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om be Casper Daily Cribune ‘ THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1922. Cbe Casper Daily Cribune almost anything appeals where devotion to duty) Aftermath the Costum length departed, his prob- 2 —_ he rod knards tram too long. dent at le : EE Ti _ ath 308: By Fontaine Fox)* jist. 2 Gotan aco he woes, wold oem The divisions of fifty and sixty years ago, which kept the party lines intact on every other | eS Sea PEs 20; Boao ks question that arose between them are no longer TST ELEPHONES .........-+000--0--' tent. di resen' Rranch Telephone Exchange Connecting Ail Departments| pagent 5 pe Bo Srgh en oe — deere Entered at Casper (Wyoming), Postoffice as second clast| have failed to keep pace with the people, failed to! Jot all the faces turned tn hip direc:| gs gown the wrong wa? pees: Bore ee en apparently | Ot course in « crogved dinthg pom |Giner they Said pan Ti work. He/the train iluston 4--> Rot exist ;ind | remembered an sttack of stage fright; it does mater which wry (tow |when called upon to address an au \y MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | first th j y matter, November 23, 1916. develop worthwhile issues, failed to present ideals! agar ay ie Sate oe ceenead. tor -- CHARLES W. BARTON ...-ss0e0e President ana Editor) above contests for office. That is the exact situa-| &@ nervous and timid person to be 5 tion we are facing today, whether we are Re- }come seriously scared if he eats fac- H. B. KLINE Advertising Representatives, publican or Democrat. ling the wrong direction. What the -. Chieaea, | tion at the DIAMONDS eis mds. Minor parties that arise from time to time jeffect of the wrong posi’ - ‘is ‘New Mont|are protests against the existing order or condi- Peeree eee ete Cm USER. OU) Waist Grete, sowetes; ae am Francisco, of the Dally'tion of things. Whether they make themselves} peer e. pets ie. eat, NOS ee 4 rity | Dietitians have fone to great jengths to show that comfort is essential to \the proper digestion of food. Hf \ S on file in the New York, isco offices and visiters are SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier or By Mail ly and Sunday 5 . As 450 2. ton | { a , felt or not, or whether they survive for one r welcome_| or ten, stili they are present to protest and Caf sent issues big or little the leading parties ignore.| | Forward-looking men of all parties have long since reached the conclusion that a new alignment | must come within the near future and that the, ideals that voters will divide upon will be some. | form of conservatism and radicalism or liberalism. | Under cites Sate names, possibly, but follow-! general] ideals. | aS | Buy It and Save Money Golden ‘Gift Coffee gives you full value’ r your money in coffee quality—coffee flavor and aroma. : | GOLDEN GIFT | CorFFEL im! Packed in an inexpensive moisture-proof double ing those gene! lines and those | Theodore Roosevelt sensed the situation in 1912 jand all but established ‘a new party on what was! believed then to be the ruins of the Republican party. Similarity of ideala and policy and only the personal issue of himself, resulted in failure of the new party to survive more than a few years,' | when its voters returned to the parent party and | | with the awakening this brought about, the re-| united party swept the country in 1920 by the! record plurality of seven millions. | Two years later in the face of such a vote of confidence you find the situation resulting from yesterday's voting. Almost a complete reversal. A change is bound to come, end may come by the time the presidential -election of ,1924 rolls around. Who knows but Senator Borch is not. even now striking the match that’ will kindle the conflagration? 1 | Member of Audit Burean of Circulation (A. B.C) ~ Member of the Assoriated Press. t= exclusively entitled to the news credited in this paper and od Press Asso: ick if You Don't Get Your key is ny t etween 630 and 8 o'clock p. m | ve your Tribune. A paper will be de messenger. Make it your duty to your carrier misses you. | The Casper Tribune's Program oject west of Casper to be authorize? . e . and cd at once. Net Always to Blame. | container to protectits A te and seientific zoning system for the | flavor and f reas ty Caspe ‘OW LET US take the other sidé of the case for +s | comprehensive municipal and school recreatoo | 4N once and see how we come out. Most people, WuHeEA THe Time CAME FoR and tosave you money. haf one apap ce ~ srr any Se lee ee pe a IE DAD To TAKE BACK THE PIRATE Ask your Grocer : e for y acc’ wv % i f Completion of the established Scenic Route boule- he blame any a in in an automo- wit, CosTuME | about it. 