Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 23, 1923, Page 6

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MONDAY, JULY 23, 1923. THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE 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. The Casper Daity Tribune issued} every evening and The Sunday Morn- ing Tribune every Sunday, at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices, Trib-| une Building, opposite Postofiice. | _——$—<$—<———— Entered at Casper (Wyoming), Post- office ag Second Class Matter, No vember 22, 1916. Business Telephone Branch Telephone Exchange Connect- ing All Departments. CHARLES W. BAKTON President and Editor Advertising Representatives, Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bicg., Chicago, Ill.; 286 Fifth Ave..New York City; Globe Bldg.. Bos- ton, Mass., Suite 404, Sharon Bldg. 55 New Montgamery St. San Fran- cisco, 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 Bureaa of Circulation (A. B. ©.) Member of the Associated Press SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier One Year, Daily and Sunday --$9.00 One Year, Sunday Only 2.50 Six Months, Daily and Sunday-- : Three Months, Daily and Sunday One Month, Daily and Sunday -- -t% Per Copy -----. = 30! By Matt One Year, Daily and Sunday. aie One Year, Sunday only. Six Months, Ditty and $4 4.00 ‘Three Months, Dally and Sunday 2.26 One Month, Daily and Sunday-. .75 All subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscription becomes one month In arrears. Hick If You Don't Get Your Tribuno Call 15 or 16 any time between 6:00 and 8 o'clock p. m., if you fail to recetve your Tribune. A paper wil ‘ve delivered to you by special mes- wenger. Make it your duty to let the Tribune know when your carrie? misses you. ——$=——— aa ae) Shee emery SS THE NEW SENATOR FROM MINNESOTA Magnus Johnson, Farmer-Labor candidate, ‘‘beat that feller” Gov. Preus, and will go to Washington as United States senator from Min- nesota. Preus is an intelligent lib- eral. Johnson himself doesn’t know exactly what he is except that his office was given him by unreason- ing discontent and that he expects | to take any lessons he may need) fre La Follette. Mr. Johnson may be eenceded the good qualities which make a hard working, honest citizen, but by his own showing he is not fitted to rep- resent his state in the senate, and yet his state elects him. His choice of La Follette as a patron and in- structor indicates a kinship between Wisconsin and Minnesota which can be explained. Wisconsin has « large population of conscious aliens. They have Am- erican citizenship, and some are of American birth, but they are mere- ly living in America. The core of this alienism in Wisconsin is Ger man, and it is from the Germany of Marx. Where Wisconsin has in- dustries, as in Milwaukee, they are indoctrinated with Socialism, and politics is dominated by it. The great movements which de- veloped the resources of the state are completed, such as railroad building and lumbering. The aliens have no conception how the state ‘was made prosperous and great. A railroad system is represented by a svay frieght run by Jake or Bill and dominated to the injury of plain veople, by some capitalistic influ- ence. Homesteading gave free land. It is proper in this economic opinion for other needs of life to be obtain- ed free, If prices of farm pro- ducts are bad it necessarily is the fault of a capitalistic system. Giv- en a politician shrewd enough, as La Follette, or simple enough, as Johnson, to tell these people what they already believe, and he is a winnen Minnesota is about as Wisconsin. Its Jim Hill days are over. The building has been done. Even the milling industry has ceased to rep- resent individual creative ability and is accepted as a natural product of the wheat lands. The people do not see how constructive genius gave them the development of their resources, their means of coopera- tion and organization. The system which they attack at its foundations made it possible for them to have farms, to raise wheat and to market it; but the farm lands were easily acquired, the wheat eas- ily grown, and, therefore, it must follow, in their opinion, if at any time anything becomes