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5 | large industries in Germany, where coke has practical- ly superseded coal as fuel our share of the savings de- veloped by the by-products would be: — } 26, 000,000 cubic feet_ef gas worths-——------$1,680,000 20,000 gallons of tar worth__.-_______ 940,500 60,000 pounds ammonium sulphate worth 2,620,800 760,000 gallons of benzols 000 Cie Casper Daiip Cribune ecucd every evening except Sunday at Casper, Natrona Wyo, Publication Oifices. Tribune Building. ounty rr 7 r, (Wyoming> Postoffice as second class matter, November 22. 1916. $8,417,608 Germany for many years has Jed the world in chem- ical discovery and development. She has achieved this position owing to the fact her men of science and leaders in economics have seen to it that coal is not burned but roasted. That the coke is used as’ fuel and the by-products for chemical purposes atd for the manufacture of dyes. American enterprise should be no whit behind Ger- man enterprise. American economy should be at least equal to or a step in advance of Germany's. Dyes for which we have depended upon Germany to furnish for many years, should be made in our own country. We had this called sharply to our atten- tion when the war prevented importation. It was lesson sufficient to induce us to provide our own dyes from our own raw materials and be inde- pendent and create business and employment for our own people. It would seem to be good sense. The president takes the view that it is essential that there shall be built up and maintained in this coun- try a dye industry unsurpassed by that of any other country. One fundamental truth has been brought home to us, which is, that anything we carmanalyze accurate- ly and ascertain its constituent elements, that thing we can create. As Senator Knox sums up the whole dye situation in America, it appears to require prompt action and unanimous action, on the part of congress, if it de- sired to do its duty toward the people and the busi- ness interests of the country. Speaking of the dye measure the senator aptly says: “If this measure were a project to invest a billion dollars of government money for the purpose of build- ing up an industry that would save a billion dollars a year and be a great factor in our preparedness against another destructive war, I would favor it; but it is not that. The gentlemen who propose to build up these industries propose to do it at their own expense, and all that they ask the government of the Uni States to do is to prevent for a period of three years MECMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS R. B. EVANS... THOMAS DAILY Advertising Representati Randall, 341 Fifth Ave., New Yort°Ct~ Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bidg-; Chicago, lil. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the New York and Chicago offices and visitors are welcome. Davia J SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Cerrier One Year Six Months Three Month: One Month Per Copy One Year Bix Mouths Three Months . No subscriptio three months. All_subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subsorip- tion becomes one month in arrears. “Member of Andit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©) Member of the Associated Press s The Associated Preas is exclusively entitled to we use for publication of all news credited in this paper and } also the local news published herein. Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. Call 15 or 16 any time between 6 and 8 o'clock p. m + if you fail to receive your Tribune. A paper will be de livered to you by special messenger. Make it your duty to let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. <> A FALSE GOD. The day will return in American life when the pos- session of money will be incidental It will the importation into this country of such dyes as are be when jazz and false standards have been|™ade here in merchantable quantities. The proposi- sent to the attic to neighbor with other dis-| tion is reasonable. It has nothing to do with the tar- carded things and sccumulate dust. Mere money| iff. It is not a question of tariff legislation. It is a will be dethroned and wisdom and culture will| T™estion of wise, farseeing preparedness and of wise, reign. It will be a better day, for the hopes and am-| f@Tseeing economy.” bitions of the people will be of higher character and ——_—_——_-0--—____ of greater benefit to civilization. The belief has grown ‘ON UNEMPLOYMENT. that mone b ing. Ni : te y can buy anything. | Never was greater) «very likely it will be a good thing to have a con- fallacy. True it can buy most things at the present g moment. It buys honor, not only occasionally but] ference on unemployment,” ‘asserts the Manchester very frequently, When it becomes true, as is often| Union. “We can’t say that.we expect it to result in asserted, that every man has his price, then you be-| *"ybody’s going to work right away, but it may be come a nation of money changers and have destroyed| “S¢ful by putting its finger on some of the key logs of the industrial jam, and it may point the way to yourselves. Your decline is at hand. But so long as . vou maintain in the public esteem, things above the| ¢Conomic methods calculated to prevent these jams, or value of money, prizes that men will strive to at-| Teduce their frequency in the future. “Meanwhile the situation is little short of appall- tain, possessions that cannot and will not be ex-|. 