Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 3, 1921, Page 2

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7 €be Casper Daily Cribunc wery evening except Sunday at Casper, Natr ty, Wye. Publication Offices: Oil Exchange Build! SS TRLEPHONE. matter, November 22, 1916 MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS FROM UNITED PRESS itor Advertising Re ntatives David J. Randall, 341 Fifth Ave., New York City Copies uf the Daily Tribune are on file in the New York ; and Chicaxo offices and visitors are welcome. j } | SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carriet One Year. $9.00 Six Months. 4.50 | Three Month 2.2 Bra his own rent and expenses. The British foreign of- i ficer may retire at the end of thirty years’ service, on a fair-sized penion. The American goes out with othing, no matter how long he has served his coun- What applies to ambassadors applies also to ithe lower commissions in the foreign service—the British official is better paid and better provided) Even the French, limited | ‘Seocinte l:diter{as are the means of their nation, pay their foreign officers better than do we, and make generous pro- vision for their old age. What does this mean to America? Prudden, King & Prudgen, 172028 Steger Bldg., Chicago. T.‘cult to estimate it in dollars and cents. But that it! akes a man of large means to accept a position in the diplomatic corps of the United States is well) Charles W. Ptattent, testablished. — Entered at Casper (Wyoming) Postoffice as second-class; try. ifor than the American. It is diffi-| If he has made his money he is apt to); be a tolerably practical man in diplomacy, but not)! WYery service ithe type’to stick on’ the job for very long. }merely wants the honor. If -he has inherited his | « $7.80 money, he is move than apt to be a diletant diplo- j;. meaiatery. 1 0 : A ; te elty today and believe Ul ac a 3 5|Mat, with papa or some other friends ai home to ‘ ution can be straightened. out in alt Che Casper Daily Cribune | > Here ey ir, from Denve y with the view of ex Although He) ttt the present condition C immediate action M Prat! the 1: Ne. subsori E than'take care of him if he spills the diplomatic beans. f. weeks.” taree months. All sul iptions muist be paid in advance and the Daily Tribune Mt not insure delivery after subscription becomes | one month in arrears. “Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations (A. B. ©) Member of the Associated Press he Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use also the local news published herein, ac IT CAN BE DONE. It is simply folly to contend that crime and gen- eral oneryness must exist in American cities, that it cannot be suppressed or eradicated. People who argue such stuff are either so wrapped up in other things that they do not know or care, or have lost that quality of American citizenship that does not permit wrong to flourish in the community they call home. A city can be purified and made decent just as easily as it can be administered with dollar honesty. The simple requirements are intelligence, €n-| about that. ergy and determination. The laws | are not en- fret wrong is not driven out, and the example of sin not remoyed from the sight of the young by mere talk. Talk, without action is idle. The para- cites and vuliures of the criminal fraternity are all outlawed. The laws were made against them and for their punishment as well as to protect the or- derly and law-abiding. Take Chicago for example. That great city, temporized with her underworld for years, with out- breaks occasionally that brought alarm to the law- abiding. Police departments struggled in vain an the underworld came to the surface and ran the yesi city, murdered and pillaged at will, until it actually $5 became unsafe to venture forth day or night. ..Itawas then that a group of determined citizens | with regard for life and property demanded action. They made it so strong that they got what they newspaper reporter, who knew the city and ha graduated into a private secretaryship. He ha intelligence, energy and determination. In the) first forty-eight hours there was not even stand-| was overflowing. Railroad schedules were freely distributed and the lesser criminals were not in- vited, but ordered. to depart upon the early trains. The round-ups continued and the cleaning process pursued with vigor. Paroles were forbidden and thousands of criminals and paracites relieved the city of their presence. | At the end of a week the city