Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 29, 1917, Page 3

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THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE When Work IsHard lifting, etc. Exposure to changes of temperature in fron furnaces, refrigerators, etc. Dampness as in tanneries, quarries, mines, etc. Iaheling: Poisonous fumes in paint- ing, printing and chemica! shops. iis are fine for Doan's Kidney strengthening weak kidneys. Louis Johnson, ratl- x road engineer, 457 34 pe Ave., Durango, Colo., says: “I had kidney trouble, due likely to the jarring of the en- gine: went down fast and had to lay off from work. My back was so lame and painful, I couldn't stoop and I was great- ly bothered by too tre- quent action of my kidneys. Doan's Kid- ney Pills made my back feel stronger and better than it had for years and strengthened my too. Occasional use since, my kidneys in good shape.” Get Doan’s at Any Store, 50c « Box DOAN’S "2Nex PILLS FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y, kidneys, has kept The Army of Constipation Is Growing Smaller Every Day. CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are responsible — they not only give relief lions use them for Biliousness, . - Indigestion, Sick Headache, Sallow Skin. Genuine must bear Signature fheeaF ord Similar. “That reminds me of some of the newfangled poetry they're printing in the magazines nowadays,” observed the man who was viewing the parade of the Punkville Preparedness league. “One account of the rhythm, I sup- pose,” suggested’ his friend. “No, on account of the lines.” irrgular In his own case a man looks upon cowardice as a “safety first” idea. Denver Directory Wyatt’s 2nd Annual Sale OF REGISTERED Heretord Cattle AT AUCTION Denver Union Stock Yards Wed. Jan. 24, 1917) Visit Denver Stock Show | choice breeding stock. 50 head herding and range bulls, 50 cows with calves at foot and rebred to good balls, all carrying the best tlood Mnes known to the BRUCE FATRPAX 440904 breed. Many more at pr vate sale. CATALOGUE ON APPLICATION. THE WYATT LIVE STOCK Co. 316 Exchenge Bidg. DENVER, COLG, 4S Complete Stores in One Everything for wear and house furnishing. Write or call | Tanning and Taxidermy by the old reliabie | Arvada Tannery and Taxidermy Co. ARVADA, COLORADO Ship in your Furs and Hides for Rugs and Auto Robes, Coats and Furs. Send for Price List. $25,000 AYEAR SALARY Active partner wanted, in manufacturing chem- icals and drags. woman or youn. lished and gro Have opportunity for man, man. Business long estab- . Big profits. $25,000 needed. Enquire for the J.H. WILSON Wilson Never Break Trace § SADDLERY Co. Guaranteed __DENVER F 1] The SW. H. NEVEU natistor Auto Benders. Hoods, Lamps and Fanks MAD and RBPAIRED. Best equi t and quickest guaranteed service in Colo fado. REASUNABLS TERMS. 1331 Broadway Pheer Hain 6068 DENVEE, COLO. FOR BEST RESULTS You should use Barteldes’ Tested Seeds for Field and Garden. Write for our new catulog— bigger, better and more attractive this year— our fiftieth anniversary. THE BARTELDES SEED CO., DENVER, COLO. (0 years satisfactary service.) The M. J, O'Fallon Supply Co. DENVER, COLO SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICR. | the handsome total of § is worth at present prices about | $7,500.00. He refused an offer of 000.00 for the land after the crop | had been taker | ald, Lethbridge, Alta. Game week and select some | highly encouraging and show that the OPPORTUNITIES — THAT ARE MISSED Why Wait? Why Not Go to West- ern Canada Now? The writer has frequently heard the | remark that ter the war we will go to Western da.” It does not oc cur to those making the remark that If they wish to secure lands in Western | Canada, whether by homestead or pur After | , the best time to gois now. » war the welcome will be Just as hearty as ever, but the chances are land values will increase and to- day homesteads are plentiful and land \i reasonable in price. There is no question about what the land in Mani toba, Saskatchewan and Alberta will do, what it will give under proper cul tivation, ers in Western Canada are pay ing for their land holdings with the proceeds of last year's crop. That this is no Idle statement may be gleaned from the three following items, which are picked out at random: | “In the spring of 1916 a half-section | of land was offered for sale at $17.00 per acre. There were 105 acres of summer-fallow, which because the owner could not at the time find a buyer, were seeded to wheat. A yield jof 40 bushels per acre, 4,200 bushels } all told, grading No. 1, was obtained | The price the day the grain was sold (which was very early in the season, before grain prices advanced to round | about $2.00) was $1.60, which brought .00. Three hundred and twenty acres at $17.00 equals $5,440.00, so that a buyer, by placing less than half of the whole under crop, would have made a profit of $1,280.00."