Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE Siz €be Casper Dailp Cribune i ; he: thi * ; r , poorest ease? city ts en. Cbe Casper Daily Cribune | the thine fold of the Dein ts s zecion called Broca’s WHILE THE SUN SHINES DOWN AT MIAMI | elke Panta Beoypringrad pela rn Ineeratate com pence wes i er Sunday at Casper, Natrona lution. named after great French sur- s ‘Take cpportunity to produce from) troduced house P f seation Offices, Tribune Buiiding. | €€0n who discovered what work the brain cells in this we mI the producer—the mechanic and the|resentative Appleby, Republican, New : | particular convolntion or fold did. , farmer and the miner—and spcedy in-| Jersey. ‘ i From measurements of a very great number of men dustrit! Cleaster is inevitable, the only and women an average has been struck that shows pomeae ete trceeee won oto ‘One of the oldest business women 1: (wyoming), Postotfice as second class| Rroca’s convolution te be considerably larger in wom- tion going Satan diverse! the state of Ohio is Mrs. Sarah Erns: . November 23, 1916. [ce than in man. Her speech-making factory being Bas Sig. probably 6,900,200 ‘Amer-| WS? tae been 8 pullliner ‘in’ Newari: a 7 | biewer, her output of words is necessarily larger. jean people are idle, today is that for|for 41 years. : ti MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS |. Furthermore, the bigger speech center of woman some time past there has been a : + J. B HANWAY .... Presidest and Baditor| seems to be more easily excited than man's smaller monthty average [Db tet st $3,- t ARL E. HANWAY - Business Manager|/one. It is set, in a manner of speaking, on a hair- 000,008 worth of ee hy a Associate Editor} trigger, quilied yc sp eg poured into “inverting ‘Manager| WAY Woman's Brocal region should be larger and the United States. [eee ae 2inganee eee eee meee neh exactly rg Scan carey phy ieee ace ea Advertising Representatives. | know. only explanation seems to be that women that there can be no return to pros-| 4 iden, King ‘& Pru io: 1720-23 Steger Bidg., Chicago, always did talk more than men, and that the speech perity til shia Lgpagaicnan, Nag be 86 Firth avenue, York City; Globe Bidg.; Bos-| centers were thus maintained strong and vigorous, goats: 06; tier | tariff law. be Mass. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in| History is full of records of taciturn men, but holds Laas. ey fed a Ry aol cre sould a New York, Chicago and Boston offices and visitors) few, if any, references to taciturn women. plan, and by an immigration law that would a reabdist teased The most powerful stimulus to the speech centers is Will be for the lasting benefit of the| Big = 4 SUBSCRIPTION RATES. emotion. Everyone knows how much more volubly American ion _ iy Caktier we ean talk when excited. Women are more emotional eee al aavekior MAC aaearR. rage rf cc re .s0| than men. With a larger speech organ, set on a hair- mip peal ances Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, MJ. | tex ‘Menthe 90) trigger, and more easily aroused emotions to stimu- on Taree, Mon ase it, they must naturally talk more. U.S. Censor For ||} “on™ wv One Month > oO 5 fer Copy hy Mail. WILL. NOT-BANISH THEM. Films P; roposed There is still some amusement to be derived from “INDIGESTI¢ the debate between Hudson Maxim and Samuel Wil- —— a val) FO? INDIGESTION = son, both Jerseymen, over the virtues in wet and dry WASHINGTON, Fed. %4— t poet g conduct. It is true that they argue a, question for- S paid in advance and the/ evor settled in America; but nevertheless it is inter- a : delivery after subscrip-| esting, because neither will ever convince the ether, the 8 n arrears law will not be affected one way or the other and en- e urse”* ie Vaabe of Andit Bureau of Grcalation (A. BG) | forcement may possibly be aided. Mr. Wilson bad the 3 “Barnett’s of Co: \ » ———| last crack, to which Mr. Maxim now responds it: his a Member of the pone spp tend best smokeless fashion: a ssoc! Press i clusively en’ o the], 4 i = use for publication. & Anpitpesie ia this paper and Mr. Wilson mentions the fact that he is a fellow | a i lso the local news published herein. derseyman. I love him for that, but it is irrelevant \ * ee coors ain and immaterial. ! ‘our Tribune. « - 2 Can 15 = 16 kay tales batalaal 6:20 and 8 o'clock p. m clin) ps a Watews ctlhe tie egath ooo] oe " y A ill be de- “ rT Eerie felt to Seemsye gout Tee ‘eggs! to| cited? It is a common expedient for a person stalled f t ° tion of + When American - F 5 parties, prefers the quiet of a country home and is| vale of tears shall be personally conducted and fg acter i tgpsee Een yc | ve AM renga oer le rn poe today, aye ate our Clothing Department. devoted to riding and mountain’ climbing, knitting,| constantly under the surveillance of a keeper—o it peasyage! ate oS Zn Er oey Te oe. ‘ae pa e.teton per ick recat peel ae Teiteedt fox! pte pe a piano-playing, the theater and books. spppinted proh bition sates serrareer city it presumis to represent is an un:| first 4 ’ of. tarife | buying geds in cheap foreign Knox Felt Dress Hats m Nothing is known of the groom-elect, except that! “In view of the ineffectual operation of prohibition| American one—an industrial commun-|duty in 1799 up to the present day, the|t sell in the dear markets of Amer- * his name is Max Oser and his income is reputed to be| enforcement during the last two years of its exist-jity withvut faith in the ability and the|old foreign system having been ‘con-|!