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FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1925 _ GHDP CONDITION ~ CORN 5 ONLY oH Ws DECLINE NE TO IMPROVE High temperatures and dry weath- er during the first part of July caused considerable decline in the condition of all crops excepting corn which improved a point, according to the monthly crop report issued by the Wyoming Co-operative Crops and Livestock Reporting Service. Fre- quent showers and cooler tempera- tures recently have helped growing crops andi counteracted to some ex- tent the previous adverse conditions. The corn crop came through the adverse weather condition without suffering material damage, yet mois- ture is needed badly in some of the dry farm districts for the crop to mature, In the irrigated sections the crop is not in danger. Hail storms during the last few days of July have done considerable damage over small areas of the eastern half of the state. The condition of the crop is esti- mated at 92 per cent of normal, one point above that of a month ago, and compares with 66 per cent one year ago and the ten year average condition on Aygust 1 of 85 per cent. It forecasts an average yield of 23 bushels per acre and a total produc- tion of 3,510,000 bushels. The produc- tion last year was estimated at 2,310,- 000 bushels and that of the five year average at 2,645,000 bushels. The winter wheat harvest is about completed and although yields on some sections were better than last year the average for the state is esti: mated to be the same, 16 bushels per acre. The preliminary estimate of the 1925 crop is placed at 272,000 bushels which compares with 256,000 for 1924 and the five year average production of 409,000 bushels. ‘The quality of this grain {s estimated at 92 per cent of a high medium grade, or one point above the average for Wyoming winter wheat. Spring wheat suffered cénsiderably from the hot wave during the past month and no doubt but what a large acreage will be cut for hay. Due to favorable moisture conditions durir the early season growth of straw was rank and the grains were slow to fill. placed at 86 per cent of normal, a decline of eight points since a month ago. It compares with 75 per the condition one year ago, and 84 per cent, the ten year average August 1. The average yield p forecasted from the present condi tion is 18 bushels. Total production is forecasted at 2,358,000 bushels, ns compared with 1,875,000 last y and 2,590,000 bushels, the five ye average. Oats was also effected by the un- toward weather and much of the crop will be harvested for hay! was a decline of six points in condi, tion’ since last month, cent to 89 per cent of normal, A year ago the condition was estir at 78 per cent while the ten average on August 1 Is 85 per cent. The condition this month forecasts a “T GAINED 1d POUNDS ON ANAK, oAYS BOWMAN “Why, This Wonderful Med- icine Has Made Me Feel Strong as a Bull, Too,’ Says Popular Denver Car Conductor. HE WAS ALMOST A PHYSICAL WRECK “Every Day People Ask Me ‘How Come’ I Look So Good and You Can Bet I Tell ’Em About Karnak.” “Yes, sir, I've actually gained 19 pounds on this Karnak and never felt better a day in my life than T do now—just think of it, 19 pounds in four weeks’ time—and I've told a hundred people, if I've told a one, what a remarkable medicine it is.” That's the enthusiastic way H. A. Bowman, of 619 East Ohio street, popular Denver car conductor, be- gan talking about this sensational medicine the other day in reporting one of the most remarkable of the many amazing recoveries here by the use of this great health bullder. Nothing can keep Karnak out of the homes. “Honestly, I don't believe I'd have been here much longer if it hadn't been for Karnak,” continues Mr. Bowman. “For the past three years I had suffered from stomach trou- ble of the worst kind. Everything I ate would lie like a lump of iron in the pit of my stomach, would sour, and nauseate me so bad that many times I couldn't retain a thing. I would carry my lunch every day and at meal time my stomach would be so weak and up- set I'd just have to throw most of so kidneys were would have to leave my car several times during a trip. I had rheu- matism all through my back and shoulders, and on my right side it Was so bad I just had to pull the bell cord with my left hand. I could hardly get about to collect my fares, “I spent hundreds