Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 3, 1921, Page 6

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est init esti 1ent ntet peki 2on¢ “Al PAGE SIX Che Casper Daily Cribune SCHOOL BONDS IRE APPROVED Hot Springs County Votes Issue for Erection of New $100,- 000 High School (Special to The Tribune) THERMOPOLIS, Wyo., April 2. — The county school bond election to vote $100,000 bonds for a new high school was held here on March 31, when 20 votes for and six against the proposition were cast. Rural precinct are not in but it is thought the bonds will carry. Carter Management Changes The Carter Hotel management changed hands yesterday. Chas. Wiess, former manager, will go east soon and (Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Fritz of Denver, tok over the hotel Holdrege Leavy Fred E. Holdrege who has been sup; erintendent of the Hot Springs Re- serve for about six years, resiged in January affective April 1, and will look after his large oll interests in Kan- sas. He has been mentioned for var- fous federal appointments and more recently in connection with that of} collector of interal revenue, district | of Wyoming. ohn Divine, former | state land ay . is the new ap-| pointee who will assume the duties as | soon as the inspectors have checked over the state’s belon at the reserve, | New Mortuary Opened P. H. Knight formerly in the fur-| niture business in this city will open | up a mortuary the comi week. His | stock of cai | JUDGE DELAYED i i DENVER, Colo., April 2.—Execu- tion of sentence upon Judge Ben B. Lindsey of the Juvenile court for con- tempt of court was postponed today | until Monday. The judge was fined $500 and the supreme court at Wash- ington recently refused to review the case. Execution of sentence was set for today following receipt from Washing- ton of official papers. No reason for the postponement was given. Counsel for Judge Lindsey announe- ed that the wording of the sentence issued by Judge Perry in district court several years ago, did not provide the | alternative of a jail sentence. The judge previously tray, the confidence of a child. hot confirmed ood | ieelved late Thursday that he marching toward Budapest with a OWNERS OF SMOKEHOUSE; ‘Vienna, which has an old reputation |as “Burope’s imaginative news cen- te te ‘The Smoke House, a popular gath- ering place for Casper’s male gen- try, is now under the ownership of| Jack Jordie and Bill Reeves, well known in business circles here. The institution was purchased from Tom McDonald. Mr. Jordie was formerly manager of The Inn parlors and Mr. Reeves connected with the Little Brick, Mr. McDonald plans to remain here until July 1, when he probably will go to California and associate himself with Harry Clark, a former business part- ner here. | The new owners assume the entire| lease held by Mr. McDonald and will make no changes for the present. Ha McGuinn will conduct the Smoke- house barber shop, Nick Spirato and Guy Hoffman the pool hall and the new owners the cigar stand, fountain and other concessions TRAFFIG OFFIGER HURT IN STREET ACCIDENT. What is termed an unavoidable acci- dent resulted in C. R. Carlisle, a mem- ber of the traffic squad of the police department, suffering minor injuries, and partial destruction of a motor-| cycle belonging to the department. Carlisle stopped a motorist who was running after dark without a tail) light. While talking to the offender, | Marion Hendricks, driving another | machine, drove around the machine} that was standing still and collided} with the of had announced that |cate as requested by representatives he would rather go to jail than be-|0f the Hungarian government, were | manger last night. condram. on “Red Sunday The sixth, 1 ALLIED au DAT HELD POSSIBLE (Continued from Page 1.) for Switzerland Sunday evoning or Monday, it is reported here. It is planned gor him to make the trip by the way of Italy, and che delay in his starting for Switzerland has been oc- casioned by negotiations with’ the Italian government for per:nission for him to pass through that country, BUDAPEST, April 2. asking the Hunga‘ian gov defeat attempts by Former Charles to remain in this country were unanimously adopted by the Chamber of Deputies here last night. Resolutions ABANDONMENT OF PLANS UNCONFIRMED. PARIS, April 2.—Reports that For mer Emperor Charles hus finally given up his attempt to regain the Hungarian throne and will return to his exile in Switzerland, without, however, consenting formally to abdi- here this morning. These reports emanated from exact- ly the same sources as the news re- was force varying from 1,500 to 15,000 men, ‘They are, therefore, received | with considerable caution, Dispatches ‘relative to the fa”ure of the attempted coup d'etat come from NEWSPAPERS BELIEVE EPISO! IS CLOSED. VIENNA, April 2.—(By The Asso-| ciated Press.)