Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 23, 1923, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE SOCIATED ts exclusively cation of ntatives dian: 't Advertising Represet King & ISCRIPTION RAT rier or By Mail 2 nda: advanc not ins’ becomes one hick If You Don't Get Your Tribune c or 16 m. if you fail to 18. A paper wil mes he delivered to you by specia —_————________—*' | siznment and ordering new ones] aD THE CASPER TRIBU? PROGRAM ' tion project west of Casper rte ant r a completed at one complete and actentific zoning he city of Casper. municipal and sark system, In pools for the system for A compr school cluding sw children of Casper. Meaplation of the established Scenic Route boulevard as planned by the county commissioners to Garden Creek Falls and return Better roads for Natrona county ays for Wyoming. Mountain frequent train The following editorial from the needs no com indictment it ads: v explanation before the investigating committee of his lack of preventive action in connec- tion with the Herrin massacre may be satisfactory to his apologists. we doubt that it will be satisfactory to relatives or friends of the score of murdered men, to the decent mi- nority in Williamson county, or to the ci ns of Illinois who feel that} they have been stained by this stain upon the state. | “The duty of maintaining peace d order in any community rests first upon the officials of that rommunity When they break state, and ' mm it rests upon primarily upon the governor. In the Herrin tragedy the chief local law enforcement officer, the sheriff, was immediately responsibe. Elected by the miners, he not only failed to preserve peace and order, but in effect pl o the hands of the murderous mob. It became evident ery early in the strained situation there that he would not or could ‘tion. “Gov. Small had information to} that effect. It then automatically | became his duty to see that peace | was preserved. He now explains that ‘Col. Hunter did all he knew w to do to prevent riots,’ and that ‘the department is not to blame for| ed’ Such explanation to clear the state onsibility. | what happe' is not suffici ministration of r are plain. The local mson county prov- ness or inability The governor was nd ad the por 1 the responsi the local autho’ z to do. Despite t more than a score of men were bru murdered The gc self-approval of his o n cannot get him or his “MADE IN GERMANY” 16 y time between | | will be acclaimed everywhere. he Casper Daily WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1923 gion Auxiliary, which organization "Mhe Jj claims the honor of first starting to make them as a tribute to our sol- diers who gave their all “In Flan- S ders Fields.” le Scorpions “ee JI DONT SEE How “THAT Boy CAN STAND IT. iN THERE, So far as is known, this is the| - only instance which has come to P public attention of German-made i poppies to commemorate the deaths of Americans whom Germans killed. The sounding words of Lieut. Col. John McRae sing in the memory: 7 “If ye break faith with us who die, We shall not sleep, though poppies grow In Flanders Fields.” | German-made poppies in Ameri- can lapes, in memory of American| graves! The idea is distinctly not appealing. Too much hysteria was loosed throughout the war, of course, and immediately after the |war concerning some things Ger- man and German-American. Even| after the close of hostilities con-| certs by great artists were some-| times cancelled because those art- ists were of German extraction— not because they were anti-ally dur- ing the war. That was stupid hys- teria. To condemn a great musi- cian for something which was no fault of his was intolerant in the ex- treme. When German opera was taboo in New York it was still be- ing sung in London. The English are more sane than we in this re- g But this issue of “Made in| Germany” poppies is another mat-| ter entirely. Jt hits too close to} ecent sentiment. The action of} he Towa post in burning this con- wt EYE VERSUS EAR Thomas A. Edison believes that} the educ or can appeal more suc- Club. 2 $ 1 ~ | county jail. ‘The daughter short- time to be hit by a loose By Fontaine Fox| Form Wool Pool PTA Ee, ce RL ORet che ae ee, A subsequent search of the Bewick| close to the rail and was forced to KEMMERER, Wyo. May 23.—|PFemises revealed many articles of/ watch the train of sixty-fve ca Loa Gradually the wool pool established) *PP#rel identified by the Hoskins firm.| pass over him. This happened on a Sitti Tanosin'Gounte “wack Gesweak Manager McMastere of the J. C.| north bound train near Angora, Neb. enney company store, and other) ————————___ association 1s taking hold, and this| (enrey Company store onde year it is believed nearly all the flockmasters of Lincoln county and western Wyoming will be identified 7 2 in the modern plan of securing an Has Narrow Escape ft « equitable and just market for the im- ; He's OUTTA portant product of this region. GUERNSEY, Wyo. May 23.