Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 22, 1925, Page 6

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‘AGE E Lt Ch On the ‘the tri it came rid flie ntioner da cran the pla ing to th in u work al 2 half ught th NE enor We on, 80 noment chain b to the f to bres 1t when don’t k a kick a half n just a rse, it just on withou bit. F aged, s put ne e Was t By this arrive 1 his fl d of go : him, drawi came don, ar er w ained t in the & ome to 2 party “ guste woulda > gone . Was! Ral lt On’ Cre Wi oO mu V's de the 1 - life 1% on py ir thr aw bedcl: hat t iy in sar erou an a cks 1, eF per 217 Ww Chi PAGE SIX TURK TREATY THLK BEUIVED nY PRESIDEN Lausanne Pact Brought Up for Discussion at White House. — The pro: omatic in the invitation of President © senate for- its position At the Coolidge, members of t eign relations committee discussed the treaty at the White House last night with Richard Washburn Child, former ambassador to Italy, who represented the United States in its negotiation. The conference was said to have been devoted largely to a presentation by Coolidge of his views as to the importance of senate action on the treat which has been pe ing In corm: for more than a’ year The senators attending sald’ the ressed no views nor did president himself e regarding tho treat give any intention as to the prob: abilities of action b the senate, where opposition already has de veloped. CRUDE DUE FOR PaICE ADVANCE Continued from Page One. parts of the midcontinent district and those in the Rocky Mountain re- gion. Coming almost simultaneously with the announcement of the quick decline of the Wortham pool, are the flashes on the wire that the Mag: nolfa Ofl company has posted new prices that mark an increase of 25c to 42 cents on certain midcontinent crudes. At the same time there ts word of a 10c advance in Ohio oils. Since price increases invariably start in the midcontinent district and almost as invariably reach Wyo- ming soon afterwards, this state may well expect to see a revision up- wards in the quotations on its output of petroleum. With Wortham pool feemingly eliminated as a threatening factor in the market, the probability {s that the initial increase in price will soon |- ke followed by others. Not only 1s Wortham withdrawn but the season is at hand for increased consumption of gasoline and other ofl products which in itself 1s sufficlent to great- Violation Of Arms Pact By - Britain Seen WASHINGTON, Jan. 22.—A new angle has been injected into the growing complexities of the naval situation by a pending senate resolu- Uon seeking information from Great Britain as to whether the construc: tion of her two new capitol ships violates the provisions of the arms conference treaty. On the heels of the senate’s adop- tion yesterday of a proposal that It authorize and request President Cool- idge to call another arms conference Senator McKellar, Democrat, Ten- nessee, presented a resolution that would request the president to obtain nformation as to whether Great Britain had violated the existing arms in the construction elson. The bed in the battleships the Rodney and th two ships have been desc: senate as combination and aircraft carriers. In the meanwhile, the senate’s ac- tlon in accepting as an amendment to the naval bill yesterday, without debate proposal for an- r a conference stood in a lit- clearer light today. —_ Universities Subsidized By Gifts, Charge MADISON, Wis., Jan. 22.—Growth of the subsidy system in»state uni- versities and colleges {s contempor- aneous with the growth of monoply in industry, it was charged by Sen- ator LaFollette of Wisconsin in an editorial appearing in the January issue of LaFollette’s magazine. Senator LaFollette attacked gif of more than $50,000,000 by two mil- lonaires recently to educational in- stitutions and cites that during Civil War times, education was supported in larger measure by small gifts and donations. Now the editorial states, wealth has become concentrated in Considered For Drake Mentor DES MOINES, Ia., Jan. Aubrey Devine, former University of Iowa football star and all-Ameri- can quarterback selection in 1921, Is being considered by Drake antver- sity athletic officials as a possible addition tq the present coaching staff. 22.