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PAGE SIX Che Casper Dailp Cribune \ et a among other things Mr. »Hard- Sunday at Casper, Natrona| ing said: py oo tS ng mm Se Offices, Ieibuse Building. : ahr some two year<’ after the death of the UANESS TELEPHONES... 5 and 16| late William McKinley, I was interested in a cam- ranch Telepsone Exchange Coameciing “Ail Departments | Paign in Ohio wherein Mr. Hanna, the late senator = = = Zico as second class| {TOM my state, was the most prominent candidate ntered at Casper fren Eo agg in the campaign. He had been the personal friend _ ~ and the associate of William McKinley, and it was perfectly natural to my mind that this great man, J. E. HANWAY in going before the people, interested in the policies EARL EB. HANW. Busine that McKinley had so tong espoused, should have gt uN LEY "city Editor | ™ade frequent and extended allusion to McKinley. THOMAS DAILY “*“Aavertising Manager| To my political instincts, however, that was a mis- - take; a pete as I was saree Vn sah dvertising Repr=entatives. tinguished candidate at thut time, I said to him, fis the Fath avenue: New York Give Glove Bldg Bee | ‘two years after the death of William McKinley ton, Mass. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in| ought to relieve him from being a part of this cam- tue New York, Chicago and Boston offices and visitors! Haim and I think you a. making a mistake to use wank aa his name so frequently.’ With characteristic frank- SUBSCRIPTION RATES ness Mr. Hanna said. ‘Well, what are you going By Carrier to taik about ‘¢ vou can not talk about the tariff .90 | questiva and this great =postle whom we all loved so much*’ I said, ‘Senator, I want you to try an experiment in Ohio. You are familiar with the merchant-marine question.’ I think he was joint sponsor for the Hanna-Frye bill. I am not sure about that. I knew, however, that he was familiar with the question, I said, ‘Our people of Ohio are just as much interested in ocean shipping as the people on the seacoast. You discuss this question Songdn that has been interesting American statesrnen for Gian _Decomes one month de arrears, so many years; and tell the people of Ohio the plain Member of Audit Buress of Circulation (A-B. ©) | trath about if, and you will find = responsive i= Member of the Associated Press. terest. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Three Months . . ription by th decriptions must be paid in advance and the Tribune will not insure delivery after subscrip The Ans d Press is exclusively entitied to th! <The next engagement of our speaking aggrega- use for pul n of all news credited in this paper anc]. cae it ga t di ., ch a ly f Give tea kotan = pebtisied herein; tion was in a country district where mainly farm- SSS ers were assembled on the country fairground, and Ric ‘ou fe ‘our Tribune. Mr. Hanna, with characteristic energy and that te you tall to twelve sour Iribene A topes wil be de | marked understanding which he possessed in rela- }'vered to you by special messenger. Make it your duty te/ tions to any subject in which he was interested, je The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. | -tarted out and made a speech of 45 minutes de- voted exclusively to the American merchant ma- reo rine; and I never saw an andience whose attention was more riveted, an audience that made more will- ing response. So keen and wise and discrimimat- ing a politician as Mr. Hamma never omitted in a subsequent speech in that compaign a discussion of the American merchant marine; and I have the conviction that if that great man had lived, he would have lent his energies and his influence to the estiblishment, through legislative action, of a Another Tangent eee LA FOLLETTH, having discovered nothing but sin and iniquity in oil and high crimes and misdemeanors in steel has found that the United States supreme court is committing as: sault and battery upon the paliadium of our lib- So erties. The specifications are to-wit: ria upbuilding our American merchant ma- The court having found acts of congress uncon-| Fine. | stitutional and ho netted “Thereby well-nigh de- ‘ re ae oer, ple to ts Moe pee he Lei pre’ stroying the scheme of representative government, | !nterest in is question; and ye is true a the tation of the republic intented to be preserved | Statesmen from the middle west, frightened by the in its legislative branch... ery of ‘subsidy,’ which has been shouted from the The fathers had more than one idea when they| ther side of this chamber from the time when drafted the constitution, and at least one was that} ™emory runneth not to the contrary, have yielded, the supreme court was designated as the final|lest their people imagine that they were doing power to say what was and what was not law, and something for the promotion of special and favored also to interpret the exact meaning of the several | interests. articles and sections which compose the document defining our rights liberties and duties as citizens. Congress has passed many laws that have after- ward been found to contravene the constitution and the court’s action has erased them from the stat- ute books. Which is quite right and proper. It is an advanced idea the senator springs when he proposes a revision .of supreme court decisions by a two-thirds majority vote of the congress. It is one als» that upturns the constitution itself and is likely to find scant favor with the people. Senator LaFollette prating of respect for the sacred document, would