Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 10, 1921, Page 2

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PAGE TWO Che G aspect Daily Ccibune Issued every evening «xcept Sunday at Casper. BUSINESS TELEBHONES-:-~-----------~ matter, November 22, 1916. ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS MEMBER THE REPORTS FROM Business Manage esentatives Adv it i ‘ew York City David J. Kandali, 341 Fitch Ave. New ¥ Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bids. Cog Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the New York and Chicago offices and visitors are welcome. UL ---15 and 16/ Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting A‘! Departments ——[—S——_ Eniercd at Casper, (Wyoming) Postoftice as second<las*/ ally make our diplomatic task difficult. President and Baitor| deceive everybody. | proclaiming to the world that no basis exists xatrona | Which permits of discussing with them the County, Wyo. Puslication Offices: Tribune Building (resumption of commercial relations, much Pica ht tare ac te aaa ats) less political relations. of the new world and our principal! European | must act the part of interpreter. But it must |not be like the ‘Honest Broker’, as was the case formerly with Bismarck, who tried to No, France owes it to © herself to bring together those who are be- Associate Ediior/|coming estranged. She must bring about a -- City Editor "Advertising Muauager | work of peace.” j a ee | It rains alike on the just and unjust, and |their umbrellas. “So many conflicts between our associate It be Casper Daily Cribune re Discover Ancient Grave. (Douglas Enterprise Dearing the name of George Mur- ray of Andrew county, Missouri, a stone was uncovered by workmen at the old Ted Poilard place, now known as the William Nunn ranch, five miles south of Douglas and two miles off the old Oregon Trail, while repairing an irrigation ditch during the week. The stone was discovered clump of willows near the ditch the inscription announced the date of | Mr. Murray's death as June 19, 1850. It had evidently been scratched with a | mainly on the just, the Eureka (Kan.) Herald| pocket-knife on the sand rock. Mur- explains, because the unjust have borrowed} "™y’s age was given as thirty-seven. It was quite probable that Murray whieh was a member of a en fol- ——_—__ lowed the rush of "49 destina- acral rer “Home Rule” for Railroads tion the California gold elds. Phho- By Carrier are tographs of the stone were taken by One Year - o—— Mr. Nunn and it ‘s probable that a Six Months - r “Industrially the icest encouraging domestic news| more suitable marking of the grave Three Months of the year” to the Richmond News Leader (Dem.) is} will be erected through the efforts of = carr the decision of the railroad labor board sbrogating/the Douglas Community club. S05 Per national agreements and laying down. certain princi- f Gab Siler. ce ples as the basis of negotiations for new working con- Sheridan's Schast Sicctios, Six Months Three Months - N Ml subseriptio:.; must be paid in advance and the ‘Tribune will not insure delivery sfter subscrip- Daily tion becomes one month in arrears. — ————————————— Member of Audit Burcau of Circuiations (A. B. ©.) -- ollie sinssescthertendeetetteeatbes 2 bcnenectieeed sana) Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited in this pape> and also the local news publish«*? 2 rein. Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. Call 15 or 16 any time between 6 and 8 o'clock p. m. if you fail to receive your Tribune. A papwr will be deliv- ered to you by special messenger. Make it your duty to let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. J o> ‘Te Really Humane Make Nevada’s experiment with lethal gas as a means of inflicting capital punishment has opened the way for speculation among those whose thought runs along this somewhat un- pleasant line. One very considerate citizen would, so to speak, redeem the offending one by immer- sion. Instead of sending the condemned to the gallows or the electric chair, or inflicting the Nevada gas treatment, he would drown them. The gentleman in question is a phy- sician and naturally his discourse is profes- sional in tone. He gives all the details, and upon request probably would furnish a chart. He describes it as a humane method. Per- haps so, but if the thing has to be done wouldn’t it be just as well to use the old method of getting rid of an unwelcome cat—. a gunny sack weighted down with stones. To add to the ideas already advanced it _might be suggested that an even more humane method would be to do away altogether