Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 30, 1924, Page 6

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. Rae 2 nek MOOn ta manu Aae 8 oe Be PAG SIX Che Casper Daily Cribune 2 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | ess is exclusively entitled to the credited in this paper hed herein. sper Daily Tribune issued every evening anc | Sunday Mornihg Tribune every Sunday, at Cas-| Wyoming Pposite postoffice. Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second 1916. class matter, November 22. 15 and 16 3 Telephones ~ ng All Telephone Busin Branch J. BE. HANWAY and E, BE. HANWAY Advertising Representatives 7 r Publcation offices: Tribune Building, | bricklayers, masons, blacksmiths, wheelwrights, CRE te ream: the thinking man that it fails in its work of really educating the youth of the land when it only teaches them to shun the skilled trades and seek only the simplest form of clerical work for which no preliminary training is necessary, The boys of the land, when they were not} schooled, did not scarn to become carpenters, | wagonmakers, harnessmakers, foundrymen, cal. inet makers, shipbuilders or even ditch diggers. Many men now living an recall a when men versed in the details of a good trade could be found the country over. was respected as was the vill The wagonmaker lived well and held Now—alas—the sons of both hang in shame if anybody recalls the fact that their parents were journeymen. Prudden, King & Prudde 23 5 Bidg.. Chi- cago, 6 Fi Ave. Globe Bidg., » TI Fi ve., nae |. Copies of the Daily York, Chicago, Boston, visitors are welcome. San Francisco offices Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) rrier and Outside State One Year, One Year, Sur Stx Months Three Month: One Month, D Per Copy. - ly and Sunday By Mail Inside State One Year, Dally and Sunday F Ona Daly anc Sunday Dally and Sunday ~ Daily and Sun¢cay riptions a ame wil n lelivery after subscrip- es one month In arrears. KICK. IF YOU DON’T GET YOUR TRIBUNE. If don't find your Tribune after looking care- all 15 or 16 and it will be delivered to you messenger. Register complaints before 8 Disfiguring The Scenery The bill-board gentlemen shot the mark in decorating the landscape and the scenery throughout the country. The people are after them. Not content with plas- tering all the wall space in the cities and towns with great ugly signs, the vacant lots and spaces with billboards, they have extended the disfigurement for miles into the country, along the highways, with a collection of advice whose appeal falls upon deaf ears and tired eyes. If there are natural beauty-spots along the way,! they are sure to be cluttered up with unsightly signs in violent reds and yellows or in pictures that are a travesty upon art. So disgusted have the people of many &tates become with this form of advertising that the women have inaugurated campaigns of sup- pression and extermination. In many states laws have been passed by legislatures, and in cities by ordinances by city councils, ordering the unsightly billboards removed and forbid-| ding the erection of new ones. Minnesota is the latest state to recover the many beautiful bits of natural scenery from the disfiguring hand of trade, and since the fi of the year throughout that state bonfires have blazed merrily. The women did it there through legislative enactment. a large part in the crusade wherever succeeded. : Which all brings us to the situation in our own state. We are plentifully plastered wher- ever the highways lead, and the bill-board builders have begun to invade the beauty spots. Directly you will be able to read your preak- fast food signs throughout the 'Petons and the Big Horns along with what is proper in hositry, thewing gum, plumbing and cigarets. Yes, whatever we haye restful to the eye along the way, is being rapidly desecrated by bill boards, busy at other occupations, to attend to the raz- ing of these disfiguring objects. Maybe, some day they will take time to wake up a sleeping legislature or a timid council to conserve what meagre beauty we have. So far us the men are concerned, they hopeless. ‘They boards were ornamental or not, and they would not bother to observe whethe: sunset was ob- scured by an admonition to “Smoke Bull Dur-} ham” or “Chew Natural Leaf.” The hope here, as it has been elsewhere, is in the women, who know and appreciate. We don’t exactly like to wish the job onto them, but we are mighty keen to help any anti-bill- board crusade they will start. Fcolish People And Money Of course the two transactions had nothing whatever to do with each other, and were a million miles apart if they were an inch; but it has are it shows a coincidence, that certain rich men} Georgia are no wiser than many of their poorer breth- ren trud; along life’s great highway. The manner in which Mr, Doheny and Mr. Bok made permanent investments of the same considerable amount—one hundred thousand simoleon bucks—would scarcely find a paralel, purpose considered, among the less fortunate in riches, involving a single buck. The