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PAGE SIX. ene Che Casper Daily Cribune \ g that already has been done, and after all, 7+» T t##1o Searniang? Chub, Natrona | Precedent, example, or pattern all have their in fluence upon hiuvan action When a person boasts of a special endownent in | interpreting human nature, he has no spec en- dowment, he is sunply a kean observer, that’s all; Che Casper Daily Cribune SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1923. 7 ‘ language of the hour. Some beauty! Agamemnon should quarrel, and have —By F By Fontaine Fox} ost wasn the pos one ot sent dead aa ur hers fe i Hin sative)tangue, op When’ weiCR-| Sites waaser War tiie Oh en pooch v3 ee at |a fellow ag Paris, there must have Ghages are better than others; Gresk| tin cue influsncee ot nore. Ne wae we Detter. Wenguage, tore preclees | ive ty: art ig/ this tini@ecarwayiis 1 more varied, more forceful and more ° at Casper, N Tribune Bullding CratHiA SNooP IS tHe LATEST ONE To BE MYSTERIOUSLY STUNG hi rte “4 acnd © ; Solou, tian: SEIN Ge sears ot: Aue IIa eh Jane Ballad tig Aes tet aa jand has developed this partivular sens: while oth WITH A BB SHOT WHILE TRYING modern *tongueg. But all language | (t's {0 jeave beh i papa oad —\ers permitted i: to lie dormant. He knows that changes, as the works of art in lan-| °% § ae —— wage. And unless art tg Ww: = aa guage 8 is Wide enough for us to live in it so, we shall trifle with {t only for an hour, and without regret let it go the way of . guage do not; in literature we have we all track along pretty much the same grove this haunting paradox, that through| a temporary medium we can build something imperishable. Much as we IATED PRESS entitled to 1 in this pap To “RUBBER” IN THE WINDOW OF THE CLUB—HoUSE. jand he simply times our arrival. Now and again there comes upon the earth an and! a . % .c°|other contemporary — things.—John unusual person whom we call great and acclaim aoay yeaa alteratush tn translation,! byeKine. ——————— }him: but by the time he runs his course the record os ee ey ato eamesnber aT, REY he leaves has been little different from others. y rpieces must sur- A different set of opportunities were presented in | this particular case, his solution of problems con SPECIAL SALE Men's leather vests, §5.75, $7.75 Vive in translation or not at a’l. In| what language were the Parables ; spoken? If Homer were not Homer! id $9.7: | tained nothing really new or startling. Sin Dagtial oe Pe ee and §9.75 For instance Caesar emulated Alexander, Na : rani how much of Homer would the world) sree Pein poleon imitated Ca rand William Hohenzollern East . know? Some boquet of hig own time} peed pitas — —_ 7 ae took them all for example. When it w going is gone, but perhaps we should not SUBSCRIPTION RATES | good they all behaved pretty much alike, circum have Iked it if it had remained. At! Seattle is the most important dis- By Carrier or By Mail stances considered, and they ‘all came out the same least we have kept what we liked: wal trating center for fresh and frosen end of the horn in the wind up. have kept what suited our spirituat|fish products on the Pacific coast. We all may be patterned after the angels, may be a long ways after, but even so, from what we are enabled to gather there was only the one pattern. = 5 needs, we has loved Andromache and| As a fishing port it is exceeded in the Hector, and wondered in the o'd way|United States only by Boston and such fe men as Achilles and Glouceste: AUCTION SALE By direction of the stockholders present at a meeting January 30, 1923, I was authorized to offer for sale at public auction for cash ' SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1923 At the Present Site of the Old Fair Grounds Goes to Washington. ONORABLE Charles E, Winter left yesterday on the first lap of a journey that will end in Washington to commence a two-year term of of fice as Wyoming’s representative in the national house of representatives. He goes as the succ of Hon. Frank W. Mondell, who is just completi twenty-six years of faithful and highly credital servic Mr. Mondell did not seek re-election to the house. Of all the able men in Wyoming, we know of no one so ideally fitted to carry on for our people Judge Win Mondell has done well, Winter | will do equally well. We are assured of the same | alertness to Wyoming interests that we have had |for the last quarter of a century. We are assured | of the me faithfuln to public duty. We are | assured of the same high integrity of citizenship. And the same Americanism that knows neither fal ; tering nor surrender. When the time for change came, as in human fairs is inevitable, Wyoming was fortunate in ing Judge Winter to call to the high place. education, training and experience his equipm is made complete. His adaptability will make the) historic halls like home to him and there will be no Member of the \s ciated Press ation (A. B. C.) Member of Audit Bureau of Ci cur Tribune. 