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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1922. and busboys wear badges bearing their numbers. One waiter, it was observed. his badge on upside down, and Che Casver Daily Cribune be Casper Dailp Cribune faith in him though iconcolasts in plenty have Tho Terrthl ~ed Insued every evening abd pe at cusper, Natrona sought to destroy that belief. T le Teme Mr. Ban~. Wyo. Publication Offices. Tribune Building. And ngain that is why popular belief in the = ~ truthfulness of George Washington cannot be SSOCL PRESS eee een nay arciues to the shaken by amy evidence that icouoclasts would pre RF in And then Henry sought Archibald in ontaine Fox b's dictionary and found what it meant in the orizinal German, ant: straightway began to club the bed had post with his gou:y foot and never}h's attention was called to the fact c ed in this paper and sent. We believe in his absolute veracity. We feel it. Archibald meant Ioxtremety}said: “Thirteen’s the reason. That's Associated Preas. want to believe in him, therefore we will. | Bold. And Leander, which was Ar-}my regular number and I wear ft up- ALLENS GOB? Sees a sam lpg = idols we Ltr Bot ee hee be chibald’s middle name, meant Lion|side down to take the curse off. Con ett Ms sm: od ° Man. —_—— mange Connecting All Departments . a ey are beautiful to us, We need Ray Gmanet eee Leather ——— = them. And nothing can take their place. ‘ . Wages lost to Indiana coal miners Entered at Casper (Wyoming), Postoffice as second cla@e) “Tht the iconoclast go on his way of destructio: Se ee oe ns marter, November 22, 1916. Z : : Lag iS way les ‘ion. jwhich was the name of the neigh-|during the recent general strike : We will cling to what seems to us to be beautiful bor on the other side of the house, CHARLES W. BARTON :--+-Preaident and Editor and true until our understanding convinces us te Be Far ale ey & man of vast proportions, and voleanic temper, and a voice lke a | Dast of dynamite—a man who was | vaguely believed so come home late | from the ccuntry club and spank his wife with a golf stick. An@ Henry found what made him happy and comfortable, that Owen came down from the Celts and means A Lamb. Then there was Thaddeus So-and-So rosy |the contrary. Even then will we surrender with 1720-23 Steger Biég., Chicage, /great deliberation and reluctance, to the scavengerr New York City: Globe BiGs./of philosophy. } Sharon Bidg.. New Mont pea eRe S Price and Supply During Strike. | Cal. Cipies of the Daily Ne New York, Chicago, Boston ypeox the department of commerce annual report! Secretary Hoover gives the public some inter | Aavers: Prvdden, King & ¢ Ii; 266 Fitr av Mzss_.Suiti Poston, and visiters are welcome. SUBSCHIPTION RATES By Carrier or By Mall jesting facts and figures and some coal strike his | oy _-30.00) ©8' 3 1 who Uved across the street and had One Year, Dat! 2.80/tory not generally known. | an Income ¢’.at reljeved him of work. 450| The departments of commerce and labor, antic and who .erta‘nly would have died if ty and Sur 38 | ipating the expiration of the biennial coal agree. he “aan’t had that income, being the an@ Sunda: . jment in March, 1922, joined in an effort during the month of October, 1921, to determine if some ar |rangement could not be arrived at by which, in, |case of failure of agreement between rators and miners, arbitration or some other device of settle mnt could be secured which would insure the coun: | try against strike, with its great losses to com }merce and labor. The representatives of the opera } jtors accepted such proposals; but the workers con | ™ret ignorant man in the ne‘ghbor- hvod, with no more brains than a cat An@ Thaddeus turned out to mean The Wise One. And there was Philip So-and-So who used to live tn the Italian villa down on the corner but who lost all his money on a string of race horses and then one day went out and shot them with a rifle not insure del! mont. tn arrears. Al Daily Tribu tion becomes one Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C) Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. i 11 15 or 16 any time between 630 and 8 o'clock p. A paper will be de ‘our Tribune. by spe messenger. Make it your duty to/ to and went away to Mextco—and his Tribune know when your carrier misses you. [sidered they would be sacrificing their opportu: | name meant One Who Loves His |nities if they acceded thereto. { Horses. | As it was evident from the situation that a strike | |was inevitable, this department warned the pub | —————$———SS}] | lic of the necessity to make provision in coal sup-| |plies against such an event, and undertook a gen | jeral campaign ‘to increase the stocks of coal as xe-| jeurity of continued industry. | And there was Henry's married sin ter, whom he had all Mis I'fe strven | to silence in an argument without ever yet succeeding, and her’ name, being Etheling, meant Nobig Snake; and this so deeply pleased him that he rose out of bed and tas yy |The Casper Tribune’s Program walked right = ie uthorizs4 As « result of these activities the country en-| down to the telephone on his gouty | Project west of Casper to be sut! tered the strike with by far the largest stock of coal | foot and told his sister all about her- eted at on jever known, and the fact that we were able to tific sont: system for the | self, with elaborations, becominy one re perlbag ere re iene te maintain all commerce and industry throughout Jot the happ'est, comfortablest, most CHICAGO pe wchenstve municipal and school recreation || the longest strike in history was due to this effort. | | contented men alive as he did it. A And he stayed thus happy for up ard of an hour. Or until, to be ex net, he sought the meaning of his own mitdle name, and found it. The including swimming pools for tre chil The strike began Apri 1, 1922. By the middle of May spot coal was selling at about $3.60 a ton] at the mine. Spot bitumnous had risen to $12 per |ton at the mine in 1920, when production was xt} THis WAS THE FOURTH oR FIFTH Time THis WEEK MR GANG HAD GoNE OVER To Completion of the established Scenic Route boule- vard as planned by the county commissioners to Gar ss. s ry Bees: a RRO | ree RN RR SRY 1 OED Ms Pall) name was Eustace. Eustace is Ger- wholesale districts, by li at~he OOF eee conde tor ‘Natsena county and more high: |/the rate of 12,000,000 tons a week it was evident ee |tmantc, and means Man of Good gitabe K ways for Wyoming. jthat some action must be taken if a worse situa-| |<ZZ7 THE CoUCH To LIE DOWN AND FOUND IT ALL Health. ‘ More equitable freight rates for shippe-y of the |/tion were not to rise, with production limited to} rf Rocky Mountain region, and more frequent train ety: |! 4999.000 tons a week from the nonunion mines.* | |~ffox% CLUTTERED UP. aut i ice for Casper. In the nbsence of any legislatien or any consti-| ut Aspiration. THE HOTEL OF Pi ee es \tutional beni for coutrolling profiteering, 12 com. - pak lark and Madison Sts. ° . : : ‘ference of the producing ovcrators was called at} 4 = nization that"ls able to get out andjally that he forgot to swear for an|W. re t of ambitions 4 Begin Right, Begin on Time. {the department commerce, Aw a result of these| Wind River Canyon patella ren tasoe sei: Asati em id eres epttiniee cottage H HE QUESTION of zoning is pertinent in so|conferences it was agreed that coal prices should | Resort. T hope tha: every car owner who 18! atter joking up ha own name,|All our secret aspirations ; Ff Lchicacos Wense restaunae ! many growing American cities that the experi-|not be advanced beyond the Garfield prices plus a net already a/member of ‘thé Park-| wich wae Henry, and findins tt de.| We Were very frankly alring. —_—_— ence of cities which have it up becomes a matter|reasonable allowance in each district for the dif- | > to: spe trey aerativoone <o rived from the German, and mean- * of interest to cities contemplating such a move. ferences in wage scale and costs which had ensued ‘ (By Fred Pattee.) oe rai pir’ ate ehiok ne #18 Sa | the Gracious Gift 0 God, he was OS Solpe pass rau! Seepetaree. rae It will be a vital question in Casper at no distant /since the war. These agreed maximum prices va-| Almost everybody in Casper and * J in*rigued, and went on to look up bee Sooty ater! kote a resh Roasted date, because of our continued rapid expansion. It is felt that if this growth is not intelligently di- ried from $2.25 to $3.50 for spot run-of-mine coal at the mine. Approximately 85 per cent of the pro- vicinity has heard of Wind River Can- yon, but very few persons in this vi- cintty know ask for an emble other names, and his joy began, The man who lived next door to For the height of my ambition Merely comes up'to my shoulder.” COFFEE : _ . oe + —Edgair Daniel Kramer. rected in the interest of property, convenience, {ducing districts voluntarily undertook this ar-|cinity Know shat it ts a game pre: Misfit Names: Henry was a man who, to Henry, ——S" beanty and all else that enters in to a complete and) rangement. In districts which had refused to en-|sey ocersonmiig a ghee, on a ererned s6‘sppropriately Jnanied as 5 Ib. — finished Casper will fall into the same er-|tsr the agreement prices rose to as high as #10 per/they know that the waters of this| some time when you have the tooth |Ip merge rnc wan bone feller hala The Jinx Number. Our FAVORITE Blend iy / rors that others have experienced to their sorrow|ton at the mines. v Y , and are now trying to correct by a beiiated zoning system. | At the end of July some districts withdrew from |the agreement, although some 65 per cent of the splendid canyon are full of fine p'ck- ere!, or as they are more ccmmonly Hed out in this country, pike. Two ache or the rheumat'sm or the grip and are in need of an all-around good cheering up, turn to the comperniium! f'cant from the stancpo'nt of height and weight, and much more so from the standpoint of mentality, but hav- Every now and then, despite 3 Ibs. for $1.15 PIGEON TEA & | ‘ g r + : science ané education and all that On this subject the Kansas City Star says of|nonynion operators held to it until August 15,/wceks ago last Sunday, at the Boy-|4¢ Common Christian Names in the ing a wife who stood five feet ten|sort of thing, one learns that the COFFEE co local experiences through which they are now pass-| when the strike was settled and the agreement au-|%¢" carey. ninety majestic elk march-| back of a ¢icticnary and ponder upon/in her stocking feet and weighed 201,) superstition that thirteen !s an un- ° ing: \tomatically expired. ed right down Into SOW: Pome is) the skill of the general public injand had @ brain as strong as her arm.| ucky number ‘is still thoroughly!{| 228 E, 2nd—Phone 623 “Under the police power the inherent right of the | istricts which refused to co-operate he main camp of the Utah Construc-/naming its children wrongly. Th This man, Henry had always said,}nlive. A recent example of its pot people to pass laws for ‘the publi s and general welfare’ safety, health, is cognized; under eminent domain there is recognition of the sov-| strike, as shown by the Coal Age, was $3.70 while|between Thermopolis and Casper, or ereign right to appropr' property for necess: the average price of contract coal was about $2.60.|in other words, which will be the only public use. In the latter, compensation often is}During the same period of 1920 even with three] sutiet of the Big Horn Basin with Bowed; but wa2er the former the is -|times the volume cf production but without any} the outside world. Boysen is a sta- gensution where property is affected, the assump-|attempt at restrain, the price of spot coal aver-|tion on the Burlington railroad, and Fon being that benefits conferred by exercise of |aged $6.20, Pe tncein Reasestteaimttnemiaon teins _the police power sufficient within themselves. — [eerie chorea ss “Zoning authorities are of the opinion that it is safest not only from a legal standpoint, but from - practical considerations, to put forward zoning ordinances under the police power of the state, nd the oceasional bootleggers in coal, the average rice of spot conl for the entire period of the Lame Ducks. | (HERE WAS quite a crop of lame ducks result- ing from the November elections. Far larger tion company, who are building the wonderful road through the canyon, which is to be the connecting link all of 3,000 feet high, and they are most likely, for the mountains on elther side of this wonderful canyon aro known to be about 3,000 fest |aboye the water level of the Big Horn was a man with the gout who did this had been named in a moment of high ency was found ir a large restay once and :t made him laugh so natur- inspiration. He was called Archibald.! rent in the elty in which the waiters | ——— eet than ordinary. If the president is expected to take i, which flows, tumbles and shoots care of all of them through appointment to federal): ough and over the rocks at the berths, where will he find the vacancies, if he is/pbase of these imposing and magnifi- so inclined? cent granite shafts. There are svimc notable exceptions, men of the! There 1s a Uttle park at Boysen, -vather than through eminent domain or condemna- ‘ion proceedings. E. M. Bassett, attorney for the New York plan commission and a nationally recog. -nized authority on zoning, said recently that every city that to his knowledge had used the right of eminent domain in zoning, ‘would take it back. the reason being that zoning after this fashion is too inelastic for the city that grows, develops and changes. “Zoning under eminent domain becomes a perma- nent arrangement; under police power it may be changed as conditions demand. he principle of zoning, especially when exer- vised under the police power, has been recognized by many state supreme courts, and on two sepa- rate oc ions has been upheld by the United States supreme court. The theory is that a city has the right to regulate its growth, certainly when