—Newspapers, of this city appear to be certain that the epi- sode resulting from the attempt of Former Emperor Charles to re-estab- sh himself as king of Hungary is ended. |"They today printed alleged de- tails of the manner in which Charles would be taken across Austria to Switzerland, and some declared that the former monarch had left Steina- Reports from Hungary, however, failed to show matters have reached such a final stage. It has been learned that arrangements were com- pleted yesterday for Charles’ return from Hungary to Switzeland and that he would be escoted by British, French and Italian army officers, who would be in command of picked forces of gendarmes. The attempted Hapsburg coup, which at one period last week, it is admitted, had a ‘chance of success, promises to have a different effect. ‘The social democrats plan to introduce in the national assembly resolutions demanding that the government take steps to hurry ratification by France and England of the Trianon treaty, providing for the surrender of west Hungary to Austria, and making pro- vision for the protection of Austrian frontiers by the entente. They declare this action is certain to prevent further royalist attempts at restoration. The three leading political parties have agreed to make separate sta ments before the assembly placing themselves as being opposed to the return of the Hapsburgs. knew that he would their age— couldn’t change and the old crowd. ious to hazard. bank, where he starte He Broke Away From the Old Crowd and Got Ahead Their shallow pleasure bored him. Holding up his end kept him broke. gray haired comrades, also broke, and unless he changed his ways. He knew he He was young and his future was too prec- so he made new friends, including this Wyoming National Bank Casper, Wyoming He looked at be no better off at still go around with d to save. | | crammed with thrills, and Percy P. Edwards, also “Cover Cut” crossing of the Burling- ton railroad while they were en route by automobile at night from Ther- mopolis to Worland. Johnson, who Possesses an able journalistic imagina- tion, says he wouldn't believe the story had he not been a principal; the aver- age reader, not haying been a prin- cipal, probably won't believe it. Be that as it may, here is the sketch: Scene: Cover cut crossing. At this point the Yellowstone highway crosses the tracks of the Burlington raiiroad on a viaduct forty feet above the tracks which are in a deep cut Persons approaching the viaduct are unable to see the highway at the other fend until they are turning into the bridge, this being true of both ends. Numerous fatalities have resulted from traffic accidents at thie point, the most recent disaster of note—preced- ing that about to be related—occur- ing when an automobile containing two persons skidded while approach- ing the viaduct, plunged to the rail- road tracks and was struck by a freight train, both occupants of the automobile being killed and the ma- chine utterly demolished. e via- duct is barel ywide enough for two cars to pass on it. Dramatis personae: Johnson, Ed- wards and (it is alleged Oscar Bier, William Stiltz and O. K, Van. Properties: Two large touring cars. ‘Time. 1 a. m. of murky morning, snow falling. Explanatory note of action. John- son and Edwards, after attending lodge session at Thermopolis, ate driv- ing toward Worland as rapidly as prudence dictates, endeavoring to “beat out" the storm. Bier, Stiltz and Van (all the action set forth regarding this trio must be accepted with the reporter's qualification of “it is al- leged”) have stolen William Bivins’ automobile at Thermopolis and have driven it to Kirby, where they at- Cathart not obeying a command to throw up his hands, was shot thru the stomach, sustaining a probably mortal wound. The robber trio then fled back toward Thermopolis in the stolen car, En route they encoun- tered Tom Thompson, held him up, robbed him of $30 and a bottle of moonshine whiskey and hit him on the head with the butt of a gun, leav- ing him unconscious by the road. They then continued toward Ther- mopolis at a high rate of speed. Action» Johnson and Edwards, driving fast but with ce, SINN FEINERS ARE RANGED—While cuted recently at Mountjoy prison, Dublin, thousands of sympathizers knelt in prayer outside the jail. hanged for high treason, the charge belng that they had taken part in the ambush of British troops at nomas Wheelan, had been convicted in connection with the murder of Captain The photograph shows some of those who prayed outside Mountjoy prison. dizzily, a Fi Narrow Escape of Auto Parties In Collision on Viaduct Over Rushing Train Holds Thriller WORLAND, Wyo., March 30.