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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1922. -—By Fontaine Fox, Roosevelt's Influence. {Toll to Check Manipu- Che Casper Dailp Cridune |ceeded; but they were restored promptly to tife in Whe Savs There Isn’t Any Santa Claus! Natrone the next round by a more skillful person and went an Wee Publication Offices. Tribune Building. jon their way rejoicing the thousands. The old songs —— - are undying and immune from assassination. MEMBER THE ABSOCKAEED FREDO Someone has sald he could tell the age of a man a2 Press is exclusively entitied to the i+ the tunes he whistled. The key being the popu- tion of all news cfedited in this paper 24/0. 12. of his boyhood. This may be so. We are Member of the Associated FF ___' uninformed. But there are words and tunes that TELEPHONES .....+++0 200020005 15 an4 28 vere popular long before any man able to whistle pune Exchange Connecting Ail Departments 10 ones was ee And these same tunes will wyoming), Postoffice as second class’he popular long after we have handed over our November 22, 1916. |whistles and musical instruments to our grand TON ...s....-.P¥e Eaitor | children. ! Presigens ee | “Just to. mention a few of the old tunes whicit Representath have survived the years and rough treatment. How wine teleraiaes 1720-23 perio Chicago | would you go about eliminating from the musical Fine New York City: Globe Bide»! map such combinations of words and music as Sharon Bidg. 65 New Mon lyou find contained in “Home Sweet Home,’ , C800 ae York, chicago, Poston |“Suwanee River,” “Old Kentucky Home,” “When isco offices and visitors aro welcome |You and I Were Young, Maggie,” “Silver Threads ~~} Among the Gold,” and others you, yourself will) \rendily recall? | 9o0| Grammatically speaking—it can not be did. 2.80, These old standbys were never calculated to fill 450 any early grave or any kind of a grave in the 35\ cemetery de harmonic. They will go on forever ‘o5| bringing joy, comfort and peace to an inharmon- | 4 the|ious world until the end of time. i pbsctip | pas | Theory in Business. HERE IS a reason for everything, and while: t G ‘our Tribune. that may sound prosaic, failure to realize it , Bick tf Xow Dow cota e320 and § o'clock p. lhas spelled disaster to countieas business: men. The A paper will be 4° | merchant does not sell as much goods as he used Te eee = **!'to sell, the manufacturer finds his product becom- — - ing less popular What is the reason? There must be a reason. It does not just happen. And unless he gets to the bottom of the condition, the trouble going to continue. Experience is a good thing to go by—sometimes. ve often it is the very worst criterion. You may have begun with wrong ideas on the subject, so where is experience going to lead? Certainly not to valid conclusions. The difficulty may be almost staring the unfortunate business man in ‘the face. but he is oblivious of its operation, and therefore all the experience in the world will avail him noth- PAGE SX ee Cbe Casper Daily Cribune Iesvet every evening except Sunday at Cusper. BARTON In 1880 the loss was probably not more than two million a year and possibly as low as one million. in 1913 William J. Burns told the Amer- SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier or By Mail ority does not hesitate in private con- iv + versation to assert that the country, would be better off if we had) the ecomes one month in arrears. have beard one distinguished meni- ats coer ae ey, be decia: Jeans corpo! jssues, Waied ate weg nt Dellef in $8 tn Al nich costs the American public sev: “ . eral billions a year, and embezzlement Could Danality, could dullness g®lor defalcation, which totals more any further? Of course all of thesm|than 100 million. can be ranked masterful intellects assure that they |it, Bank burglary ana robbers, tees are fooling the people and that the|o¢ crime which strike the average plan to take away power from thelimagination as much more dangerous people is a scheme that no one but | hecause they are committed in a more themnselves ur.derstands or knows of.|aramatic manner, csobably yield the As @ matter of fact, however, the|-+hieves about 2% million every year. people have their own way of sensing | ,, poe the treachery of thece chasing |one-twentieth the check alteration public office with a smile on their faces and a glib expression of conf! tence on their tongues, but with a secret purpose to hamstring popular government.” Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B.C.) erie Czsper Tribune's Program project west of Casper to be authorise? ed at once. te and ack Accordingly, there ts and has been in progress a long-standing warfare © zoning system for the {ve municipal and school recreation ding swimming poola for the chit Evening Suits. Gron of Casper. Comp! et Bcento Rowie boule- aty commissioners to Gar- den Creek Falla and return. Better roads for Natrona county end more high ways for Wyoming. More equitable freight rates for shippe-v of the Rocky Mountain region, and more frequent train serv: ice for Casper. You caN'T SHAKE LITTLE EGBERTS FAITH Now. Respect for the Flag. Illiteracy Cause of Acci- dents. way To summer's gorgeousness. The autumn splendors on display Show beauty scarcely less. hetween the banks and thelr support- ‘ng police organizations on one side and the check criminal on the other. Into. this fight ‘the inventor ond technician has been drawn in moro ing. He is wrong, and he is going to remain so recent times and he has devoted un- unless he takes the trouble of setting fhimself yn aeray, coe eee $9) fm tact- right again. Ian't it ‘ble that there ts more| ‘!! Problem ne and ‘routing | In older days it was the custom to leave the ob- harm in weave evening suits than| ‘ne larcenous forces, To date he has servation of business conditions generally to the people generally realize? The trouble Raseyae see hase Toteed: the men in “big business,” so called. They were sup- s that one can not put on an evening semi ing fee heitads ere ee posed to be concerned with wider intezesix, and suit without also putting on evening Wie po gepeettg je-awinging 19 x86 so it was thought that only they should be con-| suit thoughts. As soon as you wet! cher alde—E. H. Smith. cerned with such a topic as foreign exchange or ex-| Sistas Tar ok Lewes to, pes port or import figures, Modern businese—that is these safety guides are of no valuo! Uniform tenda te rob one of bls owe The Fleeting Sho to say, business o' e twent century—has to him. The best estimates from a =) e leetin: Ww ui personality—whether the uniform is ig Sufficiency of Playgrounds changed this view somewhat. It has come to be| when you see tho Stars aud Stripes eae ne eteet ae ening stte® black broadcloth or army khakl. * ic. jrecognized that there are certain principles behind | displayed, son, stand up and take off Selah! oft 1 Shah ses pe ~ape! Surely no man capable of independ-|“This world is but a fleeting show,” HE Biits'tst way to answer the question as business transactions and conditions which can not |your bat. Somebody may titter. It] 4. speaking foreigners suffer twice the ent thought ever wore an evening sult| Said Hezeki.:h Bings. to whether the children of the city have ade-|be overlooked, and so there are increasingly fewer |!" in the blood of some to deride all), Col Only, is there lose in production | fatalities that the English speaking oxcet under some form of duress, A|“I heard the muxim long ago, quate recreation grounds for wholesome play, is/men every year who do not take more interest in \¢xpression of noble sentiment. You) \ oT or Ge she ihiterate forclencs, mr |920 non-Engilsh speaking foreigners ;#emsible person. dislikes to do | any-| In.memory’lt clings. to count the children on the city streets after/trade journals, financial journals and any other|™ay Dlasphome in the str@st and) incr. is a sremendoud loss tn ‘ect {killed euch year, and I may say un-ttins foolish merely because it {8 cus-|The springtims blossoms soon give school hours. publications which help to instruct in the more the-|{/#Fcr drunken tn public places, and/ dents and casualtien among the for.|necessarily. If the besa If there are sufficient grounds and facilities, the|oretical phases of business. on to 2M but if you should get|CRMES engaged in dangerous occupa:| compensation. ix $3,000, which in al It does mot take much eruition to children will not be on the streets. If there are —_—— Gown On. your? Mes to A}-| Uons. Marian K. Clark, of the New|fair figure, the total economic loas dardized not they will be on the streets, dodging automo- A Spectacle for Gods |mighty God, or if ghisnep! 27 tana | York State Industrial” commission, {each year fo the coun:ry through the pet ae gocreteeinan pececatey biles while they play ball, making mud pies in the|____ Rashes“, o> pa) [bareheaded while s company of oid) cricetes CHAE onebalt of the, eqid:| excess cf deaths" of OciBAGah: | ee ee tit tear uel “Alida! Yiwntoh one season tafe gutters, hanging around corners and getting into! J FGISLATIVE bodies in ‘all the countries that lsottiers marches by with flags to the| {ents in factories, with a rennitant|speaking miners, ‘njured each year reppinensiale. .t¢ one saust wees de-| "20 20 1 Sather Face, gangs You know all about it. You can see it all have them are, and always have been, capable|breeze, mos: neople will think you peg wes ae. per day to pcs cag pre =e ‘alone of $1,743,780. Takei Why not at least have different col.