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ERIE TBs Topas. PAGE TWO its cargo. The sight of the American flag will be goo} tor these down-trodden people. it will imspire hope. €be Casper Daily Cribune at Casper, Natrona — such rulers as weigh political situations against depose Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments Just who is going to haul down a 7 Entered at Casper, (Wyoming) Postoffice as second class a matter, November 32, 1916. JOHN HAY’S VINDICATION. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS During the Boxer uprising in Chins many years ago and the destruction of foreign property and murder i > a Se ae of foreign citizens, foreign powers, including Amer- J. & HANWAY EARL E. HAN wT: Ww. HE ica, dispatched. military and naval forces to pe their interests and quell the rebellion which the Chi- ‘HOM. nese government was powerless to control. Follow- ing the restoration of good order the nations con- +. ona cerned assessed indemnity ag@inst the Chinese gov-} diversification under Prodaeniins a Pruiden, 113053 tiger Bing, Ciacage,| ernment for the loses and Gamages sustained. Thdlretation thar win ones Ill, Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the New! United States declined to receive the share levied on|sive planting of cotton, York and Chicago offices and visitors are welcome. her account, but stipulated that the sum agreed upo: should be spent in education of Chinese students who|*uPplies. Cottongrowers would be willing to attend American universities. | Redes against « tanking system which John Hay, was then the American secretary Of|{> secure credits in the production state, and the course he suggested in turning back/ana the orderly marketing of a crop the money was considered purely idealistic in so prac-|iike cotton. tical a world as then existed. Plan No. 2 has its wide range of 24-| jo. "5°, AeancY, wasishot through The course of Mr. Hay is now adopted by Great] vocates as the only method by which | aq hie rr Agere 4 $7. Britain and a special parliamentary committee has|the cotton boll weevil and the pink : 15g | recommended that further indemnity be remitted and] boll worm can be eradicated and the No subscription by ‘mull ‘aécepied’ for leas’ period tham| the balance of the claim be devoted to Chinese educa-| enormous losses inflicted by thove bd ic 5 agua ture cultivation of cotton, Plun No. Daily ‘Tribune ‘will not insure’ delivery after eubscripe| _, We gained thé respect, trust and affection of the|s is also being presented to the at wane an, it was alleged. hed as- tion becomes one month in arreafs. Chinese people by the broad view we took of the sit-/ tention of congress, the United States persons who gave the Wnlbes UP And EE A a) | BAtion and made a staunch friend by considerate and | department of agriculture and the gov-| *eTiff" officers information about Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A.B. ©) | Drover treatment. wcudes obthe contourcenaans the rovbery. Ho was | jailed on . Bomber “68 the’ Adebeiated “Prens Mr. Hay’s action is vindicated and approval given| (1) Threefourths of all open lands} | it , i The ehactira wh: The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to txe| to his policy toward friendly nations, in the proceed-|to be devoted to food and feed crops onks held his name. use for publication of all news credited in this paper and] ing Great Britain has just taken. and to pastureage for Liv-stock. Manuel McKnight, who last Mon- also the local news published herein. We were unwilling to penalize a friend because that (2) One-fourth of the cultivated land| day confessed compiicity in the rob- = = a vas i i be planted in cotton, well fertilized} bery, after he had been shot while Kick if You Don’t Get Your Tribune. friend was ignorant and the world and the Chinese|to " 7 is tis i i i ind worked, so as to produce the best] resisting arrest, died from his wounds a ae o ie eee ben Roel reg bi anak & ~ ae have been the gainer by the thing we did. IHieia ‘under the most economle condi this morning in the Loa Ameules ive: wo you by specia essenge! M e a x vered to y by special messenger. flake it your duty to As Ch iesioeenas tise sepia entiont ELF. of state-wide co-operative marketing aia THE REAL ARTICLE, HERSELF. associations for handling cotton and There has been so much said and written about|other farm products. ici . OrlicKs BRITAIN’S INSINCERITY. woman herself, the animated figure upon which alj|ficieney in the future baling, ware ORIGINAL % i Z ee it-] the scantiness is draped, may come as a welcome re-|the cotton crop, upon the most ap- Malted Milk er ee pipers spre borer epic lief to those interested in such subjects. The general] proved