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i PAGE TWO fbe Casper Daily Cribune ‘sued every evening except Sunday at Casper, Natrona County, Wyo. Publication Offices. Tribune Building. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press is <xclusively entitied to the 28e for publication of al! news credited in this paper and 3USINESS TELEPHONES . 15 and 16 3ranch Telephone Exchange Departments ee Sntered at Casper (Wyoming), Postoffice as eswond class matter, November 22, 1916. CPARLES W, SALTON .......-.- President ané Editor Prudéen, King & en, : ¥ Til: 286° Fite avenue, New York City: Globe Bide. Boston, Mass..Suite 404, Sharon ers oe Mont somery St, San Francisco, Cal- ies Trivune are on file in the New York, Chicago. Boston) and San Francisco offices and visiters are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier or By Mail One Year, Daty and Sunday eee) Year Sunday Only -- - 38 Six Months Daily and Sunda: 225 Three Months Dally and Sunda: One Month Daily and Sunday Per Copy ----------------- — All subscriptions must be paid in ofvance Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after tion becomes one month in arrears. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (4. B. oO) 4 the} svubscrip Kick if You Dou't Get Your Tribune. — or 16 any t between 630 and $ ao ght il to recetve r Tribune. A paper wil ae to you by special messenger. Make tt your duty let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you, Beh antec dae oo ee ed The Casper Tribune’s Program Irrigation project west of Casper to be authorize? and completed at once. A complete and scientific city of Casper. A comprehensive municipal and park system, including swimming po dres: of Casper. ae npletion ‘of the establis areas ‘planned by the county comm den Creex Falls and retur Better roads for Natrona county bp Ming AR pec rates for shippe'> of the More equitable freight . Rocky Mountain region, and more frequent train serv: foe for Casper. | zoning system for the }) school recreation || ols for the chil- | j | Scenic Route boule- issioners to Gar- and more high: Pay As You Go. HILE the Maine Yankee father was giving his son a parting blessing and final advice, on his departure from home to make his way in the world which was, “My son get money, get it honestly if} yan can; but get money,” there was a Connecticut Yankee father passing on to his son just as char- acteristic advice, from the standpzint of the two breeds of Yankees, but a bit move wholesome and calculated to carry the boy farther and establish a higher standing for him than could be hoped for the boy who was instructed to “get the money. The Connecticut father’s advice was brief and to the point, and was “Don't owe five cents five min- utes. The ideals set up in the minds of the two boys were wholly different. The Maine father desired} his boy to obtain wealth. Money was to be his life’s ambition. He was to worship the golden calf. He was not to be over-particular as to his methods} so long as he secured what the father deemed the} most important thing in life. The shrewd old Connecticut father while} acknowledging the value of money and its import-! ant use in the world, went much further and did his boy a greater service than was done the Maine boy. He taught his son the value of credit, of busi- _ness honor, of high standing in the esteem of oth- ers, of promptness, of independence, freedom from obligation, frugality, preparedness and the satis: faction of tooking every man squarely in the eye and telling him where to go, if occasion arose. By adopting the Connecticut advice to pay as you go, you may not enjoy the doubtful honor of hay- ing Your name written in the merchant’s ledger, and it may take that person a longer time to dis- cover you and know your value as a citizen and a business man, but that is of little consequence in your scheme of life. Those with whom you deal are fully aware of the desirability of closing a transaction by the pay- ment of cash. There ‘is a premium to that sort of a customer, which the fellow who pays cash can al- ways secure. It is his right and privilege to de- mand it ,as well as it is his right and privilege to see that he is not charged with any portion of the losses and delinquencies occasioned by others, in the prices at which the pays the cash. Promiscious credit not only brings ruin to the creditor but as often to the debtor. Merchants will cite one reason for high prices as being the fact that their customers demand credit} and will not pay promptly w their bills are due. The reason is perfectly legitimate and perfectly true. Everybody acknowledges the necessity of credit under certain circumstances, and everybody in business is familiar with what constitutes the civ- cmmstances. Credit has its proper use, but its abuse is wholly improper, There is a satisfaction in paying bills and tak- ing the discount you obtain found in no other ordi- ary business transaction. And the saving from this very source is no inconsequential sum at the end of the year. This is called forcibly to mind by the knowledge that our own advertiscrs are savy- ing hundreds of dollars evéry year by simply pay- ing their bills at the end of the month or at the time they