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PAGE TWO be Casper Daily Cribune tion in the trying days, which are upon us Insued every “venta except Sunday at Casper. Natrona] #‘e with partisan advantage. The majority of , Wyo, Publication Offices. Tribune Building. | crats, however, are snickering in their sleeves as they UF So watch the Republicans laboring in the wreckage of —— “BUSINESS TELEPHONES ,........ ee eight rs of Wilsonism and slo: assembling the Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments pease @ reconstructed eas stk But it is wi Postoffice as second ciass| thinkable that the people will entrust to these wreck- f eS) ee eee ae ers the conduct of this government for many year to come. Eventually the Republicans will put the na- tion back upon its feet, but it is a slow and painful Process. es ese) SE TE THEY ARE COMING DOWN. ith i pdt Hi: ath i : a3 rf te H athe tei taly gest BAA! Any matter of such wérid-wide importance as the other length of a lady’s dress skirt and any changes or criti- Lé cisms with reference to it must be reported prompt- . Randall, 341 tb 5 ly. Having finally become a convert to ‘the shorter Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger 5 i ing i i 4 a I, Copies ofthe Daily ‘Tribune are on file in the New lenatty ~qaame: J Cacwemabo red mf occasions alarm, so York and Chicago offices and visitors are welcome. it is with some apprehension that we hasten to ap- oe ¢ prise the fraternity that roll ’em that something has ‘war. happened to the dress skirt over in Paris, where the used jodes are supplied. Whether the short one has just !that purpose. can farmers. ar 57-6 | slipped down or the arbiters of style have actually Second—“To, operate nitrate plant! ine the in 195 | decreed that skirts must be made longer is not posi- No. 2 to approximate present capacity | 274 its : ‘46 | tively disclosed. But this much is observed in Paris, :|in teh production of nitrogen and other | But alt 7 -05/ loose fitting ankle length skirts have become numer- fertilizer compounds,” and in this bus-| “!rness C 7.39 | 04S within the past ten days and it is said these are to 3.90| govern fal] and winter styles: We don’t need to be bs A 1.96 | told what this hideous style will do to bare knees. The vate Vea octamer h than b de fr ight. That is all there ie otter written suggests vase) bee “ite it all pa is still a cheerful! - please note that for the waterpower pen ype yds dorgap a ats Sage note for the casual spectator, for while the ‘dreas-istself Mr. Ford would pay nothing |benefit of American farmers. Tene] a makers have been engaged in shrouding the lower/and that he would be free from all} could, of course, be corrected in the pov tl cps septs macy tora ‘ Member of Audit Bureau of Circalation (A. B. ) | Works they have torn the back out of the upper works| taxes on’ the property. Other lessces| final contract, for I have no. doubt| Preaching what ao 7 Noo | to provide iaterial, so everything will balance nicely| ot waterpower rights from the gov-|that Mr. Ford desires to make fertiliz:| snira-To make what it offers to i Member of the Associated Press ofter all. when the creation is finally adjusted to ihe|ernment not only beat the total cost/er at a total net profit of eigh per! the farmers clear beyond doubt. ‘ The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to i Th Fe back whatever. The|° building their own dams and pow-| cent. Nitrate plant No. 2, however, is abs for Sublication avian od in this ana| form divine. ere is be no e ls oom ag on but It ts said that certain Wall street : Siso the local news published birein. aed bodice is so trivial as to be scarcely noticeable. The|‘hey also pay for the waterpower ta | oot na caper cs gs wet | magnates who hate Mr. Ford ate anx- : ribbons that formerly came up over the shoulders to| ,aaition. ‘The Ford offer is like of-|als uced for the production of tenuis | 12us, taat his offer should be rejected. t Kick if You Don’t Get Your Tribune. give the impression of supporting something have been| fering a man 3-6-10 per cent on the izer, and t Can 15 or 16 any time between 6 and § o'clock p. m i i i + and not one of the best at' that. tt abolished entirely. The whole responsibility is now] cost of his factory as rent, and then pe you fail to receive your Tribune. A paper will be de The fmct is that the Ford ofter is livered to you by special messenger. Make it your duty to| thrown upon two slender strands of pearls attached/asking him to throw in a coal mine] not mainty a fertilizer proposition. It let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. to the bodice in front and crossed in the back and|to supply fuel for the engines for}is seven parts waterpower to one moored at the waist line, after the fashion of a pair of | ®°thins. ‘ part fertilizer, even if the fertilizer Be og home-made suspenders, known as galluses in certain} There is no allowance for deprecia-| part should work out. For, if nitrate sections of he country. The pearls are suposed to| ‘ion, and the government would be-| plant No, 2 were to be permanently provide