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EE REN cea Soe OR, PAGER IE TS BOTT Ct PITRE URS SR I ET CO PAXE SIX be Casper Daily Cribune WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1522 a a a Pc i ig sa eee aes cg le ee I ee ea ity to secure the services of a mau of John Hay's) The Elusive Bachelor Mrs. Smith-Hibrow | aie 348 Rate a eactes | A Harvest Hymn ailp Cribune at Casper. Tribune Butiding. setrona| ability to conduct their affairs, and cannot be even Two Human Instincts {fiir the’ temseauion to. sguander ‘ | tempted to @ consideration of a candidate of the jthelr money in what was called one cb A bachelor’s idea of Mrs. Smith-Hibrow, in her ms " In the human animei there jot the * vic! of gam- ‘ socrity of Mr. “astety first’ Livin, are at|of the “most vicious forms of gam-| When sprin, : i soma 8 ~$—-— | conatete in getting tangied up with a room, 2 are — which have been |bling.” No lonzer would John come| prom ont oy By fa ae Peepe = 9 sot of women in order to avold Displays strange ‘Danish © tales: an weloned for thou-,home broke and explain to his weep- as “ Where Is Their Candidate |ting tied up ‘to one. sy sands of yeurs; the instinct (or be g2m-|ing wife that he had “blown the wad™ for alcobolic'on Otd. Hermitage. No longer w= (tp these instincts be|Jackson, the trusty messenger, ab- essays in prose, By some French muse, whose mean- ing no one knows; And with it sorinss eterna) law }biing and the instinct For countless millions’ sisterijon) | stimulants He is an altruist who refrains from YOMING BEE UBLICANS Rave | Sivcengiaet |5 ais shaaer een eee in or- for United States senator, standing on <a last} \ it 5 Cer that he may scat | Gestroyed by summary human edicts? nd with the weck’s pay-roll, oF | yw ae — national Republican platform and -his record Of |and light amongst the canteen The pee MP ern ito a Sinn iene aeuatite ck tact txination: [ioe bbeeanget degen ting drt jute Wing sousoer flows its try TARLES TON President and Editor | Republicanism of a quarter of a century. There is nothing quite so intriguing | Neurotic dramaa, driveiing with | Without tmagination life would be -moan the Joss cf her last dollar on #| por eager men its gracio sacatiaine Na aaaaCa Wyoming Socialists have a candidate for United |to = bachelor as’ flirting with the gloom: {fiat and unprofitable. Nothing has|50 to 1 shot. Enacting Nature's high decres Kine & Prodee Steger Bidg., Chicago ‘States senator, running on a platform embodying |"idea of marriage"—with his fingers} Long luric novel, in which Mappers | tees, man’s Imagination more thdp| Everything was to be changec. Pa-|Of secd and hurvest time ect. € . City; Glove Pide~/ the well-known tenets of that party; whose loyalty |crossed. He just loves to ‘consixkr paint begotten ie lowing bowl hax/trons of the historic track were to mc iz. 28%, U8hs| and fidelity to those principles has never been|™#*t¥ing” in the abstract and go| Life garnered fromthe movies, aat DAY vale ant Dart. The Odys-|@rink the mineral waters, listen to the | The spindle turns—the falitim page pas SI questioned. about pitying himself for being so it ain't: this erent onic (gainple. ATI through 'pand concerts and watch the improve- ‘ t nicago, 1 stioned. 3 “lonely.”" - i geabb® ceotierd grea: lc the virtues of wine are * ade. . and Sa s P ters are welcome | Wyoming Non-Partisans have a candidate for| "Thee are:thres kintw of beabelorss| te ahd eviewersthymned. Ambrosia and wine sustain te ea ph fret genuinely | With each swift breeze the ripe SUBSCRIPTION RATES ited States senator, endorsed at the Dougiasitne kind that must be driven into| But, when safe in her, bedroom for|*!® Sede. No earthly fcast+is com-|gicrmed Bur her seare coon Sacien ree: le ripe nuts ; By Carrier jconvention, who has expressed himself as “grati-| matrimony with a whip; the kind that the night, jbiete without wine; it follows divinelwithin two short seasone the 9a. e Seeks -80| fied beyond measure” at this endorsement. must be coaxed with sugar. and the| She . akes her pretense with a|Tites and precere: the suppliant’s|premacy of instinct over law was|Anc winter staid and solemn wait Kendrick filed as a Democratje candidate for the |Kind that nmst be blindfolded and happy sigh, Sree chad on more alluring picture|¢irmty established. With sturdy faith while north win, United States senate, but he is new running on a/>#cked into the shafts. And, settlins down beneath her read- foe Cre SORAPUREAIOND CCS sc snot even ‘thie ‘bundent’ malot drone. = | ; 3 3 Teeee Ge er etcsd pees Alcinous with its ordered vines and ‘4 rhe And life acknow! publican platform. teak