difficult, a conspiracy exists within the system to deprive them of rights. The natural and political liberality with which alens have been received has predisposed them to believe that any economic phenomenon is a piece of governmental malevolence. Therefore Johnson, a simple man with a loud voice, is elected to bust things, to put out the fire, to cook e meal and serve it a. If Johnson should see that s folly he'd be his opinion i as A traitor by He may be too simple ers at home | on broken ever to see it. Probably these ab- errations of democracy should be expected, but the absorbing power of a republic has its limits. If every state were to take the liberties with common sense and good judgment which Minnesota has taken, which Wisconsin takes, congress would soon give the coun-! try something to recover from, and ship and poor living. If a generation of poor living is all that can teach American voters prudence that teacher may have to That the pioneers of the great West are not forgotten in the hur- ried life of editors of big metropoli- tan dailies is shown in the following tribute to a real pioneer, Ezra Meeker, eternally linked with the romance and history of the Old Oregon Trail. appeared last week in the New York Sun and The Globe, runs: “There was nothing particularly significant in the departure from Iowa for Oregon of Ezra Meeker with his wife and child seventy-five years ago. There were thousands of ox teams westward bound in 1852, and if the crowd was import- jand the individual did not seem to be. to drive a span across the greater part of the continent at the age of 93 is calculated to stir up a great deal of fact and imagination. The attempt, if successful, will «| of course be a remarkable personal accomplishment. Nongenarians are not usually ambitious of riding be- hind oxen for two thousand miles, or able to do so if they feel the im- pulse. But the pilgrimage is the n.ore remarkable as a kind of adver- tisement of history. Here is a man who looked upon an unmade country, and he is now able to cross it again and find it a great productive empire. In 1852 there were no States, no settled population, no established law in the great range of prairie and mountain crossed by the gray stream of cov- ered wagons. This summer Mr. Meeker, if he wishes, can probably be sure of an almost nightly bath with his water on tap. He can be sure of farms where there were grazing buffalo, rails where there were hoof marks, towns where there were tepees, factories where there were beaver dams. Mr. Meeker says of the migration in 1852 that the column was 500 miles long. “There were wagons 300 miles ahead cf us. While waiting for one of our sick to recover 1,600 wagons passed us.” But today that thin and tenuous rope of humanity has split and broadened into a perma- nent population. The daring tenacle pushed into an almost uninhabited land has frayed and multiplied into more than a million square miles of men, their adventur> translated into astonishing accomplishment. In its way nothing historic has been more wonderful than this. The barbarians who submerged the last of Rome conquered and destroyed an empire; Mr. Meeker and_ his marching comrades made one. Their work was hasty and not always last- ing or lovely. In aspiration, in for- titude, in labor it was heroic. If, as some have said, it is not civili- zation, it is what civilization grows from. As the accomplishment of seventy-five years it is well worth contemplation as any supposedly glorious destruction wrought by spear or gunpowder.” _ TODAY'S ANNIVERSARIES 1798—Roger Sherman, one of the Connecticut signers of the Declaration of Independence died at New Haven, Conn. Born at Newton, Mass., April 19, 1721. 1828—Coventry Patmore, celebrat- ed English poet, born. Died Nov. 26, 1896. 1886—The first passenger carrying railroad in Canada, the Champlain and St. Lawrence, was opened to traffic. 1865—Arthur Tappan, first presi- dent of the American Anti- Slavery Society, died at New | Haven, Conn. Born at Northampton, Mass., May 22 1876. 1885—Gen. Ulysses 8. Grant, the eighteenth president of the U. S., died at Mt. McGregor, N. Y. Born at Point Pleas- and, O., Aprii 27, 1822, 1888—Ninth century of the intro- duction of Christianity into Russia celebrated at St. Petersburg. 