Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 12, 1922, Page 2

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PAGE TWO. €pe Casper Daily Cribune Issued ‘ery eveni cept Sanday at Casper, Natrona “County, Wee. Publication Offices, Tribune Building. BUSINESS TELEPHONES ~ 1b and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments Entered at Casper (Wyoming). Postoffice as second class matter, November 22, 1916. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS . President and Béitor . Business Manager Associate Editor -.-. City Editor Adverusing Manager Advertising Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bide. Chicago, DL; 286 Fitth avenue, New York City; Globe Bldg.; Bos ton, Mass. Copies of the Daily Tribune are vn file in the New York, Chicago and Boston offices and visitor: are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier One Year ....... Six Months Three Months One Month . Per Copy . One Year Stix Months Three Months No subscription three months. All_subscriptions must be paid in adyanee and the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscrip Uon becomes one month in arrears. Meraber of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©) Member of the Associated Press. The Associsted Press js exclusively entitied to the use for publication of all news credited in this paper and aiso the local news published herein. Kick if You Don’t Get Your Tribune. CaN 16 or 16 any time between 6:30 and 8 o'clock p. m. if you fail to receive your Tribune. A paper will be de livered to you by special messenger. Make it your duty to let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. a> CHAIRMAN SPENCER. | General approval will meet the action of the Republican State Central Committee in the selection of;P. C. Spencer as chairman to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Judge T. Blake Kennedy. And there could be no more worthy successor to Judge Kennedy. It means that the same high class government over the affairs of the party in Wyom- ing, will continue. Mr. Spencer had the unanimous support of the committee membership which is a testimonial of ap- preciation of his value as secretary for the past sev- eral years and the confidence in his fitness to con- duct party affairs in the higher position. Mr.. Spencer is not old in years but he is old in political experience for politics has been attractive to hin: since boyhood. With his growth in years in the State he has grown in general popularity and esteem of the people. He is all that a Republican chairman should be, clean, honorable, industriovs and well informed. The party is very proud of the record Mr. Spencer has alread made and we are sure we can all look forward to a splendid future for Republi- canism in Wyoming, under his wise guidance. Sie KER a ENTITLED TO, WAIL. Did you ever--have an ulcerated tooth, gentle reader? If you have no need telling you anything “about the miséry you suffer while the blamed thing is ebgaged in ‘its infernal activity. If you never have had such an affliction. avoid it, as you would z pestilence. For take it from those who know there is mighty little comfort or enjoyment in the pos- session. There is no better way to test your nerve than te entertain ‘an unremitting ulceration at the root ofjan eye tooth. It is some chore to maintain your every day sunny disposition while a hack-saw is rasping each, every and all of the nerves in your body. "You even lose the respect and love you bear your’ favorite dentist. You hurl epithets at him when he consolingly suggests lancing and you depart from his tooth plumbing establishment in horror when he kindly offers to drill a hole in your sore tooth with au augur operated by some sort of a buzzing arrangement. You go away off by yourself and spffer in such silence as you may and sedulously avoid the kind- hearted dentist, while he wonders at the perversity of the human kind. This is in no sense an advertisement for the den- tist. It is intended as the wail of a sufferer. Soa SS aa HINTS FROM EXPERIENCE. “The reactions of reckless evil on a moral uni- verse,” notes the Continent,” ought to be studied more by men who calculate on the pleasures of wick- edness and the profits of immorality. It would seem as if the wicked would some time learn from ex- perience what the Bible desired to teach them ages ago, that those who headstrongly ‘pass on’ by the way of folly, selfishness, avarice and vice, are simply) pursuing their own punishment. Leaving the future) life aside, there is enough of such result visible in this present worldly life to persuade any unbewitched person that it doesn’t pay to be wicked even on one’s own account—still less does it pay to try to lead others into wickedness. 