Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 27, 1922, Page 6

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PAGE SIX. Che Casper Daily Cribune ery eyening except Sunday at Cusprr, Natrona Wyo. Publication Offices. Tribune SBullding. ' MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PEESS TELEPHONES .«...--.-.0+0000--+> 15 and i6 one Exchange Connecting All Departments an ea Some . November 23, ~....-President and | 2 eae amone BARTON ...- Advatising 20-23 Steger Bidg., Chicaga | Work City; Globe Bide | haroneHidg., 65 New Mont! cal Cipies of the Daily Chicago, Boston) York welcome. visiters are $9.00) - 2.50} - 450 ay: pa 4 the} must be paid tn advan — | M not insure, delivery after subscrip | one month tn arrears. “\iember of Audit Bureau of Circnlatien’(A. B.C) Member of the Associated Press. exclusively entitled to the news ed in this paper and ted Press is Don't Get Your Tribrne. + time between 630 and 8 o'clock p. m » your Tribune. A paper will be de | al messenger. Make it your duty to) your carrier misses you. | Kick if You The Casper Tribune’s Program |) project west of Casper to be authorized ed at once. Jete and scientific zoning &: Irrigatt and com m for the A com: city Casper. " c hool recreation A comprehensive municipal and sc! : | park ‘aystem, including swimming pools for the chil- || Gren of Casper. te boule- letion of the established Scenic Rou' 2 van aeae etlenned by the county commissioners to Gar- || den Creek Falls and refurn. | roads for Natrona county and more high- |) Wyoming. e freight rates for shippers of the n region, and more frequent train serv- Better Theodore Roosevelt ODAY marks the anniversary of the birth of one) b of America’s greatest sons, Theodore Roosevelt. In childhood and early youth he was frail of con- stitution but of undaunted spirit. Having obtained a liberal education he devoted some years to life in the open upon the theory that pure air, sunshine and outdoor exercise would build up a strong physt- que his birth and earlier environment had denied “him. His experiment was entirely successful and the years he spent on a North Dakota ranch made ‘of him a robust and perfect spectacnsof manhood | + pnd stored in him the health and vigor that carried «him over many strenuous ensuing years. Of his life much has been written of the years * covered by his march from the cradle to the grave. He seemed pregestined to play an important part in the world, and of the tasks apparently marked i out for him there were none undone when he en- on his eternal sleep. Freee apite men were so versatile as he, when the activities, in all of which he excelled, are taken into account. Author, statesman, soldier, explorer, naturalist, peace maker, patriot. These cover a jarge and varied list. 3 aya personality was scarecly less striking than his career. His temperament neryous and his man- His most notable mental character- ner vivacious. istics we an extraordinary quickness of appre- hension. keen interest in every subject which had to do with human progress, and a wiolesouled scorn of the insincere. As an executive, he was distinguished for his re- sourcefulness in devising, and his boldness in at tempting new methods of a plishing results for | which others had struggled in vein over well-beaten paths, and his tireless pursuit of an end “upon which he had once ‘fixed his purpose. Like many men of masterful methods he was al- ternately loved and hated, as fickle public opinion ebbed amd flowed,over the shore of events. +. In his final years when he no longer occupied public office and had ceased to be the storm cen- ter of politics, animosities were swept away anc 4orgotten. In these years as he devoted his tireless energies to the welfare of his country and the bet Serment of conditions for the human family, love for him grew to a thing almost universal. When he passed the end was peaceful. His life’s work done, like a tired child he fell asleep. In the world’s estimate he was the greatest Amer- ican of modern times. America ranks him in the order of her four great presidents Washington, Lincoln, McKinley and Roosevelt. His life will furnish inspiration for American youth for many generations to come. His tomb will serve as the Mecca of patriotism as long as the republic survives. -0 The Reform in Pictures YEAR or more ago the American public awak- ened to the fact that it was being fed through the motion picture theaters with a lot of sugges- tion and nastiness unfit'to be absorbed by the minds of the country’s rising generation. The press, the pulpit, the mothers’ clubs and| most other powers for decency and righteousness} took up the ery at once for cleaner and better pic- tures. The defense of the producers, ut the time, was! that they were simply answering what they con-| ceived to be the public demand of their. patrons.) In the ensuing discussions all interests took part and in the public morals phase that developed all) finally agreed to its desirability and the necessity) for drastic reform. : An unfortunate feature at the then stage of} proceedings was the breaking of numerous scandals} involving screen artists, directors, producers and| others in the several picture centers of the coun- _.