Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
2 officially, } events, the process of conversion total contributes to the development : of the neighbor country in a thous- * and wa: PAGE FOUR. THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morn- ing Tribune every Sunday, at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices, Trib- une Building, opposite Postoffice. ‘Entered at Casper (Wyoming), Post- office az Second Class Matter, No vember 22, 1916. Business Telephone -- Branch Telephone Exc! ing All Departms CHARLES W. BANTON President and Editor MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press ts exclusively antitled to the use for publication of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Advertising Re Prudden, King & 15 and 16 ize Connect- ts. presentatives. Prudden, aoe Steger Bidg., Chicago, Til; 286 Ave: New York City: Globe Bldg.. Bos- Mase, Suite 404, Sharon Bidg., New Montgamery 8t., Fran a, Cal. Copies of the Daily Trib- are on file in the ww York, Chi- go, Boston and Franciseo of- fices and visitors are welcome. Member of the Associated Press Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier One Year, Daily and Sunday One Year, Sunday Only Six Months, Datly and Three Months, Da j Sunday Bi One Year, Daily and Sunday--—$7.80 One Year, Sunday only---- + 2.60 Six Months, Daily and Sunday - 4.00 Three Months, Dally and Sunday 2.26 Que Month, Daily and Sunday.. | -75 ‘All subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscription becomes one month In arrears. Kick If You Don't Get Your Tribune Call 15 or 16 any time between 6:00 and 8 o'clock p. m., if you fafl to yeeetve your Tribune. A paper wit be deliverea to you by special mes- wenger. Make it your duty to let the | Tribune know when your carrie: pi > So THE CASPER ‘TRIBUNE'S PROGRAM mn project west of Casper to be authorized and completed at Br and ecientific zoning for the city of Casper. A comprehensive municipal and school recreation park system, in- Gluding swimming pools for the rs of Casper. ceapletion 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 rates for shippers of the Rocky Mountain region and more frequent train gervice for Casper. —_———————— A BAD CALCULATION It’s a wise political party that knows its own mandate. “We Republicans,” said ex-Gov- ernor Allen of Kansas, in his mem- orial Day address at Paris, “all theaght that the “7,000,000 major- ity that Harding got “‘meant the definite ‘No’ of the “American peo- ple on participation in “interns- tional affair.” But he added that it now begins to look as if ‘we might have made bad caleulations.” With engaging frankness Gover nor Allen admits that the Republi- can majority of 1920 was due to man causes besides hostility to the League of Nations. This change of interpretation is a trifle belated although the Tribune has recognized this ere now. At all has been rapid during the past few months, so that today there are compartively few Republicans to charge President Harding with dis regarding the mandate of three years ago when he urges, as he did i speech at Arlington on Wed- aint the cetedug tee America into that ‘“‘world relationship” which we cannot avoid if we would. The “great and solemn referendum of 1920 was a joke, as we have said America to be tired of a Demo- cratic, warborn, administration. Governor Allen is heartily in} favor of our joining the world court. He is not intimidated by the argument that it may lead us to something else His reply is that we can try the thing on, and if we find it taking us where we don't! want to go, we can retrace our) steps. That seems a common-} sense view apt to commend itself) to the citizens. CAPITAL EXPORTS TO CANADA Debts of other Government Treasuries to ours make ours al creditor among debtor governments. It takes more than these to make us in the fullest and most produc- tive sense a creditor nation Am- erican capital invested in Canada, as reckoned by the Bankers’ Trust Company, now amounts to some two} and a half billions of dollars; this and in lending it Ameri- can capital serves the debtor in the normal way contemplated in capital exportation The movement of American capl- tal toward Canada has been espe cially large, according to this in- Cirimint: nee the signing of the It now ever s armistice. ,| by the officers of the Brotherhood 1 | That makes the situation