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P, ‘ PAGE SIX. Che Casper Oaiip Crivune evening except Sunday at Casper, Natrona sation Offices, Tribune Building ever: ty, W ‘office as second clase 1916 = Se 15 and 16 nge Connecting All Departments Editor TELEPH ephone Ex BARTO CHARLES. W. ~ President and E SIATED PRESS 3 is exclusively entitled to the use of all news credited in this paper and # published herein, Advertising Representatives. , King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger dg., Chicago, itth Avenue, New York City: Globe Blig., . Mass., Suite 494, Sharon Bldg., New Mont- San Francisco, Cal. Copies of the Daily in the New York, Chicago, Boston 0 offices and visitors are weicom ———$——= SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrler or By Mail and Sunday -. © Year, Daily One Year, Sunday Only = Six Months, Daily and Sunday Three Months, Dally and Sunday -~. One h nd Sunday --.-. Per © Daily Tribune w! becomes one month in arrears. Member of the Associated Press Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) The Casper Tnbune’s ‘Program igation project west of Casper to be author. ompleted at once. lete and scientific zoning system for the ity of Casper. A comprehensive municipal and school recreation tem, including swimming pools for the established Scenle Route boute- vard the county commissioners to Garden Cr nd return. Better roads for Natrona county and more high- ways for Wyomin, More equitable Rocky Mountain region, service for C: ig. freightrates for shippers of tho and more frequent train z Sg z 5 wi re z IN THE SQUAREST STATE : Speaking of the Senatorship. HE OLD STORY of going away from home to hear the news is impressed by ty Washington ‘Times’ announcement that Frank Mondell, who but a few days since retired as a member of Con- gress, after a service of wenty-six years, and upon his retirement became one of the directors of the ‘War Finance corporation, would be a candidate for United States senator for Wyoming for the seat of Francis BE. Warren, whose term expires in March, 1925. The Whshington newspaper does not make its statement authoritatively, yet it bears the evidence of inspiration by the friends of the former house leader. To our knowledge, Mr. Mondell has ut- tered no word on the subject. He was a candidate for senator at the recent election, opposed to Sen- ator Kendrick, and was unsuccessful. Why his friends should think his chances would be better in 1924 under conditions that will exist next year, we are uninformed. There is no reason to speak In whispers about a matter of this sort. It is a Republican party mat- ter, and Mr. Mondell or any other candidate may as well look the situation squarely in the face. For one thing, there is the old geographical ques- tion settled in 1916, and so far as any one is able to judge, a party political settlement, it is for all future time. This geographical matter means one senator from the north, the other from the south, with the member of congress from the central sec- tion, or any modification of the senatorial and congressional arrangement that may seem advis- zble in fairness of distribution to the three sections of the state. For another thing, Senator Francis E. Warren has not indicated any notion of retirement, or if he has, notice has not reached his friends in Wyo ming. Then there is John W. Hay of Rock Springs, who in 1918 withdrew as a candidate for Senator in company with Mr. Mondell, to induce Mr. Warren to again become a candidate and give the country the benefit of his long experience as the head of the military affairs committee of the senate, when this country entered the war. It is not believed that John W. Hay is going to sit quietly by the fireside the remainder of his life, And again there is Robert D. Carey, who has just retired as governor of Wyoming. Governor Carey is the youngest man of the group. He is not a quitter at his age and his friends have already | tossed his hat into the senatorial ring, expecting him to follow it, It looks like a race among real thoroughbreds at this moment, which {s what the Republican party likes to see. They will all be in distinguished com- pany. eh Why Is It Thus? \JO LEGISLATOR, no reformer, no zealous mor- alist, will admit. tHat he is intolerant. Yet there