— yine, who {s coaching at Den- ver university, has indicated his desire to return to Des Moines as a member of the coaching staff of one of the universities here. He con- templates opening a law office in Des Moines, {t is said. Officials at Des Moines university also have had Devine'’s name under consideration. WASHINGTON AND PARK DIVIDE DOUBLEREADER Washington and Park schools di- vided their doubleheader in the grade school basketball league yesterday afternoon, the boys from Park win- ning 8 to 5 while the girls from Washington won 12 to 4. The lineups: Boys. Washington — Stanley, Turner, Mere’s Karl MeNeely Washington Taft, Barr, Huber. outfielder who drove in the run that Park—Callegas, O'Malley, Beach, | qecided the 1924 world series with | Taylor) Bee the Giants. {1 won the ttle for Gtris. Waxhington ‘That base hii no doubt Washington—Both, Alice, Miller,} jas cuused McNeely to. boost. hie Covfngton, Jones, and Duncan. Park—Watson, Chew, Johnson, Shumaker, Fullero, Holloran, Stew- art, COLLEGE BALL STARS ON RESERVE LIST OF is the hands of comparatively few per- sons, and “subsidies have increased until it may be said that higher edu- cation leoks to the monopoly system rather than to the public or the state for its support Cross-Word Puzzle Back Of Court Suit} NEW YORK, Jan. 22.— The Daily Graphic has instituted pro- ceedings for an injunction to re- strain the Bronx Home News from publishing probable solu- tions In prize cross-word puzzles appearing in the Graphic. The Home News also is publish- ing probable answers to prize ly influence the price structure of crude oil generally. COSTARICAIS OUT OF LEAGUE GENEVA, Jan. 22.—Costa Rica filed her resignation from the league of nations today transmitting with lier mesrage a check for back dues. No reason was given for the with- drawal but a league official sald @ assumed the resignation was due to criticism of the country for failure to pay her assessments. The letter containing notice of res- ignation inclosed a check for $13,677 in payment of back due for the years 1921-1924 inclusive. fo Dt was Young Wrigley Is Slated To Head Company There are four famous blends - - four famous » flavors -- from the four | corners of the East--- Black [Orange Pekoe] Green [Japan] Oolong English Break fast Schilling cross-word puzzles appearing in four other newspapers. LUTHER WINS CONFIDENCE VOTE TODAY BERLIN, Jan. 22.—(By The Asso- ciated Press)}—The reichstag today approved the government's program, as outlined by Chancellor Luther, by a vote of 246 to 160. The new government of Dr. Luther was also approved by the reichstag, the vote being 248 to 180. apis teint Gibbons Will Meet Herman In Detroit Fight DETROIT, Mich Jan ommy Gibbons has been > meet “Tiny Jim H matched n of. Jmaha in a und here uary 3 announced toda si aa FOR WEAK LUNGS Colds and Coughs W. Wyatt, Leeton, Mo., says gained 25 pounds tn 6 months. Feeling fine T am glad to recom- mend MeMullins Formula.” If you have weak lungs, cold, bronchial (rouble, stubborn cough or asthma, once. Formula at Pharma: McMu!l eb try ns | your business. Give us a ring on your next or- der of job printing. We want your confidence and some of Hoffhine Printing & Stationery Co. BECKLINGER BUILDING ’ “The Home of Art Metal” THE NEW YORK GIANTS By JOHN B. FOSTER (Copyright, 1925, Casper Tribune.) NEW YORK, Jin. 22.—Edward S. Farrell, captain of the University of Pennsylvania baseball team of 1925, is on the reserve list of the New York Giants. So, too, is Tunney, of the Holy Cross nine. That settles where these two very promising youngsters are going. Howard Berry, the former star athlete of Pennsylvania, is said to be the col- lege scout who landed Farrell. The Penn captain is a very prom- ising shortstop. He is one of the fastest infielders in college baseball and there are experienced men who are predicting that he will prove]? more alert and a better ground cov- erer, if anything, than Frank Frisch. If he can play: as well as that, he ls bound to be one of the big guns of the National league. His name is an asset, as all the Farrélls who ever got into the game have made good. THOUSANDS HAVE KIDNEY TROUBLE AND NEVER SUSPECT 17 Applicants for Insurance Often Rejected. cal to Judging from reports froin drug- gists who are constantly tn direct touch with the public, there ts one preparation that has been very suc- ¢essful in overcoming these condl- tions. The mild and healing Influ- ence of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the high- est for its remarkable record of success. An examining physician for one of the prominent Life Insurance Companies, in an interview of the subject, made the astonishing state- ment that one reason why so many applications for insurance are re: jected is becatise kidney trouble ts| so common to the American people, | und the large major of applications declined do t oven suspect t have the disease. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is on sale at all drug stores jn bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, !f you wish first to test a those this great preparation rend ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Go, Bing hamton, N. ¥., for a eample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this pape Ad perlor pl: rado university last the cagers of the University of Utah, LS ROE LOT fhe Casper Datlv Tribune | ADDITIONAL SPORTS Aubrey Devine price for the coming season as he the un already listed among signed. Reinstatement Asked by Flack ST. LOUIS, 1o., Jan. tried on baseball's ineligible Commissioner Landis for Instatement, Manager Rickey of the Cardinals announced. Utah Defeated By Colorado BOULDER, Colo., Jan to 22 22.