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PAGE SIX. . be Casper Dailp €tibune in the market places, pieces of silver are being wagered by the partisans of the contending forces. Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia may find no interest in the championship, ‘but if perchance there be a native American in any of titese be nighted regions, who in his youth played first base | on a tank town team anywhere under the severed red, white and bine, he will not retire tonight un- til he has learned the Fesult of this day's game. One day, the great American obsession will yene- trate jungles now impervious to our enlightenel cul ture and then we will have international cham 15 necting All Depar and en’ Postoffice as second class mber 22, 1916. President and Editor E ASSOCIATED PRESS Member of Audit Bureau of Cireulation (A. B. C) Representatives. 23 Steger Biég.. Chicago, Advertising & Pru e ow ‘oO « Globe Bidg . ui Sioa, ‘Sikron "Bias ss “New Mont-\Pionships and the boys from Hong “ong, Timbuktu n Fr sco, Cal. Cipies of the TF and Spitzenbergen will come over to contest with file e Caicago, Boston! our mighty practitioners of sw-it. ae aan rs are welcome. | For the remainder of this week and far into the pted for less period than ensuing week ignore the usual purvuits and ocevpa-| in advance ana the! tions of life and take your place about the scure-| ‘sure delivers after subscrip |Doards vouchsafed you by the American. consti- arrears. jtution and pursue the happmness coming to you. adamant: * en New York's Wisdom By Carrier . J be EIS a lessor to be gained from the New i York Republican state convention and the -65;ticket it nominated, by all of the states that west) 5! crazy from year to year and adopted the primary 97 so election system and are still operating under it. 3.90;True, New York went crazy alonog with the others | - 1.25/but she had enough sanity left to cast the pri- “~|mary overboard and return to thei cunvention $7.80 - 3:90 et Your Tribune, een 6:30 and 8 o'clock p. m A paper will be de Make it your duty to carrier misses you day at Casper, Natroua yo. ation Offices, Tribune Building. Member of the Associated Presi a9 is exclusively entitied news credited in this paper hed herein. to the ni on oe sars The Casper Tribune’s Program ic zoning system for the mprehenstve muntcip: neluding swimm 4 school recreation pools for the chil of the established Scenic Route boule. unty commissioners, to and more highways rates for shippers of and more frequ Red Cross Fashion Review HERE is institution in the world_ which commands the respect and support of all peo- ples and all natio: regardless of religious creed, one SCOME whit ' ! blame, i governmental form, breadth of empire or wealth|/[}4E INCOM which supports her an@ her fam-|1, nade a trained facutty for thor:| And ence'wi the world think of ine or resources. It is the one to which the humble ily is immensely more important to every wom-| ough and systematic study of difficult | then } 4 the powerful, alike, turn for aid to the sick|"> that it shall be steady and ample, than it is |questions and a cheerful willingness ara A ee d in time of war, for relief in time of |that a few of the goods she buys shall cost a little|to do hard work. He always knows |Or wit! T 50 like countiens: others ! and wou Be 3 ae pave Gaeta and nurs-|™ore’or less. where he aot is ahs to com-! And take my place among my broth-| headline? veace and for food, c! s - be F hae | th 1 oI e ers Ing in times of pestilence, fire. flood and other| The Democratic claim that tariff will inereaae |Tecr the cor tolbusneal or eit wineia| “rise taarsaly g Bete co aera calamities that befall. prices of what we buy is not true in the first place: true conditions withiwhienh he has | my cwath? The world dreamed not of the universal sery-|ut even if it were, what one ‘gets for butter and | deal, ive of the Red Cross until that noble and self- sacri- ficing American woman, Clara Barton, implanted her broad spirit of humanitarianism in the Ameri can branch and taught the world its duty. In her lifetime she received the homage and blessings of more people than any other individual in Ameri- can history. The great work of the Red Cross in the world war is of such recent and outstanding history as to require but mention to recall it. American moth- ers need not be told of how they received tidings of their boys on the firing line, or assurance of their welfare after the battle, or reports from hospitals where their best born lay wounded or tossing in delirium. And if the sacrifice for flag and coun- try had been made, how delicately and sympnthet- ically the facts were written to soften the blow to the mother’s heart. All that is current history that is still repeated about the fireside. Tt is to this wonderful institution, this great organization for the relief of human suffering and misfortune that the Tribune desires to pay trib ute in concrete form, and in the good purpose will be seconded by the merchants and tradesmen, the Elks lodge, and the youth and beauty of the city, in a fashion review