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PAGE FOUR. The Casper Sunday Morning Tribune} The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morn- ing Tribune every Sunday, at Casper, | Wyoming. Publication of Trib: | une Building, opposite Postof: Entered at Casper (Wyom! office ag Second Class ™ vember 2: 1916. Business Telephone ---..-15 and 16) Branch Telephone Exchange Connect: | ing All Departments. CHARLES W. President and Advertising Representatives. Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23) Steger BlCg., Chicage PRE 8 Pitty Ave. New York C lobe Bldg... 7 Mas Sharon Bldg.,) ton, Mass., Suite BI 65 New Montgomery St., Sqn Fran-j cisco, Cal. Copies of Dally ‘Teib-} . Chi- une are on cago, Bosto: r fices and visitors are welcome Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C.) SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier One Year, Dally and § One Year, Sunday Only Six Months, Da nd Sun Three Months, One Month, Dai Per Copy. One Year, Daily and One Year, Sunday on Six Months, Da Three Months, Dally and One Month, Daily and mies ‘All subscriptions m 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 Tribuno | Call 15 or 16 any time between 6:00 and 8 o'clock p. m., if you fail to} receive your Tribune. A Pp: wit be deliverea to you by spe’ mes-} senger. Make it your duty to let the Tribune know when your carrie: misses you. mite a> THE CASPER TRIBUNE'S PROGRAM rrigation 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 recreaticn park system, in- cluding swimming pools for the children of Casper. Completion of the established Scenic Route boulevard as planned by the county commissio Garden Creek Falls and return. | Better roads for Natrona county and more highways for Wyoming. More equitable freight rate: yc shippers of the Rocky Mountain region and more frequent train service for Casper. i} ETE PROFESSIONS AND THE | COLLEGES We are so frequently told that the colleges have ceased to, be training schools for the profes- sions that it is almost with sur- prise that one finds these vocations making such a good showing with the graduating class at Harvard. If eng ng and technical pursuits Jed to the old” professions ds°258 of the seniors ex- to enter professional work, st 183 who announce them- as intended for business or business pursuits. Such statistics are, of course, ut- terly unreliable 4s showing what sort of work these men will finally adopt, but they do show what sort of work is made to appear attrac-| tive by four years of the collegiate environment. They are statistics of hope rather than of performance; but they indicate that the col- leges are still turning out more men who would prefer to sell their own specially trained services than men who would prefer merely to sell, or who find allure in the vague and romantic function of “executive.” It generally turns out that the} specialist is cheap and the good| business man or executive officer, | whatever his special training may| are 4p one f pect have been, is expensive; con- yied a sequently many of these Harvard Noy. 7, 1888. who are looking toward|1848—Cavaignac became military al work will, in the end, dictator of France. be indistinguishable as business|1852—First national agricultural men fromi their classmates who an-| releibeagttt met in Washing- on, D. C. less specialized ambitions. nounce But it would seem to speak rather} well for the college that its grad-| uates are still imbued with the de- sirability of professional training. The professional ideal is rather a fine one; for it clings to the belief that the world is to be saved by) hard and exact thinking by trained minds, as well as by mere general competence. MR. BRYAN ONCE MORE If William Jennings Bryan were | Jess in the public prints, furiously | talking about one subject and an-| other and giving to some perhaps} the impression that he is thinking] t would be easier to take what he has to y an’s latest Mr. E controversy with Governor Smith in which he strove to read New York’s chief ex- ecutive out of the Union and out of the ranks of American citizenship, is a case in point. Mr. Bryan is an| emotional citizen whowe logic as Mr. Garet Garret would have it, is a7 “state of feeling raised to-a state of mind.” | William Jennings Bryan has long! given wordy evidence of the fact that he has not digested the first tribute of a state: to see, in an iss personal cc tior most radical part « matter. Wheth {largely responsible for the political action of Governor Smith or thinks that it is a*tweakening of the public morale is beside the question. Mr. Bryan, as a self-styled Jeffersonian Democrat, has not the faintest con- ception of government as Jefferson | would have it, were he alive today. |It is a habit with him to pra‘se in principle and assail in practice. The New York legislature, as the most obtuse politician must admit, was! entirely within its rights in repeal-| ing its own law—a law not in any} way forced on it by the federal! statutes, and a law which had noth-| Tourist travel has increased regari ing to do with the “Constitution of the United States.” The Eighteenth amendment is still in force in New York state, and can never be any-| “|thing but in force, at least in the-| ory, in any state in the Union; un- til such time as it is no longer the law of the United States govern-| ment—which will be never. | The trouble with Mr. Bryan is that he has not digested the first | principles of human nature, during a long and verbose existence on this| the angelic group. All those who| differ with Mr. Bryan are in the devil group. It is all very simple,| and all very lovely—but hardly| logical. | Mr. Bryan's ability to crown him- self and his policies with haloes is vogue he once enjoyed. He has al genius for soap-box oratory. Hel soap-boxed himself thrica into a} presidential candidate. That is) proof enough of the value of the| halo in political life. But his habit of putting three-pronged spears in| the hands of those who do not see| things as he does, and planting horns upon their heads does him less credit than his talent for paint- ing haloes on himself. RADIO CONQUERS WORLD The only adequate comment upon! recent super - broadcasting of} speeches to nobody knows how far around the world would be a gigan- tic exclamation point thrown upon the moon by a super-searchlight. The difficulty henceforth will be to| prevent radical utterances from| racing clear around the globe andj re-entering the hall to confuse the speaker or singer like a bad echo. Before long the ordinary citizen will be so fed up with listening to the speech of the Mikado opening the Japanese Parliament or the feading prima donna of New Zea- land dedicating the new opera house of that island that he will go to bed at 9 o'clock, complaining what a dull world this is. An attachment which will automatically translate any Sanguage into any other is of course only a matter of a few days, so that the untutored Icelander ill be able to listen rather more intelligently to an address by Mus- solini than he no wlistens to a lec: turer from Boston. Only one possible development remains. This is a device which will enable a radio fan, by mere- ly reversing his loud speaker, to Tourists Despite Weather GREYBULL, yo.. June 23. less of weather, and foreign license tags are in evidence every hour of the day. The tourist camp grounds are now well patronized and the crowd seems to be just as folly as usual, making the best of the mis- haps encountered along the way or the inconveniences caused by weather conditions. It is the season when America is on wheels and following the lure of the-road. The class of cars is better this year and there are fewer breakdowns. Each year sees an improvement in the tourist's equipment. The weather is becoming a subject |terrestial sphere. To him the world) shout which nomething may be said At very day. started out the season is populated by two kinds of per-|1n an unusual manner and continues sons and only two—angels andj to be erratic. East of us thia wack devils. Mr. Bryan is a decorative| people have suffered heat prostrations long-haired, be-haloed member of| While on a few occasions overcoats |have not been at all uncomfortable here. Rains, too, haye been frequent. It has seemed as though the weather man was in league with the manufac- turers of rain coats. Moonshine Drives Man Insane GLENROCK, Wyo., Driven insane by a three-months' drunk on moonshine whiskey, the spree starting in Chicago and ending on the cactus studded wastes near the Sinclair tank farm at Clayton, William Swanson, claiming to be a Minneapolis newspaper man, picked up by Deputy Sheriff Kk son and held in the city jail until he was removed to the county jail. Swanson was naked, except for a sult of B. V. D's. Men from the tank farm notified Deputy Jackson that a man, evidently insane, was wandering aimlessly and when the of- June 23.