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SUNDAY, JANUARY 17, 1926 Pontiac Six On” THE CASPER TRIBUNE-HERALD - PAGE THREE Young Women Tour Rim of United States Show at Gotham World interests have centered thetr attention on the new Pontiac Six, which was shown for the first time at the Natlonal Automobile Show in New York. The new Six hibited {n two models. five r coach and two nassencer tured by the company at { Mich., 18 a Oakland Six, Production on the started last month Pontiac $3.000.000 worth of new machiners and squlp. The en t on an allot: | dealers, who In this way on be of six-cylinder cars 1p — Internationalist || | In Life History L Miss Viennfe Borton is a true} Internationalist. She was born in American and EF brow up in F / wounded, served in the British ntelligenc f. subject to Now she {fs preparing, proval of her appointment, to join e social service stuff of the League of’ Nations. Aas es PEER GUY GAY SELLS LIFE INSUR- ANCE, ei rai: Y YOUR RADIAT YOUR BODY AND FE May All Need Attent Service That Satisfies Kemmer Body and Fender Shop Yellowstone Phone 2008 455 W. hand | ¢ | | | a the Atlantic seaboard. ates of the country. S Modrow, seated and Miss Grace Teachout, both of Minneapolis, Minn., with thelr Ajax y are making a circuit of the borde ey toured west and plan on dividing the winter between California and rting from Minneapo! turning to Minnear This much to me Is very clear: The world is chiefly ruled b —Old Mother Nature. Old Méther Nature Is largely right. fear rules the actions of most of the little people of the Green Forest and the Green Meadows, th mil. ing Pool, the Laughing Brook, the Nd Qrehard and the Old Pasture. And fear is not confined to the little people who wear feathers and fur. The big people often are quite as timid as the little people, and hu man folk also are largely ruled by r people are always hunt for the little people. You see mort of the people who wear fur, und many of those who fear feathers are hunters. There are a few who are not—Prickly Porky, Paddy the Beaver, Johnny Chuck—these are among those who do not hunt others. Of course, Lightfoot the Deer is an- other. The biggest of the hunters is Buster Bear. Buster doesn’t waste much time hunting others, but he has a fondness for fresh meat when e can get it easily. The smallest of hunters is Teeny Weeny the mmon Shrew. If you should see Teeny Weeny for the first time I am sure you would never think of him as a hunter, a tiny fellow as he ts! He weig! ‘ ly about forty-five grains, *845 F. fear.| 2 $$ BEDTIME STORIES| The Smallest Hunter By Thornton W. Burgess {s only a little more than a tenth of of the fiercest of all the hunters. If he were as big gs Buster Bear and as fierce in proportion, he would be 2 very terrible fe But, being the ttle people who you would thinie that no »ne would be afrafd of him. But, as 1 said before, Tenny Weeny a flerce ery bold and does not ith those much When he ts of e to him he winter. awake through the ler for him to find enough to eat then and he m starve to death in hal day. hen there is no snow Teeny Weeny maker little runways under the leaves, un- these runways he is forever running, hunting for insects hidden away for the winter, or for any bit of meat which some of his larger nelghbors may have left. And he doesn’t at all mind if he bappens to meet a Mouse, for that means a fight and a feast. Teeny Weeny’s eyes are very tiny, too tiny for him to see much, for he is a lover of the dark, but his ‘ears up for the small dhe is so wonder- k in his movements that that he manages to ercape those en- Rd Di th O. B. Detroit | ce. But for his size he ts one, mes the | t one of » very active, for ft} der old logs, in the moss, and along | emies who happen along his way. When there is snow on the ground he tunnels about beneath the snow Sometimes he comes to the surface and pout on top, and aly he ts hunting, hunting, hunting, for it seems as if that tiny stomach of | The next story ers Meet.” The smallest of the hunters in Teeny Weeny, the Common ———— Attains Success | In Art Circles | | _ Sara Whitney Olds went to New | York from Pittsbu three months 4g0, unheralded and unkno Unterrified by being alone and on her own re: | sources in the | biggest city in world, she ed her facile | brush to 1 | ja j ling re. do- SARA WHITNEY OLDS partment Stores of Manhattan. worked her way through heol in Pittsburgh, and studied art at night. ‘Chrysler “80” New Sensation The early-aw ing has been d car whose com- st in Interviews in America and pe ihe past few months with Walter P. Chrysler— the new Chrysler Imperial “80"— was for the first time exhibited to the public at the New York Auto- mobile show. Heading the Chrysler lineup of s, the others being the Chrysler and the Chry “58,"" It was the center of attraction to many persons interested {n motor cars, t f the significange ve Chrysler an: m justly ther phe- nouncemen to expect nome! experiment and ma 90 by the and research with de terlals of the highes engineering department. ——__ ‘UNWRITTEN LAWS’ OF a Type of Performance Never Before Obtained In Any Low Priced Car Thousands have already driven the Improved Chevrolet. on giving quality at low cost. Now the Improved Chevroletgives another reason for an even wider margin of leadership — performance the equal of which has heretofore been un- attainable in the low price field. They know its new smoothness, new stamina, new swiftness of accelera- tion. They know that in performance it completely dwarfs every Chevrolet achievement of the past and that it ranks as the finest Chevrolet in Chevrolet history. True, the Improved Chevrolet is easier-riding. True, there is striking beauty in the new Duco finishes, True, Chevrolet prices are lower. But the one great and outstanding-reason why you and every other motorist should drive this splendid car, is to experience the matchless perform- ance it now introduces. And if you are one who.has not yet been behind the wheel, you have more than a treat in store—you have yet to experience a type of perform- ance never before offered in any low balnetticat, = Drive where you will—and ‘as iong A performance so effortless, so 48 you like, through traffic, through smooth, so powerful, so spirited sand, through mud, over hills—and that you will call it nothing short Ver mountains, if you please. Expect Sfarisevelanbhl something really new, really worth- while—something really unique— Chevrolet’sleadership hasbeen based _ and you will not be disappointed. “5:10 405 Touring Sedan - - Chrysler “58's” astounding new low prices deal a body blow to any- thing even remotely seeking com- parison. For months past Chrysler “58” has outsold everywhere, as fast as dem- onstration proved its unmatched abilities of 58 miles per hour, 25 Touring Car *845 Roadster - *890 Sedan miles to the gallon of gasoline, and its pickup of 5 to 25 miles in 8 seconds, Such supreme performance, joined to characteristically Chrysler com- fort and beauty, fix Chrysler “58”, now at these new low prices, more unmistakably than ever, the ut- most value in its price class. Club Coupe °895 Coach - 935 5995 All prices F.O.B. Detroit, subject to Federal excise tax. CHRYSLER‘58” CASPER MOTOR CO. Phone 909 230 West Yellowstone "| MOTORDOM GALL FOR | DRIVERS? RECOGNITION WASHINGTON \ plea for obrerv itten laws of mi 16.— the un- dom is being rondcast by the American Automo: bile association. A su verage y of the ren Motorist - tov | which have been reduce | and those which exist consent and expediency mn of the 4 rules > writing, mmon by | pronounced t y ta t the | unwritten maxims of s with | the result t many drivers display | recklessness but still rem “with: A. A. A. investigation d for the q | restrictions, which motorists must | heed if the use of automobiles ts to | remain safe for drivers and pedes. trians alike, {s due efthor to lack of knowledge of what they are, or| to indifference to any regulation which does not have the strong-arm sanction of the law. Motorists do not face an tmpoe sibility in seeking the knowledge of | Prohibitions, which they must ob. | serve and which cannot be found always expressed in state or federal | laws, It is pointed out. They con | sist largely In consideration for oth er users of the road and a conscien tious effort to do what ts condu- Ulye te the general welfare. ————.____ Drink Hillcrest Water. Phone 115i Roadster - - 5 ] 0 Landau - - 76 5 Coupe - + - 645 »% Ton Truck 395 Coach. -.-+ - 645 1 Ton Truck 5 50 (Chassts Only) All Prices f. 0. b. Flint, Michigan Nolan Chevrolet Co. 322 South David St. CASPER LAVOYE uality at Low Cost Phone 2100 GLENROCK