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PAGE TWO OPPONENTS OF WORLD COURT FAGING DEFEAT. = Ae Failure — to Maintain}: ' Barrage of Oratory to Bring Vote. on the can g Borah of mittee, have bee re unless at once an, r ratific: the issu © ren y, aft Gs / l Maus Drink |BAKER’S BREAKFAST COCOA Hasa full rich flavor delicious to the taste; it is invigorating and sustaining. Henry C. Sherman. Food Chen , in his book “Food Prod- Jocoa, in addition Esta! Dorchester, Mass, Mowrasat, CANADA Booklet of Choice Ri Cc Walter Baker & Co. Ltd. isbed 1780 8 , CHEYENN ‘s heal: } fine of $500 i” j ty jafl const ed upon trict Court Baker wa iIt lons of Hquor tenced to pay a 115 days in jail Spe out ulting a hearin aw CHEYENNE, schools have not since the pils are reported Burns schools. In town so they classes, It 1s reported resolution proposing jherence to the tribunal, Opposition forces Jed by Chairman he foreign relations com- n Wisconsin, tion w ed" Baker by Judge A. Riner in the Laramie County Dis. Thursday s placed under arrest two for the ownership of a still rs intoxicating 3, arrested ift's officers who found several was sen-| $200 fine and serve} His cohort, n 2, Wyo., Some of the Laramie county rural fied that upe ne burden of continuing they Senator Lenroot, re- are willing leading tt red the uit by insisting that the nin.in night session. ge found the opponents momentary uncertainty. roll call at Senator Borah’s to determine Senator Blease, democra h Carolina, took the floor for ur attack on the court, fo in hich recess was taken unt wR FINE AND 80 DAYS “:) MAKE UP PENALTY FOR | CHEYENNE BOOTLEGGER vyo., Jan w to a charge of} Nquor week by his car w a $1,000 boha SHOW BLOCKED ANAS neLAY SCHOOL. WORK Jan, resumed sessions holidays condition of the roads, in the northern part of the county The Carpenter schools are expect- el to open next Monday. absent from and at Hillsdale and | Pine Bluffs, pupils are being kept | because of the particularly Many pu. the may attend their th hat the roads In the eastern part of Laramfe county are the worst they ave been in yen Se To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative BROMO QUINNE Tablets. The Safe and Proven Sit Remedy, (The First and Original w Cold ano Grip Tablet.) Signature of Grove on the box. 31 iCe 129 West Second St. Just to fill a daily want. For people who Rib Boil Hamburge Roast, | Round Steak Sirloin Stea Shoulder St Pot Your doctor will tell you Kraut is good for you. Just try it.| Bacon, sugar Quart, 15¢ Hams, sugary LAMB half, Ib. . Leg of Spring I Shoulder Lamb, basket. eati MEYER BROTHERS MARKET Old Public Market—138 E. Fifth St. SOME PEOPLE BUY MEAT It's not what they Pay—not what they Get—just so it’s meat, to balance the daily meal , WE WANT YOU FOR A CUSTOMER SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY PRICES GOOD AT EITHER MARKET MEATS OF QUALITY ts, etc BEEF b. m | POR! | 10¢| Loin Pork Chops, 15¢| 454) 20.0 20rk Roget, Iho tea 25¢| Pork Shoulder, 1b., whole 30c| Fresh Hams, whole or half, ~-~176 pound __. nn Sausage, Ib. 38c ~-=-27 Ke | Pure Lard, 1b, Frankfurters, Tb. MEYER BROS. CENTRAL MKT. care for good meats—the kind of meats that make for us steady customers—is the better kind, corn-fed steer beef, pig pork, milk-fed veal, spring lamb, sugar-cured smoked mea K | Loin Pork Roast, Ib. | Shoulder Pork Roast, lb._-_25¢ 100 Per Cent Pure SMOKED MEATS ured, 1b,— 2734, 30c, 35 cured, whole or Phone 10 Ib__--321ge ~28¢ Pork -------25¢6 Phone 303° SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY WINESAP APPLES—Bu,|GOLDEN WEST FLOUR ookir Fine GUARANTEED STRICT-|bag - LY FRE Doz FIRST GRADE Late storage, -— ntrai Grocery Co. \ TO rolls for new crop. 35¢ [0 ILET PAPER—4 big 25¢ 129 West Second St. a __25e apple for|—The big white loaf kind. # 48-Ib. f $141.75 bag $2.35 et |24-lb. 2 $1.25 | SH EGGS y ; 60¢ Vy BEANS — Michi- EGGS—|gan hand picked. Clean, Phone 10 Amert- if a quorum 15,—A nd 90 days in the coun uted the sentence pass b.