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| PAGE EIGHT nee ee Che Casper Daily Eribune Imsued every evening except Sunday County at Casper, Natrona Tribune Building. 15 age 16 Wyo. Publication Offices, TELEPHONES .. Jephone Exehange Con! ntered at Casper (Wyoming), Postottice as second class} ). matter, November 2: EMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS eee he Presidect and Editor . Business Man Advertising . g & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger ness New York City; Globe p4 :ting All Departmests|/and the Underwood tariff putting farm products —_——<—<—<—— ‘Kaverusing Mar@ger)a profitable home market and force him back to his |doubt. He would prefer to see the American farm- ict back where he was when the Democratic party gave up the reins of government, March 4, 1921, | when, because of the Democratic financial policies on the free list, the American farmer was flat roke. Senator Walsh belongs to a great manufacturing | state. It depen con- for its prosperity upon 1 tinued and profitable output of its industries. To| | save each family of Massachusetts $80 a year, Sen- Bai . . i + Asso“sy Baltes) ator Walsh would deprive the American farmer of| economic condition of the summer of 1921. Quite So!| Yet the same American farmer buys 40 per cent of all the manufactured products of the country. Che Casper Daily Cribune THE TEMPEST NARROWS DOWN SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922. ec, are on file i He is the test single cla ch of tex-| paper and I do wish I had some|cut him. Gnomes really haven't z are welcome. industry of Massachusetts. 2 “ . Say paste on | eek . Scissors? back: RUBSCRIPTION RATES echt American farmer is the greatest buyer of] [ins cetererh! SIME Te coat | mea iene Pont Po Sold ap By Carrier * _.7.90| leather goods in America, and the leather goods in-| So Understanding Scissors and Patnt| bis mind he wanted to ha’ hos’ Wanless 3.90|dustries of Massachusetts rank second only to the| sho cnatad Six Months three montks. All_ subscriptions Daily Tribune wii! thon becomes one month in Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©) Member of the Associated Frome 444 to te he Associated Press is exclusivel bse da pauiteation of all news credited in this paper an@ iso the local news published herein. Kick f You Don't Get Your Tribune. Call 18 or 16 any time between 620 and § o’cteck pS Wt you fail to recetve your Tribune. A paper Jivered to you by eget your carrier misses jet The Tribune know w' you. BESS. et Se: : We Branch Out TRIBUNE always strives to keep abreast of in advance and the mast be paid Jory after subscrio- not insure delf arrears. ‘ ‘as near-| Mg: AS a result 5,000,000 American working peo- ranches, poultry farms and with fruit growers. pre-war salary of $1,350. sil the times. It is our ambition to produce, news| ple were walking the streets. Massachusetts had A survey of 212 men who have completed their} Other courses which are offered under the gener- Sy as possible, a thoroughly metropolitan b her liberal share of these idle. What did $80 a year,| Courses shows that they are earning an average of|al classification of agriculture are: florists, fruit dpaper. We have had some difficulties in reaching per family, mean to them then? Would they not | $498.71 more per annum than they received prior to| growers, gardeners, orchard farm foremen, farm t they are forgotten when we ‘er we are giving the people to- with the paper we published “our present Sook at the newsp:!] day and compare it ‘six years ago. 3 Dexeg the intervening time we have grown. ve Shave grown from a rented basement to a commod- Jous home of our own. From a pony telegraph pak Sce to the complete Associated Press report, wi Sour ®wn operator, supplemented by special state ‘service and numerous special reports and services ‘supplying news. We have advanced in equipment “from a battery of three linotype machines to a bat- tery of six, and from a 3,500 an hour commer oat Shed press'to a perfecting press with output of 40, ‘an hour. In addition to these things there is a com- plete stereotyping department and type casting de- partment all of which provides new material for vey, oe on jobs as in the begin- directed e. © Instead of doubling up bs a ning, the news, telegraph and editorial are “by heads of these departments, with society, sports, ‘markets and oil, police and general local served by iters on these special topics. We have provided in the past a cartoon service ‘of considerable merit, but it was mot our own, not Thome made. We had no art department. Now we have one, with our own artist in charge. Mr. Frark