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FRIDAY, NOVEMRER 74. 1922. SIS EDS atk RE OU OR Ee Seem Sara! Re A PAGE SIX. Che Casper Daily Cribune ret Che Casper Daily Cribune except Sunday at Cusper, Natrona lication Offices. Tribune Building. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Member of the Associated Press. Press is exclusively entitled to the; of all news credited in tits paper and ELEPHONES <.10-cs0scdeos-oees 15 and 16) one Exchange Connecting All Depastmenta/ ——__—_———_——_$ r (wyoming), Postoffice as second class November 22, 1916. 3 ; cannot be impressed with tbe fact that human die ss the Inet valuable thing in te world, and Must be preserved; taut invesugutions and obser-/ vations bave conclusively proved taat sometaing like “vy per cent or car accidents are avoidable; | and that im the great majority of accidents that do occur, the driver is to blame. Temporizmg with an evil so widespread in no manner reforms ‘it. Drastic action by the courts is the only cure. The Detroit judge bas the correct idea of getting the situation into the understand-| ing of we thoughtless and careless drivers, by/ showing them the results of their heedlessness and | then an opportunity to reflect upon the possi- e bilities as well as upon the actualities of irrespon:| = Advertising Representatives. sibility. z & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger" Bldg., Chicagc. , ace aee wa / r New York igs Globe eee = 404, Sharon Bidg., 56 New | r ieee Cal. Cries ot the Dally John Reappears. ANREP TTERLEET EGET TL ATERY, sree SUETUEE PTET TE ¢ New York, Chicago, Boston ces and visiters are welcome. a SUBSCRIPTION RATES j By Carrier or By Mail $9.00/ 2.60 450 2.25 7% 05 the! Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. | time between 630 and 8 o'clock p. m | Bom ‘A paper will be de | yur Tionaer, Make it your duty to HE INTRY may congratulate itself, con- @ess may felicitate itself that prohibition is a question settled and removed from the category ef things that trouble the earth. Not so. The ad dition to the basic law agreed to by the several} states in the manner prescribed, has in no manner brought respect for it and observance of it, and at no time has government authority been able to command general enforcement of it or establish even a passing popularity for it. In many of the larger states mutterings have rd <ver since the constitutional amend. ment became vffective. These mutterings have en- couraged open violations. No section of the coun-| try is without liquor of some-sort, either local manufacture or that which is brought in from} great distances’ under the very noses of enforcing | |The Little Scorpions Club. ecial messenger officers if not with their actual connivance. had ri | - ane know when your carrier mises ¥0—| During the campaign thre were actual con-| £ eee aera eyo tests for public office upon wet and dry issues ee yungest bab: hased the Et Si when the law says there is no wet and dry peed nee gece The Casper Tribune’s Program Irrigation project west of Casper to be authorize? and completed at once. perk system, including swimming pools for the chil ron of Casper. Completion of the established Scenic Route boule- vard as planned by the county commissioner to Gar- ‘alls and return. for Natrona county and ming More equitable freight rates for shippe’s of the ltocky Mountain region, and more frequent train serv- fce for Casper. more high- issue—it is all settled When congresa meetu it finds old John Barley. supposedly dead and beried, camping on the doorstep demanding @ rehearing of his death semtence and with some show of strength and con- siderable show of support. | Members of the congress claiming mandates from beer and wine by taxing them to pay the soldiers’ | bonus,” which is to be passed later | What ubout all this:come-back? What about the undeniable attitude of the people against the Vol-| stead act? What about the carnival of liquor consumption in the country since it was passed?| Why the disrespect for this particular law, when others on the statutes are scrupulously obeyed? Congress and the federal authorities have trifled around in this matter until they have permitted a As A MATTER of FACT THERE WERE ONLY 3 MEMBERS OF THE CLUS “TUNNEL AND GACK INTe THE. CLUS HoVSE UNTIL. THAT HOSTILE. ‘To ATTACK. GANG DECIDED NoT Park-to-Park Highway : ‘ | suequehanna river between Columbiu |aons of the rich and the poor among! and Wrightsville, on the Lincoln Highway, and between the dates of |whom it makes no dietinetion; it wil! cultivate the natural genius, elevate meats and vegetables—sorted the laundry —paid the grocery man and the ice man— given the house “a thorough going over” —and prepared luncheon, d dinner was still to come! It wasn’t an unusual day for Mrs. A complete and scientific zohing system for’ the their onstituents because of sentiment expressed ANY WHERE NEAR AT THE TIME. BUT BY CHANGING avert, By. palapenss It was juss a sity of Casper. at the recent election, have introduced bills to! ; sample of her daily routine—the routine A. comprehensive municipal and school recreation |i «lefine “when liquor is intoxicating,” to legalise HATS, ETC., THEY KEPT GOING OUT THROUGH THE SECRET of nine out of ten housewives, No