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‘with which it is invested in popular fancy where PAXE SIX Che Casper Dailp Cribune Jesued every evening except Sunday at Casper, Natrona ‘ y, Wyo. Publication Offices, Trivune Building. - BUSINESS TELEPHONES «.--15 and 16 ®ranch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments been lh eae sass enn ens waa me ae 8 Entered at Casper (Wyoming), Postoffice as second class matter, November 22, 1916. - MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS his life he asked for public office. S Ww. < “President and Baitor) His sole idea in becoming a candidate at ail was Eanc fe HASWAT Business Manager| to help the people. To lessen the burdens of taxa- W. H ~ Associate Batter | tion upon thum. The platform presened by Mr. R. E. EV sesee ° <A y | Hay is not under all umstances a popular one; POMS DAILY .--~ toutes reeredbeeanncad PNET HL SY” Fight one. It does not attract the pro-| Advertising Representatives. fessioval politician and the chronic office holder Prudfen, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Blég.. Chi | for it contempla their retirement and the ad- Til; 286’ Fitth avenue, New York City; Globe Bide.,| *‘ Bos Mass. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file) Vancement of the ple into their own. It contem in the New York, Chicago and Boston offices and visitors plates the stricte ‘inciples of business and econ are welcome. | omy in publie m ement. It eliminates the mys- . 5 tery, the posing, assumption of extraordinary Cee ae Al on a, of ordinary mortals, and sub- One Year .. ea besauses --$7-30/ stitutes the ac ishment of plain ordinary Six Months 4 work by plain nary but competent mortals,| Socumean “95| With office door e open and the books and re- Per Cops c .05| cords spread ou public view an! examination.! By Mail It means a re tion of neighborliness between One Year . 390| the people and servants and a resumption = thao oh be cr'''* y'g5 | of labor togethe the pecple’s interest. wrt ecrir by mall accepted for leas period than _ There waa nev y thoughts of fraud or wrong t be paid in advance and the insure delivery after subs arrears Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C.) Member of the Associated Press. a is exclusively ows credited In this paper and lished herein. You Don't Get Your Tribune. any e between 6:30 and § o'clock p. m. & if ° r Tribune. A paper will be de cial messenger. Make !t your duty to w when your carrier misses you We Are All Workmen j 7E HEAR MUCH about labor and much about capital. There is a lime of demarkation be- tween them, but why should there be? It is placed there by false premises. Divested of all the fall- acious, untrue and distorted views and notions does the difference come in? Elementally, the laborer works, the employer works, capital works. Here are three prime interests. They are all en- gaged in effort for profit. All should have fair and just proportions of reward. It is designed to work perfectly and harmoniously, but if any fail- Where is the difference?) John Hay with their business troubles as they would to a father and received sound advice and cheerful aid, | There is mothing alarming in the. fact that the people of Bu; ge town and county are strong for John Hay. is their friend. And it would be strange, ideed, if they were not loyal to him and gave him @ cordial endorsement the first time in in the Wyomin; well-balanced c | may have been | ming has no sta nary election on the part of s with whatever faction they ed. In all of her history Wyo. f questionable practices in her Sweetwater cow gated is the hi the purity of t investigation is county and her ; discomfiture of : The official r: Wyoming at the ; more than mino- cers and when ports made to th official, let us fo primoy strugg): party nominees and popniar instit a fs Will the Governor Help? (jOVERNOR CAREY has issued a public state- st proof of their honesty and purposes. The result of the lly to the credit of Sweetwater ple, and on the other hand—the se alleging wrong. unt now progressing all over resent time, will reveal nothing ‘lerical errors of election offi- recount is concluded and re- secretary of state and declared t all unpleasant features of the and perform our duty to our the end that majorities rule itions are not a failure. ure occurs in this regard, the system wuer which we operate is charged with failure and dissatis- faction arises. Reason and sound judgment do not always prevail because we are all human and the element of selfishness is omitted in but few of us. Assuming that we are all workmen, and all en- titled to proper remuneration; to capital a fair re- turn in earnings to maintain the plant or business in proper and solvent