Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 25, 1922, Page 14

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RAIL SHOPMEN WOULD DELAY NEW WAGE AGREEMENT, BOARD IS TOLD BY WESTERN ROADS CHICAGO, March 25.—Counter requests for wage in-| First Presbyterian. men.” creases by railroad shopmen at a time when railroads were| Comer Sixth and Durbin street. Rev. asking reductions wére characterized as-a strategic move |Cb@t!e A- Wilson, pastor. Sunday “coldly calculated to interfere with and delay” a new wage jemes and bible classes 9:45. Morning agreement by J. W. Higgins, representing western roads, be-|fread Alone” Anthem “My Faith fore the railroad labor board. , * Mr. Higgins made the closing argu-| “sents worship 11 o'clock, Sermon “Not by “Today, ment against the employes’ charges, “The railroad companies have not|/Rogera. Mr. Firmin. 615 Pp. m. nn-|scrvice will begin in the union mi Preferred by B. M. Jewell. head of the| *ttempted to inject extraneous matter|ion meeting of all young people's so|ing of the young people at Pong 2 -|Mned up from the start, into the argument for wage reductions |cieties in the tabernacle. Address,|Charles G. Stout, minister, office in| pastor. : and we do earnestly protest against|‘The Four Rights of a Chili.” by H.|the church, Grant and Lind. Phone/meet at the home of Mrs. Ida ‘Wilson, the unfair and unsupported charges |L. Hoisington of Sheridan, Wyo. Even-|1379W. of bad faith made by Mr. Jewell and|ing worship 7:15. Please note the against his attempt at this late date shop crafts unions, that the roads had not held proper conferences with em: ployes under the transportation act prior to bringing their wage requests to the board. Mr. Higgins declared the charges “unfair and unsupported” and scored the unions for asking wage increases,” iu the face of the fact that the labor board recoghized a downward trend of wages in its wage reduction order y 1921, and in spite of the con to ings. Knowing these conditions anf also recognizing us I do the keen discern. ment of the lenders on the other side, we reason that such an extrava he ure One of the most severe and ro- tracted winters in the history of rane @ close, according to the stateme: nts of Lon Claytor, pioneer rancher of The weather wap av severeand the | welcome the stranger to the Taber. winter wasae long drawn out as any | Dacle. thet Mr. Claytor a pioneer ranche- ——. when we expect to organize of the Sweetwater has over seen Trinity Latheran Church. Seventh and Wolcott Streets, Rev. eee tra Starting early last fall, Mr. Cinytor| South Park ‘and East Fourth Phili K. Edwards, Rector. says winter has been heaped on the | streets. J. H. Gockel, pastor. 9.30 Holy communion at 800 a m; rural section slmost contingously | Sunday school. 10:30 German service,|church school at 9:45 a. m.; morn! until the past two weeks, text. Mark 8:1-9; theme. “Christian|rayer and service at 11.00 a. m.; Despite the hardships of the winter|Faith and Our Daily Bread.” 7.20/evening services on account of Union Whilein-Cnaper-Mr. Claytor ts - | service. cluding business detafls which von a rheumatism, curred incident to the purchase of First Christian. Christian Science services are held Unity Study Club. sprains and strains, aches and several hundred ‘head of cattle last} Services begin with the Sunday| very sunday at 11 a, m. in ? fall. Hispurchases included 400 head|*chool 9:45 a. m. It will be a pleas-| 1 '' vy edifice at the corner of Fou! from J. A- Delfeider estate. pure to all to know of the Sunday/.44q Grant streets, The lesson ser-|Principles.” Speaker L. Christal. te len) in’e ~ Ask After coming through the stock| school orchestra. The number of in-| "fo tomorrow ts “Reality.” your neighbor. ‘Rech Sloan's y. crisis and the hard winter Mr. Claytor | struments is increasing and the mem-|"" oD ine is cordially invited. “There was nothing mysterious or|°¥% the stockmen have cause to be|hers are showing a splendid interest a change in th ehour from 7.20 to 7:15 churches. Address, “Boy Stuff," by E. Carter, pastor, 9.45 a. m. Sunday 'y- No collections taken. ———__. Frank H. Sheley of Denver in the in-| school. 