tear the corner stones from under the edifice of democracy which rests upon them. Reasons for Church ‘Atteriance [[SEODOEE ROOSEVELT, ‘n his lifetime was a regular attendant at church. If it was incon- venient for him to attend the Dutch Reform church of which he was a member he attended some other church. The ‘point he made was to attend some church on the sabbath. The influence of the church is clearly apparent in the life and works of Theodare Roosevelt. Throaghout his public career the church, meaning all churches, had an important place. He was an advocate of church attendamtce and laid down a set of nine reasons which seemed to him No, we will not disturb the old constitution nor| to be good and sufficient for everybody to observe. tamper with the powers conferred upon the great-| They are: est court on earth. Rather will-we insist upon the} In this actual world, a churchless community, a profoundest respect for both upen the part of all| community where men have abandoned and scoff. our people, born, naturalized and alien, including] at or ignored their religious needs, is a commu- senator LaFollette, himself. ° nity on the rapid down grade. Church work and church attendance mean the cultivation of the habit of feeling some Ill-Advised Alliance itsagan others: iieent SRE iin ee = s P, ere are enough holidays for most of us. eee ria report i'sn| days Siffer from other holidays in the fact that ho other way than as an effort to perfect their there are fifty-two of them every year. Therefore, joint control over the mines and the railroads, with | yyoo "7 yy, £0 th Gite ct ome can a@ view to compelling the rest of the people to ac- wership the Creator in a grove of trees, or by ‘a cept the terms, which the combine may impose. It running brook, or in man’s own house just as well is a threat of arbitrary power, inconsistent with| 45 in a church. But T also know as a matter of the mutual obligations upon which modern society cold fact that average man does not thus rests. This, of course, is not saying that the mmers and railroad men are an exceptionally bad lot; wel will hme gee ey a peaeeei ‘st church He know they are not; as individuals they would Ye a8} an the week in making hard lives a little easion. kind, considerate and helpful as the average of| 6 will listen to and take part in reading some other people, but, as with most people, they have! heantifal passages from the Bible. And if heis not such a bias for the interests of the group or glass familiar with the bible, he has suffered a loss. that they do not see the fundamental rights under- He will take part in singing some good hymns. lying all others and which must be respected if or-| 7_ will meet and nod or speak to good, quiet derty society is to endure. ‘ neighbors. He will come away feeling a little more When a relatively small group claims, by rea-| charitable toward all the world, even toward thoes son of its strategic reations to the industrial organ- excessively foolish young men who regard church- ization, the right to put the lives or welfare of going as a soft performance. the population in jeopardy, it aspires to an exer-|" 7 advocate a man’s joining in church work for : Sey ise ih airy hg ae ANd terri esa an the sake of showing his faith by his works. Talk in language of sentiment and lofty ideals On With the Dance of the stand proposed to be taken in behalf of fam- 7 that there is. anyone left on earth who would standard for themselves by lowering the standards nessa 4 of other peoples, can in no sense be justified. raise objection to the recreation of dancing. Yet, e > by intendent of public instruction of the imperial country, excepting the miners has taken a reduction 4 in wages. Even the railroad employes have taken commonwealth of Kansas, Lizuie Wooster ‘by name. : oot Gladys White, teacher in a western Kansas rural still receiving wages upon the scale adopted when 2 the cost of living was at the highest level. They|S°200l-_ She peremptorily ordered the teacher to 4 A pes when. she disobeyed. The attorney general came to occupations at lower compensation, but insisting .. ee a: - Ghat the dtbers shall continussto pay for mining|*he Tescue with an opinion that the superintendent ; ‘ rdered her to restore the village teacher in the ft more unreasonable every day as wage reductions a ry in other lines are made. It is not a contest be-| {wil enjoyment of her rights and privileges in devo- is +,},| the pursuit of happiness. the miners and the workers who supply them with | ¢ bread, meat, clothing and all the comforts which| 8° Pleased was the board of education that a ‘feptis school house, when it is assumed all present will Ie have a good time and Miss White's dancing pro- oo EE, Petz WEST politicians are in error in as- ONDER what the factory workers-who former- sidy. It was the belief of Mr. Harding before he| nowadays. became president and it is his belief today. From back as 1916 in opposing the Democratic makeshift ministration the Republican senator and all the for the purchase of ships by the government instead! Republican congressmen have been rendéminated by bound to re a yoice in the settlements. ilies for a certain standard of living, fixing the| [7 S22™S passing strange in this day of jazs Nearly every class and group of workers in the such is the case. It is none other than the super- a reduction of 12 per cent. The miners alone are| 52° Would apply the ultramarine law to one are receiving the services of all other trades and| forego dancing and