Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 28, 1923, Page 6

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PAGE SIX. 4 : The Casper Sunday Morning Tribune are not to be found in any artificial arrangements, important as these| may be as facilities; that it is the disposition of people that counts. | Any sort of contrivance will fail if| peoples are not disposed to peace,| or are not able to find’ ground for| belief in each other. It is idle to talk ‘of proscribing war unless the | peoples are intent on maintaining | peace. | “If those who are keenly desirous of enduring peace will descend to the contemplation of realities, it) | will be seen that there is only one way to the goal—a long and diffi- cult’ way—that is by the cultivation | of the spirit of friendship and good will among the peoples through | which alone the sources of danger- ous strife can be dried up. If you find anywhere in the world, as for exampe in the case of our relations __—__* _____ | to our neighbor to the north, a com- STON ET | plete assurance of lasting peace, it --$9.00 | is not because of treaties or politi- - 2.5? | cal arrangements of any sort; it is mply because the roots of amity :75| strike deep in the thoughts and con- te pala ‘in| Victions of both peoples.”” Tribune will) These are as instructive and timely truths as have been uttered Daily Tribune issuee and The Sunday Morn- Sunday, at Caspe: n offices, Trib- Postoffice. Class Matter, 22, 1918. change Connect- rtments. ANTON Editor Ww and CHARLI Presi¢ nt Representatives. udden, 1720-23 11; 286 Fifth be Bldg... Bos- Advertis! Prudden une are on file 1 cago, Boston and fices' and visitors are Ww Member of the Associate Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) SUBSCR and Sunda nad Sunday 2 fons must e D: {ter subscription spams |in many a day, The surest road to jet Your Tribun’| peace—in fact the only road—lies i {you fail to| in the cultivation of goodwill and pune. A paper wl) friendship founded on mutual self- oy pecial x by special Mfr | respect. - To rely on these artificial m. Tribune your carrié:/ contrivances of which the secretary misses yOu. of state makes mention, is to build —< [|S "| one’s hopes on shifting sands. Bet-| ter the facts than a theory which} does violence to them. THE CASPER TRIBUNE'S ROGRAM Irrigation project west of Casper to be authorized and completed at once. A complete and acientific zoning system for the city of Casper. A comprehensive municipal an HARDING WORLD COURT PLAN ASSURED | According to statistics recently | compiled and illustrated graphically in @ prominent eastern paper, Pres- Che Casper Daily Cribune Aunt Eppie Hogg, the Fattest Woman Aunt Eppie iNTENDS fo CARRY A Pocket FLASHLIGHT FROM Now oN FoR USE WHENEVER HER SHOE coMes UNTIED. Ly, ; Fok MeRinmete Satie. foe M: in Three Counties. = school recreation park system, in- cluding swimming pools for the children of Casper. Mompletion of the established Scenic Route boulevard as planned by the county commissioners to Garden Creek is and return. Better roads for Natrona county and more highways for Wyoming. More equitable freight rates for shippers of the Rocky Mountain region and more frequent train service for Casper. [a SSS nee A CZARIST PLOT Mr. John Steele reports on the eredit of a Russian of high stand- ing, not connected with Russian politics, that plans to restore the ezardom by means of any army former German officers are known to him and have been reported to| the entente governments. The re-| port is plausible, for indeed the} wonder is not that there should be monarchist reactions in central and eastern Europe but that they have been so few and ineffectual. If Mr. Steele’s informant is not deceived, it is proposed an army of 170,000, composed of highly train- ¢d men, shall cross the frontier, | take, if possible, Petrograd or Kronstadt, and thus in possession of a base and essential material ex- pects to overthrow the soviet and| ect up a new czar. To the ci n a force of 170,000 men seems feeble compared to the army supposed to be at the com- @and of Trotzky, a million and a half organized and an enormous re- serve. But 170,000 highly expert soldiers would be a body unique in the history of war, and if it had full| technical