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Che Casper Daily Triume) ‘Tne Casper Dally Tritune Tribune every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming. Business Telephones --~.. Prudden, Avé,, New York City 5b New Montgumery § ere on file In the New York, Chicngo. One Year, Daily and Sunday Siz Months, Datly and Sunda. Three Months, Daily and Sunda °. All subscriptions must be pald in a if you don’t find your Tribune after loo: and it will be delivered to you by special messenger, PAGE EIGHT By J. E. HANWAY AND E. B&, GANW.Y November 22 1916. Publication offices: building, opposite postoffice. elephone Exchange Connecting All Departments Adverti: & Prudden, 1 Branch ng scepresentatives 0-23 Sieger Bidg., Chicago, 1 3lobe Bidg. . San Francisco, Ca and visitors are welcome. One Year, Daily and Sunday -... Six Months, Daily and Sunday ‘Three One Month, One Year, Sunday only . SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State Months. Dally and’ Sunday Daily and Sunday ~ By Mall Inside State Month, Dally and Sunday. Year, Sunday Only — $. the Dally ‘Ir! insure delivery after eutiscription becomes one month. tm ‘arrears, KICK, IF YOU DON’T GET YOUR TRIBUNE before 8 o'clock, os Good Old Days ° If some of the boys who are writing the crime chapters of the nation and are heading for the electric chair as sure as night fellows day, had been enthusiasticatly walloped the first time they were caught lying or stealing, they might now be of some use in the world: If the girls whovare jazzlante mad had been spanked and put to ved en lyin: the evening at the right time in life, is it upreasouable to: think: that they would not be more virtuous and vastly better: fitted’ to. be. come the mothers of another generation? Even those who conderin reading of the biblé inthe ‘sehoola of the land should encourage the plan to haye the teacher say to the class each morning, someth ng like this; Afi “The v of the land provides punishment for crime. To steal is 10 commit crime; to lie is to begin to fit yourself for the ready acceptance of the thought that it is no crime to steal. To be dishonest is to be-a poor citizen; to sneak in any way is to prove yourself unworthy; to do to somebody else what you would not be pleased to haye them do to you is to prove that you have a mean soul; to believe that there is anything in crime that is heroic or worthy is to prove that you are mere- a half-wit; to decide that stealing is better than’ honesty s to take sides with the meanest and most detestable people that the world has ever known, and to have no Tespect for hu- man life or the rights of others is merely to show that you are distinctly inferior to decent people anda prison or an asylum for idiots is your proper home. One cannot escape the feeling that no such: wholesome beliefs as the foregoing words convey haye ever been drilled into the criminal youngsters who are making the appalling crime history that is disgracing the parents of the nation ‘and endangering the yery future of the nation itself, ny For a Mess of Pottage ‘ In accepting a few million dollars aid from the Rovern- ment instead of building their roads, themselves, states have bartered away tleir self nee and mortgaged their #over- cignty for a few miles of highway. They néed’not therefdre; he surprised at miinifestations of federal intebest {i the ren Jation of traffle on their highways. The federal pOveRniHbht has helped to build them; it has put its money inté them And when the federai goyernment puts money into anything which the states should finance alone, it never forgets it, and what is more, never allows the states to forget it. Virtue of Corporal Punishment One thing is certain. In the days when obstreperous and rebellious youngsters were properly strapped or cened for not behaving, practically no juvenile crime was: recorded.Going along with wholesome adyiceto boys and gitls of. that time Was the certainty of corporal punishment at, home and in School for failure to behave in the manner approved by. par- ents and guardians, Some thirty years ago the rod was put away. in: the.attic, the ferrule was taken from the teacher and the youth of: the land since that time have been reared, to some very large de- gree, upon the affirmative plan: “Yes Willie, Yes, Mabel,” and there is