revoked her teaching certificate coal at the exereme rate. The position becomes| 8S Wholly without authority for her action and tween the miners and their employers, but between | 10” to the art Terpsichore, which translated means make their standard of living. grand ball has been annonuneed for July 4 at the Interior States Interested gram wall be morp thanstiied, suming that thé people are opposed to ship sub- ly made corsets and petticoats do for a living observations made by him while a senator as far ‘At LEAST Maine has not turned against the ad- of encouragement of construction and operation by| large pluralities. ! pe outskirts of the Iittle town of Sho Precent destination and fallen state, The End of the “Battle of shont, in the heart of Wyoming—per-|is an interesting, if not pathetic story. K ” . Gettysburg haps one of tho last places on the map| Exhibited between twenty-five and . Bey to expect it—the cut up, distorted rem- thirty years ago in every big city in : ON ee nants of the formerly mammoth can-|the jand, its last place ef exhibition “Imperious Caeser, dead and turned|%2S literally “turn the wind away” in]was Omaha. Here, baving become to peneb es stop a hole to turn the| the form of a tent, used as an out-| somewhat diplapidated and no longer wind away.” Few better {llustrations | HOUSe- a paying proposition, it was dis of the aptness of these lines of the| Comparatively few of the younger|mounted, and placed’ in a storage immortal Bard of Avon, if applied to|Seneration have even heard of this| warehouse, where it Iny for some time. the inert instead of the animate, could|Stupendous product of the painter's} just prior to the opening of the Se cited than that of Philipiteau's once| brush which, over a quarter of a cen-| Shoshone Indian reservation, nearly 16 Shoshoni, had the material cut up and made into a dining tent. In this capacity it was used during tne ==zis- tration period. gas and arc Mghts illuminating the| Of course, the huge painting could night in a few seconds he found him- self, as if suddenly transported by magic, standing on a platform, appar- ently-in broad daylight, in the midst of the awful magnificence of a bat- tefield. Extending, seemingly for mfles in all directions toward the horizon, be neath a Pennsylvania summer sky, the grand, but terrible scene was one cunningly stimulated sunlight. The famous stone fence, and a minute por- tion of the Iandscape, were, at one Place at the bottom of the canvas, ex- tended by natural rock and trees, but the average visitor could hardly dis- tingnish the natural from the artistic. It was said that Philipiteau, who was a Frenchman, and who also paint- al months on the battlefield, studying the topography, woods, old breast- works, etc., almost'to the minutest de- tail. He read all the most reliable ac- counts of the battle. talked with many men who took part in it, gleaning as much accurate data as-possible regard- ing the disposition of the troops, the locations of the batteries and the posi-| gambling. tions of the higher officers. It was even claimed that he went to the extent of making calculations as to the growth or decay of trees, some lof which at the time of the battle, must have been mere saplings, or had not yet made their appearance, while others, which in the meantime had been stricken by the hand of time, | w! were then in the height of their bloom. But myriads of others, still, were por trayed, just as they must have ap- Deared on that eventful day, their torn boughs and shattered trunks bearing mute testimony to the storm of shot famous panoramic painting, the “Bat-| tury ago, millions paid 50 cents apiece | years ago, some person of speculative tla of Gettysburg.” to see. turn of mind purchased the canvas, wrought death and devastation on such Sequestered in a back yard, on the How the giant painting came to itsland shipping it to the new town of and shell that, for three days, had a frightful scale. PRS be Caspet Daily Cribune GIVE THE GRASS A CHANCE ‘The phase of the battle thus depict-| that here is brisk stirring on the ango ranch soon after the chief at 4 o'clock in the morning; n struggie—the hour that witnessed per-|in bed until § a. m., as so man: haps the supreme crisia in the inter-| gringo farm hands do. After a states war. It was the hour of Pick-|ing of inspecting the tobacco, ett’s charge. The cause of the Cort-|cane and the wheat Pancho looks ov: the schools and asks a teacher whether it be true that one of the pupils was caught using a bean shoot- In the evening at the hacienda there is a plunge into the wilderness of the Spanish first reader. In the old days, the bold days, when Villa's name was on the front page, he could not read or write. Now the man who would not give himself up to any- body has surrendered to a tutor, He is trying to learn English, but is still the desperate hand-to-hand conflict be-lin the © See the Cat stage, With low-—-the dash and valor of the South met by the rock-ribbed courage of the North. > ‘The federal guns which, as history records, the union commanders had led and has still the pleasure of rewtig “Robinson Crusoe” and the Sherlock the Confederates to believe were si-| Holmes books, not to mention “Main |2"™® lenced by the southern batteries, now | street.” began to speak again. With a terrible) twenty years from now may sce cannonade the federal artillery opened/vitia at Lake. Mohonk lecturing on fire, all along the union front from) the problems of the Mexican Indian. Culp's Hill on the right to