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peetanay sett CVAUOTPADESEUTE NEDO aL croaae teres te er preeteenses PAGE SIX. be Casper Daily Cribune issued every evening except Sunday a: casper, > County. Wyo. Publication Offices. Tribune Buil MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Member of the Associated Fress. ‘The Associated Press is excludively entitled to the 1se for publication of all news credited in this paper and 8USINESS TELEPH' Bay -.--15 and 16 Sranch Telephone Exchange Co 1 Departments Entered at Casper (Wyoming), Postoffice as second clans mefte:, November 2: 48. jatrona ing. necting CHARLES W. BARTON President and Editor Advertising Representatives. Prudéen, King; & Prodden, 1720-25 Steger Bidg.. Chicago [L; 286 Fittr avenue, New. York City; Globe Bidg. Boston, Mass.. Sharon Bidég., 55 New Mont jomery St., San Francisco, Cal Ciptes of the Daily Tribune are on file in the New. York, Chicago, Boston ind San Francisco offices and visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier or By Mail Dne Year, Daily and Sund oo Done Year Sunday Only $9.00 2.5 450 Bix Months Daily and i Three Months Daily a day -- as se Month Dail Sunday 44 Per Copy =. a - All subscriptions must be i in advance and the Daily Tribune will not insure wery after subscrip | tion becomes one month in arrears Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (4. B.C.) Kick if You Don’t Get Your Tribune. € ; ts ) and 8 o'clock p. m Call 15 or 16 any time between 630 and . . ty elve you ibune. A paper will + tt you to recetve your Tr! A eee we acre te you by special messenger. tvered to 3 ~ your carrier misres you. et The Tribune know wher < ‘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 school recreation park system, includ\ng swimming pools for the ch dren of Casper. Completion of the established Scenic ‘Route boule. vard as planned by the county commissioners to Gar den Creek Falls and return. Better roads for Natrona county and more high ways for Wyoming. More equitable freight rates for sbippe’s of the Rocky Mountain region, and more frequent train serv: ice for Casper. zoning system for the Satisfaction of Success. FTER it is all said and done just what means the most toa man who has reached the heights of his life’s ambition—the material things he has gathered about him or the in realizing his ideals? Ask any person who has made his mark, and if he tells you truly, and he will, he will say that achieving success brought him more satisfaction than did the material things achieved. The phys- ical things, the tangible things, the useful things were always the stepping stones to realization of higher ideals and greater successes. If success of the individual means something to the world, if the things done meet the approval of those who know you, your compensation is com- plete, without further reward. The physical things that you have accumulated may depart from your possession, but the success you have accomplished 6 yours forever. That cannot be takea from you. is in the anticipation rather the realization. In middle life in the pursuit rather than in the possession. In age, in the achievement of the undertaking rather than ‘the things won by the effort. It is the common experience of the human race. The family reared and cared for, friendships made and kept, a record of useful work well done. These are above price and are fying reward. a eee It Can’t Be Done. SN have you heard the expression a person seriously believing his own statement? On the other hand how often have you witnessed another person just exactly performing the ‘apparently impossible? You have heard and seen frequently. Of course it can’t be done, if you admit the ex istence of the word in your lexicon, and don’t try. You don’t know that it can’t be done unless you exhaust every s at your comma Then when you demonstrate th task and give up, along comes a better man the next morning and puts it over. There are mighty few things that are absolute ly impossible, And, there are a whole lot, of ways to do things. determination tackle the job and stand aroun long enough and you'll see it accomplished. Do you think any of the big jobs right here in per were performed by fellows who said “It be done?” Not one of them. The big refineries and industrial plants in Cas per were built by “It Can Be Done” fellows. And for fear you were from Missouri, they dem onstrated. When the Texas people came here last summer Fou never heard a peep out of any of that outfit