Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 20, 1921, Page 2

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PAGE TWO be Casper Daily Cribune Issued every evening exce)t Sunday at Casper, Natrona County, Wyo. Publication Ofices: Oil Exchange Buijding GUSTINESS TRLBPHONB. ---.-.---.---------= —enaseo—. 16 | Entered et Casper (Wyoming) Postoffice as Becond-class | matter, November 22, 1916 D PRESS | ‘ ‘ ee a > i] | solution and answer. '| To make it ridiculously easy _ | producers and owners of the wool cannot sell it. | | There is no market. - ae A - Why? | Because the Wilson-Underwood . free trade law has invited the importation of wool sper Dalid €cibune THE REMEDY When the Irish war oppresses us and ‘famine makes us sad, 6 — ‘ EACCUSED OF When tre ness and sorrow ee ted ee Vhen from wick: Ween this talk of strikes and riotigg has driven us all mad, - ; toil; here is respite from this world of blood and There WNYOUROWN HOME DAY MEMBER THE ASSOC , one. nD PRESS -President and Editor Associate Editor REPORTS FROM UNI! J. BE, HANWAY. W. H. HUNTL | Argentina and Australasia, duty free, to absorb | what American -market thefe is with wool costing as low as 9 cents a pound. This foreign wool me magazine+the n’s catalogue for Just ditch the tragic Wo read the seedsma: teh yo 2 Sich It leads ur through an atmosphere that's innocent of crime; Fs is solace, still, from all this world turmoil; CRIME, REPORT PARIS, Jan. | Today, January 20. 20.—-Three French So 1 4. home of your own! Nothmg gives 4 red ‘between Mur-/ dense the .B. EVANS_. -..-City Editor : ‘ OF su! Yi] gs | clulists who disappeared *l on Mur! | iner thrill of independepze than THOMAS DAILY ~Advertising Manager | produced on range land whose value is but afew | one Grieve pany ed yer ne SBiory cine + mmannk anil Vardoe, Norway, while ce ae ane Siship of | 2a atitactive F cents against American lands whose value Fill the neadtines where disaster has no place, - » 5 ees ce ty tine foreign re-| home. The United Stoveg nt Adverftsing Representatives : 4 Fatt | And where Mrs. Grandy never shows her face. f =. j\Mellled, "It was. stated: by : | has Inaugurated a countréavide cam- Prodaen, icin poe Se a ee in, | lars and hundreds of dollars. The foreign’ |The gardens of bright colors all Ito peaceful in’ the su pe riaclRewona Mureant of the: Moscow At ae ae encourazé the) Pilling of Bepies’ Ut the Daily ‘Tribune are on Me in the New York | are tended by herders who receive only: one-fourth 14p the florist seedyman's catalogue for nineteen-twenty-one, < Mignale, says a dispatch fr Jhomes, hele Sum wants @ nation of and Ciicago offices and visitors are welcome. the rate paid American herders. Where winter Your discontent will leave you as you turn the pages o'er, _” : ay |fors today.+ The statement throws sponsibility for the deaths on “agen vot renters! A home is an w, b i mon on it. atuse oN Se feeding j th ape ie fr And: you revel in, the memories they bring.’ of the entente”” Sat a ne Tani Poets? By Carrier eding is necessary the American y costs ‘om j o™ che ae air SayEses ee ora known in days of yore. | “systematically opposing the landing ny ON saving fors-aa homo S $9.00 a " . ;. nd in fancy breathe the y airs of spring, rm vi re | communists veturn-| Thousands a gne Year arent ye $20 up._ There is no such item in the foreigners |. Breathe the fragance of the flowers in the spring. ie hewn ita Roe hae | through a Savings Account. Make a Six Mon 2.25 expense account. ; a restful and JAephang Bs Ma aay. day is done— i rs ——_— ‘start toward oe home | Si F : ithe seedsman’s cheerful. annual for ni\ieteen- ‘ ever eme ; 8 | be; 5 0 tier gers Ona Month 05 It ‘costs something to produce American wool: papas 2A Jang i > iN Rist a a a Fee aa ey aby ih StABLoNetianal Per Copy. ( ee ay *° R. CHURCHILLISMITH, Casper, Wyo. |! forseyy: is that of a years ene Dae ill ss and it costs. very little to produce wool upon the z CAPES NS.) York millonuite who maker a tiny Dies! Baqie of Commence 0D welch hey wi Six flontins vast unoccupied ranges in Argentine an Australia. upon every check he writes asa 570) ).. 