that growth, without regulation, may affect detrimentally the public welfare in relation to health, morals or safety. Bringing zoning into re- lation with these has not been a matter of difficul- ty, since zoning has to do with building regulation to the end not only that property may be protected, but that fresh air, sunlight and safety from fire and other hazards may be provided. “The legality of zoning has come to be ehiefty a question of a properly drawn ordinance, authorized by legislative act, rather than a question of con- stitutional right.” Tle Daiouenion lias: 0 THE iconoclasts of the world serve a good or ill purpose, is question that is difficult to i answer to the satisfaction of those who take op- posing views. Whatever purpose they serve they. never attain any degree of popularity, for their work is destructive and no one loves a destroyer like he loves a builder and a creator. To push our idols from their pedestais, to ex- pose the feet of clay of our saints is displeasing to us even though the destroyer have the right and the truth upon his side. We cannot but feel that he has taken a great deal from us and left nothing in its place. He has not only shattered our idols and the things in which we huve believed, but he has created doubt of the rea) and question of the truth. Wheihber, in a world of imperfecton, it were bet- ter to hide an ugly truth and leave us happy in our illusions, rather than expose hideousness and disillusion us is the point to be determined. In the big and the broad way the honest icono- clast does a work in the interest of truth and fact; but the very work in which he engages to destroy our idols creates suspicion of him. From whom does he hold his appointment -to come and take the things dear to us? By what right of su- periority does he tell us that he is right and we are wrong? That his is the real and ours the false? Is not our faith largely a matter of our own creation? Are the things he sets up truer than the things we have created or accepted? If it is largely the result, we go on believing in our idols and the iconoclast goes on with his destruc- tion. There is a force in tradition, a power in long continued faith not easily shaken. That is why followers of Jesus Christ, devout believers in his works and the redemption of the world through his sacrifce d suffering have refused for more ban nineteen hundred years to abandon their highest ability and usefulness who fell victim of jan unwise and unkind electorate, whose services jshould be sought and retained for the public good. But the generality should’ be permitted to remain lame ducks. Although the Congress may have performed splendid work, under adverse conditions and cir- \cumstances, it has not been popular with the people and no Congress in years has received greater criti- cism. It has been everybody's target for two years past. It failed to do the right thing at the right time. It’s top heavy majority was a handicap rather than an advantage. It was slow, cumber- some, totally without snap, and in many ways dis- appointing. A blind man could almost foresee the result of the November congressional elections—a greatly reduced Republican majority. The president has not indicated his attitude to- ward the lame duck brigade; but if he meets the hope of his friends and the well-wishers of the Re- publican party he will continue to devote his at-- tention to the more important matters of govern- ment than to the finding of places for lame ducks. And if, now that the party majority is down to manageable number, he does not take command of affairs and direct them there will be some history written in 1924 none of us will care to read. Public confidence in Mr. Harding is still strong notwithstanding the jolts it has received. Party eclvation depends largely upon his wisdom an. leadership in the next year. Pa eT aE SEE Vista of Coming Generation. {pte PRESENT generation has an immense ad- vantage over previous ones and it is difficult to judge to what extent future generations will still be beyond premae advancement. Modern life is full of changes but the greatest achievement has been the advantages with which the young of this generation have been surrounded. We are going forward phase of the whole question is that we are help- ing ourselves forward through providing for the advancement of those who are to -ome afterward. Our child welfare legislation has been one of the distinct advancements of the age. The welfare of future ages is protected through it. Setting up the jnormal child and the normal surroundings of child- hood as a standard, the goal has been made one o. the highest ideals attainable. There has been distinct physical improvement in ‘youth. Elders have shared in it to a limited degree, but the consideration of greatest importance is that the physical welfare of future boys and girls has been made surer. Educational standards have been raised, so that the mental standards have been (nearer to what we would like them to be. Educa- cation is no longer something for the chosen few. Nearly all who have the desire to learn may do so, and if they do not they have only themselves to blame. Physical betterment has been advanced with raising the standards of some of the indus- jtries. There is little doubt that: the increase of the supply of milk and its sanitary distribution will go a long way to making a better gene in the next few years. but the most reassuring} where already three different resort epers are f'zuring on putting in picnic camps for the tourists who will be .ured through the canyon when the new road is completed. And, talking of roads and highways, this is up to date the most important road project that has ever happened in Wyoming. For the twelve miles that the Utah Construction company have under contract the highway will be a boulevard second to no canyon road in the known world, It winds anc twists around the curves and through the tunnels beside the Big Horn river, scarcely ever out of sight of it, except when it dives through a tunnel, of which there are three. One, the main tunnels is 400 feet long, and goes through the hard- est black rock that the company has ever had experience with. The next tunnel is 200 feet iong and the short one is only 110 feet lorg, and all are in the most picturesyue _ locations, and the roads through shem are reg- ular boulevards. At no place in this drive through the twelve miles of the canyon is there more than a 6 per cent grade, and at no spot is there @anger of collision, or danger of jumping off into the boiling stream below. Women drivers can gin through this canyon on high with perfect safety. In this respect it is indeed unique, for at no place in Wyoming or Coloraco have I ever seen so much wonderful scenery, and such a perfect canyon road where there was not some places where one might slip and plunge down into a stream below, or onto ragged rocks hundreds of feet below the highway. But the Wind River Canyon route will be safe. ‘At this main camp at Boysen the company camp houses 200 workmen, and at @ifferert places along the |canyon there are other camps where \trom twelve to fifteen men are housed land from that up to eighty men, | which Is the second largest camp lin the canyon. There are four places lwhere little parks are located, where ‘ the canyon widens just enough to per- mit of stations and camps, resorts for tourists and so forth, and at each \these places ther# are streams of crystal white spring water bursting forth from between the granite wails or coming out from under a moss- sovered ledge. The Wind River Can- yon road is a part and parcel of the great Park-to-Park highway, and was {first started by the Yellowstone high- way association before the Park-to-| Park highway wes thought of, Its) creation and consummation marks one | of te zreatest achievements of eel combined efforts of the Yellowstone Highway association and the Park-to- Paark Highway association. It is the most important piece of highway work in the entire west, and every man who owns a car should be proud of becoming » member of’ any or- 1 you've been putting off buying your Columbia Grafonola till you can spare the price—stop stopping, at cnce! Everywhere, Columbia Dealers are forming Community Christmas Clubs. You pay a dollar membership fee and this goes to your credit at once, your Columbia is sent home the same day or, as many wish, it will be delivered on Christmas Eve. The rest of it can be arranged between you and the Columbia man on most any terms you like. Go to the Columbia Dealer in your vicinity and look at his display of Columbia stream-line models. Let him demonstrate Columbia tone. Let him explain the ten points of superiority that have lifted the Columbia out of the mechanical phonograph class. Let him tell you the new low prices that make the Columbia the most inexpensive, worth-while phonograph on the market. Then think! Home and Christmas. Home and music and Christ- mas. How music ties the two ideas closer together. Of all the year, Christmas is the ideal time to own a Columbia—the dear old songs, the steppy-peppy dances, the droll comedians. A Columbia is the one great gift for Christmas. Go see the Columbia man to-day. COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE CO., New York SMITH-TURNER MUSIC DEP’T