t you can’t perform the about “It nt be done,” m a city where the greatest refi in the world was already lo- and ope ng. Go out and look at the Texas and report whether or not it “can't be every hand at the “Can't be already been done. say that Casper can’t be a city of 50,000 i Well! of that year and Jet us hand you a map of the city and the census report, by way of showing tha: it has ‘een done. . Look this village over carefully. We are of the opinion that the “Can be done” people far outnum ber the “Can’t be dones.” see. os William’. j ILLIAM Hohenzollern, aceuseq and indicted by the world has completed his defense. Ag was to be expected he denies the responsibility for the catastrophe that overwhelmed Europe in 1914. That rests upon the heads of the German mili tarists. He was merely moving figure in the tableau, a pawn in the game. Be that as it may William talked too much before and during the attempted subjugation of the world led by him Our Valiant Enforcers. s Defense. themselves. Treasury,” bet usual mandate c: seems, however, commandeer, ecutive to is leading to without their com writes the Manchester (Eng.) Guardian. “The zealous prohibition officials had sent 1 for government signature a are not more to stir the uck out the ng them .to seize after all. to s ¥ §:0eks of Mquor on foreign | York jsmmed w in American waters, but the | ships of an success he has met} Let the fellow of ingenuity and} Come around in the spring} to have realized that say, as well as its champagne, might do| vesse! George nations than to advance the causo of e Eighteenth amendment unregenerate Europe. Daugherty, asty me Che Casper Daily Cribune self and the generals and admirals he bad raised up for “the'day.” The partnership with God which he pretended to rely upon in the early days of |the invasion of Beigium and France is not brought \forward in his testimony and in fact has not been |mentioned by him sinces the day he was told by }the French at the Marne, “They shall not pass.” William admits many things happened during the course of the horror which were unexpécted to} him. He did not expect opposition to his peaceful march through Belgian territory. He did nat ex- pect the French to rise in defense of their homes and the protection of Paris. He d‘c not expect ain to remain other than pasa’- and accept German kultur as ‘a thing to be lesired and to be grateful for. |. And above all he did not expect A.nerica to put into active and open operations the machinations jin which she had been involved with other pow- ers since back in 1897. Complicity and premedita- ltion on the part of America was not only unex- j|pected, but surprising and shocking as well. | He did not expect the drama to assyme such frightful proportions. | What he really expected and desired was a sort jof a peaceful holiday of subjugation of all the | world without opposition. In his opinion it was what the world needed and ought to have. | William's summing up reveals William as crazy jand as far off the mark as he ever was when he |proclaimed his partnership with the Almighty. His hallucination that America plotted against | him from 1897 on or at any time, and that we har- j|tored any ill-feeling against the German people |then or even now, or premeditated any move against them, or was even prepared for such a yea-} ture is the w t notion that ever entered his disordered bra , William’s defense does not defend. It is not} convincing to a world that knows better than! William and knows full well that his leadership} unquestioned at the planting of the train of ‘powder that started the world explosion, and! his leadership was acknowledged and accepted,| except in details, to the day of collapse and failure! and flight into Holland and exile. ee SRS EP: The Un-Zoned City. i « OES ZONING PAY?” asks John Ihider, ex pert civie developer. And then answers his question by adding, “Yes, if it is true that] a nickel saved is a nickel earned.” | Zoning pays not oniy ix that it makes the return) on real estate investment more sure, but also in} that it prevents or lessens capital loss. Among |the greatest losses from which our citiés suffer jare: | Depreciated values, due to the changing charac-| ter of a dist . Tomboy Taylor. THERE muST Have LEAST S.50% WoRTH oF \“T lown | General, hag, never been heard of. Of course the matter cannot rest there, and it is to be hoped that the action pending in the American courts by two British, companies will — provicie Mis-spent taxes, 1 solution. In that action the Amer- ‘That zoning stabilizes the character of a district) ‘CA" Sovernment will be called on to , c state, if It can, reasons satisfactory and prevents the blight due to a mixture of mu-|/."jQ4, why it should be permitted to tually harmful uses, generally is recognized. The Z ul impound one particular sort of cargo residence that cost $6,000 or $10,000 loses half its|in ships calling at American ports: loor; loses even |value if a store is opened next and thereby override a long-accepted more if its new neighbor is a factory, or a garage.