of dollars on all kinds of treatments and took enough medicine weak T getting worse all the time. get enough sleep to do any good, and my friends all noticed how rap- I just thought sure my time was drawing near and didn’t idly I was failing. I was so sick and weak I care much, “But this new has been a life s medicine, er to me. Why, you just ought to see me eat since it has fixed me up so fine. I ac- tually believe I could eat raw beet And nothing Nights 1. sleen like a top, and I feel just as strong My work 1s a real pleas- ure, now, and every day people ask me ‘how come’ I look so good. You Kernak and for breakfast now. hurts me one bit, as a bull. bet I tell ‘em about how fine it’s fixed me up. “M, nak and all the boys at the car barn are talking about this medicine, too. Yes, sir, I'll tell the world Karnak has made a clean sweep of all my anybody to yut it. troubles, and just tell see me who wants to know a I'll sure be glad to tell them.” Karnak {s sold in Casper sively by the Kimball Drug Inc., and the Midwest Pharir by the leading druggist in town.—Adv. whom you buy. fulfill: The price, in conformity mechanical condition Our reputation is guarantee 1922 Buick Touring $140.00 down $23.32 per month for 10 months 1923 Chevrolet Touring $110.00 down $18.43 per month for 10 months 1922 Ford Sedan $100.00 down $16.80 per month for 10 months 1924 Ford Touring $80.00 down $13.70 per month for 10 months 1924 Chevrolet Sedan $280.00 down $46.14 per month for 10 months If you want a good car stration. Phone 1817 BEFORE YOU BUY A USED CAR Here's three things to consider—The Car, the Price, From Here’s three contracts worthy of consideration that we The Car, reconditioned and in best possible order. FOR SAFETY BUY YOUR USED CAR HERE 1924 Chevrolet Sedan $240.00 down 62 per month for 10 months them over, or call one of our salesmen for a demon- Big Six Motor Company Incorporated with the model, usage, and of a fair transaction. 1920 Big Six Studebaker $280.00 down $46.14 per month for 10 months 1923 Chevrolet Touring $150.00 down $24.95 per month for 10 months 1923 Maxwell Touring $140.00 down $21.69 per month for 10 months 1922 Ford Coupe $120.00 down $20.06 per month for 10 months 1924 Overland Touring $150.00 down $24.95 per month for 10 months cheap, come in and look 226 South David The condition of the crop is cent, on acre There from 95 per ated year to start a drug store, but I kept losing weight and I was so nervous that nights I wouldn’t Karnak, wife and mother take Kar. Iso and praise it to the skies, production of 6,160,000 bushels which compares with 5,239,000 bushels last year and 6,240,000" bushels ‘the five year average. It is estimated that 199,000 bushels or 3.8 per cent of the 1924 oats crop remains’ on farms, compared with 224,000 or four per cent of the 1923 crops on hand at this time last year. Barley has maintained a higher condition than either oats or spring wheat, it being effected less by the adverse weather. Cutting has begun and yields are very promising. The condition of the crop on August 1, Was estimated at 90 per cent of nor mal, a decline of only three points during the last thirty days, and com es with 80 per cent one year ago nd 87 per cent the ten year aver- condition. The forecasted yield acre of 31 bushels makes a to- production of 1,302,000 bushels ompares with 900,000 bushels, last year ) bushels the five year amount of barley re- rms is 23,000 bushels t of the 1924 crop. en cut and threshing is about completed. The estimated yleld bushels per acre is slightly than the ylelds of last year, Total production is estimated at 388,- 000 bushels as compared with 264,000 bushels last year and 351,000 bushels the five year average production. he quality of the grain this y 92 per cent of a high medium grade or the samo as that of last year’s tal which the estimated production and 698,01 ngs of potatoes are 1 and shipments to local marke! © bringing favorable prices, Smali areas were hit by hail storms but it is reported that only slight damage was done. The condi- tion of the crop has declined seven points to 89 per cent of normal which compares with 78 per cent one year ago and 85 per cent tho ten year average. An average yield of 118 turning out w bushels per acre and a production of 2,006,000 bushels are forecasted. Production last year was 1,520,000 bushels while the five year average production {s 