20 and § o'clock p. m F aper will be Ce ft vour duty to mineca you, | Tf You Dow ernie The Casper Tribune’s Program Irrigation project west of Carper to be author: and coms once. ¢ zoning system for the 4 school recreation ing pools for the nsive municipal a P neluding swimr Idren of Casper. mer cheompletion of the established Scenic Route bou! vard as planned t the county commissioners to Sarden Creek Fal and return. . oeher roa is for Natrona county and more high ways for Wyoming. ™ WMore equitable freight ratse for shippers of th Rocky Mountain region, and more frequent train service for Casper. SECRET UNDERGROUND PASSAGE To CLUBHOUSE. | probationery period foc him to serve" Hie unten Seventeen. Caubea them on in thick layers which whole face. Look now at Mona Bet- ALL BUILDINGS, FENCES, POSTS AND MATERIAL hehe —— | probat 3 § a 1 a af requenly remained on for days. tola Gaglianil, the more she paints Cc | accomplishments, his ripened wisdom, his remark | — White enamels, red pomades , all anc the more sho bedizens herself the NOW BELONGING TO SAID FAIR ASSOCIATION. W, ming. |ably correct judgment in problems of government] , . shades of powders, these were com-! older she looks. Look hat's Co 8 jand general publie affairs will dily become ehereie something ailing Brother} monly used. And the moralists of| ‘And it is a remarkable fact,” con- This affords a wonderful opportunity for you to se- x forth yesterday from) sets to the great body in which he will serve and that time cried out against them |ciuded the erudite person, “that clv- * . F the groundhog ventured ee, h “ti Be ee b Fi My mother said to dad, just_as you are doing today. Here lization has always centered in those cure good lumber and material. i h ound, and was awake at the) his country will receive the benefit. “ sb 4 i " his hole in the gro , : ‘ ‘Although he claims he isn’t ill, 1 igini's ‘Book of F od vhere Da: t atten- he had ellent opportunity to observe] 41] Wyoming will wish Judge Winter a long octane Wlebed te Lee eee ine time, he had an exc y Ms 4 y ‘ He's looking very bad. ; Tland successful congressional career, will support| He mines weather conditions for the ensuing Six) him in his work and congratulate him upon the op-| _ He weeks. After that nature will take her course./ portunity before him to serve the country he love: If the grounhog hands us six weeks of winter! —_———_o——_ ; i t deter- Women,’ which published in| tion to dress and beautifying them- his shadow, which simple act on his part de! Venice in 1554. Ie writes: | selves. In all the great cities of all Of the loathsome and disgusting |times—Thebes, Ninevah, Babylon, composition of the paint with whieh! Athens, Byzantlum, Rome, Venice, many ladies, both in this country and | Florence, Paris—the dress and ado: never home in time for meals, lost his appetite. And when I ask him how he feels, He acts as if he'd bite. COME AND MAKE YOUR BID Remember, the time is Saturday, 2 P. M., 1923. = all th liable goosebone prophets| : jTeS quite unusual for him abroad, do beautify or, rather, dis-|ment of women have been a matter The place is at the Fair Grounds. weather, as all the r f : d than Senseless Stallin |. To have a grouchy streak figure themselves, I, gentlemen, do|of importance. And it is significant declare he will, he will be doing far ore aoe . € 8. He radiatec joy and vim not desire to run the risls of spea that New York gives up its choicest Cash at time of sale. Material to be moved within the weather clerk bas served haa on winter to pe POINT is, is Germany in her policy in the| Misnt up il last week. for ft being the ugliest and nastie: nue to those accessories that en 60 days at your risk. All bids may be rejected or ae SBT ae, date te coatsene to what is pop-| Ruhr occupation, performing the time-honored] \vnen tee nel so mush bhee peeks ethere Tale ay chance ba eeuneoae. OC alt dieniticleatinn accepted and sale postponed from time to time if Slarly sapposed to be Wyoming winter weather. | feat of cutting off her nose to spite her face? It|1ts very simple to perceive me such fatigue and nausea that my |but remember Renan's saying: deemed necessary and for best interest of association, Now with the groundhog on the job we are as- has every appearance of just that. If France and| ‘That something {s amiss.” spirits I should scarce retain in my| "A woman in adorning herself a as debts must be cared for from this sale. 1 of rougher treatment and the delivery of all| Belgium have nothing to show for their three weeks’ I. breast? sured 0! ” |complishes a duty; she practices back orders. While the central portion of the state has en- joyed mild weather up to this time the southern and northern sections have not fared so well. Storms and zero weather have rather been their ortion all winter long. And if the groundhog wills Frat we get ours from this out, what just complaint! can we enter? We have no claim to’stand upon in such a situation. In all humility we should return thanks for what we have escaped and pray for fortitude to survive for what is coming. eg Britain A grees. RITAIN may be a little foxy in driving a bar- gain but when it narrows to a showdown in monetary matters she is honest and dependable. Much more so than in a territorial matter. She is a land grabber, as the world well knows, but} so far as financial affairs go, we