— Robson Messenger, Robson, “That the ‘Indiana Boys’ farm this the land, all the machinery and all | overhead expenses as well as make a handsome profit, is the information given by N. B. Davis, the manager. The wheat yield was over 00 bush- els. Of twelve cars already sold, nine graded No. 1, and Mr, Davis has sold over 2,000 bushels locally for seed at $2.00. Naturally, when he gets to In- diana he will be a big booster for Al- berta."—Bassano Mail, Bassano, Alta. “Oscar Castalor, who bought Iand at Blusson after the crop had been put jin last spring, for $3,800.00, has threshed 3,900 bushels of wheat, which off. Lethbridge Her- Reports from the wheat flelds are | sack | tiful horse | Black 4 spurs, jing red | with tassels held the bags that con- | smoking | | brandy as he boasted with treme lous | Year raised sufficient crop to pay for | oaths of their dee¢ f { ‘ | but crop of many farmers in West nada was highly satisfactory. Sask.—W. A has rerage of 83 bushels per bushels of oats. | Alberta,—Up to date 2: S12 Imshels of grain have been receive Rose by local elevators, of which nex 180,0)0 bushels were whent. Seventy- | one cars of grain have already been shipped. | Stoop Creek,” Sask.—James N has threshed 400 bushels of 2,000 bushels of which No. 1 Northern od 44 bushels per scr e field of onts aver 1 If information as to the tion $s required, it will he nishe) by any Canadian Agent, whose advertisement elsewhere.—Advertisement. were wh One field | ind a yushels, | best loca- adly fur- appears | Good Reason. “T am studying out the best way “That's easy. BILIOUS, HEADACHY, SICK “CASCARETS” ~ sluggish bowels while you sleep. Get a 10-cent box. Sick headache, biliousness, dizzi- ness, coated tongue, foul taste and foul breath—always trace them to torpid liver; delayed, fermenting food in the bowels or sour, gassy stomach. Poisonous matter clogged in the in- testines, instead of being cast out of the system is reabsorbed into the blood. When this poison reaches the delicate brain tissue it causes con- PLUMBING and HEATING FIXTURES and MATERIAL A BOOK OF OPPORTUNITY, FR 3 invaded GALLS te gestion and that dull, throbbing, sick- ening headache. Cascarets immediately cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out all the constipated waste matter and s in the bowels. rn Wascarek tonight will surely straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep—a 10-cent box from your druggist means your head clear, stomach sweet and your liver and bowels regular for months. Adv. The Difference. “Pa, what's the difference between @ tricot and a jingo?” ar patriot, my son, is one whose bosom swells with pride of his country, while in a jingo the swelling appears in his head.” —_——— ‘The Christmas belle {s satisfied if she gets a ring on her fing to abate the smoke nuisance.” ] Buy good cigars.” | Ten Minute Classics Famous Tales and Legends Told in Brief Form Gogol’s Great Tale of the By J. WW. MULLER Copyright by J Dubno, the city of Russian Po- | land now a vital point on the Russo- German battle line, is the scene of the most tragic chapter in Gogol’s great novel, “Taras Bulba,” which tells of the invasion of Poland in} the fifteenth century by the Cos- sacks of the Dnieper. | Of all the mad fighters in the Cos- horde that besi 1 the Polish | stronghold of Dubno, none was so gal- | lant as were the two sons of Taras Bul the famous leader of the Ukraine. His great nostrils expanded with pride when they darted against the Polish cavalry, lashing their beau- like devils, They were garbed like birds of war. Their multifold trousers, wide as the sea and upheld with golden girdles, were thrust into boots of crim- son leather with silver heels and Magnificently wrought