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PAGE TWO €he Casper Daily Cribunce Issued every evening except Sunday at Casper, Natron® County, Wyo. Publication Offices, Tribuns Bullding- BUSINESS TELEPHONES .. -. 15 and 1* Branct: Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments: Entered at Cas i= MEMBER TH. (¥yoming), Postoffice as second class tter, November 22, 1916, ASSOCIATED PRESS Prndden, King & Prudden, 1 UL; 286 Fifth ave tom, Mass. the New -, Chicago, y; Globe Bidg.; Bos- are on file in hicago and Boston offices and visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION KATES By Carrier One Year ,... . Stx Months Three Mo One Month ... Per . One Ye Mc i) acce id in advance and. the tions must be t delivery after subscrip- not insure 2 errears. Audit Bureau of Circalaion (A. B. C) Member of | | the Associated Press. j 3 is exclusively entitled to the all news credited in this paper and/ blished herein. Member of . ted P: kx if You Don’t Get Your Tribune: y time between 6:30 and #.0'clock p. m. ve your Tribune. A paper will be de special messenger. Make it your duty to) when your carrier misses you. Se fie They Ask for Bread AND HARASSED as we have been with * for contributions. Drained as we have our financial resources for worthy and un- projects in the past several years. Solemnly! have sworn that not another cent would we y purpose. Our resolves are yain and our meaningless when little children heir hands and ask for bread—only bread. not our own but they have been brought] by their suffering and helpless plight are the orphans of a Christian people who pray he same God we call upon inour distress. They ve fought the good fight and kept the faith, al- though ave been overwhelmed by the hordes of ur belie Poor distressed Armenia. The language is inade- quate to convey to the understanding the plight of the children of this people. Injmeeting and solving difficulties the nations of the world have largely forgotten the Armenian children. Their cries re-echoed upon the shores of America and with sal has gone succor. The cry now for The one -thing with which the s blessed us in abundance. Whatever ion. Whatever may be our needs. little children, anywhere upon earth, | we have. | effor ll be made tomorrow to gather to- gether the price of a few carloads of flour—Wyoming] fiour—Helivered at-cost—to relieve the hunger of the poor help] ving children of Armenian parents troyed through race hatred and —r nd and religious intolerance. . Armenian children crying for bread are’ as our own. The miles of distance that intervene do not exist e Christian people of Casper respond to the], ery and to the teachings of the Master? Unpaved Streets ties THE MOISTURE ‘from the late snowfall +? has been eyaporated from the unpaved area of the i city street department can, with great profit contribute to the comfort of citizens who nicles over these streets, by grading, drag- ging and otherwise smoothing them into travelable condition so that when they are thoroughly dry and t will be sufficiently crowned in the center subsequent: rains that may occur. ntion at this partieular time will place eets in proper shape for present use > mean expensive repairs. work at this time can be done at no great ic necessity. and.the city should ide the trivial affairs that have tion of council for so many recent something for the public good. ee ee A Fundamental Error by. theorists, of which we have y in the world, that “in a funda- is to the interest of the employee to ries owned and operated by the col- at he can get the full value of his labor.” iy too mental way have the ind y plausible, the proposition. very tak-| ally, but only in theory. If. workers e industries, they could, in theory save. tc ves the profits that now go io the individual But there are several very stubborn reasons interests-af the dominant faction. There would would be no likelihood that managers so €be Casper Daily Cribune Prohibition In Sagéland MONDAY, MAY 15, 1922. Leaders of the Lord's day alliance decline to recogn're the legality of the plebescite and the outeome of the selected efficient im securing results and promoting the| wr o'Donoghue tance ‘success of thesenterprise as managers selectéd by men See as See whose profitsedepend absolutely on the success of the! many interesting articles to The Tri- bussiness. }bune. His matter is always entertain- Collective ownership would not be a safeguard|ing, although you may not exactly inst corruption as demonstrated.in numerous cages Séree with him, Im the here co-operative enterprises have been undertaken. "ticle he takes the opposite sids ere, again, where everybody's business is nobody's Prugihem While @o not endorse brAjiness, theresis the greatest opportunity for malad- 50, “Goo, Seige are Fee mirtistration. } Cyliectivism cannot eliminate the profit on ia, | unledi it is proposed.to confiscate property and start "Donoghue. the pi Bed iy anew with the savings which others! sailitaasiceern tes naa have accumulated. If the property now owned by/.