Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 18, 1921, Page 6

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the Re wit RATS AB ese ses" “> puruysaveada nan ee PAGE SIX Che Casper Daily Cribune every evening except Su ty, Wyo, Publication ©: iepuec ee ESS TELEPHON Teiephone Exc! Entered at Casper ma! MEMBER THE A 2. E. HANWAT ...- EARL E. HANWAY W. H. HUNTLEY R. E. EVANS THOMAS DAIL Advertising By Carrier «$7.80 Felipe Angeles, the Bayard of the Mexican revolu- ce ek 3.99] tion was first “professor” and later superintendent Tures, Montha 1881 of the Chapultepec Military academy in Mexico City. One Month ae “Schoolmaste and “professors” all of them and ier Coy this does not begin to be the list. $7.80 In fighting the world war, “Professor” Foch used Se paenths 90 the strategy employed by “Professor” Lee and “Pro- Quree Months . No subscription by three months. period’ than be paid in advance and the fone nmrost . pate es ei not insure delivery after subsorip ton becomes one month in arrears. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©) Member of the ——— Lae om The Associated Presse is exclusively entitl publication of all news credited in this paper and e locai news published herein. Kick if You Don't Get Your Tri 3 8 o'clock p. ™- 5 or 16 any time between 6:30 and 8 o’c’ ig one to receive your Tribune. A Leg gd bioghloe livercd to you by special messenger. Make it yo! let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. 8 rT LABOR IN VAIN. i VanDyke hopes to obtain any resu! aad Dr Ee «versal cratk ‘at Colonel George Har vey, he will do more than most folks. The bares must understand that the colonel has been assaul A linguistically by experts and even they have leirne ly to their chagrin, of his imperviousness. It was for- merly a great sport to joust with the doughty colonel, until the scrap heap of spears, pikes, swords and pens became so appallingly large that it was abandoned as utile efiterprise. 5 r is only cocasionally nowadays that a knight suf- ficiently bold appears and challenges, since the colonel 4s on the other side of the Atlantic may explain the "edd * arene ‘best thing to do with Colonel Harvey is to let him alone. He is alright. Whatever he has to say, he will say it in his own particular way. And if it is in disagreement with your way of thinking all the better. That’s the way he wants it to be. He is the one great American who never commits an error in language or policy. Besides the world needs just such a person. One who can stir up both banks of the At- lantic at the same time and set all the small fry to yapping. Thank Heaven for George Harvey, he re- Heves public ennui. DOUGLAS ENTERPRISE FOR HAY. Among the prominent Republican newspapers of the state lately declaring its preference for John Hay fot governor next year is the Douglas Enterprise. In @ very cordial endorsement the Enterprise says: “John W. Hay of Rock Springs seems to be ‘some popular guy’ as they say in slum parlance. This is by no means to be taken to infer that he is in any way connected with any but people of the highest morals and intelligence. It seems that during the past few weeks a number of prominent people from all over the state have asked Mr. Hay if he would allow them te announce him as a candidate for the governorship at the primaries to be held next Au- gust. The papers of the state have taken up the cry, with the apparent endorsement of their readers, and numerous organizations have added their voices, mak- ing the sppeal seem to the trained ear almost equal toa clamor. “Mr. Hay’s success as a business man {s unquestion- able. That he has won that success through fair- minded and broad-gauged business methods is gospel trath. There were times when he permitted himself to be mentioned for public office but he has hereto- fore withdrawn from the race, always in favor of someone whom he believed would fill the bill just as well or better than himself. Just what his attitude will be in this campaign is not known, but it is cer- tain that if he listens to the pleadings of his num- berless friends throughout Wyoming he will accept the proferred honor. Should he decide upon making the race for the seat