Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE SIX. Che Casper Daily Cribune WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1922. Cbe Casper Daily Ctibune ‘board said vessel, and regardless and deaf to the 4, - & ool is no: merely local, utilitarian, Iocued every, evening vacept Sunday at casper, Natrona‘ appeals and walls of our. womaikind, dump the|LH€ Old Grad Gets the Big Football Game Over the Radio. —By Fox zor, roveerss, « cute mor snapel toren 0°) SEE vere bm DBD County, Wyo. Publication Offices. Tribune Baliding. |cargo into New York bay - touch of a rakish angle Uust the way} goes simply to acquire oe. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS |. Shal? we then solemnly gather at ghe town- a ‘ve put on our school felts). A laven-| knowledge and calture thot may ———— BUSINESS TELEPHONES Rranch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments r (Wyoming), Postoffice as second class| 22, 1916, ' Entered at Caspe matter, November CHARLES W. Advertising house and formulate a set of resolutions, declaring 15 an@ 16/that no longer will we, as yreemen, submit to the dictates of any he dressmaker, millinery designer, style monger dr vogue tyrant whatsoever, hail- ing from Paris, France, or elsewhere on the sur- face of the earth whose object is to make monkies of our womankind? 5 Such a firm display of our attitude of love, devotion and protection toward our women will His DEAR OLD COLLEGE TEAM HAS CARRIED THE BALL To THE ONE YARD LINE —— WHERE THREE TIMES THEY HAVE der dress, rolied collar and cuffa of) useful to him in private lUfe: Lead chiffon, uigh heeled shoes showing a in an eminent sense, is & Lorn ae tastefel nicety of silk hos? .a steel) tional ‘nstitution, upon whic! beaded perfume andi highest weal of the repub:tc bag a little good a | eerie ideal school js the mureery of tizenship. and che Inspir- intelligent citizes ¥ the ing scurce of a sterling ts7e of gen: provement on the oldtime grandma? uine patriotism. The age oe Ss We sce frem photos sad grave.;gressive one. The femnate mournfil faced women with hair pat-|advancing civilization equi site ted down over their checks and ears!the curriculum of study shoul place complete the picture. Don't you think she is a distinct im- TL; 288 FIRE avenue, = ¢| ring ‘round the world and cause the Paris aialie BEEN HELO Boston, Mcss.Suite 404, Sharon Biég.. 55 New Mont) 1 : itp trethiag 2 _ < and over that a tace cap, a ‘ittle broadensd, from time to time An fomery St. San Francisco, Cal. Cipiés of the Daily|to sit up and take notice, and,halt them in their woolen shawl, skirta long enough to| enlightened public sentiment confirms ‘Trivune are on file in the New York, Chicago, Boston and San Franciscd offices and visitors are welcome. —<—<— $< — — ————— SUBSCRIPTION RATES j By Carrier or By Mail damnable purpose of arousing revolution in a na- tion devoted to peace and harmony. Better, a thousand years of pink sunbonnet and linsey woolsey than one agonizing moment sweet the floor and shoes fist heeled this position, promp‘s the peoplo te and with alastic sides, the kind that|munificent donations for schoo 0 fare these Victorian grandmas fall-/every grave from the kindergarten to ing arches and they did not know it.|the university, and the state ing: pledged fo pay the neces- Be prasg= , $9.00 | of crinoline. This is tho picture we see of our ly stands On : i - 4.50 ¥ We are the descefdants of the new! ing that the school syst ix MM . a nd $s day .. ‘ os Three Monthe Daily and Sunda 2.25 Lack of Rolling Stock. _ THIS 1S FOURTH Down time grandmas. We wear clothes of| complete and comowebenatte 68 3077 S ” Sty LJ 4. = rs . “ . an extremely simp'e ¢: . Often ging-| tify the vast expen w ee ee oy, 05| 4 CHICAGO market letter says that the grain | THEIR LAST CHANCE. ham. We show faulties stockings! ‘The humblest citizen te interested subscriptions must be paid in advance 6 the) Sl trade is no longer traific in without a darn or hole (this In itself {n the maintenance and improvement Dally Tribune will not insure delivery after su! tion becomes one month in arrears. | Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation a. B cj Member ef the Associated Press. | e4 Press is exclusively entitied to the} on of al. news credited in this paper and | You Don't Get Your Tribune. e between 630 and 8 o'clock p. m | A paper will be de grain. “It is buy- ing and selling transportation.” # Sales of 225,000 bushels, were made that day in localities accessible to the seaboard at prices equal to 12% over “Chicago December track—that is, the price to the tarmer was 1214c