'T HAO DISAPPEARED —— AND So HAD Litthe Jimmie. bile figures on the driver of the car. The first cry that goes up, as a rule, when such an accident occurs, is that the driver of the car was at fault | when as a matter of fact, in a large majority of cases the person injured was to blame. | From a chart containing a summary of traf-|wers pound by oath to a tally | sath fic accidents in New York city, with the favlt or|qip in the nea, bape fh bers: Wom Vie, ar py tater tended incapacity of the proper party listed and while| “Indians of a tribe tn central South | sage pervades scrapple in combina- perhaps the cause of 50 ae cent of the accidents; America are said to bathe ten or/|tion with the softer qualifying biend- is listed as unknown, the blame in the cases where| twelve times a day, They seem to us ed taste of the mect. ‘ if the fault of the accident has been detern:ined is) overwhelmingly placed on the persons injursd. Over a certain period of time in which 7,327 ac- eidents, involving private automobiles, occurred, the police department of New York city found by vard as planned by the county commissioners to Ger- ‘alls and return. den Creek Falls or Natrona county and more high: rates for shippers of the 4 mor’ frequent train serv- Better roads for ways for Wyoming. More equitable freight Rocky Mountain region, ant ice for Casper. Facing the Front. Be. Peek into a restaurant at breakfast ‘ime, or between meals and you will jbe reminded of a railroad train. The Chosen Ones. MATTERS LITTLE what political party label is is worn by the county and city officials elected} at Tuesday’s election. A party label does not make enemies of friends and neighbors and be-| sides those elected were successful by reason of the votes of members of both parties regardless of party labels. | Those who merited and received the vote of} * confidence are to be congratulated. Theis fel- lows prefer them and they are to be the officiers, who conduct the public business of all of us re- gardiess of our usual sentiments of Republican- to carry things to excess; but, then) One can buy it anywhere in Phila- perhaps they look on the rest of the|delphia. In fact, anywhere within the| the diners are facing forward, Watch world with scorn and loathing. What state limits. Even the large hotels| ¥OUFself the next time you go ihto an would they say of Eskimos who have|have it on their menus. ‘But it ising place where there is a choice |never even heard of the ablutionary|never as good, say the gourmets, as ot ye bones) carefully how you x use of water? {when brewec 2nd blended by-a heerth | 7° @*, the ers—pick a nice, Cigni- thorough investigation that in 450 cases the driver) yfan is a gvonderful animal and loving housewife. fled, s:loof sort of table and sit cone of the car was to blame; in 3,168 cases the person|can adapt himself to any custom*or} Another Pennsylvania dish which|‘© Jt facing in the direction of the injured was to blame; and in 3,683 cases the cause condition. As :he Indian said when|has had better luck outside the state| Ceshler. . of the accident was unknown. With the heavy'csked how he could go nearly naked |is the soun known as “pepper pot. The explanation {s simple enough. preponderance of blame on the person injured in|in all temperatures, ‘Indian ‘all face,’ | Into this souD co such things as tripe,| Like sunflowers, we prefer sun to the known causes of accidents, it is but fair to It im lkely that in the matter of|meat, vegetables, green peppers and|*tadow, and Ifke natural curious hu- presume that the injuréd person was to blame in| bathing at least temperance is the/a great deal of seasoning, the whole | man beings we Uk+ first to do as |Do Your Christmas Shoppin |proper virtue. The Philade'phia der-| being « “hot” soup tritended for con-|Sthers do, snd seccntily to see who is ism and Democracy. We believe these men and women are big enough and broad enough to do just that thing. Our local affairs are of the highest importance to us, of greater concern than our state and na- tional affairs. They have to do with our every- day life, and these officers are very close to us. ‘ ‘Sometimes it is believed that we do not do our “duty by these officers. Too often we elect them} orget them until something happens to ont Se tion to them, then if we do not like it we rail about it, but if we do like it we omit to say so. We should live on better terms with Sour officers. That is we should at least let ~ them know that we are supporting their efforts to deliver a clean and able administration of what- ever they are elected to do. The Tribune desires them all to know at the outset that it is ready to back them and aid them in every possible manner in their handling of the people’s affairs. None but have a sufficiently hard row to hoe in satisfying the public. Take the sheriff for instance. He is mostly damned if he does and damned if he don’t. His is an office of prime importance to the city and county The Naber can be of the highest usefulness. ‘the Tribune is ready to be of use. Then there are the members of the board of) county Morgan and Mr. Scott, are excellent men, men who stand high in the professional and business circles of the city. who has made one of the ablest public officials Natrona county ever had under any party lal whatever, and as honest and fair a man as wo have ever known—these men, all Democrats, if ‘ou insist ypon the label, will conduct the people's business in the commissioners’ office, really the} most important branch of the public service. And the public is to be congratulated upon