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a @ oe a ir at re sroans Perr TOPE NETHNTOreTL TT SEDRRP RENE HT ORETeS ee ETENES ETOREE RATES), esa UsnoRnegowoOoraQnoE” re ONT LOCNUAOETRRIL IR OTEELE EST D CHIMES ENC eHeN TORT TSEC REIT ERS 20 c- was a ce te ae & NUD ERED RORIOREETH Pp eeaSmErEE F”TET a RATERS EeeETy PAGE SIX fhe Casper Daily Cribune Issued every rvening except Sunday at SUSINESS TELEPHONES .........---.--- Branch Telephone Exchange Ttered at Casper (Wyoming), Postoffice as second class matter, November 22, 1916. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Eaftor City Editor Advertising Representatives. Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bldg. UL; 286 Fitth avenue, New York City; Globe Bidg-; tor Ss. the New York, Chicago and Boston offices and visitors/ be enforced. are weicome. — SUBSCRIPTION RATES Br One Year ... Six Months; a Three Months %8 One Month 4 Per Copy - rg 30 One Year ..... “4 Six Months ~—— iss y Tribune will not insure tion becomes one month in arrears. Member of Audit Burean of Circulation (A. B. ©) Member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to the use for publication of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Kiek ff You Don't Get Your Tribune. Call 15 or 16 any time between 6:30 and § o'clock p. m. if you fail to recetve your Tribune. A paper will be de- livered to you by specia! messenger. Make !t your duty to Jet The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. ie aa John Hay for Governor ‘ON. JOHN W. HAY of Rock Springs, has made formal announcement of his candidacy for nom- ination for Governor of Wyoming in the August pri- maries. No bit of news is more welcome to the Re- publican party and the people of Wyoming than this. | With due respect to any and all other candidates who may appear Joan Hay best answers the require- ments of the times. He is a thorough business man, through long experience. Thoroughly fa- miliar with the conduct of large affairs. Wide awake to the necessities of the internal concerns of the state. With the ability to carry to a successful issue his pledges to the people, for a conservative business ad- ministration of their affairs and a material reduction of taxation. From some persons such pledges would be empty. From John Hay they depend only upon placing him in the governor’s chair. No legislature can resist bis insistence upon a square deal to the people. John Hay has a wealth of old fashioned notions about economy that the people of this state will endorse. He has ideas about the organization of a state government for efficiency and co-operation that. the people will approve. For it is to these things that we are fast coming both in our public and pri- vate affairs if we would survive and remain in business. John Hay needs no introduction to the people of Wyoming. He has lived among them for forty years. Since he was a stripling of a boy whe had come west to make his fortune. He made that fortune and he made it himself. It wes by sheer ability and honor- able dealing. It was by industry, frugality and in- telligent management. And in the long record of forty years in Wyoming there is no black mark to mar the fair page. No scandal, public or private, clings to his skirts. No friend has ever been called upon to apologize for any act or transaction in which Jobn Hay was concerned. If nominated and elected, and we have no doubt both will occur, the people of Wyoming may take hope, that some of the cherished ambitions they have had in their hearts for years will be realized through the administration of John Ha: Memorial to Grant N APRIL 27, the one hundredth anniversary of the birth of Ulysses S. Grant, Civil war hero, and eighteenth president of the United States will occur. Qn that day a magnificent equestrian statue of Gen- eral Grant surrounded by artillery groupings said to be the finest examples of their kind the world has ever produced, will be dedicated. At the last annual encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic the subjoined resolutions were adopted: “That the national government be requested to teke papropriate action for the observance of the an- niversary, and the Congress of the United States take such measures as may be necessary to assure the dedication of the Grant memorial at Washing- ton on the 27th of April next. This action on the part of Congress we deem of first importance. “That the state legislatures, governors of the several states and municipal officers be urged to take suitable action to bring to the x‘tention of the pecple the great lesson taught by Grant’s stead‘as+ adherence to