warmth to the exposed back. yond question have to pay the cost/employed in the manufacture of fertil- THE PSYCHOLOGY OF EXPOSURE. A consignment of the new costumes is on the peeing yd Rae bere tagl as from ad it woulda Cr tn ise ne a ” 7 rot 4 joreover, | horsepow it | : “Other departments have authority for comment] way across the sea and if they arrive safely they will} inere is nothing in the offer to in-\|tion, This is the rindi ot abacetiole his offer would assure. It is fair to upon feminine wearing apparel,” says the Chicago] be given « tryout on this side. r dicate that the government, in order | matter. consider the public also, and to re- Tribune, “but this department does not pretend to In the meantime we are simply sounding the alarm|to protect its own property, would not} As a waterpower proposition, the| member that all the annual payments have. We do not even know whether women chose| and reserving approval, still being strong for the pres-| have to bear the expense of replacing | Ford offer is in every important point Mr. Ford offers to make would amount their dresses to’ please themselves, to please each|ent style which adds all that could be reasonably de-|enormously costly machinery when it] directly contrary to the Roosevelt|to only one-third of the yearly taxa- other, to make each other jealous, or to please the| sired in the way of scenery. rsalneranine th anes aere Policy wien ASTee IB tion, nepeninry, to Suvaat Soe epiptest m hr . ears was finally enacted|charge (a! joan rate calleeee re racine peri apes pee —_—_—_——— ..The second part of the Ford offer is| into law last year. per cent) 6n the government's net in- ill find ind ‘a teak 4 SEEKING AID IN ENFORCEMENT. to-buy nitrate plant No. 1, which The Roosevelt policy provides that|vestment in the property he proposed men will find her more attractive in ress, an r pe the gathering of the|(°,S0vernment in round numbers 13] alt power leases shall be limited|to take over, and that he would get that her real object is to make other women envious Just what will result rom the gathering @/million dollars, nitrate plant No. 2,|to fifty years. The Fort offer asks| the waterpower for nothing. of her appearance. county attorneys of wJeatine assembled at sree which cost the government in round |for 100 years with indefinite renewals. aE ce “Be that as it may, as we used to be allowed to say.| enne yesterday at the call of the governor, to look|'numbers 70 mMlion dollars, and other} The Roosevelt policy provides for MET: ‘WEATHERSTRIPS, ' we are half oavinet that what women are peaking 4 into the matter of more complete law enforcement in| property which brings the total cost|return to the government works at a Get ‘them Bot on your windows and ; Ath vill not be known until the committee ap-|to 85 million dollars, and to pay five| the end of fifty years. ‘The Ford offer|400TS now; while the getting is good; do now, in their various habits, is to knock out 90] the state, will not be kn: P| rnillion dollars for it all. ‘Ths when winter comes you cannot always r cent of the taboos which were so respected in the| Pointed at yesterday’s meeting formulates a report on| Million or tar ts mane, property | provides for indefinite private posses-|get them when you want them, #0 do » Pe t " Ps Acaminons kad “eetelae suped? Hl i reports at a| for which this offer ts made includes| sion of the government works. Know. Phone 4907 _ ‘home life of our dear queen.’ ; team r—chinexy to produce 160 thou-} The Roosevelt policy provides for fix ‘em. < “If a woman finds that sne 1s expected not to do aj Subsequent meeting. . = . thing simply because she is a woman, her present in-| The governor wants co-operation between county 2 clination is to tell the world that being a woman is| peace officers and state enforcing officers, which to date has been totally lackirg under the new police precisely the reason why she will do anything she pleases. Congress, which is a glutton for good deeds | bill passed by the last legislature. is hereby dared to pass a public welfare law to com- The state enforcement commission has) made no pel girls to bob their hair, to wear short skirts or| splash whatever, and will not for the numerous rea- knickerbockers, etc., and watch the government of the pointed out repeatedly to the governor when he United States being knocked into the middle of the] insisted upon the law’s passage last winter as the cure- Atlantic. We'll be tack in the mid-Victorian period| al! of conditions local officers would be more com- e in a minute. petent to handle without interference from state ap- “Lack of the franchise in politics did not infuriate} pointees. There will always be the question of author- women because they were prevented from voting.