Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 14, 1922, Page 6

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na z 15 and 16 nen Tel Connecti u mts Dateres Postoffice as second clans oy November 33, 1916. re PHE ASSOCIATED P’ President and Editor Representatives. Hobe Bids Boston offices and vi welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carcier ---$7-80 - 3.90 1.9 Mail By Mail pate - 3.90 epted for less period then wery after subscrip B.C.) paper and | Don't Get Your Tribune. » between 6:39 and § o'clock p.m ur Tribune, A paper will be de messenger. Make it your duty to when your carrier misses you. «Gi | Present and Veting ! The telegraph wires tel) a story of a! ndred and forty thousand majority for} Henry Cabot Lodge in the Massachusetts primary} election. It is entirely sufficient and satisfactory} to Republican well-wishers at a distance. There was talk awhile back that Senator Lodge would be easily defeated by any old candidate that could be induced to enter a contest. It seems that kind of a candidate entered. It seems also that | he has made his exit. Possibly not with much grace, or credit to his running ability. There was great aJarm in the ealier weeks of the campaign, wholly upon the part of Democratic newwspapers, lest Senator Lodge escape the anni hilation Mr. Wilson desired that he receive for his} part in ruining the latter’s league of nations pro gram. So the effort was put forth by the dark and mysterious powers of Democracy to aid in the hu-| miliation of the veteran senator. It was to be ane | in the primary. The attempt got no further than the newspapers before its fate could be discounted. | The people of Massachusetts approve Henry Lodge. They realize his value to them and to the nation. They appreciate the utter nonsense of} retiring him, when there is as great need of his| wisdom and service now as heretofore. Henry Lodge is one, if not the one great Ameri- can citizen and statesman. Bosh on ever retiring hin. Massachusetts people will be equally as wise at election time as they have been at primary time.. They will make his election majority equally as Jarge as his primary majority over his opponent. Hoe pe TEL one h Labor Scarcity T IS APPARENT that if there were no strikes, and if industry over the country was well-bal- anced in compensation there would be practically no unemployment and the country would be well out of the post-war depression. As it is, the strikes are causing a large amount of both voluntary and} involuntary idleness, and besides those conditions| there is still slack work in some industries and con-| gestion in others. The most notable development in the labor mar- ket since the depression began has been the advance of twenty per cent in the wages of common day labor by the steel corporations of the country which is already in effect. It had been known ‘that since the revival in the steel industry had reached about 70 per cent of capacity the companies were experi- encing difficulty in recruiting their forces. The men had scattered, many going back.to the old countries, and the immigration law is a factor in restricting new supplies. With a prospect that wages in the coal industry would be maintained at the old rates, and that miners who had found em- ployment in the steel works would go back to the mines, the iron and steel operators thought it ad- visable to announce the advance. * | own party. |sension within the party this time has the outlook for Republican success | road, said Mr. Eldrid, ed to the| been brighter. It is, as ever, the party of progress | wit! swerve about the Jand Poindexter of Washington. i that indorsement, only to have the conservative} wing of bis party repudiate their action by the choice of Mr. Ross. It is no secret among those who have followed the political news of Wyoming that there is not the best feeling between the Dem- | the candidate for governor. |__ Four years ago Mr. Ross was a candidate against Mr. Houx and met defeat the} Kendrick support. This year he got the nomina- {tion in spite of the Kendrick flirtation with the | Bldg., Chicago | Non-Partisans and the choice of Kindler at Doug-! riage, director of reads of the Amer las. Now thot he has it it is difficult to see just jican Kendrick lacks the confi-!roads board, after making a careful) “ldence of the conservative Democrats because of bis |<igest of the traffic laws of all the/ wor what he will make of it indorsement by the radicals and Ross lacks