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PAGE SIX Che Casper Dailp Cribune } except Sunday at Casper, Natrona lication Offices, Tribune Building. Issued cvery event County ONES ...5--s0--- - 15 and 16 ange Connecting All Departments Entered at Casper (Wyoming), Postoffice as second class matter, November 22, 1916. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Presiject and Baditor Business Manager sereee+--eceese Adverusing Manager Advertising Pradden, King & Prudden, 1 6 Fifth avenue, New York City; Globe Bidg.; ton, Mass. Copies of the Dail Tribune are on file in; the New York, Chicago and Hoston offices and visitors] are welcome ives. 23 Steger Bldg. Chicago, SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier One Year --ve-e-------- en ccccepecccoceene= STS Sx MONG | vcenangenem SESEDSDETIDSSTSRSSOSS Three Months 2.2 -~------~-- 2-2 oe 1 | One Month -...----- ae ne nn nen "os | Ber Copy +--+ aa ecm annas One Year .. — es Seen Le Six. Months. aaoaerw ene 3:90} Threa Months .-—_ —- No subscription by mail accepted for three months. a “es Ali subscriptions nvast be paid in advance and Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscrip tion becomes one month in arrears. Member of Audit Burean of Circulstion (A. B. ©) jess period than| Member of the Associated Press. ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to ti ‘se for publication of all news credited in this paper also the local news published herein. Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. Call45 or 16 any time between 6:30 and 8 o'clock p- m. {f you fall to receive 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. eta ieen teied met hiemeenllttronirete Bom aon Shea faa a Gasoline and Alcohol IVEN 2 high power car with a tank fall of gaso- lime and a reckless driver with a tank full of @ liqnor and you have the essential elements of a tragedy. These having been properly assemble Sheridan is called upon to suffer the loss of a}, bright young girl school teacher. The third young ‘woman similarly destroyed in as many LE dir mone of the cases was the act criminal. In all of them was it recklessness chargable to liquor. The people of the northern city are much aroused over the latest sitwation. Responsibility bas been fixed bya coroner's jury and there is talk of crim- The occurrence will Goubtless-serve-as 2 warning | j to others who have not yet met with disaster dnd to this end the lesson will be of vaiue. Prosection and imprisonment of the driver will not restore the girl to her relatives and friends. She is but-one more sacrifice upon the altar of CriminaPresponsibility Ties-deeper than the driv- eof the car and there is no need to point it ont. "These accidents are happening all over the land. ‘the cause is the same, the results are the same. Until young women and young men recognize the @angers of trifling with fate and liquor in the same hour, we will continue to witness the destruc fion of our boys and girls. Tndenentence and Courage f, THE qualities. of independence and courage vanishing from the American character? I1 jand would have been 3.90, active to give off this brilliant emanation. Yet cregse in that of others. Chairman Wadsworth of the military affairs committee declares that it pro- vides increases from time to time based both on length of service and rank, so that a career in the army will-offer added inducements for, young men. The wartime rates of pay will expire on July 1, succeeded by the pre-war schedule had not the present bill been enacted. The new rates will cost about $1,000,000 more than the pre-war rate based on the present strength of the services, but will be a saving of $16,000,000 below the total based on the present rates, ‘asted Sunbeams aman RAREST and most valuable thing in the world is that scintillating but impalpable ex- cretion of the cerebral cortex known as a “bright idea,” declares Dr. Edwin Slosson. There are in any generation only a few ounces or at the most pounds of grey matter sufficiently a large part, and probably the most valuable part of what is produced by the activity of this thin | grey film which covers certain brains, is lost for a time and in some cases forever through the care- $0 | lesariess of contemporaries. There is no form of conservation that is so important as the conserva- tion of good ideas and there is no problem of dis. tribution which is more important than the getting of information of the right sort to the right people at the right time. That much abused word “conservation” has two meanings, totally opposite. Conservation in some| cases means using and conservation in other cases means not using. The legislator with his agate-| bearing tongue will talk of the “conservation of | our coal and water power” just as though the two| things were alike and required the same treatment. | It is just as absurd as if a man should ask a paint er to have his house painted “the color of snow and ink,” for the conservation of coal means savin} it, for what is not used today will be