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nes a — Soa. — it 7 v. ne ce we uy PAGE TWO Cbe Casper Daily Cribune Issued every evening Sunday at Casper, Natrona Qounty, Wyo, Publication Offices. Tribune Building. Pa none ED te oc ae seh a tll BUBINESS TELEPHONES .......-.++++-++>- 15 and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments Entered at Casper, (Wyoming) Postoffice as second class matter, November 22. 1916. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS R. E. EVANS ... THOMAS DAILY . Advertising -Kepresentatives aa Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-33 Steger Bidg.. REO, i; 286 Fifth avenuc, New York City; Globe Bidg.. Bos- to Mass. Coppies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago and Boston offices and visitors ‘&re welcome. eee SUBSCKIPTION RATES By Carrier One Yeor . areas Biz «Months * 1.96 Three Mon “6 One Month Per Copy -. three months. Ali_subscriptions miust de paid tn advance and the will not insure delivery after subsorip- vecomes one month In arrears. Member of Andit Bureau of Circulition (A. B. ©) Pllc wth at eccimncedlbe aE e oer enh 2) Sceallne BS Member of the Associated ‘Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to we use for publication of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. Call 15 or 16 any time between 6:30 and § o'clock p. m- if you fail to recelve your Tribune. A paper will be de livered to you by special messenger. Make it your duty te let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. pe td —_—}—$_ BLACKMORE AND HONEST WORK. It has been said that W. A. Blackmore, candidate on the Casper Party ticket for mayor is opposed to paving improvements. He is opposed only tc certain methods of paving. For instance he wants the people to get the kind of paving they pay for. When the specifications say concrete base must be four inches thick. That is what it must be in Mr. Blackmore way of thinking, not two inches or any other thic’ ness.. And if the specifications call for a _certaix amount of cement to be used with the sand and gravel, that is to be the exact amount that must be used. The Warren Construction company found all these things out when it was attempted to evade the specifications and put in a paving base of less thickness than the specifications and contract called for. The base came up and the proper base was put down, but it was only after a threat of injunction pro- ceedings was made that it was done. That is exactly the way Mr. Blackmore looked after the interests of the property owners in one Casper district. That is the way he will look after the inter- ests of all taxpayers if he is made the mayor. He will see to it that contractors with the city will give value received and that none of them will evade the specifications. If Mr. Blackmore had been the mayor of Casper for the past several years the city would have saved several hundred thousands of dollars,, He would’ have seen to it. - No, Mr. Blackmore is not opposed to public im- provements, but he is opposed to graft in public work. And that is the kind of a man you want in public of- fice these days. = : BSI sad 3 BRE YS. ss. OUR UNKNOWN HERO. On Armistice day the American people will \pay simple and solemn respect to an unknown. American boy who fell on the battlefield of France in defense of}the emblem of his native land. He is an unidenti- fied hero of the great conflict. The son of some lov- ing mother, who will never know his fate. Unknown as he is he will be accorded the highest honors the tor! cousin of Jesus the discovery will be of great inter- oe ee a et he ae the Jews, and others quote the same authority as that the Jchn who was at Ephesus was not the evangelist, but a of the same name. Such contradiction is perhaps natural in traditions of a man who is, strange- ly enough, commonly pictured as gentle, slight and al- most effeminate, when in fact he appears to have been the most fiery and tempestuous of all the Apostles. “Tt is entirely within the range of possibility, and indeed not improbable, that the researches at Ephesus will establish the identity of the John who was en- tombed there. If it proves to have been indeed the est and value to students of Christian origin.” en SIX HUNDRED AND SIX THOUSAND. “Nowhere in the English-speaking werld,” rem: the American Economist, “is there a literary society without at least one member who has read or recited “The Charges of the Six Hundred.’ It was famous from the day of its first publication. Our country- men knew it well years before Buchanan Read wrote ‘Sheridan's Ride.’ It was popular when the Rough Riders were in Cuba. It won a new lease of fame when American and British horsemen rode together against the Teuton Reiters. We doubt if any war poem in the English language is better known than the account of the Six Hundred. “Stormed at with shot and shell, Boldly they rode and well Into the jaws of death, Into the mouth of hell, Rode the Six Hundred. “But on the first day of October, 1921, the sup- posedly free-trade British government imposed a duty of 38 1-3 per cent on six thousand articles. The first American tariff had 10 and 15 per cent duties to start infant industries. Nowadays the greatest manufac- turing nation of the Old World has schedules far be- yond our ‘first attempts. talked of far and wide? “Yet does Major Putnam call attention to this sig-| V8" opened last week and will greatly nificant change? Not so far as we know. Do the free-trade professors in our colleges say that free-trade has been weighed in the balances and found want-| attendance. ing? Has the New York World prepared a fuli page in deep mourning over the end of all low tariff agi- tation? Is the Philadelphia Record setting up its obituary of free-trade? Does Bourke Cockran regret his forecast that protection will probably disappear from the face of the earth? Does Senator Underwood come forth to say that with Great Britain under a sub- stantial protective tariff we had better follow her ex- ample hefore‘the snow falls? Somehow the new Brit- ish tariff fails to attrast the attention it merits. Per- haps with the world series out of the way it will re- vive a more generous allowance of space. “While the ride of six hiindred soldiers is known to everybody the imposition of duty on six thousand ar- ame does not reach-every front page. Why is this thus?” pre, Ee a WHAT ARE MORALS? The children’s court in New York, says the St. Louis Star, has summoned more than 200 of the city’s edu- cators, editors and other prominent men and women for symposium on the subject, has a child of five morals?—as the result of a legal contention in a case on trial. What are morals?’ There is no question but that a child of five, properly brought up, knows that it is wrong to steal or to lie. How does he know it’s wrong? Because he knows that he will be punished if he does either. But the argument will be made that the child is swayed by fear and not by morality. A man of thirty punishment. fear of roprigal, if not in this world, then in the next. is right? Is it not because the experience of genera- tions has shown that punishment inevitably follows failure to do certain things a certain way? that the boy of five and the man of twenty-five are not morally curbed by the same shadow—the fear of punishment. republic can pay him. The president, the cabinet, great generals and admirals, diplomats of the allied countries, distinguished scholars and citizens all will cnite in their homage on Armistice day. When the hero’s remains are lowered to their earth- ly resting place the president will deliver an oration telling of the valor of American soldiers and recount- ing the deeds of the boys who fought the world’s last great fight. As a further acknowledgement of the debt to the departed of which the unknown is the representative, the nation’s activities will stand at rest for a space of two minutes for reflection upon the meaning of the life and death of this unknown boy. The echo of the final salute will not have died away when representatives of the nations of the world will gather to discuss the needlessness of such sacrifice as came to their attention in the ceremonies in honor of the American boy. The fathers and mothers in mafiy lands whose homes hhave been forever saddened by the great war, will pray devoutly that by some means men may be brought to an understanding of the tragedy of war and its consequences to those who sacrifice and that the miracle of its abolition may yet occur. ete eS eo WANTS HIS OLD THRONE. Former Emperor Charles of Austria-Hungary, of the Hapsburg line, has made another unsuccessful at- tempt to regain the lost throne of Hungary. On de- mand of the former allied governments speaking through Great Britain, the deposed monarch will be expelled from Hungarian territory. Just so long as these heaven-born gentlemen and their descendants remain at large there will be tur- moil'in Europe. There will always be enough royal- ists about to back the claims cf rulers the people do not ‘want. . i Some day the Hohenzollern outfit will rise and try it in Germany. The Russian Reds had the only system of disposing of hereditary rulers. It may have been brutal but it was certainly effective. They don’t return to bother much, when they are exterminated. SoA ee JOHN’S TOMB AT EPHESUS. “Following hard after a delusion concerning the tomb of Boccaccio and