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PAGE TWO he Casper Daily Cribune except Sunday at Casper, Natrona m Offices. Thorne Puliding. ean subsist on $1,093 a year, whereas it costs a wom- an $1,118. c peers evening “We read that during the last 19 months 91,000 ao ee ee persons were killed on the highways of this country BUSINESS TELEPHONES ...........-.-----15 and 16/ard are shocked that 25,000 of these were children. Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments! jn a sort of whirl what the psycho-analysts refer to as self-pity, we revel in our taxes; and it appears to GABRIELE OF HUNGARY SETS UP DICTATORSHIP. Imsved Reapportionment Entered at Casp-=, (Wyoming) Postoffice as second class matter, November 2~ 1916 MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS J, EHANBVAY .... LB. HANWAY . RE. EVANS ..... THOMAS DAILY Advertising Representattv: David. J. Randall, 341 Fifth Ave. New York City. Prudden, King @ Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bidg.. Chicago, Ill. Copies of Daily Tribune are on file in the New York and Chicago offices and visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier One Year .. Six=Months . Three -Months One Month Per Copy ... One Year Six (Mouths ‘Three Mont! No subscription three months. All subscriptions must be @pid mn advance and the Dafly Tribune will not insure delivery after subscrip- * tion becomes one month in arrears. * Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©) Member of the eThe Associated Press is ex Suse for publication of all news cred giao the local news published herein. Associated Press entitled to te ed in this paper and Kick if You Don't Get Yor Call £5 or 16 any time between =#- you fail to receive your Tribune. slivered to you by spe messenger. jet The Tribune know when your cart * _ eS THE SUPERCHILD. The public prints have been paying considerable at- tention to Washington health reports of recent days and among them the Boston Transcript has taken up the Ohio experiment and says: “Announcement is'madé in Washington that Rich- land county, Ohio, has been selected as the place in which the National Child Health Council will conduct a demonstration ®f what Ame-ican communities can do for the most healthful development of their chil- dren. Richland county includes the city of Mansfield, a town of considerable importance as a railroad cen- ter and a manufacturing community. Its population is in excess of 20,000. The National Child Health Council, which, for five years, will direct-the work in Mansfield and the rest of Richland county, is com- posed of six national organizations wholly or partly engaged in promoting the health of children, These bodies are the American Child Hygiene association, American Red Cross, Child Health Organization of America, National Child Labor committee, National Organization for Public Health Nursing, and the Na- tional Tuberculosis association. It is stated that of- ficials, physicians and citizens generally in Mansfield have promised hearty co-operation in the experiment. “Whether little Johnny and his sisters are equally * enthusiastic does notyappear from the published state- ment, Perhaps they are not yet informed as to what ‘is in store for them. It is to be hoped that, as the organizations with the impressive names get busy in Mansfield, there will be added joy in the lives ‘of ‘ysubjects of ‘experiment. It is to be assumed, ‘o} course, that such will be the case, and that the ‘young- sters will be looked upon as normal human beings, en- titled to full measure of childish pleasures, instead of being regarded merely as laboratory specimens. The sunshine which fun and frolic pour into -youthful hearts should not be lessened in a campaign in which, doubtless, much stress will be laid upon the value of sunshine of the other sort. “Question arises whether the plans for the demon- stration include efforts to mend the lot of the poor lit- tle rich child. It is not forgotten that, at the conven- tion of the American Medical association in Boston last June, doctors reported that they had discovered malnutrition to be as prevalent among the children of the rich and the well-to-do as among the children of the poor. If that condition obtains in Mansfield, cer- tainly