Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE TWO. 2d TEAGHERS FROM NATRONA Given Great Boost Late Tuesday. “ DOUGLAS, Wyo., Oct., 10—The second day of the Wyoming state teachers’ convention here was featured by a large delegation of| 230 instructors from Natrona county | which swelled the attendance con siderably yesterday. Today marks the opening of the state meeting proper, the meetings hitherto held having only delegations from cer- tain parts of the state. Seven hun- dred teachers should be in attend- ance today. Yesterday the principal speakers were Dr. William A. Cook, dean of the University of. South Dakota, Miss Ruth Adsit of the faculty of the University of Wyoming, and Judge V. J. Tidball. The vocational agricultural department held an in- teresting session in addition to these lectures. D. Van Clyde Meade of the University of Southern Call- fornla will be a speaker today. The Douglas Kiwanis club last night entertained the teachers with a dinner and dance at Agricultural hall. ene CALLOWAY WINDOW HAS EDUCATIONAL VALUE Your feet probably tread upon it dozens of times each day, but do you ever give a thought as to how it is made or of what raw products {t {s composed? Armstrong's lino- leum sold in Casper by the Calloway AT CONVENTION Douglas Attendance Is | ALLIES OPENE BERLIN, Oct. 10.—(By Tite Asso-! CO-OPERATION OF REICH IN RESTORING ECOROMIC LIFE OF RUHR DISTRICT IS EXTENDED PARIS, Oct. 10.—(By The Asso- clated Press.)—Herr Von Hoesch, the German charge d’Affaires, called on Premier Poincare today and of- fered the co-operation of the reich toward the resumption of the nor- mal economic life of the Ruhr. Premier Poincare replied that inasmuch as negotiations were in Progress in the Ruhr with groups | of industrialists and labor leaders, he did not consider it advisable to begin further conversations on tho samo subject. He informed Herr Von Hoesch that when Germany was ready to make a proposition covering the entire reparations ques- tion, he would be glad to consider it. “Acting under instructions from | my government,” Herr Von Hoesch | | sata, after his return to the German |embassy, “I called upon Premier Poincare and Inid before him the Proposition of the reich’s desire to co-operate in the resumption of the economic life of the Ruhr and sug- gesting a meeting of Belgian, French and German government representatives in the occupied terrl. tory to discuss ways and means by which this could be accomplished. This proposal was refused. “I have no comment to make,” for me to make comment. The first part of my duty {fs done. It now remains for me to inform my gov- ernment that the French govern- ment is unwilling to interfere with the negotiations now in progress in the Ruhr; that it cannot discuss my proposal at this time, but is willing to examine in collaboration with its with the reparation questions as a whole.” NEGOTIATIO ciated Press-—Negotiations between members of the Relch government and representatives of the Ruhr in- dustrialists regarding DYeasures which may be taken for the resump- tlon of work in the occupied areas continued the charge. “It is not, allles a German proposition dealing | Stinnes, Voegeler and Kloeckner had called on Chancellor Strese- ;™mann before leaving for Duesseldorf but were unable to reach him be- cause he was then engaged in dis- | entangling the government crisis. The chancellor was apprised of the | purpose of the industrialists’ mis- |sion, however, continued the minis- ter, and also was given a report by them of the outcome of their dis- cuss!on with the French commander in the Ruhr immediately upon their return to Berlin, Regarding the program submitted yesterday by the industrialists, comprising ten points, the adoption |of which they deemed necessary in order effectively to restore the Ruhr economies, Dr. Sollman declared the government has taken this under ad- visement, referring it to various! committees for consideration, de ferring action until Paris and Brus- sels reply to the German govern- ment's inquiry concerning the att!- | tude of the occupying powers toward ;the measures required to put the ‘Ruhr industries into operation, Competent quarters here deny the report circulated that General De- | pouette gave the visiting industrial- ists the cold shoulder. Tt was explained at the German embassy that the proposal was based on the fact that jt was necessary to provide work and food for the Ruhr; population now that the payment of wagtes to the unemployed by Berlin has been stopped and also to ar- range for the resumption of deliv- erles in kind on the reparations ac- count. The surprise felt at the German embassy over the French'rep!y was pparent. It was remarked that ermany had complied with Premier |Poincare’s conditions. The Ger- man's pointed to his promise that the French government would con- sider passive resistance ended when Germany revoked her ordinances forbidding intercourse by the Ruhr