wonder, she was “dead tired.” ; ae ; 3 j : (By FRED PATEE.) }July 2nd, and July $th, more than |the soul; excite laudable emulation to : Pioneer Spirit in Business Seer pier boy come to Aa The “Master” Highway of the| 10,000 automobiles crossed this bridge. excel; in knowledge, piety" and benc- Suddenly Mrs. Roberts stopped and P 3 Many a state statute has fallen into innocuous] world. The longest iighway in the |” Very large percentage of which were | volence; and’ finally, it wi took a long, deep breath. From “next a faba and courage are just as much in demand in the present day as they were one hun- dred or two hundreds years ago. Courage is both physical and moral, and we need both kinds. Both «types are what control the weaknesses of human nature that show themselves in the attempts of the unscrupulous to prey on the honest people. | Crookedness demands resourcefulness, and it de-| volves «on the more courageous to keep on the watch against fraudulent schemes. “The progress which has brought about the great citicx in the United States has been a result of the same spirit which brought about the founda- tion of the country. Peoples from all nations came here to find new opportunities. And it not the methods of their individual nationalities which brought about the success of their under-| takings, for their very leaving their own lands showed they were thinking beyond the majority there. 1t was the new spirit which carried them many miles from their homes that gave a euccesful issue to their undertakings. It involved a considerable amount of initiation to build the business centers of the middle west and the far west just as it required the same pro- gressive spirit decades earlier to build up the east- ern centers. It is no longer possible to find un- tried fields in the way of new country in the Unit ed States, but the pioneer spirit may still be shown in carrying to completion what has been left. undone in the old fields, There is always a better way of doing things. In continually find ing these better ways will lie progress in the future, a —- 0 Abolish It By Statute. HIO’S woman judge has revealed the secret of why wars continue and ‘how they can_ be stopped, so the Kansas City Star tells us. They continue, she reasons, because they are a crime and they can be etopped any time by being treated as a crime. It ought to be a simple enough matter to have war declared a crime ;we suppose an act of con- gress would be sufficient, but to treat it a crime} probably would involve some difficulties. We already have a number of statutory crimes, but have discovered that it’s one thing to designate a crime and another thing to prevent it being com- mitted, and still another to punish those guilty of committing it. Our federal courts, according to the attorney general, now have 172,000 untried| cases on their dockets, which seem to show people break laws with considerable facility. We won- der if any law passed against war would be more readily enforceable than the laws now on the statute books, or if the authority charged with enforcing the law against war would act with any greater vigor, promptness apd success than the courts now act on the laws we have. We would have to go Burke one better and find n way to indict a whole peple; then we would have to find a way’ to restrain them in their illegal course and another way to punish them. It looks like a good sized job. It might be easy if nations would jst listen when told that war is a crime, but }fa ravailable. desnetude, but few federal statutes have suffered a Tike fate. A law to be obeyed and to become popular must have the assent thereto of a great majority of the people. If the laws governing prohibition in the United States are not so viewed they will re- main the ject of jest and the object of evasion just-as they are now and have been since prohi- bition came in, “oO Lloyd George in Eclipse. HAT do you imagine are the feelings of friend Lloyd George, who a brief spell ago command- ed the attention of the whole world by his slight- est utterance and with all the tremendous power of the British nation to execute his most trivial or- der; to find -himself today sitting modestly in the seats. of the opposition in the house of com- mons, the head of the smallest and least import- ant political party of the realm. For seyenteen continuous years he has been a cabinet member. For seven years the prime minis- ter and the obsolute dictator. Today he is practic- ally an outsider and opposing what he formaly diected. What will be passing through his active mind as he sits in those gloomy benches? Will it seem to him that the empire is progressing as favor- ably as it did under his administration? Will he accept, his setback with patience and wait in the hope of a summons from the king to form a new government on the ruins of the present one which he believes must inevitably fal He poor tools with whith to work at present and he lacks the public confidence, but a character: istic brilliant stroke of statescraft will quickly change these things Y The rise and fall of English leaders is swifter than it occurs in America, and defeat does not mean so much nor does party tell the whole story. The world need not worry, Lloyd George in all