the poor little rich child should not be over- looked in the general endeavor to improve the health and strength of the rising generation. “As described by ite promoters, the direct object- ive of the experiment will be a praétical demonstra- tion of what a typical American community can do to increase the health and strength of the next gen- eration. The Child Health Council, it is added, hopes to develop a program for child health so comprehen-| sive and well-balanced as to be of use to other com- munities all over the country. It is work which mer- its success, and which may be expected to produce re-| sults of value, even if it falls short of showing how) to train the rising generation to a state of physical) perfection.” Tribune. 1 8 o'clock p. m Tr will be de- e it your duty to er misses You. i SEI i Fa THE FASCINATION FOR FIGURES. “The passion that Americans have for statistics and numbers of all sorts remains unabated,” observes the } New York Tribune. “‘So long as the number of any- | thing is given it carries its own appeal. Thus we read| \ that-the new steamship Majestic will be 2,000 tons | bigger ‘than: the Leviathan and will carry 5,200 per- sons, and immediately we place them in a row men- ly to sce how far they will stretch. A woman sues =her husband for divorce and demands $5,000 a week aglimony, and we temporarily gasp with satisfaction ~until later the figures are reduced, and we are cor- *recpondingly disappointed. Fendured with a certain dist #the thermometer will go either far above or far be- + low anything hitherto known. We always are ready to suffer if we can quote the figures afterward. It strikes the masculine ear quite pleasantly, although why is much more vague, that there are now two mil- lion more males in the United States than females, possibly because this numerical preponderance con- veys the subtle if erroneous distinction of strength. Then some other male statistician comes forward with the comforting information to other males that a man « President and Editor “Either the hottest or coldest day in the year is| ct leniency, in hopes that{ of the city’s debt, which on January 1, 1921, was $1,- 5 368,861.41, with awe, and appear to take a sort $f weird pride in the fact that it is larger than ever pefore. ‘The discussion between, Mr. Brown and Mr. Craig as to whether New York has exceeded its debt limit by $20,000,000 or whether it hasn't is perused with delight, although no one could explain. why. Henry Ford has achieved the eminence of a national saint because, wherever he goes, he is surrounded with a halo of millions. Any orator who can rattle off fig- ures, no matter what they mean, is assured of a hearing. “Is this because we are a too severely practical peo- ple, a nation of shopkeepers? Not at all. It is be- cause numbers are at the base of all things—musf, art, literature, life. The proposition that two and two make four never ceases to charm.” 0 DRIVERS WITH A HISTORY. “Drivers of automobiles who make trouble finally with a crash of serious character,” observes the New Haven Journal, “usually have a history. Just as the seemingly sound oak tree when it lies prostrate be- fore the gale lies revealed weak and defective at the heart, so as a rule there is an explanation when some driver sideswipes the citizen quitely going his way, or terribly overturns himself or others, perhaps with fa- tal results. Not always, but often. “Quite recently a young man met his death in his car. As the details came out and all the facts, it de- veloped that his fast and heedless driving was re- marked. His friends knew it and commented on it. He was not as other automobilists are. This ran on for some time; at last the law of chance—-silent, re- morseless—caught him. “Some time ago, another driver wrecked a party and created a sensation. The victims were severely in- jured, the driver escaping by that strange law that keeps the theory of vicarious sacrifice to the fore. The accident nearly deprived the world of persons whom it would not willingly lose. When the matter was canvassed ard all the evidence was in from the rear towns, it appeared that this man was known as desperate driver. He was not content to use his ma- chine as 3 means of transportation but he had to ‘step on her’ and dash to and fro to make the ground- lings stare. So definite was this that persons stepped forward to say that long before the accident they had driven with him but once only, telling him with some heat, ‘never again.’ It is probably true that in many, was aw! Austria by the treaty of St. in is apparently in pos- Lieutenant Hejjas, enacting the role of Adatbert. Korfanty in Upper 8i- Fiume. The government is not re- ceiving any news from the district where on Sunday night irregular Hun- garian forces ‘attacked Austrian, gen- darmes sent to occupy Se district. Austrian Commissioner~ Davy, how- ever, reports from the town of Mat- tesdorf that he narrowly escaped be- ing killed in Odenburg. ‘There are unconfirmed reports that one allied officer “has “been killed or wounded in the fighting in Burgen- land, = anges - Lieutenant Hejjas.. is reported to have posted placards throughout the district calling to th» colors all men under 45 years of age. It is also said that 3,000 Hungarian regular troops have arrived and are encamped near Odenburg. A detachment of 200 Aus- trian gendarmes is reported sur- rounded at Gerersdorf. An official statement tmsued — here allies to prevent any confiicts in Bur- genland and to see that the treaty of St. Germain is carried out. The state- ment says that military posts in nu- merous small towns of the districts have been overpowered by Hungarian regulars and trregulars and made prisoners or wounded. Two non-Hungarian speaking per- sons have been executed in the for- ceived late last night said. ‘The same uniform high grade long filler. The same imported genuine Sumatra wrapper, And now the price is back to 2 for 15c. - if not most cases, where there is disaster the explana- tion lies in the past—that ‘accident’ is a logical out- come of recklessness. Z “It maybe profitable to introduce the law of chance as a topic in the schools, It is not only curious but impressive. It is definitely known how often one may take a crossing ‘on the high,’ or cut in on a car in ad- vance in perfect safety, the next time, however to be eligible for the hospital or related institutions.” SE RRS |S: ETT RE THE CELEBRATED RENO. “The fact that one lady has traveled half around the world,” says the San Francisco Chronicle, “to se- cure the services of the Reno divorce experts to get surcease from*the matrimonial entanglement in which she is enmeshed by the laws of two nations is but an incident in the career of that celebrated city. “Mail order houses in the divorce industry are still in their infancy, but give promise of great things. There has grown up in Reno @ body of experts who can divorce anybody, but the case of the lady from Asia is the first which has come to our attention which is so clearly in the nature of an international divorce. “Reno, of course, has other claims to public recog- nition. There is no more generally energetic and forceful community anywhere. But its specialty is doubtless the divorce industry, in respect to which it leads the world and its fame has spread to all nations. Reno is unquestionably the divorce center of the world.” sees HAS NO CRITICISM COMING. William G. McAdoo, the man who as director of railroads is directly responsible for the present plight of the American railroads, is the identical person to offer criticism ‘upon the efforts of other people to place them in position to make their earnings pay the expenses; and to so arrange the debts piled up against them to give the least trouble during the period of recovery. When wages were increased beyond reason and paid out of the federal treasury things were going fine but when the roads’must dig the payrolls them- selves, it'is something else. When things began to pinch McAdoo was the first to cut and run. He could scarcely wait to get into the moving picture business. Of all persons criticism from McAdoo comes with the poorest grace. HIS WONDERFUL CATCH, A-settin’ at Binn’s groc’ry store, says solemn Uncle Ike: “Down to the river, t’other day, I took a nine-foot pike—” “Hol on!” says Deacon Pennington, “Consarn it, Ike” says he, “Don’t you set here and conjur’ up setch yarns as them to me!” “JT took a nine-foot pike-pole up,” says Ike, “an’ with one pass, As true as I am tellin’ you, I hooked