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€be Casper Daily Cribune : be Caspet Daily Cribune coutact with the new arrivals to these shores, to the A WANDERER ON MANY RANGES : Iesued every evening except Sunday at Caspe:, Natrona end that they be mode to feel welcome and at home, |, County, Wyo. Publication Offices, Tribune Building-_| in proportion as they assimilate and apply the doc- Oe ee ee NEI ELEPHONES ........---- ~... a8 aye 16| trines of true Americanism. Uranch Telephone Eachange Connecting Ali Departments Sen Cee Savona 2 SET Ee The Reason for Sudsidy MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PuE OCEANIC~-steamship company in 1881, be- "+ gan the operation of two steamships between J, E HANWAY EARL E HANWAY . W. H HUNTLEY & BE EVANS ... THOMAS DAILY ‘an Francisco and Hawalian Islands. rt Today this company is the only American mail bag Ao aad line that goes south of the equator in the. Pacific | and furnishes a means of communication for Amer- Advertising ican business firms with $170,000,000 worth of im- Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bidg.. oust port and export business which this country does OL; 286 Firth avenue, New York City; Globe Bids annually with that section of the world. Sopies of the Daily Tribune are on file in that ‘ b the” bg es ‘and Boston offices and visitors To_help maintain this service the government are welcome made a mail contract with the company on a basis wa TBSCRIPTION RATES of $2 a mile for outward voyages and $1,000 net for s ae oma return voyages. This rate, first established in 1900 One Fear. ;- 4728 | expires July 1, 1922, under last contract. Ne ec at 2 195| Since the establishment of this rate operating ex- Tires = Months - -85 | penses of American ships have increased approxi- “And it’s going to rain, anyway,”| gan to sandpaper the One Month . sald Ted, who had become quite weath-| until it was quite thin Per Copy .. | mately 150 pex cent. The company has been operat- orwise. bent this In a circle as ing at a heavy loss. The aggregate annual mail “I know! exclatmed Ned. “We'll | tened it with a copper rivet ot ae contract or subsidy the company has recrived from make something?" bottom he made of wood, en: Three Mo the government has been $198,384 per annum. Two “Make a what out of what?” asked and a meee No subs: ccepted for less period than | Tritish lines compete with this company under sub- Ted. ‘Now, next time wo Ee 5a eaaiiations must bo paid in advance and the/ sidies and other preferential agreements which are Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscri?| nearly double the cash return allowed by our gov- go to Uncle Ben's I will varnish this all over, inside and out, with a hard those old cow horns we found and 1 threw in the stream last deck varnish and then it will be water tion becomes one month in arrears. Sansa SS ‘You Jeusbed a ee and sald I wat Member of Audit Berean of Circulation (A. B. 0) Here we have a perfect illustration for the nec- SOnae* on” = Ned and he a oo RRetibebGe tis Aseodabel een.” essity of a ship subsidy act, government essixtance, started to run down to a pool in a Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the| if American ships are to stay on the sea in com- use Se pemeatn or an news credited Yn This paper and | netition with foreign ship companies subsidized and also the local news published herein. assistd by their own governments. Kick if You Don’t Get Your Tribune. Now the Oceanic Steamship company will be/| Call 15 or 16 any time between 630 and 8 o'clock P. ™ | forced to discontinue service to Australia and the 4 il t - y" . A paper will be de Hedeed to yon De ances! temonsee take tt your duty to| colony of American Samoa unless the government small stream where he fished out the horns. =f let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. contract is increased from $2.00 to $4.00 per mfle. ee, a aa] SO ee eat yeu ees OnLoee: ae If the company is forced to discontinue, mail and z passenger service which our citizens now enjoy over N ed cae aie this important trade routs will be ended under the jtemplates that the people shall choose their wisest| for the time being the belief of a feats A of the), para the gia used to pac Ra sy Ability and Efficiency American fag aaa se ole at ee mercy one and best men to act in their stead in the transac-| most vocal and most effectively organ apna | Fee AAO | Beene,” oom ‘. L. C, Hinkle, of C as been in the| heavily subsidized foreign line wi represents | tion of public business. In this they proceed exact-| his constituents. Shin wea. bate ‘ 4 aes Serer tiay be tonrceeeneae