with each and every one of the methods mentioned, Improve With Years The publication of a monumental work by Viscount Bryce at the ripe age of 83 should persuade many of us who want to feel what it is like to be an octogenarian that old age can be attained without the aid of thyroid glands borrowed from the monkey, says a writer in the London Chronicle. One of the secrets of old age would seem to be a lifetime of intellectual activity and 2 lion’s share of public service. It is quite aston- ishing the number of public men living at the present day who have passed their 80th birth- day. Lord Channing is in his 81st year; V count Morley is 83; Frederic Harrison ‘ is close on 90; Sir Harry Poland is still a vigor- ous letter writer at 91, while the Earl of Hals- bury is 97, and possibly there are others. aes To be effective, publicity should first of al be truthful. Nothing of an enduring natur. can be built on other than a foundation o truth and square dealing.—Business Chroni cle of the Pacific Northwest. ee Cs aes The Peacemaker At least one French paper—the Repub. lique Francaise—believes that France instea: of trying to profit by misunderstandings be tween America and England should seek t promote Anglo-American harmony. Thi paper says, apropos of an outbrust in thr London press over President Harding’s atti- tude toward Ireland: “President Harding must have been awar that the sending of his offering to the Amer can committee of help in Ireland and accon panying it with a message of sympathy fo this ‘unhappy portion of humanity’ must hav caused a certain melancholy in London. “Just at the time when Lloyd George find it suitable to recognize the soviet, America i: 3-90] tracts between the individual roads and their em- Practically the entire press takes the same|,, pioyes view, and agrees with the New York Herald (Ind.) that “a ve ican history has been safely passed. There is some agreement is general that “the adopted . + ate sound and eminently fair’ (Evans- ville Journal, Rep.), and while*much depends on the spirit in which bot les enter the coming confer Courier (Dem.) that “‘an honest effort to formulate working rules under these principles can hardly fail of success.” At any rate, the Baltimore News (Ind.) thinks “we may now hope to see something accom- plished toward a solution of the railroad problem.” Official sunction of the principle that each road should make its own working agreements constitutes “a substantial victory for the executives” In this it is supported by a considerable number of papers, among them the Pittsburgh Chronicle Te! graph (Rep.), the New Orleans Times-Picayune (Ind. Dem.), and the Winston-Salem ( Cc.) Journal (Dem.), industry. But since, as the New York Evening Post ({Ind.) points out, “the decision makes conces.ions to both sides,” the Chicago Journal (Dem.) views the * thi cision” leads the Hartford Courant (Rep.) to the conclusion that “the public” ‘also will have a substan- tial share in the victory. However, the Lynchburg } the majority opinion when it deci: of the victory” of the operators a basis for the agreements hereafter to be arrived at.” These principles, according to the Philadélphia Public Ledger (Ind.) are “the old, basic labor con- tentions”; they “uphold the eight-hour day, the prin- ciple of collective bargaining, the right of organiza- tion and of naming representatives,” and promul- gated by governmental body they “will make in- dustrial history.” In this connection Capital (Rep.) makes the intéresiing oiservation that these sixteen principles “include sudstantially every- thing that Samuel Gompers stood for in President prevented from adoption.” (Ind. Rep.) hails them as “a Magna men” which ‘Sif honestly observed” would result in “no more railroad troubles, and no serious injustice on either side. At least they constitute notice, says the Richmond Times Dispatch (Dem.) “that certain contentions have passed beyond the realm of agita- tions.” The significant feature to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram (Ind. Dem.) is that: “This body of principles was drawn up by the member of the labor board representing the public, and was concurred in by all the other members of the board. It reflects a unanimous judgment, therefore, and as the beginning of a body of ‘industrial law’ laid down by 4 national tribunal, that circumstance is of very great importance.” Good Will and Business It may be wondered why all this congressional inxiety to placate and make amends to the little re- »ubljc of Colombia for her Joss of Panama. It is more han sentimental. The only two places