is intolerance in this country; intolerance practiced by good and earnest men and women who sincerely believe that what they think is wrong because they think so, and who, therefore, feel called upon to make the rest of the country believe as they do. An earnest group in Massachusetts is trying to pass a law making any Sunday activity illegal, whether it be bread selling or checker playing. Utah has been jailing men who smoke cigarets in public. Kansas has long had an anti-cigaret sell- ing law, and is now discussing whether it isn’t a crime even to own a cigaret. The New York assembly is considering a bill to supervise dane- ng ao hotels, and has a civic league which wants egal sanct for certain holds in dancing with of all others ma tried to ab: commo) the mighty trine ences against the law. Kentucky volution, but was saved by some legislators, and Texas is working on problem of whether one scientific doe- ay be taught in the schools and another ex- ish - | othe: eluded. A bill has passed the South Carolina house of representatives prohibiting the playing of pool or billiards at any place at any time. The question of moving picture censorship’ we haye al-| w with us. Doubtless all this is harmless enough; the make little headway against the hard “blue laws” common sense of the United States as a whole. | Yet the same spirit of intolerance which declares ; because one man finds rolling ivory balls over a | green cloth a crime, therefore other men shovld be made to hold the some yiews, could easily con- | sider that striking a white ball over a net a crime. jor batting a baseball over a grass lot is a crime. The spirit of intolerance, like a fire, rapidly from small beginnings, and also like a fire, its effects are wholly destructive when unconfined, It may be wise to remember that this country was founded because the inhabitants could not stand intolerance of those who, abroad, legislated for the colonies ;that certain Pilgrims carved New England from the wilderness ebcause they could not stand the intolerance of religious persecution. | j EALLY, wasn’t it the most senseless hoax you | ever heard of, the Lyons girl at Escanaba.| Mich., pulled on the doctors and her friends. 11/ was so simple it was foolish. ITere was a 30-year- jold spinster exciting the medical world at u dis- tance, for a period of three weeks by naintaining a temperature of 114, although her general health | ise indicated normalcy. can spread} Fooling the Doctors | Che Casper Daily Cribune Tomboy Taylor. —By Fontaine Fox “a PooR SOME UP HERE A FASTER When the word went ont from Escanaba the pa- ‘tient was a wonder. It was the duration of the temperature that had the scientists guessing. They accepted it as real, from where they were all over the United States, and the country doctor in at-| tendance continued to feed bulletins to the world respecting conditions at the bedside every few hours. Ail the while the sick spinster was laughing into! the sleeve of her nighty, if nighties have sleeres, which fact the bulletins neither confirmed nor denied, { The alleged patient had been a nurse in her time,! and was familiar with clinical thermometers. She had concealed in her bed a small hot water bottle covered with material of the same color of her nigh* | robe. When her temperature was taken by the doc- tor she feigned a coughing fit and managed always to place the thermometer bulb upon the hot water bag, the heat from which would send the mercury toward the top. Sometimes it would indicate above 1i4 but that remained the average temperature Finally a member of the American Medical As sociation could stand the strain no longer and jour- neyed to Escanaba and exposed the young lady's trick. The pathological fraternity, the country over, is now enjoying the joke, and the poor foolish girl is overwhelmed with humiliation, while the Jocal doctor has come down with a severe case of chagrin. Revolt Against McAdoo HE SIGNS of division in the labor political bloc are evident and not surprising. Delegates to the New York state convention of the Farmer Labor party resolved upon the formation of a sepa-} rate political organization and rejected the author-; \ity of the so-called “Conference for Progressive Po- | liti Action.” The “Conference for Progressive I al Action” is an