Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 27, 1923, Page 6

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PAGE SIX THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE The Caz Branch Telep' ing A ess is exclusiv se for publication of 1 this paper and Advertising Representatives. Prudden, King & Prudden. Bteger Bicz.. © 0-28 86 Witth s ni: ¢ the Daily Trib- ew York, Chi- cisco of- nd 3 are wel © UBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier or By Mail not insure del: E ecomes one mont Member of the Associated Press | Member of Audt Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) ‘our Tribune © between fall to wil THE CASPER TRIBUNE'S PROGRAM IN THE UNION IN THE SQUAREST STATE CIVILIZATION’S FOUNDATION | You ask who they are? Well they are not the cheap ahd sordid characters who and talk| through the pages of last best | the abnor-| seller. Neither are t mal people ‘ appear or the fron or in the society columns of daily press, where} there is chattering about} eloth quets. { No, th n people are not the prominently rich or the politic-| avish public | t the folks ally noisy, who re attention. he who li exclusive apartments, | aristocratic hotels, to avoid| the creatic es. | The common p< are the un- advertised. the unnoticed, untitled, hard-working multitude, who live in simple fashion, who are not fever- ishly anxious to get rich quick, who do not court newspaper notoriety, who go along tyear after year earn- ing ar living, believing in God, home and love and rejoicing} in ordinary everyday things. Yes, these are the common peo- ple. nd if you ask, the salt of the earth. You do not hear about them either in the social circle or in the reports of crime. They do not seem to exist in the minds of many others. But they do for them. dation of c ciety leaders, pagers are not the silent forc: ance of pov quential n preserves h t honest front politi essential to us, but keeps the bal- t the inconse- e strutters and n the mass is and they do that alltime. It continue so i future. NO MORE THE WINE PRESS When Mr. Volstes rried things high, wide and isome a few tyears ago, the great vine ustry of California, 1 as elsewhere, uttered a trem cry of dis tress. They faced ruir They squirmed and wrig ) find a way out of the situation that apparently closed dov as they ure hops ay when earn- le put their the creator ys other ‘eed them was the n upon them . these -|remained intact in the vain | was not even tempted by the trac | real when they saw their prosperity van ish, with the advent of an era of prohibition and soberness. But same wine growers have, themselves, sobered, and find their " industry not only not ruined but en- joying a greater prosperity and ex- pansion than it ever did in the old day of wine making. New uses have been found for grapes, The business of curing and preparing raisins for market and marketing them has grown by leaps and bounds. The canning and pre serving of grapes has in itself be- come an industry, which before had been mere adjunct of producing grape: for wine. The varieties of grapes have been scientifically de- veloped, and they have become a much-sought-after article of food. The vineyards of the United States in the grape growing areas hope that prohibition would be a failure and the old days would return. |When this did not occur and the belief became settled that they never would return. the growers turned their attention in other di- rections. Their vineyard invest- ments were so enormous they they must be saved. They have been d through proper efforts in marketing and uses of product. And contrary to the early expectations of the growers, they have ‘since found themselves enlarging the areas of their vineyards. California alone has added ten thousand acres to her vineyards in the past year. So sll we have to do is to get away from old ideas, old habits, old precedents, and find better and| re purposeful uses for the things have and the things we" can do. The wine press is gone forever: and the grape is finding a more useful purpose in the life of the| human family. | > THE MOTOR AGE A radical change has come over us in the matter of transportatio: The motor car has done it. It is th jmotor car age in which we are liv- ing. It was an inevitable develop- ment in the system of common car- rying. The street railway has long been struggling against approaching fate with certain doom at the end of the struggle. Its complicated and expensive system can not possibly compete with motorized transporta- tion, What a fortunate thing it was for Casper that she did not permit her streets to be torn up for the, 1 ng of tracks over which noisy, sreeching cars would run day and} ight to accommodate only a portion of her people. How satisfactory must seem today to Casper that she less trolley, but waited for the mo- tor bus—the only modern solution| of yrompt, noiseless, rapid and sat- isfactory street service. The daily operation of the motor] bus in Casper is one of the greatest things the city has done for the peo- ple. company and a cheap convenience to the people. particular. The old systems were good in their day, because we knew of no! ‘West Burkitt and Linden avenue, has! gna the fivecourt Bennett structure; other. Thei- however, ed. day, ee ee ALL COMMONERS Kings and emperors are coming) the new Wyoming North and South down from their thrones these datys| ratiway; to mix with the people. Something they have not done heretofore in a time. f Well, it marks an era, lon when George of England