Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 20, 1922, Page 6

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) bunk he pulled at Casper with reference to his con- , from foreign deb . but Mr. Kendrick and his fellow Democrats lined up} PAGE SIX Che Casper Daily Cisdsune Lmruct every evening except Sunday + Casper, Natrona County, Wye. Publication Offices, Tribune Building. | BUSINE: TELEPHONES 15 and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments Entered at Casper (Wyoming), Postoffice as second class matter, November 28, 1916. | ASSOCIATED PRESS | ~ President and Editor) Business Manager) «Associate Editor acoceeess= City Editor Advertising Manager MEMBER THE x BR HANWAY .... EARL BE. HANWAY - W. H. HUNTLBY R B EVANS SHOMAS DALY opresenzatives, O23 Ateger Bldg. Chicago, | ; Globe Bidg.; Bos-| mane are on file in offices and visitors ton, Mass. Copies of t Chicago fhe New York, z are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. | By Carrier | One Year -.--- a one neneene sn -$7-80 3.99 Six Months ——-- Three Months a One Month — ea hE Pee Capy --——- aeebee al One Year -.- = 87-80 Six Months - ++ 3.90 Three Mont! soccesere 1.95 Ne subscription by mafl accepted for less than| three months. | Ail subscriptions must be paid in advance and the) Dafty Tribune will insure delivery after subserip- fen becomes one m ‘h in arrears. Member of Audit Burean of Circulation (A. B. ©) Member of the Associated Press. The Asmociate’ Press is exclusively entitied to the! ‘age for publication of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Eick if you Don't Get Your Tribune. 5 or 16 any time between and 8 o’tlock p. m. recetve your Trizune. A paper will be de to you by apecial messenger, Make it your duty to Tribune know when your carrier misses you. <> | ] NOT A POWERFUL UPHOLDER. | As-an upholder of the hands of President Harding, Senator John B. Kendrick of Wyoming is aither zero/ or nil, or both. If memory ‘serves it was dut a short time after tus presidential election of 1920 that Senator Kendrick visited Sheridan and addreseed the local Commercial club and said in the course of that address: “I can be depended upon to elways uphold Harding, ete.” It was a Republican gathering, so far as politics was con- cerned, ax aro all gatherings of consequence in Sheri- dan, It was just a Mttle political deception John B.) was polling on his Republican neighbora on a chance/ of getting by with it, Exactly the same character of version to the Republican policy of protective tariff, | At the time of tho Sheridan utterance, Republican) newspapers in Wyoming told their readers what sort) of hypocrisy it all was, and advised them to await the) first test of the Kendrick sincerity. It eame the other dsy, while John B. was visiting in Washington on 1s brief vacation from his Wyoming campaign activities. | The absent Mr. Kendrick was unexpectedly present| when the Robinson amendment, designed to nullify the results of the limitation of armaments conference, came to a vote in the senate, Mr. Kendrick voted with his Democratic brethren| for the amendment. It was the vote of a Democrat) aguinst a Republican president’s measure for the gen-| erally xpproved purpose of peace among the nations of the world. It was in no sense a political measure) solidly against it simply because ft had its origin with a Republican administration, As an “‘upholder of the president’s hands” as he promised his Sheridan friends hhe would be Jom B. proved heap punk on the first that came to him. He will do-exnctly the same thing-when the test on the protective tariff bill comes to him, If he dosen’t vote against the measure it will be because he is in Wyoming telling Republicans.how sincerely he believes in it. Tt is almost time -to wake-up to John B. Kendrick amd check up on his promises and his performances. $$ __ AN UNWORKABLE SOLUTION. Over in the Manitoba legisinture they have a so- ealled “labor group” and in a meeting called to con- sider the matter of unemployment, a resolution was peesed condemning the present capitalistic system, It is fortunate that this is not the attitude of labor in general. If we are to have employment, there must be em- ployers. We cannot have employers unless we have st-ved something from their earnings and use that sav- ing in the purchase of equipment enabling them to employ others to assist them, No man wants to em- ploy others to assist him unless he is making a profit by thus using his savings, The man who {s not per- mitted to make a profit on his eavings will either hide) them away or put them into non-taxable and non- productive securities, in either event diminishing the amount of employment. There you have the whole “capitalistic” problem in n few words. Everybody knows that there are a lot of men who never can make a success of working for| themselvs because they are poor managers, Their} work