| ity, and an elected officer chosen by the people will not i They do not care any more about voting than the ma-| suffer an appointed officer by the state to come into § jority of thé men do, and a fire has to be built ander}his jurisdiction and interfere with his administration, & the average male citizen to get him started toward the |jand would be foolish if he did. The elected officer de- } polls in any other but-a presidential election. What| rives his power and authority direct from the people, the women did object to was being prevented, as wom-| the state bureau official is hand-picked by the gover- en and) because of their sex, from having a public| nor. That is the difference. Under the circumstances ~ chore to do, the local officer will not and cannot work in harmony » “If there were a law compelling women to smoke} with a state official who believes he outranks the lo- Pcigarettes and drink whisky, they would unanimously | cal one, and who will assume credit for whatever of refuse to have anything to do with either. They have| good may be done. . " learned that rebellion is sweet. So long as they think] The local official is placed in a responsible position that by shortening their skirts and rolling down their| and expected to perform specific duties, he has the stockings they can cause prosy people to protest, they| tight to perform those duties in his own way and to will shorten and roll. As soon as they see a taboo they| be judged by results obtained, and in nine cases out want to walk up and hit it in the eye, The new free-| of ten will insist on just such a program, dom is a wild one. The governor was told last winter his law was not “The one thing they overlook is that the taboos| practical and would retard rather than aid enforce- make nearly all the sex values. The way of the world| ment. It has come to pass and he is now seeking aid is the way of the London bus man. Exposure brings| to enforce the enforcing law, ats Pak If the women finally go to the Hotten- 0 + ts for their il i - 3 to styles they will drive middle aged club. aN Sa) men to such boredom that they will not look up from Writing upon this subject in the North American ® newspaper to squint out on Michigan avenue at 2 uM o'clock matinee day. Piquancy is in concealment, not| Review, Muriel Harris entertains her readers thus: “What is—really the magic of reading aloud? exposure, and taboos are a woman’s most powerful ¢ “One thing it is not. It is not theatrical. Actors friends.” rarely read well, because they are too personal, The reader who endeavors by his expression to interpret character is intolerable, a bore. For one thing, he is usurping the function of the author, plagiarizing his descriptions and explanations. On the other hand, persona] traits in reading—really personal to the per- son and not to the character—sometimes can lend in- effable charm. It may be the way the hand holds the book; the way the reader settles himself to read. Per- aa mei Rae (SERRATE RS DRAFT UPON’ OUR RESOURCES. " The immediate requirements of unfortunate Rus- sia will be approximately 750,000 tons of foodstuffs, the great, buik of which must come from the United States, The drought in both France and England have cut harvests in these countries so neither will have surplus to export and both will draw on us to sup- ply their shortage. There is to be considerable of a] haps it is a lace ruffle, a’cameo bracelet, a trick of | Surplus of wheat In this country, and other crops give| nervousness in starting. Sometimes it is @ humorous fair promise. But there will undoubtedly be a de-| intonation. ‘And the Lord said unto Moses,’ read the mand on our food production during the next year or) squire, and invariably cleared his throat afer getting } $0 which may equal, possibly eclipse, that which ex-]an impetus by accenting the and. Everybody would * isted during the war when, during the period from] have missed that and. There was something solid and 1914 to 1919, we exported about $7,250,000,000] comforting about You knew where you were. And _ worth of dompsels foodstuffs, or an annual average of| jt was above all entirely personal—unlike the conven- ple ea ion of the Dickens reader, whose regular sentimen- The economic effects of these, large prospective! talities were on a level with the ‘little she-ild’ of the shipments of foodstuffs are not difficult to forsee./ melodrama and soft miusic and the like. The profes- They mean another period of high prices for food in| sional reader is rarely a success just because he ha: this country; and they also mean increased profits for] not the opportunity to convey this personal impres- the farmer who has been made to suffer by the un-|sjon. Voice ggain counts enormously, but rather in wise measures of the previous administration. In all] a negative sense. It is the forgetting of the voice that likelihood the consuming public will suffer more from| counts, not its emphasis, And this is perhaps natu- high prices caused by these drains on our food re-| ral in that the complete merging of the book and the sources than they did during the war when everyone| reader produces a single effect, which would be con- had a job at an abnormal wage because the manufac-| fused by the existence of a double element. Most turing industries were running full tilt to supply the| readers gravitate naturally toward the books in which allies with war material of every description and to| they