Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 4, 1921, Page 10

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PAGE TEN : Casper Dail = lseopie are reflécted to Sone fu tent bythe number and naturesof pro- gn the condition, that weey ee | Any Croubles? vowed ivenigatonn Thus, ap Bi NAmmerieanicing’ Immigrants, {01 “e : a dozen different resolutions, Guten Americanizing’ tmmisrants, in re !1 ASK CONGress: |jaron every imasinavie phase of that AKS EXPECTED EDUCATION COMES HARD IN AMERICA, IS REPORT Th i : i i a - ag ps ig - ¥ f ing better salaries to teachers, in prov scot Ha hie Due teat ( TEND TALENT Investigation of House Committee Is Severe Indictment} mons prysica eaucation, in training aeons, 7s apes or at aS tobe in ine mands ot the | LO Lnvestigate || situation ana. Mexico. th stateg. Much deference ts paid to Congress ‘also. is concerned with ee oe ti ight of the states to manage their : - ‘Tha detention of Dr. William’, T. By FREDERIC J. HASKIN, called to service between the ages| right 0 Se naan saith’ detent Big Turnout Expected Tonight) for Second Rehearsal to Be WASHINGTON, March 4.—-The United States of America |° 21,874 21; nearly 25 per’cent were | own affairs.’ They are merely to be of- Gated oes ERE da Hib Mariah oiabasen! on Sheeler Held at Mullin Club at federal money to be given the states on the condition that they raise an i ; trae “ Practically illiterate: This'means that | fered encouragement, guidance and is one of the hard aces in th iliz ‘ /ASHINGTON BSE of an Argentina steamship. est place: the civilized world in which |2 fourth of the young manhood of the | money. WASHINGTON, Mar. 4—“Investi-|OF am Argenting steamship, 0 geta goed education, in the opinion of a committee of the | country, hee is scan eeeliente prs TEES | gating" continues: to be one. of the eet ouse which has been investigating the question. in pypece ag aei wees Teale most popular pastimes of congress, bh spre aah and purposes in a state of barbarism. | Sy The cost of these,” vestigations, |, Whether Henry Ford benefited A fourth of the men of fighting age in the United States |jrormer Secretary of the Interior Lane one Senatorannounced: the otheciday from 16 Big ee oure, ich. are illiterates, many children never get adequate schooling,| estimates that the annual cost of Illt- has reached ‘scandalous: ” ‘ i : proportions. most of the teachers are incompe!- the ballots they cast and only know |eracy to the United States. is, $825,. OFF COSTA RICA He didn't indicate the cect eeteut| ‘The price of men's collars. 7:45 O'Clock ent, There are millions of immigrants] how to vote as they are told,’ 000,000. The Director of the Bureau of of this cost He didn’t know. No one|. lcome-tax dodging. — in the country who can neither speak 5 % ,.|Mines states that if alll of the miners abea: Some of the resolutions are never Following an unus large at-| nor read English and many negro chii,| Here briefly are some ot) the facis|?ouiq read and speak: English a thou. : "There is one investigation yet to he {even voted on. Sometimes, the: inves: tendance from the younger dren never see the inside of a school-| Wich brought the congresamen t3*sang tives a year would be xaved. SAN SALVADOR, Republic of Sai-|ordered—samely, the high cost of in.| 4sutons are approved. but. never members at the -first reh room. Thousands of schools are clos- 3 4 vador, March Six warships and 4 started... Sometimes, :they:-star. ERACY iene 2 Veguge ning, are never concluded. Again there are 12 hydropianes of the United Stares But another investigation, conduct- i “ ILEIT! ed because no teachers can be pi-| According to the census of 1919] NATIONWIDE Pacific’ Meet haye arrived at Puntalea by the United Press, reveals that tained for the miserable salaries of-|there were in this country 6,500,000 Ana ; fered. persons ten years of age or older who id Piss tesan Sahn rite eer can. | Arenas, Costa Rica, according to «|during the @ixtyasixth congress alone This disturbing picture of education | could’ not read or write, and -the:com.