his many] OUT Strongest foreign competitor. Our own govorn-|ly as they do in their private affairs, giving their} “No man is fit to be in public life who will not * proof and water-tight, and we will fas. friends with reference to his candidacy for the Re-| Ment -will have to pay (subsidize) this foreign line| first thought to their own occupations and choosing| make a stand in behalf of what he believes is for ten it at the roadside spring at Uncles blican nomination for secretary of state. It is|1@7ge sums to carry United States mail. Thus|men expert in various lines to attend to their wants| the best interests of the country no matter what for people to use—it won't break like cpertiapass t0 pay; that He tan nothing but en-| Would we enrich the foreign lines at the expense of |in these several directions. The power to choose| may be the transient state of public opinion among tho glass tumbers/or rust like the tia thasiastic excouragement. ‘There are hundreds, if} UF own merchant marine and opportunity for| and to recall these public seryants is the power to| elements engaged in trying to influence fugislatiou: Nes - VER 2 not thousands of stauch friends of Curtis Hinkle| tTade advantages. contro) the general trend of public affairs. Some-| Public office is not worth the price involved in : 4 the horn bow well enough to tryout. and the rain clouds Ted had said wers coming shut out che sun at the same sacrifice of integrity and self respect. There is noth- ing in public office for an honest man but the op- h 1 awaxth portunity to serve the commonweal and win Page re- time. ‘The rain came down in tor. mi icani i i tain our independence, with resulting advantages | insist that the man in legislative or administra-| spect of one’s countrymen. . Every change our ents but the boys eat-in the doorway rege Pema etiiet pas See um te on’ the seas, or we eae ed pris 5 gain and | tive place must abdicate his own beliefs and convic-| organic and statute pew Mee sogeniee she. public it. ee ae dry Hon whittled out arrows 7 borne in| #8sistance, wipe our flag o je seas, pay OUT ‘tions, however much they may be based upon closer | official by requiring to pay the price of reten- and tried ou bow. wareee ay ieee Tran orneial eee the money for mail and freight transportation to our! study and better information than is available to| tion in power in self stultification is a step toward ‘It. shoots better than ash!” er- ¢ : the citizen busy with his own affairs, and become| the degradation and the ultimate destruction of the a mere registering machine for what he believes is! republic.” (2 avai, ceiiombsees thee ebb Ae ae tt in Natrona county, just as there are in other coun- ties of the state who have known him for many years and admire his great ability and uncompro- the merchant marine act. . ,. | Science and intelligence of the agent chosen. We Either we encoarage our own ships and main-| have a school of writers and near thinkers who now This case is a perfect illustration for necessity of thing, under this system, must be left to the = i + ifi _| foreign competitors and make ourselves the help- pects Me ori omnes Sceidental NS readied aaa less victims of a transportation system which is al- pea fora brief time orasa Puseasow to the chosen! Ways working for the “other fellow.” first. 2 > governor, the affairs of the people must not be en Ry d a job in the United States. Wo Ov rt - = j Forced Marriages - =e : ertones trusted to a person of less high quality. Representative Government seers RS this bi!l, and the qeulification a Gearatiiedl as ian texocat re} sashes fs UNITED STATES is not_a direct Demo} wren the cave man wanted a wife,| “That, in general, is my view upon ae ape ne pep De he eeazan up to all the demands required of a cracy but a Fepresentative republic,” the Na-|ne went scouting and dragged one| the question of protection to the agri-|.)=° Senuy f heard 3 tional Republican reminds us. “This is not the re-| home,” notes the New York Herald.