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PAGE TWO Che Casper Daily Cribune Ieswea every evening except Sunday at Casper. Natron® 0, Publication Offices. Tribune Building. clain leaving his office at two in the afternoon, acc: panied by golf clubs, and entering g limousine for a trip to the country club and the nineteenth hole. The Real Cause of Delay leave only the larger rocks for a car} rock go\ahead with to bump along over. Today there ig | erection, of a new & magnificent hard grade already for) sulted from damage to “It would not be surprising if Mr. Vauclain has ——————————————_—_—__________________ }}'w cement concrete top dressing, and|by a fire which started in Si Ee! y cecuteet -.-15 and 16) 05 his 3 then we would have a permanent|of the French cafe on the north 1 Telephone Bwcmense Connecting Ail Deomrtmente| Te oe tomar ws can gen be expected to work ira fae | yseng ZU, eatietial_ lst atunday] toreush the Jockeying tn the houen | oad, se Ne apere the money’ "tor|ot the gain” balling. ” Hentaurant 3 herein 3 wv ni Entered at Casper, (Wyoming) Postoffice as second clasg| tory and give their best if the gentlemen in charge of Govertnr Cueayter%e t ae aod Gimme ek pee Se he ca eae: ‘That pyre be tbe the matter, November. 22, 1916. ¢ the establishment care so little about it that they can| ton, you forgot to tell the people the him. The Dowell bit dows oe highways so very expensive, - doing mare golf away hours every week? In-the good old days| real reason that the road building | of the principles of the the same thing over and over again. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS the heads of companies were the hardest workers. The|Prosram has not been carried out as|and the Phippe bill, but i does Why not do iy right once? Why ts ton} Sficiency of the business epended on them, and'they| PToPosed when the bond issue was| carry all of the things which it that ere county could net ae Preece Stasager | Anew it. When hard times came they worked harder| Yd last spring. It was not because | importance to the state of ease atin. Gite tet ee ONT Associated Editor} than ever. They found their joy in their business! and materials to get chonnee an fa | use of tok eee ays. “What's the| can leaue bende for $300,000. succly EVANS .... --.-.-.- City Editor! triumphs. You hear a lot about the inefficiency of la-| stated to Mr. Meek, he only used that Natrona with her vast income can MAS DAILY -Advertising Manager| boring'men. Maybe so, but some of the critics have| excuse because he thought he was stand a million dollar bond. I say, net done a full day’s work in five years. They have| writing to some dry farmer who| :raveling of the Yellowstone highway make the Yellowstone highway a per- Advertising Representatives ad forgotten how to hustle. They want.to play. When| ght appreciate his efforts. along| ‘rom Casper to Glenrock. ‘This iy| ™anent highway. , Prudden, King & Prudden, 172023 Steger Bldg... Cuicace.’ the cat's away the mice ill play. -It is an old adage | *¥ch lines. very encouraging, but if Mr. Mondell TESS ae Re BLOUSES | Tiles SB Eee avenue: Nis Daily Tribune are on file in| and as true today as it was centuries ago. “The genius| The real reason that the pfogram . D tie’ New York, Chicag Boston offices and visitors| of American business is not found on.fashionable| BAS not been carried out is because Crepe de Chine Georgette Crepe "i p welcome. Playgrounds. The first people to get to work should| hive che Townsend ead’ Thine: tan | this very hapostant fog ae Se q eT ren inkene ”SSC | ete ‘executives; the hightroame® ceed toe weet’ way at this time a i, iste ALL AT ONE PRICE SUBSCRIPTION BATES . pa. 80 government could pay ; we could have had By Carrier “There are many establishments in America the| its share of the money that is neces-|‘t Paved with it conerete in- eU; Uta i One Year . A $o| Success of which was eftablished ‘by business giants,| “Ary for the state of Wyoming to| stead. To my mind it is a rank ware ’ : : 95 | men who began w:th nothing and literally battled their| “AT” out the program of the high-/©f money to gravel it. The heavy begs wel cakttiatsnocees, . Chote ofeened way department as outlined wh@n the| Winds of this country very soon blow! GLENROCK, Wyo., Sept. 23—Sus- 'e ; 25 | ae eereenocees, =: wuenerere 0G Undgr 8" | bond ismue wus voted. Wyoming has|S!!_the sand out of the gravel and geations that the Oad Fellows of Glen. *| contracts. There are:some of the old-timers, Fetired/ haa her money ready for a long time. ——S ES SSS oe Be) ilk q JInderwear : See «...#7.40] TORTe ago, who could gee beck Be oe arina of fede but the federal government hag used Special on Si oo a oa a «day and put new.life in en ises ‘the present| up e last appro} tion for roads, ! Siz Mouths 13¢] directors of which aca moabing pitt tabling thete katy and the A. A. A aod all other good Bloomers, Night Gowns, Camisoles and Teddies. N han) instead of sweating at their desks. There are hun-|TO8CS associations in United °. q Coe ne ue nasa aaron ant ta} Weds af excesves who BOE SOU even Ee Ba poe | batea_nave hee’ iying 42 gee TODAY AND SATURDAY All at Attractive Prices BS ne wil ‘Mot insure delivery after eubscrip-| to sit down and think out the basic.cause of their) wich carrion Sim Cop meet tion vecomes one month in arrears. troubles, They do not know what their own govern-| the yse of the roads, and at the same Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A.B. ©.) | ™ent