Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 23, 1921, Page 5

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IND CONVICTED) Austrian Sicha to | State Prison for Three Years May ‘Be Deported ‘at End of Investigation SHER@DAN, Wyo., March 23.—| ‘While the department of justice is|* checking up the record of John Jekuz-|" bik, Australian, who confesses that he illegally entered the United States; it need /not worry in this case, in so°’may <thers, regarding whether the subject will be available at the conclusion of the investigation. Jekus- bik, who also'confessed repeated burg- laries ut Dietz, has been sentencéd by Judge -W. H. Burgess of the Fourth judjsial district to serve from three to seven years in the state peniteniary. and-the federal government, when its| Anvestigation is completed, witl’ find him at Rawlins. Jekuzbik's arrest followed failure of. @ trap set for the, burglar who was making’ periodical raids on the stock of the Deitz Mercantile company’s store. The manager of the store camped in the establishment and was alert when someone pried open a win- dow and started to’ climb through ‘The watcher commanded the,burglar to thtow up his hands, but the com- mand }was not obeyed, the intruder dropping. outside the window and flee- ing: in an automobile in the direction of-Shéridan. Several shots from the munager’s gun went wild, as did also a fusillade fired by. Sheridan offi who-were notified by telephone of t! 6 approach of the fugitive’: atiecepokig and laid in wait for it. The machine went by the ambushing party like the proverbial “bat out of Hades,” Jekuzbik “was arrested on suspicion. Examinations of his automobile re- vealed’ several bullet holes and exam!- nation of his ‘house’ revealed. several hundred dollars worth of merchandise which was identified as having been stolen from the Diettz store in earlier raids, whereupon Jekuzbik confessed ‘the ‘robberies, and also that he had beea deported from the United States as an undesirable alien; but had man- aged to return. He declined to reveal the method of return, ‘however, or how he obtained the citizenship papers which were found among his. effects. ‘Nor would he acknowledge respon: bilitty ‘for a robbery of the Dietz post- office .several months ago, although the postoffice is located in the store which he burglarized and the robbery of the mail took place at the time of. ‘one of the burglaries which he con- fessed, The Jekuzbik problem, from the federal viewpoint; also involves what to do with the woman who claims to be .tis wife and their four small chil. ni. ——— HARDING GOING TO N.Y. WASHINGTON, March 23. 4 dent ‘Harding has accepted an Invita- tion to attend ceremonies to be held April 19 at New York in connection! with the unyeiling of a statue to Simon Bolivar, the Venezuelan | pa- triot. pu SSS Bull Dog Quality Oranges.) ~Serve them ‘sliced, halved or the juice for breakfast. They Coetc | ast must! Beach, Fia., recently. SAPS CONCERNED OF HER POLICIES Growing Apprehension at Home| Led to Founding of New Peace 2 e, Designed to Coun- ‘eae Impressions | i ciated Press.}—Growing apprehension! mong the Japanese because of unfa-| vorable: criticism. of Japan abroad is! believed to have been the reason’ for three hundred prominent Japanese, who included the foreign minister, ‘Viscount Uchida, and. Viscqunt .‘Tak- keki Kato, Jeader of the Kensei-Kai, or opposition party. The principal ‘| ubject of the society was described by its’ spokesmen at the intial meeting as\ being. to dispel .misunderstanding of “and Prejudice against Japan in for- eign lands, and in Japan against other nationals. - The imperative necessity of promoting a. happler relationship between Japan‘and the United States, and between Japan and China, was ‘}espécially pointed oltt, and torachieve ‘| these\ ends the association will send representatives abroad. Viscount Katovand Takéshi Inquki, leader of the Kokurhin-To, or national- Is there anything more appetizing than the é tantalizing odor of browning pancakes? BABY HAS HIS AND HER DAY IN PALM BEACH—A big baby patade Was one of the fedtures of the annual Seminole Sun Dance et Palm | |ist party, | declared: i but VER CTI, ling and decorating, is here de’ pulplt- jeer, [result of the collapse of a. scaftold -on |which he was working at a décorating TOKIO, March 23.