likelihood will come back. 0 Not Partisan Measure. PARTISAN elements of the press are playing up opposition to the administration’s program respecting the merchant marine in the Republcan ranks as threatening to impede its course through congress. This is at,variance with the record so Opponents of the measure who have sought to diseredt it by applying the term “sub- sidy” are meeting with increasingly cool reception that has enlightened the public as to the real mean- ing of the administration’s plan—the need that it aims at meeting and the scope of its effect The more: the pepole realize the meaning of the mer-| chant marine plan the more they realize its merit and the need for its enactment. This is a measure that calls for support, re-| gardless of party affiliations and sectional pre- judice. The administration’s program is directed along lines that assure benefits not only to ship- ping, but to the nation as a whole; not only to seaboard interests, but to the interior. The pro- world, the most scenic and the most headed for western’ points. Now can |its patrons and bénefactors by interesting. More than six thousand +)cu appreciate why the Park-to-Park |@img {ts benign infjience on the pub- miles of good roads and thrilis, with more than one third of the entire Highway assoéiation many thousands of for and has use booklets Me mind.—John Adams. |. A system of general instruction route already paved with hard sur-|route maps with road logs and de-| Which shall reach every desription of faced pavements. From Casper to the| #criptive matter which will influenee|our citizens from the richest to the Yellowstone National Park, on to the|@ part -of this tremendous band of | poorest, as it was the earliest, so will Glacier National Park, Columbia. To Séattlo and Mt. Rainer National Park, down to Yosemite Na- tional Park and San Francisco, Gen- eral Grant National Park and Los Angeles. Then east again through a perfect’ wilderness of mountains and parks, and the Grand Canyon, to Pu- eblo and Denver; asd back to Casper finishing & six thousand mile tour through the most picturesque country on earth, and over the only ono “Master” highway of the entire world. Backed by and aided by the United States government, and all of the automobile ‘clubs and civic organiza- tons in America, and to think that it is purely a Wyoming project, was started as a Wyoming project and by Wyoming men and that the first real boost of the project was made possible} general by the Casper Chamber of Commerce. The merging of the Yellowstone highway into the Park-to-Park high- way, gives Casper the absolute assur- ance of a paved highway from Chey- enne to Cody and the Yellowstone Park, through our city which will be very greatly benefited by the flood of tourists that this highway will bring in to us. And why should. not the tourist come over this splendid high- way which furnishes more wonderful scenery in one trip within the borders of the United States than all of the other tourist routes in the world. Col crado alone hag 42 mountain peaks exceeding 14.000 feet in height while the world famed mountains of Switz erland has only 8 peaks of 14,000 feet. Colorado has 36 peaké that are higher than Mount Fuesteraahorn the high: t mountain in, all Switzerland. In Wyoming the tourist is scarcely ont of sight of one of the great mountains of the state in the entire run from Chey: anne to the park a distance of 542 miles, and some of tho time the high- way ig clinging to a shelf of rock while the mountain streams boil and bubble under you, and the mountain trout jump high out of the silver foam to shout a welcome at you, and at the same time issue a challenge for you to stop and try your luck. The Park-to-Park Highway associa tion is doing wonderful work in adyer- tising this splendid route throughout the United States, and second -veek in January will put on a “Renewal” week, and will urge each one of last year’s members to renew thelr mem bership, and also to bring in one other new member. The city of Seat tle has effered to match its member ships with the whole state of Wyom and British | tdurists to come to Wyoming? must do your ;.tt, so send Mr. Sta ford at the Chamnv+r of Commerce a check. for $12.00 tor your membership dues in the Park-to-Park Highway as sociation for. 1923, and’ put onr, « their beautiful emblems on your car. pas ai seer tba | American Statesmen on Education. | The good. education of. youth h |been esteemed by wise men in all jages us the surest foundation of the happiness both of private families and of commonwedlths.— i ee Promote, then, as'an object of pri- |mary importance, institutions for the diffusion of knowledge, In proportion am the sttucture of a gov- ernment gives force to pub‘ic opinion, |it js essential that public qopinion should be enlightened.—George Wasn- ington, aVie1 o Wise and judicious modes of educa- tion, patronized and supported by communities, will draw* together the jto take an interest.