of the chief executive those who know him well claim that he will surely win against his opponents. He is, without doubt, the strongest man in Wyoming today.” soe ee PRACTICAL IDEALISM. America is not disappointing the world in the ut terances of our great secretary of state to the arms imitation conference at Washington. No act or thing in all the world has met with such instant approval as did Secretary Hughes’ bold proclamation which was in effect “the way to disarm is to disarm.” The press of the civilized world has risen . with unanimous and cordial endorsement of the American plen. It seems not to have been made a partisan question in America and many of the influential members of the press heretofore uncompromisingly for the league of nations concur in the American idea. ‘The New York Herald well voices the metropolitan opinion when it says: “The heart of the world has leaped at Secretary Hughes’s announcement of America’s explicit pro- gram for a reduction of naval armament not because he has banished or could banish with a mere dictum the intolerable burdens of militarism and the un- speakable horrors of war. The sane world whatever it is suffering as the penalties of past conflicts and enduring as preparedness against future’ conflicts knows nothing of the kind is possible. “It is not in the power of the president and the sec- retary of state even with the assent and support of the United States congress arbitrarily to determine the basis on which the nations of the Old World shall begin to beat their swords into ploughshares. It is not in the power of America, even with the assent and support of a fraction of the peace-loving nations of Europe, arbitrarily to do this. “The force of the Hughes proposal, which has Swept civilization off its feet, is that it declares for doing something as big as it is concrete, and as feas- ible as it is definite, and for doing it now. It declares for doing it with what the French press so aptly calls America’s practical idealism. “Again the force of the Hughes proposal, as the whole world gets it, is that it comes from a country which is better able to build and support stupendous- ly costly military machines than any other country is. ‘And so when the United States shows, as Secre- behalf does show, that this thing litary load and of getting further done, when it shows how it can ited States offers for its part to tary Hughes in of lightening the away from war can be done--when the Un: per, Natrona Bidg., Chicago, “Globe Bidg., Bow tle in! ton, else in the doing of it, all ankind thrills ‘at this message of a new life for n and nations the world over.” ———_o——————_ SCHOOLMASTERS AND PROFESSORS. Let us see, the despised school teacher has not done so badly in i affairs as the world rolled along. Some of them have made quite a mark not only when they directed the young idea, but after they laid down the birch rod. % ‘Marshal Foch used to teach school in the French War ‘College. te Clemenceau used to teach French in a girls’ school | at Hartford, Conn. ie Robert Lee taught school, first at the United States Mili cademy and later at Washington col- lege, now Washington and Lee university, at Lexing- Va. 3 “Stonewall” Jackson taught school for a little while at the Virginia Military academy before the Civil war. William Tecumseh Sherman was a “professor” at Baton Rouge, La. go further than apybody hi HIM A NEw DRUM, BONS, iF WE WANT fessor” Jackson. General Joffre employed the strategy of “Profes- sor” Lee and “Professor” Jackson to repel the first great German drive against Paris in 1914. Guess it is not worth while to despise schoolteach- ers any longer. a THE HAREM WOMAN'S POINT OF VIEW. The beautiful wife of Ahmed Ferid Bey, former Turkish minister of finance, has lately given an inter- view to Mufide Ferid Hanen, the Nationalist novel- ist, in which she says many things of interest to the women of the world outside Turkey. Her story follows: “The seclusion of the harem is best adapted to woman's nature and it is best for the social order that she should be there. The harem grew out of the in- that KELLOGG’S about the ‘‘gladdest sat” telligent understanding of the marriage relation. It represents the wisdom of the east. “I am a reformed woman's rights advocate. I used to yearn for the independence of the American and European woman, but now I believe the mistress of the harem is a superior product to the spendthrift Russian woman, the sentimental Aust! , the nag- ging. English woman and the calculating, self-centered American woman. “To these women, woman’s rights means the right to spend money on foolish finery, to marry late, and be childless. They live for the store and the theater. AUTO THIEF AND CHECK \ expended in useléss directions. They won’t work with | their hauds to make their clothes, their minds are tive | filled with fashions, novels, and candies. Le ko oe “Men have become their slaves, and you call this| woteraay decided to plead guilty and, western civilization. We Turkish women had had our| wero sentenced by Judgo Metz. Les-| heads turned by the effort to become like these civ-|ter M. Underhill charged with steal- ilized women, and-doing so some of us have lost our|ing a Ford car in Greybull was given sterling old-fashioned qualities and become a costly,| from one to three years in the pent: | Vaid, (esteustive creature like our sisters of the west. pear \pat Per Phere cage “We Nationalists are in favor of abolishing the | !*“! theory of polygamy, though in fact it has long since Ba trander at Wortacs Bd baer ceased as an institution. But we are sure woman's f | place is the home, and the best way to keep her there FEISS BM | 4 the harem, which gives her much liberty, but not] PAPAL CONSISTORY TO MEET. icense. We are good housewives, we wear more or “1 Oliserva: less a uniform gown and veil in the streets, which pre- gnome pias | oe the iy a) vents us being victims to fashion, and at home, if we} jnnounces that a secret conalstory has do not wish to see our husbands, we are not. obliged = to do so. Surely that is liberty enough. “One of the womanly war tragedies here is the lack been called to mieet November 21 for the preconization of a number of Dishops and, aréNbistio} A northern Minnesota prod cently shipped a ton of heney ket by parosl post. Old Winter Draws Near ae Frost sketches fantastic designs 0 “window. panes; e lonesoms pines Salt and groan; tho old sheep dog whines, And eath Silver Star brighter shines ‘As Old Winter draws near, The “Dipper” hangs low in the sky; Cold, ‘bitter winds whi ; As, southward heading) wild fly’ “bedgrounds” the sheep closer’ lie, For Old Winter draws near, Drifting, shifting, as the winds blow, ‘ Glistening in the moonlight glow, White, crystalline mountdins of snow ‘Rise_thro the night and.swiftly. grow, For Old Winter ts here. : E. RICHARD SHIPP. . Casper, November 8, 1921. A ; Also makers of KELLOGG'S KRUMBLES aed KELLOGG’S BRAN, cooked and krambled Do You Need Any- CLOTHING DEPARTMENT | | ean. arripeeememee yy ‘ercoal : re $3500 Botte oe $84.00 Sheep-lined Overcoats__...._. 15.00 $35.00 Genuine Horsehide Vests..:..........$16.50 of perfumes.. Turkish women preserve their beauty 1300 porta Wiest aaa 79 by frequent bathing, the use of oi] perfumes after the 5.00 Cord: Pants... 2.65 bath and the drinking of buttermilk by the quart. $8.00 Corduroy Pi es $3 80 “New divorce laws is one of the reforms proposed ; t ae Pa Lo i AY ® by the Nationalists. Under the present religious law, LUO Cond ue py Fatt x Shea if a husband gays to his wife, or the wife to her hus- band, on three different occasions, ‘I divorce-thee, the divorce is legal and affective.” RS SSS el PARADOXES OF PEACE. The war produced certain curious and outstanding Paradoxes to which the Minneapolis Journal calls at- tention. For example, the nations least militaristic and most poorly prepared for war were victorious. Those most militaristic and best prepared suffered defeat. Peace likewise has produced equally curious para- doxes. Today finds the vanquished nations more pros- perous than the victorious ones. Germany, though burdened with war debt, has her factories and shops bwsy. She is relieved of the costly burden of main- taining armaments. She has few idle men, and a good future is possible for her. On the other hand, Great Britain, one of the vic- torious allies, has tens of thousands of men idle. Many of her shops and factories are closed. She is facing serious problems, and her living conditions are severe. France and Italy, likewise, do not find the way back to normalcy a path of roses. $5.00 Moleskin Pants... .___..., $3. $10.00 Heavy Mackinaw Pani 50 8... x $4.50 tes, $3. SHOES—SHOES $4.50 Four-buckle Overshoes. et sete $3.75, $12.00 Chocolate Calfskin Dress Shoes.__...__....$6.75 $6.00 Work Shoes, real Crome Sole Leather. 78 $4.00 Work Shoes, Guaranteed Real Leather...$2.95 $3.50 Real Leather Scout Shoes_____=...$2 65 $12.00 Lace Shoes, 15-inch top..i..._...2.=_.$7.50 $12.00 Real Leather Puttees...2_..... : $6.50 $4.00 Heavy Cotton Pants_.________.___ $2.90 $8.00 Wright’s Spring Needle All-Woof Union PUG SUN eh -—----—- $4.50 $5.00 Wright’s one-half Wool’ Union: > So a ea Se wan SSF: goo (kW In the United States there are paradoxes within Proce i as ae = : paradoxes for anyone who cares to note them. This $800 33 A ag cere twill. $450 country is the creditor nation of the world, and yet 3) Tool Shira i . "32. suffers from a glut of gold. It is held by some econo- 45 00 ogra k Shi A 7a mists that it would be a calamity if the debtor Euro- pean nations were to pay in cash what they owe this country. There is a great housing shortage here, and yet many men are idle. Some of these paradoxes arise from the dislocation of distribution. Europe cannot pay us in gold. She must pay in goods. $1.50 Big Yank Work Shirt $2.50 Lee Overalls___.... 20e Ross Seamless Gloves, a-pals for ase c Boss Seamless Gloves,2-p ‘or... 76c Muleskin Work Gloves_____s 4B $2.00 Horsehide Gloves. ——----$1.25 $2.00 Horsehide-lined Mitts__...__—-—S $1.00 $1.50 All-Wool White Hose... BB ce pe Tey, Cece As ee +.-50c ic Woolen Hose, ‘or... $1.00 $1.50 Pure Thread Silk Hose... 75 HARDWARE DEPARTMENT $4.50 Universal Lunch Kits..__so_== Ss $3.50 $2.50 Diamond Brand Pocket Knives... ..$1.50 $1.50 Pocket Knives... 75c $8.00 Compass —-. 8 0 $2.50 Reading Magnifiers...) $1.25 $2.50 Wilson Goggles... 5.25 50 Marble Hunting Knives__.._ $2.50 .50 Padlocksa____. 75c $2.00 Padlocks. 8.00 40.00 S. & W. Special Gold-beaded Sight___$30.00 eens ae oat eiiraacrieee Loading_._......$25.00 00 . aliber Colt Special____ C $72.00 80 Army Rifle B $60.00 250-3000 Savage... += — $48.00 I HAVE THOUSANDS OF OTHER ARTICLES AT ICES. ——_—_o—____. Babe Ruth singing sisy stuff in vaudeville must be discouraging and disgusting to “Skinnay” and the rest of the gang. LID DIME: —STITIIIITI IO IIS STM GI a MM NOTICE of Session 'B. P.O. ELKS There will Be a Regular Session of This Lodge on FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 18, AT 8 P. M. ODD FELLOWS HALL Business, Initiation: Your Attendance in Earnestly Requested. SPECIAL FEATURE MUSICAL ENTER- TAINMENT AND LUNCHEON BY ORDER OF E; R. ROBT. COHEN, Secretary. FIZ PL LLL LLL hh hd db he bdodudenr' MP, ——E—————— Cheer up and hope on, brother, New York hes at last found a play too impure and immoral to be shown on Broadway. It is called the “Demi-Virgin.” SES OS EE EER Whazat? The Morgan outfit and Wall Street ap- proving the plan to scrap the navies? Boy, page Messrs. DuPont and Schwab. Ge Se eee Had Mark Hanna's son only lived long enough, no doubt he would have accumulated as many wives as his distinguished father did dollars. ——_———_o—____. Everything is okeh, now that William Jennings Bryan has placed the seal of his approval upon the Hughes disarmament plan. Tt is a real touch of winter. foe WHICH ONE? I found them in a book last night, Those withered violets; A token of that éarly love That no man o’er forgets. Pressed carefully between the leaves, They keep their color still, I cannot look at theim today Without an old-time thrill SIMILAR PRI Try Me Once. You Might Save $5 or $10 Looking Around Before You Buy. We Are Paes The The TOGGERY SHOP B. F. Addington » Tribune Wantads Always: WIILLLLELL LLL ALAA hh Ah me, what tricks does memory play! The passing years have fied, And hopes that lived in vigor once, Alas! have long been dead. And this is all that t can say, When all is said and done, Those flowers remind me of some girl— I wish I knew which one! Bring~ Results:

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