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*Jege and which should be fo Che Caspet Daily Cribmne Iss#ted eyery evening except. Sunday at Casper, County, Wye. Publication Offices: On Exel 6 Natrona Building | 6USINESS TELEPHONE. ; | (Wyoming) Postoffice @§ second-class Entered ot Caspe eve matter, November 22, | MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PR REPORTS ESS. UNITED PRESS President and Editor Associate Editor oe City Editor dvértising Manager FROM dvertising Representatives David J. Randall, 841 Fifth Ave., New wor fa i Prudden, Kin 0-23 Steger ...Chicazo, I. c tl are on fife Mm Five New York es and visitors fre Welcome. ri 0 offices SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier Six Months Three Mont Ne subseri titree monthi All subscriptions must be paid In advance and the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscription becomes one month if arrears. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations (A. B. C.) Member of the Associated Press . The Associated Press is eXcluBively erititled to the use for republication of all news credited in this paper and aiso the local news published herein. = CITY AND COUNTRY. The urban population of the United States or people living in places of 2,500 or more, is 54,- 318,032, or 51.4 per cent of the nation’s total population, and the number of people living in rural territory is 51,390,739. Ih 1910 the urban pop- | ulation represented 45.8 per cent. For the first time in the history of the coun- try more than half of our population is living in cities and towns. ; In total city population New York leads, Penn- sylvania second, Illinois third. Rhode Island has the highest percentage of city dwellers with’ 97.5 per cent. Massachusetts’ comes second with 94.8, New York third with 82.7, New Jersey fourth with 78.7, California fifth with 68.0 and Illinois sixth with 67.9 per cent. In total rural population Texas leads, Pennsyl- ania second, Georgia thitd, Ohio fourth, Illinois fifth and North Carolina sixth. Each state having more than 2,000,000 persons living outside of cities and towns. Mississippi boasts the highest percentage of rural population, 86.6 per cent. During the period, 1910 to 1920, Colorado, Wyoming and Montana lost in urban population due to the fact that in each of these states the total increase was in population living in rural ter- ritory. The figures are: Colorado 65.6, Montana 77.7 and Wyoming 70.8 per cent. The cause of population movement from coun- try to city has been variously accounted for by the city’s amusements and yariety of entertainments which prove attractive to the country-bred, the high wages latterly paid for employments with shorter hours of labor, city environment, superior conveniences over the rural life, the absence of monotony which largely governs the daily life of the average country resident. These are recited as some of the reasons why boys and girls leave the farm. For the good of the country the tendency | should be in the’ other direction, for already has | scarcity appeared in foodstuffs which are the out- put of the rural districts, due to the present ten- dency and the consequent shortage of labor. Observers say that the 1930 census will show the movement back to the farm, that the people of the overcrowded cities will desire to get away from the conditions that will govern and will seek the | freedom and open spaces of the country. They contend that the present situation is simply an ex- change of places between the people of city and country with the country movement yet to occur. THEY GO ALONG TOGETHER. James R. Day of Syracuse University has! spoken upon the subject of the anti-strike law, ‘and in connection with it has gone into the general question of capital and labor in a sane manner that all may read with profit. He says: “The doctrine that the anti-strike law compels a man to do honest work against his will is nothing | fellowship. | which he is placed is, the practical question. | réss is not by taking from anotlier what beiongs to | him, but of adding to all. | it so. | lof determination on the part of federal and state who assails capitalists and makes laborers his ene- mies is a fool ainong men and a traitor to the country ahd to the Workingmah whom he betrays for detmagogic purposes. A True Afnericans will work together for good Citizenship, good busitiéss, good Wages and g i One of the great crimes of this country is to create classes among the quiet working people by setting up conditions each against the other as an | arbitrary plat: out of which ofe prospers and the other suffers. Inequality is a law of God and is | traceable through the whole universe. Over it-the two men borne in the first generation quarreled and one killed the other. It