notable. appears) ago England the chief exporter of | capital not only held the great bulk) of Canada’s debts outside of the) Dominion but had an investment of | nearly equal size in our own coun- try. Now the prospect arises that) American lending may come to} equal or even exceed British lend-| ing to our northern neighbor. That prospect, considered in itself, offers marked advantage to all the three parties concerned in it. Canads will no doubt find it nee- essary to go on borrowing in order to hit her best rate of growth. The bigger and stronger the Dominion becomes upon the temporary aid of American money the sooner will she feel secure against the sometimes dreaded ingress of her powerful southern neijghbor’s influence. The British will draw greater profit! from a Dominion increased by the| fimancial help of a third party than from one asking the financial stim- ulus to increase. The United States will gain by helping build up a populous and prosperous customer country on its own northern border. THE POINT OF VIEW A strike has been called by the United Mine Workers against the Coal River collieries at Huntington, W. Va., because two union men have been discharged without rea- ton being given. That in itself is & commonplace relation of employ- ers and union labor. But it happens in this case that the mines are owned by a stock company headed of Locomotive Engineers. Warren S. Stone is president of the board.’ The Brotherhood of Locomotive) Engineers is financially perhaps the | most advanced of any union in the country. It owns or controls and op- erates several successful banks. It has proved itself highly capable in| a business way. And that has not interfered with its effectiveness as a Isbor union working for the bene-| fit of its members. | But now we come to « parting of the ways. The Coal River collieries find that responsibility to investors —that it, to cspital—as well as re- sponsibility to labor goes with busi- ness management. There is a change of viewpoint. Read what Mr. Sone, the business man, says to the striking miners: “We are paying the union scale in West Vir- ginia, We are paying the going rate in eastern Kentucky. Our men may organize if they want to, but we are not going to compel them to join a union. I don’t know whether the men are members of the union or not.” Does that sound like the president of one of the strongest unions in the United States? It sounds more like an intelligent capitalist. It illus- trates most vividly a change of viewpoint. It also illustrates the fact that two apparently opposed positions may be taken by one man. That is the important part of the whole incident. Industry of any kind has respon- sibility to capital, or to investors, just as it has to labor. Capital nowadays recognizes its responsibil- ity to labor. Labor is coming to recognize its responsibility to cap- ital. Neither can prosper without the other. Those are economic facts beyond dispute. The West Virginia incident proves that the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engin- eers has learned a lesson. It is a hard boiled business finding. Other unions will learn it. That will brighten the outlook for labor and capital TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES 1863—Discovery of the Rye house plot which aimed to prevent) the succession of the Duke of York. 1778—-Philip Livingston, one of the} New York signers of the Declaration of Independence died at York, Pa. Born at Albany, N. Y., Jan 15, 1716. 1802—John Young, governor of New York during the anti- rent agitation, born at Chel- sea, Vt. Died in New York City, April 28, 1852. 1848—Public funeral held in New York in memory of officers lost in the Mexican war. 1868—Governor Curtin celled out) the Pennsylvania militia to repel an anticipated invasion by the Confederates. 1866—Marriage of the Prince of Teck and Princess Mary of Cambridge. 1878—William Cullen Bryant, the) poet died in New York City. | Born at Cummington, Mass. Nov. 3, 1794. 