1 “It is a bit of encouragement in this Tine to ob-| seFve that some people who had never realized this well before, caught the idea at length from what has happened to the liquor trade. Thousands of men onte thought nothing more profitable in business life| than the heartless occupation of making men drunk and stealing from them in the process their money, their sense and their conscience. It certainly did look at_one time to be the prime commercial proposition Night Eee coseeetseree 1.95 by mail accepted for less period than Day has fled fast and far beyond the plain, ‘the Washington Post: Fled with his gay and gaudy pa-| ‘More than two billion American dol- geantry, lars are working abroad earning divi- Beautiful, but with beauty slight to|dends for their owners on this side of ‘gee |the Atlantic, according to computa- By hers who comes with planets in| tion of officials of the federal reserve her train, board. By hers whose sad embrace we seek} The United States merits the state- again; ment that since the great war it has Her velled face is gentle and moth-|become the world’s leading investing ety, nation, the bankers say. ‘And seared with sorrows of her| “Private borrowers of Europe and ee other sections of the globe are pour- Souts born in darkness and in bitter|i"S interest into pain, books at the rato $100,000,000 a year. Ah, Mother, we come to you in deep-|!® $50,000,000 due est grief, We that walked dazed and blinded through the day, We Jay our hands within your tap and pray, 4 ” it is “indicated.” The American Econo- Beagins. to find a vague unborn be-| mist tells this story Am 4 In earthly life and fe that is to|'"S,tP American money: come, internationalism which is rife in this And, as we pray, our lips are strick-| country. en dumb. % —GEINE MANTEN. why certain of the Casper, Wre ~ , Expatriated Money Taking for its text this item from government each year on war loans. “American investments in foreign countries are increasing daily. can bankers and business largely financing the world’s business, “That goes to explain much of the It explains the ‘we must buy {if we would sell’ fallacy. now free traders. It explains why they in ali the country for little risk and big returns. But it doesn’t look so today. After all that has hap-| pened to the liquor traffic, an organized assault on! sobriety and decency appears as a business idea sub-! ject to a discount worse than German marks. And it is interesting to see that many critics in a way more! pungeht than polite are directing the attention of the moving picture promoters to the lesson underlying the fate of the brewers and distillers. The district| attorney at San Francisco, who has had the unpleas-| ant duty of trying to punish ‘Patty’ Arbuckle as he! deserves, speaks typically in saying: ! “ ‘The public is tired of seeing morally rotten but! highly paid actor or actress glorified and held up; as.an idol. The public is tired of having sex flung in| their faces. People who live decent lives, the mothers| and fathers with families that they are trying to, raise to be upright and decent, are tired of seeing | film after film picturing infidelity and red love. They are tired of seeing the other man as a permanent! fixture in the home—according to the movies. They} are giving the producers their chance to reform from| within. If they don’t, public opinion won’t do any reforming st all. It will simply annihilate the motion picture industry altogether, just as it did the saloon.”| There are sensible advisers saying virtually the) same thing to the promoter of the speaking stage. | And it seems to be because theatrical managers have, begun to catch the significance of the warning that: they are glad to encourage movements like that afoot in New York city to establish a voluntary ‘jury’ of| citizens to pass judgment on the moral influence of! current plays.” —_o—_____. “YESBUTTERS.” “We found a new word in a little magazine al few days ago that appealed to us,” says the Missouri Ledger. “The word is ‘Yesbutters’'—you know, the people who agree to a proposition, are*in favor of it—‘Oh, yes, but. Don’t you know them and isn’t their name legion. Speak of wet blankets, | dashes of cold water! What has a more cooling effect! when you are thoroughly in sympathy with a project than a ‘Yesbutter?’ And you meet them hourly and probably have one in the bosom of your family and the chances are that you may even belong to the big fraternity yourself.” | e pea Dw FACIAL FOLIAGE. “An alarmist who sees in the “whisker craze” which has struck the City of Sacramento, California,” says the Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph, “‘the begin-| ning or rather the rervival of a tonsorial fashion! which may sweep the country, fails to realize that the disturbance is of a purely local character. Its cause is the coming celebration of the gold rush ’49 which has led to the offering of a $49 prize for the! best beard or the most luxuriant growth of whiskers. The mayor, councilmen and chief citizens of Sacra-| mento are temporarily following the fashion set by, the forty-niners, but there would seem to be no occa- sion for defensive measures on the part of the bar- bers’ unions. The invariable law of compensation is at work. The men of Sacramento are not getting shaved, these