11 a. m. Sermon, “The Lawful v=) SEVERE IN HISTORY ment quartet, Selected. Messrs. Cook, Os- born, Fisher and Bottoms. Westmin-| ster Gaild at the Manse Wednesday| i130 p. m. The committee on Home T Missions of the Synod of Wyoming will meet next Tuesday morning. Min-| Thursday will be repeated. Pare: tsters of over the state will be present together with Rev. A. J. Montgomery, ized Sunday school in Kenwood at|>: ™- Woman's Home Missionary scouts. Friday, 730 p, m. choir hearsal. also be organized at that time. We St. Mark's Church. the cattle and other livestock | English lenten service, text. Mark|Y. M. C. A. services. are coming through in good shape, | 15:33-35; theme. “My God, My God, Week Day Services. losses about the average normal fig.|why hast hou Forsaken Me.” 7:30 Thursday at 4:00 and 7:30 yp. m. Wednesday evening, German lenten| Friday, children at 4:30 p. m Christian Science Sunday schoo! for pupils up to arbitrary about the source of the rates| Ore optimistic thin ever. Things | And it is adding to the interest of the| |. "Ce 20 is held at 9:45 a. m. of operating officers of the western| ‘lected for the benefit of rural inter.|*h0uld be present as early as 10:35 for First Baptt raflroads, who themselves, in many | ©ts. cases, deal with the men in the con- ference to be held. There was no conservation of conference with elther of the sections of the country, cast or southeast.” Mr. Higgins called the boa: ate tention to the character of informa. tion which he said the union men had asked of the railroad officials, includ ing questions on vapital stock, bonded debt, earnings, traffic outlook, delevop- ment and fluctuation and the road's The railroad represen- such matters had never come up before in local conferences and that operating officials were not in position to give detailed informa- tion on these subjects. “There was such a striking contrast tm the uniformity of action on one side, and lack of it on the other in these conferences as to clearty point to the side that was thoroughly school- ed, drilled and disctplined in the pre- arranged program,” declared Mr. Hig- gins. “It did not matter whether the chairmen were from the same city, or whether they were thousands of miles apart; they had an insatiable appetite for the same baffling infor- J. ber; have or withheld proper tnformation, and that they ‘lacked authority mere- ty because the federation chairmen called for a.mass of irrelevant infor ing. ‘‘We produced evidence from the individual railroads that established sustain and did adequately sustain ‘heir proposed rates, with supporting Gata as to rates paid on outside in- dustries, deflations in living costs, etc. ‘We have shown that definite and dis- tinct disputes resulted from these con ferences. We have shown that the World’s Lowest Priced FULLY EQUIPPED Automobile *525 fo b Flint, Mich, The People’s Car See st oe na “te cg tN renee ctllnetmmeedtid tired * ov Compare it Try it as Our Guest Won * Oldsmobile Co. 454 East Yellowstone Phone 987 work. Phone 17920. 3-25-1t* Meet me at the Smoke Frouse. Man Safe," or ‘‘The Safety of Young week service ‘Wednesday 7 the later part of the service. Com- ——~.___ muricn end preaching follows immedi- C. Mounts, carpenter and job-|8tely at the conclusion of the class estimates and new and repair|study. In deference to the Older| 9:45 a. m.—there is "s conference our subject for the morning service will be. “Is the Young|“An Army With Banners Fifth and Beech streets; C. THE RIGHT OF THE:- ‘SICK TO GET WELL STILL STANDS UNCHALLENGED Article 2, By B. P. PALMER, President, Palmer School. Answer to Articles-Published in Leslie’s Weekly. 