—(By The Ass80-| jo in the Citizens bank, His minister- lower house of the legislature, ex-may- the founding ofthe new international \o, and formerly ordained expounder peace association here yesterday by|or the Gospel. complained that Japan. had unjustly been accused of being aggres-/ sive and militaristic. Viscount -Katoj “All peoples. have merits and fauits, we are judged by our faults alone.” rchantsPreacher Fills Pulpit When , Minister Is Hurt SUNDANCE, Wyo., - March» 23,— While Rey. N. B. Wood, who adds to ing and decorating is hors de pulpit- or words to that, effect,.as the jal duties are being capably performed ! iby another versatile resident, Hon. M. | C. Roberts, inecchant, member’of the| FPP PPP IIPLIL IIT IIIT LI IE Co eeaerwe. ge Se IN. MEMORIAM, In sad’ and Joving. memory of. our dear wife and mother, Mary 8. ‘Jobn- son, who passed away one year.ago today, March=22, 1920. Just a thought of sweet remembfance. Just 2 memory fond and:true,; Just a token: of affection ‘And _a heartache still for _you. MR. CHAS A. JOHNSON “AND - CHILDREN. 223-1t ARIZONA BANK CLOSED PEORIA, Ariz," March 23.—The’ Exchani ank-of Peoria, capitalized at. $25,000, voluntarily closed its doors! this morning and its affairs have been placed fn the hands of the state hank director. | AST OFFICERS SENT ~ TO TOW SHIP 10 PORT 5 HAVANA; ‘March 28,—Port officials qneountered stern opposition _Mon- @xy when they boarded the American schooner Benjamin Van Brunt for the purpose of towing the; vessel to the ook, bis ead the refusal of the com- mander of the — to eye. his anchorage. “When the omicera went over the side of the craft they were met by a huge and ferocious monkey, which ran ‘|amuck among the boarding party and bit a policeman so severely that surgi- ca¥ attendance was deemed necessary. ‘The captain of the hoat had refused to, dock and) unload his cargo. until demurrage charges aggregating $14,- 000, together with a payment of $300 for alleged deterioration of machinery was paid, Cuban guthorities took up the matter with the American. consul- general and it was decided to disre- gard the skipper’s objections and bring the vessel to the wharf. When the boarding party reached the side of the schooner - the . captain, inverted» the American flag as a signal of distress and his wife left in a small boat and boarded the American crutser Minne- sota,to make a protest aguinst) what she declared was an-“invasion” on the i of the Cuban maritime authori- ies. —__.___ PENSION, CHIEF NAMED WASHINGTON, March 23.—Wash- ingtor, Gardner of Albion, Mich., was given a recess appointment hy Presidént Harding as commissioner of pensions. He is a former member of congress_and a:ciyil war veteran. Daily. Ceibune Discovery That Poison: Makes Grain Palatable to Dogs May Aid Extermination of Coyotes LANDER, Wyo., March 23—Many valuable discoveries have been pure- ly accidental, including those just- ly famous ones accredited to Mr. Archemides of Greece and Ike New- ton of England. Has a great ac cidental discovery been made in Lander, viz; that oats, to which the genus canis ordinarily is as in- different as is a picanniny to, face- powder, when treated with stry- chnine and saccharine is irresistably attractive to representatives of the aforesaid genus? If so one of the big problems with which the feder- al biological survey has been wrest- which the western ranges may be rid of those predatory pests, canis occidentalis’ and canis latrans (which in the ken of low-brows are merely wolves and coyotes}— has been solved. The question is raised by the al- leged fact that the deaths of about score of Lander dogs are attri- butable to the fact that oats poison- ed with the intention of using the grain in a campaign against prairie dogs, gophers and other harmful ro- dents. The poison-treated grain was stored in the basement of the court house and its attraction for dogs is said to have been so great that the new deceased domesticated representatives of the genus canis resorted to extraordinary ingenuity to obtain access to it. That there is 2 question in connettion with the ling—discovery of an agency thru. ant denial of the county agent who poisoned the grain and stored it jin the court house that the dogs* de- mise was caused by the oats. Dog- owners |whO conducted post mor: tems discovered outs in the stom- aches. of their jlate pets, howeve and positiveness that this oats cam from the store in the court hoyse. The county agent retort» -hat dogs are carniverous and far jt is pre- posterous to presurie that they ‘would eat oats, The rejoinder of the erstwhile owners of dogs is that, granting the county agent's statement to be cor- rect, the presence of oats in the stomachs of the deceased dogs is conclusive evidence that these car- nivori did eat oats, and that the fact that all dogs known to have eaten oats thereafter passed hence suddenly with symptoms of con- vulsing distress is equally conclu- sive evidence that the oats they ate was oats from the poisoned store, the said oats having been treated with strychnine and the symptoms of the dying canines. being