Keenan will draw our pictures and makes his bow ders today. F cithough Montana may claim Mr. Keenan as a @ative son and substantiate it and bring testi- "mony of some years residence, yet he is more of “Wyommg than of Montana for his maturer years have been spent here and his pictures made here. - Mr. Keenan studied at the California Institute ‘ot art at San Francisco. He was a natural maker jot however, long before he journeyed to ithe coast to give the professors his ideas of how to ‘make real pictures. By an exchange of technical “views on the whole subject, the professors and Mr. Keenan were much benefitted and at the end of sev- ‘rral years parted good friends. Then he proceeded do decorate newspapers all the way from the Pa ‘cific coast to the Wabash river in Indiana. The war came along ard art volunteered to dec- lerate European battlefields with red. There wat ‘ime however between battles and afterward to Sdraw pictures in France and the inspiration was ‘at hand. After a year and a halt of fighting and ‘picture making the war quit and in due time Mr. Keenan came back to Wyoming. Tt was some time before he could see any fun in pictures, but his sense of humor gradualty re turned and he is getting more and more of it into textiles. The American farmer is second only to the rail- roads as a consumer of steel and iron products, be-| ing the ultimate consumer of 30 per cent of the steel and iron products of the country. The American farmer is the largest consumer of wood products—being the ultimate consumer of 46 per cent of the products of the country. The American farmer is the largest class consum- er of motor vehicles—he buys 30 per cent of the annual output of motor vehicles and motor acces- sories—like tires, etc. The American farmer owns| | 3,000,000 motor vehicles, which according to data | given out by the automotive industries is more than | are owned by all the rest of the world outside of the United States! The American farmer consumes exclusively the output of over 600 factories making farm imple- ments. All of the employes of these tremendous indus- tries are in turn consumers of the products of the textile and leather industries of Massachusetts. When early in 1921 the American farmer was flat broke under the operation of the Underwood tariff and Democratic financial policies, he was net buy- have cheerfully given it to have obtained steady em- ployment at profitable wages? Senator Walsh would push the American farmer back to his condition of 1921 and the Massachusetts working men back to idleness in order to save $80 per year, per family. Do the workingmen of Massa- chusetts agree with him? Isn’t the prosperous American farmer worth something to Massachu- setts industries? { New Congressional Chairman he ELECTION of William R. Wood to the chair- manship of the Republican congressional cam- paign committee moves the leadership of that com- mittee one step farther west. Representative Wood is from the tenth Indiana district, which empraces the great manufacturing centers of Hammond, Gary, East Chicago, Whiting and other industrial communities. Mr. Wood succeeds Simeon D. Fess of Ohio, who tendered his resignation in order that he might give his undivided time to his condidacy in the Repuplican primaries for the United States senate. Mz. Wood was fi vice chairman and by his elevation Represent. e Tilson of Connecticut becomes first vice chairman anl Representative Tincher of Kansas second vice chairman, The retirement of Representative Fess recalls the fact that when he assumed chairmanship of the Republican congressional campaign the Democratic party was in control of both branches of congress. This was in the spring of 1918. The following No- vember the Republicans carried congress by a ma- jority of 45. The election of a Republican congress this sear is necessary to prevent the return of the control of all legislation by the “Solid South,” as was the case before the Republicans secured control of congress in 1918. Because the overwhelming ma- jority of its setrength comes from eight states in the “Solid South,” the Democratic party is essen- tially and inevitably a sectional party, narrow and selfish in its views and antagonistic to the develop- ment of the west and north. Because the Democrats who come from the “Solid South” are the only Dem- ocrats who can always count upon election, the rep- resentatives from those southern states occupy ranking positions upon practically every house com- mittee. This would mean, in event of the election of a Democratic congress, that the control of every important committee would be in the hands of eight solid