ae hadcheas ifs pn | : s Mead. is a ¢|Broaning presses, who once dreamed of starting in atj And life acknowledges with joy Why don't the Democrats have a candidate? (gar ‘and dreary; 90 long as women| “Susan's Ler | Mothology, history, song and story |Saratoss to reform mankind has any|Parth's fullness ts the Lord's a1 poe cy omer are willing. to make his existence one |The Fatal Blunder,” or “The Purpie|}7e Fich with ape et ccd pms gar geteend geting cy a eS Caring For Own Troubles Jong sweet song, haturally he isn't Weeds" — y might forget the heroes of tee rane” | zealots who believe that evolution lags. Who speaks and lo! the mailed wort ee . - ial tur-|222#9Us to exchange it for a lullaby. | These’ are, the only things she really ie Home-|“siankind is not ready for perfect | Throws off Its icy sheath and oi | Wiz FACT, that during all the industrial tur. When a man actually aske a girl readat ric age and accept tn their place the , 4 The seedling in its My paid in advance and the moil, of recent months, no governor felt it nec-|to marry him in these days of bach CHARLOTTE BECKER. |™oern champions of’ prohibition; he|@W*, Reformers should remember, = TEeae torte Solon’s answer to those who-asked him if his laws were the best he could Cevise. “No,’ best after subscrip delivery essary to call for federal aid to maintain peace and order iv. his jurisdiction, is reassuring. Although |single blessedness, she has « revela. | it is true that lawlessness and disorder did occur in/tion of human unselfishness that localities effort was made by local aythorities to|"#nés a the eighth wonder of the might extol near-beer as a worthy substitute for the purple grane: he might while awey an idle hour in com- puting the profits of a soulless effi-| clency instead of wondering elor comforts and the weification of The issues of the year cre His. From Him each good and per Let all His creatures in To Him thet: “Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C) X Beidler, the Scout world. ~~ lied; “but they are the people will @ccept.”— Member of the Associated Press. 1 Press y entitled to the ed in this paper and Den't Get Your Tribune. time between 6:30 and 8 o'clock p. m A paper will be de Make it your duty to arrier misses you. zoning system for the nd school recreation pools for the chil unicipal including swimrm otithe Scenic Route boule. commissioners, to established by the coun and retur Natrona county pletion anc more highways freight rates for shippers of the region, and more frequent train y Mountain © for Casper. Let’s Reduce Accidents “TZ71LLED BY ACCIDENT” is the verdict of the coroner’s jury in the case of Daniel Worth, Jr. run dowr by an automobile Monday night on South Center street while escaping from a speeder. The boy was riding a bicycle and so far as is known was observing all the traffic rules and was within his rights. The driver of the car that caused the fatal fuent was ulso observing the rules and was in no manner to blame. another machine that drove the lad to seek safety which in fact his death. The blame is at the ‘loor of the unknown driver of the ¢ that was be- ing driven in excess of the lawful limit. The jury could do no more than return the find- ing it did—It cannot be criticised. The whole occurrerce is simply proof that the} boy should be alive and well today and grow into a useful citizen, the pride of fond parents. The speeder was the one person that failed in his duty to others. His act emphasized the necessity of im- pressing upon every person who drives a car or uses the public streets for any purpose, that others have rights that must be respected, and the failure of one to observe the rules places the lives of the others in jeopardy. Thoughtlessness is not a valid excuse. Custom or habit are no better, Persons who drive cars and use the streets must be responsible persons. Must have a high regard for the rights of pedestrians and those who drive other cars and other vehicles. They must think. One reckless driver may cause no end of damage and occasion a world of grief. If it were not for such there would be no sorrow in the Worth home today. The saving of that boy’s life would be worth any effort that may be put fosth by the peo- asper to enforce the ordinary rules that ihe security of human life. Worth any plans taken to instruct the people and drive home to them the importance each unit bears to the safety of the whole. The things we now do cannot restore life to the hoy who was removed “by accident,” but the things we now do may be the means of preventing in fu- ture similar accidents and the loss of other valu able