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PAGE FOUR Casper Sunday Wntered at Casper (Wyoming), Post- office as Second Class Matter, No vember 22, 1916. , EE hasccteet ea ease OY Business Telephone -~--- 15 and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connect- ing All Departments. CHARLES W. BANTON ® President and Editor Advertising Representatives. Prudden, King & Prudden, 1721 Steger Bldg., Chicago, Ill.; 286 Fitt *Ave. New York City; Globe Bidg.. Bor ton, Mass., Suite 44, Sharon Bldg. 55 New Montgomery St., San Fran- cisea, Cal. Copies of the Daily Trib- une are on file in the New York, Chi- cago, Boston and San Franciseo of- fices and visitors are welcome. Member of Aud't Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier or By Mail One Year, I One Year, St Six Months. D: ‘Three Months, T One Month, Daf Sopy all puter ions must be paid in advance and the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscription becomes one month in arrears. <i Cae s Bawa a BN y Only ---- y and Sunday-- 4.50 TRIBUNE'S RAM ‘est of Casper 1 completed at THE CAS F Irrigation proj {& be authorized a eK complete and scientific zoning system for ths city of Casper. “A comprehensive municipal and school recreation park system, in cluding swimming pools for the children of Casper. chijompletion of the established boulevard as planned y ommissioners to rden C « Falis and return Better roads for Natrona county and more highways for Wyoming. More equitable freight rates tor shippers of the Rocky Mountain region and more frequent train service for Casper. t GERMAN WAR LOSSES The publication in Berlin of the official statistics of the Germen war dead reveals Germany as the greatest loser in the war, so far as the number of her are concerned. The Berlin list numbers 1,846,280 dead, including 56,133 officers and officials, 212,069 noncommissioned and warrant officers, and 1,572,- 523 enlisted men, with 5,563 men upon whose ranks no report is made. Of the combatant powers, Russia stands next with @ loss that has been estimated at 1,700,000 killed. French losses es reported totaled 1,885,300 killed. The loss to the British empire in killed has een placed at 692,065, while Italy Jost, killed in action, or as @ result of wounds, approximately 500,000 of her sons. Though her total loss in lives is somewhat larger than that of France, Germany has not suffered es much proportionally to her pop- ulation as her chief antagonist. With a population in 1914 of up- wards of 65 millions, end with en annual surplus of population of many hunfreds of thousands, she was in a better position to stand a loas of 1,800,000 than France, with @ populetion lem than 40 millions, and @ birth rete virtually station- ary, could epare the loss of 1,385,- 300 able-bodied males. Though one of the victors in that struggle, France has had to pay more gen-. erowely than any other of the prin- cipal powers in that most valuable = carnage of all, the lives of ber citi- zene. ———- POINCARE TASTES HIS OWN MEDICINE The French army of 26,000 men {m Byria, to which M. Poincare ia hastily sending) 20,000 reinfprce- ments, feces @ Turkish army which Frenchmen helped to train, advise and arm. The French government which last September left the Brit- ish to face the Turks alone at Cha- =)nak is today asking the British to =‘relieve the pressure in Syria by massing troops in Mesopotamia. There is a certain ironic justice in this dramatic reversal After nll, it was something less than hon- orable to make a sectet treaty with Angora behind the back of Great Britain. It was something less than honorable to help arm ex-enemy troops that were threatening the troops of France's ally. something less than honorable to leave the British in peril in Cha- nak The Poincare government played this underhand game with the Turks in the hope of consessions and a atic triumph over Lloyd Geor But the Turks have ho prejudices. They would just as soon sell out the French as any one else. And M. Poincare can bardly complain, He is tasting his pwn medicine eAEE ES ce RELIGIOUS REVOLUTION IN RUSSIA If previous experience is any t is altogether improbable at correspondents writing from| n or Moscow know what is go- Ing on inside Ru: foubtful whet Mos It is very r correspondents in position to get events so stu- are ir . s th e ie 3) Russia with