the confidence of the radicals for the reason that they the Republicans; they stand to lose many of their | “On the other hand the Republicans are lined up with a good state ticket, excellent tickets in the counties and a well defined policy looking to the betterment of national and state affairs. Their 4 in advance and the}state committee is well organized, with a chairman |trave! at a slow of experience and character, and the reports from the counties are to the effect that there is no dis- ranks. | Never before at} Frank W. and prosperity, and with such men as Mondell and John W. Ha success assured. an end and an undivided Republican party marches forward to victory on the ‘th day of November.” paises li [2 Indorsement Not Lacking SIGNIFICANT that three Republican United States senators, candidates for renom ination in state primaries held have won) by unusual majorities over opponents presumed to have great strength and representing all elements of discontent within the party and the ordinary opposition on the outside. Townsend of Michigan, Lodge of Massachusetts Is All are close to) the national administration and all have been ac-} maries where present Republican Senators and rep- resentatives were candidates for renomination. Of all of the incumbents asking re-election the number defeated for the house would not be more than seven in the entire country and their defeat’ could by nq stretch of imagination, be attributed to any other cause than local issues. Had there existed among Republicans in Wyo- ming any inclination to show resentment of na- tional policies supported by Republican members of the congress Frank Mondell would have had op- position to his candidacy for the United States senate and he never would have been given the} splendid primary vote he received, which by the way was more than twice the vote the opposition party gave ite candidate John B: Kendrick, for the same office. Republican party members in Wyoming cordi- ally approve the congressional record of Frank Mondell, just as do Republicans in Michigan, Mass- achusetts and Washington, approve the work of Senators Townsend, Lodge and Poindexter. So far as anyone knows of dissatisfaction with} the Harding administration it is confined to the Democratic party. The Hurry Bug “sINHE HURRY BUG causes most automobile traffic accidents.” asserts the Cleveland Plain- Dealer. “It gets into the brains of drivers, partic- ularly of young drivers, and its mischief is told in the death column next morning. Just as the hook- worm deprives men and women of ambition, the hurry bug deprives them temporarily of reason. “Cars skid to destruction usually because the person at the wheel is in a hurry. Cars collide at corners, get run down at railroad crossings, go over embankments, telescope themselves against stone walls or try jousts. with telephone poles be- cause somebody wants to get somewhere before somebody else. If people would drive cars with the same calmness and absence of hurry that used to mark the handling of horse-drawn carriages of slower days the Monday morning news pages would look quite different than now. “There is room here for a study in biology. What scientist will be first to identify the hurry bug and offer an antidote? The police judges are doing their best but the bug continues to flourish.” Bi Rae. BS The Last Ball SPORT WRITER, discussing a tennis player in a run of bad luck, says: “The trouble with action naturally has affected the entire labor situation, being followed by an advance in | non-union mining districts of Pennsylvania of nearly 50 per cent, and by advances in the cement and other industries. It is an effective refutation of the charge that there is a class community if in- terests among all employers with a fixed policy to depress labor, and of the claim that there is no such thing as the law of supply and demand in the labor market. Here is the biggest open-shop industry in the country leading a ‘wage advance at the very mo- ment most embarrassing to the railroad companies and coal operators. It affords a demonstration of a method of determining wage rates that is far superior to any arbitrary fixing, either by labor unions or by arbitration, i. ¢., the free, voluntary movement of individual workers to where they can get the best pay. There is no appeal from a settle. ment in the open market. Face the Common Enemy ssMHE PRIMARY BATTLE is over—a friendly trial of the mettle of candidates within party lines—and now the