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PAGE SIX ¢ Daily Cribune | a a LT i} Menwer of Audit Bureau of Circu | Advertising Tepresentatives i | ~ SUBSCRIPTION RATES ears By Carry and Outside State By Mail Inside State : 2 $ KICK, IF YOU DON'T GiT YOUR TRIBUNF Climate and Tax » the border on his | partu On the other nd the people of Florida take other v By constittutional amendnfent voter ne and inheritance taxes are} rohit ] so frowned on all other} rms ¢ I gasoline tax, and nui-| A TLC n ave caught the ney of tax ith in other states to their de Ir s Tec zed that one ery « ce people of wealth t e to the pocket oks was the most effec tive fF a " 1 by the antitax people} d V anda that gave the anti tax ame The st on its cam nt peoy assuring | the n € r resi¢ in certainty that the st not attempt to charge them for the privileg the form of in come or inhe ince taxé In return for this consideration Florida knows ll her revenue from these peo. p 1 iy. They will invest their| purchase of land and the building} and the promotion of industrial and enterprises, all of which will mean] the state id resultant | less to add ‘that Florida is ting the California is bawling her head off x question has taken firm hold upon the people of life. They are wort out and r where by taxes. They| rel g to show for heir effor f them are becom ‘ng more and unpopular € iy be said of climate in Florida 2 r the of the former had the se cale di the taxes and latter papers, notably those in the vi of San Francisco, are very seriously es candidacy of the widow of Julius Lp and available successor to her | 1 who was one of,the nation’s ablest rep-| ives There are plenty of wome ho might make luable representatives in congress. Mrs. Kahn | aay be one among the number, The Californii 1 ut the tre the | ; th hie Wido beir f r elected. 4a f imy ant states er ¢ them conspic usly fitted to f h executive ble, of course, but they should no place in ur political considers If woman is com nd good. We | ¢ men th th t. What must one ¢ 2 womer ome measure unfort or other € - We t ! ige t he a ion ¢€ iri € rif lustry, capital, international re re har important facts, to be It} by th competent t ul with the after | Rebukes His Party en truce, Democratic member from Marv la y to Senator Harrisc M of hi iuded uare ¢ vere charac the Democra arde to breathe the words before—that after Mr. Davis had been campaigning for weeks during | the last presidential contest he said to me on one} oceasion, “Senator Bruce, I not see that there | is the slightest re: on in the United States any- where to the oil scandals.’ I replied, ‘But suppose | Senator Brv-s said : am betraying no secret when I say now—} though no human power could have inducéd me that those investigations had been just a 1 freer from partisé un extra gance than they were suppose that the members of those investigating committees had in some instances been just a lit- tle more carefully selected than they -were, and suppose that those investigations had been con- conducted in a more impartial, judicial spirit. might not the result then have been different? Might not some real effect on public opinion have }+ been worke In my humble opinion these ques- tions can be answered only in the affirmative. da were the scandals that were exposed, of the United States came to believe were nothing like as bad as they were ed to be for extreme partisan purposes rt or another. And so from th investi- hich seemed to be such fair, luscious 1 political campaigu came nothing but} ashes Observing Economy Richardson, of Calitorn is another executive to notify his people that the state must come and he will-not lend en- taxation projects for the pur- treusury receipts. The two alin epted so pleasantly the temptation among politic: other penny or two is well-nig r Dead Sea Governor e within f swelling the tax ga toriats that to ell it Che Casper Dallp Cribune CROSS-WORD PUZZLE ane ee an wae SUGGESTIONS FOR SOLVING CROSS-WORD Start_out by filling in the words of which you feel reasonably These will give you # clue to other words crossing them, sure. and they in turn to still others. A letter belongs in space, words starting at the numbered squares and running either OTHE INTERNATIONAL SYNDICATE. of.these titles an ardent desire to seek the sort of entertainment thus loudly heralded, or rather does re say to himself, “Same old stuff! Trying to catch the curlous-minded young fellows and girls. Those titles try to fool you, unyway. The* censors don’t let’ anything get by that’s really, salacious. Last summer the producers got together and agreed upon the issu- ance of a-public announcement that thereafter the films would be more high-moraled and educational, but carry out the commendable plans which their innate pulchritude and deep culture dictated. Or perhaps there have been material reforms of this promised nature meio the pub- Mc has failed to obser It may be that the villain haan’ locked the door .and clawed the poor heroine quite so often as he did last year, or that she hasn't beén quite so badly clawed. But the titles of the photoplays, instead of being toned down to what the public thought they were go.ng to be, have not, to say.the le: greatly gained in puritanic effect. In*fact, it would seem to ong wan- dering about the city that there have been flashed from the _Dill- boards during the past month or two more of the titles of plays full of the so-called sex appeal than dur- ing any previous period. Surely, if he satyr’s pointed ears and budding horns are not seen in such titles ‘Sofled,"". ‘Name the M nished,” Fires of Youth, Slave,” “Husbands and Sweeth r “Wives and Lovers” and “The Wo-! PUZZLES each white isible. It is admitted that good and valu-| h man: Who Sinned,” then one must be | mn y ttically or both. use of un inerease could be made on the peieontally/ Ot er sesny, |of that innocent order of w of the state. But Governor Richardson HORIZONTAL | 76—A gem | which observes only the pure decline be a purty to fresh adventures in tax 1—Solitary | 77—Journey peiticka Patna ee ee ition. He has some 0 ‘oli irus in his} 4—A‘famillar til s ces Sabre me of ‘the! Ooolitge, virus in is) aa hiale-ofinur ] VERTICAS | in this seductive title business noth- eins and believes) Cat’ te (practi hor BAG i aeeareate tatcvan asia | 1—A theatre-box ing but old stuff, with which the thrift is possible—even in a state that is burst-| )377)' molintain cangelefieeute | 2—Point opposite the zenith public {s so fed up thut {t is no lon- ith progress. Many efforts are 1 corer | $—Prefix meaning out pee var] Heagera ell ACHE Lieb estia wae undermine the position of the governor 15—Th Supreme Bolin, | 4—A cry or shout ahead of the scenario writer who discount his demands for economy, but it 17 =MGnallte oF lohathinlae | BThe whole is heating, what he calls his brain lieved that he will survive the tests and impress| 18—Cchild’s term for father | 8—A boy in search of a title which shall so plied to their business. ommon sense from It is another spoonful of | a source noted for an unus-| ual supply of that same article. The president| 33— 23—Musical note Gaeta : ; Seep ectien 24—An ill-bred fellow “More than anything else we need a genera-| 37—Unit 26—A British territ tion of farmers, trained to co-operation, and most of all leadership that will not desert the farmer, There is a school of co-operators who sem to believe that the program can be started at the top and built downward. They want the ernment or the bank or philanthropists or} providenee to out a scheme, set its machinery | moving, guarantee capital and then inyite the | farmers to garner their profits. I offer no such Aladdin-like project. I want society as a whole| 29—Exposed surface of the earth 30—Girl’s name (famillar) 31—Blue or green pigment 88—An intestine 39—Skill, dexterity 40—An insect | 41—Persian fairy 42—Soft center of plant stems 43— 45—Mexican (Spanish) word for 48—Food made of ground tare reots 47—Man’s name (familiar) | 20—GIri's name (fa 22—To pat softly Africa 30—Articulation A short sleep river 36—Things needed 44—A relative (pl.) (Hawai!) 