¥ city. | task was peg epoch and the i head of the great industry. Real reform was at once noticeable and a higher quality of subjects were pictured and photography of greater excellence | was produced. Former stars who had figured in! unsavory escapades were sent tu the rear or dis-/ pensed with altogether, so that screen filth now is | y be said for the moving picture industry | the lesson went home and went home! promptly and that the sincere effort put forth for| better things is now bearing fruit. | American producers are now giving picture pa-} trons a very high grade of programs throughout the country. Thore are no longer objectionable, scenes, comedy is clean and of a higher order than | the old slapstick antics of village cutups. The | world bas been ransacked Yor real material from | which to make pictures in both educational and/ dramatic features and entire success has crowned the efforts of producers. . It is very satisfactory to observe the prompt re-| sponse to the demand for better and cleaner things | picture makers have shown in their important in-| that | dustry. SCRE eS ae SM ot The Smile That Won ‘ QoMSEIAe after the world war, an American | bo hero of that great tragedy came to Casper and settled on a homestead not so many miles distant} that he could not live upon it and earn a livlihood in the city. | When he had expended all of his savings in build- ing his house, fencing and other requirements of the law, he sought and obtained employment in the He worked hard on both ends of the job he ha’ marked out for himself. He had a stout heart a good nerve, a world of industry and a never fail-| ing smile. | The first year or more, with him, was all outgo.| A little boy was born to gladden the humble home- | stead and later the young wife came down with | sickness. Some debts accumulated. Many other things occurred that would have discouraged weak- | er men and made them abandon their-efforts and sgek an easier way of getting on with less promise of ultimate reward. Not so our hero. He simply smiled and went ahead. < | Not long after this on a certain Saturday the wife came to town to make a few purchases. This is placed in the Ford which daily carried the young homesteater | to and return from his work. The young couple went to obtain something to cat before they started on the trip home. ; | Returning to the car there was no car where they | had parked it. Someone had stolen it. It was bad, enough to be“marooned in town al! uight with the aby on the homestead but the loss of the Ford! was a calamity. | The young man came to the Tribune to telephone the county and city authorities of the loss of his’ car, and while waiting for an answer to his tele-| phone call, sat down told these facts: “IT came frow. Kaisas a year and a half ago. I put every dollar I had into my homestead. I make barely enough out of my job to keep things | ing. 1 havn't spent a cent for a thing that wasn't | absolutely necessary. I havn't any money, my wife has barely recovered from a sick spell, the baby is not well, I owe a big doctor bill and I owe some other accounts I will be unable to pay for! a long time, and on top of all this trouble some scoundrel hus gone and stole my ‘Ford.” The young fellow looked up at the end of this! recital and smiled in spite of himself. He simply couldn't help it. Things were so tough with him it was amusing. “Stick to her old top, that smile will pull you through if the whole world goes against you,” he was advised. The next dgy the officers captured and returned the Ford. In a few weeks the wife was herself: again, the baby grew strong and healthy, crops re- turned some revenue, proof was completed on the! homestead, and things took on a more rosy*hue for the. world war hero the homestead hero, and the hero who could smile in the face of discourage- ments. The smile and the good nature back of it, and the! other good qualties of the fellow pulled him through | and he is now on the high road to prosperity in! his same old Ford. ———=), The Next Step |duced the o'f New England ministers. Che Casper Daily Cribune |The Terrible Tempered Mr. Bang. Mr. BANG DECIDED. | MAT MIS DANCING | PARTNER'S HAT OUGHT | Yo SE Remeven. Lyman Abbott “The full and useful fe of! Lyman Abbott, who has fist, died,| constitutes a wonderful record of in-| tellectual, political and spiritual serv- ice to the American péople;” says the! New York Sun. “He belonged to a race aminent alike for its energy In cetion, its brilliancy in intellect and its high prinetple: the race that pro- Ia him Joined the bee: of thetr quall-| tes, for he had not only the strength | ot understanding and the firmness of principle that were theirs, but the tireless enterprising energy that kept | him active al’, his life in the advance. | ment of America, s! To Dr. Abbott the country’s aa-! vancement was a matter above ell of! the spirit. While other men of his day worked manfully to make the country, more prosperous, to settle its waiting western fields, he scrved especially the ideal of uprightness and high thinking. He lived in # time when his spiritual elevation. was} needed to right the balance in a nation iply absorbed in its ‘That America to-! day thinks not simply of the dollar, but past the dollar to great funda- mental things without which pros. perity would jose its value we owe to Dr, Abbott and to men like him;! but in remarkably large yart ‘to Dr, Abbott himself. “America has produced other men who combined spiritual and mental preeminence—a long Une of them from Jonathan Edwards to Emerson; but its scholars have few of them