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“OPN ? eran. PALE THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNis issued Morn- sper, ite Postoffice. i (Wyoming), Por Sec Class Matter, No 1916. » ----.-15 and 16 sxchange Connect- partments. SSOCIATED MEMBER ‘THE PRESS The Associate ss is exclusively entitled to for publication of all news c i in this paper and algo tho 1 news published herein. ee CHAR W. BANTON President and Editor ‘Advertising Representatives. = Afshar ilar Nati aa ty » 286 Fifth . Bos: Lidg.. a cago, r ficea and visitors are welcome. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C.) Member of the Associated Press SCRIPTION RATES By Carrier One Year, Daily and Sunday 9. One Year, Sunday Only ----. 2 Six Montha, Daily and Sunday-- 4 Three Montha, Daily and Sunday 2. One Month, Dat’ ind Sunday Per Copy --- st By Mall One Year, Daily and Sunday—— a 50 One Year, Sunday only- Six Months, Daily and Sun ‘Three Months, Dally and Sun Qne Month, Daily and Sunday All subecriptions must be paid ip 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 18 any time between €:00 and 8 o'clock p. m., 1f you fail to receive your Tribune. A paper wil he delivereé to you by special mes xenger. Make it your duty to let the Tribune know when your carrie: miages you. ———<——<—$<_—_— THE CASPER TRIBUNE'S PROGRAM Irrigation 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 recreation park system, in- cluding swimming pools for the children of Casper. Completion 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 nervice for Casper. OUT OF THE ARABIAN NIGHTS It would be interesting to dis- cover, if it could be done, just what it is that leads a young Chinese coolie of the better class to pay 3500 to have himself smuggled into the United States. No doubt it is some vision of fame or fortune or achievement more or less illusory. At any rate, the coolies come in qwhen they can. And whatever it is that brings them brought twenty young and -Qwell dressed coolies into such Dloody, wierd and piratical adven- ture off the coast of this civilized country as they would have had to wait a long time to experience among the junks of their native rivers. How they reached Cuba is not revealed, but once there they arranged to pay the Captain of the little sloop Mary Beatrice $500 each for a landing in the United States—$250 down and the re- mainder on delivery. The captain got as far as Sandy Hook, but found it more difficult than he had expected to discharge his passen- gers. Instead, he deserted on a boot.egger’s launch, leaving the cook and crew in charge. The cook and erew consisted of two white men and two negroes. These four got ready thelr weapons and demanded the second installments of passage money from the Chinese. It was denied—and the rest was carnage. Five Chinamen, two white men and two Negroes went over- board for good. The sloop drifted in painted with blood. At least, that is the story of the (fifteen surviving coolies, told thru “interpreters. It may be true, even “though it sounds more improbable than ‘Treasure Island.” \ additional risk must be added to wthe list of those run by Chinese Sboys who hunt their pot of gold at merican rainbow. Ethe foot of ihe / MEETING . DISH WATER.” Undersecretaries in the British “parliament are busy these days an- “swering questions regarding the treatment of British subjects in ‘American ports. made in France, provoked by int, and it morument to should be. It the incay ‘|ations which our disregard of other right to enter the country is sub- jected to a humiliating and disgust- ing treatment which ought to shame the United States. It must be a dash of dish water | in the faco of immigrant and traveler alike. The assumption is |that the immigrant comes to be a citizen. ‘His first impresson is that jthe United States is a nation of| jslums. If he is accustomed to them | jhe will feel perfectly at home. As \@ first idea of American citizenship this treatment must be a knockout | to any of the finer aspirations and jideats which America should e |courage in people to whom it is wi |ling to offer a vote. It would seem perfectly simple} |to determine the eligibility of peo-| |ple to enter the United States be-| fore they have been carried across the ocean, and it would seem pos-| sible for the United States to have decent quarters for the people who jcome here if it insists on detai ing and examining them on _ thi side. By our liquor regulations we subject other people touching our shores to a boorish tyranny, which they resent, and for which they hate us. A false impression of real Am- erica is created, and these petty provocations swell into a sense of injury. It does the United tates no} good to be detested because of its/ stupid, unmannerly, and unneces- sary treatment of people whose favorable opinion it would be fine to have. Serious trouble may have its roots in these international exasper- | people's rights, comforts and de- cencies arouse. — The Chicago Tribune. |WOMEN’S STANDING AS STUDENTS | Almost all the first honors for| study taken by members of the graduating classes of New York | University’s coeducational schools this year were won by women. The one man who scored, a student in‘ the School of Retailing, shared the first honors there with a woman. Today the event quite fails to ruffle public attention. Twenty years ago, or even ten, it would have made thousands of eyes stare, would have led to snorts and out- cries, wou:d have inspired plays. Sex equality as to mind capacity, The Powerful Katrinka— . — ty