Democratic southern states. Some idea of the preponderance of “Solid South” influence in the Democratic party may be obtained from the statement that of 132 Democrats now in are receiving placement their war service. They are receivii Men training along special lines te the war. My Little Boy in France My little boy in far off France. A soldier’s son is he ‘Whose father died that they might live In peace and liberty. Denied a, father’s leading hand To jo you on life’s way, But mother’s love is true and strong. And lasting as tue day. Dear boy so small, a heritage Your father leaves to you, A mother, sister, country home, To guard their honor trne. Amd ag along the rugged way Life’s battle you must fight, ‘Let honor, right, your watchword, be, Defend them with your might. And as I gaze away bayond ‘The waters wide expanse, T hope some day that I shall My lttle boy in France. And when I look into your eyes As, straight and tell you stand No more a “Tittle boy,” but I Shall still be “mother Van.” training on dairy farms, salary in spite of their disabilities. er increase of earning power. Three men who have completed their training as dairy farm foremen are now receiving an average of $850 more per year than they were receiving prior to their war serv- ice. Seven men, who have completed their training as landscape gardeners, are receiving an average of $805 more per year than they were receiving prior to their enlistment. Three veterans, who have completed their training as nursery men, received an average of $1,225 per annum prior to their en- listment and now, in spite of their disabilities, are receiving an average salary of $2,125 per annum, or $900 more per year than they were receiving prior A large number of men are in training in fores- try which is classified as an agricultural pusuit. Six men who have completed their course in fores- try and whose pre-war salary averaged $755,66, are now earning an everage salary of $1,712.50, or an increase of $945.85 above their pre-war wage. An- other man who has been rehabilitated as a lumber- ing this increased show even great- labor, making Mr. maneuvy fices. Flappers birthday? man is now receiving $2,500 per year, in place of a managers, try raisers, stock herders and apiarists. In addition to training the veteran, the bureau makes every effort to secure employment for him after the completion of his course. The superv’ ors of agricultural training of the bureau keep in close touch with the field for agricultural employ- ment and provide opportunities months in advance for men about to complete training in the schools. In establishing these employment opportunities many agencies department of agriculture, the civil service commission, and local farm organizations, national and state agricultural conventions, state fairs, patriotic and other societies. A case was recently reported of one disabled veteran who had made an excellent record in an agricultural college who was placed with the department of agriculture at a salary of between $3,000 and $5,000 a year. Evidence is increasing that under the reorganiza- tion of the rehabilitation work effected by the Sweet law, rehabilitation is at last being placed upon a sound economic basis. chair and on the floor the men put forward by the group of Republicans Who rebelied in 291{ against the do- mination of the houso by James R. Mann of Illinois. They sticceeded in Gillett the speaker but Mr. Mann, by a clever parliamentary , captured all the other of- Final Word About ‘What will the flapper of today look like when she reaches her fortieth I have frequently been asked this question, which is not an easy one to answer, for she may look 20 years younger than what she really is or she may look 20 years older than her that the chances of her looking charm- ing at 40 are all in her favor, and I am quite sure that she will healthier both mentally and physically at 40 than were her predecessors of be raisers stock farm foremen, poul- are canv: including the the department of national Box Pal deep, deep in the ground. Did you ground? Well ing to climate. I have noticed on the steppes of Russia complexions that would create a furore on the Rue de la Paix. I have seen in Scotland and! on the west coast of freland among the peasants skin beauty that the poets would term “ravishing.'