Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 18, 1922, Page 4

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)

AGE FOUR. Cbe Casper Daily Cribune Issued every evening except Sunday at Casper. Natrona | County, Wyo. Publication Offices. Tribune Building. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS : S 15 and 16 JSINESS TELEPHONES «.....----------- 2 nch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments om Jase @utered at Casper (Wyoming), Postoffice as se-ond <! mafter, November 22, 1916. . GHARLES W. BARTON ...-.----/ President and an Sdvertising Representatives. & Prudent, 17: Bidg., Chicago. 1920-23 Steger Big ede Ne York City: ke | 4, Staron Bidg., 55 New Mont cisco c the Daily] Franc Cal, Cipies of the | rene sew York. Chicago, Boston i 5 offices and visitrrs are welcome Francisco offices an¢ - SUBSCRIPTION RATV5 | By Carrier or By Mail cast One Year, Daily and Sunday | and San One Year Sunday Btx Months Daily + 4 ree Mc hs Daily, and Month Daily ana Sunday 4 | OOF ae eee nd the gf Al aibecripeions must be paid in o scrip y Tribune will not insure. delivery after su Hon becomes one month in arrears. Cc) Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. Member of the Associated Press. t Press is exclusively entitled to 5 news credited in this paper e The Associate: es gee for publication of Kick tf You Don't between 630 at | Get Your Tribune. | nd 8 o'clock Pp. ™m mM be de duty to} 1 messen crier misses you. . | our carrier mins: aa | The Casper Tribune’s Program | qerigation project west of Casper to be autho | ana completed at once A complete and scientific zon! city of Casper. A comprehensive rf i park system, including swimm @ren of Casper. Completion of the esta vard as planned by fe coi den Creek Falls and retur ‘ Ae iy Detter Toate for Natrona county and more high Vyoming. Niable fretght rates for shippers of the Rocky Mountain region, and more frequent train serv: ice for Casper. ing system for the {pal and school recreation municiaming pools for the chil- plishec, Scenic. Route boule. ty commissioners to Gar Opens Today. HE TRIBUNE Style Review is the real social affair of the present week, and will over other function now on the program manifested in the opening session this successful three days’ session. ave been frequently announced, 21. a i stylish in apparel will be ied by live models. T shadow any ‘The interest evening presages @ The dates, which h are October 18, 20 and All that is new anc i strated splayed and demonstra ir is Entertainment features to care for the throngs . arranged in the form of danc-; resent, heveic, and aside from the beautiful dis-| pers themselves, attendance. will be well gvorth while for the social pleasures alone. a 4 And then, there is the Red Cross, the pt ciary, which you all respect and honor, mas Laan | fe delighted to help indirectly while directly de riying an evening's enjoyment. —_—_——_0. Being Pleasant. 0 YOU ARISE these mornings with a smile on your ‘face and a song in your heart? Or do you come Soy in the same humor as a ; i sore head? To ghe ae say good-morning, cheerfully, at the breakfast table and scatter a ray Or’two of sun- shine upon those about you, or do you munch your and swallow your coffee as though you had ite at them? * ARetember it-is a habit, eithem way, and we Jeave it to you, in your better humored hour, which js the habit to encourage, and which is the one to aie world has much more-use for the pleasant good natured person at any time of day. He is} welcome any time and any place. He gets atten: tion and gets results. This is the experience of) those who have investigated along both lines. if you have any curiosity in the matter, an experi- ment costs nothing. 1 Dangerous Practices. T IS OFTEN a popular pastime for politicians and public officials to attempt to gain votes by ckinig public arttaren thee rates down below a point at which yy can operate profitably. bas riactices pos unjust and dangerous. They endanger existence of the corporations on which the public depends for service and threaten the safety of the investments. In this matter of fixing rates great care should be taken by the public utility commission to pro- tect the consumer against unreasonable charges for. service and at the same time allow sufficient earn- ings to protect and encourage the investmert of the security holders. A Doughboy Memorial. ROCK SPRINGS the American Legion has planned a memorial to the Sweetwater boy: who fell in the battles in France in the great war. There were thirty of them and their comrades de- sire to perpetuate their memory, in the form of # doughboy monument, with the names of the heroes inscribed thereon. An appeal was made to John W. Hay and now the plans are assured and the dedication of the statue is set for Armistice Day. ‘Expresses Gratitude. eyeow, MAC NIDER, - national commander of the American Legion, says this to Hon. Frank W. Mondell, Wyoming member of congress and candidate for United States Senator. What he has to say to Senator Kendrick has not been published: “The service men and women