4 per cent. intel Three Months Ne subscription by mail acc three months. All subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscription becomes one month in arrears. It is the design of the Republican ‘party to place a protective import rate upon ths fereign wool that will equalize the cost of production abroad with the cost of production at home and af- *o the bankers that it is genuine, The idea is based on -the theory | one forger in a thousand wuld at x ofr }ute a blot ness. mi-annually thee not Asbestos wa to anything but jtwo thousand years “go. , _ oe ————_—_——- known to the Romans , i ; A. B. ©) 5 - ] Ne SALE OF ESTRAY. ‘Mail Us Your Member of Audit Bureau of Civculations (A. B. ©) ford a market for American wool that ét may be | NOTICE OF SALE OF Member. of the Axsociated Press sold to consumers instead of being stored in wa.e- One iron gray mare ; is : 4 x The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the th houses 5 ‘ } pounds, age 7 Quick Service for republication. of ali news credited in this paper a. \ a : ; . ! Arrandea_: c it also the local news published herein. * This brief explanation may serve to partially | jon’ left hip, ae Rie THE PICTURE i i ‘. 2 | was on January 17, taken up as H aS ' enlighten such brethren as wander in ‘the darkness| - Sentencing of Jess> Ps+! Atkins to life i tim, estray by L. E. Walden of Casper.| Box 1076 of Democracy, until the Republican congress can |the state penitentiary at Ravy!ins on-pleading gnilty to second) tte of Wyoming, under and by v Casper, Wyo, THE FORCES ARE AGREED. The main object, of course, is to rid Casper of as much of its immortality and lawlessness as pos- sible. It does not specially matter how it is done or who does it. Preferably the present police force. If not the present one then some subsegeunt Mayor Pelton is quoted as saying that he stands ready to fire and hire police departments until one is secured that has the ability to enforce the laws and clear, the city of undesirables. is correctly quoted the mayor must incline toward a clean and orderly city. The character of the membership of tke city council is assurance that the mayor will find ready backing in any enterprises he may undertake to attain an object so desirable as a clean and moral city. As the leading civic organization the Chamber of Commerce by its attitude and action lends the force of its influence for or against the effort in the direction of decency and order. It is inconceivable that a body of high-minded business men, having always in mind the welfare and best interests of the community, could or would take any other view than one .of insistence and immediate action toward ridding the city of evil influences. aos ; Judging from expressions of members in open session there can be little doubt of the sincerity of There seems, therefore, to be no:discord among the several forces that hold the power and exert the’ influence for the city’s well-being. 4t avails nothing, however, unless these forces are brought into action. The forces of evil are not inactiye. They are on the job every day and every night. There are ‘no vacations in their business. What holds the forces of good back? Where is their militancy? Since when did they shrink from the devil and his works in whatever guise he pre- sented himself? Is it or is it not worth while to have a city free from rottenness, ‘gambling, prostitution, thiev- ery and murder, together with the horde of prey- ing paracites and camp followers that go with such a condition > Eleventh-hour, raids and the transporting of a few truckloads’of scarlet women, bootleggers and home brewers from the Sandbar to the police court; where nominal fines are imposed, after which the principals return to again wallow in the same old mire, is not cleaning up the town. The law establishes an open season at all times upon ‘crime and wrong doing and the hunting is always good. The law also makes it obligatory upon the proper authorities to abolish crime and evil, hunt it down and eradicate it, The law con- templates a clean and moral condition of commun- ity life. The requirements of the law are not ful- filled in Casper. There is no adequate excuse. Out of the agitation born of the impatience of the people action may be expected, Depending upon the sincerity, determination and desire for cleanliness will the measure of suc- cess be determined. . WHY WOOL IS STORED. It is not that a Democrat cannot, but it is be- cause a Democrat