jofficlals with the ocoupying author- ities and when the Berlin govern- ; and putting on a surface of gravel. FOUND GUILTY Charles Pace was convicted by jury trial in the district court Tues- day of violation of the liquor law, the sentence being deferred until this afternoon by Judge Rose. Pace was arrested June 15 last when a raid was made on a still near Emi- grant Gap. In the same court C. R. Black- burne was acquitted of the charge of operating a stili near the Effel shearing pens, He was arrested Several! months ago, Morris Robinson, charged with operating a bootlegging establish- ment at the rear of 220 South Cen- ter street last May, went on trial this morning. THERMOPOLIS-KIRBY HIGHWAY 5 GRAVELED THERMOPOLIS, Wyo., Oct. 10. Contractor Paul Sawyer has moysd his equipment to the Thermopolis- Kirby highway and has a force of men at work grading and ditching The work is to be completed in 90 days, according to the contract given by the state. This will give a fine highway without break through to Cody and Yellowstone park. It will make travel over roads easy during all seasons of the year between Ther- mopolis and Gebo, Crosby and Kirby, an improvement the people have been clamoring for for a num- ber of years. Athletic Girls Exploited; Many Others Shocked SPRINGFIELD, Ill., Oct. 10.— Some localities are exploiting girls and women as athletes “to satisty Casper Sunday Cribune MOUNSHINER [5 (WAS “VERY FRIENDLY’ WITH MRS. STOKES, CHAUFFEUR SAYS IN RETRIAL OF DIVORCE SUIT NEW YORK, Oct. 10.—The re-trial of the divorce suit | of W. E. D. Stokes, wealthy hotel owner against his wife, | Mrs. Helen Elwood Stokes, today was marked by one of the most dramatic scenes ever seen in the supreme court! here when, following an implied grave accusation on the part of a witness, Mrs. Stokes rose i shouting a denial, while her husband perceptibly began to cry. for Mrs, Stokes sald: “I was very friendly with Mrs. Stokes,” and then added: “I mean just what I «aid.” Mr. Untermyer. “Yes, I do, in her seat, sobbing and | At this point Mrs. Stokes’ mother, who was sitting beside her daughter, see =" FKIDNEVOAGT rose and shouted: oh rates e-8| BAD TAKE SALTS Mr. Stokes sitting at the defense table, bowed hig head and Says Backache Often Means You Under cross examination by Sam- uel Untermyer chief defense counsel, Elmer Henshaw, former chauffeur most frantically and shouted, “That's a lie.” Make him take that back. He will take that back or I'll kill him.” “Do you mean to impl—?" asked ter ites " answered the witness. | beg: UNGROWNED KING OF STUART LINE AMONG VICTIMS OF RECENT RAILROAD DISASTER CARRIED AED GARD An uncrowned king rode to death on Burlington train No. 30 into tho engulfing torrent of Cole creek on the night of September 27. days ago the body of this man of royal blood—Feines EB. Causey—was found below the grim cluttered trap of the smoking car, and concealed in @ pocket of the clothes he wore was an I, W. W. card. Perehance, had the Windsors been incompetent to rule England, Caus-| ey would have been Feines the First—perchance, In re-| viewing actualities it is found that Causey was of the royal line of Stuarts in direct descent. grandparents had fled to this coun- try and settled in Kentucky. The Causey lineage leaves no doubt as to where the family would have been in England had the Stuarts been successful in maintaining their con- trol of the thron Because of be- ing a Stuart, F. BE. Causey might ev- en now be the British sovereign had He was on his way to Denver with Mrs. Minnie Owens of Casper and Jay Griswold of Salt Creek, where the latter two were to have caught up threads of life that had passed from youth's warm colors to somber, and made Mrs, Owens, bride; Gris-| Several wold, bridegroom; and Causey, best! To this trio came simultaneots ex- The wedding will be on other shores than those upon which in this life, so many barks are bat- The crowning of the Stuart, Feines E. Causey, will Mkewise be where thrones of gold are p'entiful jin celestial countries-=where earth- ly kings and commons all hold sway today King| His great in imperial splendor. ENGINEERS TO DISCUSS WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1923 cussed by the Western Society of} Trend of the population apread of Engineers at thelr mid-winter meet-| the city will be used as a basis for ing. speculation upon future transporta- Each winter, at {ts conclave, the| tion needs. society has discussed some Chicago bearing problem that has a direct upon engineering. Adyancing Years “Nothing is more important from our standpoint than the transporta- Need Stomach Help tion difficulties now,” dgar 8. Nethercut, secretary ‘of the society | if Tuclined to sour we said. The different plans for handling’ the city’s traffic problem will be dii cussed from an engineering stand- Our direstive system, with a litt! point. Bua lines, elevated lines, sur-|nefp, will picks out ofa” diversities face Ines, motor truck and pedestrl.