are deeply grate- ful for the vw you have stood by us, fought for us, and in face of a great, well-financed at- tack, by what we cannot help but feel to be sordid and selfish opposition, refused to desert your con- victions for the right. The people whom you rep- resent appreciate your high stand. The nation is behind us all in this fight and na one can con- tinue to prevent the people’s wishes from being carried out in a republic. “We have only begun this battle. Ve are right, and right always preyails- in America. |class of men make and jious to put my car in utility corporations and trying} S| including Sundays. $$ $$ | the justice of this legislation than ever before. You will be interestea to know that even in this year of financial depression and industrial trou- bles, our membership has increased. Nearly half}! the states of the Union have more members now than at the end of last year. “I am writing you that you may know that wo! are grateful for all your endeavors in our behalf.| We shall not forget, end we shall win this fight.” Then and Now. ANY PEOPLE recall the old-time printing (Office ofthe haud-set boxwood-quoin, stick, Washington press period. There are still a/ few of them in the out-of-way places yet remain- ing to recall the glories of an age when the “art ervative”. was indeed an drt and the nomads ted to its practice were as full of faults as humanity could stick, yet were lovable withal. In that ol€-day most printers had the wander- lust. Although they could not see them, the fields be! i the hill, were always green. They traveled altogether afoot and many boasted of their while recounting incidents of trayel about the old Burnsides stove in the printing room, Their ac- quaintance in the territory traveled was extend. ed, and by no means confined to editors, print- ers and saloon proprietors, and no instance can now be recalted where the craft Tepudiated the usual financial levy : by the most recently arrived member, ins of travel, the m-rtks of toil adhered to thing and the person of the tourist until the clo Saturday night or a week later, depending upon whether the ghost had walked during the inter. vening time. Many were careless of personal ap- pearance, others were positively negligent. So a printer in thAt day w ws as neither an example in sar- rial splendor nor a criterion in common clean. liness that ought to rank next below the godli- ness of any craft. But they were happy f hand-set type, hard They days. Those old days work and hard ‘drink- 1 re gone forever and it is for the best. i¢ linotype machine and the improvement in printing machinery have cared for and cured all the old troubles of that ancient day. A different print the newspapers of re or less moving about today. There is still mo: the country among printers, but the changes in that respect are as marked es in the personnel and hab ts, com ing the old with the new. An instance will illustrate: A day or two ago 1 dressed youngish man came into the busi- 8 office of this newspaper and inquired for the Superintendent. That gentleman happened to be at lunch, so the stranger sat down to wait, The superintendent failing to appear in the ustal half hour ordinarily required for lunch, the stranger grew restive. He was told to be patient, that his man would surely appear shortly. “But,” says the stranger, “I haye driven from Denver‘and am anx- ® garage and get a bath.” There you have the Tenge that er come over the printing craft within the memory of men yet young. This printer was looking for work and traveled in an automobile and was concerned about a bath. The men of other days walked and the last thing that occurred to them was a bath, Yes, times have changed, and possibly for the better. These new boys likely would not know what a Shooting stick is or was, and never heard of a type louse. 0 —o———_—___ Blaming Tweed on Us ILE DEMOCKA'TIC, Hillsdale Review last week stated blandly—mis-stated would be more ac- te, perhaps—that “Mondell voted to seat New: ” Mondell, of course, being a representa-| was not permitted to vote in a senatorial contest, A This week the same paper makes a vicious at- tack on the Fordney-McCumber tariff, which is marked by the usual Democratic inaccuracy and inconsistency. It speaks of the tarjf as “the ingeniously’ devised system ‘of legalized corruption nad robbery,” and compares Senator Reed Smoot to the infamous Tammany leader, Boss Tweed, ob- viously under the impression that Tweed was a Republican. = Well, in the first place, Senator John B. Ken- drick yoted for that “system of legalized corrup- tion and robbery.” In the second place, Tweed was a Democrat and a Free Trader (too free), who seryed-a term in New York's state prison, Sing Sing, for robbing the “poor people” while posing as their great and glorious Democratic friend. For Ex-Service Men. fy CAAING. UP the tremendous program of fed- | eral aid to ex-service men, all of which has been. put into effect by the Republican party, and | the money for which has been provided by a Re- publican congress, may be enumerated as follows: Over 000 ex-service