lives by other “accidents.” A whole-souled effort in the direction of general safety demands our attention, and demands it at once. es Hay Harvest Is On OHN W. HAY opened his campaign for election s governor of Wyoming at Big Piney in the most recently chartered county, Sublette. It was a good starting point and he made a good start among people who delight in the plain qualities of manhood so marked in Mr. Hay. As he progresses over the state he will meet with the same cordial reception accorded him in the west yesterday. For Wyoming people are pretty much of the same notion the state over as to what they desire in state administration. They want business ability, intelligence, economy in expense, and are ready to forego frills for reduction in They have studied John Hay's success in te life, and are confident that the same prin- applied to public administration will result in the same success. Mr. Hay does not look upon the people’s business as anything more than a concern to be managed in the interest of those concerned. To be managed with the strictest economy, consistent with good judgment. State government is an institution for service to the people, not an establishment to ex- ploit them. The simpler the system can be reduced to the understanding of the people, the farther into it the people can be taken in partnership, the great- er share they assume in aid of their governor in the direction of the business, the more detail thi know of operations, the better for the governor and the governed. It is purely a big family ‘matter and we are certain Mr. Hay so regards it. So far as Mr. Hay’s election is concerned it is a) foregone conclusion. Wyoming people have alway sought for the ablest and most available man to direct affai They know the qualifications of both candidates and will make their own compd ‘sons and draw their own conclusions between now nd November. Mr. Ross, the Democratic candi- date, could save himself a lot of trouble and some expense if he remained at home, for the result will be the election of Mr. Hay in ple of Wyoming are not any event. The peo- ng to lose an opportun- It was the speeder in! protect life and property. In cases where there was failure to do all that might be expected, it was |due in most cases to unexpected outbreaks that |could not be foreseen. In realively few instances | was there any manifestation of disposition on the | part of public officials to permit lawlessness to | dominate. This speaks well for our form of government, in which the police power is wisely reserved to the states except when domestic violence becomes so great as to compel the chief executive of a state to \call upon the national government for aid. If local self-government fails, there is little hope left for the American system of popular rule: | A community that cannot govern itself—a com- munity composed of citizens who cannot preserve rder and make life and property safe in their own neighborhood—is scarcely a dependable part of a | State or a nation. A state so weak that it. cannot | protect its own citizens from the outlaws within its |own borders is also so weak that it would yield to }a federal autocrat—and when such weakness has been permitted to develop, popular government is lon the verge of giving way to monarchy. | There could scarcely be a greater than for a state to bs compelled to admit that its |own citizenship contained so many evil men that |the good could not control the bad. Such a situa- tion would be an admission of decadence of civic “|morals, courage, and strength, to an extent leaving |little reason for hope of restoration. Fortunately, }no such humiliation was visited upon any state in the recent trying period in industrial strife. During the early days of the walkouts, there were many who urged that federal troops be at once sent to take charge of the task of preserving peace ‘nd protetting life and property. A worse | pe could scarcely have been adopted, for, if states and communities once admit to themselves that they have lost the power of self-government, |their pride, their self-reliance, their self-respect, re forever gone. r the federal government to have forced such an admission from any state, by voluntarily send- ing troops to which the local citizenship would be compelled to submit, would haye been a grievous and almost unpardenable wrong. It is to the credit of the president that he refused to follow the sug- gestions of sending national troops to preserve local peace; it is to the credit of the governors that they did not ask for aid. \ z Stat Ri teat The Wisdom of Abstention HE AMERICAN LEGION is to be