—Helena Rubinstein. The Old Attic If you are old enough to hay, ™mel- low memories of your,own, yet Sounk ‘enough to face life bravely and with- out bitterness, you would love to come fant attic and take a peep into the Who knows—we might find the demure maid of the '803 phir Winsome miss of 1922 are, as Kipling put it, “sisters under the skin.” The old horse-hair trunk, so ineffect- ual and forlorn in its last refuge. if given a chance to speak, could boast f truly adventurous past—could tell of many gay travels in its time; in the days of ite early usefulness, of pioneer- ing in the West, on a Dekota claim, where precious packets were entrusted with skin condition that varies accord-|‘1© Underground fairy ment Nicky Nome!" is intimated in 2 later epistle, in which |@ bride bewails the vices of one Jenny, her maid of all work: “I wish that you might see Jenny. has gone crazy over style. She do her hair in a French twist. I ‘have to watch her or she would spend half of her time primping.” —-Mary M. Carberry. Tryst ‘The dewfall and the dusk; Shadows gathering, grouping, “mers: “ing, And then the stars— Stars in the vault, ~ ways, > Glowworm stars in thinking. They thought back to the time when they weren't scissors or paint at all, but minerals and colored earths lying know that paints come out of the And sud- “I've remembered the gnomes—the lit- Well make a paper gnome and call him So ‘they did and here he ts. He'll last longer if you paste him on heavy ‘That the servant problem was not entrely unknown to this same period wears corsets and bangs, and tries to Firefly stars lighting the garden path- And the poignant musk of migno- “HERE 1 AM! “CRIES NICKY NOME, “CuT ME OUT AN in Tuesday's pie. And he made Betty so terribly curious when he told her hew Buunies could be made out of peanuts that she determined to make some very soon. So have Mother buy you a bag of peanuts and don't eat them until after Tuesday so you can have a big bunny family just as Betty’s going to do. Monday—Adventure Trails. “The Motor Boat.” Copyright, 1922, by George Matthew Adams. Queer Questions With Hidden Answers If You Can't Answer Them, Look Among the Want Ads. Does a whale ever have legs? About how many negro farmers are there in th!= country? |. “What should be done for a person who has been struck by lightning? How many persons were granted citizenship in 1920? How many illiterates are there in New York state? ‘What is believed to be the highest structure in the world? How many members has the United States senate? About how many restaurants are there in New York city? ‘What are the rules of polo like? r 3 20 years ago. const tonraick nette! About how many square miles are his drawings. the house of representatives 114 come from below —Iilian L. Van Burgh There is nothing radically wrong care; in its maturity of a grand there in the Pacific 2 The public will shortly look for Keenan’s daity| Mason and Dixon’s line. In event the Democratic ‘Casper, Wyo, |with the flapper of today. She is|t*Ur to Niagara Falls and New York| tiene iq zn meron cartoom and will appreciate it Sa Bawls ‘About the Benefits KENATOR DAVID Ignatius Walsh, Democratic ) senator from Massachusetts, is worried because ihe proposed American protective tariff bill, now efore the senate will benefit the farmer. He . . Was it a dream went by? arges the Republican senators from the agricul:| Claims, Ways and Means. year. This Veteran statesman, who| seen without a chaperon, indulged |peccet,, fimpses into the girlish | P en inral states with supporting the bill because it will] “yor example, the chairmanship of the House|bas served close to half a century in| very little in outdoor : hearts of the Celins and Mollies of that|1.°™ firdied with the imminence of benefit the farmer. He further charges that the pit Kita pe gpd tar otters lb farmer will be benefitted. by protective schedules on potatoes, cereals, fresh meats, etc., because the exclusion from the American markets of foreign importations of these products will enable the x : s ton in his stead, but no momber of | looked atural than the girl of —ctinton Scollard, ¥ Ak ee Gee to obtain a profitable price for|¢}¢ Wilson administration wh its chat eee a 2 ber : ee s sone ral th girl o' gzeellent eee, If you could ee te 5 eae Nee is products. . | Claude Kitchin, announced he was going to so frame |Will say that it will send a better Wi bane Up to date no Republican senator from any agri- going frame a man.