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‘chine have been applied to education in a formal PAGE SIX. Che Caspec Issued every eve Wyo. exc P cMBER ASSOCIATED PF THE ~~ Member of ths Associated Press. usively entitied to the credited in this paper and eS ES Xe necting All Depaztments Associated “Press 1 ore for ication of all news office as stcond class 1316. ident and Editor San are on file p Fran ffices and visiters arc SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier or By Mail Get Your Tribune. | 630 and 8 o'clock p. ™ ‘A paper will be de Make it your duty to arrier misses you —— The Casper Tribune’s Program Irrigation project west of Casper to be authorizes and completed at once. A complete and scientific zoning system for city of Casper. A comprehensive municipal and school recreation park system, includiug swimming pools for the chii dron of Casper. : Completion of the established Scen's Route boule- vard as planned by the county commissionera to Gar ¢en Creek Falls and return. ds for Natrona county and more high- the Better rv ways for Wyoming. More equitable freight rates for shippe-y of the Rocky Mountain region, and more frequent train serv- for Casper. Support All Laws ‘© MATTER what personal sacrifice it may in 43 yolve it shevld be the aim of every citizen to support and respect every law placed upon the statute books. ‘or upon this attitude toward | American institutions depends the successful exist- ence of our government | A particular phase of the prohibition law, which marks it unusua! among statutes forbidding things is that it places the people generally upon their} honor. It is a law which has in it more than the ordinary difficulty for enforcement, since it is di- rected at the habits of the people. If it were just a matter of forbidding the sale of any other com- modity which was calculated as being harmful in its use, its enforcement would not be so hard. The general run of people would observe it as’ law- abiding citizens and only the lawless would disre- gard i Because it is different from most other laws is all the more reason why it should be accorded re-} spect: It is one which may be violated easily, de. spite the vigilence of the officers designated to to its enforcement. It aims also at doing away with something people have been used to having for many years. Its enforcement seems to be largely a process of education. People must be made used to} doing without liquor and there must be a vast| amount of co-operation with the citizenry and the} government. Despiie the objections many may have to pro-| hibition, they should not lose sight of the fact that) it is enjoined by law. It is a part of the law of the| land, and as such has the right to every one’s re- spect. Because a Jaw is distasteful there is no excuse to disregard it. Every one owes respect to all the laws without exception. If the people do not like a law, there are ways of getting it off the, statute books, but it should be done in constitu- tional manner. A Wonderful Age | E ARE LIVING in a wonderful age and have opportunities that few of us perhaps realize. If one permitted his imagination to project itself into the future he could picture many advance-| ments that might seem foolish to think of now. But it would not be dissimilar to what others must} have dreamed of in years gone by, before the days of the telephone and telegraph and before it was| possible to make an air trip of several hundred! miles in less time than it took to go from one town| to a town nearby a half century ago. There has been a movement in the direction of | applying modern inventions to keeping the people informed. Educational purposes have been the! stimulus in the working out of many modern in-| yentions. The moving picture and the talking ma- way. School rooms are now equipped with both, 0 that lessons may be brought home to the pupils more realistically. Comes now radio to supplement the educational uses of scienee. The telegraph and telephone have supplied the news of the world soon after events have occurred. Radio takes its place alongside. It too has flashed news events quickly from one part of the world to another It will aid in reach- ing remote corners with matters of public inter- est and concern. It too will lend’ its aid in matters of education as it has already done in matters of news and entertainment. r "A Land of Pure Delight | F YOU ARE looking for the ideal location to live away from the bustle of the worl§ a para- dise where peace and quietness reigns and exist- ence is no strain or care, where the climate is| evenly warm the year through, where you live out of doors require litlte shelter, few clothes and} the food question causes you no though of the mor- row? Then Tahiti one of the islands in the South} Pacific is the Society group belonging to France, | is the place There are other attractive features of this far away land of pure delight that appeal to the per-| son of quiet habits and calm disposition. A mur- der is a thing unheard of and thieving is a thing unknown. Everything is left wide open and noth-| ing is molested. Ancient Rome in the palmy days of its honesty had nothing on modern Tahiti in its roadsides as n safe place for depositing money, jew- | chinery. ;endurance and inculcating the necessity and desir. | schools, it is but a step to the finished soldier, in ‘sessions of any C ‘years the three-session Congress has come to be the | the single exception of the Sixty-four Congress— | show the need for helping the foreigner to become and quietness are here. No victrolas, no mechar.