less than it would be if the what -onld move to the seaboard. Canadian congestiou is stili iuvre severe. Chicago that day was 23c wer Fort William. At Minneapolis, G<tober 22, wheat in eastbound MMs Time THEY SIMPLY MUST. \ is & desirable innovation). Our feet! of the public school system, because are shod with well fitting shoes, heels, it lies at the foundation ot or “ey high enough to support our feet and! tional existence. The active du:les 0 arches. What {f we do have short! private ‘and public life are better per- hair? Tt ts sanitary, and we can formed by intelligent and cultivated generally boast of thick, waving, well! men and women, than by the ignorant kept locks. We wear simple, warm gnd uncultured—William © Evarts coats with big pockets. If we walk| ShelCon. along with our hands in our pockets, | it helps to make us walk more freely | ve your Trivucr. Make it your duty to| cars was worth to 3c a bushel premium, the than the oldttme school girl ever did. ‘Puzzlement n your carrier misses you. | western roads having refused to let their cars go See Na Rae WEN SN OE ORF | beyond their own switching limits. A Minneapolis 2 tay sea Pte Ba Sia AE ‘There’s #0 much of beauty aio market letter of October 19 reports the closing of Waker tant te That your ways possess \ Minneapolis mills because they could not ship their During the noon school hour we| 7 must sing in duty * = ——————————— | four east. “There is a good big demand for flour chase out to the park. hatless and Rach pee tassel ‘\ ; F js but the. railroad pituation is against the free move- clad in knickers and blouse, to enjor| iat’ go press 2 tichar oe ment of grain products,” playing games. We come in roy, ~ The Casper Tribune’s Program | Ghicago"beibune repoxt mpeslka/ot ae axgiaes happy and beaithy, ready for our trw-| qyAR4 Jt 2 but Krew rE ehoriwes in cash prices to abnormal figures due to trans- sons. In the old days “young ladies’ ‘Were for me alone Inigation project west of Casper to be au portation difficulties. Lake rates are so high that eee ee nh een pecnee Cwtehr Ta be happy too. and completed af once. ois tor the | &rain is going all rail to the seaboard at relatively ae ey ee ‘A complete and scientific zoning system cheaper rate than by.lake and rail. Farthermadre, peep fe spine (Bh erp by ‘two, ‘Wit the winds reveal {t? city of Casper tpal and schoot recreation | 2ll-rail shipments were likely to continue through laughed or looked about tise | No, they never will. A comprehensive municipal ond Sis for tho chi | the season because there was so much grain at around her: They were an anemic.| Doubt and fear conceal it Pek Eo 2 etgaiae lower lake ports that it could hardly be cleaned | ching, /tiodeaitals met of paraders ty And they'll do. ft stil. Complotion of the establishec Scene Route boule- | up before the close of navigation. the “good old day Rte’ cacthocer emo: Maver ward as planned by the county commissioners to Gar- The New York Journal of Commerce says it! Why not look at us from a psycho- Neaeatoapotioer “anes den Creek Falls and return ty and more high. | ™ay be the middle of November before cars are logical point of view and give us our But when it ic passed ade for Natrona county em released sufficient to provide for free movement. | Biace ‘in: the ‘scheme of thingat Gloom will hold me fast ays for Wyoming: ent rates for shippers of the | Operations from the north range as well as frm MADGB. ‘And there's nothing done. Rocky Mountain region, and more frequent train serv: te iets and the yim are still being hampered ae Th N —Gene. Martt ice for Casper. »y the restrictions placed upon the supply of roll- Was room to «+ onestif. And a lot| hostess. said, “that I've a bottie of 1th: ip} Casper. Wyo. —$ $$ $$ | ing stock. % te ae Emerson Was Correct. « nae ore Ci hegre or one work Lise that a friend gave me three ¥ Nee of Citizenship ST TE, - a eens Seto, 2 Song the thing better than any-/ weeks ago: At leas:, the man that! ne existence and perpetuity of a| Adele Rowland, famous musica) Through the Smoke Screen. _| National Capelcacts ortias “pritn wataosey SURE Mage 008 sie owe te TT sage 1 hm wal ie was Sects [nation baad on univrel mutrae,| comedy ears Str Conway” asl . ~ 5 i “ 3 ive the school a prominence, and #m-| in private life. e mace the trip HERE is a very decided Democratic Saray aes TATISTIOS of the health service of the Amer |tutte: tho covene ue the mend Moonlight and Memories. | {stim £ustit. Instead. chere was | pose duties anc. responsibilities upon to Los Angeles in order to nee her er more tfian just a little touch of lavender ni) ican Red Cross show that deatlis among chil-|would make a peaten path to your| | fect won not discouraged She. wor |{S, Sdeator that do not exist under| husband make love to Blaine Ham ; results produced by the duly qua i ‘ aha “ons yu{dren of school age due to accidents are pro . | door. That remark has long been/A bundle of old love letters, Riscybbe:.