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_-@-befocked up in the cupboard with ad | beyond recall. PAGE SIX THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE Wnterea at Casper (Wyoming), Post- schemes against the other powers. office as Second Claas Matter, No vember 191 ‘The Casper Daily Tribune every evening and The Sunday Morn- ing Tribune every Sunday, at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices, Trib- une Buflding, Fostoffice. MEMBER T: SOCIATED ois exclusively publication of 12 this paper and iso the local news published herein. Business Telephc 5 and 16 Connect Branch Telephone ing I ing Rei tatives. & Prudden, 1720-23 Ii; 286 Fitth the Daily Trib- » New York, Chi Member of th nat Bureau of (A. B. ©) TON RATES * Carrier or By Mail | da: Member of Circul: By Six Mon n Three Months, y and Sunday One Month, Dafly and Sunday -- Per Copy ce = ‘All subscriptions must be paid advance and the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery 2 becomes one month in arrears. aes ick If You Don’t Get Your Tribune aot 15 or 16 any time between 6:30 and 8 o'clock p. m. ff you fail to yeoeive your Tribune. A paper wil be Geliverea to you by special mes- genger. Make it your duty to let the Tribune know when your misses you. | issueé Oriental snared by them into any Moslem In fact, they will find that Uncle} Sam is about as wary as ever of! complications. And the sooner they find it out, the better for them and everybody else. Pri- vate enterprise, with the approval of the government, is one thing. Governmental responsibility, for a The Casper Dally Cribune The Terrible Tempered Mr. Bang. WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1923. Kemmerer and surrounding camps celebration ever held on Snake river. and succeeded, by posing as a drunk- ard, in getting evidence against a number of persons in this district. After working a week, he and a com- panion officer went to Fossil to take an east-bound night train. While in the lonely station, six men came in and @ fight followed, in which Ku- kules was shot through the cheek and ear, and his companion in the leg. The six alleged assailants were sub- peared less reprehensible, several to- day no doubt would be serving pen!- tentiary sentences. Plan Huge Celebration Fourth Ply Sige rey aerteed end at looking cheaper + for all loyal Baggs boosters for the| Shields Furniture Co. Dasy payments. next two months and a half. Busi- ness men and cowboys met in the —By Fontaine Fox ‘| worse than any yet* contemplated ae MORE COTTON fier subscription | past seasons will all be gone. carrie: | last’ season. complicated private enterprise in a precarious quarter of the world is' | quite another thing. | ‘The government stands rendy, as | every government should, to pro- tect the legitimate interests of its | citizens in any land. The govern- ment, however, must necessarily be | very careful in a case of this kind, | lest it be caught in “mvolvements” by the American people. presi Set The southern states have planted | 87,791,040 acres to cotton this year | | and if the crop averages as good as |last year’s it means 11,110,688 | bales next fall.. That isn’t enough. | In the past 12 months the world jhas consumed considerably more than 12,000,000 bales of cotton, and by August 1, when the 1923 jcrop begins to reach tho market, the surplus stocks accumulated in| The short crops of 1921 and 1922 have left the manufacturers without a reserve on which to draw. But the trep this year should av- erage far better to the acre than The past winter was a hard one for yeevils and the bliz-| zards of late February killed off | the pest by millions. Methods of | cultivation ‘have THE CASPER TRIBUNE'S PROGRAM Irrigation project west of Casper to be authorized and completed at once. ‘A complete and scientific zoning system for the city of Casper. ‘A comprehensive municipal and school recreation park system, in- cluding swimming pools for the children of Casper. Completion of the established Scenic Route boulevard as planned by the county commissioners to Garden Creek Falls and return. Better roads for: Natrona county and more highways for Wyoming. More equitable freight rdtes for shippers of the Rocky Mountain region and more frequent train || service for Casper. NO OLD AGE Old ege, says a prominent phy- Bicien, is a bogey which deserves to @ lot of other useless notions. The key should then be thrown away A wicked state of .mind is his definition for ‘‘old age” as dreaded by persons who ought to know bet- ter. He points out that present- day knowledge of health laws, pre- ventive medicine, sanitation and hygiene could pretty much do away with the state of mind which contributes most of all to it. Statistics show that the number of deaths per hundred thousand population ascribed to old age in the registration area of the United States in 1920 was 40 per cent less than in 1910. In 1920 there were nearly 88,- 000,000 persons living in the re- gions of the United States where vital statistics are accurately re- corded. Of these, 21,813 were over 90 years of age, about 1,500 being over 100 years. The point the physician empha- sizes, however, is that there are too many people 100 years old in health and thought who are not over 75 in years, and still others who fool- ishly run out to,meet old age and hasten its approach simply because they dread it and won't take the trouble to keep themselves phys-| ically and mentally fit: Anyone who is already “old,” as the doctor means it, can’t do much ‘to remedy the situation now, but middle-aged and younger men and women migst well pick out their cupboard and lock up the bogey at once. . eee TURKEY AND AMERICA Those Turks, with all'their dip- Jomatic shrewdness, are very ingen- fous., They seem to have imagined that th could win the friendship fof the United States and use it as a club to swing on Great Britain France and other interested pow- ers, by the simple device of grant- ing valuable |vaded and despofled as France was ess concessions to} been improved, too, and the use of insecticides of many kinds is spreading throughout the South. The cotton that has} been planted stands an unusually | good cance this time. A 12,000,-' 000-bale crop is absolutely neces- | sary for the world’s needs. A 14,- 000,000-bale crop could readily be marketed. _ ‘ The South promises to be fairly well-to-do next winter. 