—The resourceful imagina- of the professional producer of movie serial thrillers in its most hectic state never visualized an “episode” six Sinn Feiners were being Five more ? action and improbabilities than was the experience of W. G. Johnson, editor of the Worland Grit, of this place, at the famous Preach the Cover Cut viaduct from the Thermopolis side. “Stitt, Van and after their arrival at Thermopolis on| patches Paria whlon exlgwested foot and were identified by Thompson |p t< pica aulsaty z as the trio who had robbed and as- saulted him. They are held on/|**Pecting some cumb to his wound. Bier, driving at breakneck speed but with the stolen car handled skilfully, approach the cut from the Kirby side. The occupants of neither car are able to see the lights of the other car until both cars are on the viaduct and a collision is inevitable. is at the wheel, sees the lights of the burtling other car suddenly flash into view; slams on the brakes and brings Edwards, who his car, after perilous skidding on the the bridge. snow-covered viaduct, to a stand-still about one-third of the distance across The right fender of the car grinds against the frail railing of the bridge but does not break it down and Johnson and Edwards, with the Sheer drop of 40 feet to the railroad tracks on oneside and seecingly cer- tain death but a moment in the future when the oncoming second car shall strike their machine and dash it thru the railing, hear the whistle of a train approaching on the track to which they expect to be hurled, The driver of hte second car, suddenly confronted by the lights of the first car, and doubtless realizing that whatever he does sudden death is looming just ahead, applies the brakes and en- deavors to swing his hurtling machine to the right side of the viaduct in a desperate effort to pass the first car on the narrow bridge. The brakes take hold, but the tires do not grip the snow-covered bridge and the car skids turning completely around twice on the narrow viaduct without striking either rail and crashing side- wise into the stationary automobile, striking it “squarely on the nose” and shoving it backward on the bridge. Both cars hang for a moment on the edge of the bridge while splinters from the demolished railing shower downward to the track, then settle back: to safety on the structure, that moment the train az *|under the viaduct. tempted to “hold jjup /Eleriy, | Cathars eee ee ee a bet istered! made credulous at the outcome: of the col- lision, clamber wreckage of their machine. no sign of life in or about the other Apprehensively they investigate and find that wreck empty; there any living being or any dead body on the viaduct. look along the highway and discern, just disappearing in the gloom, three forms which are scuttling away in car. the direction of That's all—except that later John- son and Edwards received informa- dazedly from ‘Thermopolis. ANNOUNCEMENT; DRS. J. H. AND A. G, JEFFREY, CHIROPRACTORS, | HAVE MOVED THEIR OFFICES TO THE Midwest Building | Suite 318 to 323 FORMAL OPENING Monday, April 4 REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED FROM 2 TO 4 P.M. ALL ARE CORDIALLY INVITED. ' Drs. J. H. and A. G. Jeffrey MIDWEST BUILDING Suite 318 to 323 roars past Johnson and Ed- There is nor is Amazed, they At the HA charges of robbery, and assault with intent > China has but 6,000 miles of rall- made of that visit, too, was to “pay road, while her natural resources war-|Tespects,” it was interpreted in offi- rant the construction of more than| cial circles that the conversation must 309,000 miles. “SATURDAY, APRIL 2, 1921 uestions at issue on the peace|in April to take charge of the Moy Sota v4 sceeae B resrtntile dtr, aap fill th information as President| position o: vacant by Harding has gathered regarding the| the resignation of Barl 8. Pierce. 47, missi d opinions of M. Vivi-) Hilton was graduated from Michig, a een ee wim indirectly thus| Agricultural college in 1911 with tie : far, the former premier having been i only a few minutes with the presi- . dent whea he formally presented a degree of bachelor of science in for. message of greeting several days ago, estry. He took a position with the United States forest service at once, He will be the president's guest, how- ever, at a White House dinner on worked on several national forests in Wednesday night, at which Mr. Her- the Rocky Mountain region of Colo. rick also will be present. ——_——>—- NEW SUPERVISOR FOR MEDICINE BOW FOREST jor on the Michigan Nationaj . Myo. april 2.—Huber ‘Forest in 1915. LARAMIE, have inevitably touched on import- C. Hilton wil) srriv= ia Laramie early = (Continued from Page 1.) that the French foreign office was announcement to come soon from Secretary Hughes. Viviant conferred -with Mr. charge—|tughes for an hour during the week and, although the explanation area eae WATER WELL DRILLED IN. ‘Water sufficient to accommodate the Heights addition was encountered yes. terday at a depth of 30 feet. Drilling was undertaken for a lower depth to provide pure water for the addition. NATO r (Taken From April Physical Culture.) Chiropractic he ATA Consists Entirely of Adjusting the Movable Segments of the Spinal Column To Normal Position Does Chiropractic Differ From Other Methods Fundamentally? Scientists tell us that in all nature there are two great forces contending against each other, and that things are as they are bécause of the action and reaction of these two forces. These forces are called the centrifugal or inside, and the centripetal or outside force, more familiarly known in physics as attraction and repulsion. : : ae} If this be true, these two forces work on human beings just as they work on everything else in nature and in Chiropractic philosophy they are known as Innate Intelligence (centrifu- gal) and environment (centripetal). ‘ e 1 Centri means center, fugal means “flee from.’ Centrifugal, then, is the force (mental impulse) in the human being which moves from the center to the periphery. Petal means “flee to” and centripetal means the force (vibration) which moves from the periphery in the center. In harmony with this idea we find the nerves named accordingly—efferent and _ afferent— which names designate their function of carrying mental impulses FROM Innate Intelligence tovthe periphery, or tissue cell (efferent), and vibrations from the tissue cell (periphery) to Innate Intelligence (afferent). mit For bandréds: oe for thousands df years the professions that have ministered to the sick entirely disregarded the centrifugal or inside force Cnnate Intelligence), and searched the heavens and the earth in a vain attempt to find the cause of dis-ease, Even now we find a vast and learned army engaged in draining swamps, killing mosuitoes, prescribing diets, discover- ing germs and establishing hygenic conditions under which those in whom the flame of life burns feebly may continue a little while longer upon the earth. For us to contend that in all these years these investigators have found NOTHING of value to mankind is at once to betray our ignorance, and to show such a total disregard for provable facts as to make ourselves ridiculous. 5 1 Fire burns, cold freezes, water drowns, alcohol intoxicates, poison kills, etc., and the most perfectly aligned spine in the world, with 100 per cent of Innate Intelligence on the job, with a perfectly NORMAL range of adaptability will not prevent these external conditions from pro- ducing death, discomfort, or loss of ease—at this stage of the development of the race, at nae But when all these facts are admitted in regard to environmental conditions, and each is traced to its logical conclusion, there yet remains the overwhelming mass of conditions of dis- ease that affects mankind which are NOT capable of being reconciled to the environmental theory of the cause of dis-ease. * , For instance, a hundred thousand people drink water from the same stream for a year, and during that year 40 become sick with what is dignosed as typhoid fever. Give the WHY of this from the standpoint of the water—or the germs in the water—being the cause. Now, reverse the statistics and say that of a hundred thousand who drank the water but 40 remained alive: Reason and logic point to the conclusion that in both instances there is an unknown i factor, and that that unknown factor in the first instance is the cause of 40 cases of typhoid | fever ,and in the second instance the cause of 40 survivors, Living under the same environmental conditions one member of a family has heart trouble, another bronchial, a third liver and a fourth stomach trouble, while.a fifth may suffer from i nervousness, a sixth from sciatica, etc., ad infinitum ad nauseam. Science teaches that. like causes produce like results. If this be true, if this be natural law, how can one who affirms that the cause of disease lies in the environment reconcile the facts of that theory? Is it not a self-evident proposition THAT THERE IS SOME FACTOR WHICH IS NOT EN- VIRONMENTAL that accounts for these different results? . : Chiropractic teaches that this unknown factor is found within and that the-resistance, or the susceptibiit , of the individual must be measured in terms of centrifugal force, i. e., vitality or mental impulse. ‘ f Chiropractic teaches that when a vertebra is subluxated and presses upon a nerve, thereby shutting off the supply of centrifugal force (mental impulse), to an organ, cell or tissue that that organ, cell or tissue becomes ‘‘susceptible” to the centripetal force (environment) and ‘4 dis—ease results. C j Just as a chain is strong as its weakest link, so a human body is as sifong as its weakest organ, and just as you would strengthen the chain by strengthening the weak links so that it could stand the stress of the work it has to perform, so the Chiropractor concerns himself with strengthening the weak organs or part of the body by adjusting the misaligned vertebrae so that the normal flow of mental impulse will enable the body to resist the stress of environing conditions. While other professions are concerned with changing the environment to suit the weakened ' body, Chiropractic is concerned with strengthening the body to “suit” the environment. | This is at once an explanation of the fundamental difference in theory, art and prattice between Chiropractic and other professions, and an explanation of why Chiropractic succeeds where all cther methods fail. Dik Coss RE Haka § So CHIROPRACTORS Townsend Bldg. Phones: Office 423, Res, 1235 Drs. J. H. and A: G. letiey! CHIROPRACTORS Midwest Building, Suite 318 to 323 Office Phone 706, Res. 93 ATT

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