Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 6, 1923, Page 6

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PAGE SIX. THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE The Casper Daily Tribune issuec 5 every evening and The Sunday Morn-|ent the little girl toddled up. He ing Tribune every Sunday, at Casper, | Wyomink, Publication votives Tris| Soo he pane, paced nek: Sane MR. BANG. une Building, opposite Postoffice. | baby’s mother saw it. And when| |>-fyQ@N$ HIS <= H . ba Entered at Casper (Wyoming), Post-|she led several other women in vio-} HEAD <To: ? ce as Second Class Matter, No . vember 22, 1916. \lent and muscular protest, the feeble ook FoR. | | ones SE A ee is and 16 man could make no explanation. He : ranch .T ing All Departments. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRES The Associated Press is exclusively Esntitied to the use for publication of dited in this paper and all news ci also the local news published herein. bs CHARLES W. BARTON and Editor President | - |man would find a home for six dvertising Representatives. ~ . . proaen K Me & Prudden, 1720-23|months in any event. But still { > Big. Chicago, Il.; 286 Fitth) there is the possibility that the w York ( Globe Bidg.. Bos: | : : “ton, Mass., Suite 404, Sharon Ld, church services and the toddling <5 ‘New Montgomery St. San Frae-|girl baby had brought the man to ecisca, Cal. Copies of the Daily Tr-|_ realization of how far he had 1 the New York, Chi- end San Francisco of- are welcome. une are on fil cago, Boston sices and visitors mber of Aud't Bureau of (A. B. C. oC) mber of tie Associated Press SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier “One Year. Dai 4 Sund: 9.00 O1 Year, Sunday Only _--. 2. .. “Six Months, Daily and Sunday-— 4.60 light. ~Three Months, Daily and Baan 2 rr ,.One Month, Daily and Sunday -- -* ESR ACeRY: —— ae BOY SCOUT | By Mail {One Year, Daily and Sunday----87.80 ANNIVERSARY One Year, Sunday only- 260/ July 8 and 9 will be significant ae een mihe. Dally a $20] gates in the life of the Boy Scouts Three Months, Daily and Sunday 2.2 @Gne Month, Daily and Sunday-— .75 All subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Daily Tribune will Wnot insure delivery after subscription a *hecomes one month in arrears. Kick If You Don't Get Your Tribune Call 15 or 16 any time between $:00 and ¥ o'clock p. m., if you fall to receive your Tribune. A paper wil fhe delivered to you by special mes #senger, Make it ysur duty to let the @ribune know when your je: misses you. —————_—$<$$<< E> eg a el ————————— | THE CASPER ‘TRIBUNE'S | PROGRAM Irrigation project west of Casper be authorized and completed at e, complete and scient tem for the of \ comprehens! scho: ticn park syst poo!s fer the \ {fie zoning Jasper. , ituble freight ra ‘h.ppers of the Rocky Mou tegion and more frequent train #} service for Casper. HOW TO USE A VACATION “The chief business of the child” for the first twelve or fourteen years,” says a builetin issued by the U. S. Bureau of Education of the Department of the Interior, “‘is to grow strong physically.” The bul- letin might well have added “and morally,” but since the subject mat- ter is principally devoted to vaca- tion vs. the school year, that may be more or less beside the point, This is essentiahy true, perhaps inevitabiy. Education has nowhere a better system than in the United "States, Thomas A. Edison and other viconoclasts to the contrary notwith- standing. But any system which} must neéds regulate hundreds of ‘thousands of vitally different, in- @ividual, sensitive boy and girl ma- _chines, gathered from all classes of society and in all parts of the coun- try, must of necessity have some “faults. During the school term of eight or nine months boys and girls ative in a more or less unnatural Sway, sitting too long in the same position; studying, often, some- ething which they consider dull and which has for them at the moment very little real interest, however valuable it may be in after life. Natural growth, the growth of the tribal peoples or of the unschooled youth, is thus interfered with. Vacation time is a good oppor- tunity to correct such drawbacks, slight as they may be in comparison with the advantages of our modern system of education. Three months of long hours in the fresh air, of sunshine and shadow, of stream and plain, of tramping, fishing; swimming, sleeping out of doors, hunting and the things dear to boy- hood will return the young idea to school in the fall brown as a berry, clear eyed as the morning and right as rain. With this formula, a mod- erate amount of physical labor is beneficial. His interest will be/ widened, his muscles and mind strengthened, and he will have earned many things he could not Wpossibly have acquired from any Mooks but the book of nature. A MAN—AND A CHILD S Patting the head of a baby girl is Spot a crime. It is not even disor- Werly conduct. But a man who did at has been sent to the workhouse in ew York for six months, and there- dy is told a story of human wreck- er ieae age which only New York—or pos- Bibly London—could supply. The gran who patted the baby is a grad hate