real test of strength is to be .” Thus writes the Cheyenne Tribune. “Sixty days is not too much time for a campaign | in a state where the distances are so significant as in Wyoming. _ Without laying off on Sunday, there "are only three days in which to canvass:a single county, and certainly that is not too much time for a candidate to use in becoming acquainted with the voters. “Democrats realize that a majority of the people eof the state are of the Republican persuasion and }that they must win over a large number in order to succeed. From the beginning they are under the handicap of a poor organization, a ticket that does “net appeal strongly to the business and conserva- tive interests of the state, and an indorsement from the Non-Partisan league. Mr. Kendrick’s lieuten- ants labored faithfully for several months to get nd him is that he can’t forget the last ball,” notes the | Fitchburg Sentinel. “In a nutshell, that explains }a great many failures. When people begin living | over the past to the extent that they harp upon it, \it means that they are just about ‘hrough’” Many men, even at the youthful age of thirjy-five or forty, ‘begin talking about what they did five, ten, fifteen lor twenty years ago. They boast about old-time ac complishments, which usually is a sure sign that subconsciously they realize that they are through accomplishing. Falling back on one’s past—self- admiration about a previous record—is a violation of the modern code which rates a man by what he did yesterday or the day before. Attention and fortune go to the man who is making a new record. The old record is ancient history, and is being for. gotten. | “The opposite of this law is working in the case of the tennis player. He is playing in bad form be- cause he is brooding too much on the last ball— | past mistakes. It doesn’t matter how many mis- | takes you have made if you can convince the world | that you have profited by them. Experience is in- valuable, yet it is nothing more than a chain of | mistakes mostly. Normally a man is fortunate in |having made mistakes, for the agony is over and |he is not apt to make them again. This is today not yesterday. The past is gone to be forgotten. “A third type of misdirected energy is observed jin the person who has succeeded in forgetting the | | past, but is also inclined to forget the present. Liv- ing too much in the future, he bungles the present. | You see this frequently in a mechanic, clerk or | salesman who dreams so much about what he will | do when he is himself a boss that he falls into a Biles, to display some sort of light when using the reads at night jstates of the union. }a report to the secretary of A x regard his candidacy as a flagrant violation of the |), ve jaws requiring the mirror on! Douglas pact. Their situation is desperate and {trucks, but that very few have any} S they cannot hope to get any support whatever from cee for horse-drawn rvehicles. trucks {California, Connecticut, Indiana, Kentucky. achusetts. Jersey and the District of Columbia. passenger ‘tars, engine completely drowns many instances terist behind, y as its standard bearers means an accident Pri y differences are atom & Pr anny by lfor it is chvious, as a motorist, com-) hicle until he is right on it. in obtaining “such law Seal tions in Nebraska were very popular mode of travel a sadd'e meant being in sty could «in many Indian ponies and bronchos crop fatlures would drive/them cut Teiperay with as little as they brought in, or even less. But new settlers who Che Casper Dailp Cribune Highway Accidents Accidents on the highways could be greatly decreased by the passage ty 2 jog uniform state laws requiring every —\ocratic candidate for the United States senate and +... to, carry a mirror, giving a | view of the road immediately to the)... rear, and by requiring every horse. This is the opinion of M. O. Eld Automobile association good Mr. Eltridge, in| com merce, sets forth that thirteen states states requiring mirrors on Washington, New York, Maryland, Mas: Missour!, are Vermont, Michigan. New “Motor trucks need mirrors as they ver rate of ageed than and the noise of the out, in the horn of the nio- who ts blowing for the| “Often they e the pas. ‘ Anonymous yc ectoe whe 3 Gel Mallee Roee. Or coined a labet for the Daffodil, Or | disclose Who fashioned Columbine, or Vielet: And whose quaint fancy titled Bouncing Ret Or chanced on Honeysuckle, no one knows. debts of gratitude we owe to those— Poets, although