|F'm glad a spot for me was made tomorow as soon as you step out-of-doors. Just|/of making, now and then, strange use of their|are showing off. There are 80000) tects ee eeaee | rer tha’ cxceed Of deathe tears iniariedl om?. Would there Bk.any sound .ob-| -Alnithe universal space. count the children in the streets on any five blocks. time and opportunities, but it is to be doubted if| But don’t you mind When O14) New “York tate ng ee ere oe ase to non English speaking jection to-an evening sult of navy] Though I have little to bestow And, as you count them, just notice how easy it\ever such a body, until the French Chamber of|Glory comes along, salu, and let] ingiish. In 1916, $11,600,000 weal forelgners, the economic loss each blue. But is there any rational argu SS caleatislv anpsionnghoty ie . is for children playing on the curb to be run over deputies did it, devoted the better part of a day to|them think what they please! When! paid out in that state in accordance {Year reaches $4,633,250. ‘This 1s en-|ment in favor of maintaining evening| “I'm thankful just to see the show, y an automobile suddenly turning the corner No-|the discussion of the question whether or not a|the hand plays ‘Tho Star Spangled) with theaworkingman’s compenaation|tirely aside from the other costs to\sults at all? Anybody ble to look, Says Hezekiah Bings, tice what chances children have to take wien Prizefighter had been justly treated when deprived | Banner in evecaipy erensie son een lat unt which would be in- Fisafhseih lac arleats aliepbo ny ie they play ball on the city streets. Look at the|of championship title and honor. a . au a Ne creased FRo $35,000,000 if to it were garm faces of the boys, hanging around on the cor-| The scene thus presented ig made’ to-appear the|Tome? stand there, nad don’t be| added toms: Of wages, ‘labor. turnover, To Hel: diviquality, eoaice shies tagk, viaseaions | qr hagtrenater, Of the Astor | weaith : Aten ashamed of it, either, doc‘or bills and administration of the o rielen. pee Wie look ridiculous trom America to England still leaves ners without anything to do. more strange the more one reflects on the present| “pont be ‘ashamed when your jaw. Statintica. of the United 8 and, should be abolished—Fred C.| quite little money in ths United But don’t think you can stop all this by passing] state of the western world, on the nature and throat chokes and the toars come|bureau of later show thee ie ate et Helen, thy beauty {4 to me» sally, States.—Boston Transcript. _ laws to keep children from playing on the streets.|number of problems that confront its statesmen'when you see the flag flying from|accidents in the Iron and steel Indus-| Like those Nicaean barks of yore It can't be done. If children do not have play-/and lawmakers, not less in France than elsewhere, |the masts of our ships on the great|try during a period of eight years|That gently, o'er a perfumed sea, “ z Fade x ie grounds, they will play on the city streets, for they|and on the amount of difference it makes in any!seas or floating from every fWgsyff}was highest among the non-English} The weary, wayworn wanderer must play. Play is as necessary for children as| real way whether Siki was well or illtreated by |of the Republic. You will never have|speaking workers and showed little bore breathing. And without it they can not grow|the boxing federation. - pee emoticn: For ot all ae decrease from year 20 year, The Fird| To his own native shore, healthy and strong playing on the city streets. On| He seems to be a simple child of nature, absurd-/S'&"S and symbols since the world) Motor company officials state that the contrary, children in street play are being killed and injured by the hundreds every year. In one-largs city as many as 6,000 children were killed or injured on the city streets in one year. Find out tomorrow how many children have been killed and injured on the streets of this city. Then reflect—‘it might have been my child.” Then see what you can do to help, school author- ities or any other authority or organization secure enough playground space for your child and other children of the city to keep them entertained and off the streets. You cannot help your child without helping other children. And remember what injuries other chil- dren may injure your child. or Community Centers ID YOU ever sit on a store box at the corner grocery Of your village and discuss local, state and national problems with other men? Of conrse you have, and yoy will