1898-—-The American army of in- vasion sailed from Key West for Cuba in 82 transports. ONE YEAR AGO TODAY Several hundred lives lost in river floods in Salvador. The assassin of Takashi Hara, Jap-| anose premier, convicted and | imprisoned a _ Where is Pleasant View? Inquire! of R. Kamon. Tel, 702 or A that American creditors hold almo: as great a credit stake in Canada as do-Englishmen. Not many years Mathers. Phone 1088%¢ or George W. Wook of J. F. Jonéa & Co. Phone] 3206 Che Casper Daily Cribuns Mickey (Himself?) McGuire “\AHAT ON EARTH ARE ‘YoU BoYS RUNNING FROM 2 P) UP THE MARBLE GAME BY JUST BARELY SHOWING HIS HEAD AROUND “TH& CORNER OF THE FENCE cHeesée iT MEQUIRE “1 Kilew THev'o THMK £ Woz Love Sims Gor an AND ONE OF HIS DAD'S Ci Outlaws Wiped Out GREYBULL, WYO. June 11.— “Butch” Cassedy and the other members o* the Hole-in-the-Wall gang who went with him to South America robbed an entire town in Patagonia, were followed by a troop of cavalry, overtaken and wiped out to the last} last man. This {s the authentic story of the finish of the notorious outlaw who was one of the leaders of the gang which had {ts stronghold in an inac- cessibie retreat in the ‘Tensleep country when Wyoming was wild and woolly. W. L. McCarty, a civil engineer, who has just come from the Argen- tine, says that “Butch” Cassidy and his outlaws ranged in the Argen- tine for about five years after they left Wyoming. There they robbed banks and ranches, stole cattle and committed other depredations, until in Patagonia they robbed an entire town, killed several people, loaded the merchandise and valuablesefound in the stores into wagons, and ted ee Ee a RT KC-IKC-KC- KC-KC- KC SAME PRICE for over 3O years’ Use less of KG BAKING POWDER than of higher priced brands. OUR GOVERNMENT USED MILLIONS OF POUNDS INC-IKC-KC-KC-KC- KC off across the country with booty. They were pursued by a troop of cavalry and, after a running fight which lasted for several miles, were finally all killed, thus ending chapter of outlawry unparalleled in Argentine history. Man Must Hang LANDER, WYO., June Unless clemency is granted, Clif- ford, Mann, convicted slayer of Mrs. Schwerdtfeger, must suffer the pen- alty inflicted by the gallows in the ‘Wyoming state penitentiary at Raw- lins. Mann was tried beore a jury in the district court and conviveted of mur- WLOEANG Continvows—1 to 11 TODAY and TOMORROW SHE’S HERE Queen of the Artists Studio AUDREY MUNSON The Most Famous, The Most Beautiful, The Most Versatile of All Artists —in— “HEEDLESS MOTHS” Also Two-Part Comedy “TEN SECONDS” and NEWS REL THURSDAY HARRY CAREY A Real Mine Costing $50,0 the strike scene, the Big Thrills, Action Around th “The Great Idea” Comedy RIALTO Realistic Coal Mine Strike 3,000 Men Employed for —in— “The Little Church —with— CLAIRE WINDSOR and KENNETH HARLAN —also— 00.00 was Constructed for Scene. and Suspense e Corner” The Home Builders Spe- cial Picture Kinograms Last Times Today 1, 8, 5, 7, 9 o'clock By Fox he OLD DERBY HAT GARS AND BROKE fr their; der in the first degree, Judge Robert The judgment R. Rose, presiding. Issued this week “that sald defend: ant, Clifford Mann, do suffer death a| by hanging by the neck until he is And it is further ordered, that said hanging shall take place at the or dead. Wyoming state penitentiary at near Rawlins, in the State of Wyom: ing, on the 4th day of September, A. Makes Hurried Exit THERMOPOLIS, Wyo.. June 11.— Tow Newton, a sheep herder, jumped from one of the second story win- dows at the Emery hotel landing at the bottom of the basement steps. He was rushed to the Hopewell hos- pital where it was found his leg and foot were broken. Newton had reg- istered at the Emery hotel and gone to bed. Before jumping out of the window he had thrown a pitcher through the glass. He has been about the town for some time and has been drinking a good deal. It is thought he was under the influ- ence of moonshine when he mede the leap from the window. Sheridan Girls Killed SHERIDAN, Wyo., June 11.—A special dispatch to the Post from Lin- coln, Neb., states that Frances Belk, 15 years old, was instantly killed and her ter, Carolyn 13, both former- ly of Sheridan, died within 24 hours after a box car at Amarillo, Texas, was switched over a crossing on which the girls were driving an au- tomobile last Thursday afternoon. ‘The girls were the daughters of Charles A. Belk, formerly of Sheri- dan and Acme, who now lives in Lincoln. An Amarillo paper says the two girls were drivving at not more than 15 miles an hour, and that the box car was switched down a track which was hidden from the girls by a long string of cars on an- other track. To Decide Terminus RAWLINS, Wryo., June Whether or not Rawlins will be the point of intersection