| Where the flapper of today $s apt|iront Say the ee ooen our eves. one 1736W ¢ultural state has denied Senator Walsh’s staté ment. It is a pretty safe prediction that none will deny it. ; The farmers, in Aroostook county, Maine, for ex- hmple, know by experience that a protective tariff on potatoes keeps out Canadian and other imported jpotatoes and by so doing makes it profitable for them to raise potatoes. The farmers of the spring wheat belt know that | pecause of the emergency tariff enacted last sum- mer they have been receiving an average of 30 cents ® bushel more for their wheat than the Canadian farmer has been receiving. Growers of livestock know that the enactment of the emergency tariff stopped the tremendous im ports of “New Zealand lamb” and other fresh meat products from Australia and from South America, party should win at the next election 11 southern | states would control 24 of the important committees | of the house as follows: Agriculture, Appropria- tions, Banking and Currency, Claims, Education, Foreign Affairs, Insular Affairs, Interstate and Foreign Commerce, Pensions, Judiciary, Merchant Marine, Labor, Military Affairs, Naval Affairs, Patents, Postoffices, Public Buildings, Civil Sery- ice, Rivers and Harbors, Public Roads, Rules, War Committee on Education would go to Alabama, which, with the exception of Louisiana, Mississippi and South Carolina, is the most illiterate state in the union. The Ways and Means chairmanship would go to North Carolinn, where it was under the war reyenue bill that the northern industries and northern people would be compelled to pay all the expenses of the war. Subsequent events proyed that Mr. Kitchin made good his boast. The chairmanship of the Committee on Pensions would go to Georgia, from which state has emanated the recent charge that Abraham Lincoln was respon- sible for the Civil war. In short, the entire legislative machinery of the government would be, in event of a Democratic vic- tory in the congressional elections this year, seized by eight southern states wholly out of sympathy with the business, financial and industrial imter- ests of the north and west and in a great many cases wholly ignorant of the needs of the United) | States as a whole. The nation woud then be sw jected to the same picayunish and sectional parti- san attacks and harrassments that it had to endure Control of Next Congress Speaking of changes and retire ments in the next congress, the Bos- ton Transcript says: “Perhaps Uncle Joe Cannon is the best known legislator to retire this the house, eight years as its speaker, announced some months 1go that he would retire in favor of a younger and a better man. Perhaps his district will send a younger mar to Washing- Uncle Joe is beloved by his colleagues, but they appreciate that at his age of 86 years, he is justified in laying down the cares amd burdens of public office. His departure from the halls of na- tional legislation will make Uncle Billy Greene of Massachusetts the veteran of the house. He has served con- tinuously since May 31, 1898. He is 81 years old. “Popular interest centers about the selection of a new floor leader. Frank 'W. Mondell of Wyoming, the present leader, will be a candidate for the senate against Senator John B. Ken- 4rick, the Democratic incuravent. It is practically a. foregope conctusion that the Republicans will control the next house, notwithstanding that their grandmother at her age. than girls are today. middle aged. charming but very stiff. to err is in the care of her heritage, a.youthful skin. She does on the use of totlet preparations that she should. She knows nothing about their com- position and apparently cares less, with the result that the very prepara- tions she uses for beautifying pur- poses will often act on her skin with more deadly effect than will the wav- not bestow the ages of time. The girls and womer in every coun- try on the globe are the same in their appreciation of personal beauty. young, vivacious, buoyant and full of high spirit; her dress may be a trifle extreme, her manners abpear a. trifle bold, but after all her life is infinitely more healthful and conducive to physi- cal stamina than was the life of her ‘Twenty years ago a girl at the flap- per age was much more cor.servative She was rarely up was practically a minus quantity. At 40 she was in behavior and looks She was sweet and Maybe she great I have seen the aboriginies in Australia and natives front the jungies of Indic anoint their skins with oll and balms with all the care and ceremony of “‘milady” in her boudoir, their dark Hearing in the scented silence The punctual throbs of my heart, ‘The bats swoop, Eléritch, uncanny (Will she come?); The mothe flutier Light as the wings of love; ‘The breeze breathes softly, (win she come?) List! state. where cherished keepsakes were added to its treasure. The pressed flowers, the locks of ees musty letters tied with faded m—who could heartlesisl: thelr secrets? gone A rakish old “bam box" of ample Proportions promises tales of jolly do- ings in the '80s. The letters, written in fine neatly ordered script, afforded ‘There is a halo in the dusk— The halo of her hair, And then I am aware of the lingering attar of roses— Her lips! If you would meet a belle of the day, read with me this epistle from Rosanne, sojourning at Hot Springs: “We went to the theater the other night to see Jane Eyre played by an A smooth, perfect. runing time piece ‘is a joy to the owner. Call at Tripeny's watch repair department and consult our expert watch repairer. 