Turkish pistols and knives were stuck In em- broidered sashes that belted the flam- coats. Long, gaudy thong tained their indispensable pipes and materials, Their crooked swords were immense, and on their handsome heads they wore tall, black caps of lambs’ wool with ornaments of scarlet and gold. Taras Bulba almost wept té, ‘ais Hardly he knew which he loved the more—the flerce wise Ostap or the headlong, thoughtless, wholly reckless Andreas, Dubno held out desperately, though the people were starving. Dawn came to it with the silence of death, fer there was not a rooster left to crow in all the land. The only animals alive were the warhorses. Even Dubno's rats and mice had been devoured to the last one. One night Andreas learned from a spy that the beautiful daughter of the governor of Dubno was perishing in her palace. He had met her once, and since that meeting her picture had been bright in his wild heart. With- | out pausing to reflect, he gathered pro- visions secretly and stole into the be- leaguered city. When he found her he forgot the Ukraine. She was most beautiful, | even in that land of beautiful Polish women. In her black eyes burned the flames . of romance and intelligen | Over a ravishing white neck and noble | Shoulders fell hair that a king vernment | | from his son: /Gently cleanse your fiver and) wiliest riders. They attacked, pre- tended to give way and fled suddenly. youd have begged to kiss. | Her fiery soul sprang to meet the | flery soul of the Cossack. When she swayed toward him and sobbed of the | sorrows of her people, her low, sweet voice shook the man’s passionate spirit as a wind shakes the reeds of a river. “What care I for father and father- land?” he cried, holding ont his strong arms. “I will have none, none, none except thee! Who says that the Ukraine is my country? Thou, thou! art my country! For thee I toss away everything; for thee I will die!” A moment she stared at him, still, frozen, a wondrous marble image. Then she fell into his waiting arins and her scented hair enwrapped his head like a shining silken net. The next day old Taras Bulba lay in the grass and tore at it while he cried out on heaven and hell. A mes- senger had come to him with this word “My father no longer is my father, my brother no more my brother, my comrades no more my comrades! Be- tween them and me is war—war with them all, all!” It was as if the accession of An- dreas had brought fortune to the Poles. A relief expedition broke | through the Cossack ring and reprovi- | sioned the ci Thereafter the strengthened defenders made furious sortie after sortie nnd Cossacks and Poles did each other to death daily under the walls with cannon and long guns, swords and clubs, lassos and spears, Day after ray the indomitable Polish men and women, even the chil- dren, cried defiance from their walls and sped insults at their besiegers. Day after day the Cossacks dashed close and yaunted: “Our swords are not yet dull, our powder horns not yet empty, and our hearts not yet weary!” There came a day of sortie and battle most great and bitter. Taras Bulba, rearing and slashing In the thick of {t, saw a gallant band of Polish hussars break suddenly Into the strife. Mounted on glorious red Per- sian horses, they drove forward fear- fully and hewed a road that was of of death. Bravest and most murder- ous of all was their leader, a tall youngster, who wore a gorgeous scarf, plainly a woman's gift for battle. “Brood of the devil!” screamed Ta- ras Bulba, recognizing his son An- dreas. “Get me that one!” he com- manded his men. “Lure into yon- der woods and cut him off for me!” The wily Cossacks detached their Andreas followed desperately, dashed into a wood and found himself alone. A great voice ordered him to stop. He | single word | “I give thee death! by merchants of Calcutta.