gives a dinner) party to some laboring gentlemen, and he of Sweden contests in a ten- nis tournament with his sportsmen subjects and Japan is sending a royal prince to the public school. But the kings and potentates who are really mixing with the proletar- iat, elbow to elbow, are the ones who have lost their thrones. The ones upon whom the great war and other circumstances has inficted financial reverses. These have been compelled to mix. Mix, too, in a con- test with their former subjects, for \daily bread. Some render good ac- count and others are failures. The world is a strange place after \all. Today we walk in the pride and pomp of power. Tomorrow our heads are in the dust. Kings descend, and the humble rise, After all, we are all common. There is no differ- ence under the skin. It is the veneer that distracts the attention. There are real people and there are kings. Why should they not mix? THE OLD AND NEW While delving among the relics of kings of three thousand years gone in Egypt, Lord Carnarvon, bitten by a venemous insect lay danerous ill. The countess in London receiv- ing the facts by radio hastened to a specialist and then to the nearest airdrome and within the hour was on the way to Egypt with the most eminent medical talent in the king-! dom What a mingling of the ancient and the modern there is in this in- cident. When the De Haviland plane landed in the midst of the mummies of the Pharaohs and their sacred playthings, what would have been their astonishment were they able for the moment to have conscious- ness of the things then going for- ward | the courthouse at Brooks and Whit. Micke So 4S Te Lesé No TIME. GETTING Home WHEN Mickey (meelf) McGuire. be Casper Daily Cridune —RBv Fontaine Fox Pres ——] verse of a big spring- building bodm | ~ =O ia J MEGUIRE APPEARS, Eppie Jones HAS BUILT A SPRING-BoARD WHICH MICKEY HAS DECIDED No'T To DESTROY UNTIL HE HAS SUCCEEDED IN WINGING YounG Jones IN MiID-AIR. Madenste tradiinte, Bee ICY. + Bi SHERIDAN—One million five hun sand dollars is a conserva © of Sheridan's building aya for the yeur 8 includes the new .B. F. Per block en Main street between Jackson etationery store, and the Bank of Commerce, now in the pro cess of construction, the Whitney evtate bank and office building on the property at Main and Loucks street now occupied by the Stude- baker sales room and adjoining prop. g Building Program It is a credit to the operating | erty, which will probably be started | this year; three large modern apart- It is ideal in every| Ment houses to be erected by ‘Thos. | W. Cultra cn the property oppos:te ney streets, by Charles Bayless at | the American Legion home on the plot recently purchased on Coffeen and Burkitt and the depot freignt house roundhouse and car shops for and the county fair eudi- torium, The building program.for the next two or three years includes the erec tion of a new high echool building, the Holy Name gymnasium, a new | plant for the Sheridan Creamery Co., and the Y. M. C. A.-¥. W. C. A. com munity bullding, involving an addl- tional expenditure of about $1,00,000. | a oe Advocates Hospital BUFFALO—At the Commercial Club mass meeting Dr. John Hynds made a very good suggestion along Nthe lines of progross for the little and coming city or Buffalo and along the Une of people going out of town to buy that which they could buy as cheaply in thelr own town. Dr. Hynds stated that Buffalo could just as well have a hospital of her own instead gf sending her patients and | all those who necessarily have to stop here before going to the hos- pital in the town on the north of us, where thero {s a hospital and where hundreds of dollars are spent by the patients themselves und the visiting friends—money that légitimately be- longs at home here in Buffalo, A hospital ts just another one of the things that Buffalo needs today. The idea that Dr. Hynds put forth was @ very good one and is another iter to put before the people of Buffalo at this time when we are all looking forward to @ larger growth and @ greater community spirit. Dr. Hynds was very much right. The idea of a hospital should be looked upon and thought out by | every individual, Some Family IOVELL—The families and dee |cendante of “Uncle Al,” Amos, | Aaron, Joseph Jr, and Theodore | Asay, residents of this city and vi- | cinity, gathered at the West Ward | chapel for the purpose of “counting | | noses” and it wag discovered that! | there were 195 present. Bat | The evening was spent very enjoy-| ably, {n such manner as only rela.| tives can experience, in goodfellow \ |ship together, singmg, story-telling, Yet in their time they had a/qancing and partaking of refresh-| wonderful civilization. Fully as| ments, furnished for the occasion. | wonderful as our own. It {9 one of the pleasures of lite! The speculation is, when the|that was participate! in by this/ kings and princes of the present day| arse clan, which makes this na and their automobiles and airplanes| WoF!4 & g004 place in which to live. are dug up three thousand year wt BS Bi ne s of #9 great @ nui ner will the doc- jrarkable fact « © mosquito bite on 4x (Ope VGonporg- Perhaps you may think of Swift & Company as a one family affair. Many do. It really consists of about 100,000 people, working together with a common aim. 45,000 of these own shares in the business. Over 50,000 of them are workers in Swift & Company. 