know of no blot on her escutcheon. That is why no uneasiness was felt in this country when the first session of the debt commis-| sions of the two countries ended in disagreement. England is always a good trader and never in a hurry. It would have been greatly to her advan- tage if the United States had fallen for the gen eral cancellation of international war debts, and} altogether to our disadvantage. When England learned that cancelation was hopeless, she speed ‘ily informed the world that she would pay. re- gardless of what any other nation would do, and Forthwith created a commission to meet with the! ‘American commission and adjust the matter and! fix the terms. The American proposition, which is an extremely ‘Uberal one, has been accepted by the British gov- ernment. The total debt is four and a half billion dollars. Interest is to be paid at the rate of 3 per cent for the first ten years, and 3 1-2 per cent for the subsequent term which may run to some- “thing like sixty-two years. Our own government pays 4 per cent for the money loaned Britain. | The settlement is yet to receive the approval of congress, but there seems to be nothing in the way of this formality, even if a liberalizing of the law is required. | The two countries will be much better satisfied with each other with the debt question out of the way, than they have been for some time, and it will now admit of the discussion and adjustment of many minor matters long held up. Like all other nations concerned in the great war, Britain is debt ridden and her people tax} ridden, but she is in better financial condition than| any of the other allied countries, because of the vast resources and the rich colonial possessions that came to her in the war settlement. England will have no great difficulty getting out from un-| der the load, but how France, Belgium, Italy and| the rest will make it remains to be seen in the years of the future, | Holding Our Own. IPHE WORLD does the same things over and over because human nature varies but little through the ages. So history repeats itself from ime to time id individuals can be depended} upon to do same wise or foolish things ns} i favorable or unfavorable in the has been east in the same old e the beginning, any vari tio tan 1 to be e th rest will do milar sitant'¢ because of our limi tations, we don't know how to do different. We seem to be able to do nothing else than some- | through the war and the subsequent negotiations | for peace, a mighty poor quality of sportsmanship. , if one way is not found to resume activity in the | of a United States senator? time, except stoppage of all labor and production of coal, which they went in to accelerate and increase in the first place, it will shortly be a matter of life or death to the Germans. The complete stop- page of industrial activity will punish France less than it will Germany. Both draw supplies from the Ruhr district. France is in command backed by military. Germany is unarmed and stands idly sulking, refusing to even make an effort to meet the demands she agreed to fulfill. Germany is showing now just as she showed all The whip-hand is France’s, as it should be, and occupied zone another way surely will be found. And all the cost comes upon Germany. Eventually she must pay for her past folly. She had better pay as cheerfully and as much as is possible than trust future negotiations after a season of stubborn senseless, stalling. Up against it? serves to be, Certainly she is. She de- Jazz Is to Blame. HERE is war in the palaces of the most illus- trious and the most high at the national capi- tal. It is among the females of the species and you all know what that means. The wife of a United States senator has discovered that the wife of a cabinet officer has the Marine Band furnish mu sic for her social functions at government expense, or at least no expense to the cabinet officer’s wife, whereas at the festivities held at the senator's wife’s home that lady is compelled to go into the music market and hire and pay for an orchestra. Could anything be more inequitable in this land of the free and the home of the brave? Could fa- voritism go father under a paternalistic govern- ment? Since when did this government assume to divide our public servants and their wives up into classes, and presume to say who shall have free jazz and who shall rustle their own and pay for it? Are we not all covered by the same starry bari- ner and serving for its glorification? Since when did Mrs. Cabinet Officer become superior to Mrs United States Senator? Are they ivt beth simply good American girls born and reared in similar pumpkin centers in similar states and both entitled to the same emolu- ments under the constitution of our beloved land? Has it reached a point down in Washington when somebody can have something somebody else can’t have? Have they gone to grading up us proletarians| the same period, and making sheep of some of us and goats of| ‘Sylva Nuptial others? And just where can be found in any law-book or any public document, in Washington or elsewhere, any right of anybody to make a goat of the wife The thought of such a thing is