pos- sessed Dr, Abbott’s gift of applying the high forces in them with full ef- fect to’ practical matters of the mo- ment. For him principle was no nb- sitnet thing, religion was not.a mat- N THE DAY that the president signs his name to a ship subsidy bill passed by congress, a} program of real constructiyeness will be one step nearer completion. A protective tariff, easily adjusted and which! meets with the approval of farmer and manufac-! turer, a tax law wh in the near future may re quire some further attention, a budget law which! regulates the consumption of funds which the tax and tariff laws produce, a reorganized and con- solidated Veterans’ bureau, « refunding commis- sion to take care of the debts owing to Uncle Sam, a good roads law which will provide new arteries of internal trade and communication, a thoroughly renovatedspostal department, a law for the develop- ment and regulation of national water power, an immigration law which will keep loafers and’ un- desirables from the building, a law regulating grain exchanges, provision for co-operative market. ing by farmers, a bureau for the betterment of the working conditions for women, and many other fea- tures which come under the head of all modern im- provements as udopted by good builders make up the structure. It is quite probable that six months ago the ship measure would haye had no easy sledding through congress, but the intervening months have borne good fruit. The attitude of middle west and west- ern congressmen hag recorded a decided change in favor of it. Indeed a New York newspaper which has been, because of its intensly British slant, a bitter opponent of ship subsidy, only recently made the reluctant statement that “there are too many middle w and western senators and congressmen who are ready to accept the ship subsidy now for any opposing element to make much headway.” Probably the greatest incentive to support the Bill came “when it was publicly shown up en the floor of the senate how viciously Great Britain was swinging her axe in the dark to scuttle the Ameri- can merchant marine. The reaction to this was so the London Post warned the British reading pub- lic that they were getting mad and more determined than ever to put the ship subsidy bill through. But the warn- ing came too late. In addition, the official figures showing the slump in the American and the gain iy British car- try until Hollywoed became a byword and a re- proach. { Producers were quick to catch the trend of public! sentiment for decency. They dropped all forms of| apology in extenuation for the filth they had been jfeeding the public, and set about earnestly cleaning ‘how e. As a first step, a man in wnom the general public had supreme. confidence was placed at the rying trade, were sufficient to convince this coun- try that if we were to maintain a marine we must aid it just as practically every country in Europe is doing, by gevornment grants; that if we were not in a position to carry the bulk of our own goods in our own ships, the foreign competitors would soon work us into a position where our export trade would be curtailed to a dangerous minimum, {deys. Jes she rare talent actually te“ap) pronounced that it is reported the correspondent of} had best lay off a bit as the Americans} ter to Jock un in the meeting house with the hymn books, between Sun- He believed in applied religion; as indeed others did. But h ‘ortune added ‘to his gifts that of lierery and speaking’ ability. His power of expression enabled him to jreach the American world ‘through tho pupit, by his numerous books and urtleles, and perhrps most pot- Uy of nil, as an editor, shaping d inspiring the utteratcos of publi- cations which went through all the country. By all these means he preached the application of conscience to the public problems of the day. It was characteristic of him and perhaps the most outstanding of his applications of principle, as well as of his keen and sound instinct for the best, that he pinned his faith and friendship In Colonel Roosevealt. He saw early what not all could: see— that this man was destined to play the great part at Washington in“2 critical phase of American progress, Few men ‘have influenced more people in this country than Dr, Ab- bott did. None perhaps have influ- enced so many for so long a term of years. Sanity went hand in hand with eurnestness in him. He remained to the end what he had been throughout, the clear, brave and convincing spokesman of what was best in «he America _nepirit.”” AFTER THE FEATHERS HAD BEEN JABBING HIM IN THE EYE FOR A WHILE hats exactly alike. They assume 10,000| Mate Top, Pieces From the fifteenth of each May to/ the fifteenth of each September, all men» conceal” their individunlity _be- neath hats that are like as peas in a pod. Plain stiff straws, differing only in the width “or color of the band, ure seen on virtually. every masculine| head. The single note of yariety in| any summer crowd of men is in the small number of Leghorn or Panama hats worn, . But once the fifteenth of September is passed the suppressed individuality of all men is reasserted. Derbies. and} soft felt hats @ppedr, the latter pre-/ ponderating. Derbies, it must be ad- mitted, have little individuatity. They are as much convention's product as} straw hats are. But'the felt hat is different. The fact Is there are no two soft different shapes and rival in new