contract for space. The question’of the greater wisdom, of the Maine or Connecticut advice, is submitted to you, along with the other question—whether jt is better for your own interest to “pay as you'enter” or have it charged? Fl ad, Our Old Friend Morpheus ID YOU sleep well last night? No? Well, don’t worry about it. In all probability you will not defelop a case of insomnia to be followed by neu- rasthenia, succeeded by nervous prostration and the finale most people desire to avoid and post- pone until the last fighting chance has proved un- vailing. So-called loss of sleep is not such a horrible thing may be as somebody else has said it is. Mostly it is due to some Jocal cause or other that has oc- casioned variation or departure from the regular and normal. But again, why worry? It is the worry that aggravates, that makes real your very} fears. { The large percentage of people are mortally! afraid of insomnia; and that mortal fear is in-| somnia’s worst effect. It can very easily lead to a| habit, that would otherwise be nothing more than| | great relief. LE TT TT eee PR |tired body are the great contributing factors, It may be a cup of tea or coffee at dinner, or later, it may be one of many things you have eaten or drunk or some unusual occurence that Substitutes an active mind for a drowsy one at the natural time of ‘When you don’t sleep and feel no inclination toward sleep panic stezes yon and you roll and toss and count the striking of the hours as time drags on through the night. The principles of psychology suggest that you are placing the foundation for another and other sleepless nights, an ensuing habit and the whole train of evils you have conjured in your alarm. The doctors will tell you that it is emotional dis- turbance that makes ordinary sleeplessness harm- ful. They will also say that deprivation of sleep caused by physical pain, toxaemias or infections, the necessity of remaining on duty or similar or extraordinary departure from the normal cause great exhaustion; but that sleep generally cones before the danger point is reached. If you can’t leep, keep your body quiet and related and the processes of elimination of waste products and the repair of tissues will proceed almost as per- fectly as though you were sound asleep. Then it depends largely upon exactly what you do with your mind in the vakeful hours you s of at the breakfast table next morning. If you em- Ploy it in an orderly way with soothing or con- structive thoughts no possible harm will come of a sleepless night. On the other hand toss, fret and Surry over your failure to sleep and you are bound to _be more or less worn by the experience. For what purpose did the create: give you our mind, if it was not to control and direct ‘all else? Even sleep. The thing to do is to give no particular care as to whether sleep comes or not. Give it an op- portunity to come of its own accord. Calmness Along the Patomac PoeLttics is adjourned for two years and as far as America is concerned war is adjourned sine die. There is no known or reasonable cause for peevishness in any view you may take of life’s out- look. Thanksgiving is approaching and it is alto- gether appropriate that we cultivate the spirit that rules the occasion—appreciation of the blessings we have and thankfulness that fortune has dealt no harsher by us. With these things in view what is your idea of the poor sport that cherishes a grievance or nour- ishes a grudge? Have you any res; for the twenty-two calibre bore of the likes of him? Would you call him a big, broad American citizen? Would Sip want a pal with hir cous you care to di- vide your lapt quart of thirty-year-old Bourl with him? We athe think mots sei It is vory pleasing to note the exchange of felici- tations between victor and vanquished in the late case of assault and battery occurring on Novem- ber seventh. It speaks well for official courtesy and regard for the season whose slogan is peace and good will. We all rejoice when the hatchet is buried and things begin to move along serenely, but there is one formality that should go with the ceremony-- to see that the handle is-also interred—and for this there should be a handle inspector and ke>per of the buriai places whose business it is to S66 that no gailty ha le protrude. _ Bute? us’ rejoice even “tr the respite, the arm- istice or the moratorium now obtaining. It is a Building Up Trad MERICAN manufactures are larity among the people of th This is quite interesting in view of the fact that Great Britain is one of the great manufacturin, countries of the world aside from the United States, which is just now vigorously exploiting the markets of the world, and quite naturally her first effort would be to regain any losses which had oc- curred in supplying her own colonies. But our own trade figures indicate that exports from the United States to British colonies, protectorates, and dependencies are forming steadily increas. ing proportion of our total exports and forming at the same time an increasing share of the imports of those colonies, and of course nearly all of the merchandise which we send to them consists of manufactures, . The increase in popularity of American manu- factures in the British colonies is quite natural especially as certain’ of the more important ones are in very close touch with the United States and the habits of their people similar to those for whom United States manufactures are produced, In Canada, where the habits of the people are quite similar to our own, merchants also find that they can have their orders filled from the United States much more promptly than from across the ocean, and the share which we supplied of Cana- dian imports in 1921 was 69 per cent against 6) per cent in 1909, and 65 per cent in 1913. 