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MONDAY, APRIL 13, 1925 PAGE SIX ~ Che Casper Daily Tribune By J. BE. HANWAY AND E. E. HANWAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class’ matter, November 22, 1916. Che Casper Daily Cridune 'BOOM IN FLORIDA IS REVIEWED BY BABSON Great Opportunity for Money-Making Stil Reigns In Souther State, Statistician Says ini Sounding Certain Warnings. stockings are sustained by grips at- tached to the corset or brassiere. Scarfs Rampant, The warm kasha scarfs that de- lighted women during the cold months have given place to rainbow hued chiffons and silks thrown non- chalantly over the shoulder. Some of these are decorated with quaint | animals and plants never seen out-| 13 Women of the Christiay church side the depths of the deep blue #ea-| here attended easter services yester- ‘The riotous color scheme are repro-| gay hatless. ‘They left their Easter duced in the strings of beads and|tonnets at home to disprove asser- ne ceases bea pate nS aru tions of male members of the chirch worn, design| old, silver, Oregon Women Leave Easter » Hats at Home along. other lines or before another jury. The oil counsel also gave notice, that the decision dismissing criminal indictments oroginally arising out of the oil scandals would be appealed, but they had: not’ set decided whether they would seek new in- dictments against Mr. Fail, Harry Sinclair, Edward L. Doheny. . or Edward I? Doheny, 'Jr., who were nanied in the indictments which the court held invalid. McNary’s Plans Reclamation plans on a large scale will be advocated at the next session of congress by Senator McNary of Oregon, | Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning jay at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune building, opposite postoffice. The Casper Daily Tribune every COTTAGE GROVE, Ore., Apri = ----15 and 16 All Departments MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ated Pi is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of dited in this paper and also the local news published herein. chairman of the sénate committee on irrigation and reclama- tion.-He says be wil proposeta revolving fund of $35,000,000 to. $50,000,000 to capitalize such reclamation projects as shall be approved by the secretary of the.interior. The program in- “BABSON PARK, Ma Aes get = "oT estio ° e al reason they went Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C.) cludes draining southern swamp lands, flood control in Colo- April 18.| happens." To thls question he re- | WORM Om that the principal rea ~ en Adverti epresentatives rado and elsewhere, dams to develop hydro-electric power, re- --Moger W. Babson has returned) plied: “I am troubled about two = Hee to church waa to display thelr new Prudden, King & prudden, 1720. Sieger Bide, Chicago, Ill, 286 Firth storation of the soil of New England and supplying water to from his winter office in the hills of| things: first, the gambling spirit and| You can get 100 shaves with one} millinery creation: ye., New York City: Globe Bldg., Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bidg.;| “ayiq regions : \ céntral Florida. He was imniediate. | the wide open conditions existing tn | blade. For results try'a Tribune Classt- San Francisco, C: Copies of the Daily Tribune " - z ly asked by reporters and others re-| Miam!. No one realizes better than ——_——-—_ ‘or res ry ss ‘ork, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices visitors are weleome, President Coolidge has again made it known that constant. | garding the great boom’ in Florida | {that a real fundamental basis ex: | Try -cribune Want Ads for Results. | fled _A - : ae discussion of the foreign debt situation and the possibility of a aed eee a ea pened sey Cont Sa eee aah ieee RS UBER ON EAS second disarmament conference being held‘is not helprul, and will last... Mr. Babson's. tepfyto| not have ‘#0 many friends, I urged Y si that he will make no statement hereafter regarding eith€r | these questions {s as follows: the people of that city, at a meet- subject unless specific developments warrant an annouricement. “There is no doubt," sald -he, june of its chamber of commerce, to f ” 5 y i with my Wrigleys 2.50 All subscriptions paid i n ad d the Daily Tribune will not the world. were St generally taken | sides oranges and grape fruit, or | 2, little wh! insure delivers eubecriptic one month (n arrears, te lets in. Goaesevejueeniaentiot ao meast ethics cand etomeeee bee ie the end. it ultimately drives KICK, IF _YOU ‘T YOUR TRIBUNE the Irish Free State, says that the| | Pi ‘ ° father union theablejo€ (spendinel| toe