days is it is true, but they are flocking to the barbers for daily whisker treatments, realizing that it is necessary to train”up a beard in the way that it should go. Some patrons are investing in Marcel waves, otlivrs in permanent curls or even) having their beards bobbed in imitation of feminine styles in coiffures. At a dollar a treatment, as com-| pared with the Sacramento rate of 15 cents for a shave, the barbers are heartily in favor of the new order of things. “Great wars have frequently boomed the cultiva- tion of facial foliage. This was true of the Crimean and of our own Civil War. There was a reason why the latest and greatest of wars did not have this Goodnight Good-night! come, ‘The dark folds softly in ‘The weary places that have known The daytime’s busy din. ‘The hour, of peace has Good-night, oh litde love of mine, | The young have gone to rest— The bee, the primrose by the wall, The bird ‘neath shelt’ring breast. Good-night! And may the hush of sleep Come gently to your eyes. In whose bright orbs no craven i thought | Or sorrow shadow lies. H Good-night! take Of you a wakeful heed To keep you shepherded by Love— Then night is good indeed. —Maude De Verse Newton. And may the angels oo a expat: effect. A safety razor was a part of every soldier's month Not ong heen they erated equipment. The daily shave was a feature of his ated their money, but they have ex- routine, except in unusual circumstances. In the! patriated their economic allegiance as other wars the soldiers had no time to shave with the well, ‘for where your treasure is, there old-fashioned razor. When they returned to civilian Will your heart be also.’ Their hearts life they had formed the habit of wearing whiskers.|*f° in Europe and hence they are so There is little reason for thinking that the example [sistent in thelr advocacy of econom- of Sacramento's celebrators will be widely followed.|(° Sovernmental policies which w! Ei di 5 The fashion of ‘the smooth face is too firmly) Not only neve trons igternatfonal established.” |ists expatiated their money, but they ——-—— 0. jhave been over-insistent upon having the returns from. their foreign inyest A VAMPLESS BANK. ments exempted from the provisions “A. diffecent type of young woman walked into’! ‘he income tax law. Instead of be- the bank of the Fidelity Trust Company at Newark, (15, ierutwente wren i or Monday,” states the New York Herald, “as a result ; : bs Pp haha result manufacturing plants or in foreign of the ‘non-vamp’ edict issued’ by the Ik officials stocks and bonds, should be subject to three weeks ago. There were no low cut waists, short a surtax greater than that imposed on skirts or exposed biceps because the order, which incomes from similar domestic invest- the fifty girls in the banking department faithfully, ments. carried out, was that skirts should be no more than! ater ted ats etd ret pap, twelve inches from the floor and of black or brown saan 4. The in material, that waists should be close fitting to the Peete anise tiie, deal hema ie ternationalists are not, interested in neck and the arms covered to the elbows at least. | the welfare of foreign nations outside “Originally the order was to become. effective of their own private interests in such last Saturday, but the girls pleaded lack of time to poieaage eter caae (Pega Rene complete the work on the new raiment and an exten- °ther countries, they are willing sion until Tuesday ‘was granted. Thay beat this by tea Ee ee hie ee all coming to work Monday in tite new attire. One the or yi low rates of Ane tr they of the bank officials said that the young women have have made investments in foreign in taken the change good naturedly, and in spite of the dustrial securities, they want the in- limitations have achieved a few interesting varia-|dustries represented by those securl- tions. Lace cuffs and collars and in some instances tes to prosper and yield large returns, ribbons were used to break the drab effect of the *% that pathy aa) ngtaretayanes plain material. y bere aoe “Simultaneous with the appearance of the new|coumauauon thatthe building up of dresses it was stated that the protests from matronly result in ine desteuction of the won, depositors against the vamp effect’ of the young’ tic industry, They do not care if the women’s dress have fallen off. Many of these employment of additional workmen to women found that their sons, sent to make deposits,!make competitive goods for shipment terried too Iong at the bank.” ie ree | _—_——0- The Philadelphia Inquirer believes it must worry a lot of young daughters who feel sort of responsible for the conduct of their mothers these days. oppose the American valuation plan. Their money is going to build up for- eign industries, to employ foreign workmen, rather than to finance American productive enterprises and sive employment to the suffering, idle millions of American workmen. ‘That is internationalism, but it is not Amer- icanism, It may be financeering, But jit is not patriotism. It may be good |business for the capitalists, but it is mighty bad business for the United States as a whole. | “Much of this indebtedness ts in the |form of industrial securities the divi- |dends on which are payable in gold. As the securities themselves were bought at great discounts, the amount earned by the money invested consti- tutes a very high rate of interest. The Post article says that, although our government ts unable to collect inter- est on its foreign loans, yet ‘interest due private interests is paid regularly and promptly.’ The internationalists are after theit ‘cent per cent’ and they CAB eme VAPORUSB Over 17 Million Jara Used Yearly AUTO INSURANCE IS THE MOST IMPORTANT AUTO ACCESSORY ‘We will write you a blanket insurance policy protecting you in every way from financial loss. You will enjoy your auto- ing more if you don’t carry O1d Man Worry with you as a pass- American pocket- of approximately In addition there the United States Ameri- men are of what is happen- 201-203 It explains MIDWEST BLDG. great bankers are , SSW to this country will throw American workmen out of employment. What do they care? Their investments are secure. Certain kinds of internation- alism may be all right, but the kind that is being exploited is necessarily anti-American. It is in the interest of anything but “America first.” “There is only one way to meet in- ternationalism and that is with an ade- quate protective tariff which shall place our own products on an equal footing in our own markets with the products of foreign countries, With that dorie the modern internationalism will die a speedy death and American ism will be triumphant, American in- dustry wilt thrive and American work and big box of Kellogs’s Ke'ines ear Tomorrow morning- all means try Kelloggs Corn Flakes Tomorrow morning—set KELLOGG’S Corn Flakes before the family! A feast for the eye and a feast for keen appetites! For, Kellogg’s are as extra-delicious as they look—all sunny brown and wonderfully crispy, crunchy! My, but how they delight everybody! Kellogg’s Corn Flakes are not only distinctly superior to any imitation, but are the most fascinating cereal you ever ate! Kellogg’s appeal to every age! Little folks and old folks find in them the same joyous pleasure! For Kellogg’s have a wonderful flavor— and Kellogg’s are never tough or leath- ery or hard to eat! Insist upon KELLOGG’S—the orig- inal Corn Flakes in the RED and GREEN package! It bears the signa- ture of W. K. Kellogg, originator of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes. NONE ARE GENUINE WITHOUT IT! ” CORN FLAKES Also makers of KELLOGG’S KRUMBLES and KELLOGG’S BRAN. -n-'-- Now Is the Time to Plant Sweet Peas Lone’s Seeds Best for the West Place orders here for Northern Nursery Stock, Shade Trees and Shrubbery. Casper Floral Co. - Phones—872, Res. 536 153 South Wolcott—New Midwest Bldg. a2 ac ORES WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1922. PAY DAY SPECIAL At Casper’s Finest Grocery Store Prices Good for Thursday, Friday and Saturday PHONE 13 GALLON CANS SOLID PACK FRUITS Apricets, per can... Apples, per can. . Blueberries, per can Blackberries, per can. Loganberries, per can. . Peaches, Halves, per can. . 85c Peaches, Sliced, per can... -85c Pears, Puyallup, per can. -95¢ Pears, Mission, per can rs -$1.45 Pineapple, sliced, extra standard, per can. $1.25 KARO CORN SYRUP ‘ Gallon cans White, each. . . Y-gallon cans White, each Quart cans White, each. Quart cans Dark, each.. Y-gallon cans Dark, each. Gallon cans Dark, each........ CANNED VEGETABLES Ne. 2 Iowa Corn.... No. 21% Solid Pack Tomatoes No. 214 Old Fashioned Hominy. No. 21% Kraut. .... Large pkg. Quaker Oats, B Large Post Toasties or Kellogg’s per pkg Small Post Toasties or Kellogg’s per pkg. Cream of Wheat, per pkg. . Fancy Blue Rose Rice. ..... Platte Valley Gold Pure Cream- ery Butter---None Better, lb., 39c Netted Gem Potatoes, Extra Fancy, per 100 ibs. . $2.00 NO LIMIT—BUY ALL YOU WANT . CANNED FISH 1-Ib. cans Shell Pink Salmon..................3 cans 50c Domestic Sardines in Oil, size 14..... . .-4 cans 25c EXTRA: SPECIAL ag Libby’s Potted Meat, large size, 2 cans 25e|/ Guaranteed Strictly Fresh Eggs, doz., 30¢; Bread. 3 loaves 25e Red Crown Vienna Sausage, small’ 2 cans 65¢ Plag Raspberry Jam, 15-oz. glass____35¢ 10-Ib. can Pure Strained Honey____$1.65 Good House Brooms, each_______ Wright’s Thousand Island Dressing, per bottle ( Crisco, 3-Ib. can. Crisco, 6-Ib. can. ..... Snowdrift, 2-lb. can. Snowdrift, 4-Ib. can... Wesson Oil, pint can. Wesson Oil, quart can Mazola Oil, pint can. Mazola Oil, quart can Mazola Oil, 1% Ivory Soap Flakes. ee: genrioe larne pkg. per pkg.. Star Naptha Powder, large pkg. =o. Gold Dust, large pkg, per phen ee Sea Foam, large pkg., per pkg. : Crystal White Chips, large pkg. per pkg. The Grand Grocery Directly Opposite Telephone Building on Second St. PHONE 13 We Deliver to Any Part of the Ci Money Back If You’re Not Satisfied. icm_neeeee

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