Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 6, 1922, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Che Casper Daily Cribune © TELEPHONES .. 15 and 18 lepbone Exchange Connecting All Departments fe as second class 1916. ..President and Editor Batered at Casper (Wyoming). Pos matter, November CHARLES W. BARTON MEMBER THE Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation ( Advertising Representatives. s & Prudden, 3 Steger Bidg.. Chicago. h avenue, New York City; Globe Bids. Ss . B.C) Prudéen, K In; 286 Boston, Mass..Suite 404, Sharon Bidg., 55 w Mout gomery St.. San Francisco, Cal. Cipies of Daily Tribune are on file tn S k. Chicago, Boston and San Francisco of ters are welcome Ne subscription by mail accepted for less period than three months All subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Pally Tribune will not wure delivery after su! tion becomes one month in arrears. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrer sa ‘ 3.90 1.96 68 KA os By Mail Don't Get Your Tribune. ny time en 6:39 and § o'clock p.m ive your Tribune. A paper will be de specia] messenger. Make {t your duty to know when your carrier misses you Kick if You per, Natrona e Building. ¢ excépt Sunda ication Offices. Member of the Associated Press. to the The Associated Press ts exclusively entitled ume for publication of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein | The Casper Tribune's Program | A complete scientific zoning system for the of Casp: A municipal and schoo recreation park cluding swimming pools for the chil aren of Casper Completion of the established Scenic Route boule. vard as planned by the ‘county tommissioners, to Garden Creek Falls and returi Better roads for Natrona county and more highways jof omission and commission and inspired respect- hood families. There was a0 lack of congrega- g« in church, for everybody from the rents of the younger children knew the hymn times and words and could sing and did sing. i The children of these homes were to an unusual | degree, well-behaved, obedient to parents and teach ers and respectful to elders and those in authorit; over them. These things were taught in the home. ut day school and at sabbath school, and a pride in such things grew up with the child which never was lost in after life. | There were hundreds of other touches of this old) home life that could be worked into the picture that would add greatly to its strength and beauty: but these few high lights will afford a glimpse of the environment that many a man and woman oc- pied from birth tq the time of ,setting up for themselves a similar institution with a neighbor's son or daughter, and that would be a nine days’! wonder to the younger members of both families. It has often been asked by children in this day how it occurred that the children. who came “ui of homes, such as described, were so much superior in all that constituted true ladies and gentlemen as compared with the children out of modern} homes. And that brings matters to the only pain-| ful recollections of the old American home. It is of | the woodshed and the holdback strap that hung in the woodshed. This was the place and that the instrument that enforced obedience, corrected sins ful attention to words of wisdom and obserrance to the direction in which the straight and narrow} path lay. As a corrective institution the woodshed stands today withoat a peer, and the sturdy en-} forcer, the holdback strap, has no equal. hings These | working together have made America brought honor and glory to the flag, reduced | to the minimum and made a race of people | undaunted by wildeats. j - EE Real American B ACK in Massachusetts they have been celebrat-| ing Samuel Adama, the one hundredth anniver- sary of his birth, and in order to impress the pres- ent generation have delved into the archives and the history books and shown us that dir. A¢ams was—-a man among the men of his time. He was the man who drafted the policy of the! New England colonies with reference to resisting the Stamp Act and sounded the keynote in the fol-| lowing words: “If taxes are laid upon us in any shape without onr having a legal representation where they are laid, are we not reduced from the character of free subjects to the miserable state! | | Che Casper Daily Cribune Neighborhood News. —By Fontaine Fox | The Church in Germany | | When the German Emperor fled to Z, | Holand and the Social'sts met tm the Circus Busch in Berlin to set up a new government, the church suddenly faced demoralization. For years the opponents of the chureh had been grow:ce in numbers. They were or- | ganized. Groups