sa market well |to, understand the current opinion | arleaton is about the same his respect for tho sacredness of tain the validity of the Teapot Dome| worth cultivating. jamong them of Jesus as the Son of | —— of New York, -wh pk Rew Bork while {bie pose financial obligation, lease. Baseball has attained’ remarkable | od, We are to think of Him a . Sinclair ts a business man. eo} popularity in Japan and the Philip. | adorned With divinity and so confess | By CARL D, GROAT , | bas built-a.vaet fortune on. strictly | pines. Jape® from time to time, has|Him before men. Not even our wor- | ‘United Press Staff Correspondent.) busines principles. With this view| sent college baseball teams on tour | ship is to obscure Christ, He is not| | PERLIN, Ma&h 14. — (United | 4 of the man in mind, it seems fatuous| in the United States, and the-calibre | to be forgotten in the midst of re-| Press)—Communisis in a _ bitter If thi to suppose that he would {nvest| of her tennis players in international s or other activities. A bril-| *ttement tonight accused the pc mane | many miljiong of dollars in a fraudu-| contests is well known to all devo: writer went into a church to| |e of tre in connection wit lent contract, the validity of which| tees of that sport. Manufacturing a place where he might read fatal riofing at Halle in which a half might be ultimately questioned and] P ically all the cheaper sports |{¢w verses fromi the Bible. It was a | “0%°" persons were killed and more which roight be cancelled, in con-| equipment itself, Japan offers only | beautiful church with but one fault, | 2" 4 score injured in fighting be | sequence, at any moment. That, it} Iimlied market for high-class spe- {it was devoid of light, To read the | ‘Ween reds and the. police | Je pointed out, would not have been| cialties of American make. It has|!ible he had to go outside the|«4® the meetings to select a suc good business por the logical course|even successfully exported’ tennis| church. He entered another church, | eso" to ate oe eeiany. Soe of a good business ma: That | racqueta to the United” States, as|eautiful in design, with but one|° Germany, got under way ther thought has been expressed many | well as other countries. fault, the acoustics, and he could | “9s bitter feeling on all sides, | times in Cheyenne: during the trial| © ‘The Philippines on the other hand, |"0t hear what was sald, It is im-| Communists seized on the Halle| and would seem worthy of serious| import all thelr baseball equipment | Portant that in every service of wor- | ‘cident for violent propaganda, Vl conisderation. from the United States. That sport is|*hlp that something of Jesus must DOWH ih Mage, BPA> Mev ering || But stepping for a moment out-| still in its infancy in Australia, be seen or heard. The service is und thelr murder regime,” daid the| t side the present court caso, what| though there are a number of teams | Most effective w it.men. are | communist: statement, eading that! s > $4 8 r has beon the result of the Teapot| organized into leagues which play a} neouraged to confess Him y | the: Hall Secret: was upslepe 1S NOT on the Box, it is NOT 4 Dome lease? Sinclair bas spent $26,-| regular schedule of “summer” and | falth confessing Him we find a foot-|™U"der without provocation Frei reaa 000,000 in developing tho Teapot| “winter” baseball. White most of the | ins for our religious life, Christian-| © communists charged police | Dome field. He has spent: $20,000,000 | equipment used in the land “down |!ty is the religion of the common | f*®d on people packed in a hall at- more in constructing a pipe line 700| under,” comes ‘from the United|Man Whe lives on tho sacrifice of | dings 2 political meeting “without | miles long from the Rocky Moun- , & goodly part of ft fs im | Christ, Our greatest concern is to| Provocation”. The police In # coun: | tains to the Missouri river, which | ed from Canada | Dertuade men to accent Him, and to |'or statement charged the reds Ares) “ ” ral, | a nfess Him in word and life igs T RO. UININE has opened an outlet for Wyoming | Bt tn worst, €n8 At | The est information obi acl here is no other B MO The evidence in the case hes! | What Is the Supreme Mission of | Mdicated that forelgn communists, proved, moreover, that the Teapot | @ the Church? | Unbestal tor Helle ito” ale. fn the Proven Safe for more than a Quarter of a Century as an Dome iease was a splendid bargain | t E By Rev. Lewis ©, Carter, D. D ROSS R RCRD Er WOE". LATE “ly *®| effective remedy for COLDS, GRIP and INFLUENZA, and for the government. It made pos-| peares. Methodist ‘church, |meeting had been widely advertisea| @8 & Preventive. Price 30 Cents. sihle the establishment on the At-| lantic seaboard of tank depots bullt | at enormous cost by Sinclair and filled with great reserves of oll which otherwise would have remained in| the earth and which are now read: for immediate use by the navy. ‘Tl sliding scale of royalties which, un- der his contract, Sinclair must pay | thes government ranges from % to 50 per cent. Royalties of- fered by other companies that bid for the lease were far below these figures. So, according to facts brought out WARREN SHOWN in court, the government drove a shrewd bargain in making the Sin-| Clair lease. The yalue of the Sin-| clair end of the deal is more to question. It was originally est! mated there were 135,000,000 barrols y | of oll in th apot Dome Nov jit seems dou , that there ar ,000,000 barrels. It is believed here that if t reimburse him © government would) Sinclair would gladly | surrender the Jease which has repre: | sented such a tremendous invest ment and has been the source to him of so much trouble. sourt, took up the leade | een Inte D of the | "Tones Te he Son of Man fs come fo reek and to savé that which wes | 2d & number of French und Brit ifr t.'