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t | (temeectereece rey ; tion proper or not, and all too many = a good citizen in the best sense, and he is shirk- PAGE SIX. Che Casper Daily Cribune vening except Sun@ay at Cusper. N Publicath Tribune Building. pared in having a large number and an adequate standing army. of fighti ghting forces if an ld ever arise. t however, another view which e one which Tt is the view recently taken ment officials regardi:e the trainin: the youth of the country. They contend. and right that the youth of the United States should be traine the fund. itals of military emergency requiring thei XCIATED PR usively entitled co t lited in this paper @ Associated Press. ix, per. necting A! as ascond clans Is tactics, — ae = resident and Editor| fo that the widest possible ovision aud protec vies _ — tion of the ontry will be made. prescutatices, An Ie fre the preparedness phase. there is the - : 22 Steger Biag., Chicago, Point that training of young men will prove one i ork City: obe Ride, of the createst assets the country can possess Mont Daily ri 1 fiw Ss is essential to the successful pros. ition of the business of the nation. If America retain her place as the foremost nation in rd to the unlimited resources she has, it will te able men to do it. The experience of the revealed the many physical defects which sted among our young men because of the inade of attention which had been given to phys levelopment. This should be euarded against future. The best way to prevent its contin ft DSCRIPTION By Carrier or E ce is to see to it that the coming generation be free from physical defects of former gen-| t ‘ ss Mt 7 Audi Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©) | P _— - mane | The Glorious West. Ki { You Don't our a > i; 3 eisai d tied en sm 630 and 8 o'clock p.m HY should Americans journey to Europe to find in be de natural scenery, curative springs, or enjoy ment? They can find all these in greater variety {in America than they can find them elsewhere on jearth. treat American west provides everything a mld possibly find in Europe, with great saving fo the exchequer and with equal if. not ° , superior ilities for comfort and real enjoyment. The Casper Tribune’s Program |/"r'is' said that European travel is declining although there are still some who go there to see the effects of the war, and others, perhaps, to visit the resting place of kindred who fell on foreign battlefields. re is no reason why the west should no* be com» increasingly popular for. travel from other sections of the country and from foreign lands The scenery is on even grander scale than else- where, there are attractions even mode varied than can be found on any other continent. Hotels and stopping accemmodations ar? everywher+ 0 vided, roads and transportation sre unexe and hospitality and reasonable charges are the rule. The rious medicinal springs found in a wide tgation project west of Casper to be authorized pleted at once. plete and scientific zoning eystem for the Spal and school recreation mming pools for the chil of the established Scenic Route boule by the county commissionera to Gar- and return. for Natrona county ning. le freight rates for shippe-s of the n region, and more frequent train serv: and more high- se Obli + ,of guests. Civic ligations. | One particular feature of western entertainment IPAXES and jury duty, though everybody admits) is the «ude ranch, to be found everywhere west th the one should be paid and the other of the Missouri river. It is a novelty to eastern- done, have in them something from which human ers and foreigners alike. Here, life is lived in the nature revolts, instinctively and evades if it can.| open and after the manner of the natives. Health All of us wi'l utilize any legal method of lessen-| is renewed and years prolonged by a season spent ing taxes, and not a few of us, alas! will go fur-)on any one of these ranches And people in the ther than that, and substitute “safety” for “hon-| east who have made the discovery have spent many esty” as setting the limits of what we will do succeeding summers on the same ranch. with that end in view. Europe hasn't a thing on Western America, and It is much the same with jury duty. The good| the world is finding it out. citizen’s obligation is obvious, yet pract cay erety, - —_—_—o--___ =o ood citizen will utilize every exemption the law} ; Srovides, and do it whether he believes the cxemy ___ The Lack of Confidence itizens | JYHE STOCK MARKET, which is quick to sense otherwise fairly good will invent. ingenious excuses developments unfav »le to orderly business for escaping this form of public service, while some progress has shown deci kness since early will go even further and resort to downright lying,| in Nov railr shares le: in the de-| if only they can make the lies colorable to official! cline. Although the country is ev suffering eye: Doing jury duty is often inconvenient and often tiresome, Wit upon the doing of it by the proper persons—by the honest and intelligent. that is. depends the protection of life and property in every civilized community. is remain facts and the person who shuns the jury box with less than a real reason is not from the road f. ties, due to th t d investments no longer com- mand the confidence of the public, one of the ob- jects of the revived agitation is the repeal of the transportation act defining what, in the opinion of the