3 gaining in popu- ¢ British colonies. Escaping Their Duty i hese INCREASE in the volume of tax exempt bonds is alarming. Every new issue finds a ready market. They draw from the reservoir of liquid capital vast sums which otherwise would be available for industrial investment. They cause an additional tax burden to be imposed to meet interest and sinking fund requirements. They re- dace the tax base of the country by increasing the volume of nontaxable wealth. They foster extrav- agance in the expenditure of public indebtedness beyond a sound credit basis, weakening the credit of the nation. They stimulate inflation and discour- age retrenchment. They create temporary employ- ment for labor and make "e permanency of employment in industrial enterprises where the shortage of labor is dangerously acute. They ex- empt from taxation a class of wealthy ci itizens whe rectly the duties or responsibilities of government. They constitute an obstacle to industrial prosper- ity and a menace to national welfare. Unless prompt measures are taken to prevent the continued issuance of such securities, to curb ex- travagance in public expenditures, to limit public indebtedness for unnecessary or unreasonably cost- ly public improvements, to stea: the flow of capital into non-productiye enterprises, and to otherwise control agencies of government which at present ignore economic laws in pursuance of their admin- istrative or legislative functions, the nation will be confronted ere long with a serious political and economic upheaval from this cause alone. Only a constitutional amendment can remedy this’ situa- tion and prompt action is imperatire. o- HE BRITISH leader, Bonar Law, says that eventually the United, States. will enter the league of nations. There is an old adage that “nec- essity knows no law.” The United States knows} no necessity for entering the league of nations. We a matter of momentary perturbation For a natural and ideal rest a tired mind and a can not therefore see where Law speaks with au} thority. wield great political influence without sharing di-! Che Casper Daily Cribune There Qught to Be a Special Set of Rules for Vacant Lot Football, — Bs &. $3 : j 5 : al | i Productions, but we are not depend forms as like we used to be. in va- small girls would not aaily, made for fotk too, ‘reg- oy ne 7 33 New York is not the sly pert to which they are coming in. French dolis, sophisteated grown up iades with costumes made in Paris have arrived in New Orleans. Sen Fran- cisco reports quantities of Italian dolls frora Florence and Milan. The West Coast announces also ar. the one thought of it, and strive in a blind sort of way to stimulate ‘sim!- &r thought fo the min¢ of the person 20 whom ‘hey are sent. Sclence of Telepathy. “The science of telepathy, practiced consciously by many, ie possibly only »y the use of theses thought forms. ‘We are constantiy sending out into che surrounding rir thes: messenger of ours, ether for good or ill; and we deceive ourselves if we think that wur thoughts are our exclusive bust- ‘eas, They are either @ blessing or round us are made sad or happy by 4 course to the community. Thoss wur attitude of mind. They are help- sd to become pure or impure by our thoughts. This is especially so if we ng of oyr own. Our responsibility in- wave learned to really do some think- ‘reases with our power to think. “Thought is & power a sunusual as ‘ts exerciée is uncommon, and for vhe mos: part @ mighiy unused force vithin ¢he grasp of men. But until ve have evolved te the point where his power will be used only for the ommon good it is better that we Co .© develop it further than it is, as ve have sufficient evidence already e 9 effect of thought for selfish are bland bisque, their skirts are volu. ménous ones of gorgeous brocade, and are sewed over bodes made of gisss. Among recent interesting arrivals are dolls designed and made by Rus- an in some respects. the gayest doll of all. A Goll to flash a smil @ Goll to laugh with. A dol! made of thie and that and the other thing—just anything—eo it's gay. A puppet at once cophisticated and savage, with an appeal equally great to the simple asd to the cynical. Few other playthings have just this quality. The stiffest competition comes from the United States. We have dozens of dol fact . “THE GAME ALMOST ENDED IN A FIGHT WHEN : THE CAPTAIN oF THE HUM-DINGERS CLAIMED. THAT His FoRwARO PASS HAD NOT s66N “Grounden™ ; ——ee Flair for Bigness. course is greatly strengthened by the stress the fact that failure of persone | , granting of federal aid to road bulld-| afflicted with this disease to consult Ing. % @ reputable physician in time leads “We dc not believe In having our|to thousands of unnecessary deaths state roads put under federal control.