Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 25, 1923, Page 10

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PAGE TEN. CASPER HIGH SCHOOL ENTERS 0 DEBATING LEAGUE OF SIX TEAMS) North Star Lander and Riverton Will Contest Honors with Local Teams on February 16; One Contest to Take Place Here. A debating league has been organized by the Casper, Lander and Riverton high sch ools for the purpose of carry- Ing on contests that will act as a preliminary for the debates during high school week at Laramie and which will also be a step toward permanent debating in the high schools of the state, The debates scheduled are set for) February 16. Each school will place two teams in the field. One of these will be affirmative and the other neg- ative. The negative team will contest honors away from home and the af- firmative will pursue Sts flight of ora- tory before the c'tizens of its own town. Casper’s negative team will debate Riverton’s affirmative team at River- ton. Riverton's negative team will debate Lander's affirmative team at Lander. Lander’s negative team will @ebate Casper's affirmative team fn Casper. Two victories for a team will be necessary to decide the champion- ship of the league. The question for debate is, “Re solved that the principle of the open shop {s justifiable.” There are sx persons who have been selected for these teams, al- though the division into main speak- ers and alternates and into affirma- tive and negative sides has not yet been made by Leslie Davis, who ts coaching the young log’clans, The members are Helen Simpson, Hugh Hines, Elizabeth Baker, Harry Lad- bury. Louise Frisby, and Marian Car- pahan. i. JURY HEARINGS FOR INSANITY (Continued from Page One) the committee be given more time for consideration of the measures, where upon Representative A. W. Willson of Sweetwater county, who intro duced house 24, and Representative V. J. Shrum, who introduced house 22, were heard from—emphat. -ally: The objected to any further delay and in the ensuing exchange of ideas and opinions among representatives it was rather broadly hinted that in fluence by interests host'le to the bills might have been responsib’e for their failure to appear in due course on the general file of the house. _ Inct dentally it came out that the mines and min’ng committee had agreed to favorably report the two measures, but that the report had not been brought in to the house. During the debate Representative John Sammon of Lincoln county, a member of ths mines committee, read @ telegram from Jame Jiacoletti, president, and John Warhol, secre- tary of local union No. 2360, United Mine Workers of America, regarding the shot-firer bill, which message stated that “at our regular meeting local No, 2360 last night it way unan- dmous'y yoted we are unalterably op- Posed to the passage of this bill.” Inasmuch as both bills under dis- cussion had beon understood to have been introduced at the request of the United Mine Workers of America, and to have their united support, the po: sition taken by local No, 2360 added ® new interest to the controversy. Addressing himself to the telegram read by Sammon, Representative Bhrum said: “The Kemmerer local has béen ware of this bill for the past 18 months. It had an active part in framing it, and it didn't see fit to object while the matter was under ¢onsideration by our people. I don’t ike one of the names signed to that messige. What I should like to know Is he an American citizen? Has © a right to try to hvip shape the RED PEPPERS — STOP PAIN OF HCMATISH bee J ‘When you are suffering with rheu matiam so you can hardly get around gust try Red Pepper Rub and you will have the quickest relief known. Nothing has such concentrated penetrating heat as red peppers. In stant relief. Just as soon as you ap ply Red Pepper Rub you feel the tingl'ng heat. In three minutes it ‘warms the sore spot through and through. Frees the blood circulation breaks up the congestion— and the old rheumatism torture is gone. Rowles Red Pepper Rub, made from rea peppers, costs little at any drug store. Get a jar at once. Use it for lumbago, neuritis, backache, stiff neck, sore musc'es, colds in | chest Almost instant relief awaits you. Be sure to get the genuine, with name Rowles on each packnge.—Adv. MINSTREL Given by the Business and Professional Women’s Club. ELKS’ AUDITORIUM FRIDAY, JAN. 26 the| | deliberations of an American legis- lative body?” Eventually the mines committee was granted an extension of tine of Jone more day before reporting on | house 24 and house 22. | House 26, providing for inspection of steam boilers, was withdrawn | Wednesday by its author, Representa. | tive Charles H. Chapman of Sheridan county. A simf‘'ar measure has been ntroduced by Mr. Chapman, house 67. The senate Wednesday passed on |second reading senate joint memorial {2, requesting more liberal payment |terms for settlers under reclamation | Projects, and senate joint memorial 2, | requestng that work on the Guernsey dam of the Pathfinder project be ex- pedited. The joint budget committee is meet. ng dally and working out details of the general appropriation act, which probably will be the last measure brought in during the session. praes hoi a. 0t CARD OF THANKS. ‘We take this means of expressing our gratitude to our many friends for their kindness shown us during the sickness and Ceath of our loving mother, Mrs, E. H. Majors; also for the beautiful floral offerings MR. AND MRS. W.F. CREEL FAMILY. Big time at American Legion dance at the Arkeon Thursday