in the world where platinum obtainable in quantity are Russia and Colombia. he Russian supply is, just-now, unavailable. . It is herefore, prudent to conciliate the remaining pur- eyor of the mineral. Colombia is expected, this ear, to turn up 50,000 ounces. It is worth about an ounce. American capital owns practically all ‘ye deposits. British capital has, however, its am- tions in that quarter. Under the terms of the merican capitalists’ holdings, the American govern- ent has first bid on the supply, and after that come e claims of the British government. The anxiety of these governments may be ex- tained by platinum having peculiar chemical prop- igh explosives. It was, indeed, at the urgent so- citation of the United States government itself that ertain @imerican capitalists made their ventures in tolombia to obtain these deposits. A good deal is being said about the good will of ie republic of Colombia, and rightly so, for good will a substantial business consideration. “The point of istruction is that here, as is usually the case behind he diplomatic interchange, is the quest of an indus- vial nation for the raw materials of manufacture.— Soston Globe (Ind.) ences, the press fecls, with the Charleston News and pyre votes per minute and resulted, rties which make it a necessity in the concocting of} (Sheridan Enterprise.) Wih a majority of approximately 20 to 1, H. C. Stevens and W. H. Edelman were re-elected to thelr posi- mportant milestone in post-war Amer-| tions as members of the board of trustees of Sheridan school district No. difference of opinion as to where the victory lies, but/7 in the election held in the old Cen- basic principles| tral school building. It was the most spirited election ever heid im the history of Sher- idan schools, and brought out a record The vote was cast at the rate W. H. Edeiman—s20. H. C, Steven—818. Cc. H. Patterson—47. Remy Sturbeaux—43. It was voted by the electors present prior to voting for trustees to reduce the school levy in district seven to 7% mills for the coming year, one in the} mill less than the levy for 1920, the opinion of the Baltimore Evening Sun (Ind. Dem.).| fiscal year just closed. ——e Can't Suppress Giendo. (Glendo Star.) Saturday night, Sunday and Monday hich calls it a triumph for “home rule in|Glendo took on a coat of snow that is worth several millfon dollars to our country and in fact the whole of the west. The rain encouraged the farm- it}ers and they are not only doing ex- rather as ‘“‘a victory for the railroad industry.” Andj|tra farm duties but coming to town stonishing fact” that “both the employes and|*"4 buying business houses, lots and erators are more or lesé satisfied with the de-|>ullding homes but they are ako starting new business enterprises and opening new averues for extra labor and employment. Men of the times declare that Glendo is the “Bee Hive” (Dem.) expresses| city of the west and with every avail- that “the scope|able man at work and calls for more perceptibly nar-|'s the plain fact of its growth. Lots rowed by some of the sixteen principles laid down as|*7° Selling to people outsiderand we have a general growth that outstrides: any in the west for substantial de- velopment. Glendo welcomes, Glendo grows. «a Lucky Escape. (Cody Enterprise.) Disregarding all orders forbidding the Topeka|holsting men in the basket or skip as it is called came very near caus ing serious injury if not death to six men at the dam last week. Along the river about four hundred Wilson's first industrial conference, which Judge Gary | feet below the level of <,e road work- The Minneapolis Journal |ing men have becn engaged clearing Charta for de-|a place to erect a building to install termining future relations between managements and| the electric light plant and a huge derrick had beon placed to convey tools and material to the men below. ITH OUR WYOMING EXCHANGE. WITH OUR WYOMING EXCHANGES Frequently the men had ridden the car or skip and were hoisted to the level above thereby saving a climb of the many steps that lead road. Realizing the danger of the trip in > rather unbalanced int. dent Sass had that no men should manner but last while he was away a new charge of the betrt men up in the ski known manner Luckily the fall was of such short distance that none of the men were injured although all were badly frightened. from people passing over it recently. Fish Being Wasted. (Sheridan Post.) : Fish, thousands of fish, enough to feed an army or sive a city full of starving Chinese are going to waste down near Lake DeSmet and they are there for anybody that will cart them