°a- Were $12.00, $10.00 and ; ¥ ten thousand dollars a year. Nothing is known in this: ence, if it is actually to be enforced, every méther’s/integrity of its national government|sistently marked by an unabated flood) And it is to the tender mercies of i ial * He| son of us will have to have a resident keeper appoint-|to adequately function within its own|of frav¢. the men who control the great mer- $7.50. Special... tee ; 5‘ ; States that buy and sell these ' i sa ; if he is t a McCormick; but the] charge—one who shall go where we go, abide where|>9s!s of its own commerce; M an " Men's hi; de Dress Shoes; ] Fancy Knitted Neckties. G_Kibcan pent rther erated toe dager ew aly andlnhy meter shal handeaed | AEe Sn waa a, Bea aay sae ce ea aoe eee tear at Em ge eG | Sec’ @Se,,, SSC ba Edith Rockefellec and Harold McCormick to marry) to us. And this keeper will also require watching. Tt! states must rest ita vitally important] In 1853 Henry Clay moved in. the}mination of their assessable valuation.|(§ Special $5.50 $6.75 P 4 « and * something more than an Alpine riding master. has been found that prohibition enforcement agents|revenues upon varying and uncertain|United States scnate for an .amend-| Jt is absurd t6 assume that a vote! Genuine Wright’s woo! | Men’s Heavy Cotton Union 2 If the marriage proves a success, which it is not ex-| cannot be trusted in the presence of the evidence, and| foreign trade values, suth values to bo| ment to the tariff law to tho effect |against the American plan by a local, Gentine. Wright's pare Suits of fine combed od pected to do, some day a portion of the Rockefeller| furtker, that those who are set to watch the enforce-| determined by Srresponsible individ-|that duties should bo on a! organization of any kind expreases the! f MH eal * yarn; all sizes; white or ecru a] nnd McCormick fortunes will be transferred to| ment agents, also, in their turn, need watching. There- a ie blaine out of sympathy saluetions made at the net in pwrnieee consensus of opinion of the people of| Pe eer ary color. $1 45 Be itzerland, and the money will go from home, and it| fore, to be effectual, every citizen will require a per- @ tried fre Asmekseeu ‘pemms| the goods are frat receiv e a city, the vast majority of whom are) Genuine Wright’s wool mixed | Special _-._-_-- e' tes undrestocd this was ene cf tho objections raised by! sonal bodyguard and Keeper of the seal of bottle and|ip!e of protection to American indux|the dution” ‘he uid, “and leave the| producers of wealth through thelr| Ml. Union Suita $2.95 ; ™ John D. Rockefeller. "He rather insisted that his} bung; and the keeper of the bung-seal will have to be) “yo: t¢ be charitably assumed, -how- condition of tha law tbat tarde the pats fort ib ia as a= ms cde Quins mista Peay be granddaughter choose an American. guarded by a guard, who, in turn, will have to belaver, that the vote has been recorded |import trade of the country into the ecg rate. prensa ree ther peopie. CN Tt assay extra toll eet Bink ig a 39 of Since the break-up and divorre in the McCormick] guarded, and s0 on, all to be paid and supported by/ without the full realization ot the tagt|hands of the foreigners. We should| 7 veur, Motes laa! Chambray Work ota he in family all objections to the match with :the riding|the poor, tax-burdened citizen, whose home will be-jthat selfish opposition to the fullest|take both parts of the operation into Industrial state of Obio—e city that Shirts. Special, each. Se Fur Caps; genuine Con a professor seem to have been withdrawn. come a guard house. possible encouragement of the Ameri-/our own hands,” he continued. has increased the value of its pro- Two for #1 heavy Fur caps. 5. 95 th AGERE RES ACS SEG “Mr. Wilson has quoted something attributed to/can manufacturer and workingmen is| At about the same time President ducts during the etx-year period from | RM ates Cee Special .--.-_--_ oe 5 = Abrahem Lincoln, in an attempt to throw the weight|the crux of the antagonism to the/Filmore said on the same subject, “It)1914 to 1919, inclusive, from §115,049,- Canyas Gloves, “Boss” brand. i tS ue FEELING QPTIMISTIC. of Lincoln’s mighty influence on the side of prohibi-| “merican valuation plan. in Umposaible that the revenue officer 990 to $293,521.00, or 155 per cent—-|M Special, 4 seal Wramaatt died yi ‘ Washington is a jamp or two ahead of the rest of| tion. Lincoln was not a prohibitionist. On the con-|,, ‘few conversant with the proposed [ed and the duties are paid should best Rak ig tle cep gs nue) RRR eee tarry goad agality 9c the country in optimism. We hope to catch up short-| tary; he was a strong opponent of prohibition, as wit-| American plan for the collection of|know with certainty what they cost| Sonica te right te labo and All Teather “Auto Gauntlet te ly. The department of commerce believes the United] 2°85 the following statement quoted from what Abra-|tarift daties and the foreign system|in the foreign countries.” with good pay tn order to give a amall Gloves; wool lined. BO QE in States will have $5,000,000,000 worth of foreign trade| ham Lincoln actually did say upon the subject: now in vogue, it may be set down in| Wurthermore, the reports of the tar-| "iCGaty of thelr eommunity the priv Special — i of Yhis year, roughly one-fourth of the export trade of| “Prohibition will work great injury to the cause of | general terms that the Iine of demar-|{ft commission of 1882 teem with able,|ine. of buying goods trom forelen mi he world, The rapid rise in foreign exchange is|te™perance. It is a species of intemperance within|cation, aa it exists in the average|oogont and eloquent ploas in favor of| 104, nage hy pauper iabor! Men’s Heavy Wool Mixed aoa *. “E Soe swer. 5 dg se e ith the in.| itself, for it goes beyond the bounds of reason, in that|™!nd, ts tho question of high tarift or/the American plan and against the pedi pene ork Sox; grey, black, ox— | Boy’s overa th stimulating foreign busine. in ar he bust | it attempts to control a man’s appetite by legislation |!°W,tarift—Protection or free trade. | foreign one, it being specifically test!- ig eee patel eather oh Aaa ford. Special, per. 19¢ Suits. 1 89 bag ier Mable) xesulk that good (times (wih peplacs ee and makes a crime out of things that are not crime. A he roponent vr ip Atnee ioe apeen| ben. toer Sinton ce, te A ey, by cheap foreign labor only do so tem- iieniag Mictys Aira e lvered to you by special messenger. Make it your duty to let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. > CHOOSES A RIDING INSTRUCTOR. Mathilde McCormick, the 16-year-old daughter of Harold McCormick and granddaughter of John D. Rockefeller, is to marry a Swiss riding academy*pro- prietor more than three times her age. It is a very: in an argument, and at loss for a telling thing to say against an opponent, to accuse him of being angry or excited merely to befog the issue. If Mr. Wilson could’ see and hear me sometimes when I do get ex- cited and cut loose in private to my friends on the subject of prohibition he would think that my lan- guage in my letter, which stumped him for words, was like a summer zephyr breathing balm on the sweet si-| lence of a night in June. “Mr. Wilson .is a ‘person of on-alecholic public American Valuation in Relation to Tariff CLOTHING SALE Don’t Miss This Sale fair example of a union of May and December. As| spirit who believes that temperance can be driven into! ane chamber at commerce of the/ported brushes will be determined by| Nesting with thelr tes etal Men’s Suits Moleskin Coats one of the heirs to the Standard Oil and International/ People. He ‘Own ideas as to what constitutes| United States recently asked for a con-| sympathetic and honest custom of-|, Nor Pave conditions changed for tne) * Men’s Overcoats Rain Coats Harvester millions the gis\ #4 bound to be attractive to| ght and yhat constitutes temperance and in-|»sensus of opinion from its numerous) ficials, daily posted on actual Ameri- cae ge i aaa eremel peaks Gabardine Cravenettes a riding teacher. On her own account she is not with-} temperance, j and injustice, righteousness 2nd/associated local organizations regard-|can market conditions. Under the 2° e28 tahed pcre Viney. ont-ns Boys’ Suits . “English Whipcord ae j ight-limbed,| iniquity. It is @ gad habitude of the zealous ing the American valuation plan in its| same rate of duty with continuance of! Boys’ Overcoats f Rain Coats out. personal attractiveness. Tall, straight-limbed, temper- the rate of 500 a month. ys Showerproo: with large black eyes and hair, and pleasant though posites nh: wed unary ae as Sp whetper relation to the forthcoming Fordney {oe ese plan, annihilation is oer Oe ited cgtc'tas Gb ahem: aaron Leather Vests Rubberized Rain Coats s. She was sent to Switzerlan not persons ‘orm: share jews, g lininers at’ the past in fagerer the a es war fags ‘medical treatment and has made| Whether or not they resent his intrusion into their af-|_,Cv'n® {© the lack of proper infor-| | The propogandists against the Amer- Duck Coats Combination Tep Coat shat country her home since. She speaks with a half- German, half-French accent and is as unlike the typi- cal American society girl as she is unlike the typical continental society girl. She dislikes” society | and countty of the kind or character of man he is: muy be all right at that, and his income is not against: ness depression of the last two years. kK Economic experts at the capital point out that the reduction of taxes will materially lighten the load of the manufacturer here, permitting him to expand and equip new plants to meet the growing foreign demand. With $2,000,000,000 cut from-the public debt and fairs as their mentor, guide and wardec He believes that anyone who would take a drink needs a keeper. Mr. Wilson evidently intends to see to it that the peregrinations of every citizen throngh this American ed by the government, to live with us and keep us in prohibition law strikes a blow at the very principles on which our government was founded.’ “Possibly, after I am dead, some zealous advocate of prohibition will pronounce me a prohibitionist, and to prove it, will quote me as having objected to the passage of a federal law to banish all prohibitionists mation, or through the influence of pernicious propaganda, there has been at least one vote recorded by a local chamber against the American valua: tion plan and in favor of the retention territory upon the strength and the almost invariably favors protection to home industry, while the opponent of it wants to buy goods in the cheapest market of the world to sell in the dear- est. The argument of the free-trader is that the people who use the cheaper fean plan call it a “new scheme,” it haying been so designated in the news- paper headline report of an adverse vote of a chamber of commerce. Facts, however, show it to be neither “new” Senator Sanford protested against) the foreign system in 1817. while in ported into the United States through American plan, together with the big burden of procf of fraud of the one, contribute considsrable enlighten- ment on the subject, and are, therefore particularly applicable to the situa- chandizing of the United goods foreign agents at that time did not pay porarily, because everybody knows Corduroy Coats Men’s Cotton Socks, black or brown; all sizes; 2 25e Can You See and Rain Coat Any of the articles mentioned above are being sold . at one-half the regular price, as we are discontinuing Boy’s Wonderhose, black only, made of select at $750,000,000 eliminated from the tax list, American industry begins to feel that the brakes are off. The president has jus‘ said: “The general industrial and business situation now is such as to justify con- foreign-made goods get the benefit of a lower price—an argument disproved by innumerable instances of actuality, | the most noted of recent examples be- i. D. Barnett Outfitting Zo. 120 East Second Street to Dry Tortugas. I have always felt that if such a} law were advocated I would oppose it as being too) sweeping and drastic; but, in view of the-chances of; fidence that we are well passed the worst phase of the agricultural crisis,” The department of labor sees cor.siderable hope in the trend of the great stock markets, always a baro- meter of employment, and the numbers of reports of! the reduction of unemployment, the marked increase in automobile and steel fabrication work lend concrete evidence to the general feeling of optimism which per- vades the senate and house of representatives. RL A ha ee ak RETURNS TO THE RANKS. Uncle Joe Cannon in going back to the Repub- licans of the Eighteenth congressional district of Illi- nois after a service of fifty years does not propose to} sit down in ‘an easy chair and fold his hands, even if he is eighty-six years old. He tells.his people he is going back into the ranks and assume his part like a good Republican should. The famous old warrior con-' cludes his letter to his constituency thus: “I shall not be a drone, I hope, but a citizen in the ranks, one of the plain, loyal Republicans of the Bighteenth district, doing all in my power to support the party and the policies that have in the last fifty years added so much to the prosperity and happiness| of the American people and given their government such a commanding place among the nations and peo- ples of the civilized world. I hope to live to see even greater development under these policies than that in which I have had a part in the house.” These are good words. Brave words. Just such words as all good Americans and good Republicans ere delighted to hear spoken. SSS BG aS WHY WOMEN TALK. Those of experience in the matter have long known that women can out-talk men. A gentleman who has! ever engafred in any conversational contest with a lady is able to give any proof desired. He will acknowl- edge without argument his inferiority in this respect, Why women hold this advantage over, men was long supposed to be an equipment designed by nature asa defense against the superior strength of man. It has! remuined however for a London scientist to reveal the! the interesting discovery that ~ 2son fer woman's loquacity. In my being misundersiood after I am dead, and being pronounced a prohibitionist, let me say that I shall not oppose the passage of such a law, “Mr. Wilson says that some of my remarks are an insult to ‘the’ overwhelming majority of native-born Americans who wrote prohibition into law.’ Can it be possible that Mr. Wilson does not know that it was an overwhelming minority, instead of an overwhelming: majority of native-born Americans that put the Eight- eenth amendment into our constitntion? “Again, Mr. Wilson says, ‘No law-abiding American haz yet had oceasion to justly (sic) complain of the prohibition law.’ x" “I think that Mr. Wilson is perfectly safe in this statement, if we are to take his words literally, for there is probably not a truly law-abiding American in this country since prohibition went into effect and since our taxes have been raised until they follow the clouds over the skyscrapers and flirt with the’ stars.” es Sty es HARNESSING THE FLAPPER. “Pessimistic views about the flapper,” suggests the Chicago News, “are so common and so depressing that any optimistic and constructive thought on this phe- nomenon is not to be sneered at. As a contributor to certain, flapper magazines Cosmo Hamilton has per- haps an iron in the fire, but comfort must be picked where it grows and Mr. Hamilton has distinctly com- forting views about the flapper. ~ = “Students may differ with this theorist ‘in his opin- ion that the flapper is merely a product of postwar restlessness. Is it not more reasonable to regard the flapper as an example of post-suffrage effervescence? The fillies, as it were, are feeling their oats. The com- forting thing is Mr. Hamilton’s supreme confidence in the flapper. She is bursting with unutilized enthus- iesm and vitality, a high-power, engine in a. flivver Lody, or, as an older poet put it before the days of automobiles, ‘a fiery soul that, working out its way, fretteth the pigmy body. to decay.’ “The flapper, then, is only another instance of un-' utilized natural resources. The power to run thou- sands of homes is flapping past every door, to a large extent. unrealized and undeveloped... Harnessing the flapper seems a comparatively simple problem in do- mestic engineering, which may szfely be left to an aroused masculine intelligence.” ing that a well‘kmown store in the United States had the unblushing ef- trontery to retail for five dollars knives that had been bought in Ger- many for nine cents. Chairman Fordney of the ways and means. com- mittee of congress, has called attention to this fact. It is not generally understood, un- fortunately, that the rate of tariff duty and the rate alone—makes the tar- iff high or the tariff low—protestion or free-trade. This is a truism unaffected by the fact that with an equal amount of duty on any certain articles of com- | merce, and with equal facility and jhonesty of collection, the home pro- duct would fare better under the oper- ation of the American plan than under the foreign. For instance, with a tariff duty of 7 per cent ad valorem (according to value) on toilet brushes, the Ameri- can industry would thrive as it de- serves to thrive under the American plan, while with the same amount of duty under the system now in vogue the industry would have difficulty in existing. 5 ‘With the rate of 35 per cont, as al- lotted at present in the proposed Ford. ney tariff law, the American plan will give the toilet brush tndus- try at least & chance to survive, be- cause the value of the competing im- ie ee | The Union e | Mill Co. Is prepared to take care of all kinds of cabinet work. Also job work of any de- scription. 402 S. Durbin Phone 1462 “Tt wasn't that I 6. 8, 8. Wil Bulld Xo Up. Your Ribs? ’ “ have in mind. rial and the cost. We Would Be Very Glad To Figure ; On any building or improvement you might If you have an idea what you would like but don’t know exactly what it will take in material, ‘come in and give us your ideas. We will figure the bill of mate- O. L.Walker Lumber Co. ‘West Railroad Avenue , neeervcseesescerscosevovocennovsvessousseneccolepevesoereeeseeeeeocenceanas, oececoseee Phone 240 eeescecscevecsacreoeesacocoscoosce neosacacescecconoeoooooosecoees Save this series of ads. to you. Departments. She meets you with a smile. purchase more carefully. well as ourselves, by carrying home with _ HOLMES’ Sales and Price Talk No. 6 Mrs.. Kirkhaus, our good hatured saleslady, is in charge of the China, Glassware, Silver and Household She is anxious to serve and please. and tell you about the various lines, and serve each other better. profits most who serves hest.” It means real money later . Step in and let her show ~~” You. are buying more carefully now and we must Let us learn of each other Rotarian motto: “He This means you as STEEL FENCE POSTS AT 50c EACH Holmes Hardware Co. Phone 601 We deliver to all parts of the city, but please help us you all small articles. ooo hes