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PAC Cbe Casper Daily Cribune med every evening except Sunday at Cusper, jounty, Wyo. Public Offices, Tribune Building. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is ex for publication of all news cr Member of the Assochited Press. SinesS TELEPHONES .... ancn Telephone Exchange Conn: tered at Casper (Wyoming), Posttfic iy entitled to the marter, November 72, TARLES W. BARTON ..........President and Editor s etur Advertising Representatives. . King & Pruddm, 1720-33 Steger oe wert mite New York City: ; 286 Fittr avenue, ‘ 5 ts New Mont} ston, Mas.,Suite 404, Sharon Bidg., 55 > ery 3 San Francisco, Cal. Cipies of the Dally the New York, Chicago, Bos ; on fi Pivune are on file Tak." Cuiene, Ta San Francisco offices ané Se ee meg Ome T son displays and learned ma became as a result better known abroad, and it became very strongly impressed on the oiher na- tions of the wor'd that America was a big factor in the world’s source of supply. : | Foreign commerce cannot be built without gov- ernment aid. So tae government should give every possible assistance to concerhs desirous of invading foreign business fields. There should be many more ships every year flying the American flag, so that we will be able to obtain and hold a posi |tion as a world power in commerce. | | Tad Sin. HE Pure Food Show at the Arkeon continuing over today and this evening has attracted le who have shown great interest in the mane cated ay things with reference | to the foods we eat heretofore unknown. Housewives go home with many new ideas which e SUBSCRIPTION RATES | will come on to the family dinner table from time) t By Carrier or By Mall 3200/0 time in the future. 1 All eubsery ’ vs ally Tiibune will not insure delivery ym becomes one month in arrears. MI Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C) Don’t Get Your Tribune. A paper will be era Casper Tribune’s Program v 3 ® Irrigation project west of Casper to be authorize n@nd completed. at once. A complete and scientific soning sy eelty of Casper. 1 and school recreation A comprehensive mu! Spark pom Pa including swimming pools for the chit dron of Casper. Completion of the established Scenic Route boule- Fvard as plann the county commissionera to Gar- den Creek Fa © Bet ds for Natrona count ominy e Tretght rates for shippe-s of the region, and more frequent train serv: stem for the and more bigh- for Casper. Should the Act Be Tolerated? - ARE yiolations of traffic regulations; or the publi 3 ll of th nd against the proprieties and de- neies nowledged and observed by all men who ave but a spark or trace even of those finer feel- igs of consideration, that go with what we are leased to call human civilization as distinguished rom the brute Yesterday a liitle funeral cortege was solemnly vending its way from the church to the cemetery t was the last journey of a little’ child, that had een the joy and hope in the household of young arents. The experience of life through which they ere passing weighed heavily upon them. Their vmpathetic friends who were accompanying them u their sad journey had exhausted their powers f consolation, and the modest little procession | oved slowly down the street enshrouded in a loom through which no ray of brightness could senetrate. Suddenly 1oisy truck, tel} from out the traffic came a loaded, nosed itself into the line immedi-- ud dropped out at an alley to deliver its load. There may be no special rule to govern a situa~ ica of this character and no term by which it is lescribed in the statute books of the city, but t. would seem that there must be some authority omewhere who would point out to that truckdriver he duties incumbent upon him in the use of public itreets, the proprieties observed in Christian and ‘ivilized communities andthe obligations of con- ideration he owes to other users of the streets. The load of coal or whatever it may have been| part. he truck driver was delivering would not have een delayed in reaching its destination more than 1 few moments. Is time so precious to a truck- (river that he needs must crowd into other people's solemn grief and disturb and annoy them in this meouth and barbarous manner? Are such brutes as this example, to be permitted to enjoy the use of public property and facilities, when they so glaringly lack a sense of proper ase and a total lack of appreciation of the com- mon decencies? WSS eee SS What Further Excuse. Bb the unpaved streets, leading to the va- rious suburbs of the city, freeze up in their present deep rutted condition it would be a splen- did idea if the city street force would at least run the graders over those thoroughfares and bring down the humps and ridges and make possible to »perate the well-known Henry Ford cars over them without the certainty of shipwreck which has at- tended such voyages in the prat several weeks. It was bad enough that these unpaved streets were neglected all summer long. That residents going back and forth were compelled to wear down the humps from the previous winter and the ridges left by the laying of gas and water mains. Dwellers in the outlying territory are entitled to