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MONDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1923 cient, Gillette will soon have water about as good as any in the state. Find Headless “PAGE SIX Che Casper Daily Crivune MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associatec Press is exclusive'y entitled to the © for publication of all news credited in this paper also the local news published herein. Che Caspet Daily threatened that the Big Horn Hot| working against time, and the re- Springs would receive no favors at| sylts being marked on the basis of his hands while liquor is being sold | speed and accuracy. in Thermopolis he deciared a policy that, if consistent!y carried out, will tie -up every state. institution, in- limitations of armament program which has been declared to be the greatest step toward permanent peace in the history of the world. That isn’t so bad for a nation “without influ ence.” Then we induced Japan to relax certain It Happened in Wyoming Mattere and Things, of State-Wide Interest, Wired In, claims she was making upon Chinese territory e Casper Dally Tribune issued every evening snd@ and concessions which claims were certain to day Morning Tribune every Sunday, at Casper, Jead to war. That isn't a bad accomplishment Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune Bullding, opPo for a nation “without tnfitien ” Then ~_ We site _postoffice. proposed a plan for the settlement of the re-| Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second parations dispute which the leading displomats | class matter, November 22, 1916, of every nation except one have agreed is the > Telugiebes sand 30 only practical plan. That is a proper subject for} atich Telephone Hxchange Connecting All pride in a_nation “without influence.” The fact that the plan has not been adopted is nothing to our discredit, for no other nation has accom-| plished more in that partieniar. We led the na-| tions of the world in a crusade against narcotics and induced at Britain to agree to a mod-} ification of international law in search of ships | for illicit transportation of liquor. We have pre-| vented a war between two South American re- publics and induced them to agree to arbitration of their differences. Departments. By J. E. HANWAY Advertismg Representatives adden, King & Steger Bldg., Chi 14, 286 F Ave., Ni City; Globe Bids on, Mass., Suite 404 Sbaron Bldg., 66 New Mont St. San Francisco, Cal. Copies of the Dally Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offi¢es and visitors are welcome. Telephone In, Written, Grape-Vined and Some cl of It Purloined To Open Mica Mine RAWLINS — T. D. Livingston, George Livingston and Frank Wil- cox returned to Rawlins after spend- ing several days near Encampment, where they staked out several mica claims which they expect to do con- siderab'e work on ing the next couple of months. n states that they claims which are within railroad, of black the surface shows a two feet of the 100 mica which on about a four foot vein and with the digging of a shaft and tunnel they expect that the vein will increase | The chief trouble with Senator Underwood |°nsiderable in width. Black mica fs now used for many forcement of the prohibition law. | “We shall not. discuss the merits of the prohibition question here, for | the writer not only voted for pro-| hibition but has lived it through | st a fairly long life. js open in worst town in Wyoming to challenge. in practically every. town in Wyo- ming, and if Mr. Ross is well in-! ™’ formed he must know this. statement that his home Cheyenne is free from booze does who visit the capital city. Is it possible that the governor goes juding the capitol.” RIVERTON.—Dorothy French, a in the eighth grade The governor's daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. W. statement that Thermoplis is the French, won the free-for-all cipher- K contest at the grade Conceding that this making a mark of 74 against seven. aw is violated here, so is it violated ty-five contestants, including school pupils and business men of theecom- Second place was won by His'R. G. Schaefer, of the Teton Auto city of |Co., with a mark of 63 udent unity Harvey Landers was not check with the reports of people |the grade contest with a mark of The contest consisted of problems and school, Find Good Water GILLETTE.