Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 14, 1923, Page 12

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st bl a t X t v ¥ t r { t 3 I t x sore@crmaars=s5 PAGE TWELVE. ALLLWESTOCK (Risks His Life Score Of Times for Science IN GOOD SHAPE T THs TIME Cattle and Sheep Have Wintered Well, March Survey Shows. Wrom estock are {n good con dition and } wintered well to date. while the winter ranges are in good condition according to the monthly livestock and range report issued by the Wyoming office of the U. S. Bureau of Agricultural Economics. Ranges and Feed: Ranges and feed conditions over the state are generally good, the ranges show a condition of 85 per cent compared to 83 per cent on February first. Ranges in the northeast are in fine shape and this section has a surplus of hay and feed, most of the state is amply supplied except the southern part where ranges have been short follow ing the dry conditions of last year, the large winter ranges along the Union Pacific west of Laramie have carried considerable snow, which melted to open ranges during Febru: ary. Reports from the state as a whole indicates that ranges opened up in many places during the month Considerable corn was shipped into the southern sections for range sheep and to provide for any emergencies that might occur. Some corn was also shipped into the central sections to provide a light ration for thin stock and to provide for feed should storms require {t. The Big Horn Basin and Converse county have shipped out alfalfa hay and meal The feed situation is generally good and several localities report a possib! surplus if no bad storms come later. On March 1 it was estimated that 620,000 tons of hay or 33 per cent of the 1922 crop of 1,879,000 tons were still held on farms and ranches. Cattle: Cattle are in good condi tion and the reports indicate an aver. age condition of 94 per cent compared to 94 per cent last month. Stock men say that cattle are in a little bet- ter shape than usual and much better than one year ago. . Some sections report an improvement since last ‘fall, Where the cattle came from the range thin. Considerable feeding has been done and there are but few re ports of hay shortages from the cattlemen. Cows are in good strong conditions and the prospects for a good calf crop are promising. Losses were very light during February. Few sales are reported, it would seem that there are more cattle for sale than there are buyers. Prices given indicate that calves, coming yearlings are bringing from $18 to $24, yearling steers, about $32 to $35, stock cows $28 to $37 and some bunches of stock cattle $29 to $35. Sheep: Sheep are in good condition and have wintered well, ewes are strong with prospects for a good lamb crop. Fleeces are in good shape and should weigh heavier than last sea son. Sheep ranges are generally good except along the Union Pacific west and partly cover@, requiring con siderable feeding of corn and other feed. Few sales have been reported, while a few reports indicate -hat buy- of Laramie, where ranges are short ers seem to hesitate at the prices iked. Reports from Johnson county state that lambs have been contract- ed for fall delivery at 10 and 11 cents. Sheepmen expect a better price for wool than they received last year. General: The livestock situation over the state seema to be looking up, the winter has been very favorable and sheepmen feel optimistic as to the future, while cattlemen are hop- ing for a price that will cover the cost of production. Considerable in- terest in farming sections are shown in dairy cows and hogs. The range stockman is facing © gerious problem as to range, the passing of the Public Domain is fast closing the large ranges. It seems that the stockman can not pay the price that is asked for this land and get a fair return for its) grazing value. Entertainment Sought by Men | For Auto Show| Another step toward the consum mation of a successful automobile show to be held at the Arkeon March Che Casper Daily Cribune VILNA DISTRICT AWARDED TO Lithuanian Claims Fail to Receive Recog- nition When Frontier Between Poland and Russia Is Finally Fixed by the Allied Council of Ambassadors PARIS, March 14.