his 's cause in the time of sever- est trial, and that all institutions of learning through- out the land be invited to celebrate the notable event so that the deep embodiment of General Grant’s life. service and character in the thought and conscience of his contemporaries may be fastened with trans- forming power upon the minds of the youth of the present generation. “* * * That patriotic exer- cises be held on that day in the schools and churches of the land, that the memorable occasion may not pass without leaving deep and abiding impressions vpon the hearts of the young, and strengthen the faith of those that believe in the God of our fathers and in the priceless boon of civil and religious liberty.” Agreeable to the resolution the dedication cere- monies will be under the auspices of the United States government. Secretary Weeks will present the mem- orial on the-part of the government and Vice Presi- dent Coolidge will accept it on behalf of the people. Many other dignitaries will take part in the cere- monies. era Results in Enforcement {NOMMISSIONER HAYNES says “if we were to col- lect the fines, penalties and special taxes imposed upon violators of the law in the first six mouths of) this administration they would pay more than two and one-half times the estimated cost of enforcing the prohibition law for the next year. These enor- mous figures do not include nearly $3,000,000 in bonds that are being forfeited to the government. $6,000,000 in differential or prohibitive taxes, or $2,000,000 that have been offered in compromise by 21 of the large violators of the law.” “Inasmuch as the appropriation for the enforcement of the prohi- bition amendment for the next year is $10,000,000, | Mr. Haynes’ statement indicates that the fines and penalties already imposed upon violators of the pro- hibition act reached the sum of $25,000.000. He also sets forth the fact that before the pro- hibition amendment went into effect there were. 130,- Casper, Natrona} States every year. In 1920. the “guxty, Wye. Publication Offices, Tribune Building. | hibition amendment was in effect, is ana 16| Whiskey reached 12,500,000 gallons. President and Maltor| purposes; in other words, one-half Business Manager ‘Advertsing Manager|in the United States and less than 35,000 hold per- Bos: | di Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in/ persistent cry that the law is unpopular and cannot SATURDAY, APRIL 22, 1922. “Woodrow Wilson as [ €be Casper Daily Cribune BUT THEY’D BE SO CUTE TO HAVE AROUND ————$—— —_—_—_ Accident Record 1921. 000,000 gailons of whiskey consumed in the IF WE HAVE ANYTHING AT ALL IT SHOULD BE A WATCH DoG- scripition of liquor by physicians is ice as is generally believed. He shows that in 24 states out of 48 Prohibited the prescripition of i States is “medically dry.” Stated there are approximately 150,000 mits to prescribe liquor for medical purposes. Among the most subtle and desperate ed against the Eighteenth Amendment is the hibition act for the next year, leads Haynes to state “that the real forces of Americanism are lined upon the side of the law and enforcement. The enfranchisement of women is proving a deci- sive factor in behalf of enforeement. With the pass age of the Nineteenth Amendment the women of the al it really wasn't him—but USt— Tumulty! —A. G. RIGBY. Violets April again and violets at the docs, Azure and white there smiling by the well, "Like clustered sapphires set with shin ing pearis. Exquisite, sweet and small of political life a force that can always be relied upon to exert itself on the right side of every moral or social question. Beyond the peradventure of a doubt. the women of this country can be depnded upon, cither at the polls or in the jury box, to cast their vote for rigid enforcement, Cultivate Patience ‘A NEW YORK PAPER which is opposed to every- +4 thing Republican says with regard to the tariff bill recently reported fo the Senate: “A scrutiny of the entire national and international situation’ in its economic aspects must convince non-partisan men that this is not the time for any new turiff For over six months that same paper has been harp- ing on the fact that Congress ought to dispose of the! tariff in one way or another so that business men would know their status. To paraphrase Lincoln’ ‘well known maxim: You can please all of the world part of the time, and part of the world all the time. but you can’t please all the world all the time. So what the Republican majority in Congress will at- tempt to do is to please the protectionist majority in the United States. That’s enough. Why Men Go Wrong aby \ GOOD DEAL of: time is being spent,” suggests| ham, fam: the New York Herald, “by such eminent bodies; as the Law Enforcement Committee of the American! Bar Association, by newspapers and tf: social workers in an effort to find out why men go wrong and be- come habitual criminals. “Six prisoners in Joliet penitentiary have been asked what led them astray. One of them said ex- pense of entertaining va “Another put the blame on failure to keep first offenders away from hardened criminals in county jails. was as com: pared with 4,329 in 1920, a reduction of over 28 per cent. April again and violets up above— The blue expanse, the cloud lke driven snow. Sky flowers that seem a perfect coun ‘ terpart places which were not due} Of those that bloom below. operation of trains. The num- April again; the blossoms {ill my 63, and in 1921, 409, a re hands, Theso violets of the earth and of “The only class of persons the fatal the skies, which showed an in-|And yet witha! I walk unsatisfied, ‘The number| Missing your violet eyes. of these persons killed in 1920 was*2,-|" —ELIABETH SCOLLARD. . * . e 166, while in 1921 it was 2,481, an in- Crime Traits in Animals |creaso of 14% per cent. “The commission's statistics of acci- tion to the mental and moral traits ety total of alt Made Her oman of animals. One of \Dr. Hornaday’s|i1 939" of these, 4,534 were employes pound dents for the last 15 years refiect an Increase in the safety of railway oper- astonishing concessions is that crime pls Mos Carter’s Tenn. — ‘Three exists among them, particularly when |22%, ®° = bad ge 1 was cast as aval? How answer his brute question in Tribute to Edwin Mar! How will it be with kingdoms and with kings— ‘With those who shaped him to the NY thing he is— ‘When this dumb Terror shall reply to each member of the Bockfeliowas, to be read at the banquet at which the poet will be present in person. The tribute of EK. Richard Shipp this city follows: TO EDWIN MARKHAM. Hoe in hand in the Garten of Thought— “Prohibition enforcement officers who do not make} Turning the Weeds under, saving} ;,_ jt impossible for him to get whisky were blamed by! each efea ope any: ng aberd Behe Bloan— oe ae ‘vor Seventy Years thy Soul has| °*® ‘© it that more of the articles in “A college graduate. who after the war had “a sought : : ‘ queer kink” in his mind, thought he could ‘beat the} 79, cep Man's lead amd Brighten! wnen I say “My California” I do game.” This convict volunteered the observation! 45.1 23, 1923 not mean that I own California. That “they teach you things in war they won't let you 4 is, not all of it. I own some of it, but practice later.’ z pail ae ap on Yip eae “These excuses are familiar. The flapper of to- forever. day is Mother Eve of Father Adam’s day. Selection al Mette Fe vecm nae: of a place in which to incarcerate a first offender pre- he wae x poor (proriet. bs « sents a difficult problem. Putting him among the But I love California as only a “Na- virtuous may corrupt them; to determine just how tive Son” of New Hampshire can loye bardened his associates may be without harm being} it I love its lakes and rilis, its done to anybody would stump Solomon. A man who mountains and hills. But best of all blames lax enforcement of prohibition laws for his I love its soil. These lots I own in plight wouldn’t fare well under a system that allowed ‘Los Angeles—I have an attachment drink. Neither a college graduate nor a non-college for these lots I shali never lose. That graduate can ‘beat the game.’ An honest soldier, is, At Jooks now as i¢ I never should. learns nothing in the army that handicaps him in civil 1 just petieat: Se see life.. Beane ‘rent, “ “The fact is these convicts, like most other per- ant Gotistesnerhe cae fe $0. some. sons, avoid the central factors in the production of bungalow, on my own little ranch, professional criminals, Those factors are greed and and there with my own little home Jaziness. Men turn criminals because they want to ‘brewery, in the golden sunlight end live as they mistakenly fancy millionaires live without eilvery moonlight, to dream the happy doing the hard work millionaires do to gather and ‘hours away, secing visions of other keep their fortunes. They are greedy for what they @ays and other places. And where can conceive to be the good things of life, but they are you find more to recall such visions too lazy to work hard enough to earn those good than on a California ranch? day things. They convince themselves there is a short ‘You rise in the morning to the music cut to ease and comfort; that they can atrike across lots and grab the pile some industrious man hes ae- of a Connecticut *larm clock You put on Munsing underwear, made in cumulated by hard labor and live hapoiiz on it ever after.” Dr. William T, Hornadey, director of the New York Zoological park, has just completed the task of drawing to- gether his observations of God, After the silence of the centuries? EDWIN MARKHAM. My Califomia At yesterday's meeting of the Cas- per realtors, P. A. Burna presented ‘My Californin" which follows with ation in the United States which prob- public. He has given special atten- they are placed in captivity. He is convinced, however, that they are criminal than men. There ji is one of the chapter headings of Dr.|1907, but the number of employes and Hornaday’s new book, soon to be pub-|passenge-s killed was almost exactly Ushed by Scribners under the title of|¢¢ per cent less than in 1907. ithe Minds and Manners of Wild Ani-| wpnere mals.” For the last 20 years D: umber of trespassers duction in the ni of Hornaday has been answering ques and other classes of persons killed. tons about wild animals and their|\ntomobile accidents have seriously ways. Ho has been written to and|interterred with efforts to reduce the called by telephone from all over the| number of people killed at highway country by persons who wanted tol crossings. know which wild animal he consid- ered the most intelligent, or if it is true that apes can walk as the Tarzan books. about 1907, Partly in self-defense and chiefly be- pe ntlng kiNed cause he knew he had something to| wren it tel! out of the observations of 40 years.|tar number Dr. Hornaday wrote the answers to all the questions that enter the minds of visitors to the zoo, and more be- sides, and put them in ‘‘The Minds and Manners of Wild Animals.” On the subject of jungie crime, Dr. Hornaday makes it plain that about the only felony to which beasts are ad-|-which dicted is murder. There isn't much banditry in the jungle. The principle, “what's yours is yours and what's mine is mine” is~pretty strictly x hered to. A monkey, for instance, if he has picked a couple of particularly large and fine bananas, doesn’t show) them to every monkey he meets. He stows them in his elastic cheek/| first’ pouches, and keeps them there until/jority of he ts ready to eat. due to man failures AI the emotions of wild animals are| Diant failures.” revealed more sharnly in captivity. Dr. says. The crime producing emotions, jealousy, hatred, desire for revenge, lust for innocent blood, are all fattened by prolonged contact with men. As a cléar case of animal mur- der he tells the story of Lopez, a jaguar at the zoo, and the female which was obtained as a companion for him. Lopez caressed her through the bars for two days before she was admitted to his cage. As soon as she entered he bit through her neck and kiNed her. As for language among animals Dr. Hornaday says they have learned that silence promotes peace and long life. During all the time he spent in the jungles of southern India, with the ex- ception of constant swearing on the part of big black monkeys, he could count on his fingers the number of times he heard animals raise their voices to communicate with one an- other. ‘That they can and do communicate, ‘Dr. Hornaday believes there is no ques- tion. For the most part it is a sign language, but there are a few sounds used and understood by the apes. The ‘sloth bear, when he warns an enemy, says, “Ash! Ach!” and grizzly, “Woof?” E. Richard Shipp, Booktellow 2156 THE MAN WITH THE HOE Written after seeing the painting by Millet. : God made man in His own image, in the image of God made He him— Genesis. Bowed by the weight of centuries be leans Upon his ground, The emptiness of ages in his face, And on his back the burden of the world. Who made him dead to raptore and despair, A thing that grieves not and that never hopes, Stolid and stunned, a brother to the ox? ‘Who loosened and let down this brutal jaw? ‘Whose was the hand that slanted back this brow? ‘Whose breath blew out the light with- hoe and gazes on the Up-to-date maps of Salt Creek Field. Public Stenographer, hitch your Boston gar- Balcony, Hotel Henning ters to your Parts socks, button your ; | Baltimore onto your De- troit overalls, pat on your Lynn, Mase, shoes, and your Danbury, Conn, hat and you are up for the Come On In oH fyaketes TO COMPETE with U. S. in Foreign Markets,” says a headline. Come on in, the water's fine! We have no fear of Canada in Foreign markets. Glad that she has no fear of us. The more business she can secure in those markets, the less she| will complain because our protective tariff restricts her sales in our domestic