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——— ne aay —_" nt aetieeenencilinass e sits acitendiil hand Se aeroP a, of t .have been directed to Germany. PAGE TWO. Che Casper Dailp Cribune Issued every evening except Sunday at Ci a 5 " Wyo. Publication Offices, Teibane Bulding. BUSINESS TELEPHONES Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Entered at Casper (Wyoming). Postoffice as second class matter, November 22, 1916. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 7. B. HAD os EsRL EL WAY W. H HUNTLEY . R. E. EVAN THOMAS DAILY . Pru 5 & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bldg., Chicago, Til; 286 Fifth avenue, New York City; Globe Bidg.; Bos- Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in New York, Chicago and Hoston offices and visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier P three months. All_subscriptions must be paid in advance and the/ Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscrip- tion 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 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. Call 15 or 16 any time between 6:30 and 8 o'clock p. m. if you fail to recetve your Tribune. A paper will be de. livered to you by special messenger. Make it your-duty to let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. > THE WATCH ON THE RHINE. Certain European statesmen would be pleased to create the impression that Secretary Hughes exhibited a lack of diplomatic tact in presenting the claim of the United States for reimbursement of the cost of maintaining the American army on the Rhine. They would have it go out to the world that the United States waited until the allied finance ministers had feached an agreement for division of the first billion gold marks received from Germany, and then stepped in with a demand of priority for the American claim of $241,000,000. The American claim for payment of the costs of the American army of occupation was based, original- ly on the terms of the armistice of November 11, 1918, Which said that German territory was to be occupied “by the allied and United States forces jointly.” It was then stipulated that “the upkeep of the troops shal] be charged to the German government.”” Later the Versailles treaty provided that out of reparations the expenses of the armies of occupation shall first be met.” The United States did not become a party to that treaty, but under the terms of the separate treaty beween this coufitry and Berlin the United States “expressly reserves all rights, privileges, in- @emnities, reparatiins, or advantages to which it be- ¢zme entitled under the terms of the armistice, or which, under the Treaty of Versailles, have been stipulated for its benefit.” Our troops were left in German territory at the urgent request of England and France on the plea that American troops would be more effective than allied forces in preserving peace. Those nations then agreed to see the United States re- imbursed. It may be said that the American demand should But we were con- fronted with a state of affairs. Germany can make no financial move except with the consent of the allies, who are on the ground with their reparations commis- sion. All of the war indemnity goes through that com- mission. The United States has no disposition to find fault with that arrangement so long as it does not in- fringe upon American rights under the Berlin treaty. When the commission does interfere with those rights it is the duty of the secretary of state to protect them. As to the abruptness of Mr. Hughes’ action. The fact is that he strained diplomatic practice to the limit in giving the allied ministers opportunity to take cog- nizance of the American claim without the necessity of any reminder from Washington. Up to the very last minute, when the agreement fof the division of the reparations payment was about to be signed, Mr. Hughes remained silent, but when it became apparent that the United States was to be ignored entirely he stepped in and recalled to the minds of the ministers the stipulations which should have governed their éc-' tions. Even then there was no insistence on imme- diate payment, but only on the official recognition of! the American claim. The whole incident is but another manifestation of the desire of certain foreign ministers to shut the United States off from any share in the victory won im 1918. What this country has done in the way of money loans and supplies sent to the devastated re- gions, since the war is sufficient proof that the United States has no grasping proclivities. Other nations have seized former German territory and other spoils of war, while this country has been content with vin- dicating its international rights. We intend, however, to collect the ordinary obligations due us from abroad. eae ee ears INDEPENDENT VOTING. William G. McAdoo is ever a humorous bird, hu-} morous because he attempts to rebuild recent history! to fit his own views and purposes, in a day when every second man in the street is as well if not better in- formed than Mr. McAdoo, of the matters upon which! fie assumes to instruct. In his latest outgiving Mr. McAdoo says that what this country needs most is a large non-partisan citi- zenship, manifestly meaning thereby a