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rs z ~ PAXE SIX Daily Cr Che Casper es. T honorable but inconvenient title of “poor man” t us, we are with the poor man and) r no intention of seeing him grt any the worst of it in a in « struggle heretofore has been to get of eny kind for anybody. We ght up on building shortage yet, but whole lot toward relieving the ears ago. The arrival of Texas refinery builders, Mammoth and Sinclair officials and field men, aside from the natural growth of the city has brought k to searcity of houses again, and demand for cheap building lots. These are being supplied by the real estate men and at very rea- able figures and terms, but there is still failure ne part of the city to supply water and other ties to the outlying sections as rapidly as SUBSCRIPTION RAT could be desired, which no doubt will be corrected By Carrier ~ | Shortly. *J30|_ In the rapid building of an industrial center like oe 1.95 Casper, the poor man has not been neglected, what One Lf 63 ever may have befallen the rest of the commnnity. r 8 One instance will show. One of the eastern addi By Mail ed for less pe! ta in advance and Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©. Member of the Associated Press. news cre herein Kick if You Don't ‘all 15 to 16 any t Your Tribune. tween 6:30 and § o'clock p.m ar Tribune. A paper will be de messenger. Ma duty to | The Casper Tribune’s Program plete and scientific tera for the c ‘aspe prehensive municipal and sc ecreation A ding mming po the chil Route boule of the established Scen flee * e county commissioners, reek Falls and a county and more highways j rates for ippers of the and more frequent train Will Serve Full Term HERE ARE THOSE in some parts of the state that haye hesitated in giving a cordial support to Hon. John W. Hay, Republican candidate for governor, fearing Jest he should use the office as 4 stepping stone to the United States senate as did Senator Kendrick, six years ago. From the fact, that Mr. Hay was a candidate for senator in 1918, for the seat occupied by Senator Warren, and which he declined to longer fill, but was later induced to accept because of the war crisis, lent color to the fea: that Mr. Hay would deprive the people of Wyoming of his services as governor after only two years in the chair, and before reforms could A\ be fly worked out. Natrona county friends and well-wishers of the Republican candidate wrote him on the subjeet and! are today reassuring voters that John Hay will stick and serve the full term for which he will be elected in November. They have a letter from Mr. Hay which tells them! in these words: “During the campaign I spoke in connection with this matter, and I desire to say, that if elected, I shall serve the full term and have never had the least idea or inclination to do other- wise. Thus {t occurs that John Hay’s ambition to carry into effect his proposals for the benefit of the peo- ple of Wyoming come first. personal vanity on the part of Mr. Hay to rise to political heights for the sake of the prestige it! gives. There is no such element in his make up. He wants to be the governor because it affords the direct opportunity to serve friends and neighbors throughout Wyoming who are having a hard time getting along. To help them is more important to him than the title of “governor,” “senator” or that which goes with any other office. The office is not what he cares for. Wealth, position, honor and the firm friendship of thousands of people who have known him for thirty years are his already. To répay consiste friendship with real service, that is John Hay’s desire. At the time he was a candidate for senator, the office had no real att tion for him. Ee consent- ed then, just as he did in the present instance, be- cause legions of friends urged him, believed in him and desired a man of his forcefulness to represent them in Washington and maintain the record es- tablished by Senator Warren in his long and able service. When it was presented to John Har in the midst of that campaign, that it was the belief Wyoming and the nation that Senator Warren could better serve the country as Wyoming's sen- ator in time of war, because of his long connection with the senate military affairs committee, he wired his withdrawal from the race and served withont pay on the state board of exemption, thus doing his bit in a war activity where his talent and judgment would best serve. Wyoming has always admired John Hay for that, as well as other unselfish acts. And it may be in part, why he has so many staunch friends and ad- wirerers in the state today. More Zone Talk *\ FRIEND writing The Tribune on the zoning question takes us to task for failure to include grocery stores and cheap apartment houses within the zone of residence districts. It was not The T bune’s intention to give a complete catalogue of things that might be found objectionable in a sfrict- ly residential section. is to exclude things not properly a part of a zone - set aside for any special purpose. Our friend advises that winter will eure any lurking fancy for two-story dwellings as well as objection to an unusual number of homes of the bungalow type. Possibly two-story homes was ideal and spec and permanent residential section for expensize homes. It was not objection te any special type of home, for we have none, it