of use to. morrow. The conservation of water power, on the contrary means using it, for what is not used today will be Jost forever. i “The greatest waste is our failure to utilize, not our carelessness in methods of utilization. We ywaste 50 per cent of our petroleum through irra- tional and competitive drilling, We waste two-thirds f our coal before its energy gets into the engine. But we waste all of the sunshine that falls upon yur arid region lands, and that means a greater loss of energy than we get from all our oil and cval. The richest region in the United States is Death Valley, California. Even the green leaves are not able to catch and incorporate more than 1 per cent of the power of the sunshine that falls upon them. If some one would invent a solar engine with an ciency of even 5 per cent it would add incalcul- to the wealth of the corntry through the util- tion of the wasted srnbeams that fall upon our arid land. Or, to put the scatement in a reversed form ,we are losing year by year incalculable Wealth for the lack of a sun-power of some sort. Here is bigger than any grasped by coal kings and oil magnates. Tut nobody has come for- ward to claim it. Yet very likely the knowledze necessary to achieve this supreme triumph of chem- ical engineering is already in existence—some- where. If it is not, there is certainly enough brain power in the world to solve the problem if it were set to work at it. We are all of us the poorer be- cause of this waste of id and inventive genins. An Echo of McCrae “\HE LIGHT-MINDKED bromides who have re- peated, one after another that Rudyard Kip- ling is down and out need a shepherd dog,” states the ‘Philadelphia Public Ledger. is a question well worth inquiry. These have been prime essentials in every person claiming _ the prond title of American citizen since the founding of the republic. Previously, in the colonial iod, independence was set up as a birthright. It has been matntxined_stoutty untibof late, when we hear Jess of it. e In business Tife courage is not lacking fn cer- tain quarters, but the individual of the rank and file by contact and association with the foreigner in k industry and large business does not dis- play the old quality which arouses pride in all American hearts. In public and official life, generally speaking, is the lack particularly notiteable. Independence and courage have given place to political expediency. It takes a big man to be independent and cour- ageous in public life and it seems we have fewer and fewermen of this type who have aspirations for public-nervice. Democratic Hokum TS.A WISH Democratic paper that tells us one day that the people are against the Republican party because it stands in with “big business” and then the next day it asserts that the Republicans can’t get campaign contributions this year because they wou’t stand in with big business. And in the face of this contradictory information, we notice that the Republicans largely predominate in the registration of voters for the future primary elec- tions and the primaries already held are most large- ly participxted in by Republican voters. H big business and the mass of the voters were against the Republican party, they would be less active in trying to shape Republican affairs. Comes First q S PLATFORM of the Indiana Republicans marshals the facts concerning. the national ad- ministration at Washington in a way that must earry conviction to the voters. It gives first place im the list of Republican achievements to the Wash- ington armaments conference: Then come the busi- ness administration of President Harding, the en- actment of the budget law and all the other pieces of legislation that have brought so much benefit to the taxpayers, the pending tariff bill, and the marked tide of prosperity that is setting in all‘over the country. For Public Good SON of the late Henry P. Davison of New \ York has chosen a political career in preference to membership in the firm of J. P. Morgan where his father was so prominent. The elder Davison impressed on his son by both precept and practice the facts that money is mot everything, and that if is the duty é6f young men who have the opportn- nity to devote as much of their time as possible to the public service. Young Mr. Davison is possessed of a comfortable fortune, but instead of applying himself to increasing it he will devote his talents! to more altruistic purposes.. He is furnishing an) example that may well be followed by other young! men of character and education. . ‘Army Pay Rates ae SENATE has passed the adjusted army com-| pensation bill that provides a new basis of p: of the officers and enlisted personnelof the arm navy, marine corps, coast guard, coast and ceodetic | wherever bankers meet and few bankers in these “Great poets need congenial subjects, as Words- worth sufficiently proved. Stephen's bitter satis. “Two Voices,” in which he told of the voice of thun- der and the voice of “an old half-witted sheep,” add- ing, “And Wordsworth, both are