¢ dapper little . the sweet individQals is to be purchased, there must be an inter-| trish singer, and spofled darling of the est chargre on the- capital. necessary for the purchase, | London ladies, who, among his sacred and, the-jinterest charge would be approximately the|—snd some far from sacred—songs same as {the profits of invested capital under the) wrote, “Sound the Loud Timbre! Over present sytem. If it is proposed to confiscate the | Exrnt’ Dark Sea. plants now operated, there is no hope to be held out} to the collective owners, for if property can be taken from those q\/ho own it now. it can be taken later from the new collattive owners by some other group. Once the principle of confiscation is admitted as sound,| there is no sit to its application. If workers can Prohibition hag triumphea— How holy are we! Something like the foregving, we they can later canfiscate the famms from which they |the pious sisters, would be heard ris. get their food, ard farmers, if they have the power,|'™s Mm choral grandeur throughout the & i ba f ie f confiscate the fiycetories in which they get their wages,| were assured by the holy brothers and |° matter is in doubt. Law Oppose VICTORIA, B. C., May 15-—In a \plebescite last week Victoria yoters rejected by an overwhelming majori- ty @ proposal of the Yictorla police commission ‘or rigid enforcement of lthe Lort’s. day. act. The plebescite | was ordered after storekeepers bad re- fused to. obey am omer hy the police commission for Sunday _ closing. of providing against later and} clothes. An endl&s round of confiscation means anarchy and rapid descent # barbarism. Human progress has beew made through recogni- tion of the right of lift, libgrty and property. Denial of these rights, either 4n tke name of collectivism or se, will marks the, beginning of the end of civil- —~o Dynaytic Control “TVING GEORGE and @lueen Mary of Great Britain have gone to Belgitm for a ceremonial visit to the battlefields.” notes tiie Chicago Tribune. “This, according to report, is to fe an occasion for improving the British position in Belgium. which is supposed. to be wavering away from the: British and towards the French as her two allies ddvelop differences in desires and policies. “The British king and qijeen may be able to exert a royal influence to pis! eract French diplomacy. This is dangerous stratagem .and full of trouble. The dynastic control of Européan affairs based upon palace intrigue and royal family maneuvering*has cost the people of Europe dearly atid it has-cost the United States a great deal. “The United States was ponsible forthe over- throw of monarchy in central{\Surope. Tis republic had an instinct which told its that the -monarchical i tution in Europe was dangewous to it. ‘The danger might not always be apparent, gbut it would, exist. “The peril which brought theyMorroe Noctrine, the American experiences with’ Napdleon IIT. and Maxi- milian of Austria in Mexico, the threats ea Hohen- zollerns against Haiti, were justification the dir- trust the republic has of dynastictideas aréi methods. Their differences are notsmerely political- secial and essential. “Great Britain would ‘not have overthrewn mon- archy in Germany. The kaiser would tive been de- posed and the crown prince might not have béen permitted te succeed him, but the Br®ish would have permitted the monarchy ;to exist. Th made the overthrow of it a point sof moral for the German geople anti the Ges r substantially the ‘creation of the 4mrrican people. The American instinct was sound in this. It was an effective war move. The .American republic. avoids trouble with central Europe democratized. If it had been democratized fifty yearseago the war:might have deen avoided. .