—London Times. coming in. You know his wife made him, Cossack Siege of Dubno At once the young Cossack’s battle frenzy ran from him like water. “Dis- mount!” sald the terrible old man; and Andreas slipped from his saddle, making no motion for His W. Molier defense lips, gone suddenly pale, whispered a | It was not the name of mother or father. It was the name of the most beautiful Polish v fun, “I gave thee life!” sald Taras Bulba. ' He lifted his long gun and fired. The glorious young head The lithe bx and fell without a sound into the red- dening grass, “He lacked nothing to be a noble Cos- sack !" murmured Taras Bulba, staring down at the beautiful youth. “Yet he has perished as 2 do He mounted his horse. drooped, One moment jhe paused, thinking with a great woe in his heart that he would pause and bury his ton. Then, with an angry motion, he galloped off and joined the battle with new fury and exulting cries. But his strong, rough, great heart was broken, Nikolaus Gogol (1809-1852) often is called the founder of Rus- stan realism, but in “Taras Bulba” he gave the world a historical novel burning with romance. It deals with the time when South Russia was swept continually by war, the Tartars and Moslems making forays into the Ukraine and the Cossacks carrying war by horse and ship as far as Trebizond. Often they fought Tartars in the South and Poles in the North simultaneously. The | story is a most vivid and accurate picture of the times and of the people. Those American readers who complain that many Russian novels are somber and heavy will find no such faults in “Taras Bul- ba.” It glitters; and it has the added richness of the same wild hu- mor that distinguishes Gogol’s other great novel, “Dead Souls.” FLY HAS ITS OWN TROUBLES Naturalist Says Problems of Life Are Proportionately the Same in Every Stratum of Life. To the naturalist or to anyone ac- customed to observe nature closely, the fact is apparent that the problems | of existence are proportionately the sume in every form or stratum of fife. Even the common house fly, ¥y toppled, sank together | | | seemingly has nothing else to do but! to crawl lazily over whatever ts left | uncovered and then go happily on It way, tion bet unclean, occas nally meets its nemesis which attaches itself to the fly's legs. doing its best to bring about an} nm the clean and the} | in the form of a tiny crablike creature | | badly your stomach is disordered you | These little creatures are known to} the scientist as pseudo-scorpions, or chelifers. They may sometimes be found between the leaves of old books that have stood unused for a long time, and also beneath the bark of trees and in mosses. Although they are called false scor- pions, they resemble the true scorpion closely in general structure except for their minute size. But they have no poison gland as the true scorpions have. They attach themselves to other insects also, but they seem to be the special pest of the house files. Sclen- tists suppose that they seine the fly's leg and hold on until the fly dies, either worried or frightened to death by the undesirable presence. When the fiy {s dead the little creature feeds on the body.—Popular Science Monthly, Garrick Died on His Bed. A gift of historical interest and tm- portance has recently been received at the Victoria and Albert museum. Da- vid Garrick's bed has been presented to the museum by H. E. Trevor, a di- rect descendant of David Garrick’s brother George. The bedstead wss made about 1775 for Garrick’s villa at Hampton, where it remaiyed after Garrick’s death and during Mrs. Garrick’s lifetime, and subsequently until the sale of the villa in 1864. The bedstend consists of a wooden canopy with columns decorated with ornaments characteristic of the period, the original green and yellow paint be- ing well preserved. The hangings of cotton, painted In colors with designs of “The Tree of Life” were made in a factory of the East Indian company at Mesulipatam, Madras, and were presented to Garrick Heard at the Club. d Yeast—That’s Fred Darling just Crimsonbeak—You mean that fellow which | taste good, but work badly; Women of Middle Age Many distressing Ailments experienced by them are Alleviated by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Here is Proof by Women who Know. Lowell, Mass.—“For the last three years I have been troubled with the Change of Life and the bad feelings common at that time. I was in a very ner- yous condition, with headaches and pain a good deal of the time so I was unfit to do my work. A friend asked me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound, which I did, and it has helped me in every way. I am not nearly so nervous, no head- ache or pain. I must say that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is the best remedy any sick woman can take.”