|culturists and protection to the man- sult of accident, but of design pn the part of the|“Sometimes he disfigured her tempo-|ufacturerr. We are ing upon a | wise men who fashioned our form of government.) rarily in the course of capture. At]higher labor plane. We are living ‘Pure’ democracy was not a new dea at the time|ny rate, she had to come whether|upon a higher and more expensive competent secretary of state. The Republicans of Wyoming can make no mis- take in selecting Curtis Hinkle for their candidate Perchance was but a dream. One spake so sweet and low, stems of government must; to be enduring,|, “This later practice, in & modificd}iabor, Therefore I am in favor of] trom the Syracuse, New York, district, form, is not unknown today. The / lifting the farmer's product to @ plane|iittered the following splendid patri- , take into account the le for whom they are utter ie fol iS sp! pat © ‘A SPLENDID concrete bridge spans the Platte| Tog. Tr humanity eed “attained perfection, we| ZUNE man is expected to make kmown| of equality, just as much as it i8-pos-| otic sentiment 5 nalts : . it what he has in the equivalent of skins| sible to do so. ‘This iz casentlally a! goveroment of river west of the refineries. It has been in use| sonia have theoretically perfect systems of govern-| and cattle, but he is not ordinarily ex, “1 am not blind to the fact that wel parties, not of pepifer vrei’ some two years or more. People have but a dim rec- But if humanity had attained perfection| pected to hand over any of it to the] are expor! ollection of the old wooden bridge that formerly mes would be no Seadyot government at all, If bia man, who, as a matter of fact, Fore reir tpaedlgn grr ae math pappedicnytis paeeivemics bore the traffic at this point. When the bridge was| joonle individually were capable of self govern-|is sometimes supposed to come for-|amount to a great deal in revenue, party solidarity. The formatton of built provision was made for lighting it. Conduits! nent, without checks or restraints or intermediate| Ward with the equivalent of a few!but anything that adds to our sur-| "pigs," each insisting that a public are all in place and the wiring installed. All that} jeans of expression, then no government at all| ‘ttle himself. plus in the United States, which is the] official shall comply with its de- yet remains to be done is to place suitable light) ould be the best government. The assailants of}, “N°% “4 then there are throw-| principal field of consumption, and/manda as the price of its political = standards and connect up with the light plant. resentative government usually proceed on the hacks jto zur. unttive marriage} inerefore of price making, can not] support, is, in my judgment, one of = It would be a mighty fine thing if the board of |)” Seat Justice Loule a Mec go.{ help, by the very law of supply and|the gravest menaces facing the coun- cane theory that every individual is wise, good and thor-| cently Justice Louis M. Martin ay- county commissioners would take the matter up/oushiy competent to decide immediately for him-|nulled the marriage of a young Ital.|{Gemand. but drag down the prices. |try today, and if persisted In and car- J nh “3 And went so soon away, he placed it in the sun to dry -.ni for secretary at the primaries and the people will| 7° : ‘i she wanted to or not. When men|plano of expenses. We can go dowD/as, heart. will know. commit no folly, by electing him at the polls in No-|this republic was born. It had been tried and found grew more civilized they went to the|to the level of other countries, but T What theilied it yesterday: Sisk ment" as vember. : _ 24 father of the woman ey want not thing it is for our interest to CHARLES G. BLANDEN, So far as we are able to judge in the matter the|Stitution were students of government both from|ang handed over a big pile of skins|do so. If the tarift can smooth out Chicago, 1, = people of Wyoming have the same thought in mind.|the historical and the practical standpoint. Lowell | or nerded a few head of cattle to the| inequalities, the greatest inequality . > They want ability and efficiency in this important| Said of them that in what they did |Paternal door. If there were énowsh | that exists today is the inequality be- Sa EY FP fie TE te 4 they find them in Curtis Hi ne “They more devoutiy prized skins or enough cattle to satisfy the| tween tho farmer's labor and what he Party Solidarity 7 ete ce a Cag eae Oot lo, |Than all perfection theorized old man they got crithout further] gots for it and what the average citi-| _, Ee ————--0— --— ‘The moré imperfect that had roots, and grew.’ trouble the wife they wanted. zen in the great cities secures for his] Watte? W. Mages, : = Light the Platte Bridge “8 aes “ : Wh I think I loosen that and complete the work as it was originally in-| seif every governmental problem. There are doubt-|ian woman who had been coerced into | trae chain apon American onenitinn | ied *2 ® loscal conclusion, wilt mean| _It and can thebirth of amy first child. Later : r 3 the destruction of our form of gov. = tended. A ‘ ‘ less well meaning theorists who believe such prem-|@ marriage with a man who was dis-l7 am going to try to do it.” Seortgnl be taken in safety by a nursing | on the advice