Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, February 2, 1922, Page 6

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SACE SIX Che Casper Daily Cribune very evening except Sunday at Casper, Natrona Publication Offices, Tribune Building. | ELEPHONES .......-.+-+-+- . 15 and 14 Exchange Connecting All Departments. red at Casper (Wyoming), Postoffice as second class matter, November 22, 1916. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - President Editor} 2 .. .City Editor DAIL’ his Advertising Manager| ; Advertising Representatives. | Prudden, King & Prudden, 172023 Steger Bidg., Chicago,| ii.; 286 Fifth avenue, New York City; Globe Bidg., Bos: ton, Mass. Copies of the Dsily Tribune are on file in fhe New York, Chicago and Soston offices and visitors) | ‘are welcome. tional border in the neighborhcod of Barnhart island. This means 1,100,000 kilowatts, she ovtput of which at 8,000 hours of the 8,760 hours in the year would be 8,800,000,000 kilowatt hours. If used 7,000 hours in the year this would mean 7,700,000,000 kilowatt hours. When the ship canal and power house are com- passe Fs & cost of $252,728,200, you will have a by- Pr for this work, the interest on the sum mentioned above, at 4 per cent, will be $10,086,000 a year. “The marketing of this power would be undertaken by private capital, and you can realize whether or not there is any ground for the expectancy of a ready market for this power, when the cost of pewer pro- duction m the city of New York and vicinity is in ex- Where they raisv cyclones for shew, cess of one cent a kilowatt hour. If this power can be produced from a hydro-electric source instead of coal, let us see what the saving in coal would be. As- 10 per cent loss in transmission, of N° there ain't no use tn cussin’ approximately 7,000,000,000 kilowatt hours. With the A* Your bat goes sailin’ by, two governments lending their help to raise the money Nor t sights you'd 1@g to gaze at, cupants. tistic unity, appropriateness and to af- |ford comfort and convenience. ‘Your of farm won't blow away i (The following is tn reply to Lillian Just listen, wait and hope, that, Van Burgh’s “Wyoming Winde.”) 6. Speed—The building operation to be so controlled that it will occupy the shortest time consisteft with the qual- ity and extent of the work. 7. Service—The building operation to be conducted in suck a manner as to leave the owner free from every care and ‘responsibility, excepting the approval of plans and materials, and the meeting of payments. When a brick-bat hit. your eye Blown by a Wyomin’ zepher Miss Van Burgh just wrote about, Compared to a Nebrasky cyclone Of which the Nebraskans shout, "Twa Of Chinook Chinookin’ Blowin’ feed ground clean and bare, Of the snow that in Ol" Nebrasky, Would remain forever there. . I have lived in O1 Nebrasky, it I never saw ‘em sell one, They are always on the “Go” Movin’ brick-bats, rocks and cinders In some poor fellow's eye, T've geen sand storms down in Kan- sas ‘Where the ‘exas Longhorns play, SUBSCRIPTION RATES. ane that it takes two pounds of coal a: kilowatt When he secs a sight that's thrillin’ | But I came back to OF Wyomin” P. oor Baker Blue: iy Gaeeeat hour, it would call for 14,000,000,000 pounds of coal, Or some chicken passin’ by. "Cause I couldn't stay away. « BY SAM CUTTS. $7.80| or 7,000,000 tons, which, at $6 a ton, would mean an/| And I ‘gree with Lillian Van Burgh | 3.90| expenditure of $42,000,000 a year, and would take And I've lived in Ol Iowy "Bout God's winds so pure and strong '1 need some hops to make some yeast “23| to transport eame 140,000 cars carrying 50 tons ench,| Where thry have storm cellars new, |For I know in Oi' Wyomin' |Said the baker to the toad. or'3,800 tralnm of 50, care of Go tone cock |You ciaivt in when a storm comes up, xt morning just at break of day tions must be paid in advance and the) ne will not insure delivery after subscrip becomes one month in arrears. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) Member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the bse for publication of all news credited in this paper and iso the local news published herein. + Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. Call 15 or 16 any time between 6.30 and 8 o'clock p. m ft you fail to recetve your Tribune. A paper will be de | {tvered to you by spepial messenger. Make tt your duty te jet The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. “From these figures you will get some idea of what the St. Lawrence proposition is, with only about one. York State canal. benefit such a great area and lace population of the United States and not have a corresponding benefit |come to the city of New York, which is no longer provincial but a city of the worl 2 Bit Se DENATURED AMERICANS. Hudson Maxim, tne great inventor and wei! known patriotic American, is accustomed to speaking piainly the tmings that come into ns mind. ss inagoaugn over prooioition’s invasion of tne nome and its tram- pling upon oid estadusned principies breexs forth in UGis lasmon: “an 4400, twenty-one years before the Declaration of American inaepenuence, when George Wasaington LOOKIT! WHAT HAPPENS. | “shock troops,” as they march down every street, in every city and village in the land, $hocking right and left the “shock troops” that went pver the same route in 1892, what will the shockers bf 1952 do to the ones who are delivering the knock- put in this year of our Lord? ‘ | Heaven only knows! But whatever it is, it cannot possibly occasion a larger volume of public comment fhan has been indulged in the past year or two. — | | Students of modes have discovered by the seismo- graphic records of the past that style upheavals oc- fur in thirty-year cycles. Therefore we will worry flong with the present ones, or modifications of them, for some years to come, and many of us will miss the hiext grand show by reason of having passed onward find upward. Carefully examining the style publications from the heginning, present day folks have lost nothing special- ly, except during the very earliest period, which was bf brief duration. Owing to vigorous criticism and the inability of the female of the species to withstand it as well as the total lack of support from her sex, the style pendulum swung forward to the other ex- treme. From that time, almost to the prosent day, it has been all for putting on. ti The journey back to first principles, now well on the way, will reach the end, by even cycles, in 19 when the tyranny of clothes will be abolished and fivery day will be September Morn. It will be different then and entirely unlike it was in the beginning. There #yill be the moral, support of numbers. ! Thus will it occur to those who have lived between the time of the swinging out of the style pendulum ud its return—they lose out at both ends. Se se BENEFIT TO THOSE WHO OPPOSE IT. Answering the New York newspapers who are op- posing the St. Lawrence waterway project, Paul Brady pf that city, having a clear conception of the subject from boti: sides, makes this exposition of the entire Proposition. It is in reply to a newspaper article: “The title ‘The St. Lawrence Threat’ seems an un- kind title to apply to a great public enterprise of the character of the St. Lawrence undertaking. | “You ask what New York and neighboring states are going to do about it. From a fair business stand- wint they should help and encourage the proposition. “You say this state owns a competing route from Oswego to Mohawk and other points to tidewater. Let ts see what kind of competing route this is. That we way judge intelligently of the competing route, it is ‘well for us to know the character of the St. Lawrence and Great Lakes and how much canal it is necessary for vessel’s to traverse in going over this route. “We will start at Duluth. ©The distance on Lake Superior, which you cannot term ‘a canal,” is 888 tiles; on the St. Mary’s river and St. Mary’s Falls ¢xnal, 28.4 miles open ngvigation, improved channel, $5 miles and 1.6 miles in a canal; on Lake Huron from St. Mary’s river to the St. Clair river, 220 miles; on the St. Clair river, 27 miles, improved channel, 13 miles; on Lake St. Clair, 13.5 miles and 3.5 miles of canal; on the Detroit river, 22 miles, improved chan- nel, 9 miles; from the Detroit river, through Lake Frie, to the Welland canal, 219 miles; the Welland canal, when completed, 25 miles; from the Welland canal to the foot of Lake Ontario, 160 miles; through lake Ontario by the St. Lawrence river to Montreal, open navigation, 117 miles, improved channel, 45 niles. The canal, when completed, 20 miles, making