will not understand cause and effect in the simpler features of the protective If he | give a more complete demonstration of the per- fect workings of a protective tariff law in the in- terest of a great/American industry. The press of the country has frequently noted Harding in approaching the duties of the presi- dency to one of humilify, and faith in divine guid- ance. The St. Louis Globe-Democrat thus notes: “Mr. Harding has chosen the text from the Bible upon which he desires to take the dath of of- fice as president of the United States. ip is the eighth verse of the sixth chapter ‘of Micah, and it reads as follows: 3 “““He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good: | and what doth the law require of thee, but to do ) justly, and love mercy, and to walk humbly with | thy God.” : | “With the first clause eliminated this text ap- sional Library at Washington, and doubtless Sena- tor Harding has often read it there, and pondered upon its peculiar fitness to legislation and govern- mental administration. it is the test, the supreme test, of the man who is called to a post of high power and responsibility in government. Justice and mercy and-‘humility—these are the qualities tion the nearer they come to divinity in themselves. MGéreover, when these qualities are exercised with humility and evident sincerity, men recognize them and severence them, realizing, by intuition as well as by knowledge, that they are godlike.” FOSTERS AND STIMULATES. | The subject of a protective tariff is one ‘that provides a darge discussion in the pgess at the | present time. Congress is engaged in framing an emergency tariff act ‘designed to relieve farming | interests primarily, but other interests are clamor- | ing for benefits as well. The real tariff measure | will come before the extraordinary session of the | ncw congress. The New York Herald is one of the | Strongest advocates of the protective system and ; one of the soundest as well. In a recent issue it said: “The American tariff system is designed not merely to create and foster home production, but to stimulate improvement of process and _perfec- tion of results. It must broaden the whole home market and strengthen, not weaken, the general purchasing power, “A duty of 100 per cent might be required at- one stage of the founding or development of an industry, but none at all at another-stage. A duty of 10 per cent or 100 per cent or 1,000 per cent for an industry might fail to attain the ideal of this American policy in that industry itself if the very tariff act ‘did more harm in a second direction than it did or tried to do good in the first direction. “A tariff dity on Wheat reaching to the blue sky, for example, could never sell the American farmer's crops at a fair price if general American industries were allowed by the tariff makers or compelled by other circumstances to go on the rocks, ; “If American mills and factories are idle, if American wage carnets are out of work; the American farmer cannot ell his crops. Tariff or no | RELIGION AND STATESMANSHIP. | and: as frequently spoken of the attitude of Mr. | Pears as an inscription in the dome of the Congres- | ‘county rancher, on or circumstances are largely divergent, the two cases show a marked parallel in the lack of evidence apparent at the! | time of, thei’ discovery. | The body of Corbett was found nailed in a dugout cellar on his ranch south-! past of Cusper in Efkhorn valley, ‘Lhe trail had: heen cold for several days) when the sheriff's office first found that a man answering the description | of one who escaped from the Casper | Jail had been sceh on the Corbett ranch. | With this to work upon it was. later | }found the.