selecting men of their quality, Other officials could be enumerated with equal compliment in both county and city, As we enter upon the new era let's see how good we can make the record. In the Wake. \(;}OW THAT the war ts over and the dove has at least flitted over the field of carnage and view- ed the remains of the dead ones, those who escaped with their lives can lick their sore spots and turn their attention to other and pleasanter things. They can kid themselves into believing that they} saved their honor out of the wreck and still the) jim. % troublesome question persists—did they? Even so. There is little or no satisfaction in post mortems. How we came to our death is obvious—the mountains simply slid down and buried us—and we have a considerable job digging out—almost, but not quite the task our jubiliant|™er weather while our friends elsewhere are cx- friends of today had two years ga. The shifting of power by the people’s votes from the one party to the other and back again is due| 4PPlying to the city of notice of dissatisfaction with both. The line of demar' that the one party or the other did its duty while in power—that is raised the money, paid the bills hnd kept the business running—gets us nowhere. commissioners. The new members,’ Dr.) : form of a first sea lord of a fleet that does not Together with Mr. Thomas A. Hall, | exist, the sword that has no more back of it than! bel, | ation is all but wiped out between them| and something new must be raised up. The fact} more than 50 per cent of the remaining 3,683 cages, basing this on the most conservative estimates. During the same period of time, in which 1,209 accidents, involving taxicabs, occurred, the cause for fifty-one such cases was traced to the driver while 437 cases were blamed on the person injured and the cause of 714 accidents remained unknown. In any event and regardless of responsibility for blame for accidents, there are too many of them | happening everywhere, and the number should be juced to the vanishing point, and will be if we all obey the rules and keep our eyes open. p Re DBRS ON ES BURY WA Pte Social Note From Doorn. OSs to a previous engagement ofthe Amer- ican public to prepare to exercise the fran- chise and attendant circumstances thereto ee | thereon the social function at Doorn, Holland, in | which the Princess Hermione of Reuss became Mrs. | William Hohenzollern Sr. was almost overlooked | by the writers on social topics hereaboute, The | fact was duly chronicled at the moment, and what the contracting parties were to wear at the cere- mony, had been previously advertised in the ad- vance notices, f And as we read the account of two full persons kidding themselves into the belief that anything uncommon, or ex- | traordinary simply excites risibilities. The boasted partnership of former days, the uni- rown | they are putting over } If Hermione can get any thrill out of any such mummery, we presume that is her affair. The world looks an with a sort of “pity you, my | children.” , Why Do They? Ww DO AMHRICANS wish to visit Europe? Do they crave European culture which ix in- finitely lower than ours, or their morality, which is on a very low plane? Americans can learn noth- ing from Europe that will elevate them, Europe is a seething inferno of false theories, which have pushed her over the brink, and from which she.is now dying. Americans cannot afford to visit this maelstrom, as they will eatin return polluted with some of the poison with which Europe is reeking. For an American to go abroad, is like a gentleman stepping out of his immaculate mansion into a sea of mire; he cannot help getting some of it on OF COURSE we cannot help having a lovely climate. We don’t-advertise it or claim it as an asset, still we go on having beautiful Indian sum- periencing winds, snow, rains, floods and other disagrecable . are conten plat ae Upton, Wyomin; r the loan of the signboard near their rail. station qralch declares to the world, “The Best Town on arth. NOTHING quite so resembles left-over Christ- mas toys in a show window, as the pre-election ine, regular and totally without thrill. If it must bi 1 wash. “If you fin Bathing Eccentricities. | 55s. .."1f you tin At this season of frosty mornings,|touch your skin.” ed from|that the sclupt said, spectacular accomplishment of! feated. bed down dry, but do not let water claims of the chairman of the party that was de- id it absolutely nec-|but they annointed themselves with ‘have yourself rub-/oil, which may have made a differ. @ peasant’s staff—all seem pitiful and ridiculous | ;in the light of happenings since 1914, | matologist who has started the dis- vussion leans perhaps much to the side of prohibition. ‘Women on Murder Juries “The question of women's service on juries has been much discussed sinc? suffrage came Jn,” remarke the Brooklyn Eagle. “The six women who sat with six men in the Bergin mur- der trial promptly joined with the men in aocquitting the two men end one woman on trial is the first case of the sort in this section and it throws some light on the problem. “So far as one Case, shows, women em likely to be moved just