Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 30, 1921, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

AGE TWO Che Casper Daily Cribune Ebe Casper Daily Cribune | ts previous effort that entwines « treaty of peace snd) Normal BlOOd Is} in ssa. commatarnaecu| Marine Workers SATURDAY, JULY 30,1921 Jand Canada in poster form which he} trator in the dispute between the.tro bas posted at the Holmes Hardware) coustries concerning the boundarics - for the Promotion of Trade with Rus-| company store, and invites the atten-| of certain petroleum wells In Peru. ery evening «xcept Sunday at Ca‘) rately, just as it was told originaily would have to be Me ‘ bea narneg ay afters : tion of ali local sportsmen.* It con-| ‘These + ls belong to an English Wyo. Publation Offices: Tr | don i Werst Enemy ‘Of pembenees preg in Moscow. 7 ‘Break Off With tains much valuable information. compan}, with headquarters in Can TELEPHONES-------- WHAT. BOWS KNOW. | ‘ eat oF: Mr. tS ef i perl 5 ‘ ey ep la = ‘Switzerland has ‘consented to Cy necting A:! Departments of [bad lost more through operations | : = teed Go ore nace so The Atmic| Disease, R epor t)mii2ee wen Ue serene! Bigg Federation) *W% A®srrarion ssxen. ee RERY Postoffice as second lass | aner “ambassador: to. the United GENEVA, July 30—The Peruvian| A train on « Canadian railroad was rit, 1916. Moumiiy, =, very interesting story ‘pbhout boys, wriees —— States, than any other American man: government, in accord with the Brit-|kelé up for nearly }alf an nou- owing from the experience as principal of a boys’ prepara- ag |uéueturer trying“to deal with. Runsia, ving climbed into tory school. It is worth passing along because what cLEVELAND. July 30. — Normal] put neverthetess he still thought it is true of the boys under his care is true of. boys| blood, both in quantity and quality, | advisable to open trade relations with everywhere. Mr. Rolfe says: -“For some years it| will preve » presence of disease. | Russia |has been patt of my job as master in a large pre-| 0" eles « jared e the ‘G AD paratory school for boys to'make out each year two| FO). Socios of the 26th munual cos.) LU NGARIA ah ae rs “information. tests,” and to superintend the corre wane ee ar ons the American Osteopathic! BUDAPEST, July’30.—The Hungar-| A constitution was,adopted and it tion of-the papers. Each test contains 100 questio' dan crown, which recently declined to Was stated that the membership of i and presupposes on the part of the pupil a bowi What termed circulatory whirl-|180 to thg dollar, is. now 490 to the the society had mo grievance . with y Advertising Representatives ct acquaintance with the masterpieces of English liter-|poois in the child's body are eaused | dollar. Ihe recent. €uctuations in|the American Federation of Labor but : 4 J. Rand New. York City ature, including the Bible, some knowledge of the|by abnormal postures, Dr, am |eurreney are provoking @ serious eco-/did not wish to affilate with it. The SMBER THE ASSOCIATED PHE ORT FF ITED Y the American Federation of Labor, Sea Oe the American Order of Marine Engi- CROWN SLUMPS. neers was organized here with Ed- RK. E. EVANS - 9MAS DAILY Advertising Manager J ment dg., Chicago, | " eel Ledaduot’ King & Prudden, 1 - c a i ; z me and abroad, andjexplained. Th circulatory whirl-| nomic crisis and there is rising indig- order, it was announced, SL! * ‘th. Copies of the Dally Tribune are on tik tn the New | poritteal Goings of the day at bome | vaguely styled | Pools, in addition’ to poison from im-| nation against speculators whose op-|classes for apprentices and in generat : atl x 1 Chicago offices and visitors are Reve scree rx a ph comes from the habit of |PToper diet and poor care of the teeth, |erations in Zurich, Switzerland, are|endeavor to promote the interests of e “gentrrn! information,” which comes ause chronic disetses, and if they | alleged to bé the cause of the trouble. marine engineers. SUBSCRIPTION RATES keeping open the eyes and ears. re propérly: cared ‘for in’ éaxipiyouth ae es oO ater nsumers, < iy “Cenries «| “The boys who take the tests range from 12 to 19] many operations will be avoided with Card of Thanks. GAME LAWS POSTED. rT | One Year 90; years of age and are for the most part sons of/q ing estimated at, $2,000,000,000| We wish to =xpress our. heartfelt - i eater .