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_ Che Casper Dailp Ctibune ————— ‘ntered at Casper (Wyoming) postcffice as second matter, November 22. 1916. eee tee Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at t, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune Build- pposite pos-office. Hasness Telephcnet --ce--e------r----—-> 15 and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Con! al Departments By J. E. HANWAY AND E. EB. HANWAY MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited in this paper) and also the local news published herein. pes Sera eee ate a ee ee Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) Pi en taaseata Shee Reise Aiertestcoced te Rb actere:tes thea ab 86 Advertising Yeepresentatives Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23' Steger Bidg., Chicago, Ill, 286 Fifth Ave., New York City; Giobe Bldg., Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bidg.. 65 New Montgomery St, San Francisco, Cal. Copies of the Datly Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices and visitors are welcome. —_— SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrer and Outside State One Year, Daily and Sunday One Year, Sunday only . Six Month, Daily and Su! ----- 4.50 Three Months, Dally and Sunday One Month, Daily and Sunday By Mail Inside State One Year, Daily and Sunday ---------——-—————-81.80 One Year, Sunday Only --------------------=--- 3.50 Six Months, Daily and Sunday --.—. 3.00 Three Movths, Daily and Sunday 3.25 One Month, Daily apd kengred All subscriptions must ivan the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after sub- fcription becomes one month in arrears. KICK, IF YOU DON’T GET YOUR TRIBUNE If you don't find your Tribune after lookimg care- fully for it call 15 or 16 and it will be delivered to you by special messenger. Register complaints before 8 o'clock. ¥ a 1 Economy the Watchword The keynote of the president’s message to con- gress, delivered yesterday, was economy. This by all who know or had studied the president since his accession to the executive chair, was to be expected, Mr. Coolidge was a part of the administraton that succeeded a regime which has gone down in history as the most reckless in the use of the people’s money. It fairly sickened his New England conscience. When President Hard- ing passed to the beyond and he was unexpected- ly thrust into the presidency he carried out the policies of his predecessor faithfully. The Hard- ing policies, embraced reduction of cost of gov- erment by economy and this Mr. Coolidge am- plified. He added to these policies, reduction of federal taxes. He not only secured economy, but ion as well. es that further economies and further tax reductions are possibilities, and he calls upon congress to second the efforts of the executive anch of the government in keeping within the nd lifting the burdens from the backs of the people. What She Won't Wear Our fashion department has not yet been ad- vised as to what our lady governor will wear during inaugural festivities, but Sister Fergu- son of Texas, has informed the world what she will not wear. She will not blossom forth in any Fifth avenue creations, nor import any) purple and fine linen from Paris, London or other fash- ion center across the sea, for the occasion of her inauguration and the-ball that will follow. She will content herself with what Forth Worth, mo- distes and local shops can supply. There will be neither fuss nor flubdubs about her raiment. Everything will be plain, almost to severity. She will wear a tailor made when she reads her message to the legislature and, an evening gown at the ball. Furthermore, she pro- poses to go home at prompt midnight from the dance. and if the others choose to dance all night, it’s all right with her, but the members of the legislature better not be late at the next morn- ing’s session. Referring to the ball, the good sister lets it be known that she is a Methodist and does not approve of the waltz and abhors the modern jazz dances. Such dance figures as she will par- ticipate in are the dances of the Victoria period. Ma figures on a right smart social time pre vious to settling down to govern the largest state in the union Genius at Work The transmission of pictures by wireless which has been in the experimental stage for sometime has passed into the stage of actual achievement, by the sending of copies of photographs, across the Atlantic ocean. This is a wonderful accom- plishment, equal in usefulness to many of the other works of genius of the present generation. When we stop to note the wonders of the time that many of us have been on earth to witness we can count up, the telegraph, the electric light, the telephone, the automobile, the phonograph, the airplane, the radio and now the photoradio- gram, to mention only the principal inventions. There