large independ- ent vote. His real purpose, of course, is to endeavor to draw from the present Republican affiliation a large portion of its support. In an earlier but also recent address Mr. McAdoo charged the deflation movement to the Republican party notwithstanding the recorded evidence that it was started and practically consum- thated before the Republicans came into power. | ~ Had he but recalled the election returns from the last three presidential elections, he might not have plea that ignored partisan political issues. By adroit- ly forcing to the front the plea that President Wilson “kept us out of war,” tie Democrats were enabled to win a considerable portion of the independent vote and continue themselves in political power. No one has ever had the audacity to assert that Mr. Wilson could have won on a straight party issue with the fundamental party principles paramount in the dis- cussions of the campaign. The combined votes of the Republican and Progress- ive candidates in 1912 exceeded the Democratic vote in the proportion of about 7% to 6 and that is prob- ably somewhere near the normal ratio when the is- sues are drawn on differences of political principles. ‘The independent vote manifested itself again in 1920 when Mr. Harding won by a vote of 16,000,000 against 9,000,000 for Mr. Cox. This was a plurality of 7,- €00,000 votes, which no one will contend represents the real difference between the Republican and Demo- cratic strength. The independent vote, thoroughly dissatisfied with the un-Americanism, extrava- gance, the autocracy and the inefficiency of the Wilson 90 2dministrs:ion, went overwhelmingly to the Repub- lican candidate. Many a man who was a believer in the funasmental principles of the Democratic party and opposed to Republican principles, voted the Re- publican ticket as a protest against the maladminis- tration of which Mr. McAdoo was a part. In view of what the independent vote did to Mr. McAdoo’s party in 1920, there ought not to be any doubt in his mind as to either the reality or the magy nitude of that portion of our citizenship. pS R A eS ate DEMOCRATIC PROSPERIT Speaking of the buriness conditions of 1916-20 the Philadelphia Record refers to it as the “long period of Democratic prosperity.” But it happens that it was not Democraic prosperity; it was war prosperity. The records of the department of commerce under the Wil- son administration show that following the enactment ef the Democratic tariff law our imports increased and our exports decreased until for the first time in many years if not for the first time since the Civil war we were importing more merchandise than we were exporting. Because we were buying abroad more than we were selling, our own shops were closed or their operations were curtailed.’ The front pages of the Democratic press of 1914-15 pictured the bread- lines that were conspicuous in every city. The bal- ence of trade, as shown by Democratic records, con- tinued against us until a moath after the outbreak of the war when the cutting og of imports and he filling of,war orders changed the situation. Not even the most stupid reader of economic history disputes the statement that it was the war and not Democratic ad- ministration that brought the prosperity of 1916-20.! Tt is not stupidity but mendacity that makes the claim set forth by the Philadelphia Record. ———_ CONSERVE THE PAVING. That the public is Awakening to the necessity of Frotecting their hard surface highways with some form of a cushion to prevent their destruction by the triphammer effect of the growing traffic is evidenced by motor license laws in various states which reduce the amount of the license for vehicles using pneumatic tires. The modern motor car would last but a few months traveling at the speed it does without the cushioning otfect of rubber on its wheels. The slow moving truck. gets along with hard rubber but the fast moving ve- hicle must have the added cushion of air between its rim and the pavement to save it from destruction. What is happening to a cement, brick or macadam surface which has no cushioning wearing surface when the terriffic hammering which it receives by passing vehicies is kept up year after year? It ie eventually crystallized and shattered the same a8 would be the modern automobile without its cush- ion of tires. In order te save our highways which have cost the taxpaycrs hundreds of millions of dollars, it is now. recognized generally-that in building these roads or in saving the roads which are already built it is essen- tial that whatever the base of their construction may be, it should be protected with a cushioned wearing surface to save it from eventual destruction. ecg RP EVERY LITTLE WEEK. “Everybody will rejoice at the success of the move- ment to secure President Harding’s approval of a ‘Be! Kind to Animals Week,’’’ remarks the Kansas City Star. “The president’s letter to the humane associa- tion in which he heartily indorses the project will set at rest the fears of those who had taken the pessimis- tic view that he might denounce kindness to animals, “The project can now go forward with every pros-! pect of success. ‘The week of April 24 has been fixed, and the date will be extensively advertised so that nobody will make the mistake of being kind to ani- mals out of season. That date was selected, it is un- derstood, as it was the only one that would not con- flict wih other weeks already set aside for particular) The national bureau for the identification’ purposes. and codification of what to do and when weeks has not, we understand, completed its work, and until its report has been published there may be some unavoid- able confusion in the celebration of these national weeks. “Return B wed Articles Week’ and ‘Bestow a Thought on Your Creditors Week’ are now generally observed, but ‘Give Your Mother-in-Law a Kiss Week’ end ‘Wave a Hand to Your Neighbor Week’ have once or twice regrettably telescoped ‘Pick Up Waste Paper Week’ and ‘Eat a Prune for Prudence Week.’ Hasty persons who have kissed mother-in-law in prune week and eaten a prune in waste paper week will not now be proceeded against, but the societies having these weeks in charge recognize that mistakes like these can- Che Casper Daily Cribune A LESSON IN ECONOMICS | Lawlessness, flagrant, persistent, compelling the governors of two states to send soldiery for its suppression, recently has startled New England. Intimidation of fellow-workers by strikers, destruction of property, in- terference with the moving of freight, constituted a situation which the com- munity would not endure. But however intolerable were the lawless acts which so recently have disturbed our peace, they are not the only form of lawlessness rampant in New England, nor are they so far- reaching and ominous as the most prevalent form; namely, the wide- spread and increasing disregard of the national law, prohibiting the traf- fle in alcoholic liquor. It is no exaggeration to say that this is the characteristic attitude of the mass of people in our larger cities, as well as of considerable groups in the average town. This contempt for the law is ag- gravated by the supercilious speech and self-indulgent practice of many people of “high social and political standing.” The manufacturer who breaks a federal law in his club fs as much a foe to the public welfare as the striker who breaks a law with a club. The federal machinery for the en- forcement of the so-called Volstead act has practically broken down wherever local co-operation fails through the indifference or opposition \of municipal or state authorities. | This phase of lawlessness is more to be dreaded, because more insidious than the depredations of excited ‘strikers—just as tuberculosis is more to be dreaded than scarlet fever. Con- tempt for the laws of one's country, | especially for laws prompted by ideal- ism and aimed to protect and raise the man-power of future genérations, is a national menace. Two winters ago, a stalwart team- ster, driving me through the snow in a sleigh to an evening appointment, told me what a blessing had been to him the new prohibitory law. The other day the same man—drunk— dabbled to me about our drive through the snow-drifts. ‘The instance serves to confirm,the impression that the enforcement of the law is less efficient than when it first went into effect. Why? ‘The reason lies in a debased and vitiated public sentiment, which might fairly be called four per cent Americanism. How did the state of Rhode Island meet the crisis, the challenge to its manhood, imposed by the Eighteenth not go on, and it is their purpose to be severe with in| amendment? fractors after the work of codification is completed. “We are informed that the serious difficulty that at one time arose between the prune weekers and the promoters of the ‘Eat a Cake of Yeast Week’ has been happily adjusted. The prune weekers had asserted that the yeast weekers did not have a letter from the president. We understand the charge has been with- drawn, and that ‘Eat a Cake of Yeast Week’ will be regularly instiuted as soon as an open date can be ar- ranged for. In.the meantime persons who are eating yeast without waiting for the official time are taking their own chances. “The association that is promoting ‘Be Kind to Ani- mals Week’ will issue special instructions before the, date set. It is believed that persons who desire to ob- serve the week, but have no animals to be kind to, made his statement regarding the need for a large in- will be permitted to be kind to each other, if they can dependent vote. | produce the necessary proof that this is the best they This nation is normally Republican, as shown by can do.” the elections for the last sixty years, In 1912, how- ver, at the close of a Republican administration, the| largest independeMt vote manifested itself in a three- dornered campaign which resulted in approximately 3,500,000 votes for the Republican candidate, 6,300,- 400 for the Democratic candidate and 4,100,000 for the Progressive candidate. It is unanimously agreed that most of the Roosevelt Progressive vote was really A prize has been offered for a descriptive word for the animal known as the reckless and inconsiderate automobile driver. It must be a term with punch and end kick in it, Word builders get busy. fw ee Yes, bring the government close to the people. If Its general assembly promptly passed an act defining non-intoxicat- ing beverages as those containing not more than four per cent alcohol. The minimum quantity of Mquor likely to be consumed by & hearty man in a thirsty hour is about a quart. Four per cent of one quart is an ounce and a quarter. Therefore the statute law of Rhode Island im- plies that one and onefourth fluid ounces of raw alcoho) absorbed in a short time by a normal man leaves brain and nerves in a normal condi- tion. Is it unfair to charge that such a definition of intoxicants stands an en- acted He on the statute book of the state? Ides on the statute book do not make for respect for laws in general. When that Inw was passed, the call- ing out of the militia to enforce other laws became only a question of time. ‘The majesty of law departs when lawmakers make sport of law. ‘That law was as real an attack on the national integrity as the firing on Fort Sumpter—not as serious, not as deliberate, but as real—not as con- Republican in principle, for the Progressive platform the income tax does not do it to your taste, how much sciously appreciated by those who included in its principles many of the time honored closer do you desire it? teachings of the Republican party. The total vote for the Republican and the Progressive candidates ex- ceeded the vote for the Democratic candidate. It was o-——_—__—_ committed the act, but none the less a step toward moral secession from ~ {the national ideal constitutionally and Will Hays ought to divide his movie salary with the legally expressed and deserving of the independent vote which went to Roosevelt that re-) People who are telling him how to run the business. sulted in the election of Mr. Wilson. Although the nation still belicved i Repu! | the fundamental fought, the Democrats were clever enough to nut un 2 over tha canditian ef tha mantlaman wha teak ft eee se When the Democrats get Henry Lodge’s scalp in conscientious and selfdenying trial. But the four per cent Americanism filunks the test, tries to nu.iffy the national law by its puerile evasion, principles whén the campaign of 1916 was Massachusetts, all we ask is the privilege of looking and flinches from the nation-wide line i ak hottian \F ae 2 The Godlessness of Lawlessness Granted, there are limits to the power of the state to control indi- vidual custom; granted, it ts debatable whether sumptuary legislation can ef- fect a moral change; granted, it is im- polite to enact laws implying moral standards above popular conviction; granted, there is room for honest dif- ference of opinion as to the wisdom of so radical a law. Still, ft is the law, the law of the land. If it is a mistake, repeal it. Until it is repealed, enforce ft. Enforcement is, proverbially, the surest way to secure the repeal of an obnoxious law. If it was unwise, enforce !t, to prove its unwisdom; if it was wise, enforce it for the sake of its wisdom. In any case, enforce it becduse it is the law. § : Last week, on a state highway, at the very door of the shack where he had bought his moonshine, I picked up a drunken foreigner and gave him a ride. He was talkative, chiefly on topics relating to potations. He opined that the prohibitory law ought to be repealed if the country’s free- ‘tom is to be preserved. Hoe has many fellow mourners who bewall the loss of their personal lib- erty—personal Mberty—what is it? The traffic officer who restricts my creedom of locomotion at the crowded -orners is the real guarantor of the Mberty of the road. Every good law limits freedom and every good, law enlarces freedom. Where the white-pine forests are worth saving from the blight, the state denies ‘me the right to grow cur- rants and gooseberries. To protect the public health, the state may condemn my cows to slaughter. The men and women who with travail of soul achieved that legisla- tion which ts so obnoxious to Amer- jcanism of the four per cent brand, were not ambitious to impose a des- potism upon us; they sought rather to relieve us of a despotism—the despot- ism of that traffic which for genera- tons has denied us safe highways, has wasted the fruits of our fields. and has chained multitudes of our broth- ors in a debasing servitude. Five years ago we were at war in France. In the heat of midsummer, some Boy Scouts of Cranston, R. I., were sweating In a corn field, planted to raise funds for the Red Cross so- ciety. Across the road from the field there was a licensed Uquor store. . In the shade of its doorway its owner Joafed and ridiculed the boys at their work, and hailing them, tried to dis- courage their efforts. He was true to form. He was typical. He symbolizes the American Hquor trade. The essential result of its en- trenchment, the means of its perpetu- ation, was the appeal to indolence, the destruction of the ideals of youth, the blighting of boyhood. In all its departments and branches it moved toward the deterioration of our society. ‘The gilded Ufe of the metropolitan hosteiry blasted the bloom and beauty of humanity and made {ts music dis- cord as inevitably as the debauchery of the rural roadhouse. ‘The luxury of the banquet, the so- cial bowl, coarsened the fiber of the souls of men and women as as does the moonshine swilled in the roadside shack. In the balked promise of the dear companions of our early years, in the degradation of our kith and kin, in the falling from the