—Luke 19:10, 7 | ish leaders were present. As onal “As Thou hast sent me into. th | Englishman concluded his remark | The First and Original Cold and Grip Tablet |! world, even so have I also oar France has a river ¢ | town named A sent | 1d."—John 17:18, » church } the we and Sweden a Some criticise th Inclu¢ (Continued From Page One) |i does not enter polltical life with | SC eee rles B, Warren to be attorney|* Party to reform politics; because general, with both sides convinced |{t does not enter the {dustrial strug “y 7 the culcome would be anotl re * and espouse one faction he sh SPE p fol PROL D Section, |dustry as an organization or u LU President Coolidge’s announce-| °@Use It does not as an orgs ay n of her ment that he would c a recess|“ttemp the cleansing of the social j I appointment to Mr. Warren if he} | again fails of confirmation fired the the church should n opposition with a new and fi interfere with ’ | e : determination, pired . th qu the social problems, put Democrats » insur 1 be mere Lr to dl raple orship alor is spe r of » house 1 Goft lis mi. = “ attorney general, opened the defense | ‘he ehureh 4 - tual ay ; jot Mr. Warren and t esident,| When Individuals ave saved from sin hile Senator Borah, Republican,| they will th leanse politics ¢ * i z Idaho, and Reed, Democr Mis.|Tform the industrial and ial] on the New Street Lighting System | ng coalition fighting for defeat of tho fee Sanne writer has well said | : nomination, Under an agreement| “After all the economie problem is Tout : Recover Quick previously ‘made, the speephes were| Nt caplial and labor, Tt tw the cap: | | Wiring—Jnstalling Globes and Bulb: 4 . Umited and a vote was to be taken| !tallst and laborer, ‘The’ danger {x | | ‘ . From Grippe doriha tine ettcroeon not that the former will get the | Connections 2 Senator Gof atter. It is, rather, that the devil| Instant stomach relief! Harm as! | Fl 1 ade by Mr, W will get them both. ‘The problem of |The moment “Papes Diapepsin" | or u! iwveradvats cly is not that of new tenements | reaches the stomach all distress from | was done by After a spell of Grippe or flu,| government in arbitration cases and | Pt of new folks, and folks always | acid mach or ligestion ends. | when your system is all run down|as ambassador to Japan and to| have been individual, %¢ is ours pri-| Immodiate rellef from flatulence, | and your legs aro so woak they can| Mexico, ‘The attempt of the senate,| arly, not to discuss problems, buf | gases, heartburn, palpit ayjon, full. | hardly hold up your body, the best| “for partisan reasons” to prevent | {9 Proclaim the gospel; not to secure hn pressure thing You cat do to get ck your | the president trom selecting | reforms, but to call men to repent tion for a few health and strength ck, is to start |met to his own lik! wos not to ose saloons, but t it b ly. Drug right in taking Taniac; by Senator Gillett yopen moon's heart It is not t rtisement & CON Fc It's wonderful how soon you reall: “After Senator Reed had rey d| build tenements, but r SE ate <page do start to improve! Tanlac sails} Once more the nominee's connection | %tem not to der at vopemg rite ® right in and puts the em in| with the sugar industry, and had re-| {0 save Driers from their sins; not |) Hank's Used Car Market We furnished all Electrical Supplies fighting trim. It cleams bio newed his char of an attempt to| ‘9 furnish the world with new | 426 W. Yellowstor revitalizes the digest! organs, | Violate the antitrust 1 Senator| but to furnish the world with new || PHONE 1008" re gives you an appetite for solid food | rked back to Daniel Web:| men 8 sfc ra oe mind and he art d Wire—Bulbs —Connectors—Globes— and makes you feel like a new pe defense of the senate's un-|%"d motive by the grace of God and you feel like a new per T and moral right to| And then theso men will go out and|| WE BUY USED CARS Switches Nothing will turn the trick quite | block nominations turn the world upside down.” Highest Cash Prices Paid as fast as Tanlac, made after the| “I would not at all challenge the me any that if you give men | | famous Tanlac formula from roots, | integrity of the president of the) ‘he right environment they will all? United States,” sald Senator Borah.| £ barks end herbs gathered from the four corners of the earth. Buy “a bottle today and get started back to full strength and vigor. Take Tanlac Vegetable Pills for Constipation TANLAC FOR YOUR HEALTH “expect him, knowing him as T do, | to do his duty and to meet bis con victions; and if I did not do that here I would forfeit the respect tho president of the United State Comets have been known to « ceed a hundred million miles length and “ten million’ miles breadth, Now in Our New Location | CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE ll at | ‘hE LEAVE DAILY AT 9:30 A. M. PARE 257 SOUTH CENTEF ve# you approalmately 12 hours’ travel between Cas and Rawline WYOMING MOTORWAY t Cronk ortotion Office PHONE Compar ay

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