—Ofticial tests of wa- ter taken from the well on the Sin- clair place two mf'es south of Gil- lette prove very satisfactory, ac- cording to word given out by mem- bers of the city council this week. The water tests 13 parts of hard- ness to every 100,000 parts. Tho present city supply tests about 49 parts of hardness to 100,000. Pump- ing on the well wi'l be resumed in the near future, after which furth- er tests will be made to see whether or not the water will continue as good as the initial test. Should the well prove satisfactory, pumping Into the city mains wil! begin as econ as in| possible, providing, of course, that the flow is sufficient. ‘The first test of the hardness com- pares favorably with the water sup- GILLETTE.—Hunters in the east ern part of Campbell county catne across the headless remains of @ men northwest of Rozet and re ported to the county authorities, The deceased is unknown in the local vicinity. ‘The head was nowhere to be found and the man had evidently been dead for several months as his flesh was partly decomposed, Accord ing to report, there are no marks of identification on the body, other than a pipe and pair of ginsses. A bloody white shirt and a mackinaw coat seem to constitute most of the clothing worn. -etrtalere Maat St A See Butcher for used Ford cars at Wyoming Oldsmobile company. Phone 1963; after 6 p. m. 542R, ———$—— ply of the city of Laramie. Should the flow from the well prove suffi- around with his head in the clouds |!n eddition, substraction, multiplica and does not see what is happening tlon_and division, the contestants about his fe j “If Mr. Ross knows that the law Is being violated here he has a per- right to say so, and we wou'd Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State One Year, Daily and f.unday One Year, Sunday Only _-. seems to be that he wants to be presifent, has aserent things and very extensively no constructive ideas of his own; and, therefore. |. puiding materials and is reported spends his time making general complaints with-|{, pe worth in the neighborhood of -$9.00 out being specific. $30 per ton loaded on the cars, and ——-- 2.60; The American people are not likely to take |with this so near the rallroad the Tribune Want Ads bring results Six Months, Daily and Sunday - —+-- 4.5% very kindly to a chronic kicker, especially when |gentlemen feel that if the bod¥| pave the greatest respect for him !f Three Months, Dally and Sunday - 2-25 /he belittles his own country in comparison with | Proves to be in sufficient quan-} i ould say it at the proper time One Month, Daily and Sunday the rest of the world, when his own country is | titles they will endeavor to market} inq piace and attempt to correct Per Copy --. “doing more for the promotion of world peace |'t ‘= the spring. the evil. To sit as a guest at the By Mall Inside State table, to break bread with his hosts _$7.8)/4nd prosperity than any other nation. One Year, Dafly and Sundar $9} mimes = Puck and then to indulge in mercile: e One Year, Sunday Only —~. nat uae ; - Meets Old Comrade criticism of them sets one to won- . Six Month, Daily ané Sunday mR TT Dr. Eliot's Indictment POWELL—Forest E. Howe, an ex-| dering in what school the governor Three Months, Daily and Sunday “4 service man from Colter, was in| ‘earned his social amenities, Would One Month, Daily and Sanasy +e 2fany people place great faith in the opinions Borel on ieee re sage are t not have been in better taste to scriptions must be pa of Dr. Charles W ot, preside of | made an effort to get in touch w: have hired a or to have deliv ib will not insure delivery after subscri > r. Charle ot, president emeritus of |e’ cia triend Milton Hilblah, Mr ated his messake: tsGmn" thes tase ca Harvard university. His comments, therefore, on becomes one month in arrears. P : ; " 4) | Hilbish had not heard from Mr. the muni fingstott? - Saar affairs in Europe are timely. They cannot fail| Howe since he had last seen him in| "s pesunicins Renn ieee KICK, IF YOU DON’T GET YOUR T o raise the question in the readers’ mind how|France, and had supposed that he|torney being biameworthy for the f you don’t find your Tribune after looking United ates can possibly be of practical . 