-, Be ony. pines Sore of government. The merstein — in the films. ' most parts of this republic, yeatare ays tains con.|tionately larger than among other young children |sneered at by the realists; it secms| ‘A Yaded knot of bliie; ‘In run out and get it.” wu:3 onainrear # area aces ¥ eae Deacon of rep-|0F Older persons. Out of each 1,000 deaths of chil-|°02 no one. ot ee ay ate ee A ed era oe ("mY teandim-ii She reiuried with the bottle ana . trol of the Unitec s jot Fe 5 9, 167 several’ glasses, one of which she Fesentatives it is by greatly reduced majorities | (y aceidenta; saee enon: of Sead, af sal aid, ae turng, ‘Try that andayou will find) Are all that I have of you! filled apa offered fo a guést. He EUGENE W. MUNSON from the landslide of 19 This of, course) 7°01 to aocidents, t erson was right. begged to. be gxcused, A seconcy Nationally Known Lecturer of the to be expected, because Xtepublicans were oc- seats that in normal times would In each: branch of con- ww ¢upying house be filled by Democrats. alle ing majority has been saved ; Bgcad gress a smaller working majority 7 in. | ble possessions they have are their children. But|mining fuse used in our country is} And keys its strings to his tune. jdrinking it herself she set the gla: i A F : 5 and during the remainder of 4 eine eeraeaat appears that there is great need for some power|made in a little Connecticut village. : alii iaba- put" w recorded the ehen At the Henning Hotel, Opening His Series of Six jstration there will be no deadlocked or to instill into the minds of civil authority the|!* you raise poultry and equip your-| Was it the nigutingale’s singing. ograph. Lectures With a Discourse on ‘“Nature’s Hidden goverument. . In Wyoming dope sheets were completely upset | all over the state. In the Mondell-Kendrick sen atorial race, Senator Kendrick will win by several} thousand votes. Te took the lead in the early re-| { " ¢ : Hi The id id ite tod: turns and held it consistently all epoca proportions in the larger centers. Of what use is which we cannét’recall. The biggest/A kiss—a sigb—a quarrel—good:by—|1o be to fet your friends eample your night and this morning's news told of staunch it to the municipality or the state to spend Jarge|optical ginss business is uy in the} <A tear that no one sees. Iquor.' If ahey live: it's protably Mondell supporters reluctantly conceding Senater| Kendrick’s suce Judge Charles E. Winter never faltered in the) mobile before he becomes an economic factor in 4 al Nothing-ta tore weno aia 2 eyesight. running from the beginning and he will go over | the comiaunity life? Se ag aig, eae = eemienseni he ot eee conettt eeue ase with a very comfortable majority as indicated at C ities and traffic bureaus search madly for pag iittio | tbwns.. Speaker, Cobb; —Clara 8. McCulley. More of: the Flapper this, hour with more than half the state pre-| remedies for traffic accidents; “safety weeks” are|xtatnewson, Johnson and others— & cinets reported. proposed, debated, held; new ‘and more drastic|/Granttand Rice has developed this Why all thisimuch ado ‘about the As for the governorship, it is a neck and neck race between Hay and Ross and its termination depends now entirely upon which one has the ‘wind to prove the best finisher. Fortune seems in- clined to Hay. t The Republican state ticket including Lucas,| Snyder, Carter and Morton have landed not as handsomely as expected by their enthusiastic sup- porters, still by comfortable majorities. The Natrona county situation presents about an even break as to offices captured by Republi- cans and Democrats, with the chances favoring the Republicans to win an odd one. It was a spec- tacular contest in which considerable steam was generated and much extraneous matter injected that has no place in political rivalries for office. The judgeships of the supreme bench seem to have fallen to Justices Blume and Kimball by large majorities. pies Wroming maintains the status quo at Washing- ton, with two Republicans and one Democrat as has been the case for the past six years. In politics, in modern days you can no more account for results than you can account for in- Gividual tastes in neckties and socks. And be it said this thing is growing. We have come very far from the day