Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 13, 1922, Page 2

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SRODSZOB2 A Z bi ahaa ys ol ree en ee | P, PAGE TWO e Che Casper Dailp Cribune armistice and the certainty that the war hag cerm.- Issued every evering «xcept Sunday at Casper. County, Wyo. Publication Offices, Tribune 5: im paying Americsn money to foreign nations. matter, November 22, 1916. ity. It also has a full understanding of proper lines! President and Editor! that the United States has no objection to American | into clans and clans into nations sim- had mezded the broken doity - Business Mansser| business men entering into conference with foreign| Py because this gave them a greater And kissed the tears away. FS ee ee ae a vices Gerad + Associ) Haitor | business men and negotiating loans of surplus capital ee aaa var dees eke =F Ney, Bey at ada word or|That once with’ reckless. thythm ‘Advertising Manager| in the United States to any enterprise or any nation|“teagy great fighting amength F : these = AT cen een aad] tnoeee. swelled desiring to borrow the same. Those loans. of course,|~ 7. ins fae eo F - amet From the mouths of wonderful men, | In triumph as the words were spelled. Advertising an Chicago, | Would be made upon security the sufficiency of which! oie phan Brees tte ie ati) relied Got=sx O8t, as she knew he must, Now in the grip of silence held Frodaen, King & Pradden. 172053 Stew: Je iildg.; Bee-| would, be determined by the len’ = It is not the|unon ts o anecter ctant then ta this , SE Fils place in the world to take. |But deep in the walled-up woman’s|Lie as a mighty Hermes felled. ton, Mass. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in| province of government to - its citize - vither'country for protection. It remained ‘ “der white lips smiling bravely. beart— ihe New York, Chicago and Boston offices and visitor’) shall or shall not make loans of this character so long for the United States to find and to , None heard the prayer they| Of a woman that would not yield, | Wires down! are welcewss. as those loans do not conflict with the international demonstrate a new kind of protec 6 : huried, But bravely, silently bore her part— 1 eer te prtcnrp-cill BUBSCRIPTION RATES Policies of this government. In order that there might tion, an“ economic protection that Unto the Infinite, for her boy La! there Ss the battietieia. a aad ; not be any such conflict the administration asked that i i i to rao! but Ne troop. on bivouac song, | ’Tis in itself enough to know Gia Wieshs before making loans American financiers inform gov- ; A. — ie aoe Ria sanaeeoe aoauret The whes"ere Gown, ; Six Months . ernment officials what they contemplate doing. = ‘And watched them fly away. But, oh these battle; they last so GENE MAR’ 4 Turee Months American business men who gre going to Europe to| Mine ee Casper, Wyo. Per Copy ... represent their own interests and the interests of! an Se “No love like mother-love From babyhood to the grave. a Fe q their clients are among the ablest financiers in the|Umited States has fought with those| Mother o' mine, Ever was known, JOAQUIN MILLER. |- ee = r, i, leaden, One Year . world. If it is possible for a plan to be devised by | that. other nations have fought during | Sweetest, bravest, Mother o’ mine, No love like mother-love promin Politics, and known as which loans can be made, these men can undoubtedly No subscriptio accepted for less period (81) devise the plan. When the terms of a loan have been three months. ig must be paid in advance and the| agreed upon and the sufficiency of the security has xacrona| nated) there was a disposition on the part of the ‘new ai «the or u thirteen ding. mocrati istrati i colonies would not have wi inte tic administration to be as liberal as possible pn ge Mint sect og A oo BUSINESS TEL rotect! t needed. The tri- Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departmenta] The Republican alministMation has a far different eet ee Tape, Seabed Seal Gmtared ai Gasper (Wyoming), Postoffice as second class| Conception of the proper sphere of government activ-|safe without this protection. 7 Meated ~ St ee ee et easU> fo ithin comparatively recent — o1 or private c: itizens |times ft was fighting strength that MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS the United States. Mr. Harding has made it clear measured protection. Families grow would be more effective than any oth ‘the past two hundred years. It can] Through all the years my) truest be judged by comparing the homes of friend. the middle class people of this coun- jtry €be Casper Daily Cribune olonies composed of Ever was shown.” The day thou gravest life to me Thy snow white soul drew near the} Unchanged with those of the middle class Daly Tribune will not insure delivery after subscriP’| been vouched for by men of the high standing of people of any other country in the end— her breast: ton becomes one: month in arrears. __________.| those who are to go to Europe, it is altogether prob-| world. - (A.B ©) able that American capitalists, large and small, will Member ef Auaié Burean of Circeiation invest their savings in the sccurities thus offered for Member of the Associated Press. keh vs Oi sale in the United States. “The prime objert of any govern ment is to protect the ‘amily. If it does not do this, at least to a consid- erable degree, The debt I owe I cannot pay, Love that is priceless, But from my heart I ever pray, é May God bless thee. fated Press is exclusively em! rues ja ; use for pabiieation of all news credited in this paper and| The whole country, with the exception of a few/doomed to collapse. The degree in| prriing little Mother o° mine, Casper, nino the local mews published herein. internationalists, will heartily approve the policy|which it does do it determines how] sod grant that you may know this Kick if You Don’t Get Your Tribune. loaning business 46 private eubexpet Call 15 or 16 any time between 6:30 and 8 o'clock p. m. ic Pp wis yor eive your Tribune. ‘ ‘ ; ; ened gets tS eek) iasaaeper. Make it your duty to) than it can in any other line of private entérprise let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you- where experience and self-interest are essential to bune know when you a Se . The govern- NCE AGAIN the daylight saving foolishness. The ( attempt to kid oneself into believing that he is| ington Post, “‘it is well to glance at the record of the doine something to save time and gain advantage for} -overnment in its treatment of soldiers and sailors of e di: . Sy the habits of the sun, disturb the reliability of the| suggest that the delay in bonus legislation is due to light and vi , force us to eat our ham and before day service men. aoe hers shortcake in the middle of the after-/ 4 statement compiled by the government author- noon, and so confuse our domestic habits that bab ities, made public yesterday, throws much light upon from tha labor of the children, and ‘are in constant doubt whether to go to bed or get! the government’s attitude toward its defenders. The from the people working for starve up and our business program as to whether to go t0/ figures are brought up to April 1, and show that ajtion wages in the rest of the world : ea total of $1,996,260,634 has been appropriated for the we make a stronger 1 mation. “We bud light saving is purely a misnomer. An allega-| welfare of soldiers and sailors of the late war, in such UP the physique the people an dent that cannot be substantiated by the evidence. A’ items as famiiy allowances, insurance, hospitals, voca- Ye? we do need to win a war we work or play golf. pure and simple fad, devised by some foolish person | tional training, ete. The appropriations for the fiscal whose time hung heavy on his hands, even it WaT) year 1923 are $406,038,842 for these purposes. hus ahead of the schedule fixed by the sun, the railroad|+t, April 1, specified, are as follows: [pscple become undernourished, dissat- . Mother's Day eta stars hired ‘with ‘wonder corporations and the meridian of Greenwich. |_| Military and naval family allowances... $298,615,000 | isfled and if we pi) plied e dangers dVrigdh peri ean Away with snares and delusions that drag an Sm". | Military and naval compenzation_ 557,150,000, quatitied to win It for us. Mending the broken playthings, ‘ {ean citizen to his daily toil an hour ahead o! Ar hour} insurance .---- - 23,000,000| The protection that we need most Kissing away the tears, Later when you were called tnto the as unmercifully drag him back home, again Trib * | Administration 83,896,880 is not so much that which is given] With a smile of love for merit distance before dinner is ready; and without his i Sie Hospitalization 224,729,402 by our militia, our soldiers and our And courage for him who fears; Away from her sheltering care Hecause the Associated Press knows not tee vieys of Hospital construction 47,095.000 sailors as that which is given by a Sa nd Are ne Hosrgerialit Did you let es: know you were in ex, ‘ : Ce [ephencee: ris len} of ni istence’ the daylight saver and refuses to get the Pesce on| Vocational training - 469,128,870: Provoetive tacit that kesbs our Deople! 7. ying toe beanie ed ibe ‘ime Utde another buck there.” bef: the daily toiler pas Prosperous and happy and makes the ° e. an hour earlier and before daily Disposition of remains 38,478,788 eee ails cherie Batok ie Bo anit ohin Coe aslEAtT peter min pel bes: Bick: e to his rooftree sad and disappointed. any ana| onus allowance —~- = 248,682,200 come here and live. economic protec-| Ah, the mother's smile so sweet and} Out into unknown Let the employes of the Standard Oil ene 4 rts} P2¥ments to beneficiaries of army \tion Is our greatest need.’ ag. bright Nothing will influence humanity other unfeeling corporations do afl bi aa Raplehe | mBdcoetcersa-- Asn cnes ans r--- 10,495,000! ae As "who gathers the scattered play-| Like the love on a mother's face, st and economise at their will on 3 : pe Head Lettuce, 5c each. Welsh Fruit —Nancy ivan, s * aithey have at command; but why discopmons ever. Weta e-toc Sees et eee $1,996,260,634 Market. Phone 1705 and 204. 5- : ‘When figuring on fae ee that F H i i: vn to sav = = a macy oe. mheir ite? take, gupaletion does not, The number af former service men reveiving voca-' it is not the cost per gallon but the cover. waste. The tin the view taken by these employes, | tional training is 108,200. The average received per ing capacity that counts, maeiape, share. authority to say the the citizers of] month -by each man is $115. This includes compen- i — i an hour! sation which goes to families. In addition, the gov- Serra a sae 4 ra SETS confers| ernment supplies the men with books, tools, medical Soman oo such power. And no citizen is} care, transportation, tuition in schools, etc. ae sioxta abey! such an order if it were issued. Other figures on wounded and ‘disabled men. are corhat has the Chamber of Commerce got to do with| as follows: vy 30,008 ae the matter? What business is it of that organization pproximately 30,000 are now in hospitals. late our time? When did it become its} The total number wounded is 208,526. EE rs instruct the honest householder or any-| | The total number discharged for disability is ight? Surely that) 251,916. . Lote ee ee brid at 4 The government is paying compensation on 50,420 Teri ae ast ould not be considered closed with-| death claims and 156,539 disability cases. Me tke ieee “che Rotarians, the Lions, Elks and The amount paid last month for this compensation or Sy . Moose shedding a little daylight on the subject. was $10,340,000. ‘ $ 5 agriculturist all ye amateur day- The government is paying insurance on 134,550 33 ee ee ae TVisdom, He is the only, origi-| death claims and 6.299 disability claims. nal and genuine daylight saver on the job. He con-| The amount paid in war risk term insurance last ‘uss about it either.| month was $8,454,069.17. meres 2 Larner ies fad Wistisattiea| icoThesosmmbvedieatiavat war austere ita ente He don't ask ey he vequested to conform to his ideas.| allowed by the government is $1,826,985,835.70. that anyons son or any contingent of the population| If there is any duty which lies upon the heart of sag Fr city feels it incumbent to be frugal with| President Harding more constantly than all others, it OF Or tart davlight, let him, But he has his nerve| is that of providing for the disabled man who fourht reference to ats everybody else to be as thrifty with|for the United States during the late war. He has when he nd inexpensive an article as sunshine as| emphasized his sense of responsibility many times, so common ai xpens and has more than performed all that duty required i 2] S be. pes rs Hey himself: proposes._to. 0) im impressing upon congress the need of forethought 0. " 4 a 9 “Force our people to compete with times, and who erroneously thought he was Serving) the United States is expending more than $1,000,000 the whole world and we lose many of kis country by turning the family clocks an hour| « day for the welfare of “the boys.” The expenditures the advantages of government. Our adopted by President Harding in leaving the money-| g00d the government really is. “Nothing more is needed than i ) |study of our immigration figures to . A paper will be de-] ment cannot succeed as a money-lender any better prove that the fivnllten ex thie Geantest Bint gathcdiaprg cd 0 day, jaze on the whole better protected thar Yoh “ are the families of any other country the highest efficiency. Why are thay better protected. Bk aa “They are better protected because * ‘ they are not merely protected from r Republican Congress and the Soldiers | tse physical attacks of a foreign for Regulating the Sun but because they are better protecte 5 “PENDING DECISION of congress and the presi-from the economic attacks of such ion. !toretgn foe. dent on the bonus question,” observes the Wash-| "Tf. ss sie af gmail per- centage of the men of one generation Ps An economic attack, if successful himself over the existing order of things. The Soot the late war. If it appears that the government has| takes work from the heads of the fam-| Tl be with thee. American fiction. The monumental bunk which seeks! been liberal and thoughtful in its care of these imen, ilies and causes hunger and starva- t cate the Waterburys of the land, disarrange| there will be leas disposition on the part of any one to|tion that not onty affects the present generation but those which come’after hun dial and the shadow on the northeast corner of the/ disregard of right or justice in dealing with former,‘ day The love that fills the heart of me. Mother lear sweet lullabies in the air, nd long for thee. Mid Springtime’s glimmering Tother o' min: : n worship at Thy holy ‘shrine Ty soul will ever dumbly kneel ‘srough @, Jong, long ternity. Flowering in the full bloom of nd though the world shall onward] In her Yesteryear reel, With goodness, faith and truth When those who die do live again, Beyond the sorrow and the pain, of you. Roses have faded since then A lily Groops its head While days and months blend Into sunset'’s dream instead. —E. RICHARD SHIPP. Casper, Wyo. Russia is a good example of a To My Mother pea emery has been dealt um eco- Her heart has always been o! “Ie T cannot place the violets eat gold we protect our own workers Pages a Every day she grows dearer Or lay them among the Myrtle As time draws near its toll. om her grave, ~ Sut the symbol that I give today "ies in the blue eyes of my babes. Once when you were brand and Tender plants that I must crue desaatynctea have the young men who can win for| ‘ear with love and care, le others us. Tor they carry on her immortality. At such a funny bit of red. —NEAL GALLATIN. |and liberality in providing for these men. As for | A H i: | congress, it is sufficient to say that every dollar esti- Province of Private Enterprise mated for by the executive departments has been RESIDINT HARDING said during his campaign| appropriated. In no other branch of governmental for the presidency that there ought to be more| activity is this the case. It is only in dealing with business in government and less government in busi-| former service men that congress has met the esti- ness. And that is his attitude on the subject of loans, mates without cutting off/a single dollar. jn the United States in aid of the rehabilitation of| Soon the country will hive before it the proposal Europe. Loaning money is purely a matter of busi-|/ for a bonus as worked out by the senate committee. ness and not a matter of government at all. It is) Whether this plan will be approved by the president proper only in the extreme exigencies of war to Ioan| remains to be developed after conferences. Alter the money of the people to another government. It)native plans are suggested, and perhaps there will is sometimes doubted that the United States was jus-| be modifications resulting in a satisfactory compro- tified in going as far as it did in loaning money to| mise. President Harding has frequently said that the nations associated in opposition to the central, he would not approve of bonus legislation which did || is i the funds were not; not provide means of raising the required revenue. Biers te Mas gteenen Se ise ean The appropriations in behalf of former service men ¥ Tn pursuance of its general policy-of having the have been made by congress without thought of par- government do everything, the Democratic adminis-|tisanship. Just as all partisans fought in the war fration encouraced the belief that supplying money| without drawing political lines, so congress draws to both individuals and nations is one of the most/no lines when providing fof the nation’s defenders. important functions of government. The railroads It would be a pity to see bonus legislation injected were taken over and deficits paid out of public funds. | irto the forthcoming campaign as a political bone of If congress had permitted, this new national policy| contention. If a bonus bill should be enacted, it will would have been greatly extended, Even after the be bythe votes of all parties. : I B late wealth for the purpose of enjoy-|tries where the ‘wage earners have the Human Society Is Based |{f'°,."“numssit. te will have but a few| fewest days of work a year teouble te 5, 2 brief years at most in which to enjoy/more frequent and more acute. In Upon Protection it, but his family, his children and his] those industries where the families of es grandchildren and their children andj the wage earners are protected from “The unit of human society is the) grandchildren can enjoy it. The| want because the head of the family: family,” says the Ameircan. Econo-| wealth that he accumulates serves as/has steady work year in and year out mist. “The object of all other social|a protection to his family. there is little or no trouble. It ts a) groups of all laws and of all ondes| “If men were not striving to protect|™atter of protesting the family. of ethics is primarily to protect the| their families, they would not spend| ‘The employer is impelled to fight famfty. Any social group, any sys-|their money for life insurance. ‘The|for what he has because he wants to! tem of laws, and code of ethics that/ plea that makes men go forth to war| retain the protection for his family. It does not protect the family is a fail-| and fight the enemy is the plea to pro-|!s all a matter of protection. ure. Perhaps the supreme weakness| tect the home. “Labor joins together for protection. of the present government in Russia] “Only so long as the home, the fam-|=mployers join hands for protection. les in the fact that it does not give| tly, is protected can the human. race Families come together in groups form-| sufficient importance to the family/survive. Back of all labor trou¥le is|ing towns and cities because in this as the social unit and does not offer|tho desire to protect the home, the| way they can better protect themselves sufficient protection to the family and) famfly. The laborer is fighting for/from want and misery, Communities encourage every effort on the part/higher wages in order that he can/organize into counties and counties of the heads of families to do all in|have a better home, that he can givelinto states for the better protection thelr power to further their protec-/ his family greater protection. If there|of the families. 2 | rey is any doubt about this ail that is nec-| “‘Flad it’ not been for the necessity of “The average man dogs not accumu-essary is to learn that in those indus- uniting for the protection of the fam- SSSA MMIII WELLESLEY GIRLS BLAMING EVERY ILL ON BACKBONES THINK FERFECT JOINTS NEEDED FOR GOOD HEALTH AND CLASS STANDING MISS BESSIE WILLIAMS Staris Vi: cf Spine Adjustments After Recovering from Death Sentence by Physicians. Wellesley girls are having their spines adjusted. A Chiropractic wave has hit the campus, and fair’ collegians are having all their little backbones made straight. Bessie Williams, a junior at Pomeroy hall, started it all. Miss Wil- liams was given up by heart specialists. “Doomed to die,” they told her. So the poor little sick girl went to bed and never expected to get up: again. Then along came a chiropractor, and now she is one of Wellesley’s - star athletes. “I was doomed by prominent physicians,” declares Miss Williams. “They had given me up’to die, when a chiropractor saved my life. Henry L. Runge of Boston adjusted two misplaced vertebrae which governed the heart’s action, and almost at once my heart became strong. Saved from death, I took up life where I had laid it down. “Within a few months I was back at college. And now I’m good as ever.” The story of Miss Williams’ miraculous cure has spread like wildfire through college dormitories. And the girls, for all their ills, are seek- ng chiropractors. If they’ve a cold, they insist upon having their spines adjusted. If they flunk an examination, they swear it was the fault of a misplaced vertebra. Whatever their troubles, they blame them on their little backbones. “A perfect spine,” they cry, “means perfect health. The only way to get a diploma from Wellesley is to keep our.spines in line. We can’t be physically perfect, or mentally alert, if, there’s a single vertebra the tiniest bit awry. And so we’re dating up all the Boston chiropractors for our free afternoons.” : Runge adjusted a misplaced vertebra for Helen Lane, fancy skater. Then Helen went out and won the championship. : For other girls he’s cured headaches and backaches, rheumatism and colds. He’s driven away the blues and instilled pep for exams, so they say.—(From The Telegram, Boston, Mass., March 28, 1922.) Drs. J. H. and A. G. Jeffrey CHIROPRACTORS Suite 318 to 323, Midwest Bldg. Office Phone 706, Res. 93 TEN TT PSN Ad, tt seemed to mother but yester| “Twas fought by the nicthers of day She Truest and purest, the first and the New Crime in Calendar ‘since she held us first to| Murer by telephone was the charge! metropolis. that. government is] \fother o° mine, L. VAN BURG. ee Tes| (She AIMED ASS: ; 4, 4 Don't forget her on Mother’s Day dew Though Autumn winds blow her way Her heart is young with memories Shiging from her eyes so dear. Mother's hair has turned to silver fe She gazed at you with proud, up- Casper, Wyo | Perhaps, you don't remember the sleepless nights she spent fought. ; Shall I tell you where and when? On the maps of the world you'll find it] caped penalty through not; fiicality. Wires Down men. “Chicago's best business woman,” is being urged by her friends to become & candidate for mayor of the western preferred against a citizen of Berlin, - Germany. Bernard Kobler was ac-| Hotels in continental Europe never cused of telephoning every day, an- provide soap for their guests. ee = iy ‘ = 4% LOS ANGELES Daly CALIFORNIA ai POP oa riding Bathi athin beaches less than half hour away. . The Ambassador is located in a 27-acre park of tropical verdure. ambassador golf course, for Ambassador mae Alexandria guests. < pur ki ‘new Mountain and Plains Paint Ciimatically Correct Costs a little more per gallon but its cover- ing capacity makes it the cheapest paint on the market. Outside White, gal_________________$3.75 Ordinary Colors, gal________________$3.50 Muresco, per pkg____________________65¢ Natrona Lumber Company Phone 528 251 N. Beech St. Chamber of Commerce Referendum Ballot Daylight Saving _ Are you in favor of the Chamber of Commerce ask- ing the City Council to place a daylight saving ordi- nance into effect for the summer months—June 1 to October 1 during 1922, and from May 1 to October 1 for the years following—by moving the clock one hour ahead on the day the ordinance is to become effective, and by reverting back to Sta: October ‘Ist of each year? . pared i If you are not a member of the Chamber of Com- merce and desire to express your preference for or against the proposed ordinance, vote as indicated, sign your name, give your address and return by mail or in person to the Chamber of Co Monday nobn, Map ast of Commerce, not later than If this referendum carries, a i on the City Council Mandaen Sree eva ete

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