and. advantageous moder i (6) Indi very cotton farm in the herence of Japan to the alliance during the war prea, paca of prepaid foster Marine and Set caesth is anatonan: tire OF att cua Britain cannot now refuse the Japanese request fdr| C*sual observers, an opportunity to determine most | south o> conteal tine eet a renewal. He declares that, had it not been for the PrDy anionbling ths obloe zt Besfection. ices t Gad mite of cottan aa te Yacee the coe: hased G: in raiders in the : a A Setanta ait ae Zealand troops could not| Ce™med themselves in gathering the interesting data, it| "mine world 0, Day tee STO eT acne “ood: Deinket tos All Bees have been transported to the battle front in the early| #8 learned that the description and measurements ap-[eyery bale of the staple. Quick Lunch at Home, Office,and = my proved and agreed to by the most competent Petition the governors of the states for HORLICK’S. * days of the war. Fountains. hage psissid 2 thorities and keenest observers that the perfect wom-|vi North Carolina, South Carolina, prot It is most instructive to learn from the British pre- vev-Avoid hunitations & Substitutes fs j kansas, Oklahoma, Tennessee i I ae pounds, must measure 36 bust, 24% waist, 42 hips,|!ana, Ar a the high seas by the Japanese navy. It is a historical) 55 thigh, 17 knee, 15 calf, 8 ankle, must wear 6% }*"4 Texas to at gees. oslt Sate ore fact that the notorious German raider Emden, that 1 d 3 hi Shi hi iden hal: d session the general asserblies 1 did so much damage in the Pacific was run down, cor-| £10Ve 204 3% shoe. e may have golden hair and | respective states, to enact a law pro- LOS ANGELES, Sept. 3. — Roul, investigator for a pri: Three Months Hay Fever From the viewpoint of Chiropractic the cause of hay fever is definite and does not rely on deduction alone, but is a proven fact by actual demonstration. That pollen is the irritant is in all probability true, but it is not the pri- mary cause of hay fever. As proof of this we have but to point to the fact that ninety-five out of each one hun- : dred escape, while the relatively smaller number of five or less contract the disease. These five, as the medical au- thorities claim, are “predisposed,” that is, the mucous - membrane is less than normal in its resistance to the irri- tation poison of the pollen. tions of labor and other expenses. county hospital. let The Tri know hen your carrier misses you. _—_—_—. women’s clothes, that possibly a few words upon the] (4) Adopt economic reforms and ef- alliance. He states that because of the faithful ad-| VieW bas been so unobstructed of recent times as to|methods of orderly marketing. suming world to pay the growers a mier, at this date of the valiant service performed on| 2% ™ust be 5 feet 7 inches in height, must weigh 147|Georsia, Aalabama. Mississippi. Louis: iy + bs ri blue eyes, black hair and brown eyes, chestnut hair lanting of any cotton nered and sunk by an Australian warship. It is also! and hazel eyes, or any variation of these colors to fa ecs ioe tee’ States. named in 1922, an undisputed fact that the German raiding squad- suit the individual taste. lsuich {tases £6) eciarthceed wales ron, under Admiral von Spee was overhauled off the Further, she must have a velvet skin free from|broad police powers of the states, for coast of Chile by a British force of inferior strength| eoose pimples and other blemishes and innocent of|the Purpose of destroying the cotton and came off victorious, only to come in contact with rice powder, rouge and carmine paint which adds|0l! weevil and the pink boll weevil, another British squadron at the Falkland Islands and] nothing to the taste or pleasure of erecting, the former insect having spread over suffer destructions. It may be that the existence of Five-room modern with two rooms cated one-half block from pave- ment in southwest part of town. Price $6,500; terms. Phone owner ; 77 per cent of the entire cotton belt of a“ Japariens navy shed “a@paychological- effect on-the If possible she must have an angelic disposition, and the United States—such laws to be ef- German Pacific raiders, but history is silent on any blows struck by the Japanese in clearing the seas of those pests, he If Lloyd George is exercised concerning the aid Japan rendered the allied cause would it be at all out of place to take into consideration what America con- tributed to the success of the war? If the rencwal of the Anglo—Japanese alliance is to) be ted ‘be- cause Japan helped the allies, would it be unreason- able for the United States to favor the dissolution of the alliance becauce of what she performed in France? To attempt to reassure us by saying that the re- newal “does not mvan that we are to continue an al- liance