—(By The Associated Press.) —By de- cision of the allied council of fixed finally the frontier between Poland and Russia, the WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 192 POLES BY ALLIES One man, partly dressed, escaped by jumping out of a window, leaving Part of his clothes behind. ‘The five persons arrested are George Brigeil, Henry Larned, George H. Taylor, Mrs. A, Nicho'son and Mrs. Charles N. Strickler. STILL SEWED, jail. The raid netted three smaller Stills in addition to the 75-barrel one and 21 barrels, according to the sheriff. Harding Files Income Returns Income tax law making the preside: salary taxable went into effect wh Mr. Harding took ofice. However, h's return last year covered only nin months o his salary. The Caspain Sea is declared to bo gradually disappeartng. CLAN STUART will hold a box secial and dance on Friday evening, March 16, in I. 0.0. F. hall. COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 14—The first fully ear income tax return ever tiled by a president of the United ambassadors, rendered today Vilna district is attached to Poland. This decision the culmination of the long dispute between Poladtand ONE ARRESTED In a raid on the Powers’ ranch, 18 States was in the local internal rev nue ofice today—President Harding's report for 1922. An amendment toithe DR. MARCO AURELLO By EDWARD THIERRY New York, March 14.—Although he has already risked his life for science 28 times, Dr. Marco Aurello Herra- dora, noted theapeutist and bio hemist, expects to live to be a hund- red. For that, the scientist predicts, will soon be the normal span of life for those who fulfill these two con ditions. “Exterminate bacteria—and clean.” As a result of many risks in testing irug combinations in his war against bacteria, Dr. Herradora has perfected keep AER BUT LABORATORY THE FINAL TEST O A TORMULA 15 MADE ON HIMSELF HERRADORA. tion have reached $30,000 in the past few years. Guinea pigs cost 90 cents each, white rate 4/ cents, rabbits from $1.50 to $2, dogs $5, monkeys from $15 up. | Dr, Herradora 1s just 38 and |graduate of the University of Barc lona. As president of the United Latin-American Colonies Society he | Was chosen to deliver to New York the statue of Simon Boliver, South American liberator, in behalf of the Latin-American ‘Colonies Society he est work has been in perfecting drug formulas for tuberculosis, pneumonia, malaria, influenza, heart disease, pel many formulas to destroy disease. “Modern therapeutics sre dimin- ishing disease," he said. ‘But that is} only half the battle. It is not enough| to cure disease if we would live to] be 100 years old; prevention is neces- sary, and the surest way is by clean- liness, Baths, and more bath means less accumulation of bacter! or check /jagra and high blood pressure. | LATE SPORTS | NEW YORK, March 14.—Bill Bren- nan, the Chicago heavyweight, |thing going on around him. time he was completely paralyzed for | There will always be bacteria, but we have greater protection against it.’ | Vivisection is a means Dr. Herra-| dora uses in h!s laboratory experi- ments—but the final test of a drug formula is always made on himse’f! “My records,” he said, “show that I have used 7981 animals, including guinea pigs, rabbis, white rats, dogs and monkeys. But before a formula is perfect I must know how it acts on a human being. So I take it my- self—and I watch the symptoms. “Many. times I have nearly lost my life in these sclentific tests. Twenty- eight times I faced death. But I sur- vived to perfect the drug combina tions, ing this, in the fight for human life. For 16 years I have been do- It ment in science.” Once Dr. Herradora took 216 grains of sodium fodine, he said, in an ex- periment for a rheumatism formula. For 12 hours he could neither move nor walk, but was conscious of every- Another two weeks after trying on himself a formu‘a containing quinine extracted direct from the tree bark. Bills for animals for experimenta- —China’s latest move to abr | friendship between our two c In a note delivered to the Chinese charge at Tokio and made public at Lack of Appetite 26, 27, 28 and 29, was taken last night | when C. R. Peterson of the Wyoming Cadillac company went to Denver to confer wtih theater heads there on the matter of obtaining several spe cialty cabaret numbers for the enter. tainment feature of the show. Just what Mr. Peterson will be’ able to obtain is not known as yet, but scme good acts are promised. The automobile and accessory deal- ers of the city are making elaborate preparations for the show which will undoubtedly exceed in {ts many at tractions the show of last fall. Ar- rangements are being made with the manufacturers to furnish the very latest models of all makes in time for this great spring exhibit. The success of the displays last fall have taught the dealers that the people of Casper really cherish a pro- gram of this kind and that they will pat form their con the midst of many enthusiasts, Its educational value is one of:the Mnest parts about the show. about c are in | f When Due to Indigestion, Acid, Sour, Bloated Stomach, Is Restored by a Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet After Meal: ‘When there js indigestion and the stomach does not seem to relish food it is a great mistake to starve or to use stimulants to force appetite. The best way is to woo the stomach back to health by giving it the help it