organization under the | control of Washington politicians who are really out to lead union labor and the fanmers up a | Democratic blind alley, The special objective of this combination is to deliver the presidential can- didacy, As a genuine “labor” candidate, Mr. Mc: Adoo is a merry jest. The rank and file of labor is beginning to realize that under the camouflage of “independent” political action the real purpose of the big bosses of the so-called “Conference for Pro- gressive Political Action” is to turn the partisan Democratic grindstone in 1924. It is a noteworthy fact that this combination has started on political insurgency in the solid south states, which lag a half century behind the procession in social justice legislation and in representation by congressmen who by the furthest stretch of the imagination could be called “progressive.” The Conference for Progressive Political Action confines its political effort to Republican states where injury can be done to the national administration and the Re- ublican cause, preliminary to the proposed “de- ivery” of the labor and farm vote to McAdoo or some other Wilsonian Democrat next year. The revolt against such leadership is evidence that you can’t fool everybody all the time. Take It and Lick the Spoon IREOTLY or indirectly, Germany will have to find a way to satisfy the demands of France under the Versailles treaty which she signed in good faith. She is getting no sympathy and will certainly secure no help from other nations by the attitude she has assumed toward her obligations. And if she persists in causing bloodshed it is all upon her own head. Whining and lying never got an individual out of a hole, and it is not going to get a nation out of a bad situation. If Germany cannot come down to earth, face the music, play square and be decent, and try and forget her past rotten behavior, she will simply have to take what is justly coming to her. Every day she is making a lot of good Americans regret that the allies were so lenient at the close of the war and that they were not permitted to go on to Berlin and hand the Germans a dose of the same medicine they administered to other nations, ly lay'u waste a wide strip of territory from the Rhine to Kerlin. Paralyzing Transportation NO ONE CAN explain why railroading is not a 4% business just as much as banking manufactur- ing and merchandising. No one can explain why railroads should not be run as any other business by trained railroad men, instead of 49 state and federal commissions and by 49 state and féderal legislatures, In the recent congress there were 134 bills deal- ing with the railroads. A few of these may have had merit and may be necessary and constructive. But the larger number, instead of aiming to help the railroads render better service to the pub-| Me would in effect hamper them and be destructive of their efficiency. The next congress will doubtless have an addl- tional flood of “prosecution bills,” some of them, no doubt more radical than anything heretofore presented and if the signs of the times are read | correctly there will be more numerous and urgent | backers of such harmfn! legislation. (VEE wae, TF the person impatient about the arrival of; spring wants to know how to expedite matter) he can learn by placing a thirty-day promissory note in a bank; and the time will be shortened up fully 90 per cent. And, nine chances in ten, spring will be here before he has paid the note, jhe Wyoming is AT THE ToP So ¥ GET THE MoST BRILLIANT IDEA (THAT TomBey TayoR HAS HAD IN MONTHS WAS ABSoLUTELY RUINED BY THE s Hoot TH’ CHUTE UNTIMELY ARRIVAL OF HER MOTHER. pa Sak Mig die ai Noel OR a q Railroad Details at Sheridan SHERIDAN est interest in The subject of great- Noe! aera Wyoming ts North and & \- road. Details are pt a fey id worked out and the railroad officials “re taking the publlé into confidence gn every point. It has been deter- mined, as all along surmised, that Sheridan is to he a division point With offices and shops required. Tt is announced that the proposal to bring the road directly through the city from north to south has heen abandoned because of the tremendous expense of right-of-way and the de lay. and Utlgation consequent upon © exercise of right of eminent do- main, ie The main Une of the road