ground for thin ing that those who have‘been “yessed” the most have later made the worst records, . The papers are daily filled with stories of the lives of successful people and a study of the careers of the admirable ones invariably reveals that they were early taught to work, to rely upon themsetyes, to be honest and to respect the law of nl. Why not can this prevalent’ fool notion that “self- expression” and a policy of “affirmations” constitute a new and wonderful discovery which reveals how.to rear children, and go back to the substantial, time-tried, often-proved. and efficacious plan of the forefathers which seemed awful bitter to the youngsters who experienced it but which gave the world Te-men and womanly women? dale ¥ Not everything modern is, therefore, necessarily, admir- able und this is especially true of the present-day: methad: of trying to breed a race of God-fearing, law-abiding. industrious and intelligent human beings by letting. them runowild when they are young. No human greatness in mature life can be achieved through the practice of acquiring all the yices and learning to detest all the worthwhile virtues. in childhood, Where Fault Lies ent, four-square government, municipal, state Hones and federal, is never a gift, but is always a’ prize’to be won. If the nice people, who at each session ofa legislative body, spend time and energy in bewalling and reviling bad legisla- tion, would use one half of this energy by seeing to it in the first instance that it has competent’ men elected to office, the gain for the world would be a great one, It is a rather curious, but true, fact that oftentimes the majority of the people who bewail the deeny of democracy are the same people who believe it is an evidence of exclusiveness to avoid the primaries and elect are being nominated and elected. om day polling-booths when the men whom Ahey feriticize Vhe Tariff Party The Republican party is a tariff party, and the tariff js one of the fundamental planks of its platform, It is a turiff party heeause those who. have made this nation early foresaw that if we were to secure to the American workingman three square meals a day, a decent place to live in, and’ an opportu: nity to educate his children, and an equality’ of opportunity for advancement, that a strong, firm protection barrier must be erected to safeguard him from the low priced labor of Eu- rope. The European wage-scale is improving, but! it: te worth noting that for all of its improvement in many cases European producers are able to meet the Inbor costs to pay ieavy customs duty, and yet put the articles on sale at a lower price than the American-made products. The Burden of Law In the last five-year period we are advised over sixty-two thousand state and federal laws were enacted in the United States, oe wonder that the man who has to run n-fllyver, help in the spring house-cleaning and try to do.a Jittle plant- ing under glass for his garden, is obliged to pleadsignorance now and then because of lack of time to become acquainted with them when he is hailed up by the authorities for-the vio. lation of some one of these sixty-two thousand, Av gool lew is only one for which a need iy self-evident and generally agreed? on by all of the people. ‘The enactment of laws with the'hope that the people will yrow up to them is the poorest’ way out of a serious difficulty. mt ARRAS mer Wntered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second clase» matter, sued every evening and The Sunday Morning Tribyn men~l5 and'1é witth Boston, Mass., Sulte 404 Sharon Bidg.: Coptes of the Dally Tribune Boston and San Francisco officer ‘bine’ will not ng caretully for {tvcall 16-or‘16 Register complaints enemy Who's Who Clarence S. Darrow {s about to retire. In fact, he says he virtually has ‘retired. A few details remain, tome odds and ends to be cleared up, . Then he will lock up his* book: eases, say good-bye to his partners rd and off to the woods. He wants to fish a little, to muse and meditate on the folly of the world, to write a book! or two on crime and the futility of Mfe. He ts 68. He is tired of being the coun- try’s foremost ¢riminal ‘lawyer. He Is tired of battling with state attorneys. He-is tired of eredity and repenting the phrase, environment to juries over and over again. He ts