2 eens WAR DESTRUCTION’ If the United States had been in- by Germany in 1914, to the same extent, and in the same proportion to our size, wealth and population, it would mean the devastation of nearly everything in the area east of a line drawn from Erie, Pa., to Charleston, 8. C. ; That area would take in part of South Carolina,-most of North Car- olina and Virginia, Maryland, part of West Virginia, all but a narrow strip of Pennsylvania, the whole of New York state and New England. In that area every mime, every mill, every industry of every kind, every home, would have been abso- lutely destroyed. It would mean terrific industrial, economic and agricultaral destruction, with indi- vidual suffering in proportion. Such a picture, described by an authority on coal mining who has recently completed a professional examination of the French wa zone, brings home to Americans the completeness of French distress better than a detailed enumeration of French losses. Seven devastated departments mean less to us than devastated New England, New York, and so on. Such pictures may do more harm than good if they are presented and studied for thé purpose of fanning war hatreds and inspiring revenge. It is well, however, to give them occasional seridus thought and to recognize them as the inevitable re- sults of war. Why should it hap- |pen again? —<—_— — | | PHOTOGRAPHERS AND SPOOKS | A reputable photographer and jeditor of American Photography jconfessed at the International Photographic Exposition that he |could not explain all “spirit photo- graphs” materially; but he had been experimenting and never had been able to get a psychic impres- sion upon a plate not previously doctored, There is one difficulty with pho- tography as a means of testing sptr- itism; the process can be inter- |rupted in {ts several stages. The| plate may be defective and un- evenly covered by its film; it may be exposed two or three times with an Anterican syndicate. The Ches- ter concessions, for developing -min-| false forms. gral lands, b they think w ally. They ha’ with other cov ke America their 8; why not with ours, which, as the Turks have al-| independent pictures at the same ‘ways been told, values dollars above everything else? At Lausanne, where there is an- other Near Hast conference under way, and where the United States has’ two official observers, the| Turks are probably due to wake up They will find that, while the| busi r ene A I ernme them, and is ne business thus/the original image. Even the ster- thus explained the possible origin various effects; it may be devel- oped to bring out false lights, even in a number of ways so as to alter eoscopic camera, which takes two moment from slightly different po- sitions, can be used in producing fakes, as the amateurs of the art of photographic falsifications well know. | A number of photographers, both professional and amateur, have of spirit pictures. y ways of cheat solving the problem | Then in the printing railroads, etc.,|the sensitive pager may be exposed Oh SSAAy s ue wie r-: : wae Ge a “« Mi iaagin Byediaems, a, 1.4 Buy 4,000 Sheep KEMMBERER, Wyo., May 2.—Alex and John Bertagnolli of LaBarge, the former of the LaBarge Livestock company, and the latter of the White Mountain Sheep company, both of whom are extensive -ranch operators and experienced - livestock owners, have purchased 4,000 head of fine Rambouillet sheep. The purchase was made at White Sulphur Springs, Mont., and the per head consideration was $15. ‘The sheep arrtved at LaBarge last Saturday and were added to the herds of the two purchasers, after being fed hay for several days before they were trafied out to the range. Both men expect to pay out in their investment within a year. Alex now hee -ap- proximately 9,000 head and John 6,000, Forest Fires Fewer CHEYENNE, Wyo., May 2.—The Medicine Bow, Hayden, Washakie, Shoshone end Big Horn national forests in the state of Wyoming em- brace an area of almost four and one- half million acres. Fire protection has been established to an extent that in recent years the cost of fire | suppression and fire damage has been reduced to comparatively low figures. In 1918 there were forty-six forest fires, covering an area of national forest land burnea o7 12 acres, doing damage of $66 and costing $933. In 1919 there were 65 fires, burning an area of 12,450 acres, damaging to the extent of $104,014, and costing $33,: 247. In, 1920 there were 115 fires, burning over 266 acres, doing dam. age of $1,622 and costing $3,982. In 1921 the number of fires fell to 68, burning over 165 acres and doing damage of $480, fighting the fires costing $1,181. In 1922 there were only 31 fires, burning timber over an area of 109 acres, costing $840 and resulting in damage of $509. The an- nual average on the ve national forests was 65 