“a mah of the same descrip- | tion, unuer the alias of Jack Richards; | had sold Corbett’s horse to William » Heddleson of Glendo. There the officers | Yost the trail but pictures. sent out broadcast ‘and calling for iis finally breught him to justice. Atkins,- who was, known here under the name of Red Livingston, . was! caught at Alamagordo, ‘Texas, when he| Was picked up on another charge and | Ben West, who made tlie arrest, re-| geived the reward of $1,500, Before go- | ing to Texas Atkins had traversed Col- orado and Arizona for several months. ‘From Atkins’ confession, which has never been published. it is learned that he-is but 19 years of ave and on four | separate occasions he had been charg- ed with crimes: When he came to W: oming he was a fugitive from justice | having escaped from the Michigan re- form school with 14 months of his sen- | \ } { | arrest | DESIRE ONLY BASIC RIGHTS. To Baitor of The Tribune: “< «When the I. D. Jéhnson_ clinic un- | j dertakes to enlighten the ‘Trades Union | ; Council and the general public by a| published letter, tt immedititely ap. | pears that the writer has absolutely no! ; knowledge of what chiropractors are ;dsking for,°or if he has that knowl: | | edgé. wiltully conceals it and secks to |, may read the statements made. uit Chiropractors. have no contrevers? with the medical profession, nor with! amy other healing art or science which} seeks to relieve human suffering. What} chiropractors desire, what they ‘(are | asking the people of Wyoming to do | through legislative action, is to provide! for a proper board of examiners to ex-| amine and know that amy, person who} rtic within the: state | nt in a@ knowledge of | chiropractic as a medical man is re-) quired to be if the practice of ‘his profession. There ure many methods used tor the better health of the human race: Chris- tiun ‘Science, dietary methods by the score, defitistry, osteopathy, chiropody,| massenrs, chiroprac- electric and magnetic methods and the numerous schools of medicine; yet} | there are none of them who undertake | to diagnose the disease of a putint, save onyl the medical practitioners, neither any of them treat disease, but seek) of the ailment. t a Christian Science or of physical enl- auctor, or any named should have the sume character and quantity of educa- tion-would sbsurd as to. requir thit a lawyer Weke a thedlogical cou iroprocters desire and are ask’ What is the right of every. Ameri can citizen under: the constitution; the liberty of practising thyir profession oid beiyg protected from jthe attempt ( wvintans and fakirs withowt per knowledge of that profession imposing upon the public. et In this ‘letter; is the statemelft; The medical profession in general, weleoues | any methed that, is consistent for the relief ot human saffering and the eradi- cation -of disease.”~ —* | 2 if “hat be true it is a bitter com- mentary on the knowleldge medical, practitioners ‘have of the benefits to ‘ Pot the othe about January 20, 1920, holds unusual { rignificance at a time when another “der in the arrest of two for the killing.of J. bvewsd nite a snow drift. His fear was! throw dust in the cyes of those who |. degree murder for the kiiling of John J. Cos Corbett, Natrona | ‘mystery has been! 5. Reeder. ‘While ane stele # pair of chaps and other clothes an@ "continued his flight to the | mountain. One night. be says, be bur-| that he would be caught/and returned | © prison in Michigan. | After haying had nothing but corn} to eat for five days he finally reached the Corbett ranch and was rifling the premises when tht -owner retarned } home. Atkins had already appropriated ‘cur guns, three revolvers and a rifle, and ‘declared in his ‘confession that Gorbett fined first when he tied’to run} © the barn and escape on Corbett’s} horse, Atkins returned the fire anda} sun battle was waged in the snow-, storm, which made it almost impos: sible for the two to see each other Corbett was ‘killed and his body vss4 scereted, Atkins claims he remained a! the ranch. for two nights after commit ting the ‘crime. Local, authorities were at first de:! termined that Corbett’s slayer if caught should pay the death penalty if it was jn their power to secure such. ver- dict. Investigations following the eap- | ture of Atkins revealed that this’ might} prove impossible. Yesterday be pleaded | guilty and recelyed the maximum pen-)| mty for second degree murder. | Iw addition to his youth: counsel for Atkins would ‘have been able-to use in- | sanity evidenee*whieh might have Leen sent to look for soldiers who were A. W. 0. L. He had committed thefts in- | discriminately amd before coming 10} Casper had robbed hardware ‘store | at Lusk. © i ee hb Sa ate has The Scottish ‘fishermen the most superstitious world. One of their peculiar belicts { that it is unlucky to pronovnee either their own or ather people's names dur- $9.95 - in wll