Tittle Round) When a good man turns bad his Top, far on the left. A veritable temP-| friends shudder, but when 2 bad man SE Ect St ell. rane aa pane turns good the saints take en extra ter swept the ranks advancing cl straps. Confederates. Nothing, however, | “th !n _their_halo” straps. seemed to check their onset. Gaps and lanes were torn open in their columns, Unrecognized As up and down a watersiie I walked at day’s decline, I met a ghost of boyhood years Was loyal friend of mine, “Now where is he was chum to me In days of auld lang syne?” Pickett directing the charge while still|And ever from his ruddy lips further toward the southwestern hori-|__Went forth a merry tune; zon, and more vaguely discernible on| His laugh to hear was ringing clear a little knoll, could be seen General, AS bugles blown at noon. Lee and hie staff. Close to the union center, and near the front his black| Then answered I that dear, dear “The gods are kind to thee; "Tis thine among thy brother shades A happy soul to be, While I, grown old, have naught to hold That stirs thy memory.” Charles G. Blanden, hardly be called a great work of art in the higher, or more technical, sense|_ The Prowess of George of the term. Yet, the grandeur of the ‘The old wheeze about George Wash- ington tossing @ dollar across the Po- tomac river is going the rounds once more and since the Potomac is some- thing more than two miles wide at Mount Vernon, the old. explanatton, that a doilar went farther in George’ day than it does in the present, must still & George was somewhat of a braggart, ‘even in view of the explanation of the Vi feat, a friend writes, “Even eo, it Villa the Fequires no great stretch of imagina- 4 are tion in view of the well-authenticated fact that he also threw a sovereign “When it is argued that lasting |across the Atlantic. world peace is tmpossible, let the ideal- ists point to Pancho Villa, 1922 "'Maxiean City newspaper man has|| Queer Questions With paver rtd out ett edoa pclae Hidden Answers sie noted villain. He reports an amazing reformation. The outlaw has become a tiller of the soll. ‘The bandit is a|j If You Can't Answer Them, Look furious advocate of education. The Among the Want Ads. creature who destroyed churches in- sists on religious freedom for all. The} How much income does a married leader of the toughest band since/man without dependents and with an Jesse James’ prohibits Mquors and|income of $1,000,000 a year have to pay? Politics? Nay, Pancho ts out of it.| At what age may a man marry Why should it interest him, enyway?|without the consent of his Parents in He saw much politics of the most| most states? In what year were the most strikes recorded in the United States? ‘What is the largest average daily {number of telephone messages handled Carranza by any one company? hole wide world. Not even the pres-} How old does a beo lve to be? idency interests him. Besides, he told] How oid is the American Red Cross? The laughing. ing Scissor laughed it was a very wide affair indeed. - “What's the joke? said the Friend- ly Paste Pot. FOR LITTLE WHO LIKE MERRY MAKINGS Built for You by Elsinore Crowell “I've just thought of a new kind of paper doll,” said the Scissors. “She's funny enough to makea monkey | shown. Ss Tit POLLY PRIM Qe HAS COME TO TOWN, IV HER © a CHECKERED GINGHAM GOWN. “Then she must be a Wonder,” said) and here's where the “different” the Friendly Paste Pot, “for the mon-|came in. ‘The drees was cut from or- key wrench hasn't giggied since Sar>: my Saw cut his tecth.” Then the pattern was laid on a “Well, he'll giggie over this; see if|of gingham and anothy he doesn't!’ said the Understanding the newspaper man that he wished| How many years of his life does the Mexico to live in happy accord with/average man spend the United States. Would it not stir up| In what state is co-operative mar- old memories, of the Columbus raid |keting of farm produce most general? and cther events, if he wero to go| How many Americans were killed after the presidency? in action in the war with Germany? ‘Villa is the same stern disciplinarian| How many eclipses of the sun were of yore, his visitor says. We fancy| scheduled for 19222 ji z A AA ines LEE ROG OSLER REO ncaa JT PNR 4g. PRE REE ARS oS OEY ero ne. le eee ie Ase eee THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER CO. FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS proceeded to ing to hold the dress on more and a lttle lace frill was gathered around her neck. Then off pranced Polly Prim with her pantalets waving in the siggley breeze! But she cama back quickly enough when she what Betty was going to day for Kewpie Doll. Don't you you knew! |Wonday—Adventure Weeds.” checks and blue eyes and a dazzling | Adams. CONSERVATISM Has characterized the policies of the ‘Cas- per National Bank since it was established in 1889. The: gréwth of this bank has kept pace with that of Casper and surrounding terri- tory because the officers and directors have realized the necessity of maintaining bank- ing service adequate to meet the needs of the community. Patrons of this institution enjoy the best possible banking service, in which safety, courtesy and convenience are considered of paramount importance. 33 Years of Service May We Serve You? Raa Casper National Bank CASPER, WYO. Under United States Government Supervision Everything in Building Material RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY Office and Yard—First and Center Phone 62 « @inary paper by the design shown. ‘Trail: “Poinen