thine,” will recall to any reader of Victorian poetry what we mean. Kipling, the imperialist, has not had a subject since General Joubert died in 1900, except when Roose- velt died in 1920, and then how magnificiently he rose to the occasion with The world is none the braver Since Great-Heart was ta-en’ The world war did not offer a subject to the im- perialist poet. It was only Britain that appealed to him, and he sent his only son to him a universal death, only a British death. About the same time Colonel James McCrae, a Canadian, sore-smitten and soon to die, felt forebodings that after all their sacrifice would be a compromise, in which Ger- many would, as usual, get the best of it, and wrote that unforgettable poem, “In Flanders Fields.” If the sword the dead left to the living were aban- doned to the German, We shall not sleep, though poppies lie In Flanders fields. “To Kipling that evil day has come. The sword has been surrendered? to Germany and Russia. The British dead do not sleep under the poppies in Flanders fields. The Kings of England and the Belgians journey over the dead, 100,000 here, 500,- 000 there, and are reminded everywhere of the unredeemed promise. Kipling’s poem is the se- quel to McCrae’s. The two are bracketed. The dull, mournful power of Kipling exceeds the swift, terrible warning of McGrae. McOrae is dead; Kip- ling takes up the fallen strain. The sequel is aw- ful. One need not agree with either to feel the terrific force behind the eulogy. The last word cf’ the Tories has been spoken. We may not agree with it, but we must honor and admire its way of speech, taking McCrae and ‘Kipling together, the exordium and the peroration. “As for regarding Kipling as dead and gone, Iet us wait for Hollowe’en for that and frame a suit- able jack-o’-lantern for the occasion; or call Pope from his grave for a new Dunciad.” Not Real Sentiment EFERRING to the fact that at a recent meet- ing the New Jersey Bankers’ association passed resolutions asking President Harding to reap- point Governor Harding as governor of the fed- eral reserve board, a New Jersey banker of the highest standing, writes, according to the Manu? facturers Record as follows: “Nobody felt like saying much about it. I was Iy out of the conference at the time. The vote was a very feeble one of not more than ten or fifteen out of the three or four hundred ple there, and I know it was not favored by thema- jority of those present.” Here is a specific statement that a majority of New Jersey bankers attending the convention did not expr their honest convictions, but permitted a smlall mina®ity to pass a resolution to which they were opposed, and which yet carries the weight of the New Jersey Bankers’ association. We won- der how long the bankers of the country will per- {properly balanced dict. The ideal food €be Caspet Daily Ccibune TRYING TO LOOK LIKE WHAT SHE AIN’T tions at their real value and that is as so much chaff. ‘The Manufacturers Record has also received from another banker the following: “I learn through unquestioned sources that a powerful moyement is on foot to secure the reap- pointment of Governor Harding. Behind this move- ment are tremendous financial and powerful polit- ical interests. Those who have reaped fabulous rewards as a result of the policies of the federal reserve will utitlize every ounce of effort and all the power at their command to retain Governor Harding and others in office. “The plan is to have a director of the federal reserve attend all state bankers conventions, de- liver addresses, and thus lize sentiment. The director attending will release his address in ad- vance. Of course, it will be natural to express ap- preciation for his attendance and his address and incidentally of the policies of the federal reserve. This same plan will also be put through the Ameri- can Bankers association if possible. In fact, a powerful movement has already been started to get the endorsement of the American Bankers associa- tion.. Yet numbers of the bankers who have crit- icized and condemned in private the policies of the The Measure of Devotion |2"¥- ‘Words! Astome not to frame fn words| meals. The fullness of devotion life may hold; ‘The measurement of faithful years Can ne'er in formal syllables be told. Speak though you may of # sacrifice, Of tenderness or patience or g00d cheer, Of fleshy wounds or mental healed, Of loyal vision seeing far and clear. below one pound. and then you will bohydrates. These Count if you will th cycles swift The harvest of unworthiness and pelf, But o'er against it set the gold Of service that forgot to reckon self. —Mande De Verse Newton. fish, dried beef, cheese, To Keep Ideal Weight A commonly used rule to find the ideal weight is to take the number of inches above five feet, multiply this by 5% and add 110. This gives the weight in pounds. For example, if you measure 5 feet 6 inches in your stocking feet, multi- ply the 6 inches by 5% and you get 33; add to this 110 and you have your ideal weight, 143 pounds. If