is either done at a great disadvantage or is en- tirely fruitless unless they work under the direction of ve a better knowledge of the tqsk or ne proper performance of the work higher degree of attention. The careless, the} hntless, the inept, we shall always have with us, n order to utilize their work to the best advan- | such men must work under the supervision of men of initiative, s and energy. If every youth re- othe: | Washington deals with a separate subject, instead cf There is noe other source than the peopie’s purses. The | only question there has ever been in all the hue and) ery with reference to bonus has been the willingness of the people and their ability to dig up the money. Sceretary Mcilon told the country early in the pro- ceedings that there was no way by which the Amer- iean taxpayer could avoid the burden. Congress has struggled to devise some miraculous means of ebtain- ing the money without anybody knowing it or feeling the effects; but there is no such means, Whatever your earning power’ may be or whatever your income a share of the result will be devoted to the payment-of the bonus. The wisdom of the whole! thing and the amount end manner of payment rests| with those selected by you to make your laws and di-| rect your public affairs. ——___. ADVANCING WORLD PEACE. No ome contends that the first efforts at Washing-| ton toward world peace were complete in detail; but| every sincere believer in better things will grant that! it was a great advancement in international relations and the negotiations should be ratified first by the| government ealling the conference and propo:ing the| program to be followed. j There is no inconsistency @isplayed when men who oppesed ratification of the treaty of Versailles ask! for ratification of the treaties negotiated at Washing- ton. The Versailles treaty, with its interwoven league| of nations, was objectionable for many reasons. It| established a super-state to which its members would| be indefinitely bound and whose mandates its mem- bers would be morally if not legally bound to fulfill.| It created new international relations and territorial boundaries, some of which we did not approve, but| bound us to uphold them if we became members. Ap-| parently it gave the league of nations a right to take! action upon controversies arising over such questions! as immigration and tariffs. It left te the league an| undefined and slmost unlimited jurisdiction. The bas, sis of the league was forre. The treaties negotiated at the armaments confer ence are different in every respect. They establish new agreements, but those agreements are definite and certain, so that each nation knows the extent of the obligations {t assumes, ‘The international rights es- tablished are by mutual agreement of all concerned, and not over the protest of some, as wus the case in the treaty of Versailles, No nation is bound to en-| ferce an obligation the justness of which it may hold| in doubt. The plan of reduction of armament pre-| scribes specifically what each nation undertakes to do, instead of leaving this to the decision of some trib-| unal yet to be named. Each treaty negotiated at| combining unrelated subjects which must stand or fall together, as was done at Versailles. The treaties of Washington were negotiated and! signed by an American delegation which included senators of both political parties, and the full proceed- ings of the conference have been placed before the senate, Not only in letter but in spirit there has been| an observance of the constitutional requirements that treaties be made by and with tie advice and consent of the senate. Although some people would prefer that there be even greater reduction of armament agreed upon the results of the conference in that respect are far great- Ge Casper Daily Cribune Two Houses T have Mved since I was born, four score and ten years ago, in this Old House— It is @ long time, four soore years and ten— lived and had my being in this Old House, TRE pier we ee It is old, weather stained and gray, it is dark and gloomy; no ght filters through the dust-covered windows; er than was hoped for when the conference was called. | The treaties are a very substantial advance in the di- rection of world peace and understanding. They lift! military burdens and reduce the danger of controversy| that might lead to war. After a reasonable degree of, discussion, in order that every viewpoint may be con-! sidered, there should be no delay in taking a vote and thus clearing the way for attention to other pressing problems. ———____o—______ OUR TRIBUTE TO STEEL. “By fiat of the United States Steel corporation,” says the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, “the middle west pays the steel industry an annual arbitrary tribute esti- mated by the Western Association of Rolled Steel Con- sumers at $75,000,000, This tribute