of this kind on any point against anyone else, and certainly not against the United States’? comes with very poor grace in view of all the circumstances and relations of the two countries as viewed on this! virtue, the wicked husband or wife has a saintly finish. side of the Atlantic. Of course nobody suspects Great Britain of scheming with Japan for. an attack] oy: on this country. But while the premier says Britain will never be against the United States, in the event of war with Japan, he is careful not to say Britain will be for us as Canada and Australia have done. The mere existence of the British alliance with Ja- pan, and the renewal of it under existing circum-|. stances tends to encourage Japan in the aggressive attitude she has assumed on many questions in issue with the United States. When the world war opened Great Britain was in immediate need. of supplies that only this country could furnish. If war suddenly broke between this country and Japan. we would be in need of material aid from Great Britain, not in the form of warships and armies, but of munitions, cargo ships, and, pos- sibly loans of money. We should like to hear from. Lloyd George as to his probable policy under these circumstances. Would he then recall what the United States did for Great Britain in the hour of;her distress or would he con- tinue to think only of the fanciful work of the Japa- nese navy in clearing the Pacific of German raiders? Would the role of a friendly neutral be compatible with her alliance with Japan? ee OUR FLAG UNWELCOME. We are eng iged in loading and shipping food sup- plies to a million or more starving unfortunates in Russia. It is a magnificent act of charity and Chris- tianity. It is a beautiful thing that out of the sur- plus of a bountiful harvest the great American peo- ple are permitted and are desirous of relieving the distress of another people who through misfortune and untoward events have come to want for bread. From time to time American relief has gone for- ward to all parts of the earth as occasion demanded. It has been received with gratitude and thanksgiving; and when ships bearing gifts of food to those in need appeared in the harbor there was no more welcome sight than the Stars and Stripes flying from the main mast. The emblem of a free Christian prople ready to serve those in distress. The old flag which we love and which all the world respects is welcome the world over, save in Russia. In the land of Lenine and Trotsky of Bolshevism and sovietism and destruction the flag of the free is not permitted to enter the ports even on ships carrying the sustenance of life. Food is welcome but the flag is not. The symbol of the nation, the emblem of a great people who have brought many blessings to the world, must be hauled down when the ships come in. We must get our gifts of food into Russia titiously, we must sneak bread to the starving. All because the sight of the Stars and Stripes would pro- duce a delicate political situation. The starving Russians should be fed. No two ways about that proposition. But any situation that would even seem to demand the lowering of the American flag bent on a mission of mercy out of political or other considerations is too trivial a situation to speak about in the same breath with saving a million People from the pangs of hunger. It is not a delicate political situation at all. It is pure captiousness and cheap bunk on the part of Le- nine and Trotsky. The American flag should be carried into the ports where the food is unloaded and it should fly in the girls are in danger of receiving and accepting wholly criticism should be directed, in our opinion.” wear the evanescent clothes prescribed by current} foctive in each state named from Jan- styles with grace, charm and to the advantage of the|uary 1, 1922, to January 1, 1923, pro- Something New ‘The Latest Gift Shop Novelties The: Gift and, China Shop OPEN EVENINGS 236 South Wolcott Street PHONE 1409R The convict turns into a hero, the libertine be-|| Distributors cathe Mentiwortts clothes and the contents thereof, ——$——_p___ THE SHAM OF THE MOVIES. “If we were to undertake a serious criticism of the movies as they move,’ announces the Chicago Jour- nal of Commerce, would be directed against their urnaturalness, their infidelity to the fundamental im- pulses and unchangeable sequences of real life, and the false education of audiences resulting therefrom. Too often rascality and crime, lust and lack of in- tegrity, are rewarded with happiness after a super- ficial and obviously impossible repentance in the last act. comes a moral model, the vampire acquires amazing ¥ “Such things do not often happen in life; they oc- r so frequently in the movies that young