its Polish connecttons, 2 {know that its leaders have never though the issue of treason was in- volved, the outer world on the gen- eral grounds of humanity has rea- son to pass judgment. But on the much more complicated-question of the schism in the Greek Orthodox church and of the relation to this of the Roman Catholic church in it is best to wait and to try to un- derstand. In these matters Russia is historically much more like Eu- rope before Martin Luther than like Western Europe in the twentieth \century. Nor is it wise to mistake the an- tics of the Communist youth 4 Moscow or the Communist doctrin- aires as a true picture of what is happening in Russia. Wie iknow that the old Russian church was the \spiritual arm of czardom. We reconciled themselves to the fall of! the autocracy. We know that with- jin the Russian curch, out of the lower orders of the clergy, has come a schism much more {<vorable to the revolutionary government. \We can hardly doubt that the lead- ers of the Roman Catholic church! have foreign and probably Polish | political connections. | What the issue is to be no man {ean tell. Organized religion in Rus- sia will certainly survive, but whe- ther it will be politically red, white or neutral is now apparently the great question. Bo THE RUNNER’S HEART The cardiac condi\ion supposed to affect athletes, especially mara- thon runners, has been called harm- jlews by Dr. Mackenie of the Univer- tity of Pennsylvania. And now| three doctors have suggested a si- milar conclusion after examining |the contestants in the marathon Face recently held in Boston. Test of lung power and X-ray photo- graphs of the runners’ hearts failed |to show the dilation and weakness of the “athletic heart.” In fact, Drs.} Levine, Girdon end Wilmaers re- port, the hearts of thesq athletes tended to contract as a result of the race. Opposed to this view of a much discussed physical effect is the statement made by the Medical Record of New York in 1920, com- menting on the Olympic games of that year. That journal noted the \symptoms of d=xtion and “runa- way heart” in the long distance men! land explained the collapse of Rudd Morning Tribune cuti¢n of the Vicor General, even ———————> LIVE. NEWS from WYOMING Items and Articles About Men and Events Throughout the State Reserve Beautified ‘THERMOPOLIS, Wyo., May 5— Superintendent J. F. Devine, of the State Reserve, on which the mineral! hot water springs are located, has a force of men at work beautifying the grounds, planting additional shrub- bery and trees and setting out flow- ers on the terrace between the hot water lakes and falls where the water of the springs and lakes drops over the high bank into Big Horn river. The tennis court, located in front of the 200 containing many specimens of Rocky mountain animals, is in the midst of a woderful garde of flowers on the west and south aides of the court and along the east side a row of shrubbery is being planted. The| court faces a street on the north, This gives the tennis ground a most beautiful setting. Hotel, rooming and apartment house proprietors ars busy with paint brushes, planting flowers, ad- ding to the extensive lawn: making other improvements Prospects are that the celebrated hot springs and) lakes will be lost in a| wilderness of fiowers. The amusement places are also spruc'ng up for the summer's bus!- ness. The Star and Washakie plunges have engaged orchestras for thelr open alr dances which will commence on May 30. The plunges have been painted a spotless white inside and the exterior edges of the buildings are fringed with flowers. Already there are many visitor at the springs and the chamber o commerce estimates, from inqulrie: received, that the crowds will be greater this year than ever before in the history of the springs. oun hth eset Fg Ball League Organized RAWLINS, Wyo., May 4.—Even the recent return of winter weather has failed to dampen the ardor of lo cal baseball fans. Emptoyes of the Union Pacific are the latest to tak. up the cry “play ball.” The Wyoming Union Pacific league has now completed its organizat o and a schedule of games has beer worked out between Laramie, Raw lina, Green River and Evanston Dates have been so arranged tha each team will play every other gam on the home grounds. Organization of the Wyoming Union Pacific league was complete: & meeting held recently !n this city 4 the cities in the organization were represented as follows: Evanr ton, J. Sidney Smith; Laramie, R. C. Ful'er; Rawlins, John C. Gunning: Green River, Joe. D. Havens. |and Campbell as heart failure. In the face of these opposite opistons it i¢ interesting to suggest ent fame, seem to make no great |preparation for their tests; their |hearte probably have not been over-! developed by long periods of strain.