Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1922. PAGE SIX. Cpe Casper Dalip Cridune ‘an. to the coun-|sibie—and you say to.your wife Che Casper Daily Cribune ting balled up and caught with the goods and hu-) he Boss Took an Awful,.Awful Cha nce. —By Fontaine Fox ,**“.® of Wyoming, in' here: The A. Baxter Simpertons ha : mulated by evplanations that do not explain. | re trust for the purpose of & pablicitived here 17 years and Ne have * SUSINESS TELEPHONES . -+--15 and | You can get by with deception for a time, because = park. , Sen Oe eer at eters Mranch Telephone Exchange ¢ : peopte are naturally trustful and not suspicious. RE A . te gees Fities ”—j-sbgrie “ Sntered at + (Wyoming), Postoftice as second class) You may think you get by for a longer time than The Nei Oe FS ees seety nevi sete 4 ey November 23. 1916. | you do, out from the rirst irregular move you make, Neighbody ine perp aera plee larch great esteem and profound mort'* |tion. and go over and raid his « cellar.” And s0 it comes Anout. confideact in you is destroyed, your friends are wise aid you are not fooling anybody but your- self. They may continue to associate with you and CHARLES W. BARTON -President and Editor Party Surprise parties are more fun than! That “& AGvercstng Representatives. Prvdjen, King & Prucam, 1720-33 Steger You ge: : reus Everybody thinks so Ti; 256 Fittk avenue, New York City . s See 2 “ - +ja party. You gather together Peston, Maw.Suite 404. Sharon Bidg.. ser a have srapeacee with you, but that may be on ‘ > everybody but Se. persons lan a neighbors and = couple of bache's. / gomery St., San Francisco, Cal. Cipies he account of other and better assets you posses nd f he army of you, all dress: tri on file in the New York, Chicago, Boston By 8, ant O¢ ccuRSE iF HE'S i aicieond ay jan the army of ro A jon the other hand they are watching you very | closely. A reputation for dishonesty or trickery is hard 39.00|t0 live down. It bobs up against you at almost 2.50/every move you make. It hoids you back and fre- 450 quently prevents your success in meritorious mat ight of the ball. go snes victims’ lawn and over the and San Francisco offices and visitors arc welcome. s Leder Gone foR THe DAY, L CAN'T LEAVE THESE BudoLes foR HIM To '-| Stoop tles are supposed to be given in the 4 they are supposed to be ae S. crying. y and comfortable and ** ad by such a show of affection, And of course it's a glorious »; | | there fa the American social world. 2 ‘Chey are not supposed to be sad. Pa P 2.38 18 Al subscriptions must be paid {7 advance tion becomes one month tn arrears Member of Audit Burrau of Circulation (4. B. C.) Kick if You Doo't Get Your Tribun. Call 15 or 16 any time between 620 and § o'clock p. m tf you fail to recetve your Tribune. A paper will be de Uvered to you by special messenger. Make it your duty to let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. . EE i> The Casper Tribune's Program ject west of Casper to be authorized once complete and scientific soning system of Casper. A comprehensive municipal and school recreation ptrk system, including swimm'.g pools for the chil Casper. | tor the VED e AR TRPOCUETT ¢ RMS ES TONET POSE POWERED OLTORS or CI PeNL ENS le vard as planned by the county commissioners to den Creek Fi and return. Nairona county ané more high- ble freight rates for shippe-y of the 3 ntain region, and more frequent train serv- for Casper. About Doing Things A\ YOU! Whas do you mean going around with 5 lead in your shoes? Delaying the game, im- © peding progress, and mussing up the parade. Get| = out of the way and permit the fellow with pep and| action to do the things that have to be done. . There's no time to dawdle along and spend an en- tire day plowing just one furrow when there’s a/ » forty acre field to plow before the crop can be put in. When you are putting up hay and a storm cloud is rising in the west, it is not the time to sit down on a hay cock and roll a cigaret or tell a soiled story, get on to the business end of the pitchfork and see how near you can come to breaking it with- ont actually accomplishing that purpose. When there is anything to do do it. Don‘t talk about it or about something else entirely foreign to the thing in view. Don’t wait until next day, next week or next month. Way hold and do the job. : Whatever your business or work in life is, wheth- er for yourself or someone else, you owe it either to yourself or to the other person to do it. To do} it promptly and to the best of your ability. Hop to} it and save a lot of words and language later, ex- plaining why it was not done. Nobody is going to coax you to do things very long. Life is too short and the wheels of progress