Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 13, 1923, Page 4

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as rio PAGE FOUR It is estimated that 4 per cent! fot the crop will be harvested for silage, 69 per cent for grain and 27 per cent cut for forage or grazed or u oct. The yield of silage is at 6.5 tons per acre and the reports mdicate that 81 per cent of the crop is of merchantable qua ity compared with 84 per cent last year! and the ten year average of 86 per | cent. About 80 per cent of the crop is! + |grown in the southeastern district Sugar Beet Harvest in! {Gosnen, taramie and bintte seus | | ties) and 11 per cent fn the eastern! State Delayed by Bad | district (Converse and Niobrar 0 ties), Potatoer—The potato crop ts not! Weather. up to earlier indications and the } preliminary estimate of this year's production is 1,881,000 bushels com- Wyoming corn cr in the history of 788,000 bushels. The yie’d is placed at 99 bushels! against 110 bushels in 1922 and the sti /ten year average of 129 bushels. The quality of the crop {fs 84 per cent} pared with 90 per cent last year; and the ten year average of 91 per! ; | oent, 1. 8. Department of Agrict d by the Cheyenne office of the on of Crop & Livestock i mates. Corn—The preliminary estimate of Wyoming's corn crop bushels, the largest eve: last year's crop was estima The crop over the state is very| 1,560,000 bushels and the five year| spotted with some excellent yields average is 967,000 ‘bushels. The from dry land sections, while re- yield this year is 26 bushe's per acre ports from Goshen county show a compared to 24 bushels last year and light crop, the Powell district has a lighter crop than last year due to much smaller acreage. A number of sections are short and it seems that there will be but little need of many potatoes going out side the | state. Wyoming has shipped 306 cars} compared with 489 to October 28| jlast y The total shipment last) year was 1,036 cars compared with § cars in 1921 and 948 cars in ft ” }.1920 | | General—The harvest of sugar beets has been seriously delayed by wet weather, snow and freezing in Some of the higher sections, | |. The last cutting of alfalfa was | badly damaged and a larger acreage | has not been stacked. The hay crop| | |this year is not of as high quality| as in the past ysars due to dam- age from rain, The feed prospect Say “Phillips”~ Protect Your |i not as good as indicated earlier 1 ll, due to low feeding value Doctor and Yourself and a short crop over| much of the Big Horn Basin and| Beware of imitations of geniun afer isatrtacac bh Pipher wal abip eware 0: ola large tonnage of alf: “Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia,” the ano meni Li teseandpae original Milk of Magnesia prescribed | ea! y r fifty years. Accept | © “Phillips.” threshing and a considerate avce. ace of !cuked grain is stil in the » also larger size,| -je'ds, Time Extension For Building of tere serozty estar Dam Is Refused SONNE remeshacensiee aoe ee eee eee @de Casper Dally Cridune Inside Information | by the former state water commis-|tiations be not atrected in any way sion for the construction of the by the interests of any one pro- mond Dam on the Colorado river by | pect.” James B. Girand. Tho present per- RecN TRE mit will expire on December 22. BANKRUPTCY PETITIONS. The governor tn a statement to] CHEYEN Wyo., Nov. 13. — the water commission to deny ap-| Voluntary petitions in bankruptey pileation for renewal of the permit, |filed in the United States court here states that since the deveopment |Monday: of the Colorado river is now recely-| Frank E. Towns, Sheridan, labil- contain directions ‘i@ “uses PHOENIX, Artz., Nov, 18.—Gov-| ing consideration both by the basin | ities assets $1 (Grog store —AAvertis dem engtinrs Seer ee jernor Hunt today denied an exten-| states and by the federal government} Ross A Marsh, nston, Ma- zug store.— Advertisement. Tribune Want Ads bring results 's'on of time on the permit issued! he “believes it advisable that nego-'bilities $78 assets $1 ' _A Cordial : Welcome to Natrona Power Co. furnished the Electrical ixtures for the PRINCESS Confectionery SOILS. Casper’s Finest Establishment of Its Kind LPI SIS LSS Sa SSS SOS SS III IS IDI IIIa LST) magne arenes Casper is indeed fortunate in having construction men and know their work, who love their work, and whose chief desire is to be a part of the growth of Casper. We cite as the most recent example of this laud- able spirit, the completion of the new Princess Confectione: the ground floor of the Consolidated Royalty Building. The companies whose advertisements appear upon this page point with pride to the completion of the new building, and are glad that they _were able to play an important part in the erection of an establishment which is undoubtedly a milestone in the growth of this city. A piece done is the strongest evidence of skill and speaks louder than a