%6| wealthy parents. They have enjoyed all the advan- ally, he sai thanks for the ‘kindness and sym. Liecres Everts, sesietant game and s Three Mou #5 | tages tl . y hav veled wide- ychologi . the-brain is the| pathy shown us during the illness and commissior » has ¢ Cop | ly a few exposed t society - 2 at Per Cop | ¥inedlacad Galbaredeserecties the pituitary bodies, one. of the du Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Slaughterdeck. logical Survey a complete digest o! ss glands, is by far more imporwi 7-29-2t* ‘the gamo laws of the United States Dr. Ernest E. Tucker of New York, = =o ae ts One Year -- Six Months ~ '390| “After reading some hundreds of these ‘general in- 1.98| formation’ papers i am forced to conclude that the| Po) tir “anegat pts an Padre cii accepted for leas period than| average boy’s ignorance of literature, especially of| oYtion of the body rather than of the ; the Bible, is profound, not to say abysmal. The un-|t rain, st be paid in a@vance and the| plumbed depth of the abyss may, perhaps, be assigned — rie , it insure de‘ivery fiter sabscriP) to the youth who gave as his version ofithe third com-| Do You Kmow that, the highest tua (ft sone month in arrears. | mandment, ‘Thou shalt not commit Deuteronomy!’ | grade of honey is ‘ : You are hereby notified that on all ac- counts not paid before July 31, 1921, a pen- alty will be added and water shut off. ee] e o it Bureau of Circutattons (A. B.C.) -.|. “Every boy has a few favorite authors, whom he| sunpiy all dealers. eS ool olds eanpousibla feel Mist hike Teen eritet nls On eee inte rc} Member of the .associated Press } The Associated Press. is exclusively entitled to the vse for publication of all news.credited in us paper and | hes prose or verse since Shakespeare’s day. Longfellow is the list, with Tennyson and Kipling following Russians Tired also the local news publishc* } rein clesely; and many are the crimes that are committed =o - in their names. There is some reason for attributing : Bick & Fen ee) OS Sas tee ‘The Vision of Sir Lannfal’ to Lord Tennyson, for he Of Bloodshed Pure Rich Call 15 ur 16 any°time between © and 8 o'clock p. m. it} you fail to receive your Tribune. A paper will be deliv-| sang of knights and their visions; but why should he her ‘Two Years Before the Mast,’ —— as the a e ips b yecial messenger. Make it your duty te| be made to a fa a a * A 1 ail 3 "rhe ‘Tribune know’ when your carrier misses you. | ‘Westward Ho!’ and ‘Tae Ancient Mariner?’ Evident- “July 30-—(iy The Amociated Moun- the ; i ater en < : | y minds y boys, * is his, and ; Ruenien Dov ‘ ; ily mn ay ings) Of ‘many, boys) "the pea is Bi tired of bloodshed and counter-revolu- tain Purest cog shiag | e tions and wants a more moderate ‘ q | ; re are, however, two poems which every boy brorm of Soviet government, according Dew Gold hai with joy as his very own. These are “Hiawatha” + : + THE CONTRIBUTION FROM ONE HOME. — | and “The Raven.” Few boys have read them, and < - | “Early in the war period out of an ideal American| fewer could quote a line of them, but the majority 1 "home at Rock Springs went an ideal type of American| identify without difficulty quotations from either. S$ ne Z poy. The eldest born. The pride and joy of devoted! “When history and geography of the United States J parents. Whatever of sorrow was felt by the par-/ are in question, the answers are equally astounding. Ask for k By Name ents at the departure was carefully !'dden. With] The largest city of Ohio is Detroit. St. Louis, ‘Sinsin ron ea : thousands of others like himsei?, the boy went to|natah,’ and ‘Omerhaw.’ (The average boy refuses the distant battlefields, where the flag of his coun-| to be a slave to orthography.) Washington, Lincoln, £ & . try waved encouragement to duty. How faithful] Garfield, McKinley and Roosevelt were all impeached. Stomach Pains Gono , Sf ~ he was, was told in the brief message from the front| Farragut was admiral in the Spanish war, and Mr. Made Him Well QUR ICE CREAM WILL TICKLE a = “Killed in action. Taft was the third president of the United States.| Eatonde | There was gloom in that household, just as there|In the youthful mind ‘a hundred years are as a day,’| ‘After guffering ten long montha YOUR PALATE D4 was gloom in countless other American homes where| and it matters little whether Lee surrendered at Ap- with stomach pains, I have taken | G such messages were received. In this case the sor-| pomuttox or Yorktown. ge a eer oie an: se row was sacred. The parents, brothers and sisters] ‘These are out-of-doors boys, living in a world of| Pulm (hetever,, Am aa ong raised ‘ Gi found comfort for the loss sustained in the heroic sac-| motor cars, airplanes and wireless. Many a boy who| | Thoueande of somech euiferers vx. | P 7 1 Opens Monday Aug. 1 Ps rifice of the well-beloved son and brother. The suf-| could not for his life name a member of .Mr. Harding’s| port wonderfal relief. Their trouble | hone 4 - > ® fering endured by the bereaved was unknown to the| cabinet can, by the sound of the engine, ‘spot’ every a bet —— fecal endiges P beana , 3 a ublic. Their grief was the common grief of all! motor car made in this country, improvise an aerial] Eatonic quickly tutes un “4nd car- | = tiie in similar situation. And the sympathy of|from the springs of his bed, or draw a: model of a sae 9 reese rae | " WE HAVE EVERYTHING FOR THE mw: friends was accepted as the heart expression for all] gasoline engine that would do credit to a mechanical] Ocery few Eatonies, take one cite | can = = 4 American families who surrendered their first born| engineer. Children of Martha, ‘they ‘are concerned| cauc, , food will digest well—you will HUNTER upon the altar of native land. They preferred it so.) with matters hidden—under the eartheline their altars] feel'fine. Big box costs only a trifle lie.” with yoor druggist’s guarantec. erhaps t have chosen the better part. Who HARD.