Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 14, 1925, Page 9

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‘ “\ 1 ORI se SUNDAY, JUNE | 14, 1925 MAS, MECILL M'CORMICK OUT TO DEFEAT WORLD COURT MOV Following in the Footsteps of Her Senator Husband, She is Attempting to Rousé Public Opinion By DAVID LAWRENCE. (Copyright, "1925, Consolidated Press joclation.) WASHINGTON, June 13— a ing in the: feotsteps of her husband, who was, perhaps the most active of the, “irreconcilable” group in. the senate, Mrs. Medill McCormick ts engaged in a campaign to do her utmost to defeat the world court pro- tocol when it comes up for ratitica- tion in the senate next December. The widow of the late senator from Illinois has tevealed her plans to some members of the senate and, in brief, she hopes to arouse pub lic opinion on the subje of the old fire which the opponents of the Leagy tions will come back again. sor Their plan, therefore, is to propose reservations, in the hope that the court proposal will be so amended as to strip it of the features to which they object. If unsuccessful in thelr fight for reservations, these oppo- nents are doubtful whether they should vote against the court proto- col or record themselves in favor of the project with the excuse that they favored some court instead of no court at all. While the advocates of the world court protocol at present have the necessary two thirds, the opposition feels the margin is so narrow that it can be overcome. Hence the activity of such women as Mrs. Medill Mc- Cormick. The late senator from Llinois felt very deeply about the world court. Although accused dur- Mrs. McCormick's activities have been marked upon by one or two senator® who are in opposition to the court created by the League of Nations and from the information received here {t would appear that the opponents of the court are afraid that the protocol will be rati- fied if the project is allowed to drift along without public discussion as to its alleged dangers to America. The Coolidge poli as understood by the opponents of the court, {s to let ,the matter run along without much debate until December and then let the vote be taken, the the- ory being that if the public isn’t aroused over it, the protocol will be ratified by the necessary two thirds vote. The Democrats, of course, will present an almost solid front’ in favor of the court and will not have more than two or. three defections. The Republicans are diyided. Many of the senators who are pro-Coolidge are embarrassed because they op- p the court protocol and want to go along with the president, tod. ing the Democratic administration of being partisan tn his opposition to the League of Nations, he soon disproved that by continuing his fight during the Republican admin- istrations of Presidents Harding and Coolidge. If he were alive he would be Campaigning from one end of the country to the other tn the hope of arousing opposition to the court. Eis widow herself was active in the suffrage campaigns of several years ago and is an experienced speaker as well as a shrewd strategist on political questions. One of the sen- ators with whom she is reported to have conferred is eaid to have re- “marked afterwards that he had Tarely heard u more convincing ar- gsument. The friends of the world court have organized throughout the coun- try.. Mrs. McCormick hopes to oft- set this by organization work, too. The details of her plan have not yet been announced, but it remains for ® woman to revive the old “irre. concilable” group, decimated in num. bers, but capable of _a strong fight Thorough Chewing of Food | Is Advice of Dental! Surgeon By WILLIAM J, McEVOY (United Press Staff Correspondent.) functions normally or succeasfully. “If insufficient masticated food is WASHINGTON, June 13,—(United | persistently.sent to the stomach, the Press,.)\—Thorough chewing of food] usual result is disease of the stom- is esspntial to tho:hedlth of every person, according *to Dr. Clinton T. Mersner, chief dental surgeon of the U. S. Public Health Service. The | cation. ach or colon, or both. paratus is essential to proper maati- Without sound teeth, well mouth, Messner said, must prepare | placed {fA the dental arches and aup the food for distribution parts of the body through the blood stream. “Thorough mastication must carried out,” he said, to other] ported by healthy foundation tissues, the mouth will be handicapped in performing a most vital function. be| Unfilled or imroerly filled teeth, sore “In order to] teeth, irregular teeth, vacant spaces maintain health; in order that every | resulting from decay and extrac- particle of food which can be utilized | tions, inadequate. substitutes for lest as nourishment for the body may be made available; in order that the} gums—all teeth, teeth, loose ‘or sore and