revolve too rapidly for that. If you don’t get a wiggle on and do what is expected of you, just one! thing happens. Some regular doer of things comes | along some morning and does the things you have been puttering over. Ever stop to take that view of the case when you wasn't doing what you ought to be doing? Heat t eS OaOee TOT ORE STREET FSRTERED ENEDT EomOro Ruan: Their House 6f Worship UR PRESBYTERIAN friends have reached the point when their congregation, now one of the large and growing church bodies of the city has grown tired of makeshifts for a house of worship and decided to undertake the erection of a perma- nent church home for themselves, suited to their neéds and commensurate with their importance as a power for good in the community. The congregation is not an old one nor a rich one, but it has an active and influential member- ship blessed with determination and a desire to serve that has long been felt throughout the city. Casper may well blush for her array of church edifices. With one or possibly two exceptions, we have no church buildings in the city comparing in size, beautiy or suitability of purpose to other structures for other purposes. We have handsome and commodious mercantile and office buildings, are the largest and richest city in the state. We have done about everything else except build churches and attend them. And it is high time that Deily Tribune will not insure delivery after eubscrip i public buildings, hotels, theaters and homes. We, ters in which you deserve to succeed. You are not qufte trusted and are s of raling something when at a matter of fact you i things or big ones. The principle is the — “Semwty scrupulously practiced is the best policy. A crooked deal put over by another successfully, at great profit, may look attractive to you, and! cause you to wonder if you cannot do a similar thing. Reasoning that if it is right in one case it is right in another. This is fallacy. Crookedness is | right in no case. It never prospers. It is never worth trying. It may succeed in instances but it is sure to plague the person who practices it. He cannot put it over for three hundred and sixty-five days in the years like he can upright dealings. And it is the long run that counts. And the epitaph on the tombstone “he was an honest man” is worth a whole lot more to you, dead, than a reputation | for dishonesty, alive. | sh ee Should Reclassify \ ;EKEN George Wharton Pepper, the distinguish- ed senator from Pennsylvania, complains that the people generally take too small interest in pri maries, elections and public affairs, and that the sons of the well-to-do fail in their duty to their country by avoiding a public career, he is right.| But in the same connection, when he asserts that | criticism of the United States senate undermines | the institutions of the government he is wrong. For | he classes honest, constructive ‘crtics along with | red radicals and 1. W. W., Bolsheyists and destruc- tionists of all classes. All who utter a sound against the action of that great and sacred insti- tution is guilty of less majesty and therefore un. dermining the government. In this view the able senator goes too far. The United States senate is a purely political body, where the game of politics is played with the high- est skill and greatest refinement. Still it is played. And while its members would have us believe the body far removed from political influence and de- voted solely to the welfare of the people, the record of its action comes before the world and an an alysis of it tells a different story. The senate sim- ply kids itself not the public. f Senator Pepper has already, in his brief sen- atorial service, come to the senate’s own view of its secredness and freedom from public crititcism. he has caught the disease very early, and will find no more sympathy with his position than with that of others who have served longer and from whom he has contracted the disease, The fact that the congress is criticized 1s obvious by the rush of members to defend it, That it is criticised by its friends equally as well as by its enemies is a matter of significance for congress to note. The friends criticise for'purposes of good. Among them are the best citizens, purest patriots, and! most ardent »upporters of our institutions. They criticise because of their love of institutions that fail to measure up to their ambitions for them. These decline to be ‘classed with destrictionists, extremists or radicals of any type. The good senator from Penasylvania must re arrange his classification if he would do justice to his countrymen who may hold different opinion from himself and his colleagues, respecting the operations of