possessors and managers of large wealth seem to-be more foolish, than possessors and managers of small wealth. The latter must! secure some but what, pra out of their larger investments when they re-} spectively soaked their funds into a league of nations scheme and the bottomless pocket of} Montana a discredited public official? Somebody has said that it takes all sorts of ily; but no one until now, has ever suspected | Mr. Doheny or Mr. Bok of being anything but} hard headed men of business. Of course the: have absolute coytrol over their investments: but even so, it is more or less of a shock to sen-| sible folks to see perfectly good wealth spent in riotous foolishness. foolish people to make up the great human fam-| New Hampshire A Lame System have rather over-} They have had} Our women, apparently, are too} would not know whether bill} ue for the money they inyest,| Mic could the former hope to realize| Minnesota | “educated” and therefore they are above work-! ing at building a house, making a shoe or coop-! ering a firkin, as the case may be. We have too many “gentlemen” in this coun- Of course they are only fake gentlemen | try. 'BSCRIPTION RATES | and hardly self supporting, but they fondly de-|y thing. They know how to read and write, but seldom do either. distinguishes them as men of class in the com- munity in which they live. Our foolish system of teaching pupils in | publi¢ schools anything but that with which they | can earn a living has much to answer for. The his hands with work of constructive kind. Refining Alchemy of Culture The experience of ages that are past, the | hopes of the ages that are yet to come, unite | their voices in an appeal to us; they implore us to think more of the character of our people than its numbers; to look upon our vast natural resources, not as tempters to ostentation and pride, but a means to be converted, by the {i | refining alchemy of education, into mental and the cry of spiritual treasures; they supplicate us to seek 1 | for whatever complacency or self-satisfaction | we are disposed to indulge, hot in the extent of 9NE DEFECTIVE FLUE CAUSES our territory, or in the products of our soil, but! | in the expansion and perpetuation of the means of human happin they beseech us to exchange the luxuries of sense for th thus give to the world the example of ‘a tion whose wisdom increases with its prosper! afid whose virtues are equal to its power. For these ends they enjoin upon us a more earnest, . a more universal, a more religious devotion to | our exertions and resources, to the culture of the youthful mind and heart‘of the nation. Their gathered voices assert the eternal truth, that, in a republic, ce is a crime; and that pri- | vate immorality is not less-an opprobrium to | the state than it is guilt in the cee Horace Mann. 693J or go to the factory, 1014 South Oak St. put them up yourself. made adopted and are steadily used by the United States Government.— Advertisement. Who Gets and Who Pays If the soldiers bonus bill is enacted fifteen stutes and territories will be culled upon to pay more taxes than their veterans would receive and thirty-eight states and-territories will re- | ceive for their veterans more money than they | will return to the treasury in taxation to meet the cost..For example, New York will receive | $199.493.000 and will pay 140,000 or $367,547,- 000 more than that state will receive. Michigan | receives $68.676,500 and pays $114,700,000, Penn- sylvania will receive $151,944,500 and pay $195,- 000,000. On the other hand, Missouri will receive | $66,926.500 and pay $5,000,000 benefiting to the amount of $61,926,500. Texas will receive $82,- | 100,500 and pay $31,451,600, Towa will receive | $50,000,000 and pay ~ $13,000,000, Wyoming will | receive $5,642,000 and pay $1,211,000. | The following table is compiled to indicate the total each state and territory will have tc | pay and which of the states would benefit from a money standpoint and which would be injured in the same manner. The table is based on $500 | to each of the 3,900,000 men who served in the ; army and this does not include those serving in the navy and marine corps and nurses. It furth- er shows the amount each state and territory will receive and the amount they will turn back | into the treasury, based on the 1922 report of the treasury department. The table follows: State or ‘Total Bonus Re- Cost in Taxes to} Territory ceived in State State, 1922 Alabama ............$ 37,743,000 $ 6,351,791 Alaska . 3 972,500 155,465 Arizona ... 4,863,500 3 | Arkansas ... . 81712500 California . 59,838,000 | Canal Zone . . 105,500 Colorado .. - 19,926,000 . Connecticut 25,875,500 Delaware ....... 3,891,000 3,829,000q Dist. of Columbia 8,791,000 10,600,000 | Plorida . 17,398,000 9,000,000 »746,500 10,430,000 Hawaii Idaho .. Tilinois Indiana Towa. .. Kansas Kentucky . Louisiana . Maine Maryland . Massachusetts 9,000,000 higan Mississippi Missouri . Nebraska . y ja .. 8,744,000 477,600 3,463,600 | New Jersey ..... 59,090,000 | New Mexico . 659,600 New York ... 