was rather urging upon those who can afford expeénsive them and make of Casper a home city a permanent place to live for generations and a place in which to take pride and show to visitors and those seeking investments and homes among us, that we are here to stay and are anchored in the midst of beauty and comfort. Our friendly writer gives us ther piece of sage and timely advice, hoost for the poor man “and let the capitalist take care of himself.” Since more in connection with the an It is not a matter of| The whole object of zoning! tions was pl ced on the market in June of lust year and promptly closed out. By December following. just six months later one hundred and fifty-two homes had been built and as many families living in them comportably 1 happily. Real estate men, building and loan people, contractors and building materia: firms had all done their part in one another in making these homes. possi ble. The eastern section of the city is a fine one and in the years to come will be still finer, when lawns and trees and other cntdoor improvements have been mane. here has been no laek of interest in the poor man. All he had to have here, as is the case every- where else, is the right stuff in him. | In the particular section referred to this was |specially noticeable. When the home was built and the lady of the house moved in, a baby buggy was parked on one side on the house and a fliyver on the other side. The head of that family embarked in that flivver each morning accompanied by a dinner pail, and at nightfall returned; while during the day the other member of that firm found time to do her housework and take a future good citizen out for an airing in : vehicle mentioned. This was largely the case in that neighborhood. iks like these will get along, help or no help from the outside. They have the spirit and are unashamed and unafraid A roning system will be just 1s advantaccous to the people of this newer district as it will be to those of any other district, for they will just ubout say what restrictions they desire. There is ample time for a full discussion of the zoning plan before January, for before anything can be actually done in the matter it is necessary to pass a legislative act enabling’ the city to estab. lish such a system. | | Situation in Industry |(YUMULATIVE EFFECTS of the labor dis- turbances in the coal and transportation indus ies are still hindering in some degree gener business progress. The production of steel ingots in August decl tons from t rease of 147,37. the eight Ba mente dd e July total, which in turn was tons from the output for June, months ended August 31, however, the output of steel ingots was somewhat more than| iG per cent in excess of the total output for the cor- |responding period in 1921. In the third week of |September the steel industry as a whole was oper- |ating at about two-thirds of capacity. Pig iron production t month was the smallest jin any month this year since February, but was more than 90 per cent larger than the total for ; August, 1921, sion is adequate transportation. If coal can now |be steadily supplied to various parts of the coun- try for both industrial and domostic uses, thé gen- eral business prospect should become more assur- ing. Car loadings have increased greatly since the settlement of the coal strike, although bituminous coal loadings are reported to be still below normal. decline during Augu: Contract for building awarded in twenty-seven North tern States dur- ing the month showed an 8 per cent decrease from the amount awarded during July but a 46 per cent increase over the total in August, 1921. Motor. vehicle production for the first eight |months of this year approximated 1,664,000 cars and trucks. and for the year is expected to exceed 2,000,- }000, The present prosperity of the automobile busi- |ness provides employment, it is estimated, for 2,250,- 000 people, and it preciated when it is considered that 30 per cent of the plate glass manufactured in this country, 22 per cent of the aluminum supply, 20 per cent of the |tin, 16 per cent of the copper output, and 4 per cent |of the annual iron and steel production are ueed in the manufacture of motor cars and their parts. } Unemployment in the country has become prac |tically normal. About this time last year it was [estimated that approximately 5.500,000 workers |were out of employment. Today it is estimated that only 500,000 are secking work, while another mil- \lion and a half are on part-time work. Reports |from various parts of the country, in fact, refer |to labor shortages in certain districts and trades. | ne | : : | Something Omitted | JAREFUL READING of, the Democratic state |U platform fails to disclose that time-honored, that traditional phrase, “we reaffirm the princi- ples of the Democratic party” which has occupied a, place in every Democratic platform, everywhere, since the days of the late Thomas Jefferson. To have thus publicly “reaffairmed,” would not have dovetailed with Mr. Kendrick’s campaign for yotes on his record of Republicanism, nor with his acceptance of an endorsement by the Non-Partisan | League. The only thing natural about the Democratic |party document for 1922 is its general bellyaching the ship of stale off the rocks, upon which it was |cast by the incompetence of its late Democratic crew. ee eee Keeping the