weary of criticism and weary of praise. He {fy weary, he says, of life Itself. What 2 record he leaves! hundred’ battles have been by “him’in the courts of the i He “has «defended no less than 60 persons charged with murder, Against approximately 60 of these the death penalty has been asked. And with what result? Forty-fiv haye been acquitted, no few. hay gone to asylums for the insane, the remdinder. have recelyed prison sen- tentes. - Not’-one has ever been hanged in “all the 47 years of his practice. The younger generation doubtless asoctates hig name with the case of Loeb ahd’ Leopold» but their fathers Wil] -rémeriter, him no less’ vivr'diy as the defender of Moyer, Haywood and Pettibone and of the McNamaras with the great anthracite strike of 1903 and with many other batties fought /in tho pioneer days of or- ganized labor. What Samuel Gompers did in establishing the rights of labor in the ‘Industrial field, Clarence Dar- row did in establishing its rights under the law. Datrow was born near Kinsman, 0.,,on>a farm. He. was educated In ‘the publfc. schools and was ad- mitted to the bar when but 18 years of age. | In addition to his criminal eases he has led iegal fght4 against monopo!'es, including the Chicago was trust. He has been cotinsel for labor unions in many important in- Junction proceedin; ‘The “Radical” Court THis "country vtaits—in vain, doubt- lees—for {ty radicals to burst forth in ‘songn of praine for the United States Supreme court, which has just decided that the money de- rived from a trust estate is not a gift but. is {ncome and therefore taxable by the federal government even under the revenue law of 1913. , Hére ts a blow to many rich per- sons.’ " Consequently the radicals Who love “to talk about supreme tt 'tyfARny” will neither praise i ba ® that tribunal, but will remain silent, ax ts thelr custom on such occasions. When! the’ supreme court delivers & decision’ 'that seems to benefit the fich or the employers of labor the Tadicals call the court an enemy of the poor, Why do not thé radicals how call the court an enemy of the rich? * _Conalder what the supreme court has been doing that would give the ie w chance te change their tunel: It lately declared that a state gov- ernment could tax national bank stock. That decision hits persons of means, + It cIately* upheld the constitution: ality of a New York statute forbig- ding’ night-time employment of wo- men In restaurants. That Increases the expenses of restaurant owners. It lately held that persons charged with contémpt of court during labor disputes’ for actions outside court: rooms must have the benefit of a trial’ by, jury; under the Clayton law. That decision {s liked by trade unions’ and disliked by employers, ‘It lately upset and destroyed the Kansas ‘Industrial Relations court with its ‘fixing of hours and wages Che Casvyer A Wyoming Sunset By LADY ELIZABETH BISHOP In the dusk cf the sunimer evening, When the day ‘is almost at it's end, Like soft sweet music stealing The colors of the sunset blend, Violet, bright rose and pale blue A falry-lke summery green— While feathery clouds of a golden hue Float lazily in between. Yonder on the snoweapped summit Of the Teton’s peak there glows, Like a fair robe thrown upon Jt A warm and colorful rose. ; On the.sunny bright blue waters» Of a beautiful lake there floats, Like pictures painted by a’ master hand 4 % Majestic white safled boats. The bright hued colors of-the sun- set fade, The western sky turns dull and gray; The rosy glow which the sunset made Has faded with che fading day. The sultry alr of the summer*day Is cooled by a whispering breeze The twilight gloom slips.on<apace ‘TIM stars peep through the trees. Soon the wky Is dark blue velyet, With a sprinkle of silver lights; Oh the beauty of old. Wyoming And. her wonderful © summer hts, The Simple Life The anct>*t saints .lved iyes. of utter sinsplicity,jand preache? tit the simplest mode of existence wes the noblest one. But we of today have almost made a.creed that all asceticism, all privation, is in {tself an evil and that aenobler.lfe will result from generations’ of) self- satisfied rather than repressed ant mai desires once they»are the lot not of this class or that, but of all. Henry David Thoreau wag of no auch mind. For him, the mania to possess things, to value a man by the amount of’ his’ possessions, is destestable {dolatry.. Men will not be men he holds, until they, have learned to do without things, to adopt a rigid economy, a stern and more Spartan simplicity of Ife and elevation of purpose. Our lives are ‘frittered away by detail. Simplicity, simplicity, Thus he preaches. simplicity! “Why should’ we live in such hurry and waste of life?’ Thoreau ponders. “We are determined to be starved before we are hungry. Men say that a stitch in time saves nine, and so they take a thousand stitches today to save ‘nine. tomor- row. “An for work, .we. hayen’t any of consequence. We have the St. Vitus dance, and cannot popsibly keep our heads still.” For more than five years Thoreau maintained himself solely by the labor of his hands as a man of odd jobs, and he found» that. by working about’ six weeks in the year, he could meet all of the ex- penses of his Mying. -Thus he learned,—‘that to maintain one's self on this earth is not a hardship but a pastime, if we will live simply and wisely; Thoreau says what so many of us have thought; that fdr whnt we could have we must exchange life —so many hours, or days, or months, or years for this, that and the other, As man wants, .and works to supply his wants, so his wants. in- crease. e And as his wants Increase, so is his lMfe expended in gratifying never-ending desires, Says Thoreau: “The cost of a thing 1s the amount of what I-will call life which ts re- quired to be exchanged for it, !mme- diately or In the long run.” Thus he chokes off all desir to have his freedom and his leisure, ee Whenever you eat and wherever eat look for the Union House of employes. That {s an offering of A sweet savor to the shade of a ivaiga Gompers and is gall and worm woo and sackcloth and ashes to) that most: zealous of all tamers of trade uniohs, ex-Covernor Henry Allen ‘of Kansas, wAfter this” run of “progressive” deeisions will not Senator LaFolleite write an article pointing out that the supreme court perhaps after all tries to. hew to the line of the and let the chips fall on the lowly andthe lofty as they m No, ‘he jwill not So “a song By Reyard Taylor. Tplueked for thee the wilding rose And -wore {ton my breast, And there, tif daylight’s dusky close, ) Its atlken: cheek was pressed; Its desert breath was sweeter far . Than ynlace-roxe could be, Sweeter than allearth's blossoms are, *\ But that thou gay'at to me. I kissed itm leaves, in fond despite Of lips that felled my own, And love recajied that sacred night His blushing flower waa blown, I Vowed, no rose should rival mine, Though withered now, and pale, ‘TI those are plucked, whose white buds twine Above thy brida} vell Jardine’s Idea {: Besrbtaty *Yaraine has exploded phe ancient theory that every va wancy” which occurs automatically calls for an‘appointment of someon: else in t federal service, The st retary jaye. “If It becomes desir able to submit a recommendation for fn increase in force tn order to con ‘duet new work which has been duly nuithoriztd ©) such | recommendation must ishowycleatly that the addition Is abdalitely necessary and give the specific !reasons which makes it i» Tewill ‘not. be possible to give ap: proval to ‘recommendations for new appointments, elther by additions to the force or to fill vacancies, except where It) is Canny he Indleated that careful consideration has been given to the possibility of rendering an ad- ditional appointment unnecessary,” saved will take care who has foresight. amazing rapidity. Sunday Cribune thetr relations to the public, but bor continues unchastened steadily intreases its demands. Timely Views Julius Kruttschnitt, closely asso- clated with B. H. Harriman in an epocnal railroad development and since 1913 chairman of the executive committee of the Southern Pacific railway, will soon quit the ranks of all this leads.” The Gardener By LOUISE DRISCCLL. achnitt talked| The Gardener, God has many about his former quaint device, chief and the fu-| Of tree and vine and shrub—a ture of American and then, railroads. He now ‘i characterized Har- skies riman, wwo, he said, founded his | For the great wonder and delight transportation empire upon. confi- men. dence in himself and the greatness of America, as the greatest and last of the railroad kings. He will have no successors, in Kruttschnitt’s opinion, because stringent govern- ment regulation has “taken much of the personality from railroading.” But the industry faces a perto¢ of And lnden trees that have a yell flower; of lace Over the azalea’s rgsy shower. many vast changes, he believes, and | ‘The Gardener, God, has gardens ev- contemplated consolidations will erywhere, greatly alter the railway map of the| By roadside, on the hill, and in the country. wood, “Government control has laid| And sometimes we can find Him such heayy burdens on the roads walking: there, that only intelligent relief can pre- vent further receiverships like that should. of the Chicago. Milwaukee & St. sul,’ Kruttschnitt said. “It ts a Abandoning Free Trade interesting feature in sign of the times. Critics have charg- ed the road with overdevelopment in its Puget Sound extension. Perhaps that condition exists, but it could not be predicted 10 or 12 years ago when the improvement was project- 4. And government regulation had not then imposed difficulties upon the road such as haye since reduced its earning powers so much that the Puget Sound extensions became a handicap. “The Interstate Commerce Com- mission has recelved a task in the matter of «djusting consolidations that is beyond its powers. Neither the commission nor railroad execu- tives can positively determine at this time which consolidations would be best for the country and the roads. The whole problem is in a state of */movement. Beyond doubt we shall See changes such as have not taken place for many years. “I find no fault with the principle of government regulation, but it should not be onerous or destructive, The impossible to place at work, swinging slowly, but yet surely, method at least to that which have in America. pened in England happen in America if we relaxed practically tingham has been Unless the public awakes—and con- gress awakes through the public— it is Inevitable that other great rail properties will be unable to make their way. Extensive recelverships will work infinite harm not alone to the roads, but to American indus- try as a whole and the nation itself, Our prosperity is so bound up in rallroad prosperity that it is tmpos- sible for the country to flourish when the roads lanqiish. I believe that these matters are eyidont to all who will studysthem, but the public has not yet realized their portent. The roads mist have fair treatment and a _ resonable chance for Ife, or they cannot eX pand 6r even keep pace with modern conditions. At the beginning of the century the roads earned about 33 1.3 cents gross from every dollar of receipts, but in the ase of several Breat systems this figure has fallen to 9 or 10 per cent, which Is not a living return, On the one hand, the roads confront stringent legislation and on the other militant labor, “The last decade has witnessed a marked chastening of railroad haeies - . FORSALE OFFICE FURNITURE AND FIXTURES 3-Room Suite unemployment in America, the ple, turers, is self evident. eva. XXXXX Flour Whole Wheat, Rye ve." Corn Meals, and have better bread Casper Warehouse Company DISTRIBUTORS Tel. 27 Bargain if Taken Complete. Call Looking Ahead With a Savings Account One of the best habits we can form is to save money, but to do it systematically so that it accumulates by its own value—that is a far better conception of thrift. The man, woman or child who can look years ahead—when money Such a future ts made posible by tain sum, allowing it to accumulate interest, all of which grows with CONSOLIDATED ROYALTY BUILDING 301 CONSOLIDATED ROYALTY BUILDING of them in the winter of their lives—is the person. ving weekly or monthly a cer- Start locking ahead today! THE CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK eS TS, eS and “CHRTSLER alk PAID TRIBUTE need not say that any business man, any reasonable man, can see where He drops a gentian flower from the He plants arbutus in a lonely place, He spreads His dogwood like a veil Watching His flowers as a gardener news of the day is that after years of free trade in England, English governmental authorities, faced with an-extraordinary surplus of unem- ployed labor, which it is apparently wards the adoption of a protective tarif¢ policy, similar in theory and What has hap- is what would precedent. The lace industry in Not- stroyed by foreign competition. Key industry after key industry, essen- tial and vital to the life of the nation has been driven to the verge of bank- ruptey. The total unemployment in the country is a million and a quar- ter, 152,000 over the same period of jast year, These are the facts and this is the story. When it is appre- ciated that our sale of wheat and of meat products drops materially with portance of the tariff to all our peo- whether farmers or manufac- An International wireless exhibl- tion is to be held rext fall in Gen- Lexington Cream More and Better Bread per sack Graham, Ask your grocer for this flour 268 Industrial Ave. Ja- rs| The Chrysler from which the air {s drawn, w! ne dtear ca gel rye Goer planes Home much comment fn Buropean bet means, of course, very much longer men. After c! ® 2 his side of the he engine.” and|circiv2 a4 it has on th! life for the eng thapaeenbue phen per ie ph eh Masser water, The following is an article Sete A } he will retire \ a 4 + 3 are: “The Motor” the eve of his sev-| Marsh marigolds in swamps, a brave bat ses autaes a (4 birth. display, Tha. a Yhrysler with | violet and biue.| “The six-cylinder Chrysler And Uttls flowers of ¥ Its saloon body, made by the Fisher | (HM a | corporation, is a most luxurious car. I.took one out other day and In the first pla ful six-cylinder nd, of} body and full miles per hour. I did ascertain miles per hour second, from 35 miles per hour was a onds, with only sion of the a smoothly does lent is the susp per hour feels | for it glides al nolse. low claimed will maintain, with enclosed tunity of testing it at this specd, but and to The hydraulic brakes fitted are a suitable counter- part to a high speed potentiality. I|the public’s interest in highw: found them smooth in action and|transport, with a special emphas very powerful on the farm aspects of the situation, eb negates SUNDAY, MAY 17, 1925 “Very few people realize the harm that is done by drawing into the en- gine, mixed with the air, particles | of road grit, which not only act as | an abrasive, crusing wear of the | cylinders, but also form a quite sub- | stantial proportion of the carbon | deposit in the cylinder heads. With the air cleaner, as fitted to the Chry- sler, impurities are thrown out by a rapidly rotated fan in the chamber Six has caused as for a short run the AOGRA was very impressed. ce you have a power- : Jhb ot ob! engine, which it ie ae Cyrus McCormick, Jr., of the In- ternational Harvester company, W, H. Lyford, vice president of the Chi. cago and Eastern Illinois Railway company and G. C. Woodruff, gen- eral freight agent, of the New York Central are among the railway and motor vehicle executives» who will thrash out their mutual problems at the Midwest Motor Transport confer. ence, Chicago, May 27 and 28, ac cording to the program which 4s an. nounced in detail today. Hon. William M. Jardine, secre- tawy of agriculture, as perviously # nounced will tackle the uiren. load, a speed of 70 There was no oppor- that a speed of 48 can be reached on accelerate the car per hour to 55 miles matter of a few sec- a very light depres: celerator pedal. Jo it run and so excel- pension that 50 miles ike 30 miles per hour long without fuss or four wheel the are to- The we our de- im- STEWART & CO. STEWART & CO. ° GOOD-WILL, Inc. Kick and Company eer CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE SARs: eo be DAILY AT 9:30 A AL Hy Salt Creek Trans |] TOWNSEND HOTEL HAS PURCHASEP Wyoming Poster Co. (DUCO YOUR CAR) 660-680 West Yellowstone Successor to Good-will building now a business in itself. is It is a day-to-day effort of the progressive public utility—second only to pro- viding good service. As a result, customer- friendship is showing day- to-day growth. CUSTOMER & COM- PANY HAVE INCOR- PORATED A GOOD- WILL PARTNERSHIP. ‘NATURALLY, KICK &° COMPANY HAS LOST A LOT OF BUSINESS. FARE—$12.50 ou approsimately 12 houre travel between Casper and Rawlins WYOMING MOTORWAY ‘portation Company's Office PHONE 144 Eastbound TRAIN SCHEDULES <« Arrives rts Eastbound enweee 1:55 p.m, 2:0 p, =. No. 622 Arrives rts Torn m ana t twnmnennenenn. 6.45 p,m, CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN 6:00 p. m. CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY Arrives ewewemene 6:50 a. m. ++ 9:55 p. m