| diet what the body needs t sustain € § 6 0 4 |an rush-hour traffic will be investi-| health. It is the condition that gated. starts trouble all along the line, articularly with people getting on Ez 7f they will use Stuart ‘a Have Not Been Drinking Enough Water HERE'S A SHOP THAT NEVER BALKS FOR ITSELF OUR When you wake up with back- ache and dull misery in the kidney region it may mean you have been eating foods which create acids, says a well know authority. An excess of such actds overworks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the blood and they become sort of para- lyzed and loggy. When your kid neys get sluggish and clog you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowel removing all the body’ urinous waste, else you have back- ache, sick headache, dizzy spells: Your stomach sours, tongue fs coated and when weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds and you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. Either consult a good reliable physician at once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lthia, and has been used for years to help clean and stimulate sluggisW kidneys, al: UR plumbing talks for it- self—it looks right, and it renders the maximum of service. Sanitary engineers we—worthy of our modest fee and always hustling to oblige. Furniture company, is the subject | was begun yesterday it was stated’ ment suspended thie payment of| masculine curiosity,” others “are|the family remained undeposed. of a remarkably interesting and | today, | wages to the unemployed. } still shocked if a girl ay ‘3s in But Causey wore no crown, nor educational display In the window of | Minister of Defense Gessler has| The Germans consider that both s pear: y public in bloomers," Miss Ethel Per. | was there a jeweled scepter, nor pur- in a ‘| 3589 EAST SECOND Second Bere en ene enoranin on Ate meee ne, % these| conditlons| hive! naw; been) full vin lot! Naw ‘Yorks agsleaat aligutte | hie robes fee tie ateecant habe hack |niCETGAGO*(GHilsd orem eats peaks Me piel Sd ae PHONE JI! Second street. censorship on military news. | filled but f#el that the Ruhr ques- of health education of the American|that deeper down where are kept| portation problems here will be dis- Linoleum {s a strange mixture.| Hugo Stinnes and the other Ruhr! tion lots of soft water. By all mean: is apparently no further ad-/ Child Health Association declared at|from the world’s eyes the inner y s To many it is probably a mystery. | industralists who conferred have your physician examine your ra jast| vanced toward a solution, the tenth national recreation con-| thought, the traditional bitterness kids i \- ineys at least twit — a The highest grade of cork from the | week yee Hisneeal apace nat ——————___ pricey over frustrated’ plans) for dominance Why Stay Fat? ice a _year.—Adv. cork forests of eastern Spain, a sub- | Duesseldorf were given a c*ean bi: Expert watch and jewelry repoir-} John J, Tigert, United States com-| of the English throne was rankling. =n ai ars inate aus ae ee tte cerned de lerae aero mmant Guring’ the reich: |ing./ Casper Jewelry 00, 0) B\BICw. | mlesioniot of edticatiany tape aap: | avers, thar ear tee meee Catal You Can Reduce another chemically prepared in- | stag debate on the authorization bill} —r_— K ed stand agai | Ce frratfonal onse to the] . The answer of most fat people ts gredient called linoleum cement are | to give the chancellor sweeping au-| Tho natives of India never allow stand against competitive athlet-| Causey in resp that it too hard, too troublesome ies for women and girls. red doctrines of the Industrial! iia too danger to eo the e the. three Obief, substances of the | thority 1: dictating feconomic! meas. |p. takir—of -Whooi) Whery\/are Maem Hh sine call the, erties Sr tarecteten |iceiece Coenen taeaicte welght down, Marmpin Presavipe composition. ures. Dr. Sollmann, the minister of!than 3,000,000 who live by begging |. itteq,* he aid, “the worst in| member of that organization. | tion Tablets overcome all these dif- These three coupled with the fine | the interlor, formally announced that =to_starve. coaching a giris’ basketball team| Anyhow, when the coldness of fleulties. ghey a et ae lately seo painting: S10 deeening end mene Pe ae Se Ad |Nhich lost only ong game in four |death leaped upon the man he had| cise, or absurd greases and. saivos, . depending for finish upon a number |xears. All of the incentives to win| deserted the conservative ranks of/and have the paged, a Gvartene, Of = other minor ingredients, are. re | were applied to this team as to ajfoiled nobility, and had in an ex-|futinr ‘by. all drugelete, the world sponsible ‘for the Armstrong Lai team of men and they entkred|tremity found comrades among rad-| over, or Send the price direct to the uct. The Calloway display in th: R a t H Ith games regardless of everything.