Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 14, 1921, Page 6

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PAGE SIX ear - = = re = | immediate aid of those Whoth disaster had over- | taken. : It is rather that we ate all too tnuch wrapped up ih our own affairs. We do not take the time to even think of our Christian duty to others or that it is our concern how they get on in the world. The spirit of weighborliness and helpfulness, that yules in smaller communities or that formerly ruled in Casper, is hot so much in evidence among us today. "We have grown big and with it has come | | an apparent selfishness, and a forgetfulness of the | icieney of the presentatives ' brother in distress. It is not to owr credit. .|government in D h Ave., New York City | = eolvee. Bldg., Chicago, Ml. | Sk AES, ae in the New York | s are welcome. | SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier Che Casper Daily Critune Issued every evening except y at, Casper, Natrona County, Wyo, Publication OM! Oil Excharigé Building | eh Pa Eftered et Casper matter, OCTIAWED PRESS MEMBER TH O UNITED PRESS REPORTS FR Eo. HANWAY. LE | President and Jéditor | Associate Editor | City Editor | ing Manager | J. y David J. Randal Prudden, King & Prudden, 17 ly Tribune 4 i STARTLES THE JACKSONIANS. | At a Jackson Day dinner in Philadelphia with | the assembled hosts of Democracy present and | eating, Senator Charles S. Thomas of Colorado was ' the principal post prandial orator. | The distinguished senator's greeting to his | brethren of the faith opened with these words: | “The Democratic party lost the last election be- | | cause it gave tp the tenets of the Democratic faith. | j Ie abandoned the policy of state rights and pur- | | far more popular buque for years. {the first of June. ae Phat (under ‘the Towa state x Mont three months (i All subscriptions must be Tribune will not insure deliv one month in arrears 1 in advance and the Daily ofter subscription becomes sued the practice of centralization of power.” This was enough. The faithful waited for no | more. Had a bomb been exploded in the banquet ;room of the Bellevue-Stratford it could have | | created no greater consternation. The died-in the- | | wool patriots ‘did not attend for the putpose of |ii0 december pale, t | hearing historic truth. It was bunk they desired. |is now beaig sold | The article Demotracy feeds up and deludes itself jp rwhen Van need ‘ | with. Senator Thomas is one Democrat who does | not deal in it. So an exodus occurred. The toast- master pounded and pleaded in vain, but the dis- gruntled Democrats returned not, neither, did they ; pick up the chairs they knocked over in their} hasty departare. % | Senator Thomas finished his’ speech and those } who remained to hear it pronounced it worth while. | Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer came upon the scene and attempted to woo the assemblage into !a state of forgetfulness and complacency, but was Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations (A. B. C.) id nearly $800,000 oss. How to balan Member of the Associated Press ted Press is exclusively entitled to the use ion of all news credited in this papar and news published herein. ANOTHER CRY IN THE WILDERNESS. It is very certain that our women and girls will | never return to the Puritan modes of a hundred | years ago, and it is doubtful if they ever resume | the habits of the days of ‘‘Alice sit by the fireside” of thirty or forty years since, after having freed |. themselves of the shackles of old conventions and stood up the equal and with the same freedom and | rights of men. ¥ , The novelty is wearing off and there is a void in the life of today we don’t seem to be able to fill. e are going to » through the format also the | yu are able to get ober, our ny officials toxethe: re him ur ® the prop com! jto the the proposed raise walks and all conditions. Too, they have discour- | commi aged if not abolished entirely, as ‘obsolete, the acts | dustry declared that the competition of the past | , i ; bie ; |this kind in charge o of chivalry born with the passing generation. | had been chiefly from Germany, and that much ‘+ Gone are the distinguishing charms of both Puri- ie | unsuccessful. {high, ‘but ‘that a slight raise was jun I ‘ ‘rmine ead age we rded wom- | palaces, fen, * ‘tls elements that determine We miss the homage we formerly accorded wo Democra¢y has ever held truth in slight esteem, |ivle atid with the facts and figu wth and str en, we miss the Wwonted habit of offering protection | ‘before them, the council atithorized the gro an e oye : Seo {slight raise he mmended which Seott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. and shielding women from the crude and vulgar H e E el jcott " . things of ites They have themselves dismissed | THE BOGEY OF RETALIATION. heart a mene me ier netiod] { —~ALSO MAKERS OF——— : “ny: | 4 ono hi a the © £ Dubuqtie, ‘ Ss these services, willingly rendered by men of all | A witness testifying before the ways and means thot SER RHA coat ikLaaeaet KE-MOIDS JINC WENTIERS W. L, Gorriy while y other corpora ‘alue of the city While it Is a tittle early to draw final conclusions regarding our new form of | ‘government, T will say that so far it has | en absolutely satisfactory, ond that it) sive step that has