900O900090000-0000004, BIG POINT NOT MENTIONED In no one or all of tha above articles is the one big, outstanding feature men- tioned—The Right of Him Who is Sick to Get Well. That medicine may be one hun- dred per cent correct, or Chiropractic one hundred per cent wrong; what medical men, or Osteopaths, think of Chiropractic; or what chiropractors think of either is all be- side the one big, dominating iact that the man or woman who sv‘ers still possesses greater rights than any or all of the others. There are approximately 140,000 physi« cians in the United States; there are approximately some 6,000 Osteopaths and ap- proximately some 15,000 chiropractors; and, all told, they are but 161,000 of the population. . There are still some 119,839,000 people who have the right to choose the-doctor and method of their choice; who have the inalienable right to get well. SICK NOT CONSIDERED This entire series of articles, and anything I might say in defense or in chal- lenging the articles of Leslie’s Weekly; or, any challenge I might make of the rights or wrongs of medicine or medical man, does not destroy this one fundamental and constitutional right of every man and woman of the 119,839,000 to still get well. - So far asthe series of articles are concerned they but wrap themselves around the differences that now exist between three methods of how to get the sick well. They have not discussed the rights and wrongs of the right of the sick to get well. HAS HE NO RIGHTS? Has the sick man a right to get well? Has he a right to use his mind in settling that question? Has he a right to choose medicine, Osteopathy or Chiropractic, if he so chooses? When this question has been weighed in the balance then we have set- tled the question, for which six articles were caused to be written. Chiropractic is an interpretation of man, well and sick, and how to get him well again. In practice Chiropractic has succeeded in getting the sick well. Because Chiropractic has made the sick well, Chiropractic has succeeded in greater numbers in shorter time than any other evolutionary movement in the history of the world. Because Chiropractic has grown it has commanded attention. Commanding attention, Chiropractors must be investigated and written about. IGNORE FUNDAMENTALS That this series of articles has studiously ignored the Philosophy, Science and Art of Chiropractic and has refused to discuss whether it was right or wrong, is be- side the even still greater issue. So, Severance Johnson made a trip to the Home of Chiropractic and then toured other states; and, he searched not for the thing that was the cause of his investigation but against some of the people and some of the things he found in the ranks of the schools.and followers of one certain method—and he still has overlooked the origina] and only question that remains now, has always been, and will continue to remain the pinnacle in this free United States—the right of its every individual to get well. The value of Chiropractic may be determined by the percentage of those who recover their health under Chiropractors; and its value in relation to other profes- sions, having the same objective, may be determined by a comparison of the results. Chiropractic has grown from an idea in the mind of one old man in 1895 to where it has 15,000 practitioners, numerous schools, 6,000 students and millions of converts at the present writing. With only those upon whom other professions failed to test its efficiencly and without a single dollar of endowment, it has grown to these proportions not only with- out the aid of the medical and osteopathic professions, but in spite of their utmost efforts to exterminate. It has written laws favorable to its practice upon the statute books of twenty- one of the forty-eight states of the union, and yet Mr. Severance in writing upon it chooses to ignore the merits by which it grew, and to indicate some collateral de- fects. He entirely ignores the fact that in spite of these shortcomings it mus¥ con- tribute to the health of the world or it never would have attained such proportions in so short a space of time. J Running through the- and woof of all Mr. Johnson’s articles is the assump- tion that the medical profession has