—Out- flelder Max Flack, who has been list since he quit the game last summer, when the St. Louis Cardinals sought to send him to the Oakland club of the Pacific Coast league, will apply 22.—By ying in the last half Colo- night defeated in a non-conference game The Utah quintet led at the end of the first half. 13 to 11, The two teams will meet again to- morrow night when the Utahans will leave for Laramie where they will tackle the University of Wyoming. [ LATE SPORTS NEW YORK, Jan. 22.— (By The Asscciated Press)—The 1926 intercol- iegiate varstiy rowing championship will be rowed over a four mile course instead of three miles for the first time since 1916, the board of stew- ards at the Intercollegiate Rowing association decided today to fixing the annual regatta for Monday, June at Poughkeepsie. NEW YORK, Jan. 22,—Walter Johnson, veteran pitcher, today ask- ed for a supreme court injunction to restrain the Thompson Feature Serv- Inc., and the Brogklyn Dally le, from further exploiting a ser: les of articles purporting to be a ory of his baseball career. Johnson ulleges that the series is a “sham, fraud and a fake." NEW YORK, Jan. 22.—Jack Zivic of Pittsburgh, and Pinkey Mitchell of Milwaukee have been matched to ght at Los Angeles in April or May in a bout involving the junior welter- weight or 140 pound championship. The match was announced today by Jack Root, Los Angeles promoter, who Is here angling for ring talent to appear on th st in bouts un- der the new ¢ a law permit- ting round contests. Mitchell is recognized by the nat- ional boxing association as junior welterweight title hclder. Zivic gain- ed prominence a few days ago by knocking out Lew Tendler. PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 22.—Betty 3ecker Pinkston, world’s fancy div- impion, now a resident of Los was suspended today by the registration committee of the *Mid- dle Atlantic association of the Ama- teur Athletic union for alleged fail- ure to file an expense account of her récent exhibition trip to the Pacific coast. PARIS, Jan. 22.—Luis Angel Fir- po, missing for five days from his usual haunts in Paris, was located by long distance telephone this after- noon at Montainebleau. He had set ut in his new moter car Saturday QUCH! BACKACHE! RUB LUMBAGO AWAY When your back is sore and lame or lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism re- has you stiffened up, don’t suffer’ Get a 36 cent bottle of old, honest St. Jacobs Oil at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it right on su- your aching back, and the soreness and lameness is gone. In use for 65 years, . this sooth- ing, pehetrating oi] takes the pain right out. and ends the It is absolutely harmless misery. and doesn't burn the skin.—Ady. RICHARD DIX | MANHATTAN SHIRTS | and his latest picture is entitled MANHATTAN. Known as the Best The Best Known $3 to $10 M. D. BARNETT OUTFITTING CO. 154 SOUTH CENTER vay co spend Sunday in Rheims, he would return Monday and the fact that he had shown signs of de- veloping a speed mania with the new machine caused fears that he might have met with a mishap. NEW YORK, Jan. 22.--As a re sult of a deep cut in his arm sus- tained in a fall on an icy raflroad platform, Willie Hoppe, world's balk- ine billiard champion, has been forc- ed into temporary idleness and hand- {capped {n his preparations to de- fend his title in the international tournament at Chicago, February 23. Hoppe was forced last night to can- cel three cushion match with Henry Solomon of Spokane, Wash., and will be out of competition for at least a week, Wade Killefer, manager of the Seattle baseball club, 1924 Pacific Const League champions, refused an offer to manage the Brooklyn Nat- jonals at a $15,000 salary. fed ee a etal Player Claimed By Waiver Rule To Bring Price . CHICAGO, Jan. 22.— Hereafter when a bascball player is claimed by the waiver rule within a year after purchase, the riva] club claim- IF KIDNEYS ACT BAD TAKE SALTS When you wake up with backache and dull misery in the kidney region it may mean you have been eating foods which create acids, says a well-known authority. An excess of such acids overworks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the blood and they become sort of para- lyzed and loggy. When your kidneys get sluggish and clog you must re- lieve them, like you relieve your bowels, removing all the body's urin- ous waste, else you have backache, sick headache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue {1s coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds and you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. Either cdnsult a good, reliable physician at once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine, This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with Hthia, and hag been used for years to help clean, and stimulate sluggish kid- neys, also to neutralize acids in the system, so they no longer irritate, thus often relieving bladder weak- ness. Jad Salts is inexpensive, can not injure and makes a delightful, effer- vescent Ithia-water drink. Drink ‘ots of soft water. By all means ave your physician examine your iddneys at least twice a year.