been taken in Du-! iwas selected by them and took office jageéer form of government and not under a special charter. For a copy of that|' I suggest you write to the secre-;% of state, at Des Moines, rr’s chief duty has been to reorgan- > the city’s finances, half million dollars delinquent tixes “en His chief worry, bei tion to buy. these delin 1 experienced engineer and } ‘rience in managing led the council and ih 3 an appraisal of the plant, {their operating expense and their in- come and ‘on November 1 submitted council evidence showing that | ttee, recently on behalf of the celluloid -in- ‘paratively small amoun to have an_ experie t may run in a busine: Che Casper Daily Cribune Does Casper Want a City Manager? Read What Other Cities Say After Experience in This Kind of Rule Dubuque, Ia, Nov. 5, 1920. {ment depends largely upon the wise ‘Mr.-Chas. B. Stafford, Secretary; Cham- choice of a manager, bat we believe Ger of Commerce, Casper, Wye. Dear Mr. Stafford—Your circulnr Yet-| willing to co-operate as they are in Du- ter Of October 30 inquiring as to the buque, it is the very best possible form If there is any thing |” udque has Deen re- further you would like to know about, |where ,the council and the peo, mantger form of of government. ee write me. YOurs very than any progres:} Architect Here, Our counéil was elected April 12 and, our new city manager, Mr. O. . Carr, ‘We are operating law for city man-| Ta. Mr} yesterday from Denver and imm He found over {wil begin ana additional boxes cd. Just what will bé done will flonting indebte ice these two hi lve on een passed on by Mr. charge will return here from he st to every pub reorganization. eS Se Episcopal ring was form m. It is however at e city manager wha other ‘action quic on | or For tnstance, the |= el comps rand got them to ntil November i to; osed change. pany from Kansas are more useful than others. was entirely to It is worth? as sed man ce (Tablets or Granules) the city in order | f vy; = For INDIGESTION tion is manag, ee ee caer Dubuque Chamber of Commerce, D. B. Cassat, Executive Secretary. SS Federal Building Draw up Changes Mr. Levi Whitted.. ordered here by he treasury department to draw plans na specifications for remodeling the sement of the pdst office, came here hegen work on tie remodeling plans. As soon as the report is made work known until the proposed changes have Whitted. Mr. Frank T, Frawley, inspector in In a few days and begin the work of Certain foods, those rich in vitamins, } Scott's Emulsion is replete with. those ae | ple are Gem Nut ‘garine Makes Them Smile Good Bread tastes better—so good they want ‘more, and you can give it to them. Gem Nut is economical; saves ma- terially on your grocery bill. Gem Nut is delicious; it is pure;— contains only nut oils, Pasteurized milk and salt. . Swift & Company, U.S. A. Manufacturers of truly, to ediately install- not be Denver t erly he pr JIM WINTERS TRANSFER CO. Baggage and Freight Hauling. | of that competition will be of German origin in the tan and Cavalier. Gone are the modesty of women | future, but he also called attention to the fact that | and the innocense of girlhood as we knew them | Japan had likewise highly developed her celluloid ' in the old days. | industry and that Japan possessed a monopoly in ; We may have been kidding ‘ourselves in the | this product through her control of the Formosan ||! day when we gave women a place of equality with | and Chinese supply. t! angels, but it was a most delightful deception, and A Democratic member of the committee asked i we are even now loth to relinquish it. | the witness if a protective rate were placed upon |#) Every so often some person of the old school | celluloid which would regulate Japanese impoits, (4 cries out in anguish at the tendencies of the modern | would he not fear retaliation by Japan cutting off girl. One day it comes from New England the | our supply of ¢amphor, crippling if not ruining the | next from the metropolitan’ district of New York | American industry. The witness did not fear any | and Philadelphia, on the next the plain and sturdy | such contingency. West speaks. Today the Pacifics coast is heard | There is just one answer ‘to’ the question of re- from. A woman of the high school faculty of San | taliation and that is that it is a game at which two Diego speaks before a woman's club and her re-| could play if the time should ever come when marks are still being discussed by the wives and | Japan or any other country attempted to coerce us | mothers all along the coast. : into free trade by the method suggested. America This high school teacher scores the “modern | united for war has never yet been obliged to sur- girl” and frankly tells what “made her what she Render ts superior force, and neither need America 5 e.3 as, 7 | united for commerce need to fear such an eventual- | K. th L b ( ; “The girl of teday,” she said, “ts not the in- | ity. | er Um er oO. nocent, shielded, pink cotton type of thirty years It could be specified perhaps that if Japan tried , i Phone 3 . ago. She no longer blushes or drops her eyes at | to starve us tit of camphor something might be | mention of sex relations and problems, but, on the | done to regulate ‘the supply of cotton going to | = ene es contrary, discusses them freely with her friends, | Japan, a