of the University of Toronto nd of I He was once the ector of » Episcopal church, ae he now is a confessed “bum.” & This man walked in front of a ephone Exchange Connect: | ! Scouts Che Casper Lailp Cribune jchureh. Sewvices were going on. The Terrible Tempered Mr. Bang— He stopped to listen. At that mom-/| was arrested and jailed. | There is little sympathy | mother’s heart when she believes \her child is in danger. The mild protestations of an obvious “bum” could not sway her. It is impos-} |sible to blame the mother. The! | magistrate who sent the man to the | workhouse did so in the belief the in a fallen. He said he believed that | was the case. There is no crime in patting the head of a baby. It is not even |disorderly conduct. But in this case, at least, it was a startling {commentary on how much of lif ja child—and a man—can bring of America. The 18th annual meet- ing of the national council of that fine organization will be held then. And at this meeting an il- luminating report will be presented, showing among other things a net gain in enrollment of 79,863 since January 1922. The total boy membership in he} Scouts today is 472,151, and the total adult membership 140,329. If| all the Boy Scouts of America| could be brought together in one line, with arms extended, they |would form a continuous chain jtouching finger tips all across the state of Wyoming. It would take 80 hours to review a parade of Boy and their leaders, if the marchers walked steadily. Only 8 cities in the United States and 17 states have populations that ex- ceeded the Boy Scout membership. These are facts worth consider- ing. It is even more interesting that 1,117 representative business and professional men throughout examination for entrance to the the country make up the national! naval academy, Annapolis, Md., the /council; and that they will sleep| young man having been nominated “under canvas” in Interstate Park,|for 4 scholarship by U. 8. Senator New Jersey, in the biggest camp| V*'Te?: for boys in the world. They will eat camp food with camp tools, sit on Bonds Urged the ground around an enormous) semRIDAN, Wyo., July 6.—Sherl- | Receives Appointment EETSEE, Wyo., July 6— vers will leave the first of to be present at a physical camp fire, go to bed and get up when the camp bugler tells them to. The men who will do this are, most of them, far*beyond the age when men normally revert to such boy- hood practices. They are solid, sub- dan can heave a high school enroll- ment of 1,000 pupils in two or three years if the city can have accommo- dations for them, according to Super intendent of Schools J. J. Early in advocating the voting of the $348,000 bond issue and the additional 4-mill tax levy at the special election July 7. stantial citizens; and that they take such an interest in the Boy Scouts is tribute indeed to the importance and standing of the organization. ‘The lack of facilities to accommo: date the present high schoo! enroll- ment is hindering prospects for fu- ture growth, Mr. Early declared. Families residing in the Sheridan territory are not disposed to move into Sheridan territory for the school term because of inability to provide SOUND INVESTMENT With something more than a graceful gesture, the Canadian) government has included in its sup-, plementary budget estimates an an- nuity of $7,500 for Dr. F. G. AUTO SERVICE CO, WE DO SIMONIZING Cars Washed, Polished and Banting, the young Toronto physi- Greased cian who has become famous thru DAY AND NIGHT his discovery of the insulin treat- SERVICE 188 N. Wolcott 1 Block East of Henning Phone 2370 ment for diabetes. If the annuity ig granted it will permit him to de- vote his life, untrammeled, to scien- tific research. The research staffs of great tech- nical companies, such as the General Electric, often number scientists | who have been in effect put upon! a pension in the expectation that) they may develop something of} value to the corporation. Medical) innovation, fortunately, has no great | commercial value; but Canada is to/ be congratulated on having found a way in which those investigators! who work in the interests of hu- manity at large can be given oppor-| tunities for working in their own! way. A pension for this purpose would | not only be the most fitting and most dignified way in which Dr.| Banting’s service could be reward- ed; it would also likely turn out as one of the best investments which | the Canadian government has ever} Demand Bubb’s Quality ASK FOR 400 A Chocolate Milk Drin« 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 Never Touched by Humam Hands |made of their taxpayer’s money. Made by | | Casper Ice and Cold |BELIEVE. LITTLE ABOUT Storage | H. P. BUBB, Sole Owner RUSSIA The news direct from Moscow by the Associated Press that “Dr. Tik- hon, former Patriarch of all Russia, is free and at ease in the Donskay | Monastery” is important and should | |be noted by all who took at face! value the reports that he had been| tortured and killed. Once again important and highly | inflammatory news about Russia has proved to be unreliable. Once| again we are reminded how skep-| tical we ought to be about any news Phone 493 Drink Hillcrest from Russia which does not come from perfectly well-known, first hand witnesses. Nothing second- a er | hand out of Russia is worth reading, much less believing, ‘ eves A STR |adequate sccommodations for high school pupils. There are enough seventh and eighth grade pupils next year to fill the present high school bullding. The problem confronting the schoo) offi cials of Sheridan has been for several years, but each has become more and more #0, the city has grown and the sch ol enrollment has steadily increased. Endorsement of the bond issue and extra tax levy for a new high school building has been given by Sheridan's leading clvic and commercial organt- zations. as 3 Surveying Road at brand | GUERNSEY, Wyo., July 6.