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{ is hoped to bring the figare close to $3,500,,000,000 in PAGE SIX oe ee Ehe Casper Daily Cciowe ne cecy wear future. ns 7 16, $800,000,000 per nd 16 Iamued eve w nal revenue law and deductions The economie: | program have created once 2¢ tion. THOMAS DA Advertising Representatives, _Aavertis : ncer Blig., Chicaro, c 2 £ ilobe Bidg.; Bos avenue, New aie tak in} pies 3 es and visitors! Jaw, a civil servi pages e reau law, = SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Carrier abled soldiers the ted for less period Wwance and the after subscrip- dit Bureau of Clreulation (A. B. Member of the Associated Press. | ia exclusive'y entitled to the Sited to this paper and Press Kick if you Don’ Cal 15 or 16 it you fall to receive y livered to you by special m: Jet The Tribune know wh A paper will be de Make it your duty to wenger. carrier misses you “I congratulate | to your efficiency A VIRULENT DISEASE. wire whether or not our public »ed what has come to be known Well may servants have d you ise . ne the world’s history since Daguerre’s first feeble attempts at picture making has the camera played such a leading part in human affairs as in the present. The rise of moving pictures, the development of a great industry and the creation of » popular pro- fession for entertainment are responsible for the dis- ease that has extended to all public life. Screenitis is a malady that goes with the business | of picture production. It is a part of it, and no criti- cism can hold, except of the manner in which it is) put over. But when an epidemic is taken over from another| ord made by you }on the high seas. service. ter of getting into ths reelz by public men and wom-| en who have nether accomplished sufficient to war-| vant exploitation in pictures to be viewed by the gen-| era] public or are even pleasing to look at, the pic- ture makers have shown lack of discrimination and are guilty of plxying upon the vanity of uninteresting nobodies. The poor patient publie is suffering from fatigue. Th has ceased to be interested in viewing the mayor of Podunk in the act of signing an amended dog licence erdmance and pasting the pen over to the president- general of the ladies’ auxiliary of the piano movers waion as a souvenier, while the village band renders “Hail, Hail, the Gang’s All Here.” If there is any film Ieft after Will Hays gets through picturing his own advent into moviedom, we hope he ‘will devote it to the very excellent purpose of giving fire public a little worth-while stuff in the news p' tures. he has mentioned his own age. ticularly foolish Preached in war. fare. a NEED FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION. “Never has there been such need for sane, calm thinking as there is now,” suggests the New York Commercial. “Heretofore, our economic policies have! heen thought out by a few leaders, or else have taken| care of themselves. But with the upheaval in world conditions the general public has been brought in di-| rect contact with economic problems and is studying| them now with the greatest possible interest. Unfor- tunately there are not enough leaders of thought in close enough contact with the public to formulate these theories along the lines of sound doctrine, but,| ts ever, there are at hand those who seize upon the opportunity to preach false doctrines for their own profit. The demagogue may be a crossroads politi- cian, the mayor of a big city or the editor of a strin ef sensational newspapers, but wherever he departs from basic natural law he is laying up for himself, Zor those he represents and for the nation at large a reserve of misfortnue that will have to be reckoned with in due course oughout the country a wave of loose rtant projects that is finding expres- sion in congress, with no prospect of improvement in the congress to be elected this fall. It is a tendenc: rather away from conservative thought and which, care is not taken, may find an outlet in a wave of radi- such as marked the free silver craze of the early nineties. Let those who hold responsible pos tions anywhere, whether as editors, college professors, preachers, or wherever they may be placed so as to influence public thought, realize the Tesponsibility which i rs, of holding to sound doctrine.” ‘ place. have eagerly gone tin de body the the 0 RECORD IS OPEN. on administration retired America international prestige was the lowest ebb in i history. Today America has completely regained her moral and material leadership among the nations of the world. President Harding conceived and Secr tary Hughes executed the boldest stroke for eman pation from m nd for world peace the mod- ern world has The league of nations cove- nant, with ery for effecting its decrees by force not att to do what ist. THE known ma the Washing ferenc actually accomplished ‘The covens va 'y of future limitation of armaments, Hughes opened the Wash-\ tende ington cor ¢ program for scrap-| ang it might make ping ain ntially as pres: ed. 20 s n ow : 1 fashion in wi conducted. renders that n former preside nternational relations have been trast to the successive sur- of minds of the plomats of Europe. blockade in street When President aney of the! &Tess in Washington, ‘White House the aa Gs thet Ato finan | 16 crazy! cial rain followed deficit, even though| =I the war had been « relief in sight. The repassed the budget 1 sor had vetoed, the pr proved enerzy and couras: and the congress valiant siactions of federa] expend have had 3 Republican con ave iad a Republican p: Period the cost of ms follows: @00; 1921, rs, and there was no can congress promptly . Harding’s predeces- pointed a man of * him in his re-| vamp : three years we and for one year we i During that ing the government has been| 90.000,0¢ ). $7,500,000,-! 