4 changed for gold, you arouse the best and noblest in| ing: We are getting along towards cold weather, and in New York city alone half a million workers are man and you have broadened and advanced culture.| ! When money is again assigned to its proper place as| idle, thousands of whom are sleeping out of doors. the servant and useful agent of mankind and deposed| They can’t do that a few weeks hence. as an idol of worship, and usurious accumulations and| “At the same time, tens of thousands of men could human selfishness are curbed by public opinion there| £° to work in New York, and make work for thousands will be more time and there will be inclination to cul-| Upon thousands more, if it. were possible to renew tivate, that which is desirable and a part of happi-| building operations on a basis promising reasonable ness, refinement. > . | security for investors in realty, And throughout the ‘A man is more to be judged by what he has in his| Whole country, building would start with a rush if it head, than by what he has. in bank. By. what idgals| Could be done on a common sense cost» basis. and aspirations he nurtures in his breast, than by the| “We are inclined to think that one of the key logs éunning schemes he has devised to wring a profit from| of the jam is right here, in the item of building costs. a doubtful transaction. “But there are others also, and besides the key logs there are countless more that are helping make the Wealth and intellectual refinement make a proper| ° ~ Pore partnership. Wealth without culture is dangerous.| jam. Back of it all Ifes the tierce individualism that we spoke about the other day in connection with The fact that the wealth of today is to an extent in| We h y the hands of illiterates who never ‘before possessed] ‘Time. After a fairly long period of intense collec- means and know not and cannot. appreciate the ro-| tive thinking wand acting most of us are individually sponsibilities that go with the dangerous power of pos-| ‘on the make,” fighting to'squeeze out the last cent in session, explains in some degree the ethical depravity| Prices, struggling to keep ourselves in the air by tug- that has obtained in business and figancial affairs and| “ing away at our bootstraps, each for himself. Now the demoralization of purity and right standards in| #nd then some corporation like the Amoskeag slashes prices and its workers accept wage reductions. Then personal conduct. ‘ ; a there is ‘little or no unemployment in a particular Cease the worship of money, lift your eyes to the ji h higher and nobler things of life and seek happiness] Tea.’ But by and large, retailers, manufacturers, la- bor unions and what. not are doing precisely the in knowledge and the wisdom that follows with it. 4 things, in their chase after that last cent, to keep men out of work. The congressmen helped, too, by block- ing the liberating of the railroad money until after the recess——-money that would have put probably a half million men to work. “Oh, there are all sorts of causes, besides the ba- sic one of over-industrialization to meet a war emer- gency. We wonder which ones the conference will re- gard as of greatest importance, and what it will pro- pose in the way of remedy.” ——-o—____ LABOR TAKES UP BANKING. “A one hundred million dollar bank—a bank of the people and for the people,” is an enterprise of the Central Labor Union of Philadelphia notes the Pitts- burgh Gazette-Times. “Its organization is well un- der way. Quarters have been leased ,and eubscrip- fer stock taken. Thirty-five thousand_.shares have been sold at $10 a share; when a million has been paid in the bank will be ready for business. The bank is organized under a declaration of trust, sub- ject to the state banking laws, but one of the trustees says, ‘We will not only be able to provide all the serv- ice obtainable in other banks, but we will go further and get closer to the people, which will be possible for a private banking enterprise such as this and not nampered by some of the restrictive laws which limit state and national banks to such a narrow field.’ “This sounds like a knock at conventional banks and banking, but ‘the promoters are not small souls. They recognize some good qualities in banks ‘as is.’ The spokesman before quote said: ‘I know we, the trustees, are not bankers, but we propose to buy the best banking ability obtainable.’ That ability will have to do real banking, for shareholders ‘will be entitled to 8 per cent per annum cumulative.’ It may not be in complete sympathy with the plans of the promoters; AAA ae OE A MAVERICK FROM OKLAHOMA. The champion boob of the lower house of congress is one Manuel Herrick of Oklahoma who resides down on the “Cherokee strip” and specializes in Herrick’s Giant Yellow Corn and Copper Faced Hereford cat- tle. In these useful endeavors he is possibly best able to serve his country for as a member of congress there is a doubt in the mind of most people who have come in personal contact with him since his arrival in Washington. He leaped into notoriety by the introduction of a ‘ bill to abolish beauty contests by newspapers, con- ventions and all other interests who sought by vote or other manner to determine the most beautiful girl within a given area of the earth’s surface. He deemed it destructive of all of the refinements and modesty of American maidenhood. If a lady pos- sessed beauty she must. wear it decorously at home or! hide it under the well known bushel. The world was to remain in ignorance of it and the enjowment there- of. Herrick’s bill made no hit with the pretty girls of the land and the move queens sad the lates in wait- ing of the screm “sprang to arms overnight,” as W. © J. B. migat express it. i The real object of the bill appeared when the Okla- * homa congressm#n opened a corresposdence school ® and addressed numerous of the beautiful maidens, © whose pictures were even then appearing in the Sun- © day editions of a local newsyaper, in an endeavor to { corral at least one of them to preside over the ranch ‘| house kitchen in Okishoma where giant yellow corn grows in abundance and Copper Faced Hereford cat- tle attain highest perfection. His method was first to dissuade the beauty candi- date to abandon the contest, then to induce her to fix her affections pern anently upon the grower of Giant yellow corn. @ He anr.oyed one after another of the beautiful af penkers wees Espen gas Beste be ae — tenner 2 be: ‘thi sity for ‘a bank ot people.” Bui maidens in Washington until he became the quest of| tt¥ £07, '@ bank of the people, tore nich shold so large a company of irate fathers, brothers and reg- ular suitors that life was unsafe outside of his board- ing house. ’ . We fear Oklahoma, in order to establish the status quo in Washiagton, should recall its rural member. He is performing hke a Copper Faced Hereford bull in an emporium devoted to the sale of Sevres ware. make everything safe, even ‘making loans, large or small, unsecured or secured, by mortgages or other- wise.’ “Unsecured loans will not appeal to the best bank- ing ability and the state banking department may have something to say about this benevolent innovation. But if ‘a loan department for making loans in small sums to responsible workers, repayment to be made in a lump sum or in installments without prohibitive interest charges’ can be made to succeed, the bank probably will fulfil the chief purpose of its founding. ‘The enterprise deserves to succeed. It will be a good thing for ‘labor’ to secure an intimate knowledge of the banking business and the responsibility and serv- ices of bankers.” Ee wR Se tS No Edgar, it is.a false rumor that the next conven- tion, following the State Medical Association will be the Amalgamated Association .cf Morticians. The Methodist preachers must have their inning first. 0 -___ pee ae A QUESTION OF ECONOMY AND ENTERPRISE. Senator Philander C. Knox of Pennsylvania, has lately laid before the United States senate some valu- able information and useful suggestions, in the use and waste of coal, from which it is learned that the annual waste of Wyoming's industries alone amounts to more than $6,417,000. The total annual waste in the entire country is placed at $930,188,000. Coal is the source from which more than 1,500 arti- cles of commerce are wholly or in part derived. Ger- many has been able to place all of these articles in the world market as a result of the research work done by her chemists, In our country, tar for roads, pav- ing, roofing, waterproofing and insulating materials, at ‘a : flavoring extracts, perfumes, photographie developers Peggy Joyce is in France waiting until her divorce proceedings are ended, when she will make her fourth d| prietary medicines and ‘an increase of Deen completed by the squads and sent to the bureau, the statement said. —— alarm signal. > ——_—— Jewelry and watch repairing by ex- pert workmen. All work guaranteed Casper Jewelry Mfg. Co., 0-5 Pats what changes in industry ought to be co-operate for service. Excess Profits - Repeal Asked; per WASHINGTON, Sept. 9—Repeal | ing the past year, paying the present gall “Ninety per cent of this was used of the excess profits retroactive to for beverage purposes and last January 1, and of the capital have paid the beverage tax which vas stock tax effective next January 1, paid by consumers,” said Senator) was recommended to the senate ‘fl- Calder. nance committee today by Secretary Mellon. To make up the loss for this : fiscal year the secretary propose re- Many Service Men turn of one-half of the transportation | tax until January 1, 1923, @ manu-| facturers’ tax on cosmetics and pro-| flavor when you —it’s sealed in by the : 5 per cent in the normal income rate! WASHINGTON, Sept. 9. — Opera-| ., Sept. 9. — | on corporations making the total 15 tions of “cleanup” squads per cent instead of 12% per cent as, sommecemceeneb eauede under di- Although the beaver’s chief use for its Mat, trowel-shaped tail is for swim- ming, it has another purpose. When beaten upon the water it becomes an In Need of Help Ce) Lio. Ba O FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1921. SWEEPS OVER NATION Thousands Write Grateful Letters of Apprecia- . tion as Famous Medicine Continues to Accom- plish Remarkable Results—Great Tanlac Laboratories Running at Top Speed to Supply Record Breaking Demand—Over Half a Mil- - lion Bottles Behind With Ors¢rs. By CHARLES MURRAY GILBERT ATLANTA, Ga., Sept. 9.