ranks of gifted comrades and colleagues, we have had our portion of the bitter cup of slavery. And you, professors emeritti, re- gretting the lower-priced wines of other days, you “socially superior” people, you legislators who hold your place by playing up to the baser, blinder instincts of the crowd—all of you, with your four per cent Amer- {canism, are trying to replace on his reeking throne that cheap tyrant, with his belly for his God. Here is the issue—Four Per Cent Americanism, or One Hundred Per Cent Americanism. Breok tha lam, emada the law. do- = ¢ ~ WE CAN KEEP THOSE CAPITALISTIC COUNTRIES FEEDING OUR PEOPLE, WE Mo WWELL HAVE ALL 2 OuR OWN FooD \| To KEEP UP OUR GREAT ARMY ride the law—or uphold the law. Which? The Christian church {s concerned with this issue. Religion, which ts the binding of the souls of men to the soul of the universe, is law-abid- ing. A natural Trinity is consti- tuted by the affinity between nation- alism and the social consciousness and religion, These three make a three- ply cable, mooring our’ frail, wander- ing lives to stable and eternal things. The religious feeling and public spirit are kindred principles. “Fear God, love the brotherhood, honor the king"’—these imperatives ring out in @ perfect chord, like a peal of belis. The recognition of this relationship between regard for civil authority and reverence for the Divine ts very .an- cient. In the old Roman world, in spite of the many points of contrast between the empire of the Caesars and the Christian thought of the Kingdom of God, still secular seemed to the Apostles to savor of the things of God. “Submit your- selves to every ordinance of man for the Lord's sake.” ‘The powers that be are ordained of God.” “The law is ovr schoolmaster, leading us to Christ.” In holding us to our lawful obliga tion conscience says: “Hark, the Voice Bterpal.” That obligation, even because it imposes upon me personal inconvenience and discomfort, even because it forces me to substitute pub- lic interest for private interest, even because it makes me put my kind be- fore myself, is the Voice of God. For, as I accept the principle that posterity’s welfare takes precedence over present pleasure, that ideals out- rank appetites, my soul has fellow- ship with the Holy Spirit. And so lawlessness is Godlessness. Anarchy and frreligion are boon com- pantons. Evasion of law, contempt for law, is rank impiety. ‘That is why, beyond the horror which crime arouses. our souls revolt at the perversions of justice. If courts are partial, if juries are cor- rupt, If sheriffs and constables and macistrates are unfaithful to their oaths of office, we feel a sense of out- rage, as if sacred altars had been de- filed, and the unclean been admitted to the Holy Place. And when, after generations of travail, after long years of praying and pleading; by the slow, careful process provided by our fa- thers for the expression of the na- tional faith and will. Article and statute are duly framed and lished as the law of the land, jeopardize our national honor and tn- tegrity if we leave the scoffer among us unrebuked, and let the rebei go unscourged. REV. Cotton Production The finai ginning report of cotton production for 1921 fixes the amount at 7,976,665 running bales or 7,942,500 equivalent 500 pound bal ‘The 1920 production was 13,270,970 bales or 13,439,603 equivalent pound bales. : The crop was estimated by the de- partment of agriculture last Decem- ber in its final report at 8,340,000 equivalent 500 pound bales. Round bales included in the crop for 1921 were 123,791 bales, compared with 206,534 in 1920; American-Egyp- tian cotton amounted to 37,094, com- Pared with 92,561 and Sea Island cot- ton amounted to 3,316 bales, compared with 1,868. Cotton remaining to be ginned after the March canvass and which was in- cluded in the total crop was estimated at 7,435 bales, compared with 211,- 893 bales ginned after the March can- vass last year. ‘The average gross welght of cotton bales for the crop was 498.5 pounds, compared with 506.4 pounds, the aver age of the 1920 crop. This has been a season of surprises in the government estimates. The final preliminary estimate of 8,349 000 bales in December created considerable consternation in the trade because it was 1,803,000 bales larger than the total which the government estimated in September. Now comes another rather startling change, a drop of ap- proximately 400,000 in the final crop report from the last preliminary esti- mate, Evem this drop leaves a dis- 500 law! Patient, | estab-)| we! running’ to make another blunder Ike the milk ordinance was a year or two ago when some of our citizens were ar- are Sairy men delivering milk a herd that has been found tn- ed with an awful disease.” The fact is as the writer could have learned from the records the city had no milk ordinance two yearsago. The Present ordinance has been in force Just one year. complaints thelr milk“ commercially bought from each one of them was found to be adulterated. Some of the milks haa as high as 40 per cent wa- | ter added. others as high as 60 per cent of the milk fat abstracted. | The results obtained at the time these examinations were made were not guess work, but showed the ab- solute condition of the milk