009,000. I Vesuvius is age on either H through the enactmen' Proofs of tha Liberty bonds have gained more than $10 per hun-| éred in value, the borrowing rate has decreased from| 8 per cent to 6 per cent, nnd securities in general have, teadily advanced in price. i The foreign debt refanding law, various laws for egricultural rehabilitation, an immigration restriction > retirement law, the veteran's ba- nd a host of other laws contributing to pub-! minded zeal for the public service degree you have stood for that kind | which puts the interest of the people as a whole first} and foremost, and treats all other considerations as} ligible when the public weal is involved. The rec- “The nomination of Mr. |sharp and clean. It ts not primarily an issue between the Republican party and the Demoeratic party, for | Mr. Ford does not seem to have any firm political con- e in the future a Hindu senate, choose, in a spirit of cormopolitanism, to admit eat- =, there is no reason why Mr. Ford should not pire to membership therein, but he would be signal. out of place in the American senate so long as that is dominated by men who zealously believe in merican ideal and faithfully endeavor to serve the American people.” 27a PR at IF THE POPE VISITS US. “Why can it ‘never happen,’ that the new Pope Pius an make a visit to America?” asks the Congresation | “Is it a mere continuance of the ecclesiastical | fiction that the pope is a prisoner in Rome? own theory the pope is a shepherd; might it net be good for the shepherd occasionally to visit his flock?| Good, we mean, not only for the flock but also for the shepherd. His message to the American people strikes one note of interest to all of us his ‘great desire to re-establish among all nations,’ American who in his heart feels a desire for wae. It is perhaps the one thing about which American pub- lic opinion is practically ganizing power of the Roman church is not, ———$ _ Living models displaying the latest designs in ‘ho- siery in a leading drygoods store A further economy is shown in the drastic cut of in the peoples’ tax burden of the new Republican inte » of that relief is felt by the year M individual taxpayer who is given increased exemptions | ng his return. The rest is felt! th h reduced prices and stimulation of business. iakeocs d reduced taxation of the Republican | t renewed ambition into industry and} n an incentive for piofitable produc- fact are found on every hand.| Tic welfare have been passed. They have brought an increase in farm prices, which means added prosperity n scores of other industries; they have given the dis-| decent treatment denied them by| the Democrats; and they have renewed that public | confidence in government so sadly lacking in recent) years. The party responsible for these accomplish- ments awaits with confidence the judgmer.t of the peo-| ple next November. Baie 2 FR | WHAT ROOSEVELT THOUGHT AND SAID. Since our Democratic friends insist upon dragging) the Ford-Newberry skeleton from the Michigan attic] and the southern brigadiers who have profited by dis- franch'sement of legal colored voters insist ) rading the said skeleton up and down the aisles of the American legislative haljs and dragging it through the columns of their party newspapers, it is well to turn to what the greatest American citizen of his time had to say to Commander Newberry at the time the whole | matter was news and before Henry Ford and his paid agents so confused the case in the public mind. | Here is what Theodore Roosevelt thought and said! to Mr. Newberry in October, 1918: | you on your nomination, but far| more do I congratulate Michigan and all our people. | It was my good fortune to have you serve under me/ as secretary of the navy, and I can testify personally | pa interested and single- To a very peculiar| of government| and your di und your two sons in this war is typical of your whole attitude as a public servant. Soth your boys at once entered the navy, and are now You sought employment abroad; | when that was refused you, you accepted any position} that was offered in which you could render public Ford makes the issue| r | victions, and was content to take the nomination on profession and so largely appropristed as has the mat-) any ticket without regard to what the general prin-| ciples of the men supporting that ticket were; and) his memory about past politics is so hazy that although| a Republican candidate for presi- | dent for whom he thinks he once voted, it does not ap-' pear that this is possible, unless he is in error as to “The issue is infinitely more important than any! merely political issue. Amcricanism, of straight patriotism, and of prepared- ness for the tasks of peace and war, as against a par- It is the issue of straight and obnoxious type of pacifism This is the first time in the history ef our country in which a candidate for high office has been nominated who has spent enormous sums of! money in demoralizing the people of the United States on a matter of vital interest to their