market, particularly of wheat. In 1900 Canada exported $177,000,000 worth of goods. In 1920 they totaled $1,286.000,000 in value. This is a seven-fold increase in 20 years. From 1910 to 1913, inclusive. under the Payne-Aldrich protective | tariff law, our imports from Canada averaged $106,- 060,000 annually. From 1919 to 1922, inclusive, our| wnat gulf between him anf the serar imports from Canada show an annual ayerage of phim! $464,000,000. That was under the Democratic tariff| Stave of the wheel of labor, what to} |law. We took $336,000,000 worth of goods from him Canada last year, “although largely on account of the| Are Plato and the swing of Pleiades? Emergency Tariff this rae Pe OU nou pS less than ayes ee long reaches of the peaks Canada’s sales to the United States in the previous year.” says Canadian trade commissioner | Frederie ia oN od ar Mia Hudd. So evidently the Emergency Tariff law served a purpose, despite the assertions of Senator Pat Har-\" "WS aces yom he NO SOR rison and other Democrats that it was a gold brick/rime's tragedy i# in that aching to the farmers. And wheat has gone up in price, stoop; while bread that sold for 10 cents a loaf, and even| Through this dread shepe bumentty | Toor 12, before the Emergency law took effect, is now. betrayed, 3 selling for 6 cents, and in some eases for 5 cents. /|Ptundered, profaged, and distaher- Americans regard Ganadians as first cousins and ited, dike to wee them sncceed.” ence ; when it comesito wp-| Tees, Satan Tern see restricted competition in the home market—well, a man has to look after his own family first. A. Dantent, See {seine Spee ye: = O masters, lords, and rulers in all em In the handiwerk you give to Goa, ‘This monstrous thing distorted end 2 day. You sit down to your Grend Rapids table and eat your Hawalien pine- apple, your Quaker cats and Aunt Jemima flapjacks, swimming in New Orleans molasses. Then you go out and put your Con- cord, N. HL, harness onto your Mis- gsouri mule, hitch onto your Moline, IM. plow and plow up e@ couple of More filled with signs ané portenta | @cres of land covered with Ohio mort- for the soul— More fraught with menace to the uni- verre. At noon you dine on Cincinnati ham then at night you fill up your of Detrott’ a kr Y* with Mexican gaso- York gtri dance the Memphis shimmy to the music of # New Orleans jazz F [ ‘HE new organization building the good Max- well fully realizes that the future of this car rests en- tirely on the continued high regard of its owners. And then upon returning home you more talkative, Dr. Horna/ay declares. Domestic chickens, he points out, have 8 vocabulary which they use constantly while fowl have not. ‘The barnyard warning to beware the hawk is “Coor! Coro!” Murder! Help! is ‘‘Kee-Owk! KeeOwk? Come on is /“Ctuck! Cluck?’ Food is here is “Cook- cook-cook-cook!" Alarm is made known pri by “Cut-cut-cut-dahcut™ — character in-| Dr. Hornaday finds that the antmal stantly recognized and invariably| whose mind most closely does count big in the way of sales. | that of man is the chimpanzee Next And ky plays an tmportent|in order comes the orang, with the In- part in Building insofar #s|dian elephant, the domestic dog and are yet the| the horse prattically abrhast. € should not be Some of the chapier headings in the by an insufficient amount of space in! book are: The Morals of Wild Ani- which to properly display what you| mals, Fighting Among Wild Animals, have to say. The Language of Animals, The Bright- ‘White space of itself probably lends|est Mindr Among Animals, The Men- more to character in advertising than|tal and Moral Traits of Bears, The any one factor—it will help you sell| Mind of the Elephant, Plays and Pas- more goods, : times of Wild Animals. | Invisible Balances TT IS REPORTED from New York that 15,000 people | have thus farbooked passage for to see the Passion Play at Oberammergau. A man who can afford to take a trip of that sort can afford to epend| “™ rill you ever etreishten up thix at least $1,000 while in Europe. and he probably will.|rouch ‘ again with immortaltty; So here is $15,000.000 of so-called invisible balance|Gtve nae the upward looking’ and C. E. KENNEDY Corner Second and Park Streets Phone 1419-W MA spent in Europe, Of Iste it would seem as if most of the Europeans who -visit here come to panhandle for funds for their suffering countrymen, and those|q mast: lords, [funds also might be added to the invisible balance.|° "ienas”” ae a ee Americans are helping Europe all right. and it is How will the Future reckon with this’ not necessary to throw free trade into the alms box. Men? "The Good XW ELL