| At the other end of the scale is the jathlete who trains arduously, through four years of high school and then four years of college, ending hie eight years of physical effort at one blow when he goes! into business. His heart later will) probably show the effects of its un- equal life. Dr. Mackenie does net deny that young athletes and old ex-athlietes may injure their hearts by too sud- den and violent exercise. The in-| complete report of the three doc- tors in Boston reveals that the mar- athon race did have some effect on the runners’ hearts. This effect may or may not have resembled what has passed under the name of ‘“ath- letic heast.’’ real reason that « prolonged strain without due preparation will do in our chests. They are not yet something to the vital mechanism ready to throw over a previous con- |viction that danger to the heart \does actually exist in some kinds of athletics. = — ALLEGORY IN JAIL The action of a Philadelphia! judge in sentencing a man who had pleaded guilty to driving while in-| |toxicated, to remain 4n the county prison until he had read and studied Bunyan’s ‘“‘Pilgrim’s Progress,” may \have been taken because he thought| It was jthe book a particularly appropriate | the juice will be paid for by the city. gala Bite! own aet ta jone to be pondered on in durance vile. It was written by a jailed thinker, hence may be read with| profit by a jailed motorist. This may have been the judge’s reasoning. Otherwise, the one time classic is not so appropriate. The} |theme of the book, progress, is not| jone that needs to be hammered into| most motorists. They need not so| much Christian’s example as the! example of less worthy characters |in the great allegory, who tarried and hastened not. eA SE Nene | Violators Warned | LARAMIE, Wyo., May 5.—Frank J. Keefe, atar motor vehicle inspec- | | tor, who has been tn the c'ty for the | past week, departed for the western part of the state this afternoon | During his stay hore Mr. Koefo has | persuaded between 80 and 90 motor: ints to take out 1023 loenses. f arrests were made or fines nfl f the law pert 1 license plat igoroualy dealt with, that some runners like Ray of pres-}three Union Pacific teams formed a But the majority of} oe, 5 physichans believe for seemingly ridge Near Com- James H. Ballard, secretary of the local Shop Employes associat!on stated this week that there would be Rawlihe and that the best out of the twenty-seven would bx chosen for the league nine. The three local teams to start the season are: The Pipe Shop team, the Ma chine Shop team and the Boiler Shop eam, players Che Casper Sundap Horning Cribune To Complete Road AFTON, Wyo., May 4.—The federal government through the forest ser- vice has made an appropriation to cover the cost of construction of a highway through the scenic wonder- jand, the Grand Canyon of Snake River from Alpine to Jackson, Wyom- ing. This stretch of road will be nineteen miles long and will form a connection with the famous Hoback cayon route to Yellowstoe park. ‘When this road is compieted the Te- |ton Pass will be eliminated. The buniding of this road means | much to Montepeller and the Bear | Lake section in that, it will shorten the Bresent route from Salt Lake and | Utah points by way of Logan canyon, | Montpelier and Star Valley by ap- proximately forty-four miles, which between her pon; will give this route preference over any other route to the park from Utab and the east. Besides shorten- ing the distance, it will open up one of the most picturesque routes in the entire west, and will naturally draw thousands of tourists through his sec | tion of the state. It will mean a fin- ished highway from Salt Lake to | Yellowstone as funds have been pled- ged in Star Valley to take care of that part of the road which passes through the valley. Race Ends Fatally BIG TIMBER, Wyo., May: 4.