commodity for which Japan is chiefly de- | $OO904042007026006000906004960S 60084 2 male as well as female. The old-fashioned girl who | pendent upon ‘the United States and of which we Le : f p taboos such subjects is the exception. sent to her 438,000,000 pounds worth $176,000,- | : TRUNKS---SUITCASES ; “What has brought 'the change? Many things, 000 during the fiscal year 1920. Japan is the sec- | q 3 : > but to my mind three are €specially responsible; | ond largest purchaser of American cotton, and while | i} } | | HANDBAGS ‘ Moving picfates, ate woman's suffrage. | she bi erates to develop a supply in China, the | ditt] | OTL au 3 ae d : “The girls have learned ‘to “vamp” from the | quality of that cotton makes it very | * os A oeEE | 3 ibre iOS Lee tes tie in eae lies the ue oh ; fit only for a Simplicity of Construction ;. Metal os Fibre-Covered Trunks, Various ing the war, and suffrage ‘has ‘put ‘the women on | Retaliation is more or less a “bogey” of the |} Durabilit of Parts i izes—$18.00, $22.50, $40.00 the level with men.’ | free trader, ‘but if there is anything in the conten- Pertection of Operation it SUITCASES “The jazz music, the dress of ithe day have em- | tion that the nations of the earth will retaliate on TTT TTTIT \ Tan, selling regularly at $10.00, Sipaett [ phrase "i = oe Pesca 7 fr | Ge ited Se ig we see fit to tien our we, now Res yan Bega can be te for less now priced at $3.95 e fee as " on hr e throat | indus s from such foreign competitio: “| a in. Underreamer than any other. ‘ ‘ j . * as the laws of the land will permit, delight 'to shiver |‘duce us to mere hewers a: ie and drawers i‘ y Afircah catepire RsaI aE stores | | | same cr sand fost, pice oeueny and shake to the music of the jangling strings. | water, it can mean but one thing, namely, a foreign | Manafacturn and Dis ed Exstcvey by | || ' $10.00, Rew: selling at $7.50 Dancing is no longer the ‘poetry of motion,’ for | commercial combination for a trade war on the | B idgeport par hi i C | i HANDBAGS ‘ music a ‘concord of sweet sounds.’ ” | United States. | irate sepor } acs f ine| ; “0. 53 In tan leather, beautifully made, big US| Pee ae ge And chodld atv such combinatinavontn ate Hie R 2 Avista, I vas | | ur ner Moy Marietta, Ohio | 3 roomy models. $7, 50 i FG_.SETFUL OF DUTY. pecan neat would have to combine to meet } | || | BRANCH stores | | | iI | ae \\ | p y : I In cold and bitter weather a few nights since, Hep aaa capacity of several billions of || HT ARRAY TAITE b H | H d Co » plain little home of three rooms, sitogly. fisted. oe 4 es ee eeials and foodstuffs we could : 0 Mes ‘ar ware ° but representing the struggles and ‘accumulations | before btedly induce the foreigners to think twice - Phone 601 of the years that family had been fighting ‘to win clore attempting such tactics, especially in view con eteeeee 0eoceeoee such competence from an unwilling world as it | ihe seat that the protective principle is finding cbuldjcaught-ftte awd ‘beled wouiiie dcunlly te jstch universal approyal among our competitors. man, wife and children barely escaped in their night clothing so quickly did the home ‘burn, and ft Raia ecld ake 408: ; | to speak of it-as a “sunroom” or “sun porch.”” Why Thee fire dopatimettt Midiie tdi mund-dedved inst solarium? Tt sounds much more important and upon the scene with speed after the alarm was | "P to the last tick of the watch. We are certain given, but the ‘delay in giving the alarm found the | Kasper sea)ty felks ‘are not doing business in house in ruins when the department arrived, | Pumpkin Center. The fire caused no particular excitement or in- terest. The department made things safe and returned to headquarters. The neighbors gave no concern to the situation | of the unfortumate family and its. members were | pennitted to shift for themselves ‘as best they could. We are informed ‘that there ‘was no help ing hand reached foxth to aid these people in their distress. We ‘notice our local real estate agents continue 2 - Tlinois is debating what ce | governors. She has five. in be done with ex- _ Mr. Wilson is finding ‘some trouble in making his vetoes stick, The government we still Can thank, They haven't taxed The baby’s bank. Detroit Fre: Itis not because the peuple of Casper are heart Jess or uncharitable. For there are thousands of large-hearted people in this city had they but , a La Offite Phone 18 C. West Confectionery Residence Phone 829-W CASPER, WYOMANG Your Patronage Solicited We can frig you up with all sizes of the best seasoned rig timbers. “Give us an opportunity to quote prices on all of your lumber requisites. a Taylor & Clay Incorporated CASPER, WYO. Ground Floor, Oil Exchange Bldg., Casper Wyo. Phones 203 and 204 ™“ New York Exchange Stocks Chicago Grain Markets xcal Oils Bought and Sold Econ eR The NORRIS CO. 129 East Second Street Phone 12 Largest Market in the State WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Refrigerating Capacity for Handling Fresh Meat and Meat Products in Carload Lots ; Fresh killed poultry and game every day. Fresh Fish and Oysters every day. Smoked, salt, pickled and canned fish. Complete line delicatessen goods. Imported and Domestic cheese. Pickles and Sauer Kraut in bulk. Yresh fruit and vegetables. i HAVE

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