when a nomination was equal to an election and the scratched ballot was a sin in the sight of a man in good party standing. Voters these days seem not to be bound by party principles and ideals as formerly and a new line of cleavage must be found if party government is to continue. CS Insidious European Propaganda. GREAT CALAMITY impends. The peace of the world is menaced. All danger could be averted, all crises safely passed by appeal to love- ly woman, if appeal were not in vam. In this approaching horror, woman is against us. Not from choice, possibly, but because she is helpless and must obey a power stronger than the appeal of home and loved ones. Stronger than the chal- lenge of fathers, brothers, husbands and sweet- hearts. More potent than the dictates of righteous- ness and common sense. More commanding than the philosophy and experience of ages. From his throne in Paris, the Autocrat, the Tyrant, Style, has brandished his scepter and de- creed the revival of the crinoline of our ancestors, hharking back to the days when our great grand- mothers were kept in draped b cages. God save our queens! They are under the spell of the Tyrant, doomed to patronize his court} and march in his armies if need be and _ there be room for them upon the battlefield. For it is a cunning arrangement either to array the sexes or solve the baffling mystery—why men leave home. Are we to stand impotent; while the ghastly tragedy is enacted before our very eyes? Or shall we form the brotherhood of man, take up arms against our troubles and by opposing, end them? Shall we march upon the New York dock, when our sentinel in the Old North Church tower dis- plays a red lantern, or our watchman upon the battlements about the Goddess of Liberty, sends us tidings of the approach of an European ve: with a shipload of hoopskirts, and unlike our d guised brothers of the Boston Tea Party, boldly In proportion deaths due to accidents among children under 5 years of age and among adults are quite small. No parents need to be told that the most valu- conviction tkat the most. valuable asset the state possesses is its children. Accidents .do not “happen.” There is a cause for every accident. Particularly is this true of traffic accidents, -which are assuming alarming sums in educating a child to grow up to be a good citizen if *t permits him to be killed by an auto- traffic rules are formulated, and more or. less en- forced; more severe penalties are inflicted by the judges for driving recklessly, but the accidents con- tinue. HM would seem that the engineering brains which built a Panama canal, took 2,000,000 men to Europe in the face of submarines, and built and perfected the largest railroad: and telephone systems in the world, might solve this problem, too. But while the remedy is left in the hands of policemen to formulate, no matter how interested or willing, or while the answer to the problem is given into the hands of aldermen, mayors, and leading citizens, no matter how well meaning, we will still continue to kill our children. Traffic accidents to the young is a subject of national concern, state concern, city and town concern, of such gravity and magnitude that their prevention deserves the consideration of the very best minds in the country. . Greatest of Orders. IHE PRINCE OF WALES, heir to the British throne has been installed as senior grand war- den of the grand lodge of England. Were it only an estimable and pleasant young man, who was thus honored, the matter would be of no special importance. But the heir to the throne is not per- mitted to follow his own will and bent as he pleases; he may never forget, in playing the man that he is also Prince of the [m. It should be a sufficient answer to any of the detractors of the order of freemasonry that the president of this great republic is a freemason; that many of his predecessors have been freema- sons, and that the first president, Washington, was not only a freemason, but devoted his time and attention to the order and became master of his lodge. But for those whose admiration and veneration are given more to those who rule by hereditary right than those who win to power by their own abilities and the will of the majority, the fact that thesfuture king of England becomes a senior grand warden of the English grand lodge of freemasonry, should be all sufficient proof that the diatribes di- rected against freemasonry by those who are its enemies and who know not whereof they speak, are but the fulminations of minds untutored. Freemasonry stands for patriotism, for law and order, for fear and love of God, without