1,987,000 bushels. The general outlook for this ye: crop is smaller yields on a decidedly emall- er acreage but higher prices and more money for the producer than was received last year. The condition of all tame hay is 93 per cent of normal, the ‘same as last month, and forecast an average yield of 1.95 tons per acre and a pro- duction of 1,470,000 tons. Production last year amounted to 1,333,000 tons whole the five year average is 1,345,- 000 tons. The condition of the sec- ond cutting of alfalfa is 88 per cent of normal, timothy 97 per cent, clo- vers 96 per. cent and clover and tim- othy 99 per cent, It is expected that a larger acreage of grains will be out green for hay this year than last, the increase amounting to about 5 per cent of the 1924 acreage, Yields are slightly lighter, 1.40 tons as com- pared with 1.50 tons last year. , The estimated. condition of wild ed at 1,7 +] with 1,617,000 tons, and 1,621,000 tons, the five year aver. age crop. bushels. is estimated at 92 per cent of normal also, Harvesting is way and yields are expected to turn out favorably. There was approxi- mately 2,000 acres planted to this crop this year. A London couple were married in a taxicab lately. ———-__—. FIRST NATIONAL ROUNDUP AND CHAMPIONSHIP RODEO rant Park Stadium, Chicago ugust 15 to 24, inclusive, 1925 Low Excursion Fares in effect via Chicago & North Western Ry, Pro- gram includes hundreds of tanned cowboys and cowgirls from Lariat throw- alf roping, relay and ee-for-all racing. Wild longhorn steers battling against the “bull- duggers’ and many other spectacu- lar events. Grarft Park Stadium on the Lake Front is an example of the finest amphitheater architecture in America. You cannot afford to miss this splendid opportunity to witness the st thrilling American sport, and it the wonder city of the Middle For sion to any North W information regarding excur- train service, ete., apply Chicago & dy {tching Rashes or any other burning skin troublewhich keeps you scratching, is a source of embarrassment as well as.torment to | you. Why don’t you get rid of it by | using Resinol Ointment? Physicians prescribe it daily. In most cases it stops | itching at once and heals eruptions | promptly. It is pleasant and economical | to use, Sold by all drugs Resinol Lexington Cream XXXXX Flour More and Better Bread per sack Rye, Whole Wheat, Graham, Corn Meals, Ask your grocer for this flour and have better bread Casper Warehouse Company DISTRIBUTORS 268 Industrial Ave. Tel, 27 hay is 94 per cent and forecasts a production of 308,000 tons. The ag- gregate hay productions is fOrecast- 000 tons and compares the 1924 crops average yleld is 14 bushels per acre making a total production of 140,000 This compares with 84,000 bushels last year and 83,000 bushels for 1923. The condition of seed peas getting under SYNOPSIS handed tramp, who quick fer him. him. Spike, the tramp, through a window, leering at CHAPTER IV—Continued friend in curious surprise; and came forward again. “Oh, wouldn't blame you if you he sympathiz- too hot to get excited Besides, he’s got plenty did choke him, Bob,” ed, “but it at his like. Copyright, 1925, Warner Br “{HE LIMITED MAIL” with Monte Blue, is a piccurization of this story by Warver Bros. Pictures, Inc, Jim Fowler has induced-Bob Wilson to remain in Crater City in the employ of the railroad. The two meet a one- tempts to stad Bob with his steel spike, for exposing him as a thief, but Wilson is too At the railroad sta- tion Bob sees a handbill bearing hi own photograph and the offer of a reward for informaNon concerning As he tears it down he sees him Jim, pausing as he rounded the platform corner, looked at his excited then, catching sight of Spike, he shrugged foreign body that stopped set up community inflammation; and aside from the sporadic ragings of strange dramatic pain in their workaday lives, the good citizenry were sub- jected to acute epidemics of less tragic, if not less interesting, excite- ment. There was, for instance, the thrilling advent into the town’s ken of the handsome, mysterious hobo, Bob Wilson, on that storm-racked night already a half decade gone. And the draped day when a crepe- hemmed Special bearing a dead President's body to Washington rolled mournfully through. Days of other sorts, too; when Bolts Mor- ran, hilariously behootched over the arrival cf a junior Bolt, broke open a cage door in the