- ical picnos, no jazz music machines and no jazz- ers. No distracting fiapperinos. The natives’ go them one bofter and set styles Siepeee dare not follow. No disturbing industry with clanking ma- ‘o railroads rushing across the eountry soiling the delightful scenery. No nothing to both- er. The quiet simple life for quiet simple folks. No worry about breakfast, just reach up in a tree and get it. For lunch, pick it off a bush. For dinner patronize both tree and bush. When you have company, reach in the sea and get a fish. Everything handy and delicatessen provender en-| tirely too bothersome. It is a retreat for the worldweary All bright |surshine, blue skies, green seas and verdant land- . Tourists who go there remain for ‘months They become enraptured with the cli- the peacefulness, the simplicity and the restfulness of life. There is no monotony. day is more glorious than it predecessor. And jin living natures’ life the false and artificial are | forgotten in the enjoyment of the real and the genuine. If you are weary of stepping lively to avoid be ing stepped upon, if you are fatigued with modern speed, if’you have nervous prostration from dodg ing auto cars try the rest cure at Tahiti. It is a great life and there is no danger of weakening. | ee a Value of Boxing. poxz THINK simply because some nations, in cluding our own, have reduced navies and cut down expenditures for war purposes that war is 1 and there will be no more of it. If you such hope in your breast it is one you will Just as long as there are people m earth who disagree and each thinks he is right in his coutentions he will rally his friends and try and convince the other fellow with a club of some sort, that he is right. | In that event, the nation that is so foolish as to’ go unprepared to defend itself when attacked, de-, serves what it gets in the contest. | An so with the people of that nation If the fighting men, those who will be compelled to carry arm if they neglett the casual precaution of | ical training it is to their sorrow if the fel-| on the other side gets the better of him. The art of self-defense should be a prereqnisite | ii The war established the fact and} ‘k of the training among the men who filled) the ranks and went over the top and engaged in| the hand-to-hand struggles with the enemy in No} Man's Land. Boxing is a science that should be taught in the public schools all over the land by thorough mas-| ters of the art. It is a means of developing the physical health of the boy, building up nerye and ability of elean living. Along with the proper teaching of the art, goes manliness. forbearance, patience and many other qualities that form the capable citizen. With training of this character and the mil-} itary drill already established in many of the case the country has need of him. There was a day when boxing was not consid- ered respectable. That was at a time when re- spectable people did not patroa| art to be monopolized by the tough and brutish element.. A change has ocenrred since that and some of the finest families in the land give their sons a complete course in the art. And some of the proudest names in the American s0- cial calendar appear at times as patrons and pa- tronesses, too, of boxing events in various portions of the country. All of his life Theodore Roosevelt kent himself fit by just such physical exercise as boxing af- fords, he trained his sons along the same lines, and he always kept up his acquantance with the professors of the art and his interest in it. To Have Four Sessions. RECEDENTS have been broken in the history of the American Congress by the Sixty-seventh Congress, in that it will hold four sessions. The present third and extraurdinary session will close in time for the reguiar short session to open on the first Monday in December. Previously there have never been more than three ngress, although during recent rule rather than the exception. Sterting with the Sixty-first Congress, that and each succeeding Con- gress has been expanded into three sessions with the only two-term Congress in fourteen years, 1909 to 1923. ‘ In the Fifty-eighth Congress there were three ses- sions, as also in the Fifty-fifth and Fifty-third, the Forty-sixth and Forty-fifth, Forty-second, For- tyfirst and Fortieth. Thirty-seventh, Thirty-fourth, Twenty-seventh, Twenty-fifth, Thirteenth, Elev- enth, Fifth and First. It is interesting to note that in the early days the extra sessions were held on dates fixed by law rather than at the call of the president, Congress itself deciding if and when extra sessions were necessary. The Constitution, in article 1, section 4, provided that the Congress should assemble March 4, 1789, and thereafter “in every year * * * on the first Monday in December, unless they shall by law appoint a different day.” Up, to and including May 20, 1820, eighteen acts were passed providing for the meeting of Congress on other days in the year. Since that year Congress has met regularly on the first Monday in December. co tT When Admitted, Help Him HE IMMIGRANT comes to America a stranger He should be taken in hand and given the prop: er direction. that will help him find a place in American society which will muke him