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2s eee ee CAGE TWO fre TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1922. of ceneral conception is at the expense ability F handle practical Caaire: idealiem va ona Cs os — ? Cic Casper Nailp Cribune ‘Tribune Bulding -+ 15 and 16 Departments feation Offices, Postoffice as second class 1916. BE BVANS = ;- - ae “hdvertising Manager| coupled with industry and capacity to see a plan in| : its parts as well as its whole. Then ou the larger) Advertising SE eee tie. Chicago, | tage of the insurance investigation the same qualities | Glove Bidg., Bow file in York City Prudden, King & F i New en SUBSCRIPTION RATES. except Sunéay at Casper, Natrona)» ism. The distinction of Mr. Hughes is that be com- bines qualities commonly separated or a | stely present. For it will be conceded that the gen-| eral program of the conferenec showed amazing breadth of view, yet so firmly linked wers its several | perts that it went through little amended. | “The skeptical citizenship of New York first began to take the measure of Mr. Hughes years ago, when| he emerged from obscurity to take charge of a legis-| lative inguiry. It was discovered that the attorney of} the committee had remarkable lucidity of mind, more than a lawyer. So he was chosen governor, and though he could not conquer a hostile legislature when he went to the supreme court he quickly won a place | us a great jurist. “As a presidential candidate he did not fire the! were displayed, and also thrt Mr. Hughes was much} iy YOv"RE GOING To STAY SUNK By Carrier rs rt * One Year .. ne " papeler imagination. He had so'high a conception of} Six Months . the exalted office to which he aspired that he felt self- Three Months restraints that prevented a full revelation of his per- een ee eoceert-v a Oe ee Bang: S-s-s-s-s! pad ne sonality and his possible policies. The American peo- byyve B legram sir, Both rear tires at once. ple like sentiment and are not kindly to anything sug- And that’s what we get—yet deserve} Sounds pretty bad— Ons Year se.s-ce gestive of austerity of character. Mr. Hughes, in fact, in the end— and looks worse! Stix Montus Three + 2.98) onths Saves 3 accepted for less period thap N three mosths. All_ subscriptions r Daily Tribune will not tton becomes one mont Member of Andit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) the Associated Press. ss is exclusively entitled to the of all news credited in this paper ané ews published herein. be paid in advance and the ure delivery after subscrip in arrears. Member of Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. 5 or 16 an be 30 and § o'clock p. m A paper will be de duty to to recet is warm and generous, but, aias! he has little liking for wearing his heart on his sieeve. “Americans are often said not to be internationally minded. It is complained of them that they are pro- vincially immersed in home affairs. But as to one thing the criticism is not just. Let it appear that a course is in accord with the spiritual urgings which come out of our past, and that there is a chance to ex- tend the domain of the American spirit, and they are intensely interested. So the more ambitious Mr. Hughes was to play the role of a practical altruist the strorser became his home support. Cynicism retired abashed in the presence of his candor and directness. We are filled through Mr. Hughes with what we re- gard as proger pride over the results of work. not Sy SStuceners, ATT Se SCRE PTED Around the corner a vanished friend humiliating any, to exclude complete of immigration difficult to assimilate and absorb. 8. ‘The law sheuld provide for the sending of expert examiners to the lands from which immigration most ly comes—this for the sake of both Prospective immigrants and of our own Jand. %. The law should make possible a wise distribution of new immigra- tion. The flow should be restricted or entirely stopped from given peoples, But you have a couple of spares along —a lucky strike for you. LUCKY / STRIKE, toasting process years ago, it was a Lucky Strike } The Telbune know ou. _| merely for our own good but for the world’s good. | to already congested areas, and en.| f0F US. A “Fortune in the cause events gave him an oppor-| couraged to go to those parts of Why? Because now tanity to further, he was speciall> fortunate in hav-| America where it is desired. millions of smokers —————_—_———~| ing as his presidential chief a man neither nervous Plc is 2 new immigration policy the special flavor of the nor dogmatic and willing to show abiding confidence should be distinctly patriotic. It) Jucky Strike Cigarette — PROFESSION LOSING CASTE. As a sign of the times on the eastern seaboard a cheerful note is reported in the press with reference to the profession of bootlegging. , | People who are looking these days, anxiously and not too successfully, for evidence that some day or cther prohibition will prohibit, can get at least a lit- tle encouragement from what Colonel Hayward, the United States attorney, says as to the change of spirit that has been shown of late by the juries before whom are tried the men accused of violating the liquor laws. Not long ago, he declares, acquittals were the vale and convictions were the rare exception. None of the accused picaded guilty, no matter what the evidence against them might be, and confidence in the eager- ness of the jurors to find excuses for letting them go in one to whom he delegated power.” ROPE Pe NORTH DAKOTA AS A LESSON. “The industrial commission of North Dakota,” ob- serves the Detroit Free Press, “hus issued a report showing the