—Mrs. Mangarer Quinn, Rear 259 Worthen St., Lowell, Mass. She Tells Her Friends to Take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Remedies. North Haven, Conn.—“ When I was 45 I had the Change of Lifo which is a trouble all women have. At first it didn’t bother mo bit after a while I got bearing down pains. I called in doctors who told me to try different things but they did not cure my pains. One day my husband came home and said, * Why don’t you out ydia K. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Sanative Wash?? Wel |, I got them and took about 10 bottles of Vegetable Compound and could feel myself regaining my health. I also used Lydia E. Pinkham’s Sanative Wash and it has done me a great deal of good. Any one coming to my house who suffers from female troubles or Change of Life, I tell them to take the Pinkham remedies. ‘There are about 20 of ushere who think the world of them.”— Mrs, Florence Iskia, Rox 107, North Haven, Conn. You are Invited to Write for Free Advice. No other medicine has been so successful in relieving woman’s suffering as has Lydia E. Pinkhaim’s Vegetable Compound. Women may receive free and helpful advice by writing the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Such letters are received and answed by women only and held in strict confidence, The One to Warn, Good Reason. “I warn you,” said the soothsayer, in “Why do you ne take Gladys out a tone with ice down Its back, “that |}in your automobil an enemy will soon cross your path, “Because she gets and—" nerves. “Ah, warn him,” returned the speed- er. “I drive a Riproarer car.”’—Kan- sas City Star. motor on my Using benzine for fuel, a new ciga- rette lighter is a close imitation of @ cigarette. OR SICK STOMACH Time it! Pape’s Diapepsin ends all Stomach misery in five minutes, Don't fool with acold. Cure it. pits CASCARA ee The old family remedy—in tablet form—safe, sure, easy to take. No opiates—no unpleasant after effects, Cures colds in 24 hours—Grip in 3 days. Money back if it fails. Get the genuine box with Red Top and Mr, Hill's picture on it—25 cents, At Any Drug Store hit back— ferment into stubborn lumps and cause a sick, sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or} Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's! Diapepsin digests everything, leaving nothing to sour and upset you. There never was anything so safely quick, so certainly effective. No difference how Do some foods you eat will get happy relief in five minutes, but what pleases you most is that it strengthens and regulates your stom- | ach so you can eat your favorite foods | without fear, You feel different as soon as “Pape's Diapepsin” comes in contact with the stomach—distress just vanishes—your stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belch- ing, no eructations of undigested food. Go now, make the best investment you ever made, by getting a large fifty- cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin from any store. You realize in five minutes how needless it is to suffer from indiges- tion, dyspepsia or bad stomach. Adv. | hy. powson, of course. No, that would kill them —cheese.” Do you know what's good for a cough, throat and lung troubles, that will allay inflammation and insure a good night's sleep with free and easy expec- toration in the morning? The answer always the same year after year, Is Boschee’s German Syrup Soothing and healing to bronchial} Eighty Per Cent. The Browns are celebrating, their silver wedding next yt" “Their silver Why, they've been married only five years.” “I know, but that’s five times as long as anybody expected them to stay married, so they feel they are en- and throat irritation. 25c. and 75c, titled to a discount."—New York sizes all Druggists and Dealers every- World. where. Your grandfather used it 51 years ago. Try it yourcvif and see how it stops a hacking cough like magic, PATENTS f37s2f2sp7 tie Pimples, boils, carbuncles, dry up and Cres Hinge with Doctor Pierce’s Golden srs aoe Dascovery.. In tablets or liquid. —Ady. “ROUGH on RATS” free enss, ices W. N. U., DENVER, NO. 3--1917, The New Method) ne Riggs “iow is of iegylte emaciation, come After a girl has been married six months she doesn’t use half so many adjectives, Medical Goiden impoy-

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