of pay mother used ; It is certain ‘the traveling public would more] i.e. as this, but most of those who profess faith in|tasteful to her. He had bargained Aor § Gy areas | The public has the right to say to it for a dull pain in the small of my than appreciate public lighting at this point and such a theory are designing demagogues who seek| With her father and obtained hts con- a ty SORRY pigiesetaers ‘of mothers who back and fora be: feeling. aside from the benefits, ornamental lighting would| ;,, gain power by flattery of the voter and thus se- sent. incest of paciencs, ware used Lodge Furnishes Figures First, You must not violate your| T? as eis Serene by taking Maseaipeten bead eas eck onimos te add materially to the beauty of a noble structuré.| ore an opportunity to sandbag the public. epee Kgsall re haterset sae: cath of office! are youkoor wane Wiel oes beanie oS ciated on ey ring —o——_—— “No one competent to operate an automob fle in-|tico Martin said that the practice of pattie ase - Sapiro 8 Ra eh ope on ge not take it yourself? Soy bores peer ames A : is God-given right to apply the power] forcing marriages in thi: Senator Henry Lodge o! “Will Gladly Questsons’?, | W8 com to for ! nvading Fundamentals weal ee the Se ehitiat Olrectlyo7 Ae igs g a Bas among iedools roth teselen Massachusetts says: x I pend unreservesiy, for bes es Oia Gaby Saree, Gosations i found Lydia E. Pinkbam’s NHE PRESIDENT has just made this solemn| qjyidual he is glad to have shafts and gear and a|birth in this state. He denounced it bone ain ope ratio of 1921 to Seah babies ray a i ‘was born I ‘troubled AL sein linet poe ‘bel a statement which is sure to find responsive echo] score of devices for stopping, starting and regulat-| cause of unhappiness and crimo. fae EAMES ee ee ‘the ful tien| With ‘Wwentcness of tho’ female or- 8. Belnord F 3 = “The laws of New York state pro-|!n the United Kingdom, 114 in France| Power, the full measure of devotion Also my stornach bloat | LOR@rTA B. Smuons, in every true American heart: ing the machines between himself and the motive! iso tnat anybody who tnles {and %9in Germany, If la not merely | Which’ these ‘totally disabled heroes, eoresd Thea ve., Baltimore, Md. “The foremost thought in the constitution is the| power. There are egotists who could easily be led| veman without her consent ts lighle, |that we have held cur trade with lees {om the threshold’ of itves full of|. SP ound aeanty not do | “Cannot Thank You Enough” right to freedom and the pursuit :f happiness. Men|to believe that the building of such devices into a|{? convicted, to 10 years imprisonment | diminution than any other country,| Promise, gave to their country. Pa.—‘“‘After my last anything. Allentown, but we have improved it over the} I 4m an American, through and and read Vegeta- | baby was born I lostweight andwas pre-war basis. Despite the hard times| ‘through, who makes no distinction be- Com: Sid for others, so ‘run-down pound ina ition. After and the general decline throughout |tween American born and American init a trial. After the first few | taking the second bottle of Baris E must be free to live and achieve. Liberty is gone in| machine constituted a reflection upon their ability| and a $1,000 fine. There is a eimilar America when any man is denied by anybody the|/to handle the motive power themselves. So there| penalty for the use of forge in mar- right to work and live by that work. It does not|are demagogues in this republic who try to make|rying a girl less than 18 years old matter who denies.” le believe that the selection of representatives| without the consent of her parents.|the world of all trade, we have kept|®aturalized. While we are the melt- could tell a picabe.. |. Sikham's Vexetsble Oey Organization such as the Ku Klux or any similar|of the people for the work of legislation and repre |The means by which to prosecute this Ped ea nae eee ee a intlOte oase cquMTECGATL OF ga retta aueR I oe IO powable, Satie a ed cae pel eae association of self-appointed regulators of public|sentation rather than the direct transaction of this |Sv\l are at hand. | Justice Martin rec-| “2 wil! now give “he department of|ment that affords ample protection to| E. Pinkham’s Vegetable my own housework and do an extra or private morals or conduct who first whip andj business by the people themselves, is an attempted “Tt ts utterly eer s FA she cateas Set Renan tae shall pombe vanes life and property, a government that} and felt so fine Yinogiected to wash 2s. I do not feel at all then run out of town those who do not please them,| reflection upon popular intelligence and capacity. |sense of modern society that girls|below the thousands. In 1913 the ex.