men have received hos- | pital t ment; 30,00 ex-service men are now re ceiving hospital treatment; over 1,000,000 ex-sery- ice men have been called for examination in order to ascertain if they should receive hospital or med: ical treatment. Over 160,000 ex-service men have entered yo- cational ing; approximately 110,000 are now | receiving such training, and 150,000 more have been declared eligible to receiye such training. Over 50,000 medical examinations are made free every month in order to ascertain the physical and mental treatment needed by afflicted ex-service men. Compensation” to disabled ex-service” men‘ or their depndents is being paid “out at arate in jexcess of $1,000,000 in cash every day of the year, Free medical treatment is being given 20,000 ex-service men every month outside of hospitals in cases where confinement in a hospital is not neces- sary for proper medical treatment. Over 1,000 new claims are being handled every day by the Veterans’ Bureau, and all work in that bureau is being conducted practically current (that Che Casper Daily Tribune _Getting Ready for the First Big Gar e. —By Fontaine Fox City and’ Rural Parties take the @eal parties we give out of wives and dadghters the home and into the hotel. 1 seldom now that even Hallow mn or'pails; with clanking, is invited, are entertained at-home. In many cases unless we can have a jazz orchestra and bootlegged .cork- tains it isn’t a party. And if the déco- rations have not been done by some one with a foreign sounding name, the affair's not really worth going to at all, Yet, it is not a long journey from the scene of the city festivities, away) , from sumptuous hotels to the midst |, of other social affairs, simpler, and more wholesome and more enjoyable— jer, old-fashioned parties progressing bY) the light of the moon. Back in the agricultural states, in a Jahd blessed with plenty, October comes along with its crisp miorions| nights, and “corn frolics” arevin oF | 74, der tlroughout the countryside. Chiness \sGrean: Galions of elder are on tap, and. NO) Celestial, Poinsettia: othe® refreshment is needed for the! 41! beautiful colors men who make merry husking corn.}who once won excep |* in the on the apparel of his the coming pralseology Here are the mages, /Mose Ros thelr song and laughter fly from stack | ig to stack as swiftly \ up thelr shucks under the dexterous fingers that strip them. | He may study up, in Blecric lights, some tinted, some coming exact, but shaded, glaringly yellow pa’ms potted plants, women in gowns and the blare and whine of perfect fo> your fins from 10 till 2—that's the city affair. jis wide. And the country affair is a great and intricate, Bakers Bake It For You ERE’S your old-time favorite —full-fruited raisin bread with at least eight tempting raisins to the slice—already baked for you by master bakers in your city. Simply ’phone your:grocer or a ieiphhorhdda bake shop and have is, up to date), at a minimum loss of time and a minimum expense, both to the government and to the ex-service men concerned. An insurance business for over 600,000 ex-serr- ice men is being conducted by the government with- out cost of administration to the ex-service men at premium rates far below those, which private companies charge for like polices. Snch, in brief, is the record of the treatment ex-service men of the Werld War have received and are\receiving at the hands of the Republican party, which is in control of both branches of Congress and all of the executive departments’ of the government, This record is in striking contrast to that made by the Democratic administration, both at a time when it had control of Congress and the exéct- tive departments and full charge of expenditures of the $778,62,000 voted by the Republican Congress for use of the agencies dealing with ex-seryice men. It must always remain a smirch of dishonor and shame. upon the Democratic party that practically “At our national’ convention this month, the adjusted compensation le; ion will be endorsed more strongly than ever. he Ameri¢an Legion is more unanimous and stronger in its. conviction of 2 all,of this money was squandered by gross incom- petenee and brutal indifference of the Democratic a fresh loaf for lunch or dinner to delight your folks. : We've arranged with bakers in almost every town and city to bake this full-fruited raisin bread. Made with big, plump,:tender seeded Sun-Maid Raisins for not than the following prices: officials. who were-in charge of the agencies deal- ing with ex-service men. # Among @ great many city folk it’ place with their. vivid orange. has become the established Custom: to work swiftly swapping stories, while very!in ginghamis pass the cider in great birthday parties, where a large crowd that make a simple sort ef music from evening until 10, ae Peril to, Flatterers The path of the weil groomed man'ered that she insia{\f upon positive who makes.a specialty of compliment: | wilt be fraught with many difficulties | r on scheme promises to become @/a concerted, effort; lost art or at least a moet vexing prob-/ficulty