3t Tost all the women wore white bon- nets and white shawls, a select few ‘wore opera cloaks * * And we do have such good times playing whist and euchre. I have a fine partner, a ————— Jewelry antl watcn repatring by ex- Pert workmen. All work guaranteed Casper Jowelry Mfg. Co., O0..S Bldg. a5 Excellent Board and Room $12.00 Per Week. Shower Baths. Men Only. Mrs. Vance, Prop. young man, and between us we scoop the board. Poor dear mother would not like to think that I had grown) fond of card ying, but it is quite ‘the rage here.” “Sedate,” visiting in the country, wishes to prolong her-stay in order to attend a “‘spelling school,” but true daughter of Eve that she is, complains of the fnadequacy of her wardrobe. bag petitions her brother in this fash- mn: “I should Ifke very much to attend ‘the spelling school and sociable, but I have nothing with me which I find ANNOUNCEMENT I hereby announce myself as a can- : r majority will be reduced. Mr. Mon-|skins frequently having a texture di i i i nd guaranteed him a profitable market at home. | fr cicbe ceare teder tie Wee ed tna | dell nas baw the welotty lentes fons Seta eee Soth | mutable to wear, as the youns women didate for the nomination of sheriff of The American farmer knows that becanse of these eam : 1918, when the Republicans took the| ‘The appearance of the flapper when|sent to me ene westhen, om could : X Enings, combizied with’ other assistance in ithe form comtrol of the lower branch from the SES bapthes,.- spain foe Natrona County on the Republican q of extension of credits, he is getting back on his feet and able to count on making some progress again. oo But the prosperity of the American farmer irri- |tional training in agriculture under the veterans|has the atror kt This from a frivolous miss with a i dates Senator Walsh, of Massachusetts. In fact, it) burean have just been made public and this activ.|while he may have opponition, aes| mane: Of eke One ange [mind Of her own who nigns herseit at the August Dammaeies: angers _him. Ne denounces it as outrageous and|ity on the part of the government for the benefit|chances are that he will win an easy too pretty to need any cam- chiar ete: something which should be prevented. He ascer-|of the boys who served in the war-crisis is thor-|Victory. A number of the members| ouflage. Our country 1s #0 lance and hone promise that I shall return : Value of Vocational Training esoses showing the increased earning power of disabled veterans who have received yoca- Democrats. According te present indi- cations he will be succeeded by Nich- olas Longworth, son-in-law of the late ‘Theodore Roosevelt. Mr. Longworth surely be called its “mantle.” bracelets, my red silk dress and white skirts. One visualizes a snowy fleet of them, brave in their array of tucks and ruffles. ticket, subject to the will of the voters ‘ALF. B. POTTS. 1ins with the assistance of a sharp lead pencil home very soon as I am having too l|oughty justified. would Ike to make Joseph Walsh|our climate so various, according to *5 . + Pa : S ba that the increased prices the farmer will get by rea-| Approximately 15,000 disabled ex-service men|°f Massachusetts the mapority leader, | geographical location, that speaking of einen ce pics ee. Diaeke Son of the proposed American tariff will add to the| training in agriculture under the bureau, Fifty pec|pe giver the offen vo rate oe camet | the American as a whole tn a derma-laiik that stands alone—and I have! Tiving costs of every Massachusetts family (based| cent of this number are receiving their training in|sschuretta man hone ree etner ie | comical ence would be lke speaking ilearned to dance the polka * * * | = s the office o on a family of six) the stupendous sum of $80 al recognized agricultural of the European girl where theres are | Fear. ‘That this is a robbers Senator Walsh has no thronghout the country. the English, the French, the Italian, the German and the Russian, each schools z The remain cannot think of anything more to! write and I am not sorry as I am tol Political Advertisement] { Ss §0 out surrey riding this afternoon.” id colleges|speaker. If Mr. Longworth is chosen ing number floor leader the house will have in the