Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 5, 1923, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Che Casper Lailp Cribune _PAGE EIGHT. THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE The Casper Dafty Tribune issue? evening and The Sunday Morn Tribune every Sunday, at Casper, ming, Publication offices, Trib- une Building, opposite Postoffice. wade Bi ot i ae ‘btered at Casper (Wyoming), Post- ffice as Second Class Matter, No vember 22, 1916. Business Telephone Branch Telephone Exchange Connect- ing All Departments. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively. entitled to the use for publication of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. CHARLES W. BARTON President and Editor ‘Advertising Representatives. Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-28 cago, Tll Firth ? y; Globe Bldg.. Bos ton, Mass. 404, Sharon Bidg., 55 New Montgamery St. San Fran- cisca, Cal. Copies of the Daily Trib- une are on file in the New York, Chi- cago, Boston and San Francisco of fices and visitors are welcome. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) Member of the Associated Press SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier One Year, Daily and Sunday One Year, Sunday Only --~-. Six Months, Daily and Sunday. 4.50 ‘Three Months, Daily and Sunday 2.25 One Month, Daily and Sunday oo Per Copy ------- = . One Year, Daily and Sunday One Year, Sunday only Six Months, Daily and Sunday - Three Months, Daly and Sunday One Month, Daily and Sunday-- | .75 All subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Dally Tribune will not insure delivery after subscription becomes one month !n arrears. Kick If You Don't Get Your Tribuno Call 15 16 any time between 6:00 and 8 o'clock p. m., if you fail to your Tribune. A paper wil liveread to you by Make it your duty to let the when your carrie: seng: Tribune know misses you. ————— ee 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 j 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 nd return. Better roads for Natrona county and more highways for Wyoming. More equitable freight rates for shippers o€ the Rocky Mountain region and more frequent train service for Casper. | UNWISE TO ADVISE A BUYER’S STRIKE The Saturday Evening Post is a periodical with a circulation of more than two million. To belittle its influence would be foolish. It has five million readers, probably, and of these perhaps a million are » heads of families who thoughtfully consider what contributors to its columns have to say upon economic subjects. And the Saturday Evening| Post could be in better business at this juncture than it is when it ad- vises a “buyers’ strike.” The first and only ‘buyers’ strike” this coun- try ever experienced may have been to an extent justified, although even that is not certain: a “buyers’ strike” now would be unjustifiable, and it would prove disastrous. Vir- tually every household in the coun- try would be adversely affected. The manufacturer is not the only one interested in keeping his fac- tories going. The corner grocer is interested; the farmer who must find consumers for his produce is interested. The doctor is interested, the mechanic and the day laborer are interested, for we are a people of interlocking interests. Commerce is not stimulated by applying an anaesthetic; trade does not thrive upon strangulation. The Tribune and all other pub- lications should advise expenditures without extravagance; the legiti-| mate exchange of earned money for essentials. special mes: | | chapters explaining the evolution loring legislation for the establish- | ment of protected areas for our na- |tive trees and flowers. | that to those who can read it aright|the hotel a few minutes later an Made by is as absorbing as an epoch in the|was not seen until her body was Casper Ice and Cold ; ” found. Storage history. of our own race: ..| Her daughter, Mrs. Hliabeth Pl ) The writer briefly outlines this|,,.¢¢ arrived on Tuesday morning and H. P. BUBB, Sole Owner great drama which “began at the/that evening accompanied the body | unfavorable for one species, forcing tain only some 1,000 or 1,100 dele- gates, our poll should at least be a very strong indication of how the convention would vote if it should meet today.” The Literary Digest poll gives a wide margin of leadership to - Wil- liam G, McAdoo. As first choice he received 706 votes. Henry Ford . is |second, with 231. Then came Oscar. W. Underwood, 204; Alfred E. Smith, 128;'\James M. Cox, 125; Woodrow Wilson, 111; Samuel M. | Ralston, 91; John W. Davis, 62; William J. Bryan, 41; Carter Class 40. These are the ten leading candi- dates in the poll. There-are nearly a hundred other names listed, with | votes ranging from 24 as first} choice to one vote as third choice. Some of those who voted offered explanations. Mayor Durkan of) Scranton, Penn., said: “I have | selected McAdoo as my first choice | for the reason that I believe he has | | the best chance to obtain the Demo- j \cratic nomination. Henry Ford, to |my mind, would receive more pop- | ular votes than McAdoo. Governor | Alfred E. Smith of New York | would be the most popular candi-| date of all.” County Chairman Mc- Naughton of Harlan, Iowa, quoted as saying: “We think in this