holding varieus non- Christian felie’s. composed ma'nly of Intellectuals, opposed the church. | Larger groups, political enemies of the} old government, were likewise the ene mies of the church. } Withdrawals from the church b* came numerous. In Berl'n on car! tain days reets near the appoint | led office bu is were filled with pro- | | ple who came to declare thetr with @rawn!. Entire blocks of people with | | drew, The movement was closely ob- jaerved. A campaign throughout al! state churches to induce withdrawals | lin 1908-09 had netted about 60,000, “an-} } lotber in 1913-14 60.000. But in 1919 Bione about 250400 withdrew. The; Catholic church réported 33,842 witn:! | @rawals in its statistical handbook for/ 1919 | The number of withdra may} now have reached half a miltion, ac | cord’ng to German statisticans, but | | church leaders refuse to entertain any jercat alarm ar th’s foature of the} church situation. It was not a brand new factor. A quiet conflict: suddertly | jappeared in the open and opposing] Sforees became definitely engaged! While lorses are deplored, they also) i eum! members who are out of ond with the church and of no con jmtructive value. It Is @ process which |hetps eventually in true valuation| lof the church's dependable strength Resides. a quarter or @ven half a mil-| Von out of a protestant membership of | about 40.000,000 i» a relatively emall number. The cpponents of the churen accom: | pi'shed their success only after the| | greatest effort under c'reumstances most favrable to them and «hile gol at times to unbelievable extrem |The movement has lost its momen tum. Some of those who w'thdrew have returned. In Letpaic. where 19,- 000 children attend the public schools, there was a determined effort to pro- hiblt religious instruct’en, but the at tempt failed.—Howard B. Gold. - AFTER EXPERIMENTS WITH MANY THINGS YYoUNG HAROLD ATWATER. DECIDED THAT DAMP TAR- PAPER WAS 4HE BEST THING To USE IN GIVING AN IMVTATION OF A TORPEDO Beat DESTROYER LAYING DOWN A SMOKE SCREEN. for Wyoming. | More equitable freight Rocky Mountain region, service for Casper. of tributary slaves.” Holding sentiments of this! character the “Boston Tea Party” was inevitable. | While Samuel Adams did not lead that “Indian Uprising,” he aided, abetted and apptoved. | apice fa serine as lieutenant governor, gover. Ep nor, and previously in minor positions in the Mass- The Old American Home |achusetts government, he was a member of the con- T’S THIS WAY, we have traveled too far and tinental congress and one of the signers of the Dec- too fast of late. We have gotten too far away |laration of Independence. He was the leader of from simple and wholesome things and too much Congress, and the recognized leader of the Repub. entangled with jazz. And what has it all done to lican party. : us. Simply filled us with unrest and dissatisfac-| His greatest service to his country was immedi- tion with everything that does not have a bass @tely preceding and during the Revolution. In devo. drum and saxophone ¢syncopation, with bright tion to country and in accomplishment of its good lights glowing all around. he was second only to Washington and history ac- After a hectic summer of wildness and speed, |‘ rords him suck a place. bored, jaded, surfeited, with little left untried why | rates for shippers of the and more frequent train E Not a great orator, but an effective speaker, a ot journey back with us to the time and place of |Judge of and leader of men. Modest, unassuming. eal things—the old American home—as it existed, |C#Teless in dress. A great writer on polities and before speed was put into everything and before S0vernmental matters, he accomplished his ends by the-American dollar was set up on the altars as an | Putting others forward and effacing himself. A object for worship in place of the things that had | rarneaen tiga ne era antsramonine ees pares: ® hee F vious er- | m- br eer by Sather cand: eum fon mreresn araen |cerning which there never has been controversy The picture may be a hamely one, yet out of sim- |He was absolutely unafraid. Statesmen of this day ilar ones the real men of America have stepped, to|™#Y study his life and characteristics with pro command armies and navies, govern states and na-|'® themselves. Backbone was a necessary quality tions, electrify the world with eloquence, portray |i" his day and Samuel Adams possessed it. character and hold audiences spellbound, arouse|, He was not always right, but he was alwars go- the world and turn it from sin and inquity and |ing in the right direction. He was never indefinite. do all the great things