on the Union Pacific Railroad when Ex-Governor Heskell and his associates extend the North and South railroad into Colo- rado from the present terminal In Natrona county, will soon be decided. F. L. Norman, the Haskell repre sentative who has been conducting a series of reconnatsances to the north and south of Rawlins, left for New York City where he will meet with the head officials of the North ani South railroad and report in full his findings while in this community . Although Mr. Norman is non-com- mittal as to what his report would be it is well understood that he is favorably impressed with the indus trial possibilities of Carbon county in general and the city in particular. The Haskell representative since his arrival in Rawlins has made a close study of the industrial situa- tlon and possibilities in Carbon county and Northwestern Colorado and has already prepared and for- warded to the New York offices of the North and South railroad a de tailed report of the topography of the several proposed railroad routes from Natrona county to Rawlins or Wamsutter and thence south across the Union Pacific into Moffat coun ty, Colorado. This report contains .| maps and profiles of the territa) and routes he had visited and con- tains many photographs of the coun- 41 D. 1923, before sunrise on said day.” try surrounding Rawlins. In order a ian ay Zn ——_ Shows at 1, 2, 6:30, 8 and TODAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY ‘Only a e ”? —in— 0 “AN UNWILL- J ING HERO” - A_ seipping, pulsing seeer / story of life ‘picturized font eee auesee “TORCHY’S / yi; —wiTH— HOLDUP” ( (| 3 Estelle enerior 10¢ AND 200 Wallace Beery Tully Marshall AND OTHERS —Also— NEWS AND TOPICS 10e AND 40o Admit L. A. Reed and one, Free to America Today, June 12. S LAST TIMES TODAY Will Rogers Admit J. EB. Nelson and one, Free to Iris June 12th 3:30, 9:30 5 WED. and. THURS. LEWIS STONE —In “THE DANGEROUS AGE” far, FTIR AW CASPERS FAMILY THEATRE OJ HA 6] “A Woman 5 —Pho Clara Louise Burham STARTING TONIGHT Billy Maine’s Big Co. 25—-PEOPLE—25 Presenting the Screaming Comedy You'll Laugh Until Your Sides Ache Ladies’ Matinee Wednesday Two Shows Tnight-—-7 and 9 LY A BD in the Case” toplay— in “HEARTS HAVEN” Prices 10c-40c ' that Ex-Governor Haskell and“ his | uw TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 1923, that should the North and South raj) road build south from Natrona coun, ty it will be with the assurance tha: sufficient tonnage is already on hand to make the railroed a profitable en. terprise from the very start. Mr. Norman expects to return to Rawlins within the next three or four weeks and it is predicted that this city will know definitely as to the route to be taken in the extension associates might have an even more complete report he goes to New York City to discuss in person the situation as he has found it here. It is reported on the best author- ity that during the visit of the Haskell representative an invevstiga- tion has been made of the amount of tonnage now being shipped from this section of the state—the figures obtained include coal, stock, farm]|of the North and South railroad produce, ofl field and many other|either or immediately following his classes of tonnage and it is certain| return here. Sooo Why have the appetite blues In this “What shall I eat” season, when but few things appeal to fretful, jaded appe- tites, you'll find a tempting suggestion in Shredded Whole Wheat—topped with fruits or berries. It’s just the light, crisp, crunchy wheat food your system is calling for—madedoub- ly enticing toyour appetite when served wit the delicious fresh fruits and berries now im season. eae Try this combination today. It's a sss? cure for the appetite blues. TONIGHT “The Great Idea” DANCE It’s a great idea to own your own home. We are strongly in favor of such an idea. You are bound to be more contented. Your home life will be more enjoyable. ‘ ‘And it is also a “Great Idea” To Get Acquainted at Our Dances Here you will find a home-like atmosphere. body always has an enjoyable evening at the Arkeon Dancing Academy CASPER’S JOY PALACE DANCING EVERY NIGHT Every- OSCAR WILDE'S “Salome” ‘A daring picture of the dazzling Salome who has created a furore in drama, in opera, in song and story! And now a screen portrayal that delights the eye and beguiles the senses! Tomorrow and Thursday RIALT