leg! e authority, is a fair return upon railroad property. Nothing more to make the railroad situation hopeless. Railroad service cannot be had without the facilities, and these cannot be had unless the investing public is assured of a return corresponding to what can be had in other fields of investment One view com- monly held at the sources of this agitation seems to be that the railroads are owned by a few rich bankers who are able to put their hands in their | pockets for all the money needed to ing a special duty he should be proud to perform. oe oo What We Want. PRODUCER of motion pictures was desirous of learning what the public wanted in the way : ; shies provide the of movies. He put on an idea contest and invited necessary expansion of service. The railroads, suggestions. He received some thirty thousand) however, are not owned by bankers: the owner. replies to his inquiry. They came from every state | in the union, Canada, Mexico, France, England and Australia. ment to be safe. Analyzed and crystalized, the concensus of the A large amount of money has been raised for thirty thousand opinions can be narrowed down | equipment recently by borrowing on the part of to—we ure tired of crooks and “young love.” Give, the companies, thus creating new liabilities ahead us history and the Bible. Give us plays that deal) of the stock. This is just like puttitng a second ship is widely distributed and will respond with additional capital only as it believes the invest- with married life, but cut out the eternal triangle.| mortgage on a farm. This process cannot be car-! There you have it from quite an audience, and it| Tried indefinitely because the margin of safety reflects fairly what many times the size of the} eTows smaller. Proper financing of the railroads audience reporting thinks. requires that approximately one-half of the cap- The guess of one person 1s perhaps as good as, ital shall be represented by capital stock: in other the guess of any other person, for humanity is| words, that proportion should be proprietary cap- pretty much the same the world over. In pictures | ital, in order to obtain favorable terms upon bor- or in story the greatest appeal is'in life We)|Trowed money. Very little new capital has been may with propriety and should gloss over parts Taised for railroads by that means recently. of it and present it clean and attractive, but after) ———— it is all said and done what we want is life. | The Evil Spirits 2 % A | PERIODS of business depression have occurred ‘Always Has and Will Fail. P from time to time, ever since industry and OVERNMENT ownership of various big busi-| usiness became organized to such a degree that ress interests has been given consideration | people, instead of supplying all their own wants from time to time and urged by yersons who be-| have exchanged goods and services and thus be- lieve it would be a good thing. They fail, however, came dependent upon each other. As industry has to take into acrount a few very fundamental phases | become more highly specialized, bringing thé peo- of. business progress. They forget that business ple of all countries into trading relations, and par- which has lent itself to the expansion of the coun.| ticularly as the use of credit has developed, these try has been the result of individual initiative. periods have become more pronounced and demor- If at the beginning of the business development | ® zing. They are due fundamentally to the fact of the country government ownership had been es-| that a complicated organization is more likely to tablished of utilities, there might have been some} get out of order than one of few parts. These con- degree of success, but that is more than doubtful.| ditions are fully recognized by the economists of To introduce government ownership when certain all countries and by practical people of experience. concerns have been expanded to their present | Such people understand that these periods of dis- great size would be followed by positive detriment | turbance are disastrous to all business, because to those concerns. they reduce the volume of the exchanges and cur- Take the railroads as an example. Competition,{tail the earnings of every kind of business. the greatest stimulative factor in business, has; In every such period of disturbance there are bnilt them up to a point where the railroad facil-|tWo Classes of people, to-wit; those who quickly ities in the United States are second to none in) recognize that one of the readjustments to which the world. If there had not been keen competition | the system is subject is under way, that the nor- between the different railroads during the years | mal in in which railroad development has been going for-{ nd that individuals must adjust themselves to the ward, it is more than likely they would not be as| Seneral situation; and, on the other hand, those highly developed as they are. | who forthwith conclude that some mysterious and Gweership and operation of business enterprises| pernicious influence is at work of which they gre seem to be incompatible with the purpose of gov-| the chosen victims. This hallucination is the nat- ernment. The state’s chief function is to govern Ural successor in primitive minds of the once com- and to protect its citizens and to control business; mon belief that invisible spirits ruled over the for- where it encroaches on the rights of the individual,| tunes of men. It used