48—A feeling of list 7—A kingdom of Southeast Asia 27--The footstalk of a leaf 28—One who sets traps 29—Openwork of crossed bare 32—A court of justice | 34—A familiar constellation | 60—Lacking moisture 7 zens t ine ’ whet the curiosity of those suscep- good citizens with his sincerity Be Rape Sei meio 8—Personal pronoun Uble to sense-affecting influences as ing he Oe A lrennvsonie tisligne: 9—Like ashes to’ fill every seat in the theater, in- More Common Sense lear pan ee 10—Comfort cluding the one beh.nd the post, | { 12—Latin for “that Is” (abbr.) with a long Ine leading. up to the | President Coolidge holds out no cure-all to| 25—OMicial name of Gers 14—A degree (abbr.) box off.ce, clamoring for admission. farmers. His remedy is work and intelligence ap-| 22—Man’s name (familiar) | 16—An edible bulb The clever inventors. of alluring | titles must rather pity the old play- wrights. .Whatya fine opportunity | Shakespeare missed when he failed to consider the chance to fill up the house by such a. head ng Weak Wives of Windsor, of making It the tame merry one The character of Lady Macbeth should have suggested ‘The Sicken ing Sin of Her Soul Laid Bare;" millar) ory In West insted of which we get the pluin, in- of sipid “Macbeth,” -utterly devoid sex appeal. With a little alter: Desdemona could have been less weariness stead of plain “Othello” the title help; but I want the farmers to do their share| 48—M day of the week (abbr.) | s2—To bark-or.yelp Sadat cite aan I warn’ them! that this “will be ‘the lion’s| 5 ye ook of reference (abbr;) | 65—Made of oak \ no: ‘stretch sof inaginatlon cor intl » 53—A division of Canada (abbr.) 57—Indefinlte article | delity. to historic fact to have con- SE Ss ee | 64—Girl’s name 59—A wanderer jverted “King Henry the ighth" What He Thinks 56—Otgan of the body | 60—Chloride of sodium | into King Henry the Rake.” ; 58—To merit 61470 lodge temporarily | Lytton also missed a strong soat- zadier General Lord Thomson, late secre-| 60—Remain 62—A nobleman eens point Nana ahd Sink ce y of the air forces of Great B: i e| 68—Send forth profuse! nothing more seductivesthan. “The abor cz ; 66—Point of comp bbr.) read'“‘A Maid Begulled.” ‘The mod ; athe » fact, | &o— ful | in sheer more] | COM andice to blink at the fact,| ecco old mat 67—Btaln ern scenatlo, writer doubtless would and it should be advertised and people should | 74 ro strive for ‘superiority 68—A wheeled vehicle assent to the assertion that only one understand, that the next war will not be that | 71—Foe 69—Preposition of the old playwrights emerges froi between professional soldiers, but between peo-| 73, : dramatic history with any sort of J scende 72—Point of com; abbr. A ‘ ples. New York city would become a burning | goed biel kal pet ” conception of whatia t:tle should be charnel house under the aerial attack of poison | | 75—Sound having definite pitch asphyxiating and incinerating gases, with the inhabitants fleeing to the outskirts of the city, only to die as the g: from the bombardment | took effect. In future wars we will have to give! | the civilians gas masks and train them in the use of them.” A New Remedy Sano is the latest scientific discovery | for the cure of tuberculosis. Its commoner term is “gold salt,” and it remained for a Dan ish doctor to make the discovery and successful administration of the cure. The scientists lately in session at Washington have come in contact with it, as have health authorities in the large | centers of the country. Most of them agree that} is no doubt of the power of the new rem It cannot be used in advanced tuberculosis, w af re the lungs are almost gone and the patient is weak. It will not reproduce tissue. But it | solutely cures tuberculosis in the early stages where there is no nephritis or other complica tions The world will welcome the assistance of this} new remedy in its ‘tight against the white plague. The! End at Hand Christabel Pankhurst, the English militant suf - of whom we heard a great deal iw th ore