needs, the alkaline effect that arrests acidity, prevents gassiness, belching, ure that sour risings, flatulence. pr seems to crowd the heart and such distresses due to indigestion. Chew one or two of the large, whita tablets after eating, no water needed, and the stomach setties down to restful digestion, you feel eased and comfort- able and you get the good of food You now tackle pia, cheese, pickles, anything you like without the means a yspepsia Tablets druggist. —Advertiseme does not matter, for there is no senti-| knocked out by Luis Frpo, the Ar- gentine pugilist, at Madison Square | Garden, last Monday night, was re- moved to the Jewish Memorial hos- pital today, where it was said ho may have concussion of the brain. ST. LOUIS, MO., March 14.—(By The Associated Press.)—George Sis- ler, local American ‘league first sacker, who has been acclaimed the best all around player in the league, today said he expects to join his team mates at the Mobile training camp next week. His physicians informed him it would be inadvis- able for him to take up training be- fore then, he added. MOSCOW, Ind., March 14.—Har- Lithuania, with dramatic incidents beginning with the raid pests Selassie aa Ata on Vina by the Polish General Zell gouski in 1920, | Besides Vilna, Poland gets eastern| Yalicia, which practica'ly satisfies all ver remaining itorial aspirations that had already not been passed upon | The situation with Lithuania was much improved by today’s decision by the council regarding Vilna\M. Gal-| vanauskar, who has just resigned the Lithuanian premlersh'p, is on his way| to Paris to sign the settlement giving Lithuana the port of Memel, on the Baltic, but it is anticipated the suc- ceeding government at Kovno will raise obections to the attributing of Vilna to Poland. ‘The declaration made by M. S'korskt, the Polish premier, to the Polish diet yesterday that the frontiers established vy the treaty of Riga, between Poland and soviet Russia, are inviolate and can be brought into question by no me, is taken as an assurance that the >olish government will be entirely| satisfied with the council’s decision. habbetibestANcilensieds WYOMING IS BLANKETED WITH SNOW, ND RELIEF IN PROSPECT FOR DAY With no relief in sight for the next 24 hours, all the northern plateau| section cf the west is being swept today by snow and winds. Sheep and| cattle, many of which had been! turned out with the false signs of| extended warm weather, are said to be suffering throughout Wyoming with the possibility of some losses in the most severely attacked centers of | the industry. In Casper and vicinity snow has been falling all night and part of the day with a resulting blanket of sev eral inches laying on the ground ‘This is extremely wet and will prob. ably be dissipated with a brief period of sunshine. In the Falkland Islands there are five men to every woman. Blackheaded Pimples Quit WithS.S.S. ‘Why? Pimple-Poison Goes When Red+ Blood-Cells Increase! S. S. S. Builds These Red-Blood Cells, You can be snre of this, nature has no ute for red-blood-cells. Fimple- t live in the red rivers of your blood as long as there are enough Fich red-blood-cells in it, More red- old Telford of Coeur d'Alene, two years guard on the University of | Idaho basketball team, was elected | captain of the 1923-24. team at a meeting here last night. Telford was named by Dr. J. F. Bohler, conference secretary, as a member of his all-Paciflic coast conference basketball team for the season just closed. JAPANESE REFUSE TO ABROGATE ‘21 DEMANDS’ TREATY; CHINESE WARNED AGAINST PUSHING PLEA WASHINGTON, March 14.—(By The Associated Press.) ogate the famous “twenty-one demands” treaty of 1915 has led Japan to inform her that |such a proposal is contrary to accepted international prac- tices and will “fail to contribute to the advancement of countries.” j the Japanese embassy here the Jap- anese foreign office not only flatly rejected the proposal that the treaty | and its kindred agreements be abro- | gated, but declared it could see | ‘absolutely nothing” in them which usceptible of further modifica: NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS Hereafter the final edition street by 3:30 p. m. every afternoon. for all advertising copy to be o’clock a, m. on the day of publi It will be better for the advertiser to have his copy in the night before. No ads which come in on the The advertiser will get better dis- will make the mail edition, play and more results if he wil to always get copy in on the day previous to publication. The Tribune can positively not guarantee publication for any advertisement which is not in this office by 10 o'clock on the morning of the day for which Advertiser, will be the one who tisement is in earlier than that; attention which takes time, anc more effective. (4 @ Bes ‘the shame ofa blemished face tf Dlood-cells! That is what you need when you see tEaplee Staring st you in the mirror, Blackheaded pimples are worse! Eczema is worse yet! Youcan try everything under the sun.