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La annnannanennumwannmmnanennne AK RS SSS PAGE TWO Che Casper Daily Cribune Issued every evening except Sunday at Casper, County. Wyo, Publication Offices. Tribune Building- BUS'NESS TELEPHONES ........-------+>* 18 and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments posse acs a Recess somber. a abies ts ema vis Entered at Casper, (Wyoming) Postoffice as second class matter, November 22, 1916. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS . E. HANWAY ..... EARL E. HANWAY W. H. HUNTLEY RE. EVANS .. THOMAS DAILY Advertising Representatives Davia J. Randall, 341 Fifth Ave., New York City. Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bidg., Chicago, Ill. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the New York and Chicago offices and Visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION BATES. By Carrier One Year .... Six Months . Three Months One Month . Per Copy ... eral authority, all charged with the duty of enforc- sng the laws, If the iaws are not enforced it is sure- 4y not for lack of authority. Every selt-respeciing ciuzen in the state wants to see pot only the pronipition laws upheld, but every other law respected and observed, trat most people nave become discouraged because the several enforc- ing powers do an almighty amount of stalling } ut dev- sosh Lttle enforcing. Mr, Jackson has a fine opportunity and a large to operate in. And if the office of federal director of prohibition means what the public understands it to mean things ought to be humming. Oe IN TERMS OF WASTE. The way in which the Republicans in congress are not receiving support from their Democratic col- jeagues in their campaign for economy and retrench- ment is illustrated in a resolution introdyced by a senator from Texas. He would authorize commit- vee.on manufactures of the senate to investigate “the practicability of establishing a bureau of manufacture at the seat of government for the purpose of study- «ng manufacture in all its forms and diffusing infor- mation relating thereto among the people of the United States.” At a time when the tendency is to- wards co-ordination of government activities, and re- ‘90 | crenchment of expenditures wherever possible, the es- All subscriptions must be paid tn advance and the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subsorip- tion becomes one month in arrears. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulaiion (A. ao Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to we use for pupfication of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Kick if You Don't Get Your Call 15 or 16 any time between 6 and 8 o'clock p. m if you fail to receive your Tribune. A paper will be de livered to you by special messenger. Make it your duty ta let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. be a SIMPLY GET BUSY. Mr. Carl Jackson, federal prohibition director for Wyoming, is in distress and as is usual with federal of- ieee he turns to the newspapers of the state for elp. The Tribune has never in its history turned a deaf ear to a federal official or anyone else who needed help that we were able to render. Mr. Jackson is receiving numerous anonymous let- ters from persons in this vicinity reporting violations of phases of the prohibition laws. These correspond- ents of course want action, but they fail to sign their names to the complaints. He has wisely declined to investigate this class of cases because in his experi- ence and the experience of others in similar matters, the person complaining is all too frequently actuated by motives of personal grievance and that the testi- mony of the wrong doing of others is based wholly upon suspicion. We are not informed as to what these anonymous communications contain and are little concerned about them, but if Mr. Jackson is a regular prohibition di- rector and desires to direct, he can come té Casper and find enough to keep him busy directing for some time. It is a matter of common knowledge that there are about seventeen places in the city of Casper where liquor is sold more or less openly, and persons of knowledge in such matters maintain that there are at least three hundred stills in operation in the county. it would be no trouble at all for Mr. Jackson to se-; cure information of these practices direct, and not by) anonymous suggestions, insinuations, or spite reports, | if he saw fit to tackle the job. | We are certain it is not The Tribune’s task to en-| force the prohibition laws. We have in Wyoming city! authoritv. county authority, state authority and fed- cablishment of such a bureau would-be folly. The op- portunity for development of a bureau of manufac- ture would be almost limitless, until it would easily ex- ceed all others in cost and personnel. Of course there would also be vast duplication of work, as the depart- ment of