| doctrine of extra-territoriality. The The retail store that did a thriving business will| rea! reason that has determined this find its trade diminishing if the neighboring prop-|step has, of course, no force in law— erty is occupied by business or industry offensive| the desire to put the same handicap or disturbing to customers. The industry that has| 0" te popularity of foreign ships residences for neighbors is nearly sure to be han- Tine aera ® gk ile |dicapped in operation or expansion by complaints shina ba pothpalifce Aisne Ge nah ders: of its noise, its odors, its smoke or some other mani-|-r¢ real point in international equity |festation of its activity. i is not the fate of American shipping | Those facts have been recognized, although not! under a dry dispensation, nor is it the always realized, as long as men have lived in cities.| value of prohibition as @ national ex- | The oldest towns had their different quarters, or periment. It is the question how far, |bazaars because experience showed that was best| in order to further an internal re- for sines: Zoning simply utilizes this age-old | ‘form, & nation has a right to disturb experience and applies it logically and in orderly | he freedom of another which has fashion. “ | been long recognized by international law and cugtom. If American lines cannot subsist dry without a subsidy, the subsidy should surely come from America, at least until her example has willingly been followed by other nations.” Do Tell “A dispatch rider bas just hurried in from the western part of the Commonwealth with the news that ire losses are among the great, preventable wastes of America. They are increased by jum- | bling different kinds of occupations together and by crowding buildings too close to each other. In our cities business men often pay higher insurance rates than they would if their fire-hazard was not inereased by neighboring properties. Householders pay more than they would if there were wider spaces between houss or if business or factory buildings were not mixed in with residences. That i constant and unnecessary tax. Zoning re- s it. at orth Adams a youth of the baill- Zoning also reduces the other tax, that paid not} wick no later than the Sabbath took ! private companies, but fo public treasuries,} tn axe to a lady of t»» yicinage, on | Public taxes for public improvements are ar the ground that her y'sits to. his item to every business man and to every house-| Parents irked him,” notes our fa- holder. yorite Boston Transcript All of those affected by zoning. A large propor.| ,,“Of course there must be two sides jtion of our expensive school: buildings are of| iri tuie judement is be all mona jdoubtful value because of the environment that}, be avoid onthe wholes has developed about them, They should be, and| much as this youth may have ben many will be, scrapped long before they are worn| vexed by this y's visits, orem out, simply because of the neighborhood. Teach--| though well meant, :he course that ers 1 pupils are only partly efficient bec he followec must be considered hagty. of their surroundings, noisy, dirty, dangerous, It is stated that he ‘gave her the tracting. The loss here is constant and it is per xe’ (this is a term vouched for by manent, for the pupil cannot live over again his|® minor poet of our acqua’ptanee) partly wusted years. He goes ovt into life han-}‘#fter # short reation.’ We cans : J not say the nature of this dicapped. | 5 5% jconversation, but plainly it wag not Our highways are costing more and more every} 4 1 ady, may. ; * ; | one entire amity, The lady, may year. If a highway is built to serve a miscel-|}i\e said something that hurt and lany of uses or without any clear idea of the|jiitatea the young gentleman end character of its district, it is sure to cost more| aroused that temperamental” strain than it should. Wide, heavy pavement suitable} which impelled him to use an axe fer trucking costs much. It should be confined] and we know that he did not like to to stretches of streets directly ‘past establish-| have her calling on his people. -She ments needing it, and from them by the shortest| may ve said those things which youth regents; for instance, first dis- entangling a crocheted tidy from her back, she may have leaned forward rocking-chair and said to bis s, ‘My, isn’t Ahenobarbus get: : to be a big boy.’ This is fright- vexing anc most of all to high strung lads already thinking in terms of rive manhood. She may have ai tempted to kiss bim,a process of ex- cruciating torture, as the embrace Is | routes to destinations, such as freight stations If it passes through residence districts it not only represents waste in cost of” unnecessary construc- tion, but waste of time and ener on the part jof truckers. Narrow, more lightly paved road ways are adequate to the needs of residence dis- trets except in the case of a few arterial highwa: But if they are used by heavy trucks they soon are broken up and must be repaired. The cost of laying sewers and water mains is an item of consequence. In a properly zoned city it] fenerally directed at the nose or eye s possible to figure just what volume these serv-|9f the victim. And she may have will have to carry when a district is fully| *!uded to the day in the distan| past wken the young gentleman had been spanked for a slight surfelt on his papa’s cigars. “Who knows what happened? That is, in the intramural conversation at his parents’ home that preceded his application of the axe? We must be indulgent with buoyant youth and dts crisp enthusiasins and never except for cause discourage self expression. built up. Then the right size can be laid in the first place. In an unzoned city the safe thing is to err on the side of adequacy and lay pipes larger and more costly than are likely to be needed because this waste is so much less than the. waste of re- placing pipes within a few years. The work of our police and of gst fire depart- ments is simplified in a zoned city. A conglomer- ation of dwellings with gas tanks, lumber yards gas saiped Nev S, one feels that thi and warehouses offers infinite possibilities for Nee eatigusa oe eet ce trouble. That kind of conglomeration also adds|70U"® |,ventieman | Cenerves | rather ‘o the work of the health department both on its preventive side and its hospital side. So zoning does pay. impress on him that no gentleman takes an axe so a lady. Such a prac- tice on a son's part is most embar- rassing to his parents; much as they t the main isguc remains sti! un.) ™9s esteem him, they must keep up olved. The long arm of prohibition | “7Pearances and. how can they when s been extended actos the Atign:| he 2evises thelr visitors Ust with an by edict, but the edict Is co far | 2x0? But western Massachusetts is unregarded, except by the ‘American | *® home of the bull-dog breed: Washington, which | as sailed (despite the vigorous pro- test of one passenger who wanted| He has} his money back, without a bar. ‘The jause, and we are | Cunarder Scythia, on the other hand ee the port of New} has up-anchored as festively as th impounded | though the ruling of Mr.| ¢ American Attorney |; The Seeretary of ‘ore whom this un ame for initialling, the Aquitana, merriment of the pe RASA Ee i Grounds for Divorce. “Restless in the matrimonial inclos- ure, many ladies beat their wings against the bars. and sometimes the Its them out, but not always.” rves the “The z of vart- the troublesome Kew the Sun. the is BEEN AT Boys CLoTHING RUINED IN “THAT, GAME oF “FouLow THe LEADER on RotLer SKATES WHICH TomBoY TAYLOR INTRODUCED, ous in cifferen* eourts, and the af-j of ths question by Will Day, a well-- ventive art of :mstrimony sporting side. The other has its in Massachusetts the highest court held that. though no physical violence was charged against the husband, he had yet caused his wife great mental an- guish by showing his tnfatuation for another woman, and that such men- tal anguish constituted intolerable cruelty under the divorce laws. Thus ne got her bill,” as the laconic braze goes in some parts of New Eng and, “On the other hand, a New ."vrsey judge has failed to find substantia- tion of a charge of inf-deli:y brought against a husband by hig wife, who said that she ‘smelled him when he came 12:18’ and furthermore Ge clared: ‘I know that perfume; I kno the only person in town who uses it “It is evident, that this Now Jersey judge is not n romantic man; it has been