—Adv. DT IOI IF TITRE ATTS EEO THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1885 other club paid, and if the price was in cash and players, none of the players can be figured at a price of more than $4,000 baseball's ad- yisory council ruled yegterday. Increases in the pay of umpires who work in the world’s series from $2,000 to $2,500 were granted. All clubs finishing in the first division will share in the world's series gate receipts, a rule adopted yesterday provided. Firpo Missing, Anxiety Felt By His Friends PARIS, Jan. 22.—Friends of Luis Angel Firpo are somewhat anxious today as he has been missing from his regular haunts in Montmartre and has not-appeared at the Hotel Claridge, where he registered upon his retufn from England, for five’ day He left Paris Saturday driving his All hemstitching taken dur-' ing the white sale at Kassis will be hemstitched for 8 and 12 cents per yard. MRS. DORA SMITH Do You Like Cross-Word Puzzles? ? ? If you do, you're missing most of the fun and educational ad- vantages they afford, unless you have a modern book of synonyms. There is nothing to take the place of Webster’s Excelsior Standard Cross-Word Puzzle Dictionary This recenty published book con.ains more than 25,000 classi- fled and discriminated SYNO- NYMS and DEFINITIONS. A gold mine of words of defined and related meaning, especially adapt- ed for solving CROSS-WORD PUZZLES Revised and en- New edition. larged.. Cloth 820 pages sent to you post-paid upon receipt of $1.00. Exquisitely bound edition in full crushed leather, gilt edge sent for $2.00. A PUZZLE A DAY KEEPS CROSS WORDS AWAY Our unique Cross-Word Puzzle Book containing 50 most interest- ing and intriguing puzzles sent to you post-paid for $1.00. Write at once. WARD PUBLISHING CO. 1258 W. Hastings St. Chicago, Hl. Dept. F CARS LE TOWNSEND HOTEL saying |ing the man must pay the price the| new automobile, saying he was go. ing to Rheims to spend Sunday and would return Monday. He has noi been seén in Paris since, however, and telegrarns sent him in care of the two leading hotels in Rheims failed to elicit a reply. Firpo is reported to“be a speog maniac with his new car and som of his friends fear he may have met with an accident. Coal Creek Coal $8.50 Per Ton Mine measure Moore & Morris Phone 17J4 “NORTH OF a6” 15 RATED EQUAL TD -“QOVERED WAGON” U Those who have previewed the upendous Western Epfe drama ‘ORTH OF 36" declare it to be equal to “The Covered Wagon.” Many even like {t better! Botl: are by the same author, Emerso: Hough. Both feature Drnest rence and Lois Wilson. Both ; tures were made by Paramc “NORTH OF, 26” is the last story written by Emerson Hough before he died. He wrote ft in Denver and it was declared one of the finest stories ever p lished in the Saturday Bveni Post. The heart of every t: American will thrill to this tacular picture of the Old West In addition to Torrence a Miss Wilson, Jack Holt and Nc Beery are featuted in “NOR’ OF 36,” which starts Satur the RIALTO theater. CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE AVE DAILY AT 9:30 A. M. Saves you approximately 12 hours’ travel between Casper and Rawlins WYOMING MOTORWAY Salt Creek Transportation Company’s Office FARE—$12.50 PHONE 144 | drudgery. TYPEWRITERS ~ WASHBOARDS | cote ) Divorce records show that 75 per cent of the women nowadays get married so that they can quit working. They give up a job in a nice airy office to struggle with a bunch of pots and pans in some man’s kitchen, and it doesn’t take them long to discover that a typewriter is easier to operate than a washboard. but it is easier on the knuckles! ters written, she can make carbon copies of them, but if her husband has ten shirts to wash, she has to wash them oneatatime. Laundry work cannot be done on the mime- ograph. The average woman thinks that from nine to five are terrible hours in an office, but wait until she starts to work from seven to six in the basement! Stooping over a typewriter is very fatiguing, but stooping over a tub is worse. When a girl dreams of a home, she never thinks of the laundry room and tubs. Love is blind, but the tub and board are there just the same. Call us and each year we will save you 52 days of real he PEARL WHITE LAUNDRY PHONE 1702 Not only to-operate, If the boss wants ten let- Don’t get a divorce.

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