Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 13, 1919, Page 11

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SATURDAY, DEC. 13, 1919 Che t Daily Cribune TWO DELWERIES {SOME EDUCATIONAL PROBLENG )FLAG CARDS ARE BIOs on aMCeTs-—erTnses Gist ACER, ear nea. 7 wee we ore ef maf aig ‘ ; to the Lord Mayor for distribution 2p) | . ing Discussed by President of ) ge By MARGARET ROHE i I | _By MARGARE’ 2} ‘ould afford to be booted with the best| Onto produces more barrel hoops than ——— _- QVritten for the United Press.) — | or them. lany ohebimate = | CHER T. BECK, | What boots it if your ankle’s fine The high cost of booting makes rath-; ~ —_—__@—__—— President Casper Business College. | If you must go and boot it. er for the anklet as a more popular| 4}) nations used 220,000 carrier pi. oon R ded “by I | The time for educational, as well as the time for political and| NEW TORK. Dee gree moot it: especially does it go well with the orf SRG RUST Ee Extension eco ende y In-|j striat reconstruction. and tS e | Provision Made b: Last Le istasl By YORK, De ~Incoming ships | ental trouser effects so prevalent among| A Norwegian has patented a spark: Rsk omen sae ndu . and adjustment, is here. A new world|Pr y g' ure bringing heaps of exciting things to|our best skirts these days. The skirts|less radio device. ° 2 + = + 2 $/ among the poor of London, “in sincere 1 a P UGH DEPENDS ON TEMPERAMENT AND TURN OF ANKLE, :"sss,Ssioniner hs fe 7 r A b | | the Guildhall on the occasion of hig ital Phases of Reconstruction Question in Regard to Special Train-, | : Ot | recent visit.” 2 B Coll j | | This is Dame Fashion's last decree | foot adornment of the season, however, feons in the war. democracy, with a new social order, is being resurrected on the ruins} _ ture to Spread Knowledge of — our shores these days, besides royal-|yutted in around the hem do thelr wove 3 5 fe: * 5 “1 . Ue: d Bolsheviki. t the ast of . 2 areme: » effec Service on Old Routes and of the past four years. In this new and higher social order, kings | State Emblem Being: Chins Wace ern py tae Gaskiiet Denar | ce a ne baremsediie eae ane Creation of New Ones and potentates will play but a minor part. For the first time in his-| - Carried Out ican matrons when they put their best | season ago that bids fair to exceed even| foot foremost down the gangplanks the | the suce of its debut. In that wicked : jother day. One wore an alluring g0ld-| paris more blatanly bifurcated garments In accordance with action of the 1919 | cn anklet that gleamed seductively thr !naye been flaunted in the face of con. jtory, the people_not of one or of several nations—but of the As the result of the yisit here this | world, must be responsible for their own [literacy among ‘the different states. week+of two postoffice inspectors a plan | government. Whether this, world de-|This high rate of illiteracy is due, at! jegislature, Miss Agnes ‘R. Wright, the the transparent mesh of her gossamer| vention ¢ : rikeask has been recommended and sent in to|Mocracy shall succeed or fail, depen leant in part, to the widely \ varying| state Mbrarian, is distributing to. the | silk hose and the other swasgered down Mo oar peared tact kre the postoffice for the extension of the/ largely upon the emphasis laid upon|standards and effectiveness of our state| school children of Wyoming, through in a dashing little pair of honest-to-| to tuck hartchidersvatine ibe es| carrier service in Casper. jequal and universal opportun'tics ft vstems of education. One ting is cer-| county superintendents, embossed cards goodness regular Russian ballet boot boots like a regular wildwestern fel-' By the new plan all the present car- | Cducation. | tain, that there is need of better en-| containing the state flag of Wyoming You can take your choict between} tow when ns soes\itoicast ther! vote at rier districts will have two deliveries} Part of the world has, for many ycars| forcement of compulsory educational | on the cover and a description of the these two divergent styles