materials, grouped prices— : > 3 2 | ure amons , folis. ir. | $ tue of the provisions of Chapter Session La Unless claimed by legal owner animal will be sold at public the 21st day of February, 1921, a o’clock.in the afternoon, at the of L. B. Walden. BOARD OF LIVE STOCK COMMIS: SIONERS OF WYOMING, ve $ bs an ste este hots ste ite she sa hn hn etn she ate oo, LOLOL Oe So Hoo Ho Soo oho ao alo ahr aS 12 35 S2o o-ahente-el Ladies’ Dresses We have just received the most wonderful dresses seen in Casper at these prices. They come in Satins, Combination, also beautiful beaded effects: Made of Poplin, Velvet, Trictines, Serges, ‘fweeds—Fiity winter suits 75 | in $17.75 $29. , 1918. ranch NAZIMOVA By M. E. Pickett, “SOQ LONG LETTY” it’s One of-the Funniest Plays of the Season With a Host of Beauteous Bathers ' IT WILL BE AT THE AMERICA OF COURSE! FRIDAY AND SATURDAY DS A ea ee eR eB Re A WANTED f ‘ is ah ; that God's law requires of such a man, and fortu- | ‘ence:still unservea. Jamaging, Atkins’ mother, Mrs. Mary the Chamber of Commerce upon this vital subject. a as 4 oh | € sal Ean ai law jo | APHVIng here the was thrown in” fall “Atldie Aupntbbearte eur ciden somes The wishes of the moral element, the people | ™ a 4d Mids teeg ail BP me AW 18 | as a vag nad in his own Words, “walk | Ayyiim at Kalamazove Pwo: Brothers | Me -: ‘ z « . : i , | gor and acts in accordance with’ it. tice, tem- | ec out” of the jail during a snowstorm | were ce itted to. ‘th: a] before ~_ generally, including the big and little <AspasEre red with mer ‘ h: the fun without coat or hat. Heading for the their cath? He was ie tea carn ot} ean ottoen ags at ~ who contribute to the support of local government, Pe cy, sums up Ina phrase the fun- mountain hy visited, the Leavitt ranch | nine children, all, but who of Whoor ase pS there is no question where they stand with refer- enegiel phental es gre law os oo govern- | - dead. His’ father, Jesse Atkins, 75; is a s “ & os : : i ‘iti iad : Bis | ‘Watson, Mich. } ence to a clean city and the banishment of immoral ; ment. The fusing of the two-qualittes forms an at- | 4 5 1! aki bay pay se | I bun Off: i i } 4 4 z ies if { Atkins guye a fictitous age example from the sight of the women and chil- | tribute that ‘is the perfection of divinity, and ‘the | Letters From the People |) when ‘he jenlisted ‘In’ thelarmy medical | ri © ice dren of the city. * nearer men approach to perfection in its applica~ ;e——__——_2 | corps and later deserted when he was | oe Sc PER POUND OUR Price Demolishing Sale IS IN FULL PROGRESS Tricotine, Serges, $14.95 $19.95 Amazing coat bargain, garments made to sell at $20.00, sale price Vieaseis dit $8.95 Silvertones, Beaver Cloth, Bolivias,. two Le $50.00 values, sale * F) . . . A af ise fro th sources, & % te sj tariff. tariff, because his economic salvation, first, last pihaigan abt fie es hat ene a 'yes| My price is Sale $19.95 You will find Deazbcratic newspapers intelligent { and all the time, depends upon being able to sell trovsand, of plain people in Casper. : upon most other subjects voicing absurd tommy- rot like’ this: i ‘ “Mr. Fordney wants the Dingley rate on wool restored, The wool warehouses are bursting with stored wool which cost their owners litte or noth- ing, and they must obtain high prices for it by con- gressional hook or crook.” It is ‘all too true that ‘warehouses are burst- ing with stored wool.” And even a Democrat ought to know why. It is so simple that it re- guives scarcel II any nce to comprehend the in this, our own American market, the greatest and | richest in all the world, : “Any tariff to be sound and to make good | must never ignore the supreme national factor—the the products of the various and varied industries of the nation, farming and all.” } } Sir Auckland Geddes, the British ambassador, has been called home to receive a new dope sheet to govern after March 4. $ carning power of the whole nation to be penton || us welloas al over this state, iiliions of them in this nation, are better. in furmed than the, inedical profession, DR, B. 8 HAHN, Chiropractor, "Hundreds of articles at Shattered Prices, Ve ‘ See Our Windows THE LEADER 143 East Second ever § | Ladies Coats | ae ao te te se sl Hip sestestnatedy

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