— Wife of Cowboy, M Spends Half mn ne i t, a 1 il Mrs. Ik By Central Press. KAW CITY, Okla., Jan. 15.—This Uttle northern Oklahoma prairie town, bordering on one side of the famed Osage Indian reservation, on ‘nother the Kaw reservation, and on the east extremity of the old Cherokee Strip, is one place in the southwest where art and cattle are eal riv.ls as conversational topics. You can walk along Kaw City’s sain str et and worth of Shorthorns and Herefords, or of Corot and Innes, with about equal chances of finding intelligent »pinions based on first-hand informa- tion. also has obtained ownership of a collection of paintings for which ap- proximately $500,000 has been paid. And Kaw City has acquired a re- cent and Intense interest in art as a result. The magic of black gold explains how art has so successfully invaded the cattle domain., Details of the story involve the seemingly hope- less yearnings of a woman cut off from the world on a lonely ranch with a land-poor cowboy husband struggling against the ever men- ancing ogre of debt. Ike Clubb of Kaw City was the cowboy husband. For nearly a half century he herded cattle in the thwest. When the Cherokee Strip was opened in 1892 he settled in the Saw reservation and started pur- chasing lands. Soon he was land poor. Then the 011 Gushes The oil boom struck the Kaw country In 1 The land which j bad made Ike Cobb poor for years now made him rich, On his land in the Kaw reservation there are 3 ofl well It was while Ike Clubb enterprising young cowboy that he married a country school teacher, the Mrs, Ike Clubb of today. She was an elocutionist of note, an artist, a dreamer. While her hus- band was herding cattle Mrs. Clubb was dreaming, LIRECTORS, OFFICERS | OF TWO CHEYENNE BANKS ARE ELECTED CHEYENNE, Wyo., Jan. 15.—The stockholders of the American Na tional bank elected the following fficers for 1926: John W. Hay, president; Weston ond Charles J. » presidents; W Storey and D. T. int caghlers. The directors of John W. Dz ¢ was an H, Ohnhaus. Fair, cashier; ic E. Warren, W. EB. Mullen, Herbert V. Lacey, Alex Nimmo and L. A Miller, The Stock Growers National bank anne the the AWE. F he following officers for John Clay, chairman of A. H. Marble, president Jel and A. V. McIvor, vice nresidents: Albert Cronland, cashier; Douglas Fuller, Loulse Smith and Harold Kerrigan, assistant cashiers: noed t J. T. M. Connor, general auditor; M Nesbit, auditor, and N, F, Godbe, manager of the bond depart. ment Se entii Z Wife Justified In Lake Killing GREAT FALLS, Mont., Jan, 15.— (*)—A_ coronet’s jury yesterday justified Mrs, Elsie Young in the \tlling of her husband, Charles 5, Young, at their home tn Black Eagle, 1 Grent Falls suburb, Wednesday evening he jury held that Mra, Young noted in nelf-defense and ex- onerated her from all blame. she wns released after the Inquest Mrs. oung the Inquest testimony , shot her husband while he was walking towards her flourishing a butcher knif. Young was struck y three bullet ne penetrating his neck, another his chest and the third his right arm. He died instantly, ulk of the relative | For Kaw City is not only the cen-| er of a great grazing region, but} R.! Morris, assist aALVER JUBILEE OF TELEPHONE COMPANY Tn a letter to the stockholders of the American Telephone and Tele- graph company, W. 8. Gifford, presi- dent says: “In 1876 the first conversation was held over the telephone. Therefore 1926 ig the fiftieth anniversary year of the Bell system. “These fifty years have been years POUNDS “I Had to Live