congratulated it- self that no major crime had been committed with- in forty-eight hours. When two weeks had elapsed men resumed} wearing their watches and women their finger} rings and hand bags. , There is no relaxation on the part of the police chief. The department is| actively patrolling and performing the functions ex- pected of a police department. The underworld) has been driven out and officers have instructions! to shoot and shoot to kill. In Tammany governed New York the situation! was even worse, because Tammany stands with the! underworld. The press of the city exposed the, Tammany mayor and police heads, and the respect- able element of Tammany itself revolted and joined the determined citizens in a clean-up crusade and a driving of Tammany into a corner and forcing action. Action came. Thousands of extra officers work and things are being made safe. Philadelphia's experience is but a repetition of that of Chicago and New York. Other cities are arising one by one and demanding relief from an intolerable condition of crime. There is no use in saying these ‘things cannot be done. For there is concrete evidence that they are being done. They are not done by talk, how- ever. It is action that is doing it. AMERICA’S DIPLOMATIC SERVICE. For many years there has been talk of placing the American foreign service upon a plane com- mensurate, in pay, advancement and continuous service, with our national importance. As yet we have done but little in the way of actual reform. But each* incoming administration brings with it promise of better things. Possibly the Harding ad-! ministration will s accomplished. An English ambassador receives $40,000 a! American ambassador receives $17,500 and pay Brains and training are not at a premium in the American diplomatic service.) \vith the additional car \though they ought to be, as we have many acute ‘thin the city limits that He should worry. |problems to meet henceforth. But, however well «vive the same clas; ja man may have been trained to represent his coun- republication of all news credited in this papar and | ry abroad—whatever may be amount, it means a good investment in the end. Our) \tafrenberzer, foreign officers ought to receive better pay if not as! much as European diplomats receive, at least more! '« ;than we pay our officials now. jhoused in official residences owned by the United) '« ashamed of it.” said | | The rentals we pay represent }a 5 per cent interest on a sum which would build, «triers and so arrange route They ought to be assured of re- \tirement pay after long service, in order that they) ‘veries daily in the residence se States government. such residences. may make diplomacy a career, and not be worried)“: by the fear of poverty in declining years. A first-|' class diplomat often averts war, but we forget all. cep it oper until? p. 1m a We provide our army and navy of-|!'"@ved service to the 1 cers with retirement pay which will support them) . after they have venga 64 years of “iy and a But Not Like ‘military officer is chiefly an ornament unless a war If there were no wars there would ‘be no need of military officers, but we would still need diplomats and consuls. There are some peo-) ‘VASHING \ple who would be willing to see the United States |" “pinche: ris going on. contribute a billion annually to belong to the) ien blacked for in League of Nations, yet those same people would , 1% hs been done fo probably balk at giving our foreign officers a decent) pio: living status. Fifteen millions of dollars would supply us with | ines in a “me dences for our foreign officers. Less than’? eapme wer ae 000,000 annually would raise their salaries, give} jthem decent local allowances, and provide retire-| Down in Albuquerque, N. M., use 500 gallons of liquor seized in raids for street 2°"° sprinkling purposes. for this purpose in Albuquerque. ANOTHER BAD INVESTMENT. The Baroness de Korwin, heiress to $25,000,- 000, daughter of the founder of a Chicaxo depart- ment store, thoroughly disillusioned, is fighting to retain the custody of a young son. She is done with Old World titles and the cheap noblemen that go_ with them. She does not hesitate to say how badl she has been stung, and.offers the advice to her) ed Case of ‘Flu’ Says Lewin, American sisters to avoid the pitfall into which she herself plunged headlong. | American. jlows anyway. they propose to Inot t They didn’t former! ly use it fe says marry an They are about the only regular fel- And then she gives a catalogue