Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 30, 1923, Page 6

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PAGE SIX. Che Casper Dailp Cribune i : y Si trona Iseuec every evening except Sunday at Casper, Na’ County, Wyo. Publication Offices, Tribune Bullding 15 and 16 Departments BUSINESS TELEPHONES hange Con! Postoftfice as second class) 22, 1916 ning). pyembe: matter, CHARLES W. BARTON -..----- President and Badltor The Aasociated Press is ex for publication of all news « nigo the local news publisher Advertising Representatives. Prudden, King & Prudder 0-23 Steger Bias... C . “ty: Ti; 286 Fitth Avenue, New York -City: Globe “ Boston, Mass. . Sharon Bldg. 55 New Mont. gomery St. San ©, Cal. Copies, of the Daily T e n ff i New York, 5 t a SSOR! 4 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier or By Mail | One Year, Daily’ c - - One Year, Sund s Six Months, De Three Months, [ paid in advance and the {neure delivery after subscription fn arrears. Member of the Associated Press Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C.) Kick If You Don't Get Your Tribune. Cail 15 or 16 any time between 6:30 and 8 o'clock D m A paper wil ce if you fall to receive your T tbune. pap : : e ~ er. Make it your duty to Mvered to you by spec’al me nger. X let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. a The Casper Tribune’s Program Irrigation project west of Casper to be author {zed and completed at once. A complete and scientific zon’ dj Cc ir. ax comprenenaive municipal and school recreation park system, including swimming pools for the {ldren of Casper. : Completion of the established Scenic Route boute: vard as planned by the county commissioners to Garden Creek Falls and return. ‘Better roals for Natrona coun ss for Wyoming. 5 Wore equitable freight ratse for shippers of th Rocky Mountain region, and more frequent train service for Casper. ing system for the ty and more high: Reading Directions. | ‘ANY a fellow who does not read the directions - M before opening, gives the coroner's jury some- “ thing to do. * “Tt is liable to be anything from a mail package to a bottle of “moon” presented by a friend. You never can tell, So you better examine carefully the outside before giving your curiosity a chance at the inner contents. | A mail package may appear innocent enough. | even outwardly, yet it may have an infernal ma- chine neatly tucked away among the inner wrap pings. If there are no directions that you feel you can trust call some personal enemy to your assisf- ance, in such cases, or open all such packages with | a ten-foot hook from behind a boiler plate breast: | works. Caution is a valuable thing if only reason- | ably practiced. Note the directions on the medicine bottle. There} are many people now residing on the other side; who failed to do this and swallowed a draught of carbolic acid instead of cough medicine. 1t was the mistake of their lives, of course, attributed tc Jack of the bump of caution, “Don’t monkey with the buzz-saw,” is the read- | - ing of directions familiar in saw mills and places) devoted to building operations. The fellow minus a few fingers monkeying instead of reading care- fully the directions. “Stop, look and listen,” is another direction fully calculated by design to curtail the activities of the coroner's jury, yet the automobilist and the destrian keep right on with demonstrations of inability to read directions. J Many a man has lost a trouser’s leg or a section | out of the seat of them py ino. following the simple irection, “Beware of the dog.” . Then there is the other fellow, who saw but did not read the injunction ee. out.” He -is not =» going in places now, so far as his friends on earth | Ssknow. ‘he coroner’s jury drew fees for telling} the world of his lack of caution. | The truck driver blew a couple of hair-raising Dlasts on his mechanical horn, but the fellow per | sisted in crossing: the street while the truck was) going by. One broken leg, three broken slats and 9 collection of painful bruises, All for not reading the directions. ; == But why continue, if you have not been iin: & pressed by the necessity of reading directions by =this time, just take your medicine your own way and leave it to the coroner, 3 —0-————- a Bed it is your opinion that Christianity ought to v4. be spread over a wider area than you believe it does, why don’t you live it and practice it? Jf you don't know the fact, we are informing you that} that is about the best means yet discovered to spread it. Lots of people have learned that it works splendidly and with little or no failure. They are setting you the example in their daily walks, every day. Why don’t you try it as a experiment? By Christianity, we don’t mean the sinner’s defi- nition of being so horribly good you are unfit for] the ordinary worldling to assoc with; but in| just being decent in the ordinary acceptation of! the term. For instance, honorable and fair in your daily transactions, considerate of your fellow man, charitable towards his lim ions, kind and help ful to those with whom you come in contact instead of curt and heedless of everybody and everything except as they concern your personal advantage. It don’t take much effort to be this kind of a! Christian or much effort to spread this