— ficer went in search of him he found Swanson skulking in the brush along the river bank. Swanson was not doct in fact resented interfe: ence with his out-door liberty, fought furiously against getting into Jack-| son's car and finally had to be hand- cuffed before being subdued. The night was cold and as the stiff wind struck Swanson's bringing goose-flesh, the man shivered and exclaimed: 2 “Wow! Wind right off the lakes."’ Swanson’s bare feet were in a pit able condition. Penetrated by hun- dreds of cactus spines, both feet were lacerated and swollen so thmt after a night’s rest in jail he could not bear his weight upon them. Brought partly to his senses by a restful night, Swanson talked coherently in the morning. He told of his long debauch, but could not remember how he got to Clayton, nor where or when he parted company with his clothing. He stated that he had started for the fight at Sholb; Mont. but could give only a vague account of his travels. Swanson is the fourth prisoner in the county jail, brought there through moonshine craze. Two of farm and one from Douglas. Registration Heavy LARAMIE, Wyo., June 23—The registration of students for the nine- teenth anual session of the summer school at the Univer of Wyo ming numbered trar M Whinnle anticipates enrol! ment for the term of about Since many of thege who are still to reg ister are out-of-the-state students, it is expected that the number of en trants from other states will he pro portionately greater than heretofore as already the filings show an u usually heavy registration of this class. The splendid series of lectures te be given this summer, the addition to the regular faculty of a number of nationally known educ: nd the unequalled climatic conditions have helped toward swelling the ranks of the out-of-the-state entrant. Gage eh Bed bug juice, all vermin; will not stain bed cloth. ing. Apco Products C hear the sun spots sizzling or the rings of Saturn whizzing around. TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES 1805—Daniel Read, sixth president of the University of Mis- souri, born at Marietta, O. Died at Keokuk, Iowa, Oct. 8, 1878. 1816—Theodore F, Randolph, gov- ernor of New Jersey and United States senator, born at New Brunswick, N. J. Died at Morristown, N. J., -860—Jerome Bonaparte, youngest brother of Napoleon, died in Paris. Born in Ajaccio, | Noy, 15, 1784. 1867—General Custer lost 60 men | in fight with Indians, near the headwaters of the Re- publican river. 1895—The Marquis of Salisbury ac- cepted the British premier- ship and formed a Conserva- tive ministry. 1917—Belgian and Russian war missions visited the tomb of Washington at Mt. Vernon. ONE YEAR AGO TODAY Death of William Rockefeller, Standard Oil finanaier. Governor Small of Illinois acquitted on charge of conspiracy to defraud the state. LEARN HOW TO - ““ SECURE A LOT FREE BY DOING A_ LITTLE WORK AMONG YOUR FRIENDS Call 1189 bare skin, | here, | guaranteed to kill Indians To Celebrate RIVERTON, Wyo. June 23.—Su- perintendent R. P. Haas has granted permission to the Arapahoe Indians to put on a big three day celebration at Arapahoe on July 2, 3 and 4. All the heavy copper box in order that all future visitors to the summit of the peak may register their names, addresses and the date of their visit. his failing from making the ‘ascent, Kee of Pinedale, who are to accom: pany him, will see that his wishes) are carried out. { Fremont is not the highest peak in the range, Mt. Gannett, 15 miles to the north, being 55 feet higher. Fremont is a round topped peak, while Gannett terminates in a sharp the bucks, young and old, are ar- their brightest regalia for occasion and are rounding r wildest horse and steers in put on a real show, Hun- squaws, kids and dogs will order to dreds of be there, too, and whether you have attended the Arapahoe celebration be- fore er not this one promises to be a treat. The Indians will put on their native dances each evening and this feature alone {s worth coming miles to see. |To Perpetuate Fremont .