Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 15, 1925, Page 2

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e Y: PAGE TWO. Gre Caner Daily Cribune VESTOCK MEN ARE PROMISED CONSIDERATION Secretary Gore Sends Message to National Association Meet. | only IINTER-ALLIED DEBT ISSUE IS REOPENED 15.—(By The Associ- s8).—An official renewal of the proposal for settling the inter. allied debts contained in the Balfour note of 1922 {is made by the British inet in the reply Winston Chur chill, cancellor of the exchequer, ha: given to the recent letter of Finance Minister Clementel on that subject. The British cabinet thus proposes to demand from the allies the amount by which Great Britain’s payments to the United States for LEU 15.}her debt exceeds the amount she re- re partment (ooives from Germany f t toda raphed the) Mr. Churchill's letter says negotia- nal L' ASSO"! tion rding method of payment tior will be necessary between the two governments in the same spirit of comradeship” that united them dur- este man.” secretary's teelgram, read at the convention this orr ents here the r iquerque wishes t them of my iportant mat { agriculture sire to express the associates as W earnest consi war. poets eS SEARCHERS FR AODIES BATT STOR ON PEAK nd ed to ¢ suggestion F R . . it, promleed it the end|Forest Rangers Join in de 1 a bet ‘ the vestock| Hunt for Estes Park na In the mr zin fees - 2 about which you » inquiry, I be Victims. I i an vie point of s kmen © question and — r ure them that the in ESTES PARK, Colo., Jan. 1 In » engaged in the in-| the teeth of a raging blizzard, 11 ye will be a domi-| Men, including s al forest rang consi ers, today were battling their way anization that | UP the face of Le s peak to nt is a mem r nee which has been © president for the con search further for Herbert Sortland and to bring down the brozen body Miss Agnes Vaille, who lost her party as it ascended the mountain. He tnevile Bi j.| life in the course of a climb to the fon Oe Ne Denes or eer | summit 4a-obmpany with + Waller nting the industry will| Kener last Sunday. Sortland was > os red jn a| 10st from a rescue party that set out Loteal 5 ‘e manner. | to find Miss Vaile. T trust yc e having a thoroughly]. While weather prevailing at the atisfactory and profitable meeting. | D25¢ of the peak was comparatively Signed, Howard M. Gore.” mild today, {t was predicted that — ~ sub-zero temperatures even lower than the mark of 50 degrees below zero that brought death to Miss FARM BUREAU ELECTS LARAMIE, Whore ‘at pleting its annual leet Laramie n connection with Wyo. farm Jan —The bureau, com session today, to 1 January, 1926. the extension service and the boys’ and girls’ club worl: at the University of Wyoming, elected the following ficers H. J. King, Laramie, president Walter War iverton, vice-pres dent om, Brough, secretary treasurer, and EB, Lyma A. Wat: Members of the party, however, expressed no hope that Sortland would be found alive and declared their task probably would constst of bringing to Long's Peak Inn the body of Miss Vaille and that of Sort land, {f it could be located. > MAIL HOLDUP IS CHARGED TO FUGITIVE son, Laramie and Mrs, Lettie Camp-} NEW YORK, Jan. 15.—Gerald bell, Star Valley, directors, the five|Chapman, notorious mail robber, constituting the executive commit-|who escaped from the Atlanta pent. tee. tentiary 4ome time ago, was pos!- How to Make Pine + Cough Syrup at Home ; ge Se Hae no equal for prompt results, Takes but # moment to prepare, and saves you about §2, non tom teen enn troeteonte Pine is used in nearly all rescrip- tions and yemedies for coug! The reason is that pine contains several elements that have a remarkable effect in soothing and healing. the membranes of the throat and chest, P ugh syrups are combinations The “syrup” part een tnt ee: $10,000 in ively identified today as the lone bandit who held up the mail clerk in a Long Island railroad car last Tuesday night and escaped with ash, AIALTO GETS VEGETABLES of pine and syrup. By fast shipment from sunny that money can buy, put 3% ounces |the year around, the Rialto Fruit of Pinex store has just received a whole na pint bottle, and fill up ¢ sugar syrup. Or |c ses, honey, or corn syrup, instead of sugar syrup, Either way, you make a full pint more than you can buy ready-made for three times the It pure, good and tastes very pleasant, You can f cough or cold b The nd tight na wey that means cough ‘may be dry, or may be persist. from the formation of t The cause is the same—in- | flamed membranes—and this Pinex | nd Syrup combination will stop it isually in 24 hours or less. Splen- did for bron al asthma, hoarse- throat ailment, aa concentrated com: and of genuine Norway pine ex- and is famous the world over ts prompt ffect upor coughs. Beware of substitutes. Ask your druggist for “2% ounces of Pinex” with directions, and don't accept any- thing else ranteed to give abso- Jute satisfaction or money refunded, The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. JUST RECEIVED A Fresh Shipment of SICHLING’S vegetables is in the list to 1 this take hold of a jat this time | following ere G. M Natrona county, president S. Brown, Fremont nty, vice president; P- Fort ner, Hot Springs county, secretary- Name Change parload of fresh vegetables. All the joys of mid-summer garden are again possible. here. rything in the, list of bunch To be able seasonable products the year, is a pleas. ure of Casperites afforded them by the Rialto Fruit store at unusually low prices. PENLEY HEADS COUNTY AGENTS LARAMIE, Wy enjoy, such , Jan. 16.