sacrilege. Warren Harding has been proclaimed a man of peace. A man of unusual powers for conciliation. Here is a job worthy of his special talent. To head off a lot of spirited conversation over the back fence between the cabinet and the senate and com- pose the differences respecting jazz Dad answered, “Yes, of late It seems He hasn't been the same. When he is home, he moons and dreams And@ scarcely heeds his name, His appetite was once a cause For wonder and dismay. But now it's light as sheerest gauze, ject. ‘Agnola Firenzuola, born in Flor- | ence in 1493, also ai: nvented to remove pimptes and moles | and other such stains, but today they | are used to paint and whiten the b-' most charmine of arts.’ ae At least, says again the And growing less each day. Although he tends to aggravate, He's scrupulously clean, And just from this I intimate, That, being seventeen, His tilt with Cupid has begun, And my deduction is: There's something wrong, and ten to one, That something ts a miss!* —J. Philip Stack. Antiquity of Cosmetics. Now it seems that the women of the middle ages plucked the'r eye brows, dyed their hair, painted their faces, and otherwise proved them- selves worthy ancesterosses of our sisters and our cousins and our aunts. Furthermore, they cultivated the at- tenuated, slender, slinky figure that modern Cress designers say a woman must have if she wants to be fash lonable. An erudite person whose specialty is twelfth to sixteenth century manu scrips, has dug up evidence to prove that all the beauties sung by the trou- veres and troubadours throughout the middle ages were just such types as we see now on the streets and every- where in the public places. “Grace and attenuation of the fg- ure were the essential characteris. tics of female beauty for at least 400 years,"" sald the investigator. ‘In hundreds of manuscripts you will find described and depicted this ideal type, with her small heac, long, thin arms, firm but slightly developed chest and gaunt, flat hips. She is always blond, which means any shade of light or russet hair. ‘And how do you suppose those dark-haired women of Italy and southern France acquired the red and golden hair celebrated by all the poets of their timo? Why they dyed It. Saint Anselmo reveals that the wo- men of the eleventh century had re- course to dyes to transform their raven locks into blond. ‘Vincent ¢e Beauvais of the thir. teenth century devotes a who'e chap. ter of his ‘Speculum Naturale’ to the dyeing of halr, Jean Nevezan, of indicates in his ® process whereby women bleached their hair first by means of some compound of sulphuric acid, and then tinted it up to the de sired shade. Even Martin Lefranc @ self-appointed Champion des Dames of the fifteenth century exclaims: ‘There is nothing women won't do! Haven't you seen how they come away from the wash boller with their dark hair changed to light?’ “As for plucking eyebrows that was a common practice in those days, when one of the canons of beauty was that the width of an eye shoule If it requires a separate and di for every senator and every cabir inct brass band) t officer it is the duty of the government to supply them. Not only is it desirable that the savages in and bout Washington be soothed by music; but it. is <o important that. peace reigns and things along the Potomac remain quiet, and the administration be upheld. Finally it is unthinkable that one woman can have free music and another woman must pay for it, under our form of government. separate the eyebrows, which bad to| be narrow and delicate and adhere closely to thee skin. The women v further than the girls of ttain t high, broad M89 Of foreh which} s said every woman they pwiled thetr hatr the roots. You get the effect in the paintings of Piero della Fran- ces and Simonetti. “And they used today. To lomelike exp; he middle a should out by cosmetics, too; You Have a Pass to the Inner of 1300 Publications jart, an equ'site, and in a sense, the Att and the Test of Time lover of current things, you must write in the NATRONA COUNTY FAIR ASSN. By B. L. SCHERCK, Secretary. If you were to knock at the door of any publisher and request his private circula- tionrecords,wouldyoureally get them? Did AliBaba gain admission tothe treasurecave till he used the key word? Your “Open Sesame” is spelled A.B.C, The inner doors of overtwelvehundred publications swing wide upon its use. Would you know how sub- scribers were secured? Would you know the class of subscribers? Would you know how many subscribers have paid? Examine an A.B. C. report! The first page contains the circulation. you might ascertain in other ways, though not verified as are the A.B. C. figures, The other pages contain the facts that only the A. B. C. can gain for you. It secures them through its strict rules, its stringent examination of all records, its supreme authority over everything Pertaining to circulation. Study your A. B. C. reports throughout! Be sure to get your copy of “Scientific Space Selection,” the new A. B.C. book. A guide to every advertiser, space- buyer and publisher who is interested in the sale or purchase of white space. Price, two dollare and @ half.