Faith Neneh LS carrying out her part of the agree- ments reached at the Washington armaments so, but the reference to| conference Japan is keeping faith. The evacuation! |qf Siberia by Japan is now under way, and it will al section proposed as a high class/not be long before that menace to world peace will| ‘have been removed. The arrangements drawn up at! | Washington and their practical application should! serve as nn object lesson to.Europe. The surrender homes to build) by Japan of the hold she had obtained in China} jand Siberia was no easter for her than the sacrifice’ of some of the cherished projects of European’ na- |tions would be to them. But Japan consented to her} | withdrawals in the iaiterest of peace. Strikingly similar situations are to be found in 2urope today, which should be treated in a similar fashion If that course were adopted we would see a sncedy end to much of. the trouble that n distracts the old world, itua-| A chief: requisite of continued business expan-} eS nisfe-r6q © oN PAN’ | dollars, with $6,000,000 going into one|*"4 of teaching every ehlid thrift ne Construction activity showed a slight seasonal} effect on other lines may be ap-| jabout the slowness of the Republicans ig pulling) Che Caspet Da Hay Vindicated ng system that may be established| “™!"- John W. Hay, the Republican [nominee for governor and beyond a doubt the Succersyr to Governor Carey Was completely vindicated in his posi- ,Uem on the state tax question the other day when the board of equalira- tion lowered the levy thirty per cent |tor the ensuing year.” this. in the opinion of the Lusk Herald. “The re- duction bore out Mr. Hay’s every con- jtention during the campaign: it was but a frank acmission that his claim| |that lower taxes were altogether pos- |sizle and necessary was a just one, | “But, this te only part of the story. \ “Mr. Hay, informed of the action of [the board, smiled and reiterated his |intention to cause still further reduc- tions: he is still convinced that useless }boards and petty offices should be} abolished if the taxpayer is to «et |that which he pays for and is demand. ing—an efficient administration. “Wyoming taxpayers are of a very Progressive type. They insist. that the state forge ahead as state in the union does, but also tired digging deep into” thelr jtrouser’s pockets and paying in to the; | Public coffers a lot of money only to {pee the same wasted. Themyslves|Than see you have the things you] “And ‘hy not? The history of! forced to more efficient methods of} wa: John Hay {s a romance of consistent, | | handling business affairs they demand | And Watch them turn to dust. constructive development—the con- that those spending public funds fol-| HELEN FRAZEE-BOWER.| current development of a great state low suit. ee ee } ‘an you bla: | “You can n © them? It's high time the servams of the commonwealth atep| jfrom off thelr high horse and along With the people get down to earth come out of the trance of wartime ex travagance and realize that today a dollar is worth one hundred cents, | “John W. Hay is a business man. | He is a mian of large interests himself jand he knows that were he to apply jthe sort of methods to his buainese |that have been employed. by state jofficials, in some instances nothing jShort of financial ruin would be the Tesult; he realizes that state affairs |are but business affairs and {f sugcess is achieved in their handling such wil] come only as the reault of a business. ike administration of such. His elec- tion will bring the further vindication of his claims and an economical, effi- ent conduct of Wyoming's business su ied public servant really doing a consti- | tuency service.” ¢ } ——————— Be a Bull On America “Billlons of dollars not figuratively |Speaking, but actually billions of: real money, are going into construction | work and vast industria! undertakings throughout the country.” This {= the cheerful message o? the Manutac- turers Record, which keeps very ctose |tab on such matters. | “Ratiroads are beginning to order rolling stock more freely than for a jlong time, knowing that the revival | of business now under ay, despite | strikes and other difficulties, will bring about a volume of traffic far beyond their present ability to handle. “With the enormous diversification jfon, with its people producing home {supplies to a larger extent than for jmany years, with its coal mines and cotton mills and many other industrial interests crowded, with vast water power projects under way involying the expenditure of many millions of sulphur development and $2,500,000 into one cement plant, both typical of what is taking place in many parts of this section, the South is moving forward to a broader and sounder Prosperity than it has ever known. No longer will its prosperity depend upon one crop, as for meny years. It is jforever freed from that danger and now it moves forward on safe and sound lines for an industrial upbutid- ing, for a utilization of its. matchless sulphur and fr oil, and its marbles and granites, to an era of prosperity surpassing anything that it has ever j known. } “The time is rapidly coming when }labor will be fully employed through- out the whole country, and no man will have to seek in-vain for work. “When the Steel Corporation an- nounced an advance of wages it made |Cne of the wisest moves in the history |of that great corporation, wisely man- |aged as it has been. Following its |ecxample, other interests’ will of neces- |sity have to pay higher wages, and | this shotld be a matter of profound |rejoicing on the part of employers and as well, of employees. Low wages are always a curse. They curse ever, country in which they prevail. India and China are falr samples of what low qwages mean to a nation. High wages, which enable men to earn enough to live in comfort, are a bless- ing individually and nationally. We are tending to higher wages, to full employment. The curse of the defla- tion of labor, liks the curse of defla- tion of credit, has rufWits day. “There is no longer room for the pessimist. His day is gone. Opti- mism, strong virile optimism, shou! rule the land. | Out of the turmoll of the hour in strikes, there will come |pece between employer and employee. | Railroads will run, coal mines will be operated and the whole nation, more marvelously endowed with’ natural ad vantages than any other area earth, will go’ forward to boundless prosperity. Be a “bull” on America!” FAIR VIEW ADDITION Lot buyers are insured against death and sickness while making payments THE DOBBIN REALTY CO., Groun? Floor, Tribune Bldg. Ne IRMA ce, TALMADGE THE ETERNAL FLAME ! no other! they have | h as the taxpayer is clamoring for:/ of its agricultural interests, with its! here by }Sreat fruit crops of the present sea-|**vimgs in the postal savings banks, resources in soi! and in minerals and| in water powers and in timbers, In its! on} flp Cribune I Bid You Keep Some Few Small Dreams ; is T pray that you may never hare |. The things you long for mos: Fer he who gratifies desire Must pay @ princely cost. ‘The doll T wanted ax a child | Seemed strangely wonderful, {Unt I held ber in my arms— Then she was just a doll. The world that stretched beyong my door, It spelled romance to me; I spent ten years in t.ravel—now | There's ncthing left to see. My heart that quickenea with desire While love was yet ahead. | Now wakes not at his whispered word Nor stirs not at his tread. The things we long for give to life The purpose and the gleam; The things we get, however fine, Are never what they seem. Oh. rather would I bid you keep- A few small dreams in trust More Savers Needed “Even though savings bank deposits re increesing in the United States, is still a laggard in re- tft.” says the Cincinnati quirer, “Though many Interests claim the <redit for the undoubted betterment of the last five years, there can be nd gainsaying the trut!, which is that ithe increase was due to the tremen- dous campaign of education growing out of the sale of war securities of mail denomination. “One of the admirable developments of that period was the establishinent of the organization for the sale of the little thrift stamps which of them se! arried convincing, argunients into every household which had né Rlecied to make provision for the tra- jditional rainy day. Thousands who never before laid aside a penny thus Were induced to contract a valuable and constructive habit failure is to he |found, but tn the number of indivia jun! depositors. Statistics .of recent @ate stow thst but ninety-nine in feve-y 1000 population in the United States have bank connections. In contrusi England has 302. 348 and Switzerland, 654. One of the analyses of general conditions during {the historical drive for war funds was that here the peonle had established a minimum dollar "standard. wiille abroad the standard was the shilling franc, or mark. -There they — saved their ponn‘es until they grew to he Pounds: while here we waited for the |dollar bills before starting This foreign habit has been brought alien laborers who place their ‘rather than fn’ private and the recently issued re: department of the United office carries a great lesson to Ameri. cans. Provisions should be made for steady widening of banking facilities, for the receipt of the smallest amounts depositaries Port of that States post. Well as the three R's. Our percen: e is too low for nate! ee sake. ‘Echo ; { A jor sweet compz.nions, mine, for choice, Is Echo of the :dulcet voice Who carols rounds and glees with me And thoroughly agrees with me. And though she {As ladies will, I've never heard Her. claim undue priority Or prate without authority. kes the final word, Among the hills the pleasant minx Observes a custom which, methinks, All flappers should be broken to— She only speaks when spoken to. —Arthur Guiterman. None Better tunate tc have a gubernatoria! candi- Gate of the calibre of John Hay. None knows the needs of Wyoming better than he; none ty bet:er equipped to ebtain their fulfiiiment. By -ne elec mn of John W. Hay as governot, Wreming will secure the services of a successful Dusiness man every phase of whose succeseful career has been developed in this state, a man of sountd judgment and exceptional ability, Thus former Governn B. B. Brooke of Casper, in a brief address delivered n Chéyenne recently at a dinner’ of the Laramie County Republican com- mittee, endorsed the candidacy of Wy- oming’s next governor, John W. Hay-! Governor Brooks pointed out the ex- cellence of the Republican Hay, Winter, Mondeji—and expressly stated ft as his opinion that no thoughtful person can fail to vote that it an undtyided America united. strong and effizient. eqal to her tasks you cannot be saved Uy the valor and| devotion of those of an earlier da: that to ‘each generation patriotic duty, and that tpon your # Willingness to sacrifice and endure, as these before you hare sacrificed and emplified and junder law intelligently conceived and tmpartiaily not a thread in it but scorns self-in- duigence, ticket— is eloquent soutwelghing all divergences of opinion, 1 Dity the folk we lei and of our common destiny. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1922. oo yence. of uniof preserved, of liberty | ;and@ union one and inseparable, of the/ intelligence and zeal must go togeth- ' foust accompany “Wyoming this year is indeed for-'wtom the ideals and honor of this na-|/emotions and that we must ultimately tion has been dearer thar life. ses of brave men and women toler, that discipling rely upon enlightened ueune..Amesica tiret, Jt Charies Evans Hughes. allegiance. It means means Driving It means that ‘Before my seud And the on Gomes its edured, rests the national hope. jSanch. my old dos, j- It speaks of equal rights; of the back-biewn inspiration of free ingiitutions as ex. leans far out, O’er a flow: vindtated: of liberty administered. There ts stb weakness and rapacity. It of our cow interests, of the wind. teket straight this fall without violat-/ ing hts better judgment. As Governor Brooks has held, so do other thoughtful, disinterested judges, | notably the Salt Lake Tribune in a ading editorial. { and of the mentality, character and| influence of a great man. What more fitting than’ that the man should be} sovernor of the state. | ‘For more than thirty years in thin] western country John Hay not only has met every test, but has profited by each. It ts indeed fortunate for Wyoming that he aspires to be gover-| nor of the state he has served so! well in a private capacity for his busi-| ness experience and hia intimate familfarity with all Wyoming’s nees fit him for the place he seeks, not as & political’ job, but as a cherished nono 3 pe SE How.Reconcile? | Mra. Antoinette Funk's campcign | for Senator Kendrick awould be more wnvineing if the duet now’ being sung in the southern part of the state were in/ clover harmony. Or has Mra. "unk—successively, Republican, Pro-! Bressive, Democrat — changed her views again? ' Senator Kehdrick not only voted a Republi te ‘on that very ground. Now harken to Mrs. Punk as she, over her own signature, speaks her mind in the Congressional Digest of August, 192 So people are | more concernec over the cost of living than women, and the meaning of the-tarift bi!l now In congress has dawned upon them. Again they are indebted to the press for telling them the truth about it, and they are Indebted to the Dem: cratic party for throwing lUght on this meesure. compared with which ,the malodorous Payne-Aldrich bill is an innocent lamb.” \ ‘There you have it—the fantastic in- consistency of the Democrat! to call ir by no harsher name. It wes quite right for Senator Kendrick, © Demo- jerat, to vote for “the super-matodo- rous Republican tarite,” but all wrong.— in fact, a wicked consp'racy jAgainst the housewife for Republicans ‘to do so. Coe That is tynical of the Democra {Anything right for a Democrat: every thing wronz for a Republican! The Republ'cans, we are told by Kendrick’s press agents, have failed miserabty; | done. nothing. Yet Senator Kendrick” |boasts. of having supporte Republi- ern measures. He would take.all the iglory, none of the blame. In other words, Senator Kendrick is out for the votes regardless. Con- ‘sistency be hanged! } What do Democrats care for consis- |tency anyway? “It cramps their | style. Symbol Present Eadeaior This flag means more than assoct- ation and reward. It is the symbol of our national unity, our national en- deavor, our national aspiration. It tells you of the struggle for independ- | stantly growing Sedan - = ~ $1335 Touring Car- _ 885 Prices f. 0. b. Detrost. Revenue tas to be added C. E. Kennedy Motor Co. 230 West Second Street ee Public appreciation of tne very unusual value of the good Max- well has crystallized into a con- sections its reliable performance has solidified the confidence first won by its pronounced beauty. ‘The Good MAXWELL demand. In all Coupe - + - $1235 Roadster - - 883 Phone 909 ‘ Tt bappily <aforces the lessen that ---—- car the bright road winds on and on and with his ears hint Ob, never a cloud in the wide blue ‘an feel so fleet, #0 free xx Sanch barks and yelps ‘spite she rush ve behind. GLADYS HUSS BANG. oe Money Start to save to-day! jOLDEN GIFT CorFEE. Bring the Entire Family to IN THE FREE DANCE TUESDAY EVENING, OCT. 3 Arkeon Dance Pavilion In honor of his Third Anniversary in Casper, the greatest city in the U.S. A. $100 IN PRIZES 1,000 FREE DRINKS-—“Softies” Don't fail to read the in in The barnet’s next Sunday’s Tribune. You'll get a kick out of it. Fruit Jar . and Save Goda Gift Coffee is packed in an inexpensive, moisture - proof double container to protect its flavor and freshness. Put it in a fruit jar which will maintain its quality and freshness and save you the cost of an expensive coffee container. THE MAN BARREL’S Announcement in Copper Coil Tank Water Heaters The world’s best double-coil Water Heater. Order a Ruud now and en- joy real hot water service. Es Casper Gas f=4 Appliance Co. Inc. 119 E. FIRST—PH. 1500 Special Price On Ruud