4 1 Daas had been killed in action. He was|non-enforcement of the- liquor laws carefully for it, call 15 or 16 and it will be seereed sistance in bringing peace to Europe if the|great'y pleased to know that he was| we have nothing to say. “They eas to you by special messenger. Register complaints +416 of international morality, there is at the|living so near. Mr. Howe was| ro utter them! own disagreement before 8 o'clock. pretty badly disabled in the war, hav. Ing lost the use of his right arm through gas burns. His lungs are impaired from being gassed and he ig still suffering from she'l shock. Old Hotel Burned RAWLINS—Thé Fort Steele hotel, one of the oldest land marks in this : jlow ebb described by Dr. Eliot. In the course of \2 recent letter to a friend the distnguished edu- Peace Insurance Jeator had this to “Do not th tions ns t . Universal conscription of both men and prop-| peace and good wil het ee eRerately more erty in time of war, as urged by President Hard-!ya11y? How can such proceedings as those of ing, is the best plan ever suggsted for the pro |France on the Rubr, of Italy at Tripoli years mition of pace and might well be awarded the |, at Corfu and in the Aegean-now, and next Bok peace prize. jat Finme, and of England and France recently with the governor. But tho makes the governor responsible for the enforcement of the lMquor laws where the local officers fail. He has a fully equipped law enforcement jepartment and the last legislature HENEVER you give Candy to your dearest gave h'm $60,000 to be used for this friend— wife, mother, sweetheart, sister — very purpose. If he knows that the é 3 or to the little folks, ica have a right to law is being flagrantly violated it is a4 4 is PURE and WHOLE- not only his privi'ege but his duty 4 from only the aoe oly The Bok peace prize offer his stimulated re-/nt Constantinople and Lausanne breed anything | section burned to the ground, throw-|to seo that it is enforced. If he ingredients, in a careful manner, under newed study of plans for the Spear war’ /but hate and longing for revenge, and therefore |!"S two families pais and de-| has proof enough to warrant saying sanitary conditions. It is said that some twenty-two thousand! war? Such proceedings always have bred wars |*tToyins all their belongings. The things he said he has proo i y ar? Su ‘ : : s the fine quality of Candy that schemes have been submitted in competition for |; building cons'sted of about 20 reoms| enough to remove the officers who { sc P in the past. Must they not now and tn the fu-}ana wan erected by the war epart-}ure lax in thelr duty. When he juces. No other kind ever would the award. One of the leading daily newspapers of the country has put forth the suggestion that all the citizens and all the wealth of a nation proposing to go to war shall be drafted into the national service, the young the vigorous men for the fighting forces, and all others as signed to positions according to their ability. All employment of services and wealth are to be without profit. Announcement of such a pol- icy by nations at peace would have the effect of be sold ander BRECHT’S trade-mark. This name is your Guarantee always of Candy purity and perfection. One of BRECHT’S many pleasing confections is the “Milk Chocolate Covered Cherries” package. ture? In the end it will be the peacemakers, not the warmakers, that make this world a better place to live in.” ment in 1868, and was used as a bar- racks for troops, a garrison of four companies being maintained there for the protection of the men work- ing on the Un'on Pacific railroad at the time 12 was bullt through this country. Passes the Buck condems them for not doing the'r duty and takes no action himse'f acknowledges himself that he is also failing in his duty. “If the law is being violated | Thermopolis it is the duty of Gc ernor Ross as well as of the lo officers to take action. His effort to place all the blame on ‘ocal shoul- ders and evade responsibilty him- Is France Side-Stepping? Since the end of the war it is estimated that France has loaned more than five billion francs to various European countries that she consid- Big, red, juicy, luscious Marischino cherries, dipped ¢ in thick, creamy fondant and covered with a hea coating of Swiss milk chocolate. Half-pound, full pound and sizes. boxes. two-pound In beautiful Another favorite is BRECHT’S “Creamed ss R ; : her friends, among them Polond, Czecho-| THERMOPOLIS—The Thermop-| seif | 1 rf . 