you meas- ure less than 5 feet, multtply the num- ber of inches under 5 feet by 5% and subtract the result from 110. To sup- ply the body needs there must be a ties. mixture consists of protein, 10 per cent; fats, 25 per cent, and carbo- hydrates, 65 per cent. In addition to these elements there must be provide? mineral matter, vitamines and water ‘The chief food is protein. It builds tissues and repairs waste. The frame- white of egg. You will find about the same amount of protein in a glass of milk—skim, whole or buttermilk—in one egg, and in two slices of bread. At least half your daily supply of pro- tein should come from the vegetable kingdom. . “Fats yield energy and are stored in your body as fat. They include cream, butter, lard, olfye ofl, almonds and other nuts and chocolate. Carbohydrates’ also ‘supply energy and are stored in your body as fat. ‘They include all sorts of sugars, like grapes; starches found in cereals; po- tatoes, corn, peas, beans, lentils and nuts. Minfralmatter helps to form bones and teeth, and includes such minerals as lime, iron, carbon, sulphur, sodimn potassium and phosphorous. These ele- ments are found largely in the outer Ideas, Wi late. A girl T hate Papa—You were daughter. mit.themselyes to live in this kind of mental slav- ery. This. scheme is now being vigorously worked conventions have the courage to get up in meet- ing and oppose this effort to railroad through these survey, and public health service, The act is to be-| come effective at the beginning of the next fiscal] year, July 1. Ths new pay schedules will mean a re. duction in ths compensation-of some, but an in | dent Harding will probably use h resolutions commending Governor Harding for re- appointment. Fortunately for the country Presi- own good com- mon sense in the-matter and appraise these resolu- coatings of grain, fruits and yere- tables. ‘Vitamines are-health preservers and body Duilders, better than tonics. Among the foods in which they are found are fresh milk, butter and eggs, fresh vegetables and fruits. Water is necessary to dissolve and carry off undesirable elements which form in the body. ‘The average per- son needs from tifree to five pints Air club? ‘This may be taken partly as milk, tea or coffee with meals, but for the most part as pure water between The normal need of the active per- son is for about two ounces of fats and one pound of carbohydrates per day. If you eat more than these amounts you are sure to add flesh, and you cannot hope to take off weight unless you reduce your intake of these foods You must study a good food table, what articles are high in fats and car- You may, within reason, eat freely of low caloried food, such as celery, let- tuce, Jean meat, white of egg, certain Holstein milk—because it is low in butterfat—and fresh fruits. Hot cakes and maple syrup, honey. pork, sausage, fried foods and dried fruits, ice cream, candy and pastries are fatal if you wish to reduce. Cream sauces, butter and starchy things must be avoided. Whole wheat bread may be taken in limited quanti- ——_—_————_ Newspaper Smilage. Easy Running. Miss B. Smart—I hear you have a model husband. Is he a late model? Mrs. Junebride—The very From 12 to 2 a. m. Pontiac (Mich.) Press. : work and form of the body are deter-]|—La Crosse (Wis.) Tribune. mined by protein. It is found in lean —_—_ If You Can’t Answer Them, Look meat, in milk, fowl and fish, and in Some Kid. Among the Want Ads. Gertie—-And why does that man always refer to you as his baby girl? Mabel—Oh, I don’t know. I suppose I keep him up so late nights—London — farning Signal. Speedo—Does your wife have the door open for you when you get home Peppo—Yes, the “Topics of the Day” Films. Yes, He Does. Is Betty Strate She keeps me out So gosh darn late. —Hudson Observer. Very Exclusive. Daughter—Yes, papa; our Fresh Air club met on the veranda. Papa—Who belongs to your Fresh Daughter (slowly and somewhat re- luctantly)—Well, papa there are only two of us at present—Jack and—me. —New York Untversity Alumnus, Considerate. John—When you were standing in INEFFIUENT AND DISORGANIZIN GOVERNMENT board are afraid to oppose this movement. They state it will be a bad business policy to raise oppo- sition to it. Many of the bankers unhesitatingly state, ‘We are in the Lion’s mouth and it would be worse than foolish to make him mad.’ “This movement is even on a wider sweep. It takes in tonventions of varions organizations na- tionwide. You will find that efforts will be made to get the endorsement of conventions of various kinds. Governor Harding recently addressed, as you know, the convention of the dry goods people at Birmingham, and stated that agriculture was back on its feet much earlier than was expected, and that all that was necessary was to advertise and send out representatives. ; “At the annual meeting of the American Cotton Manufacturers association at Washington next week an effort will be made to quietly get through a resolution endorsing the policy of the federal re- serve and incidentally Governor Harding. ‘A. number of the largest journals in the nation are behind this movement It is being backed by the geratest financiers. I cannot think that Pre: dent Harding will reappoint Governor Herding, but those who expect Governor Harding to quietly e up will have a rude awakening.” the door saying “goodby” to her, did it ever dawn on you— Jack—No, I didn't stay that late.