sort of| doctrine, and the amount of good it would contri- bute to human happiness within the zone of your activities and influence would even surprise you. In the first place you have a wrong conception, altogether, about Christianity. ae Tht + - bebad Try the Experiment. + { No, yon don’t have to have a face long enough | to eat oats out of a churn to be a Christian. You] are mistaken. Just nt, and if you haven't ruined it lowed it to rust out, let your consci guide, | Wii | people. | ence, and, in fact, made their presence a menace | toward either the Germans or any of the allies. | Peerrrerrit tt tite t it teeeeeenee tree re The Right Course. B ()VER in Albany co offict right course to end some of the anno red of the widespread manufacture of hooch and the moon merchants who purvey it. They e employing the abatement act. And where they @ebave found that a man gs using his home for the nty aker te because purposes of an illicit distillery they go into the courts and ask to have it vacated, locked up and stand idle for a year. It is the correct punish- ment. A man who deliberately breaks the laws of his state in the presence of his family, has little or no manhood in the first place and where the family join him in his nefarious work, all with the fear of the law before their eyes, they should be made to move and to forego the use of their prop- erty as a fit punishment. And in addition to this, if the head of the family has been a persistent law-breaker in this same Tespect, the court should sentence him to a term in jail, instead of assess: ) ing the usual fine of money. | It is time there was an awakening in the matter’ | of flouting the law by people who pander to the depraved appetites of other people for vile concoc- tions. If the law comes alive through those who | administer and enforce it there will be less general , nt that the laws of the land are ignored| shamefully disregarded. i SACO 7-H Extending Corn Market. LE Democrats attempt to create the impres. n that Republican policies result in .de- creased exportation, and that the farmer ts partic | ularly injured thereby the official statistics rebut | Democratic contention. Take corn, for instance.| According to department of commerce records, ex-| ports of corn during the 1921-22 cereal year were | 40 per cent greater than for the preceding year. The cereal year is considered as commencing in November and ending in October the next year. For the 1920-21 period we exporte:! 119 million and for the 1921-22 period, 116 mitiwi bushels of corn. Probably the corn grower would be interested in knowing to what countries and in what volume this American corn went, and how shipments in creased during the 1921-22 period. If so, the fol- lowing table will give him the information; the figures expressed in thousands of bushels: | Country. November to October, 1920-21 Belgium 1,196. France 406 Italy Spain .. Denmark (Sermany Netherlands Norway .. Sweden Canada It will be noted that with tie exception of Sweden, Canada and Mexico, there were increases in consumpuon of American corn on the part of every country, suipments to the United Kingdon, Germany and the Netuerlands showing higu per: centuges of increase. Sweden, apparently nas not yet been educated up to the use or our corn, while Atexico, where corn 1s a large element of the native diet, has been able to supply its own needs to a greater extent than for the past decade or so, owing | to Improved conditions under the admimistration of Obregon. Durimg the warm months it 1s considered. satcr to ship corn to Europe via Canada, whicu ex- plains, somewhat, the heavy exports to that coun- ry, about two-tnirds of which occurred trom May! to Uctober, dust how this corn is distributed in turope, Our own statisticy do not show, but pos- sibly it goes to sweil tue volume of American corn taken by the United Kingdom and France. During the five calendar years preceding the war, lyoy-1913, inclusive, our corn exports averaged about 43,000,000 bushels annually, su that the 1ig- ures above given, for 1921-22 show almost a four- fold iucrease. Our principal purchasers in those days were the United Kingdom, Netherlands, Can- ada, Germany and Denmark, in the order named. in 1920 with the Democratic tariff in operation, we were receiving imports of corn in considerable quantity principally trom Argentine, but in 1921 (May 2/7) the emergency tariff was enacted which placed a protective duty on that product, and this wa quigkly followed by better prices for the} farmer, anu increased sales abroad. | Total Return of the Troops. | {THBRE WERE some Americans who wanted the administration to withdraw the troops trom Rhine duty many months ago. On the other band, there were other Americans who desired the ad- ministration to undertake the settlement of the dif- ferences arising out of the Versailles treaty, which course would undoubtedly call for more American troops in Hurope. lt has been impossible, of course, to satisfy either the few interventionists on the one hand, or the few extreme isolationists on the other, The administration chose a wise middle course, American troops were long fetained on the Rhine, not at our instance, but at the urgent re- quest not only of the allied nations but of Ger- many as well. It was represented, and