to be thought that nothing but it should end there and allow the operation |e¥Yer happened to a man that had not been brought to stay in the hands of the people whose business it | #bout by these spirits, and it was thought well to is to run private business. retain the services of a “medicine man” of some sort who was able to deal with them. These “med- jicine men” have their successors in some of the politicians of the present day, and the faith in Physical Training. "HE BEST preparednes the United States can| their incantations is very well illustrated by faith have is the training of the youth of the coun-|’in the legislation commonly proposed for the relief try so that their physical welfare will become! of business depression. an asset not only to the country, but to themselves. | DR a Preparesiness has been viewed from several The Tiger came over from France to set Amer- engles. ‘There is the purely military viewpoint, icans to thinking. so he proclaimed. He has done ecording to which the country is believed to be more. He has sct us all to tatking. Those who! l this view point to the Jifficulty of assembling gets to the fundamentals of expanse of country are well improved and ample | | Provision made for the care and entertainment! uld be required | alance in the exchanges has been disturbed, | Che Casper Daily Cribune TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1927. The Tooneville Trolley That Meets All the Trains—By Fontaine Fox “ £0 Wortie’s TRYING To KETCH You Simply Requires Confi- | dence | The best way to carve a roast chick seekers and says quietly but firmly, Jl) wait out here for ¢ He is not to be shaken from this tand lhe « when politeness begins picious resemblance to Too Late I Stayed Too late I # Unheeded fiew the hours:— ' ar. It is all very well to be polite ntends, but there comes a point bear a sus: Jiogism, and That only treads on flowers! yec—torgive the crime j How noisless fails the foot of Time! ——_—<—<—<—>__—_$—$— | vented what ts to be. these Gopesters , Gopester’s prophecy are worth certain not only pick the winners on tomo im, they are not contro). row's gridiron or track or in the|ling. The min of such ‘doping 1 j squared circle, but give detailed ex-|cocksureness. The dopesters an) } planation of their choices—that the/ their followers close the'r eyes to 11. public may see for itself that the fu-| hundred other factors that may det-. ture can bring no other outcome. But| mine the result and refuse to sc... | the fates that rule field and treck and) nize the Umitation of their kno» | circle have a way of ignoring such|edge. There ie such a thing as hes | ‘dope’ in making out their decrees. |and nerve that respond only wh. ““Form’ is all with the dopester. Bo-| the contest {s greatest and bring out ause a horse won yesterday, they | powers that sleep on lesser occasic.. figure he will win today. Secause a/ There is the type of man and bes.t | team bas made a better record during (hat bas a way of beating form |@ season or because it numbers |victors—seemingiy under the goad >; | stronger men, they pick it to win.|past defeat. There, also. is the prise fighter’s measure ment of chance, the aleatory elemen: for which the ancients made so grea: fancy more than do those of his | opponent, they name him in advance allowance in figuring on the future— |as winner. While the bases of the } \ and which moderns, too, hold in high respect, if they are wise.” There is no “Just As Good” | Don’t accept substitutes—don’t buy baking agin that is sup- posed to be just as good as Calumet—don’t think that a big can at a low price means a real saving. se CALUMET The Economy BAKING POWDER Avoid disappointments. Millions of housewives are ‘using Calumet because ot its dependability. They know that the bal will always turn out just right. Pi cakes, biscuits, muffins, vil always be ectly raised, light and wholesome if you use Calumet, the real eco } | by en when there is company at dinner st short of this point the husband Wh ie ¢ if ~ + at ey with clea: count remarks | put your foot on it and use a coldfto be budged further Twhen ali 11 an eee al chisel. Hyguinasmuch as this method] Thue you will see them, on Satur] "apargy nu MTS iamonal Calumet sales are 2% times {scone rather bizarre, let us}day afternoons particularly. in front| pyar degsie as they pass! | as much as that of any other lconsider “the next mos* popularjof the women’s shops, grimly grip: brand—always call f it meth (that is, carving with a knife| ping previous pu s and keeping | Ah! who to sober measurement } OF it. lin the dintng-room, in full view of the]a keen weather eye open for the ex ‘Time's happy swiftness. brings, | nee) and formulate two or three] pected return of wifle. This last Is] When birds of Paradise have lent | ules of conduct fespecially important, since net even] ‘Their plumage for his wings! Rule 1, When everybody is seated|the oldest veterans among the hus: William R. Spencer. | and the entire company has turned| bands of the seco class can ala ————<— = toward you to watch you make a fool|mate how long a given woman will Ee cfodreaie trina WAS eaiRNENt sob | etal ini aiat res ear g Dope and Dopesters chair, seize a sharpening steel in one Some are self-conscious, but most of und and your carving knife in the|them are accustomed to It. Often the| “Dopes differ from each other in FOR HER CHRISTMAS ‘other and commence to strike violent-| bert s of friendships are made|ingloriousness,” says the Washington {ly agains h other us if you were] dur Ee: time the all powerful Mrs.