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PAGE TWO. SUPPORT FOR. WC, A URGED W BUSINESS MEN BY SPEAKER Forum Meeting Today Addressed by Mrs. C. D. Murane on Behalf of Girls and J. W. Johnson, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1923, Warren. The letter was addressed to the editor, Senator Warren says; “I want to compliment you upon your remarkable edition of Sunday. February 11, 1923, which contain, so mitch information about’ Wyo. ming’s industries and natural sources. “You performed a splendid worl: Che Casper Daily Cribune ‘CONSUMPTION AND STOCKS OF © WOOL REAR PRE-WAR STATUS, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION SAYS re: y's paper, and I feel personally graterui for tho opportunity of having the published facts before me for refer. ence.” BOSTON, Mass., Feb. 20.—The consumption of wool and the stocks of wool in hand are now near pre-war conditions, the National Association of Wool Manufacturers was told at its annual meeting here today in the report of Secretary Wal- A SaaS Who Discussed Legislative Proceedings. A plea for support of the Y. W. C. A. drive which is to be put on at an early date in this city and a talk regarding the proceedings of the last legislature, as well as the proposal to start a city zoo, took up the major part of the meeting of the Casper Chamber of Commerce this noon. Cc. D. Murane stated that the Y. W. C. A. desires to 00 for its work during the as an loyment agency, and in| 1 ye In urging the sup- promoting thelr welfare. next fisc port of the d Mrs. Murane shov g the month of January alone ve the organization had 182 women made calls for employ- its existence in Casper, |ment, and 150 employers asked for| nds every effort female help through the organization. within the city by/One hundred and forty-five women| a acting} were placed in positions through this s' — |serv SEAS IN . Six hundred women used the| |Y. W. C. A. rooms on East Second |street during the month for rest, for aving bundles, or for leaving their dren while shopping. Seventy-four |rooms and apartments were rented through the Y. W. C. A., a member of the assoc'ation investigating the quar- ters in each case before recommend- Ing them. J. W. Johnson, member of the state legislature, spoke to the chamber on the subject of the 6 per cent royalty obtained by the counties !n which oil |'s produced. Mr. Johnson showed how |the ftleht had gradually been centered |sround this bill and how the bill had| jbeen put through. In this county the 6 per cent wil be used mainly for |the promot'on of good roads, so that BOOT AUSalh Scenes Enacted in U. S. i db |the Mahway department which Is also NEW YORK — Is a moral clean-up needed tn tho literature of | Are Duplicate y: Rranted 35 per cent will rece!ve prac-| toany Or ostracization of snappy stories and novels? bd | toe 41 per cent of the royalty. as our fiction multiplies. Protests against sex stories The Soviet. Mr. Johnson sa’d that the bill had vered by defenders of them. Vice crusaders have dragged several been put throueh f. and without and thelr authors anc publishers, into court. Some books have been a lobbying or trading. ‘essed; others have been acquitted, : It was brought up at the meeting}. 4 ysiclan has now fired a broadside against what he calls Aroscow Thte Asso-| th mperial Order of Muscoviter| xl lite and, in an interview ‘says sex I\terature menaces the AOE ' : ses arts cov tes| public health. clated Press.)— sian govern: had two cub bears on hand which It) 7°,’ woraan editor,et one of the many. sagasines that have bull jip Me be g'ad to give to the city as ment has declared war on bootlegwers Hap a ag ath lds rers of illicit “hootch” «aia that other offers of anima’s had ign is duplicating MANY heen obtained Jast year and that plans of the situation in New for a zoo to be put in the section of} ‘the c!ty embraced by the Community| The sale Of wines and beers {s legal Extension corporations addition had In Russia, but the soviet regime has been made. The matter was roferred continued the war-policy established to tho board of directors of the