are hundreds of others, but these are out- standing. No one can say what the next generation may add. Things at present, undreamed and unim- agined. Giye genius a half chance and the impossible can be achieved. Invading the Nursery Movie stars must keep themselves in the sun- light. No group understands the gentle art of publicity Better than they. They’ are not even particular by what means they accomplish their ends in this particular line, Now, Charley Chaplin has set the picture world by the ears, by marrying a sixteen year old movie flapper, while he is listed at thirty-five, and of previous experience in the holy bonds. The public agrees that a gentleman should be a few years the senior of the bride, but it don’t beli should be twice the age of the fair The pair were married in old Mexico where the, laws are none too strict in such undertak- ings, but now that the happy pair are back in California, and under the jurisdiction of the laws of California, school authorities and tru- ant officers are demanding that since Mrs. Chap- lin has not attained the maximum of school age, she shust resume her studies in the public schools, and continue to trudge off every morning with her books for two years more. e ——$—$<$<——_—— The Hard Road The majority of the people are naturally con- servative, and there is no tougher job a person n set for himself than to make them progress. spegially in a governmental way. There was 1 with his silver coinage and his anti-im- perialism, and his tariff reform. What a wreck William G have been in entire agreement: he made of it. There was Koosevelt--with-his brand of progressiveism. He created an interest that lasted one season. Then came LaFollette with another spasm of progress. He possibly. will never realize what ran over him. * If these efforts were real progtess, the people would readily recognize them as such, but the fact is, the’“reforms” sought are almost’ any- thing else than progress. They are mostly steps backward. ‘Changes and betterment in government, come | 280° by, slow degrees, and not at one fell: swoop -as * frantic reformers would have it. And reforms come by trial and experience without the i of ‘self-seekers, who do not have reform and im- provement so much in mind, as personal advance- men: it. It is well to have these waves occur occasion- ally. They do no harm. They only emphasize the we are liable to embrace, and they spur and areal ad parties to a higher sense of public uty. Berger Approves _ : While on. his way to the Milwaukee: station to take the train for Washington to be present at the opening of Congress, Victor Berger, the socialist member from Wisconsin made these observations: “It was absolutely proper for the Republican senatorial caucus to read Senators LaFollette, Ladd, Frazier and Brookhart out of the party, because, as I.take it, only a Republican hag the right to ‘belong to the Republican party, ang only a Democrat has the right-to belong to th Democratic party. Senator LaFollette hag fought the Republican party, and left it, there is no doubt about that. The senators barred by the Washington caucus have made speeches in which they charged that the Republican party is corrupt, operated as an enemy of the common people, the farmers and the workers. : “They have done all they could to defeat the Republican -party. Now, I agree with what they have said, but the Republicans have a right to their opinions and to their own organization. “There, ig Just as much cause and reason ‘to keep Senator LaFollette ‘out of a Republican caucus as there has been to keep me out, if) I claimed to be a Republican.” Question Settled The people of the United States are for pro- hibition and they are for the Volstead law, as it is written. If it could be enforced more rigor- ously ‘the people would be better pleased. They have prohibition, want it, and propose to keep it. The nation has been committed to it. New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut and New Jersey might vote for a “wet” presidential candidate in 1928, Certainly neither the south nor trans-Mississippi would do so, while except Wis- consin none of the Great Lakes states would like- ly do so. A “wet mpaign is beaten in this ‘ountry before it starts. But what interests us most at this time.is.Gov- ernor Al Smith’s suggestion of a national refer- ndum| It is something the cat dragged in. It is 1 foreign ‘gimcrack, alien to our national genius and unknown to our federal institutions. Were a referendum taken, it*would mean nothing except as an expression of opinion under conditions not at all American. The constittution, cannot be amended by a popular referendum. Neither can a statute-be repealed ‘pr changed by that method. This union of states is still a republic. Thank heaven for that. We are not a pure democracy. The people speak throngh their representatives, who