| tes the idea that illiteracy Is eon: | dispatch received here. (the present one) resolutions in America is contained in the report | mittee does not believe that conditions | ned fo ine south and te octal | ——____._______< heen“ introduced asking for 212° in- of the House Committee on Educa:|have improved since then. In‘addl-|7a% sections. tt shows that « wille ccm; |vestigations. Only sixty of these res. tion on the Towner Bill, and abund-| tion to these there were 3,500,000 per- Tock has 466,000; and. that Pennsyl- olutions, it is true. were passed, but ant proof of its truth is contained in|sons who could not read or write | Yorit Nas 460,000, and that Tenns the larger figure indicates that’ the the hearings which were held in con.| English, making @ total of 9,000,000 | Vania Ras more of them than Alt: congressional penchant for investigat- nection. with the bill. in the land of the tree who wore 1 | fame, Nether does tne Melly neweone ing still thrives. This report is surely one of the|more qualified to exercise the right |q¢76 are millidn more “white: illiter- J Divery,_concelyable-subsect ile: cover most startling indictments of our civ-|°f the franchise than so many Aus-| 112. than colored. oats Ce Pree nice: Conereae He lization which has ever issued from|{Tallan bushmen. The Surgeon Gen-|" of the 15,000,000 foreign-born in the mires. Hers :axe afew ot thetic Capital Hill. The Representatives and |CTal’s report showed that of the men | _.Cr tpe 15,000,000 foreign-born in the Substitutes for railroad crossties. the Elks ™instrei show night at the Mullin club larger turn-out is expecte at the second try-out to t the same club starting at 7:45 o'clock Men who have been in other minstrel shows both here and in other cities} have been espec: asked by the| Elks’ minstrel show committee to re port tonight. Not a man cinched his part the first night and there will b characters or leadir ed until after seve investigations which have been com- pleted, but the result hasn't’been an- nounced. It's difficult to figure the cost of these inquiries because» no two are conducted inthe same:way. The cost will depend:on the length of the in- vestigation: In .sqme instances,’ cou sel is employed and must be. paid. nd then there is the expense of |stenography and printing. Frequeni- |ly,. traveling and other expenses for witnésses. must. be paid. | | tonight | held at eS ae Have you something to sell? Try of ali kinds is crav Givlcctinvcnarce, and Senators are always investigating that 5,000,000 cannot read or write jp Soclaniatte activities in the Federal | ote something and reporting about it, but i lish, a t 2,000,000 cannot rade Commission. Hesliahy and. thy 0. Alleged chemical treatment of |&_T#ibune Want Ad, minstrel men in the Elks expected at tonight’s meetin Men who are too modest to carry usually their findings are not too] fi& 3 ; read or write any language. beer - i critical or pessimistic. Like all Amer- * The committee says that getting an + 3 Sa \ | ; education in the United States is coh peers Ps Ras tal movement | ONSILITIS ~ icans, they have generally proceeded the leading parts are wanted to serve} ¢ eg in the big choru 1} on the assumption that, whatever lit largely a matter of luck, that the op- ace naa : Ny costumes and scenery |JUST AS SHORT AS MAMMA’S—Ifjtle shortcomings it might have, this portunity is not equal t if : rf of using saccharin 23 » ranged for by the committee compos: | anything would justify use of the ad | Nation is nevertheless the finest and ae ; “In the south a‘large proportion of pee ul e ‘or ers { ed of Todd Bowman, BE. J. Donahoe, |Jectives “cute” ‘and “cunning,” this|™ost enlightened on the face of the the: negro ‘children; ‘tiever™weo"the in : jqSuspension of a Washington schoo! James S A, B. Broadus, M. | little child’s frock of taffeta might, | carth. ee 44 | side of a schoolhouse,” it asserts “in “ Sanaa P. Wear, Ja ery and Willian [= But since the war a new spirit the north there is hardly a city that Zi 2 ise paren against individual 5 Jardine. The work of putting on the} seems to be abroad in the country. 