scheduled for the Elks’ home on Wednesday, October 18, Friday, October 20 and Saturday, October 21 The merchants of the city dealing in ladies’ and gentlemen’s wearing apparel, including shoes, mil- linery and everything that goes to completely dress ladies and gentlémen for all occasions will display their goods on living models The beautifvl women of Casper, and that in- cludes them all, from the tiniest flapper to the most sedate grandmother, and the handsome men of Cas- per, and that likewise includes all of them, from the ‘oddler learning jo walk to the dignified grand- father, will all take part in the style show, picked by the merchant to best display goods exhibited. Tt will be a-gala occasion, and the Tribune will see that no dull moments mar the program from the opening to the closing of the show. Aside from the main feature of showing what is best and most stylish in apparel and afford- fng those attending ‘an opportunity for ordering} similar goods, there will be music and dancing and other entertainment. The cause is a worthy one. The entertainments Wil be worth while in every particular. The fash ion show will appeal to every man, woman and child in the city. And the proceeds will go into the treasury of the Natrona County Chapter of the American Red Cross. & es Armenian Fall F, estival ODAY marks thé opening of a brief season in which America lets off steam. Relieves the tension us it were. Indulges in a form of lunacy unknown elsewhere on earth. Everybody, from the president to the red-headed boy en the playground gets the bug. The few that are immune are -sour- dough sports that dynamite could not accelerate. When the ump. remarked to the grandstand to- day that Messrs, So-an-so and So-and-so would do the pitching and designated Mr. Swatter to smite the projections of the former, business in Amer- ica was adjourned and a moratorium declared pend- ing the pennant de sion. War in Europe, strike adjustments, politics “anf the various scandals monopolizing first page acreage are relegated to back yard stretches alongside of market statistics and other like thrillers. There will be but the one subject on which Americans will speak until it is over; and all Americans can and will talk understandingly and earnestly on this subject. Even now, as these few trivial lines are shunted on to press, the vociferations of one hundred and ten million folks are heard throughout the land, re peating how it occurred, and why it should bare been otherwise Within the tempies of the money changers and 4|with Governor Milier at the head and a cabinet of system, after accepting her share of punishment in the selection of officials the people did not }want, and having wriiten into her statutes by men | !unfit to write bills, laws that humiliated her pride jand bowed her head in shame. | New York is again back to the convention sys-| jtem and has nominated a Republican state ticket | |honest, fearless men who are fit in every sense to |be-a part of his state government. Men in har |mony with the broad general principles advocate) and practiced by the governor and proclaimed as the Purposes of the party that selected them. This would have been quite impossible under the pri mary system in New York or any other'state. And it is doubted if any primary adyocate will claim its accomplishment under that system. Bossism, of course, was promptly set up—by the opposition party which never could differentiate between bossism and the proper leadership, without | which no political party can properly function. Che Casper Daily Cridune Let Wyoming take a leaf ffom New York's book of experience and wisdom and when the next leg islature meets put an end to our cumbersome, ex pensive and atogether unsatisfactory primary law and return to a convention system that gives us an/{ opportunity to select officers we want to serve us. When a primary does this for us it is an accident. What>we want is a system that will regularly do for us what the primary does only occasionally and then largey by accident. . —_—_ OO | It’s Meaning to Women eggs, week in and week out, js much more import- jant than what one pays for an occasional milk-pan. | If tariff increases prices to the consumer—which |it does not—it would be cheaper for us to pay them than to be out of work. Better to go to work in a suit which costs a dollar more, than to walk the streets unemployed in a suit which costs a-dollar less. The item of income is more import- ant than the item of outgo. The foreigner works for a wage very much less than the American worker receives. He lives on a distressingly low standard to correspond. For this reason he can make an article and sell it for much less than we can make it for in America. Free trade means that the products of this cheap labor are brought to this country by the ship load and fill our markets. The American merchants will not buy our goods as long as they can get for- eign goods so cheaply. Since our mills cannot sell their product, they quit work, and the laborer is out of a jop. With free trade, farm products, in vast quanti- ties, are shipped in, and