justified its existence from the standpoint of contributing to the health of the world, has won the right to judge of the merits of other methods, and to set the standard by which their competitors are to be judged. Were this assumption warranted by the facts it would be an entirely different question; but the facts are entirely at variance with the assumption. | ra rao j - Drs. Jj. H. and A. G. Jeffrey CHIROPRACTORS — 3 Suite 318 to 323, Midwest Bldg. Office Phone 706, Res. 93 O'clock. Union meeting of all/ 303 East Second street. Rev. Lewis 3 regular | cordial invitation is extended to every. very class be present. 3.15 p. m. King's| the West Side Mission Sunda: Heralds ‘The program gtven last| Will be organized, with tem “are also invited. No evening service|<leventh street. This will fill a long- because of the older boys’ conference | *¢!t need, and a cordial invitation is at the Presbyterian church, beginning | “t®™ded to the public to attend. A D. D. of St. Louis. The newly organ-/** 615 and 7:15 p.m. Tuesday 2.30 ‘Thompson, Jr., pastor. :3unday school is Speers Bist shea ple, rastor, $33 North Madison. Sun-| being aroused. An exceptionally fine is el were not free|Looks Up to Thee,” Havens. Solo evening hour on account |day school at 10 a.m. E. A. Turner,| corps ~ 7 . of teachers has been secured beanty laurels before she went into it Ye Will Hear His Voice.’ service. The young people's for the school. Be there and get ‘Woman's prayer band will Saints. Services held in Labor Union hall, 40 North Wolcott. Sundas schnc’ at 20.30 a. m. Evening meeting 7:30. A East H-near Durbin, Wednesday st ‘West Side Mission Sunday School. At 230 p. m. Sunday, March 26 y schoo! | FIGHTING IRISHMAN 1S PORTRAYED AT THE HUB Herbert Rawlinron makes his thina quartet from the First Baptist church | “Cur appearance under his present lot nts | uarters in the chapel at 725 West til So-| Will sing, and after Sunday school G. Kirk’s Saturday Eveuing Post ° re-|28¥ school at 10 a m. preaching at}, Tawunsqn's two preceding aypear- 1 a m. This mission will continue to have a Union Sunday school and reaching services for another quarer jley’s choice for his leading feminine 611 East H street. Nona D. Gilles-| the city. Quite a general interest is! role, and it’s a true Irish colleen she ‘PIPE TO ARRIVE S00 Despite printed statements that loads of eight-inch pipe which are be- Fire insurance is the thing ing stored here are the origina! units | to be attended to now. The ele- by the Western Pipeline company def: torium to protect you from the inite announcements were made today that the pipe to be used by the West ern company will not start moving un: SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 1922. of Henley's directorial suc-| From 1895 to 1897 he was fleet sur;. |eon attached to the Asiz‘ic station. H. Scrapper” is the story of an/|retired in 1901. is the to be Olmstead in the story. 3 —._—_-- FOR SALT GREEK LINE YOU JNSURE the new pipeline to be constructed ments do not issue any mora- ruin that visits all men. Our company is conservative, safe, and financially strong. Monday from the eastern roller Universal contract at the {ub theater| ills, After the first shipments are | PTV ESop oes 6! Rev. C. M. Thompson will today and tomorrow. The vehicle is|™ade Mondzy the pipe will be consign Fourteenth and South Jackson will! “ity at the home of Mra. Chapin, 437/ 0 ooo sive @/The Scrapper,” an adaptation of R.|&4 Sweetwater country has just come to| meet at 2:30 p. m. A quartet will sing.|S0uth Lincoin street. Mrs Horsch sermo The Presbyterians of Mills will dedi-| Will assist as hostess Wefmesday, cate thelr new building Sunday even-| 7-39 DP. ™.; service for prayer, study that section who is in Casper today on|ing at § o'clock. The church will|@nd testimony. Friday, 7 p. m., boy to Casper at the rate of a ca: a INSURANC day. iaeoren story, “Malloy Campeafor,” directed | ‘The pipe which is on hand here said F N Mission. we! ri" Girected |g contain 25 carloads of eight inch by hobart Hensley. Hleventh and Cedar strects. Sun.