2 . has adequate school facilities for all neh’ 3 1 jen tty ierise of Columbii bis show has been divided up among | { Frequently you encounter Americans 4 EN its children.” eS = 5 ‘a le bothering the American these men but it does not mean thot | who seem to think that the Agrcr- 3 3 3 The committee finds that in phy-| [: j : ; they will be the whole show ause ican horn has been blown lone bess sical education our schools have fail- in the vernacular, “there's too de:n| enough. They seem to think that Hi | cd even worse than in mental educa- ; : y much talent among Elks of Casper boasting is no longer in order. They| & . tion. to allow these seven to do it all | are inclined rather to make a critical se ‘The Provost Marshal General's re- ‘The committee expects to have sev-| estimate of the country, to take ac ed port fevealed the startling fact that eral of the stars of the last I count of its faults and to find those % 4 more than one-third, of ‘the men ex- minstrel show back in the cast for Klay Be faults grievous. A numbet of books| | . ‘ amined for military «service in the the coming production. With thes z have been written since the war “ t 4 {late war were disqualified by reason old-timers in the show, those w! Proposal to Be Put Up to Base-| which practically reverse the tradi- : B of physical disability,” it reports: “it saw the last one would buy tickets on] ball Cl i 0 -. f tional attitude of the American yy % S aiso stated that 90 per cent of these hx itactialons. | lub Owners for ward his country. Instead of calling| | z 3 young men could have qualified had >_> Next Season it the greatest on earth, these writers 3 | |they been taught the simplest rules |MRS.. HERBERT H. HARRIMAN— Haeey ‘ aint point out that it is lagging behind . of hyriene and héalth. It was igvor:| Both sides have requested secrecy in FIELD ii all other civilizations in many of the| %).> s: ance, ross ignorance that in the vast]the divorce action instituted in New- f PASADENA March 4, —Jactivities which make civilization majority of cases was the cause of| port, R. L, by Mrs. May Brady Harris| = ‘ i Plans for a Pacific Coast professiot literature, in art, in education, in their incompetence. , man of New York and Newport, . = ¥ GROSS 5 TRANSFERRED |: : modeled after the Pa-|Spect for individual rights, in the’ ‘n- % , The committee finds that American] against Herbert Melville Harriman. F | cific ast Baseball League, ave | telligent enjoyment of life. ’ ‘ ae teachers are-utterly incompetent, that | Mrs. Harriman’s first husband was eat |been conceived by George ("Tuffy") 2 3 ; fs 100,000 of them are-less than’20 yeavs|(C,. Robert Stevens, who died in 189; t ge eetings Miss Margaret B. Cornell, ficld rep-/Conn, former star halfback of the |THE TAIL END OF | : old, that 30,000 of them have no edu: |{eaving her a large fortune. Her sec- : resentative for the Red Cross in| dent high school, the Oregon | © x cation beyond the eighth grade, that}ond husband was Major Charles! Remember to give the password to tender, golden M..&.G. coming, is leaving Casper for Chi-|ticultural College and several pro-| Now this eritical spirit seems to} E i } | 200.000 of them have less than a high: | Spencer Hall, whom she divorced.| Potato Flakes, : tis fessional « ; peers: t0. i@ | school education, and that 300,000. of] She was the daughter of Judge John crite uchtion ee tho dient iuconsiileasd: reteHiOy to Has moumoud | oan tial uA panned) seme: ries So B= them have. no professional training | Brady. of New York and known, as a Let them right by the doorkeeper. } t chapter of the Red Cross and will be/€4 the proposal out in detail! and| cation. : fr: | | whatever. It-finds that the avera:c| beauty in the eighties. = ‘They deserve: a. place at the Grand High salary paid teachers in this. country a Potentate's right hand! faiseedby many, trieiiaa would not do so until he learns th?|’ “These statistics put. us in the - ] Wyoming is now in the central di-|attitude of coast league club owners, !ninth place among the nations,” t| fos Madi sv) Chai oni meme o? As refreshments, where there is a vision with headquarters at Chicago.|t? whom he has suggested they takc|says, in regard to our status in’ edi. S women ‘or ditch-diggers. e > € Miss Cornell will be retained for work |Ccontrol of the nizations. cation, “with most. of tha ctelitecs ‘The measure by which the congress: bis crowd tobe served, these fairy-light in this state and undoubtedly will| s that owners of | world ahead of us. i 9 men hope to ameliorate Spee ie Gs oo of crisp* goodness have a unique visit Casper from time to time. it L a its ; hould eae pro-} Nor do the congressmen’ blink the Rane eeeetes saree’ ot euprn4 . 4 Beg A | fessio ‘oot er the bi i a s ef x Baa ett ter the baseball |significance of the facts which they| ; Neat Tt apprarintes “1p 808,000 St Serve with sandwiches of any Little Comment |soapcn\ djoses,. 