— Park Stylus. + Father Is Right. Fay—Do you like winter sports? May—Yes, but father objects to their staying so late.—Loew'’s Weekly. Watchfal Waiter. when you are late? Bill—No. She waits until I get home, and then she goes for me.— N. ¥. Railway Employes’ Magazine. The Music of the Spheres. learn for yourself must be avoided. chicken, cottage are To those who, with anointed ears, Hear drifting down the voids afar The choral music of the spheres! The noble spirits of all time, If they but be supremely great Are gifted with a sense sublime, With the Divine are intimate; Biijah who was lifted up, Homer who sang yet could not see, And Socrates who drained the cup, And Christ who died on Calvary! ‘Tis such unselfish souls as these, The lofty singers and the seers, Who penetrate life's mysteries latest. every night— —Clinton Scollard. Two of a Kind. Neighbor — Doesn't object to your staying out until 2 or 3 o’clock in the morning? Young Lady—She might if she knew about it, but I always beat mother in. your mother Queer Questions With Hidden Answers How much has the World grown in the last 100 years, How much has the number of freight cars in the United States! grown in 20 years? ‘What states have thi most wage earners? . Population of the How long ago was the famine Ireland? aa ‘When was the first gasoline auto- mobile demonstrated? Yale and Harvard have rowed 53 years. Which is ahead? What is the meaning of word Oklahoma? Med Who was the first king of France? if a man saved a dollar a year and cee at 6 per cent compound in- terest how much would hi the end of 50 years? pire nS Bottled drinks inclndng Orange Crash, 8c or 2 for 15¢c, Pep’s News Depot. 62-2 storm door.— up late last night, —_—>___ Throught a little effort on your part you can avail yourself of 3 per nt unney. United Home Builders’ association, suite 6, Bec! Phone 1830, “mar? Gast John—Does your wife send for you | How poor earth's sweetest anthems. And know the music of the spheres.| ADVENTURE TRAILS — -.naco | “Now we have the “Oh, I do wish I could haye a gar-|we must have the den.” sighed Betty. “But Mother says|the Paint Bex Pal. it would muddy my clothes and, be-| This timo the Understanding |sides, there's no room in our back|took long st-ips of yard.” that won't muddy your clothes,” said |and the Paint Box Pal . . “And a grass and flower design, there'll be plenty of room for it on the cutting away all the HERE’S A GARDEN, SWEET AND GREEN, FIT FOR ANY FAIRY QUEEN. Os 5, ih wl =a table,” finished the Friendty Paste Pot cutting through all the thickness at and the Understanding Scissors. “Then HURRY,” cried Betty, I want it this Instant Minute!” this is what they did. First they made a jolly tree pattern lke the one I have given you in the picture, The Polite Pencil traced this many times on cardboard until he had almost a dozen trees. Then the Paint Box Pal and the Busy Brush painted the trees. They made bright green follage and wonderful fruits of orange and blue and red. The tree trunks were bright yellow. After the paint was dry, the Understanding Scissors cut them all out and the Friendly Paste Pot gave them little supports of pasteboard in back, as shown in C, “For And) In a jiffy Betty had flower borders \running up and down the table and |trees standing everywhere, with flower beds at their roots. To make it pret- Uer, they cut and painted some tubs of flowers, too, and fixed them => Betty found a small, glass for a lake and of flowers around it. you run and make a flower too, and Monday I will tell you. Peter Poodle’s new playmate, GIVEN WITH $1.00 | SAVING ACCOUNTS || Special Boy Scout Savings Bank and Pass Book and. an “Eversharp” Pencit. Every Boy Scout who opens a bank account in the Savings Department of the Wyoming National Bank with $1.00 or more before July 15‘ will recefve a spe- cially prepared Boy Scout Bank and Pass Book and an Eversharp Pencil. Cha | The bank is an exact replica of a Scout Hat, made in bronze and is durable and safe. The bank book has a khaki cover bearing the Scout insignia and is filled with information valuable to Boy Scouts, including diagrams of both the Sema- phore and Wig-Wag Codes. \ The Eversharp Pencil is of nickel silver with clasp “ to hold it securely in the pocket. $1.00 OPENS A SAVINGS ACCOUNT FOR A BOY SCOUT AND ENTITLES ‘HIM TO ALL THE ARTICLES MENTIONED. : Wyoming National Candidate For District Judge I take this means to announce myself as a non- partisan candidate for election to succeed myself as District Judge of the Sixth Judicial District, subject to the primary election in August. JUDGE C. 0. BROWN. SOPOSOOOLOSOSS OC OCSO ORE SCOOEESIOP