will pass by Sheridan two miles to the east following Prairie Dog valley. A “Y¥" wil be constructed to connect with Sheridan, however, and as this city will be established as tho division Point cf the road, engines will be changed here as well as train crews. The passenger station of the road will be located on Grinnell avenue at Broadway, ‘two blocks from Main street, and the shops and division of- fides will be located near the St idan sugar company factory and Denio flour mill, The through fretght trains will net enter Sheridan, but the engines and crows will be changed from this city, An engine and caboose will leave Sheridan over the ‘¥" and awalt the through freight trains on side tracks along the main lino, When the trains arrive, the crews will change there. Passenger trains and local freight trains will come into Sheridan, how: ever. “In locating the Wyoming North and South raliroad through Sheridan. {t was necessary to cons!der several points outside of the exact location in the city, Mr. Huss said. “As it is well known, the railroad has to cross the Piney divide, ana in doing so, the rafiroad must come down on the head waters of Piney creek. North of the city tho line will have to be located at the junction of Tongue river and Prairie Dog creek. “With these two points fixed, the question arose as to the best line for the benefit of the railroad company and the city of Sheridan. “There {s a pass from Piney creek into McCormick creek and Goose creek, but it has an almost prohibt- tive grade, The distance by the way of McCormick and Goose creeks, through Sheridan and down Tongue river, is 14% miles longer, than by way of Prairio Dog creek, and this aditiona] 14% miles would have be maintained and cperated at an nual cost of not less than $70,000, for which the railroad company would not receive any additional revenuo. “A further objection to the railroad passing directly through Sheridan wounl be the fact that for many ‘years large proportion of the freight will de of! and these oll trains would be moving through and across the streets of Sheridan, obstructing traffic and adding an clement of danger, without any advantage what- ever to the city. The locating of the Une Cown Prairie Dog valley contem- plates a main track across the d+ vide just south of where the Burling- ton crosses, to @ passenger and freight station located in the heart of the city within two blocks of the center of Main street, and complete freight facilities for the convenience of local shippers. In addition to th's, it Is contemp'ated p'acing a division point in the city, the exact location of which will be determined as soon as off'clal advices are rece'ved from the company’s efficers in New York. ‘The location of any division point in Sheridan is, furthermore. absolute-; ly dependent on the adoption of the Prairie Dog route The distance from Miles City to Sheridan via Prairie Dog creek {s 154 miles, which is the} utmost limit that can be aperated as a Civision. If the road were built | through the city via Tongue river, the distance would be increased to 162 miles, which {s too long for a division, and if that route should! have been adopted, it would be nec-| e ssary to estRblish a division point somewhere near the Montana, state Une, and to abandon any plan of giv- ing Sheridan a division point. ‘It is my judgment, based on 40 years’ experi ce from laying out and building raflroads, that Sheridan will be much better off with the rail- rond locatee: in Prairle Dog valley and with the natural growth of the city in ten years, every citizen will be glad that tke line does not run through the heart of the city.” Paying Last. Tribute GILLETTE--The affairs of the Bank of. Gillette aro undergoing a thorough examination by the state bani'ng department, which was de- manded by the directors following the suicide of President Mark H. Shields. Previous to the shipment of the remains of Shields to Sheridan for burial, the funeral services of the Christian Science church gvere held over the body at the Shieds home. At Sheridan the services were in charge of the’ Elks and the funeral took place from the Reed chapel. Floral offerings from frien¢s business associates at Gillette Sheridan ‘were profuse. ‘The death of Mark Shields is bound to make a great difference