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PAGE EIGHT Che Casper Daily Cribune at Casper, Natrona Tribune Bullding evening except Sun Publication Office: Issuec every . Wye, HONES 15 and 16 TELEE e Connecting All Departments hone Entered at as second class CHARLES W. ASSOCIATED PRESS ! clusively entitled to the use ted in this paper and) ein, presentatives. r Big, Chicago, Globe Bid, New Mon Coples of the Daily vy Yo Chicago, Boston n Francisco offices and visitors are we:come. Blag., 55 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier or By Mail Daily an One Year, One Year, ¢ Mon| Month a advance and the after subscription Associated Press Member of the Member of Audit Bureau of Cireulation (A. B. ©.) Kick If You Don't Get Your Tribune. between 6:30 and 8 o'clock p. m. Tribune. A paper will be Ce- peelal messenger. Make it your duty to] Tribune know when your carrier misses you. a ‘A complete and scientific zoning system for the city of Casper. Better roais for Natrona county and more high- ways for Wyoming. More equitable frelght ratse for shippers of the Rocky Mountain region, and more frequent train service for Casper. Your Representative. BEEING that the legislature of any state is the creation of the people in the va-| rious subdivisions, acting, it is to hoped with their best thought for the public welfare. The body is a fairly accurate reflection of the mentality and purposes of the average citizen, and if it have Yaults the blame is upon the people who chose the men who make the failures. If the work done in the law-making body is to} be improved, the citizen who votes must have a} better understanding of his job and give more in telligence and careful attention to the work of| selecting his representatives. If the people want better government than they have received in the past, they must not only give attention to selection, but they must also follow up closely the work done day by day during the session as published in the proceedings. You must not lose touch for these members are sent s ele ;. tr . . i tye ash foolish idea of a woman's fealous dis-| !te.” ‘Maybe four or fi supplement- to the capital to transact your business with your jntionaries were as far removed from. Washington position,” clamored Mia wwe | ed the policeman. “But maybe some- @ ge authority. F and his associates as one set of men could be bana. '“No, I simply can't have body else, who isn't as young as you If you delegate men to shape the destiny of your from another. The leaders of the American reyo- tS Syul a wie MeMEE det de Bitie ald due Gus, wllu Juaecs Luk UUt DULLES Hine, 2 ULES Ube CHarg: eu Wat SMU Wa MY Oa agerty au Guea Uuoc. pas wry UCVUS; ley AMCs Loe putlisuuMenis SuLiereu by LaeiuscayGs au YOuWuE utlU ack aL gu ue Lut. JUC Lun ACMLOH BeEIUS LO DE Luar uivulers are a Mitue Leacer Up WW uae, DUL LOL mUuErs a Jutuers Ur UccuseU BY Luus yuuge OL veg Lar ve- duu Lue LES. AS GVEry Zeuscauiun Ls Luvitguc DU, PreSWIUMMAY LUE ACCUSALUN as LrUe. Law and the Lynchers. TL NOs ut aier nouge, aoe ay ncuers every- where, ry WO jusiuy Lue ucts Lo Luciseives Hud LO ULErS by Culuuy Lucu retrivuve or pre- VenuVe OL Yi “Une real moive, Were Ue ey uis eXist, 18 Uieir discoltent wita we penulues pro Vaueu bY LWW ANU Wil LU AUSeuCE UL Jegul pear Ues lor what they tuimk evils und Lue LW dove not recogiuée as Ruch, ‘Luey wunt lo llidict Summary vengeance with nu beter reason for it Ulu Lueir OWN veLcis Or Sus pacsobs, OF They WaT lo punish wita a Terocity wuuich tne law ‘does not permit. ‘hey know tau tuey Cannot gel On the sStuLuLe DOOK such penalties as burning uiuive, covering with tar and leatuers, or even “peaung within an imch of tneir lives,’ in their more reasonable moments they would nov yote to make such penaities legal, and Luey are wei aware that no legisiature would dare to ordam such a revarn to tue Mark Ages. Jn no part of the United states today is there any excuse for a secret society to replace or even to supplement the courts. ‘the vigilantes of Cali- fornia aid have an excuse and more tor what they wid—if the better element at the muting camps «id not take control the worse ones would retam it. But the vigilantes did not conceal themseiyes be neath hoous, and their trials, hke their occasionai executions, were openly conducted with full respon- sibility assumed by the self-appointed prosecutors and judges. nd when the law did come to the coast the viguantes