Nive at tellen woman, I. Have 3 yon AEP APEC carefully for it call 16 or 16| people of Ireland are turning away a portion of one’s winter in a tropt- i Wahopaes rorkk ahateagithis and {t tegister complaints | from politics to the consideration of cal land. ‘This may be, to a certain | high hopes for 3 Then there fe the size of esgs and the quantity extent, 2 fad; but no more so than | Only in her interests. Then there fe butter that they can get from a the owning of an automobile. Both | (he constant possibility of « Jforide ay =| sive a combination of pleasure and | oer eee eae ene may be one = In other words, they. are getting increased efficiency. As almost ev- niet ee Ha) AE dtoas Abe ue i down to the brass tacka of life: Gry, respectable: Samully BAS An ieuto- |i toin tor *twenty’ years; 7 Hut iwhen The Soothing Weed For a long time Ireland hae proak- such families east of the Missiesippl| % 2968 come ‘values in many sec- Women are fast coming into their own, or if not their own, then what they demand and can secure. The Milwaukee railroad has built special cars for their Chic go to Seattle trains in which are smoking compartments for women. This things which you are not. Senator Borah-inquires anxiously “What isa Republican?” A Repnblican,-dear ‘senator, is about fifty-seven varieties of Brass Tacks fasted, dined and supped on politics. A returning priest declared: “I | never saw anything Itke-{t. -Youns men who should have been at work lounged about and all they did was They haye learned a lesson that would greatly profit all the rest of “that a boom’ {s*gradually develop- ig in Florida which can almost be compared to the California boom of a decade ago; the Duluth and cen- tral west of the early 90's and the fugh to the Klondike a few years iter, Furthermore this Florida boom is based upon something be- STRIKES. SNAG are beginning to feel that they must go to Florida for from two weeks to four months in the winter. As in many cases this fe increasing the have faith and invest their money in Miam{. But unlees Miam! wate! {ts.atep and keeps clean it may s fer collapse. ‘The people of Miam! should study the history of New Or- leans, Saratoga and similar sport- ing cities. ‘The policy of ‘giving peo- ple what they want’ pays for only . It is a boomerang tions will surely freeze likewise. Of | course if some sections, such as the | ‘Ridge’ from Haines City to Se- bring, should be immune, as many believe will be the case, a freeze s f length of life of those who do company has recognized the growth of the cigarette habit | to talk politice. “I was invited toa lenin by troasieivertorten path {0| might send values up in such sec- among the fair sex and is frankly catering to it as it has |testaurant band ee aha ania oqo le Saks can be seen that there {s a real ae os eeeet poweyerscts gh for years catered to the habits of men. And, why not? pe pe peeryi Atala {Utilities Commission] ™#!s for Florida's boom. Florida | 16 ® tormado—no one knows when The rights of the two ses e equal in all respects, and if men may smoke they certainly have no monopoly. on such rights that consistently can be denied to women. If there are still existent among men, male creatures, who, while indu g the habit themselves, are shocked at exten- sion of the practice among women, then let these old fashioned persons set the example of tefraining from an indulgence which they consider only proper for the male of the species. The tobaceo habit, at best has nothing to recommend it. It is more or less filthy and more or less detrimental to the user, in point of physical effects. But since the day Sir Walter Raleigh introduced it at the Court of Elizabeth, it has had a certain fascination which hag grown with the years and ex- tended among the people until it is next to universal. The attitude toward the use of tobacco in recent years has shown a tremendous trend in its fayor. This is shown con- elusively in the unparalleled growth of the industry, which has not only trebled, but quadrupled, since the European war. Cigarettes haye shown the greatest growth. If the strain of war upon men was relieved by tobacco, the same is true of women only to greater extent, because of their greater ner- yous organism. But few women who engaged in war activities at the front, who went into the service free from any thoughts of tobacco, but came back confirmed cigarette smokers e8 a nobody was within earshot, lowered hig voice and asked me in a whisper what I thought of the politieal situa tion. It_J out to dinner the drifted -around to polities he: words of President Cosgrave indicate that, the; condition which the