are not delegates, Those represntatives and not the popular vote do such things as declare war and propose amendment. The federal ‘stat- utes are no passed by popular yote and neither are. the constitutional powers of congress and president exercised through popular referendum. Ours is a government of the people. But the people are not the populace. The people express America’s Favorite In answer! to. questionnaire’ sent out by:'the Etude, 32,000°men and women Have shown. a) preferrnce “Nearer, My God to Thee, Kindly Light,” “Rock \ of “Jesus, Lover of My Soul, Holy, Lord God Almighty,” as -I~-am © without + “Jesus, Saviour, Pilot Me," and Hail the Power of Jesus Name. ‘The. favorite hymn .was written by Rev: Henry Francis Lyte, as he was dying*of tuberculosis, contract- ed in his. ministerial labors in the Abide ,with me! .Fast falls the ‘eventide, © TRE The datkness, deepens, Lord, | with ;me abide . ‘When other helpers fail, and com- forts‘ flee, Help..ct..the.-helpless, | Oh, . abide their will through constitutional channels, not with ret 5 an arbitrary crowd. ‘They do riot themselves |S™#t, to, tts .cloge. ebbs, out, life's pass upon specific.questions which by the nature] partn's 56: ‘grow, dim, {ts glories of things they cannot well decide. They choose I { pas ‘awa; tepresentatives who study such questions and de- Change and decay in all, around I cide them. see; What the people want, they get in this country | % auee ee ~changest not, ‘ abide of ours. They don’t get it by means of popular heh ppeesepasl mandates, however, but through ‘constitutional | * none thy presence every pasing agencies. The republic suffices for our. needs. What we want is more republic and less pure democ Y, aS we want more stability and wel- fare and less demoralization and discomfort. If Governor Al Smith could have his way and a popular “wet or dry” referendum could be held, he. would be about as surprised at the result as LaFollette was a month ago. What’ but) Thy, grace’ can foil ‘the tempter's power? Who, like Thyself, my guide and btay “can “be? Thro’ .cloud and sunshine, oh ablde with.me!.. | + Hold Thou ‘Thy cross before my Shine through the. gloom, end -point to the skies; . - ; Heav'n's morning . breaks; . end + eartl vain shadows. flee! - In life, in death, O Lor, abide with me! ‘Villain Still Pursues Pity the Dmocratic'party! Its Old Man of;th:Sea, William Gibbs. Mc- Adoo, who, with: fingers clutching ita, eniglottis,; rode its back, at the New York convention until it was almost. ready to. go the «way. of. all flesh, and who was unhorsed only by | last superhuman: effort which left"no strength for-a coup de grace, is’ now’ rested iby‘ his trip to Wurope and .by)—. subgequent visit to the GE TEA MEEPS. OUR ADRK » Gray hatr, however handsome, de- notes advancing age. We all know the advantages of, a:youthfil appear- ance. ‘Your hair ts your charm. It makes ‘or mers the face. .When ft fades, turns gray and looks streaked, Just .2 few applications {of Sage Tea and Sulphur enhances its appear ance a hyunéred-fold. . i ‘Don't: stay gray! Look young! Either prepare the recipe at home or get from any “drug store a bottle of ““Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com- pound,” which is merejy the oldtime recipes tmproved by the addition of One of the things to worry about, to. the fellow who refuses to believe in the works of Andrew J. Volstead, is the scarcity and price of “highland smoke” deemed necessary to pro- duce that Yuletide cheer known of old. The port of New York is diligently guarded and Wyoming is a long way to the westward, with many a slip in betwixt. Some of the chickens that come home to roost nowadays are not aware of it—they are carried in by the chauffeur. From casual observation, ereare traveled some distance from Plymouth jock. $ Much is being made of the allegation that a winning football team devoted a season to prayer before each game. The average golf player does his praying while the game is in progress. OMEN RAE TE 5: The only question to be solved by the new nat- fonal administration is, are there enough lame ducks to fill the offices. LaFollette warned us before election that folks would be surprised at the result. Folks is an in- clusive term. If al] the rest of them were sur- prised, we know of one who. was knocked cucoo. Let's. adopt Australia’s plan of fining. non- voters. the sum of ten bucks for each and every offense and apply the f thus accumulated to- ward payment of the nftional debt. On Novem- ber 4, we had thirty million slackers. Here’s a three hundred million jack pot going to waste. It is An that Colonel House, President Wil- Saat ¢ teatant son’s silent adviser, will embark in the news-|0tbher ingredients. Thousands of paper business. Being a man of few words he| Sls fecommend. this reedy.to-use Peal sink DA bectactod preparation. because {t darkens the xpei ‘© cover much space. What Deautifully, best a ald be an interview with C | pop AGiAt axtkose cotter a-gem wo interview w alvin Cool. bly tell, aw it dari so. natu- idge written by the Colonel. rally -and evenly. You moisten. a mola’ sponge or soft brush with It, draw- The thing at present most puzzling to the cross-|ing this throvgh the hair, taking worders is—who in h started it? one small strand at a time.- By —— morning the gray hair disappears; after another application or, two,,its natural color is restored and it be- comes thick, glossy and: lustrous, pe you appear years younger.— Aas. William Gibbs McAdoo 's his idea of a place for him to live is California rather than Wash- ington. This is the first time the country and melled, utterly “free to devel ~|iristincts and energies in the con- in which Providence had given it room and great opportunity. etheralize American fleals, to aoe coincide with a revuision of Amer!- f OG) SOS Ob B IRIRIALY] Q GABROARAG LOLA IDL AINIAL {Pl Wilson's Fourteen Points, and still] whose literary tradition is still more by the Treaty of Versailles and| ly connected with England. It was Covenant of the League of| perhaps just because he felt this persistent opposition of the senate | vehemently on Am: to all the Wilson doctrines and report goes, is laying his plans fight for the leadership of the ‘Democracy in 1928 with a view to landing the presidential nomination he was unable to secure iast sum- mer, This means that the fissure g|in the Democratic ranks that. was | to a considerable degree responsible for the extreme debacle it suffered on November 4, is to remain’ unhealed and is to fester and infect for the next four years, and defeat all the carefully | lai@ plans of the real friends of the -| party for convalescence and healing. In some Ways, Mr. McAdoo is a less admirable public figure even than Mr. LaFollette. The latter, at least, can make a pretense of stand- ing for issues, but Mr. McAdoo never succeeds in giving color to the pretense that he stands for something except McAdoo and a rule or ruin policy. ‘The Democratic party has sinned its sins, but surely it never has cone anything to make it deserving of the curse of McAdooism. An English View “Boston, Bunker's Hill’ and the .| Civil War determined the character andthe views of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, whose long life has just ended,” says the London Times. “He was o very stalwart American, of a-type that is fast vanishing, and though he cherished the memo- ties of the War of Independence, and maintained a traditional and, it may be hoped, obsolete antagonism to. England, the disappearance of such a remarkable figure cannot but be felt as a loss. His rigidity, his | resentment against England, and his rope represented an “| important ‘element in jthe complex process by which the His spirit was-essentially that of the Pioneer who had cut loose from the even a faint lop its reason the attempt to can feeling after the swift and ‘in- He was the leader in the | vital connection that he insisted so ence long after it was absolutely cably. assured. Perbaps Dear Autoist: M pee sae DO YOU ZA0W— that your garage is absolutely worthless as protection te your car? It may have cast $150.00 or $15,000, yet so far as utility is concerned, -its cost is just so much money thrown away. You might just as well leave your car out in the open yard all winter as in your frigid garage, for frost will do just as much damage to your car in your garage as in the open. een But if you install a Scientific Gas Garage Heater your garage in worth its full price. It can then protect your radiator, motor, bearings, batteries, car finish, and save the heavy deterioration of winter’s, frosts upon your car. Hundreds of Casper Car Owners have found economy and con- venience of.a warm garage heated with one of our SCIENTIFI GARAGE HEATERS. = ‘ Allow us to supply, you the names of representative Casper owners. Z Immediate attention given all orders. We are always at. your service. ° The Casper Gas Appliance Co., Inc. “Merchandise That Merits Confidence” : Phone 1500 : 1156-119 East First Runabout ; Touring. Car * - $290.00 THE UNIVERSAL CAR Effective December 2nd, The’Ford Motor Co. announces new low prices on all Ford cars. A reduction of $25.00 on the Fordor Sedan and lower prices on all other types make Ford cars even greater value than ever before. : $260.00 : ba $520.00 Tudor Sedan . oF ; $580. Fordor Sedan . $660.00 ~ ~ * $225.00 ‘Truck Chassis - $365.00 All Prices F. O. B.- Detroit - These are the lowest prices ever offered in the history of the-Ford Motor Company. They create a new standard of yalue for motor Te ar ad SEE THE NEAREST AUTHORIZED FORD DEALER changes, the shortening of distance, , the mingling of diverse populations” He might have been a pioneer anx!-