admit that your time was not wasted, although the grocer may have secretly anathematized you as a loafer or a nui- sance. But the corner store, postoffice, and other placer are passing as social centers, and community for- ums, and must be replaced with something better. The better locale is the public school building, which is now being used in many communities as the common meeting place of the people There are discussed such questions as good roads, public health, methods of raising and spending public money, or methods of production and transporta- tion of food products. In many school buildings there is created that neighborhood spirit so essen- tial for concerted action. The means employed are various—games, dances, theatricals, music, debates, literary exercises—which require the subordination of self to cooperative effort. The use of the school building as a community center or forum will furnish the key to the pos- sible solution of a variety of problems, the Amer icanization problem, for example. The great ob ject of the community center is to break down the rriers of racial and religious prejudices and to romote a spirit of fraternity among the native and foreign born. Citizenship means membership. It is obvious that the teaching of English to aliens is not sufficient to make them members of America. To acquire the language as a means of communi- cation with their fellow is, of course, necessary. But it is only a means to an end. If they are ever to fee] that they belong with us, the right hand of fellowship must be extended to them. The neigh- borhood spirit alone can create in them the spirit of America. ae ag ee The Old Songs. MHE OLD SONGS are the best. They have been A tried ont and have proven their right to live and be useful They have been tried in every key, ly inflated by a trivial achievement, but no more mistaken as to his relative importance in the cos- mos than are the orators who debated his case {with such solemn eloquence. Legislators can em- ploy their time more viciously than this—and have | jtoo often for of their sanity A Eugalizing Force. kin.” This touch of nature is simply some- thing which evokes a mood that is good and uni- versally experienced. It is these broad, universal, human moods with which music deals; and conse- quently people exhibit, under the appeal of music, a closeness of sympathy and a unity of feeling that surpass any other unity ordinarily experienced. |The fact that music can enlist the participation of large numbers of people at the same time, though they be young and old and diverse in many ways, is again a matter of profound significance. In a cosmopolitan community the hour of song in the public schools, the congregational singing of hymns in the churches, or of comraunity chorus practice of adults, may be the only time when com- plete social solidarity is attained by a community group. The character of modern industrial and commer- cial life tends toward the mechanization of human life. In many callings men are never so little their own true selves as when they are at work It is during the leisure hours that the individual powers and qualities are restored and developed. Music! holds a safe and strong regenerative power for the individual during these hours immeasurably great-} er than the wearing excitements into which he is so often led. Von Bernstorff's Disapprobation. EN TYRANTS incur the disapprobation of high-minded men, it is safe to say that they \are in for majestic anger mingled with grief. Such is the fate of the ex-kaiser at the hands of Von ( Bernstorff, who does not approve of his majesty’s |“‘memoirs.” It is an awful and humiliating thing to have lost the support of a Von Bernstorff, but the ex-emperor evidently brought it on himself. He should not have published the book without consulting the whilom ambassador to the Washing- ton gevernment. | Von Bernstorff fintts himself left with three }impressions. First, regret that it was ever writ- } ten; second, surprise at Wilhelm’s Bourbon mind, and third, “its historical inaccuracy, combined with a feminine conception of things in which the personal stands always in the foreground.” As to this last, we can orly say that it is a good thing for Bernstorff that he is at-a distance from the suffragettes of America. He would never presume to say such a rash thing within reach of some of began there ts none so ful lof meaning|accidents have fallen off 54 per cent |On desperate seas long wont to roam, as the flag of this coun+ry. this flag means a glorious future. It Ve las it is the flag of our children, andjity to read the English unting—but surely never before did|of countless chiren yet unborn. It}tremendous handicap. In 1919 the wins they employ it in a way to raise such graye doubts |is the flag of tomorrow, the signal of | director of the bureau of mines stated kee Cipemeiiea pilates ($()NE TOUCH of nature makes the whole world!an equal opportunity to all the sons|men were taught to read and write on_ every kind of instrument. by every kind of our more outstanding ladies. Deploring violence voice and every kind of whistle. they have sur- at all times, we nevertheless would like to see him vived it all. The old songs have splendid physical address them in this country. We are quite sure constitution and wonderful endnrance.. They have that there would be brisk doings. good running-gears in them and have been built of ———o—_—_—_— excellent materinl. They have been with us for [TT IS EASY for the country to believe that Prof. some time and there is no wonder they are dear Tiernan is crazy after the recent sensational to us. i |court proceedings in Indiana. It would appear to Many have tried to murder these old song so be purely superflnous to prefer formal lunacy far as the actual performauce was concerned, su charges against him 4 since thelr school was started in Other flags mean a glorious past;| 1914. In mining, the most hazardous oc- is not so much the fldg of our fathers|cupation in this coxntry, lack of abil- nguage is a ‘Thy hyacinth halr, thy classic face, Thy Naisd airs have broughi me home To the glory that was Greece And the grandeur that was Rome. How statuelike I see thee stand, The agate lamp within thy hand! the “Good stme coming.” It is not| that 465,000 men in the mining indus- the flag of your k'ng; it {s the flag ofltry came from non-English-speaking youtseif and your neighbors. races, and that many of them were Are Holy Land! Your flag stands for humanity, for] illiterate. He states that if these % Edgar Allan Poe. | of men. Of course, we have not yet|English it would be a tremendous arrived at that goal; injustice still|economic factor in the industry dwells among us; senseless and cruel|through a reduction in the casualty customs of the pas still cling to us,| lst. He says: “This is a plain bus!- but the flag leads the way to righting} ness proposition to prevent the death the wrongs of men. of at least 1,000 miners each year and Our flag 1s the world's symbol of|*® Prevent the Injury of more than Nberty. That piece of red, white and| 150,000 miners each year. Thousands blue bunting means five thouzand|f illiterate foreigners, many of them years of struggle upwards, It ts inc! unable even to read or write thelr full-grown flower of generations|ative language, are poured into the fighting for liberty. It is the cen:ury|8Teat American mining machine each plant of human hope in bloom.—Col.| Year @nd with most disastrous re- Alvin M. Owsley, National Comman-/Sults. The mines that employ num- ise Torlthe A macicanti salons bers of foreigners generally have the precautionary rues printed in ths dif- ferent languages; but if the foreigner Not’ tothe: Beautifal can_not even read his own language, ANNOUNCING The opening of the L. & L. Grocery Monday morning, December 4, with a complete line of groceries and staple supplies. has a charming face, es so bright and blue; Mabe! owns a Ussome grace, She {s charming, too; Mollys has a tilted nose— Somehow Molly gets the beaux. Bthel ts a dainty girl, Made to love you'd say; Nellie’s hair is bound to curl Just the cutest way; Molly has a tilted nose— Strange how Molly gets the beaux. We can save the Casper families 20 cents on every dollar in the grocery line. Just give us a trial and we will convince you. L. & L. GROCERY 628 East Yellowstone Ave. Phone 2231 W. A. Lester, Prop. Ernestine is warm and sweet— She's the clinging vine; Kate is capable to meet, Wind or storm or shine— Molly has a tilted nose; She's the girl who gets the beaux. —Charles H. Chesley. FOR HER CHRISTMAS BUY AN ORIENTAL RUG. AT THE CHAMBERLIN FURNITURE CO. KHOURY BROS. Most Reasonable Prices—All Colors and Sizes. of the cold that might lead to something serious. This simple treatment coole and soothes inflamed, irritated membranes; loosens ble_phiegm; breaks colda and coughs in short order. Don't wait—right Row ask your druggist NEW. ~asyrup for coughs & colds Ah, Psyche, from the regions which Mg “Home” and * “Christmas” Some- s how Seem to 2 Go Together ‘And There’s No More i Natural Christmas Present to Give Any Family than bs One for Their Home. ; Inexpensive or Costly, it’s Ke Sure to Find a Permanent x Place in their Lives. xy Unusual Presents of This Lasting Sort Are Listed under “Gifts For 4 The Home” in the “Christmas N Gift Suggestions” Columns in To-