|Post. “There is one ingloriousness of | fighting a duel with yourself. Keep] take® to decide between the short|the poppy products and another in- BUY AN ‘carrying on Uke this for about fourj|onem with the blue border and the|cloriousness for each of the other lor five minutes, or unt!l you cut your] long plain ones. No doubt the store | drowsy sirups or powders of the East thumb off, or your wife faints with|of the future will contain a smoking |and West. And then there is an in ORIENT A | RUG fear. Then stop and do whatever|rcom near the entrance where hus-|sloriousness for ‘sport dope’ that is seems right to do next. bands may be conveniently checked|in a class all oy itself. Just as the The reason for this is paychological.|and a sort of an electric carriage call | dopesters who, between sniffs or puffs AT THE It sa tacit informing of the company |#¥stem whereby | they may be re-}or ayalces ice needle penis dream, [tht they oan have confidence tn yas. |IAUCCH Tithe ‘Arse type of husband, | sporting dopesters, between iwatien cr CHAMBERLIN FURNITURE CO. leaevirentuasttiey ae not fear you}4ragged around frem counter to] races or contests, pléture many fu- Ii de'something to shove the chick.| counter, he has but-one justification. | ture events that never take place. humor with ea] With the solemnity of prophets to en off the platter into one superior knowledge has re- flaps before the carving is over, |you can get your company into thi frame of mind, you will find tl |something of the same confidence will |speak into your own mind. | Rule 2. Get off a joke. Get jany kind of a joke. Even a pun. ¥ leven a conundrum. Or, better than nothing, a charade. Why: Psychology again. You sec it Is sometimes possible to get a set of guests in such a frenzy of conti dence in your ability to carve a chick en without hitting them with it the |they will actually start up a conver sation among themselves and jaway from you, and leave you to at- jtack that hen all by yourself And then what. Why, then, when |you are pretty sure they are not look |ing you can lay down your knife and |fork and use your bare hands. Any body that can't carve a chicken with |his bare hands has no right in a din [!ng-room. Rule 3. After the chicken s carved |deal it out in such a manner that there will be something left over, 2 kitty, so that you can ask a guest to |have a second helping without hav ing to give him the platter to lick. Of all the rules this one is the most im {portant. For there is nothing that will more surely destroy the delicate aplomb of a social situation than to | give a guest the platter to lick, If |¥ou do not believe this, try it and see. cf erage Three Sorts of Husbands There are three kinds of husbands: the husband who goes with her and goes in, the husband who goes with her but waits outside and the hus. band who doesn't go with her at all. The reason for this classification is the inexplicable wish on the part of nearly every wife to have her help- meet with her when she goes shop- ping. Women who are not ordinarily con- spicuous for their connubial affection reveal, when shopping time comes, a most unreasonable desire for the com: pany of their lawful wedded spouse: The third type—the one who doesn’t go at all—ts, of course, the kind of person every married man would like | to be but rarely is. Nor is the second to be scorned. He | compromises, it is true, but it may be, as he would argue, that this compro- mise is justified. The Little Lady really needs somebody to help her carry all those bundles and things, and only a boor would refuse to help his own mate when he had the chance. S80 he consents to trotting around with her. But here his ions end. At the entrance to each shop his obliga- tions are temporarily dissolved. He takes one look in at the seething, shrilly chattering mass of batgain This moisture-proof container keeps its CaRanTees QUALITY crispy freshness. 4/ a) OPVLE; OUR coffee taste will tell you what words can’t express—you’ll love the delicious flavor of Nash’s Delicious Coffee. Whether brewed in hard or soft water, it makes a rich, full-flavored, satisfying cup of coffee. It’s the coffee of no regrets. . ~* A new achievement in coffee blending plus that “hot roasted” crispy freshness. Air-cleaned to remove chaif and coffee dust—no bitter flavors. In one and three pound containers. ) } Your Grocer Sells It ~ | KHOURY BROS. is Most Reasonable Prices—All Colors and Sizes. Fe Et ae LIGHT! First, feared as a devil— then worshipped as a god— then served as a master— NOW used as a servant; the patient acolyte of human intelligence that still worships at the shrine of mystery in the language of the nursery. It is the Scourge of Death the Herald of Life the Highway of Intelligence. the Incentive of Genius the Cure of Criminality and the Vehicle of Progress! Autocrat of Animation, the Speed King of Motion, ANNOUNCING The opening of the L. & L. Grocery Monday morning, December 4, with a complete line of groceries and staple supplies. We can save the Casper families 20 cents on every dollar in the grocery line. Just give us a trial and we will convince you. 'L. & L. GROCERY 628 East Yellowstone Ave. Phone 2231 ’ W. A. Lester, Prop. the Giant that lives in the Void. LET THERE BE LIGHT. Natrona Power Co. (Copyrighted by J. M. Brown. All Rights Reserved.)