consideration. Tha city has procrastinated. too long, has promised too often, has deceived too con- tinuously for patience to longer be a virtue. These streets need attention at once and the peo- ple residing along them and beyond them are en- titled to storm the city hall with demands until something is done. It is a shame the City of Casper should bear no longer. Encourage Business and Comme:ce. T[\HE WAR had many lessons which the Ameri- can people should have learned, and it had, if war can be viewed in such a way, many advan- Jao accruing to business which should not be ost. . Before the war Americen business interests had made but a comparatively small beginning in the foreign countries. Then the war came along, and the very prosecu- tion of the war itself made transoceanic transpor- tation necessary. It was necessary to send sup- plies abroad for the troops, and indirectly it con- tained the lesson that there should have been a great deal of American products going overseas. The war had also this ericans better known outside their own country. Before the war America was little known in some sections of the world. Pecple from the United States who went outside their own country for business purposes were, not so very many when rou think of the size of the economic resources. But the war brought a de- your duty to » are oifenses against the rules laid down| then there are crimes against \to the hour of |in which their unknown dead was honored. | I4 is pleasant to contemplate the British offi- between \the hearse and the car of the grief-/hands, into which were stitched and woven the real tricken parents, continued on for several squares| | point—that it made Am- | dinner, but never before of an instance where! | purse. The displays, exhibitions and demonstrations lare all worth while and serve to acquaint many jof the unknowing with matters with which they should be familiar. : The show is not devoted entirely to the exhibi- tion ar.i demonstration of foods. There are social features fully as attractive, music and dancing dur- ing the evening hours, and the meeting of old; | friends and the forming of new acquaintances. The show is entirely worth visiting, and has time between 630 and 8 o'clock P- ™ | brought about a better and closer relation between dealér and customer and done it all in a very | pleasant way. r Graceful Tribute. ARE NOT «0 steeped in prejudice because of j other matters and incidents in which our | English cousins have been concerned, that we re main blind to a graceful act and insensible to at {tention containing real sentiment. | Long after the close of the public observance of Armistice day, when the president of the United) States had placed upoi the tomb of the unknown) ‘American hero of the great war a wreath symbolic of the love and reverence in which the people hold the memory of that simple and faithful soldier of| the republic, the members of the British embassy droye to Arlington cemetery and placed alongside} the American wreath, a British one made of eng: | lish flowers bearing this touching legend, “In Uz-| dying Memory.” | The English act was totally without audience,| | without photographers to record it in picture: | Quietly, at close of day as the sun sank behind | the Appalachian mountains, the representatives | lof the Pritish nation paid this tribuie to our heroic | |dead, comrade of their heroic dead in the same} | cause. The visit to Aflington was timed to correspond the ceremony at Westminster Abbey cials journeying to Arlington and doing this kind| thing. In remembering their own thoy did) not forget ours Their words upon the wreath| were very appropriately chosen, for in undying) memory shall always be held the American soldier| and his brothers in arms in all the armies that) fought the great war. — Bex ee a We Have Drifted. N THIS DAY and age we exhaust ourselves in| the preparation for Christmas, in efforts to} overreach ourselves in the giving of gifts and the| making of the sacred holiday an occasion for she} exchango of merchandise i We have grown entirely away from those little; remembrances that meant so much to friendship’ and neighborly regard. Things made by our own} affection of the giver. All that has been supplanted, by the things you buy. Things that have no significance except their value in meney. Things anybody can buy and, have to their heart’s content and the limit of their The real meaning of the day should not be lost to view. It should be emphasized. The spiritual) values should be brought out more forcibly. It should be community action in. which the church schools of all denominations should have There should be pageantry, there should be community singing, Christmas carols, and all that revives and keeps fresh in the memory the beau- tiful traditions surrounding the birth of the Savior. Such an observance by the community will serve to make the day what it really should be. A day of joy, of spirit of soul. z Popularity of Golf. Rt eeeASts will be interested to learn that William Flynn, the geeat golf player of Penn- sylvania believes that the game to which they are so ardently attached will within the ensuing ten years become the