fires, burning an aver- age of 2,600 acres, doing $21,834 dam- age and costing $8,036 to fight. The forest service has improved in methods of fire fighting and in effect- ing usable fire plans, and though forest officers are keenly alert for smoke during the fire season ahd are prompt in action to prevent fire dem- age, the record is largely due to the residents of the stato who are gen- erally careful with firé. A greater factor even than this, though, is the co-operation on the part of stockmen, settlers end civic associations. Fires can be easily and quickly extin- guished When they are small, and in the past few years many fires have been killed by public-spirited citizens before torest officers knew of their existence, Campers and smokers are now the YOUR 426 East Second St, Tie MAN WHe soucHyT = THE PLACE NEXT DOOR WAS (ON A STEP. LADDER’ SAWING OFF THAT PORTION oF THE TREK WHICH OVERHUNG HIS PROPERTY WHEN BANG SPIED HIM FROM ‘THE BATH ROOM WINPOW, | sequently arrested. chief offenders in carélessness with fire. This should not be the case, for only a very few minutes are neces sary in which ‘to compretety drown with water every ember in a camp fire. Smokers’ fires are purely the result of carelessness or tndifference, and if very smoker will learn never to discard, matches, cigarettes, cigars for tobacco until it is certain they are completely extinguished and thus harmless, the number of fires and re- sultant cost and damage will be very much re@uced, Child Swallows Nickel | BUFFALO, Wyo., May 2.—The In-| fant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred! Martin of Kaycee was hurriedly | brought to Buffalo to be gtven imme-| diate surgical attention. ‘The child) while playing with a nickel had put it in ber mouth and accidently swallowed the coin and it lodged in her throat, The parents after un- successful attempts to remove the nickel rushed tho child to the city where the com was removed from the throat and the little girl| is’ none the worse for the experi once. | sight. ming. $1,250. ane Dry Sleuth in Toils KEMMERER, Wyo., May: 2—James Kukules, who figured in «. sensation at Fossil last August, while employed | as an aide to Carl Jackson in the| federal, prohibition enforcement de-| partment of thie state, wus proven to| be a common, or garden variety of grafter, and on Thursday of last week, was arrested in Seattle and held for Colorado authorities on the charge of having fleeced Charles Brown of Trinidad, and the Garrett Motor company of Pueblo, out of sev- eral hundred dollars, upon false mis- representations. Kukules was arrested when -he ap- peared in Carl Jackson's new head- quarters at Seattle, seeking-to again| be taken under Mr. Jackson's employ and operate in the Northwest. Jack- son had orders from Colorado for sev- -—_ SHOULD DRINK - HILLCREST WATER Ask for Horlick’s The ORIGINAL Malted Milk ‘The Original Food-Drink for All Ages. | Leanne Home,Office&sFountains. | ich Milk, Malted Grain Extract in Pow. der&Tabletforms. Nourishing-No cooking. 8@ Avoid Imitations and Sabstitutes BABY | Phone 1151 ere! “months to arrest Kukules on Detectives and other officials had been searching for Kukules since last January, shortly after he left Wyo- resenting himself to be a prohibition sleuth, he borrowed $650 from the Trinidad man, Pueblo, where he madé a payment on an automobile, which he took with him, and disappeared from sight. In all he is involved to the extent of Le MOM MO He went to Colorado, and rep- and then went to Devoe Mirrolac Stains-in-Varnish Devoe Mirrolac Natura! Varnishes Bevoe Mirrolac Enamels Kukules, working as a federal pro- hibition sleuth, came to Kemmerer last summer, and made the rounds in Wy JUMPS T end paid fints.| First State bank and started the ball Can your furniture withstand the daily damage of living? Constant use of your possessions brings down on tablea‘and dressers a disfigering rain of blows. A hundred articles stab, slash, dent, batter and hack till the wood is pit- ted and marred and thevalue is gone. Devoe Paint and Varnish Products prevent this destruction. They give your farniture a charmed life. Blows are warded off; beautyandtisefulness preserved throughout years of use. John Jourgensen ? Sets a New Mark in _ Closed Car Value All-Year Utility at Open Car Cost 2 The Coach will cost you less than the dpen model of - any car to which you compare Hudson in quality, per- formance and reliability. Yet see how fully it meets your closed car require- ments. With the long, carefree service that only a‘ superlative chassis can give, it provides all essential- closed car utility and comfort. The Coach Met . Instant Success The Coach has a sturd; comfortable. It took buyers by storm. More than 30,000 Coaches are now in service. With the Coach you get the fa- service. mous Super-Six chassis, of which more than 140,000 are in service. Official tests mark it one of the truly, great automobiles, - 7 Topas. Phaeton $1750 Delivered in Casper Second and Yellowstone CASPER, WYOMINO. Coach .. And with its new and improved Su: get the best Hudson ever built. unknown to earlier models. Its reliability and en- durance exc&s even those Hudson: istered upwards of 100,000 miles of service. Respecting its good loo! need no. other assurance: the world’s largest builder of fine cars. You Will Like It per-Six motor you It has a smoothness is which have reg- ks and substantial quality. you e than Hudson’s at as ; ly simplicity. It is delightfull: It is built to stand the hardest tine of Come ride in the Coach, See if it does not full your closed car needs at a saving of $800 to ‘izooe $2475