11 iy only during /unearth. They recognize that a demo-|: " ea Pprop) 2 Wah?! with saalhds:) qwithicHllechalsaaam | October, November and December, |cracy is an absurdity unless the vot-| FRENCH WOME! with hot, bouillon “or consomme, or just with coffee, At YOUR Grocer's COLORADO POTATO FLAKE & MFG. CO: Denver, Colorado i | from the close of one|érs are intelligent enough to know|COMPETE IN CROSS-COUNTRY From London on |bas s on in October to the op-| what they are voting ‘about. What,|RUN—More than fifty young women ening of the next in April, then, of a democracy in which a large |athletes of France competed in a re » football game a week in four | fraction of the population is illiterate arkable cross-country race for wom- jof the league cities would be played. fs tee a Inaugural Here %. ( 1 eee aoe Played. Janda still larger one densely ignog- fa riichy was. held over: the famous N. & A. Coal Co. joneaes nek as ihe Jos Angeles! “In a free country its safety is|cently. Photo shows Mlle. Briard, Fhone 1400 Sane cassia esi jand Vernon league clubs are owned | jeopardized,” the report modestly ad-|the winner, who covered the three- INDON, 3 spaiches here, and one a week on San Fran-|mits, “when its voters cannot rH from the United States have given|cisco bay, either in Sah Francisco eI IE Gondon newspapers little basis for edi-!or Oakland. Portland, Seattle, torial comment r to the new|/ramento It Lake wou American administration's prospec-|a game two weeks. tive foreign policy. would be vs ‘A New York dispatch to the London | = : * Times declares it is understood Mr.|Harry Clemons, who has been in the Harding will follow generally the po!-|employ of the Midwest Refining com- jey of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, |pany is leaving this evening for his Which is declared to contemplate sep-|home in Denver, aration from Europe, no permanent| Toe a have Games Richards and Cunningh Pf v Lemon has returned to Cas- military alliances and no economic} E. U commitments that might endanger the | Per after looking after business mat sovereignty of the United States. |ters in Cheyenne R. N. Van Sant has left for Den-} Carl Miller, who spent several days ver where he will spend the week-|in Cheyenne visiting with friends, has end_on business and pleasure, 2 ~ Men’s Department Spring is almost here and we all think of new wearing apparel as the warm To the Ladies of Casper Right here at home, it is now possible to secure a “Fifth Ave- nue” tailoring service in spring apparel that costs you no more than the price of a “stock size” suit or coat in any of the ready- made shops. weather approaches, therefore, you should call on us and get our prices on our men’s wear. _Menwhoknow machinery recommend Clothing We still feature the well-known Hirsch-Wickwire make of men’s suits, and offer same at ridiculously low prices: in fact, some of them are selling at half Every woman is an admirer of the better things in life, espe- cially when it comes to her wardrobe requirements. That's why we have added the IDEAL tailoring service to our business. of the regular prices. ' A service that enables us to- oe offer the best to be had in Sh . Fit, Workmanship and The farmer who turns up more soil with his tractor in an hour than he once plowed with two horses in a whole day knows that his wife Fabric Excellence. . We are allowing a-discount of can do moreand better washing with an Eden in an hour than she can = il 3 d do with her two arms and a scrub-board all day. UW Z h 25 per cent on all our men's an He nears that sheeden vu ge bat heey her clothés, her time— ~ f ( ’ ‘ ; and her money—and he prefers the Eden because it is as mechanic; Ladies’ Lf ELIE Call boys shoes, so it will pay you. to well built as his best tach machinery. : a | Sirs san @NCORPORATED poe buy two or three pairs.at-prices : A Free Trial in Your Home. : Gents’ Casper — Chicago — Rapid City | Inspect offered. Have a free demonutation of the Eden in clothes, than any other way of washing: aie way were ‘v0! Tailoring. and ‘ esas Wikies Extra Special ‘ Photos fi of is % We still have a good assortment of boys’ shoes which have Natrona Power Company ieee Peas been selling at $4.00, $4.50 and'$5.00. Your choice now for Ph 69 ‘ and $2.95 per pair. : , one } Models. Summer. ———— = === : Bey CUMEasoR tet] Banter Think Richards '& Cunningham When You Want the Best

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