is doing, and do not care, They buy their|time gave the five western states } | thoughts second-hand. * Vacation has become the vo-| which have great acreage of govern. School Hats at Member of the ses Po fed nb cation of too many business men and: business their pa age a advantage of from ‘he Associated Press is exclusively e' sf u 3 “ "et Oo fiv Oo one, ovel oO use for publication of all news credited in this paper and| #vocation. F state in: the wee, Of this moaay,. Shek eclso the local news vublished herein. “Tt is about time for some of the golf fiends and] means that Wyoming could have had SIOMIRE Dea Nia mia jazz-hunters to set an example to the so-called labor-| matched against each dollar of her $3.50 and $5.00 psa. 5 16 any time between 6 und 8 o'clock p, m | ing classes by themselves wackling down to hard work.| own money, from three to five dol. tf you fail to recelve your Trébune. A paper will be de | There is no business in the worid' sa prosperous that/ lars of the federal government funds livered to you by special messenger. Make it your duty to| it can long survive parasitical direction. for use on her roads. In other words, let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. “The country needs some more ‘cranks’ of the type} %¢,coud have had instend of the one Pp gt oe eas, say tee e Moore Hat Shop wie ‘ STS SN on [our own “stiie, ‘Ave ‘ailitioe: toer L _— undred thousand, or nine million dol- F ae THE FISHWIFE OF THE SENATE. sates hopin Gy tp Yon bg ecu wwyomace sébal Fon ths Iris Theater Building 126 S. Center Wolcott Street, Just Around the Corner From For a downright example of a public scold, Senator] OUt where it is thickest. Where» contact is 0n| case might be. In any'event we have . Lukis Candy Company : f every hand. Where opportunity is afforded to secure|jost one entire year of road work 4 POSOOSOOOPOOOOOOS Pat Harrison of Mississippi is easily the winner in any] a close up of the stars of the screen, their right to the : ee contest initiated in the national association of} title reputation gives them, their habits of life and . grouches. He has not been in good bumor nor pleased| their vaiue as citizens of the community, the Los An- with the world since last November. The’ sun has} Seles Times is in position to deliver judement constantly been behind the cloud and the birds have] SY a been silent, sweet sounds have been discord and the “Roscoe Arbuckle will have ample opportunity to rainbow possessed no beauty or‘graceful curve. Some-| repent at leisure in the cell of a San’Francisco prison one must have put salt in his ice cream cone. his attempt to play the role of Lucullus off the screen. Senator Harrison has undertaken to do the growl-| They do such things in literature and in the cinema, ' ing for the late Democratic party. It will be noted| but he is now learning at a tragic price that there is) we said “for,” for if we had said “‘at” it would have| 4 Wide distinction between the silent drama and real been too big a contract for a senator, hailing t'rom| life. ‘ : ; Gulfport, Mississippi, and consequent!y suffering from| _“‘Whether he is culpably responsible for the sin- the hook-worm, which affliction is not compatible with| ister death of Virginia Rappe is a question that a San 2 bard and steady work. Francisco jury must decide. If the charges muds by At all things Republican Senator Husrison is dis-| Certain of those who attended the ‘party’ from which pleased and so tells the world. The president can- she was carried in an unconscious condition to\die not take even severa] days respite from his duties and| ‘Wo days later can be proved, he richly deserves’ the ‘ go to New York and play golf, because some crank is penalty; but it is possible that the fumes’ of alcohol S offering unemployed labor for sale on an auction| ™@Y have caused their imaginations to register things block in Boston, and there are former service men| that did not occur. The Times accords to Arbuckle erots where! waeienaciee his full, right to be regarded as innocent of intent to If Senator Harrison's party had done its duty by the an a ¢rime until he has been -actually proved eople, when his particular president, against whom-he z 4 5 ; : dace ines ee was in Sade: and not wasted'so| “But the Times is not blind to the fact that two many millions of substance, things would have been| Carousals in which he played a prominent parthave different, the unemployed would be at work, Boston| caused charges of the commission of a felony to be common would have known no’ painfal sights and Mr. ae Bile sindiviad ee the hate is zoly. avast - "i h. aay si je individual, however hilarious, doesn’t <on- Basing would: Rave fea eae ee ae ae State party. ‘The wild nature of his entertainments : But under such circumstances Senator Harrison| ¥*% 8" open secret in the screen world, and it 4s not would have had nothing to roar about and therefore | 0? record that any olie attended except of his or her silence would pervade his immediate environment} °W" ?ree M2. ' “y , which would be sad and more than the public could] “We do not refer to these things in extenuation of bear. { his alleged offense, but to point the moral that he is ‘) = simply the product of the unhealthy atmosphere of . certain movie studios. Public opinion will not’ toler- \ THE USUAL CAUSE OF TROUBLE. ate one standard of morals for film folk and another ity.” One of the greatest aids to what has popularly been for the rest of the community. termed the “moral let down,” so painfully apparent I, since the war, is the possession of money in ir’ or PUSSYFOOTING PUSSYFOOT. smaller quantities, b: eople unused to it or unfit to Ba y handle it, because of the self indulgence and wrongful| That militant disciple of prohibition and” world uses it affords. The possession of money by inexperi-| ¢vangel of the bone-dry state, Mr. P. F. Johnson, is enced and self tndulgent persons results in debauch-| touring far away India, doing his utmost to bring ery of persons and things. down misery upon a people who never did him any To insure safety and the maintenance of the equili-| 8tm and who never heard of him until quite recent- brium, ‘accumulations of money must come gradual-|!¥- It is noted that hé is not meeting with any great ly, that its owner may haye proper conception of its| YCcess, notwithstanding the fact that he is constant- coat and value, and grow used to its power. ly BPG 2) ‘eh jana of the free as the shining ex- When, as it occurred in war time, fortune dumped TBesagtank Gy tia he kidding the Indians, but ae beat bet as Ps apeer gk poe Bhemnenenges Pa in any official action so far observed they are rather Po cet what they wanted and had wanted all their| <idding him. They pull no rough stuff like our Eng- orl yu ais Ciba Se ehige atic lish cousins did, They do it much smoother, the coun- life, and got it with speed. You are witnessing the re-| <i) simply defeats the proposition by vote in the first sult of the process today. instance. One-fifth of the local revenue comes from In the hands of some, much money is extremely un-| the excise taxes and that revenue has a strong ap. = fortunate, but in experienced hands there is no such] peal, thing as too much money. SE ae The analogy would be in entrusting to a boy of tender years, whose sole experience had been with HOPE DEFERRED. kiddie cars, a valuable high powered automobile and js expect him to drive it with safety to himself and the bes «sophie era anc! eas public through crowded traffic, With alittle more YouRteblty, lustrous strands-et hate age and greater experience the boy will succeed, but Haye bound my heart to you; Lis early attempt is altogether likely to prove disas- Your form is graced beyond compare— trous. So with sudden riches. With more familiar- ‘What is a man to de? ity and wider experience in financial affairs the per- son with sudden wealth will better succeea, vehave I ahalinnge faney. tae and tad, seiner aot peace ed a safer and saner 4 To paay 8 thing Sompleters ao gl 2 A daintier lass for any la T., large extent the unexpected wealth has passed AUthot ant@ankle Bh ovt of the hands of the original owners. There are (My lady of the silk hose ad— no longer funds for gratifying foolish whims, tempt- Ah! Will I ever meet ’er?) ing cupidity or urging immorality. : —Evelyn Ramsey . : < The drastic cure of shard times,” may be a repug- ——_—_~0. @ \ , e ij ‘6 nant medicine, after the plum pudding we have eaten, 2 but it is the identical dose thet will bring us back to| , There is no telling to what lengths insurance.en- Satis wearers Wl e certain: health and restore appreciation of plain and whole-| t¢rPrise may go. A Connecticut company insured a gs some things. : bridegroom against bad weather on his wedding. day. 3 x e Now if some live company will guarantee a safe jour- “i Bean ASS ney of the matrimonial barque to the final port, ome. of clo correctness WORKING EXECUTIVES. 4 thing real will have been accomplished. \ © " Lt “Samuel M. Vauclain is the head of the Baldwin . * locomotive works,” observes the Manufacturers’ Rec-|. Marshal Foch who is to come to America next —stand highest in favor where real values are appreciated, ord. “He directs its activities. He points out that it} month on a visit to the American Legion specially and : t . is the policy of his company to grant liberal credit to| the United States generally, in expectation of a stren- ‘ : x deserving customers and that it would be entirely im-| tous welcome, has gone into training at his country . ossible to do business unless there were liberality in| estate in Brittany, to make himself physically fit for : $ $ credit, a liberality which transmutes itself into divi-| the ordeal. ercoats — to dends for stockholders. OO a “If business men in the United States today would| New York is developing its own screen scandal, in- Vanelain. ‘But they must meet new conditions. They| with c tan he subtlety the Bay pebge me must do some of their business on credit. They must| in,0% . en: realize that other men are just as honest as they are, + ° Business is founded on confidence, ‘The other fellow We Carry a Complete | is honest and will work and pay if given a chance.” "| ~Enter, the lady with pink hair, in the Arbuckle Line of Wilpers & “Mr, Wauclain naturally does not extend any more | case. Shoes, Stetson ai credit than is necessary. But Mr. Vauclain, in the oo wy Aa tiegheap opinion of some of his contemporaries, is a very pe- - ; va : igh Grade _ Men’s culiar person. They say in Philadelphia that he is the| jo ma it See De rontal fo say thet tn the Naw see Furnishings, — ), hardest working man in town. He gots down to work| "Senatorial election Bursum brought Holm the A early and leaves late. If there is no business in sight| °*°°?” ke packs his bag and gocs to find it, though it be at Pek Ree the end of the world. Nobody has ever seen Mr. Vau-} There are no Yacations in the school of experience, ’