1891—The Jewish Alliance of Am- erica made public a plan for distributing Russian Jews in communities throughout the Western and South States, 1894—Gov. Tillman of South Caro- lina issued a proclamation re-establishing state control of the li traffic. ‘ONE YEAR AGO TODAY Britian refused request of United Stat side the 3-mile iimit British ships suspected of rum-running, it might take a generation of hard-} take the job.—The Chicago Tribune { A NEW TRAIL TO OREGON | The editorial, which} But Mr. Meeker’s proposal | r permission to search out-| | | | THe SKipPER USUALLY WHEN HE Lcutnbeomeentotiaid LADY HARPIST AT THE RIALTO Miss Genevieve Fitzgerald, pupil of the world famous harpist, Alberto Salvi, will be the featured artist at the Rialto theater this week as an added attraction. She has had a thorough foundation in other branches of music besides the harp, Her reputation as a skilled artist| lowing her course Carnation gives complete milk and cream serv- ice — the only milk supply needed for your household. . woe cusper way Cripune The Toonerville Trolley That Meets All the Trains RUNS THE CAR BACKWARDS 1S FRYING FISH ON THE CAR STOVER BECAUSE HE CAN WATCH THE SKILLET AND “THE TRACK ZASIER AND “THE SMOKE ETC., DORSN'T BLOW BACK ON PASSENGERS. under Salvi that she held for several years the position of head of the de-| partment of harp and aesthetic danc-| ing at Sherwood Music school, Chi- cago and the Visitation Academy, Evanston, Ill. In modern music, Miss Fitzgerald interprets the Chopin preludes, Me- Dowell’s Woodland sketches and many other classics. Because of the interest being teken| in the work of Miss Fitzgerald in| Casper where she and her sister re cently opened a studio, her appear-} ance at the Rialto theater the first part of the week undoubtedly will be well receive es The Pikes Peak motor in the new thand the master of every hill ARNATION Nothing is added sugar. Only part of moved to and absolutely safe. as it comes from the methods, ii milk—100 per cent cows’ milk. » It contains all of the food elements in the fresh whole milk. ¢ luce the bulk and give you doubly rich milk in convenient-sized containers. Car- nation is then sterilized (heated) to keep it pure Removal of part of the water leaves twice the proportion of cream in Carnation as in whole milk. Thus Carnation ie twice ac rich as ordinary milk. For cresma purposes, use it back the water we removed (equal parts); for cooking uses add from 3 to 4 parts of water. By Fox "amis sretess of FRING FISH CUGHTA BE. PUT A STOP a) “THE GO-GETTER’ PROVES BIG SUCCESS AT RIALTO, Cosmopolitan's picturization of. Peter B. Kyne's novel, “The Go-Get- ter," for Paramount is meeting with market success at the Rialto theater. This picture, with T. Roy Barnes, Seena Owen and other prominent players in featured roles, caught on in great shape with the enthusiastic audience. ]up in the great palace belonging to | delightful love interest throughout. William Norris, Tom Lewis and Louls Wolhetm are well suited to their respective roles. ——_—_—_— LAVISH SCENES FOUND IN “ENEMIES OF WOMEN” PLAYING AT THE AMERICA Lavish—that seems to be the ons! word that will describe “nenties of Women” now playing at the America theater with Lionel Barrymore and Alma Rubens in the leading roles. ‘The producers of the picture have) spared no energy and no expense to make it one of the most gorgeous spectacles ever thrown on the screen “Enemies of Wamen,” could be called a war picture, but that {is not its main theme. Set in ths heart of France at the time the nation is drawn into the great maelstrom known as the World War, it shows the life of an idle class of parasites who know neither patriotism nor other manhood. One of these comes to a cynical con- clusion that woman is man’s natural enemy. Therefore, he says, man should shut out women if he is to find contentment. A clique of four is formed who style themselves “enem- jes of women.” They shut themselves the Russain baron and prepare to en- joy perfect peace, ‘The theory does not work however and the attraction of the feminine finally laws all things to ft. The enemies of women are finally led one by one into the war and in this