demanding character and|He loved his country and what he believed his leadership. country should have, he went after it and com- It is a chilly fall evening, like now. A bright| P¢lled his country to do the same thing. Society fire a blazing in the large open fireplace. The | public opinion, kings, bosses, armies, navies—noth- father and mother and the children, and there are "£—Pput fear into his heart. He acknowledged plenty of them, are gathered about. Or the large | but one ruler—his conscience—that he never quar- center table a lamp rests. There is a milk pan fill. |Tled or argued with. ed with russet apples, and another with popped corn. Later the mother will fetch from the pantry still another milk pan filled with doughnuts, and the father with all proper dignity as the head of the family will fetch a pitcher of sweet cider from the cellar. The scene now being properly set, a book or magazine is brought forth and some mem. ber of the family, whose turn it happens to be, be- gins to read aloud. If it be a younger membef*crit- icism is offered by the elder ones, on matters of pronunciation. declamation and other points which constitute correct reading. No one is im mune and no one is offended. Authorities or rules are produced from the book shelves and the point settled and accepted. At the conclusion of the story if it be a sto it is thoroughly discussed and a synops fixed He was a real man, & real public servant, a real | nation builder. Would that we had today a congress chuck full of Samuel Adamses. BEL ik Cds Pinchot Tells ’E... GTERORD PINCHOT, Republican candidate for governor of Pennsylvania is hunting trouble, and it is altogether likely that he will find it be- \fore he gets through with h’¢ campaign or through with his job as governor, if he is elected. In one of his speeches to constituents he declared: “IT am determined not only to drive the saloon| jout of Pennsylvania, but to prevent the bootleggers | from using the highways of the state for the trans-! |portation of contraband liquor. | ;| “I haye been informed that much illicit liquor | n the mind of each hearer. Oftentimes relatives,|i§ being transported over our highways. When friends, and neighbors drop in. The evening pro-|! am governor, if the state police are not able to/ gram is not changed on this account, but proceeds Prevent such violation of the law, I will know the| without reference to the addition to the circle. reason: why. “Some people may not like my views on the <a:| |foon and the bootleggers, but I-am determined to! do just what I say in relation to both of them. And} I want it understood that when I discuss the} {liquor question I am just as dry in a wet town as I am in a dry town.” That's what you call “telling the world,” where you stand, and Giff was ever strong on that line, The program is not always the same. an evening of school lessons. more light on “fractions.” perfected in a “piece” that is to be spoken at Fri day afternoon’s literary exercises. Perchance a stubborn history lesson brings out a wonderful ¢ol-| lection of knowledge the family did not know was possessed by its members. It may, be Someone may need Another may have to be} ae Again the evening may be given over to work, | Whether it was in the platform upon which he was/ li and g upples for appl tter, standing or not : — ra eehatesons vogpreadig” A peste aad There is no liquor issue in Pennsylvania this} tity was required in a family of growing children |C@™mpaign. Jt is an issue believed settled. by most | against the arrival of the ensuing spring. This folks. And if bootleggers and hooch merchants are | work was made as pleasant and attractive as any|‘isturbing the usual quiet of Pennsylvania, other other family evening affair. And besides there was |P!@ces are enjoying the ame general affliction and the next evening to look forward to, when the|"e#ard it as the final spasm before settling down Pants and Trousers I notice that “toreador” trousers are to be fashionable this winter in Ne York—-trousers that have bell:haped bottoms, fancy lacings along the side, with many rows of little buttons u;.on them. Men used to wear spring-betcomed trousers at belied out over the boots nearly to the toes, a sort of apron on the front of the bottoms of the “pants” that looked like @ whi fin. These trousers were “skin-tight’ and, as they rounded along the calf and sud- denly sprang out over the shoe. like a pig out of a thicket, they had a power to startle and to interest. tl observer. In the days of those pants, men gave them considerable attention as to color. Indeed tie color of “pants” was very important. Delicate