« “The evils of intriguing, secret diplomady, with cret treaties and secret understandings, are not vreater than the evils which.can arise outgof dynastic manipulation of international relations. Republics fear that instinctively. “Royal families produced the two groupings of nations which caused the war. They: arranged the balance of power which unbalanced the, world. The safety of the world is away from the spalace manipu- lation of diplomacy and away from dynastic. control. The great kings of Europe have passwd away and Republican security lies.in. the permanence of Demo- cratic readjustments. The king in the»council cham: | ber is dangerous.” - | Found Work—And W orked j IN HENRY P. DAVISON went to New York to look for work at the age of nineteen, he failed to find a job in all that big city. It-was work that he was looking for and if New York did not desire lis services, he did not become discouraged. He jer- | severed in his quest and finally:found a job-at Bridge- | port, Connecticut, as a bank messenger. It was in | 1886 that he first went to the center of American industry and finance, and from that moment until | the day of hs death he never-ceased to look for work. | Tt was the keynote of his life. | . From the first meagre start"he never failed te find work in plenty, and it is the record of his life that he did it well. So well in fact that after a time the work came seeking him. The record Mr. Davison, left in business, finance and public works is a lesson for American youth te contemplate. He was honest. but integrity alone will jnot win success, He was ambitious, but ambition alone will not lead’ to achievement. They are Amer Republics and monarchies are neessary ropponents. can confiscate the Sactories from which they get their|'#2¢ with the advent of prohibition. Nominally and actually we were to jbe transformed into » nation of latter jday saints, Yea, verily, indeed. |. The new Jerusalem was to be esta lished. All crime would cease, Mur jder wold be unknown, save, perhaps, |when some of us half-educated news. |paper men start] on Webster's En- |glish. The gunman’s gun. if it emoked | at all, would smoke only as some kind of new-fangled peace-pipe. The burs- lar’s. tools weuld be as relics of the stone age. Theft—why even the love- sick swain, in his early twenties, Would not steal a kiss, no matter how \swent the. temptation. | Even such inveterate transgressors ‘as the drinking fish and the gambol- jing lamb would cease their wicked Prisons and insane asylums be as much out of date as the | feudal casties of Europe are today. In fact, such gn era of wholesale | holiness would be ushered into being that even the most hardened old sin- ner of ys would be seen of a Sabbath, \trudging meekly to church, where we would be led in prayer and hymn sing- ing by a sweet young lady of—forty- | four. | But levity aside, let us get down to the facts. Beginning right at home, what do we find? In a certain, not very thickly settled cotmtry in this state—in fact right here in the Horn basin—sixteen homicides several serious accidents, the majority sail to be directly or indirect!y trace- able to moonshine, is the record of the year of more or hss grace, 1921. ‘This far exceeds anything recorded of the region in the old days, while the country was still wild, wooly and “wot” even in proportion to popula- tion at the different periods. Thus, with the passing of the sa- joon, we find ourselves the, beneficiar- s of these twin blessings—the pro- of son a the “jim-jam’ jaice he can unscrupulous | th cate and artistic work and {ts inward . |Parts, strawberries. | “There is no record of the dis- ceyerer of the .sponge cake device that came into fashion im Iater years syn from a large proportion of the |@nd crowded the real strawberry short- public. 4 no inconsiderable. number |cake out of the scheme of American of us were always anti-prohibitionist; Cookery. But we all know how it came others indifferent; while not = few /about. It came one busy day when an have reached the conclusion that en-|4merican housewife was not looking forcement is hopeless. And while it/for company, and company came. may be pleasing from a rhetorical) came when the house wes all point of wiew to descant on “the au-|cluttered up, and ft was near dinner ties of citizenship. regatdiess of - time, and there was nothing at hand ft is an _adameatine | the way of dessert except. some left- fact that no law can be ¥en: adequatel. forced that ts distasteful to a big per. politice—religious tyranny in the form |Over sponge ¢ake—and strawherries. We know that's the way it happened in. the beginning, but we don't know As a labor-saving device we have of prohibition prevatis, so long wil! the |rO Toubs that the sponge cake straw- illicit fiquor traffic continue. Prohibition means moonshine. Ekhora Ranch, Wyo. -_——_——>-. Red Candles A cloudy curtain dark with rain Across. the sun was drawn When Spring in smock of filmy ef 1 ingly... ‘It's just. the sume as the old- Came tripping o'er the lawn. She bore a basket full of plants And blossoms. sweet and gay- “It’s almost twilight eried, ‘I cannot see to set here,” she eo &.