557,140,000 North Carolina North Dakota Ohio ...... Oklahoma . Oregon .. Pennsylvania 40.077,500 16,343,000 944,500 When the banks and offices of the country! are beesieged by young men who know no tfade and hgve no special training, but who seek em. ployment ‘of clerical character paying compar- ntively small wages, it indicates a surplus of labor—such as it is. But when the member the useful and productive trades, p wages to those who have mast 1 n, dwindle and practically no young men seek to be apprenticed to such callings, the aspect of things industrial, so far as our growing youth may be concerned, takes on quite another huc Onur public school system may be an adwir able thing—some of us had no edues mal -¢ vantages other than it supplies+but it seems to ‘the ardent support given to the bonus measure Philippines . Porto Rico . Rhode Island South Carolina Tennessee 9.533.000 27.237.500 Texas Utah Vermont Virginia ... 15 476,000 18,396,000 28,260,000 1,211,900 This compilation may furnish some reason for Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming . by some senators and representatives, be wishing it was ~|Newcastle Courier. Observers The village cooper the sky above we Philadel; The sons know nojJennings Bryan's “dark horse” is trade and can do nothing well. They have been/8" evolutionist. Ce ee pant cuse for switching to himself.— Memphis Commercial Appeal. >. | ceive themselves into believing they are the real|never tasted alcohol, as good Dr. (Eliot suggests, isn't it time the They can wear white col-;W*y was being prepared?—Lowell lars and the clothing that they foolishly believe |Cout!er- }!s going: to veto the,tax bill if it is jnot right, the congressmen might : J ¢ ry as well make up thelr minds that worst of its crimes is when it transforms a po } manly youngster into a sissy, too good to soil | preside exclusively for signing bills this year. However, unless they fix up some kind of a working agreement pretty soon ,it may not take many pens this year to-do the signing with.—Salem News, or element has definite ideas about a vital problem and fs anxious to joys of charity, and | fered a fire $150,000 just because of one DE- FECTIVE FLUE. contractors and builders continue to cent of all fires in residences. school defective flues? insist on Asbestos Chimneys, and when you buy, 9 Only a few more months and we'll winter again.— —_————— Is It Permanent report Bryan’: , 4 Where Do We Begin? If we are to breed up in thirty years’ time a generation that has PQTRLEES TT You Can Depend When President Coolidge says he win do it. It looks as if. the ‘3 pen might not be used ——— Boys At Play The senate fs mired in its own neapacity. Yet when some ‘group meth.ng, and do It above-board, “propaganda” is raised In. the senate and an investigation HALF OF ONE TOWN TO BE WIPED OUT BY FIRE. The town of LIMON, -Colo., sut- that cost the city Why = should tell the people that brick chimneys ‘Are Just as Good". When the National Board of Fire Underwriters will tell you that more than 90 per houses, and churches, are caused by When you build be sure the house is equipped with ASBESTOS CHIM- NEYS. ORDER TODAY. Phone Take the blocks home’ and They are in Casper and. have. been If FROM ALL FEAR ‘YOU WOULD BE FREED. SANITATION'S _— ANITATION — that’s the watchword of the mod- ern home. Sanitary experts —that what folks call us practical plumber men who serve their wants so well. Phone us. woe SCHANK PLUMBING EHEATING CO.INC. PHONE 7Ii. 721 Madison Phone 2044-R Estimates Furnished On Request The Old Reliable Gebo Coal Phone 948 and 949 Natrona Transfer Stor, & Fuel Co. . FOR RENT Store room 20x60 with full basement in Chandler building, 617 East Second street. Inquire at A. E. Chandler Filling Station Matters and age Telephone In, | Trout Prospects CODY—Fish at the hatchery are doing nicely is the report brought to the city yesterday by R. R. Rous- seau, deputy game warden, who vis- ited there. He took Ed Johnson, | country toda: superintendent, out to the hatchery | “°rnecs ‘ocia that he might take charge, having been laid up for several weeks by illness, Former superintendent C. E. Henson has been looking after the pew babies for some time. More | teresting, and illuminative. ibtless than a half million eggs were set for hatching a week ago by Bliss Bayne, sioner. LOVELL—Lovell is exceedingly proud of the product of her giass factory this year in particular. In former years, the output of the plant has varied in quality of glass from A to the lower grades of B. and C and in some instances to D, but not so this year. arting the blowers have been able to produce finest quality of A and AA glass and there is a very gener- al feeling of satisfaction, not only with the management of the plant and the workers, generally over the product that is being turned out this year. pai he she hae A Radio Menace Alarming possibilities of the radio @re seen with every new develop- ment. son that radio apparatus is making its appearance in the Yukon, and the worst feature of the report is that residents at that far northern latitude are able to hear the jazz music can tune in on radio concerts far their jazz music.” ; This is something that might have been forseen, but it is indeed news of dire portent from which there is no escape at home, and which already has made a successful foreign countries, is destined to be carried by tne radio to the utter- most ends of the earth. be the consequence no one can tell. That rough and hardy crew. who moil for ‘gold beneath {lights from now on may spend the better part of thelr time dancing to the staceato of metropolitan jazz orchestras hundreds or thousands of miles away. fined to the dance hille at Miller Creek end Keno Mills. will also tune in on us, the music of the sphere. heard where they have bananas and State-Wide | Doul deputy state fish commis Lovell Glass science, less selfishness, “the better clement.” would be vaiied. From the day of ity: but Lovell folk Now tt is reported from Daw- that emanates from New York, San Francisco, and ‘other home the cties. “Dance halle at Miller Creek Fuller « 9 a and Keno Mills," we aro told, “have There’s a Reason experimented and found that they Man is American jazz, invasion of certain Fuller Man What will time you give the arctic » call, write or telephone . C. Phene 2185 Nor will-this be con- The tropics Jazz will be 1t will be . CARPENTERS ATTENTION ! A Special Call Meeting MONDAY, FEB. 4 % For the Purpose of Considering the Disposal of Our Property ALL CARPENTERS ARE URGED TO ATTEND Carpenters’ Local 1564 bel Reduced Rates for Winter Tours. Florida, The Gulf Coast Southeastern Resorts ‘CUBA Go One Way—Return Another— Stop-Overs at All Points Come in and let's discuss your win- ter trip. Planning comprehensive tours is a special feature of BUR- LINGTfON SERVICE. F.. S. MacINTYRE Ticket Agent where they have none, as at Daw- What We Need ‘What is tne greatest need of the ‘There would be all sorts @f ans- wers if there were a straw vote taken to find out. The answer of the hundred and ten millions of Americans would.be strikingly tn- of the people would say that we need lower taxes, Others would be just as firmly of the opinion that what we need Is better enforcement of the laws. Still others would say that we need great- er stability in industry, higher wages, less propaganda, more con- more in- terest in politics by what we call ‘The answers Probably the dnswer covering the most ground would be the one that would assert that we need, above and beyond all else, a higher moral- Let us see what this would do for It would, for one thing, lessen bootlegging and moonshining. would decrease crime. It would drive People to the polls, and urge better men to strive for political honors. It would do away with a great deal of} ‘ grafting, raise the tone of busin: and industry, improve the attitude In every welcomed.’ Because ‘women . have learned that he always comes ‘with ‘helpful suggestions, This is because every is courteous, and considerate of the him, Therefore you may admit him with absolute con- fidence. If you want a Fuller Man WHITAKER eae WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 30, 197; family going. It would makes chil aren respect and obey their paren ‘as well as show landlords tha: ., ants are human and should be (7.4 ed in the lignt of this revelation, would cause tenants to see Jandiords ar? not all fiends. pretty good scouts most of the time, to work hard to keep the | What We Forget - . Between | 15 and 50 Schools teach, and nearly every home applies the rule against coffee arid tea for children. drug of coffee and tea, and how its regular use may disturb health. Often they have cause to remember what it has done to them. How much better it would be not to forget— and avoid the penalties!. Postum is a pure cereal beverage—delightful, and safé for any age—at any time. Good for breakfast at home, for all the family; good for lunch at the club or restaurant; good with the evening meal; good with a late night dinner— good on any occasion. Postum satisfies, and it Why not be friendly with health, a//thetime? It Tell Your Friends About : Casper and Wyoming a Send them a copy of the Annual Industrial Edition of the Casper Daily Tribune and boost" Wyoming. This year’s ‘number will be better than ever—the most authoritative, ‘up-to-the-minute piece of work ever issued on Casper and Wyoming. USE THE COUPON BELOW TO ORDER ; YOUR COPIES: CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE, CASPER, WYO. Gentlenien:—Please reserve copies of your Annual Industrial Edition for me, check for being inclosed. Name se.ee.ees oe SOT T eee Address (The Annual Industrial Number will cost the usual price of 10c per copy.) SALT CREEK BUSSES 3 Busses a Day Each W: LEAVE CASPER—ARKEON BUILDING Lave Salt Creek re: Baggage an Called for and Delivered 8 a. m. : Salt Transportation 2p. m. ~ 2:30 p. m. Company Tel, 144 3 p. m. TRAIN SCHEDULES Chieago & Northwestern Nov aatbouna Departs a e — —— nee wwe nn’ :15 P.M, 2:35 p. m. Sori = Arriver Departs - nnn nnn nnnnnenen $45 D. m.

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