menagerie car of a circus train in the Yard and al- lowed a tiger to escape into the streets; when the town Magdalene crept timidly and obscurely into church, and upon being singled out and patronizingly welcomed in an coming to him. The men inside say|impromptu lost sheep text by the they've got the goods on him for| Minister spat at him and departed many. things—breaking box car|in a huff; when Morran's Yard gang seals, among other things. Come, let's go home.” "Sick at heart for reasons he could his outlook clouded with morbid speculation as to how much Spike had seen of the hand- Bob stumbled away not confide, bill, or knew, in silence beside Jim. » ts After him, a gleeful shout from got your num- I've After him, too, a deri: the window: ber, 'bo!” peace would have been his. “ CHAPTER V sleepy Crater City, every’ adding a square to the quilt of mote hill-country bed. the ceaseless pulsation | ‘virtually stagnant itself. and fared on, under Bolts Morran. colliery villages, steel-mill and fishing hamlets, Indeed, the | ic. mountains. Then its bulletin board—like their storied below. | | ger-fraught divi: | | CHEYENNE ROTARIANS TO AAISE FUNDS FOR IMPROVING MAIL FIELD CHEYENNE, Wyo., Aug. 14.—The Cheyenne Rotarians will raise a fund to be used for the purpose of making necessary improvements on the landing field at the alr mail field, it was announced Wednesday. About $1,000 will be needed for the work, it is believed, and a com- mittee, consisting of Leslie A. Mil- ler, Warren Richardson and James H. “Walton, was appointed to raise the money needed for the improve- ment of the landing field According’ to Hugh L. Long, as- sistant superintendent of the air He'll get fifteen years if he gets a day. mocking, ine Boat sane was a day when otherwise surety and Dust from the measured footsteps of five trudging years sifted over season that tucked the little town more and more snugly each twelvemonth in the isolated importance of its re- Though professionally aiding and abetting of traffic blood through the railroad artery on which it was a parasite, it was For every baby born, someone died or left town; for every restless journeyman member of the Big Four Brother- hoods who rolled up his’ store of the world’s good in greasy overalls jome, half-baked re- eruit put in an intimidated first day And yet, excitement was endemic in Crater City like measles in an orphan asylum or barber's itch in a public trait it had in com- mon with other central spheres of brawny industrial activities such as towns There was a ways the Damoclean threat of those Sierra twins of perversity, Granite Gorge and the Old Witch, to raise this latent infection into an epidem- town had known many a night's travail when bliz-| 14) zard or freshet were amuck in the womenfolk waited and wept at the despatcher’ s-lof the ters on beach and quay when waves roll high, or at colliery pit mouth when rescuers brave the gas damp As headquarters of the most dan. ion of transconti- nental railroading Crater City was in effect, therefore, somewhat of a vermiform appendix on the coun- try’s steel intestines in which every won their third successive blue rib- bon for having the best kept Divi- sion on the Road; when the Pay- master's car was robbed; when the Widow O'Leary had her goitre re- moved; when Bob Wilson thumped the Yard bully who sneeringly called him a tramp. But all these manifestations were mild compared with the sudden on- slaught of brash cramp that, with- out a forewarning symptom, kinked ;| Crater City’s inwards one feverish summer morning when 4 certain taffy-colored head flamed and siz- zled through the dry masculine hearts of the town like a virginal comet in a heap of dead worlds. @ ' Bob Wilson, on his way down- town to breakfast carly that morn- ing, found himself conscious of an unwonted something in the air. Not that many visible evidences suggest-* ed this; although, true enough, there seemed to. be a sabbatical repression in the dusty flow of Main Street, while Feeney’s Pool Emporium was barren of its usual handful of oily- handed idlers and the several groups of gossiping off-duty men whom Bob passed were perky and animat- ed quite beyond their accustomed stolidity. Bob wondered mildly almost subconscious! at these signs; but the most acute and signi- ficant testimony emanated from a Ppremonitory tingling in his chest— a sort of pleasant uneasiness. Sy Bob