way make amends for the worth- lessness of their previous lives. jatacdah hhh VOTING ON BEAUTIES AT ARKEON STARTS TONIGHT Voting on the 132 nominees in the Arkeon beauty contest will begin this evening, according to an announce- ment by T. J. McKeon, manager of the establishment. There will be free door admission tonight and also free dancing from 9 unt!! 10 o'clock. Each person entering the hall will be given 25 votes to cast for his favorite. Ten votes will also be given with each dance ticket purchased. } Much interest has been manifested in the beauty contest, and the dance this evening should be lively since it has such a drawing card. To the winner in the contest the Arkeon will give a free trip to Long Beach, Cal., and other points on the coast and a return trip to Casper. A solitaire diamond ring will be awarded the person achieving second place, and to the one coming third Although a comedy-drama, the there will be given a platinum wrist watch. HOTEL MARSEILLES Broadway at 103d St. (Subway Express Station at Door) NEW.YORK CITY Near Riverside Drive’ Central Park, Theatres and Shopping Sections Double room, bath $5 per day Handsome suites of 2, 3rooms Dinner de Luxe $1.35 served 4n Blue Room and Grill Exceptional Orchestra M. P. MURTHA, Mgn Phone 1732 Casper, Wyo. Wyoming Baking Co. Notice to Water Users Commencing Sunday, July 22, 1923, the Water Department finds it abso- lutely necessary to limit the hours of irrigation from 5:00 p. m. to 9:00 a. m. My Favorite (@ Recipes Cream ef Spinach Soup 2 tablespoons flour, 2. tablespoons butter, 3 cups bolling water, 2 poets spinach or % pound, ‘Wash spinach thoroughly and cook 80 minutes in boiling Drain and rub water. through sieve. Melt butter, add flour, then milk, MILK is just pure to Carnation, not even the natural water ie re- bake until potatoes are soft. This recipe serves six people. Cream White Saves 2 tablespoons flour, % cup Can nation Milk, 2 tablespoons butter or substitute, % teaspoon salt, % cup water, can; for whole milk, put Melt butter or butter substitute, add flour and stir until thorou, mixed. Add the milk and wed about five minutes or until the mix- ture thickens, then add seasonings, This recipe makes one cup of white sauce, Creamed Caulifiower 1 head cauliflower, 2 cups cream white sauce, until further notice. W. H. JOHNSON, Water Commissioner. 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 IT’S CLEAR SOFT AND PURE The high quality of Carnation is due to the excellence of the fresh whole milk and to our extreme care and long experience in prepar- ; ing Carnation by the most modern sanitary Millions are using Carnation because they have found it the economical and dependable Pure Milk Service. needs, : “~ from Contented Cows” LOO You, too, will find that Carnation Milk is just “100 per cent cows’ milk,” rich, safe, con- venient, economical, Order a supply from your Remove outer leaves, soak thirty minutes in cold water with the head down and cook with the head up, twenty minutes or until soft, in boiling salted water. Drain and heat in the cream white sauce, This recipe serves six people, Fieh Souffie 2 cups fish, 14% cups white sauce, parsley, 2 eggs beaten separately, Flake the cooked fish and season, Cool the white sauce, add the fish, then the well beaten yolks and mix, Fold in the whites of eggs beaten stiff,’ Bake in buttered individual baking dishes or in a pudding dish set in @ pan of hot water, Bake twenty minutes or until puffed and 503 East Second St. Order by the case or 5-gallon bottles. HILL CREST WATER WE DELIVER Phone 1151 =IIWVVeeS'!] |] grocer today and learn the food value of Car- nation for all of your daily milk and cream brewn. Serve immediately, recipe serves six people, special dish, to you. Address m Milk Products Co, Stuart Gollan Seattle, Washington. This 'f you desire a recipe for any will try to send it Stuart Bullding, TRAIN SCHEDULES Chicago & Northwestern “it Rod ve Arrives » >.» Departs | i 2:00 p. m +h 2:20 p.m. ! Arrives t- "S| ‘Departs | anna ae =~ -- 3:40 p,m. i 855 p.m mauee Chicago, Burlington & Quincy hy yetatbouna Arrives Departs CreaGsTobane Domestic Science Dept, Carnation Milk Products Ca,

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