cham- early in 1915, of banning vodka and ber, er strong intoxicants. vo If B. Durham brought up the fact ; made In huge quantities l- that the attendance at the luncheons 1 nearly every one of Mos- has been fall'ng off very much lately newly rich has his pr and urged that a better attendance be evidenced in the future. last three months of icket committee for the annual g to statistics furn!sh ing has been appointed. This bondent by the Moscow ™eect'ng will be held at some t!me in police made 65,807 the ni fu he committee fol- a discovered nearly ! - PHA rns, L. A. 3,000 privat Byvidence obtained F ri a L. Watlace Burns, J even indicated that there were ‘vod-,J- 5. Mechinig and J. V ka trusts” or combinations of capital to produce the liquor in large quantl ties. Restaurants ave been raged Mew Hearse For MuckFuneral Home an@ manufact and the camp of |the sce f York and other American cities. cow's source of supply. the ra During 1922, ed the corre: ace the power spirits se'zed while In some in- stances patrons “bringing their own” have been arrested. Heavy prison sentences or expul- sion from Moscow, are the pena'ties applied to violators of the law. A new decree makes the chairman of each house committee responsible for the preservation of the anti-vodka !aw in each apartment bulld'ng, the the- ory belng that the committees com- posed of res'dents of each bu'lding must know !f any stills are being A new hearse owned by the Muck funerai home made {ts appearance on the streets of Casper today. This vo hicle is a Meteor two-ton car with a gray body and with blue leather up-| holsteriIngs on the Interior. It has a 16-cyiinder Red Seal Continental motor, the best motor put out by the Continental peop'e. The hearse was A sensaton was recently caused by the announce ment that the grave of Seaman James Jones of the U. 5. Navy was the hiding place for priceless jewels and g ems of the Iat> Orr Nikolas of Russia. Finally the! grave was opened and a search instituted but no jewelry was discovered. Picture shows men at work in the National Cemetery at Cypress Hills Is Modern Sex making the scarch. Fiction Harmful to Readers? BY EDWARD THIERRY. circulations during the last few years on frank fiction of love says sex stories are not cheap The prosecu PROSECUTION, terary pretenders who write sex vels and magazine stories today are guilty of producing septic ltera- ture. “Such authors are as menacing to the public health, especially in this ne age of shifting moral standards, as a typhoid carr! sical Our mental and phy- health {s endangered.” s the burden of an editorial . Eugene Lyman Fisk, medical director the Life Extension Institute der the heading, “The Putrid Pen,” in the forthcoming February issue of the intitute’ magazine, “How to Live Journal.’ Amplifying his op'nions, Dr. Fisk said: “Books and magazines of this sep- tic sex type appeal to an evil appetite. ‘puis appetite is not as widespread as some think; it is like the appetite for morphine: normal, healthy people do, not crave it, but many become ment- aly {infected and develop abnormal tenden C'intes and hospitals re- cord the terrible effects. Phis is an age of self-indulgence, luxury, of the new freedom—par- ticularly for women—of precedents cast aside. Stories of love that are high-minded, spiritualizing a human passion, create good. ‘The other kind, having a pathological trend, brutalize c operated. shipped here from Plaque, Ohio. it and appeal only to- the animal rae B sense. fi 3 ii “Magazines ap'ng the ‘miscalled Stage Lures Member of Nobility maT a rege ™ ; Jour home circles add fuel to the fire. OS iin Young people get the wrong view of Cia » from these extreme stories. Mor- wrong yd fe are aroused and the high emotion of love is dragged down into the mud of materiality. This is the 1 of sex education. “Wo possess a rescrve of energy and emotion which must have an out- Some get it in adventure, mys- and detective stories. People used scndemn the dime novel as spec: tacular, sensational, exaggerated. Dime novels of the most lurid type were harmless compared to the pol- son of today’s sex