equipment and ammuni- tion it would represent a military power far out of proportion to its numbers. It is interesting to note that such an army, if it exists as described, would be precisely the sort of force which German and other military theorists were pre- dicting. The war of great armies, they said, is past. The armies of| the future will be small, highly trained bodies, with each soldier an| expert capable of handling any arm or of doing any of the highly tech- niéal tasks of the modern soldier. Such a force, says a veteran of the late war, if well equipped and supplied, would cut through the Red army like a knife through a cheese. WHY WARS OCCUR Secretary Hughes’ remarks in| Washington before the delegations} attending the Ni Conference of Social Workers deserves to be read and meditated upon by every person who cleaves to the illusion that it is possible to abolish war from the world by mechanical con- Himself a tireless labor- neyard of peace, a states-| has contributed in no} small degree to reduce the number of possible causes of international Mr. Hughes nevertheless is! n an observer of men and to believe that war can be the waving of any trivances. er in the man who trouble, too ke affa I € The cause of war lies ¢ i in human nature. The ‘ > fight, in men as well as in pe primal instinct, and the 5 of war can never il the seeds of odwill shall have among nations, and h t t 1 nes in his Washing: it appears t ore upon essential conditions more clearly | does not seem that they will have | political hermit-crabs seem to be in ident Harding’s plan to have the United States join the world court | is certain as the count in the Unit- ed States senate now stands. A chart published along with the fig- ures indicate that both senators from Minnesota, Nebraska and Massachusetts are doubtful; that one senator from Washington, Mon- tana, Illinois, North Dakota, Texas, | Indiana Pennsylvania and Georgia is doubtful; that one senator from} California Idaho, North Dakota,| Missouri, Iowa, Wisconsin, Tennes-| see Connecticut, New Hampshire, is! against; and that both senators from Oregon, Nevada, Wyoming,| Utah, Arizona, ew Mexico, Colo- rado, Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas,| Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama,| Kentucky, Florida, North and South| Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Ohio, New York, Michigan, Ver-| mont, Maine, New Jersey, Mary- land, and Rhode Island are for. The count in the senate stands at present: Rep. Dem. Total) In favor of the court: ..---- S7a Se 78 Against court. 7 2 Doubtful of 6 13 (One Vacancy). The irreconcilables thus appear, numerically at least, to be what President Wilson was wont to call a “little group of wilful men;” though it must be remembered ‘that the “little group” is considerably smaller than that which used to an- noy the late war executive. Far from conceding defeat, they are prepared to make a bitter fight on the court, The Hi Johnsons and the Moseses can usually be counted on to make a bitter fight. But with the figures as they appear now, it much chance. This alignment of the senate is bad news for those who oppose any form of participation in world af- fairs for the United States. The for a tough season. BARKING UP THE WRONG TREES The Socialist party of America is holding a national convention in New York City and accusing Com- munists and Soviet Russia for the fact that its total membership has fallen from 118,000 in 1919 to 12,- 474 in 1923. “We have been flirt- ing with Soviet Russia long enough” declares Editor Cohan of the Jew- ish Forward. But more than the defections of| Communists, more than the “dis- mal failure” of Lenin and Trotzky, more than the “persecutions under legal methods” given by Algernon Lee as a cause of the empty ranks faced by the convention, we would mention the hostile position taken efforts of the United States when it entered the world war. A socialism which ean sympa-| thize with an alien imperialism in a great world struggle invites what has overtaken the Socialist party of America, In the long run the de- fection of those who left it on ac- count of its war attitude in 1917 and 1918 is a more serious matter than its recent losses upon the ex- treme left | Lives After Long Fall , Hit in Head by Wrench! CODY, Wyo., May 28.