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PAGE EIGHT Che Casver. Daily Cribune MONDAY, MAY 4, 199! with a few hostile gestures. But it historic wrongs. the pe time, existenc came it. was different. Aimerica lsat aide there {s Prance. acting through | : ‘ why worry about.them? Let the a? ou safe E One ¥ Bi cate jback and watched others devise or| Gevit take them. We: have other|JUs0*'avla, and possibly Great Brit | bitty uid Adee oe Lee ee |at least develop, new instruments. | interests. And no one need endure |". though the British try to ap 1) is ane Boas When Americans got inta ¢he’ war, ras more or less neutral p.edia Ww 4 n Heronence ‘ ve left Old World p. gue has not even bee . 2 = + 7 distinguish themSelvea from the] if he chooses to neglect th: 8 if y a nes well stucked | seem to have as ablés, VW if Gas pr Bai Cribune Razzing West Point reat herd. of navenitles at Harvard |for euch a period of self improve |shows that Europes well, stocked, ssem Ta Mitt Mon Te ; ropean cables, \ st es Ie Pp by becoming’ assistant managers of | ment and patina! mene, eae not gacaal Met been abolished by the|. Where ts the poor feacue of Ne | the: pyelone has phe ————SS ee ee this or that, hoping to.enatch some | doing justice to himself, or living up|red has ap, by “self [tions in this emergency where ] ote ene By J. & HANWAY AND i. B. HANWAY Senator Hiram Bingham of Con: |recognition of thelr edperority, from! to his opportunities. recent cewiaton of the map, by & Tut Ca ene eie weuisoy “Ub to LBtPRR 7 necticut complains that the instruc-|the throngs. . . . Sot got tired}. fustead of hunting, fishing, or | @eterm Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as eecond class matter, tors at West. Point “have still got | nnd entered business, where 1 ox ; Nowambar #42826 their eyes fixed on General Grant pected to find stupidity and crase 1 the summer camp ' » Casper Daily Tribune tesued every evening and The Sunday Sorning |#nd the tactics of his day." He] ness; where 1 met it with open eyes useful exper.) id vune every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune | thinks it ts unfortunate that “rever-lang fight it. But am for standing | fence and to hit} | : | butiding. opposite postoffice. ence for the somewhat remote past’ |(¢ tn college, why should 1?” ‘country—and more economical! as} & e ‘ | = " ee je and 16 causes the military academy to con. Another comment declares that | we'l usiness Telephones ————-——--—-a+-e0--ane =a athe tinue to teach horsemanship, with| Harvard {8 at fault in, laying dis. ae _ Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All bepartments no teaching of airplane observation. | proportionate emphasis on bysiness 5 2) . MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Me angham ts one of the few | put holdw that this consideration is) Where’s the League? } ' d Press is exclusively entitied to the use tur publication of | members of Congress who saw ‘ser- petty when comparéd with the great: ey | | ted ip this paper and also the locaj news published herein. | vice in the World War, He was in ood of liberty and self-determina-| .., | F the’ aviation’ branch, and so natur. ba mchray Privtceton wk eeke Lor The Balkan turmoil invites an ob | Th ILY fees . om, je Pri | nT 4 E yy { Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©) ally seen the airplane am the great| princeton--a Daniel come to jode Hohe someabcon sats phe eitaation | FOR A LIMITED E ERJOD ON il Ta hae eraeae Representatives weapon of the future. He does not| ment—"the Dartmouts man of Han. | ‘8 Lie! : | a » u 7 -23 Steger Chicago, IL, a ge advocate separation of the aviation] over, but the Harvard man js an Serpe rarasiga: naieuteeertiat | As a SPECIAL INDUCEMENT to more thoroughly introduce mame: F: 3idy.. Bostor . Suite 404 Sharon Bidg..|cervice from the Army and Navy. | individual.” - bs ~; ; | ioe Te on oe vantages of this particular line gncleco, Cal. Cobles of the Dally Tribune}-But he does believe the Army fails| ‘Toxteacts trom. these suggestions Power. (on Wachee es | RICS into the Casper homes, and to show the adv antages of this tae ae } Youk. Chicago. Boston and Sar Franelaco offices | tulty to realize the importance of.alr-| oliam. “There Is a maneral tack ot | Sextet re mere p | SUNFAST AND TUBFAST FABRICS. we will DESIGN, MAKE and HANG Gar Mate atJ@ dad ind planer in directing battery fire and| aesthetic facilities.” “College courses| Austria has vanished from the | of SU } ssh te ack SERIES SELECTED from our LARG SUBSCRIPTION RATES In scouting, are regarded as.n necessary evil; To} %C2n¢: but Russia remains as one WITHOUT LABOR CHARGE ANY DRAPERIES SELE aes GE | By Cartier and ‘Outside Stata -| Americans have always been pro-| bring the ettdent's Interest back to|0f {he bis factors. and Bolshevist | | STOCK of GUARANTEED SUNFAST and TUBFAST FABRICS, | ; One 3 Dally and Sunday gressive. especially {n mechanical] nig studies we are cursed with the| %ussia Is just as aggressive and 4 r Six Datly and Sunday — Ways. America has led. rather than | concentration system.” “Since stud | Militant in the Balkans as czarist| } Three Mon Dally end Sunday followed. But when the World War|tes are ‘becoming #0 unfmportant,| Russia ‘used to be On the other| } One M h, Dally and Sunday - the system more than four years.” | © } | | Dally and Sunday .2b | they showed their customary energy | “yTytors @houlds be bigger. ang bet- | ‘Ors for the time being, just as a) F Dally and Sunday - 76) and initiative. But they seem|ter. They do more harm than good.” | ess#yed to ‘localize the conflict | Beautiful Voile, Dotted © Year. Sunday Only —...._ = ~------- 2,50] strangely cold toward airplane. de- a 1914. ra ER i Dotted Mar. All subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Daily Tribune wil) not| velopment: Afrplane.travel {a taken There might be little trouble in | 3W288) anid Dotted: Mar- insure delivery after subscription becomes one month in arrears. much more as a matter of course What This Old World | “tocatizine” the conflict if it Invol- | | quisette Curtains — i KICK, IF YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE abroad than it is here. But perhaps ved .nathing more than focal inter-| i) oo Cream yellow ; {ft you don't find your ‘Tribune after looking carefully for It cal! 18 or 16| MT. Ford will give us the lead. in Is to Me | Se°8 ether Palkans.;- Nelther) mild pakcanacteans : and it will be delivered to you by special messenger. Register complaints | *Vlation even yet. By Lillian L. Van Burgh. summer madness nor spring fever | and helio—ruffled and before 8 o'clock. ee out-bursts of fighting in that happy | > A a f | trimmed with ball j ’ 5 I wonder, oft times I wonder, what | Part of the world are necessarily Z a ETD 1 | Harvard’s Question- this old world would contagious, provided that the grear fringe. Priced at * If it did not have so many, many | Powers are really anxious to apply ea iad aes naire "tolke quarantine measures. Of course, if r y hee if, ike & the great Powers have quarrels of ' General Conditions Be ee ew aaa: © ).| thet awn, which st beyMasan ie bn Good dnd bad, big’ and small,— The old world seems’ to need and] one half of Harvard's un- 4 The first quarter of 1f jer graduates are strangers tu rum, registered the largest volume of railway tonnage and th longest volume ne to fight out at this time. the kans offer a $3.50 to very convenient of payments g from the answers. sent’ {h love us all, : > cy pty ts . " ie fighting ound, as they have do x through banks ever recorded in the corresponding period of uestionaire recently distrib-| I've found it’s a good place to iive | ae rier brat teh, ‘ any year, The year started with many expressions of confi- | uted to every member of the xenlor aha ; | on thi | bled : 4 aah 5 ‘ f ‘ Satiengbtotry, | From this distance, it does not | dence by prominent people in the business world, and althogh | class. The returns on the question: | Is this wondrous, plane. c eave ft aces = ort Pranse | . c PSR ale s these expressions may have produced exaggerated expectations, | "*!"e& sre not Flete as yet, but! And. growlog’ sight long. “side. the pat Shas plage rnd tity asthe Draperies & UPHOLSTERIES H M they have been well justified to this time. The first month | .°r@ne to #tatlstios compiled trom day tale : ' x y | ady to “start something" e. The alleged crisis may pass I've seen heapes o* thorniesg flowers: N & JUBEAST five hun tred IN & JUBFAST And of all the wild birds singing © | wlich have been Per Pair Corors GUARANTEED 5 a had not pa ed before murniurs of disappointment were heard, i to and these have been swelling until the je.¢ forty-two pec cent seem to be almost the | of the seniors turned in a flat 1 Up among the tree-tops tall, 7. dominant note, but disappointment is chargeable as much to ex- | to the ques ‘Do you ever drink | You'll find the Lird with the crippled | | ORNAMENTS PILLOWS pectations as to realiz: alevholle wing | tions. Everything in the world is good | | | it summer | ; | ¢ . i ; Paney Pi vs All shape ; ist ; 2 : F the hy r y of them all. | * Pillows and Spreads. Priced at Fancy Pillows. / ar or bad by comparison with something else, the state of busi- : trovbled the aver | Is singing the’ sweetest « For Pillows and Spre s i, 4 ness being no exception, The state of business TWerotek He Pate ae ge ticrnataee slouda arose ene | One-Third Off. Priced at One-Th ¥ bar sag Actes 2k ee soi, ie lere was a feneral tendency Ung, was bad and the conditions not such as to encourage optimism }4o avold. its’ bruial. directness hy Making Jife seem dark with dread | ‘ for the future. A decided change had come over the scene by the | wculd-ne witticixma or by uttempts and fears, | X P SH ADE SPECIAL end of the year, and the expression of confidence at that time- | to escape from tne (aregory of wine-| Then, first we know the sun's a/ WIRE LAMP SH i Ay etat ; atural shad 4 signified relief from apprehension and a belief that conditions | titers t peeping out FRAMES Retna red Cure ina To) UAE eo n had improved fundamental “Only whietn pared Wethne |S SAE ee emer eee nid 2 | eae Filets, English weaves and shadow ef- i: That the world had reached an ideal state of equilibrium eon ftediaeydan’s ane | Ne USNS look ea ao ere ear Ss | An assortment of sizes and shapes fects, trimmed with silk Boullion with price relations’ nicely adjusted, purchasing-power every- « | eine Melita Stet Seite eked We ‘better: atart a’ climbing, | Pll pPriced jatesc "e252 25c to $2.75 Fringe. Priced at____.$2.90 to $6.00 ( yee ait all enany igr eo un mpered oN, oh prvdne | the following: “Honl rolt qui nia! y| And get above the clouds so gray; | | | into consumption, nobody had any right to believe. The condi | pense,” Inly to ness on the qual.| The higher up we get, the brighter | | oA ‘ 7 i . 1 , nee ual —enjoy ROMAN MEAL | {| tions had become better than they were, although with much | 3 Jersicly,” “Don’t mind it will be, | aoe x | @} FINE CAMBRIC PILLOW yet to be desired. That situation remains true, It is.due to | ceo fish" “Only when | Becaune, never has a cloud been) @ Properly balanced | FORMS e éven talk about the outlook for prosperity without giving | clfered from x ieJable source’ | yale ane! Y | feed, and become as | 1 x ; Sill 1 thought to the requisite conditions. Where is no mystery about |" NAV?” and” Acre ely Novort"| To get behind the gun, you see.’ | gegular as clockwork Filled with special processed Sill 1 prosperity. It is simply a state of free and réady exchange of |, aren Te! ( meotonn pees: | ing, rusting pace | | Floss, Priced at--.—-~~ 95c to $1.95 | goods and services, wherein erybody is able to use the pur | 4, ; Tiree cteoninrn | And jong. toJalip! awayawhile. and | Drapery Department—Second Fioor | chasing power which exists in his own labor, in buying the rest, | and the intended ocey products and services of others. It is not something which in ion of the son, and a comparivon | There are quiet Uttle places in the | | modern industrial society any individual or group can enjoy | been made by percentages of valieys near aome streainlet, | e e : independently, for modern. se s itself by organized | the popularity of a number of o¢-| And there'a a heap 0 hesuty-spats | a effort and exchange, and 1 of it can either market its | CUPations at beset ty ccesnares with pc 2 near e _mountain’s products or supply its hee otharracehtina Kee iGinG r popttarity a generation ago : pm lou or supply its need s other sections are doing Twenty-five per cent are still In| Up there, so heir’ the ‘stars @ shin I ° FI | doubt, and a part of this twenty-five Ing on you clean and bright, must according! the ‘percet seems to Nght up all the corners, hasing shadows, setting everything y be divided | which have 5 ay Second and David Streets Phone 37 The Hope in Hindenburg | : een worked out for the present to right. | es Hindenburg is to manage executive affairs in Germany senior class. With all our grumbling and fault- for a time there is this that may be said for him. He probably Next to the unde @ contingent | oi, ; will not be at all dazzled by power (of which he has had much es the number which business The old.bgll keeps rolijng right along er graduation. ent plan to his time) 1 military traini or will and Twenty | Sometimes weeping;—mostly amiling | ter business, | At our childish woes and song. | he be in ined to be too ide living, it would istic—his | rather | i seem, ng hi'e six-tenths of one per cent| I've found, all along Ife's highways | against such a thing. It is possible that in his fecling of re nred thelr intention of go.| There's many crooked patha and Spousibility for the rehabilitation of his country he may be |ing into the ministry. | Médietne straight, © willing us one who cannot look forward to yery many more years of activity in national affairs to subordin: | comes one-third in size with 18 per € personal | cent, and law and education are But {f we watch the turnings We will all meet at the gate. appear to him. Lveryone who lenge far world peace, whoopee | feat" and' a ner cout ne tis wosigee| Tih stay: HORE bess ee Ghia mic Foot that the years to come will see fewer international complic look forward to-a career of untroub: Bto tions and more international good-will, will trust that th | leisure, answer to the| For {ts good enough for me. may be the ¢: | to their Intended occu-] Somehow, I think we will all pull Germany—be she republic or modified monarchy, but never | pation, they reply ‘*None.” through, - again, let us trust, a Pru nized Germany—is too great u | In every case except the Church | And be it early, or be {t late, factor in the world's welfare to be disregarded, or regarded | 't !* evident that the younger gen-| We will each one pass through the . wholly with disfavor. Rather it were better for the world to | Sration Is turning to professtonal tn. fehemiins Sof} yn y with dist: E I stead of mercenary occupations. It |S0 I’m content to serve my time have a Germany well governed and worthy of all acceptation. | {a to te noted trae wena per cent of| And take the sunshine with the ae =n If von Hindenburg rules Germany well, under its constitution, sons will follow the professions shade; nd with the best interests of Germany (these certajntly mean | eir fathers, 111 just keep on climbing right along prosperity and peace) at heart, even those who felt most wide choice of car-| And some day, I know that against the man, the soldier, the monarchist, may make no mis- | Was revealed, ranging from the|{ shall “make the grade,” his administrat ell nm to a single aa 77 ‘ntect. ove was-| Rewarding Service architect. One way Prospective Prohibition Drive ee is Spee aan f Another indl question asi n the single sentence, A great prohibition drive is about to be undertaken by istration und 25,000 inspectors in every branch of ve Charles Saunder sible Marquis whe: to the oats ey | who made pos. | . ts pensloned Absolutely wamped availed himself of this opportunity to alr the coast guard, ances and suggestions. rtment of the interior m cheap for the Canadians, The gov- ernment can easily afford the $5,000 a year from the increased taxes paid by the men who cashed in on Saunder's labors, 1b tives of the p e. department hibition bureau, the treas of justice ut and the dep ernuient service will aid the prohibition agents in put- |" Seeeeeete eaPra the) Canadian | » en to the sale of liquor; not only on the Canadian and | of the questionnaire, | Sovernmen| 1» borders and-along- the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, [Several pages are lett blank for a saebVentare Tesiomee oe ee | 1 a along Ath acl} 8 | general statement of a man’s the-|@2¢ inventors get more than that | yut where ever t are statjoned throughout. the United tes. | 6 to college affairs.|OUt of years of work. Yet it is \ The plans were drawn up at a conferevee in W asbingtgn at | | his griev- One of the t interesting of the comments is the following Jeremiad things “T saw ma which disap- What He Thinks | pointed me in college. I expected * Wat you think about it, Arthur T. Hadley, | vagy tre ba le Mata Purely Optional | ent emeritus of Yale, is telling you. what he think it antl ayenpasieet re Ai | i folle The Ejghteenth amendment is a marked f view. But I didn't. Ifound them| There ts, tn America, no compul- Ny . Ss M nore NI iberty; icotuhig ah wastitna other per : h as (howe In business, | sory military training for citizens in | W W h t Ap 1 gz t t t 1 liber dang when the infringement of per. There was the same distinction be-| time of peace. The summer camps | e 18 Oo fe) Ce] e ce) ose na e Oo e il liberty. is. dangerou r democracy. Laws the people | ‘een Thee and Me based on ‘the)/are wholly an. optional: accessory, of J % ; | Possession or absence of fur coat,|our national defense: ot y ant cannot x onfor | The young 4 well-filled wallet or a well sound. | man goes {nto camp or remains away ing name. TI found hoy striving tolentirely. upon his own choice. But, land the continued lack of en- cement only tends to break down the morale of the « Waited Upon GREATER BARGAINS brat ast Pia le After the Demon Tndian as a ently enacted’ “bone dry” law, under | hich federal und local officials believe the s ate can be made | “arid” principal feature ix that the purchaser held equally guilt s the seller and becomes liabl to imprisonment running from one month to six and to a fine of $100 to $500. The odor of liquor may be used as prima facic reasonably of liquor i "| Take Advantage of This Offer eden spacial ee “On x Tide Range of Prices on Framed Pictures tl poten Aue ayaa ths ited 8 4 ) and t rh Mt er polit Ask to See Our Appropriate y TFI IN Ea TE | somensontits Til OUTETETING COMPANY ity, Now might seem, the tide of public duty and interest e - Biies tase hs: | Casper Mirror and Picture P A Oil Figures March crude oi] output averaged 1,0. ineréase of YAS daily February. St at refinerlo: March 31, were 45,500,000) barrels, decre: 70,000, Import» for the first quarter amounting to 18,980,000 larrels, were 154 South Center St. Frame Company Corner Second and Durbin (Downstairs) PHONE 1910M barrels daily, a over « 2,405,000 less than those for corresponding quarter of 124.