stories. “Two types of authors are guilty: ypoint for NEA Service, via Gough, wife of Captain Wilfred Gough and daughter, Hugh Sutley-Gough, has startled London society with thi it that she is about to go on the stage and will begin as a) ¢ Automobile Contest Subscription tions made from any subscribers by F drive there the regular benefit of all contestants. inducement to our pre ave reduced our subscr As a further ent and pros- iption price to » for the $7.50 for One Year. 00 for Six Months. you of $1.50 for o: ear and 50 cents for least a ed of onth or s year the "a subse trouble of the half-insane type, who think they are geniuses, and those who know what they are doing and deliberate- ly prostitute art for commercial re- ward. We can spare such writers; they breed unhappiness and disease, They say the!r works depict life? Go visit Bellevue Hosp‘tal or the near: est Insane asylum and see such life in its disgusting phrases; what good does it do yor eS hes stories are not, as many peo- ple think, cheap and smutty. Peo ple will get over th's idea in time, “In Uterature people today are de- manding directness, frankness, truth. They are crying—at least the younger fon is—for life, more life, life Defense: + is, ‘That Ramos, is the view of Miss Eleanor editon of “Saucy 8torles,” y magazines published “Smart Set,” Mencken and Jean ? ributors who re mistaken in the editor of Storie Miss F g000 looking, tall, willow bobbed hair of copper. has K “The swinging of the literary dulum pen toward sex stories is logfeal,” nd sordid and harmful, on and the defonse are given here: she sald, explaining her editorial view: “I presume that a psychoanalyst w love stories are sex stores. I am sorry to find that some tisok them ob- Jectionable. 4 say alll BUILDING BURNS AT LAVOYE, NO SERIOUS INJURY Loss of $7,000 Reported In Destruction of Frame Structure. Fire which started on the second floor, completely destroyed the House- Mitchell building at Lavoye, Salt Creek, Monday, and ‘damaged two nearby structures with a loss est! As the editor of a so-called sex magazine, I think of the sex story as one that treats of love from the realistic, rather than the romantic, angle. “Realism has vivified the arta and crafts of today. Gingerbread decora- tions have passed from our homes and furnishings, women have s'mplified thelr clothing—and disc: led much of it. In lMterature the demand now ‘s for frankness... Witness the popular- ty of ‘Main Street,” “Moon Calf’ ‘Cytherea.’ ‘“Phis demand naturally enters the fiction imagazine fie'd. ‘Tho more pre- tentiou® magaz'nes do not dare jeop- ardize thelr circu‘ation and advertis- ing by dangerous exper!ments. They do not understand thelr public, and they take no sporting chances; they stick to the sturdy old themes. t ig insthe modern sex magazine that the writer with a novel and beau- tful experiment awill received a warm welcome, and it is here only that he wil get a public. ‘The Dreisers, the Cabells, the Andersons of tomorrow will appear today in the pages of the unconventional magaz'nes, and their stories will be sex stor‘es. There is an enormous audience awaiting them, a steadily increasing demand. fs and have an unlimited desire for pbeavlnnasts rie 3° tc SIX KILLED IN RAIL CRASH ON LEHIGH VALLEY ELMYRA, N. Y., Feb. 20.—Six per- sons were killed in a train wreck to- day on the Lehigh Valley ratiroad at Rummerfield, Pa,, about ten miles south of Tonawanda, Pa. The report- ed dead are: William Shellenberger, of Easton, Pa., an engineer; John Nodo- lin, of Eaton, Pa., @ trainman; O. L. Culver of Athens, Pa., an engineer; O. W. MeDantels, of Athens, Pa., a trainman; George Casper of Athens, Pa., a fireman, and James Fox of Sayre, Pa, traveling fireman, padinshan ins Disiec areas REREARSALS TODAY FOR “MELODYLAND! Rehearsals called for today for “Melodyland,” the American Legion show to be put on at the Moose |Puditorium March 12 and 18, are as Iffcttown: 4:20—"I'm a Regular Farmer in a Nine o’Clock Town,” principal and chorus. 