Britain adopted women’s suffrace ted her British and American si 1use, ne that they have suffrag he ill not use has turned her attention to the repentance of the world in preparation for the end of things earthly, which event, she s ays is at hand this y possibly as early as Febru ary If Christabel is right in this matter, all we have to say is there will be a lot of unfinished business when things blowup, as it will be quite unexpected Dial’s Opinion Nathaniel B, Dial of South Carolina has expressed the opinion to his colleagues in the ate that, “It is a mortifying, bitter truth that the quiet and close-thinking man in the White House just elected president as the Republican Senator | mminee, is a better Democrat in many essentials more ir ‘ord with the foundation prince iples of the Democratic party than many men who have btained high and honorable places as ostensibl Democrats Use I lain English ttee of the commisssioners on uniform of the American Bur association ree: | that legislators seek greater clearness | drafting of laws. Every statute should be drawi up in “everyday” English and be so clear | it will convey the same meaning to all per- | of average education and intelligence. Noth- | should be left for construction. Half of our would be avoided if each ate laws onmend wf the ng egislative tate and the congress would have a drafting troubles mmission rhe American people paid $1,773,509. ses on their incomes and profits in bout 21,000,000 les o in or} than they turned in in 1923, PUZZLE SOLUTION Solution of Thursday's Puzzle. | hoards one wonders as Ihe Queen of 8! res of Passion” the latter with what provoking subtitle, Does the average 74—Holy person (abbr.) ; Movie Titles | When the. biggest thrill: of the | century is being blazoned on. the b'll puhifc, which according to Bancroft | 1s Wiser than tho wisest critic, reacts to euch a hue red-lettered film title to prove to all wives the cur'osity- Yeur Husband's Past.” and that was Sheridan “School for Scandal." Shall this fertile subject be dis- missed here? Yes, because a pub- Ue so fully fed up with these titles must begin to yawn, even by the enumeration of them, let alone any redundant insistence.on the all-too- apparent reason for the ringing of so many changes upon them—changes which long ago began to bear the earmarks of tiresome relteraton. the wholesome spread for bread with = his how the great in’ or * ‘Sollea" or “Tarnished” was culculated “That” Blot on citizen see and perhaps they haven't had time to] suages. | thing of the devil, its manifest absurdity. Why Import Culture An American woman of great wealth has recently founded an In- stitute of Music in Philadelphia, which as instructors has secured eminent. aliens, French, Italian, German, Polish. New York and Chicago at great expense support grand opera sung for the most part by foreigners. and in foreign lan- Persons of wealth responsi- ble for the institution acquire civic merit for their deed. Meantime, the legitimate stage languishes. And in place of the fine old-time acting of great drama our people throng to sensational produc- tions. The great tradition of the Englich and American stage dwin- threatens to lapse. But Amer- ican money is not endowing any theatre, not in sumptuous fashion It is not founding any schools for acting, as would give us a theatrical art such as the French and Germans & | have. Our Puritan prejudice against the theater still operates, no doubt. But persons who would shrink from endowing a theater will pay out a fortune to plant here a foreign art that would make Anglo-Saxon drama blush. The convention that music is spiritual, no matter how lascivicus its theme, while the drama ts a still holds, despite There is fashion in art as in everything. Forelgn music hag been the fashion in art amongst us for a generation now. In the middle lot the last century the fashionable art was Shakespeare and the ciher better dramatists. To pretend that we today get’ as much out of foreign opera as our grandparents did out of dramas whose language