and startling out¥nes the endless individu- ality of the wonderful headgear worn by women. | Look at the next twenty men you pass. You will see hats ‘with the brim} turned up in front and down behind, others. turned down in front and up} behind, others with brim turned down all around like an inverted wash ba- sin, others so irregular fn their out-! lines as to be almost indescribable. When you consider the upper atory of these hats the variety, becomes be- wildering. Some are dented in on top and both sides, some on top and ‘one side, some on top only, some in back and front, both sides and on top, some in front and back and on top, some here, there and almost any- where, some free of any, dents at all,|/ some with one dent, same with a dozen, some with big dents and some with little ones, but no two with the samé indentations. —By Fontaine Fox Ae. ‘ox at man, mere man, the man who wears a soft felt hat, can havea new ‘one every day in the week. He has each morning only to change the size, shape and outline of one or more dents, and lo! to all intents and purposes he has a new hat. If he he {% immédiately and without ex- pense adorned with something which is a new creation in the hat world. Becca +R Home Made Hats A look at the crow? that comes stampéding every evening now into the sméll and more or less sxete.. furnished shops where the makings of ‘winter millinery are sold, and where the cost of a hat may be es- timated in terms of dimes instead ‘of dollars, ‘s enough to make one won- der whether New York does not hold the world’s high record as the town of the home made hat. Right after work between five and six girls of all ages, al) salaries rnd all sorts of situations come crowding ‘to the counters that are piled half way to the calling with buckrdn frames for new hat foundations, They paw them by the score, they try them on by the Cozen, standing in line in front of the one or two small mirrors. They keep the line moving, hu ing the choice of she one who is us: ing the mirror by a yelunteer vot BUY } PIGEON’S COFFEE It’s Fresh Roasted ~ Pigeon Tea & Coffee Co, i Phone 623 Few women have more than three or four hats in any ‘one season, but HAZEL CONWELL — Republican Candidate for Clerk of Court General Election Noy. 7, 1922 Polltical Advertisement). eat 1 \ Zuttermeister Building Springs and Hens, fresh per lb. Brisket Becon, Ib. POR. sa oes We Deliver }e sensvennannnenn sa tectes¢enmteaneeeemeweeeagentee Morris Supreme Skinned Hams, ‘Natrona Meat Market SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY dressed, Pot Roast, per Ib... 17M%e 27¢"| Picnic Hams, Ib EUS i wane Capons, 5 to 8-lb. average, ~eeg Senmceprectons toe 50c per jh... Phone 1390 simply omits one of the depressions | 4 ee FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1922 apoter ta know ‘Precisely, what against the ské sbe | Pig tH, Fem ob Milica arn| oak they pre aatak to « Saeed weperaliy wishes. to (it bought, And. to be quitk chou: ‘try on a dozen, so-long as shé does, While’ they wait they keep an - | not take too long to decide‘abou:ieach 07 the trays of brpeadies and ve! pers an Pg | cf feathers pod fir bands, of « ana oes the [Mens and Tnihge: And most of Indecision wBing are the | — Seats been selected Up the 5 thet are slightly curdled along the | E . Ss cer line of faces that walt for ® chance [OC ‘he meine se gmickiy as oo eek oe Shan Spee See see | The care a ee ite ee ot San winr thernew-Mat to Work tho... ‘They have no time to select [next aay. os. jetpure, these girls who cums.-* ; ———— + shops and from. offices, from factor.) Reed jes and from telephone béards. They | Tt, 's now BA that tmmi= the manner 4 do to wo: | J He ‘glad they’re_ coming,” she: said q Bue suse he tol Bill Bradley arrived home a few minutes earlier than usual and greeted his wife with more than customary good humor. There was a reason for it, as Mrs. Bradley was soon to learn. ee “T’ve—I’ve—invited sorne of the fellows and their wives to come out tonight to play bridge,” Bill began - hesitatingly. “I meant to telephone’ you this afternoon, but—but—some- how or other it slipped my mind.” Bill stopped-and looked up, hait , *xpecting a brisk comment on his, . thoughtlessness.. But this time ~ . Mrs. Bradley merely smiled. “I'm calmly, to Bill’s intense surprise. — *T'msurewe'll allhaveagood time.” © They did! The evening went . ' q ly by——Mrs. Bradley enjoyed. herself Y for minute—there was none of that feverish hurrying and .. Scurrying to prepare the usual mid- © night luncheon, . : * - ed Bill was proud of his wife that night. She had never seemed a more perfect hostess. 4 5 “Itis because I have learned how to entertain,” she said. “Why wear yourself out preparing an elaborate spread when sandwiches and cake ate quite enough, provided you give people plenty of good Coffee? After all, the secret of Hospitality is to make people feel at home. »And, nothing does that like a chummy, cheery cup of Coffee.” . COFFEE. -the universal drink This advertisement is pact educational campaign co! dy the‘ cotes merchants of the ‘States in co-operstion with the planters Brault, Jatnt Codes Trade, ts €4 Water Street, New York, St'sea Pau ‘Cosamitiee William H. Lloyd - Candidate for ‘City Council jee Ward Three- . For 20 years a resident of this ward. citizen experienced in civic affairs. [Political Advertisement.] A

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