congratu- lated for keeping out of politics. It undoubt- edly would be a tremendous force in molding the affairs of government if it should choose to throw its weight into the elections, byt it is to the best interests of the country as well as the organization that it abstain from seeking the control of can- didates. Proof of the freedom of the electorate \from legion influence is furnished in the Michigan {primary where a former commander of the organ- ization sought the senatorial nomination but polled only about one-eighth of the total vote cast. ae Light Literature HE MOKE you scan the so-called “record” Senator Kendrick, flow appearing in supple- ment or serial form in Wyoming Democratic news- papers, the more becomes evident the painful effort to find something to fill the page. There are some very remarkable things in this “record Standing out like a sore thumb is the paucity of actual constructive performance during the sena- tor’s six Years of service. The careful reader will also be struck with the extent to which wholly in- consequential matters are referred to in order to pad out the statement. The reckless disregard for the facts, running all through this “record” will no doubt be referred to specifically by more than one person during the campaign. s The “record” starts out with a caption as in- accurate as the “record” itself. It states that Re- |publican newspapers claiming that Senator Kend- |rick has “neither introduced nor supported a sin- jgle piece of constructive legislation during his en- tire term in the senate.” Nothing of the sort. It is entirely true that the senator has not to his credit any important con- structive legislation, but nobody denies he has voted some constructive legislation. As a matter of fact, he is making his whole campaign on his claim of having voted for Republican legislation. If this is the best John’s press bureau can do for | him, he certainly is in hard luck, and if the mis- statements that garland and decorate this “record” are a fair sample of what-is to be expected, there s nothing they will not eventually claim for Kend- rick. |be a mighty poor one, but unfortunately for John that portion of it which treats'of matters of any considerable importance are sadly at variance with the facts. a Field for Demagogy HE GREAT WAR almost put an end to agita- tion for public ownership, but now it appears to be coming to the front in all parts of the United States. It is said in trade union quarters that Mr. McAdoo is getting ready to run for president in 1924 on a public ownership platform. The fact that Canada. is losing $120,000,000 a year directly and \indirectly, on here socialized railways does not Isdem to have any effect upon the advocates of so- {cialism in this country. - Public ownership of industry offers the great- est field of activity for the professional politicians as it increases political jobs 100 fold and builds up a political machine that is self perpetuating due |to the large number of beneficiaries of the system “who naturally vote to keep themselves in office--- and the taxpayers foots the bill. humilation |” of | Even if all the “record”-were true, it would |’ | That tired expression on a bach: elor's face is not so often the result of brainfag from an overworked mind as of heart-fag from crerwork- jing the emotions. | Lovers look at Mfe through rose. colored curtains; old bachelors see it through a for. Somehow, a bachelor never quite |gets over the idea that he is a thing jof beauty ané 4@ boy forever! |_A bachelor fancies that it is h's wonderful 60-horse willpower that jkeeps him from marrying, whereas it is nothing but his ‘ittle 1-horse |won't power. One consolation in marrying a bachelor over 40 is that he has fought so long and so hard to escape the hook that theré is no more fight jleft in him. | Never give up hope as long as a |bachelor declares definitely. “No wo- jmen can ! ‘Wait until he is |so sure of his immunity that he sighs jregretfully, “No woman will have '—Helen Rowland. ! Active Patriotism Is there not for Americans a mean- ing in the word country? Is there jfor Americans reason to live for country, and if there be, to die for country? Whatever the country, pat- riotism is a duty; in America. the duty is thrice sacred. The dw; of |patriotism is the duty of justice and {of gratitude. The country fosters jand protects our di,-est interests— our altars and hearthstones. ‘With- out it there is no safety for life 6r Property, no opportunities for de- velopment and progress. All that the country is, she makes ours, and to- day how significant the world ‘over are the words: I am a citizen of America. The days when patriotism was a duty have not departed. The safety of the republic es in the vigilafit and active patriotism of the American people. Day by day the spirit -of Americanism ‘waxes. strong; narrow- cannot resist its influences. Nob'est Ship of State, sail on over ed, imperishable! Within thy bul- warks the fairy goddess is enthroned hopes_of humanity, guard well thyself! peerless ship, malign wind, beauteous in prow and canvas, ever guided by heaven's polar star! Sail thou on, I pray thee. undaunted and imnerishable!