condition; to the manager, executive or stockholders, proper salary or wages, dividends on investment, in return for labor per- formed or risks incurred; to skilled or workmen pay commensurate with ability, ingen- uity and muscle employed in performing required tasks. It must be admitted, if logic is to rule, that the system is fair and equitabfe. Then if it fails, there is a cause, to be looked for elsewhcre. If it is de- cided that human selfishness lies at the base of ents among those who labor, as it is likely to be, then let us turn to and hammer hu- man selfishness out of the human system. How? By public opinion. The one winning method by which all things are accomplished in America. ‘We all want labor to be justly rewared, because most of us are laborers. Those who do not labor are neither popular nor are they in the majority. Their situation is laregely to acquiesce in what the rest of us do. ‘We all want labor to be prosperous and obtain - out of earnings the things of life that lift existence above the level of the hum-drum and the constant repetition of eating, sleeping and working. For upon labor depends the well-being and prosperity of society and the progress of the world. If our national ideals are to survive and Ameri- ean civilization advance, we have reached the point where more of justice, more of co-operation; more of consideration, more of fraternal regard must be mixed in our daily struggle to succeed ani ac- cumulate. New and unheard of problems have confronted us on the road back tu settled conditions since the war. They have been ‘rying to patience, trying to purses, trymg to the peace and good order of com- munities in many sections of the comtry where local condition have laid heavy hand upon the people. We shall survive, and out of our experience we should leave valuable lessons in industry .and frugality. We should obtain a more just apprecia- tion of the nobility of labor and a more just re- gard toward our fellow laborer. That present labor difficulties will be smoothed out withont harm to labor there is every hope. And there are favoring condition that long before the snow flies we will again be proceeding in harmon- ious accord one with another as was our wont in the days before the world upheaval came to dis- turb our peace and disarrange our economic weal. —o—_ —_ Sweetwater Comes Clean PERFECTLY LEGAL and properly conducted 3 primary and a net gain of two votes for John : Hay in Sweetwater county. This is the result of ;the much Heralded allegations of fraud in the {home county of Mr. Hay. It was inconceivable to some minds that home folks would stand by a can, didate as nearly unanimonsly as did the people of Sweetwater county in the case of their leading citi- zen after living neighbors with him for thirty years. ite - “ In Rock Springs is where the people know John Hay best. Tt is there they have come in contact with him day after day for many Years. It is there John Hay can call men and boys alike by their first name. It is there the people have gone to Last Call to Grog ter a! boat Tioga, lying The first of September ma Fowhatan, an abandoned earthwork{tub. it may bo of interest to some of; APA peu ascit Gubpemne Koenros sixtieth anniversary of the pas! on the James river some 15 miles B6-} Your readers to learn something about el ara Brog in the United States low Harrison Landing. where MeClel- ceremony, for much {t was, which| Drift down the lanes where pur- Rear Admiral lan's army was encamped, an@ at ed_into history on that occasion. ple _saters ‘blow: navy, retired, hes crritten an inter- erty on aeeee §1 all hands were|~ ror several months I BARES TOES tee yeg! anee ere ieee esting account of it 1 -| Piped to splice the main brace, @# WE) the gun deck card = fon = official eboll- |.44 no drummer to announc. (amine Sees © tho frigate! feems only 2 dim mystery of blue first will be the sixtieth | ™ORT- of the day which saw the f the spirit ration in the|caston, as all han: ed to the United States gun- Tt was not regarded as 2 festiwe OC ment in which he says he is probobly defeated for renomination. in «he Republican primaries That he was elected to his present office asa Ro publican and has conducted a Republican admin- istration during the four years of his term; and if he ever becomes a candidate for office again it will be as @ Republican. Republicans over the state, supporters of the governor and supporters of Mr. Hay, will regret that the seer did not go a step further or aniplify hig statement to say that he would be fonnd in the Republicen ranks doing his part to elect Mr. Hay and his share to make the Repub- lican party successful at the approaching election. Governor Carey is too big a man to omit the little