a helpful addition and a good American citizen. When he arrives his surroundings are entirely new to him, and it is with-no little difficulty that he is able to overcome the obstacles in the way of becoming accustomed to his environment. The great mining and steel districts readily a desirable member of society. They will be found in those districts perhaps in greater number than} in the large cities or small towns, with the ex-| ception perhaps of New York. These people in the! past came into the country; knowing little about what was before them. Now with restrictions in force’ the number coming is not so great. but there is still much to be done before the prohlem of im- migration is solved. The present governmental organization which is handling it seems to be func- mains for it to continue this course. The United States by virtue of its history, pro- cess of development and its extensive resources: is always going to be a land for the immigrant. He is going to continue to come. We must be. pre- pared to greet him properly. He should be en- couraged to learn our languags, our laws and our elry and valuables. Latchstrings are unknown, just push aside ajus in law, palm leaf and enter a man’s domicile. Few, if any of the modern disturbers of peace customs and as soon as possible to become one of so that we will have no basis-for a large portion of unassimilated people within our midst. , e it but left the/: tioning in a most satisfactory manner. It only re- | Che Casper Daily Cribune 2 Family Stuff. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1922. Pitsburg. | Mrs. W. H. Felton who had reaches that her teens befor, Henry W. New York not/was born. Mrs. Felton «> : [ pande, WEARING “THOSE BIG, BRIGHT COLORED py EAR-BoBS IN THE PRESENCE OF |arstgit taccwcg ways toe berian | toee bd epaak tar icametiaeion «. w. +r | of cheap, lost oppor-unity. was twist-| their exchange, no wonder that ‘ BAsiES 1S A SOMEWHA lea a cravat) from Philadelphia.” | says, ‘I am for @ protective tar, | GowEh: Steet? of tetas ilted “uke |terstube ak eat ca Unie, ° 1 “the as Unite ae ee | Sepire meate ait cas eect coretshal| orale Makasee weedy. adie ao lite corpse and the grave—enly those | day.” % } ya nothing more. } (ive been Invested in marble 1a Wr aceon ose a] ; Topics \ great marble cu‘ting Dant rose only {twenty miles away. From his elo-| Some men ‘speak of liquor, ) quent lips, from his active pen, Henry | Some men talk of sports. the’ Others of a business bent Rave of “longs” and “shorts.” rindustry, the feeding of the southern | Some Ciscuas the weather, | furnace, Ne| wonder that a eulogist| Some discuss the news, says, He bithed our forests in the) There are chaps who dote upon | purpe and pink anc gold of his:im-| The moyies and reviews. \ag'nation and disclosed the value of jour timber and thus Invited ycople! But since Father Adam, | to erect spoke and hub and ax handle! gince Noah went to soa, {ie all through the sduthern| There's no man who hasn't views states.’ On femininity. _ Grady saw what Henry Clay of —Eégar Danlei Kentucky bad seen, that’ protection | war necessary to Sur industrial growth. Tlie words of Jefferson and | Madison were never out of his mind, | the letter of Jackson was his | tongue's end, the sturdy tariff sound jot Zachary Taylor's message was | dear to him, an¢ he did what in him | jay to show the south its true in- ‘erests. This year the governor of Georgia | chose for the vacancy In the state Kramer. . FOR HER CHRISTMAS 3 BUY AN = ORIENTAL RUG CHAMBERLIN FURNITURE CO. KHOURY BROS. Passed since his Ceath, there ts prob- ably not an editor In the country who writes his own editorial (we speak not of those who buy them by the yard) who has not some knowledge of the work he did for the Atlanta Con- lems before the American counte- nance registers, proclaims and indi- | cates, I shal not reply firmly in the |neative. If it is not in us to be |happy unCer present conditions, the redistribution of wealth and the com- Signs of National Hap- piness. “Are we a happy Meredith N people? holson, in Harper’s mag- asks ‘plete revision of existing laws would stitution, for Georgia, and for the Most Reasonable Prices—All Colors and Sizes. atine. [not assist a particle. whole south. His view covered the “The question wears an odd look.! ‘There are no signs apparent of an un'on, After the renomination of laly sort ating st on the back of an abatement of the general restlessness. Grover Cleveland in 1888 the New 4 envelope « g train bore me west-' The great war if now rapidly reced- York Sun suggested that in 1892 the 1, T foGud myself uncomfortably | ing; we have reached a stage where Democrats present the names of Sam- turbed by it. To inquire whether |i already begins to grow dim in the uel J. Randall and Henry W. Grady, é fae Breat. Prova, pe are) hazy didtance, a monstrous. thing, both ef whom were soon called away ° h seemed an inpudence; almost vast in ita pathos, which many of us from the earth. q dit a profanation. I hastily scratched at times pany proved and established rady’s aescription of a peavtitut | Use your re the question out with a gullty sense | nothing, so ‘unstable seem the hard Chris’mas day in Georgla is equal to that I had committed an indefensible | won gains. We were told at the be- the sunset editorial that won for Cox F, son ‘against the peace anc dignity | ginning of the conflict that one 9f hi: ncckname. The same Grady show- Call 15 or 16 and give Miss Classified of the United States. Long journeys! the compensations for its frightful- ed his business side in his memor- a Ws comp intensive, thinking, ae v ness was bound to be @ great spir- able account of a burial in Pickens your Want Ad—we'll send bill later— ound inyself pondering very soberly | jtua} kening. This did not, how-| county’, Georgia. Although the grave Fy the question that had so. insolentiy {eu to ba the cane! at lesattl | waa dug Wifough' Georgie Gattis the |). 2.0, NO extra Charge for credit. pear aa is jam Aware of any impressive and miarble headstone came from Ver- > “My reflections upon history. an-!oy:standing evidence of it ‘n America mont. Pine tree# were all around, Ph clant aud aadern, equate, up oe stamens cron ae ee ee ee oes). ise YOUr one sharply agains: the Declaration of In-; er do I believe that to the war may the grave, but the body lay in a p'ne . E dependence. fe, Uberty and the justiy be attributed the lowering of coffin from Cincinna:i and the nals —— pursult of happiness’ gave me mo-| ioral standards, so generally com: * mentary consolation, but I choked in| »iained of just now, or the lessening that qualifying ‘pursuit! Why pur-)poia of religion upon the popular suc a thing you are supposed to be jmaginaticn. born with and enjoy to the end of| “Just what ts it, then, with which , your days? I was sorry I had thought! we pow chiefly concern ourselves? i of the Declaration of Independence,|yjtie beyond ‘he strengthening of particulaoly when 1+ suggested the our position as « nation in material Constitution and the amendments things. thereto, which ought to be, if they are! “precccupation with thé material, not, a guaranty of happiness. {tne elorification of efficiency, the He “IT @o not find these evidences of worship of magnitude are not suffi- happiness so insistently present as cient to make us a happy people. The they should be if we are jo be exhib-! augmentation of size and numbers \ ited to the rest of the World as aloniy increases. the burden we are : sample of what democracy offers to jaying upon our successors of estab- : mank'nd, lishing America in the world's eyes e 3 ® ts “Even on days when the skies are}as a tand ,ofg serenity and content- 7 { high and T take an optimistic view | ment, atten’ to the cultivation of c (9) tr er ngrave | of the future of the race I am dis-| tha: spiritual grace which does, little tressed by a certain grimness in the| 44 we may like to believe it, make faces of the peop'e I encoun‘er. Evi-| ror national greatness.” dences of gaiety are hard to find. In e those places in our largo cities where dancing is permitted and alcoholic re-|_ Fyom Grady to Felton. freshment is tolerated it is astonish- % Ing that so few of the patrons mant-! wr) dye, Mneratigni thers are. St , fest Joy in the proceedings. The men’ gow to wham Intenso practical sense e and women huddled about the tables ina poctie grace of expression are look as if they had heard evil tid) civen in equal proportions,” observes : ngs, and when they address them the American Economist. “To cite, selves to dancing it 1s with an air of Lernaps’ the noblest example of the determination, as though ‘they had Cicnteenth, George Berkeley had as resigned themselves to a harsh fate ficn common sense as Benjomin i and meant to go through with it if/ Franklin. ‘There will never be many The engraving houses will not accept an order for engrav- it sae eee cties mood I wonder /8Uch Persons but there will never be : “In a retr s ' . : : : : whether thero are as yany incentives Page enos Tau Pas roneror Se ing for delivery before Christmas if received later than to laughter these days as there were| ‘ieary wy. Grady, though only 48 * 3 ‘ twenty-five years ago. Of one thing | when be died was known throughout December 10. Up to that time we will accept orders for I am sure, anc that is that in th®'the length and breadth of the land. ypical American community where S 01 as : + “1 have spent my, ife humor 1s leas evi-| Nom _Sithough 9. generation _b delivery before Christmas. dent than it used to be. There are - fewer wits and story tellers in my f. time than formerly. I fear mine own Home Cooked . Hoosier peop:e do not laugh quite as e i i i i ° Ha attyiabithes tice Sik. he hoe ee CHICKEN We can furnish beautiful and exclusive greeting cards quicker pace of Ife and fear of a reprimand from the temperamental, traffic cop kill mirth in the soul of, the citizen who in other days halted | you In the middle of the street to tell you a story. “Happiness connotes contentment, so that my trdgulflesome question might be altered to read: Are we then really a contented people? * © * If pressed for an answer to the question whether we must not solve pressing social and economic prob- THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER CO. Everything in Building Material SATURDAY 11:30 a. m. to 2:30 p, m. Ags The Wigwam O-S Bidz. until dur stock is exhausted, up to and including Decem- ber 23, with your sentiment and name printed in shaded or solid Old English or Script type. Make your choice now while you have a hundred designs from which to’ choose. RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS THE COMMERCIAL PRINTING COMPANY PHONE 980) Basement Midwest Building Main Entrance—Take the Elevator and Yard—First and Center Office ' * Phone 62