labor and commerce and the Federal trade commission are now dealing with most of the subjects that a bureau of that sort would handle. i The senator's resolution will likely not get any- where but it demonstrates that a Democratic states- man simply thinks in terms of waste of the people’s money. ee ee a ee FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES. “Attorney General Daugherty has a sound sense of values,” observes the Washington Post. “He shows his knowledge in his speech delivered before the joint session of the American Bar association and the Ohio State Bar association in Cincinnati When he ce- clared that without respect for law, life, liberty and property are insecure, he uttered a solemn truth. “Every crime wave, every deed of violence, every concerted attack on law and order, every open flout- ing of the statutes and authority, if it goes unpun- ished and unheeded, tends to weaken the structure of national life. Obedience to the laws of God ‘and-man must be taught and practiced, else there will be a gradual decline in civilization, as is so glaringly shown in Russia today. “The laws of this country are of the making of the people themselves. The people can unmake them, just as they made them. If they are dissatisfied with any existing statutes, they have an easy and effective rem- edy in the ballot. There is no need for them to vio- late laws when they can so, readily, if it is the sense of the majority, change them to suit themselves. Mean- while, as the attorney general points out, all laws must be enforced, for, as he says, ‘The government will endure on the rock of law enforcement, or it will perish in the quicksands of lawlessness.’ ” phan ere AVOIDING RAIL TRANSPORTATION. Grain for export from the west is going into New York in Great Lakes barges under their own power carrying 80,000 bushels each, making the trip in less time than it takes the roads to bring similar freight from the same points of origin and at less cost. This is the sort of competition into which the railroads have been driven by the wage demands of rail employes. Advances in freight charges drove business to other channels and in the disaster the roads face, the men will also face unemployment and many other disagree- able features, reasonable demands would have secured to them. manity's deal What happened to this ideal man? | Prominent By the crowd he was not understood. | nn By. w tow. hal wah aint nsahameeeon.| 4 And these few repudiated him. In fact thay caused bim to be put to} lest spirits aspire to be. He is hu-|% pay & big price. Some of her realized. am Ne ane RIVERTON. Sept. 12. — Father Does not this represent what always|J. V. O'Connor of 's happens, in the first instance, to alsion and who has ministered to the great deal? The slow-moving masses|congregation at St. of men do not catch its meaning. Of|here for the last two years has the relatively few who do catch its|called to Senver for in meaning, some embrace it, the larger|red Heart parish. He will be number resist it. In many cases it/ceeded' here by Father Hoffer. is crucified, ——— ee But although Jesus’ enemies cruci- fied him they did not destroy him. They lifted him up on a cross where 5 the long-suffering masses of man- Nim “They toade f iepowaite tor <x | ARE YOU PALE? WEAK? ‘The world's policy with reterence| ENFIOh Your Blood to men who exek to ircarnate great ideals has always been, ‘rest ‘em rough “ Has there ever been a gen- eration that did not treat its prophets rough? But the one sure way ¢o im mortalize a prophet is to treat him rough. Put him in a dungeon. Nail him to a cross. Burn him to a stake. Give him a twenty-year prison sen tence. Then you will have canonized him. You Will have placed him in 2 position where the crowd cannot fail to see him. You will have made it certain that future generations will remember him. Jesus is, indeed, “gn epitome of hu- manity, and calvar? a summary of history.” As Jesus dreamed his dream of diviner civilization, so humanity in the persons of its noblest representa. | | tives has always done, and will con- tinue to do. As Jesus suffered for his ideaiism, so humanity in the per sons of its prophets has ever suf fered, and ever will. But just so surely as Jesus conquered when he died just so surely will a long-suffer- ing humanity realize eventually its unsurrendered ideals even though as at this present moment some one idea! is being crucified. izedOx— a? _ i But before any great ideal can be realized one condition must be met. Men and women must be found who A more beautiful cream-colored pearl necklace is hard to imagine and the price we offer them at make them doubly attractive. They are equipped with gold clasps and will be sent you prettily boxed on recelj:t of price. 18-inch strand, $8.25; 24-inch, $10.75; 30-inch, $13.50; and remember, money refunded in full if not entirely sat- @ isfactony. East & West Gift Shop 422 Seventeenth Street, Denver, Colo. eocccccccocecs: eosccccces iQur Exchanges i Main Street Stuff fm Cody. (Cody Enterprise) A large, fat porcupine came into Cody for the Park County fair last Thursday night. He ambled down Main street at a leisurely gait and stopped near the Cody garage. There, being unfamiliar with traffic rules and regulations, he parked himself in the middle of tke street instead of the side. While viewing the sights from this point of yantage and accustoming himself to the bright lights and the gay night life of Cody under the pres- ent city administration, the porcupine was hit amidship by an automobile and died without a struggle. He was removed gingerly by Con- stable Harry Wiard who gave him de- cent burial, Modernizing the Telephone, (Torrington Journal) When the local telephone office moved from their old building to the second story of the Eaton building, they made a change from the old board whereby one must turn a crank on their telephone to ring central to the newest type of board that rings in merely by lifting the receiver of the telephone. When the receiver is placed on the fork of the phone again it automatically “rings off." This we are told, does not hold good for phones on country lines The installation of this system is a decided advantage. Not only does it save time, trouble and energy but gives the town @ more citified ap- pearance. Oil Field Worker Takes Own Life OSAGE, Wyo. Sept. 12.—Wiltiam Forsythe a tooldresser employed in the oil field here for the last year, was found dead in his shack from @rinking carbolic acid while in a de. spundent state of mind. Forsythe had been drinking heavily of late, it was claimed. EJs lips were badly burned in drinking the acid. Highest ,prices paid for diamonds, ela gold and silver. HB. Kling Jeweler, Oil Exchange building. x B-15-tf, Model Cleaners and Dyers “ CLEANING AND ged DERESSING Expert Alterations and Repairing LADIES’ WORK A SPECIALTY Phone 1304-J For OUR Prices ANITA STEWART LYRIC THEATR Two of the Bigest Pictures Ever Sho ---in--- Sowing The Wind A woman with a past. A giri with a future. A rogue ready to destroy one as he had the other. THIS_ WEEK Casper wn in James Oliver Curwood Story “To Baby Brabant--- The Devil We Know! Often Rosamond had heard that toast in the gambling dive; pitied the beautiful woman who accepted it as an honor; yet did not know who Baby Brabant really was. Then realization came. MOPMDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1921, Lyric Theater Co. Lyric Theater Co. What Is The Most Valuable Piece of Land in The State of Wyoming? \ PONDER AND THINK BEFORE READING THE BALANCE OF THIS AD! Thinking is wholesome. It is the only thing that has made civilization possible. Many things enter into the value of real estate—gold and silver and precious stones may be imbedded therein awaiting the prospector’s pick and when uncovered smile up to him in their brilljant radiance and in their dumb language tell him of their in- calculable value! Thousands of agencies enter into the values of Real Estate, but after all, the greatest agency is the needs of man. The most ardent need of man is at that place where he is most numerous, and in casting youreye down Center Street in the City of Casper, it can be said without contra- diction, that he is most numerous-at Center and Second. Streets. More people pass and repass this corner than any other place in the entire state. We are offering the people of Casper and vicinity an opportunity to invest their money in the RICHEST SPOT in the STATE OF WYOMING—under the most efficient business management that the most scrupulous investor can demand. HENRY BRENNAN needs no introduction to the peo- ple of Casper. No business man has achieved more suc- cess than he has since his arrival here. As a showman, he is|without a peer in the northwest. His fame is not cir- cumscribed within the limits of a few states, but extends throughout the entire country, and his ability in that behalf is as well known in southern California as in Cas- per. Not alone as to the selections of the productions shown but he has the rare trait that a business man should have in order to make a success of any undertaking, to-wit: The Financial Side of the Theatrical Enterprise It needs no argument to show to the investor that Mr. Brennan has made a great success in that behalf. Space will not permit us to explain our entire proposi- tion but our solicitors will interview you within a short time and explain our opportunity in its entirety. The affairs of the Company will be under directorate of some of the most prominent business men in the City of Casper, whose past business achievements have been crowned with success. Lyric Theatre Company HAGENS & MURANE ; ‘Counsellors HENRY F. BRENNAN President JOHN A. MILLER CO., Fiscal Agents Minneapolis, Minn., and Casper, Wyo. HU x Hitt!