fawn shades were very popular but were bad for picnics. One had to be very careful and avold sitting on the grass. I recall a pattern of trouserings in the day of the variegated main-section of man's apparel, that was of a delicate taupe basic-color, with green vines run- ning up and down, gracefully intertwin ing in a lovely herbage. I remember these pants, because they were after wards cut-down for me. I wore ‘em to school for a year or so after they had been “razeed. Faded by the sun and wet hy the dews, the green became intensified and I developed finally into a fair rep- resenta‘ion of a little running cucum- ber vine, as I flitted over the fare of earth. To have watched me speeding away was to have seen a section of the garden hedge violently agitating into the distance. I have used the word “razeed.” It Is in the dictionary as @ regular word, but it was always ured in my family for reducing thé agé of pants. In the dictionary. it {s found in connection with cutting off the top hamper and decks of a man-o'-war: as for instance to reduce a seventy-four to a frigate When so cut down tn rating, the ship was razeed. Same with pants for bo- 4 Mother would take a pair of seventy- fours in pants 1:0 matter where she got them, or what the color, and would razee them into pair of skiffs, just suitab’e for me. She would gnip off |the legs; reef the main jib; take in lenough of the stern section to give a boy ® chance to climb over a fence, call it a job. All mothers did it. All boys.wore ‘en, razeed, I saw a smal! boy come to school once in a pair of o'd-fashioned barndoor paints, razeed. The little chap was nothing but! His front perspective or facade was the huge shield of granddad's barn-door breeches. The pockets were enormous. The seat billowed out like the back of a hack, But we lpys dia not say much about it hecause we never knew what we might draw our- se'ves. When the lad sat down the trousers sprang up about his little body almost to his ears. There was slack" in them, And often, as an added inconvenience in these razeed pants, the dear mother had difficulty in reducing the circumference of the legs of the trousers us indicated and they flopped fullsize as we strode along or as we ran to fipst-base on the bail ground. It was a triumphal sight to see a pair of razeed pants, original ly designed architecturally for a man of 250 pounds running away with a forty-pound boy inside of them, As |Panteth the hart for the water-brook, |so pahted the boy for the swimmin’ jhole. But, perhaps worst of all was ithe difficulty of making the pockets come right and stay right. You sce there is a longer distance from the {wesband of a man’s pants to his poc- kets than similar reach in a boy's pants. I have seen a boy's pockets a’most down around his knee. Mother could reef the mainsail but she couid not cut down the jib-halyards. Poor Qld soul sh* did her best. but she war no taf’or; and, doubtless, she dropped many a tear over the tiny indescrib- ables ere she held them aloft and viewed her razeed handiwork. We need simplicity in trousars—not toreadors. We have had toreador= enough! , Let the women wear them They seem to want to! There is not a maseuliné affair that they have not seemed to desire. I saw a woman smoking a briar-pine the other day. She was not “tuff"; she was only thinking she was. A bunch of women in a Maine summer-place were sent home the other day, because they came home every night ridiculously intox!- cated from the'r picnics! We do not Burner Outfits Handy Gasoline UICK heat when needed. —saerer 3 Y Takes stall space. require any need is common of-tact trousers, until we get over the present jng of strikes, silliness and society sin. per the better! Old fashioned raz: putting-away for Don’t Gamble with brands of baking powder with the you’re sure to lose every time. CALUMET Ths Economy BAKING POWDER, It’susedby more housewives—morechefs—more | railroads— more restaurants—more hotels, than any other kind in America and its sale is over 150% greater. If you want every bake-day to be a success—if you want positive results ata small cost—if you want to guard the LSS ss ‘May toreadors or tom, or “tights and trun | asntonea Gefiance of fashion! O14-/ fashioned love of diligent work! Oid- | fashioned reverence for the sanctity of a contract! Old-fashioned regard for .tuth! Old fashioned regard for) the Haith of our Fathers and Mothers. Those are the kind of social trousers this world ought to get into and .et bull-fighters wear what they please.