—Latest word on the proposed north and south cut-off of the Burlington and C. & 8. railroad is that a joint surveying party will be here within the next month to go over the line and re- establish the survey which was made several years ago. Following the sur- veying party will be a party of the chiefs of both roads who will go over the proposed rcute. 43 Those in a position to know some- thing of the plans of the roads are very optimistic in their belief and are expecting things to take form this suramer. The old C. & W. railroad between BECOMES “THE. CENTRAL _ FIGURE IN......- veo TERRIFIC ~ AUTOMOBILE SMAsHuP* By Fontaine Fox | esT’CAR AND | Son rafich, about 12 miles from Ar vada, on North Prong of Wild Horse FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1923. were well made and were entirely of copper. About 150 gallons of mash were destroyed by the officers. wearing apparel from the Birnie mil-| about six feet long, upon which were linery shop, pleaded not guilty to} three stills, two of ten gallon capa- charges of grand larceny in police] city and one of 15 gallons. The stills under $250 bond each. COMMUNIC ATION SPELLS TELEPHONE Makes Haul GILLETTE, Wyo., July 6.—Sheriff Dick Jarvis, accompanied by Special Prohibition Officer Bruce Hodge of Sheridan, and Special Officer R. E. Huffman of Salt Lake City, made the biggest moonshine haul since Camp- bell county went dry at the Robin- Creek, As the result of this raid Ray Carter and Sam Robinson were ar- rested, but both were released after furnishing the proper bonds. A search about the house revealed only about a quart of moonshine, but down in a secluded place a few rods from the place was found the whole moonshine outfit.- The fire place was It is said that if Europe had the same percentage of telephones per population as the United States, the League of Nations to enforce peace would be unneces- sary. Personal communication establishes friendship. When a voluble letter fails to soothe an irate customer there:remains but two things to be done_ One entails a journey by railroad with its attending expense and time lost in traveling. The other is at your elbow and is often overlooked— the telephone. and eae spe Breen mad you, can’ yourself. what substitures are for. i Genuine Darcova Valve Try calling “Long Distance” the next time you think a railroad journey is absolutely necessary and save yourself time, money and trouble. ing the oil till long after expect to re-cup. For years Darcova quality has been demon: over the oil country. The Darcova label is your security. If a valve cup hasn’t the name Darcova in it, you _know it isn’t genuine. Tell your dealer that only Darcova will do. Cu; there’s where Toe akctyou'd The Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Guernsey and Hartville Junction is being put in shape for use of some sort. This plece of railroad has been out of use since 1914 and at the grade crossings the rails were torn up. The rails are being replaced at the road crossings. Pair Plead Guilty LARAMIE, Wyo., July Martinez and Joe Ortez, arrested by Officer Al Cameron and Deputy Sheriff Lankford in connec- tion with the theft of some ladles ask tor Horlicks The ORIGINAL Malted Milk The Original Food-Drink for All Ages QuickLunchat Home, Office&sFountains. RichMilk, Malted Grain Extractin Pow- der& Tabletforms. Nourishing-Nocooking. 8@F Avoid Imitations and Substitutes Rich ‘as Butter— Wyoming Baking Co Sweet _os a Nut? Casper, Wyo. e Phone 1732 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. Phone 3 TRAIN SCHEDULES Chicago & Northwestern Arrives 2:00 p. m, Arrives 3:40 p. m. Chicago, Burlington & Quimy Arrives Departs 2:45 p. m. 10 p. m. 3:35 p. m 7:00 a. m. 7:20 a. m. 0.25 p. m 6.—Nellie | Mexicans, | TO THE PUBLIC OF SALT CREEK AND VICINITY HILLCREST WATER can now be obtained at our Station at Lavoye. We have overcome several difficulties and can now give you the right kind of service. We will de- liver as soon as we can get our telephone and give the pub- lic our number. To those who live in the vicinity of the Mammoth Camp, we wish to say that Hillcrest can be obtained at the Cas- per Provision Commissary. Hillcrest Water Company If You Want-- QUICK SERVICE AND QUALITY WORK 7 AT : REASONABLE PRICES PHONE OR VISIT Commercial Printing Co. Basement of Midwest Bldg—Main Entrance Phone 980J

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