stepped respectfully aside and subsided takes must have been made, but its mewtive and its logic were sound. Washington ‘Times, a Hearst paper, remarks: “Don’t despise reyolutionary claptrap. The French brand gave us our Revolution.” | Which leads almost any informed American citi-| zen to inquire, What does a Hearst editor know of the history of his own country, the history of! France, or what does he know about anything in| general? ‘The American Revolution began in 1775 and end-} ed in 1783. The French revolution took place ir the years 1789 to 1799. So the American war for independence preceded the French struggle for a change in form of government by several years, si: of them at least. And it would have been a diffi. cult matter for the French uprising to have h even a remote influence upon affairs going for-| ward in America in the historic years 1775 Yi In their causes, conduct or consequences the two revolutions bore no résemblance whatever, the one to the other. The monarchy which was overthrown! by the French revolution came to the aid of'the American colonists in their rising ag: t the British crown. ubtless it is true that the success of the Amer- iean colonists in making good their Declaration of Independence, was a source of inspiration to the Kepublican spirit in France. In their character and in their declared principles the French revo- her Casner Dein orth eichhorhood News. A LIGHTED CIGARETTE STUB Choosing Them by | usband tragically. Adele’ ania eases was giving a dance to some of her | | and .t is awful to have to sort peo- jple because of their circumference. lived in @ piace where space wasn't so precious! I'd luve to have a great baronial hall in waich interest as he idled|to receive my guesis instead of these are both Weight. ft we only “Whom are you going to ask to your tea?” asked Mr, Kindhusband Wit& cheerful over his grapefruit. [anky lite rooms soing to Invite,” asserted Mra, Kind-| Proportion. husband vigorously. ‘That's Adele Weighuy. ing to spoil my ga g000 humor.” Mr. Kindhusband manifested the| ® sincere interest always aroused in hi: tea to keep her in| bedr spa wonderfully where anybody “Well, I know one person I'm not) WH Welgus over 126 seems out of “But, after a:l, Joseph,” I suppose she'll be aw.|TeSaining her cheerfulness, *it isn't fully cross about it, but I’m not go.,#% bad as Irene Smaliface's case, He is so small and her clos ce so Mmited that she neve: to find room for a large hat. © has to be satisfied with tur- she"added, is manly breast by his wife's disagree.|P&08 and other close fitting shapes, ments with her women friends. | They aren't a bit becoming to her, “What's poor Mrs, Welghtly done?!; #2 she looks perfectly stunning in he asked smiiingly. “I Mope she! &Teat big hats, isn't going to be left out merely be- cause she coat, Madeline?” onsense, Joseph, that’s a man’s Adele and Susie Massure here at the |to the country before Kind Words. If Irene only had closet space for big picturesque hats) has that superb new fur, &V¢ry one would think her a beauty, minutes?” asked the policeman. 11 often wonder why she doesn’t move too, blocks, three maybe. | school friends, I was trying to be the polite host of the house. I saw a little blonde sitting reading the paper. 1 thought it was my duty to ask her to dance and I begged for the fox trot in my best manner. Tho young wo-| man looked up ‘at me languidly. ‘No—! thank you, I don’t care to dance;’ and she resumed her paper. I observed that it was two weeks old, and I de- cided that if I was less attractive than a two weeks old news sheet it. was ticie to quit. But that was not all— ix two minutes she was up and danc- ing with a lad who appeared from the smoking room and asked her. Consider the Hiking “How far can you walk in five “Oh, I don’t know. A block, two are, coud only walk one. state and spend your tax money, common sense jution were sane patriots not blooded-handed, same time and as we had Acele to “Now what I'm getting at is this: would suggest that watchfulness of your own in-| fiends. They were sages and warriors, not dema- dinner last week I think I'd better HOW often, when our seem) People are all the time coming up terests, regardless of the confidence you re-| gogues and assassins. They had Tories to contend| leavé her out than Susie.” twisted, broken, darkened | °° ™° #hd asking to be directed to pose in your representative, would be your first) with, but they did not make the strects of Boston,| “Any little rift between them And we are groping in a ened) some place, And when I point the soncern. It would also mean a larger appreciation} Philadelphia or New York run red with their blood. | !