5:00—"Blame It All on the Beautl- |Sul Girls,” principal and chorus. | 7:80—"Goodnight,” chorus and prin- wipals. $:00—Japanese and Chinese | bers, prinripals and chorus, $:30—4 y chorus and principals, Qe | num- For Constipated Bowels—Bilious Liver ‘The nicest, cathartle-laxative © to © your bowels when you have B Indi Headache us “8 stion Stomach two tonight will empty pletely by mornin our bowels com and you will feel splendid. They work while you s'eep.” Cascarets never stir you up or gripe like Salts, Pills. Calome!, or Ol and Chi'dren ¥ 10 cents a box, arets loo.—Ady, mated to be approximately $7,000. The building which was burned down carried $2,500 Insurance. Heroic effort on the part of a bueket brigade composed of residents of the town, assisted later by fire de- partment from the Home camp and the Midwest gas plant saved the con- flagration from) spreading and en- dangering the ¢éntire town. Fortu- nately there was only a light breeze. A defective gas heater was re- sponsible for the blaze which quickly spread to all parts of the building. Tho residence of Dr. Luth@r E. Mar- tin and tho building leased by the Scott Clothing company were badly scorched but by keeping them con- stantly wet the spread of the fire was checked. Several of the men who worked fighting the flames were slightly burned about the hands and face but none seriousty. “DAUGHTER OF LUXURY’ FEATURES AGNES AYRES A destitute girl with plenty of gor- geous gowns! The role played by Agnes Ayres in her latest Paramount picture, “A Daughter of Luxury,” which will be seen at the Rialto the- uter tomorrow and Thursday, {s that of a girl who {s reared in luxury, but whose parents die and leave her pen- niless. Tho role of th destitut girl who {s forced to make her own way, however, does not mean that Miss Ayres will not wear several gowns in the picture, as dno of the principal assets of the character in question ‘s @ large wardrobe of fine clothe: Paul Powell directed the production, which 1s an adaptation by Beulah Marie D:x, of the sucessful play, “The. Imposter,” by Leonard Merrick and Michael Morton. Tom Gallery is the leading man. ALL WRONG The Mistake Is Made by Many Casper Citizens. Look for the cause of backache. To be cured you must know the cause. If {t's weak kidneys you must set. the kidneys working right. A Casper resident tells you how. Mrs. L. Bedsaul, 1113 N, Howard “My kidneys became and disordered from a cold which settled in them. My back was so lame and sore I could hardly stoop On account of the sharp) darting pains that shot through my Sudden dizzy spells came on before my T read about Doan’s Kidney Pills in the pa- per and bought a ‘box at the Casper One box was all I needed All the trouble disappeared and I have had street, says: weak over at tim kidneys, and black specks came eyes and affected my sight. Pharmacy. to make @ permanent cure, no return of it, since.” Price 60c, at all Doan's Kidney Pills. Mrs, Bedsaul had. Co,, Mfrs,, Buffalo, N. ¥.—Ady. Office Space Those wanting office room in a new, modern four-story building with- in a block of the Post Office see W. R. DOBBIN Room 231 Midwest Bldg. dealers. Don't s'mply ask for a kidney remedy—get the same that Foster-Millburn ,ter Humphreys. “While the ; normal, as compared with 1918,” he said, “that of domestic wools is dis- tinctly higher. The consumption of carpet grades has had a marked in- crease which has continued through- out the past year, “The usual uncertainties concern- ing the admistration of a new traiff have arisen. The regulations con- cerning the importation of carpet wools provoked adverse criticism. The ruling making the rate of duty on carbonized wools the same as that for tops has been justly protested as those the wools; and the more recent ruling relating to the importation of woo!s from Iceland is challenged, particularly as it is based upon the classification by usage rather than by blood or that accepted by- tho trade, “Apart from these specific cases of uncertainty, and with the main question of the tariff settled, and be- cause of under production during the | last two and a half years there is a | spirit of hopefulness for a successful year to come. “Regardless of the