results of the plunge which the stnte teok into public ownersh’p under the guidance of the Non- partisan league. In a general way it confirms the re- ports of financial failure which have been made from time to time by various unofficial observers. The, $200,000 and has about $1,000,000 tied up in state banks which aré in receivers’ hands. The partly com- pleted grain elevator which will cost $2,500,000 will not be worth $2,000,000 when it is finished. The flour Bank of North Dakota has lost something more than} | Copyright, 1922, ‘The present emergency law for the {temporary numerical restriction of immigration does not relax any of the many and excellent, qualitative, Fundamental Principles in Immigration Sidney L. Gulick. country to bécome a permanent fac- tor in the composition of our popu- lace and in the conduct of our polit« ical and social institutions. and selected both in quantity and in quality, 2.. No more immigration should be admitted of any nationality than we can wholesomely assimilate and in a reasonable length of time wisely in- corporate inte our body politic. 3. No more immigration should be admitted than can find steady and should favor immigration from peo- ples easily assimilated and check it from other lands. It should guaran- tee equal treatment and a square deal to all aliens now in the United States. It should provide for higher stand- ards for naturalization and then grant the privileges of citizenship to all who qualify. It should look to the creation of a substantially homogen- eous people having a common mind, and a wholesomely functioning democracy. It?s Toasted* k— which seals in the delicious Burley flaver And also because it's Ke Wana iene Meee Ceceerecaren Stabe mill is losing about $100 a day, and the Home Build- was almost always justified. ” Asso: its’ solective tests of the law of 1917. It| And then, there is the industrial] Useful employment without endanger-| P . Now the situation is nearly reversed, a fact which pe, Pern Cem SOL itie: Leer Deewana: eee, merely provides that for the fiscal] situation. Widespread and long-con-|!ng normal American standards of| LAR BANK i y iki for) Colonel Hayward ascribes, not to any new liking but to a new detestation of the bootleg- “These losses are not large. ‘ Taken all together | year 1921.22 the number of otherwise tinued depression has gripped the life life, labor and wages. 4. The numbrical regulation of tm- ‘ohibition, ki 2 4 ualified immigrants who may be ad-| of our people. Between 3,000,000 and ® | Fi ray based on realization that, in addition to being| they are less than Philadelphia was robbed of in the| “itten trom each Iuropean country | 5,000,000 manual workers are report-| migration shofild bé flexible. When| i building of a city hall, and if, there were nothing in} «nan not exceed three per cent of the}ed to have been without work for| industrial depression sweeps the i ‘thless profiteers they are ready, as a class, to sell Sakon Agree patrons when they have nothing else to sell and not infrequently when they have or could get the something better, and will not simply because less money is to be made out of it. ‘The result of this resentment is that excuses for acquittal are no longer sought, convictions are nu- mercus instead of rare, and guilt is frequently con- fessed in the hope of securing a mitigation of sen- So often, of late, have the bootleggers been the affair but a story of losses due to falling mar- kets and bad management, it would be of little in- terest. But North Dakota set out to teach the United States a lesson. This country as a whole has found that business and politics do not mix well. Certain non-competitive kinds of business may be carried on fairly well by the public but there is nothing in the history of the whole nation to show that governmental organizations are fitted for industrial administration. foreign born residents in the United States as shown in the census of 1910. Sometime next winter congress ex- pects to enact a new immigration law, for the present ‘Three Fer Cent ' Law" is open to a number of serious | objections. In drafting the new law the committees on immigration of the jsenate and house will no doubt keep many months. Whatever permanent tmmigration policy congress may adopt, that pol- iey should grow out of the facts and experiences of our national life. It should be fitted to deal effectively with changing industrial conditions and also with the larger and more in- tricate problem of population compo- country, all labor tmmigration should be promptly stopped. But the doors: should again be opened when pros- perity returns, It should be possible to take either step without waiting for special congressional actjon. 5. ‘The closing and opening of our doors should be sclentific. It should be based on assured and accurately compiled facts and stadstics fm i The Wyoming National Bank is the popular bank for women. They like to deposit at this bank. They find J + % sition and its wholesome incorgora- : : toreddrers in everything except explicit intention that| The voters of North Dakota did not believe that ¢x-|'> ™Und two vital considerations... _ | film, Nou ot ody politic and. na,| Cvery, part of the country. here an atmosphere of friendliness the most thirsty have ceased, or are ceasing, to| perience and judgment in such matters corresponded) | ¥irst- there is' the well-nighsunf: | onal life. 6. The law should be general. The that pl h aay * benefactors, and have come, or| with the truth. They thought that the independence, | \°*! Conviction that the needs of eae principtes should be applied