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SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1921. i ADDITIONS. MADE REFRIGERATING TO LAW LIBRARY! AT UNIVERSITY Collection of Books Now ual to That of Long-Estab- lished Schools as ult of Acquisitions. LARAMIE, Wyo., Oct. 29.—Valu- able. additions to the lbrary of the University Law school have recently been made so that the schoo! is al- i i i fale | oF x is i i 7 AY g H Ampe, arrived g #3 art & ER childhood E i the new equipment. at the X. W me } WOMAN TRIES SUICIDE, FIRE of the National Reporter System. ‘This system is composed of 1,500 vol- umes and gives of all cases in the United States since 1880. The set is new and up-to-date, Each year the current reports are sent to users of the system so that the Ubrary will be constantly up-to-date on such mat- ters. normal by the 3 ‘The university has also purchased | mitted to the state institution at Lan- the Digest System, ury System, | der. and the Decennial System, a total of pe 250 volumes. In addition to these RUMANIA REVOLT LOOMS. there are the New York court re} RIGA, Oct. 25,—A wireless message ports of 250 volumes, the Harvard poe teach. Cr hap eames! Bey Law Review of 35 volu: = school is making rapid progress in pares Lee oi garage the acquisition of a first rate brary | ot, wrnanetee toon plai and will soon be able to join the | —-emeemmmmeneeny tween Bessarabian insurgents and! Fi Romanian infantry and cavalry. — | ar Saati i ORDERED ypinn Bride Travels i ine BY S88 6,000 Miles To Wed Sweetheart ‘ssi. nee 6,000-mile journey Cambridge, England. to become the bride of her issue. invitations Sneesby of Brighton, Colo. Sneesby a from England 18 months ago.! * Aancuncemer. Sal the these eI Named As v. A. building. IS SENT 10 STATE HOME; @OLO, VILLAGE sr TRINIDAD, Colo., "| which started in the Yearout whole-| Press)—King Alexander sale house at 2 o'clock this morning | Slavia, traveling incognito, left Paris swept through the town of Branson, | today "160 miles east of here, destroying eight buildings and resulting Gamage estimated at $25,000. Besides the wholesale house, a hotel, livery stable, moat market, grocery and a ygoods establishment were destroy- Thirty barrels of of! stored in and alll revolt against the Rumanian govern-|the warehouse exploded, scattering the current law reviews. The law] ment in Bessarabia. At the station| the flames to near by buildings. Bran- sanguin-| son is located In the new dry farming oe Casper Daily Crioune a IS PROJECTED WASHINGTON, Oct. 29.—Forelgr i tion conference would be guests of | the nation on a tour of the country. for the trip. U. S. Minister WASHINGTON, Oct. 22.—Rabbi Jo- | seph Saul Kornfeld of Columbus. President —_ KING LEAVES FOR HOME. PARIS, Oct. 29—(By The Associated of Jugo- Oct. Fire for Belgrade, the Jugo-Siav in loss and Phone 27 HAY, GRAIN AND FEED Best Quality, Lowest Price Industrial Ave. American Association of Law Schools. Indicative of the position the col- lege of education holds in the public school system of the state are the many requests that asking the dean to make inspections of different schools. This would tndi- cate that e@ superintendents all over the state are not only anxious to keep their schools up to standard and co-ordinate their work with that of othér schools, but that they recog- nize that the college of education is the culmination of, and co-ordinating foree In the public school system. One of the greatest handicaps to | = the rapid development of the educa- tional system in the state is the lack of Wyoming trained teachers. Wyo- ming has found it necessary to im- port)many teachers from other states. ‘These people have In most instances given excellent service, but they have been handicapped by the lack of knowledge of the Wyoming schoo! System and Wyoming conditions. The facilities in the college of education are adequate for training all the teachers that are needed in the state. Young people should investigate the opportunities that are now developing for trained teachers. have come in Experiments to determine the angle |. = at which a ladder should be placed té obtain the maximum degree of safe- ty for those using it have shown that the angle of 75 degrees is the bes whatever the height of the ladder. SLOAN’S EASES PAIN RELIEVES THE ACHE MENTING, agonizing rheu- Chiropractic is a new idea. It is not a New Theory. A Theory is not a proven fact, for instance the Germ Theory is a good ex- ample also Solidistic pathol lular path- ols experimental . patho! > humoral ology and a thousand and ‘one other eories. ‘These all have been confusing prob- lems to the earnest physician. relieved. Chiropractic is a new discovery of an old by Sloan's Linintent, Atal it a rinciple” in disease just as the discovery of freely and enjoy a comforting sense of @ power of electricity was new in its day G ‘rubbing. and that arteries contained blood in the living being instead of air, Phe electricity has al- ‘Ways existed, so has the principle of mental impulses. Dr, J. B. Palmer is the discoverer and dem- onstrator/ of this principle in man—the cur- rent of mental impulses under control of In- nate Intelligence. fi ‘Gt has been the Palmer’s mission in science to discover and demonstrate in Chiropractic that mental impulse is the secret of health. Mental impulses have power and are the force used in the human economy for meta- bolism, Force is simply an element of God's universal law. We use the