on Milk and Raw Eggs for Almost a year but This Medicine Fixed Me Up So I Could Eat Steak and Mince Pie for Breakfast,”’ Declares Marlow. “I was so sick { had to live on milk and raw eggs for almost a year, but now I could eat steak and mince ple for breakfast—believe me, Kar- nak sure put me right,”’ is the re- markable statement “of Frank W. Marlow, of 1172 Vine St. Denver. “Why, I've actually gained 18 pounds in weight and never felt better {n all my life,” continues Mr. Marlow, “and if anybody wants to know about a medicine that will just knoek stomach trouble, indigestion, fas, billousness, headaches, nervous: ness, that tired wornout feeling, and everything that goes with them, sky high, why. just tell "em ot see me about Karnak, Belleve me, it'll do fe Club” In 1908 Mrs. Clubb went to Europe, and it was there she pur- ased her first paintir They | wers inexpensive. Today her col- lection ts valued at more than half 1 million dollars, Since wealth has come to the |Clubbs, Mrs, Clubb has given lav- sbly to community and charity auses, It was through her Kaw {City got a fine library. She has \dopted three children. Her great- st hobby fs e lectir tings. Built Hotel for Galery Clubb also is a liberal spender, He built for Kaw City a modern up-to the-minute hotel costing © $150,000. As this is the home of the Clubbs, it is expensively furnished. The hotel also serves as the art gallery for Mrs, Clubb, Paintings, one valued at more than $100,00, cover practical- ly every inch of wall space. Many of the best known artists of the world are represented in the hotel collection. Mrs. Clubb is a leader in club activities in Kaw City and spends much time in the Girl Scout organ- ization. —_ MOTORING MENDICANTS DENOUNCED BY DOCTOR CHEY! N Wyo., Jan, 15.—Dr. 421 South Center St. SWEEPERS HAVE ARRIVED PHONE US TODAY fora Free Dzmonstration Mountain States Power Co. of great progress. We now enjoy advantages in our everyday living that were unheard of in 1876, Then there were no telephones, no auto- mobiles, no electric lights, no radio und no movies, {In the economic and social prog gess during this period, the telephone has played an important and vital part It has not only more than kept pace with the growth of the coun try but.it has Itself been an tmport ant factor in that growth, and has contributed in large measure to the general progress, “Starting with nothingefifty years ago, today the Bell system intercon- DENVER MAN GAINS 18 TAKING KARNAK “Why, I cou) talk Karnak all day. I used tO just have to sit around at noon and watch the other fellows eat, but now I'm right there with them. My stomach had been giving me trouble for thirty years, and I just got to the point where milk and raw eggs’ was all 1 could ‘go’. I would get sick at my stom ach whether I ate or not, and I was so weak and underweight that a half hour’s work would get the best of me. “Now this Karnak went right to the roots of my troubles and six bottles sure put me right. Say, you should see me eat now—nothing in the world hurts me, and I’ve just been built up as strong as a bull. [ eat, sleep and work like a new man, and believe me 1 feel great Just tell me who wouldn't talk Kar- nak after they have gotten such remarkable results. as I have.” Karnak .is sold in Casper exclu ilvely by the Kimball Drug Stores, Inc., and by the leading druggist in every town Av. Phone 69 J. H, Conway, county health officer, denounced the motoring mendicants of the type that Infested Cheyenne last summer and fall, in a talk be- fore the Rotary club at its weekly luncheon meeting. His nddress on measures for the | protection of public health, In which he mentioned the “mooching” mo: | torist, brought out information on |sanitary conditions in Cheyenne, which