the American farmer can- not sell his wares. Added to this, labor-—bis best customer—is out of work ard has no money to buy. Protective tariff lays a duty on certain foreign imports such that they cannot be sold here for less than we can afford to sell them vor. This gives American producers fair competition. With the difference in wages and standards of jliving in this country and in foreign countries, we can take our choice of things to do: (1) We can accept the low wages of the foreigner, only 40 cents }a day in Germany and only a few cents a day jin Japan. Or, (2) We can let the foreigner have | the work while we go unemployed. (3) We can pro- tect our markets by means of the tariff. Free trade means let the foreigner have the job jof supplying our markets. Let our wages go abroa.l| while we sit in idleness or stand in bread lines. Protective tariff means that the income keeps on coming. * | No sensible woman is going to hesitate very long jon her ghoice. went SS A Lesson In Devotion ‘((\REATER LOVE hath no man than this, that | a man lay down his life for his friends.” So said John, and ever since man has glorified the hero who sacrificed his own life for another. History is full of examples and peace as well as |war shows many heroes. Sometimes the héro is not even a man, or a human being, but a humble an- imal; a dog, perhaps, whose love of his master is greater than his love of life. A dog, so say the scientists, has only instinct. | A dog, say the wise men, does not think or reason; he does not react to his environment. Doubtless they know, but if a dog does not think or reason, what holds a dog to his master’s side in the face of certain and painful death? Trapped in an industrial plant, the papers tell, John Bracken, watchman, died from’ fire and smoke. By his side died his bull pup. When they} found them, after the smoke and flame had stilled the dog’s barks for held, he was not at the barred door, or at the blocked window; he was found with his head upon his dead master. To make this trne story the better one, logit be chronicled that John Derrick, friend, was so severely burned in a futile effort to rescue man and @og that he, too, may die. Probably dogs do not reason or think; the scien- tists are usually right. Probably John Derrick didn’t think of anything but his love for his friends when he fought fire for their lives. Would that more of us could learn the lesson of brotherhood as these have iearned it, man and dog. Perhaps the little hero pup did not die in |so ft is not a failure to appreciate or ]@ national parsimony that makes im- Mickey. (Himself) McGuire. —By Fontaine Fox Mickey M©Guirnt’s METHOD oF sToPPiKG THE MAN WITH THE BALL IS Te KNocK HIM OOWN, So IT WAS A GREAT IDEA To GET HIM To WEAR THose BoxinG GLOVES IN THE FooTGALL. GAME. English View of Kipling “Mr. Ru@yard Kipling bas just been [saying some rue and foolish things about America.” says the Manchester | Guardian. can we say that | wit help Americana to understand how far Mr. Kipling is from spesking for England? Here we all look the lother way and make aa if we had not heard when he hreaks our now and (then. For he is a man cruelly > jreaved br the war and fn a f of jettere very far removed from politi | he showed in youth a streak of genius jthat most of us loved. But an aged ‘royalist dowager Itving fmmured in a Gesolate palace in the Faubdurg St |Germain is scarcely x more inexact | representative of the living France of |today than Mr. Kipling ts of living jEngiand. Before the war a few En lishmen, whom good fortune had more lor less spoiled. imagined that Mr. Kip. ling’s somewhat crude and boyish |thinking about polities could supply a | practicable and creditable rule of na- |tiep conduct. The war amashed all the best thing In it; his shortcomings immatarity.—Stanley | are Han. those of ‘EDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1922. that. His ruaimentary philosoph: Uaperialiam—strangely Uke Prussia tsm—failed ail round as completely \. d:d his favorite hero, the unintelligen: soltier. We look beck ow ft now a we look back on the equally pictu: que and equal'y undesitable yermi!! |coats in which our soldiers fough: |the Crimea. But how convey America? Would it help if we beg {American friends.te take no more ny. tice than we should do here it x1 Dooley tomorrew gave England a: other of his little digs ir the ribs? w. should never mistake Mr. Dooley to. | Ameries, or for anything but a deie- table wag whose little slaps must no: be minded. That ts the way to taie Mr. Kipling. If Dickens could be , great writer and yet write the rubbis he did in his time about the Amer cans, what Is to keep the author of “Kim” from biting and seratching Happily there is no trace of h power in these little outbreaks. “God the old proverb says, “gives a curs cow short horns,” and when Mr. Kip ling turns out to insult the friends o- his ecentey, Paley's evidences of ce sign in the works of creation are u. ually fortified by the poor qualtr the misguided novelist’s vitriol.” np ——Try_« Tripune ctassifies a4—~ A Real Governor | | Biinu Root ta