— ‘At the wool growers’ meeting in| Herchel Coleman, Burlington brake- VSG (NG Pate? THE SECRET UNDERGROUND EXIT &sAvep Eo01e. SIMS WHEN THe TRUANT OFFICER CORNERED HIM IN THE CLUB AND CONERED UP THE STOVE PIPE. To SMOKE HIM OUT. eb THERE LONG} .| Cokevilfe recently it was mutually SINCE agreed that members would not dis- pose of their wool this year without getting in touch with their banker and with the officers of the associa- tion for the purpose of securing latest advice on sales and offers through- would be held in Cokeville at 2 p. m., Saturday, June 16, for-the purpose of discussing thoroughly the subject of the disposition of the wool clip, the wool pool and the uses of bonded warehouses. It is expected that buyers will be on hand at this meeting to inspect the wools that are ready for sale. A few years ago there was no such thing as a wool pool in Wyoming. Wool buyers were to be seen on every side, taking the individual flockmas- ters off into a corner and telling him how tha market was “shot,” and finally, through a great deal of palayer, secure his clip at the lowest possible price, But since the wool pools have come into popular favor instance higher prices than the indi- vidual buyer could get have ‘been forthcoming. ‘he Wool Growers’ association of- ficials all advocate the pool system, which {s the twentleth century plan of collective barg: protection the grower has on the market, pak Catch Woman Shop- lifter ERER, Wyo., May 23.—Mrs. A wick, wife of a local car penter, was arrested as she was leav- _?> KEMM BE. cessfully to the sense of sight than to that of hearing. Testfying be- fore the federal trade commission, the myentor emphasized the educa- tional value of motion pictures by saying that he thought that from 80 to 90 per cent of all impressions reached the brain through the eye. Apparently he referred to the case of children. He tuld of making y years ago pictures showing SPRIN Kinne n showed in y were pre- of the most phonograph, would not be expected 4 (reiwnt : Later he. wai to underrate the importance of sound as a means of conveying ideas. The phonograph has been widely used for educational pur- poses, such as instruction in the) Juno 30, pronunciation of foreign languages.) | While serv pute fent foe ved Nevertheless, the inventor banks on, V0" Raciic he had Atte. business, the eye rather than the ear. Later he became interested in the There. is room for both, without! sheep bu th John W. Donnel- dot thout encroachment! 4”. cashler of a Salt Lake City bank. 2 ree years he lived alone at > printed page, which remains ‘sicep camps. Ha invested in Salt on agent. It was whil 8 capacity that he met « t Crokston, a rings girl. ‘They were mar old cathedral at Salt Lake on t Pioneer Dies | consiaerea a good employe. - well known in this section, a eer resident of} ™ the barber's trad in Guernsey ing the B.-F.-H. store, charged with shoplifting, and through this arrest, local merchants believe they have finally unraveled a mystery that has kept them guessing for many months, during which time hundreds of dol- lars worth of merchandise has been stolen. Suspicion had been directed toward Mrs. Bewick, and Wednesday when she and her. daughter entered the Hoskins store, a trap was laid, and she was seen to take three night His only relatives] gowns, valued at nearly $40 from the Cha: and Pete Argeros. under her coat, Sheric Oakley was vices will be held this| close by and met her at the door. rnoon and interment made in was accompanied by her daugh Hartville cemetery ter, and the pair were taken to the; history of the! r n carly said Mr Angeles last week) re all very imitative es of three weeks. likely to remem n in County} t i it be- September 1846 ' 1 Minnesota, and ‘& hele ae Who-} tion He arrived in| tion picture in- n the early 70°s, t powerfu he vas employed “for sa tine t- present.” ctor on the Union Pa-| Aine aE ! came from there to Rock Springs, where he worked £s for most purposes the quickest, the) Lake property, and, though his city most accessible and the most gener-| interests required much of his time, al voftinutraictare | he gave his personal attention to his |camps at shearing and shipping um ON THE CIGARETTE Mr. Kinney was a member of the It interesting to observe, in| !ower house of the Wyoming terri- Aue 4 s '\ torial legislature of 1877, being the view of such laws as exist in Kan-| popresentative from Sweetwater coun and a few other states, not to| ty, He intreduced the first bill pro- ntion the occasional outbursts of construction of & state the Dr. Peases and others of the re-| Be Spneoee: ; ‘A ; was ted county com form element, that statistics prove Routers Derishtiate mars the average span of human life is! jing as chairman of the board. Previ increasing almost as fast as the in-| ously he had served for