visiting priest found to prevail in Ireland several years ago {s alter- ing for the better.” The people are beginning to think of getting on in the world. {n about the only way a people can ‘get’ on). arid ‘that is by working. Politics, like the ‘poor, is always with us here in the’ United States. It stares at readers. from many pages of their datly newspapers and mostly in the story {t tells is one of fifing and fiddling on ‘the -part: of some body of ‘public. servants: with the public business. ‘Sometimes the business is important, but mostly it is not, except that {ts importance be found in a determn{ation on tHe part of a state legislature ora congress Cuts Off Valuation Figure for Radio. By ROBERT MACK. (Copyright 1925, Consolidated Press Association) WASHINGTON, April 11—Broad- casting. by public service corpora- tions *has been hit a blow by the District of Columbia public utilities éommission. The commission holds that a broadcasting station must stand on its own feet and ‘that the cost’ of its installation, equipment and operation is not a proper allow- ance in fixing the valuation of the owning. company for rate-making purposes. vad This decision was made in the case of WCAP, owned and operated by the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone company, one of the two has come to {ts own and—boom or. no. boom—is destined to have a great future. “As to how long, the present con- tinued mounting of prices will con- tinue, no one knowe; but surely, tn most sections the real boom {s just beginning. The national publicity which Florida has received this year has awakened an ‘interest never be- fore equaled. Without doubt next year will show a great increase over this year and for, some years to come the numbers golng to Florida should continue td increase. Of course, prices cannot always go up. Sometime prices will reach a peak. Then everyone will start to sell and down they'll go. Ae a boy I was brought to Gloucester, Mass., and saw the great boom {n ,seashore property which extended from New- port, R. I., to Bar Harbor, Me, Hum- ble people who had farme of 50 acres which they valued at $100 per acre sold for $2,000 per acre but it will come or where {t will strike. “Florida people should not forget the California still existe. Although California is much further from ‘the center of population than {s Flori- da, yet’ it» has certain advantages over the latter ‘state. Southern California and the entire coast has a much better all the year climate than has Florida. Moreover, i. fornia must some day profit greatly from the awakening of China, In- dia and the Far East. Now in mc sections of Florida land values ar still much below similar property in Southern California, As, however, Florida values continue to climb, they, will equal or exceed California Prices. Then people will again flock to California as Florida has no more of a monopoly on climate than it has on oranges- “My mother used to say, ‘Every dog has;its day’ and without Flori- dais beginning to have her day. Unless. something happens, Florida will, during the next few years, of- Wrigleys #ives the penny a bigger - value in delightful, long-lasting and beneficial refreshment. Coming home on the train or in the car - Its so cool and sweet after smoking. And then when you get home how eager the little folks are for their Wrigley ! How good it is for them! WRIGLEYS 8. to-pass a new law to! cure.an !mag-| broadcasters’ of the Bell ‘Telephone | 14, they really make any money?! fer the greatest. opportunities for The ideas prevailing during the Victorian period concern inary dil. Andis #he last analysls| system. In passing upon the valua-| No, becaure after having the money| money making ever known tn rv ing what was proper for women, have undergone drastic modi- | most of'the statu nostrums thus] tion of the company, the, commis. | 1” sai bank for m year or two they.| america. On the other hand, those d 7) ter every meal fication. In this day women do pretty much as they choose, | compounded: for mynicali maladies] sion struck ont $125,000 claimed, as | tok ft out and bought seashore | who have the true interests of Flor. just. a8 men have to large extent always done, held in check : 2 : still have, Only today they > only by what public opinion set up as the proprieties of their |*®&t wovld outrank: the onessth Officials of the telephone com-| 1,, y today they have but | tg, righteowgness and not realtors y 9 f read. we DECE rs are- supposed to cure if the’ latter itantisaluriagawts x. | five acres in place of thelr fifty!) which truly make a nation. Real time. It would be mighty nice and mighty