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PAGE TEN THOUSAND ELK TO GE SHIPPED TQ EAGT oO0N Valuable- Animals Will Pass Through Sheri- dan to Massachusetts SHERIDAN, Wyo., Jan. 6.—Per- haps the largest and most valuable ixpress parc to pass through theridan thus far in her third of a jentury of railroad history soon will g on their way toward the seaboard. One thousand are destined for shipment by xpress on the Burlington from Mass., Dixon, Mont., to Middleboro. ng to Percy Jones, president if the Elk Breeding and Grazing Association, Inc., who was in Sheri lan on his return east from the Montana town. r, Jones had just consummated 1 with the federal government thereby his company purchased the mtire herd which had been propa increased to the number approximately 1,000 head. The of this band consisted in head of the antlered ant- ‘ch were placed on the Na- Range near Dixon 12 At the time these an! ced on the government fame ve it was not anticipated they would soon interfere with the najor plan of the government, that it saving propagating the rem nts of the once mighty herds of American bison. More Than {9 nals tonal years agi nals 500 Buffalo. ery government now has 621 duffalo on the federal game range tt Dixon, and the rapidly increas numbers of elk made it neces either that the latter be re- or that more range be secured better propagation of the zombined herds. The latter ar- tangement 1s practically out of the juestion, as most of the lands are privately-owned and the enlarge- ment of the government's holding rufficiently to handle the elk along with other animals in the preserve vould involve an expenditure on the part of the government which would fot be considered judicious or ad- visable,” Mr. Jones sald in Sheri- fan. "The wise expedient present- yd to the government appeared to be the sale of the elk, hence the nove on the part of our company m acquiring the band.” Special Express Trains. s stated in Sheridan that plans of handling the Mon- F)NEUMONIA Call a physician. Then begin “emergency” treatment with ic APORUB Vv Over 17 Million Jars Used Yearly tana herd contemplated special ex- press trains of ten cars each. Thirty elk will be loaded {n each car, mak- ing 300 animals in each shipment. Forty-eight hours will be required for the Montana-Chicago run and 22 hours from the Windy City to Massachusetts. The elk will not be unloaded in transit but will be fed and watered and carefully guarded in the special express cars, Mr. Jones state ——_———_ — ELKS MUSICAL COMEDY DESTINED 10 SCORE GREAT SUCCESS HERE Good progress is being made in rehearsals of the musical comedy, “Marcheta,” which will be staged next week for the benefit of the Elks charity fund. Discussing the presentation the director, “Bud Bullis,” had the following to say t night. “Did you ever stop to think how many types of people the amateur production must please? You know, of course, that this show will draw many people who do not usually at- tend the theaters. For them we have absolutely clean fun and noth- ing that would shock a typical chau tauqua audience. We also have the sophisticated theater goer who sees the big city productions and hard boiled reporters, and we must please them with novelties galore. We have the polite intellectuals in the boxes who nod approval of a very clever line. while the gallery gods want slap-stick comedy and their noisy approval means the success of y show. “In our audience will be people who want thelr money's worth of show and would sit up all night watching extra enchores, while seated nearby the commuter will nervously finger his watch at 10 o'clock We have the artistic souls who like the soft colored lighting effects on a group of dancers while we know that we have to flood the stage with white Nght before the dance ends because if we don't some angry parent will come back stage and tell us that the lights are ter- rible and .they couldn't see their daughter's face clearly. Some come to see the dancing, others to hear the voices and still others would like the plot delineated without the aid of either song or dance, Quite a job to please them all. CURIO DEALER FEEDS BIRDS AT CHEYENNE CHEYENNE, Wyo., Jan. 6.