—Rhode Ver- non had a miraculous escape from| V. Fisher, employed at the Mutual! penitentiary. Mannaux was -| instant death when he fell nearly 150| refinery, had a narrow escape from ie to cal away from peti eslig ah ball Block over Wray’s feet down the almost perpendicular] death, when a combination wrench! was just disappearing through a door;| Cafe. Phone 30. walls of the Shoshone canyon. and drift pin fem from the scaffold) when a knife hurled by the cook |)———_——-_-—s| Vernon, who is employed at the| of a pressure still, the sharp point| struck him in the leg, Inificting a| —————— Cody bakery, in company with George] striking him in the forehead, just| painful wound and one that may| a aes Edwards left Cody on a fishing trip| piercing the bone and entering the| cripple the man for life. | in the canyon, and upon arriving at| brain cavity. Had the point struck @ point about 4 mile east of the first | him on the top of the head the heavy unnel at about 6:00 a. m., parked] instrument doubtless wo i i uss to the river bed over the trail that leads downward at that point Vernon was {n the lead, and as he Jumped off the wall about three feet high onto a ‘lat rock that sloped t rd the river, he lost his balance and falling over backward landed on his head upon an immense rock some 0 feet below, from where he rolled nd fell down the face of the cliff, sustaining four or five separate falls f from 20 to 30 feet until he finally landed at the river bank six feet from the water in a pile of jagged rocks and boulders. George Edwards, who had stood horror stricken and watched Vernon fall apparently to his death, hurried down the trail to the river, expecting to find the lifeless remains of his friend. Upon reaching the river, Edwards found Vernon lying in a heap on his face, and though unconscious, still breathing. After making him as com fortable as possible, Mr. Edwards clambered up the steep trail as rapid. ly_as possible for ald and assistance Me secured a man at the road camp in the canyon about the time that two cars arrived on the scene in which were George Gollehan, Roy Johnson, Sibyl Wilson, Imo Baglin Glen Borron and William O'NetIl and the rescue party hurried to the in- jured man. It took the six men nearly thirty minutes to get the unconscious Ver- non up to the road, he was at once brought to Cody where Doctor True- blood made a hurried examination and called Doctor Whitlock of Powell GLENROCK, Wyo., May 28—Fred mstant death, Fisher was attended by Dr. Callo- way, who, upon finding that the skull| had been slightly his removal to a Casper hospital. At last accounts the injured man was speedily recovering, Given 2-Year Sentence DOUGLAS, Spencer, cook at the Clayton tank arm, who was charged with cutting mM pleaded guilty to the charge and was sentenced by Judge Brown to a term of not less than two nor more than two and a half years in the state POWELL, Wyo., May 28|—Powell this year is maintaining fourteen school busses and two wagons and | are transporting 525 pupils at a total cost of approximately $18,000. > fractured, advised Jewelry and watcn repairing by ex: pert watchman; all work guaranteed, Casper Jewelery Mfg. Co. O- SBldg. te Wyo., May 28.—Jess ‘When Morocco's sultan decides to| marry, the whole country becomes) shrouded in gloom, as every subject altercation, must contribute a wedding present in an 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. in consultation which resulted in tak- ing Vernon to the Powell hospital where a thorough examination dis closed a fractured skull, a badly lacerated face and numerous bruises, but no broken bones, undoubtedly due to the fact that Vernon was ren- dered unconscious by the first fall and his body was limber during the balance of the déscent to the bottom of the canyon, and the fact that he escaped instant death is a miracle. Oo ee Choose School Principal SALT CREEK, Wyo., May 28.