two years as creasing consumption of the much-| Pesitentlary commissioner for the maligned cigarette. Ho wae president of the First Na Statistics can be made to prove! tional bank of Montpelier for 14 years, anything—and usually are. And it) resigning recently He was still one is no part of the. Tribune's conten-/ of (he directors at the time of his death tion to strive and show that there| “"l),” opgenizea the First National is something of longevity in smok-| pank of Rock Springs, which he éold ing cigarettes. The cigarette is not, to Cosgriff Bros. Afterward, he be what Ponce de Leon was looking| ®#me connected with the Rock | Springs National bank, of which he for, perhaps; but neither is it what] © a eanibiebel Hey tled the fanatics say it is. Kinney was for many years Figures furnished by the federal) manager of the Kinney Mercantile government, which as yet is not company at Rock Spring: He was ; alle i - ) president of the Dougherty Shoe controlled by propaganda-mendi-| ¢oripany of Portland. At one he was cants for or against—show that} counted among the largest individual five billion cigarettes are consumed| sheep owners of America. monthly in the United States. That s wife died about 30 years agc teaniandode’ ineredietoves tthe ; her life she was actively in Ae} He iho m °, 2 terested in Catholic church cir in mber consumed twenty, ten, or k Springs and Mr, Kinney has five years ago. Thirty or a number of endowments upon ars ago the cigarette was church in her memory. —_ uboo everywhere. | of the Health Commis Coal to Ships New York state, recently : i, prove that the a Wyo, May 23.— on of human life has in-| xcomme steps to the front about fourteen years in ©, in the near fu ars. New York| ture. of the of coal for the taken as typi-| 8Us® Pacific liners, that arrive and ae 3 depart at Seattle, owned mostly t it has almost a! Japaneso corporations. ‘The Paciti ‘ population of the| Coal company, which is opening 1 and becauaactt ts beth mine below Oakley, has thi large ¢ ‘act - prennna rural, metropolitan and cosmopol > an ¢€ nt true of very few tates Mine Mucker Killed | > as 6 UNRISE, May 23.—Nick ris, much » Sunrise mina t y is not . was fatally { at work ‘in i t under 5 of the 1 grown xt oe. He w i no f f f dum 1 OM an unpretentious daily out- under thoroughly organized methods put tothe necessity of atwenty-four of economies, results in a lower pro- hour a day year-round production duction cost per tire, without curtail- schedule to meet the demand is the ment of quality; and these substantial achievement of this modern rubber savings redound to the benefit of plant. Naturally this volume,produced Vacuum Cup Tire buyers, PENNSYLVANIA RUBBER CO. OF AMERICA, INC. ‘Jeannette, Pa. ; LIBERTY GARAGE — South Elm Streét jcar of a moving train. Sixty-five out the country, and that a meeting the buyers have dealt with organiza-| tions of wool growers, and in every| ning, and the only| e three cousins,| silk counter and deftly place them| man running into Guernsey, had a harrowing experience last week when he fell between the engine and! first cars passed over him while he lay with his face upward expecting at Gulbransen Piano New and up-to-date This sturdy little piano guar- anteed for ten years Only $285.00 See it and let us arrange terms to please you The Chas. E. Wells Music Co. “Home of the Chickering” 232 E. Secend St. Phone 194 Spotless Walls Fuller Wall Brush For cleaning wall \ M duper, cots Tetoerde det | MONUMENTS handle. || CASPER MONUMENT WORKS Watch for the Fuller Man, or telephone for |] 505 E. Second St. .Casper, Wyo- him to come any day you wish, ask him Robert Simpson, Prop. to bring me along. M. C. YEAGER Phone 1852 H P. O. Box 1805 j @) NOTICE i Dectors Keith and Har-}! vey have moved their of-]) fices to rooms in the Kim-]} ball Block over Wray’s Cafe. Phone 30. BEAL BAKERY 939 South Cedar Phone 328-W Wholesale Only ~ Bakery Goods of All Kinds TO THE KIDDIES Ask Your Mother to Try . Our American Beauty Bread A Prize With Each Loaf Building Materials We are equipped with the stock to supply your wants in high grade lumber and build- ers’ supplies. Rig timbers a specialty. KEITH LUMBER CO. DISTRIBUTORS Casper, Wyo. HIGH CLASS SALESMEN WITH CARS Who know how to sell real estate, and who will only be interested in our proposition after they know of See Mr. Winkels SUITE 103, BECKLINGER BLDG. se <9 GENUINE [4 BUTTER-NUT St BREAD © Rich as Butter—Sweet as ‘a Nut? Wyoming Baking Co. $22,% American Legion Auxiliary DANCE BENEFIT DISABLED VETERANS Government Hospital at Sheridan, Wyo. ARKEON, MAY 23, 1923 Admission 25c TRAIN SCHEDULES Westbound Afrives § No. 603_. F: stbound— Departs . 8:00 p. m. Departs 8:55 p.m. . Departs 245, p.m. the real merits, its splendid selling possibilities and the high standing of the firm making this offer. ; o ee

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