—The ty Agents’ association, com- ed of the county agricultural nts in each county in the state, ting h t night, selected the treasurer For Rainier Is MILWAUKEE Rye, Graham, Whole | Wheat and Tea Table BREAD |: ROLLS Turned Down SHINGTON, Jan. 15.—The THREE-CENT GAS TAK PROPOSAL 5 DEFENDED BY, W. CONNELL The proposed three-cent sales tax] ing the name and address of each on gasoline was defended before the | Kiwanfan present with a fine of 10 Kiwanis club today by S. W. Con-| cents euch as penalty for failure or well, of the state highway commis-| error. He made the circuit of the sion, as the one equitable method of} Henning dining room with ease and making those who use the state’s| accuracy, but with one costly omis- roads pay for their upkeep. sion, He neglected to mention R. C. Cather Failure to levy an increased line tax, Mr. Conwell told the Kiwan P, N. Chapin was announced win- fans, will mean either tMat the road ner of this week’s attendance prize. can not be cared for properly or that | He must qualify at the next meet oll royalty income will be devoted to| ing by giving the biography of B. T. meantenance instead of ew ¢ | Cullen, struction, thereby forfei At the meeting a fortnight hence state the advantage of federal aid.|the Kiwanians will be the guests of Mr. Conwell ridiculed the conten.| the Natrona General hospital, and tion that an increased tax would] Will inspect the newly completed ad. curtail the consumption of gasoline. | dition to the hospital building. The He pointed Ott that 21 states now| invitation was tendered by Dr. having such a tax had showed an| George Smith. increase in consumption of| J. A. Leary has been elected to 22 per cent, and that in Nebras the Kiwanis board of directors. He h has no tax, consumption had sed only 4.4 per cent. The highway commission {ts income now from three the speaker exp) accruing from +1 e ward retiring the bor ing the earlier year ment’s operation, at ent rate will cl succeeds Emmett Fuller, who ten dered his resignation owing to pre: of business derives ee Jan ness in the next seven ye > 16.—Taking pald: = Now amitersccdee up the $39,000,000 rivers and harbors care of by the income from ¢ Ru thet today. resected, ani alties and by federal aid funds amendment by Representative Bar Unued pRneIEEe ABE MER EES bour, Republican, California to re course, depends on the state's ap] dire local communities to contri bute to proje measure in or uid from the propriatin, ts recommended in the r to receive financial government its share This leaves only the gasoline tax to maintain highways already built the speaker continued. Last year| penvER, Colo. Jan, 16.—Gov this amounted” to approximately | ernor Morl< today announced the 200,000. e Wo ; i S ; $200,000. ance work ppointment of Lewis N, Scherff, of 19 4 will t about $614,000, Edgewater, Colorado, as chief of Conwell e tir d. Thus the ry the state department for prohibition posed increase in the gag tax from'! enforcement. to succeed “Sohn R one to three cents would virtually Smith, herff, who js a captain in es the upkeep cost ns 1 guard, is a Seven years hence, when the high Jormney way bonds are retired, Mr. Conwell ‘ pointed out, the state will have a] yorge, Idaho, Jan. 15—-Under fine fyatem of roads entire ly Pala] suspension of rules, tho lower house 0 er that time the income : of the Eighteenth Idaho legislature from lcense fees will be available , ery aero eealatur today ‘unanimously passed a senate measure to prohibit the granting of permits by the state commissioner of agriculture to appropriate Idaho waters for use outside the state. ts Natal ca for maintenance. Meanwhile, he ar. gued, the motorist who creates the demand for improved roads should pay his just share of the of keeping them in condition. President R. C. Cather was calle¢ cost | in Uncle Sam’s Radio Cops Kept on Steady Duty To Force Rules Observance By ROBERT T. SMALL. (Copyright, 1925, Casper Tribune) WASHINGTON, Jan. 15.—The task of “policing the ether’ has srown to enormous proportions dur. ing the last two years and the “traf. fic cops” of the department of com merce, charged with the task of keeping amateurs and professionals within their alletted lanes and pre. venting them from breaking the “speed” laws by overstepping the Intensity of their assigned signals. are crying loudly instrumental Ip in } n and for Ing the roadways of the The problem of the amateur ts a big one with the governing officials of the radio and yet the department of commerce is anxious not to do anything to discourage the “hams" and the transmitting “bugs”, lest the actual development of > art is retarded. It is real y all radio engineers that the ateurs of the country, by thelr stant experimenting and delving » the mysterfes of the wireless principle making constant and definite contributions to the perfec tion of a science which admittedly is in its infancy. Radio manufacturers are, perhaps sirous as the amateurs of changes, for each improvement means pping or the diminution value of thousands of dollars worth of equipment, either in use or on the market. The amateur, with his home-made set, is not happy