national game and supplant baseball. Mr. Flynn declares that golf {s going right ahead in all parts of the country. It is becoming more and more popular everywhere. Links are being con- structed constantly and the number of persons in- terested in the game is increasing daily There are many reasons for the spread of the popularity of golf. It is a game for all. The game has opportunities in it for nearly every one. To play golf one need not fulfill the more difficult requirements for other sports. It does not re- quire orgahization. Baseball requires at least eighteen men, and it is difficult very often to get that many together if a few want’ to engage -in the game. The same is true of football and the other games which have become well established in public popularity. Another argument in favor of golf over other sports is that it does not require the training or physical condition which is neces- sary for other sports, and practice does not de- pend on getting eighteen or twenty-two men to- gether. Golf is a game where the personal element is always dominant. The ‘individual is always in the foreground, in the sense that he must d-pend on his own prowess in playing the game. There are scarcely any exceptions to this, with the possible exception of ice skating or track events. Billiards might be termed an individual game, but the next! play depends greatly on where the last man leaves the balls, Hs. would you like to be tried by a jury for an offense, and your guilt or innocence deter- mined by the cutting of a pack of cards by two jurors delegated to perform this delicate act of jus- tice? Such was the case in South Dakota. We have heard of pulling straws, flipping coins and of wretches hanging that jurrmen could go to —o—______ justice was meted out by a pack of cards. PrmiUntniRht s Aad gc hos A SHORT time ago the daily news on one particu- - lar day contained nine outstanding cruel country and its great one murders. Since that time the acquittal of all but |nal of Commerce, E Che Casper Dailp Cribune Hed tmprovement along these lines. America The Absent-Minded Professor. HAT Te Pe at HERE ANO 'L FIND 17 Boosting Home Town “It ts characterisdc Populations to display loyalty to anc confidence in .thelr home communt!- ties, big or Mttle,” observes fhe Jour- “There is real. no- bility In this disposition to impro nad increase the sperity of the home town. Appeg’s for investment of su‘pius funds fy enterprises ‘for the good of the town’ seldom fail to registtr approval of the most sub- stantial kind, “But too often well thought out plans of local citizens for industrial increase along conservative lines meet with opposition, while strangers promoting new concerns and demand- ing large concessions of land and stock subscriptions, while promising large profits, are received with favor. Too often these unstable enterpris ‘blow up’ in a year or’ two, leaving loyal citizens in possession of worth- less stock certificates and allen pro- moters in possession of rich proceeds from stock sales. It is all done with- in the law, being simply an unloading of topheavy enterprises on unwary citizens. “Always, presumably, there will be gulible people with money in every community. But it is hard to sym- ot American trust a dollar with rsponsible fellow. townsmen, but turn over their casn cheerfully 40 strangers who come to their towns with but one purpose— that of organizing a new industry on a fifty-fifty basis, only to leave it te languish elone after they have adrolt ly but legally “disposed of their own interest—and then flit to some other town to repeat the offence. “Strangers, who profess a warmer interest in a town than even the town’s people have, may well be viewed with suspicion. Really, there are no people so unnatural. When a stranger preaches love for a com- munity it is community assets he {s efter, and nothing else. Ge as SE ancesly [The Zero Hour Jim was « fairly new husband, Madge was a fairly new wife. And they frequently bragged to the neighbors That theirs was a quarrelless life. But today there's a coolness between them, Smiths came to dinner last night, Madge looked up thelr gift in the gift book— The To be sure “salts and peppers” was right. Then Jim picked one up between courses And sald, “Gee! He must have a score— Madge, where did these dinky ones come from? I never saw this bunch before.” Marjorie Diven. Dancing Before the Lord “Everywhere religion began with the dance,” says Réy. Dr, Wiliam Norman Guthrie of St. Mark’sin-the -Bouwerle, and “we cannot have a genuine religious revival unless we restore the primitive art to its dis- nity and turn to { for assistance,” notes a writer in the Brooklyn Eagie, “A revivali® Mke Dwight L. Moody or the Rev. Billy Sunday. might pro- test thia -view. But Dr. Guthrie is Probably right in saying that ‘prim- itive man was not much interested in sex(’ so far as dancing goes and ‘‘it is only we who get excited about sex.’ That control of the body, poise of the boty, grace in the movements of the body mean much to spiritual grace and polse may not be disputed. “We are informed in Second Sam- uel, vi:l4, that ‘David danced before the Lord with all his might, and Dawid was girded with a linen ephod.’ How long the ephod was even the rabbis are uncertain, But it had mere shoulder-straps, was made of ‘threafs of blue and purple and scar- let, end fine twined linen, embroid- ered in gold.” That was primitive art. David, {n¢Psalms eix:3, imposed has been reported, but the convicted one evened up matters by escaping. his dancing ‘views on” the ‘people; ‘Let them praise Him (Jehovah) in 4 ‘ ” PLEASE Deny FORGET To LEAVE YOuR oTHER CLEANED —- ” MY HAT BLEW OVER pathize with losers who woulc not |» Be Pe CANT stance! NERY STRANS oe he dance.” The ancient Jews may have employed a sort of square dance in thelr ceremonials, as intimated in Santicles vi:l. Certain it is that they had religious processions with danc- ng to the music of flutes, trumpets, timbrels, cymbals and drums which lisappeared only after, the Greeks hag introduced the ‘phallic element and Mad infereqtially associated it with all dancing. At least this is the view of Jewish theologians. “Dr. Guthrie ‘9 sure that some thing wonderful could be done with the civilized population ‘of American ‘4 that population. were as sound and in as perfecs possession of the boay as is the barbarien or the sav- age.” We do not know. Every-day Americans have to work so hard to pay the piper that they have neither time nor ¢ left for dancing. That is the riing anomaly of our civilization. unsympathetic world to anything ove medium height or a 4% shoe. Yes, of all feminine shapes and sizes the tall girl has had the rough- est time of it. Her fat sister, despite her pathetic plaints, always got along very well on the whole. And, besides, she can Isy .cff.the sundaes and French pastry any time she wants to with heartening results. As for the thin ones, their slimness is now the admiration" and envy of” their Zat friends. They can slip into an empty space on a subway seat that entirely eludes a heavier weight; they can wear the straight Ine costumes that are ths despair of the plump and they can go as far as they 1!.2 with ice cream and fudge without a thought for the future. And when it came to the advan- tages and blessings of the small sizes —well they've just had it all their ‘own way ever since the invention of reances and roadsters made summer and moonlight famous. No, five feet ight fs hardly In the “cute” class. ‘Again, unusual height has hereto- always made its possessor ‘ort of public character so to spec,’ so that every introduction to a new to suit the daiety petiteness that it}ecavaintance brought forth com- sonsidered should betoken the female}ments of the kind that are made in if the species, cr to accommodate looking at a new exhibit in the zoo. sice;” average is distinctly We recall one tall who used to Tall Girls Now in Style. . This {s the day of, the call girl. For years she has been struggling dong in % misfit world—a world cut FOR HER CHRISTMAS BUY AN ORIENTAL RUG AT THE CHAMBERLIN FURNITURE CO. KHOURY BROS, . Most Reasonable Prices—-All Colors and Sizes. Quality Is Remembered Long After Price Is Forgotten : That's why so many people insist on Miche- lin Cords and Michelin Tubes—and Miche- .lin prices are no higher than others not so good. R. M. MOSHER THE MICHELIN MAN 316 W. Yellowstone Phone 309 35, Ei i 8 i fe # i f i 8 § i Fi 3 i 4 Es Villian © A. it, who with them. with Dr. Kimball, Dt for the reason of all this| so™alY has moved to the O-S building Dr. ere. M. 1 Quaker Oats Cooks to perfection in 3 to 5 minutes The Only Oats That cook in five minutes Now Qualier Oats hold supreme place, the world over, in two important ways. est They are the finest-flavored oats in existence. They are flaked from queen grains only—just the rich, plump, flavory oats. We get but ten pounds of such flakes from a bushel. For mahy a year, oat lovers the world over have sent for Quaker Oats because of that matchless flavor. Those who know It will not go without it. Now a Quick Style Now that same flavor, that same quality, come in a Quick style. Quick Quaker Oats cooks in 3 to 5 minutes, and it cooks to perfection. It is by far the quickest-cooking oats in the world. In the Quick style the oats are cut before flaking. They are rolled very thin and are partly cooked. So the flakes are smaller and thinner—that is all, And those smal!, thin flakes cook quickly. Get Quaker Oats always, in fairness to yourself. This is the food of foode—the greatest food that grows. You want the dish delightful. But tell your grocer which style you want, the Quick or the regular. He has both, and the price is the same for either. Regular Quaker Oats Comte in package at left — the style you have always known. Quick Quaker Oats Come in package at right, with the “Quick” label. —————— Your grocer has both. Be sure to SS —so=gtt the style you want. i Es AL tale i Fe 112 to announce that a t g a 2g oa¢ was E. he ing 7! Packed in sealed round packages with removable covers ANNOUNCING The opening of the L. & L. Grocery Monday morning, December 4, with a complete line of groceries and staple supplies. 4» 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. 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 “gOPEOELS VO FOD ODEO LODO: ~