—Archbishop John — Ir Sail thou on, safe from shoals and One day in 1869, wher the Nile, one of the old time wood-burning Missouri steamers, stopped near the mouth of Musselshell river in Mon- \ana to take on wood, twe “wood- hawks” came aboard. “Woodhawks” were men who cut firewood and corded it up on the banks of the river to sell to the steamboats. These two men were famous frontier char- acters, “X” Seidler and “Liver- Eatin” Johnson. Among the passengers on the Nile was a party of eastern tourists, among them several women who were enjoying for the first time the thrills of being in the wildest “Wild West.” They were especially delight- ed at the appearance of Beidler and Johnson and at once began asking questions of these “picturesque char- acters,” ai they called them. The woodhawka were not especially Pleased to be treated like a pair of Tndia: but said nothing about It, F’nally. one of the women inquired “Mr. Beidier, are you married?” . replied ‘"X."" n, I would never have guessed it. Is—is your’ wife, ah—a white woman?” “Indian.” grunted Beldler. “How delightful! A native of these great plains! Where is she now?” “Oh, I've sent her to Rome,” said the woodhawk. “To Rome? To be educated? How romantic! Do you mean Rome, Italy “No,” answered “X." with a grim smile. ‘To roam on the prairie!" The woman stopped asking ques: tions. Reldler served as » scout with General Miles in the Sioux war of 1876, but he was better known as a |vigilante leader in the early Montana mining camp. John X. Beidler ywes jhis real name, but he was called “*X”” \Beia'er because he always signed his ness of thought and increasing strife, | state officials to visit his ja‘l and in- billows, and through storms, undaunt-| holding in her hands the dreams and, Oh, for her rake. ever strong in keel, ever) | warnings to western “bad men" with the single mysterious letter ""X."" One such warning was usually enough to make the had man leave camp. Later “X” was, sheriff of Lewis and Clark county. He once invited the governor of Montana and other spect a new steel cage of which he was very proud. The officla's came and Beldler took them into the cage. “Now, dern yel” 4 sa'd to his prisoners. “Ye've been edgin’ off lately when I was tellin’ my stories of the old days an’ not listenin’ to ‘em Nok I reckon you'll listen.” He’ kept them there three hours and told them every story he knew! -—Elmo Watson. - ore Chie ae Subscribe for the Trimune and get a key for every 50c what the vintners buy Guo hate 0 precious as the stuffs'they sell. Yes, alas! he might. But he would not be a normal human being if he aid. Attempts to enforce prohibition will have just about the same results is did the attempts to abolish race- track gambling a few y. Every one knows that such have now ceased. We have just seen the close of one of the most success- ful seasons Saratoga has ever known Thousands of dollars were wagerec every day at the trck and a° vertt- eble ‘army of bookmakers plied thelr trad; without being interfered with in the slightest degree. Those who wished to speculate on the ponies without going \o the track placed their wagers through poolrooms. Business was brisk; tins were plen- tiful. Names of horses, past perform- ances, post odds, these form:d the chief tonic of conversation in hotels, cafes, clubs, barber shops and other public places. A man might not be able to boast of a vrlet. but he was pretty certain to have his own book- maker, and his own bootlegger. Observing this’ condition of affairs, T could not hein but recall those fevered days of mit a few years ago when a horce of zealous reformers stormed Capitol Hill fn what. prove! to be a successful attempt to enact a law against. race-track gambling. Those were halcyon days not only for the uplifter for revenue but also for many honest, well meaning men and women who believes that all you had to do to prevent betting on horse races was to nass a law prohibiting It. So the law was passed. Saratoga was to be swent clean of professional book-makers. 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