| ‘The gamdencr placed his tulips, tall 1 in this'country prior adyent of prohibition. _ However, would be as unfair to lay all crime and mishap at the door of prohibition, as was formally the way of the holy {brothers and the. piqus sisters to im- ‘pute all evils to the-demon rum. But if there be any moral\improyement, or abatement in crime im this neck of the sagebrush, as a result of the “dry” regime, the foregoing certainly would not. indicate it, | . Stripped of verbrage, so far as this region is.concerned, prohibition is a failure. To say it is « farce, would be hardly. correct, since the spasmodic efforts at its enforcement are so often accompanied. by a tragedy... Nor has it tended to the regeneration of those who were confirmed topers prior to the subjection of the state to religious *omination. The vile quality of much of the conshine seems little deterrent to the man with a chronic thirst. Neith- er is the exhorbitant price. The same old votaries of Bacchus, now get soak- ed.on moonshine, just as they did on —let us say “sunshine”—only at four ‘or five times the cost. To put it in | brutal facts and figures, in the days jof the saloon they got drunk at the rate of $5.00 a gallon; now they get drunk at the rate of $5.00 a quart. Some of a more economical turn of mind, try to offset this bythe produc- tion of certain home-made beverages. Butas to the physical cost of this, figures cannot determine. Riding oyer the range, some time ago, I spent a night at a sheep camp, with an old herder whom I had known some years After supper, the old fellow, who is the soul of kindness, brought forth a jug containing some kind of teverage, which he sald he |“made himself”. Although almost a He: may have had/| total abstainer for nearly a decade, ) Red, candies in a row. Minna Irving. Ss Eg eens ‘Trade unions in. Persia have a mem- bership of. 20,000, re one: fifth of all the industrial workers in. that. country, chore ais sak ¢,4F¢ only married Seg an be Be bts weddiog goren. There were music tobe selected and cards to be sent. Each moment was crowded with anticipa- tions. Oh, if I could have only, known then the dark cloud that over ness! At fast the gloriqus day of rived. into glowing A Dy I Will Remember Forever berry shortcake has its advantazes. Otherwise there would be mo excuse for the sponge cake counterfeit. And American bosbands have found labor. ‘saving. devices handy arrangements tr be \ yeith arches, ercgi Bob Sipertait ja ob wi yyou st day of my I planned for, that ha; and sromity, fobtiel the shines ving tos at my Lo" The excitement fanned ing and T thril happiest day of my The Pi: the scheme of domestic economy. “And then, the ‘biscuit’ shorteake The little baking powder biscuit t! \a put down in a sauce dish and bo strawberries sprinkled about !t, spo» t we are 80 soleranly, informed. ‘but the biscuits are '. But. we are not to be deceived. The biscuits are smaller we are willing to admit, and as to th composition we pass no expert opinion. But they are also dry and uninterest ‘ing as compared with tho old-fashioned substance that formerly was the founation, framework and corner- stone of the shortcake that came down to us with the flag and Constitution und free schools and the homestead act. ( “If this be treason, let the modern strawberry shortcake advocates make the most of ft.” —— Jewelry an@ watcn repatring dy ex pert workmen. All work guarantee? Casper Jewelry aifg. Co. 0.8 Bidz. _National ali forni Los Angeles, San Diego San Francisco Aadijlonal Cost saat ang vee Sale dates: To California, May 15. to September 30. To other points June 1 to September 30. Return limit October 31, 1922. Stop oyérs in both directions. Fred Harvey meals ‘‘all the way.” Ask for ia Picture Book,’* ‘Grand. Canyon. a" SOM the: Bester Path,’ “Petrified Forest’* and Summer Way.” J. P. Hall, Div. Passenger Agent A. T. & S. F. Railway Co. 303 U, 8. National Bank Bldg. Denver, Colo. I Buy a Book