a great American cit izen. Hg ts also a great judge of the |character of men. He gave the Re-| | publican state convention of New York | | his estimate of Nathan Miller, who| jWas belng renominated for governor | lin these words, and the word picture lis a true one: | | “To an active and alert intelltgence | | “He has perfect courage; not the kind of courage which a man has to) be keyed up to by excitement: not the} kind of courage by which a man auc-| ceeds in overcoming fear; but the ha jbitual and instinctive courage which leads a man to do his duty without pen to him. “He is not only considerate and fair jin the performance uf his official du ties, but the sincerity and firmness of | his character carry to! others a con-| vietion that they may expect: justice | |in his treatment of them. He is free, trom the infirmities of temper which | breed hatred ahd the wubtilities which invite suspicion and distrust. “He has the frankness and truth natural to courage. He is simple and direct in r.-ech, without duplicity. He never talks for the galleries. And he| commands belief. He has perfect in-| difference to his own political future. | He is thinking about his job—not/ about himself. “He is not playing the part of gov- ¢rnor in order to be president or sen- ator or to be reelected. governor. He is simply doing what he thinks is wise me: people of the state. He did not s the office of governor—it sought him. He is not eking office now—Iit is seeking him. Principle Not Money “The refusal to place a cash value on the services of the men who served during the Great War does not in any way indicate that the country is obliv- fous to their service and sacrifice,” notes the Rutland’ Herald. “From the president down, there will not be found a man among the opponents of the bonus who falls to appreciate the greatness and glory of what those men did, not one who will hesitate to give those men the tribute of hay: ing offered, on the altar of the na» tion's need, the greatest sacrifice— that of life itself. “It is rather because we place-on the ‘services of those men a higher value than that of money that the recompense of mere cash has been re- fused. It is in support of the theory of a demogracy that in case of need every able citizen may be called upon tor military service, with or without wage, that the veto of the president Is stained. “Once let the principle of cash re- ward creep into the necessary defense of our couptry and our soldiers be- come mercenaries and our heroes paid bullies. The fine sacrifice and patriot- ism of fighting for the flag disappear and presently we can depend on no one to defend that flag but the pro- fessional soldier, a splendid, trained product of our military institutions, perhaps, but a paid fighter, neverth lest, and requiring for the adequate defense of the nation a standing army of a million men or more. “Militarism in its most offensive form stalks close behind the standing army and the money-rewarded soldier, perative the right to call on the citi- zen for national defense and to refuse thereafter financial award beyond the fixed wage of the fighting man “Furthermoré, the distribution of = mere “piece of change” to the fight- vain, if his selfless heroism brings home to us who read, the lesson which John read to ns so many years ago. ing men of the nation would work no permanent benefit. It gets down to a small matter of a few hundred dollars, at best, certainly no adequate reward | Will T be packed In the grat thinking at all what is going to hap-'* and just and for the benefit of the) —— Tt Matters | When I go down to my @eath. I won-/ , der ‘Will the words of it rol! ike a clap of thunder Across the heads of my fellow men?) Will the criera of news take up a name | That once I bore with my share of enterprising cesspoole in Casper as at last blast ceasing its Or crumble before the oven’s With the world not rhythmic breath? [Itjmatters little how much of glory T shall possess in the ended stor} But it matters much wh er T shail be way In the circle that I have chosen, missed, And whether my brow shall be once kissed t By one who rfay think somewhat of me. { —Gene Martin. | Casper, Wyo. | | for the risk of life and limb in war, and a'most certain, under the plan! adopted, to go to money-lenders, bro- kers, or to be dissipated in matters of ne consequence.” “The Herald does not share the ap-| Prehensions of those who say that the | Passage of the bonun bill would have wrecked the nation’s finances. If the mibasure had been accompanied by a general tax bill, levying tribute on every citizen of the country, it could have been financed easily enough, but. of course congress, with an eye on the! votes, declined that obvious and prop- er method. This is not saying that! he country im not already highly and 5 veedlessly taxed, but when we com- ‘are out taxes with the taxes of other vations which felt the weight of the! war, We are extremely fortunate. “So it comes at last to a question of' principle, not of money, and that prin-/ ciple undoubtedly inspired the action of the president in his veto of the bonus