™@uired Mr. Kindhusband hopefully roam. way they invarlably ask, ‘How long | of his responsibilities on the part of your member, Be Optimistic But Don’t Kid. N° ONE but a confirmed grouch believes in pes- simism. It is an uncomfortable doctrine and removes the joy from life. But did it ever occur to you that its antithesis, optimism, may at times be overdone in its effects? In business matters we all preach optimism. We want success and prosperity. They are so much more desirable than failure and adversity. There- fore we preach what we want. It is psychological. Optimism is fine, undue optimism—well, not so and attitudinizing, the leaders were demagogues | “At a tea people have to move . * where near the place he’s going to mettle; bathing, fishing, the old fine. and doctrinaires and with it all, filled’ with envy! about easily, and Suste and Adel Time to Quit. ] me ths ttl q If you do not take the time to study and analyze| Md doctrinaires and w a ed w 7 | about easily, end Susie and Adele aro put when I tell him that he'll sa Missions. conditions in business to determine the wise course to pursue, but depend entirely upon your optim: ism to carry you through, it does not always work in_business. Recent years have disarranged the conditions un- der which we formerly operated. Overhead costs ‘and all costs have gone higher, and in this day it is not unusual to discover that it costs more to market an article than to produce it. And again you will find that there are firms spending more to call upon other firms to which they may sell a carload or two of goods in the year, than they get put of the deal in profit. As a matter of course, if this sort of thing were the rule and continued anyone could foresee the dis- astrous ending A final readjustment is bound to cogue, when} unless those who effect revolution have virtue and F these and other inequalities and impeciments to} wisdom enough to substitute something better. elit heed to bend aoe. successful business will be removed. And while} ‘That our Revolutionary forefathers were able to |, aed aad ry optimism in business as in everything else is-a| do this is their greatest glory. ‘That .the French| ~ LL Suey Rect Se Cali- splendid thing it does not want to be overworked,| and Russian revolutionaries overthrew one nny fornia. rite or call nor depended upon, solely. only to establish another representing their own t for detsils, rates, Have something back of your optimism. Be op-| selfishness and brutality is to their everlasting Cc (ela) reservations, etc, Sera but don’t kid yourself or try to kid any-| shame. The American who cannot grasp the dif- e payed tal, one else, . P. ———————_o— Youths’ View. I IGHT on how the youth of this day regard their 4 parents is both interesting and instructive. We are certain, just as other elder generations have been, that of recent years there has been a ecom- ginte unsettlement of viewpoint. That old ideals aye been jostled from pedestals ruthlessly in the! upheavals of governments and the bringing to- gether of the youth of the world in war. Truly; ™many changes have been wrought but old human} mature has remained pretty much the same. It has remained for an English girl to supply the revised viewpoint, or if you prefer the flapper} view in an essay that has reached this side of the| ecean and is being discuss by American fathers | and mothers and applied in their own cases to { When independence was established they did not} Aissipate the results of reyolution in tyranny es-| tablished in the name gossamer theories of govern- ment bearing no relation to human nature. Because the Revolutionary patriots were sane, practical men rather than mere demagogical phrase mongers, they have been roundly abused by some of our modern writers on politics and sociology,| who imagine it is as easy to create or maintain | government as it is to string out words on the subject. ‘ The French revolution brought little immediate gain to the rid because with all their fine talk and hatred and lust for power rather than with love of country and of mankind. In ‘this they were like the present military masters of Russia, who wield the bayonet and the bludgeon on those who dare to disagree with them politically and while professing to be filed with love for humanity hold a people in the most miserable thralldom. Washington, Franklin, Hamilton, Jefferson,' Adams, Hancock and their contemporaries of the| American Revolution rise above the tyrants and}| assassins of the French and Russian revolutions as Mount Everest towers above a mole hill, They were mentally and morally so far beyond Robes: pierre, Danton, Lenine and Trotsky that words fail to measure the intervening distance. There is no benefit to humanity in mere revolu- tion for revolution’s sake, eyen \against tyranny, ference the practical political bad of our founding fathers and the claptrap of European movements engineered by cheap demagogues lust- ing for power and employing noble phrases to fur- their ignoble ends, is lacking in comprehension of what Americanism méans. 7 | Tax Free Bonds. \ ITH the approval of the administration there has been introduced in congress a resolu- tion to propose to the states a constitutional amendment prohibiting the issue of tax-exempt se curities by national or state authority. As a practical matter it is unfortunate that tax- free bonds were eyer issued by states or nation. In this tountry the practice began when public debt and taxation were trivial and no great in- jury followed. “Mercy, Joseph, don't be so dense,” begged Mrs. Kindhusband. ‘ Adele js too large, that's all. I simply can't! wet Adee and Susie into the living room at the same tea. They take up so much room that people trip over them and there really aren't chairs enough to @p around if every- body is going to take one aptece./ spoken, tender. wih shown us, wait , Some half remembered words, come and pierce clouds of gloom. For all the loving words and kindness soft ‘Though often half forgotten, le in Three thin girls can sit on an arm-|TO cheer us in some lonely hour of chair and four or five can pile up on sorrow a day bed, but at Jennie Dyer’s tea yesterday Susie took up a whole arm- chair and Adele occupleg — three- fourths of the day-bed in the corner. the gate. Both of them grab a place and hold it for the afternoon. block other people up dreadfully.” Kindhusbane appreciatively. * all, som of those s‘ender sisters you'll as good natured and merry.” “Thank: know it," admitted Mrs. Kind- jott 1 Like steaCfast soldiers waiting at —Katherine Edelman. “I wish some one would tell me ‘They seem to how you are going to know when you are considered too old to ask a flapper “Sort of fixed post?” commenced Mr. to dance with you?’ asked the fathe fter of an attractive 16-year-old. “Look in your mirror, old man,” re- ask instead of Adele won't be nearly plied his friend frankly. A But I did get an awful or the heavy | a walk is it?’ } “Well, that’s all right !f it's only a} short distance. Then I can count up| the number of blocks in my head | and tell them. But if it’s further I/ say it's a ten-minute walk or a twen- ty-minute walk. But the trouble is how am I going to know how fast the walk? = a@ proposition. A man wil! ask where some store is and when I tell him’ he's way past it he gets mad and says that a fellow back there, told him it was a fifteen-minute! walk. While another w'll not be any- ‘But a man down the Ina said it was} nly a six-minute walk!" " | An old lady interrupted the po- liceman at this point, inquiring the way to Blank square, “Straight ahead, ma'am. You can't miss it.” “Ts it far?’ asked the old tady. “About a ten-minute walk” on a winter morning -—fresh and rosy—or pinched and chilly? That's a matter for Mother to decide. — Children, as well as grown-ups, neec a hot mealtime beverage that is whole- some, invigorating, and free from harm- “ful after-effects. Coffee is known to be harmful—especially to children. ‘That is why so many thoughtful mothers give their children delicious Postum. This pure cereal beverage gives needed ‘warmth and comfort, has delightful flavor and aroma, and is free from anything that can injure the health of children or adults. little legs moving: at for one so aged. “Now look at her,” exclaimed the policeman, “Who would have thought she'd walk like Dick Remer. be there within three minutes, she'll go right on and not stop till Some peop:e are she’s walked ten. so literal. Cult of the Natural In our present cult of the natural there is cause to suspect some lack of The plea that our predecessors were so deficient In real- ity that we to save the day, exhibit less art than theirs, will not Our new poetry curiously relaxed and enervated in skill and courage. go in the long run. amazing speed/ temper, ground-hugging, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1923. Bray and fiat; if we have moods which such wring adequately represents, we have other moments more cheerful acd creative, which ou architecture and our engineering manage to cxpress, but which cannot be guessed at in our poetry, not as much as the oak cay be guessed at in the acorn. Our novels, too, have lost their cour- age, and though they often represent photographically the machine of civil- ization which builds up around us, and which now is the raw materia! on which our art is. to operate, they do not even attempt to portray the spirit oi the artist which actually pervades the land, the joy in putting the ma- chine to human uses the almost divine ecstasy in having made so much of Nature subject already to the mind.— John Erskin She'll but must YouWill Never Understana how delicious Karo is until you taste it. Nor how economical it is until you serve it to the entire family. Nor what a won- derful energy food it is for little folks until you serve Karo spread on sliced bread. Your grocer sells Karo. Why not make some delicious Divinity Fudge toda: “lL ? The Casper Tribune’s Program |} fnto'the generat massot citizens, ther work dene. ; 2 cts Crema yt Rep Smeaton i ~ : 2 a8 ° Karo, Red Label Sah Ch ; Irrigation project, weet of Casper to be author Vrobably it was not all good work, for some mis Ase Jones ToSseD AWAY ge Mareies Tat Seen5 h sae Chopred Reisina sed and complet natecerek Boil sugar, Karo, he hot syruy constantly. ‘hen mixture ine to A comprehensive municipal and school recreation < siiden, add nuts and raisins, and drop from n onto oiled ystem, including swimming pools for the || 2 ad Dats iain Panldren of Casper. 2 deci matkoabie The Two Revolutions. AND IT WENT RIGHT OoWN INTO t tojsind nik dag a me Completion of the established Scenio Route bout YRITICISING a reference by Herbert Hooyer to 4, ved Gu : a xp Bis t missioners to h i a in /half-tnets “eltces. ward aa “planned by. tre _county. Ser the. “claptrap of the French revolution,” the | MYRTLE WorTLES open GoLosH } See pias apple make a pleasin; salt_and water anass in cold water. Beat whites of ntil it fc hard sieens ci taagrcemar tees Winter ANT vs Cy facation i ( the\ land of no-winter ‘your : There. are many famous resort 4 hotels, cozy inns and pretty bungalows. Fine schools for the children, too. You will find wonderful motor highways; hee links'to test your 1 You will be charmed by the Southern California winter—a veritable summertime. The journey is.a pleasure. ° Grand Canyon National Park is open all year ‘round. Fred Harvey meals all the way. ps Pass. Agt. A. 'P. 303 U. S. Nat'l. Bonk Bldg. Denver, Colo, Building Materials We are equipped with the stock to supply aS. What advantage they may derive. Your grocer sells Postum in two forms: Instant Postum This young English girl does not think much of} aon oe pete are extant plone en billions (in tins) prepared instantly in ine sop. by. in sddivonet abi y ic] ispl: ed by = } of such ponds hose who pay higher taxes as a) boiling wa Postum Cereal (in pacl es) for those who teaining ot chiliven’ thodel seemingly he inliveg| Fesult are bitterly complaining. | prefer to make the drink while the meal ia belng prepared; to the kindly belief that their intentions are fairly| Nothing we can now do will enable us to tax made by boiling fully 20 minutes, zood. On fathers she is especially severe, holding! Such bonds how outstanding, and possibly sad ex- P ostum. For HRAcTH them often unjust to both sons and daughters,| Perience will stop the ¢raze of some states and i Ps “There’s a Reason while the mothers, she writes, are unjust only to more municipalities to run into debt. Made by Postum Cereal Company, Inc., Battle Creek, Michigan your wants in high grade lumber and build- ers’ supplies, Rig timbers a specialty, KEITH LUMBER CO. Phone 3 daughters, Fathers, she admits, know more thar a mothers, but mothers f and have the merit ype debt cancellationists can now turn their at of standing as buffers between the fathers l ter'tion to speculatin what America will Phe children. do with the money when Britain pays, which she A curious statement is thai “u father has a soft declares she is about to do. .