in the business life af Gillette, Mr. Shields has been the moving spirit in this vicinity for a dozen years. The two newspapers of the city—| The Record and News—combined in} issuing ® memorial edition as a tri-| bute from the civic fraternial and commercial organizations to the late mayor of the city. Resolutions from a dozen of these organizations were printed in the memorial paper. —_——_—- Busy at Billy Creek BUFFALO—Interest in the Billy Creek field is unabated and a great deal of work has been accomplished deepite the unfavorable weather con- litions. Trainloads of material have come in over the Wyoming Railway for the camp and for the two new wells to be drilled. ‘Work on the two new wells will be begun about March 16 Water pipes and gas pipes are com: pleted and the gas ts being used for Nght and fuel about the camp end at the rigs. \ Everything about the camp is humming. Several of] concerns wit! begin wild catting {n Johnson county ag soon as spring opens. Tt {5 au- yentieally rumored that among these will be the Hastell company, building the new North and South Ratiroad. a Court at Lander LANDER—R. R. Rose first judge of the new Fighth Judicial disrict, composed of Natrona and Fremont counties, held his first court here this week occupying three days. Only civ!] cases were considered. The judge was accompan'ed by Court Stenogra- pher Harry McCracken, and) and Let us save you money on draper fes. New ani complete stcek just recetved at Graham-Shlelds Furniture ComaAdy, $ | for To Meet Again On the closing day of the recently Samisee congress, everybody was busy any everybedy was yin, ood bye. One old-time rasmiier apeoetad Uncle Joe Cannon took him by the hand and expressed the hope they would somewhere meet again. To this earnest wish “Uncle Joo” re- plied: “My friend, as to the hope of meeting you again, I can best an- swer you by quoting those beautiful wards written by George D, Pren- tes, which, 1f my recollection is not at fault, run as follows: “The flat of nature is inexorable. There is no appeal for relief from the great law which dooms us to dust. We flourish and fade as the Jeaves of the forest, and the flowers that bloom and wither in a day have nd frailer hold upon life than the mightiest monarch that ever shook the earth with his footsteps. Gen- eratons of men will appear and dis- appear as the grass and the multi. tude that throng the world today will disappear as the footsteps on the sbore. Men seldom think of the great event of death until the shadow falls across thelr dwn pathway, hid ing from thelr eyes the faces of loved ones whose loving smile was the sun- Nght of thelr existence. Death {s the antagonist of lif, and the cold thought of the tomb is the skeleton et all feasts. We do not want to go thrdugh the dark valley, although its dark passage may lead to para- dine; we do not want to lle down in the damp grave, even with princes bedfellows. In the beautiful drama of Ion, the hope of immor- tality, so eloquently uttered by the deathdevoted Greek, finds deep re sponse in every thoughtful sdul. When about to yleld his young ex- istence as a sacrifice to fata, his Ccemantha asks !f they should meet again, to which he replies: “I have asked that dreadful question of the hills that look eternal—of the clear streams tifat flow forever—of the stars among whose fields of azure my raised spirit has walked in glory. All were dumb; but as I gaze upon thy living face I feel that there is something in the love that mantles WHICH Dt you look forward to a good nght's sleep and get up in the morning feeling refreshe< and ready to cheerfully meet the tasks af the day? OR Do you dread going to bed, only to stare sleepless at the walls? ‘The difference in sleeping and staring is simply o matter of nerve freedom. Let us explain how CHIROPRACTIC ADJUSTMENTS Remove the Cause of SLEEPLESSNESS Consultation ae Analysis Bring all your health troubles to Robert N. Grove CHIROPRACTOR Over White's Grocery 112 East Second Street Phone Palmer School through its beauty that cannot who- We sball meet again.) Casper Jewelry Mfg. Co, O-S Bldg. ly perish. Olemantha.” * THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 1923. pert watchman; all work guaranteed Jowell Try Tribu Classified for Results. d_wach repairin; MODERN METHODS