st) an! eee Awe Na LIVE NEWS from WYOMING Items and Articles About Men and Events Throughout the State May Test State Law — \ — Oi A ad, Cpe Casper Daily Cribune Za @ = THe Powerful KATRINKA BA AND HER ATTRACTED CONSIDERASLE, Novice up AT THe LAKE. —By Fontaine Fox FismiNG Poe A Open Season On Dudes) SHERIDAN, Wyo., June earnest, reports gathered from vari-) dicated. easterners scene of their vacations. Manage-| they expect their facilities will At the Spear opened with a fishing trip to the) Seven Brothers lakes. from Penrose park and will proceed this week it is expected. | The Lodore ranch, which deals business much better than usual this year, despite the handicap of cool and! rainy weather. be police force. fully taken up by new arrivals soon conspicuoi | after July 2. their appearance, ranch the season, up the street. An anonymous telephone call came A camping to The Post about 8:30 o'clock, saying party returned to the ranch Tuesday| that a news item could be obtained if a reporter would go out on Main to the Cross Creek lakes the last of street at 9:15 o'clock. Harned Bros. locatio: Klan Is Active SHERIDAN, Wyo., June 29.—The 29.—/ Knights of the Ku Klux Klan ap- July 1 1s the date on which ‘dude’ peared in public in Sheridan for the ranches-of northern Wyoming expect second time this summer, when three the 1923 tourist season to begin in autdmobile loads of the white-garbed |klansmen paraded north on Main ous ranches in Sheridan county in-! street to Fourth street, then back south on Gould street to Burkitt, So far this summer but few of the back to Main street and up the court- who plan to spend the house hill and disappeared over the summer here have arrived on‘ tho) hill. ‘They were first seen on Main street ments of most of the ranches say | about 9:20 o'clock by a member of the He sald they made ‘no lemonstration other than but drove quietly tly in ti EXPERT watch and jewelry repair mostly in transient traffic, reporta| EXPERT watch and sewslry, repats ge REMOVAL NOTICE and the City Furnt- ture Co., have moved to their 234 South David. Phone 249. FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 1923. Bolt Plays Trick THERMOPOLIS, Wyo., June 29. While a group of cattlemen and help ers were branding stock at Phil Mo. Clure's mountain ranch, during a local thunder storm, a bolt of light ning struck a cow that was in the branding chute and knocked the ant. mal to the ground. Phil McClure haa a hot branding iron on the animal at the time and was dazed by the shock, Bobbie Nostrum was struck to the ground by the bolt and Johnnie Sapp was knocked off the fence where he was sitting. AUTO SERVICE Co. WE DO SIMONIZING Cars Washed, Polished and Greased DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE 133 N. Wolcott 1 Block East of Henning Phone 2370 new Receives Appointment MEETEETSER, Wyo., June 29.— Frank River, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry River of Meeteetseo, has been selected as one of the Wyoming| young men who will go to Annepolis Naval academy, through the efforts of Senator ¥. E. Warren. ask tor Horlicks ‘ The ORIGINAL . Matted Milk Y —_ BUTTER-NUT <= BREAD ©Rich as Butter Sweet as a Nut? Wyoming Baking Casper, Wyo « Phone 1732 fh Lbs The QuickLunchat Home, Office&sFoun! RichMilk, Malted Grain Extractin Pow- der&Tabletforms. Nourishing-Nocockiag. Food-Drink for All Appraisers Named x | SHERIDAN, Wyo., June 29.—Ap- SHERIDAN, Wyo., June 29.—A) praisers for three North & South test case will probably be made of) pajiroad right-of-way condemnation coming in for hotel accommodations during the whole month of July. | —————_— Many Cars This Year ALUMINUM SETS Consult Your Grocer FREE Makes Children Grow ¢° 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. was less widely accepted then, seems, than now. But how far are women likely to| carry such scholastic leadership, It) Pat Cusick next week. it! the case of the state of Wyomnig vs. |W. T. Price, Dietz rancher, charged | with violation of the herd law, which comes up for hearing before Justice Information suits were appointed by Judge James H. Burgess in district court. They are Charles W. Skinner, Earl C. Green and J. A. Church. They were instructed ROCK SPRIN indicates that there are Wyo., June 29.— A partial census of automobiles here as many motor driven vehicles in Rock Springs Lo) ae If so, an} THEM WITH Angry statements | American treatment of French. Protets come from Italy. America is disliked abroad and it keeps ir- ritating the other nations with pin pricks Ellis island is a cause of com- | |used to be said that women had no head for business. That has cer- tainly not been borne out by their work in business courses at New York University. Doubters of femi. nine mental worth must now f: back to a stand o# men’s superior| mental quality. Quality of mental output is some- thing else, indeed, than capacity. | |Man has not yet learned how to! measure mental quality, but he has| |made no startling difference in col- lege men’s and women’s mental ages. ECONOMY IN FLYING | | The public, according to Lad’slas |@’Orcy in Aviation, has largely mis- |sed the point of the gliding ex- 'periments which have excited the world during the last year. There! |has been little tendency to regard| |long motorless flights as of interest; |to the entire science of flying. The| development of planes without en- |gines, or of planes, like Barbot’s, with small engines, have been dis- cussed. The question of the influ- ence of gliding on bigger machines has gone relatively unnoticed. Yet