the great legislative body which he honors by his membership in it. —_—_—_—_o—____. Not Forward—Back Into Darkness wt NEXT out of Russia? She las gone so steadily on destroyfng her civilization that it would seem but little remained. The myth of the stork was abolished long ago. Now the communist leaders and teachers have a systematic program for the destruction of sacred and traditional things that takes what little, joy, beauty and covi- fort there is remaining in the life of this once great and happy people, Holidays, Christmas, Jewish and infidel alike, are to be erased from the calec2sr, Those having | a religious significance are especially taboo. East- |er, the Passover, Yom Kipper, Christmas all must go into the descard even symbols employed in the celebration of those anniversaries, and information, literature, pictures all must be destroyed that the children grow up without knowledge of the origin, of customs and ceremonies of former times. ‘we paid some attention to the places and the con- yeniences of the places in which we may hope to have our souls saved. Casper is rich and the people are liberal. Tt ought not to be a very hard task for our good Presbyterian friends to raise the funds necessary to build a suitable place of worship as well as an ornament to the city. It is a task that must be done. We all want Cas per to be a moral as well as a progressive city. It can be neither successfully without churches and Sabbath schools. Let us all join with our good friends and help them accomplish their good work. psa SS eins NST a NLR SS A Dependable Policy FELLOW who %said “honesty is the best policy,” saié a mouthful; if you will permit the use of English more forceful than elegant. He may have spoken from actual experience with both sys- tems or he may have had a transaction with some one who practiced only the one system and hail not yet recovered from the sting. Be that as it may, he uttered a bit of philosophy that will be good for all time. And how much easier it {s to be honest and square than it is to be tricky and deceitful. Not any trouble at all, and then every thing balances and comes out even as it should. There is no get- ‘As An Institution He Has Passed Period. On the the culmination of a persisent pro- Sapta Claus is banished. He is ordered to detour jpeale where making his annual pilgrimage over | the earth. ; } The child mind is not to be enslaved by angels ; and symbols. The psychologically ruinous impren- ions on children due to decorations and legen ot | “decadent religions” are to be avoided in the fu- ture. ; To take the place of all things banished and de \stroyed and to compensate for the loss, music, the- jatricals and anti-religious discourse will be sub- | stituted. | On top of this comes the announcement from the | high officers of the soviet regime, that the state printing bureau has completed an approved work tor general distribution entitled “The Failure of The world has watched Russia move on from one failure to another since the fall of autocracy. That {form no doubt should have been greatly liberal- | | ized in the early day of unrest among the people, that it was not we have the result before us today. | Bad as the czarist form may have been it was to j be preferred to what the Russian people endure today: | In their extremity to destroy, that history, ex- perience and philosophy should be discarded is ap- | palling but that God should be repudiated marks the lust stage of the journey to chaos for the Rus- sian people. | the anomalous product of a particular| prophet of precise apparel, the weath- contrary, his was! ercock of what to wear, the custcdian of the country’s classiest cut cos- away by the wind. wwRes PERSERODEEDSUEDED® oREREDOET TERRI STORET TEER ERC TES ~=Ere Tere y The world has been so very busy of late—what with war and peace and @ thousand and one other disconcert- ing things—that certain smaller phe momena have been cehated of what ‘would ordinarily be their due mead of *Fecognition. Such a phenomenon is the disappearance of the dude. And yet the dude was no mean ure in his day. The politician, the suffragette, the tired business man, @id not receive more publicity. Nor was ha the creature of an hour, gress through the centuries. At vari- times, under various names, he figured prominently in various is of culture. He was the fop, the fribble, the dandy, the exquisite, the coxcomb, the beau. of ctfvilization’s more frivolous ‘ges- tures; a separate and distinct being, who had no more in common with the rest of his fellow men than pate de fig-|fos gras has with corned beef and cabbage. As he formerly flourished the dude| was first of all distinguished by his| uselessness is debatable. fastidiousness of dress, He was the} fence to the stares and He was one| | sort of person who would so cons: tumes. His most obvious characteris- tics were his willingness to sn any- thing he thought might improve his appearance, und his superb indiffer- sneers of an_unappreciative yokelry. Your true dude never strove to Jus: tify his own existence on this earth of ours. He was willing to be con- sidered a parasite because he enter- tained a profound contempt for the! him. Yet the question of his utte True, he took no part in what the economists CARRY OUT fl are fond of calling ‘constructive; work,” but fs this suffident ev® dence to condemn him? ! The dude had his uses. He was a evotes of the opera and the better class of play; ;he was never missed at & new art gallery hanging; the best books found their way to his shelves. These things may have been affecta- tions, but affected long enough and cleverly enough, even a taste for the| least desirable traits of the dude—tha| esthetic acquires a tinge of reality. But now the dude is gore. Gone, not like a thief in the night, for he was far too dignified of carriage for} this, but rather Ike a thin, wavering | wisp of incense that is swept rudely In the matter of dress this is not because he has stopped to mingle with | his fellow nen, but because his fellow- men hav. ascended to surround him. The distinctive earmarks of the dude | —the cigarette, the spats, the poly-| chromatic cravat—are as common to- day as straw hats in summer. His last symbol, the wrist watch, was snatched from him by the war. Wrist watches are worn now by men who swear and spii and play poker—rough men with hair on their chests and red blood is their ve'ns, and a vast cuantity of grim determination biat- ant upon their physlognomies. No, in the matter of dress he has not really gone. Hoe is simply out- numbered, indistinguishable in the throng of his equally flamboyant brothera. But in the matter of culture he {ts certainly a type of the past. The ay- erage man of today has too active a fear of heing deemed effeminate to participate in cultural activities or at- tend cultural displays. Our eminent English visitors and impression col- lectors have been unanimous in warn- ing us against permitting the pursuit of Beauty to rest with the fair’ sex| alone, The Little Theater movement for example—a movement which more than any other of {ts sort demands} the co-operation of the sexes—is being Supported almost entirely by women. Were he alive today the dudo would de an enthusiastic advocate and an invaluable critic of the Little Thea-| ter movement. | THe office Boy mice. s'p, but he represented also manners neatness, cleanliess, ad color. Would history be half so picturesque were j ft not for the Brummeis, the Nashes, the Christopher Hadd the egal Wildes? It is pointed out that we have the | lounge lizard; but this ts poor conso- Jation. The modéern lounge lifard !s an inferior person who embraces t idleness, the crooked little fingers in| mauve tapestried tea roor:s—but none | of his commendable qualities. —_—_—_—_———— The Poet’s Song .."' The poet sang a jubilant song Of woods and valleys and fields, He sang of the joy the victor can now, And the courage that never yields. And, 6h, he sang with a confident heart Axa vision of things that are; He sang of the healing—never wound, And never sang he of the scar. | His lyric told of the radiant stars In deeps of elivery night, He sang of the love that ever is true, And the glory of wrong made right. Amidst the throng a listener sat ‘Who timidly caught the strain, ‘Who half unconsciously Ufted his soul In the wholesome and sweet refrain, With a Iifted soul and lifted hope, Life budded for him and grew— The post asinging his humble song Sang better then ever he knew. —Maude De Verse Newton. Title to Hell's Half Acre On December 14 the Hon. Frank W. Mondell introduced in the house of representatives a bill granting Hell's Half Acre to the county of Natrona of which the following is a co) Be it enacted by the senate and house of representatives of the United States of America in congress assem- bled, that upon reconveyance by the state of Wroming to the United The dude, in short, may have repre- States of section 36, township 36 sented sofa cushions and insipid gos-'north, range 86 west. of the s! ieee @ i, It stays fresh and crispy in this moisture-proof container. S HIPPED the same day as roasted, A’ perfected blend of carefully selected, high grown mountain coffees (the richest, most pleasing kind obtainable) roasted, steel cut and air-cleaned with exacting care. Full-flavored, smooth, sat and refreshing— whether you brew it in hard or soft weter, it retains its uniform, ly delicious flavor and wonderful aroma. “Your coffee taste will tell you.” . Tn one and three-pound containers) Grocers _ At Your LITTLE PRESENT FROM THE Boss FoR THiS PARTICULAR BIT oF WoRK WrrTH “THE Boss’? WiFE . But the parties r given The Simpert®ns are surpris thetr benefit. and do the parties real-/half to death. And are as happy ani ly make them happy and comfortable) comfortab’e and proud as they cay and proud? Yes, in the same sense be. You know this ts so. because they as lynch’ng parties are given to please Say 80. But you could have told the victims. was so even if they hadn't sald » Now suppose that you are John J.