A few years ago an automobile could be possessed only by the rich. Now few can af- ford to be without one. Electric light in every city home is a new thing. It is only in these modern days that we have learned that the luxuries of yesterday must be the necessities of today. Communications have undergone the same change. The letter, the telegram and the per- sonal visit used to be the only means by which business and social affairs were handled. Today the modern means is the telephone. Just your words are not enough. You want to project your own voice with all its inti- macy and directness and its evidence of your personality into your message. Moreover, you want to tell your story and get your answer in one operation, It is more sa factory than any other method and that is why progressive business men do business by telephone. Ge Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co. Business and Professional Directory AUDITORS DOCTORS H, REIMERTH THE CASPER PRIVATE Public Accountant | HOSPITAL Certified income Tax Service Li 401 O-S Bldg. TARRY F. COMFORT | Augiting and Accounting 938 South Durbin—Phone 273 Women’s and Children’s Hospital 542 South Durbin—Phone 406 STAFY SURGERY, GYNECOLOGY AND STETRICS | Phone 767 | Phone 1008 Suite 18 Daly Bae ae, OBS —— | Homer R. Lathrop, M. D., F. A. 0. & 0. F. STEFFEN 7 , . F. Auditor—Accountant Victor R. Dacken, B. Se, "M.D. Income Tax Service $12 Con. Roy. Bidg. Phone 1459 AND XR AY TREATMENT R. ©. VAN DENBERG NARY DIS Ss Certified Public Accountant | } Income Tax Service G. B. Underwood, M. D. ROENTGENOLOGIST Hallis is Over Campbell Hardware PATHOL( THOLOGIST Phone 148 J. F, O'Donnell, M. D. PHARMACL ag TE eee GUARANTEE REGISTRY CORP. Auditors and Accountant ock: hi Registrar and Transfer Agents EE : . E. Vunean,, D, 208-11 Ol Exchange Bldg. Phone 66) Ottices in Rohrbauet ARCHITECTS Telephone St and 33 DUBOIS & GOODRICH, Rooms 11-12 Townsen ee MARSHALL ©, KEITIx, M. D. ‘Architects d Block HERBERT L. HARVEY, M. D. . Tyo. Phone 449' Office 108 FE. Second—PI 7 Casper, Wyo Private ‘Hospital, O12, South Durbin We. J. een General Practice Surgery Obstretrics GATES z So ARI ee hoe Eee ene eS Bide. Suite 12, Daly Bldg. | Phone 1351 Specialist SSRs LES he EF Me ah Pett Ear, Nose and Throat BAGGAGE and TRANSFER . Second. Casper, Wyo. DR. DE ORGLER SEARLES TRANSFER Hair and. Scal Res. Phone 8iW Office Phone 313 Smith ‘Tarnee Deeg ce DR, T. J. RIACH BATTERIES Phone ae and Surgeon CASPER BATTERY CO. 3 Beaiepee' 2118. 508 EK. Yellowstone BEAUTY SHOPS THE RADIANT BEAUTY SHOP Phone 907 DRS. MYERS AND BRYANT Physician and § 200 0-8 Building Oftice Phone 699 Residence 746 Henning Hotel, Mezzanine Floor, Ex- LAWYERS pert marcel waving. For ap. Ph. 682-R AMBROSE HEMINGWAY Lawyer ; CHIROPRACTORS M. GABRIELLE SINCLAIR Palmer Chiropracto: West Hotel, Koom 72 Room 221 Midwes, Building’ NICHOLS & STIRRETT ir Lawyers Phone 15405) 3809-10-11 Oi Exchange Bldg. DR. J. G. JEFFREY MES >. KEM DR. ANNA GRAHAM JEFFREY dated Royalty Bldg. Suite 318 Midwest Bldg, Phone 106)? TatAEURANG DE. B. G. HAHN, Pee ‘do ee Chiropractor il Exchange Building Townsend Bldg. M. BE. HARNED, 162 North Kimball St, Phone Phone 423) Chiropractor \ 4AM 0, WLLSON Xttorney-at-Law al 1415-16 Townsend Bldg. ese te sO wneerd Bldg, Madd VINCENT MULVANEY mney-ai-Law DE. L. ©. BERQUIS Zuttermelster Bldg. Phone 178 427 Midwest Bu‘lding DR. ©, 1, ARNOLDU OGILBEE & ADA. Osteopathic ‘and Chiropractic | 210 0-8 Building Phone 2217 310 0-8 Building Phono 1754 OSTEOPATHS CHIROPODISTS gee CORINNE E. 0'BRYANT Chiro weed and Orthopedio ‘001 212 S. Center St. JULIA RUSSELL " ph, 388 DR. ©. A. SANFORD Midwest Bldg. Phone 1930 RADIATOR REPAIRS Suite 6, Tribune Apartments eee Phone 124-3) suito Novy duttrmeistes bide, |” NATRONA RADIATOR 5 © No. 1, Zutvermeister 4 . LAT Phone 1742 rae ring, Recoring Of Radiators 425 + Yellowstone Phone 1523W COAL SHOE REPAIRING CAEP Eee oe COKE 00, NORTH CASPER SHOE SHOP 356 N. Durbin basse All Work Guaranteed. 3 B ne 677 Ben Suyemateu 235 East H DRESSMAKING TYPEWRITERS MISS CARG LON TY! Theamakiae, Hemodsiag aaa REMINGTON aren Repair Work. 324 8. Lincoln E. 309 O-S Bidg. Phone 2278 Phone 548W Jennie 1, Sherman, All Kinds of Sewtn; Phone 5965 TA'tLORS a ae en ne | TROY TAILORS EANERS 335N. Lincoln! 148 E, Midwest > Skane g6at¥ AN s