tariff, prices of ‘raw wools have risen, in foreign as {Well as domestic markets. Tops and | Worsted weaving yards were fairly stable in 1921, but throughout the | Year 1922 there has been a general advance in their prices, In spite of this increased cost of raw materials, the demand for lower prices for goods has been insistent. “At the beginning of the year there was a relatively greater demand for woolens than for worsteds. This con- tinued, but the rate of increase in the demand for worsteds during the year was much greater.” The association re-elected its off_ cers, headed by John P. Wood of Philadelphia as president. pts nae hr 2 Congressman-Elect And Mrs. Winter In Nation's Capital WASHINGTON, Feb. 20. — Con- gressman-elect Winter and Mrs. Win- ter have arrived in Washington anc. plan to remain here for next two months. Judge Winter will profitally employ this time in getting acquaint- ed with the house members and famil- jarizing bimself with the details of the job that he assumes March 4. Soothing Vapor Stops ( Catarrh If you want to get rid of catarrh misery you must first hea! those raw inflamed spots in the nose and throat. Procure a supply of “Deo,” the celebrated Dennis’ Eucalyptus Oint- ment, from any good druggist. Gently heat a spoonful of the ointment in a tin-plate and take. in deep: breaths of the pleasant, healing vapor. ‘This quickly clears the throat. ‘The vapor penetrates every nook and corner of the respiratory tract, forming a pro- tecting film of oil over the d‘seased membranes. Right away the raw, tender spots begin to heal, and if the |\vapor treatment is continued, night Jand morning, you should be free from all disagreeab'e symptoms. “Deo” is sold everywhere in 25¢ tubes and 60c jars. Satisfaction guar- anteed or mone yback. Dennis Mfg. Co., makers, Berkeley, Cal.—Adv. The famous boox fair of Leipsic total of wool consumption is] gastos trom the year 1545. Congressman Mondell has arranged to turn over to Representative Win- ter on Marché, all uncompleted land cases and other matters which will require attention here after that date. F. H. Barrow, whose duties as Leg- islative Clerk of the house will re- quire but little attention during the ‘recess of congress will assist Repre- sentative Winter for a time in the work of his office. Industrial Edition Of Tribune Praised It’s toasted. This By Senator Warren Sab anireocécses oe eae gives a delightful quality that can A very enthusiastic letter regard not be duplicated ing the Industrial edition of the Cas per Tribune was received from Wyo ming’s oldest senator, Francis E Announcement Frank Canner back to Cas- per to serve his friends. I have secured temporary quar- ters at 257 South Center street (rear of Reliable Jewelry store.) I have a complete new line of woolens for men, young men an¢ women's suits for spring and sum mer wear, Owing to my small overhead ex penses I can save you many dol lars on your wearing apparel. Come in and let us show you. Canner rade clothes speak for themselves, Frank Canner Tailored Clothes ip for every-day toilet use. Assist with Cuticura Ointment when necessary. Cuticura Talcum 48 also ideal for the ekin. SearigRogh ree ty Mott Address: ~Cutewra tab 257 South Center Strect. Doped be Sold every " 5 Eee trang Mande sac Rear Reliable Jewelery Store WE HAVE ONLY A FEW GOOD USED CARS LEFT AND WE CAN OFFER YOU SOME REAL BARGAINS IF YOU COME IN TODAY PN Jorn Sant WU TUR SRUGK &—BAF CASPER, WYOMING =a Second and Yellowstone Phone 1406 \ OPPORTUNITY AWAITS YOU IN MILLS A Home Is An Investment Stop digging up for the landlord—dig in your own garden. A Big Lot For a Little Down WE ARE JUST STATING FACTS $25 down and $10 a month will start you on the roa It is admitted that $400.00 and $450.00 is a ver CALL, WRITE OR TELEPHONE Mills Construction Company Phones 311 and 2019-J-3 Offices in America Theater Building and Town of Mills, d to prosperity y reasonable price on these lots. Mills. Construction Co., America Theater Bldg. P. 0. Box 1089, Casper, Wyo. Without an; wish to know Mills.” y obligation on my part, } more about “Buy a Lot in Name Address