accepted for years as a fact by dramatists and writers of romances that the identification and implica; tion per nasum does not admit of ar doubt: Not even agitation betray: at a familiar phrage of an old song is such conclusive evidence as a whift of perfume. But the law is cold toward romance; it has perlex- Itles of its own." First Movie Producer. That the earliest idea of a! moving Picture was recorded in the time of Confucius, the Chinese hilosopher, who lived 500 years before Christ, is the deduction drawn from his study —By Fontaine Fox known figure in the Engiish film world, who has exhibited in London & collection, of relics and machines: teacing growth of the moving picture from the first primitive idea to its present form. The “shadow shows” of Confuctus are the first of all known endeavors to present animated pictures. The next record of progressive achieve- ment is folind In 1646, when Athan- asius Kircher published a book in Latin entitled ‘Ars Magnalycus et Umbrae,” in which a description an¢ iustration are given of a moving picture which the writer had evolyed| with mirrors @nd a tallow candle for filuminant. Included in the collection ts the original diek, which Eadweard Myl ridge used to settle the controversy between two American millionaires on the Palo Alto race course us to whether ‘he four feet of a trotting horse were off the ground at the same time. Approve The Tribune. Editor ‘Tribune: ‘The Tribune has} shown such rapid improvement un- der your ownersh!p that we feel we should show appreciation of your ef- forts to make Casper a clean and pro- Sressive city. We realize that every improvement means dollars to all property owners. A live newspaper is the best boost- er a city can possibly have. It will be a pleasure to us to support your WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1922. ‘Within its eben dome; Alice was a highbrow; | eee te ee of, Shee, Remote the busy, careless world, | Remote the dear, familiar home. © Renascence - The midnight deep wears not @ star ‘The tearblinc aye behol’s no ray _ To bless its sorrow-stricken sight; [me night upon the leagues without classics. ‘Quotes Brown ug, Homer, ivater. And all he got was icy stares sa a ‘Within the heart of pain ‘tis night. Mary pas a simpls maid: | Mut to! from out the graying east ‘The cock-crow heralds forth morn, 9 Jana as at God's appointed haute: Peace comes, to joy and hope ree Seantm! often shatz, born. 4 * Ana all he <x was puzzled frowns | —Maude De Verse Newton. : Se From the little lady. He became a gloomy lad, i Snow. |A Birthday Cake with white frosting; |" Whole Nut Meats sticking here and 7 | there A |and Candies—elim, straight, upstand ‘To win the favor of. her ing. “ ‘Take her in your arms and say | Numbering the years of the heir. How very much you love her. Pagar Danie! Kramer. | ye Earth today is frosted white; __ | Hills show bere and there like nut The best of all habits is to break | meats; our habits. Nothing restores our self) Tall Pine trees. Uxe candles alight. Teapect #0 much as che discovery that| stand blanketed in thin white we can Co without pleasures to which | sheets. we have become habituated. RICHARD SHIFP. An Unprofitable Saving You can’t save much on your electric, gas or telephone bills. These bills are too small a part of your living expefises, as compared with other regular expenses. Supposing you systematical- ly attempted to save on your bills for utility sérvice—and succeeded. A few cents each month would be the limit of your success, unless you ac- tually deprived yourself. Sav- ing of this sort would hardly warrant the effort. Considering its actual value to every man, woman and child, utility service, which costs the average family but 4 per cent of its income, prob- ably is the cheapest thing in the world. paper and help its success in any manner we possibly can. MICHELIN CORDS For Winter Driving Trouble R. M. MOSHER THE MICHELIN MAN 316 W. Yellowstone CASPER AUCTION HOUSE CASPER MATTRESS FACTORY New and used Furniture, Gas A Cleaning, Mattresses Renovated, Up Repairing. poliarices, Rug olstering and WE BUY AND SELL 326 W. Yellowstone Phone 1617-J Building Materials Weare equipped with the stock to supply your wants in high grade lumber and build- ers’ supplies. Rig timbers a specialty. . - KEITH LUMBER CO. Phone 3 Phone 309 } Do Your Christmas Shopping Earl BUY IN CASPER y Do You Realize That There Are Only 32 Shopping Days Until Christmas? 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