7 arest voiding iprospective wars. Itiis easy fora coun-|o* He i; r4 iy LIS P-| self looks like an effort to pass the I ” 4 is aaa i, or Sy per cent of its people |slovakia, Jugoslavia, and Rumania. It is report. | olis Record in its first issue fol-| buck. Now passing the buck is as ae ya Soyer an ert ee 3 : jed that further loans to these countries, total-|'°wims Governor Ross’ call down of|old as the human race. In the in (Owiss milk chocolate and darke- eanille choke to-fight, but if all its citizens are subject to im-| mediate draft upon a declaration of war, to be arbitrarily assigned to tasks by the military forces, there will be a long hesitancy before that nation rushes to arms. The plan is full of merit, but it is not new. The late President Harding sensed the domestic evils of the late war, and suggested a remi pe 6 not only for them in’ possible future erred ficient reparations must be devoted to the repair but also as an influence to prevent wars alto-|°f war damages before any money shall be turn- gether. In his inaugural*address he gave first |¢4 to the liquidation of the American debt. expression to that policy, and amplified the| A large proportion of our people are in sym- thought in his address at Helena, Mont., in the|P@thy with France in her difficulties with Ger- course of: his fatal western trip. On this occasion |™any, but they are beginning to seek more in- holsaid: |formation concerning her ability to make loans “Viewed in the retrospect we see more clearly | t® her neighbors for military equipment and war than ever the sordid side of war. I have said |PUrposes, while she professes inability even to before, and I choose to repeat it very deliber-|Tefund the debts to America. ately now, that if war must come agnin—God| The American people are dedicated to the grant that it shall not!—then we must draft all| Principle of world peace, and have given prac- of the nation in carrying on. It is not enough |tical effect to it through various treaties and to draft the young manhood. It is not enough to |°ther acts of the present Republican adminis- accept the voluntary service of both women and |tration. They do not take kindly to paying hun- men whose patriotic devotion impels their en-|dreds of millions in taxes which otver nations listment. It will be righteous and just, it will /have defaulted on their debts, but it is adding be more effective in war and marked by less re-|insult to injury when they see the money that gret in the aftermath, if we draft all of capital |is rightfully theirs turned over to other goyv- all of industry, all of agriculture, all of com-|ernments for the admitted. purpose of increas- merce, all of talent and capacity and energy of |ing armaments and setting the stage for new every description to make the supreme and unit-|W8Ts. ed and unselfish fight for the national triumph. ‘When we do that there will be less of war. When we do that the contest will be aglow with un- sullied patriotism, untouched by profiteering in any service.” a our shores returned to his home conntry and That is the Harding plan, not only for the} recorded his impressions. Among other com- conduct of any possible wars that may come|ments, he said, “the standard of living of the upon us in the future, but as an effective means | working man is three times, certainly twice, as th, 10 e best sug-| American uses a ‘or car.” pene wenereny. sive, Uinibea) Staten onl : 1 in| Tere is food for thought for those who urge dent Hartine aiadetetores ten pens St) the abolition of the protective tariff, and also Seal but hi 1 * cot competition was |for the radicals among us who are working for ahaa Tha pe mntietvalon pt aye a site th destruction of Sans ae oseles® Not is Mr. Bok’s contest. | long ‘© some miners in the middle west went ape lire th vane ppbenit ‘his fuagestion tolon strike because the mine management refused Nevertheless it is there for the committee to con.