this, according to Mr. d’Orcy, is the most significant aspect of| gliding. “The main point about motorless flight,” he quotes from Major Brocard of the French air, service, “is that it enables one to become familiar with and to meas-| ure ail kinds of atmospheric energy, little known as yet, which are cither contributory or deterrent to flight. We must learn to find their loca-| tion and know their strength and size.” As Mr. d’Orey points out,| such knowledge can be applied to heavy-powered machines. Just as| Nieuport in 1911 with the first “steam-lined” plane was able to do with a 28-horse power motor what| other aviators couid do only with a |50-horse power motor, so discover-| ies made about air currents and air! |conditions in gliders may be ap- plied to motored airplanes to bet- ter their performance per horse | power. How vital a matter this is be- comes apparent on consideration. Recently a new type of radiator, by making possible a better airplane |shape, enabled flyers to reach a top speed of 244 miles per hour. But |this radiator can be put in slow as well as fast machines, and should increase speed by something like 20 per cent in almost any type. Util- ization of knowledge got while gliding should make possible im- | provements which, like this one, can have a general application to all types The result will be inevitable. ed will be increased in relation or the fuel necessary to ain speed will be a result, the ven distance will lessen, tif n € il, will be closer to a fu as filed upon complaint of Stock In spector J. T. Harrington that Price in the to appraise the daniages ses against Samuel J. Mc as in Cheyenne, which has twice the opulation of Rock Springs. Many of Contains Vitamines had twice ignored his warning to, keep his domestic stock from grazing in the Dietz roadway. | Section 3119 of the Wyoming com- piled statutes prohibits the running of domestic stock on public lands or) roads during the months of May to September. Two years ago this stat: ute was amended to make th’s unlaw- ful at time of the year. Penalty for conviction is a fine of not less than $10 nor more than $100. *rice contends that inasmuch as this road is not fenced he was not violating the law. Price was former. jy a special deputy pheriff of this county. K ce Accident Causes Loss of Eyesight NEWCASTLE, Wyo., June 28.— John Pettengill, son of Wm. Petten- gill, formerly of Weston county but of late years employed in the Homo- stake mines at Lead City, 8. D., met with an accident which caused the total loss of both eyes and may re- sult fatally. Mr. Pettengill had placed a shot which from some cause Neese, Clara S. Burns and Mattie A. Stout and to report their findings to the court within 60 days. Appraisers for the suit against James M. Enochs were appointed a month ago and fixed damages at $370. The court gave the defendant 30 days the coal ye miners employed here ride to and from work in automobiles. twshrdl shrdlu shrdlu etaoin ea in which to file objections to the re port. The case against Pearl M. Snyder was settled out of court. ae Two-Gwo-Tee Pass Open LANDER, Wyo., June 29,—The Lander-Yellowstone Bus Line has started running their bus between Lander and Moran, and the first reg- ular bus was loaded to the brim. The season looks very promising as in- quiries are coming from all sections of the country, and we will miss our guess if one bus a day will be able to take care of the tourists after the 4th of July. Last year the railroad was slow in getting started, and the strike was on during the whole sea- son, which kept people from making the trip, This year the railroad has advertising scattered around = the United States in such a way that it 1s now taking hold and tn every city was prematurely discharged, with the disastrous results stated. He has a wife and two smal children and it is understood that should he live he will receive a pension from the Homesake company. Casper, Wyo., June 22, 1923. of the east you can hear of the new “Lander Gateway to the Yellowstone Park.” No business of meuh account is looked for unt!l after the 4th of July when most people are starting on their vacations. Reservations are NOTICE The LUKIS CANDY COMPANY wishes to announce they have this date, June 22, 1923, sold their entire inter- est in the Retail Store located at Second and Wolcott Street, to the WYOMING DRUG & SUPPLY Company and that C. Lukis is the only person authorized to con- tract on behalf of the LUKIS CANDY CO. The Lukis Candy Co. By C. LUKIS, President FINE TEAS BLACK AND GREEN WYOMING GROCERY CO. Wholesale Distributors IT’S CLEAR SOFT AND PURE From the land of the Geisha girl and of the jinricksha and the bamboo parasol, comes our most deli- cious and fragrant tea Positively the finest flavored tea you ever drank — you'll agree with that sentiment after the first sip. A beverage for kings! , 503 East Second St. Westbound No. 603. Order by the case or 5-gallon bottles. HILL CREST WATER WE DELIVER TRAIN SCHEDULES Chicago & Northwestern ‘ Arrives Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Arrives Phone 1151 1:20 a. m TO THE PUBLIC case. PHONE 1151 Owing to the large increase in our business, we are compelled to notify our customers, that beginning on the first day of July, we will deliver our water in case lots of six (6) bottles only (3 gallons) or in five (5) gallon con- tainers. Any one wishing it in smaller amounts, can ob- tain same by calling at our station in rear of 505 East Sec- ond. Phone us at 1151 when you are ready for another Hill Crest Water Company