|°%, ob pipe is said to belong to the Midwest % 201-203 cnaeu.wetn.in ‘fae paMiarnioes Refiaing company and may indicate “Cheated Hearts." The lattes <cas| that the Midwest contemplates beating al all its competitors in laying additional pipe to Salt Creek. ene church, and build on a site near Eleventh and Cedar streets. ‘This work has grown" until we have nearly one hundred in Sudnay school. Rob- EASE LAME BACKS ing DO lert Loe rintenden: be ade porheoee ys Yee best when Scandinavian Evangelical Free yout Tack Cand every muscle arch aches atigue. 620 East Fifteenth street. At home| _ Apply Sloan's Liniment freely, with- - A; Larsen. Preaching service 7:30 ob ae en ee meive Good for the! Midwest building, services Sunday rth}11 a. m. Subject “Applying Truth North Side Church. At all druggists—35c, 70c, $1.40. Subject “The Way to Be Happy.” En. the Spal North Durbin. Sabbath school 9 a.m. George Spech oa S tory,” he con-| Went back to bed rock and everything | Work. The murger service will bo|"#) 2 Toi meetings are hela|dent; Calvin Neely, Gasistant. Morn oe oe the|!" now on the upgrade which means | continued and those who ip not come| _Testimondal meetings, Set Bell ine Service il am, Text Pealme ta cea ‘ Knowledge, experience and judement| ttt steady improvement will be ne|for the Sunday school lesson study y =| Liniment zor BERMUDA“ Special Easter Trippave Ny Apel Barrie We April 15 Fastest Steamers on uda Route The palitial oil burning steamers of the Furtess Burmuda Line land their passengers and baggage directly to Hamilton Dock, avoiding the discomforts, Inconveniences and delay of landing by tender. Sailing Twice Weekly . From N. ¥, Every Wed. & Sat—From Bermuda Every Tues. &'Sat. Tickets Good on Either Steamer—Offering Unequalled Express S. S. “Fort Victoria” and S. S. “Fort Hamilton” Twin-Screw, 14,000 Tons Displacement. Twin-Screw, 11,000 Tons Displacement Bermuda Offers All Outdoor Sports Including Golf, Tennis, Sailing, Bathing, Fishing, Riding, Driving, Ete. No Passport»—Many Modern Hotels. Write for attractive inclusive rates FURNESS BERMUDA LINE 34 Whitehall st. NEW YORK : OR ANY TOURIST AGENT deavor 7 p. m. Subject, “Missions.” m M.| Evening service 7:45 p. m. Text, Ec- 5 STRAYED Driverless Cars A donkey. Reward if er returned to 1023 S. Wolcott ||Dodges and Fords, Also One Streét, or Phone 1282. Ford Ton Truck. See Virbel, Phone 1589-J M. D. Barnett Outfitting Co. 120 E. Second St. Get Sheep Fertilizer for Your Lawn. Phone 875-J THE CITY SANITATION CO. Sheep Fertilizer For Lawns Phone 948 Natrona Transfer Storage & — THE WYOUMGAvTONOTIE (() 1 we STRIVE T0 PLEAse~ SHALER FIVE-MINUTE VULCANIZER Simplest and only lasting Puncture Repair. Just what you need when you are on your trip. Come in and let us convince you. We hesitated before to advise our customers of a coal strike but we noe eereend that the miners have definitely decided to walk out on We urge all of our customers to lay in at least a small supply of coal, as the railroad will probably hold up or confiscate all coal shipped the lat- ter part of the month. Action should not be delayed too long. At the present time we have plenty of coal on hand rapt plenty good and can CASPER SUPPLY CO 914—Phones—913 The Food You Eat and the Dishes You Eat From Call for a * Modern, Sanitary Kitchen Sink No furnishing in the home is a greater la- bor saver or more protection to health than a kitchen sink _easy to clean and‘_ keep clean. H. A. Burk Heating and Plumbing 319 South Durbin Street Phone 43 jmp Holmes Hardware <c Company Did! wf If you would have a SUCCESSFUL DAY out in the BIG OUTDOORS and on the bank of a stream com- ing home with a nice lot of FISH with SATISFAC- TION written all over your face, get the RIGHT TACKLE. We have it and plenty of it, too. See JIMMY BURNS. He knows what you need and where to send you. YOU WILL FIND OUR PRICES RIGHT. Holmes Hardware Co. APRIL 1 THE BIG DAY

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