—you'll find only one answer, more cell-power in your blood! The tremendous re- sults produced by an increase in red: Dlood-cella is one of the A. B. C.’s of medicel sclence. Red-cells mean clear- pure rich blood. They mean clear, rud- dy, lovable complexions, They mean e power, because oll your ner are fed by ‘your blood. “They mi freedom forever from pimples, from the from boils, from ecse- uptions, from rheuma- tism impurities, from that tired, ex- hausted, run-down feeling, Red-blood- cells are the most important thing to the world to each of us. 5S. 8. S. will build them for you. 8. &. 8. known since 1826, as one of the great. est blood-buliders, blood-cleansers and aystem ever produced. 8. S. 8, is sold at all drug stores im two sizes. Tho larger size bottle is the more econoniical, S.S.S.niscarhst of The Tribune will be on the This makes it necessary in The Tribune office by 10 ication. day of publication 1 systematize his methods so as it is intended. And you, Mr. will profit most if your adver- that it may receive the careful i which helps to make any ad miles northeast of the city, yesterday afternoon, the sheriff's forces seized a 75-gallon still that is believed to have been supplying Casper with moon- shine for the last three years. C. 1. Powers, owner of the ranch, was arrested and brought to the local CORNS Lift Off with Fingers SUMMARY OF OWN YOUR HOME ————————t NIGHT NEWS Five-room strictly modern home; oak floors; fur- nace heat; built-in kitchen cabinet, bathroom; Kitchen | finished in white enamel; gas range connected; full basement with room finished, toilet in basement; lo- cated on South McKinley Street just off Second Street, close to school. Price $5,750.00, Terms. Immediate Possession. See Ben Realty Co. REALTORS SYRACUSE, N. Y—Dr. James Roscoe Day, chancellor emertus of Syracuse university and known as the “friend of corporations’ over which he became entangle with Pres'dent Roosevelt during his ad- ministration, ded at Atlantic City. RECKLINGHAUSEN—French en- gineers seized government-owned coke plant at Westerholt and shipped irst tra'nload of 15,000 tons of coke taken with the plant to France. DES MOINES—The firs of the bonus checks for Iowa soldiers will be sent out early in Apr!l as a re- sult o the decision of the supreme court establishing the validity of the state bonus law. INSURANCE LOANS GMUDEN—The former kaiser {s again a grandfather when h's daugh- ter, the Duchess of Brunswck, gves birth to a son. BERLIN—The German govern- ment 'n a note to the French govern- ment protests against the severe re- prsals taken for the killing of two Frenchmen at Buer when t has not been proved that Germans had any part in the ki'ling: FIVE ARRESTED IN RAID mA Building Materials We are equipped with the stock to supply your wants in high grade lumber and build- ON WET PARTY, REPORT) | Freezone” on an aching corn, in: : I "2 ; ‘ an a Brod on an apartment house in stantly that corn stops hurting, then southern part of the city at 3 ye : leiiae shortly you lft it right off with ; ck this morning the sheriff's dep.|tingers. ‘Truly! E i utes arrested three men and two} women alleged to have been tn a state! of inebriated exhilaration. The raid was made after a compla‘nt had been phoned in to the sheriff by netghbors Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of Freezone” for a few cents, suffi- cient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the calluses, without soreness or irri- ers’ supplies. Rig timbers a specialty. Phone 3 yar sa that the party was waxing hilarious. | tation Advertisement. OA rinting | Look over this list and see if there is anything you need. We execute orders in the least possible time consistent with good, clean work at a fair profit. Letter Heads, Envelopes, Bill Heads, Statements, Bill and Charge Accounts, Ledger Sheets and Special Ruled Headings of every description, Wedding Invitations, Calling Cards, Booklets, large and small, in fact anything that can be printed with ink and type. Why No Man Can Go to Hell His Own Road Because he cannot go there without hurting his fellow-men who do not want to go there, Selling below cost is an economic fraud and falsifies the whole chain of commercial transactions that ensue, The most im- ortant, and most evaded problem of a printer is to know, day by day, a We i making a profit.—From the March issue of The Typothetae ulletin, OLDEST ESTABLISHED PRINTING HOUSE IN CASPER Commercial Printing Co. Phone 980- J Basement Midwest Building Casper, Wyoming CONTOUR

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