evening. —_—_—_—S Timothy Healy, Ireland's first gov- wwhor-general, was a railway clerk before he began his political career. — Diabetics Should Use Nuradium Its Marvelous Power to Regu- late Eliminations Is Abso- lutely Startling in Results. In diabetes there 1s a constant waste of the body's nutrition and it sas always been a problem how to stop it. ‘This has been solved by the| marvelous action of radium rays caught in sugar of milk and put up as Nuradium tablets, They act as a} natural tonic and stimuiant to the se sretions they furnish to the glances ‘nd functions a powerful force or en- ergy by which unhealthy or diseased conditions are thrown off and new! and vital blood rushes in to restore| health. Thus the anemic, wasted con- dition due to diabetes gives way to firm flesh, Nuradium is not a drug, it is not! an extract, it Is an element—a force, a form of energy like oxygen, It may be the very basis of tron, it may incorporate all the value of phosphorous in a medical sense, it may be the source of vitamines, it may be the very essence of the. en-| ergy which susfains life. Whatever it is in a@ scientific sense it is doing things for diabetics that are absolute: ly startling. Your mental facu‘ties take on an irresistible, positive att!- tude and you become more and more onscious of some strange force or influence, some gratifying nature. Extreme physical freshness and in. crease(: bodily activity 1s pronounced. Your diabetic pallor gives way to the pink of red blood. This remarkable substance is put up by the Nuradium company, 111 No. Dearborn 8t., Chicago, in vials of 210 Nuradium tablets and is now veing sold by leading drug s at $1.50 per vial or will be mailed direct upon receipt of price if druggists are unable to supply you, If you are not now using Nura- i } { | dium better get a vial today. It is certainly a wonder. Sold by Kimball Drug Co., two stores, Casper Pharmacy.—Ady. 100 WAYS To Make Money BY BILLY WINNER If I Were a Student— WOULD study AND MAKE MONEY DOING IT, There would be people in my neighborhood with children. These people would want some one to stay with their children while they were at the theater, parties, etc, I would find these mothers and fathers with a Tribune Want Ad. I would charge a fair amount for staying with their children of an evening. I would stay until the parents returned, and then I would be PAID for my time. Sounds good, doesn’t it? Well, it is so good that I would telephone my Want Ad to the Tribune right away. I never wait for profit: I go out after it, “The Lady of (Continued from Page Eight.) Miss Gargrave will be very giad to oblige you.” The corporal remembered that he ad heard the name Gargrave before. It had been borne by an eccentric wealthy Englishman, who had perish- eG rather tragically on the Klondyke, three years before, and the mystery of whose death had never been clear- ed up, satisfactorily. “This {s the North Star ‘Lodge, THe watched while the corporal fed the dogs with frozen fish, As the dooor opened Bracknell’s guide stumbled over something which fell with a clatter on the pinewood floor. The man stooped and picked it up. “My rifie," he explained. “I had forgotten it was there. I rested it against the wall when you hailed me. The corporal nodded, but made no remark. When he had finished his toilet, his guide brought him into the dining room y hich, except for the roaring Yukon stove and the fur rugs, was a replica of the typneal din- Ingroom of an English country house. Two girls stood near the stove, and his companton’s voice sounded: “Corporal Bracknell! Miss Joy Gargrave! Miss Babette La Farge. Tam Adrian Rayner.” Roger bowed to the two Indies in turn. ‘The second, he knew as he glanced, was of French Canatian ex- NOTICE. Found three work horses, two gray mares and one sorrel horses; fourteen miles northwest of Casper, section 13. township 35, range 80. G. D. Carr. P. O. Box 141, Casper ea (rhe reer Tait traction, with perhaps a dash of Indian blood. But the first was a golden-haired English girl, tall, biue- eyed, with face a little bronzed by the open-air, and—the irl who had pass- ea him with her face the Index of mortal terror and her rifle at the trail! “You are English?” Miss Gargrave asked at dinner. “Yes.” answered Roger. “I come from Kendal, in Westmorland.” “I have stayed in the neighbor- hoot," she sald. "Are you any re- lation of Sir James Bracknell of Har- rowfell?” “My uncle and guardian,” he smil- ingly replied. Joy Gargrave looked at him thoughtfully. “I have met | your, uncle,” she said slowly, “I should scarcely have looked for his nephew in the Mounted Police. He did not seem to me the sort of man who would approve—" “It very Mkely that he would not approve if he knew. But that does not greatly matter; as before IT came) out here we quarrelled, and the re- lations between us are likely to con- tinue strained.” “Is it permissible to ask the cause of this quarrel?” inquired the man. Bracknell was about to administer a snub, when he caught Miss Gar- gTaye's eyes fixed upon him expect- antly. ‘There can be no harm in saying that my uncle hacia matrimo- nial scheme for me of which I did not approve, so here I am.” He laughed to hide his embarrass- ment. Miss Gargrave spoke again. “JT suppose you are in this ne'gh- borhood on profess'onal business?’" “Yes, he answered. “I have been they are at 95c. be sold for 50c. at our 142 East Second St. | : $1.50 Men’s Silk and Wool Hose ‘We've always sold these good Hose for $1.50 and at that price they were bargains so