the huge joke concerning the grave of Hamlet comes a serious and important an- nouncement of the discovery of the suppdsed tomb of John the Evangelist at Ephesus,” remarks the New York Tribune. ‘Archaeological researches in recent years have produced so many striking confirmations of Biblical history that there is reason to anticipate in this the throwing of light upon one of the most notable New Testament figures, and perhaps the solu- tion of the age-long problem of his fate. . “Common tradition, largely derived from Tertullian and Jerome, is that John, the cousin of Jesus Christ, was boiled in oil by Domitian, but emerged from the bath uninjured and was banished to the mines of Patmos; that he was released by Nerva and returned to Ephesus, where he died in the year 100, at the age of 94, the only one of the Apostles who died a natu- ral death: Irenaeus tells that John published his gos- pel at Ephesus and lived until the time of Trajan, and Polycrates adds that he died and was buried in that city. hand, George Hamartolos quotes orks are no longer extant—as say- ety ee ; NO PEACE IN IRELAND. Much to the regret of the world the prospects of a peaceful solution of the Irish-English controversy are as remote as they have been in months past. Nego' tions pending give no promise whatsoever of settle- ment, and the prospects are again fora lapse into further civil war. It has long bee: Is not this something to be|ports a congested condition tn that is tempted’ to steal ‘but refrains. Why? Often, too| sented at a: tamil: fon hh often, it is because he is afraid of apprehension and|a few days The, Fepeussarchivil Consciously or subconsciously there is| were Mrs. Elmira Hunt, her daughter There ave those who will claim that they do the|@ushter Mrs. Nellie Keen, the latte right thing because it is right. How do they know it /@aushter Mrs.-Harry Julian and the great, great ,grandmother of the Keen | *ct!¥e outdoor iit Future of Laramie COUNTRY CLUB SCHOOL BEING OCCUPIED NOW Relief for South and East Cas-|ever have per Districts Also Near tue pate Bod Sight in Erection of fatth in him that he Large Building. A gentleman me that during ands of our across the If your dream is too big for you, if @bove and beyond you, tell ft to Mt to, the children; tell it in the Sunday schools! When : I received @ letter{schools and the public Fabel dine Fe Rene ste Pk ice was nine years old his fath- Hannibal er led him to an altar and bade him swear eternal enmity to his foes. All that we know of Hannibal was writ- ten by his enemies, but what they grudgingly wrote has made his name Her husband was was in France, come home. ee tig icy fe i | ; ; H ae ‘When the Children of Isreal were being driven to hard labor by the Egyptians and little Moses, the adopt- 4 son of the House of Pharaoh, was pre genre «banat atl gras _ -|mother, I fmagine she would pu The new Country club school house] Ommendation” | sh etgnet Sites about en aces “Ménen, God situated one mile south of the city ree-| PSST TD which her husband hed re-|has wonderously spared you and is ervoir has been completed and is| Der simp, when hs giving you a great opyrtunity. Re- ready for occupancy. It is @ modern went to he wer office and member this, that thote slaves out Standardized oneroom. one teacher | request to an undersecretary, yonder who are being lashed with building. Fifteen pupils were expect-| 1 flatly turned down. “T whips are your penple!’ I can see his ed to enroll at its opening session ‘ittle shoulders straighten up, his gome to the wrong man,” today. Mrs. Earl Ward of Baldwin, | 27 Be N. D. has come to Casper to take|Zbe" he went to a higher ‘secretary, /neck stiffen. bis eyes sparkle, charge of the new school. reopliatberye pee a ce ted n of Casper far to cope with it © being built’ as fast_as possible. A new seven-rcom building near the Casper golf links is nearing completion and will greatly relieve the congested conditions in the schools tn east and south parts of town. The Salt Creek schools are under pervision of A. A.” Slade, super: jent of the city schools, who re ; HE the heart quest was root in his soul. No need now to tell him study, I can ses him diligently applying himsel*: to his lessons until he becomes the ¥itest man in all the world. In her weakness she could not free a singlé slave, could not right a single wrong, and how utter- the children. You are a Republican or|ly nopstons tt comme re Od ant it to's Democra’ ialist because! child: but she did. in after yea! Mag you on x “tna you became|all that she had hoped for, al! that she what you are now. You are a Metho-/had worked for, al! that she had pray- dist or a Baptist or a Quaker or ajed for came true! Catholic because you decided what! Ee you would be when you were a child. Y¥. W. WORKER DEAD. ar missionaries ‘in appeal ey Were butting up against a brick wall, Tey trying to convert men and women to} H. O. Warton, Casper attorney, has Christianity, but when they took their|recetved a message from Shanghai, message to the bosses—to the children |China, announcing the death of Miss —success came, “The child is father|Grace Coppock, national,secretary of of the man.” z the A. who had been more SAYS CIVILIZED MAN boss with his proposition. The real bosses in this country are village also. A new elementary school, facilitate. work in the Salt Creek di- vision, although even yet more room is. needed to preperly care for the AAILROAD 1S “SAVED,” CELEBRATES IN CRASH SARATOGA, Oct. 25.—The Sar. atoga & Encampment railroad, which recently has been struggling . ately to escape the junk pile, cele> tion train was led by spreading rails south of this placo and thé loco: motive did a nose dive into the ditch. The cars, however, remained on the track and none of the persons aboard, nor any of the several carloads of cat- tle in stock cars that constituted aj Paul several days ago, H. C. Burrell] tively wicked. portion of the train, was injured. personal representative of Williany A. Everything but His Health—Crowds Swarm to See Him. a Five Generations At Family Reunion Of Wyomingites| wits ‘nm. "ssd is lacking in common sense." At those health problems so accurately. “America,” ho said “must think now, or pay price. fle modern. conditions hav&a hi The representatives! hig being i fre ‘tired, thin and pale all the time, Inck of the use| pe) mo. of common sense can be blamed equal} i... 4+ ly ag much. rang “It is tmposetble always to lead the | wilt it last?” KEMMERER, | Wyo., Oct.. 25.—Five generations of one family ‘were well and robust. Mrs. Harry Thompson, the latte: trial. But latter's son Harry Julian. Mrs. Hunt, I simply said: we should in the fi Mrs, Keen and Mrs. Julian and son | 8 all the time, and this, more than any- "| thing else, is the cause of s0 MANY/applied to thousands just like him all Undey weurtshed. and yellowish, sickly-lover the country. Garren‘s Tonic is or 1 foe are with at least a lit- es, a a in bringing relief. +f sideration. . Paper Is Uncertain) cre amount ot nait<hewed, bastly eaten feod the average person stuffs must quit stiftfing ourselves.” CAEN the Casper Pharmacy.—Adv. CHEYENNE, Wyo., Oct. 25.—Wil Reid, former register of the Cheyenne apparent that neither side to the] land office, whom a Laramie dispatch controversy is willing to recede from practically the|stated would assume control of the same position assumed in the beginning. That being| Laramie Boomerang November 1, to- the case the resumption of civil war is inevitable. The|*¥ stated that he had no. definite Trish will not be crushed. be exterminated. It is the most — difficult problem Great Britain has ever faced in her long governmental experience. The end, no man knows. A PAEAN FOR PUMPKIN PIE. Of all the delectable dishes ever set before a king the American pumpkin pie is the best of all, says the Washington Star. Poems should be written about the pumpkin pie, its worth set forth in song and story, and It is doubtful if they can|P!4"s regarding the Boomerang, but might take it over later provided sat- isfactory arrangement with the own- ers were made and satisfactory sup- Port were forthcoming from the demo- cratic party of the state. Reid this morning opened a land office here and for the present will engage fn ad- vising applicants for public lands. REWARD. Suitable reward will bg paid for in- formation of the person who stole rad- Jator cap and little airplane from my recipes for its making stored in the bureau of stand-|Pierce Arrow car, last night. ards. With the first touch of real fall pumpkin pies Have made their annual appearance in Washington, and something really ought to be done about some of them. To any one who has ever tasted a real pump- kin pie, some of these local efforts are a snare and a delusion. They are no more pumpkin pies than apple pies are. Cinnamon pies can masquerade as pump- kin only to the unknowing. As in everything else in life, one must know first the real to be able to de- tect the imitation. So it is with our old friend, the pumpkin pie. Those of us who have eaten of the golden brown pie, made of real pumpkin, accompan- ied by a glass of cold, sweet milk, cannot be fooled by a dark brown pastry that gets its flavor from the spice jar. sl CS See WISDOM NEEDED. It is to be hoped that the general rail strike voted by the brotherhoods and shop mon, embracing some sixteen unions, may yet be averted through confer- ences of representatives of the unions, the federal la- bor board and the justice department of the ‘govern- ment, A strike will be particularly unfortunate at the present time as a tie-up of any length of time will work hardship upon many innocent sufferers in mat- ters of food and fuel distribution. It is bound to be # serious matter if it occurs for it will in all probability result in a test for union la- bor, and no one could rejoice in the destruction of the unions. The only hope_is that those who are guiding the destinies of the two sides will act with wisdom and save public suffering. ———_o—_____ FILE FOR REFERENCE. In a letter to the Demoeratic club of Southern Cali- fornia, James M. ‘Cox, defeated candidate for th« presidency writes: “We stand inflexibly as we did when the polls closed last November, for the league of nations, with the United States as a co-operative part of it.” This will make an interesting reference when the campaign of 1922 opens to determine the political complexion, of the next congress. Major Ormeby. No Odor--No Dirt And a wonderful gas heater is now ready for you in our complete stock of gkheiUMPH-REY a Radisnifize, one-eleven 2 We have a size for you. Positively the . cigarettes greatest gas fire ever made. CASPER GAS APPLIANCE €0. 119 East First Street seed of the glorious purpose takes LACKS COMMON SENSE tne a Weel a nertronat=*y *ev-! Burrell Shows How Modern Man Takes Care of peak: to a large crowd in St.}{nto himself during the @ay is post- " vate ‘Then when he feels dull and nervous he wonders. what's Garren, made a significant statement | the matter and imagines he has heart when he declared that “civilized man|trouble, or insomnia, or something Ise. There is one thing the mat- first the large crowds did not under-|ter with him. He has abused the ono stand the distinguished visitor but/organ of the body which is most es- when he explained fully the reason for| sential to good health—the stomach— this terse statement, hundreds agreedjand until the gastric juices in his n about|stomach perform their functions as him marvelled at his ability to analyze | they should all the doctors and medi- cines in the world wii not make him “The other day a man well bagi over this sectiqn came to me al fo with Deol said: ‘From what a friend tells mé about Garren’s Tonic, I think it will At ‘Teast, I am willing to pposing it does get my stomach in shape, how long "If you ara! nature see dreryshrd begin taking Garren’s Tone right boy, 1s 92 years old. She is imposaible for many to exercise the/ now, at the end of a few days your Ordway, Colo. She was eer ie er: body sufficiently to make the gastric} food should be digesting perfectly The student of ethic<’can perhaps show that fear|and bore nine children, four of whom| Juices wholly active and virile. does not always enter into a consideration of right or|are dead. She. crossed the plains to| impossible to spend as. ‘wrong, but it will require convincing evidence to prove | California, by ox-team in’ 1849. It 48] once more. But if yau continue to act ach time A8}/iike a fool, so far as what you eat % air and sun-land the way you eat it is concerned, It is also impossible for us/you will be right back where you are reside et Sage, Wyoming, near here,|t© Set absolutely fresh vegetable food| now inside of six months.’ Mrs. Thompson is a resident of Filer, Idaho. P “What I said to that man can be te people.) But it is possible to]the most wonderful medicine in the already ‘woakened | world I, believe, but it only aids nature As @ nation, we Garren’s Tonic is sold in Casper by DOES YOUR BANK GIVE YOU SERVICE? Phone 1500 3 Millions of pounds bought by the gov- ernment. Quality the best. WHY PAY WAR PRICES? The Webel Commercial Company Office ——+ Is Now Located in the Van Gorden Investment Company’s Office What does your-banker do for you besides take in your money and pay it out when you call for it? Isghe willing to help you in your business transactions when you need advice on something that is new to you? Does he show an interest in. your affairs and a desire to be of service? These qualities are among those of- fered by The Wyoming National Bank in what we term service. A cus- tomer’s interest is the big idea with this bank. What helps you helps us, and the officers of the Ean are al- ways ready and waiting for a chance to be of service to you. There is an old tradition associated with this bank. It has often been said of it that, “The officers are the easiest men to see.” Bring us your account, large or small, and be a part of this wonderful growing institution. We deal in high class investment securities, including Liberty Bonds. Wyoming National Bank Casper’s Popular Rank