—Capt. who has I | been active for years in marking the scenes of historical events for the guidance of posterity, has collected .a number of Fremont relics including a fine glass and copper framed picture utobiographical sketch of Gen- John C. Fremont, letters from and \the general also framed in copper and glass, and other articles. all to be placed in a heavy copper box in a cairn of stones on the highest point of Fremont’s Peak on August 14, 1923 which is the 91st anniversary of ent of the k by Gen. Fre. We will trade more good R. N. Van Sant point. General Fremont made the ascent from the south near Boulder lake, but Capt. Nickerson will make the attempt from the north, 1 A long account of Fremont’s ascent NOTICE I have moved my_ office from Suite 302 Midwest Building to ROOM 3, NEUMAN BLOCK 235 East Second Street DR. N. E. MORAD U-KNOW Free your poultry from lice and mites by putting U-KNOW Lice and Mite Remover in their drink- ing water. It stops insects from obtaining mo'sture and they leave the fowls. Will NOT taint the eggs or flesh and is guaranteed by J. F. Cowan Hay, Grain & Feed Co. 325 S. Durbin St. Casper, Wyo. Notice Truck Men Have hauling to pay for car. used cars for truck work. | 442 E. Yellowstone §) | Smart Hupmobile Special the Talk of the Town Smart, dashing, but not extreme, the new Hup- mobile Special Touring Car and Special Roadster, ii are literally the talk of the town. They are proving particularly attractive to those who demand less conventional appearance in a motor car, with the consistent, economical service- for which the Hupmobile is so noted. The top is a special brown; disc wheels of pleasing design are included, as well as such desirable fashionable details as aluminum scuff-plates; nickel-plated radiator, radiator cap and bar, cowl lamps, and barrel headlamps. The roadster has, in addition, nickel-plated bars on the rear deck, and a tilted tire carrier. The style of these two models seems particularly ex- pressive of the Hupmobile’s brilliant performance. At $1215, these two special Hupmobiles are out- standing values—in style as well as in sturdy serviceability. You should see them. Come in, or phone for Gdemon- stration today. JOHN M. WHISENHUNT, Dealer East Side Garage First and Park Streets Phone 79 Hupmobile eee ee send mont and party on August 14, 1842. may be found in exerpts from his He Is also having made a specially journal published in Coutant’s hi prepared registry book to be kept in| tory of Wyoming. Plan Laramie Fair PINE BLUFFS, Wyo., June 23—At Capt. Nickerson hopes to personal-}a meeting he'd here it was decided ly visit the top of the peak, but if) to incorporate the Laramie County strength, prevents him Fair asociation and hold the annual Forest | fair in this city. Rangers B. V. Cockins and EB. E. Mc-|* a number of farmers and business men were in attendance and articles 4 fair. SUNDAY, JUNE 24, 1923. : of incorporation and a constitution were drawn up. The papers will be sent to the secretary of state at once. There will be 11 directors, one di. rector from each local unlon of the county Farmers Union and six di- rectors at large. 3 The association will be incorporated as a non-profit institution and its sole object will be to put on a first c’ass agricultural fair, with the legit- mate side issues that go with such Save Yourself Needless work next fall when it turns cold by having your heating equipment inspect- ed and repaired now. Let us examine your plant while you re. member its faults, and be rid of worry, dis- 4 comfort and extra expense next winter, Schank Plumbing & Heating Co. Phone 711 359 E. Second St. ‘site is just east of Evansville. $8,000 To Be Loaned in Evans- ville at 1 Per Cent Inter- est Per Annum A GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY TO OWN § YOUR OWN HOME IN THIS » THRIVING LITTLE CITY Evansville is the fastest growing city in Wyoming and is supported principally by the Texas company payroll which amounts to upwards of $60,000.00 monthly. At the fast meeting of the city council of Evansville, a franchise was submitted for the installation of gas for domestic pur- § poses, also plans and specifications of the city’s new water system were submitted by the city engineers, and from all indications construction will be started at an early — | date. ANOTHER REFINERY To be built on site adjoining Texas refinery , by White Eagle Oil & Refining Co., which An investment in lots in this city is better than money in the bank in order to help build this city. We will loan eight of the lucky buyers of lots in Evansville during this sale $1000.00 each at 1 per cent interest. For Further Particulars See Us Representative on Ground All Day Guaranteed Investment Company MAIN OFFICE: Zuttermeister Bldg, Phone 410 BRANCH OFFICE Evansville Phone 2016W-1.