—Ern-| est A. Logan, local curio dealer, has| devised a way to obtain the friend ship of hungry birds this winter. Each day he places a wire basket containing bread on the street In front of his store, and within a short time there 's a veritable rush of birds seeking to overcome the pangs of hunger. | ee 3 Che Casper Daily Cribune Indiana Governor and Senator is | Political Topics, Call on President Indiana political circles are discussing the possibility of Gov Ed Jackson running aguinst his appointee, Arthur R. Robinson, for United States senator New photo shows the two calling at the White House to ses President Covlidge. Objections were raised when Robinson was named to succeed late Samuel M Ralston. be cause of his alleged Klan affiliations CAPTIVATING ENTERTAINMENT FOURD BY MUSIC LOVERS IN APOLLO CLUB CONCERT HERE One of the largest audiences that Tuesday's program and his solo num- ever assembled at the Elks auditcr-| bers were a welcome addition. jum greeted the concert program! its concert the Apolo club jus- given Tuesd*y night by the Apollo, tified the hopes which sper people have held for its success. The mem- club, It was such a concert as to | arouse a welcome response from bers of the organization worked hard to Pp re an entertainment! every lover of music, and the aud! ence at the auditorium showed its} which would meet with the public! approval and in doing this they pro- appreciation by calling again and | vided a musical treat which will re-| again for encore main as one of the high spots of the on here. The numbers were given in suffi- cient variety to provide something which wouuld be pleasing to every Too much not be said of the taste, from the clarion notes of “The work of Mr, Marquis in his double Hunting Song” from the opera! capacity as director and soloist. “Robin Hood,” through such sere-| One of the most popular of the nades as “My Heart is Thine’ and numbers given by the chorus was| “Be My Love" to the closing “Mam fhe Blind Plowman.” It was so my’s Lullaby.” The club is eemposed of fifty male voices. Raymond Marq dl- enthus'astically received that it was repeated at once and again was given by special request after the Drink Hillcrest Water Phone 1151 MIEDNICK BROS. “Always Giving More to Get More’’ Pre-Inventory Clearance Sale now in full swing with the values better than ever Hart Schaffner @ Marx and Medbro Suits now s24°° $g% #345 Furnishings Greatly Reduced Manhattan Shirt Sale Every neckband Shirt included At Substantial Reductions Fine Velour shape and shade, NOW $4.95 Formerly priced at $6.50. Silk lined. Interwoven Hose All the new plaid combinations, in wool and silk and wool. OVER oS Our Annual Hats Every new Large assortment of Broadcloth Shirts Collar attached. ‘Sizes 14 to 17. COATS 33% Off main program was completed. Because of a cold from which he | was suffering, Mr, Marquis deferred the singing of “Il Pigliaccio” until a inter date. He substituted a light. rector, also was assisting artist at er lyric, The numbers given by Mr. Mar- quis included “At the Smithy’s Door,” from “Philemon and Baucis,” “The Khaki Lad,” “Nur Wer dic Sehnuscht Kennt,' “Noon and Night," “Pipes o' Gordon's Men,” “Under the Rose.” Those given by the club were “Hunting Song,” “Roses of Pil- “Now Is the Month of May- ‘The Old Road, The Stream- ‘My Heart Is Thine,” “Be My Love,” “The Blind Plowman,” “Mammy's Lullaby.” Mrs. L. L. Langworthy accom- panied the soloist and the chorus. The Apollo club is composed of the following active members: Tenor Section: H. C. Kimmel, Morris Mesney, J. C, Carr, M. C. Chaddock, H. E, Guthrie, B. C. Swal- low, Harry Austin, Edward Dona- hoe, Ray Holloran, D. EB. Gallatin, Cc. D, Freeman, A. O. Gumont, F. W. McNamara, R. 8. Garlick, L. U. Fuehrer, C. T. Brown, Robert Jen- ! sen, M, L. Sechrist, Harry Weseman, R. D. Forsyth, R. E. Lappin, J, V. McIntyre, Frederick Moore, Edward J. H. McGinnis, W. B. Snod- L, Langworthy, Haurtl, J. A. Burkett, J. nter, R. C. Carr, ll, B. H. Clendenin, Marquis, Russell Wright, T. V. Black. | man, P. Braden, H Northup, | Palmer Johnson, K, L. M Vv MGOY TO TAKE INDIAN BRAVES O EXPOSITION Will Play Prominent Part in Quaker City Fete. THERMOPOLIS, Wyo., Jan. 6.— (Special to The Tribune)—Maj. T. J. McCoy of Thermopolis, Wyo., has been selected by Mayor Kendrick of Phitadelphia to organize and man- age the Indians who will have a prominent part in the sesqul-centen. nial commemorating 150 years of American independence to be held at the Quaker City June 1 to De- cerber 1. Major McCoy is perhaps the best qualified man in the country for the work of bringing together repre- sentatives of every living nation of Indians in the country and setting them up in villages of their own at the big Philadelphia show, the gathering to compose the “Last Great Council!” of the original American citizens On his ranch forty miles west of Thermopol's, Major McCoy has ten experienced riders, including Johnny Baker, foster son of Btffola Bill. at work breaking 200 pinto ponies of the Indian type. A hundred head of oxen are being broken to the