has gone on ever since and will continue until men are made of ond pat- tern, and the uniformity then would not last a week. The great law is adaptation; how to get | along with what one has in the circumstances in | We | in this old world who believe that no matter what we want, provided it Is} something which it is right for us. to} have, that ‘if we wait long enough we} will get it. to thing won Hoes along with it. ut F don’t tike to work. you won't be very apt to get the thing another ptay be k oY Letters From the P le) NATIONAL LIFE THE REAL FOUNDATION. Editor of The Tribune: 1 wonder how many of us there a Some of Us have proved be true and it sure make ‘ou want worth waiting for. Ways. remember do the trick. this, fa t Tut | you want, for we always have to work x the worthavhile things of life. Then we aso teliove that there factor in all this philosoph » biggest of all, and th "Some folks are afraid ause they know that one ca and then sit down nag and wait for the desir ust pri ni t : tend, but | answe Oh 1i0; prayer doesn't wo May, emulaté, but not, envy; We may coe lthat way. When. you have come not be contentious. The field is open. Our prog- the point where you are willing The high putposes of life is to add to the common good, remembering | that we are thé comthon ,people. | How does the workingman feél about capital | when he himself becomes a capitalist? ing a capital to work for himself, whether hundreds ' or thousands of dollars. thatthe only moral virture is poverty. One can makes him what he is. as other than the enemy to them and their country. | to workingmen when he urged them to be coti- tent in whatever estate they were. The way out of a less estate into a better one is by men’s own efforts, and their hope is that others are in better estates than they are. The hope of a country is iti | its workingmen united in a solid compact with its | business men—-is by the investment of the intelli- gent laborer’s muscle with the capitalist’s money. | The extreme folly is in setting them apart and in creating an antagonism between them. Capital is labor's hope. Labor is capital’s hope. The two cannot separate; neither ote can go alone: It must be true:that Mr. Hughes is to be the other likely candidate has been disposed of and the | staff correspondents all agree. SLOWLY EVAPORATING. \ A year has elapsed since the came bone dry by law. As a matter of fact it is not bone dry or even dry, it is just approximately so. Smuggling from foreign countries, fraudulently | obtaining liquor from the supply in government storage intended for medical purposes, the manu- facture of white mule on a commercial scale and | the making of home brew have been the means | of supply. The enforcement of the law has been largely a farce. Several things. conspire to make | Inadequacy of force and appropriation, | desire of certain elements to indulge in liquor, Jack governments to compel obedience. : These problems may all be solved in time, and the supply in the country may finally become | exhausted. Whatever occurs the nation will never That much is certain. Another thing is certain and | that is that the people are much better off with- | out liquor and most of them realize it. phase of the whole question that gives the bright- | est promise for the future and ehcourages the hope | that finally the minor discouragements may be en- | compassed, The bible used by George Washington when he return to the open manufacture and sale of liquor. | pray for what you want. it is jyou that you a jor goes along with it. G lex and you Nave all the ble: Are not! | the instincts of a laborer to be a capitalist? That is | 1% what the savings bank means. He is not a worthy | |)" workingman who does not work to the end of mak- ner of then 1 But Casper gtew,-and the good folks eu down there outgrew their chureh* her It is pernicious to teach ana th lmore waiting and working But aren't we thankful it had to come be great and be poor; one can be good and noble jinis w | and be poor, but one can be neither by being poor. It is how a man handles poverty or riches that |aone we |x T cannot look upon the agitator of workingmen | ba I cannot believe that the apostle was unfriendly | aa been ry byt for what we have;m would tend to remove the menace been ri essed, and) op » suicide is the opinion advanced : z t last we Teast “in the new’. 