of Etiquette After the weddi At homer wanted a knows. I , ne: er of, ywers to, be almost every day! after reading only five pages, I discovered that I actually did not know how to introduce people correct- iy} I didn’t know whether to say; Mrs. rom, allaw ime to. present Miss Smuith;. or Miss, Smith, allow me to present. Mrs. Beets dst, aw whether to say, oy, this is Mr. Blank ; or Mr. Blank, ihis is Bobby, I didn’t know whether it were proper for me to shake hands with a gentle- man upon being introduced to him, and whether it were Proper for me to my happi- it I Crie Ceremon there were cards of thanks b to be sent. The wedding brealéfast had to be arranged aid our honey~ moon trip planned. I determined to avoid any blunders, and so I sent for the famous iquette.” al \ hina, and I Ss Dri being cultured and well-bred... We bad always believed that we followed the conventions of society, to the highest letter ofits law, But, oh, the serious breaches of etiquette we were mak- Lt a stand or.remain seated. .t prevent a suceessful and smooth operation in| friends who could have helped him get an unusually tice. good start, but if he had he evidently made no call be no ownership by the collectivity un-| upon their generosity. He began at the bottom of nership ig abolished and prohibited.| the banking business and by demonstrating his ability worker in a steel mill owned| and willingness and dependability advanced from, one the enterprise. some of the work-) position to another until the city which refused “his > to sell out their interests unless pro-| services in any capacity in 1886 was glad to accept If permitted to sell at all, the owner-|-his counsel on any subject of finance before he had y pass once more into the hands of | passed his fiftieth yea! re to gratify present wants rather It would be manifest insincerity to assert that every r the future would cause the many youth can attain the same high place in national af- to aceumulate. | fairs, for undoubtedly Mr. Davison had natural talents Assuming that each individual worker were, pro-|for finance that many young men do not possess. hibited from selling his Interest and each forbidden| Others have different talents of no Jess value to the to acquire more than an equal interest, none would] world and fitting their possessors for places no. less have an incentive to put forth special effort to make! useful and honorable in the great world of affairs. the enterprise a success, he tendency would be to| The one lesson of every man’s success is that to integ- develop « spirit of negligence, for what is everybody’s!| rity and ability there must be added industry and business is nobody's business. Equal ownership would| thrift—expenditure of energy and economy of time— mean ele m of managers by vote of the workers,)if one hopes to attain unusual heights in this busy and this would lead to factionalism,. bargaining for’ world. | tbe procession moves, even in the for the court. In fact, no member of case of life appointees, like those of/it {s today so young as President Hard- © supreme} the supreme court. ing, whe ix doing the selecting from court of the United States, three owe| It is doubtful if there has ever been} this time forth. their appointment to the cight years|a time in our history when there was -—>—_—<_ of President Wilson's administration. | no -member of the court dating back!) 6.5 3). Disciplining the Landlords Supreme Court Facts Of the nine membe: these are McReynolds of Tennessce:|to an earlier period than this. Mc-| Brandeis of Massachusetts, and Clarke| Kenna,, for example, took his seat in} of Qhio. Two owe their appointment| 1898, only 24 years ago... This change} to the preceding singie term of the| doubtless. comes trem the.Jater period| 8 ‘Taft administration; these Van|in life at which men become of suffi-| Twenty-five thousand families . of Devanter of Wyoming, and Pitney of|cient. prominence. in. their profession Chicago .will move. from houses and New Jersey. Two owe their appoint-|to obtain..thts peculiarly distinguish-|apartments to tents for. the summer ments to the two terms of President! ing recognition.. The new Harding} in a. fight against prohibitive rents, Rnosevelt: these Holmes, of| administration counts one in the list,jaccording to, an announcement of the nd Da nd that is Chief Justice Taft, who is| Tenants’ Protective league of.that city McKenna, of California,| now in his 65 r, and #0 one of! Ninety dollars