was on call to take out a lo: The bean crop has declined six ; ; points in condition to 92 per cent sabe yard bully shrunk away. \ bs pate ‘at seven-thirty. It was of normal and compares with 80 per meen [already five minutes past seven cent one year ago. The forecasted| tO haunt and disturb Bob on many|when he elbowed briskly into the Ned Larvey lunchroom in the De- pot, so he did not have any too much time in which to down his breakfast and glance through the morning paper. His general sensi- bility to an atmosphere of expecta- tion and surprise was heightened at sight of the extraordinary number of trainmen in the place, consider- ing the time of day. Men coming off the night runs lingered, bright- eyed and sleepless; day crews ate unhurried by the inexorable tale of the clock.” Bramley, the English ex- butler manager t of 4 Crater 4 City’s branch of the famous Larvey chain of Transrockian ; Railroad restaur- ants and lunchrooms,’ was already on the job—this, in menon of rare note. 1 Bob nodded in his genially silent way to acquaintances, saw with chagrin that his favorite table was occupied, then found himself an un- tenanted table in a secluded corner Here he sat down in hasty peace. confident of the service of Minnie, the fat waitress, whose consistent and especial stewardly attentions he made sure of by generous tip “What the deuce is up?” he specu- lated without much real curiosity, looking around as he propped gainst the sugar bow! with prac- tised deftness his copy of the Salt Lake City morning newspaper, a batch of which were dropped off in Crater City at five a. m. each day by an eastbound through express. eyes discovered no answer to his question, and a moment later the newspaper headlines had taken his whole attention and interest far out influence of his immediate surroundings. So he did not realize that it was fully ten minutes before there came at his elbow a shy voice, “What will you have, sir, please?” Bob's eyes were wistfully scan- ning the society column, which, with the financial pages, he searched each morning. (To be continued) mail division here, the Cheyénne field is recognized as one of the best commercial fields in the coun. try, and the people here have an opportunity to develop the possibill- ties of making Cheyenne one of the greatest alr ports on the transconti- nental! line, REMOVAL NOTICE Offices of DR. N. E. MORAD to Suites 3 and 4 Zuttermeister Building FARM PRODUCT EXCHANGE HERE IS SUGGESTED Kiwanis Club Hears Proposal From Wholesaler. A farm product exchange for the purpose of facilitating trade between the farmers of the state and whole salers here was urged before Casper Kiwanis club today by ter Schultz of the McCord company. Mr. Schultz delivered a paper on the “Results Obtained by the Chamber of Commerce Good fellowship Tour. He outlined the advantages received from interest ing farmers in adjoining tertitory to the importance of Casper as a mar ket for their produc: Mrs. J. M, Melntyre, who charge of the girls’ camp h cently at Camp Carey, expre appreciation for the work of Kiwanis club in sponsoring the camp. ‘amping has become a maj recreation throughout the country said Mrs. McIntyre. “A x c sh From the day W flavor. Serve Kelloge’s with cold milk or cream—or with fruit added. tough- thick! Or such incomparable They’re Never leathery! and cheery. these hot days. never ! MANTRA \MPLED|? UNDER HORSES Sold by all grocers. Served at all hotels and restaurants. Imitations cannot bring you such wonder-flavor —such crisp, crunchy finke ine corn flakes originator, have the The only signature of nu the on the package. K. Kellogg, of Battle Creek, first originated corn flakes, Kellogg’s always have been the favorite by long odds. Throughout the country more than ten million people every day insist on getting Kellogg’s. Just one trial will show you the reason for this huge national preference. Kellogg’s are corn flakes as they ought to be! bring such crisp, crunchy flakes. No others Keep PAGE FIVé (QUAKE FELT IN SEATTLE 14.—(By The As- attle was shaken e@ yesterday. A University) of the shock of more than a a maximum intensity o damage was re- ted having , sor Sheldon t said “the les trom inten: 1ors which e excitement 1 ihe Bt OB 2000401 § the wholesome spread for bread NUCOA ;: fine as shortening in high grade pastry ; the original - always lo sweet LODaeoveveseeees: Py \@ \? PS you fit WASTE,