bleeding interfere in some way their supporting tissues and| with with the mastication of food the muscle of masti¢ation, may have} and are a consequent menace to been properly exerciaed; and in order | hemith. that there may be no overloading of poisoning of the system with fermen- “Coarse and hard foods which de- mand mastication are NOT only tation and putréfying of pieces of| essential to the entire elementary undigested food lying in the stomach er colon.” Without thorouh mastication, Messner said, the remainder of the digestive tract cannot perform its UNIVERSITY CLOTHING SPECIALIST WORKS HERE Mies Wilhelmena Jacobson, state clothing specialist from the exten. sion department of the University of Wyoming, ‘has spent the last three days in Natrona county giving cloth: ing demonstrations in rural commu- nities. Thursday she demonstrated the making of dress forms to the women of the Bessemer Bend com- Friday and yesterday she der ations at Powder Riv of millinery work and making of as forms t es siderable in the fall. a oe KELLOGE'S WARNING TO MEXICO VIEWED given AS ILL-TIMED MOVE: MEXICO CITY, June: 13.—Secre- | tary of State Kellogg’s warning to Mexico to maintain order and keep her obligations will pre y be an- wered s00n b Pres nt Calles. no official comment has been forthcoming. But unofficial ob. servations show’ that the Kellogg warning is viewed here as ill-timed ind possibly conductive to encourag ing disgruntled elements in ob structing the government's program. “Yankee imperialism” as the com- munists term the United States pol- l¢y, was to be protested tonight at “ communist meeting. The leaders also proposed to object to what they termed American Ambassador Shef- field's dominaticn of the Mexican Hitherto, tract, as they furnish the roughase to the dgiestive tract, but are eseen- tial to the géneral well-being of the teeth and their foundation struc- tures.’ Failure to masticate food properly, according to Messner, is ‘a contribut- ing factor in the widespreaé preva- adie ef pyorrhea and decay of teeth, Me science, however, he sald, a Nor determined the real cause of decay. “Teeth start to decay always from the outside surfaces; never from the Inside of the tooth. Most frequently this decay starts between the teeth, where one tooth touches another, this being due to the fact that it ts very much harder to properly clean the teeth at this particular point; next along the fiesures or fiat chew- ing surfaces, and lastly alongside the sides of the teeth, close to the gum OT believe that this gen er the next will see the civilized people free from dontal de cay on,its complications, but we ¢ | believe these diseases will be greatly retarded» when all schools have adopted health programs; when the care of the body is given the same thought and study by the younger | generation as is the training of their minds.”" Buried Obelisk May Be World War Monument ROME, June 13.—(United Press)— Rome will see another magnificent and very ancient Egyptian obelisk added to the fifteen which for cen- turles have been adorning its streets and squares, if the incttation by the press and the archaelogists ts heed- ed by the municipa) administration or the direction of the Fine Arts and Monuments department. The obelisk, the unearthing of which the lovers on antiquities are clamoring for, is laying at a depth of no more than seven or eight me- tres acress Glustinan! street, right underneath a thick layer of mortar and masonry which supports the aqueduct conveying water to the main fountain in Navona Square, sovernnent. The meeting, scheduled for some days past, was not @ result of the Kellogg statement. Charge Rarthur Sonenfeld has found it necessary to make repre- sentations to the governments in the matter of the Evans ranch mutder. ne Get the habit of calling . Tro: Laundry when you wish laundry service, Phone 1672W. Pennsylvania established the first perhaps Berini's most beautiful work after his Trevi fountain, The medieval historian Rossini, who saw the obelisk in 1693, des¢rib- ed it as one of the largest among those preserved in Rome, and rich- ly decorated with numerous relief figures and hieroglyphic Expert excavators of antiquities hol@ that the obelisk could be brought to light with a comparative ease and at a emall cost without the necessity of tearing down any build It is there- fore evident that a good dental ap. By J. C. ROYLE. (Copyright, 1025, Casper Tribune) (This is the fourth of a series of. dispatches constituting a “round-up” of the general business situation, giv- ing a basis on which business men may predicate their own forecasts of the coming year in business and industry.) NEW YORK, June 13—Production and use of gas and ¢lectric light and power current for the first five Months of 1925 have been greater than at any previous time for the same