|icals—the better, perhaps, to inflict| Marmola Ca, ‘Woodward Ave., Segond treet “window, is-iwell. worth oa re) ea | God only knows how much damage| revenge upon & world that tolerates |{)¢i'°\ Mich. Now that you Being your while’ as/ tt expleing in detail | I aia.” no failures. fat,’ but can reduce steadily an: the manufacture of America’s groat | | Progent day tnterwcholastic con-| Too, this excommunicated Dblue-|rasily without going through lon “kitchen floor preserver,” from the | If the liver is right, the whole system is right. Nothing acts like Carter’s Little Liver Pills. Purely Vegetable. They assist Nature to gently awaken your sluggish liver, and relieve constipation, stomach trouble, inactive bow- els, sick headache and dizziness. | tests do more harm than goed ford blood avas to have lent the grace of |"ieee# of tiresome exercise | an starvation diet or. fear of bad ef- '#, he concluded, a_phantom courrier to a wedding. fects.—Advertisement. time the bark is stripped from the | cork trees of Spain until the man from the furniture store carries the prize roll through the kitchen door. brits cee aeebaey PRESBYTERIAN MEK 1) ENJOY DINNER Til EVENING AT CHURCH The men of the First Presbyterian Church will meet at a dinner served We are face to face with the same desperate circum- stances that confront a drowning man. Standard Remedy taken by millions for over Fifty Years. Weare grasping at a straw. . Our lease has expired, the five-day period following the serving of the vacating this evening at 6:30 in the church vs tlotice has.ended ddd we aie parlors by members of the Ladies Ald Society. The purpose of the | not ready to go because con- siderable of this jewelry . stock remains. men is to carry out the p'ans re-| cently formulated by the trastces| for the every member canvass for} the current support of the church. | This church has not had an every GC ine ue % member canvass for some years. It Must bear Signi & has a large and constantly growing ature membership, and plans have just MontGocel program of efficiency and ect Small Pill — Small Doso — Small Price So you see that we are in no program of efficiency and activity in te every department. It is desirab) that every member of the church | have soime part in the support of this program. All who are not already listed as regular supporters are requested to be ready to respond when the visitors call. Every man who can assist in the canvass is in vited to the dinner this evening. Asse dBase thas nals | NoChangeIn \§ Condition of Pres. Obregon | Purely Vegetable Not Injurious position to hold out. This stock must be sold out and we have cut the prices to make it worth your while to do your Christmas shopping now. These Furs Compensate for the Bleakest Winter Day Blizzards and storms might almost be considered a joy when Mi lady goes forth in such irresistible and alluring furs such as are shown at | the Richards & Cunningham store, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday of this week, Oct. 10, to 13 inclusive. EARRINGS Very Large Assortment MEXICO CITY, Oct. 10.—Prest- 4 Gent Obregon’s personal physician | has announced that the condition of the chief executive remains the same and that although he is not seriously Ml, it would be necessary for the pa tient to leave the extreme altitude of Mexico City for a lower climate before a compiete cure of the throat trouble could be expected, Although no offtcial statement has been made {t is belleved prob- $2.00 to $3.00 regular value. Spe- Just run your fingers through the glistening pelts—feel this silky cial selling out price for 95¢e sleekness and the spell is on! balance of this week. Perfectly matched and modeled in the season’s smartest modes—seal, sable, mole and a great variety of other beautiful furs are heré from the B. W. Harris Co., St. Paul, Minnesota, for your inspection. The prices will meet with your approval—the quality is as dependable as ss ea. oT able that President Obregon wil! e i] our reputation. start soon for Lake Chapala, Jalisco} k Car ; BELA erat tap iwas, madeed tee Take eor tour rar. = $4.00 to $6.00 regular value. Spe the spas wasle wut, was, delayed: be Many men wonder why their hair becomes gray pre- cause of an aggravation of his bron: chia] trouble. EARRINGS e Large Assortment maturely, why it falls out, why it is coarse, why it is oil. Our shampoos have aided many men who may be classified in the above. They will remove all grease and oil; they will cleanse the hair, permitting cial selling out price for balance of this week. 91.95 led bho natural growth; they will preserve the natural lustre, Bese PALES and prevent premature baldness. yeursknownesBest,Snfet.Aiwayekeatt | M And our shampoo is only one feature of our remark- OLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE | ff ably efficient service. Casper-Salt Creek Stage Leaves Arkeon Bldg. 9 a. m. Daily Telephone 144 J. Stanton, Mgr. Becklinger Building Barber Shop BASEMENT BECKLINGER BLDG. PAUL HUBER THE JEWELER IN YOUR TOWN J.