--Thomas Jeffer- |son. | ‘The Broken Heart. | ‘Here 's my heart And took it from her breast jAnd gave it to his waiting bands, |, Where it had hoped to rest, she, guard st well,"—twas human caution 80, yet trust her heart, And oh! so ke a woman! j_"se | To “Be sure I'll guard it carefully” (All tenderly he spoke) And speaking, held Sit carelessly, And so it foll {“Now T can't mend my heart,” she i wept. R | Salad he: “I think you ean: ; But if you can't why don't despair, | It cannot be so choice and rare, Or you'd have kept it with more care | "Twas on! s0 like a man! alizabeth Evelyn Moore = _ it \ SAME goes farther. PRICE for more than 30 years Rep Ounces for BHF Millions of pounds bought by the “My hear: is rare and_ choice," ‘sald | and broke!! You |{t be the latest of all the public con-| -|cerns In which I shall permit myself | she sald to pit | door” came that clean, crisp, appetizing aroma that stirs the appetite and spells “C-o-f-f-e-e” in any language. It was ir- resistible. Pretty soon the Coffee Pot was singing its friendly little song in the Roberts’ household, too, rail That evening, when Mr. Roberts came home, he noted the difference in his wife. She had a better appetite for dinner —she seemed less tired than usual—more cheerful. “I feel better, too,” she said. “I believe it’s because I sat down for a little while this afternoon and drank a cup of Coffee. You don’t know how good it tasted. I’m going to drink a cup every afternoon rom now on.” . COFFEE -the universal drink Have you ever tried a mid-afternoon cup of Coffee? You'll be surprised at the way it lifts you yw much better you feel the rest of the day. There's nothing better on a busy y than a steamin’ cup of Coffee. This advertisentent is part of an educational campaign conducted co-operation by Coffee merchants the Unit ites in with the planters of Sao Paulo, Brazil. Joint Coffee Trade Publicity Committee, 64 Water Street, New York. Do Your Christmas Shopping Early 0 1 motion of foreign trade via American shipping] ing. kts show them that they will epment ALITY the best. : We have found they won't. They don’t seem to care} would be beneficial to all elements of the popu.| need to hustls some. Casper had 169 move t. QU: whether it’s a crime or not. It’s that attitude | jation, and the establishment of the merchant ma-|membere in the Park-to-Park High- BU b IN ( ‘ASPER that has made it very difficult to reason with| rine on the basis of a secondary defense in event| Way association, last year and we them; and it seems plain that if they don't care if war is a crime they will be’ equally indifferent to the penalty that might be fixed for it. They probably would figure that if they won’the war nobody would show any great enthusiasm for punishing them any As a rule we don’t see anybody trying to punish victorious nations—it never was a popular job. The real punishment for going to war is get- icked. -The real crime in war is entering on it unprepared. If we can keep these two truths in mind we probably will be doing more to make war improbable than by passing any number of stat- nutes against it or callinz it any number of names. SS ea: Driving the Lesson Home. ‘PSE OBJECT L IN may have been a bit gruesome yet it contained the elements of poetic justice, when at the court’s order seven convicted speeders in Detroit were taken to the morgue to view the remains of victims of other careless automobile driving. And there was a bit more of poetic justice in the situation when the prisoners were led away to serve jail sentences for the offenses they had committed. it is more than strange that drivers somehow of war would mean increased national protection. The fact that increasing support of the measure is being registered in Democratic strongholds of the south shows that it is nonpartisan in appeal. Continue to Look Up \HERE IS a great realm for speculation when you look at modern man and then wonder about those far distant ancestors who lived in caves and wore the skins of wild animals. The human race has come some distance when we consider what it must have been from what) fragmentary knowledge we have of it in the dark past. The bulldog jaw and low forehead have been changed from the day of our wild animal ancestor, | It must have been what we call civiligation did it. it started when the human began to look at the skies and took his eyes from the ground. The cul- tivation of the mental and spiritual brought us many laps on the road to whut we ure today. Occasionally men lose heart over the world as it exists today. They should not. Once glance back- ward to what we once were and what we still might| he is sufficient to supply all the eneouragement| needed to go ahead in the hope of a glorious future, hope to get 300 memberships this year. Just think what has already been done in. thé establishment of this splendid highway, and get in with us and help us make every man who sings America, come to see America, as she ts in the rough, And they are coming too, this was proven in July when a careful count of the number of automobiles coming west was kept at York Penn:, there is a toll bridge at this point across the Fresh Roasted COFFEE 35c Ib. Our ROYAL Blend 3 Ibs. for $1.00 PIGEON TEA & COFFEE CoO. 228 E. 2nd—Phone 623 Buy Your Gifts Do You Realize That There Are Only 24 Shopping Days Until Christmas? NOW in Casper Building Materials Weare equipped with the stock to supply your wants in high grade lumber and build- ers’ supplies. Rig timbers a specialty. KEITH LUMBER CO. Phone 3 Lae Wantads Boma Results