men and false ideas of human relations with irrevocable and inescapable moral laws. Too many utterly bad things are condoned on the screen; the natural progress of character, good or bad, is too often perverted. The result, so far as immature minds is concerned, can be only a distorted and untrue conception of the values of life and conduct. It.is to correct this trend that 9 An automobile is sold every minute. Could the fact have any connection with Barnum’s assertion that one of a certain kind of citizen is born every minute? et RA a Se eet Anxious inquirer wants to know what became of the anti-beer bill. Simply placed in cold storage, while congress goes to the seashore to coo! its fevered brow. 0 -______ Add Sad Tidings: The cranberry crop is short. 2S OS dea Who dug up “agenda” and gave it to the news- writers and bade them overwork it? vrerukieb fe Es Just as we had forgotten it, the coal dealer removes the joy from life by the announcement that coal is going to be higher. a If Former Emperor Charles of Austria is so all- fired crazy to grab a throne, why not move him over into Russia and hand him Lenine’s job. That would entertain for a while and afford him about all the reigning he would desire to do for the balance of his natural life. ———<$<—$<$_. Yes, we ought to have a dye embargo. We must manage somehow to protect an important and growing industry. For instance there is chemical hair. ee The trouble is to make the fourth and eighteenth amendments work in double harness. AES SIE ES, We have been told for some time that prosperity is just ahead. What we would like to know most is, Art Wares and Importations whether we are holding our own, gaining on it, or losing ground? Ree Seale Now that it is possible to make a silk purse from a sow’s ear, adds one more by-product tothe packing industry and a new industry to the country. grt RE The gentleman who mowed his lawn every five days earlier in the season is now performing this surgical operation but once in two weeks. Man’s enthusiasm wanes as the season advances. ——$_—___p____. The jobless workers in the eastern ‘ndustrial cen- ters have turned in their Ford automobiles for sale. —————_o——____. Russian breezes all the while the boat is discharging! to the cal] of the Anti- oa The lower house of congress has adjourned subject Saloon league. and builder, 734R. For Vacation or Stopover — Don't miss @ stay at the strictly modern AT THE Big Horn Hot Springs “The largest mineral springs in the world.” A FEW DOLLARS ‘You never know the power for good a few dollars can work until you get in the habit of seeing them writ- ten opposite your name in a bank book. If you shave fifty dollars to your name it would return you profits of more than money to keep it in a bank, profit in self-respect, confidence. in yourself, comfort of mind. We know these things are true, because our cus- tomers tell us so. We make a specialty of small ac- counts, and have many depositors who have been able to gaimin wealth and happiness by their small start. We help them all we can by mak- ing banking here a pleasure. They like it and are encouraged. Fifty dollars will do for a checking account or a dollar for a savings account drawing 4 per cent interest. Resources Over $4,000,000 Wyoming National Bank Casper’s Popular Bank THERMOPOLIS, WYOMING In treatment then, of hay fever, the logical thing to do is to restore the mucous membrane to normal healthy tissue. To accomplish this restoration, Chiropractic turns its attention to the nervous system with the full knowledge that when the system is freed and is able to deliver to the organs which are both directly and indirectly concerned in the maintenance of a normal mucous membrane, the irritant, commonly understood to be the cause of hay fever will have no effect whatever, the restoration will have been accomplished, and the patient will be well. Those fortunate few who annually spend their sum- = mer vacations at the seashore, thus avoiding the hay fever = season, may not be intersted in learning of Chiropractic and what it can do; but to those who by choice or by force of circumstances remain at home, Chiropractic, and what it can do, should prove interesting indeed. Because medicine fails is no reason for anyone to give up hope—this is the time when wise folks turn to Chiro- practic. If those who wish to remain at home will visit the Chiropractor, hay fever will cease to be the nightmare , that spoils the otherwise delightful dream of a season of = joy and sunshine, the good old summer time. Drs. J. H. and A. G. Jeffre F CHIROPRACTORS - Fl Midwest Building, Suite 318 to 323 Office Phone 706, Res. 93 Drs. B. G. and E. E. Hahn CHIROPRACTORS Townsend s Bldg. Phones: Office 423, Res. 1235 LATA TTT