away. They are not trout but a lake fish, but at this season of the year they are good eating and it Is a crying shame that they should be wasted. The huge ditch that will serve to carry the surplus waters of the Piney into Lake DeSmet reservoir has ben completed recently and the water wat turned into the ditch and as soon ar it struck the lake the fish began as- cending the ditch. Yesterday from the lake to the highway. a distance of about a miie, the bottom of the ditch was literally covered with wou'd weigh from a pound and a half tc three pounds. There was only a couple of inches of water in the ditch but the fish were struggling valiantly tc force their way upstream and not one would turn back toward the lake and safety. As more water enters the ditch the fish will keep going up. and unless they ate stopped they will eventual enter the Ptney. Men versed in fis lore say that if the do, the fishing In the Piney will be ruined. The fish are a species of carp and it ts believed that they will eat the trout spawn. Whether or not this is true the fish are there and should be eaten as the supply from the lake seems almost ex- haustless. ky Beautifying Tourist Camp. (Douglas Budget) Arbor day “was observed In Douglas this year in a practical manner by about 40 public spirited citizens of Douglas, who spent a good portion of the day in trees at the tour ist camp site City park. Nearly a hundred trees were set out, which in future years will be an ornament tr the pretty park. The work was unde: Milk That Is All Food and No Waste 7 Milk is 7 water and % solids. The solids give milk its character — its flavor — its food value. Remove the water and all the valuable part is left. Replace the water and it becomes liqui¢v.ilk instantly —just as rich, as fresh, as delicious as the richest, creamiest country milk you ever drank. - and giris and the buoyancy of spirit which they bring. On Thursday and Friday of week, May 12 and 13, the Big basin track and field meet All of the schools of the Big Horn basin will enter contestants in some of these events’and the two days will see some very spirited rivairy. No less than 150 contestants will be here for the two days and 250 more visiting high school students will come h them. ——Subscrib~ tor The Tribune—— ae me H Question Box | (Any reader can the answer to any question Ly writing The Casper Daily Ini Frederic J. Haskin, Director, Wash- ington, D. C. This offer applies srtict- tw to information. The bureau can- wt give advice on legal, medical and financial matters. It does not at- tempt to settle domestic troubles, nor to undertake exhav,tive research on any subject. Write your questions plainly and briefly. Give full name and address and enclose two cents in stamps for return postage. All re plies ure sent direct to the inquirer.) Broportion of the men em- ployed by mines actually work under- i—Q. E. D. A.—In bituminous mines four-fifths) displacement speed of 22.5 knots. teries are 12 14-Inch fi |People’s Forum } Horse Sense in Good Roads. Editor Tribune: After all the cam- paigning that has been done to in- Sure a favorable v he good is, might it not have been well to devote a Littl e to telling us where, and along what general lines the roads will be built? Are we to have long stretches of level roads that are already good more than 300 days in the year converted into pavement fer the benefit of joy- riders and transients, or are we to have our roads built from the weak est link up for the benefit of every- one? In a practical sense a read. like a chain is better than its weakest spot Of what real benefit is 19 miles of if an impassible aill or mud- the traveler arriving at his destination a mile further on? I have been traveling a certain 15 mg reed for rarely, very bad, and nev memory theoretica: after every storm, 50 yards of { this road sets the possible haulage one | way over the entire 15 miles at naught and a person is in real luck to be able to negotiate this 50-yard hill with an empty car. With this particular spot made solid, a 50 per cent load could be hauled at all times, and 500 yard® ligent construction -would { sure a 90 per cent efficiency for the whole 15 miles. Hundreds of dollars were spent last ner on this road, and, as a matter So well was the work done t the small boy could readily have Played marbles on any and every square foot of it for a few days! But, alas! a heavy rain and a large bunch of stock obliterated every trace of the work and since that rain this road has been in worse shape than at any time since the first grading was be- ing done * th Is this stretch of road or