honor and wel- The expenditures on behalf of pacifism by Mr. Ford in connection with the peace ship, and in connec- tion with his great advertising campaign in favor of | the McLemore resolution and of the pacifist and pro-| ; German attitude against our participation in the war,| was as thoroughly demoralizing to the conscience of the American people as anything that has ever taken The failure of Mr. Ford’s son to go into the army at this time, and the approval by the father of the son's refusal, represent exactly what might be ex- pected from the moral disintegration inevitably pre- duced by such pacifist propaganda. Your two sons to the front. They stand ready to pay with their lives for the honor and the interest of the American people, and while they thus serve Amer- ica with fine indifference to all personal cost, the son of wealthy Mr. Ford sits at home in ignoble safety, and his father defends and advises such conduct. “Michigan is facing the test, clear-cut and without shadow of a chance for'misunderstanding, between pa- triotism and Americanism on one side, and other pacifism and that foolish sham cosmopolitanism which thinks it clever to deride the American flag and to proclaim that it would as soon be a Hindu or Chi- raman as an American. on the If there should be at any and it should By his in its expression of peace and harmony There is not, we suppose, one unanimous. And the infiu- ence of Pope Pius in extending that desire and pur-| pose of peace in all the world is welcome not snip among his own flock, but as far as his influence ox. He would be welcome if he came an a visitor us all feel that the headship and or-| window caused a traffic and an adjournment of con-| — The way they keep young in Maryville, Mo., says the Forum, is for the seventy year young ones to laugh at the old ones of twenty. ae a we changed since her da: on thas held all the years ifted down the Nile in the roy } fees eyptian affairs with Lloyd George could shel eee ave obtained a better deal for Egypt? ee but the open nd if Cleopatra al barge to dis- n in eruption but it hasn’t a thing Johnson or Bill Borah. be Casper Dally Cribune OH! | UNCLE, WATCH YOUR STEP The Philosophy of Poor Richard Poor Richard, with his homely phi- losophy of life and his simple economic theories, must seem hopelessly old- fashioned, almost doddering, to our generation of intelligentsia. Yet his philosophy has one quality that theirs lacks—it works. As Poor Richard says: A learned blockhead is a greater blockhead than an ignorant one. All the great pant of the past century, all the touted curealls have been tried out in practice during the past ten years. Without exception they have proved miserable failures— destructive instead of constructive forces. Communism has utterly ruin ed Russia. Socialism, which {s diluted communism, has prostrated North Da kota. Government ownership, which is diluted socialism, has half bank- rupted our railroads. As Poor Richard says: Many medicines, few cures. All echemes to crimp brains and in- litiative, all class and special-privilege: |legistation by any bloc for any group will in the end react against its would be beneficiaries. These panaceas that would cure the wrongs of one group— ‘and his personal shortcomings, and that is riot such soothing reading as an arraignment of a vague composite society that holds down the worthy failure out of pure cussedness. No man is an unworthy failure to him- self. Economic truth teaches a hard though perfectly clear ot steady work, self-help and self-denial. It points to the middle ct a long, hot road as the shortest way Letween two points, and discourages the use of shady short cuts. Anyone who will run through the list of classic com- munistic short cut books, on which the take-it-from-the-other-fellow system of|osted in keeping his job. As Poor economics is based, will find that they, Richard says: were written by men who were not ac- tually engaged in business, or familiar | SUe~ at first hand with the real problems of finance, management and produc-| keeping out of bankruptcy, in larger tion. ‘That is why their theories go to, Production, in cutting out waste, in pot when put to the test. That is why Das Kapital and books of that ilk will eventually find shelf room alongside Airy Fairy Lillian, by Thé Duchess, and similar works of light fiction. As Poor Richard says: s Great talkers, little doers. It would be hard to overestimate the wrongs more often due to limitations/damage that has been done to the imposed from within than from with-| world by writers like Karl Marx, who out—by infringing on the rights of/haye put out dull romances in the another group, back-fire in operation.| guise of serious economic discourses; They look good, like countless little/or by the orators to whom any theory models of inventions that run a mile| |a minute on a cup of water and a gill of gasoline, but that go to smash when! built on a larger scale and put to work on the rafls or the road. As Poor looks sound if it gets a big enough | han;d or by those politicians who issue unlimited promises at the expense of the tax-payers, provided they can be discounted in yotes, from the tax-free- after all,| Yea, verily, the world meemeth Richard says: |The people, and in’ that term we in- Thou hadst~better eat salt with the clude merchants and manufacturers Philosophers of Greece, than sugur/as well as farmers, have plenty of with the courtiers of Italy. |troubles, plenty of grievances, but There are plenty of people who,|they will not be cured by any pana- against all the evidence, still believe|cea in the politician's pharmacopoeia. in communism, socialism, government| As Poor Richard says: ownership of rallroads, Nonpartisan} Here comes the orator, with his leagues and the like, but then there /flood fo wards and his drop of reason. are many people who still believe In| The greiitest problem before the |fairies, ghosts and Russian rubles as/|world today is a business problem and an investment for trust funds. We it will be solved only by business men. |shall continue to have countless books) It is a practical problem and it will be on socialism, just as we shall always) solved only by practical men of affairs. have bluetiky stock; not because| Disarmament, unemployment in Chica |elther is worth the paper it is printed|go, the cost of an overcoat and the on, but because, as Poor Richard says:|price of corn in Iowa are interdepen- Samson with his strong body, had a/dent and interrelated matters. The weak head, br he would not have laid| intelligentsia, the politicians and the it in a hariot’s lap. diplomatists have brought the world Economic truth is dull reading, be-|to the brink of ruin. Everything has cause it repeats simple rules that we|been tried by them except common all know and because it does not pro-|sense. If from tho first hour of the |ise anything for the taking. Its crit-|armistice at Spa the world’s affairs icism is first of all for the individual been in the hands of the world’s NS S The Master Rebuilder Every drop awakens new energy, new strength and new endurance In every drop of FORCE there is revitalization—new life. { It is the dew of the morning to languishing bodies, impart- .2 tefreshing and snstai: influence which keeps alive the spirits, alert the mind and vigorous the ysique. ‘ Worn-out tissues are re-created, nerve forces replenished, scthe bloed-stream purified and ‘made rich and zed. ea o general are its reviving ‘building actions 1 physical eystem becomes charged anew with animation, possessed of fresh nergy, increased strength, greater endurance—radiant with the glow vigorous health. | In short, FORCE stands as the most resistant | barrier you and the everattacking | forces of Discase. Get a bottleof FORCE taday. Any reliable sae tn | FORCE City | Bc fa Sarr ee ‘| ae | Always on Hand at Fi John Tripeny Co., 241 S. Center St. iis alt htt uit i g t i : i i g fa i Hi i i ii | | 5 | e 8 g i | I i ii if i i i iu i ! | : iil | a uh | E i tinuing loss. looking into. It needs a drastic house: cleaning.” It does indeed. And all other concerns in the same line of usiness—government—need an im- mediate and drastic scaling down of thelr activities and expenditures. There is trenmendous and wasteful competi- ton between them in unproductive Mines, and it is berrying all the weak- er nations towards bankruptcy.. Some of the war drunkards, rightly begs i g business men, we should now be well ahead of our troubles. As Poor Rich- ard says: Of learned fools I have seen ten times ten; of unlearned wise men I have seen a hundred. A lawyer ts interested in the way in which a case is handied—tn the fine points involved, the legal quibbles, the arguments. the decision, and then the appeal, worl .wiihout end. The diplomat is interested in the game, the jockeying for place, the balancing of power against power, and in that final heaven of diplomacy, the status quo. The politician is interested in what- ever is good for the most votes at the next election. ‘The statesman is inter- Poor plaindealing! deat without is- The business man is interested in building up a surplus, all of which are necessary to the happiness of the : -— 2 aif i | if gz if g ; | sgt % ? i 7 Hie i it i reflection in some European fate ag It is individual action Uke this, individual pressure, individ ual work, individual thrift that will save and rebuila the world, not 3 laws and theories. As Poor Richard God helps them that help them VW selves —Saturday Evening Post. NOTICE. The Tadies Aid society of Casper will hold a bake mile, Satur. , March 11 at Schmidt Hawley’s store. 266 East H street. 3-10-10 g I Gained 16 Pounds and Am Brimfal Of New Life and Energy, Thanks to TANLAC of G. Washington's Coffee is equivalent ase eter in cored bare Beis There 5 no waste ;table—with delicious, healthful Measure the cost by the cup—not by the size of the can. For seatest. cconoeny Ce, leper. ste) cons, are eno, mended. Every can guaranteed to give satisfaction} Booklet free. Send 10c for special trial size. SG. WASHINGTON COFFEE REFINING COMPANT, (722 Pith Avene, New Yous \ COFF ORIGINATED BY MR. WASHINGTON IN 1909 Information Wanted a We want tc know if you are aware of the fact that when the CASPER MANUFACTURING & CONSTRUCTION ASSOCI iA- TION occupies its new building that it will be the largest and most ccanplete LS ed aphlied in the TOME EAT RE you know t present institution under the manage- ment of O. SUMMERS has developed in the past two years from a building 16x30 feet into our present fully equipped plant of 2,850 square feet of floor space? . WE ARE FORCED TO ENLARGE OUR PLANT AGAIN. Do you know of an industry pares panatey to CASPER or that should pay higher divi Our units are selling for TEN DOLLARS EACH. INVESTIGATE JOHN A. MILLER CO., FISCAL AGENTS Box 188—Phone 1780 Suites 5 and 6, Daly Bldg.