comforting to re- existed: pany -were silent ‘Saturday when ask-| rand at Magnolia, Mass., where iI ard the use of tobacco by bandoned later volunta men also. Who knows but it may be sa? of tobacco with us, and m its use, recognized and eate women as a passing fad, to be So would it be in the case: of . Meanwhile we-haye the use awhile we have the extension of ed to by many important inter: Ay iPr ‘ out vice, Mquor and 1; onsibl ests, Just what are you going to do about it? ibbitimate Casita ton nugponsnbuie:| Cat Plorida. Some day ‘the boom will] subdivision auctioneers eho ace healthful surroundings,.plenty to.eat,| It "fs understood that study* will | break; but: unless something, hap-| merely legulized’ burglars. I. be- The Many Questions The ruling of Federal Judge Garvin of Brooklyn. in the case of the Dutch schooner Zeehond authorizes the government to confiscate vessels engaged in liquor smuggling ‘anywhere bn the high seas. The Zeehond was seized fifteen miles off shore with a cargo of wines which were quite evidently in- tended for American consumption. Since this involves a vio- lation of the tariff act, as well as the Volstead act, the court decided that the seizure on the high seas was justified under the rule of international law permitting governments to cope with smpgglers hovering beyond the three-mile limit. Except for the necessity of proving an attempted fraud in each case, the government iy free under this decision to. deal with rum-running without regard for the three-mile-limit or even the special twelve mile limit established by the treaty with Great Britain. It is difficult to see how foreign govern- ments can rightfully object so long as an attempt to smuggle is always proved. At the saine time, the questions of fact raised are likely to be close, and too much caution cannot be exer- cised in applying the rule. America, as an important maritime power, must proceed carefully in giving new applications to international law. We have already, in effect, practically de atroyed the three-mjle limit, and the consequence may some day be rather more than we anticipate. It is possible that in attempting to enforce the prohibition law by stretching a point as convenient here and there, we may be letting ourselves in for serious trouble at some future time. Passing Fads It is almost time for a new fad to knock for admission, for they happen along at irregular intervals. The man who thinks up the next thing that will take the country by storm may as well prepare to retire and live off his income. There always will be some persons who like puzzles. That has been true for many years and probably will remain true, but the popniarity of cross-word puzzles seems to be waning. They still have their devotees and many of them, but it is reported that there are ny family contests to see which member will get at first and people who are well supplied with large dictionaries dé not t so many telephone calls from Jarge dictionaries do not get so many telephone calls from aped into sudden popularity and failed almost as suddenly. In card games bridge whist and poker seem like ly to continue while pepole shuffle decks, but there was a time when that seemed true of euchre, about which little is heard any more. Cinch has also lost favor. Bridge is generally ac- | strength. It ts the wish of your min: | so\is'the hope of {mmortality to’ the from & Y Z 4 2 # > § 14 ister that you should keep foraver | soul. Said Tennyson, “It is incredible ‘ Natrons County Tax Ass’n. cepted as a social game although as experts play it there is no i A } sociability alwnt it for the reason that conversation is not |e é¥ gladness which the confes|[fhat man te. not immortal. That Washington to Center Street EiBanonate allowed and the player's attention must be given to the run of cards. Most people who play it are not experts, and find that it stimulates rather than interferes with conversation. The next fad will no doubt be popular with all classes of persons; and something not too expensive for the public to buy or'pla Piha he hide ae ann Foes ce tives nee ws 4! | Bg Eenclonedifind’$. ~~ seo in support of work That the farmer pays far higher taxes than does the | day that brought them forth. They | that genius explodes like a meteor Prices range from 10 cents to $2.00 per tree de- Pport of work banker or the. city property holder is the opinion Of econo: «| Ore cease Bites Sone Ue | ORES ete Ea can | mepending on amountorenrayitigmmecsasaryy orl) < UMIM) | mists of the department of agriculture, based op a survey » o8 barre *y price beaatiitild bs pcre ae Esrlp) Baye, Of shied a Se em coe the pent $4 ti . anquets. t is not so with the] are calling forth nature unto e * ~ : of conditions in three Indiana counties. They, figure \that a | cnusah. tp! Mvgu by. (tx lergesand uc | teenie echiite: Tha rudaend barale Call Me When in Need of Advice On tax of two per cent levied on these classes of property would ake 25 per cent of the income of the bank property, 42.5 per cent of city rentals and 52.6 per cent of the farm rents. Still Pursuing The special District of Columbia grand jury, to which At- lee Pomerene and Owen J. Roberts, special government counsel in the naval oil leasing prosecution, presented evidence on which indictments in addition to those now pending have been sought, have adjourned without action. But government agents expected that the attempt to get further action will be renewed are themselves breeders of troubles The people. of Ireland ,have: sick- ened) of. politics because ‘they have discovered that even the. Frea; State cannot give them the things) they would have, unless they; buckle down to-work. Any time the citizen allows hiniself to dream of gratifying his clothing, some . amusements and books;to read by recourse to politics he is deluding himself, i Much time is wasted by a. large number of people in this and “other countries {pn efforts to get by means of special statutes things which have not as yet come by any process other than that-of toil. Pollticlans eay a great deal about the necessity of this or that measure and) lay great stress upon the importance to the individual of ‘some particular law, but {f any man will sit down and try to think of some particular statute that has served to lighten the burden of his toil or increase his income he, will discover that! he cannot recall any such measure. After a government has made pro- vision to protect {ts citizens in thetr lives, persons and possessions, it cannot, except in a yery. general way, do much more for them. The people of Ireland, doubtless, were told during the days when they were struggling for the Free State that wheh jt came they would dis- cover that lfe had been made sweeter by less work and {ts rewards fuller. Now they know that the be lef was not-warranted. Disi!lusioned by practical experience they are turning to that greatest of all the rees of hu n happiness—work an allowance for WCAP. ed df the decision might result in removal of the station to some other elty. “There te nothing that can ba said just! now,” one official sald. ‘'The most we can promise is that WCAP will be on the air Sunday and Mon- be made-of the actual cost of the station during the past year when it has operated as a commercial sta- tion to determise whether sale of time on the air can make broadcast- Ing profitable. WEAF, New York, continued to fet the record of the country’s broadcasting stations in maintaining a constant frequency during Febru- ary, the bureau of standards an- nounced Saturd: WEAF turned in a perfect score with WCAP, Wash- ington, WSB,.Atlanta, WGY, Schen- ectady, WBZ, Springfield, WRC, Washington and KDKA, Pittsburgh, showing an average deviation from their assigned wave lengths of one: tenth of one per cent, a ree CARD OF THANKS We-wish to thank our ma friends for thelr expressions of sym- pathy and kindness during our re- cent bereavement. Mr. EB. F, Stanko. ‘Miss Mary Stanko. Albert Stanko. Eula Stanko. Mr. and -Mre. E. EF. Davie. ————_—» If-you have never tried a safety raror, try AutoStrop. First Presbyterian Tabernacle, Rey. Charles A. Wilson, D. D. It, {s becoming to. us to feel in- tense emotion this Easter day as wo welcome to our membership so great an occasion of numbers and people has brought, you. Your serv. ice is tO be unto. the Lord whose do- minjon ts coextensive with human- ith, church {sa medium through which you can’ est carry en: the or ganized activitles of the Christian fo, Some orgg@nizations.are but tem: porary expedients, transient as the ending purpoes, and by obediencs to the revealed will, of the Lord. You have chosen to live a certain kind of life, Give that life the enthu- silasm of youth and the mature judg: ment of age. Today. we observe the fact of the divine mystery of the res- urreotion. That fact should never be dimmed by ‘familfarity, and we should ever sustain a sense:of freely wonder that custom never etales, Back of ¢ reat days p historic } tact ‘Independents Day,” Decoration SERMON EXCERPTS Contributions from Ministers for Publication Under This Head Are Welcomed; Manuscripts Should Be Typewritten, Not Ba ceeding 230 Words and Bhould Be im This Office Saturday. Day, Chyistmus ‘and Baster ull bear testimony to facts of hitsory woven into the very fabric of civilization. This day commemorates a stupen- dous. experience, inspiring with an immortal hope. As bread to the body, would ‘be fora just God to deceive His children:" Emerson said, “I h gotten beyond arguments for. immor- tality. I have experienced it, and I lnnow that I ath {mmortal." Long days and weary nights intervene be- fore the amateur becomes the: ex- pert. Tt is not reasonable to suppose that ‘growth counts for nought and bulb byrobedience to the law of its Uife grows into glory. Low or high, no Uying thing fulfills its fe with- out bursting Into lovelin Obey the law of your growth and beauty will be your crown. The risen Christ comes bringing life as the summer. making sun. Disobey, and your lite will be Sahara sands and Arctic foe. Obey and your beautly of Hte and character will adorn the doctrine of the Lord, and glorify your conf. [rion of Btm — = ‘lots’ with their $100,000 which they worked when a boy went in ten years from* one cont a square foot up to one dollar but it is now Sel to twenty cents, Estates in New- port which cost $200,000 can now be bought for $50,000 or even less. The same thing may be repeated in pens, it should continue several years langer. Moreover, going to Florida winters may become a great new industry like the\movie indus- try, the automobile {ndustry and tho radio industry, If 90, those who now get in right should make a great deal’of money.” . Mr. Babson was then asked to what he refers by “unless something By AILEEN LAMONT. (Copyright, 1925, Casper Tribune.) NEW YORK, April 13.—Few peo- ple sniff at perfume {n conjunction with an Easter costume since per- fume has come:to. be a recognized accessory to the toilet. But if one must sniff, the place to do so is behind the ear, That {s where the modern woman places a little dab of perfume. It she be fecently ar- rived from London, the probability is that the scent to be observed from such sniffing fe ashee of roses or lavender. The latter old perfume has taken on new jf Bunch of Flowers Not Clothe Flowe Baste On South’ Washi the north and'south streets This is the time of yea : SETTING THE STYLES We Start Work Today PREPARE TO HAVE YOUR TREES. SPRAYED Our spraying machine will work back and forth on either harmed or made Irealthy. SPRAYING ASSURES AGAINST DISEASE Trees—Landscape Gardening—Lawns J. BJORK Phone 444 ida at heart will remember that it friends of Florida will endeavor to attract cultured, honest and thrifty People rather than merely rich men. True friends of Florida will stamp out gambling, horse racing and other questionable activities. True friends of Florida will keep Neve yon can spot them jby thelr cheap signs on the highways. In closing, howefer, let mo say that these true friends of Florida will be richly pald as a reward. For after allis said I believe that Florida dur- ing the next few years offers the greatest opportunities for money making of all the states in the union.” in bunches’ but not the undergar- ments of the flower wearers, In efforts to preserve the simplicity of ine which the modern costume de- mands, thousands of long brassteres extending well below the hips have been purchased this season. These are not boned at all’ and are but lightly bound to the figure by elastic inserts. They serve mainly to ob- viate. bunching of undergarments and to hold up the stockings, A Hold Up. Garters worn by the modern wo: nan usually haye an initial or cipher pecullar to the wearer in th stone appropriate to the month in which she was bora. below They are worn the knee and more for o use ince ngton Street, so r in which your trees are LOOK AFTER YOUR OWN INTEREST The quickest and most effective way in which you can do this and at the same time lower your taxes and establish economy in the management of public busi- ness, is to join the Taxpayers’ Association. This association has taken upon itself the public duty of ascertaining how public money is expended and whether or not an expenditure is advisable and justified by the public needs. he association desires the c taxpayer in Natrona Cour overwhelming success of the you with us. operation of ever. In order to make an movement we must have Use attached coupon. Cut Out This Coupon and Mail It ites eater er oa WE ARE FOR TAX ECONOMY Casper, Wyoming. I am in favor of lower taxes and business economy in government affairs. I approve of the objec: nd purposes of the Association. Please enroll my name as a member for the ensuing year and forward me a membership card. Enclosed find $ NOTE—Make the payment in F th ; ind justified, whether one dollar or a Wain gece thle r or a hundred dollars.