—‘‘Tanlac made me feel young- er.” ‘It put me back on the payroll.” “I now have a fine appetite.” “I can eat whatever I want.” “No more dyspep- sia for me.” “I gained weight rapidly.” These and scores of like expressions are now heard daily from tens of thousands, as grateful users of Tanlac tell of their experiences. Leading drug men of the country are amazed at the tre- mendous sales of Tanlae, and point out enthusiastically that nothing has ever equalled the phenomenal demand for this preparation. At the great Tanlac laboratories at Dayton, Ohio, letters and telegrams umes are pouring in daily asking that ship-| ness. ments of Tanlac be rushed at once.|day. In a few weeks' time crops wit Many of these orders are for full car-} begin to move. Hundreds of millions load shipments, and quite a few of|of dollars will be put into circulation, them for two and three carloads. Al-]and business will soon be back on a though running at top speed, the Tan-| better and sounder basis than in years. lac laboratories are now over half a Notice to Dealers. million bottles, or approximately Many wholesalers and manufactur. twenty-four carloads behind with or-|ers stopped pushing at the very first ders. This announcement will no| sign of a dark cloud. “The result being doubt be received with great surprise} that many drug lines slumped. Tan- in the drug world, because business in|lac went right ahead and the result many lines, especially in the drug and|has been that more Tanlac has. been medicine business, nas been off from] sold during the first six months, of 40 to 50 per cent. the present, year than in any corre Agents in Every Town. sponding period in the past. One druggist in every city, town and] Line up with Tanlac. Connect with t least, not in the drug busi- ‘Things are getting better every Provided in the house bill. | ” ‘The treasury secretary also recom- mended elimination of all income sur- tax in excess of 25 per cent effective January 1, 1922 | Church Sessions Opened to Public PITTSBURGH, Pa., Sept. 9—All sessions of the eleventh general coun- cil of the Alliance of Reformed Churches thout the world, hold- ing the Presbyterian system, to be held here September~16 to 25, will be open to the public, Dr. John Mc- Naugher, chafrman of the committee on arrangements has announced. | LIQUOR TAX PLEA TAKEN TO HARDING wasuianoN oot s.— sonar A he Typical American” Calder of New York yesterday explain- ed to President Harding his proposal for a tax on distilled spirits and beer. Senator Calder said he would p amendments to the tax bill to levy a tax of $6.40 per gallon on distilted dents and Childre spirits and $5 per barrel on 2.75 per dren, 25¢ cent alcohol beer. These new taxes, N Will Deliver a Popular Lecture at the METHODIST CHURCH His Subject Will Be BISHOP MEAD Admission—Adults, 50c; High School Stu- SPECIALS TODAY AND SATURDAY We Have Just Received a Wonderful Line of . Phillipine Embroidered Underwear, Gowns, Chemise . Regular $6.00 Values Regular $8.00 Values ‘$2.98 $3.98 A SPECIAL PURCHASE OF LONG CLOTH ‘Extra Nice Quality. 10 Yards in Bolt. $1.75 A Good Value in Silk Hose All Our Brassieres . Regular $5.00 Value. White $1.00 per pair and Pink. Black, White, Brown, Navy $2.89 ALL PLUSH AND FUR COATS This Season’s Styles 20 PER CENT REDUCTION Richards & Cunningham Co. and wood preservatives are some of the possible prod- “ucts that are now “going up the chimney in smoke.” If Wyoming would employ the methods used in the venture. This time a French millionaire. This is go- ing some for a barber’s daughter. 1 ee ee aa ome ROTTS THINK RICHARDS & CUNNINGHAM WHEN YOU WANT THE BEST village in the United States and Can-|a product that sells no matter how the ada where agencies have not already] times, because of its superior merit. been established will be awarded the} Although Tanlac has been on the exclusive publicity agency for Tanlac| market over six years, it is an actual within the next thirty days. ‘These|fact that more Tanlac is being. sold agencies will carry with them a big}today with the same amount of adver- publicity campaign exclusively for the|tising than during any time in the one druggist in each city @hd town] past. who secures the agency. ‘Tanlac will not only prove your Tanlac is going right ahead more|greatest seller for this year, but for vigorously than ever before. For Tan-}many years to come. lac there is no such thing as business| Taniac is sold in Casper by the Cas- depression. In fact, Tanlac does not|per Pharmacy and by leading drug- believe there ig such a thing as hard] gists everywhere.—Adv. oeccccccoccccscooococes: | Parrccccccccccccccccvcccsocccoccsocess: SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY WATERMELONS 50° EACH Rocky Fords, Guaranteed Ripe ‘ PEACHES Pevoccoccsorcccoccocsocescoccscceosoccososcoosootoeteee Bushel Basket for Canning We Handle Blue Hill Butter and Cheese The Pomona Fruit Market 212 South Wolcott Proms seicniaitaicieaiely al | For 32 years in the welfare of Natrona County citizens is a big factor assuring to YOU, if you carry your bank account at the: Casper National Bank, the kind of banking service that you require. In this institution the factor that deter- mines the kind of service which we render. is not the size of an account but rather the special needs of the customer. Wha 32 Years of Service « May We Serve You? Casper National Bank CASPER, WYO. i Under United States Government Supervision.