thousand promises for the ability of the men who built. The Plumbing For The New Princess Is the Work of THE SCHANK PLUMBING & HEATING CO, We are proud of our work upon The Princess and invite the public to in- spect all outward evidences of modern plumbing upon the next visit to the new store, NEXT TIME—SEE THE SCHANK PLUMBING & HEATING CO. 359 East Second Street THE PRINCESS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1923 ‘the intention of the lestsiature that] WASHINGTON—Preciten t E Western boundary line of the Mra. Coolidge attended the thea: new county should be identical with the first time since th, the western line of the state trom| tered the White House)? Yellowstone park south. We think, | ——————————________ | therefore, that Teton county was sufficiently described and lesally4! Stevenson Reveals Fact, formed by the act of 1921." | The court's decision Was made in About Trouble After Two Yeats TETON COU HELD ENTITLE TOFOREST IND === Dispute: of Long Stand- there funds shld be pl to Peace Supreme Court. CHEYENNE, Wyo., Nov. 13—Te ton county is entitled to participate in the distribution of Federal forest reserve funds allotted Wyoming, the State Supreme court ruled in a case indirectly involving the long dis puted question whether Teton county is, or is not, a separate sub-division of the State of Wyoming. The ques- tion not being directly involved, was an action brought by residents with- | in the Teton county area who are en- | deavoring to prevent recognition of |the new county as a legal subdivi- sion. Further lUtigation involving the status of Teton county remains un- decided. SUMMARY OF NIGHT REWS LINCOLN—A. G. Eckhardt of | | DeKalb, Minos, former secretary hot finally answered by the court.) oo tne United States Grain Grow: the Htigation under consideration in-| oF. inc., iost his $70,000 libel suit | Yolving merely whether the State! against Professor H. C. Finle, of | fekee fade ts cr chee taped the University of Nebraska and | should include this allotment in that/ {he Nebraska Farm Bureau Yed- of Lincoln county, from the north-| °™ : ern portion of which’ the legislature, by enabling act, authorized the crea- tion of Teton county. ‘The court's decision settled, also, | that an error jn the legislative en-| abling act relative to the hotndaries| vf Teton county was not of vital im ee portance. The enabling act de-| _MOSCOW—In an effort to ecribes the west boundary of Teton| Straighten out legal technicalities | county as “beginning at the south-| Teearding Russian and American west corner of Yellowstone park and| ‘rade, due to the recent revival thence south along the west boun-| Of the Russian cooperative business dary of Wyoming.” Inasmuch as| ® Commission of American lawyers the southwest corner of Yellowstone| #8 reported Moscow. park is in Idaho, some miles west of| Taniac.” the west boundary of Wyoming, a| | WASHINGTON — The British | ‘Tanlac ts for sale by. all oul pe ssn. south from that corasr) Sovernmerit has notitied the treas- | Gruggiate. Acckbt ime . substituis would include within the Wyoming) ury that its next payment of the | Over 37 million bottles sold, Teton county a portion of Idaho.) war debt, due Derember 15, will Regarding this point the court's de-| be made In liberty bonds. cision, written Wy Associates Jus- —_—_—s—_—— tice Kimball and concurred in by the} _ Tribune Want Ads bring results. other justices, says: — = “It {s not urged that anyone was ecelved by the description. No one could have been mis'ed unless willing to belleve that the legisla- ture intended to include tn the new] nty a part of the neighboring! sta No doubt every person tn. terested in the new county could tell from the language of the act GEORGE STEVENSEN “The best I can say is not enough for Tanlac,” is: the | clative statement of George son, 3633 Loma Vista Ave., Oak Calif. “Rheumatism had me ertppled v; so I couldn't work for two and thr weeks at a time, and my wife tually had to help me put my on. Tanlac boosted up my appeti increased my weight fifteen p< and my rheumatism of twenty years’ standing went entirely, and I haven't felt BERLIN—Out of the 10,000 men employed in state printing plants only 1,000 are working and only two newspapers made their ap- pearance today. — Take Tanlac Vegetable Pilis— Advertisement. Tastes Better—Goes Farther—Always Good Pigeon's Fresh Roasted Coffee 228 East Second St. Phone 623 W yoming’s Finest Confectionery The New Fine Awning for Cn Ah Ah a ht tt A builders who The New Princess Confectionery ry, located on Was Made and Erected by of work well KISTLER TENT AND AWNING CO. 432 South Elm Phone 2065 ALL CONSTRUCTION WORK for the new PRINCESS CONFECTIONERY was contracted and done by Carson and Schulze CONTRACTORS Phone 711 Phone 1054-R ERM eka ca etg es hab CELLET ITAIIPAPALLLL Dell dl ed a all LLL LE OF LI I I EF EL a a ELLIO LE LO a PML LE LE LE

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