part of the country Ford is a sure winner.” A county chairman in Alabama wrote: “Henry Ford is stronger than the combined field of prospective Democratic candidates.”” The vote in Iowa ran in approxi- mately the same order as the gen-| | eral vote for the entire nation. Mc-| Adoo received 33 votes in this state, Ford 10, Underwood 5 and Smith 4. The Literary Digest poll will re- |ceive much attention by virtue of | the fact that a large number of the | voters will sit in the Democrstie| | national convention next year. No bist a7 OS oTdewes Come: BACK HERE AND DRESS! RIGHT IN FRONT pF AUNT EPPIE“THEN SHE CANT SEE ‘TOU is} Aunt Eppie Hogg, the Fattest Woman in Three Counties Avuat EPPin is A Most WELCOME ADDITION To ANY oUTING BECAUSE. WHEN? SHZ's ALONG 1 ALMOST EVERYONE CAN CHANGE INT. THEIR SATHING SurTs RIGHT OA THE BEACH ee —By Fox ! } | one denies, however, that sentiment may change before that time ar- rives. Considering the general party leadership of the men who voted, one of the most significant features of The Digest’s poll is the support accorded to Henry Ford Excluding only McAdoo, Ford shows the greatest strength of all the party favorites. | YELLOWSTONE PARK BOOK PUBLISHED Designed especially to meet a . : \ Arte: led ice men of this section in the reor sian Drill \ganization. of the American Legion SSS |port. About forty ex-service men we! LARAMIE, Wyo., July 5.— Lara-|present at the meeting and it was book in|mie well,/decided that the post should be re- pressing demand for a has another artesian \pisin non-technical English on the|brought in on the property of the|organized, new officers elected and plain ni e Cathedral home by Burkhard and|the affairs of the camp placed on a plant life of the park, a book en-|7.i-4 at a depth some 300 feet short titled “Trees and Flowers of Yel-jor the estimate for a free-flowing llowstone National Park” has just/well. Artesian water, flowing in a been published with the approval|*ubstantial quantity sufficient to irri- . gate a considerable area, it waa esti- of bc Dac aetts Service’ by J-| rated was found at.a depth of 340| 5. Haynes, offici park photo- feet, whereas original estimates, for a| grapher. It is written by Frank /flow in any quantity were for 700) E. A. Thone Ph.d., park naturalist feet or more. and lecturer; and illustrated with! The fact that water wae found with la tree flow at so shallow a depth does {sketches by Margaret A. Thone|. i inaicate, however, that the drill-| and photographs by J. E. Haynes. /ers had an easy job, On the contrary | {A beautiful cover, in colors, shows|the structure is so difficult that it| the fringed gentian which abounds |has taken about as long to drill the Me 5 ay 340 feet as it would take to drill twice This book aims especially toifac-| neistereatintiotatinn easier features to the drillers. ilitate identification of about one ———E——EE hundred of the trees and flowers| most frequently seen and inquired Woman Drowned about by tourists. There are also ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo., July Shortly after 8 o'clock on Sunday afterndon the body of Mrs. Anna Lar- son was found in a pool of water just west of the roundhouse near Bilatr- town, death resulting from drowning ‘Whether it was a case of suicide or accidental drowning is not known. Mrs. Larson was 65 years of age and was en route from her home at Boise, Idaha, to the home of her daughter at Alliance, Neb. She got off the train at Green River and did not return, Sunday afternoon she reached Rock Springs. She was taken to a hotel by Chief Capen but !eft ‘business basis. At the present time about seventy-five have signed up to join and it is expected that this num- ber will be increased considerably be- fore the next meeting. es Bed bug juice. guaranteed to kil) al vermin; will not s.ain bed cloti- ing. Apco Products (0. Phone 286. Demand Bubb’s Quality ASK FOR 400 A Chocolate Milk Drink With a Rico Flavor Ask For Bubb’s Quality ICE CREAM AND ICE The only up-to-date Ice Cream factory in Central Wyoming The only Custard Mixed and Homogenized Ice Cream made in Casper fer Touched by Human Hands of plant life in the Park and fav- “The plants are more than var- iegated and interesting setting and complement to the wonders of the Park,” writes Dr. Thone. “They; are not static, passive things, but actors in a most immense drama of their own, a silent play of struggle and success, tragedy and triumph, Phone 493 of RISA MKS ance, Mrs her mother to her home at Alli Neb. Eliott wishes to thank the end of the glacial epoch, fifty or a hundred thousand years ago.’’ ‘Even after all available room}),.4; ‘Red Cross and Mrs. Lafferty was taken up by the plants the|for tcindness and assistance shown drama continued,” he writes, “‘and|during her sorrow, the Red Cross, ilo nS : nating $200 towards the preparation it still goes on, No area where a/i0a"tsoment of the body. plant can get a roothold is left bare ps and as soon as conditions become To Reorganize SELECTING DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL FAVOR- | ITES In a recent issue, The Literary Digest prints the results of its na- tion-wide poll on Democratic pre: dential prospects. By way of ex planation of the method pursued The Digest s: The Republican nomination appears to be consid- ered a foregone conclusion by the political wiseacres, unless some new complication arises, so for the pres- ent we have confined our attention to the De We have of Demo nators, ref resentative overnors, 1 canvass cratic United national convey it to give up the fight, its place is taken over by another that is adapt-) ed to the changing circumstances. |“#Pt tonal ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo., July 5.