is put in the form of fictitious freight charge, which is applied on the! price for rolled steel produced at western plants just as if it were produced at Pittsburgh, “If an Indianapolis manufacturer buys steel at Gary he must pay the freight not from Gary but from Pitts- burgh. If a Chicago fabricator sends his truck to the South Chicago-Gary region for a load of steel he pays the mill price plus $7.60 a ton, which is the freight rate from Pittsburgh, “This graft, called ‘Pittsburgh plus,’ which the con-| sumers’ organization charges in a petition to the Fed- eral Trade Commission came into being with the birth of the United States Steel corporation, is passed on as a charge to builders and renters, buyers of farm mar) chinery and all users of steel. “The alleged arbitrary private tax of §75,000,000 has a large spread, but it is a vast sum which could be) put to far more beneficial use than swelling the coffers) of a giant corporation, It is indefensible in principle anda yielation, in spirit at least,.of the anti-trust laws as well as an economic burden and commercial handi- cap on the entire country between the Pittsburgh area and the Rocky mountains, “Application to the Federal Trade commission to have the discrimination removed was first filed in Au-| gast, 1919, Hearings have since been held and were} resumed in Milwaukee last Monday, All testimony is expected to be in within three or four-months, “It is taking a long time to right a simple injustice which has been condemned by the American Farm Bu-! reau federation, several trade organizations and the! legislatures of Mlinols, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa and Missouri. Meanwhile the people pay.” ———_o-—__—. AND WHY NOT? One of the Rome newspapers criticises the United States for non-participation in the Genoa meeting, suying that “the United States tries to make its own political and financial interests predominant.” If par- ticipation in the Genoa conference would mean mak- ing those interests subordinate to European influence, fused to be an apprentice, we could never have skilled | workmen, and without skilled workmen there would be} no progress in industry. More than that, without a saving of some of the profits, thus creating capital, | there could be no employment of the unskilled under! the supervision of the skilled, because of the lack of} tools, mate chops, selling agencies, advertising, etc.| Condemning the first essential of employment is a} poor way to solve the problem of unemployment. | Tt must be noted, however, that the Manitoba 1a-| hor group offered a solution for the unemployment situation—to have the government provide work for the unemployed at reular wares, How this could pos- sibly be a solution {s not reddily comprehendec, for the government must get its funds to pay labor through taxes, and the taxes must be eolleeted from capital I? capital is to be destroyed, the government will have no one from whom to collect taxes and consequently no money with which to pay wages. Confiscation or annfhilation of capital has been tried] , and {t did not work out to the satisfac- tion of anybody—even to those originating and advo-| ¢ the theory. It ought not bo necessary to furth-| mpress the lesson on Canadians or Americans by y purchased experience. | o— OF COURSE THEY PAY. | less of the plan that may finally be workev| out in the bonus matter the people ultimately have got! to put up the billions required to pay the obligations. | This holds whether the soldiers get their money} adjusted es, receipts f, mis from bond | assets to counter-balance her war liabilities. the charge states the exact truth, Of course America wants to keep its interests predominant, which it has} a perfect right to do, being the richest and most pow- erful nation in the world, But such a policy does not) necessarily include selfishness. Amefican resources have been extensively devoted to the rehabilitation of Europe. The difference is that they have been em- ployed under American, rather than European, di- rection. SS Ee EYE ON THE MAIN CHANCE, Combatting the theory that America’s great indus- trial progress has been due chiefly to richness of agri-| cultural resources, an eminent authority neserts that ica has greater agricultural resources than North America. Now we can understand why Great Britain took pains to get control of practically all of the Af- rican continent outside the Sahara desert. England was not short-sighted when it came to getting a few —— CAUSES UNEASINESS. Our dear relatives on the other side of the ocean are much agitated over the threatened American ship sub- sidy program. They see in it the greatest single menace to their own maritime interests. Which is) pretty good proof of its effectiveness and an additional reason for its adoption by congress. ee ee If, 2s Jim Cox asserts, Henry Lodge is an Aaron Burr, for voting against the ratification of the league/ of ns covenant, wilt David I. Walsh, a Democratic senator from the same state, be a Benedict Arngld for r the door is loose on the hinges snd tremulously swings open while decaying odors float out; the roof trembles and shakes, on the rotting foundations, oy Let cnet tetra, It is unsafe : I must move; Where can I go? eel bah | iri 3% Mek, toni). 2 Through the darkened windows dimly seen white hands beckon me. ©, re artitte As the foundations fall the dim-seen hands reach down |and lift me from the wreck. Crushed by the years the Walls give way, the roof falls in and a great dust heap les where tho House was. 8: See ME Ie SNe A New House, a House that Will Not Decay has been provided for me. , —E. Richard shipp. Man of the Hour On the eceasion of the memorial in honor of the late Colonel Charles Young, U, 8. A, the Rev, H. C. Cole- man of the Second Baptist church de- livered the fgllowing tribute from his pupit Inst Sunday. “Nations and men alfke Bide their time, Itve thelr short span and lose their entity in the vast chaos of ob- lUvion. Nations are guided by an un- sesn force through the eyes of thelr dynasties and leave thelr impression for the human tongue and hand to historically record. ‘The acons of time revolve and evolve in a never ending sheme of observation and the heritage of nations is viewed with true critic- ism and each awarded {ts prominence and glory—ever remembered by what tt has contributed to the goodness and greatness of the finite and the hope- fulness of ultimately attaining the in- finite, “The intellectually fearless Cicero speaking in the Roman forum re- marked that “no nation however fa- vored by the mercy of the Gods can rise higher than the individual status of its constituents, “So through the pomp and glory of the ages, man has run true to form as being the greatest thing on earth and his mind es his greatest temporal asset, “Sines earlfest civilization in the ac- Kiddies’ Colds Be Eased Quickly Sao ite quisition of territory and the reten- ion of natione] pride and integrity, tho soldier has held an eminent place in tho true greatness of the nation, “National and international je compels that in the real justice of affairs due credit and unselfish praise be rendered those characters who in the trend of the times contribute the fullest measure of life and service to| the glory of his fellowmen. So Greece lauded the valor of Alexander the Great. “Rome continues even now to favor the military genius of Caesar, England | never forgets Kichner. France loves Napoleon and America points with pride to Washington. “In the sweetness of these praise songs of the ages to military heroes the most solemnly plaintive and har- monious notes and meesures should be sung to honor the darker skinned men: and amid the discord of the ac- claming tumult the chfldren of Etheo- pia have cause to inject the forceful melody of Hannibal, the solemn ag- gressiveness of ‘Toussiant L' Ouverture and the quiet suaveness and har- monious determination of our man of the hour Colonel Young. One month ago today we assembled \in solemn | thoughtfulness of Gals instrument for the abolition of America’s curse of sla- very, A, Lincoln, “Then too we casually as it were reflected on the wrrtues of Fred} Douglas. “Since that memorable occasion the world of events has continued in rev- | olution and evolution and God in His Infinite wisdom has seen fit to grace the present age with the privilege of |paying solemn homage to America’s | greatest soldier, an example of her finest citizenship and one of the mod- ern world's greatest and best men, our | own beloved Col. Charles Young. “Thus it is that today the b7th an- niversary of his birth we chant in our hearts a soft requiem to this man who ignored taunts of West Point, who braved the perils of Liberia, who bore the test of the fevers of Haiti, who endured the burning sands of Mexico and who in the clos- Ing years of his exemplary life bore the pangs of curbed desire to serve his country rather than oven murmur protest to the force of obligation and the call of duty. What finer American has ever lived. ‘The darkest blot on our war department is the caso of crush- ing this man of honor. We cannot hope in these few brief hours and in so unfair a world to render just mem- ory to this life. “At home, among friends and asso- A SEALS-Rupat ——S R STAMP, =) SacHs]avior ( Ground Floor Store Room, Suitable for Store. ARKEON BLDG. Phone 1485 Just Opened Planing Mill 214 West B Street Am Prepared to Give You Mstt- mates On— MILL WORK, CABINET WORK, REPAIR WORK Agent for American Metal Weather Strips. Wm. E. Pratt Phone 1806W re A MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1922. ‘The number thirteen is never used place with ready hands and fervent sg up their hearts the choice marble in honor |by the Italians in makin: and just recognition of thé pride of lotteries. nobility and the man of the hour, Col. | Charlies Young.” | = me at the Smoke T-ouse. value in steel desks: No fewer than 10,000 words were added to the English language by the Meet | World war A new Size 60" x 303" x 34% ESKS of end@ing steel, with bronze hardware, linoleum tops, generous drawers and knee space. Well designed, sanitary and fire- resisting these Art Metal desks will give years of satisfactory service. Made in many styles—single pedestal, double pedestal and type- writer models, that harmonize in design and finish with your Art Metal files. s See these unusual desk values today THE MILLS COMPANY 139 West Second Street Casper, Wyo. clates and the din and smoke of world tempest he was even the same incar. nation of nobility. “Robbed of the world’s floral of fering and personal glory our only hope for redeeming our country from the blackness of this sin of forgetful- nese is that every fair American culti- vate in the garden of his life a flower of purest bloom of pride and principle, matured with care in memory of this unsung military marvel. An unfulfill ed.pledge, a forgotten promise, a deat ear to duty's call and an uncompleted task were never his. “His life was a blessing and his death was a beatitude, now becomes the duty of the race, the nation and the world to perpetuate his memory as @ legacy and golden cased heritage, containing not only the jewels of a beautiful career, and the treasure of & Chftistizn principal but the gift of divine providence for which wo all alike should be thankful. In erecting the temple of fame let all men and na tions work together and in fashioning an inner shrine to this loyalty and de votion. May West Point, Wiberforce, Halt!,, Liberia, Etheopia, America and the world of Mving men carve and The Right of the Sick _ to Get Well STILL STANDS UNCHALLENGED Article I, By B. J. PALMER, President, Palmer School. Answer to Articles Published in Leslie’s Weekly. If they know they are sick, if they know and find Chiropractic which to their satisfaction gets them well, is not that the most important thing? i Chiropractic is one of the aids that is listening to the cry from Mace- onia. The results show that Chiropractic is 85 per cent efficient, even in those cases that are pronounced incurable by other professions. Chiropractic teaches analysis instead of diagnosis, and the adiust- ment of the spinal column instead of the administering of medicinal Zemeriles. is elie ese practices simply illustrate the fundamental di = tween Chiropractic and the other methods in question. aiRerencts He The fundamental idea back of the practice of medicine is that dis- ease is an entity to be killed, while the idea back of Chiropractic is Fiat cease a condition sore adjusted. e fundamental idea behind the practice of medicine i: phenomenon of life is the result of a chemical combination Sans pe fundamental idea behind the practice of Chiropractic is that this chemi- cal combination of the physical body is the result of i i chemical constituents by an innate Seeliigence. pie eeeninon ot its Chiropractic teaches that behind all spiritual sical expression there is an innate intelligence t the functions and faculties, and that this something performs its func- , intellectual and phy- hat expresses itself in tions through the medium of the brain and nerve that health is but the normal expression of fanetion Aaa ference with the mechanism, through which this fundamen’ is conveyed, viz., the nerves, that this interference occurs in 95 per cent of cases at the point where the nerves leave the spine and is due t m Late aes ue a vertebra. oa Upon the adjustment of this vertebra to the norm iti power within—the power that performs all the-functions eee she aqatn exprerecs eel normally in what is termed health. ae lave always been content and will feel perfect i i this entire matter in the hands of the Bone neh ee ar eed Jeaving get well, and are willing to try all methods, holding fast to that whi h he has found to be geod. It would be eminently unfair to tect Or ick body who was sick in the hands of any man or body of men ae ery- unued to fail, yet continued to believe that what they believed 7 5 all there was to be thought; who made 80 per cent of mistakes Sata Ui manded dictatorial control, living in the iopes that some day hee mi ht stumble upon something that might prove to be right; who admit th “hope” and “camouflage” were the best treatments they had no ba refused the right of any other man or association of ‘men to ae at improve upon it. Society’s interests are best served by trustin are 2 mass opinion of the majority ; the sick are the majority in atekton, the Drs. J. H. and A. G. Jeffrey : CHIROPRACTORS Suite 318 to 323, Midwest Bldg. Office Phone 706, Res. 93 It teaches © an inter- ital impulse

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