bill, which. of course, is the) only straightforward, statesmanlike, all-American incident in the ‘whole af- fair.” —_——_— Classified ads in the Yribune are} winners and possibly the keys we give with every 50c paid 2t office will! win _you_a bie prize. B-12-tf Wants to Know Editor Tribune: ‘Who in hell is Marry Poulin? Why “feature” Ind! na filth when Casper has nienty of her own? Under -the scare head con-; cerning said Poulin in yesterday's Tribune you advise the good people of Casper to “Stand by Your Home En i terprises. Doubtless there are many worthy of ‘featuring’ as that in which said Poulin swims'to fame. | “Many a man rocks another man's kid in Casper.” that Would not make a beavtiful But why indulge in reaspnols? -They } May be necessary sanitary things, but why stir them up to offend the nos- trils of the greater part of mankind simply because some degenerates seem to like the odor. F. B. SHELDON. Riverton, Wyo. — Half Way to Perfection | Now. is it likely that such a being | as man. with such a record in the! Past. the rate of whose advance, in-| stead of being retarded, has constant-| ly accelerated up to the beginning of the century, should suffer degeat, ar. | rest, or lapse inte sudden senescence? Are not all the hardships and périls of our day rather to be regarded as) painful initiations of humanity into stage of adulthood or as new chal-| lenges which will be met as triumph-| antly as all the old ones have been?) For the soul of man has been the most irrepressible and unconquerable thing {n the world so far. NS Are we shallow optimists, if we feel an invincible conviction that history so far has been only prolegomena, and far better things are in store for our race than it has yet known. Man is perhaps now near the halfway station between the ape he was and the demi-| fod he Is to become in some far off day when man as he now is will be as forgotten as the missing link of java. there any better way of judging the future than by the past? Thus nature ang evolution bid us hope. What we need, then, is more faith | in man. Neither his soul nor his body Was smuggled into the world from| without. but evolved from its unmédst! cove. He is its beloved and only be-| gotten son, and the story of his pro cessional from ether to ethics, fram cell to citizen, amoeba to the architect | of civilization, is the epitome of all | knowledge possible to man. | Always and everywhere the best have ‘survived; so that it is a good! world. and despite all his faults, he is Help The Red Cross Go to the TRIBUNE’S Fashion Show October 18, At the Elks Lodge Entire proceeds. 20 and 21 go to Red Cross ‘ the other, reducing the stones to a Sieve Woven Finer Than Silk Portland cement, to meet the exacting specifications of leading engineering so¢i- eties and the United States Government, must be ground so fine that at least 78 per cent will passa sieve having 200 wires per linear inch. A silk handkerchief has but 110 threads perinch —an excellent quality of silk dress goods 187 threads. The watch in your pocket hardly calls for a more complicated and carefully adjusted process of manu- facturethan the making of cement. Grinding is only one of the many operations required to make it. Yet in grinding alone, see what is required: The rocks from the quarry, often as big as a piano and heavier, go first into a gigantic “coffee mill.” Tt bites at these huge chunks, chips them, and finally crushes them—to pieces six inches or so in diameter, Two finer mills follow, one after the size of coarse sand. After this, they must be ground in a great re- volving cylinder half filled with steel balls, until every cubic foot of the rock has been reduced to 14 billion pieces—until 85 per cent of them will shake through a sieve that willactually hold water,asieve _ 40,000 holes to the square in And all of this is less than half the necessary grinding. The coal must be ground. For the object of all this fine grinding of the raw ma- terials is only that it may be fused into crystalline clinkers. And to fuse it requires pulverized coal— or its equivalent. Most plants use .Pulverized coal. The coal must be ground as fine as the raw stone. Eighty-five per cent of it or thereabouts must go through the sieve that holds water. And that often means two grinding operations. * There is still the clinker to be ground. i: i: glass-hard to begin with. It must be ground first to the fineness of sand, and then ground and reground in another cylinder of steel balls—until at least 78 per cent of it will go through the sieve woven finer than silk. Huge bowlders to an impalpable dust. Common coal to an impal- pable dust, and finally, after the burning, glass-hard clinker to an impalpable dust. That is the mak- ing of cement. And eight heavy grinding operations are required in the process. Grindjng is only one of the lesser heat and power consuming oper- ations in cement manufacture. PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION A Nationa! Organization to Improve and Extend the Uses of Concrete filmne —Dea Moines Bachersbarg Be ce poke NewYon Sartass Got Wokireertsc.