| in the United States each year. Many But neither do we beliévs in compel-} Other forms of disease are insidfour “We Americans want to do things in the mass, the North American Review. “But that {6 the way of the mob. It is the unthinking way, it stupefies intelligence, it It pleases our manufacturers and has proved profitable to them to flat ter the youngsters of the Unite: States by making the dcil babies th: imitations Possible o actual children of a dozen types. nn In India there ts a rule which say that where there are several daugh ‘ers in one family the younger on nay not marry until the eldest ha: found @ husband. Bui sometimes ‘ happens that ,while there is no suito ‘or the hand of the eldest daughter ne of her sisters has a sweethear Wishes to get married When this state of affairs arises th: Ufficulty is overcome by a neat ruse Gonvention must be so the idest daughter goes through a mock veremony in which sho ie united to s ree or large flower, still Do You Feel Tired After Eating ds. Mr. Munson speaks again touight inder the title, “The Spiritual Life or the Man of the World.” All are “elcome. producers of genuine pearls © organized a campaign to cur- ali the output owing to the success f the artificial pearls made by the fapemese. ? A tired, nervous feeling may be n sign of pofsons in your system which orevent proper digestion. Food turnr to more poison and gas, making you ‘ervous and weak. Simple buckthorn ark, glycerine, etc., as mixed in Ad- places the premium upon aheer force|ing a motorist in driving from New | in their approach; the sufferer, whos: and weight, not delicacy and fineesé.| York to the Maine woods to change| health or life may be seriously en- We are big and rather unwieldy, and|his method of operating the car five | dangeréd, may not be aware that any- we push forward by the momentum’ times, to sult the varying require-| thing at all i. amies. of inertia too often. That is wh= =.c!ments of so many different states.” “Mr. Frankel mentions some cf the have not ted our ‘40st for- startling conditions that have beer eign-born as we should. Our immi- : : discovered by physical examination o: gration troubles are due to this very Keeping Human Machin- | Vanous groups of people. There is the flair for bigness, to the tendency to ired well known case of the tests of men submerge the individual in the type ery in drafted in the Iate war. Another war or race. So we breed hurts, and dis- that of 1,000 employes of the insur contents, and injustices. Divide-et| “Everybody knows the danger] ance company of which Mr, Frankel Ampera is still the way to conquer our threatened the ratlroads of the coun-| is an off'clal. Two: hundre% os tifficcities. The undigested masses/try last summer when the shopmen| forty-five, nearly one-fourth the num: in the body politic must be broken up, | went on strike,” recalls the Kansas| ber, ‘showed defects in heart, lungs thas they may pase on their way into |/City’ Star. “A blow had been directed | and kidney."t Another examination of the blood and fiber of the nation. The| against the very heart of the trang:| one hundred Postal employes in regu teaching of each new generation is uf| portation rystem. Repair of locomo-| lar service ‘revealed that twelve of the course the business of the schoris.| tives and rolling stock generally was| number meriously defective; tha But we must realize that men’s souls| interfered wiih; It was a question as| fifty-three Were in need of regular are not cut from the same patterns,|to how Iong the trains could be kept| medical or surgical attention; that We must simplify our total scheme,| running unless the work of the shop-| thirty-three hed defects calling keep it es free as local conditions de-| men should be done in some way.| correction, ahd>that ‘not one of t mand. We must realize that the true| Loyal assistance of other railroad em-| one hundréd examined was free from democracy is not contained in mass] ployees and newly enlisted men pro- | some slight physical defect or impair education, which provides opportunity | vided the needed relief and the trains} ment. > only for the few whom it happens to}were kept running with only limited] ‘That the right kind of attention fit, but in class education, which is] exceptions. to defects revealed by examinatio: adaptable, flexible, and able to give] “The necesaity of keeping ma-| may have highly beneficial results wa opportunity to each phase of human] chinéry in repair and of regular in-| shown when 53 per cent of the impe: Our GILT EDGE Blend 50c Lb, intelligence.” apection to detect: possible breakage | fections of the group of life insur } orike, expels poisons and from eS ———-—__ or weaknesses jn recognised by every | ance company employes were slimin [30TH wiber com ere teen TS PIGEOM TEA & Traffic Rules for All industry, by every individual who] ated at the end of one year of com | noves old matter you never jt has to do with some kind of mechani: States. cal Gevice, such ag a watch or motor car. But the remarkable thing is that “An exceptional opportunity wil! be| the same idea has not carried over to presented next year not only for the] ® Sreater