you can appreciate what a real bargain Then there is another lot of pure Virgin Wool Hose that sold for 76c during our sale, These are only two of the REAL BARGAINS that we are offering First Annual Clearance Sale Good things can’t last forever— you had better pay a visit to Shikany Shoe & Clothing Company These will Phone 474 The most consistent breeder of trouble is misunderstanding. We find that 99 per cent of all the trouble we have with our customers and that our customers have with us, is not trouble at all but simply a mu- tual misunderstanding. Our practice is to go to the customer who feels aggrieved and take the necessary time and put in the necessary effort to get his views of the matter and present to him ours. Talk the thing over and get acquainted. practically every instance we find the trouble is more imaginary than real and as soon as we understand each other the trouble vanishes, and so we invite any of our customers to call on us at any time and discuss any problem connected with our relations to them, with every assurance from us that we will devote such time as may be needed to make clear the matter not understood. In ke . wrthune following a man for a month and have trailed him something like 400 miles.” “Who was he? What had hedone? ‘Was he a very desperate character?" Inqulred Miss Gargrave. ‘*He was Koona Dick,” answered Bracknell quietly, his eyes fixed on her beautiful face, He was suspected of selling whisky to the Indians in the reservation, which is a serious offense in the territory.” For a moment after his rep:y there was a strained uneasy silence. Mr. Rayner fingered: the stem of a wine-glass nervously, whilst Miss La Farge was looking from him to Miss Gargrave with puzzled eyes. Miss Gargrave grew pale. ‘“I notice, Corporal Braclnell, thot You speak of this fellow in the past tense. Do you mean to say that he is—dead” ee “He {a lying in the snow in.a path cut through the trees off the main Toad to the lodge.” an! red the corporal steadily, “‘and he has been shot, I think.” “Good God,” ejaculated Mr. Ray- ner, in a voice that, whilst it ex pressed astonishment, seemed to the corporal to be a little flat. “And we have been sitting -here, gassing, whilst—” He broke off abruptly. “Joy," he cried addressing Miss Gargrave, “you are ill, The shock of this story— “It is nothing,” interrupted the girl.in shaking voice. “II feel a little faint, If you wil excuse me—" She rose to her feet, staggered a little, and then, as Miss ran to her, faintec, outright. Miss Gargrave was carried to her own room and while Mss La Farge attended her, Roger said: ‘I La Farge| wondering why Mi up here in the wilde Rayner laughed a little. The fact! the breed.” is she has no real choicé in the mat- ter. Rolf Gargrave was immensely rich, and he made his daughter his heiress, but on the condition that for three’ years after his death that she should live at North Star Lodge. That {9 the explanation!” * But why on earth should he make a condition of that sort — for a girl?” Bracknell asked. “Fe was a crank!" replied Reyner contemptuously. ‘He was not an ac- mirer of what is called modern cly- ilization—and while he sent his daughter to Enzland to be educated, he desired to ‘protect’ her against so- ciety irfluences; and he believed that a few years in touch with primitive life, would give her a distaste for the shams and artificiallties of great cities, Also—I believe he was a little a Quickly Conquers Constipation | Don’t let: tipatic ‘blood j ‘constipat Mek nish hed | fon’t work larly take CARTER’S charm all its own: ° and new combinations, A Breath of the New Season Spring Frocks Most refreshing are these lovely new frocks of crisp Taffetas and Soft Silk Crepes—each with a delightful $24.95 THESE SPRING INNOVATIONS COME AS A REAL CONTRAST OF THE WINTER THINGS—BRINGING YOUTHFULNESS AND ORIGINALITY. The favored Taffetas have been conceived in the most adotable styles—with lovely bouffant effects for the miss—softer fullness for the more mature—and all bringing the newest fashion ideas for Spring. Never were such preparations made for a Dress Sale. It is an event that will surpass all previous dress sales and make this the most welcome and the most talked-of re- membrance of the year. These Dresses Worth up to $35.00 NOW $24.95 New Spring Hats Let Go At $6.95 —All the clever new shades. —All the new and wanted colors, —New and unusual trimmings. Scores of flower trimmings, visca and hair-cloth Hats, some faced with Faille Silk. In black, brown Very specially priced. The National Sample. Cloak & Suit Store HENNING HOTEL BLOCK Gargrave livesafraid of fortune-hunters and wanted THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1923. said the corporal laconically, “The body we come to look for has disap- peared.” Tomorrow’s installment tells Joy Gargrave’s startling story. Joy’s mind mature before she met After (inner Rayner and Brack- nel! went to look at tne body. The latter explained he was sure it was that of the man he was hunting from the trail, which he had followed all that way. He had never seen Koona Dick. ‘Then simultaneously he and his companion came to an abrupt halt. At their feet in the snow was a dark blot. *: “A strange thing has happened,” BAKING POWDER you use /es Casper’s Greatest 1923 Sensation MILLS CONSTRUCTION CO. Watch Sunday’s Tribune New Spring Suits Arriving Daily Big assortment to choose from, in all the new wanted shades and styles, Priced $25 and Up 112 SOUTH CENTER ST.

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