— Grace Wilder, 14, only chila of Mr. | and Mrs. L. J. Wilder, 3 miles south of this city, was fatally injured by a fall from a pinto pony, dying 20 minutes later, as the result of a race 4 an automobile. HOTEL NEW.YORK CITY Near Riverside Drive’ Central Park, Theatres and Shopping Sections Single room and bath # Singleroom, running water MARSEILLES Broadway at 103d St. (Subway Express Station at Door) Double room, bath $5 per dag Handsome suites of 2, 3rooms Dinner de Luxe $1.85 served in Blue Room and Grill Exceptional Orchestra M. P. MURTHA, Men IS NOW OPEN 1105 SOUTH POPLAR The Popular Bakery Full line of all kinds of breads, rolls, pies and pastry. Give us a trial. Walter McEowen Free Candy for boys and girls teday. FOR BUSINESS STREET—PHONE 2290 Adventists to Meet DOUGLAS, Wyo.— Arrangements are being made to entertain the state convention of Seventh Day Adven- tists which is to be held in this city commencing on June 20 and con- tinuing until the first of July. The Comrounity club has been asked to assist in securing sultable camping grounds for those who attend and care to camp out. About two hun: dred fifty delegates are expected to be here representing all sections of the state. A special meeting of the board of governors of the Community club was held last Tuesday evening at which time the communication from the conference wes taken up. pletion DOUGLAS, Wyo., May 4.—The in @'cations are that travelers over tht The Ring Suit That Will Her ‘ Is just such a ring as we exhibit. The mod- ern girl demands more in the setting of a diamond than did the girl of yesteryear and we have made a successful effort to put in stock the type of ring she demands. Yellowstone highway will be using the new bridge across the Platte river here within the next few weeks. Exce'lent progress is being made. and there remain but three spans on which to pour the cement. The bal ance of the work should require no great length of time and it {8 believed at the bridge will be completed by o Yirst of the coming month or very shortly thereafter. ‘The bridge is one of the largest of its kind in the country and will be one of the greatest improvemen4 yet made by the state highway de: partment. Electric Ughts will be in stalled by the’ Community club and t the Escapes Election WHEATLAND, Wyo., This ts the first spring since the {ncorporat!on of Wheatland in which the exclte- ment of a city election {is missing. This altuation ensues from the action of the sixteenth Wyoming assembly in 1921, which passed a law provid ing that in towns with between 1,000 and 4,000 inhabitants, the mayor should be elected for a period of two years and councilmen for four years. The law went tnto full operation last year, when Mayor Natwick was jelected for two years, and the conn- cilmen were elected for four years. a Radio Is Installed MANVILLE, Wyo., May 4.—The Masonic lodge has fnstalled a radio recetving set in the lodge room and intends to invite the public to enjoy the radio programs. FOR SALE. house lot tn price of ng lot; als I me and evening Phone JEWELER Casper. JOS. I. SCHWARTZ A Real Homeseeker’s OPPORTUNITY To have a home of their own—right on the Salt Creek Pavement, Lots 60x120 at the Low Price of $10.00 Down ‘And $10 Per Month Until $100 Is Paid. These lots are all under proposed frrigation ditch, Buy direct from the owner and save commission. E. L. RICHARDSON On the ground 4:30 every evening and all day Sunday TRIS BUILDING only four miles from YOU ARE AS YOUNG SUNDAY, MAY 6, 1923. AS YOUR ARTERIES SCLEROSIS—or hardening of the arteries—starts early in some people because they do not drink enough pure, soft water. Kidney troubles, backache, liver troubles, stomach trouble, bowel trouble, headaches and many other ail- ments can be cured permanently by drinking plenty of pure, soft Hill Crest Water The State College Has Analyzed This Water and Found It To Be Unsurpassed For Purity And Softness, Your System Needs Flushing KEEP YOUR HEALTH. FEEL FULL OF PEP AND ENERGY. Your success depends upon your physical and mental condition. ‘ Dfink two glasses of pure, soft Hill Crest Water before breakfast and six glasses during the day: \ The more you drink, the better you feel. BUSINESS MEN Your employes will do better work if they drink plenty of water and so will you—order a cooler for your office and a case for your home NOW! : 426 E. Second St. ° Phone 1151