| Suarantees to all absolute equality be-| take more for about @ year. | like I used to and I cannot thank the murderers at Herrin, TIl., the capitalists who] “Tt was long ago said that the man who insists|shonld be bought and sold in’ mar-|ports of the United States were $2,| fore the law, regardless of race, color| ‘This last winter I Cede gn lg ee ta ead grind wages down below living possibilities, the| on acting as his own lawyer has a fool for a client.|riage without their consent. It is| 204,500,000 and in 1921, thes weee|OF creed: ‘This is our government, not| 80 Lhave been taking it to jens ak ma wine 5 es doing an unions who forbid others to work in the places they] The same may be.said of the patient who insists |bad enough that they are often bought | $4,485,100,000.. In the United King-|# democracy, but a republic, a repre- ‘of female troubl vacate on strike may all well give careful consider-|on treating in his own way, without expert assist-|2nd ey ie their consent while dom in 1913 the exports were $3,089,- Reid fot Se ae Let beat 5 : . aton to the words the president has uttered. ce, a deadly disease that has attacked him. Yet|*0cl*ty looks on approvingly. It is] 363,000 and in 1921 $3,118,686,000, “ : Pinkham’s Private Text-Book upon “Ailm peat sarsaasis aim Patient hearing is given to the demagogue or doc-|7°t Within the power of government] showing that while we have nearly|US never forget that ‘the men who| | Ti 2 ae Wonca will be sent yor ree y eines. pal Se Men the “right® aeetn to Correct that evil. but the one| doubled our exports as compared with|™ake nation great are the men who| ree les BO E. Pinkham "Medicine Co., n, Massas ““4 Man’s House” | trinaire who insists upon the “right” of the people against which Justice Martin's censure |1013, in the year 1921, Ghine ee cin |dare to die.” J atand for the repub- chusetts. his book: contaius valuable infocuadinn 5 t ,to legislate directly and who seeks to tear down|is directed can and should be at-|worst year from a business point ot|lc—indivisible and indissoluble—tirst, QOLICITOR R Y of the department of labor{ the machinery through which believers in the rep-| tacked.”” view that we have had, Great Britain | !#St, and all the time. says: “Immigration laws of the United States/ resentative system of government insist the public has not attained to the pre-war level, limiting the influx of foreign-born persons to thistshould act in order that the state may be wisely and at the pre-war level she exported country, are justified when it: is considered that|and safely governed. McCumber Talks (Tariff |eariy a tition aouacs mone Snes Queer Questions With : | | it is the duty of the government to protect Amer-| “Every step away from the representative system did. . CEMENT ican ideals and safeguard its citizens. of government as deigned by the framers of our|_ Speaking on the subject of the tarift| “France tn’ 1918 exported $1,327,682,|| Hidden Answers ANNOUN “The United States government has the same| national constitution has been a backward step, | Senator McCumber said recently: 000 and in 1921 exported $1,606,570,- —— Tight to close the gates of Ellis Island to undesir-|and we have plenty of evidence, visible to every-| .. 0% 1, snow What the senator would| 000. It is remarkable, in my judg-|] If You Can't Answer Them, Look able aliens as the head of a family has ‘o protect| body, that the effect has been the demorilization aif Sta pce miaay thine tent, that. France and Sree Beata the Want Ads. I take this method to announce myself as a candi- his home. But it is essential that the small quota/and degredation of government. Government is im-| many thines but no wey oy live, or|Germany exported in 1913 $2,403.142,-| “Dace alr Chine ase Ie tac ae Tre date for the Democratic nomination for Sheriff of Na- of paras eculing under ths aise ap ad-) portant as an end rather than merely as a means.