as men are by the’ evidence. There seems to have been no disagreement among the jury, certainly none on sex lines. ‘We are still firm in the belief that women should serve on juries,’ sald Mrs. Squire, the forewoman, but. T think that we’six who served on this jury will never want to try a urder case. We have gone through a terrible experience. I only hope thet what we did in such sincerity was as just as we believed it to be. “and yet with al this sincerity and conscientiousness these «x wo- men flew. almost straight into the face of Justice Parker in his charge. The judge suld: “I see no real ba- for an acquittal on the ground of self-defense. When Bergin want- ed to leave Cine detained him—and Cine had a. pistol. Belf-defense means an attack where the party at- tacked has no reasonable means of ge'ting out ef the way.” The judge Imost as severe agrinst the de- of excusable bomici(e, saying ‘This {s not & community for lyncb- ing, and I don't know that there ts much difference between lynching and @ man taking the law into his own hands.’ “Time out of mind furles have taken the law Into thelr own hands and flown in e faces of judges’ charges wher man has been mur- dered for invading another man's home. There is a wide bellef among men that that offense deserves im- mediate killing, and it comes out of jury boxes in all parts of the coun- sumption on «old days. In Philadel- phia pepper pot appears daily on all menus through Autumn and winter. ere ‘Tl See You in the Spring.’ T shook his hand end gripped it hard, And said, “Well, Pap, good-by.” “Hells Bells,” says he, “don't talk to lass |}lo felt vaeuely uncomforta coming into the place. ‘The other day ¢ student of psychol- oxy hurrled into m rostaumnt and set down with his back to the street. and would have liked to change his place. but the waiter ha¢ already laid out tee knife and for wk and napkin. Hv ng end ¢recovered | Unlike the feeiing when me As if I'm going to die!* He swollowed hard; then, lookin’ up, He seen the ducks awing; “Bo long, m’boy—I wish ye joy, I'l gee you in the sprinj I knowed wha: Pap had on his mind And waved as keerlessly As he did, then, and joined the men All bound for Camp Machree. For lumberjacks with frostbit lungs Cen't promise thataway, And those alive for Apr'l's drive Aln’t always here In May. I never spoke to Pap no more, But had my little fling At work and play—and, anyway, In see him in the spring. —Charles Nichells Webb. try. Judging by this case, the addi- tion of women to juries will make Uttig difference, If men are primi- tive an@ savage in thelr attitude to- ward this crime, these six women were equally so and just as firm in their belief that they had done their duty as men jurors ever are. Hu- man nature seems to run the same course through both sexes. If the law runs against human nature, 56> much the worse for the Jaw in the jury box. The Scrapple Season. The scrappln ereson is on. it gins when the cold shows its teeth mornings of early fall, and keeps ing until mayflowers wink in grass and the dusty bock beer in saloon cellars creak and crack with longing for the open eir. over her cornmes!] flats, but Penn- jence. The Romans treated the bath It is concetvable|cs a religion. Perhaps it was the or-painter-architect-|only real religion they had. ‘The sylvania coes its way serene in its possession of scrapple. és the Heart of the Loop Convenient to all theaters, 8 stations, the retail,and ‘Tetace Garden j i our establishment. beauty. home. } i { i | | Just Like New. That’s often the expression that follows the cleaning of a garment which has been sent to We are experts in this business. By our scientific methods we will restore your finest Suits, Wraps or Frocks to their original Let’s show you what we can do with our wonderful modern equipment in our new The Service Jackson and Railroad Sts. Early BUY IN CASPER Cleaners Phone 56 the cold, col okes no| poet followed his father’s advice, for| Engiish have somewhat regembled the| And with justice, too. For in the eagerness for [LANDER DAIRY &| the Phila-|it is related of him that, when work-| Romans in this as in much else. They|neighbor state scrapple wears a feiphia sage wv recommended | ing on the ceiling of Sistine chapel she |and thelr tub have made the round of|crewn and reigns undisputed Curing | DUCE co. ®n annual bath coming to) sometimes ¢id not remove his oats | the world, though there have not been | wintry weather, and against domin-) PRO. ° mind,” writes the New York Sun. | for three months a: a time. However, | wantin, ahd nd. | at e. 5 skeptics who thought that/ion of this dish there has: never rig is a curious letter) Michacl Angelo lived to be 90 years|2 good deal of the supposed bathing /a mrurmur since it conned the sov- 546 South Chestnut extant Michael Angelo’s father] old end his days were filled with | y s only ‘alk. However, there was!erign purple years arc. society formed in Englane a few Roughly speaking, scrapple can be § ago'the members of which defined as a compound of country Phone 1735 to him in which the latter adjures | labor the son by ail that is holy never to' “The Greeks bathed rt