16,000 of the workers are share- holders. Pages 19, 20 and 21 of our 1923 year book, just published, bring out who and what Swift & Company is, in a way that helps you to under- stand all industry—how it oper- ates, why it has to operate in just that way. And it tells of the organization that has made Swift's Premium Ham and Bacon, Brookfield Butter and Eggs, and Brookfield Sausage, — household words for excellence, * Send for @ copy—FREE Swift &Company1923YearBook Addresa: Swift & Company, pt. Chicago Public Relations De: Uz 8. Yards, - - - ' Swift & Company, U.S. A. A nation-wide organization owned by more than 45,000 shareholders Things Looking Up | BUFFALO—This city {ts on the) and waits but the settling of the rail- road quest.on before work will begin. | The most important is a comb.na- tion store and office building to be| ‘erected between the Buffalo club and) the Buffato hardware store, by R. 8- Seney, proprietor of the City Drug store. Several new residences are being | p'anned as well as the remodeling of | @ number of homes and offices. The Buffalo Manufacturing company | which recently purchased the Wolcott | building, 1s planning the remodeling of that bullding with modern offices | for the company on the first floor and apartments on the second. tubes Corn and Hogs 1 GUERNSEY—It is well known fact that corn is becoming each season more slopular with Platte Cowlty farmers and right!y so for no part e¢ Wyoming is better adapted to the growing of corn for seeding than Platte county. Because of this fact we are and have been in the pas' giving corn a great deal of attention and study and many things are brought to our notice that all corn growers should know. ‘The slogan in Platte county this year {s “Corn and Hogs” as this combination, with our other feeds will lift mortgages if anything will Also the growing of corn will do much to pave the way for a sugar beet factory tn Platte county as much @s anything else woe can do. ee a Back from Philippines THERMOPOLIS—Major Geo. W. Sliney, who has been stationed in the Philippines for several years past, hag returned with his family and is at present visiting with Mrs. Sliney's parents at San Francisco. He has been assigned to Fort D. A. Russell at Cheyenne and will be stationed there, Major Sliney, who has here: tofore been in the cayalty branch of the service, has been transferred to the lght artillery. He is expected M. Sliney, and his sister, E, Holdrege. Auto Wrecking Co We tear ’em down; everything saved but the honk. THIRTY DIFFERENT MAKES OF CARS SALVAGED NOW 1117 Kast Yellowstone At Scoop’s Garage Mrs. Fred in Thermopolis early next month to/ visit with his father, Colcmel George | Rather Bold | KEMMERER—Something now was) sprung in Kemmerer’s prohibition | enforcement annals when Night Mar shal Anderson took a prisoner to &/ focal restaurant for his suppe When the prisuner had finished eat ice tthe two strallet leisurely to- ward the front of the eat-ng ho when Lui Gabardi called to the pris oner, who stepped to one side and conferred with blm a moment. The officer seemingly paying no at tion saw a lot, but sald nothing. He took the prisoner back to the cl jail, and as they entered the plac Marshal Anderson says, “Well seo what Lu! passed to you.” ‘The prisoner ra.sed both hands for a search, and the marshal found in one of the prisoner's pockets a flask 5 ceorting to tt {t to him while 1 the restaurant. Ga was at once 1 under ar est, and was fined $75 in the po, {ce court, This makes $100 Gabard mwes the city, as he was out on robation, owing the city a balan ‘ on a former fine when he Ie of Uquor the prisor nt. let's Lui sold rred Important Link the reported KEMMERER — If a of tern Wyoming missioner, . there is to be a unit to connect Kem merer and the Lincoln Highway, at a point about 12 miles east o ston. While there is noth t is known that Mr. O'Neil f his project first of. a Once this i \cross Cumberland flat, i s00n to Kemmerer, as this route {s road ised more by 1c motorists in the ne other road from Ths provide spler fr Lincoln Hig! to Yelolw stone pari. une. Not This big vote possibility until April 2, offers any secure a winning vote total fo: grade encloged cars soon to aver (ont also the pri uced to $7.50 per year during this fi riod which closes April 2. ah eae and share in this extraordin How to Gain a Million Votes in the Tribune’s $16,000 Free Gift Distribution Enter yo THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER €0. Everything in Building Material RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS Office and Yard—First and Center Phone 62 ‘ which continues from now live wire the opportunity to Hag one of the high e@ awarded by th rib- only more votes are given now thar silt eS ice of the Tribune has been re- first big vote pe. _ your name today ary prize distribution, For layer cakes or cream filling—use) RED CROSS EVAPORATED MILK Absolutely pure, safe, convenient Sold and recommended by all Grocers SEE THE JEWETT Cut Away CHASSIS At the CASPER AUTO SHOW | ; 12 3-year subscriptions 1,080,000 Votes | If new (in extra votes) 900,000 : : | This would constitute 18 Clubs..1,800,000 Votes 4) Total for 12 subscriptions__ 3,780,000 Votes 3 64 bscripti cise -year subscriptions ...............1,080, If new (in extra votes).____ 600 008 Sie This would constitute 12 Clubs....1,200,000 Votes Total for 6 subscriptions. ----.2,880,000 Votes ae ; (OR) -year subscriptions .... earsomeesieel O80, “ If new (in extra votes)... a 450;000 vom This would constitute 9 Clubs... 900,000 Votes a Total for 3 subscriptions... 2,430,000 Votes i

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