— Cc. F. Plummer of Casper, nat- Vice commander of the Amer. If a lily pond dries up, the bot-|ican Legion was in Rock Springs for tom is soon occupied with cattails|/tne purpose of interesting the ex-xerv and rushes, which are succeeded by sedges and grosses, and these by | willows, and finally the forest comes' | AUTO SERVICE CO, in If a dry, sagebrush covered WE DO SIMONIZING hillside develops a gully where a | Cars Washed, Polished and trickle of moisture persists, the Greased DAY AND NIGHT sagebrush must yield to plants that can make more advantageous use SERVICE of the water. First a few shrubs, 133 N. Wolcott then a thicket of aspen, and finally 1 Block East of Henning fir or spruce or pine. The aspen Phone 2370 s pioneers, pushing up the slopes and out into the open, carry-| the new conditions to some ex-| ts shade and covering new trees that follow e The ptior of trees cover ry the lodgepole pine, pine, the douglas fir, e, the cedar, the e »w leaved cotton- T ne is by far the most 1 i » spectes in the par k nearly threa-fourths whole tree Plans Ready LARAMIB. Wyo., July 5.—W. A , the architect, stated that ns for the proposed shop build- the University af Wyoming ing at so that they can get before the com- mittee at the same time the plans are submitted, so that it ts possible at that time to be in shape to proceed with the advertising for bids and the awarding of the contracts. The com- mittee at the same time will consider the bids for the new gymnasium, part of the contract for which is to be let shortly when the determination as to brick or stone has been reached. ‘These two buildings are next to the building program of the board of trus- tees. and both are large enough to furnish lively competition for, their | work. ; The executtve committe, will mect on July 10, which is the thirty-third annivermry of the admission of the state into the union, and it 1s expect- ed that the meeting will prove all the more intereating on that account. Bisitcocbe St isin a Body Found © ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo., July 5.— After a six months’ search for Carl Bain, who was lost December 11, 1922 while trapping near Merna. brothers located: hin body in the Fa'l River Basn district. Bain was a trapper and left his home last December to make an in spection of traps, which he had for coyotes. He was weering. ski's and it im thought he was coasting downhill when he struck @ reck which stunned him, and he was fro- zen to death. L. L, Bain, of North Platte, Neb. came several months ago to assist the brothers living at Merna in their search for the body, which was found in a ravine in a fair state of preeer- ation. The body was brought to tho Sprowell Mortuary and prepared for shipment to the olé home place at Bedford, hy. The deceased is survived by six brothers, two residing at Merna, on? at North Platte, Neb. anc three in Kentucky. Sheridan Girl Is Killed In Crash of Car SHERIDAN, Wyo., July 5.—Miss Evelyn Johns, ticket seller for a local moving picture theater, was in- stantly killed when the automo- bilé in which she was riding over- turned on Prairie Dog road near here. The driver of the car was only slightly injured. aot ee Our domesticated turkey developed from the wild bird of Southern Mex- ico. oe had been completed, and will be ready to be submitted to the executive com- mittee of the board of trustees, at its meeting on July 10, They are now in the hands of the contractors for estit- mates as to the cost, to be prepared Glass windows were not #een until after the Norman Conquest. ———.__—_—_- EXPERT watch and jewelry ing. Casper Jewelry Co., 0-8 ar &Rich as Butter— Sweet as ‘a Nut? Casper, Wyo. Phone 1732 a Wyoming Baking TRAIN SCHEDULES Chicago & Northwestern wewenene-------8:40 D. m. Arrives 2:00 p. m. 2:30 p. m. Arrives Departs 3:55 p. m. f You Want-- QUICK SERVICE AND QUALITY WORK AT REASONABLE PRICES PHONE OR VISIT ommercial Printing Co Basement of Midwest Bldg—Main Entrance Phone 980J set) THURSDAY, JULY 5, 19: Yt Pry mo a J. P. HALL, Division Passenger Agent, A. T. & 8. F. Ry. Co. 524 17th St., Kenmark Hotel Bids, Denver, Cole. Hats have a way of getting mislaid, yet you probably wouldn’t care to set aside a million dollars to find yours. So it is interesting to know that some other people have done this for you —have invested millions so that you may locate anything in the dark, and enjoy many other conveniences night and day. Natrona Power Company never lets its fires die out. Boilers and genera- tors are always on the job. Miles of distributing mains are ready for the snap of your switch. It took money to construct this equipment. It takes money to keep it in order. Water SOFT AND PURE Order by the case or 5-gallon bottles. ~ HILL CREST WATER WE DELIVER 503 East Second St. Phone 1151

Other pages from this issue: