Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 26, 1926, Page 2

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PAGE TWO “HANWAY jeation Offic Casper, Wyo. er (Wyoming, postofiice as second class matter November 22, 1916 Ther Casper B very “Even Bldg issued Tribune is Telephones ~ Branch Telephi TELVERE RUSTE ---15 and 16 Connecting All Departments K THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ess is exclusively entitied to the use for publication of ull news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. _Member of Andit Bure irculation (A. B. OC.) National Advertising Hepresentatives King & Prudden, 1702023 Steger Bldg., Chicago, tL; 270 Madison York City; Globe Bidg., Boston, Mass.; 607 Montgomery 8&t. Seattle, Wash., and Chamber of Com: Tribune are on file in the co offices and visitors are Prudden, “SUBSCHIPTION RATES he Carrier and Mail ne, every evening except Saturday dally and Sunday . daily and Sunday . daily and Sunday Herald, every morning except Monday nd Sunday - aS Sees ol) and Sunday Those Who Are Always Right Th ons, you know, who are always right. There is no country or race but theirs, no church, no political party, no profession. Think of them as you read this little essay Voltaire, who braved imprisonment and death when he put his thou int, for there was liftle tolerance in France in his for a preacher of tolerance. ‘I know that men have disorders in their brain. We have seen a musician die mad, because his music did not appear vd ¢ 1 € 1 imagined that their noses were tlass; but if re so violently afflicted as to always right, would there u sfYange disorder? And if these pat- instance, th we se ene h for in to x ain they were always in the xight, yuld thre with nediate ath any who thought them in the wix Tf they appointed spies to discover those who were refractory If they condemned a father upon the testi- mony of hi son, a mother upon that of her daughter, to perish inflames— Should not these people be confined and treated like bedlamites? These words were written two centuries ago, when men and women and children were burned to rid them of evil spirits. Humans are still being subjected to the inquisition by persons who » always right. Men are still tortured for their religious beliefs, Beauty in Business Down in New York an enterprising woman has started a beauty clinic to assist girls out of work to finds that no girl need be lo-+s ind joby. She out of work if she is attractive. And many girls who can’t land jobs because they do not look ornamental enough, are not homely, but simply haven’t 1 arn- ed how to dress. They may have figures that Venus would vy but do not know how to drape them in order to get the n office. Is who think that it makes no difference how office. They are mistaken. An attractive ap- makes a more harmonious place for others to work in. It adds to the general r.spect accorded by the public and other employes. There may have been a day, when it made no difference how a young lady dressed herself when she worked for a living, but that day has gone forever. A girl must look neat cnd trim and must be bright and cheerful, and at the same time competent and efficient in her work. Business is not demanding pi'.e beauties. It wants that rare combination, of beauty and brains, with good taste in dress, and a care for personal appearance at all times. Such a girl in business does not need to worry for a moment about being out of a job. American offices, themselves, are places of beauty and good taste in furni. hing and adornment. They must | aced by girls of good looks and neat and pretty clothes to complete the picture, and make the office a fit place to transact business with the general public. The Governmental Machine The governmental machine is complex, cumbersome, waste- ful. It has been the American habit to add a bureau here, a commission there, a board in another place. Sometimes the dditions have been dumped into a convenient department; often they have been duplications and wastes. Por many years this process has gone on, and all efforts to simplify and co- linate on lines of common sense and business efficiency have n defeated, whether by apathy growing out of the abund e of our revenues or by the opposition of those whose public jobs might be affected or abolished Whether even a partial success 1 be achieved, and the president can be clothed with the p Ss neecssary to making over the clumsy government machine, depends largely on how earnestly the American people come to his support and that of the leaders in congress who stand with him, It needs not be a partisan problem, if the Democratic minority shows the same tical ul wisdom showec ort of pra by its support of the tax m bill in the 1 se t is plain that her relief for the American tax 1 burdens can be found only in a system We ton, effected without regard to ( slder Talk and T hought z the time and if ever an age was truly, that and of a verity greatest sound of the clacking us, on the street, in cafes sidewalks, you will hear the xz on around us most of inking Shakespeare said sound,” th little time for est around the “talk that Ther we should keep a glum ar are times and places for light who can talk delightfully’ of te a general closing of faces ly vould cut down on his idle chat per cent to begin with, all of us would be ld he re ti think, and the world would ie to The Red Menace ry considerable ration velative to the Red propaganda in frankly said that even after the eliminated that the amount of which is being carried on in this fy t serious attent North, east, south of th or re antly work making more headway. ig solely bx sense of the American people whom h. W in the week, one of the former ts has made a confession as to his past activities support he was receiving nation of all this it is well to remember that a | obligation of the Soviet government in Russia is the inst ions of publ vernment in other ial appropriation which is made for this an extraordinary amount, and even in the their ability to ef many. instances governs their withhold recognition from Soviet hn v re able to control these antagonistic efforts, Once 1 u r ed, ho and its diplomatic offices -nl lowed entree country, they are clothed with diplomatic mur which makes a curtailing of their activities a vast ly different matter, 1t would be well for those who talk about our loss of trade through failure to recognize Soviet Ru to let their m pst awhile on the t that this failure of recognition operates so that it at least stops the uninterrupted flow of Red propaganda into these United States. amount of exa he cons ul ntatives repres nda in vever, ty World Topics lo, sex, health, jazz er psychology and money are the seven deadly values of modern York university. 'n @ recent Inter- jew he discussed several of the so- alled * crossed the sea for| the purpose of setting to another, contir not for the set- tie t- lantic speed recs r Our pioneers - trudged across the DR-C.G. GHAW, plain @ mountain for the sake of in, but we make such jour- ys with the aim of killing space means of time, We revere radio, and haye set up its million altars for no other reason than that we can listen in on the most commonplace entertain- ment at the greatest distance. An- othe age would have hesitated to annihilate space and time the way we grind them up in our machines. They would have feared the envy of the gods. But we enjoy the idea of overcoming the natural lmits of human life.” The twentieth century conception of love is the third {deal Dr. Shaw questions. “We ought to know that primitive man wag barely capable of love,” he contends. “Love is by civilization, and the more crowded our cities and in- tense our way of living, the warmer is the erotic feeling. We have im- ved the cave man’s technique and s could give’ iim les- sons, “The love-value advertises every plaze—bill-board, book, magazine, We have sex uber alles itself electric newspaper. It used to be the love-story, play, We used to be thrilled by meo and Juliet, Paolo and cesca, but we have come to the place where we require vamp and sheik. Ours is the age of love, the erotic age of the world “Then there is the ‘show’ value. We have come to the conclusion that we must be entertained, wheth- now it is the sex er we are tired business men or weary business women. Somé still hunt, fish and swim, but most of us want a jazz show, movie, golf, bridge or baseball. There's deadly value in too direct action upon the nerves. “Psychological explanation is per. haps the most modern of our values. No home is complete without a com: plex of some sort. Time was when psychology was confined to the class: room and laboratory, but now it is running foot-loose on the street. We have applied it to business, adyertis- ing and getting a job. Every factory manager, every salesman is suppos ed to be another William James or Stanley Hall.” To Follow Suit ‘The agitation for the reduction of expenses of government has now seeped into the various state cen- ters, Exnthused and encouraged by the work which has been done in Washington in reducing the total of federal expenditures, the gov- ernors in various states have them- selves taken over the task of carry- ing on a similarly meritorious work with regard to their own common- wealths. The inaugural and open- ing messages of practically all the new governors stressed the neces- sity of economy and happily in this case the effort is not being confined merely to pithy sentences but the actual facts are being set forth be- fore the voters. The total cost of government in 1924 of the forty-eight state gov- ernments amounted to $1,613,628,021. The operation and maintenance of general departments of state gov- ernment represented 66.2 per cent of all costs of the states. The other payments were for the operation and maintenance of public service enterprises, interest ou debt, perma- nent improvements and education The revenue receipts of the states from all sources in 1924, amounted to $1,370,066,000. The per capita receipts were $12.31. In 1915 the revenue reecipts of all the states amounted to a per capita of $4.66 as against $12.31 for 1924 « tal payments have 1 en th x 4 TI per mo 1 doubled Che Casper Daily Tribune cessories brought the grand total 7 x ‘4 up to nearly $5,000,000,000, People Will Talk Who More than 3,000,000 carloads of ——— freight were contributed by this in- ANONYMOUS. Seneral J. War: dustry to the railroads of the coun-| We may get through this world, but | Civil war fighter try, adding tantlally to the ‘twill be very slow, itician of a past spe of our transportation] 1¢ we Msten to al! that {s said as| paring to celebrate at system, we £0; Springfield, Ohio, A market was provided for nearly | We'll be worrled and fretted and| his ninetieth birth-y 7,500,000, gallons of gasoline. kept In a stew; day anniversary.! More than 750,0000,000 pounds of} wor meddlesome tongues must have| Keifer is the only crude rubber went into the manu- something to do— living major gen-| facture of automobile tires, 84 per For people will talk, you know. | cral who served in| i cent of the country’s entire con- the Civil war. Hel © sumption of this product. The motor industry absorbed 11 per cent of the country’s fron and steel, 50 per cent of its plate glass, presumed assumed, If quiet and modest, That your humble position is only is the only Ohtoan,| excepting Nic Longworth, has ever you'll have it olas| who] been| 46 per cent of fts aluminum, 65 per sire a wolf ig sheep's clothing, or| chosen speaker of cent of its uphols anc ids youuleeta toa the national House shah ey don’t get excited, keep perfect repieentery led, directly o} ly cool— © Deen! ees 0 About 1 » 3. 1 50,000 of If generous and noble, they’ vent} 185} t sate sea he manufacture out their spleen, a gh several m The remainder wert You'll t onbe jaoud dhints® Bhat) cy icle doe Catnon in the parts, accessory and raw ma- you're selfish and mean, is in ‘better health J wl Who mn Keifer, famous and prominent pol-| eneration, is pre his homein Januar on 30, REN KEIFER n years nonths older than Keifer than the veteran veneral terials plant engaged in the | If upright or honest and fair as the! Tinciean He continues, the rene sal nal operation of tice of 7 and pears regularly mo v Tr all you a rogue, in’a sly-] 0) 0" and” ap) regular’ Over e these figures for neaking way— | General Keifer attributes his lon. the indust elf must be taken For people will talk, you know.} «vi 4, care diet and plenty o! into account « tate and national physical exercise. h r largest pub-| And then if you show the least bold-| > Ne works that rid has ever ness of heart, x /, khown, call an annual ex-| Of a nt inclination to take your Tonight penditure of approximately a billion own part, dollars and giving employment to| They will call you an upstart, con ATL |: thousands of workers throughout celted and vain; By JOSEPH B. WHITE. the country. But keep straight ahead, don't stop| Mysterious “night! when our first >. to explain parent The Moron Moron is the word used to define one of the three degrees of feeble-| someone For people will-talk, you know. If threadbare your coat foned your hat, of course, will take notice Thee from r they x or old-fash Dia tr mindedness, the other two being of that, cael ae imbecile and idiot. Unfortunately And hint’very strong that you can’t hs the term is en carelessly used as |~ pay your way Bathed the ray though it were synonymous with| put don't get excited, whatever they Hbg fame mental disease or insanity, or with he other departure from mental he It should be applied only to those persons whose defective intelligence as demonstrated by competent chometric Places them It psy- tests on a will talk you dress in the think to escape, you know And Io! Cre don't view ation fashion, deceive a heard his lovely opy of light and of the great set- host of heaven widened in man’: dark it such Sun! or who and leaf and insect stood ntless orbs thou shun death with wherefore scale of intelligence between the dull | 2°" they'll criticize then, in a dif-| who « i have normal and the imbecile groups. It ferent tegoe “ ness lay cor is not a form of insanity nor a| X0U're ahead of your means, or your! Within thy beams me 1 disease, "i tallor’s unpaid; ; ld find, The term moron is thus definea | BUt mind your own froaihaes, there's fy by the American Association for NOUSHE to. heise revealed tho Study of the Feebleminded. A For people will talk, you know. ‘phat to such cow moron is a mentally defective per- mad’st us blind! son having a mental age between | If a fellow but chance to converse] Why do we then eighty-four months and one hun- with a girl, anxious strife? dred and forty-four months inclu-| How the gossips will talk, and their] If ight can thus sive, or, if a child, an_intelligenc seandal unfurl; not Life? quotient between fifty and seventy- four. oe They'll canvass your wants or talk “2 of your méans, z ro you're engaged to a chit} Burlington + Spec agent for the —— And dec’ E ilroad, is in this eity > * in her teens. from Chad Neb. C. F. Smart Canadian Trade Yor people will talk, you know. | of Chi iditor for the Burling: ton, f pb in C p While the Canadian Dominion | They'll talk fine before you, but then ———.—- brought in about $100,000,000 worth ut your back of goods more than she of v nom and slander there’s never To Cure a Cold d in One Day > exported to Take Laxative BROMO QUINNE the United States in the twelve a lack— Tablets, The Safe and Proven month period ended Noyember How kind and polite in all that they (The First and Original 1 the cb of trade in t say! rip Tablet.) Signature of month was almost equal. In Novem-| But bitter as gall when you're out of on the box. 30c.—Adv. ber, Canada sent to the United the way =e States goods valued at $47,36 For people will talk, you know and brought in from United goods valued at $48, good exported to the United please. through Canada, In addition, were valued at $806,06 year im-] then be at ease; ports totalled $6 and ex-| Of course you ports of goods $469, . In addi. sorts of abuse, tion foreign goods to the value of| But don’t think to stop then, $10,103,280 were sent the United not any use— States by Canada as been the steel indus For years it } custom to think of th many tt suse of its basic nature an: tl tribution of its products tc other industries a fundament of condition: difficult to see how the business motor industry can be dented a pli in the same category, If not wit equal significance, in our econom lit ‘onsider some of the dimen sions and ramifications of this enter prise During the year 1925 there wore produced 4,325,000 cars and trucks with an sgate wholesale va while tires and ac Relieve the prin and tightness by rubbing the chest freely with BAUME BENGUE (Den-Gay). Ite penetrating warmth will stimulate the cirenlation and quickly belp to relieve the congestion. Ben-Gay js wonder- (ul for every ache nnd patn of nerves oF mus- cles. Bvery dragstorenelisit. Keeps tubs handy, Get the original children to have,” the de: “These little Life Saver mints are much better | for little folks. Try the new Violet flavor. Children love them.” Every growing child craves sweets. Active little bodies demand sugar. But children’s candy must be pure—and they should not overeat. Life Savers, the little candy mints with the hole (life saver shape), answer this problem in just the right way. They are china-hard and deliciously flavored. This means that Life Savers are eaten slowly. Children suck them to make those wonderful flavors BAUME BENGUE ~< "SS ANALOESIQUE )~ The best way to do Is to do as you For your mind, if you have one, will will meet with For people will talic On Diamonds, and Musical and Good Jewelry Repatri all it is you know last longer. Little tummies are not upset. And Life Savers are kind to tiny teeth. They're safe and wholesome. You ni tiously be generous with Life Savers for ideal candy for little folks. Six flavors are displayed at all good stores so you may help yourself: Pep-o-mint, Wint-o-green, Cinn- o-mon, Lic-o-rice, Cl-o-ve and Vi-o-let. package.—Life Savers, Inc., Port Chester, N. ¥ Good for little tummies MONEY TO LOAN Watches, Jewelry instuments Clothes ng and Agate Cutting United Jewelry Shop, 249 8, Center hay conscien- they are the Five cents a Safe for tiny ceeth I ! 1 | | | | BB prettier teeth now, and better protection from tooth and gum troubles in later life? day tube of Pepsodent, free. See whatleadingdentists urgemothers to use as science’s latest attain- ment in tooth and gum care. child’s teeth. That’s a frequent danger sij tooth same stubborn film that you can feel by running your tongue across fight it successfully. [FREEMS=: Papsadant TUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1926 10-Day Tube FREE Mother! Be sure you get Pepsodent for child’s teeth and gums Film is the greatest enemy of tooth health. It clings to teeth, gets inte crevices and stays. Germs breed in it and imperil both teeth and gums. The acid that leads to early decay forms, Old- methods failed to combat it. Men of science undertook to discover an effective combatant. Now in Pepsodent, two new combatants are embodied—com- batants approved by highest den- tal authority. It curdles the film, gently removes it; then firms the gums. It keeps the teeth whiter, cleaner, more sparkling. It is the modern scientific method for bet- ter tooth protection. Insist uponit. Geta tube today. Mail the coupon. 5 you want your child to Mail the coupon then for a 10- - * You will notice a film on your * —an invitation for gum troubles. The own teeth. You must com- tit. Ordinary dentifrices don’t | THE PEPSODENT COMPANY ‘The New-Day Quality Dentifrice 1 Sec.C-2073, 1104 S. Wabash Ave. Exdorsed by World's Dental Authorities | Chicago, Ill., U. S. A. | Seasndeegtecs rset Ah 845 Boar i tse E WISH to thank our friends who have assisted us in placing $600,000 of life insurance in addition to a large amount of health and accident cover- age. N. A. MCLEAN CASPER H. E. MADSEN MIDWEST _ Business Mens Assurance Co. ' “Pays Allways Always” What national banks have done for big business, the Peoples Finance and Thrift Co., is doing for ‘The Man Who Works.” “Will the Peoples Finance and Thrift Co, Make a Loan to ME?” That is the question of supreme importance to the honest, steady man who needs a lift. He knows that the Peoples Finance and Thrift Co. lends money right along; but he wants to know if it will make a loan to HIM. And the answer is emphatically “Yes.” The Peoples Finance and Thrift Co., does NOT, of course, lend to idlers or irresponsi- bles. It DOES lend—gladly and promptly— to those men and women in average circum- stances who meet its simple qualifications of good character and steady income. Loans are made for any legitimate purpose to consolidate and pay off old debts (a splendid thing, especially at this time ef the year), to meet unexpected emergencies, to take advantage of an opportunity, and for many other purposes, Peoples Finance aud Thrift Co, 105 Becklinger Bldg. Phone 825 Casper to Buffalo Sheridan RS LEAVE DAILY AT 9:00 A. M. aves you approximately 18 hours’ travel betweer NO TRANSF 8S OR LAYOVERS CASPER-SHERIDAN TOWNSEND HOTEL ne TRANERSO ATION CO. 144 Stage FARE $11.50 and Sheridan. CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 9:30 A, M. FARE Saves you approximately 12 hours travel between Casper and Rawlins, WYOMING MOTORWAY Salt Creek Transportation Company's Office, TOWNSEND HOTEL PHONE 144 $12.50 TRAIN SCHEDULES. CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN Westbound Arrives NG TGDB eee. — --1.30 p.m. Eastbound ‘Ey No, 822 ...... - onwnn~~~.-5:45 p.m. No Sunday trains west of Casper. CHICAGG BURLINGTON & QUINCY Eastbound No. 80 ........ No. 82 Westbound No. 29 No. 81.

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