equaiis: at pleases them. regard them as public benefactors, * America as a nation should be*the} The following principles should] t, every nation and people without are coming, to treat them as the miserable criminals they all are. gh hE Ng ee BANKING HELPS STABILIZE. The indications are that labor radicalism and va- rious forms of socialism are on the decline. Ns Banking organizations have always shown a spirit pf co-operation in progressive community movements. The organization of groups to market products and to purchase improved livestock has been encouraged. As a result of such encouragement sentiment for real co-operation has grown and made farmers strong- er and more hopeful. - Producers associations such as fruit growers, wool initiative, flexibility and experience necessary to suc- cess in private business could be dispensed with even in the highly competitive flour milling industry. They are now losing $1.50 on every barrel of flour they make. “North Dakota also thought that Mr. Townley and other politicians could be trusted to establish an en- tirely new sort of bank under state control tha’: would finatce its industria] enterprises and do a viristy of things banks ordinarily do not do. In this fieid, also, the, state ran counter to a deeply established convic- tion in tbe rest of the United States. “North Dakota now has some reason in its own ex- perience for thinking that this bias of the people against political banks is founded in sound policy.” prime consideration in regulating the amount and kind of immigration which may wisely bo admitted to our charecterize the permanent immigra- tion policy of the United States: 1. Immigration should be regulated arbitrary discrimination. 7. The law should be courteous to all, It should be possible, without Doctor at 82 Finds Mothers Prefer His Formula to New-Fangled Salts | And Coal Tar Remedies for Babies = Banking is made easy here, not for the lady who is just starting an account and needs coaching, but for the experienced business woman who is in a hurry and wants immediate seryice. The people in the bank are here to Judgment of 1892 vindicated by world’s approval of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, | a simple vegetable compound for constipation—So safe thousands give | it to babes in arms—Now has largest sale in the world. WHEN a man is in the 83rd i . le want to us¢ them noone tan year of ‘his age, as I am, Ht growers and truck farming have increased and be- come more self-reliant. To illustrate, an organization of flax and hemp growers has been built up in western Cregon, where ite a En ae DON’T BE A JOB KILLER. “Don’t be a job killer,” writes John Oakwood in Forbes’. “It is an admonition that those in control of 4 help and the slogan is “what you want when you want it, with a smile.” land owners and rerters are putting up $10 per acre for five years to establish co-operation in those in- custries. fs That is an illustration of the effect of constructive banking building up confidence in the producers of raw material to go ahead and organize the capital to mar- ket a finished product. the policies of large enterprise might well impress up- on their operating executives ali the way down the scale “The job-killer is an executive who ruthlessly fires men on the pretext of retrenchment and economy, but really in order to ingratiate and intrench himself more 1875, market the laxative prescrip. there are certain things he has learned that only time can teach him, The basis of treat- ing sickness has_not changed since I left Medical College in nor since I placed on the leny them the privil but the y should never be aye cl constipation, the safer for the vhild and for you, and at. ter for the general h all. And as you can get results ren to nm. The simpler the remedy for ith of This purpose appeals to lady custom- ers as well as to men and it is making The Wyoming National Bank the popular bank for women. Under good methods the farmers will reap the har-| firmly in the good graces of his own superiors. pana aed nee iste verre in a mild and safe, way by ‘ ) See WE calc ‘at thats caw miaterial: bat, eoecprett of]; s*phle digetrintion deea ait apoiy fa ang.acabe th aya ls Cees AT using Dr, Caldwell's Syrup | eye Sutting it up in a more highly finished material for| the prudent executive who makes a sincere study of aidwell’s Syrup Pepsin, «Eppley why taken chances wit | checking account can be started vhich there is a world market. the business interests intrusted to him and of the Then the treatment of con- dru; if disguised i i , eT SOE ieee ar cau somewhat austere requirements of these difficult times. | stipation, biliousness, head- canst day parnalig ter ost with $50, or a savings account, earn- WICKEDNESS IN NEW YORK. The crime figures in New York for the past year, make the smaller states feel almost pure and holy in comparison. oss z The number of convictions in courts of recora and courts of special sessions in New York state in 1921 It has been patent on all sides in industry and busi- ness that }4x administrative policies during the boom resulted in swollen employment lists. “But there are always birds of prey ready to take advantage of necessitous conditions. The very neces- sity, the very virtue of economy and conscientious ad- laxatives, | aches, mental depression, indigestion, sour stomach and other indispositions that result from constipation was entirely by means of simple vegetable herbs and roots. These are still the basis of my less ‘than most others, only about a cent a dors such as you can fiad in any drug store, will last a family several months, it. It is good for the bake in arms because pleasant to the A bottle and alican use ing 4 per cent interest, with a dollar: 4 cent greater than in the preceding| ministration during reactionary times makes all the Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, taste, gentle in and pod etn total of {0.601 in 1920 rose to 55,516 in| more execrable the work of the man who uses them which {s a combination of from’ narcotics. In the proper year. ic to’ ' D th, r5 Egyptian Senna and othermild dose, given in the directions, i921. as a pretext fur killing other men’s jobs in order to laxative herbs with pepsin. it: ist ecdally nattective at all 2 The convictions for intoxication nearly doubled, go-| win favor for himself. He can be seen running to the 1° Recently hew Wedictnes "Bran ages. erly -peopie will find W omin N ° /) ing from 5,287 to 10,291. Opponents of prohibition! president of his concern, saying to him with great | hava, been“brought out: for - Men. it especially ideal. g£ Natio will shake a wicked finger at the increase. - But those caution: ‘See how many men I have fired today, see constipation that contain cal- is eeenic gfe: public against The formula of Dr. Caldwell’s s who study the drinkers of the prohibition era are not} how much money T have saved’—leaving it to the pres- omel, which is mercury, salts them. Certain coal tar products Byop Pepsin is on the cover Casper’s Popular Bank Geceived. A man who in the old days would get| ident to think ‘what a good and faithful servant thou of various kinds, minerals, and will depress the/heart; certain: of every bottle, and the @runk enough to be happy, but not drank enough to| art.’ er es li salts give rise. to intestinal ingred font have the endorso- 1 to F> ‘ BL ate 4 : Foe ¥ = i . i ment of the U.S. = he arrested, is likely now, to become roaring drunk ‘From the broader social point of view, job-killing ous, and the medical profession Pe ithe tnivatines. atarcwa peo. scopoeta: arma. whenever he gets hold of a bottle of hard liquor. Whet’s more, the stuff the bootleggers sell as whisky ig the stuff that crime is made of. Why should there have been an increase of 10,000 convictions outside of intoxication cases? The police wey say that the figures are evidence of their greater skill in catching criminals. The district attorneys and the courts may claim a share of the credit. The pes- simist will say that there being more crimes there are naturally more convictions, and that the increase in crime is due to the war, the deflation in wages and a widespread disinclination to work. means depriving of work those who have a certain right to their employment so long as their jobs are) justified and their own services are satisfactory. it! means also the creation of unnecessary unemployment, the reduction of buying power, and the prolongation| and aggravation of business stagnation. “Give the jeb-killer enough rope and he'll do the} foolish thing every time.” DE ET SS EI, A MONSTER UNDERTAKING. Webb Adams, well known publicity man and sec- retary of the Big Horn Basin Producers’ Association, The ratio between the sexes stands fifteen to one burden of conviction upon the men. is nothing cheerful in the figures. ey — CHARLES EVANS HUGHES. The man who comes out of the sessions of the limi- tion of ‘armament conference n the highest credit} bound to be our own retary of state who pre- sided at the gathering. American and foreign news- vs have been lavish in laudatory comment and ¢ voices American opinion when| most enlarged by the writes us about The Tribune’s industrial edition: “T have just finished reading the big edition put out by you. It was a monster undertaking. From the standpoint of an editor the work is a perfect accom- plishment. The make-up followed the latest styles of the printer’s art, which is not a small part in making a newspaper attractive to its readers, and I read your daily edition with great pride in the fact that very few cities, so young as Casper, can boast of its equal. Its make-up, too, is along big city lines. I congratulate you and your excellent force who have contributed to its success.” pean ASSESS SES course, Charles Evans Il observers agree that! great gathering. To| of practical details and 1 that public! r virtues: Sweep! What's wrong with the times? It has been at least three days since a bank cashier out in the wicked mid- die west has looked into the muzzle of a forty-eight) er been locked in the vault by an enterprising bandit. | = ° Once ag: better reorganize ns of Wyoming business? and re | $10,000 Worth of Syrup Pepsin Free In remembrance of my 8srd birthday I have set aside the sem of Ten “Thousand Dedlind tata pied boas is batt oes Naeias of ws Shee Pee ee Free Trial bottle to a family. All are constipated now and then, and opportunity for you and othérs to try Dr. Caldwell’s S; Pepsin FREE OF CHARGE. Ask for your free bottle teday, simply siding wees aad Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 514 Washington St., Monticello, Ill. Do not postpone this. + here is an Paddress to Terrace Gardens For Private Parties Call 697M The Union Mili Co. Is prepared to take care of all kinds of cabinet work. Also job work of any de- scription. 402 S. Durbin Phone 1462 a cane ncn meee THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER CO. Everything in Building Material BIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS Office and Yard—First and Center Phone 62 — | THIRD ANNUAL BALL eins nadetchelieeeeeeee GIVEN BY Women of Mooseheart Legion Arkeon Dancing Academy SSeS Wednesday, Feb. 15 Tickets $1.00, Including War Tax