they strove no songs to make, Whose lovely words a throng of ghost flowers wake, Fair as in gardens of Hesperides, That bless our workadays with fra. to have me, let's write to You may call me Aunt i Sizs The Burbank of Wyoming One of the most interesting men in Wyoming is Ed Young, rghtly called the Burbank of Wyomng. In speak- work, ng of Mr. Young recently the Lander enger car is about to, pass, and this As for the light! the need horse-drawn vehicle, RE Up behind such a vehicle and per-| haps blinded by the headlights of a} from the opposite direc-| car coming tlon, cannot see the horsedrawn vo- I be isve that uniform state laws on christened Clov,r, Caraway, or Squilt watched Narcissus preen himself, } and chose because he Jacked the |r#wn vehicle. as well as automo) 11, name to grace a flower; no screeds these two subjects will go far toward] decreasing the number of accidents which take daily toll of life, and the A. A. A. will do all in its power to ald Stealing In Self-Defense Shortly after the civil war condi- primi- tive in promoting its policies. tive. The comparatively few people If there was discontent in the country, with the|there were living mostly in sod Harding regime it would be reflected in the pri hala slau ObSaalapalty ener The eck of a broncho was the fa good hurricane An experienced man with a lariat as a short time procure he needed or could use; consequent animals were plentiful and cheap. But the old Cheyenne saddle commonly used by cowboys and plainsmen, and so called because Cheyenne was at that time the head- quarters for cattlemen for ~ several hundred miles about, cost from $75 to $100 each, and specie was scarce. The saddles were made of sola leather, except the frame, which was firmly constructed of tough wood and fron, and they had in front a high horn upen which the ijariat could bo wound to hold a refractory pony or steer. Comparatively few of theso saddles were owned by the real pioneers. the most of whom had come into the country with perhaps nothing moré than a wagon and a pair of broke: down horses or mutes. Sometimes usually arrived after a good crop sea- son generally had money and one or ™ore new saddles. One of the old settlers whose sad- die had worn out and who had no Money to buy another appropriated ‘one from a newcomer and was after- ward arrested for the theft. Thete were then no courts, and a jury was the neighborhood, mostly like the accused. The case was clear- ly proved against the old settler, but as he was popular among his peers the jury were loath to convict h'm. selected from among the people of. farmers PHONE 1325 Journal sad: “Ed Young, the veteran orchardist of Red Canon ts again at the Fremont county fair this year with a wonder- ful display of apples, among them bé- jag no less than 39 new varieties propagated and grown by himself. Many of them are desttined to become of great value to this state and to t entire west as he js constantly experimenting to bring out fruit that’ is especially adapted to this soll and climate. “He has produced in all 53 new va- rieties, the best being the Washakie, the Fremont and the Wind Riyer apples. “Mr. Young, though past 80 years of age, is still as active and enthusiag- tic as a boy in his chosen work. He is one of the rea) builders whose life's work will live long after he is gone. Such men deserve far greater honors than is usually bestowed upon them in lfe. “The state of Wyoming, through its experimental farm department ought to take up and carry on the impor- tant work begun by Mr. Young in order that Wyoming may In time de- velop enough hardy varieties of fruit adapted to this climate to supply her |citizens with. fresh wholesome fruits grown at home.” Rest Time BUY | PIGEON It’s Fresh Roasted Phone 623 BAGGAGE AND ‘Oh. dear ‘dorablest ’ said Teity, TRANSFER “I am £0 sorry.’ And with that be set to work n «made Jenny Linn a ‘ttle Hopi Indian girl of exactly her own Rize. And che used one of her ewn wern tan stocKlags! Vor most litte Hopi Indian girls look as if they were nade from tan stockings aay- First, she took a piece of stocking of the size shown in A, 6 inches deep shows an arm with the string tied around for the wrist. Halr was made of Block darning cotton. Betty cut many lengtha of cotton and sewéd them all firmly on the top of dolly’s scalp, then banged them neatly across her forehead as shown in G. The rest of the hair she divided, into two parts and wount them into two rolls on either side of dolly’s face. This is the way the | skidway, and out of house. And easeful hours the season should + allow, Oh, long the strife against the wind's will vagrant— Calm let me rest amid old memories fragrant: "Tis autumn now! ~—Stokely 8. Fisher. out, stuffed tt snugly with rage, tiod/ ripened fruit of the big human fam- the place where tne neck shew! he | ily. Betty called her Ma-san-l-yam- srsothing out the piace for facy| ka. What are you going to call yours. !, stuffed the rest nto a pi Write and tell me. tle tummy end fastened up th as inc. ‘then she marked the face with a Frencil. If you wish you can make the lines. with needle and thread and a, GARAGE Tomorrow—Adventure Trails: ing a Bait Box.” Copyright, 1922, vy George Matthew dams. i " There will be a bus line to Evans ville, leaving postoffice 6:30 morn: pees also leave town on the half 01 2. “OR QUICK RESULTS TRY TRIBUNE CLASSIFIED ADS’, 12) | up for your Tri>ume for every 50c paid. They meditated for some time and discussed the nature of the verdict to be brought in. Finally one of them hit upon the happy idea of calling it a case of self-defense, which was finally accepted by the other jury- men. The verdict brought in was accordingly that the saddle had been taken in sel-defense and the accused Was acquitted of the charge. A. H. OLESO! GIRL HAD PAINFUL TIMES Mothers—Read This Letter and Statement Which Follows with irregularity and constipation and ito lie down are welcome to use testimonial.’’—STELLA NEwTon, R. R. 8, Indiana. Mothers — You should ee Tay ‘with cold or wet feet, from li heavy articles, or over- working. If she Portland, Indiana.—‘‘I was troubled | would often have tryit. It bet | i is doi \ me goodand I praise it highly. You , this letter as a | carefully | fas ycurdenatier health. Advise | lof the danger which comes from not let her overstudy. | complains of headache, pains | in back or lower limbs, or if you no- ‘ | September 11-16 Lydia E, Pinks | The Casper Daily Tribune will publish every day this Compoundand got week, items of interest to the men and women of Casper and Natrona County with reference to the proper apparel for this season’s wéar. The stores of Casper are displaying the most wonder- ful lines of Fall and Winter wearing apparel. Anything you desire can be purchased in Casper. | The Casper Daily Tribune ‘believes in patronizing home merchants. We know that Casper prices are as low, | tice a slowness of thought, nervous- ness or irritability onthe part of your _ daughter, give her careful attention. Lydia ikhain’s Vegetable ~and in many cases lower than the prices quoted by mer- chants in the larger cities. ipound is an excellent m¢ state of self-hypnotism and slights today’s tasks. All of us, seeking success, are ladder climbers. We have our attention on a man higher up, on the rung of the ladder where we want to be. There is such aAhing as being so intent on him that we for. get the fellow below who is after us, who wants the Tung we are standing on now. Sometimes he gets it, passes us. Then we come ont of our daze and curse “luck.” The future is created today.” Lillian Peterson Teacher of Piano Graduate: B. Mus; © University School of Music, Lincoln. 665 $3. Park. Phone 1222. arenes emember it contains g that can injure her, Spend CASPER. THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE your money where you make it. Spend it in Stenographers rant # made lenge: As are the aie ttt nomez re foot “= SECRETARIES attD —CHARLOTTE BECKER. in BF. OTHER OFFICE HELP Rate i Are in constant demand at geod salaries with opportu- nity for rapid advancement. Our school offers you the ad- vantage of day or night class Casper Business College, Inc. ’S COFFEE Pigeon Tea & Coffee Co. Phone 2015 We don’t use your stair. case or parlor floor for a Goods carried in Avoid Accidents Brakes Examined Free eee | 274 5% inches wide. She stitched up| Hop! Indian girls wear their hair. “Tis autumn now— one side and ran a gathering string) The rolis of hair are eu; to be Raybestos Service Station fret life drift free of ills long borne|threugh one end as in B. Then she/like the squash blossoms, for little Gas, Gils and Greases and flagrant: pulled that end tightly and tied the| girls are supposed to be the blossoms, Guaranteed Week Work "Tis autumn now, string. Then she turned it right side, While the wives and mothers are the Cars Sold on Lowest Storage in Casper -unc||Willis-Hackett Co, nd a

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