yoke and workmen are buliding “prairie schooners,” a part of the equipment to be used in presenting at the sesqui-centennial a spectacu- lar pageant, “The Winning of the West.” The ponies, oxen and other para- phernalia are being assembled at Thermopolls and some time during the month will be shipped to, Hagerstown, Md., where fairgrounds wave been secured for train! g pur- poses. In addition to representatives of the Shoshone, Arapahoe and Crow nations of Indians to be taken from reservations near here, Major Mc: : Coy is taking with him “Wildcat Sam" Abernathy, one of the pioneer hunters and trapers of the West. Early in the spring a caravan of cowboys and Indians will start from Kansas City in prairie schooners drawn by oxen and make the long trip across the country to Philadel phia, arriving there in time for the opening of the sesqui-centennial. AUBBER VITAL FAGTOR IN U.S, Series of Articles in Tribune to Show Importance. It {s with no attempt at levity that we report, after examining statistics, that rubber fs an extreme- ly elastic medium of exchange. Away back in 1907 wholesale rub- ber was $1 a pound. In 1910 it had shot up to $3.75 a pound. In 1920 {t had contracted to the absurdly low price of 9 cents q pound. NIn July this year it had sprung back to $1.18. No commodity in economic history so plainly shows the effects of the stern old law of supply and demand. Inasmuch as there has been so much interest in the subject of rub- ber prices recently, owing to threatened Increases in the price of tires and the discussion of the Stevenson act of the British East Indies, we believe our readers will be glad to read a series of three articles on rubber by a ga'esman who has studied the subject for more than fifteen years. Cc. E. Worthington has conseated to write this series, He goes thoroughly into the his- tory of rubber and shows why the vrice have fluctuated to such ex- tremes. The automobile business. of course, is responsible for theso fluctuations. Rubber has become one of the most {mportant com: modities in our present day ctv! tion because it Is the cushion be- tween the moving commodities and the hard highways of commerce—be- tween t highways and the | traveling public. It ts facilitator of passenger and freight transporta- tion, In many cases supp'anting the steel rails and springs of the steam roads, | A. Briggs, K. C T. R, Hughes, C. SHEEPMAN OBJECTS ~ TO NGEPING HERDER WHO INSTALLS RI | RIVERTON, Wyo., Jan. 6—John | Geraud, on being told of a herder ‘who was equipping his sheepwagon ith a radio outfit for entertainment ing the long winter days on the range, stated most emph y that the Installation of a radio by one of his employes meant that that man would lose Job. As his reason Mr, leraud stated: “This present day of jazz coming {nto a sheep camp over the radio ould start the woolles dancing to uch an extent that they would never be fattened for market at any season of the year. This age ts get- ting too fast. Everybody has a car and a radio, and ts kept busy with mo or the other. “What fs It com: ing to?” sald Philosopher John, ‘there will be nobody left to grow the potatoes. ——— Fix up the home—add the edhe furnishings which will make it You can get them Want Ad columns, $1.95 'y. through the Mr. Worthington shows a thorough economic comprehension of his sub- ject, and gets away from interna tional politics, which has been in- Jected into the rubber questicn. He speuks of m subject which affects every citizen of the country and we know our readers will read his series with profit. When You Catch Cold Rub on Musterole Musterole {s easy to apply with the fingers and works right away. Often it prevents a cold from turning into “flu"’ or pneumonia, It does all the good work of grandmother's mustard plaster without the blister, Musterole is a clean, white oint: ment, made of ofl of mustard and other home simples. It is recom- mended by many, doctors and nurses. Try Musterole for sore throat, cold on the chest, rheumatism, lumbago, pleurisy, stiff neck, bronchitis, asthma, neuralgia, congestion, pains and aches of the back and Joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chil: blains, frosted feet—colds of all sorts. To Mothers: Musterole {is also made in milder form for babies and small children, Ask for Children’s Musterole, Jare & Tubes Better than a mustard plaster Federal Men Raid Soft Drink Parlors ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo., Jan. 6.