regard to church or creed, for charity, for toleration, for brotherly love and relief of distress, for edu- cation, for freedom; in siher words, for the ideals of all enlightened and civilized nations. That the future ruler of a great country thus takes his place officially in the grand body of the or- der, obviously with the consent and encoura: ment of the rulers of Great Britain, should make those who slander the order for their own ends pause to wonder if the masonic virtues of silence and circumspection are not ones which they had better cultivate. - ee ee HE EIGHTEENTH amendement is the law of the land. It prohibits the presence of liquor | within the confines of the United States and its territories. It is nat a question of whether one fa- vors the law or not it is the law, and it must be obeyed. . vale, Kan. fitted to you have the end o! So it goes. theme a score of times, and the truth of it holds for other lines of athletics also. A man. Yorker. surgeons, a country Spot a thing’ and ‘There is practically no mining of any sort in New England and fuss to set off high explosives is an essential tool in thet art. self with the needed implements, you will probably order them from Cedar- roads burg in Iowa, hilis of southern Magsachusetts at about as rare as @ metropolitan states- The larger cities simply do not grow them. Theodore Roosevelt was almost alone in his class as a New Everybody knows about those. great made their village a world center for students of healing. knows that practically all the big New York bankers were once village boys. somewhere up the creek where there ——— A nightingale trills in the valley, A cloud steals over the moon; But nearly all the some notes, No modern barn ts really house blooded stock unless! equippeG it from a cross- the namé of Moonlight and memories. [Al that is left of you, All that I hold are these; f a jerkwater branch line. metropolitaz! champion’ is| Bootlegging {s responsible for man in chaps feel justified to drink with him. the Mayo brothers, sons of doctor in Minnesota, who]|an apartment party, Not, everybody | to “come up and get ginny.” person who can do some: you'll find a native from|ly. A bottle of gin followed. “I just happened to think,” Ce call Trying It on Friends. And my own heart answers his lone- That lured you away from me. Or a message an arge! whispered, That set your weary soul free? What would life be without these? an entirely new kind of etiquette that nearly makes Jonathan Swift's max ims valueless.\ No more can the cat- in The party of six consumed two bot- tles of rather doubtful grape wine which every one agreed tasted od the A The good Maxwell is outselling because it has been definitely accepted as far and away the greatest value in its class. The remarkable per- formance records the good Maxwell is making in the hands of owners, everywhere, is the result of the fine way in which it is made in every part that is subjected to stress and wear. Cord tires, nen-thid front end reer; disc creel whookn, demountable et rim and at hub: dram type lampe; Alemito fubsication; motor-driven electric horny SS eee oe C, E. KENNEDY MOTOR CO. 236 W. Yellowstone Phone 909 The Good XWELL shooting the easterner who refuses] This state of af- fairs’ was shown the other evening at whose guests had accepted their hostess’ invitation aso begged off. Each in turn be- leved he or she did not care for any, thank you: Then they all watched the owner of the Scotch. Instead of American Theosophical Society WILL SPEAK TONIGHT Forces.” “Aren't you going +o drink it?” they chorused. ; THE PUBLIC IS INVITED Admission Free very c7ndid about it all. she explajneéd. “I'm afraid of. that darned stuff.” 8:15 P. M. safe to take a little swig now and then without’ dying or losing your flappers? Preachers are preaching. editors are writing and grownups are worrying. We are sleeves of the old egat, chips fromthe old block. May we put in a° word, Here comes grandma. Now let me describe her. She is a sweet-faced old lady of 70, white hair curled and wavt Bas with delicately tinted cheeks, all ‘ TRIBUNE “WANT ADS” offer the solution to all your problems—no matter what they may be. . There’s always someone eager to buy, sell or trade and you'll surely find him throygh a Tribune “Want Ad.” Scores of people are using this powerful medium every day, and you can do likewise with certain success. Watch - ». the columns—and send in your Ad today! The circulation of a newspaper is what bring resuits—we guarantee our circulation to be greater than any Wyo- ming paper. The Casper Daily and Sunday Tribune Phone 15 or 16