they un- derstood would be ridiculous. Yet it is not our Italian or German born eltizens who support forelgn music, but our own Americans. The knowledge of this time exceeds that of 1860, say; but the culture is less, considerably so, in tho circles that are counted polite. Art is supposed to be interna- tional. Great art may be, but all art is national, too. kespeare is | Anglo-Saxon, as Wagnef ts Teutonic. And suppression in America of Anglo-Saxon drama, enocuragement en eee tt Every Day a GROCERIES E.R. Williams Store No. 2 a 129 W. Second Phones 10—11 a SS eee 20c = a Pot Roast, lb 15 a | 121%¢ and ee c | : 2s 22%e i De | Veal Chops or Steak, 17 | | PEMD a eee eer 2¢ a ° Z pci at Pork Roast, 18¢ m7 - pobre Ribs, 18e 8 Rib Boil, 2 5 ¢e BADE eee SS eee | " WE DELIVER a FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 1925 of Latin music and Teutonic opera is deletrious to the American genius. Naturally; how could {t be other- The cultivated American for striving to wise? @ generation has been become a cosmopolite aesthetically. But there really isn't such a thins and all he has managed to achieve is a sorry melange of Italian, Ger- man, French, Russian and w! reflections, Calturally, he is neither, fish, fowl flesh, nor good red herring. He is culturally a freak, or better, |a scream, let us get American again, ctually and aesthetically, 23 we have remained politically. PS Birthday and everyday greeting cards at Hoffhines, Becklinger Bids. ———_—.——— A good test of a man ts the way he spends his money. oge 2 positive relief Acute pain that you can hardly bare tute the time to use Sloan’s. You don’t have to rub itin. Just the liniment itself does the work by sending fresh new blood tothepainful spot. All drug- gists, 35 cents, It will not stain. Stoan’s Liniment ~kills pain! | Bargain Day \ MEATS understand the motive behind these seductive titles and let them .go for what they are worth or does he meet NUCOA the expectancy of th to see the show? peals to that side which ‘most moral not be unduly deve and his publicity man and rush off With so many ap- imparted to him through the medium fine as shortening in high grade pastry the original - always sweet e film producer of his natu ts bold should WE'RE THE DOCTOR loped, i# there HatenBatil, jlbsco--—.. 2! fee Brisket Boil, !b.---..-.__ Eel 8c Neck Boil, Wh,<.c2_- = eee ee 124%ac Pot Roast, 1b)2_s2 oe Lee eae Rolled Prime Rib, lb,.--__..._-<20¢ T-Bone “Steals, “1b... 22. Sere -25c Round Steak, Ib. Sirloin Steak, 1b. Hearts and Liver, lb...______ Corn Beef (boneless), Ib... -- Hamburger Steak, lb.__15c, 2 Ibs. 25c Pork Sausage, lb._____ 15c, 2 Ibs. 25c Pork Shoulder (whole), Ib,.--_--14e Pork* Hama, 10.2520. 23 SOc: | Pork Loin, ib.-._ od Leneiaovece eS ee} Pork Loin Roast, 1b. Spare Ribs, 1b..___ Genuine Lamb Legs, Ib. Genuine Lamb Shoulders, Ibe Genuine Lamb Shoulder Roast, Ib. 25c Genuine Mamb Shoulder Chops, 1b. 25c Pure Home-Rendered Lard, Ib, --25c Half Light Hogs, Ib THE NO OFFICE AND PLANT Cor. H and Durbin hone 12 Meats and Provisions Prices Good Until Changed by Another Quotation RRIS CO. Veal Stew, Ib kek: Veal Shoulder Roast, Ib. Veal Shoulder Boil, Ib.L_-__ Veal Shoulder Steak, Ib.-_ Veal Sirloin Steak, Ib. Veal Round Steak, Ib.__ Dolds’ Sterling Bacon, lb. Dolds’ Sterling Hams, lb. Dolds’ Niagara Bacon, Ib. Lean Bacon, lb..---__ Picnic Hams, Fresh Fish and Oysters Every Day. Norwegian Stock Fish. Smoked Salt, Pickled and Canned Fish Imported and Domestic Cheese. Mince Meat and Pickles. Full Assortment Luncheon Meats. Lerd Cracklings. NOTICE TO RANCHERS We will pay you market price for Dressed Beef, Ho; Veal, Poultry, Eggs, etc. Ship your products to us, BRANCH MARKET 426 East Second Phone 2540 You wouldn’t ignore the family doctor and depend upon us to treat you if you were ill. We'd probably tre to count your pulse with a meter and measure your fever with a yard stick. So with our service or our business methods. If you think either needs remedying, tell us--not somebody else. We're the doctor, NATRONA ~ POWER COMPANY