identical with the symptoms associated by science with the effects of stry- chnine. And there you are—the ques- tion! If the answer be that the treat- ment accorded the oats by the county agent caused the grain to become attractive to dogs, then the biological survey, while search- ing for_a-lethal_ugency_thoroug! ly effective against wolves and coyotes* has” been, all the while, in possession of such an agency | but’ has been applying it only in the campaign against non-cariver- ous pests and because of ignorance of. its wider potentiality omitting to utilize it to depopulate the range country of carniverous raiders. To the interesteq onloker it would seem that the question might be answered immediately and con- clusivety through association of a worthless dog with a small por- tion of the poisoned oats—assum- ing, of course, that if the grain proved fatally attractive to the dog it also would exercise a like influ- ence and efféct in the cases of his first cousins, the wolves and coy- otes. Such’a solution, however, is not unassociated with —difffculties, among them the reluctance of any Landerite to admit that his dog is worthlegs. and his unntovable determination that if an experi- ment is to be conducted, some oth- er fellow's dog shall be the sub- ject. Alleged Bond Thief Pleads ‘Not Guilty’ TORONTO, Ont.; March 23—John Doughty, charged with having stolen bonds worth $100,000 from his former employer, Ambrose Small, theatrical magnate who has been missing more than a year, pleaded not guilty on ar- raignment here. Doughty, who ws arrested in Ore- gon, subsequently revealed to police } situation results from the _indig- TOPIG OF MEET Central States’ Anke Association Out lines Financial Conditions in Great Grain Belt | District ST. LOUIS, Mo., March 23.—Finan- cial conditions throughout the middie west were outlined here today by dele- gates at the closing session of the tenth annual ‘conference of presidents, vice-presidents and secretaries of the Central States’ Bankers’ associations. Numerous bank suspensions recent- ly occurring in, North Dakota were caused, in part, by the diverting of public funds, according to W. C. Meé Fadden of Fargo, D., secretary of the North Dakota Bankers assovia- tion, The heavy decline in the price ot grain was another factor, he said. Mr. McFadden explained that the law which created the Bank ef North for all public funds. | Approximately $3,000,000 ot the |public funds was diverted to invest- |ment in mortgage loans, and $1,000,- 000 for a mill and elevator, he con- tinued, adding, “this upset the finan- cial and business structure of: the state.” Subscribe for The ‘Tribune—— the hiding place of the missing bonds. Special for Easter Your Choice at cAlso ri : ri kusaanenas above seuce>beanns RST thing. in the morning— Umm! Umm! Umm! Great. big ctisp' brown cakes. But the ‘dest thing is the delicious thick Karo you pour all over them.’ It doesn't seem as though you could ever get enough. Of course you don’t have to be told that Kero is what makes’ the cakes or hot biscuits taste so nice, But did you ever know that Kard is one of the greatest of al) energy producing foods—made ina way that brings out every bit of its good- ness and wholesomeness. » 3 You can use Karo for every bek- ing and cooking’ purpose. You can make the finest, purest candy. you r ever tasted—fudge, taffy, Caramels and lots of other good things from Karo, Your ic Stvared offal weight cau and Mighest eaalhy BLUE Karo’ ‘The standard table eyrap. Also for cooking. RED Karo. The Ideal Syrup for every use—for cooking, baking, candy making and preserving. Because efits) ike appearance many prefer it eee ‘prea: ken, biscuits, breeds,” GREEN Karo Flavored with highest 41 maple auger. Very moderate tn price: 7 pure, The makers of-Karo ere the world’s largest users of the bighest grade maple augar—gver athousand ton wally. Products Cook Book of sixty-four pi Cora Products Refising Company, Argo, tllnole MIDWEST - BUILDING and Style - pring The Very Newest Types in: Every Wanted Shade Just Received—200 Brand New Hats Your One Great Chance to Buy Wonderful Easter Bonnets $6.95 | Children’s Hats In Every Wanted Style \ $1.49 $1.98 $2.98 New Spring Suits, Coats and Dresses at Ve ‘ery A ttractive Prices THE - You Will Find ade Want for Your Children and Infants at This Store EADER “CASPER’S ECONOMY STORE” Acros From Post Cf eat ‘ce VIPCLLLLALLL AAA AMAA AA hhh Ohhh BE hhk ke hak hued TIIILL LILO LLM LL LLL LLL LLL LL ELL EL ERIE Ca el BANK SITUATION IN MIDDLE WEST are a Dakota designated it as the depostory . A <meee os ceiveshinesonca asian Za HEI ATR cen MFC cniennansiniistetabanenindl

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