| live honestly and properly, who does|000, a total of more than we exported | coinage unit? trona County, subject to the will of the voters at the ministered by the immigration authorities wel-| The test of efficiency in government is efficiency in| not lay up a Uttle each year, who|in that year, and her exports in the panese worth rimary electi: gust comed whole-heartedly by the American public. legislation and administration. Judged by that test| does not sell more than he buys. The year 1921 were $858,292,000, ‘The fais ae eetoeeye car! Pp el on tq be ‘held on.Au oe “Immigrants who pass the tests at Ells Island|it is apparent that the steps way from representa-|*armer buys a pitchfork once in five| ratio of 1921 to 1913 was, the United POOOOOOD OOOO OOSOOOOS: : ; ; About what did the world war cost . P. AR! AST. are worthy of the friendship and advice of their|tive government have been toward chaos and in-|Z¢@Fs, if he does not loan it to his|States 191, the United Kingdom 101, the United States in Money? (ents Boe American neighbors. Tt is the solemn duty of every| competency rather than toward order and efficiency | "@shbor. He buys a monkey wrench | France 121, and Germany 36. How long is the alien widow of an American citizen who loves his country and who| in government. cherishes the principles for which George Washing-| “The overthrow of the representative system in ton fought to see to it that the foreign-born resi-| political parties has crippled and may completely denis are assisted in their struggle to understand destroy such organizations, constituting the only that lasts 10 years. He takes his} “We hear a great deal about de- American citizen considered a citizen? wheat to market in the fall of the|stroying our imports and therefore be-]| What is the most costly building in year, and he takes 100 bushels. He] ing unable, as we do not buy from for-| New York City. does not come back with a wagonload| eign countries, to sell anything to] Who was the first mayor of New he ri 1 ot monkey wrenches or pitchforks. If|them. In 1913 the tmports were $2,-| York? - the meaning of good citizenship. By so doing we, feasible means of responsible government under eur} he did, of course, he would not be | 509,000,000. In the United mines ‘how long has the prezs>* woman will be safeguarding our economic institutions and| system. Primary laws have been enacted which| anything but a loser in the Jong run.| the imports in 1913 were $3,741,048,000| tennis champion of the ‘Jnited States FOR RENT insuring the spread of patriotism.” throw open the doors for control of a political party|_ “When the laborer is interested in| and in 1921 were $4,182,713,000. Her| held her place? Tw INE OFFICE ROOMS "i 5, . ; Pt Mm ry P Mr. Risley s sentiments find ready approval by|by its enemies rather than its friends, and which 2 soe foal Hee eae Here nad increased out of propor-|| Are there as many acres in the OFI CE every American citizen worthy of that proud title.j have vastly increased the power of corruption and Sigg cee ae eee ae 00nd ee em borted | World's deserts as in the polar regions? RIALTO THEATER BUILD! It is important that the country realize that no im-|demagogy in politcs. The time is near at hand beedrigg ugh eigen Mens | fom s) in 1918 and 31,755,633.-|| About how many 2 pe araay te Formerly ‘Lyne Blas mS migration law, no matter how strict, can do for the} when political parties, for their own salvation, must| he buys once in five a us he is reg twas ead $2,563, 185,000 and her is genet ig ke ae Be tes ‘ nation what must be done in the assimilation of| insist upon the right to place their official tickets,|the price of a bushel of potatoes, a ports in 1921 were $1,062,684 000. Hee penteney: Sepa Geir! Reasonable Rent. those who come to these shores. Immigrants who} chosen by the representative method, on the primary| bushel of-corn or flax or rye, and the pass at Ellis Island and who remain here must be-| ballot. This is the only way in which the power of | gallon of milk or cream which he sells| extent as her exports. The ratio in come either an asset or a liability to the nation.| minority blocs, of money corruptly used and of un-| very day. We are trying to give him | imports was 133 for the United States, 7 Fhich depends upon whether ther become good] scruplnous demagogy can be prevented from destroy.|® Protection that will enable him to|112 for the United Kingdom, toe ant Driverless Cars Americans or persist in remaining foreigners living| ing first political parties and then responsible gov-| COMt#mue to sell, and in order to do| France and 41 for Germany.” sable dbo siea imports had not declined to the same Rialto Building in a, to them, foreign land. This is a question which| ernment at Washington and in th i the te uave to givo'a protection to is is 8 t ie various state] the two-th: Sea can only ho solced by educational sethoas con heen lation Who eat and consume his pros | pavantsecs, Mere. for the tomous] Dodges and Fords. hearty co-operation on the part of all who come in “The system of representative goyernment con- Rickenbackers automobile, Ben Mey- m ———————eeee SS ee’ ucts, We have to give them a job,| ors" garase, zara |See Virbel, Phone 274M RENT YOUR ROOM THROUGH A TRIBUNE WANT AD