-TIMES DANCE Wear Your Old Rags to North Casper.Dance F 1000 Block'on North Washington‘ Came vne aay when the flag-draped remains of the 3 honored dead were brought to the homeland to| At any rate, they are content to leave let- rest in native soil until the final resurrection. On| tors to those who love them; to let their xecretarids Sunday a simple military funeral occurs \Gom-|do their spelling»and politicians.:manage their: gov- rades will conduct it. Comrades will fire the last! ts ‘while they finger death at their gloves’ voliey and a comrade will sound the retre: | All of life's “hoy d ambitions ha¥é ‘not been ie a the first-born, The'chastening BARLEY SIGHS FOR BARLEYCORN. . CAMPBELL HARDWARE CoO. For Vacation or Stopover Don't miss a ‘stay at the strictly Modern Carter Hotel x tra’ Ah buricd in the grave wit : i nied as one of the AT THE TONIGHT JULY 30. Honest Merchandise of the All-Wise has been accepted as ane of the! not often, but occasiorfally.you read one like this in ‘ experien that mi for a better and fuller life, eastern newspapers. » Which ‘may. be \takex’ as ‘evi- dence that old John is not sleeping comfortably in his grave. This from the New York World: Big Horn Hot Springs “The largest mineral springs in the world.” THERMOPOLIS, WYOMING -~ more ‘complete comforts that remair This sacred story of one American household, | ; Nias has its duplicate throughout the land. The honor is ith in prohibition among. the farmers, of | the Ree sncri,| Middle west may be seen as a grain of mustard seed. ipitheixelationshiyiwa Lear to}hsross Who: nobly eActl-| 1 era ts visite ei dence Ahet Metamich equal olsOveTl at |ion bushels of barley. For at Washington, with the proper committees of congress, there is: revoiced ef the blessings and Fine Orchestra and a Good Floor Happy 5 Dancing Club (We Introduce and Entertain You) 147 S. Center Phone 425 eeepc ooo ccccococonoeoeDececovoocoocecoonoeeoees z mi? sh oi MR. SULLIVAN SEES THE SHOW. prope! y : Aste — Hon. Patrick Sullivan, and Mrs. Sullivan and their| >¥ Farmer Charles D. Kenney of Mr. Volstead’s own three ‘daughters are attending the Frontier celebrg-| yore di usWe are mot incercated in bese oboe 4 Eft MIME 2D oN? SAE ST OT SN TTT 2 AUT 2 UT 2g SA gS occasion to note that Sir Patrick has never missed|®#¥S one Mr. Jones, also of Minnesota. But there's this annual cowboy festival in all of the years of its| ‘the barley, and continues Mr. Jones, ‘I may say to existence. The ringing of the bell aanouncing the} YOU that the sentiment of the country is for light official opening of theshow found him occupying a| beer, and you men would be surprised at the pres- box cheering the contestants, and it made no dif-| Mt attitude of the country on this subject.” — ference to him who won or lst, so long as their] | “This is treason, of course, and rumhoundism and work was good. And, of the things that are done at] #ll the other iniquities. Moreover, it is a plague which a Frontier exhibition,’ Patrick Sullivan is well in-| ‘8 bound to spread, since Minnesota, with her millions formed and as good.a judge as he is of the perform-| °f yearning bushels, is. going to circulate her petition ances of a Wyoming senate, a national committee| in the Dakotas, Idaho, Wisconsin an adjacent states conclave or apolitical’ campaign roundup. whose before-the-war barley crops rose to the value of Patrick Sullivan like folks. He enjoys mingling| bout $300,000,000. It is believed that many thou- with them, and greeting old friends. He delights in|®8nds of votes can be cast in these commonwealths band music, brilliant color, thrilling performance and| t¢gardless of the pginciple that it is better that super- snappy horses. You can’t blame him for regular at-| Tighteousness Tegulate its neighbor’s Gustoms than tendance at the Frontier show. In the years back| that much grain be saved from rot in field and ware- of him he has been a no mean performer in the every | hou Hit 1500 Safe Deposit Boxes | lay of-it “Heretofore the middle west has been held as the : N Installed ats Be sRLW Seibel ws soul and solid body of prohibition. It even furnished Ow KANSAS TELLS ’EM. the birthplace of the Anti-Saloon league. In its. eyes Raneastite ante ly effective remedy to a| New York was a half-way place on the highway to hell. situation that threatens good order in the common- t in the light of Farmer Kenney’s petition and of wealth. The Nonpartisan league and the I. W. W.