| here they Wad toca crete cars in the spot 4 ¥, in|who are low n eir criticism of governmen’ yaad adherence £0 the Zrineiples of the consti-/as they find it in the United States. They never impaired Gekioeelen iene SOE. erica nero un: | stop to think that if they lived in Great Britain eral vighteonimecs? glements, and in gen- eer would do well if they could afford a bi- President Harding shed much glory aie nation while he lived, but aftes his eatin The Repunlicen smarty. bases, tts et 108 may be that the full worth of his ideals will be \the American standard of living free from the realized, and by following them the United | (no \meicemeseancard of living free from the| States can render its greatest service to man. | c™rctition of paeee, Torsten ard Loree 2 kind without surrender of any of its ow, Get {to drag it down to the old world standard. The | iy i wn inst Democrats are for admitting the products of ling about one billion five hundred million are in contemplation. Meanwhile French statesmen | who have a hand in directing the policies of that country have announced that repayment of any of the money borrowed from the United States during the war, must wait until Germany makes payment of its reparations bill. Moreover, suf- the Hot Springs county sheriff and| pleasing little apple episode Adam ati icious: combinati: i Prosecuting attorney has this to say.| passed the buck to Eve and Eve aes ote a Ive BeE snare Governor William B. Ross, at a| passed it on to the serpent. Per. i i banquet and smoker tendered to him] haps {t is a hereditary trait on the| in full pounds, in packages of refined design. last Thursday night by the citizens] part of the governor, of Thermopolis under the auspices ‘But when Mr. Ross stood the of the Triangle club, took occaston| who'e citizenry of Thermopolis and to say some uncomplimentary thin: {fot Springs county up in a row and of the county officers and the cit!-[accused them he took a stand that zenry of the to’ regarding the en- mi will resent. And wi he Always Ask for BRECHT’'S When you bu for health, m buy the best~ Posts | BRAN FLAKES Now youll like Bran / Food for Reflection One of the distinguished Britons who frequeat Daily Fuel Savings with - Automatic Heat Contro] ‘) kecords show that the Minneapolis Heat Regu- Saves one-fifth to one-t On gas, | That’s easy to explain. The burner is auto: matically turned Ga und! dil ec ast wake, | a uniform temperature, day and night; a lower fecpRerstnre, at night. No overheating, no waste of gas. Building Materials We are equipped with the stock to supply tutions sey : Bean = Fuel is saved and the house is kept comf: that cheap Inbor into this country practical A ‘ortably warm = > = shat “cheap laron eate te coat, practical! your wants in high grade lumber and build- pie de Seoipesseats eee ee we if z e Overplays icy, demonstrated many times in the past, is to ? H Sarit . there’ WORK Of wosry. No carly or ¥ y Tplay clos, Arnericasrafactorielethvow! thes exiplover Piers supplies. Rig timbers a specialty. to wake up the fire; the temperature rises sutsemarisily Senator Underwood says that the United | out of work, establish bread lines to keep them in the morning and is lowered automatically at night. States has been almost without influence abroad | from starvation and perhaps ‘give them emplos- ' The “Minneapolis” is quickly for three years. Well, w t al i a- | A i and easi- ica Sous co alee eee Se sent later only at wages near the th KEITH LUMBER CO | peck ny na rots Phone e a i ° ‘heating system burning any kind penitentiary for larceny from Ches. ter county, Pennsylvania. His poetry tells of the horror of prison life: “O, matins, and O. Vesper bells, | ‘oll slowly! { city of a thousand cells— “A thousand individual he!ls."* | And of the longing of the convict for freedom: “Ours is « grimy bit of blue very small, Phone 3 PRISON DOORS OPEN TO CONVICT POETRY HARRISBURG, Pa Casper Gas Appliance Co, Inc. 115-119 E, First TRAIN SCHEDULES Chicago & Northwestern ons after two and e had been pu Westbound he 1 iblisher Where sunbeams scarce venture to | No. 603 nae Ro ton — ta Sata ee 4 - ion, the board] o'ertop the wall.” Eastbound— Setteee pi ee be Rit Th ¢ LW, Ee; tod di ieee » jrith the spiritual! Rea discovered Ing genius behing J No. 622 -———-——-- yt rile e e se aes n the poetry, present-| prison bars, the board decided, and Hi R F eicthartccteste one i. tly bas fund his! his literary promise is such that he Giieago, Burlington & Quincy LAT EGULATOR sf = bes ee deserves the pardon signed toni, Arrives ., 1 in tt < ze ight. “The Heart Heating i parton. tontgtt Sea bn gk ae Cele eee ae I The poet’s plans after his lbera- 2 ----- =, of the Plant” aavAeI8 Vea were’ 16 laters tion were not revealed by prison -an-e~-------8:10 p.m. a . race 7 athe et authorities in Philadelphia, and mee en (i es = ——+ # t nough be had written no poetry| newspapermen w owed ) The pardon was signed by Gov-! before being sentenced to Easteralece bie en Allowed to 0.28 Dm + » Sear