that 50. yard mudhole a particular pet of mine? I think not. I have see more high-powered town cars bogged down on that hill in a season than there are cars and wagons owned in this neighborhood, which is quite a few. I shall want to drive to Lander and Washakie; to Douglas and other points wondering how this e. I fear the 140 odd miles to Riverton and so on down the line. I am for good roads first, last. and ail of the time and shall probably vote for the bonds, trusting my misgivings may prove groundless, and that the money will be spent with an intelli- gent effort toward giving the most good to the most people, and to make all the roads passable all of the time instead of part of them passable part of the time. It is not unreasonable that the main highways should nave the best atten- No matter whether you want a spdonful or a gallon—Klim is always ready for use in any quantity. Kept in its package ‘ight beside your other staples, Klim is not affected by droughts, rainy seasons, summer tion; it ts still less unreasonable to in- sist that the really bad places in the be ways be built up right and given reasonable attention. WILLIAM MOSTLELLER. Mrs. Hiram Browser—Why you join the wives’ union? object? Mrs. Cuddleton—Not at all. Only he says he intends to run the house as An open shop—Houston Post. ge Perfectly Eligible. Alice—Oh! Ma, I do love Mendels. sohn won't ¥¢ Husband heat, or Jack Frost. to liquid form and let it sour naturally. It makes excellent cottage cheese. Food experts endorse Klim; Klim-fed babies are healthy. And the older children are more sturdy when they drink Klim. Klim is endorsed by eminent physicians, food experts, and scientists. Mrs. Wonspore—All right my doar, | you'd better ite the young man to your next pariy—London Opinion. < CASPER, WYOMING KLIM BRAND POWDERED MILK Should you want sour milk, restore Klim © in 1—2%—5 lb. cans. Yellow Label for Whole Milk—Blue Label for Skimmed M’CORD-BRADY COMPANY Hospitals, Homes, Schools, Health Re. sorts, the United States Army and Navy,and hundreds of cone and semi-public institu- tions use Klim and testify to its and value. ‘ ee Make your pantry your dairy. Get a supply of Klim to fill your = family needs: Klim Powdered Whole Milk (full cream), for drinking, for coffee, for cereals, and desserts; Klim Powdered Skimmed Milk for all cooking purposes. Get a week's supply, now. _ ' WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS | were completed during 1915-13.| regarded as a curiosity. Such | ii ei i : himee!f 10 work at! lines. It was not that he gave the name alons —The department of agriculture in the udder at the beginning of t@Xing ‘process. The milk is vargely during the process of 5 Q.—Blease toll me if called “Avalon?’—K. C. A.—Avalon is @ legendary island, — which King Arthur was supposed the procedure in water- have @ canvas tent?—A. PF. L. the canvas of three solutions, as ‘follows: (a)/ notably Glastenbury 59 grams; boiled in 21. of| shire. t f rll Hi @issolved in 31. of water; (c) or the “happy other world.” svap, dissolved in 21. of water.” | branch of an apple tree apples and pear pg SRR nt of ure although it is true that & h of the apple tree can be grafted Pear tree and the branch have and the pear tree have pears, i | i f pears’ The that : | on’ the turrets fs 12 inches.” These) this is mot common and ty simply 1836 or 1827 that he decided to devot. ms eduvationa! ‘until 1836 or 1837 m to the system of teaching children that there is very little milk) whjch he had gradually developed. a= is 2 place to to been conveyed after bein: wounded im his last battle. It has ith a mix-| been identified with various place. and Somerset Avalon is probably merely the free from lime; (b) alum. 100! old Celtic representation of paradise, Get thrice-daily benefit from this low-cost aid to appetite and digestion {t keeps teeth white breath sweet -and throat The F lavor Lasts ALMOST EVERYBODY Has something which he does not want to lose. It may be valuable papers, jewelry or keepsakes. Whatever it is in your case, the only way to be sure that it will never be mislaid, lost, stolen or destroyed is to keep it in a modern bank vault. For as low as $4.00 per annum, you may have the protection which a Safe Deposit Box in our fire and burglar-proof vault af- fords. Larger boxes,°$7.00 and $9.00 per annum. The officers of The Casper National Bank iny* - inspection of its facilities—at your convenience. Re 32 Years of Service May We Serve You? Casper National Bank CASPER, WYO. Under United States Government Supervision.

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