according| the next pr aidential election, by heck of mail a day instead of one, as is now} been nurtured on a false educational! laws and the universal establishinent of flag and its meaning on a second page. | (4 arent aide Theatamtiat = —— - trne in all residence districts, and sey-; ideal. This false, egotistical ideal did, | a minimum age for leaving schoui. The sum of $750 was uppropriated| your ankle. It’s always well to” re eral new, districts will be created in the | and must always, result in national sui-| A study of the unequal eduentional| py the legislature so that these flag |. ember, however, that when there's a outlying parts of the town which will/ cide. | The emphasis laid upon the, I am, | opportunities offered to the children of| cards might be printed and distributed. | weil turned anlele there's many ic well have one delivery ‘a day. RS Cee coo et has | the icifferent: states thas fiver uel just |Mave tT ttemnde mas, aaopted’ by (the |turmed head, “And, it doda, seem: such| Collections ‘Gf nail’ will be: made in| Bee tie apane) OF bUllding up) a 2aiae | Cause for alarm) 10 te meveesary for the! ssinisiats leglaature’and was designed |a wicked waste of short skits, shecr the business district as late as 8 p.m. | System of philosophy and education,|safety and the welfare of the nation » go and by Miss Verna Keays of Buffalo,. her | hosiery and slender sl design being selected from 37 submitted | drag boots on the scene in a contest conducted by the D. A. R. Nevertheless there be many The flag is of blue with narrow bor- doing it—som: they £ ders of white and red. In the center | ously every v the mode whether is the figure of a Buffalo in white with it means baring their back the great seal of Wyoming upon its ing their tootsies, others (and This can be done with the addition |\Which must be undone. For many years, that states which for one cause or an- of two carriers to the present force of | this doctrine was fostered in the public other have lagged behind in their edu- five, it is believed. schools of the central empires, to the cational progress be urged to rfise their ‘A supplemental report: asks for the|€nd that autoeracy and democracy couid|standards to certain minimum requires addition of two parcel post’ trucks so| 0 longer live in peae We are now}ments. It would seem advisable for} that parcel deliveries in the residence facing the tremendous problem, not) the federal government to adopt a pol- vatural district can be facilitated. only of edueating these people, but also; !¢y encouraging such states to make | cide, iu booteos davotecs: cout for! thi The postoffice was greatly congested | Of Undoing—which is far more difficult )4 greater effort to establish higher | Mino eaves picion) because their ankle li yesterday when Clerks were called upon | —this falsé teaching of the Hohenzol-|standards of health servi training | t Bey cP tte ai ite of Wya- | rathe® lumps, make boots the to handle three days’ mail, which had | lerns. [for citizenship, and preparation — for| ihe Bene Oh Wy * STORAGE i BATTERY heart of the flag. Placed | Of two ¢ a ser | e bison it represents the truly There are lots of boo I © choose tern custom, of branding. The bison from when it com: color scheme ns. ‘The and ornater tho the general cut of accumulated while trains were held up| While this process of re-education is|teaching, so that’ their standards muy iy that etoran’ | going on democracy must not lower, Conform favorably to the more pro * its educai sssive. An uneducated democracy i \but ra! standards and & Sacks of outgoing mail, which could and) ta Ah oF \Haitid not be dispatched while trains were tied | Meals. We must not fail to apply to/an illusion and an AAV cae naraee anes tate ed ates | dlitenatpbaeet ial Rigel Kine leasnon |All & al life 2 er . folution, povert n mises ogard- 1 stghidtr _ t bs a iPS up were piled high in every available OUP National life the great lessons of | olution, 1 Fate ed ean Bara"! who knew and loved the state long ago |over patent kid ones are smart and To clinch to An an civili-|less of race, climate, and natural re- || ‘ He'srate Jong jaa lessons of the*past four years, | Sources—follow in the wake of the poor | tran pigaece me ch NAG ing and distributing. While cage ne sutocrany up. therstalts 1nd indediate Bohool ayatenn En ethala ti eaablemecr pliriiy, and Niprigits _ , of democr: nd progress,'is_no easy | United States, as here, we are only | ness, Bhus, which is found in the bluest To make sure of success, the|@S strong us the : : FLANDERS MUD eshte Piece Ee weakest state, and) or Wyoming akics and tho distant of American t i res | as 1 as a single state in th i and_ privileges | @8 long as a single state in the union |) ountg . Tp aes hee! cnship must be ime| fails to provide its youth with the | ountans, has through the ages been space in the building, blocking aisles, | the war. and greatly hindering the work of sort- | tion th those of patent kid lowers with t We can't compete for battery business on price, either grey beige or t of the biack patent kid rn over cuffs at their top tan by » form-fitting, as it Willard service does cost more, so does a Willard Battery. But isn’t it true that if you hire a real engineer, or architect, or contractor, or carpene ter, or mechanic, or doctor, or lawyer, that it saves in the long run? significant of fidelity, justice and viril- wets, fur trim planted in the lives of our people be-| Means of attaining certain minimum | VMAS OF Heelys Justice and viril: | ‘Ato Almtt We're in business to dothe job right the first time SOLVES HOUSE yond the peradventure of a doubt. With} Nation-wide standards of health, intelll- | of ‘tne state flag of Wyoming are the and there these principles firmly established, we) sence, citisenshtp ‘and character, our) colors of the greatest flag in all. the |jike an edition de luxe. T-and that costs more. tham to fix it so it has to be BUILDING NOW should succeed in holding fast to the} mittonal life and unity are endangeerd. | world, the Stars and Stripes of the! we h been threatened with this done over again soon after, ‘newer and higher ideals of democracy, he titanic struggle of the past four! Unitea S$ a. boot fad ere this but it didn’t stick suf Any schools which have not been / ficiently to make supplied with the cards may obt a years phant ove ended with democracy trium- | put acy, justice over in;! When we sella Willard Battery with Threaded as well as in leading these less enlight- Rubber Insulation we charge more for it, but, it deep boot print en tned people upward and onward in this Paes Bele! Se poe cetee| n}the sands of fashion, or a deep im- | bag er aa GE i ROULERS, ‘Telsit ¥4 great march of civilization. Preopie, ree be re it sine rect] them by writing to the State Librarian, | pression on feminine favor. ‘The v eoaEATE a peek Kee Degen era ate Fianderaiinnd Millelbanedorcallaihe The war has not only laid bare the de- Rhehetconeth onde ne Seietiae ef Capitol building, Cheyenne. | fact that the price of leather is so high | the service you ht. ym tot 7 . i F pe pes OE ave “| the strengthening « SOS CEA NO zh s | PP tAt he lam rc c = armies that operated in Belgium, iy fects and deficiencies of the German sys-| principles: ‘i | nowadays as to almost make the than you'd believe possible. or gerne tye eter oi tem of education, but it has also ‘laid } whi i “ 018 prohibitive except to the; we are heccdlic which housed the first diplomatic mis- | high boots probit ff . P bare* certain weaknesses and short-|4¥tocracy at large must be re-educated, | ¥ ec | d Uy ates ati Uae avar chia fa iene ain a Belgium today und in many of ti ? : *| tinue to be divided against itself. Dem-| background for the first ne of thé'| put the ste a a vi yer) od. y 4 ve rei e, = pakiaa TS f: f y cked whe e joi Rubber Ins: ingle vee bel ics with aud " pear igul o tne the ies 0. cceeee ocratization must be carried on abroad | Play. Two sormural, fathers nd son, | that they Incked when the! hol pollo mL, ing stones icks with mud for |! : Rb as stat baste) 2 ho | While Americanization is being carried |‘ on guard to protect Ha from | Drop in, ; tosce yom, temporary shelter against the com- | 266 of people living in America. WhO! tetaoinshdlu trocm htachttma mtmm| attack. Suspicious characters lurk | ¢ ————__________— ® ae eee in winter. Others fill the chinks had failed to imbibe the true spirit and | T | around, ready at the first t it | ? i : ; yall with it, ideals of the American constitution and|0m 2t home. The problem of estab-| Hround, ready a anger torouae | In the Da $s News | ahd aitogetiien tts faconie enna of American democracy. The conduct | !8hing higher and more uniform stand-| t Sesornlnnte Piorabanssy sro res 'y Stee oe sole % ion ‘itical |2T4S Of education among the different | *' 18 em is caught by the of a comfort toy thie re Rees as it pies elias peppy lerion, at 2. oe es, and the vastly great problem of} samurai and bound, but at Harris’ re- | 4 ~™ s was a handicap to the soldiers who By, Was suc Pause: 3 ey | must both be| Guest is set free. Koshiro’s entrance) The election df Victor it the whole may be| PY the temple gate, carrying the Stars | lando to the presi oi | 4a Stripes vel is ari 7 i | che er f le} ies m leavened und the world finally made | #4 Stripes over his arm, was impr chamber of deput | ve , evidently had to unders the |Te-educating " autoc lived in for months. vidently had failed derstand | accomplished, so t At Dixmude there is a little, low, spirit .and ideals that underlie our | 111 EAST FIRST STREET cavelike building, made of stones | American institutions. This was largely ; se anenes sive, p immensely toward an intelli from the old pretentious “city walf | due to a defect in our’ educational sys-|"#f° for democracy, The great topic of the day was| gent and immediate solution of the dis PHONE 968-J They are laid in the red mud of the | tem, and we should no longer delay in| whether Japan would open a port to|tressful conditions now prevailing In ‘ tives clashed | Ialy, for no man 1p nearby battlefields and over the top | adjusting it, for without an efficient JAPANES foreign trade and conservative: of it are arched pie | public school America will fail in her F PLAY SHOWING | with progressives on this point. ‘This | ate know of from British dugouts. In this little | mission as 4 teacher of democracy to} Aly was shown in a scene in a tea house | fairs in that country than ho Of ver building, containing three tiny rooms, | the peoples of the world. ‘ in which a serving maid overhears a | distinguished appear Signor Or on; in one room an architect is at | living in the United States is a. public! _ I wait for the minister on a nearby hil" He was a professor of juris work on estimates of damage done | school problem. We can not’ depend} and kill him, moe ee 4 | ‘ first at the University of to public buildings in the city. In {upon the home nor upon the churcle to} One scene is laid at the appr nd later at Palermo. In 1897 another room the fortnightly supply | inculcate our ideals of liberty and jus- | tase br Idge .near the great temple 1 public life a member of of coal is issued and another room tice into these un-Americanized people.| ~ - j Sozojl, where the minister was attend- {the chamber of deputies and in 1903 he blankets and | Goth muy: assist, but neithey singly nor | ——. SAaby u Just as ned his first cabinet post, that of . er articles which the Americans | combined will they alone succed. The! ‘TOKIO, (By Mail.)—A famous Japa- | AR NATE Ce tee of public’ insiructioin. — His hay e supplied. homes of those who have imbided the; nese actor, Koshiro, played the role of stops the retinue ana. Aalst a ho pees Ne, © career as premier and as a partie: | » mayor, by far the busiest man | German “kultur,” have not and will not | Townsend Harris, the first American tion about the plot = See ige Brine jipant in the peace conterer brought in town, divides his time between [for many years, become nurseries of! minister to Japan, in a play presented ne ot. Before long the jhim into the world’s lime light. public affairs, weighing out coal, dis- | American civilization. While the in-| in.the Japanese language im the Im. | O%2 Dares are engaged in a hand to ——————__— tributing supplies and_cleaning mor- fluence of the church may be altogether | perial Japanese theater the other day. bere ene ene Hirris ys Be) | _A Tribune Wantad will sell it. far-off of old bricks from the ruin jin the right direction, it is too limited | Koshiro gave a faithful portrayal -of | Wte dust coat emerges from his palan- of itis house. to result in any radical reform, The) America's first diplomat to Japan, hay- | duib, pistol in hand. But his escort mud, too, for his w tvotuntary time: spent -under its guid-}dng borowed a portrait of Mr. Harris | (nds the ey before he His example is being w ance is not sufficient to secure the} from the American: embassy, through | tame.) pol mone of th in Dixmude and surrou! desired results, An effort should be the kindness of Roland s. Morris. REET Re are oe ee lages. made to harness the home, the church,! The pliy was called ‘America: Pereenihe Aaa ae ean the tnasreenne and the school into a harmonious work-| tsuki American Messenger”, lieeionthaltecin’ or one ake ing team, but for the present’ the ro:|\and was written-by Olaamuto Kido, The cea See 0; Y Naat sponsitlity for sthis “Americanization in th temple. in Toko, | YOUns Samurai me lear go in War | will have to be shouldered by the pub- Sp | lle 'ectiot ie Our school system has been wonder: American army of occupation pre: gutty developed and expanded during the pared to cross the Rhine. past few dec . We have just cause President W{lson “landed at Brest’)¢9 be proud of what has been accom- u antid great rejoicéings. { plished, But, in the face of all the unsport: De Kalb, with 1141 soldiers 5, més that has’ been made,’ we were Light Your Christmas Tree Electrically eee New York. surprised to learn of the high rate of! illi 'y still prevalent among our population. The large pe army recruits who could 1 lish languag id to hay moto: SS IIS SS SS: Germans are noiseless airplane devised a A Christmas iree aglow with tiny electric lights, some in the form of its own kind Write the B —— Each kind of orchid h of insect for polinization, oT EN Wee a If your friend owns an auto, buy him an brilliant fruits, of birds—all colors of Darters, although + ttention. tatistics will no doubt soon ? waving web feet, Si vailable to show the distribut perch and ni in tre || _ AUTO THEFT SIGNAL “$100 Reward for anyone caught stealing an auto which uses the Theft Signal. ; WE CARRY a full line of Spark Plugs, A.C. Champion, Champion. Weed Chains, Wrenches, sahinastends Radiator Covers, Light Bulbs, KEEP WARM ~~ Pumps and all other AndsComfortable while driving, with ~~ |] AUTO ACCESSORIES “TEMME” EXHAUST HEATER SOLE AGENTS Utilize the heat that is wasted and make your __||) winter driving a pleasure. For Hood an floor, is not in the way and is as efficient as the __] Brunswick Tires The “Temme” Heater fits flush with the car radiator in your home. Adaptable to Pleasure Cars and Trucks Have a few Hartford and Falls Tires, which we . are closing out at a special low price CENTER STREET FILLING STATION Corner Center aud Linden Phone 402-M your delighted children! What a feel- ing of security will be yours—know- ing that there is no risk of fire! MEAT REGULATOR Sn DASHBOARD. This should be a safe as well as a mer- ry Christmas. Don’t risk fire by burn- ing candles on a tinsel-covered, high- ly inflammable tree. . SS fy PE . N) N N) \ . & N the rainbow! What cries of joy from N & N ) N & N Get an electric tree lighting outfit NOW and use it for years to come. TIPS PALAALALLAAL AL A The demand is always heavy—particularly at the last minute—so order YOURS early. OUR EXTRA LAMP STOCK IS COMPLETE Natrona Power Co. Phone 69 . WML LS LDL LS PLL LIS SI ST SS BE MS SS, LIL LD IIMS Dg On Display at— CASPER SUPPLY CO. Center and Linden Sts. . Coliseum Garage Co. Oil City Supply Co. ___ Linden and Wolcott St Ale East Second

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