was un- pubtedly true, that peace and order could be bet preserved by American troops than by others. ‘The bitter antagonism which German residents felt toward troops of the allied nations was not mani- fest in the attitude towards troops of the United States. On the contrary, there was the kindliest feeling between American troops and the German But the time finally arrived when France felt that she ought to take aggressive steps to enforce compliance with the reparations decisions which Germany alleged she could not meet. Whether! Germany can or can not comply with the de- mands and whether France and her associates can or can not compel compliance, are questions which the United States ought not to undertake to deter- mine. The best thing the United States could do | was to step aside and give France, Italy and Bel-| gium an opportunity to do what they claimed the power to do-—to compel compliance with the repar ations decisions. ‘The controversy is one between parties to the treaty of Versailles who are di- rectly interested in the reparations problem. | something to which we are not a party and in which we have no direct interest. | The administration acted wisely and generously in leaving our troops on the Rhine as long as their presence was desired by all nations con: cerned. When it became evident that changed con ditions removed the need for their continued pres- to our continued friendly relations with all parties | to the controversy, the troops were promptly or- dered withdrawn. The act can not be reasonably construed as an indication of unfriendly spirit The United States hopes and trusts that Ger-| many and her antagonists will be able to reach a| satisfactory adjustment of their present differ. | While we should be glad, of course, to be of an assistance that would meet the approval of all concerned, the American policy, as indicated by | the president and the secretary of state, disavows any disposition to assume the role of dictator of either international law or international mgrals. be Casper Dally Crioune That Meets All the Trains. uj I — The Toonerville Trollev THerve GEEN KIDDING THE SKIPPER A GooD BIT THIS WEEK BECAUSE THE LATEST PASSENGER. “To GET SICK ON “THAT ROUGH STRETCH oF TRACK NEAR DowpDy— Town was a SAILOR ! ps \ Ss Using the Ears. Have you ever thought how little! the average person hears? A busy man does not want distracted by outside sound that reason he unconsciously “closes' his ears when he is thinking about a specin! piece of work. | This is apt to become a habit, and! a baud one. It tends to make a per: e2a cbsent-minded. Whenever ore! has the time to spare, it is both a useful and very pleasan? pastime just} to listen. One can do it in a town, but better still In the country. | When tramping down a country road try the experiment of listening to the voices of the countryside. At first you may not hear much—just the confused notes of a few birds in the near-by ‘trees and the sound of} wheels in the distance. That doesn’t sound very interesting, does it? But that 1s because your ears haven't got | tuned in; they are working badly through lack of practice. But after a little while they will become keener and more alert. In other words, your ears are taking, back some of the jobs your eyes have! taken over from them. It is then that you find what a doubly attractive place the country is In addition to seeing tho restful! beauty of it you hear the beauty of it as well, There is the vague whisper of the! breeze in the tree-tops—one of the most soothing sounds in the world— and the crisp rustle of dead leaves. | ‘The confused notes of the birds be-| come clear and definite; though you may not know them by name, youl will_soon_find rself pickin cut drug, caffeine, which It pays to face volved. It’s a good plan to look for the cause of restless _nights and nerve-fagged days. Postum is a safe everybody. It meets tains nothing which may safely share it with you—as many cups as desired, without risk of disagreeable after-effects. There's charm without harm in Postum—the famous cereal beverage. | the notes of the: ¢:iferent songster®. ; the sort of trees you are near. | Tho wind in the grass is difterent| Her tears, her frowns, her teasing from the wind in’tae hedge, even ax ‘ways, ‘What does the cup supply for you ? Many people find harm to health in the seeming friend- liness of coffee and tea. They first notice the unfriendly side of their table drink in sleep irritation—signs that health is being disturbed by the ~ —By Fox 0 } | ) | Domesticity. And you will hear, too, that dif forent trees have different’. sounds Tne wind in the car has a different whisper from the wind in the fir. Before long, with your eyes shut, you will be able to tell hy fis sound slone. Her petulance, he thought, was quite her pout j Filled him with rapturous delight, | Made Love the more devout. it ls different when blowing ever the brow of a hill. And thug in 2 few weeks you will Each temperamental whim, Provoked the most delirious praise— Were beautiful to him. find yourself knowiny instinctively a thousand different sounds, and the| Atlas! we take so much on trust: things they stan@ for, You’ have!” r,e's disillusioning! learned the art of Vatening. . Your) she weeps in vain, and he is just ears will