is.set_as the price of appointment tothe Mc-'the oldest men at the time of his_ap-|the camping equipment. Dogs ate not stration. Thus rapidly pointmont of any man ever namedjallowed, but children are welcomed. of Ohio. Only for old tithe’s sake, I took one drink. Talk of a powerful brew! It was a horrible concoction. Another thing worthy of recog- i With afl its shortcomings, in the days of the saloon. we selfom saw minors on a-drunken rampage. We sometimes do, now. Not very lone ago, a number of youngsters, in this vidinity, most of them in their middle teens, discovered. a moonshine cache; ‘got crazily drunk rode into a loca! town and raised what Sherman called war. The writer witnessed several. paral- lel cases, years ago, in the prohibition districts in the South. The illicit fire- water being concealed in various un, conventional places, children would frequently find it, sometimes imbibing with serious result. his would not happen where Mquor was handled le Ritimately, and placed beyond reach of irresponsible hands. Most men fn this neighborhood who yoted.for prohibition, are airything but proud of the fact today, A prominent rancher, who voted “dry.” recentty did. Prohibition fs tho t kind of a failure." “ Said another: "T voted for probi- bitin, hoping that with a real. ‘dry’ country, certain fellows, around hero, would .have*to keep, straight..Now, with, this d—— moonshine everywhere, they're worse than ever.” . On, the other band, an ardent, nro. hibitionist was heard to remark a few days ago, that he hoped he'd live to see the whole countrr ‘bone dry.’ ‘Well, judging from present progress in that direction, if this man's hopes be realized, he'll have established a to you the beauty of the asf found: it when I, arrived? iuge wers swumag in graceful fragrance from the ceil: to the wall. sara uF sae } iy ss avoided at wedding apres poe gue pg paiee with crim~ pore a ling lip I began the march ali would be the crowning glory of my life, a miserable failure, Book af Equctie” Ts te Boh. 9) ette’,"" I said to Bob. “It tells us just what €o do, what to Say, what ¢o write and. what to wear at all times. Sec, here is a chapter on. wedding etiquette—the very mis- take I made is pointed out! Qh, iB bad only had thi ok, “as would have made that The world is a harsh judge. To be admitted to. society, to enjoy the company’ of brilliant minds, and to win admiration and respect for oneself, it is essential for the woman to cul- fivate charm, and for the man to be polished, impressive. And only by following laws of etiquette is it possible for the woman to be charmmog and the man to be what the world loves to call a gentleman. 1 would rather Jose a thousand dollars than liye through that awful moment of my wedding again... Eyen now, when I think of it, I blush. And so, my advice.to young men and women who desire to be cultured rather than coarse, who desire to impress by their delicacy of taste and is—send for the splendid two- volume set of the “Book of Etiquette.” The Book of Etiquette In Two Comprehensive Volumes Sent FREE for Five Days Send for it that you may know the co: thing to wear at dinner, and the cae thing to wear at the Ball. Scad for it that you may Know just what to da and say when you overturn-a cup of coffee on your hostess” table linen. Send for it, that you may he always at all times, cultured, well-bred and refined: that you:may do.and. say and write and wear enly what ig in the best of form, Fora short time only the complete two-volume set | The: Book of Euquette is offered at the $3.50." Don" wail wedding, your Y, your dinner is spoiled by a tlonder. Don't dev for your set NOW before you forget. ‘The ceugon below entitles you to aS days ggamination of the two-volume set of The Etiquette. At the end of that time if yo you want to keep it send us $3.50 in the set is Or, the books to us and fall poy ment Faas lighted, return a cent. yeu are not de- you won't be out Brac’ peer aheal Cae Tees Depts Soa, Oyster Bey, Send for your set of The Book of Etiquette friends, with your knowledge thing to do, say, write and Just mail: the coupon—don' ‘som Doubleday, York. Ni New - eee eee eee NELSON DOUBLEDAY, INC, Dept. 593, Oyster Bay, N. ¥. in ad: “TwoVolume’ set of the, Book of 5 days I will either returm, the you $3.50 in full payment. It is under- Lam net obliged taj Buh Cbliged to keep the books if T Without mon: send ime the { you want these hooks ‘ul, full leather binding at examination privilege