a total of 1,189.9 miles to open navigation, 100 miles of improved channel and 50 miles canal. “No one will question the navigability of the St. Lawrence or the improved channel, which means dredging of the river bottom so as to make the chan- nel from 500 to 800 feet wide. Part of this has al- ready been done. “Strictly speaking, you are comparing a canal 20 thiles in length with a canal from Oswego to Albany. about 170 miles in length, through the Mohawk val- ley, one of the most populous portions of New York slate outside of the large cities, and one in which it weuld be difficult to provide sufficient water to float a ship at certain periods of the year. The cost of a If the principal gave some practicai auvice to General oraddock, Laat | Pompous olucer repued: “rugh Umes, hign Limes, When & young Buckskin can teaca a Sritisn general now to ngnw!’ “ashe Americans of that day were pioneers of a new CiVilizauion—a civilization in Wich manhood sacuid hoid a high piace ana the puppet of priviuiege be esiminated. “nose oid leather-sides lived close up to nature, ‘Their nouse was the great outaoor, walled by tne tor- est and roofed by tne sky, They ,-wore buckskin clothes, a dirk knite and a gun. ‘they drank a brew to one another’s health that would make tne home-nootch of today seem like soda water, and yet their great drafts of it, taken with deep drafts of sunught and open air, merely helped to soften and limber up the grim soul under the nairy breast as they cianxed their gasses and piedged a larger brotherhood. |And don't know what t6 do. , third of power developed, as compared with the New| “Another thing must be borne in mind—you cannot || “in their batuing with tne red indian the American! pioneers learned the science of warfare as it had nev- er been learned before—every man for himself, fight- ing from cover to cover, frem rock and bush and tree. ssraddock’s defeat was a lesson to the whoie worid in the mulitary science of the young Buckskin, and even ife great Napoieon pronted by it. Modern trench wartare 18 a vanant of American pioneer and redskin tactics. ine strong arm agé& grt brain that shielded the home irom tae red savage; the arm and brain that teiled tue forest and raised the rafters of the home, ere the same arm and brain that framed the pronun- ciamento of freedom, the Deciaration of Independ- ence, and that architrave of liberty, the Constitution of the United States; and the same arm it was, guided by the sanfe brain, tnat raised the giass to the lips that said ‘Give me liberty or give me death!’ and drank the, | pledge of American union against oppression! |. “Lhe liberty to which they drank was the sort they |learned in their close-up association with nature and with nature’s noblemen. it was individual liberty to the full, and a liberty that did not interfere with the exercise of equal liberty by others. Their home was tueir castle, ar. was inviolable. So it was that, in their primal code of laws, they recognized the home as sacred and shielded it against violation. ‘This code of laws shielded the individual everywhere and at all times, against search or seizure of personal property, so long as no act of his should uim harm at others or infract their freedom. “But those are bygone days, and those are bygone laws. ‘The personal freedom for waich they stood, for which they fought, for which they bied and died, is} now bygone; and the denatured descendant of na- ture’s American nobleman now stands meekly by, with no expression but a whimper, while he is held up on the highway and his vehicle and baggage and the per- | sons of himself, his wife and daughter, are ruthless] searched for a secreted flask of alcoholic liquor. If the flask be found, his automobile is confiscated, and he and his family are led to jail, and heavily fined o imprisoned, or both, even though the flask may have been carried from large necessity for medicinal use. “The denatured descendants of a Daniel Boone, an Ethan Atten, an Israel Putnam, a Patrick Henry, now sees his home entered without a warrant, and on the merest suspicion searched and ransacked, from cellar ‘to garret, by some contemptible weasel of prohibi- tion. With all the manhood lost out of the denatured soul of his race, the modern householder merely whines and cogitates with himself, and tries to recon- cile himself with free institutions, and to justify as a divine right of law, such a damnable infraction of per- sonal liberty when even to reason about such viola- tion, under such shameful circumstances, with any countenance toward justification, is a dpeth of shame and dishonor which could find harbor only in the mind of a cringing, contemptible cur, unworthy the name of American in the old undenatured sense. “History repeats itself. | France, before the French revolution, the common ‘people had for centuries been subjected to the most sing oppression. y any one of aristocratic blood was bound to respect. | “The home of the hard-working farmer or humble artisan was frequently entered, the women of the household, mother and daughters, were seized, violated | In Europe, especially in They had no rights whatever canal through the Mohawk valley to accommodate! and dishonored by feather-head cavaliers out on a ships from the Hudson river to Oswego would prob- ably double the cost of the St. Lawrence improvement. So, your statement that the route is shorter, compar- spree, merely to divert their gaded minds by new ad- ventures. Father and big brother stood meekly by, whimpering to themselves their cogitations, trying to Most all's right and little wrong. ‘Thax’ or Wyoming. ‘The toad brought in a load. I need some bread to save my life Said “Slow” to Baker Blue. Too bad! Too bad! The baker cried, i knead what you need too. Seven Essentials In Building BY NOBLE F. HOGGSUN. The instinct to build with blocks, to) And above all, perhaps it would be Xhe Leone harry Me ape eo tinker with the hammer, which ts = ‘or ples o! ere! born with us, is only once removed, | fem? ‘tat he have « practical ex-!r54¢ he only made eleven pies when we grow up, to the penéiling of |@CUUve knowledge of costs in every | Recause the crust was short. plans on the backs of old envelopes | Particular, so that he woula know be and pieces of scratch paper. yond a doubt that he was receiving; The baker set his daily bread No single laymen, about to build/value for every dollar he was spend-|2¥st “8 the night began. one or two or three“buildings, can ac-, ing. and as the sun rose in the east quire, without years of study, even a! Now, it is admitted that the average The bread rose in the pan. fairly good working know!edge of the|man has not all of : multitudinous details involved in the|formation nor is tt necessary fer Bie Se bake intly gentleman, average building operation. To gain|/to acquire that knowledge. lYourn Bie faa ons: pieliee “wsece this knowledge would necessitate the| qnerg are, however, several import-|Thovgh he tee lot ot Danah study of architecture, not only in this|ane points which every prospestive!| ough. country but abroad, and for a suffl-|punaing owner should be fully clent length of time to become expert ‘formed upon. These can perhapa be in the fullest, truest sense of the grouped into the feflowing seven es. Prentehos ae oS anichore (ot teegcea: | ae which every owner should be ~ fully satisfied regarding: before pro- scriptfin and their relationship to the cooing with construction and ‘which Editor Tribune:—For the fast day or surrounding conditions, so essential to wi} giso ecrve as an excellent basis two I have seen announcements in the insure the proper arrangement of in- ror a review of the completed opera-| papers of a gathering of the American terior space and the necessary conven: |tion: itv adn tot Mien or-concntorcs at fences. | Also knowledge of color.) 1 cost_rne buflding to be worth the Henning hotel. Arriving just a woods, fabric, rugs, leather, mosaics. | 1 shat: cost, and, if a renting build, little late X found this meeting being tile, marble, bronze, leaded glass, and) i. to produce a satisfactory yield on {held behind closed doors, and the clerk fall the details that enter into the dec: |10E to Produce a sat Merteaty welkta @ieke COMA give 14 PO. oration and furnishing cf a well ap- information as to gaining admittance, pointed building, would be necessary.| 2. Appearance—The building — t> atc, xo of course I took mine out “in In order’ thet the actual work be Possess architectural character sult- wating in the lobby. directed efficiently so as to insure able to its location and ‘purpose, and) — gnonid any visiting legion member uninterrupted Progress, a thorough to deserve admiration as long as It) wish to attend a similar gathering in mastery of mechanics would be re- Stands. ‘ South Dakota, I am sure he would be quired, 3. Arrangoment—The _bullding to given ‘a welcoming hand ut an open Delicious” filled — with the fragrance of Southern Seas, charms and delights asa trip fo Sunny Lorergn Lands. Richards & Cunningham Co. MEN’S DEPARTMENT Special Sale of Pants ii DISCOUNT Will be allowed on all of our Men’s and Boys’ ing 20 miles with 170 miles, is hardly correct. justify the damnable transaction with divine rights of “Your statement that the New York state canal’s Some sort, just as the father and big brother now stand period of operation is longer than the other is also in- meekly by and whimper while their home is being vio- Pants for a few days only. correct, because data shows that the along the St. Lawrence and the Barge canal are open- ed and closed approximately on the same dates. ‘date aristocracy of prohibition. “OQ denatured Americans, awaken! Break from the present canal lated by some accursed representative of the down-to- “As to the canal's being wholly within American’ thraldon that is fast smothering the last spark of man- territory, unless we consider treAties as only scraps of vaner, the Webster-Aghburton treaty between Great Britain and the United States, T believe, provides that this cre: terw: shall forever be open and free to the commerce of the world. Certainly. under. these i nt ot ede; therefore, ad interest ‘on something other he m ewrence, how-| n of what re of itself, <3 of New or Canada. enort to the nt 1,464,000 hood in your souls. dem—personal liberty, inviolability of the home, 2nd patriotism— one and inseparable!” ———_——_o—___— BEST IN WYOMING. The Riverton Review must think pretty well of our recent industrial number when it says: “The special industrial number of the Casper Daily Tribune and Weekly Review is an edition deserving of great praise. It is complete in every detail and very intelligently sets forth the advantages of the Raise a new battle cry of free- state of Wyoming and furnishes many reliable statis- ties that speak of the great care taken in their com- ilation. 1 get-up and to Don Jones, the special illustrator, credit is due for his exceptional drawings.” The number is also of exceptional mechan- $4.00 Pants for____$3.00 $5.50 Pants for____$4.10 $7.50 Pants for____$5.60 $8.50 Pants for____$6.10 $10.00 Pants for__.$7.50 $12.50 Pants for___$9.40 A splendid chance to purchase an extra pair of Dress or Work Pants to tide you over until you are ready for a new Spring Suit. YOU CAN ALWAYS DO BETTER AT RICHARDS & CUNNINGHAM’S © afford maximum facilities to its oc-,(nor even though he should happen to lhe a few minutes late Im arriving. Is 4. Decoration and furnishing—The not this the famous western bospital- interior of the building to possess ar- ity of which I have heard so much? Member Clay Kiser Post, Redticld, 5. Stability—The building to with- gouin Dakota: ‘That your hcuse wont be turned plum ' stand properly the wear and tear of tee anata | Mims, Wyo., Feb. 1. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1922. \Terrace Gardens (@R) E. M. CHRISTERSON, 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 Garde~ for your meal. Neat, clean, rooms, In fact, all the comforts of a real home and you will enjoy your yisit in Denver if you stop at The Albany. Why Not Butt In? | ANNOUNCEMENT A. E. Biglin and Gil H. Wootten Have Purchased the Business of Tames H. Bury Realty Company 127 West Second Street The Oldest Insurance Agency in Casper. Your Real Estate and Insurance Business Will Be Appreciated. —_— ee SAA MA Casper, Wyo., Jan. 31, 1922. TO ALL WATER USERS: All accounts for the period end- ing January 25, 1922, if not paid on or before Monday, February 6, 1922, will have water shut off. WATER COMMISSIONER. » The Casper Manufacturing and Construction Ass’n. . Burlington 2 Ave. and Clark St. 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 "474" 1096-J NITE THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER CO. Everything in Building Material BIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS Office and Yard—First and Center Phone 62

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