things/and the pate] things to place him- self in the proper light before the people. It is to be hoped that some subsequent statement after the official count is made will contain the things omitted in his first utterance since the primaries were held There is no doubt of the. ism from any quarter. There should be none. Nothing has happened to cause the governor to for. sake political principles he has held since arriving at his majority. And there is certainly nothing in the principles advocated by the Democratic party, or any other party attempting to do business in Wyoming that would prove attractive to * man of Governor Cerey’s views and attain- ments. . _ The Republican party of Wyoming would be de- lighted to see Robert Carey take part in the pres- ent campaign in the interest of the Republican state and national tickets. It would vindicate the judgment of his friends as to his good sportsman- ship his broad-mindedness and the sincerity of his Republicanism, i governor’s Republican- Interfering with Natural Process | TF YOU ARE a married man, do not apply for a | -_ teaching position at Northwestern university at | Evanston, Til. Evanston is a “social center,” or so the univer sity authorities thi The salaries paid instruc- tors are so slim that they can not maintain a wife and family — them, because of the social de- mands upon time, strength and pocket book of the professors es of learned instructors have had # take jo’ stores, telephone ex- changes and @S waitresses in restanrants in order to live. Wherefore the more married inst A baldheaded m: his head. The tov That he killed the him to matter. Did it not oceur with the unnatur: eliminate the fals« the true standard for man to live a! versity authorities say “no tors.” ; omplained of a fly on top of fool killed the fly with an ax. idhead, too, didn’t appear to to the authorities to interfere not the natural procss? To tandards of “society” and keep human life? For-it is not good 1 e; the unmarried instructor is sure either t9 marry or to wish to marry. If he does the first, he fired; if he merely wants to and can’t, he Worries as much as the professor al- ready in chains of debt and small salary and “so- ciety”—heaven save the mark! : The best feacher, other things bein: mal, is the happiest temeher. The laborer i Scar of his hire. Let Northwestern ban the “society” expense, let Northwestern reduce its progrem and pay a living wage, but let Northwestern take heed in time, for nature is stronger than universities, the ingrained instincts of the human race far more powerful than the ukase of the board of directors. Either Northwestern will change its ruling or Northwestern will co down, down, down in educa- national ability . not to mention desirability! at anchor o72 ert} th ds know tt wagethe| deck elections. The « ary voter is an honest person. | | He desires noth: but the fair and the right. | , Tt is only thos: «ho would stoop to obtain results | by unfait meth< lid they not fear the law, that would « s and raise the ery of fraud against honest who knew not the meaning of wrong. The willingne John Hay and the people of | to have their primary investi-| and} remaining officers of the navy, tf not| last one, who presided at the Bros) Cumberland, and one of my duties was to attend at the serving out of grog, which took place at noon on the half which was the after end of the vce Mrs. NARRIET TAYLOR UPTON -be Casper Daily Cribune ical Housekeepin in Washi ngton Br licen Liecutive Conunitteec MRS. AVERAGE CITIZEN AND THE TARIFF | .. Women since the days of Abigail | ‘Adams have ‘lemanded education | and advantages for all people. No | | ene can ever know what the early | mothers sacrificed in order that their children might have educat- | | ional privileges. What is true of | | the early mot*iers ts true today of | | the women of America. They want all the young men and women to jhave the advantages of education. 3f the wages are ro low that a | father cannot support his sons and | Gaughters, while they are being | | educated, the children must enter the ranks of the bread winner, handicapred by lack of training and stunted in all future develop- ment | | in deciding for or against the | tariff on goods tmported into this country women have but to make a simple choice of two things. Xt is whether they are willing to pay @ little more for some articles or whether they would prefer that Jess wages be paid to the workers of this country. If Europe can make and eell at a profit a lamp | chimney for four cents and our lamp chimney manufacturer pays a man four and one-half cents | dust for blowing, it is perfectly | mpparent that either the blower | must get less or a tariff must be placed on lamp chimneys of such | an amount that the working man | ean have four and one-half cents and the manufacturer can also be | paid for his outlay. | An effort has been made tn the | sistant, the Jack-of-the-Dust, would! |open the spirit room, get out the grog tub, which was a good sied keg with |brass hoops and brass hasp and pad-| | lock. and take it to the usual place, and then inform the officer of the deck that everything was ready and a sentine! in attendance, and when eight bells struck the drummer would roll to grog, @ long roll.on a tenor drum being the usual signal, which| |was soon followed by the tramp of en's feet responding to the welcome call to grog. h Inside the grog tub was a half shelf a few inches below the top, which was) perforated with holes and on which eaoh. These the purser’s steward would fill to the brim, and as the purser’s clerk callod the men’ they stepped up and took their grog) neat and fell back to make room for others. The boys were not allowed| the crew whose grog was stopped as a | puntshment. It took some time to serve out grom! to a large ship's company, but tt was| done as quickly as possible, the grog tub returned to the. spirit room, the} keys returned to the orderly and the! officers of the deck informed and the fact entered in the log that grog was served to the crew. | ‘While the new order of things was very unpopular it was accepted with better grace than might have been ex- |pected under the circumstances. | It should be remarked that the s0o- jcalled spirit room on a man of war was not a room in the generally un- derstood sense but was the after hold below the orlop deck, the space be-| tween it and the berth deck above be- |Ing called the cockpit, in which was a room for the captain’s clerk and one on the opposite side for the purser’s clerk and some storerooms for cloth-| ing, tobacco, soap and so-called small stores, | The following verses appropriate to /the passing of grog were written by| Paymaster Schenck of the navy. The| Scene was supposed to be the ward-| room of some United States vessel nd the air “Come, Landlord, Fill the lowing Bowl": Come, messmates, round, Our time is short, remember, For our grog must stop and our spirits drop | On the first day of September. pass the bottle | | Farewell, old rye, ‘tis a sad, sad word, But alas, it must be spoken. The ruby cup must be given up | And the Gemijohn be broken. Jack’s happy days will soon be gone, To return again .oh, never: For they've raised his pay five cents} a day But stopped his grog forever. | Yet memory oft will backward turn And dyvell with fondness partial On the days when gin was not a Nor All hands to splice the main hrace call, But splice it now tn sorrow, For the spirit room key will be laid) away | ®orever on tomorrow. Charles O'Netl. Now Wanes the Summer | Now wanes the summer to her twi- light time, June was her morning hour, July her noon, August her evening and her after- Flow: ow cricket choirs in one clear ca- dence chime, That beckons with veiled fincers, calling “Come!” | “The Signif.cance of the Electron," by the Rev, Joseph Ritson, {s one of jmore than a thousand times smaller! Sight against an adequate tarift te |*PAco fcr = few plain persuade American women that | they will be required to pay al- most prehibitive prices for articies | be forced to raise their order to cover the additional duty. This is denied by the facta, which shew that under the present rates the importers make enormous profits. A toy monkey made in Germany, for instance, can be | brought into this country at a total cost of 31 cents. The price charge ed by the importer who is alee | the retailer for the monkey is $2| } ‘The enormous profit made on am | electric fron imported to this | country furnishes another good example. The total cost, includ | ing duty, is fifty-nine centa. The housewife is charged $6.50 by the retailer for it. <A beaded volle dress imported to this country at a total cost of $22.50 was sold by the imuporter for $48. In all three! cases an additional duty could be, imposed without affecting the sell~ ing price or causing the importer any ‘hardship. Geepublican party has al- ways stood for an adequate tariff, tn order that the working man America might make a dqpent lir- ing and still be able to compete with cheap foreien labor. The present Republican administration stands for America first and by 0 doing it protects the women and children in industry. Who Struck Mr. | Patterson? John Phillip Sousa's reference to the old mystery of who struck Patterson recalls the only exp! I ever heard of the cause for that much repeated query. In June of 1894, while camping In the Yosemite valley with Herbert Hoover and other college associates, woe got up a great campfire gathering to which were summoned only the col- lege folk then among tha hundreds of in that wouterful vafity. was in a natural amphi- rs i Our campfire ley Mercer river. and Europe. { James Brett Stokes, Princeton °81, giant who played guard at Princeton, grog, so their names were not called,|reiated the story responsible for the tertaining. nor were the names of members of| question “Who struck, Billy Patter.) What ¢o you gain by {t—“For t you sow, that will you also reap?’ And while the children are small, is ‘your golden opportunity, for as the twig is bent bat Brows. son?” In years gone by there was an an- nual feud night conflict between the university students at Oxford and the river boatmen. Billy Patterson was the recognized leader among the, boat- men and a bruiser to be dreaded. To capture, him became ‘the special ob-} ject of the English collegians. ‘This was effected. ‘Billy was hurried away one rush nigst to an awesome chamber. There all the assembled were in black gowns and cowls and! were ed. A mock tribunal was Institute Billy was tried, found guilty, sentenced. He was to be guil- lotined. The beheading block was re- vealed, the headsman stood beside it with a huge battleax. | Billy, bound hand and foot, was placed kneeling before the curved de- pression and his throat fitted down into it and the blindfold placed over his eyes. The command was given. The blow fell upon Billy’s powerful neck. It was only a cord that had been wet in cold water. Billy re-, mained inert. Moments passed. Billy had fainted? No, Billy was dead. The whole thing had been very real to him. His heart had stopped for all time. The affrighted students re- moved their disguises, spirited the body out to the river's edge and.left it. “Who struck Billy Patterson?” re- mains a mystery. —ARCHIE RICE. Atoms and Systems Tn the Hothorn Review for July the articles. most likely to appeal to the layman. The author, with Pro- fessor J. A. Thomson’s work, “Out. nes of Science,” as a source of facts and inspiration, argues well that recent discoveries have weaken- ed the cause of materialism consid- erably. With electrons the wonder ts mul- tiplied indefinitely. An electron 1s than an atom. If a bubble of hydro-| gen gaa be magnified to the size of the globe, each atom in ‘the bubble would be the size of a tennis-ball. Again, if an atom were magnified to the size of St. Paul's Cathedral, each electron im the atom would be about the size of a small bullet. To put it in another way, according to the Iat- est and finest measurements an eleo- trom‘of hydrogen is one part in 1845 parts of an atom. The infinite mind of the Creator alone could build & untverse of such particles, no one of which is at rest, and yet each has its part to play in the vase economy of Nature. ‘The wonder is further enhanced when we reslize that an atom is a sort of miniature solar system in |which the electrons revolve round a! ommon center as the planets round the sun—another symbol of a vast lunity. ‘The center in this case is a nucleus of positive electricity, where- as the electrons themselves are nega- tive electricity. But as yet we do not know the nature of either. The theory has been advanced that jsons, or both are the cause of it all. | Did I say the cause of it all? own fault your own hands have fsshioned. | children? ling @ Uttle child, probably net jor make you mind me. you might see the ridiculousness of ft all. | Uttle easier overruled and |they are parent, and méther the child. ny 5° Many trashy, vulgar movies, Se ion | ect some of the best, something clean and instructive—take all the children; make a family party of it. children? You prefer some chum or lady friend and as a consequence, ‘your children are not tn the proper company. jpanion you must start out with them very early in life. Enter into their sports, be one of them, stood several little tin cups or tots./tneater under the Royal Arches, up(things they do. Oh, yes I hear the as they were called, which held a gili| near Mirror Lake and close beside the|>usy mother, say who will ‘The registry that Work? They will all gladly help—ir ht showed men and women present| there is some object to work for and Names| trom 37 different colleges of America there is nothing that pleases the little ‘folks more than to go with mother. Tt very soon becomes a habit. “the varticles of positive anc noga- Now fain am I to walk where light ; ° sD 5 ; e winds etray. soap Suates avy. for on September | Inst day jof race and Jack “i@ Mab Rn Cock, on the warboar® ede Bomnted wih! fragrance “from ’ ths 1 he act of cengress went into | take y to being depri Ata little before noon T : 2) AGE, oie act of cons rte being depriv ittle before noon T used to get fields I knew, sue “abolishing t “ax “part of the eee, - bbe ih war ithe ay of the spirit room from the Among the valleys and the hills sation. x o c captain’s orderl dhand it over to of home. On that date I was an acting mas-— As I am probably one he few —ELISABETH SCOLLARD, - j a, who with his as. tive electricity are points or centers, of disturbance of some kind in a uni-| |versal ether, and that all the various, |forms of energy are, in some finda- |mental way, aspects of some primary jentity which constitutes matter tt sel But this is mere speculation, for Science has not yet decided what ether is nor even whether it exists. When therefore the Bible speaks of a Providence that guides the steps «f a good man, that takes account of the death of a rparrow, and in mag- alficent hyperbole numbers tho very airs of our heads, need any of these Atvags be counted too «mali for the consideration of One’ who regulates the movements of atoms anl elec- trons? A Word to Mothers Editor Tribune:—Please allow me remarka to mothers ‘ Why do you grieve so? Why the premature gray hairs and deep fur- rows at brow. ‘Your daughters and ol It is mostly your They are decidedly what no they are not, Have you the confidence of your Then why is it sometimes a hard thing to do especially with boys? If the father is not a compan- ion to ts boys, if he does not tell them the things he should, then mother dear, it is your work. I know it js a hard thing to do, but there are many things in after life that are a thousand times worse. Did you ever hear a mother scold- yet five years of ee. Making such threats as “I'll knock your bdiock oft.” “Yl Kill you while you are little “I'll brain you,"—eay shame on such a mother if you could have stood a plock or more away and heurd such talk Ask yourself ‘who {s te blame? When you speak in a loud voice it is bound to echo back again in the same loud tone. Speak in a low tone. Most mothers talk too much. Give the children broad Ifberties, but when “Well you may go this time, but don’t ask to repeat it.” The next time it is the same thng, only the child ts more determined and mother r long Don’t permit the children to go to ‘Why not be a companion for your If you wish to be a com- enjoy the do th Too many mothers do too much en- It 1s mostly foolishness. in see one before? Betty. & WHO MERRY WITCH AnD PIRA FOR LITTLE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1922. ARM FOLKS LIKE ADVENTURES y MAKINGS Built for You by Elsinore C:owell “Oh! Tomah-to, come, excitement. “Hurry! fling n Enormous Snake! COME!" shrieked Betty, hopping up and down HURRY!/ Runner in your back yard either There's the queerest bird out here,|he'll make a very jolly toy if that looks as if he’a started out to be! paste him on paper, color him | & baby ostrich and then couldn't de-| brown, cut him out an@ put ci@e whether he'd turn into a hen or! gether with paper fastener & wood pecker. And h tepas in MY back yard” Perhaps you wouldn't want a Road ajof twisted wire. The holes are ibered so you can see which one goes “That sounds interesting,” said To-;where—and if you don't laugh when mah-to, the little Hopi Indian guide who was taking Betty on the wonder- ful adventure through the desert land. “Let's see your bird. rf and To-mah-to began to laugh. that's just 2 Road Runner.” ‘A what?” ‘A Road Runner. le ha: when he’s four feet lon, said Betty, tance. Please attend. (Signed) CARPENTERS’ NOTICE Local No. 1564 will hold a special meeting on Thursday @venifig, August 31. Business of impor- GEO. M’PHERSON, Recording Secretary. Didn't you ever He lives in the des- erts and some of the mounta‘a places and running is the best thing he does. His legs are almost as big and strong a& Jack Rabbit's, his beak {s as hard as a chisel— “And look at his tail! interrupted twice too much tail.’ “No he hasn't. He needs every bit of it to balance himself as he scoots along on his high legs and swings that great neck of his from side to side looking for something to eat. most everything, but he LOVES a nicey fat, juicy, garter snake and he can kill him quite easily, too, He eats ticularly “T don't want ie (or she) ts fnished, I'll go out ani t a garter snake myself! Tomorrow—Adventure Trails: ing a Boat.” Copyright, 1222, by George Matthew Adam: “Mak ——— es Sell it with signs. Wood the s: man. 8-2 ECZEMA ON BODY IN PIMPLES Itching Intense. Could Not Sleep. Cuticura Heals. “Eczema broke out on my body in small pimples with white bead: ‘i At first there were just GD) few small spots but it i quickly spread, censing Y intense dis- Give Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum the care of your skin. CASPER, WYO. JUST RECEIVED A Beautiful Line of STERLING Jos. I. SCHWARTZ P. G. MAC MANUS, MGR. DENVER, COLO.