—At a theeting of the schoo! board of Dis- trict No. 2, James Bond, formerly su- perintendent at Big Piney, was elect ed to the position of principal of the Salt’ Creek high school. Mr. Bond's work will probably be that of superin- tendent of the schools in the district surrounding Balt Creek, since there are seven schools there which require an executive who can keep tn close touch with them. The schools are located in the oll camp. IT’S CLEAR SOFT AND PURE Order by the case or 5-gallon bottles. HILL CREST WATER WE DELIVER 425 East Second St. Phone 1151 —By Fox) Expect Many Tourists SHERIDAN, Wyo May 28.—W. D. Fisher, ‘secretary of the Custer Bat- tlefleld Hiway association, returned to Sheridan from a three weeks’ tour of the east. He reports an unusual interest in Yellowstone and Glacier parks, An unusually large tourist traffic through Sheridan may be expected this year, Mr. Fisher thinks, but it will not begin until at least a month later than usual. All hiway assocla- tion officers report light tourist travel so far this season. ‘The season is about seven weeks behind normal in Illinois and Iowa, a foot of snow having fallen in Chi- cago last week, according to Mr. Fisher. Many people, he said, have made all preparations for motor trips through this part of the country, uth are hel4 up by the inclemency of the weather and the poor condition of roads in the Mississippi valley. The hiway is in good condition, and many improvements are promised by the towns along its route, the secre- tary says. Rapid City has added 25) acres to its nap pt | camping grounds, | and is building a large log house for} it. Soundings for a bridge across the Missouri river at Chamberlain, 8S. D., are being taken, and n 1s the inten- tion of that city to bufld the bridge next year, four years earlier than ex- pected, so that its opening can be celebrated on July 4, 1924. This will be the first wagon bridge over the Missouri river in the state. Steals Empty Bottles LARAMIB, Wyo., May 28.—Jack Lasster was fined $50 and costs in police court for trying to steal bot- tles from the rear of the factory of the Laramie Bottling works. The po- lice caught him in the act, but his accomplice escaped. They are of the opinion that Lasster and the other man were stealing empty bottles to be filled with -:eoonshine,” the men being afraid of being caught if they bought bottles openly. The officers could get no information as to still operations, {f any, however. Lasster had deposited a $50 cash bond and the costs of the suit were $2. Monuments CASPER MONUMENT WORKS 505 E. Second St. .Casper, Wyo. Robert Simpson, Prop. oe NOTICE Doctors Keith and Har- vey have moved their of- fices to rooms in the Kim- They all like *USCO” United States Tires are Good Tires RROBABLY half the motorists of America ride on Fabric Tires. Byche hundreds of thou- sands they have stuck to “Usco” yearinand year out If there ever was a tested money’s-worth “Usco” qualifies—and to spare. Made by the makers of _ Ss a Li Where to buy US. Tires. Casper—Coliseum Motor Co., Inc. Casper—Doud-Weaver Motor Co. Casper—Kennedy Motor Co., Inc. Casper—Joe E. Mansfield, Inc. Casper—White Motor Truck Co., Inc. Casper—Wyoming Oldsmobile Co., Inc. GENUINE BUTTER-NUT BREAD Casper, Wyo. See What's Coming Your Way e Phone 1732 Wyoming Baking a) A CAMPAIGN has been started to shift the rural pedestrian from the traditional right side of the road to the left. This will enable him to see approaching traffic and avoid danger. 5 It is interesting, instructing and profitable to watch for the good things the advertisements bring your way. It’s always wise to know what’s coming your way. Every day the advertisements in this paper bring good things your way. Bargains that will save your money. New products that other people have developed for your personal comfort and convenience. every article of human need, whether it is food or cloth- ing, an article of household utility, a necessity or a luxury, Do you heed the advertisements? Or do you go blithe- ly along, letting them come up from behind and slip past you unnoticed? Information about SSS GIVEN AWAY TRAIN SCHEDULES Chicago & Northwestern ‘Westbound Arrives | No, 803-. 40 p. 8:00 p. m. || Eastbound— » THE CHOICEST agg maa Sa RUA Pp) 300 pm. | FAIR VIEW LOT Chicago, Burlington & Quincy x Eastbound Arrives Departs % No. 32. 245 p. m. Dobbin Realty Co. }} *°, “$35 Dm 7-South Center St. TAR Sie ene reali 740 6) m. Look for them every day in : The Casper Daily Tribune 4

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