Dr, Conway declared were | very good. Saturday Preceding Dr. Conway's address, Hiram Day'dson, veteran fiddler, in troduced as a rival to Mellie Dur. | 3M ham, Henry Ford's famous fiddler, | played a number old old-time seleo- | ons, the bank are) R. Weston, John J. Ohnhaus, Fred From School Teacher To Great Eminence A young man who was brought up on a farm in Western Pennsylvania studied diligently and qualified for district school teacher, Further pur- suing his studies and teaching, he managed to save up enough money to put him thru metical college. He began the practice of medicine In the new oil section of Pa He was a student of nature, knew and could easily recognize most of the medicinal plants growing in the woods. Later, he moved to Buffalo, N. ¥., where he launched his favorite remedies. and in a short time, they were gold by every druggist in the land, ‘Today, the name of this man, Dr. R. V. Plerce, is known through: out the world. Hix Golden Medion! Discovery 1s the best known btood medicine and tonic. More than fitty million bottles have been sold in the U. 8. If your druggist does not sell the Golden Medical ‘Discovery, in liquid or tablets. you can obtain a trial package of the tablets by send- ing 10c to the Dr. Pierce Clinie, in Buffalo, N. ¥.—Ady, gold prize. A TOMORROW NIGHT ONE PRIZE To the person holding the lucky ticket. Everybody who comes to the dance gets two chances to win the * Admission Gents 25c LADIES FREE rkeo $50.00 GOLD DANCE COMMENCING SATURDAY, JAN, .15 and continuing each and every thereafter— THE DENVER POST will contain 12 PAGES OF COLORED COMICS The Price remains the same—only 5@ FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 1926 Che Casper Daily Cribune J : ade Rich by Oil, Million for Paintings Tribune: Herald's A com: Watch for’ the mammoth industria! edition. plete survey of Natrona county and Wyoming In 1925. nects over 16,600,000 telephones throughout the United States. Prac- tically any ‘one of these telephones can be connected at any time of the day or night, weekdays, Sundays or holidays, with any other one any where in the United States.” Drink Hillcrest Water Chone U5) “The finishing touch” for breakfast or a banquet Biunhill Coffee Timi mm mmm Child Photography he ILA HOME PORTRAITS BY Daurel Bell The Portraitur of Babyhood Is a Study in Itself = = = 2 = = = = = By putting into her Home Portrait Photographs the true individuality of her little baby subjects, Daurel Bell has succeeded in producing remark- able results of babies and children in their homes, results that could not be obtained in the cold, strange atmosphere of a studio. Baby’s birthday should not pass without having a Home Portrait made to remember the event in the years to come. Outfitted with the latest in lenses, cameras, and machinery for this special work, makes it possible to photograph any size baby, in any part of the city, at any time, by appointment, JANUARY SPECIAL Six Home Portraits, 4x6, $5 80 easel or book folders.___....______ Coo TT uu LULU USL UL UU NUTELLA For Appointment Phone 2708R or 1303 2 = Daurel Bell, Portrait Photographer il rT NOTICE TO THE PATRONS OF THE GRANT STREET GROCERY CORNER GRANT AND DEVINE I want to express my THANKS AND APPRECIATION For your patronage enjoyed during the Operation under the management of the E. R. Williams Stores Co, Deciding to devote my entire time to the management of the | CENTRAL GROCERY 129 WEST SECOND STREET The Grant Street Grocery has been sold and is now owned and managed by MR. A. L. LA CLAIR A capable meat and groceryman, and the continuation of your patronage will be appreciated by him. ‘ _E. R. WILLIAMS STORES CO; By E. R. Williams, Pres, \eased? if reerucctares st SSUUTELISTILTE SMTP EER Se Tea Es Hivegeasearssarers: