Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 7, 1920, Page 8

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Cpe Casper Daily Cribune! eee ry evening 7 hve teedan = d fF jatrona county, Pub! ‘Ol Exchange ‘Bulldin BUSINESS. TELEPHONE. er (Wyoming) Postof- @nteréd at Cas; fa lass matter, Nov. 22, 1916 ice as secona- MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS| REPORTS FROM THE UNITED PREBS| B HANWAY, President ang Bditor | EARL 5B. HANWAY, Business Manager| BalLy.--sAavertising Mantes | BVANS.. ity Wdltor JB. GRIFFITH. Associate Editor Advertising Representatives David J. Randall, 341 Fifth Ave. ty. & Prudden 14g. Chicag opies of the Dally Tribune are on nm the ww. York and Chicago of- welcome. cation offices | By Mat ‘x Months . ess period than three monthi All subscriptions must be paid in aad- ance und The Daily Tribune will not nsure delivery after subscription be ‘omes one month tn arrears. ———— Member of asaiys Berens of Cireulations > | Member of the Associated The Associated Press exclusively utitled to the use for republication of 11 news credited in this paper and also ne local news published herein. CaS — THE DRAGON’S NAME 4 famous publishing house, in issuing} A catalogue of juvenilé books, says this: “The dragon which we must kill who! Wish to give only the best literaturs to| our children is named ‘Mediocre.’ .You gan help by choosing your children’s reading with care, and by encouraging | the libraries-and book shops which you patronize to demand much. of the best and none of anything else. Tightening of moral! fibre in Young America can éome only by raising its intellectual Standards and by discouraging such lazy roads in reading as will lead to literary} apathy later on.” Why the cheap and silly book is country flooded with Why are nine- tenths of the dramatic productions | Know that h» is dangerous. | Judgment. the dragon Mediocre ranges the land and} waits to be slain...Many people are So lind and stupid that they do not even. There is but one way to train the taste. It is by setting before the grow- ing mind the best. Children have no If they had, they would not be children. Judgment comes with years and experience, If they are permitted to read any book that comes along, see any show, hear and play any witless music, they will find it extremely diffi- | cult to develop discrimination in later | years. But if the parent will thini: over the books of his own youth, and remem- ber the ones which stand out to him now as an enjoyable and wholesome to these, with perhaps a little widen- ing of the list by the neighboring lbra- rian, the child will not be satisfied with books of less value. arts. The child who is held to seeing every year two or three plays of un- i | | | | i questioned excellence, be they Shakes. peare or those moderns who are of gpod who is held to two or three food concerts a year, who is given two OF three books of: recognized worth; has | standards to go by. report, Other things are either as good as these or not so good He has a trutstWorthy measuting stick and will confine his enildren at first) The same| holds good for the drama and for other! No JACKSON DAY “PARADE” When the Jackson Day dinner of the Demécratié national ‘comniittee is held have contfacted a chilly feeling in the region of tho feet. power of the ill ruler /s still so great absence. do with “Bryan the Silent" who has suddenly become very talkative. A word picture will be presented by Mr. Bryan express- ing his idea of the perfect candidate and the ill chief may send « memoran- dum setting forth what shall be the platform for 1920. All in all it should prove an interesting session for the innocent bystander but more than like- ‘ly a nightmare for those who must Or it may have something to the sudden appearance of listen to the spouting of nine candi- dates surrounded by as many more non- presidential spouters. 7 In the Day’s News —o Shepherd Ivory: Franz, who has been - | i | chological Association, is. scientific di- |rector of the Government Hospital for the Thsane, Washington; D.C., arid one of the best .known ni¢n of his profes- sion in America. Dr. Franz is 45 years for his pleasures. That child tsin no driniger of $tot:| ryp4. or of laps ing into If he amuses himself (tor a moment with 2 bit of tinsel, But he w Il never be misled, in | lowing the lazy literary or any.éther apathy. all! right. Place. {to thinking it fine qld. slaying in every walk of present-day life. by Excellence, mony things win be bet- worthless, ofttimes vulgar trash? The answer to both question is that ter.* Tinsel has its! When he is “gone, and we are sled Old and a native of Jersey City. His | education ;wais fecelyed at. Columbia | University, w) *he graduated in 1894. Tr his earlier” professional career’ he | Was attached Successsvely to the facul- jties of Columbia and Harvard univer- |sities and the Dartmouth Medical | School. | psychology « and’ experimental psycho- |logy at George Washington Unversity. It is the draga Mediocre who needs | His writings on psychalogy and kindred |subjects have made ¥is name famailiar | to medical scientists the world over. a One home in every two in the rural districts of Ontario’ has a telephone, and about one: farm out ‘of every, four és an_automobile. pylon HE old-time pack-beare dred pounds ten miles ea day. The railroad is the modern pack-bearer: every employee it carries: 2,0 Back of cach railroad worker there is & $10,000 investment in tracks and trai steam and electricity harnes of burden. Without ‘this mighty transportation machine the railroad worker could do time packer. But with it he highest railroad wages paid.in the world, ;while tlie country gains the lowest-cost transportation in the world. The modern railroad does a cent asthe pack-bearer could do for a full day’s | pay. . The,jnvestment of capita other industries itcreases pr pe ity’ To nie e Fe cur i rodds 8 pace with ¢ ati Pi i improve theyp ry Mone Tess and’ vee thu new capital needs fe eaten or Under “iiie ublic : ere railroads , re bé oot stimuldter adequate) shire ic psi its ul. e¢ OF. ment, sh i Those.desiringgnformatian concern tain Yi racure\h ny wry (Rg tod a preg da 46 rayces civilization. creasin ‘To -try to ‘control railroad + rates. by. arbitrarily -limiting Profits is to, put the manager , who makes his profits, by efi- ‘ cigney’ and - economy :o0 ‘the same-level as the. one: Se : teles to ‘accouiplish. the’ pa result ~ through * extortionate «Sarges. —Hadliy I Railroad Securities ‘ommission ; Report to the President—1911. © conld carry «a: hun- For 00 times as much, ns ‘and. terminals, with sed liké a great beast no more than the old- is enabled to earn the as much work for half in Washington there will he no parade} paitor Th of presidentia] candidates. Rumor has|Dear Sir: it that it started out to be a parade) iain. but the national committee seems sto} to be Enforced Here" and which says | that no action can be taken during bis jlead a person to believe’ that the only elected president of the American Psy-| Since-1907 he has been in the} jservice of the Federal Government and! jat the same time bas -held the chair of | Letters From the People | 3 Casper, Wyo., Jan. ie. Casper Tribune: 7, 1920. This morning's . Casper “Herald con- an article headed ‘Traffic’ Laws in part: “Proper observance of rules in park: It may be that the/ing, lighting and speed ‘must be ob-| served or the offender will find himself in police toils.” etc., all of which would one to be regulated is the driver or) {operator of @ mbtor vehiéle. Fine;| Brave! Let's go on with the enforce- | ment of the traffic laws!) But, while we are in the mood, let us make a clean job of it' Let us regulate the pedestrian —the individual—man, woman or child who has a habit of “popping” into the middle of the street from behind, in, and around cars that happen to be parked; the individual that walks across the street in the middle of the -block réading a newspaper or in a trance never loooking to the right or left; the individual that walks thru the intersec- tion of the most congested streets; the individual who rides a bicycle and does a “hula hula” from one side of the street to the other and winds up by grabbing on to the rear end of your car, ete. etc. Let us make it as es- sential for these individuals to observe the traffic laws as well as the drivers of motor vehicles and I venture to say that the fines collected from the pedes- trian Violators of the traffic laws will greatly exceed the fines collected from the drivers of motor vehicles. We will all have to learn sooner or later to}, "| PASTOR ad WN OVER LOSS OF je of two young nen | known from boyhood.and who. led by train Bi ety ip 5 Be pe | William Toole, Epis pastor here for many years, hag suftered ‘@ nervous breakdown and has been taken to Dep- ver for treatment, | NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING, ‘TOCKHOLDERS OF THD CIT. TATE BANK OF CASPER, are notified, that the annual meet- stockholders of Said Bank | pursuant to its By-laws, the statutes and instpuetions of- i | Board of Direetors, -for January 1920, at 3:00 o'clock in the artern [at its offices in Oil Exchange Bidg., | Casper, for the purpose of electing: 2 | Board of Directors for the ensuing year and transacting such other busihess\as | may properly come before said meeting. Dated Casper, Wyo., Jan. 7th, 1920, Cc. H. HORSTMAN, Secretary. TH 1 h \ing of the is now called, A MARVELOUS AUTOMATON—Its inventor has cliristéned it Isis.” The mar. | In 1873 the high school girls of Port- - vel has been constructed by Dr. Cecil E. Nixon, a San Francisco dentist, after liand, Maine, unanimously decided ‘to sixteen years’ work, According to Dr. Nixon “Isis” can do everything but discard jewelry and expensive articles think. The automaton has more than 1,187 wheels in its entire body. of dress while attending school. — ae ee | Today’s Anniversiries pel 1917—The | — England agreed to the terms of; Read the Tribune Want Ads. the ‘New York Yacht Club for an) international y “Railroad * introduced in Cong walk to the next corner and across the street in the proper way, why not now? Yours for the earnest observance of all laws. | M. A. MESTAS. One Year Age in Warf Machine guns used to suppress Red in Berlin. The Bolsheviki captured the Port of Riga. , President Wilson began negotiations on preliminary details of the Typaue of Nations. —_ In Korea the marriage certificate is equally divided between husband and Avite. 4 LIST YOUR OIL LAND LEASES and ROYALTIES with us for quick sale. BRUNSVOLD & FUNKHOUSER ote T. M Phone 203-204 rage Wiese C) Eat: th hey.may keep. p Na v1 shayl ed with Sopetant: sete. rf = ithe; guint he 4 eth Nd wi We are “overstocked Ww ‘of all kinds Hey, ad len’s or | sale. unt 5 OMIM 1 PO POPC OOCE OG PPD D Od, COOLS SM Trunks, Suit Cages and Traveling Bags A discotint of 10. per cent wilk be given on-all of our Trunks, Suit Cases and Traveling Bagg during this gale. Sweaters ‘er men’and boys and will A discount. of 10 per cent will be | Bill wa 1841—British squadron. reduced two of| by Representative Adamson of Bogue forts, on the Canton Miver. | Georgia. 7 1861—Last territorial legislature of Kan-|1918—Supreme Court of the United sas met at Lecompton and ad-| States upheld the constitutionali- | Service Ace. journed to Lawrence. 1873—U. S. Congress appointed a coni- mitteo to investigate the ‘ered A Serbian boy, 17 years old, recently | Mobilier. | walked 1000 miles trom Petrograd to 1895—The Royal Yacht Squadron of! Belgrade to see his mother. a ty of the Selective oe LetCuticura HelpYou Look Like This Nothing better to care for your skin; hairandhands.. The Soap to cl and purify, the Ointment to and heal, the Talcum to perfume Then why not make these delicate, fragrant emollients your every-da! toilet preparations? ee Caticura Taloum Powiet “S08 Do not fail to test the feabin ance of. the Ss exquisitely sae n ghifal, dbtnwue the.person 8 charm incom A Sura Soap, Ointment and Talcuny 2 ass renie ay Dept. 1 wi Boston.” Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital-Sanitarium An Accredited Training School for.Nurses. New classes. will begin after the first’of the New Year. Young women desiring to take up nursing as a profes- sion may write to the ; BENEDICTINE SISTERS Hot Spyings, South Dakota Richards & Cunningham Co. January Clearance Sale Men’s Department CLOTHING A discount of 10 Per Cent will be given on all Men’s and Boys’ Suits, Overcoats, Mackinaws and Odd Pants. We feature. the well known Hirsh-Wickwire make of Suits and Overcoats, which insures you good workman- ship, 2 good fit and up-to-date styles. Shirts and Underwear We will give you a discount of 10 per cent on any style of Shirt you select, whether it be a Work Shirt, Dress Shirt or an All-Wool Flannel Shirt, and we have a splen- did assortment to pick from. EXTRA SPECIAL Silk Shirts We have in stock a large. assortment of Silk Shirts worth $12.00 to $15.00 each, which we will sell at a dis- count of 20 per cent. i g 2 adic eapasaiaiail + MIT IIeLw, > Pajamas and N ight Shirts 10 Per Cent of A discount of 10 per cent will be given on al Pajamas and Night Shirts during thissale. ll of our Men's and Boys’ mo Ah Underwear A discount of 10 per cent will be given on all of our men’s and boys’ Winter Underwear, whi hn includes the celebrdted “Léwis” thake of, Men's Union Suits; also “Wright's” well known make of Shirts and Drawers and Union Suits. EXTRA SPECIAL Neckwear and Mufflers We will allow you a discount of 20 per cent on any Neck Tie or Muffler and we have a large variety to select frorh. ith Sweaters EXTRA SPECIAL ee oe givén of al] our Men’s and Boys’ Hats or Caps-during the sale and we have a large and well selected stock to pick from. It‘ will pay you to buy’¢ Fur Cap for next winter at the prices offered. “THINK RICHARDS & CUNNINGHAM WHEN You war TH BEST” LPL LF LILI LP SI LI ILI LILI LILI LI PMS F&F AF OF, Cashmerette Socks We have in stock about dozen Black and-Grey- Socks, worth 40 to 50 cents per pair, Sale-price;'35¢ or 3 pair for $1.00. 9 25 to 80 SOF Cashmerettelcent-on Men’s and Boys’ aa Ve will allow a discount of 10 p any’ Men’s or Boy’s Work Dress Shoes and yoy know that handle only the best x

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