extent in the case of human making of much-needed changes In| ™schinery. A man who may be most the road and motor vehicle laws of | diligent in attention to the mechanism many states, but also for securing aj of his car is neglectful of the mech- much greater degree of uniformity} anism of his own body or the. bodies among them than now prevails,” sug-| Of his children. ; gests the Boston Transcript. At a recent conference of the United “Tt 90 happens that in 1928 there| States public health service on the fu: will be sessions of the legislatures of | ture of health condition in this coun: all the states in the Union except | ‘3+ le K. Frankel, a pir chaaieee fiven-Maryland, Virgina, Kentucky,|f the Metropolij-n Lite ingurance Mississippi and Louisiana. Moreover,| Company, showed that es promi ot the forty-three legislatures which | Of continued or pene: will be in session, all except two will wanes pple oe oe ee rere tyastida a aanciL phaeeneine of. attention to individual health, or|and service to their employes. Bu 7 ( ce "| periodic physicai examination, Med-| with these and other advances, ther Egieaia be difficult to emphasize | ical authorities who are launching an }are stil!_millions of persons who, bc too strongly the need of uniformity in ; = regulations for the operation of motor care on highways of the various Dairy and Chicken Feeds, Oil Meal, Stock Sait. Car lots a specialty. states. The number of persons driv- ty. CASPER STORAGE CO. ing cars is now reckoned by millions, 313 W. Midwest Ave. petent medical service. Similar ex periments with a group of pdlicy hole era in the company brought a reduc tion of 28 per cent In mortality in five years, “How to make the means to health and longé life available to all the peo ple will be one of the big problem: of the next few decades, Mr. Frankel's discussion indicates. The schools, par Neularly city schools, have made vast trides in providing for medical ex amination of pupils for health in struction and for co-operation wit parents in removing defects that be discovered in the children. Many industrial plants have seén the value in furnishing, either free cr through @ nominal a..nual fee, medical advicr COFFEE Co. 228 E. 2nd—Phone’623 vas {n your system which poisoned stomach and made you tired and ner- yous. -Adlerika is EXCELLENT to uard. against appendicitis. Casper Pharmacy. A down-at-the-heel idea is of about the same relative soundness and value as a down-at-the-heel shoe. It slouches aimlessly along, a vaga- bond among the fresh, new ideas which throng the mental thorough- fare. ; + eareceremmne sacene and of these a large proportion fre- quently cross state boundaries. For the sake not only of convenience but also of safety, and of affording rea- sonable facility for complying with the law, there should be the largest pos- sible degree of uniformity in the rules for the practical operation of vehicles. Such uniformity now exists in a few respects, such as turning to the right when meeting another vehicle, and te the left when passing one going in the same direction. But that is not enough to serve satisfactorily the con- ditions of motor traffic. “There should be greater uniformity in the prescriptions concerning head- lights, signals with the horn and with ate hand, the parking of cars on highways, and—if the suggestion. he not utopian—rates of speed. There is no reason why these and some other tails should not be governed iden- tically in all the states. It is unrea- sonable to require that a tourist shall acquaint himself with the special road rules of all the states, perhaps a dozen or more, ‘through which he passes on his trip, and that he shall alter his Subscribe NOW! For the Casper Daily and. Sunday Tribune The best in News, Features, Continued Stories and Comi One down-at-the-heel idea that is rapidly be- ing relegated to the attic of by-gones is that ‘which holds that public service companies charge their customers any rate they please. Legal regulation of the rates of ail such or- ganizations is dispelling that erroneous idea. The twin of the above idea—that public serv- ice companies build tracks, extend gas mains, string wires and make other extensions en- tirely out of their earnings—also has been routed. Borrowed capital is by far the most GUT OUT AND MAIL TODAY Enclosed find $9.00 for which please send me: pdt nih a perhaps’ thi D. and Sunday Tribune for one common medium through which such com- ae caupment sha action ot ie ee ee anciiee find $2.50 for which please send panies accomplish their wrok. Sounteny acy ees Sune me the Sunday Tribune for one year. ee “When early in the new year the legislatures of forty-one states are simultaneously in’session, there ought to be correspondence among them on the subject of highway legislation, leading to prompt and substantially identical action by them all. It is by such performance of duty by the]§ states that demands’ for further fod eral encroachment upon the jurisdic tion of the states are to be avoided And it must be recognized that th: failure of the states thus far to adopt uniform road laws has already pro- Name ...... Street No. ees wesente (6 Qabdpie Seiad otecamaaliakonds S| Se Scratch out offer not accepted. DO IT NOW! =—————_—