of international marriages that have proved failures. The baroness’ first impressions were: that the foreigner was the handsomer, more romantic and) ferins were put on and New York's finest is doing splendid ;the more delightful love-maker. Since her return [Bvoavunuaaeyni and ea er ea to sanity she believes the American possesses these|a very weak and rundawn conditi qualifications in higher and finer degree, only she In addition to this the| American is dependable. A sheet anchor in time of | domestic storm. She knows now that it was the glamor that) caught her fancy. She says she will never, never |it pressed up around her heart so she get caught again. did not recognize them. And to think, that before the’! thue head marriage could be solemnized she had to make“! financial settlement with nine actresses, four Mor- | impossible for her ganalic wives, two.common law wives, and a troup |e ‘The slist large, had been forgotten, The baroness does not regret the hole made in | hardly walk at all. the department store fortune so much as she does haying mixed up with so dilapidated a sample of She ought to, at least, have the custody of the |treubled with something of permanent yalue! child. We see where the Socialists are right. They say year and his house and all expenses paid. An they propose to fight “until the last vestige of Wil- |” ‘sonism is destroyed esent visited by tl coser to town. With the enlarging of the his ability in the!» :eclal mast collection in Ux: ¢ |great chess game—he is out of luck if he has not ithe wherewithal to carry one. There is a way to remedy all this, and while it may mean an initial expenditure of a considerable | °“t location of th district wil be made cach ev me for the night train. Additional lock bo } soon as they ar ady for imme | ctermirea, but it is thoug that with leling the stairway would 8 to. the would be in atied ther They ought to be “We propose to bring ihe se! 10 where the people of Ca Y, acting postmaster, today nd three in the busin: Iso intend, as soon a sec nents eral delivery windéw at 8 a, nd | — (By United Press.) ‘ON, Jan for. u: on bathing scenes, But now the miserosc cd to reveal bare ft: | Moreover, gov ment inv jounce they bt ordinar he pool y s, shows avy Toss to graden’ It ; : t ;would be the means of reimbursing the United) distribuica by the U.S. Department « asked. A chief of police was found in a former|States by many times $20,000,000 through foreign | \sticuttur jtrade development alone, to say nothing of the ef- FIRE fect in fostering our friendly relations with the na- tions of the earth. . The fees turned in by f : 1 f ne |sular service this fiscal year will probably exceed . ing room in the police stations and the county jail’ py more than $5,000,000 the total cost of upkeep 'sivins am alarm set excited and ait of the service, but that money must be covered ‘back into the United States treasury. Isn't it high time that we came to appreciate what an A-} foreign service could accomplish for us, and to take steps to insure such a service > ALL of the fi Memt y so that the ni enly with the oni FOR —John bank while police ing to identify jewels valu $15,000, as part of $190,000 worth store, last August. 2 SAE iE W. O. Matlock of Deny here attending to busin MONDAY, JAN. 3, 192i MORE CARRIERS WILL BE ADDED. TO FORGE HERE Ionigeeaminee Correction of Local] Difficulties Promised by Post Office Inspector on Visit CHEYENNE, Wyo., Jan. 3.—H, Underwood and Arthur Nave, were identified late here in her home, Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Daisy Odom as the two who attacked her Underwood, ‘she said, was the negro who manhandled her, and Nave the man who stood guard at the door, “COUNTER-GHARGES TO BE MADE BY RANCHER HELD FOR FRRUDULENT SALE: rancher of ‘Thirty- vel, arrested on a charg ing sold 6,000 head of sheep, which had mortgaged tried for charges of theft and cm- , came herr tending the mi Tea Bowl of Chili in Town 20e At the Chili King Lunch * All kinds of Sandwiches at Popular Prices. Quick Service, Highest Quality intention of tb At least two and perhaps four Whitmore & | vars will be added to the present fc 1 whose hearing | the complaini | - | rade against him. It is Henderson's claim that the trou- suigrewth of a pantnership | th he has been hilked out of thousand dollars. furnished: the sheep and the plaintiffs | in the suit the capital for running thera Will be instales We will give a 20 boxes has no as the result of fri 1 declaves furthermore pment and t called mortgage our intention to put on additional ct Bret Smee! ANSWERED. arriers will leave the office on time s‘ fire depldtbnent mated: Huvded vach morning, making two complete de fire the ‘depart- Ane aTaaG ete toe Discount investigation’ by fact that in- men disclosed the sicad of a fire, workmen in the building ReneREs: * using gas to heat plaster. PLUSH COATS CLOTH COATS VELVET DRESSES DUVETYN DRESSES HUN SPY IN U.S. ARMY IS GIVEN FIVE YEAR TERM. September Morn has been em-/ id fi tigate 1 distribute their ssociated Press.) iN, who was arrested York on December acted as a German on claims that “ts too insignificant | attention were the victims a dewdrop and the bath- greatures too small for the naked t ye. The film, ewfed “A Plant Diss ment pay after they had served thirty years. A) ina How it Spreads’” ‘foreign service reorganized along practical lines,| “ating rhubarb bl rted by. a court-martial a organisms Rt a source red today. Willers is still to be Me Moos ot: Oo co 6% s%e ste te a an a an Me Me 6% Me Me of Me Me Me ohn she tn so eoahe the ale she shoot ai oatocpoage SP 950 See tee aoe #50 aie ti the te eho seo ao ae 450 9h ao ake teate-ate sto-ate sto 4 Final Sale of Winter Suits, Coats Dresses and Skirts USING. @ -ash yeople when turning In a fir our con- over the phone, take ¢ culy a o%, 2, - t location of a ce) "? 1 be given. Many people wher io ‘- est. difficulty the men-can get anything like a reas- ‘? & (0. ix % so so, 2 roage ° + Ms + 1 at K? eee, sM - n from the Vancouver QE) DEFEAT pims TWO BLACKS HELD FOR OUTRA PAIR IDENTIFIED IN CHEYENNE SIGNIFICANCE COLBY’S TRIP SANTIAGO, Chile, Jan. 3.—Much of the importance attached to the visit of Bainbridge Colby, American secretary of state, to South Ameri- ca has been lost, from the stand- point of international policy, because the incoming Republican tion “surely will not accept the trines of President Wilson or conti ne, his policy,” said El Mercurio today. cee ae Tribune Want Aas bring results. Grand Central Block For Tuesday, Wednesday and: Thursday On La France and Nemo Corsets An Expert Corsetiere in Attendance at 1-2 Price O8S2E9¢6 2900909 5% atea% as er ote He 2 ‘* oo, er20ves0000 Me aX Me 5% as '? R a? +4 o - oe KR? +, 2, o> ‘- , '° oe, 2 ? ve-ateat - "9 Mm o4, Saturday as the guest of °, h stomach troub! kent a con fered wore down. and was not able to out suffering agony “fven the lightest things to form so badly on hei could hardly breathe. She 1 nd at times | y that she couldn't stan es were SO Shatter to ge nery her | in the par that os a last ided to get her a bottle sted to iy right ay ow and tien or stoma only gained te of her housy fs well as she ever did. cantile drug store.—Ad oy - Suits $45 and $65 Value to $150.00 Me R2 * , a a> SEATTLE MAN fo eves > oo 2, - > 2 > RA <a> oS e ° 5M OF iM - O8,o-o-8,o, ‘." Moat STATES FAGTS Y Complete Breakdown Follow- Coats $25, $45 and $65 © Value to $150.00 Dresses $45 and $65 Value to $150.00 oe, %, - ++, % o* * RO o oo Tanlac Proves Merit 2, oe - wonderful things hapy of them is th RA - K? + reat shoe! - well known em incer's office, wife had been R? fo09 - ° o-* 2, > '- Mas 92 P08 95) 5 Ra >, 2, - oo, RD ty xs > s 2, - Me ‘aXe? "* o¢ 5% 0 o> ° C4 ry . ° ° ° ° ry ° ry e ° e ° e e ° ° ° ° e 2 ° 2 ° ° e ° e ° s ° ° e 2 e ° . e e ° e 2 ry e o%, r she “% - oe, 2 ° Skirts $15.00 Value to $30.00 Nothing seemed to do her any god : worse until io, + oe ee#, 2 with ingigestion Mt amy thing with: terwards. KA - o, Me - 1% oe - 2, ? <a> 2, ca 2, ° oe, ‘y a ‘- coo 2, - > se oe, stomach tl R2 2, "? Waists $10 and $15 Value to $45.00 LAV acs - S292 2A DIT OVESeSeToRCLOSSODDIZ92x00090090909 red that it tm oud nish t nvise would up: . ; night she just rolled of female pensioners, the number of which, while|ana tossed all night Jong. She final Hut so Weak that she could not walk | up or down stairs and in fact would 2, - Furs at Less Than Cost Carter’ Knit Underwear, Silk and Wool and Winter Weight Cot- tons, all shapes less 20 per cent, 2 *, “sf “Tr had seen so much about 1 2, - aXe? - 2, = of is # touch of indig ? tos -" and says that she feels funlae is sold in Casper by umacy, in Aleova by Aleova in Salt Creek by Salt Crow) PAOHOREOROMONLEDSPOOTOPOPOSOI—O ROR OOMOereeeneeeDeeDDanneenie re she te Se Be she She She ho Bo dM este Se Se foto Soto eck % Po ooo? aes 2, ae ?" sas = ° 5% 2 >, 2. 2, ? be 4, <a ae - oo, >, o> ? %20099009002000 >, 2, >, Kao +, > * y ° ? ?

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