period, indicating very healthy condition for industry generally. Among those industries showing markedly improved ‘conditions are the public utilities. The oll industry is in a much stronger position, with of this year, The demand has cov- ered a wider range than in 1924 and less of the profits have been dug to manufacture of telephone equipment. Household appliances have sold in radio equipment now is showing the usual summer slump, thé.total for the year great quantities and while IA MENU HINT. Breakfast. Sliced Bananas in Orange Juice Watfies with Maple Syrup Buttered Toast Luncheon, Salmon Souffle Head Lettuce grith Salad Dressing Bread and Butter Home Made Strawberry Iced Tea or Cocoa Dinner, Jeliied Tomato Soup Croutons Coddled Steak Mashed Potatoes with Brown Gravy | Creamed Peas | Baking Powder Biscuits Rhubarb Plo Coffee and Milk Jam TCDAY’S RECIPES. add four tablespoons of cream. cup of milk, two teaspoons powder, and lastly beaten whites of two eggs Bake in very ateady fire, maple syrup, Serve with ‘butter anc il a ple plate full. Then | Coddled Bteak.—Take about two| enough to fil pounds of round steak an inch thick,| Plunge it into the boiling, water for salt, spepper and flour well. Have|10 minutes and drain. Line ‘the ready one small onion, chopped fine tnd two tablespoons of butter or beet drippings heated very hot, Put in the meat to brown evenly on both sides, then put in enough hot water to make a quart of gravy. Add salt, pepper and Worcestershire sauce to taste, Cover tightly and simmer steadily, until steak is tenders The Treasure Trove meat must be basted and turned frequently. with a small quantity of gravy and parsley or water cress. The rest of the gravy sérve;in boat Salmon Souffle—One can of sal mon, two eggs, one cup of cream or rich milk, Remove skin and bone from salmon. Pick fish fine, drop in the yolks of eggs and mix well. Add the cream or miJk and the egg whites beaten to a stiff froth. Mix Ughtly. and put in buttered pan, Bake 20 minutes in a quick oven. Jellied Tomato Bouillon—Three cups tomato, three bouillon cubes, one onion, one bay leaf, one and PUBLIC UTILITIES MARKEDLY IMPROVE; OIL INDUSTRY TAKES ON MUCH STRONGER POSITION no new fields developins to tuceaten | business, as in many others. Prepara stability, tions for merging a number of large | The 1925 construction of the pub-| chain store systems are now if prog lec utilities up to the end of this| ress. The canned goods situation has | year call for the expenditure of}been favorable, with no-Heavy or | $580,000,000 more, Wlectrical'} burdensonte ‘stocks ‘overhanging the equipment manufacturers have had} market and with production favored remarkable business in the first half | by Coffee and Milk Creamed Potatoes Waffles—Beat yolks of two mes; one baking flour to make thin batter hot waffle iron over Serve on a hot platter seems likely to indicate most gratity- ing rei Steamer traffic has been well eus- tained and car loadings now are at a high level. Profits “have accrued more from the reductions in operat- ing’ costs than from increased. earn- ings, according to railroad execu. tives. Gasoline. stocks: now ‘are approxi- mately the’ same as a.year ago. The leather trades have been fairly steady and production. has shown a marked increase as compared with last year, Profits of companies in the west have: been good’ and the labor and’ industrial sitgation in the New England factories seems to be improving. The glove tra had a good half year. wring The trend’ toward consolidations | has become prominent in the groc Its. R t the low prices which have of tained for sugar owing to the reco size of the Cuban crop: While the usual seasonal recess jons are in evidence in foreign trade the expansion in this exchange of goods, so marked early in the year, seems likely ‘to’ be unchecked for some months. ICE BOX ECONOMY. During the hot weather. when you are getting fodd out of the refrigerator for a méal. or! put-| | ting tood away, plan to open the id@ chest only once or twice at most.’ Swiftly take out what is nedea or put’ in what is to be stored. The open cover or door | | lets out a rush of cold aif'and is wasted and the temperature rais- 04 to the point where food is not kept at its best. | teaspoons, minced parsley, onehalt celery leaves or celery salt, three teaspoons gelatine, a few pepper: corns, few sprigs of thyme. Sim- mer the tomatoes, onion, bay leaf, and celery with seasonings, until quite soft and strain. There should | be three cups of the juice. Add the minced parsley and bouillon cubes. Soften the gelatine in three table- spoons cold water and dissolve in the hot juice. Season to taste with | paprika and salt. Gatnish with fine ally chopped green pepper. Rhubarb .Pie—Prepare rhilbarb| greased ple plate with a good short crust,, put jn the rhubarb, sprinkle with two cups of sugar in which a desert spoon of cornstarch !# mixed, Put on thé crust and bake in a me- dium oven about 40 minutes Sought in Colo. RODENT KILLING DRIVE oTARTED lette county started active squirrel control during May. The entire Fall compulsory ‘commis: deted by the county, putin readiness to start as ‘soon as the weather permitted thia( spring, Che Casper Sunhay-Cribune > LARAMIE, Wy6., June 13.— Sub River basin, covering apprdéximately wo townships, was set aside as a poisoning area by the joners Inst. August. ‘Three ons of steam crushed oats were or- and everything the drive Mr. Zena Brush, an agricultural student from the Colorado spector, acting as both He with ing that all deeded tands are pe 64 and will furnish free polso all of the public lands surroun the basin, The Hoback Livestock « sociation has placed two men for the season, acattering poisc their range bordering the bas’ the south and west. All of the son for scattering poison on the other public lands surrounding the valley. | f Grass and crops in. this section of the county were almost totals stroyed last year by ground rels. If the state legislature Appropriated funds for as biological sutvey poison public lands little could have been done this year and another disastrous would have been the resul As it ad not | ¢ we tural’ coll Asbestos Shingles for over the old shingles. You last time; you save money; ~ Your local contractor or instalments afterwards. No time to Get in touch with one of th below now and have him Michigan Aye. at DURANGO, Colo., June’ 13.— The luré of buried’ treasute. is ‘casting | its spell in so new a state as Colo rado, | In the wild places of the almost | inaccessible San’ Juan and Colorado | rivers and the canons breaking away | from them is a spot where a party of early explorers buried‘ gems and ornaments of gold and silve This is the béllef of H. Dam- schroeder of Durango and a group of men who grubstaked him recently to search for the Bupposed cache. sanitarily manufactured. good if popularity counts. BUSH 111 SOUTH LOWELL Depend Upon UTTER- Containing pure wholesome ingredients and being contains the materials that make it so. INSIST ON BUTTER-NUT Made by WYOMING BAKING CO. ANYTHING IN THE PAINTING LINE ™ SIGNS WE GO ANYWHERE | | UT An ideal toast loaf, for it It must be DID IT PHONE 1840 , JOHNS ~MANVILLE Asbestos Roofings | Where to buy them:— Re-roof for the last time Nom is easy to secure time-proof re-roofing the Johns-Manville way —right Lots of time to pay! roof —immediately — with Johns-Manville Asbestos Shingles right over the old roof, and you pay for this property improve- ment out of your income in easy monthly Beautify your home for all time to come. about this remarkable time-payment plan. Or mail the coupon in the corner today JOHNS-MANVILLE INCORPORATED 18th St., feel aesured that very f Lh your home by re-roof for the and you have dealer will re- lose! e dealers listed tell you more Chicago, IIL he pors dents have. agreed to furnish labor | He ing the | int ed to giv farm ged five cent arn Uh akes s been u: ds of t ASBESTOS ROOFING & INSULATING CO. CASPER, Rigid Shingle Contractor (Applying Shingles HAV E YOU THE OF Name of Person 227 East First St Telephone 2087 Distributor BEEN COUN ) (Apply If you know al Wa TAT MAT AT / i\ If not, kindly fill out the blank below and mail to the Chamber furnish will be checked against the present enumeration in the County your name will not be re-entered in the records. this matter to his attention. | HURRY—THIS FINAL ENUMERATION MUST BE FORWARDED TO CHEYENNE, WYOMING, NOT LATER THAN JUNE 22, 1925 Commerce WYO. Flat Roofing Contractor ilt-Up Roofing) r anyone else BE re i ann EE <a OE a pe is sur a sworn state~ sed seems to be le. County uted approxi alt to’ dat ates a de- r the next ne. with’ the rtainly pl itation, it ead with Crook Mail this ,¢ C. y Chicago, Ml. oupon ¢ Please send me ot rED FOR CASPER IN 4 SS ENUMERATION? Box vhovha Boyd spent ing A shipment of calctum eyanide hes been sent to Mr. Bowman for this purpose. districts will also be done. 862 nd if you have been counted Color | Single } Nativity or Eex | Age} or | of Birth | | Marri ed | or Plac PAGE NiN ued. Mr, Potter Bowman, Untver of Wyoming alusinus a coun- surveyor of Crook county, has n appointed rodent inspector. Mr some time in May help . Bowman get started and re- 8 everything shaping up Sicely. work In the districts or- former county agent, will be started shart! Lewis Some other work in new HOME COOKED Chicken Dinnérs Every Sunday at the GLENROCK HOTEL 5c Glenrock, pirpeing JOHN W. MILLER, \Aa Jobas ule Ine. chigan Ave at 18th Bt. once your booklet on 7 Re-roofing and the de 4 me of your time-paymeat if The information you been counted, kindly call iy ani Write —— Occupation

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