are most able thus to merge themselves. While make up the deficits elsewhere caused by Europe’s in-| a man will read Shaw a woman will read Trollope.” ability to “manufacture for export. Naturally, the A Democratic party will make much capital of this con- dition of affairs, andwit'will be blamed to the Repub- OUR METHODIST FRIENDS. During the latter part of next week Casper will be licans and to the protective tariff. met and the prospect for any radical reduction in taxa- The annual conference of the Methodist Episcopal { tion is exceedingly remote, although the Republicans| Church, representing. all of the local pgp are achieving something in that direction. Not that| denomination, by delegates and lay members. Aside they are. obligated by any promises so to dc, but be- from Bishop Mead of Denver, who will preside, many cause it 46. believed: t fel ay imp for 4 season, | other church dignitaries will be present from a dis- Ga 5 tance. Se ant” revision of taxes if it is to) "Considering the. popvjation the Methodist church ts 7. Dean , in| Strong in Wyoming, being represented in every com- ; tht onan alatsope ep navined Se Seana tt] munity of eny magnitude, with an active member 4 1 he rs in Ou r ro} fis {. ou ay nd y T ay 4 Bau! A 2. lat =_ i f about 6,000, ‘sve must face the fact that while the character of the| ®t the last conference session o: dah & taxes can and should be changed, an early reduction Every person is not if ge aero but every person of the amount.oftrevenue to be raised is not to be ex-| 885 4 high respect for the Methodist church, and this pected. But-aound policy.equally demands the early| ‘burch has been one of the most enterprising in car- J - geeomplishment of that real reduction of the tax bur- | T¥"& the gospel to the farthermost peoples of the sat? i arth... The old church has done a noble work in the den which may: be achieved by substituting simple for world and will continue to do so, so Jong as the same earnest and intelligent work marks its direction and the:same broad, charitable spirit guides its destiny. complex tax laws and procedure; prompt and certain determination of the tax liability for delay and uncer * tainty mulet the consumer or needlessly repress en- terprise snd thrift.” een ae ee There are a few, a very few Democrats in congress “Disarm or bust!” is the way George W. Norris of | who are more concerned with the welfare of the na- the Philadelphia’ Reserve bank puts ii. ! + bs iO rrennmnernancmenmencns iP God Particular?” Big Tent TuesdayEvening Thirdand Park “Crispy an’ crunchy an’ all-the-time-crackly! Gee, what would happen if 's got all eated up before tomorrow!” From the instant you open the generous sized pack- age till they’re tucked away in cheat and tiny “pread. baskets,’’ Kellogg’s Corn Flakes are a never-ending delight! You can’t even look at those big, sunny brown flakes, all joyously flavored, crisp and crunchy, without getting mighty hungry! Such a spread for big and little boys and girls—the sweetheart of fine white corn kernels wondrously flavored and deliciously toasted in Kellogg’s own way! You can’t imagine anything more joyous to eat, or more ideal for very, very fussy appetites! ae ing to get-anywhere, and the wise TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1921. A banana peel isn’t the only skin that causes falls. gust 28, Wealthy Man Faces Mail Fraud Charge Carter Hotel AT THE Big Horn Hot “The latgest mineral springs in the world.” 'MAKE A START. WITH WHAT YOU HAVE > The fact that you can’t start your bank account with a large deposit is not a good reason for delaying it— not at this bank, where most of our accounts started small—it is a good reason for starting now. You know you have to begin some time, with something, if you are go- thing to do is to start with what you have. You may open a checking account here with $50. It is a small begin- ning, but you can save money by hav- ing it. A savings account can be started with a dollar. On this we pay 4 per cent interest. The first thing you notice about this bank is the service you get, no matter how small your deposit. Resources Over $4,000,000 Wyoming National Bank Casper’s Popular Bank Kellogg’s Corn Flakes are childhood’s ideal food! Kiddies can eat as much as they can carry! Every mouthful makes for health, for sleepy-time-stomachs! The thing to do is insist upon KELLOGG’S Corn : Flakes. Don’t just ask for r } corn flakes. You say KEL- LOGG’S and you’ll get KELLOGG’S! . ‘Are the instructions of the Lord to be followed out to the letter, or is He indifferent as to the details?. In other words, does God require strict obedience? THE FIRE PLACE KING The building ordinance requires all flues to be lined ‘with terra eae. flue ining. Have just received several hundred feet of the Places a. specialty; iso fancy: fireplace brick, Gapers” cleen out Places a 8) 3 cy ou doors and ash dumps. Prices to suit the builders. oa Phone the Fire Pace King _ J.B. PROVINSAL, 1588-W We are equipped with the stock to sapply your wants in high grade lum- ber and builders’ supplies, Rig tim- bers a specialty. KEITH LUMBER CO.