4 meniber of the Ameriéan Legion Whose Fault Is id chureh” even though it is only “in the iy i communication to) the © American ‘ : estate Hi her Ra Legion Weekly. ‘There are many 3 But we don’t think of it in that WAY. |\cung couples.” the letter reads, “that “ Wve Just Hae ae nave ita) te looking forward to compensation Something is certainly wrong with many t ‘8 a means of making it possible for +. evar) ie larger and und while'wél ‘heii to becdme fathers and. mothers of thé movies. What.that something is, is in this, of cour Pigs * A ¥ of t ep A ert elt s. } © in the: material sense joe Suture: Amerizanvaleaans | fearlessly revealed by Benjamin B. Hamp- m ;be enriching, sweetening and purt jour own lives in order that we, in tu may be fit agents to help Others ee Tree aa rae a ie build right.” Raber iad maaan 2 ti i describes are nothing short of appalling. u ey sau. [ot#anizations in the town, ‘he legion ‘A © cag pee es ner to ‘remember: that the aly seat] "emers revived the torn fale and His article bristles with astounding infor- ; 2 a y reall ter five weeks of hard work put. it n 4 ee Pea foundation which the church at the : ‘ ers ate ma in that has never been ‘blished corner of now Fifth and Beech has, is}°ver With much profit to the treasury tio 4 ip Jesus Chr’ meeting of our chur ment, w Ww | known. United States be- three vears 3 | beard of Calg e fi It is this.) © took th eoath as president, will be the one used | | by Warren Harding when the oath is administered to him by Chief Justice White. | THE GIRL WITH RED HAR, j Mary Garden has succeeded Herbert Johnson more than silly, There is no sound sense in it. The proposed law does not force any man to work. It only provides against a conspiracy of workingmen H to prevent work by anybody. The character of a | strie is seen in destruction of propérty, assaults and murders. The strike stands for everything | which American opposes. It is violent. It is riot. | It ppposes liberty. It is dangerous to life by ex- citing men to unrestrained and dangerous passions. It takes control of properties unlawfully and forces loss into business, forbidding construction and man- ufacture, It destroys credit in trade and reduces the profits from which wage is paid, : No one would object if dissatished men Were to leave a job and go quietly away to another, leay- ing those satisfied to remain and work, or the em- ployer to hire whom he pleases. man’s privilege. 1 That is every | i It is different from the conspiracy | of a strike, which violates every right and privi- rbidden, | Our American workingmen, greatest in num- | bers, found in all callings, dependable in all things, | are our greatest citizens. They must never forget that they are citizens, They must not forget that the capitalists are citizens also, and without them | the fires would go out under the boiler and the | wheels would not turn an hour. The labor ator | | artistic departments of this company. as director of Chicago grand opera and remains the prima donna of the company. No other person except Mary could hold down these two important jobs and keep the stars in the operatic firmament, | maintain anything like peace and continue to fur- nish harmony through such a league of nations, Mary, however, is a Scotch-American and has beautiful copper-colored hair, which means that she is a fighter and will likewise succeed, It is the first time in any country of the world | that a woman has been chosen to direct grand opera. After more than ten years of Italian dom- ihation, during which the Italian contingent has ruled and regulated the personnel and production | of the famous Chicago company, a rted-headed | Scotch-Americah girl with a pronounced ptefer- | ence for French modernism and German classicisin, now sits upon the operatic throne clothed with au- tocratic powers over the business as -well as the TARIFF DEBATE. .A mighty progress would be made To benefit the nation If taxes only could be paid By liberal conversation Ww. %. x * will al: ready to tw and. responsibili You are simy od’s working partheg and you ca t to have (Him do all the we the Ss aks ne’ years ago 4 ion of. something’ th in Casper, fia hy ing and waiting it came. little Bar Church at the began ‘to s leven » final’ great goal hk: an, too, that through it a t. We are hol ing the annual busin Wednesday ith a dinner at 6 o Beginning Sund if hold all of our uary ervices ther i if you want to heir about the great: | est foundation that any secretary of state in the Harding cabinet. Every |« on have, come to the nd you will find out g » learn that waiting, werk joy ng can bring more than perhaps you BA Fred Langford, who has -s a member. of the’ sch . Alta, has been et d chairman of that body, being to be honored Mrs, rst woman hairmanship. with ne on BLACK 4 Preparation of* COMPOUND COPATISA and CUBEBS — AT YOUR DRUGGIST— For avoid Substitution. LAN P G NAZIMOVA RK PUK ay * Liat NOW is thy tine toe tert right by wok horde all kinds, the heaving Wi notions form letters bulletins, ete of Printed on th MULAYGRA Mulfigraph Servier South Woteott Ouposilo Pout Oftive Phone 155 Co, and fold) ant it Was chureh or life | iptist ‘Churéh | and bh Legion Weekly. na ia eetrattons fonowed. Recently ‘the bought one of the best corner 2 legion clubhouse and an auditorium Oth. for tht town. Like most royalties nowadays, Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands is an j excellent linguist. s a girl she had ‘to tern far more than the average young; woman who is considered to be € Besides the ordinary ! are Today, January | ‘Well educated. Most people who fail to carry ade-/ College course, #he had to study stat hefquate life insurance, ptend thelr ma-! Craft, cbnstitetional government, inter- bility to pay premiums. Ard so tHey National law. the legal and moral rela- ‘| put the matter off until they “getj ons ofa sovereizn to her pedpte, and straightened arould" so as to be: able & Variety of dther kubjccté necessary to pay out of” their income, the ever TO the ruler Gf a navion tu know.) In recurring premiums. , | addition, she is an expert horsewoman, Those are just the people who nee pate ta plover tial 2 tales, ace ™ Lienert hes -tha! eee . musician, and hasan intimate acquaint eeliteate to aay premioms: "8 ance with all OF the Metalls ot Dractical ‘| With a definite stim dedjcated out of} NOUSeWOrK. | cach pay enievelope to life insurance! phe Association of Alma _Redemib- ty /premiunis, the depositor will soon be-\ iors Mater is the name of a dociety ‘of ¥\ Come so accustomed to meet this obli-| Catholic women phiysiciana "that bot ny t |wation that it will be mo\hatdship. n't! sae jbeeh organized in London for medical Going without Jife insurance is plac: rea and missionary work in foreign lands. “Ed u 4 j ‘i {ne a great burden of tisk upon one’s) eee aN a SA , els nterprises, Carrying as good.a line of | The Sunday édition San Francisco 5 to) insurance as one prudently ‘cam, will/ Examiner every Wednesday, at 126 8. | often ré to his estate much Nabi 1-19-16" th: tof ins ce itself. RTT eRe | Te it tut eauitioe Into unimpaired | agtellupe Classified Ads bring resulta. Be “Best Bowl of Chili in Town 20c. At the Chili King Lunch | And paying’ the premiums ito the | National Bank of Commerce in easy in- All kinds of Sandwiches at Popular Prices. Quick Service, Highest Quality « Grand Central Block + CASPER ICE AND COAL ply tallments, is the best way to provide ithe premiums. ‘The National Bank of Commerce pays 4 per cent on savings. led | WOODMEN? of A. will hold} meeting Wednesday night, ary 19 at $ o'clock in the Moose . All neighbers nd visitors are re | to attend. 1182 | Enea Oe jon] bonus bill for ex-service Too Much Sex Stuff in the Movies nt ton, President of four’ big motion-picture companies. Some of the conditions he ng Out with nothing, not even a hall’ to meet in, Benjamine Post of Colubiana; Ohio. has 1 to. ccording to an article in the Am: before. You'll find Mr. Hampton’s article ° Pictorial Review On Sale Now ess INEIGHT YEARS Schuster Says Since Taking Tan- lac He Never Felt Better in His Life | | ' \ ut it, and you | ing e “When I ‘gat ‘Tanlac 1, found the medicine I had been needing for a iong} time,” declared Gus Schuster, a well) known ranchman of Bountiful, Utah, a few days ago. “The fact is Lam nowsenjoying the best of health for the. first time in years and I owe it all to Tanlac.. For seven or eight years 1 hardly knew what a well day meant. My blood) Was impure and boils broke out all over; CHAS..M. GUNNISON the the a Yor retouching marred or scratched fur- niture. Makes it like new. Will stand my body. 1 had frequent and severe} Readaches and nover slept well git | 5 st. Put i a-tlz haiey ¥ hot water test. Put up in one-quarter, 1 had ulways before that been a 52 i ¥ rts. p wi n hearty cater, but my” appetite seemed} one-half ‘pints or ‘quarts: See window f leave me completely und my stomach ; | Hot all out of order. 1 lost weight and | strength steadily and was getting to! » ‘very much wortied about my con-/ m. A good friend of mine urged me to! | Tanlac and, 1 wil? never forget him! for that. 1 haye now taken just. two} bottles of this medicine, and it’s a fact} cating and sleeping as Well: as} y did, arid my blocd seems to be | display. lliver Company ouds- Hardware eht, for La never troubled any; with boii 1 am as good a man 3 ; iy botler than t de now Lg Lelephone 714 105 South Center Street don't know when it was, Yes sir, you! . . vat me down ws & strong believer | Opposite Hentiing Hotel Creek Drug ‘Storé.—Advy > fs veld in Casper by ‘Casper “Where the Best Costs Less” in Alcova by Alcova Mer-| cen lile Company, dnvgatt Givi bys Balt S sssensosennesspiebeaibestenssWWNesevosesssassleiels HIRAI ER IR LIRIAS IR PT Studebaker AUTOMOBILES EREREEEKER EEA SALES DEPARTMENT: H. E, Grude, Distributor 108 S. Center St. _. KREEREKRER BIS SERVICE STATION 113 S. Conwell St. Phone 1494J KHALI ERREIKIE LAIR AAA AA Phone 381