is belng madeé,;, and one sug- decision of the Textile Color Cara! Asnociation, which ists an even dozen tists of the bon mot. It ie proposed jeolors, for popular Use, {¥"responsible. |that an index color card be printed, reigning Anemone, Eglantiné, Golden Glow,/willbe carried in the left hand just Caprice, Many are invited and many come, and ‘You look swell in yelyw" or “Green|he can proceed along the usual lines. the ears yielded offerti, when, according to the card, for his effort if he pronounces it “mocs she is wearing Mmogy his run will be “Chinese green” when it is ‘opal’ the and complete if he compliments her on/evening will be uncomfortably chilly. expensive | “caprice” when she is wearing “eglaf- instruments paid at so much an hourj «The range of possibility for fallure| blindness is the only other possibil- The list of ‘colors ts- Sun-Maid Ra The Supreme Bread Raisin ‘Youn retailer should sell you Seeded (in 15 os. uc phe.) —20¢ Seedless (in 15 ot. red pkz.)—18 ‘Seeded and Seedinss (11 ot.) —15¢ fave it all. ~ Dhe stacks itn regulated | her colory scheme as “golden glow’ even rows stand up like sheafs of} when she way spent weeks of ardent, | brorfze; “while the pumpkins.dot the effort in chocaing “tangerine.” Several flahbergasted swains who have already encountered the diffi- Men and sweethearts attempted to evade the main issue by dealing in generalities. Instead of voicing their regard for a definite tinkling tincups that shade.” Their. hopes have been sadly shattered. .They quickly discov- identification. “sylvia.” 1f tial! And ‘no. gens In some of the: fashionable hotels 1 ‘sylvia"” it's feminine friends genson, Soft the adopted | gestion has been introduced which may save the situation for the. ar- shades: small enough to fit in the cuff. ‘This Silvia, Opal Tangerir: before the meeting occurs. Then, as she approaches, he quickly congaits the card and matches up the shade But the inan|she is wearing. mal favor with) When positive identification ts made type." will only And he is sure to reap a rich reward or poinsettia. rose” and It is “moss rose” But if the hope of be-|he has judged hastily and calls it This metho may ve adopted ficial. If it isn’t the plea of Color of. Yong {ity, And that will be very lame after And the social eriors|she has ransacked the spectrum and sheet of a field, rising to a gentle ard disrupted assoc‘ations promise ts sectetly figures that. the ‘slope far to the right, silver moonlight be frequent with the interpretation of Lights are drab in comparison. ——— Northern raisins. ‘The raisin flavor permeates the bread. You've never tasted finer food. Order a loaf now and count the raisins. Raisin bread is a rare combination of nu- tritious cereal and fruit—both good and good for you., Serve at least twice weekly to. get the benefits. Use Sun-Maid. for home cooking of puddings, cakes, cookies, ete. 3 You may be offered other brands that know less well than Sun-Maids, but the kind you want is the kind you kaow is “Insist, therefore, on-Sun-Maid brand. cont no more than ordinary raisins, Mail coupon for free book of tested “Sua- Maid Recipes.” * ee isins i Be @ « CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT | Sun-Maia Raisin Dept. N-432-3, Fresno, California. Please send me copy of your free book, | “Recipes with Raisins” ad sapere! Bos Street. H Creve Sarg culties which beset thelr tratis have’ WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1922. Bootlegging Widespread a have just re mile trip through the United States. [I have made a WJ, unbiased study lice and excise forces ‘aligttly camouflaged; in others it open as the day, particularly sc Viewed with suspicion. | by friends he can get enough to swim . In New Orleans I met a Ie seafaring friend. To my inquiry re- garding his welfare he replied. “Times |with me are fine. I have just landed |2.000 cases of Scotch at Risk? No risk. Everything is fixed by the | shore interests before we nose in. ‘The! only danger is when we try to yun =X cargo on our own account with- REGULAR SIZE | CORD TIRES AT POPULAR PRICES Soft Bead Clincher Type 30x34 31x4 Straight Side Type 30x31 $15.00 32x34 32x4 33x4 34x4 32x44 i 316'W. Yellowstone A Acknowledged Right _ Gas, electricity, the telephone and street railway occupy such | an intimate place in life that those who utilize their services have a right to know every- thing there is to know con- cerning the agencies which provide them. : ‘An * In recognition of this right, public service organizations the nation over are frankly turning the light upon their in- nermost affairs and directing the people’s eyes to them. This is one of ‘the public serv~ ice organizations which recog- nizes that right, ers’ supplies. Rig timbers a specialty. KEITH LUMBER CO. if. Phone 3 MICHELIN i : than Michelin Regular Cords cost only a little more fabric tires, yet they give about a third more mileage. R. M. MOSHER Phone 309 | Building Materials are Weare equipped with the stock to supply your wants in high grade lumber and build- entire United States army, navy, ;.

Other pages from this issue: