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PAG me) ma bl crs moa Oe PERT PSHE ROR EES TETAS LES aRL Sees shRet ane he Casper Daily Ecidune AGE SIX ' €de Casper Dailp Cribuhe books have not done well, and that the public still) geced every eventag exougt Suncay at Casper, Natrona| demands what is clean and wholesome. | County, Wyo. Pablication Offices, Tribune Building ‘The big theatrical successes of the season are plays i qs and i6| that the most exacting parents would not hesitate to Departments/tahe their children to see. - % e ] Movies that are sufficiently clean to pass any blue Be), Postotrice, A= second Cls*] jaw censorship draw the biggest houses und are brought back to be run over and over. Plays that omitted to emphasize and play up any President and Editor] degenerate or morbid sex motives, and show homely - Business Manager! American virtues on the screen get houses. ~ Associate Editor} Clean stuff in the legitimate dranm and on the ‘Advertising Manager| screen that is hugely successful is distinctly American and bears no foreign label or taint, Advertising Representatives, chicago, The reeking orientalism that has been made such Loge a Saag tye Giobe ‘Bids: Bos-| & feature of the sensation movies, and that is dragred ion, Mass. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in| into so many of them, is worn stiff. the New York, Chicago and Boston offices and visitors are welcome. See Er al cen siniae s e S S t SUBSCRIPTION RATES | CLE SAM MAY HAVE TO GET THEM TOGETHER gi é | im W. H HUNTLEY i E. EVANS THOMAS DAILY . The caterers to American sudience might as well understand that control and direction of American entertainment is not going back to paganism. The average American home still pays its respects Ove Year Stx Months Three Months @Qne Month Per Copy .. One Year .... Six Months . ‘Tree Months No subscri| purity vital to honest men and women. 65 We may love a little jazzing and rough stuff at -05| times for breaking the monotony ‘of life but for a $7.80 steady diet Americans ure distinctly anti-jazz. - 3.90 ‘Theaters, publishers and film manufacturers might 1.95] as well understand this and are learning it through accepted for less period than/ their pocketbooks, a thrilling education. | three menths 4 the There is a theory that the great mass of the Am-! pene BTS mat be Pucisery after wubecrip-| eriean people can be fed up on anything that has a tion Becomes one month fn arrears. given “pa of artistic nastiness in it. f A. B OD So bool plays, movies and a certain type o: Menber of Audit Bureau of —— periodicals have been manufactured along profiteer- Member of the Associnted Press. ing Tines that are happily going bankrupt. mew Fie emaciated Prost is, exclusive'l, (is paper ana| There will always be people with easy money aiso the local news pablished herein. snd curiosity to make a brief golden harvest for SS the caterers to various forms of degeneracy. Kick it X 3 Tribane. = 5 onesen can te i ere ete eres ts Eiptoock pm.| | The American people could deport shiloads of this ee ie to reecive your Tribune. paper m™ ‘er amy necessary enjoyment, an: Tvered fo you by special mesenger. Make it your Guty 9! entting their cash to the bone will stort them. | WILLS SAINTE CLAIRB Meemg orene Snen whee re=. Publicity will ent the flood of profit: from their) Motor Cars retten plays and their rotten books and their rotten! sg movies says the Ladies’ Home Journal. | Follow the flight of Gray The blogd of our country is not yet continental-! preter prog ote miles tzed—it is still substantially American and we have —the trail of the Wills Wrong as Usual no palates for further displays of fetid orientalisms, a profit if he gave closer study| The breath of new mown hay from the farms ee om eee iutery than he apparently de-| sweeps into cur towne und chica, sal in) preferable -otes ot it. His Jeffereon banquet speech, which was/tc French perfumes and our simple old-fashioned votes ot it Te is the mture of a 1924 keynote is| Colonial decorations are more beautiful than brothel obviously refuted by present history as to keep| interiors : James in the ridiculous class and at the head of it There Is No Excuse e was left standing in November 1920. weet substance of Cox’s address was that America ' se is suffering industrial depression and international We City of Casper is not keeping faith with its peo- change is disrupted because of the refusal of this ple when there is failure to extend public facilities Country to join the League of Nations. The plain|to its newer ontlying districts. More especially, its| Week facts are that American industry has been on the) water mains. Hundreds of people have established pant upgrade nearly ever since the inauguration of lhomes within the city limits in the outer environs, THE MASTER. Republican administration demonstrated the impos-| because their means would not permit them to buy or| The centuries have come and gone; sibility of the United States subordinating its sover-| build in the closer in sections. Their property and, On city streets no more we, hear cignty and its interests to a super state. International) improvements have come upon the tax roll. They| You speak. But like a strain of song exchange has been rapidly getting back to normal—| are supporting the city government to the extent of | |The echo ‘rolls from year to yéar; getting back so rapidly as to surprise the most san- pee asia T They are not only without water but = Sh eos tar, Manda bean; ruine. they are without streets. ? J a SiuiThe one great burden to American industry has| Te is not the theory of municipal government that| “74 hero on earth you felt the sting been taxation. The internationalists who propose to/ the taxes of the people shall be devoted altogether] rave blotted out your voice, could force the United States into a league of nations are| to improvements in localities where the greatest reve- nol also debt eancellationists who would have the United} nue is derived, but to be so distributed in equitable] God's truth will alwaye find the States, either voluntarily or through the influence of| manner that all the people may receive the benefit of; _ light; the league of nations, write off from our books some] the necessities of civilized life, in the form of public| The morning comes and who can stop eleven billion dollars due this country from European | improvements, The dawn from throwing back. the nations. If that debt were cancelled it would mean| ‘The city can bring no proper excuse, not even might? an eleven billion dollar additional debt placed upon) the plea of lack of funds, for failure to provide its Meee moet Petetat on Rapes oeae the people of the United States for the liquidation of| people with water. Sewers, light, telephones, can all| ,AMOnE Ws —taught ts how to live which they would be compelled to pay increased taxes! wait if necessary; but water to drink and passable! some for probably a century to come. Scarcely anything) streets to travel upon are necessities, the city must| win not! Oh, Master, do forgive. could be done that would have a more deperssing in-| provide. It is negligent in its duty when it fails. We chatter cur way thru the world | Passing. Was there ever such arrant discussion, her historic significance in fiuence on American industry than the cancellation of * 2 consequence, m~ es debts with the asrerit have heavier Federal taxes to| Efficiency Means Control Coniptataing. War ottsh tceat rubbish, tosh or .balerdash. The sole|QUestion, her population surfelted ae. i That so much that we take for|cause of the disorder of which she| With the profits of war and wild ex- pay. CAUSE of the inefficiency of the late Wilson prey is the fact that man has|travagance, her industries inflated by Mr. Cox ignores the record and assumes that the administration and the miserable results obtained| | rayper ss compe Sher fed to raise a Iittle private | OVerexpansion from war demands-and American public will ignore the record when he at-| under the classified ‘service, it is well to look into its] ,,"7,Drirceu™,, Our Srontest aseet | fin Sombrito tind what woman so| Problems of “reconstruction, complt- tributes depreciated foreign exchange to our refusal! operaton and learn what abuses have crept into the) “xo. tn the high Places of men, | carefully “‘tidiec away" on a previous | cated and imminent. to enter the League fo Nations. The fact is, that in| system in the eight years of Democratic direction. But down in the deep silent nooks|.occasion. Once permit a woman to| “Tocay he sees peacé again estab- November 1920, when the American people decided In its original conception, the classified civil ser-jof our hearts. And our unselfish | lay @ finger upon masculine belong-|‘lished with all countries, foreign re- by a seven million majority that the United States] vice included those employes who perform purely deeds ings and between tea and dinner she| lations resumed wtih honor to our-| would not enter the League of Nations the British! routine service and whose qualifications could be de-| Are, the beautiful tles that do bind| will have “tidied way” so effecually| selves and complete justice to others, pound sterling was worth in the United States $3.33;/ termined fairly well by a competitive cxamination.| Us close to the Master of old; that it will be only by the merest good|the finest attitude of the world to- and the French franc was worth 5:7 cents, while to-} In recent years it has been extended to cover posi-| he Pearls of Great Price that we|luck that anything is ever found afer Toral leadership as evinced ever of a disposition to enter the league, the pound! equation is of more consequence than ability to pass| Deter tp de) down ths. pevietealiiiatlicatindin tights. an escatrie temenie sterling is worth $4.42, and the franc 9.2 cents. a competitive examination. The power to make ap-| of articles retrieved by diligent rail-| istration upon the soundest principles Moreover, the public assertions of Lloyd George| pointments has been practically taken out of the hands way officials from racks and under|of economy, a reduction of our pub- and other eminent European statesmen attribute de-| of the men who are responsible for results. Casper, Wyo. i i Woman, the Untidy seats of trains. Fully nine-tenths of | lic funded debt to the amount of $2,- lay in the restoration of Europe to normal industrial No large or successful private concern in the ——— these obpects of art and virtue could} 000,000,000 and a reduction of our conditions to the refusal of certain European coun-| United States conducts its business on any such There are, no doubt, untidy men.| only have been left behind by women. | floating debt-of $700,000,000, a reduced tries to balance their budgets, reduce their military} principle. ‘There are alsg, I am ready to believe | No man that I know could ever bring | taxation of over three quarters of a expenditures, and return to the normal activities of The United States postoffice department is the|tity women. But in each caso they| himself to forget a fur coat; yct with | billion dollars per year, a rejuvenated iene : largest business entheptiga\ta'tieveusi@: are the exceptions that are said/some women it must be almost a] agriculture and industrial. fabric Neither is Mr. Cox in harmony with the records It covers the entire United States. East Second and Park Ave. untidy, while a man is untidy from force of circumstance. This is chief- ly because a woman's concern for an object cesses directly she has ob- tained it and has no further use for it. Not #0 long ago women were rais- ing cain to get the vote. Now that it is theirs, they leave it lying about for anyone to pick up. has to my knowledge, lost. her tem- A woman can never wait to attain] Per, her head, her reputation and course, that women have iy one of her varied assortment of| ber husband, without so far being minds, They are muMled thinkers. As an instance of what I may perhaps term woman's permanent mental con- fusion, I have to cite case of an} Acquaintance of mine—a woman, and, in many ways a very charming one —who in the short space of a year untidy The Message of Easter eart’s desires by thn orderly, methoc | able to find any one of them again, ical route, Short cuis or nothing for a aa her. Observe her, for examiple, read- ing @ newspaper. It is a spectacle to bring tears to the eyes of any news agent who takes pride in his profes- sion. After she has had five minutes with her favorite newspaper that worthy publication is reduced to a condition of chaos which suggests that it has been run over by a steam plow on a wet day. Revival Meetings FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Grant and Lind Streets CONTINUE Set aside your evenings and do good and receive good. COME! Republican Achievements | Representative Simeon D. Fess of! Ohio, speaking on the accomplish-| ments of the Harding administratio.. in the first year of rule has said: “But a year’ago Warren G. Hard- REA coe EE wh ‘s proud boasts} ms found the nation with her rela- jthat threequarters of her working tion with many foreign countries day {s spent in traveling round after | ®t™ined to almost the breaking point man, tidying up the debris lett by his} Ber fundamental . principles under THE LESSON. Marguerite J. Newton, Easter Time |/ SUGGESTS A BETTER APPEARANCE Its employes (though I can never understand why)| hobby. sorely distressed ty the havoc of war, Tica $a Intiinates Cnt here has been alack of credit to prove a rule. A woman is naturally! ‘The real root of the trouble is, of| the prospect of gencral employment w i . due to the refusal of this country to enter the league. The records of our foreign trade show that during 1919 the United States sold abroad fn excess of its purchases, goods to the value of four billion dollars, in 1920 to the value of three billion and in 1921 to the value of two billion, making a total credit extended to foreign courtries, since the termination of the war, of nine billion dollars. It would be interesting to know how much more credit Mr. Cox thinks the United States could have extended if it had become a member of the League of Nations, and from what source, in his opinion, the United States could expect to secure ultimate payment if’larger credit had been granted. ‘A Substantial Victory {ANOTHER substantial diplomatic victory has been} 44 won by the Harding administratior®thru the State Department. The British Government has sent official notification to the United States that not only the Standard Of! Company but other citizens in this country will be given the same rights of exploration in Palestine as are enjoyed by the nationals of any government that signed the Treaty of Versailles. London reports are to the effect that not only Pales-| ine but all the former German territories adminis- tered by Great Britain under mandatory powers are to be opened to American development, and concessions will be granted to American citizens on an equality with those of any other country. Of course the action of Great Britain is strictly in keeping with the league of nations covenant, which construes a mandate as being merely a trusteeship administered primarily for the benefit of native in- habitants. But it has necessitated a firm stand, coupled with a high degree of diplomatic tact, to se- cure for the United States the rights that were hers. The value in dollars of this latest success of Secre- tary of State Hughes cannot be estimated, but it may very well mean an additional income to our citizens! of kundreds of millions of dollars, depending on their) initiative in following up the advantage given them| by the Republican administration. x Ee Back to American Standards | Ladies’ Home Journal hes of late been looking | into things that lie at the root of the temporary ills from which the country has suffered since it was brought into such close association with continental Europe during the war. The findings are included in an article entitled “Quicksands of Filth,” amd among other things: it shows that dirty plays, dirty movies, and dirty | applied to that class of employes. | the conection between the public and the routine | emphasis on his feat, while director general of rail- are in every city, town and hamlet. Yet, in the ulti- mate workings of the civil service system, the em- ployes of that department are not the selections of those in charge of the Postal Service but are chosen from a list made up by a separate commission in no way responsible for the efficiency of the Postoffice Department. Can any one imagine a great manufac- turing concern, an oil company, a railroad, or 2 bank choosing its employes from a list made up by a sep- arate concern outside its own offices? The relative abilities of clerks, stenographers, ai countants, etc., can be determined by competitive! examination better than by any other method and the classified system is undoubtediy of benefit as) But the selection) and retention of supervisory officials—those making] workers—is an entirely different matter. No compe- titive test by an outside bureau can he as satisfac- tory from any viewpoint as a selection based upon the personal judgment of the men responsible for results. The Harding administration has promised the country more business in government. There isn’t a business man in the United States who would will- ingly undertake to conduct his business with super- vising employes selected for him by outsiders. He ought not expect a Government Department to do it. Neither should the average American business man permit a seH-appointed civil service reform organ- ization to mislead the public as to the merits of the classified civil service system. Such organizations are usually managed by men who have had Ittle if any practical experience in important business undertak- ings. If they have had such experience, it is safe to say that they did not permit anyone else to select their chief employes. “Civil Service Reform” is a term that has been msed to cover much civil service absurdity, and the sooner the country finds. it out the better for all concerned. Errors of McAdoo IN he was before the Interstate Commerce Committee of the Senate, Mr. McAdo placed great roads, in moving 17,500,000 bushels of grain to four! Atlantic ports in February and March, 1918. The} accomplishment, according to Mr. McAdoo, “saved the war to America and the allies.” Now comes Mr. Wil- lard before the same committee, and shows that the toads under private management, moved 54,000,000 bushels to the same ports in the same months of 1917. The private owners make a showing three times as/ good as Mr. McAdoo, and yet McAdoo says the roads were taken over by the Government because they had “broken down” in the hands of their owners. Cooking Hints How to “lighten” bread flour to use for cakes, pastry, etc. =r Up-To-Date For Every Housewife If your recipe calls for. 4 eggs to 1 quart of milk use 3 eggs, and for the egg omitted use half tablespoonful of Kingsford’s Corn Starch. piecrustsandmufiins,makeyourpastryflour with one-fourth.cup of Kingsford’s to three-fourths cup wheat flour. A little Kingsford’s Corn Starch dusted on top of cakes before A quarter teaspoonful of Kingsford’s put each of your salt- shakers will keep the salt from caking. . . FREE: s.P.. 306 New Uae Slee: Does, Bemsfol folder of the new fcoeeieeck eee America’s Fayorite Sin Phone 601 co 1848 PAINT UP AND CLEAN UP We have -the Paints, Varnishes and Brushes, Get. our prices on Lawn Rakes, Lawn Seed, Hose, Lawn Mowers, Grass Shears. GARDEN IMPLEMENTS HOLMES HARDWARE COMPANY Casper, Wyo. Building Materials Weare equipped with the stock to supply your wants in high grade lumber and build- ers’ supplies. 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