unless he is ig constant changes. Most of these changes naturally are ar. thereby rushing ra revolutionary the valueless, but occasionally a vast improvement is wrought. ‘The ordinary user of a radio re- ceiving set really knows but very ttle of what is going on in the air about him. If he can “select” half a dozen or more of the big high- powered broadcasting stations of the country, he feels that he is not only to be envied by other set owners, but that he, personally, is a particu. larly accomplished operator. Very few of even the most expen sive of the sets on the market to- day have a range of selectivity which permits tuning in on the low upon to qualify for the attendance For results try a Tribune Classi- prize awarded him last week by giv. fied Ad . iblic land committee, by a of nine to four today refused port a senate bill to change sme of Mount Ranier, Wash to Mount Tacoma. Luther H eads Berlin Cabinet BERLIN, Jan. 15.—(By The Asso. clated Press.)—Dr.° Hane Luther this afternoon appointed Ger- “Th e Delic wave lengths. For some reason or other, the manufacturers seem to have gone in for the higher ranges, most of the sets being reaching bands which use. When one does get a set or so re- arranges his set as to tune in on the amateur treffic at night, then and then only can he appreciate what is really going on in the ether world. There are something like 15,000 amateurs licensed in this country. M of the amateurs dabble in transmitting only by code signals, but more and more of them are equipping their “laboratories” — some in cellars, some in attics and relegated to the barn—with mostly home-made, swiping” and transforming it from the old lamp socket, they nightly engage in conversa. tional tests with “friends” all across the country. Naturs same da: capable of are not in , it is a radio dream that each person may have his own particular wave length so as to carry on wireless conversations at any time and place, The amateurs of today are approximating that dream while the average radio user knows nothing about it, A listener-in here in Washingtona w nights ago heard a local ama- teur calling by assigned signal num- ber a friend in Pittsburgh. He was calling through the microphone and said he was transmitting on 150 metres and 20-watt strength. He asked for an answer on a lower Wave band, In a very few mo- ments the answer came. Then fol- lowed a coytyersation between the two boys, Finally the lad in Pitts- burgh exclaimed: “You'll have to ring off, old fellow, I want to talk to a guy out In Kan. sas City. Good night." The amateurs are on the air at all hours of the day and night, Isten- ing and “butting in,” but each and every one of them is working in his own way to help solve the infinite problems of this new source of com: munication, They ate difficult to keep in line, jt is true. More than often, they step “out of bounds” in their unquenchable enthusiasm and therefore the radio cops want mea- suring instruments hich will per- mit them to gauge the strength of the transmitting signals as well as to record the length of the waves. The measuring of the waves is quite THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1925 -4.03+60 by keeping your BLOOD PRESSURE NORMAL~* IDE Iodine-Colloid TRADE MARK wely reduces High Blood Pres. ture. 3 tablets daily. Guaranteed harmless and non-poisonous. Positive results or money refunded. $1.00 at your druggist or sent direct, KOLIDE LABORATORIES, Inc. Foll-lodine Laboratories On~sale at Kimball Drug oc, the Midwest Pharmacy, Sprecher’, Pharmacy and the Tripeny Drug simple with instruments already possessed. The gauging of the fféld strength of the signals is something else again. The latest proposed ban on the ubiquitous amateurs is that’ they shall be ruled off the air every night between 8 and 10:30 o'clock. ‘This would prevent interference with the more important broadcast progran The amateur does not much tare. He will employ every other minute of the 24 hours. Prison Terms For Violators Of Prohibition WASHINGTON, Jan. 15.—A_ bill to make a prison sentence a man- datory upon conviction for violation of the prohibition laws was reported tnday by the house judiciary com mittee. A CLEAN OUT OF Children’s High Shoes and Ladies’ Oxfords THREE DAYS ONLY Friday, Saturday, Monday CHILDREN’S SHOES Patents with colored tops—Patents with kid tops, button and lace—Tans in lace and button. All new, sizes 514 to 2. These shoes go at a price that no child should be with- out a pair. Look These Prices Over Then Act! - Ne 84% to 1114—regular $3.65 and $3.95, at. 11% to 2—regular $3.85 and $4.50, at LADIES’ OXFORDS ‘High and low heel Cortectives, black and browns, 1 lot of Tans, low heels. Regular $5.85, at ___-________ 1 lot of Russian Tans, low heels. Regular $7.45, at _-..______ 1 lot of Black Calf, low heels. Regular $7.45, at 1 lot of Sports, black and tans. Regular $7.45 (small sizes) $9 ous | 1 lot of Correctives, black and brown. Regular $7.45, at HAYTIN’S Boot Shop “We Fit the Feet” COR. 1ST AND CENTER GLADSTONE BLDG. Coal Heat--- A SAFE HEALTHFUL HEAT A bin full of coal— And the satisfaction of KNOWING That no matter how low The mercury_may go You and yours will be WARM. PHONE 949 for a load of the good Gebo Coal Natrona Transfer, Storage and Fuel Co, JOHN L. BIEDERMANN, President

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