term Mental im- pulses in this sense only. no life power in themselves. It requires the mental elk le ieveraee as a force to explode the oxygen of the blood cells in creation—ex- pansion. Man can and has harnessed electrical force in the dynamo. It can propelled over a of wires roducing expression in light, heat and motion. If we intercept the electrical impulses flow-in through the wires they are iiminished and the light grows dim, the heat is diminished, the motion retarded. the interference is complete all function coases, on the current again and the Nght shines, Turn off the current and you have caused interference in transmission. This is a good illustration of the expression of life in the human body. The brain cor- responds to the electric dynamo, from which mat i or “ae Ye EO eo cur- ren constantly propelle to every _ AMERICAN, IRISH AND SCOTCH BALLROOM DANCING Odd Fellows Hall—Casper Nov. 21, 8 p. m. TICKETS $1 INCLUDING WAR TAX. Come on Along, You'll Never For- Get the You Had. ie cell in man oF an’ The spinal cord is composed of numberless filaments which is out of the cranium the FO: ‘(AN MAGNUM at. the base of the skull into the neura! canal which pases down though whole number of verte- of the column. ry nerve filament distributed to tissues of the body must emit from the spinal cord in some oue of the 31 pairs of nerves which pase out between these movable articulating vertebrae to their des- tination, facts are. facts clinically roved, There is no rferve force or power in ese neftves of themselves, notwithstandi the theory of an indspendent action throug! sympathetic nerve plexuses. They are sim- ply the conductors or nerve structures which transmit the mental ree from the brain le body, * to every tissue cell in GOOD DOUGHNUTS Are as Much a Part of Any Hallowe'en Occasion as the Autumn Decorations Call 1 706-W The Doughnut Shop : 427 East Second . Produces’ all “involunta Tissue cells have’ Drs. J. H. and A. G. Jeffrey CHIROPRACTORS Midwest Building, Suite 318 to 323 Office Phone 706, Res. 93 The distribution of nerves to all organs and tissues, having their origin in the brain, correspond to the electric ex If 100 per cent of mental impulses, or this continuous, normal. flow of mental current is fully ex- pressed in function, this is termed life—nor- mal health. _ This mental force manifested in expression by function, causing the heart to beat, the kidneys to eliminate, the liver to secrete, the stomach and intestines to digest the food, etc., is under the control of an Innate Intelligence, sometimes mistakenly termed the “subcon- scious mind.” This Intelligence is that which functions. It is ciples of God’s Universal Intelligence manifested in all life. To say that this is “Nature” working in us does not alone account for its discriminating wisdom manifested in natural phenomena. It will become clear to the thoughtful, that if one or more of the bones of the spinal col- umn is subluxated, or forced out of normal sition by some concussion of external ‘orces, either by a blow, fall or atrain, pres- sure on one or more of those thirty-one pairs of emitting nerves will, in proportion to the displacement, shut off the current of mental impulses, thus causing a lack of expression of life, which means dis-ease, the light pro- portionately dim. Sit on your foot and ‘it hock tah 2 ,"' you have shut off a) og ren e foot is temporarily paralyz te} on the hose and the water cannot freely Ton, Should we try to doctor up the nozzle, or should we remove the foot? Which appeals to our reason as the best thing to do? one of the fixed The pure Chiropractor is a mechanic. He does not massage or tinker with the nozzle. He has learned the art of adjusting the hu- man machine. He goes to the seat of the trouble and adjusts the subluxated vertebrae to its natural position by use of only his bare hands. Thus the mind will grasp the phil- osophy, that he has now made it pomibla for the full amount of life force or impulses to reach the di organs to restore and con- tinue health conditions. If the 7th Dorsal vor'ebrae is out of position, thus impinging . arve emitting at this location, it is ob- vious that the stomach, which is supplied by this nerve, could not properly digest food. It lacks its full quota of mental imptises, hence indigestion is the result. When the Chiro- practor adjusts the subluxated vertebrae to its normal position and full quota of mental impulse to produce normal function, the dis- eased condition ceases. Does this not seem reasonable? tively speaking, tha Chi- ropractor has “the foot” the hose, and natural action follows, Adjustments :ften show rema: results in many Gleeanes! thas sia AR eae principle in them right, and thus solve the rahe of the cause the majority ef dis- eas . & Today and Sunday ae FRANK MAYO | —IN— The Shark | Master | CHARLIE CHAPLIN IN ‘THE IDLE CLASS’ eae ee ee BESTA “Costa Lase per Month of Serotes™ Casper Battery Company 508 E. Yellowstone Phone 907 For the Benefit of the Buying Public We Publish the Following Compara- tive Prices for the Years 1920 and 1921 Prices Prices For _ For 1920 1921 $100.00 Now $60.00 ” 60.00 ” 65.00 ” 20.00 "5.00 te ae Fiber Silk Hosiery___- q - 50 Mercerized Lisle ” 3 5 Loe ” 15.00 1850 ” 12.50 16.50 ” 10.00 30.00 ” 22.50 18.00 ” 12.50 30.00 ” 17.59 10.00 ” 7.00 3.00 ” 2.00 40.00 ” 25.00 329°.” 15 6.00 ” 4.00 15.00 ” 10.00 5.00 Leather Coats Leather Vests. 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