— Arthur G. Staples. simple plain matter- world’s wars and Sim- Old-fashioned, saving! eeing. Old-tashioned the rainy day! Ol the “lots for your money” cheap and big can kind, CALL FOR purity of your bakings, use Calumet. Every ingredi- entinit has beenofficial- ly approved by the United States Food Authorities. Order -~ Calumet today —it will pay. . FRIDAY, OCTOBER, 6, 1922. Twenty million bags a year but only a limited amount can qualify Practically every coun- try of the tropical world grows coffee in amounts varying from a few bags up to many millions, with Brazil, Centra America and standing first in order of importance. of the coffee business is of the utmost import- tet and knowledge can be obtained in but one eng Bros. business is under charge of three experts whose combined years of service amount pen Ar years. Their ability to fine flavored uniform blends is reflect- ed in the cup of Hills Bros. Coffee served at your table, High grade coffee is ex- ly scarce and out of this enormous pro duction, only a very small percentage can pass the tests to which coffees are subjected be- fore being purchased by of those who have be- come accustomed to Hills Bros. Coffee, for no sin- gle lot of coffee, how- ever fine, is equal to a blend. Every coffee has some particular charac- teristic. It may have fine flavor, but be decidedly weak, or it may have heavy body but Ieck in flavor. Of course, there re ap se pace <a types, and the combin- ing of these many lots ~’ into one coffee is the work of the coffee tester and blender. of : ; al drought | apples would be cooked down with cloves and cin-|'? # perpetua sto . namon and other spices and cider, in a big copper|, few bootleggers riding over the highways in! kettle with a roaring fire under it. The neighbor |‘O¥ring cars should net be disquieting. The fash- Easily moved without effort, Useful on ranches and farms to heat stockfeeds, to distill water, etc. thousands of these burners are now in use— Go to the Mt children would be there and everybody get a turn at the long-handled stirring paddie. Maybe on some particular fall evening, it hav- ing been announced from the pulpit of the Metho- dist Episcopal church the previous sebbath morn ing, it would be mother's turn to entertain the “mite society” and that would be an event. Mother would wear her “black silk,” and father would be brave and handsome in his “Prince Albert” that he wore only on Sundays and at funerals. On this occasion | the children could “stay up” until the late hour of | 10 o'clock, which hour marked the departure of the| guests. Another occasion of some moment was when the “Ladies Sewing Circle” met in the afternoon with jion will go out of style very shortly, the cars will be worn out and the supply exhausted. What Pinchot ought to do first is to be elected governor, then tell them what he is going to them, and do it. It would seem to be bad policy to warn them in advance. He is likely to lose the support of the bootleggers union, which according to Pin- chot’s own statement must have a considerable number of votes. ? nt FetaeE BES ypHE MOST needed thing in Europe is a thorough placarding with “No More War signs. mm ea HE LEAGUE OF NATIONS inquires of the league of nations why it does not exercise more Many all giving satisfaction. No Odor and No Smoke Nothing to wear out or get ont of order. No Place for carbon to collect and no packing nor sand to clog. Larger or smaller styles in stock for res- taurants, vulcanizing molds or candy makers. Ready for Immediate Shipment Write for Booklet Write eee ce oe Lea nce Light- Systems, leman Quick-Lite Portal Lam pe Lanterns. Post-free on . Ask for apiece on one-half and three-eighth inch copper tubing. TRIBUNE’S Fashion Show October 18, 20 and 21 tt Sil Hil mother aud put over a lot of clothes making for, power: All the league of nations has to do is to! the poor and needy, and in the evenings the hus-|stage a demonstration or put over an imitation of bands of the members came for tea. It. was quite exercising power and its question will be answered. a time but lacked the thrill of the “mite society.” | Oftentimes there was an evening of music. beiit' I se Cle Pla Gl At the Elks Lodge aE Ea ST WHO is the European Wilson that is keep- Ae 4 Girls) JC 2053-57 WELTON STREET : und boys in such homes were mighty keen to learn Ying th t of id % | DENVER, RAD! ; torplay, mitisical instruments and to sing “Ani it) ne tem ont of WOR os TR. CO aes. Entire proceeds go to Red Cross was mo uncommon thing to be able to organize al Our favorite winter sport will soen begin—pay- fairly good church choir in many of the neighbor- ing for coal and firing the furnace, 2. ARTE ASSP ERR ANODE A SLY ROREECEER REESE

Other pages from this issue: