Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 21, 1922, Page 6

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PAGE SIX. Che Casper Daily Cribune é 15 and i6 All Departments BUSINE franch TELEPHONES g me Exchange Connec Entered at Casprr (Wyoming). Postoffice as second class marter, November 23, 1916. CHARLES W. BARTON .........-President and Editor Adverrsmg Tepresentatives. Prvdten. King & Prucdm, 1720-23 Steger Biég., Chicags Y. may by refrining from investment. The average man looks on spending as something which should be avoided as much as possible. In fact, he thinks that if he may prevent expenditure it is quite |an achievement. Of course, the man in present: day business life has got away from this illusion to a very great extent, but at times he does act as if he really believed it. ML 286 Ras svenus. now ie ogg Bed wane. Many business men who depend on their own gomery St. Sar Srancisco, Cal. Cipies ee sate experience alone and disregard fundamental prin aynune are on piu in she iow Tous aro weceme. ciples evolved as well through the experience of —— others continuously think of economic principles of op pe ca Penge good business as demanding saving. To a certain a Sunens 9 extent they are correct, but they fail to realize that 450 they are also very wrong in their idea. In other 25 13 oS — 4 the All subscriptions must be paid in advance an Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscrip tion becomes one month tn arrears. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©) if Don't Get Your Tribune. Call ps 16 tin be ¢ between 630 and 8 o'clock p.m ff you fail to receive your Tribune. A paper will be de Uvered te yru ty special messenger. Make it your duty to let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you The Casper Tribune’s Program utborized Irrtgat to be @ and © m project west < feted at once ie lete and scientific zoning system tor t per. prehensive municipal and school recreation neluding swimming poole for the chil of the established Sceaic Route boul 1 by the couaty commisionera to Gar s return trona county and more bigh- > freight rates for shippe-s of the in region, and more frequent train eerv: || tor Casper. 5 | | Nerve in Executing Crime. | E BOLDNESS of a crime often means its! success. Take for instance, the robbery of the Denver mint. It wa: staged at half past ten in the forenoon when the business day was well under | way and the streets crowded with people. It was at the main entrance of the mint where money was | bei loaded into a Federal Reserve truck, where} the bandits opened fire on the guards and other| and grabbed two hundred | thousand dolla ved away in the thick traf:| fic in the car they arrived in. | It would seem such a robbery was impossible under the conditions that obtained at the time. No one scarcely knew what was taking place until it was over and the guards began firing at the rob- bers. The plans were bold and took into account the | crowds upon the streets and the fact that guards | would not dare fire. Then it was simply a mo- ment’s work to disable one guard and surprise the rest, seize the money packages, toss them into the tonneau of the car and tumble in themselves nd with a nervy driver at the wheel escape. There huve been many bold robberies in the coun- try from time to time, but even in the picturesque days of the James boys and other gangs that infest- ed the west in the long ago, and earned reputations for nerve and execution in taking other people's rty, none of those displayed the cool delib- erate daring of the mint bandits. The interesting question arises—would _ these game thieves under other cnreumstances display ing like the nerve and daring in a good cause, that they have shown in a bad one? s, killed one gus attache rs and words, they shun theory, because they believe it is incompatible with business, and in trying to 7un counter to it they at times violate the most funda |mental principles of economics, business or any- | thing else you please to call it. The man who is is always trying to avoid putting ‘out more money in the way of further investment jto extend his business is going to lose many op portunities to gain greater profit. He confuses |the belief that spending is wasteful with the idea he should have that spénding without a propor tionate return on his investment is a losing prc sition. It is self-evident that if investing $1,000 in going to give $100 in addition to the sum invest ed, it would be foolish to think of not investing. eS Future Traveling Speedier. [TRANSPORTATION has been the one effective means of building up. the country. We now look upon the railroads as a matter of course, just as we may other things in our envoron ment. But more than superficial thought will) show their part in the upbuilding and development of the country all the way from one seaboard to the other. People in various communities must sec each other to trade with each other, even though that meeting be occasional. The products whicl thus figure in trade have to be transported. When the country was still small it was more or les satisfactory to let it take weeks for products t.: moved from the producer to the consumer. there came a time when the country began to ‘le velop faster than the slow moving means which weer then at hand. In the olden days, travel required weeks, for dis-| tances now covered in a few days. It would be unthinkable for any one now to start on a journey across two or three states and be satisfied with getting there in three or four weeks. Business, much less pleasure, would not it it. A busi- ness man may leave his desk for a few weeks in Florida or California. he must spend as little of it as possible on the) train. He therefore finds fast traina virtually a necessity. As the means of travel and transportation became speedier, business grew. They go hand in hand. The day is now not far distant when present facil. we do automobiles for shorter trips. Co-Operative Marketing. HE OUTSTANDING development of American agriculture is co-operative marketing. largest movement at the present time is the rapid development of this form of marketing. There have been co-operative organizations in the United States since 1841, and possibly earlier than that, but the development of really effective co-operative five years. three years than in all the highest development is found the fruit growers. revious time. n California among The time is limited, and! ities will be back numbers and we will be using air-} planes instead of trains for long distances, just as} The | marketing has taken place within the last twenty- | More has been done within the last | The} _Cbe Casper Daily Cribune The Terrible Tempered Mr. Bang. MR. BANG WAS HAVING A ‘TALK WITH HAROLD ABouT THE WAY HE WAS SPENDING MONEY AT COLLEGE AND WAS TR'TING To REASON WITH THE SOY BUT UNLUCKILY HAROLD THREW GACK HIS CoAT DISCLOSING HIS FRATERNITY WHICH WAS oF PLATINUM ‘SET WITH REAL EMERALDS AND wens PEARLS AND DiAMoNDs ! | ' t ‘ In the I Used to Sleep. There was the softest, whitest bed In she room where I used to sleep, And a quaint faded little patchwork silty ideas of people in the gurding the climate of Alas! Southern Alaska has an Oregon- | Washington climate, due to the Jap- anese current, which has the same et- fect from Ketchikan to Cape Spen cer as it has on Puget Sound, result- ates re-|of locality no longer led him to The Winter Woods spread, " F esi ‘ I love the sober winter woote,. the And a cest that was b eal MM gk 4h ee Soe eee trees pes at was brown and tremely del'ghtful eummess. Very) With ther clean trunks. and boughs The |seidom, in the last twenty years, has) *hats i cleas ana backs minbigs sheltered the | window /+n9 ehermometer reached zero in this| Are etched against she blue, with] And the stars looked through when |*tire section. ' here and there the boughs were tare, | The interior of Alaska, made fa-\4 nest more silent for the memories And mother's footstep was on the Mcus by txasgerating novelists, has o¢ sonz it holds. I love the calm— sd phe tone a ‘climate closely duplicating Min. ie pees j Buy Y Hard Candies f In diatom where 1 used to sleep, (esata In the winter, and Malne @r| that broods noon the frozen earth| uy Your Hard Candies for 4 "|Oregon in summer. SoA als | Xmas S ‘kings ‘There were the fairest golden hours, Summer is wanton, taking thought AT THE in the room where I used to sieep.| | Dangerous Ductless | nor care \ And a fatry powers Her jealous guard would keep. queen with wondrous) Glands. cease flicted,an injury upon the lady's head which interfered wit the proper func- tioning of the pituitary gland, which} regulates the accumulation of fat in! A Fairy Story. I met a family tn Junvau, Alaska, that had formerly resided in Cleve- T asked th —By Fontaine Fox Toy Hunting With Pa. Little Room Where! t= an¢ further remarks abou: the ' nity a victim whose damsged bump |For bird or flower, and giving no sur-} Of beauty till the soul is surfeited. | [And all the shadows scurrying black| “A recent decision by a federal) TOE Sette ny corel Could never frighten her bold dream/jcourt in Kansas awarding damages ered (Ware ! pack to a lady from @ railroad for injuries| Who lingers when the rest have Oh, brave, dream fairies. come back, jrecelved by her collision with a loco-! ta ee come back moive culls public attention to. the One leaf that fames mid others dry From the room where I used tejdangeroifs nsture of the Cuctles! ene ceeds nore, reward seep! glands which people carry abo’ One. winter .x-olet is Mu eiercneal —Sixty Years Ago. |their persons," observes the New! Than all. the wealth that summer oa York Sun, days hl, ean y Tien. q # | "I this case the locomoti Fe ae ee et Alaskan Winters. moerente — THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1922. home in another cab, an¢—but new even though you do go to bed, you - can't go to sleep, there is 30 mues noise in the house—conversation anc walking up and down afd the like ‘And then first ching you X-ow tts another Christmas. and here yer are Tors hare come to the toy stores and every der the aisies of Santaland are thronged with little boys who are sleepy and want :o go home to bed. Decause their fathers @r6 on your way to see the Soy8 wri with the eric trains OF father again. Pity litte Boys these For the boy or toy wu days—for thetr first few Christmases age, these are tiring days, indee?. are hardest. pen TSN ES A boy of toy using age has o: mon sense; when he is tired of play ing with toys and !t ie time to go to bed he quits his pi but when a father gets to pt with toys and hes no sense of any kiné—he knows no time or fatizue— he plays and plays. on and on, and Restaurant Idyll. as fair as Diana, ely as Venus, too; on. til the tor ks down or the bi g glances, ores close and then goes hore feel-| Not knowing just what to Co, Ing cheated. This isn’: to say that boys don't Bankere and lawyers and brokers— love the toys as much as their fathers. Oh, she just passes us by, do. But fathers have such an infin- Unheeding our innermos. yearnings, greater physica! strength to call) With never a thought or a sigh uch an Infinitely greater en suppose Though she’s as regal as Juno, tpon, @urance that—but look here. you are a little boy yourself. She is more cruel than fair; You are a little boy whose father While I am watching and waiting, one evening save: “Tonight we shall) She seems not to know I am there, BO and see th while ays at home arking farewell: “You talk ‘about spending a lifetime buying a #00! ot thread! Babi When a man gets cose in a toy store he's just the same as dead. Now listen, you walk that chfi4 more than fourteen rniles and you and I'll have a fight!” So to the toy store you go. and up and down the fairyland alsies you walk, mile after mile; and finger the toys, or father does for you, and for an hour or so have the time of your Itfe—no for could be sweeter But after a while you cet tred. First you are tired of walking ard then you get tired of the toys. By and by you start going to sleep right there as you stagger slong. And a: last rou sit down in un automobile, while ‘father goes on to finger a cannon and you go to sleep and dream ané have a nightmare, and wake up in ithe middle of a crowd, with a man in & uniform poking your ribs and say- Listen! What's Now she is smiling above me! It is too good to be true! Shail I order liver and onions, Or crukers with coffee and stew? —Edgar Dan!:} Kramer. The Hopewell Hospital Lillian L. Nelson, Superintendent Wyo. A general hosp’ situated in the Hot Springs mopolis, to which clans are welcome. Rates moderate; nurses; for dress the Superintendent. Has added still another Ing ‘Ifev, listen! tokts the tdear?” 7 So you feel very bad, afd you cry é and a woman steps out of the crowd Quietness saying that she knows you and takes you home ia a cab, delivering you to E. ye GROW, lyour mozher, and remarking as she does so, found him sitting on a toy, Mrs. Brown. He says his father Jont him. What does he mean when he says things like that?" | And then father comes Resident Selesman 147 West J—Phone 2031-J the tearing PALMS Confectionery 414 East Second "TENSHUN Veterans of Foreign Wars Meeting Friday Night, Dec. 22 As a matter of fact, a number of other sections, |!2" Sar lacy of the house particularly the south, are giving California ae cay t Pew Pat difficult to pretty good run as leader of the co-operative field. ot amore | Of: the Der enermert: the body. The lady's weight has in./Once upon a time creased. within. two years from) i0{There was @ young women { pounds to a burdensome 375 pounds, | Wh? had two suitors, Cooks and Waiters Hall L i ORS. \ The Book of All Bo inate. ‘4 MAN once said he knew the Bible was inspired because it inspired him. The more you ponder the remark the more your belief grows that he spoke truly. If you are a Bible reader you know from your own experience how true the observation is. How often have you turned the leaves of the old book at random and in turn have read history, poetry, philosophy and tragedy all within the com- pass of a few pages? All couched in the purest and most forceful language. It matters not the mood, you will find something responsive to it. How can a book of that characte? fail to inspire ® person who can read understandingly? It has withstood the test of literature of all time and today stands superior to all other written work. Aside from that it has brought more com: fort and hope to the world than any other work of the ages. Whether inspired or not, the old book is a con stant inspiration to those who read it. There should be more readers. wee ES The Movies in War. Te WAR did a great deal to develop the mov- ing p icture and point the industry to a wider field of usefulness. The experience gained brought out many. possibilities. The problems, of course, were many. And those who directed the exhibition could likely testify to many strange experiences. For instance the right places of showing certain pictures and the means of getting the showings under unfavcrable circumstances. In the camp where men had just been inducted into the service pictures dealing with home and mother were very much taboc. Later, when the men had become more accustomed to military life and had reached the embarkation camps they got some of those pictures in the program. When they reached France and were up against the real thing they were given everything on the reel regardless of what some of the pictures might recall. During the height of the campaign in which Americans took part one officer said of the desir- ability of films: I want only three things for my men—motion picture films, more films and still more films. In France pictures were shown in specially con- structed cars wherever the men could be reached, even on the direct front. Pictures meant much for the morale. They ban- ished dissatisfaction and discontent in many camps. Even the American picture machine helped win the war. tae Judicious Spending. Oe may be promoted at times by spend- ing, just as it may be by the practice of saving Business men as well as those who are not en- in business, too often overlook the opportu nity of benefiting by. proper expenditure as they There is a very widespread interest all through the upper Mississippi valley now in the co-opera- tive movement, and in spite of several iJl-advised and unfortunate ventures that have resulted in failure and near-failure. the great body of produc ers there still have faith in the co-operative move- ment. They are beginning to realize that co-oper- sound business practices to the marketing and distribution of the products of the farm. There will be greater development of the system in the coming three years than there has been in the last three years especially in the west and mid dle west, which need the co-operative movement }more than any other sections. Co-operative mar- keting is a legitimate effort to add to the farmer's income, and if the effort is successful about nine- tenths of the so-called radicalism in the rural dis- tricts will disappear. Cheerful News That Saddens. dpe LARGEST wine harvest since 1875 has just been registered in France. The statistics are cheerful even if we may never pull any of the corks. The yield is 68,000,000 hectoliters. In 1875 the total was 83,000,000 hectoliters. The 1910-1914 average | was 47,000,000 hectoliters and the war average was 38,000,000. When the results of the wine harvest in Algiers and Tunis are added to that of France the total wine yield for this year will reach 76,000,000 hecto- liters. Besides all this, it is estimated there are 9,000,000 hectoliters of wine in stocks on hand. The registration reveals that even the city of Paris has vineyards, whose outpnt has increased from eight hectoliters in 1921 to 200 hectoliters this year. When you stop to computate that a liter under the metric system equals 1.0567 U. 8. liquid quarts, and a hectoliter equals one hundred liters, you will have the totals translated into quarts which an American citizen is familiar with or at least used to be. It is correct to assume that no Volstead has ever arisen in France to turn the people away from their wine-drinking habits and the country into a Sahara waste of aridness. Wine and song and possibly the third ingredient still contribute to the joy of French life. The fes- tive bootlegger is not abroad in the land and home brew is unknown. Heaving a large sigh, France has the makings of a very joyful Christmas, with all that wine in her cellars. pa dN hase ARE enough motor vehicles in the United | States to take the entire population joy riding at the same time. And if all the machines were in action simultaneously there would be four and |two-tenths machines for eyery mile of road in the country. | The only wonder is where the people get the money to buy them and feed them gasoline and oil. ative marketing is simply the application of good,! She lauged outright |She sued for $50,000, but a jury, while |AP4 they both proposed, “Well,” she answered, “we endured [recognizing her claim, only valued ir/And she accepted one of them Cleveland winters, and Juneau is cer-|at $1,000. Before Cristmas, ¢ tainly a paradise compared with| “Many Yean and hungry pensons a : vver Wyoming Bakery, 324 W. Yellowstone Assembly 8 o’Clock , Cleveland elther in winter or summer. We have been north eight years in! all; spent five winters here, and three | back home; the five years we have |winter blug:. The envious may even Uved here during the winter months say the debt should: Ife the other way. the thermometer has never reached| Would the jury give damages to a zero. Do you imagine it takes a vig-'man whose bump of poetry had sus- erous person to stand such 2 cll-|tained so bad a dent in a smashup nu that be became abie to make money This was followed by peals of laugh-!hand over fist? *Wouldn’ will envy the victim in this case, none the less. One's pituitary gland may keep one too slender to enjoy the FOR RENT FORDS AND DODGES Drive Them Yourself. Phone 274-! 511 South Durbin 24 MS Your XMAS DINNER will be more CHEERFUL and HAPPY if you drink PIGEON’S FRESH ROASTED COFFEE Our FIRST PRIZE Blend The richness and fragrance of this distinctive blend will especially appeal to the most skeptical and exacting taste, ‘and connoisseur of good coffee. IT HAS THE GOOD OLD SUM- ATRA JAVA IN IT, TOO! 55c lb., 3 Ibs. for $1.50. Pigeon Tea & Coffee Co. PHONE 623 228 East Second St. -Opposite Phone Bldg. nN nc i TONSILS Are organs as well as your stomach or lungs. No organ, once it is removed, can ever be replaced. Quinsy and Tonsilitis Respond to Spinal Adjustments, Robert N. Grove CHIROPRACTOR (Palmer School Graduate) Over White’s Grocery Phone 2220 = = a > . 3 = = = OH BOY! We sell real winter oil for cold weather. Free crank case service, too, ALCOHOL FOR RADIATORS WOODS FILLING STATION East Yellowstone and A Sts. = = EB = : ite

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