— Federal prohibition enforcement of- ficers, headed by State Director Lon Davis, paid Rock Springs a sudden visit and took the operators of five soft drink parlors into custody after raiding 10 places. All five are now at liberty, haying waived their pre- luminary trial before U. 8. Commis- sioner Rush L. DeNise and given bonds ranging from $500 to $1,000. >_—_—— Man Stole Money From Wife, Charge ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo., Jan. 6.— G. A. Pappadakis, alias G. A. Pap- pas, of Rock Springs an” Superior, is at Mberty under $500 bond pend- ing his appearance at the next ses- sion of the Cistrict court to answer charges of having stolen $535 from his wife. He waived preliminary hearing when arraigned before Jus- uce of the Peace Thomas. imples. ? can{[dol 6 H, why can't I have a skin like other girls? Why do I have to have these ugly pimples, blotches and blackheads? “If I could only find something that would clear up my skin and} give me back my soft, rosy com- plexion, I know I would be the hap- pies girl in the world! What can I 40?” , i Is that you talking? If it is, you | don’t have to worry a minute! Just | build up the rich, red blood in your | body. Then your skin will be as) clear and soft as anybody's, That's what S. S. S. has been do- ing for generations — helping Na- ‘ure build rich, red blood! You can uild red-blood-cells so fast that the mpurities that cause breaking out m the skin hardly get into the sys- tem before the pure blood annihi- late. them—kills them right out— stops them from breaking out! through the skin. i And then this rich, red, pure blood feeds and nourishes the tis- sues of the skin and keeps it look- ing healthy. That’s ell there {s to it. Healthy, vigorous red blood such as 8. S. 3, helps Nature build, ik makes you healthy all over. It beautifies your skin — drives away pimples, black- he.ds, blotches, rash, boils and eczema— giv you back your appetite— builds firm, plump fiesh and fills you full of new life and energy. All drug stores sell 8. 8S. S. Get the larger bottle, It's more eco nomical, SO MARY PICKFORD. “Tt is always well to build a kitchen in your air- castles. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1926 STRONGER FOR KARNAK NOW THAN 6 MONTHS AGO “Yes, Sir, Karnak Stopped My Troubles Last July, Built Me Up 12 Pounds, and Believe Me, They’ve Stayed ‘Stopped’,” Says Denver Salesman. “I was one of the very first to buy Karnak in Denver last July, and I expect a lot of people remember the statement I made at that time about how fine {t fixed me up,” says T. C. Laurence of 740 Grint street. Den- ver, well known salesman for Fahey- Brockman, men’s clothing. “Now, I want you to know my statement wasn't one bit exagger- ated, and I just keep getting strong- er for Karnak all the time, for I've gained 12 pounds and never felt bet- ter in my Ife than I have even since taking the medicine,” adds Mr. Lau- rence. “What stands out -in my mind as the most important thing about Karnak is the lasting results it brings. “Yes sir, it stopped all my troubles ) indigestion and dyspepsia that kept my stomach so weak and upret that I couldn't éat a hearty meal to save my life—and believe me they've stayed ‘stopped.’ I tell you I was just about down and out for threo years, but ever since I finished my sixth bottle of Karnak I've been feel- ing as strong as a bull and haven't known what trouble was, “I've recommended Karnak to hundreds of people, and they've come back since and thanked me for put- ting them on to the medicine. It just beats anything I ever saw how it does fix a person up, and what lasting results they turn out to be.” Karnak is sold in Casper exclu- sively by the Kimball Drug Stores, Inc., and by the leading druggist in every town.—Adv. . La _~- iy ing turer—for less ¢ orders” ask. Here’s Proof: drop in. Find Out Who’s Who Today The Stockmens National Bank and First Trust and Savings Bank Combined Capital and Surplus $225,000.00 * Salt Creek Busses Leave Casper, Townsesd Hotel 8 a, m. and 1 p. m and & p.m. jon RESS TELEPHONE 144 Service Westbound No, (608))s 0 soon nas oSa2 1.80 p.m. Eastbound No. 322 22.2.5. No Sunday trains west o: Casper. CHICAGG BURLINGTON & QUINCY Eastbound CALIFORNIA via the BURLINGTON Be Yourself! Save Tire Money We can give you a real good tire—cord or fabric—meade by the world’s greatest manufac- n the “gyps” 30x31 Pathfinder Fabric ssseee ¢ anne POD 30x314 Pathfinder Regular Cord $9.70 30x314 Pathfinder Oversize Cord........$10.90 Other popular sizes just as low. Goodyear SCHULTE HARDWARE CO. Corner Second and David TRAIN SCHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHWESTFRN end “mail- Phone us or Station Phone 800 Arrives Departs 1: 250: p. m. Departs 145 p.m, 6:00 p. m. Arrives 4:00 p. m. Departs 8:30 p. m, Departs 7:10 a, m