a twelve-foot bass? “Tke Stratton!” hollered Deacon Pen, a gettin’ up to go, “T won't set here and hear setch lies! How dast you tell "em 50?” “J hooked a twelve-foot basswood log an’ drug it to the shore,” Says Uncle Ike, and Joe Binn says the deacon all but swore. —The Depositor. says that Austria is relying upoa the} jesia or Capt. Gabriele d'Annunzio in! | | afford us a mild glow to know that each one of us, On| WTENNA, Sept. 1— Burgenland, alresidents of the town and thrown the average, will spend $60 to keep our beloved coun-/narrow strip of territory situated|into the barracks try going next year. As for New Yorkers, they speak|along the ‘Hungarian border, which| Official circies here do not consider the Hu session of Hungarian insurgents with of 5 Sees ee Mountain Feudist Convicted M urder Ky> sentenced to life. Bailey shot and kitled White last April, * Weak Heart Fatal To Arizona Justice Beverly D. LOS ANGELES, Sept. 1.—Justice Albert C. Baker of the Arizona su- preme court, died at a hospital here from an attack of heart trouble which began a ‘week ago, while he| was on :. vacation in this city, He was 78 years of age. With him when death came were two sons, Robert and Alexander B. est of St. Margareta," dispatch re-|Baker’ of Phoenix. He is survived Forty-!also by a widow, expected to arrive eight strangers in Odenburg are re- here today from Colorado and two ported to have been arrested by the daughters, Mrs. John H. Page of Phoe- THIS BOX Welcome News! ‘We have reduced the price of Spana-Cuba cigars to the old pre-war figure! Smoke up today and you'll fiotice the same still there. AN EXCEPTIONAL VALUE. fine quality is YOCUM'S | 2 for 15¢ ‘WYOMING GROCERY CO., CASPER, WYOMING Bill Very Soon ‘WASHINGTON, i, Sept. 1—Congress playful |gun when he that he has been shooting prairie an uncon. firmed report from the hills has it|” that he pretty near hit one. Marske los .S ea “Hola thy tongue lst it betray ye,” is the moral-message of Aesop's “The Ea warrt ros BoositT om MoT#ERWOCe AND Twe BABY. 7eEe BAADIIELD REGULATOR CO..DEPT.9-D.ATLARTA. GA. 10% Discount on Groceries _ On each purchase amounting to $2.00 or over we will give a cash discount of 10 per cent." In other words, for groceries amounting to $2.00 at regular prices you pay only $1.80 at 4 am THE ROSE GROCERY | 129 East J Street North Burlington Addition PPPreeeccccccsscccccccesvccoeesoescscsvsoocesccccceoooscecsoonee B. P. O. ELKS NO. 1353 There will be a regular session of this lodge Friday evening, Sep- tember 2, at Odd Fellows Hall at 8 o'clock. i povrccccocccsocoecooes: ACTUAL SIZE Regular business and entertain- ment. i NM Special Purchase of Long Cloth 10 Yards to the Bolt FUR and PLUSH COATS ON WHICH WE ARE OFFERING A We Are Also Offering a Good Sheets’ Size 72x90 Inches . Your attendance is earnestly re- ‘quested. By Order of the E. R; ROBT. COHEN, Secy. Mreccdoccecscoooves: Seeocccccvecesovcosscoocoeseooooeccococsscoeecescoscesececes Reduction of 20% §1 4 proctamation Come in and make your selection. Make a deposit and we will hold it until called for. ‘ E In the name of the men and women who toil. Labor Day this year falls on Monday, Septembecee 4 ___ Labor Day was made’a ‘national holi ce * of Congress, and dedicated to Labor. holiday by. ag aes Quality of % ss Tt is the one day in the year given ov. ae t toil- ers. The great wealth producing element i oe a i tion. The right of Labor to Labor Day has never been“ - questioned, and all classes joi Pit do honor to the day. have joined with Labor to. But it seems we have in our midst th ; AA $1.85 per Bolt It Is a Regular $3.00 Value at $1.50 Pillow Cases to Match at 45c for the Sanctity of Labor D. i private gains for themselves. Re eee “God’s Memorials” BAPTISM, LORD’S SUPPER, ETC. “Serving to Preserve Remembrance.”——Webster What Is the Bible Mode of Baptism? COME TO THE BIG TENT THURSDAY EVENING Evangelist Turner From Nebraska Will Speak Friday Evening. NEW COATS, SUITS, DRESSES AND WAISTS ARE ARRIVING DAILY Richards & Cunningham Co. THINK RICHARDS & CUNNINGHAM WHEN YOU WANT THE BEST Mills City, Wyo., admission will be the GUESTS OF where all are WELCOME rare You are all invite: = > = | Ss CASPER TRADE AND LABOR ASSEMBLY ; R. E. -M'ELVENY, President. J.B. LEONARD, Secretary.