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PA ° LA] ¢ sect beit tok hi Sraemsacnod Sw rn wean 7 { 1 f ' ' ' t ) | ( PAGE SIE Cpe Casper Daily Cribune Imsued every evening except Sunday at Casper. aaron County, Wyo. Publication Offices, Tribune Building. ISINESS SLE: 15 and 16 BUSINESS TELEPHONES ...-..- Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments Entered at Casper (Wyoming), Postoffice as second class} matter, November 23, 1916- MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President and Editor J. B HANWAY . Advertising Represemtatives. Prodden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bkig.. Chicago, Mi; 286 Fitth avenue, New York City; Globe Bidg. Bos ton, Mass. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago and Boston offices and visitors re welcome. — — SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Carrier Six Months . 195 Three Months ‘s One Month - 05 Per Copy - . One Year . Six Months . Three Months No subscription by mafl accepted for less period than three months. ‘All subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Dany Tribune will not insure delivery after subscrip- tion becomes one month in arrears. Member of Audit Buresn of Circulation (A. B. ©) Member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the 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. Cait 15 or 16 any time between 6:30 and 8 o'clock p. m. tf you fafl to recetve your Tribune. A paper will be de liverea to you by special messenger. Make tt your duty to Jet The Tribune knew when your carrier misses you- «a CRADLES OF AMERICANISM. “what is the matter with the public schools? The only answer is that there is too much public, too lit- tle of the school From one end of the land to the other we need more and more schools. More schools, so that the cherished hopes and ideals and hard work ot the whole teaching foree from the superintendent to the assistant teacher may serve the nation as they so sincerely aspire to and plan for.” , The quotation is from an article by Grace Irwin in Harper’s. Every friend of the Americanization fea- ture of the work of the public schools should read it; every legislator, trustee or even taxpayer who raises a hand or casts a vote against liberal support of the public schools should be inserted in the stocks and made to Esten to it. For it is not only the child of parents or the child born abroad and emi- atte the United States who needs Americaniza- tion; it is the street child, the child of poverty and ‘ce and wretchedness, who must have it. And it is here that he gets his first and often his only mowledge of what real American citizenship may be; here in the public school, he learns not only the three Rs but what trath, honor and decency mean, and what the rights of others stand for in young lives otherwise lived only in selfish egoism. ‘American schools in addition to being well and lib- erally supported must be shown in a more grim light,| than that which illuminates ornate buildings. Instead] of being everything but schools they must be real schools, where both mental and moral instruction are in the training. Remember, it is to the public school down in the city slums—the one clean spot in a wallow of civil, political, moral and actual filth—to which America raust look for the fires which boil the melting pot. ‘And away out on the lonely prairie, where horizons are vide, storms fierce, suns hot and conditions rough —trom the Tittle district school close to Mother Earth, you must look for stardy Americanism of the quality to lead and direct. ' In these two cradles are American ideals nurtured. It is our duty to see that they are adequately sustained. LSE SE ‘FHE RANTINGS OF JAMES. James M. Cox has selected safe hunting grounds when he goes to South Carolina to perform a sur- gical operation on the Republican party. He can get by with it in that vicinity. Anywhere else on earth he would be arrested for malpractice, pinched for pre- varication, thrown in for exaggeration, and incarcer- ated for impious utterances. Having but recently regained his consciousness, James is not apparently aware of the death of the league of nations. He still whines for it. He was whining for it wher the avalanche hit him in 1926, and it is quite natural that it would be the first thing in his mind on recovering his sensibilities. Likewise his verom toward Henry Lodge. The country was ringing with the words of Senator Lodge —“Remove the last vestige of Wilsonism from infiu- ence upon the government of the United States,” when James went out. Quite natural again that this would be sticking in James’ crop. Because at the time Cox- ism assumed to be a reflection of Wilsonism. Made so by the fnmous “at one” statement. It may have been a weak reflection but it was the best that could be supplied from the source. At the safe distance of Columbia, South Carolina, and in that sympathetic environment, James says: “In no period of American history has there been a pub- lic official who has been such an evil influence as has been Henry Cabot Lodge.” These are strong words and James will have to stand upon their utterance. It makes no difference to him at the moment whether he can substantiate them or not. The people know he cannot and they will make him and his party pay the penalty. Senator Lodge is teo great and unselfish an American citizen, too great a patriot to be harmed by scurrilous statements by ames Cox, that is not the point. But that we have | In the end, dollar popularity is always as hollow as it is expensive. ; “Cannot my opponent and myself, with our respect- | ive committees, at once get together and agree to s imitation of the amount to be spent in this primary and common honesty of all the people as a proper) sum? | “Above all, it would set an example to the entire nation. Hereafter candidates of all parties in every’ state of the union would adopt-—public sentiment) weuld compel them to adopt—the Indiana plan. Why) not abandon, throughout the republic, competition in| political money armaments? And why should not In-! diana lead the way?” ee BUT NOT FOR A BONUS! It has been proposed in France that laws be passed to encourage the immigration of young American! men, with the idea that France needs youthful males) to marry and have children. ,The proposal includes} the paying of a bonus to such young American men} as will come, give up their American and take out French citizenship and agree to marry the French women. ° It is not a matter for worry, but for laughter. Any American man who would give up his American citi- zenship for a bonus would be well lost to this coun- try, and but a poor gain for France. Some Ameri- cans do become naturalized citizen of France, just as Frenchmen become naturalized citizens of this coun- try. America welcomes as citizens good men and true of other countries, as France welcomes an American who wishes to become French. But not for a bonus! | I | BAD HOMES—BAD CITIZENS. “Tt is enough to make anyone’s heart sick to go through the slum districts in large cities,” says the Newark Advocate. “Tt is not strange that people get discontented in these dingy districts, in which build- ings are in poor repair and dirt and disorder prevail. | And in most cities and towns there are some houses that approximate the same condition. “The living conditions prevailing in a town have a great deal to do with the morale of the people. Those who reside in forlorn and ill kept tenements get dis- satisfied with life, and are rebellious against the so-| cial system. If you move those people into attractive little apartments or homes, and induce them to main- tain that condition you reconcile them to life. You incite them to pull themselves up and show ambition, | and check the tendency to engage in vices, which often) result from the discouragement of discontented people. “The landlords of poorly kept homes usually say that the tenants are careless and would not keep the property up if it was improved. That is true in many cases. If discontented people who are sick of their unkappy surroundings, would show more responsibil-| ity for improvement, they would encourage real estate | owners to keep their property in better repair. “Tt would pay landlords to make special {nduce- ments to such tenants. An owner can well afford to make + discount on his rent to any family that would! keep their building and grounds in attractive condi- tion, and do something to beautify them. Or he could) make the rate higher to those whe refused to co-oper- ate in this way. “TIl-kept homes are a blot on the nation and the! community. A combined effort should be made to pro-| duce neat and cheerful conditions for the people who occupy rented quarters.” SS THE PEOPLE NOT THE CHURCH. | “Investigators report drug addiction on the in- crease,” observes the Vancouver Sun. “Famous per- sonages are being charged with debauchery. Recent notorious crimes have revealed orgies at which Nero’s satellites would have blushed. “And with each revelation, people ask, ‘What is the church doing about it?’ “What is the church doing to combat the wave of| licentious extravagance and immorality that seems to be sweeping this continent just now? “In every question of this kind is an inferred in- dictment against the effectiveness of the church, a veiled charge that religion has lost its power to keep mankind on the narrow path of virtue. “The fact of the matter is not that the ehurch has lost its power but that the people have Jost interest in| the church. Religion cannot force its beneficent in-| fluence upon the heads of the unwilling and self-suf-| ficient. It cannot compel them to take advantage of its moral tonic. “This is the age of self-confidence. Man has probed the mysteries of the universe, harnessed the energy of natural force and is staying the powers of disease and death. “He is beginning to think he can do without God. “Man can keep steel trains on a narrow track by applyimg well-known principles of physics but he can- not keep his own soul on the path of progress without the stimulation of the church of “That is the reason for the spread of drug addic-| tion, debauchery and crime. “The church cannot fight these things, unless the people are willing to give the church a chance by sup- porting it.” | —————_ oo MONKEY BUSINESS. In defense of his stand against the teaching of bio- logical science in general and Darwinism in particu- lar, Mr. W. J. Bryan defies anyone to “make a monkey out of him.” Surely no one would try, Mr./Sryan. Doubtless the priests who wished to burn Gallileo as a heretic be- cause he said the world was round and moved, in face of their assertion that it was stationary and flat, de- fied the Italian, or anyone else, to make monkeys out of them, walking on a round earth, sometimes upside down! One recalls with some pleasure the mathematical proof which Professor Simon Newcombe, unquestion- ably one of America’s greatest scientists, adduced to show the impossibility of a man ever flying in a heay- ier-than-air machine. Doubtless he considered that | anyone who tried to prove to the contrary would be |making a monkey out of him! | Yet, somehow, the world was round and did and does move, and men did and do fly in heavier-than-air a man who has once attained high position in the op- position party who has proved himself unfit to even touch the hem of the garment of greatness, guilty of such irresponsible statements. Es a a A HOOSIER IDEA. Whether A'bert J. Beveridge wins the primary nomination for United States senator in Indian against the present incumbent, Senator New, or not, he lays down some perfectly good Republican proposals that can hardly be ignored by his opponent: Z “Let this nomination be decided without rancor and purely on merit; and may the best man win. “I hold in my hand, that you may see for your- selves, paid advertisements that have already appeared over Indiana. Professional newspaper men esti- te that if this continues until May 2 the eost of this one item alone will mount into scores of thousands of dollars. “Unless it has a sinister purpose, it is all nonsense— not wickedly meant, but deplorable in result, and, un- ¢ ably, it puts our party at serious disadvantage in the battle we must wage with the Democrats next fall, machines, and somehow even the voice of the distin- | guished Democrat, erying in the wilderness, does not | appear sufficiently virile to remove from books, libra- ties, schools, or men’s minds the truths which Darwin first gave an astonished world and which, in our pres- jent knowledge of evolution, form the basis of much of biology. OO RARIN’ TO GO. As winter approached last fall and we prepared to go into winter quarters it was with every promise of | suffering and hardship on the part of many people. | Especially did we fear for the unemployed and the improvident. Yet somehow, through a kind providence we have | Teached the time when spring comes again and most) It was not as bad as we believed, of us have survived. & would be. In fact it was not bad at all. We have | Temaining. _Incentive to do things occupies our minds. | We have visions of activities in a hundred different directions. In Wyoming it is building, plowing, plant- ing, drilling, road making, and other efforts crying for |the respect of everybody, come through with considerable vigor and lots of hope| Che Casper Deny Cridune Public Servants Or Vote-Seekezs Probably as great « need as the na- tom pommesses at this time t legisla- | contest, which amount will appeai to the common sense tors who legislate not for re-election but for the public good—men who would rather be right than gain the approval of the noisy but unstable minorities; men who not ef “blocs” nor associations viduals with selfish ends who only are afraid things that their their common sense ¢ona, i is 3 8 & 1 [qf & 888 organized crowd can get the close tention and the final support of mi tm public office if it can stir enough clamor, while the unorgan- tzed public is made to suffer for the benefit of the few. It requires cour- age to stand out against the bellow- ing of @ few whfle the majority re main sflent. It is a matter of com- mon knowledge that especially tn the last few years one piece of class legislation after another has been en- acted because some special interest was to be served. Men of small minds play politics to gain votes but if they would read his- tory they would know that tho best politics is that of sincerity and that the public officer who is honest with himself first, in the long run gahis inctuding those who may oppose him from time to time for selfish reasons. “A leader leads—he does not follow the mob. A weather cock blows with the wind, A trimmer who trims his sails to suit the breeze never knows where he is going, but finalty he lands in the port of oblivion where he belongs. But in the meantime he has done incalculable harm because of his shilly-shaltying. The public finally wobbles right, but {t sometimes isn't even given the chance to wobble at all, nor to go straight forward. It is deflected from {ts course by class partisanship and ita best endeavors finally stopped be- cause of a lack of courageous leader ship. Defeat of a man often means the Promotion of a cause. We see our manhood go unselfishly tnto battle for the sake of principle, knowing that death may be their portion. A frac- tion of that courage is needed by men tn ‘public life who possess the spirit of the oid Americanism which would rather suffer defeat at the polls than see the public weal trampled upon by those who have only their own self- ish gains In mind. The war developed men of high courage for the conflict of arms. We now are engaged in a great war upon selfish forces that followed the war, and to fight them we need men—real men with red biood in their veins and stout courage in their souls. It took courage for President Hard- Ing to call the nations of tho earth together and demand that they make some decided and practical move to- ward insuring tht peace of the world. It took courage for Charles E. Hughes boldly to tell the diplomats of the great powers on the first day of the limitations conference what he be- lieved they should do to bring this thing about when both he and the president knew of the existence of age A @usty road whereon the rattling wain Went creaking homeward from seme crowded mart— A road that wandered like a thing apart, And made me dream of lost youth once again. And what of roses with their crim- con stain Against a wall that crumbled from the start? I @rink all wonder avidly, lest I Bo absent from this world within a day. I scarcely dare to sleep, or turn awny, Fearing that Death may whisper, “Say good-bye To this bright scene, and follow me!” Oh, why Is Life so brief? delay? —Charles Hanson Towne. Bacay eerie asi Respect for Law Why can we not In an address delivered by Abraham Lincoln in 1837, when he was but 28 years of age wo find these words: “In the great journal of things hap- pening under the sun, we the Ameri- cin people, find our account runing the date of the nineteenth century of the Christian era. We find ourselves in the peaceful possession of the fair. est portion of the earth as regardr ex- tert of territory, fertility of so:l, an: salubrity of climate. We find our- selves under the government of sys- tem of political institutions conduc- ing more essentially to the ends of the civil and religious liberty than any of which the history of former times tel:s us. We, when mounting the stage of existence, found ourselves the legal in- heritors of these fundamental blesa- ings. We toiled not in the acquire- ment or establishment of them; they are a legacy bequeathed to us by once a hardy, brave and patriotic, but now lamented and departed, race of an- cestors. Theirs was the task (and nobly they performed it) to possess i remember that to violate the law is to trample on the blood of his father, and to tear the charter of his own and children’s liberty. the laws be breathed by every Ameri- can mother to the lisping babe that prattles on her lap; let it bo taught in schools, In seminaries, and in colleges; Jet tt be written in primers, in spelling courts of justice. And, in short, let it become the political religion of the nation; and let the old and the young, the rich and the poor, the grave and the gay of all sexes and tongues and colors sacrifice unceasingly upon its altar.” ————___ The “silver greyhound” ts the offi- clal badge of King’s Messengers, a body of men attached to the British foreign office and employed to carry confidential despatches from White- hal] to embassies and tmportant per- sonages abroad. Kiddies’ Colds Can Be Eased Quickly Dr. King’s New Discovery will do that very thing, easily and quickly. Don't say, ‘‘Poor little kiddie, I_wish I knew what to do for you!” When 's New as directed, an‘ it will soon be eased. It’s family th and cold = Loosens up the hlegm. cough, relieve: the con- harmful drugs, For fifty standard remedy for colds, yhs, At druggists, Gera bates New Discov ry For Colds one Lous Constipated? Here’sRelief!Cleanse the system, with Dr. King’s Pills, , free bile flow, stir up the the _ New Buick Four Lives Up to Reputation Made by its Predecéssors Fulfilling the promise for service- ability made by Buick Fours of other years, the new Buick four-cylinder car is held with high regard by motorists everywhere. In every respect it is reflecting the experience and knowledge gained by its designers and manufacturers in building Buick Valve-in-Head Fours and Sixes for many years. = : Buick Sixes Buick Fours Ti Poss_ # (22-Foor34 Twe Hr rert in Posdater $1363 Pane: Roadster 9 893 33.Sia-té Three Pave. Coupe = 4 32-Four$S Five Pass: Touring 935 Five Paws: Sedan + 16s 22-Pour-3é Theee Pass: Coupe 1295 32 :Si-48 Four Pass: Coupe- 073 23-Four-37 Five Pass. Sedan 1398 22-Six-49 Seven Pass: Touring 1583 22-Siz-50 Seven Pass: Sedan - 2375 (All Prices FP: O. B: Flint, Michigan Ask about the G. M. A. C. Purchase Plan which provides for Deferred Payments ectnenen CASPER MOTOR CO. attention. Will the capital and the labor at hand com- bine to make dreams come true? e Phone 909 —— ee WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT, BUICK WILL BUILD THEM ———— EEE EE ret WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1922. . | REHEARING DENIED. Goat Milk Cut To Fifty Cents supreme hes court on March 6. —“-—_ WASHINGTON, March 15. — The court denied the mo- tion of the attorney general of New York state for @ rehearing in the Consolidated Gas casts decided by the ‘The pipe which Sir Walter Raleigh Goats Milk company, newly formed,| «moked on the scaffold, in 1615, is now after two years experiments at the/|in the private museum belonging to a Evanston General that the price per quart will be 50 cents. The average price has been 85 cents. March, 1920, with ows ,oat. Yesterday a herd of 25 was delivered to the hos- pital and the announcement made that would combine business with her .phil- -janthrophy. To those in straightened hospital announces | London firm of tobacconists. The experiments were begun Mrs. James A. Patten, the sponsor. circwmstances who require milk for @ invalids or infants there will be no) charge. All who can afford It will be| charged 50 cents a quart. |B nourishes Seer vec, yrs Henry, goat milk man, has| § tones the blood © bigger herd. One goat, he says, build strength. | will not give much milk for it gets helps at & Downe, Ricomscid, 3. —_—_— lonesome. | PAY DAY SPECIAL At Casper’s Finest Grocery Store Specials for Thursday, Friday and Saturday PHONE 13 CANNED VEGETABLES No. 1 Flag Sweet Corn... .. ----20c, or 2 for 35c¢ No. 1 Flag Cut Green Beans......... . . .25c, or 2 for 45c No. 2 Kuner’s Cut Wax Beans. .............3 cans 50c No. 2 Brown Beauty Beans. ........ --3 cans 50c No. 2 J. S. B. Red Kidney Beans. .....25c, or 2 for 45c No. 2 Mt. Cross Lima Beans. .... . --.3 cans 50c No. 244 Empson’s Pumpkin. . ..... .3 cans 50c No. 214 Libby’s Sweet Potatoes... 30c, or Z for 55c CANNED FRUITS No. 1 Ainsley’s Fruit Salad 30c, or 2 for 55c No. 21% Ainsley’s Fruit Salad .50c, or 2 for 95c No. 214 J. S. B. Royal Anne Cherries, 50c, or 2 for 95c EXTRA SPECIAL Signet Fancy Country Gentleman Corn, No. 2 can____.._______25¢, or 4 for 90e Argo Corn or Gloss Starch, 1-Ib. pkg______ ~--_._..3 pkgs. for 25c¢ Log Cabin Syrup, pt can______ Log Cabin Syrup, qt. can Log Cabin Syrup, half gal. can -$1.20 Log Cabin Syrup, gal. can_________ $2.15 Gal. can Broken Sliced Pineapple, ea_80c Weich Grapeade, oz. jar, each...... Delicious Jam, 2-Ib. glass jar, per jar. No. 21% Libby’s Apple Butter. ..... Skookum Jam, 5-Ib. pail, any flavoz} Mosteller’s extra fancy Comb Honey, per Ib Extra Fancy Blue Rose Rice.......... Granulated Sugar, 132 $1 White or Yellow Corn Meal, 10-Ib. bag. ...... J. S. B. Boneless Codfish, 1-Ib. box. ... ......... Extra fancy Sockeye Salmon, 1-Ib. flat can. . Blue Hill Peanut Butter, 214-Ib. glass jar... -50c 35c, or 2 for 65c ++ +--+. 65¢ Platte Valley Gold Pure Cream- ery Butter---None Better, lb., 39c 2 Ibs. for 75c NO LIMIT—BUY ALL YOU WANT ‘Extra Fancy Red Potatoes, per cwt. Table Salt, 10-Ib. bag, per bag. .. Royal Crystal Salt, 2-Ib. can. . EXTRA SPECIAL California Home Tomato Catsup, pt__28¢ Red Cross Milk, 48 tall cans, case___$4.95 Carnation Milk, 48 tall cans, case___$4.95 Fairy Soap_____--_10c bar, or 6 bars 38c Curtis Ripe Olives, pt. can____._____25¢ Kuner’s Cut Wax Beans, 2-Ib. can 3 for 50c Kuner’s Pork and Beans, 2-Ib. can 4 for 50c Paul’s Pure Fruit Jam, 16-oz. glass, Best Out West Flour, 48-Ib. bag. . ..... Walter Baker’s Chocolate, per 14-Ib. Walter Baker’s Cocoa, per 1-Ib. can... Lipton’s Tea, 14-Ib. pkg Pompeian Olive Oil, 14-pt. can........ Pompeian Olive Oil, pt. can............. Bread... Strictly Fresh Eggs, per dozen. PHONE 13 We Deliver to Any Part of the City. Money Back If You’re Not Satisfied. +» .3 loaves 25¢ The Grand Grocery Directly Opposite Telephone Building on Second St. LOGICAL ADVICE! "\