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poveetoets ptoeeee | down such narrow chim ip Crue at Carper, Natross yne Bulldins. - — ana 16 D4 ~ Departments whan - 5 ved Ex City Editor rtising Manager ves ger Bidg., Chicago, :dg., Bos Tribune are on file in tmu offices and visitors ———_——_—— SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier $7.80 comes 0 Trurean of Circulation (A. B. ©) Member of Audit Membe: = 2 local news out . on't Get Your Tribune. oe om ttween 6:30 and § o'cioek p.m. ‘A paper will be de c Make it your duty te arrier misses you. SELECT THE CHAIRMAN. of the Republican editors of the state nes pean od themselves to the effect that the ¥ q publican state committee should meet at once, =: lect a state chairman to fill the existing Meera organize insofar as is necessary, peenes® for shale i 22 and inaugurate it early n e Peet year's campaign promises to be of unusual interest, with a United States senator, mem tt of congress, governor and other minty ofpoets as well a in each county to elect. erent time to be lost in getting under wey and the idea that a campaign can be put over - a few weeks in the present instance is foolish. or, read the signs and be informed that it is going to es ms real live campaign. Don't be lulled to sleep any soft solder talk from John Kendrick's personal organ, that he “may not be” a candidate to succee: himself. You don’t know your uncle John Seyi if you swallow any such, twaddle. That sort a statement is made at this time to put fear into the hearts of the faithful and create a demand that the senator must not desert his party in its day of great need. It is expected to bring about something like an unanimous party urge, which is exactly what it will do. When this little formality has been enacted John B. is given an offportunity to reluctantly accept ike call of his countrymen and will hang his colors on the cuter wall. He is the only candidate of sena- torial size his party has in stock. He has served but one term, rather likes the job a as a matter of - desires another term, at least. “pitted sine Senator Kendrick will be Frank Mon- dell, present Republican floor leader in the lower house of congress. Mr. Mondell has alrendy an- nounced his candidac: : ; If any brother believes the senatorial contest in Wyoming will be tame and tiresome he will revise his «pinion when the exercises open. Then there is the governorship. The best loved Re- publican in Wyoming will be the Republican candi- date, if he will but consent to the use of his name— Burke Sinclair is mentioned as the Demo- cratic candidate. £ Then there a shoes that ma; good party standing. just them to the feet of J. C. O'Mahoney. 5 But, this is enough to arouse the Republican mind to the fact that a busy campaign is just around the corner, and it is high time to get ready to meet it. If the Republican party were wise it would keep its headquarters open the year ‘round and doing business all the time. Instead, the party newspapers are de- pended on to do the party work out of season and in season they are requested to double the speed. It would be a mighty dreary old campaign with- out the newspapers. At this time they are calling upon the state com- mittee to do business and start the fireworks, they are honin’ to go. iat SR IRISH PROBLEM SOLVED. The world will rejoice over the settlement of the Trish question which has been reaclied through confer- ence of representatives of the two peoples. While the agreement is yet to be ratified by the British parlia- ment and the Irish Dail Eireann the terms are known to include recognition of Ireland as an independent state, an agreed form of oath of allegiance to the British Empire, and many of the major and minor contentions of Ireland. Ulster is included in the scope of the new government with the option of with- drawing in thirty days, reverting to her present status with territorial boundaries to be fixed by a com- Eission. It is conceded that the settlement will be ratified promptly upon the convening of the parliamentary dedier. Thus will end one of the most historical struggles of earth, continuing over a period of seven hundred years. While in the nature of a compromise, Ireland may iid to have gained » victory and if she did not ob- en for, still she ha: received its equivalent and will govern herself in fu- ture with practically the same powers as other com- ponent paris of the empire. Now will come the real test. The Irish have helped govern the rest of the world, let us hope they will make an even greater success in governing themselv 0 © Mr. Mondell’s old congressional fit any one of several Republicans of SANTA CLAUS RESEARCH. Zenerations of children have wrinkled their young brows,” asserts the New York Tribune, “trying to fig- ure out how a fat man like Santa Claus could slide and how he could have that crowded pack without mussing her c little serious study has ever been given by adults to one of the most interesting personalities in history. “Who is this man Santa Claus? What ; p? carried sister’s 5 What nationality? What were the influences of his ed him for a career of stocking childhoo as come to the fore with a Christmes ich about the Claus, end big was never money While the Democrats would ad-) .| past. fhe Casper Daily Cribune ys for all the little folks, 20 the big] owy December afternoons to! and rag dolis out in the wood- > older brothers have| id it first. That was} as of many another devoted the toys first made for his own little brothers} were so popular that before he was grown ¢ them for the whole communits—| he rest of the biography. rificeance of this study rests, however, ¢ details of the life of Santa Claus, vt in the promise it gives for more serious considerriion of lives of other great popular heroes. History pays far too much attention to the careers of mummies jand other long-dead nonentities. Why not find out about the people that are rally interesting today? | “If the old favorites are to be saved it must be done not by shrouding them in greater mystery, but | by throwing more light on their history; even if some | pretty details have to be sacrificed. That they can be so saved is witnessed by the Santa Claus biography. | You may never have quite understood before why an old gentieman with high blood pressure should wish to leave his comfortable hearth and cavort around the | world in a reindeer sled by night, but when you re: ixe that he began doing it as a little boy and just naturally has the habit, why, how can you help be- Neving?” {and sisters up he was — . DETERMINATION. A life insurance company which puts out some very | attractive literature distributes a card containing this} | sentimer |. Iam that which called the Shepherds of old to fol-| low the Star of the East and they saw the Babe of} Bethlohe I am that which exiled the Pilgrims, and finally | brought them across the wintry seas to a landing at) Plymouth Rock, and the right to worship God accord- ing to the dictates of their own conscience. I am that which instigated the American revolution and brought it to a successful conclusion, resulting in independence and freedom. . 1 am that which covered this land with blood dur- ing the Civil war but that was not in vain, for it es- tablished a government of the people, for the people, and by the people. I am that which prompted Franklin, Fulton, Bell, Edison, and other great men to perfect useful inven- tions, which assured comfort and happiness for mil- lions of men and women. I am that which suztained the Allied cause, at the fighting front and at home, during the world war./| When men cried outin anguish of soul—‘How long,| Oh Lord, how long?” I comforted them, and victory came T am that which encouraged men and women every- where the world over, throughout all time, to fight on- ward and upward, in face of any and all obstacles, to success. I am that which will inspire you during this year, and in the years to come and if you will but use me, I promise you increased personal development, use-/ fulness and finally achievement. I am Determination. Ged THE MANLESS MILLIONS. Margaret Walter, writing in Leslie’s, asks the ques- |tion, “What are England’s two million extra women } going to do with themselves?” She admits the sub- ject is agitating everybody except the two million themselves. Then she proceeds to tell us. “Some people talk about dual marriages. There is a whisper going the rounds about a new sex relation- ship, but Miss Lillian Charlotte Barker, C. B, E., who knows more about English women than anybody in the world, says there is a simple answer to all the agitation, and that answer is work. “Miss Barker began as an elementary school teach- ez at the age of eighteen, and gradually worked her- | self up until she was acknowledged to be the au- | thority on common, school education, for girls. | was the principal of the largest women’s institute in the country when war broke out and immediately it was formed she enlisted in the Women’s Legion, be- coming its first commandant. The government put her in charge of the 30,000 women employed at the Woolwich arsenal, at the same time making her chief inspector of women munitions workers all over the ccuntry. Then she was transferred to the women’s training section of the ministry of labor and is now} executive officer for the training and employment of | } women who suffered during the war through the loss} of their men supporters. “Two-thirds of the female population of this coun- try have passed through Miss Barker’s hands as school | children, munitions girls and women and industrial} workers. | 2,000,000 of extra women in England is} y all right and don’t you forget it,” declared | Miss Barker.” “Don’t you worry one particle about them. There’s a big lot of work to be done in this| country and the women are going to do their share| of it, You just keep your eyes fixed hard on them }and you'll see ‘em on the job. | “But don’t they want husbands? a ‘discount a menace to civiliz: | Geddes says?” I began. | es, they want husbands and let me tell you one thing that every woman knows. Every one of those 2,000,000 girls thinks she’s going to have a husbend, every girl born thinks she’ll have a husband when the | time comes. What we have got to,do is to help those | girls to get work so that they will forget thmeselves | and their own personal desires in their job. They did it i Aren't women a| on, as Professor | a moral nation; we women aren't go- ing to forget all our traditions and prove false to our ideals now after the test we have ‘passed these last five years. Not a bit of it. All you have to do is to |remember what the women did in thd war. There | was a big job to be done then and not a single woman too many. They left off being just women, they dried their tears for their men at the front and every last one of them buckled to and did her bit, and did it fine. “Then came the hardest test of all. |home. They wanted their jobs back and the women them up. Did anybody hear any squeals about | that? Did the women say that they could do the jobs | better than shell-shocked, war-torn, nerve-racked sol- | diers? They did not, and they never will. They just quietly stepped down and out. Most of them, and a | good many men, too, have no jobs at all. | “But we have touched rock bottom, the worst is Trade is picking up and the women will soon be |swarming to the factories and the offices, contented, | and industrious, as it is the nature of English women |to be. “No, English girls are not going downhill, but up- hill. And it is uphill in every sense. They can’t ex- pect and they don’t get the help from the men that they might at another time, because the men are up against the stiffest proposition of their time, too. But at least this is a problem that is béing fought shoulder to shoulder, men and women, and it’s being fought | straight and clean. “A girl has never come to me and complained that she wanted a husband and couldn’t get one. Some- times they say they want babies. Then we train them jin some department of baby service and they make gcod every time. There is always plenty of employ- ;ment for the best highly trained nursery worker or teacher. The men came t work. That's all we want for the 2,000,- 090;-that’s all they want for themselves. But at jobs they have chosen themselves. And after all, we wom-| not all born mothers. Remember that.” i CONFERENUE SIDELIGHTS HoLpinG OUT Three Knights ber husband had the duty of housek Golden Circle Sent to Prison “We will never fail to help a brother distrens. “All money taken shall be divided the other day that What Is Health? DR. J. MACE ANDRESS. Health education should seek to pre- vent disease and physical defects and to pPomete right habits of lving which play such an important part in building up robust health with its re- servo force of energy. This fs one of the ways of insuring to each indi- We sometimes assume that freedom from disease or physical defects means ly. They do not have reserve force ty' meet the emergencies of life or to «¢ health, but this is only one part f/complish the things that are mvst|\idual his maximum contribution to the story. There are thousands and) worth while. They are destined to be-| the world. thousands of school cicidren’ und! come il from time to time, and tf _- adults that are not really ‘Il and have! most cases to be a serious burden to] At the age of 70, Mrs. Josephine M. }re serious physical sut have} socie One American man of letters] Ingalls, of Green Bay, Wis., is operat: emly energy enough to drag them-|says that the important thing is not Ing a Unotype in the same office where she began work as a typesetter 56 sears ago. The Call of Home CLARA 8S. McCULLEY. - Isn't that a lonesome feeling That suddenly comes stealing— A cross between a heartache And a weary, wishful sigh? And through the evening shadows, You scent the dear old meadows, what you can get out of the world but selves through life—to exist physical- what you can give to the world. In the Grav ‘on the Hill, | I wandered the narrow Alone— Scanned the Tombstones standing there like But, the memories are stronger, As you dream a wee bit Jonger Of the gentle gray haired mother, Can't you see her plainly now? With the light like star shine beam- ing (Dreams are paths along— so sweet when we're Sentinels. | And you see the old home plain}; dreaming) Read ‘Though the tears are in your eye? | In her eyes when she smiled on you, e Names ‘ With a smooth unruffied brow. and the Fulsome Praise graven on their fronts, and ‘Thought: “God! What Saintly Folk were these who are Dead!" —£E. RICHARD SHIPP. You have “sneaked” and gone a-swim- ming, Dad has promised you a “trimming, And you bath adjourn, for “business’ To a corner of the shed. | And your choking sobs are mingling With the birch strap's painful tin ~ pl You go supperless to bed. Now you're old and worn and jaded, But the picture hasn't fuded, (ouckens up Ujye sluggish lifeblood— Say—you all know what I mean! And you know the folks are waiting, sor you. Don't be hesitating, But go make a visit. And forget the years between. Trya can of Baller Nut Coffee. if after giving it a thorough.trial for a few days you are not satisfied return the balance of the can to your grocer for credit, for ButlerNut Coffee is guaranteed to you through him by us. imemamcenn BatterNat —— | i SARL TRE RAITT S MAKE YOUR HOME AT The Albany Hotel WHEN IN DENVER Conveniently located near the heart of the busi- ness and shopping center of the city. Car lines from Union Depot to the door. Best service. Everything in the market to eat. You may catch your own moun- tain trout from the pool in the Italian Garden for your meal. Neat, clean, airy rooms. In fact, all the comforts of a real home and you will enjoy your pisit in Denver if you stop at The Albany. . One Odorless Gas Heater How long will it take for this wonderful heater to melt 50 pounds of ice? Register your guess before 1 P. M. Saturday, December 10. At this time we will place in our window 50 pounds of ice. To the one guessing nearest the correct amount of time we will give a heater FREE. S i Wyoming Distributing Agency STATE DISTRIBUTORS 129 W. Railroad—Open Till 8 P. M.—Phone 714-J | The Casper Manufacturing and Construction Ass’n. Burlington Ave. and Clark St. 1 Announce That They Are’ Now Engaged in Building Truck Bodies and Cabs OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT AND PRICES PROVE IT Special Attention Given to Repair Work. Telephone "A"? 1096-J NITE Useful Christmas Presents A Full Line of Clocks at New Low Prices Table Lamps, Closing Out. Be Sure to See Them. All of Our Aluminum Has a Marked Down. : Price Food Choppers and Casseroles Pyrex Baking Glass Our Special for Thursday, Friday and Saturd: ate Wek ee American Beauty Electric Sad Irons at $6.50 Holmes Hardware Co. Phone 601 THURSDAY, 8, 1921, ore ee ee ee