as sold at that time. After careful and pain- | staking analysis. These are the facts as they pertain to the arrests of milk dealers in Casper a year ago last fall. The prosecutiuus had nothing what- ever to do with a city ordinance. | Final tgnorance and trresponsibility mark the conclusion of the contribu- tors’ paragraph quoted. Tf he refers to one herd tn which a number of cattle were found infected not inoculated, with tuberculosis, dur- ing the examinations conducted last | December, I wih to state that every one of the disensed cattle were ship- ped to Cheyenne, and I personally saw them slaughtered at the packing \plant there. There ts not a tubercu- lar cow from which mfik ts being tak- ‘en to Casper today, anywhere in this locality. People have nothing to fear from use of milk offered for sale in the city, the state of Wyoming and the city of Casper see to it that the milk is pure. The contribntor referred to, possibly does not realize the seriousness of the loose statements he has made, either from the standpoint of unwarranted a’arm to consumers or his Mability for damages to honorable and law: observing dairymen. I am noticing the ludicrous and un- true statements referred to, solely, fpr the purpose of reassuring the Public that no danger exists. CYRIL R. BODENBACH, Dairy and Food Inspector. pa chal hati The Primary Law Editor Tribyne—tI noticed an ar- ticle in your paper a short time ago regarding the primary election law. Tt was the opinion of one of our ex: governors, and he said among other things, that the primary law should be repealed because not over one third of the voters used the primary to put in nomination the candidates. Also that it was expensive, costing about $2 per vote to finance the primary @ection. The article wound up with the assertion that any Tom, Dick or Uarry could get his name on the ticket and that as a result our offl- cers were not as high a class as they were when we had the open con- vention. Now I wonder if we are to judge other businesses on thé same scale; that {s if they are not used by a third or more of the people they are a fail- ure. If we are to so judge them, the farm is a failure, the banking bust- crepancy of 1,405,530 bales between the first preliminary estimete in Sep- tember and the final report, viz, 6- 537,000 and 7,942,530 bales, respec- tively. CHARLES R. MEADER i The Valve-in-Head is rec- ognized as the most powerful type of automotive engine. Its use on the powerful aeroplanes and motor boats still further emphasizes this fact. TheValve-in-Headengine is more closely associated with Nash-built cars than with any others manufactured. InperfectingtheValve-in- Head, Nash has given it even @reater power by enlarging and straightenifig the gas pas- Nash Six Prices S-passenger touringcar . . . $1390 ‘2-passenger roadster + + «+ 1360 4-passenger sport = + » 1565 T-passenger touringcar . . . 1640 @-passenger coupe . . . . . 2090 ‘T-passenger sedan . . 2 « . 2390 All Nash models, both open and closed, highest class of bunk. It is my opin- wh Ut We ave the best repreventa- uve im the congress and senate of the United States that it is possible to vt unuer @ay system. I also believe that our county and state officers are close touch with: the know what they want. Nebraska has a primary law something Ike the Wyoming law and there they hold a convention before the primary elec won and endorse the candidates tha: they think are best fitted for the par dcular office to which they. aspire. his does not prevent any one from saving his name on the ticket, but .ne men endorsed at the convention are nearly sure of election. M. A. HENRY, Warren, Wyo. Some Things I Love There are some things I lové, and these \re visioned now by memory dear— vho longingly in fancy sees Sweet bygone joys—oft in dreams seem near. I long to feel the soft, salt breeze Gently wafted from off the sound, And the cooling shade of the great oak trees, Far away in my dear coast town. Would I could hear the mocking birds’ songs, Lilting, and happy and gay— Ah me—tc the south—that sweet musio belongs— (To my dear coast town far away. | Here about the mountains in grandeur rise, Half Veiled by a soft blue haze— Crime nd golden are these sunsets skies, And rau.anuly brilliant those autumn days. God made them allJ—the mountains. the coast— Rare beauty in each is found— [t is not quite kind of our,own to boast town. Yes, there are somethings I love, and these Make me long for the south each day The mocking birds’ songs, the soft salt breeze— In my dear coast town far away. —8 G. D. For Cold on the Chest Musterole is easy to does not blister like the mustard plaster, old fashiooed Here is perfection of the Valve-in-Head sages from carburetor to cyl- inders and providing a higher valve lift. «Greater Endurance is achieved through uniform hardhessofcylinder walls. The ‘Nash organization mixes its own metals in itsown foundry, by itsown process—and every mixture is accurately tested. $1390 never before pur- chased a car at once so power- ful,socomfortableandsobeau- tiful. See it and drive it today. Nash Leads the World in Motor Car Value a eae ie ear f. 0. 6. Milwaukee have cord tires as standard equipment NASH SIX Nash-Casper Motor Co. Second and Kimball Streets Phone 1125-J