| Farmer Jones’ keen scent for popular sentiments, have been flocking to the Kansas grain and oil dis-| how great is seen to be the miracle of the barley tricts in recent weeks. “Kansas sees no immediate] fields!” inclination on the part of the visitors to engage in es el > any occupation that could be asociated with manuat| EUROPE’S STANDING ARMY. labor and perspiration, b sees much inclination to “Despite the virtual disarmament of Germany and oratory of a kind deemed productive of trouble and] Austria,” says the New York Sun, “it appears that the tion. Therefore, Kansas regards the time| number of troops under arms in Continental Europe ripe to nip it in the bud. at this moment approaches the number enrolled in When offered the prevailing wages of $4 a day. to| the standing peace armies immediately before the out- go joyfully into the harvest the sojourners indignantly | break of the war in 1914. The present number may declined. This settled the question for Kansas. State] be even greater, since exact figures are not obtain- ;«and county authorities served notice upon the tem-|able in the cases of Russia and the states of south- “porary residents to go to work at prevailing wages,| ezstern Europe. the alternatives being to go to jail or suffer deporta- The highest pre-war peace strength of the armies “tion from the state. of these countries (including Russia) was approxi- There has been an exodus of the more timid, a mately 3,960,000 men. A recent estimate of the Brit- few have gone to work and the jails are being pre-| ish ar office put the post-war military establishments pared for the reception of the others who are de-| at a total of 3,334,000 men, exclusive of the army of liberate about making up their minds as to what they| Soviet Russia. Offsetting the former German and intend to do. | Austrian armies, there is a Polish force which a few ——_—_—_—_o0-——_____ | weeks ago contained some 600,000 men, a Greek army THE PREMIER’S SMALLNESS. }of 250,000 as against a pre-war peace establishment The action of “Joyd George in.shutting off sources| of 25,000, a Serb-Croat-Slovene army estimated . at of government news from the Northcliffe newspapers | 200,000, whereas before the war Serbia had only because of crit of the premier’s policies, is abou ,000. The French army is 100,000 or more larger the cheapest tank town stuff ever perpetrated by a| than in 1914. The new state-of Czecho-Slovakia seems supposedly great man. to be maintaining a considerable army for its size, Whenever a public man squirms under honest and] the number of soldiers recently: being put‘at 147,000, respectful newspaper criticism and employs the pow-| The nely created states on the Russian border, Es: er of government in retaliation it is about time that|thonia, Lithuania and Latvia, recent storm centers, particular public man retires. He has ceased to meas-| probably still have notable forces. The present Greek ure up to the job he is occupying. advances and the related Balkan troubles doubtless It is feared that Lloyd: George. has becomie too ir-| have stimulated the military there, the’ precise size tive and ought to take a long rsst.| of which the governments ar not dsirous of revealing. He is advancing backward instead of forward. “Europe is suffering from acute economic paralysis. ———_——— — | One of the chief causes is the fact that for four yeafs| 7 LEARNING BY EXPERIENCE. | millions of men were taken from productive pursuits |! The world has just lost about three years’ time,| and put to an activity that subtracted from the wealth |! tting back on the track after the big European} of the world. Armies have thus a double cost, an urope wanted American leadership at the| industrial loss in man power and a greatly increased | accepted the bogus instead of the real] governmental expenditure. Europe plaint n | 2 BY and then proceeded to ball up the works. Now that|ford to snaintaiy-the present military tetagancnte y: Resources Over 4,000,000.00 dership is offered Europe is ready SAL f its former works and come do more. It myst repudiaté that portion A Size to Suit Your Requirements ee We Have the Most Modern Safe Deposit Department in the West Any Officer of the Bank Will Be Delighted - To Show the Equipment at Your Convenience ee reccccoce A Special Attendant in Charge at Wyoming National Bank ‘ cd INE SI The world is: getting the genuine open diplomacy, not the bull that is meaningless, a A AEA a ’

Other pages from this issue: