Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 24, 1922, Page 6

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Ee a of ec al ERE | a ESOS FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1922. he Casper Dailp Ecitune | finger of our imports writes, and having writ for two| Sun. Casper, Nrtrona| Months in a horizontal line we may depend upon it Ps Mount, Wyre Eusiantin Offic Twbase Dultng | that 34s due for a flirt in some other diection. With eee ogccton BUSINESS TELEPHONES 35 ara ie| the Underwood tariff law still operating, and the Eu- NES * . ih me | Fopean and Asiatic drive for markets rapidly organ- Flakes because that’s i eee . Sane | iting, that direction is logically upward. In short, we dhe well _ Pntered at Casper (Wyoming). Postofrice as escond may expect to witness a steady increase in imports Novecaber 23, 1316. | MEMBEEE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President and Editor | Business Manager| ciate Editor | y Editor anager | reached, and possibly overshot unless the guard is from month to month until the average of 1920-21 is speedily mounted and stationed at the proper posts— our customs houses. That guard is made up of pro- tective tariff schedules. They must be enlisted and assigned to duty before the enemy has invaded our industrial lines and put American production to rout. The situation is further reflected in our export trade. Pro@den, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bldg., Chicago. | During the eight months’ period 1921-22 we exported| TH ML; 386 Fitth avenues, Now York City; Globe Bids: Des-| something less than $2,500,000,000 worth of goods,| a eee eee ey en cineca ad visitors | OF leas than one-half the exports for the same! period ACCEPT are welcome. 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES | By Carriee | One Year —.. ss Stx Months . ‘Three Months of 1920-21, but 46 per cent greater than for the 1913- 14 period. Here again the values do not tell the real story, since export values have likewise fallen and the dizparity in volume of exports, 1921-22 and 1920-21 is nothing like as great as the value disparity. A great/ many export commodities show as high as a hundred VERSION oe wn @ Ae E You'll agree that you never ate suck delicious, such satisfying cereal as Kellogg’s Corn Fiakes! Those bi One Month .- rer cent increase in volume, while the values show a sunny-brown ‘“‘sweet-hearts-of-the-corn” are so Per Copy ----..- decrease, the two periods considered. Nevertheless. nating in flavor and so crispy and crunchy that you don’t One Year . Stx Months Threa Month : less period than scriptions must be paid in advance and the QT will not insure delivery after subscrip tion becomes one menth in ai ars. there are decreases in certain lines, particularly in manufactured goods. One of the reasons for this is that manufacturers are marking time. They want to know what congress is going to do about the tariff,! and they must know before they can take steps to meet the situation. Another reason is that Europe is | not buying so much because she is manufacturing more than she was a year ago. i 0 Member of Audit Bi of Circulation (A. B. ©) ssoctated Press. | s exclusively entitled to the n of all news credited tn this paper and} ews published herein. LIFE INSURANCE AS A STABILIZER. - wonder the children are thrilled to eat them! Compare Kellogg’s with imitations to realize their quality, their appetizing appeal, their wonder-crispness! Unlike imitations, Kellogg’s are never tough or leathery, or hard to eat! Each heaping spoonful of Kelloge’s is even more joyous than the last—there is no cnd to the happiness that is yours eating Kellogg’s Corn Flakes! ASK FOR KELLOGG’S! Be sire phat A 3 € eitnly cueton is es that you get Kellogg’s—the delicious SS | at Americans are not entirely absor! in the| i: D am Kick if You Don’t Get Your Triune. | present but are looking to the futare, is evident from| pe taplaered roars ney the oan tan 6 tescaisene peel tenet dl pre Ge.| the life insurance figures for the past year,” says the| W. K. Kellogg, the originator of jer | ivered to you by special messenger. Make it your duty to| Minneapolis Journal. “In the last twelve months more Toasted Corn Flakes. NONE ARE nt * Jet The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. than thirteen million life insurance policies were writ- GENUINE WITHOUT IT! ho ten in this country. Those represent more than eight) yula «i and a half billion dollars of new insurance. C) Nh F = : Bi figures carry both an economic and a social significance. They witness to greater foresight on ae SUCCEED oe the part of many citizens, who find in life insurance peel “The working class and the employing class have) not only protection but a good way of saving. People “n mothing in common,” is a declaration to be found in| Bard to ppendieave aot sony: all into gbene- s 7 % {ra xuries. y taking out life insurance, in one oh a wee seuprinciples proclaimed By: eligegeac el crm of policy or another, they exhibit a wholesome : we Of the Bolshevik movement—the L W. W. This state-| «1. for the future and a strong bent toward thrift. 1a ment is false just as most statements from the same) The increasing favor of life insurance has also a * |\Neon gas at a low pressure, and a CORN FLAKES tior source are false, and designed to deceive. | lurge social significance. It is som what akin to home-| An Ideal Idle Idyll high frequency current of about 300,- _ A There is no distinctly working class nor a separate) peli in cs implication. A life insurance pol- | 000 cycles was employed to excite the | Also makers of KELLOGG’S KRUMBLES and KELLOGG’S BRAN, cocked and krambled in, employing class in the United States or anywhere else! icy, if carried for any length of time, means a citizen transformer. mi Where labor thrives. ‘There may be an employed and| more firmly rooted in the soil of his community. By | When, to cauiltlower A Raattra! ir Hana taotonaerae ices pew Sento ts only ite the expect | n,n employing class, but even so the line of demarka-| taking out a life insurance policy, a man not’ only And the Hiawatha’s Highly hicing|™emt#! stages at present and the) ae : 5 x isti . ae ves hostages to the future, but makes himself d When the Pyrenees are peering higher on high. amount of light given out ts not large, | vn tion is so slight as to be barely distinguishable. Most] rives hostage u jmself an ee os up peagned stripe cere ah 7 nd ©mMployers are also workers although not receiving} his family more secure in the present. hanagrmag team ‘ aord could be commercially made in the| t, their compensation in the form of a daily wage. The| “For any citizen an insurance policy represents just | Wen, the rubber stamp is rubbing, | Taxo a pact at ccesponioan form of @ standard fixture around \ ° Nee eae ee te ee ee eee | so gach capital, 20 amneli saving, 401 ames security. ren the wgemhers te, fenton Souk] Oey ero eens, aoe Lo | wight itne eakae eaves Goulabe Tic: Baas CAST SECOND STREET PHONE 1288 ned employers are drones in the hive of industry. It thereby gives him a stake in the regular ongoing of| the poly is.a wog. bling faster than the ransom ran)}—|Ped- The lamp will last indefinitely 2 sor Regardless of the attempt to create erroneous im-|the social and economic order. In this sense inoue. To write it rightly, make it sprightly,| Unless the glass is broken, and yee These are our regular prices. Let us help you make wi pressions by a deliberate misuse of terms, the state-|ance policy-holding, like home-owning, is a. social|When the insincere are E. Nightly, lightly, and contritely; ie only emer sdoe ae tet the dollar go a long way. en ‘ment is nevertheless wholly false. The working class) stabilizer. Insurance is an excellent jllustration of aj4B@ the windowsill ts E For the canopy can do it if the canny|'" Place » ae perry rue ing in} business, co-o; j jel in i And the cirlbiribims are cheering soft} candle can. ing- required. equality eo and the employing class have almost everything in| ness, co-operative and socizi in its nature, and yet And Bagh Sey ‘Ww. B YOND! light is soft and pleasing and as it is BEEF VEAL ae common. There can be no employed class unless there| Carried on and controlled within limits by individuals | ke ic sas] Pai SS prwiaee Sir ay lanes Choice T-Bone, Ib.32%c | Shoulder Steak .._221%c ‘vo are employers. There can be no employers unless/ nd private initiative. It tends to stabilize society, A ‘ strain the eyes.—C. Stow. Choice Sirloins, 1b. 30c | Loin Steak 32,0 » there are men who have first worked and earned and| nd to protect it from the dangers of socialism, bol. Lights of the Future peg nah Jenin tale Perdue ataciszce n bs ‘SS aaa aga Papen heat de ame 22%; saved in order that they may have moncy with which! shevism and similar vagaries.” ss | mercury vapor lamp ts st Dreseat = M ks Short Cuts or Club Shoulder Roast —_2: Ef to employ others in useful occupation, ———_o—____ Av ztag “cei wide! ccarign tieet ital Susan, cacti oe eee German Mar | eA ae pet FOE ET The two have much in common. Not only the| FARM PRICES ABOVE PRE. WAR PERIOD no wires leading to it and glowing in |ture studios. Both of these types re-| 5 \g Roun St TC Ib. 18¢ vstul, a). 14c amount but the regularity of the wage of the employe " + [the darkness sets up an interesting |quire electrodes, or terminals, scaled Hit New Low Hamburger Steak, Ib. Bttiffed) jjer ee depends upon the continued prosperity of the employ-| | Our Democratic friends who a short while ago were|‘-"'2 7f speculation as to the illumi-|in the giass, but they have a long jg Choice Pot Roast, Veal Chops. er, The employe has, therefore, a very vital inter-|.telling the world with jazz music accompaniment about Baton of the future, Nobody sup-|1ife because there are no parts which _— per Ib.______16 yc SPECIALS est in the prosperity and success of the undertakings “Eepublican prices” for farm products have shut off Pot fF an sey ecg ates hb ag Coen Ga ct es REG aie IR ee gs a eS RS Good, meaty Shoulder Fresh. Ground Bone, Of ‘the employer. On the’ other band the employer the noise and are bearing down hard on the soft, men staar ate cree i toe ie cerns a Spon ttseit |German marks throughout the day Boil, Ib.___.14e has an equally vital interest in the welfare of his em-. pedal. ne) ployes. In order to render satisfactory service the employe must be in good health, must be properly fed, clothed, and housed, must be reasonably well satis-’¢ At this writing wheat is selling at $1.85 to $1.40 a bushel; corn, 65 cents a bushel; oats, 43 cents; rye, the present arrangem+-t of wires with bulbs that have to be screwed in the form of a ring. This ring was | brought the rates down to .029% in slipped over an tron core wound with | the final hour of the stock exchange into their sockets and renewed fre-|the proper number of turns of wire|Thursday shattered all previous rec- Prime Rib Roast, extra fine this week, boned and rolled, Ib__.224%2c 81% Ibs. for____....25c Weinies, Ib.___-_ 22 %e Frankfurts, Ib 22 4c ar-cured Dry $1.10; hay, $20 to $25 ton; hogs, 11 ; fat @uently is cumbersome and ineffi-|through which alternating | current ords. 4 7 . 6 Sugar-c fied and have a hope of improving his condition through jymbs, ists cents, end ctllag tare aedeeiel Gani ye: Stent. Research work has, suoccetied nj veas cased to Saw. |The magnetlan, |. Deslers attributed, the further week: Prime ae Hons, SatSe a Beef, Ib......----—45¢ Sp Sener, ee Seay oo etbeh he pectoeras tock fa peoportion ree the ease tee Meee, Serine ge oer eco pees tans Peer UB in ee SOAS agit Park oo aT IAs i i is i i e . A Oo sexy, ie im jescence set up it av " sine at besagtten) Ba ae eres Tee aan| These prices are not only higher by from 50 to 100|by induction, where tho electric cur-|ed therein and if the parts were prop. | Paris last night an dthe firm. attitude | 8 Ibs. for__..........25« | Sugar-cured Ham, are 0: oe wercifes iH 4 Gs if ve j Per cent than six months ago, but they are higher than|rent bridges an interval purely by|erly proportioned this voltage ionized!o fthe United States government for Shoulder Steak 2 ibs. 35¢ sliced to fry. od pueterence s> thoes who hive reridered the longest ‘and ts waren ithe all endl rinks of 1913 and the|electric energy. To be sure the light|the vapor and caused it to glow, giv-|the payment o fthe expenses of, the if Good grade sliced pened efficient hia encourage them in fake Seokond spring of 1914. That period is taken for comparison| +5 only an experiment and so far is| ing out light in a similar mee ca ed of occupation on th> Rhine. PORK Bacon, Ib 30c their earnings, offer them an opportun’ £ | bees 4 not practical for commercial purposes, |the Moore and the Cooper: tt yee SE ETS 3 an interest in the enterprise, and never fail to recog-| {c-2use the only crop harvested and sold during peace| Pot Bre °ucuntor commercial DUTT lamps, but of @ pleasing orange color, Transo Cigare—Union Made. Pork Shoulders, whole | Home-made Mince Meat nize merit by promotion. eee aaron eer touninteatlOn | Wad LEN8 §CEOD | eae irene ashi = repecinaa eee or half, Ib.___19¥4c 1 25 sf harvested in the fall of 1913. The 1914 crop was not The principles enunciated by these radicals by what- ever name you may choose to call them, have no other purpose than to create discontent and bring on a state of chaos in society. They are designed to deceive men who have had small experience and are not accus- tomed to analyze statements placed before them. In the United States, fortunately, the proportion of those who are so ignorant as to be thus deceived is relative- ly small, and, therefore, the I. W. W. movement has gained little headway. ‘The great majority of the working people of the United States, whether wage earners or those working on their own account, recog- rdze the truth of the statement made by the late Col.! | harvested when the European war broke out and at no |subsequent time during the Wilson administration| were conditions and prices normal. _At the prices the farmer is receiving today he is better off than be was during the peak of prices in war times because the purchasing power of his money is greater today than it was then. In other words,' wheat at $1.35 today will buy more of almost any com- | modity than wheat at $2.20 during the war. Farm im- | plements. have been radically reduced in price. Farm wages are approaching the pre-war basis. The farm-: er will be able to buy binder twine this year fori less than 10 cents. neon gas have been carried to the point where the tube has been caused to give out light although no wires have been attached to it. In the optil- nary form of electric illumination the ligtit is usually produced by an in- candescent form of filament or by carbon electrodes. The life of both of these types is limited by the burning out of the incandescent element. Of course in the case of the arc lamp this can be easily renewed but at the cost of frequent trimming. The type of incandescent bulb in common use has been improved through the subst Goodby e Boils! Wil Rid You of Bolle, Pimples, of time. The power of its Pork Chops, Ib..25-2744c Pure Pork Sausage, home-made, 2 Ibs. 35¢ Small Pork Loins, whole or half, Ib...._26c Pork Steak____22Y%ec Lean Shoulder Butts, fine to bake, Ib....22%c Spare Ribs____.._174c Fresh Side ....____._.22c Fresh Hocks_—....12%¢c Home-made Link {hp pRee en, Oysters, New York Counts, pint...........45¢ Calf Tongues, lb___.20e Beef Hearts__...__ 8c Calf Liver__....____25¢ Harkermer Country Full Cream Sharp Cheese, Ib.___.....__40e¢ YOUNG MUTTON Rib and Loin Chops, per. ib. 2ooS .30c 1% id: ie Seusage 1b: 25¢ | Shoulder Steak.._221%¢ : ‘Theodore Roosevelt when he said: 5 i tution of tungsten for the carbon fila- lients ts acknowledged by au! i age, Y : “If the laboring man permits himself to put improp-|, This year’s crop will be produced at a Jess cost to| ment. Soveral types of lamp using tm Gusratiteed to ho purely vegetable Pig Tails, Ib.........17Ygc Papuld snes 1b Wiee dg er burdens on capital he will bring everything down the farmer than any crop raised since 1912-13. That! candescent vapor have been developed ears a) skin of Peters PURE LARD ZO: u oR ne “g ‘with a crash; and even if the man higher up is smash-| the farmer himself believes this is evidenced by the|and have been used both experiment- incernends, Mutton Stew, 2 Ibs., 15¢ is will } fact that he is preparing to put in a tremendous acre-| ally and commercially. The Moore 2 Ibs. for__.__.___35¢ ed, this will be small comfort to the man lower down : sabes, ae HAMS if he too is under fhe ruins.” age of cereals this year. light used very long tubes filled with Raementianas Seats . for__...... c iy The fact of the matter is that the employing class|__ Moreover, farmers are spending a lot of money and] “ira to slew theouek the wee Pranufsctare mew biood Bebe, for: $1.60 Your Choice—Sugar and the employed class have about everything in com-| Paying high prices in order to restock their farms,| of q nigh voltage clectric curreat| Are yeu “up te the neck” tm blood im- manufacture new bio ¢ 50 Ibs. fo: —$7.50 Cured Skinned Hams, mon and they must work together if they succend for if they pull apart it is the simple matter of failing together. wee cts HOLDING BACK PROSPERITY. Delay in pending tariff legislation is always de- moralizing to industry. The fiscal year 1920 was the record year in our import trade. ‘That year we im- | which makes livestock in great demand at splendid, |prices. During the crisis of last year and the year be- fore thousands of farmers sacrificed their breeding stock in order to get ready money. They are now in the market to replenish their stock. Banks have plenty of money and between them and the War Finance corporation the farmer is not ex- periencing much difficulty in getting all the money or credit he needs té carry him through the year until through the glass. This type was not much used commercially, but a sim- '? 8.8.8. is one of the greatest ali d: ti in two sizes. The lar- bine news Ser size is the’ ical, bleod-purifiers known. Try it, cor © more econo —— Make More Money-Sell the BACON Supreme, whole or half slab, Ib...._.35¢ Premium, whole or half slab, Ib__.__..35¢ Whole or Half. Armour Star -36c Swift Premium ____36¢ Morris Supreme ....._36c Ham Shanks 17%yc WE DELIVER TO ANY PART OF THE CITY TWICE A DAY. e e e i ported $5,238,000,000 worth of foreign goods, a vol-| harvest. : Hupmobile in This Town 3 STOP AND SHOP. x ume which spurred thonwave nl eneaal corte to wie a reasonably face: in so pret cuene : , WE BUY THE BEST—DO YOU? : sass the Fordney tariff bill last July. e following} conditions are concerned, ‘armer wil in er Sas . 5 d reputation o: ; seaeall year, 19217 tiara lpaslacroist up in the volume| shape after his harvest next fall than he has been in Within a brief periods mie, up een Soniye fnecat n of imports, but not so great as was indicated by the) many years. There is no pessimism existing in agri- mobile will be represen’ in : img neautts MoED Ee b feee 7 decrease in total value because there was a decided| cultural states. Everyone feels the worst is over and community by a live-wire dealer. a Pi ace e Asia iste slump in prices due in part to falling exchanges andj that from now improvement in agricultural circles You may be the man. tory—crea' as te ‘d 7 in part to lower production costs in Europe. ‘That| wil! be not only steady but rapid. Whether you are in the motor car mand in every city, wn ani ; -«- Year we imported $3,654,000,000 worth 2g goods, or} Further evidence of this fact is furnished by a ques- business, or in some other busi- countryside. : nearly twice the pre-war average. The decrease was) tionnaire which was circulated among the farmers of interested in our : . 3 somewhat rapid from month to month and the fiscal| the Pacific Northwest by a trio of farm pablications liberal, sabes deat dealer Greatly increased production now 5 —_—-year opening July, 1921, recorded something of a mo-| This questionnaire asked the farmers not only regard- ‘tio enables us, for the first time, to x mentum of this decrease, that month $178,000,000/ ing their prospects but regarding what they intended proposition. supply this demand. ‘ ai worth of imports coming in. to do in the way of improvements, if anything. The Just as long as you are a sound a A 4 os And then the needle began to waver and to indicate| answers showed that one-third of the farmers of that business man and a hustter, you You are invited to help us do this. Be 2 movement the other way. In November we import-| section will be in the market this year for fencing, can’t help make _ exceptional You will have the advantage of f ed $211,000,000 worth, and in December $237,500,000| paint and other construction material. Perhaps about profits by supplying the large po- dealing with a large motor car : | worth of goods. The current year opened with a| one-fifth of them are going to be in the market for all tential demand for Hupmobiles in » with a very liberal slight downward trend, but the value of imports for| sorts of farm machinery such as tractors, tractor this territory. i policy. Our discount rate is = January and February was greater than for the same | Plows, gas engines, motors, drills, etc. Our definite, specific plan assures much more liberal than that ordi- months last year. Both months of the current year —=—- we imported $217,000,000 worth of goods, while for| as a fourth of the replies indicate purchases this year January of 1921 we imported $209,000,000, and for| February, $214,500,000 worth of goods. For the eight! new canning outfits, and other household equipment. months of the fiscal year 1922, ended February, we imported $1,623,000,000 of foreign products, an in- crease of about 33 1-3 per cent over the pre-war fig- ures. more marked. And it is the volume of gozds which is If measured by volume the increase would be! the United States, according to well posted observers. The housewives are also reflecting better conditions, of such household equipment as washing machines, This is the natural reaction following a period of strictest economy and self-denial. What is true in the northwest is true throughout! you of many prospects and sales. More Hupmobiles in 1922 Heretofére, the metropolitan cen- ters have entirely absorbed all the Hupmobiles.the factory could narily offered. This is a real opportunity. Grasp it. Write now, at once, without obligation for all details —-which will be gladly given and Take. freely. High-Class Shoe Repairing at Lowest Prices —— a Northwest Corner Second and Durbin e ¢ s the ° The farmer has permitted his equipment to run down ‘ Downstai: t to be considered in estimating the effect of foreign! and has maclectedl needed repairs mad painting. Every S B I MOTOR SALES Co. : pane) i imports in displacing domestic products and lessening | bit 5f money he has been able to get hold of has been ‘ rather? = the opportunity for American Inbor. | applied to paying off debts. With prices of commod- Distributors J.0. BRITTAIN, Prop. > Rarely does a graph remain constant, Its move- ities declining and a good crop this year, the agricul- , ne ment at a certain level for a short time js generally foliowed by x decided trend-up or down. The moving a tural states will be in the market after the harvest for the purchase of all sorta of commodities, 1260 Broadway Denver, Colorado

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