tell of the landscape as) 4 nasty tempered thing! clearly as your eyes do. In addition to that it will make your eyes keener. Each helps the task, other. By the simple pastime of lie-| hey rant and rage and row! tening you have become keen and/'rne reason. Little need to ask alert. No longer will:you have to!” ‘they're married now! ask a person to repeat’what he has| Leallé. Nelson Jennings. just told you because you didn't fol- SS low all he said. You will take it all « Silencing the Barbers in at once. ———_. Who Am I> If you are partially bald here fs an , absolutely infallible ocounter-barrage ae |to turn on your barber when he starts 1 am always misunderstood. to bombard you with arguments for I am no end of trouble. irrigating that arid apace be- I often come ‘between husband and| neath which your brain is supposed wife. ‘to function. Women love me. en the barber opens fire with: I am a friend in need. |“Hair's getting a bit thin, isn’t it; Women expect me to do all their! hadn't you better have a treatment of worrying. Dr. Pinfeather’s Surecrop?” just say Tho banks betray me. in an offhand way: Iam more dangerous in the hands} “Well, that scalp lock of mine isn't} of women than a gun. very handsome, is it?" He wil im-| I have made men weep. mediately agree. He thinks he's got I am a woman’s check book. you. As a matter of fact, you've got Edmund J. Kiefer. him. ‘Then you say, skeptically: ‘They glower and sulk and take to lessness and nerve- these beverages contain. the facts when health is in- and satisfying mealtime drink for every demand of taste, and it con- can disturb health. The children [letic, forceful, commanding, all that | TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1923. course, none of these treatments {{¢ he doesn’t understand the perfect really ‘restore your hair, but I logic of your position, fe he pose they will save what you have.” |dcesn’t understand the English lan- That's the finishing touch, He im-|guage at all, he will think he has mediately agrees that he can’t make | offended you, and you can make yqur two hairs grow where only one shows|getaway while he is apologizing. now, but swears he can save what|Sometimes you can even get away you have. Then you finish him off|without the tip, but this is not to be with something like this: recommended except in the most ‘Well, look here, barber, I wouldn't | exceptional cases. mind being perfectly bald; there's an alr of distinction about it. It would make me lock intellectual. On the other hand, I would like to have a good, thick crop of hair; there's dis- tinction about that, too. I'd look ath-| phe drowsy night is creeping down. In houses near and far; * I seo the gleaming, kindly Nghta, And In the sky a star. Beckoning Lights. - sort of thing. { “But if all you can hold out to me! is to perpetuate thie ugly bunch of | pinfeathers now disfiguring =m | rhe carkness deepens and the night cranium, then: go away and don't!” Shute out the sounds af day come back any more. You admit | pit trom each home a little lighe ‘ourself it looks cheap. Why should | “senay out its cheering ray. you expect me to. spend money to | “hy make It permanent? Not on your| xow footfalls echo in the road, ‘ uel Stars fill the winter sky, By this time the barber is thor | x. homeward to the beckoning Nghts oughly alarmed. You must work | "NOUN totters hie. yourself up to a frenzy of indignation | titetac ana’ Ove —Jean Seivwright. i Victim =<of the cheap or big can baking powders. —don’t waste your time, your money, your efforts, in prepar- ing bakings and have them Tuined through the use of uncertain baking powders. ALWAYS USE CALUMET The Economy BAKING POWDER because it never varies in leavening strength — be- cause it lasts longer—goes farther-keeps perfectly and A is moderate in price—be- cause it is most dependable, most economical. Its sales are over 150% greater than that of any other brand. No human hand ever touches it —it is made in the world’s most Banitary baking powder factories, | ; \ els THE WORLD'S GREATEST BAKING POWDER Vogue Beauty Shop Apartment A, Wyatt Hotel Phone 2292 Opened this morning. We specialize in facial massage and packs. Miss Webber and Mrs. Harris, Props. THE ART SHOP Operated in Connection. Home portraits by appointment. MERLE SWORD, Prop. Announcement . Ihave taken over the barber shop inthe Becklinger Building and earnestly solicit your patronage. Sam W. Cooner Basement Becklinger Building Hay, Grain, Chicken and Rabbit Feeds Alfalfa, Na! Wheat Grass, Prairie Hay, Straw, Oats, Corn, Chop, Your grocer sells Postum In two formset Instant Postum (in tins) prepared in- stantly in the cup by the ‘addition of boll= ing water, Postum Cereal (in packages) for those who prefer to make the drink while the meal is being prepared; made by boiling fully 20 minutes. Postum FOR HEALTH “Theére’s a Reason” Whest, Barley, Rye, Bran, Oyster Shell. One sack or carload. We can save you money on carloads of hay, and give you any kind you CASPER STORAGE COMPANY 313 MIDWEST AVE. TELEPHONE 63 THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER CO, Everything in Building Material RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, ‘WAGONS Office and Yard—First and Center Phone 62

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