\Mrs. Simperton, who was darn’ Jones, who lives in a fashionable sub-| stockings as you came in and urban ne'ghborhood, with a wife and her happy says. “Holy Moses! 1 a car and a healthy appetite for a faints all over the cat. And Mr. sir friendly game of bridge. And a day Perton walks in in his B, V. D.’s a comes when it seems to you that &&y¥8— things are very dull. There is noth-| You never saw = poe and hostess ing going on. No bridge parties tn made so happy an“ comfortable ang the offing. No dances. Nothing. Proud in all your life ‘What ts the thing that comes to you to do? ‘The thing to do is obvious. You do not hesitate, In such s predicament nobody ever hesitates. \t is time to start a surprise party. And you do, You pick out of the neighborhood a fine large house—a house with a good floor for dancing and a good phonograph and as few bables as pos-! THE BLIND have been made to SEE. THE DEAF have been made to HEAR. THE LAME have been made to WALK. YOUR DISEASE is curable by the scientific appli- cation of Chiropractic philosophy. ROBERT GROVE, Chiropractor Palmer School Graduate 112 East Second St. ‘ Phone 2220 WILL GET A VERY Principal meridian, the estate is here- by authorized to select within the state an equa! area of unreserved, un- entered, nonmineral public land tn lieu of the tract thus reconveyed. . Section 2. That upon the reconvey- ance to the United States by tha state of Wyoming of the lands described tn FINE UPHOLSTERY Cushions and special] pieces made to order. THOMAS LONGHURST 535 West Yellowstone Phone 129-J Formerly With the Shaffer-Gay Furniture Co. authorized to convey said lands and 0 the north half of section 1, town- p_36_north, range 86 west. of the al shi KINCAID-KIMBALL CLOTHES SELZ AND PACKARD SHOES “Famous for Fine Tailoring” Goodrich's Quality Rubber Footwear FASTEST GROWING MEN’S STORE IN CASPER. TheFad Shoe & Clothing Co. RELIABLE GOODS AT REASONABLE PRICES 220 South Center St. Next Door to Kimball’s Drug Store CHEERFUL NEWS FOR CHRISTMAS SHOPPERS This great sale for men continues all this week, and beginning tomorrow (Wed- nesday) our store will be open evenings until 9 o’clock until Christmas. QUALITY GOODS AT LOWERED PRICES! Kincaid-Kimball You Can’t Find Quality Clothes Better Boys’ Suits Represent the best clothes value in : America and at these lowered prices you At these prices. Some of the Suits have two pairs Pants; full lined, reinforced cannot afford to buy cheaper clothes. $35.00 Kincaid-Kimball Suits and Over- seat and knees, tape-sewed seams; good values at coats, sale $24.75 $4.95, $6.75, $8.75 and $11.75 price = $40.00 Kincaid-Kimball Suits and Over- 929.75 PAIS coats, sale Suits and Over- KEEP YOUR 934.75 | FEET DRY << Boys’ heavy Wool Mackinaws at price ...... SHOES Men's Dress Shoes. Fine black and mahogany leather. $45.00 Kincaid-Kimball coats, sale Our Entire Stock of Men’s, Women’s and Children’s Goodyear welt. Epaial House Slippers eens Overshoes. 5 s Shoes. Every pair guar- Now on Sale at Lowered Prices. price -----_ 1.9 teed to wear. Regular $7 and $8 values. Our Storm Rubbers. Special _. 95c This is the Slipper Sale of the town, and while we have several hundred és 4 7 we Ladies’ Rubbers. Latest styles in calf skin | Pairs and many styles we don’t expect ° and SPA kids. hele to neve a single pair left when this | 5#!® Price ----- 69c rices 45, 9 sale ends Saturday night. Men's Felt 5.45. : f si! Shoes. Special B Led Men’s heavy fleeced Union Suits, 95¢ and... $1.19 mie ete nee Sate Sa oe Guy auth ape aes Fine quality heevy Ribbed Union Suit: Fine Silk and Wool “De Luxe” Union Suits__ $5.95 Men’s Dress Socks, 25c, 35c, 45c and 75c m Suits, ance $5.95 Shirts at 85 and... GLAD ale pose ee EAS ane Re Men’s Pajamas sale price .. $1.95 Men’s fine Velour Hats..o...cccooeun$4.45 Men's and Boys’ Winter Caps, sale prices. 45c, 75c, 95c to $1.95 Men’s Fabric Dress Gloves ——.s...-+-..35¢ Men’s Four-in-Hand Ties, sale prices__......._..45c, 75, 95c and $1.45 We'll be glad to show you, whether you buy or not and we'll meet you with a smile. The Fad.