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I nn + PAXE SIX Che Casper Daily Cridune SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 1922. 1 ee eerie, wants of aaeenen aa on te Sie PICKING DAISIES BY THE WAYSIDE z County, Wyo Publication Offices, Erixine 5 American market. Since the American market is .-15 and 16) worth fifty billion dollars annually to American Connecting All Departments | producers, while the foreign markets will not reach 5). Postoffice ss second class five billions for some years to come, under normal vember 32, 1916. jconditions, it is evident that the home market is THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ten-fold more important. : President and Editor - Busin Manager } 5 . ; Associate Edstor | Can He Reconcile Views? E eee ° > . City Editor THOMAS DAILY -Advertising M anager | SUBSTANTIAL AEGUMENTS for protection are Advertising Representatives. frequently found in the free trade press. A re- Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bidg - cnicase. | cent illustration of this is in the editorial columns York City: Gi dg, ‘ ff A es of the Daily, Tribune are on fils, Of the Lynchburg News, owned and published by hicago and Boston offices and visitors | Senator Canter Grass, of Virginia. Under the head- are welcome. | ing, “Patronize Home Industries,” it is asserted SUBSCRIPTION RATES | “every dollar spent for goods in some other city, By Carrier leaves Lynchburg that much poorer and makes the 90/ Other city a dollar-richer.” The economic studies |of Mr. Grass enable him to grasp the soundness of that declaration, but seem not great enough to comprehend the application of the same doctrine to international trade. The truth of the statement quoted above is no > scription by mail accepted for 1 | Clearer, however, than the statement which might three months as readily be made that “a dollar spent for Epes - nt rola tae gg Meo Vien rx advance and the/in some other nation leaves America that much une Ww delivery after subscrip- ” thon be s one inc ars. poorer and makes the other nation a dollar richer. {The American national policy can also be appro- Member of Andit Bi a owed Avdh Daeed ett eee ae priately applied to the further comment of the 7" Member of the Associated Press. Lynchburg News when it says, “Why people who # Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the|). - > Ry at heart Gal . és Se’ news credited in this paper an¢ | "Ave the interest of the community at heart wil 1S Z - WS y} also the hed herein |do that sort of thing is one of those strange aber- i wt i LS pu Don't Get Your Tribune. rations of human nature that is hard to reconcile Hi yl 4 Y yp Day &. by y between 6:30 and § o'clock p. mi.) With good citizenship.” ‘ e=4 Mi YY YUL ti: y fig tk i Weakn dt tose Aiee ak Republicans have always been unable to recon- REY UA, ULLAL when your carrier misses you. cile the Democratic free trade policy with good ry American citizenship. Republicans have been un- .. es ts +: a able to understand how a man of the educational What We Need Lost Its Popularity write to a mail order houge tn & wrest attainments and business experience of Senator ane samen ete a es : SC, SE Ms ss that it had sent a pistol to a roc i liey which encour- Bye! second “Tho chief charge against the pri- y living in Boston, the sale being Welcome News eee com Boman raze DONS new birth of freedom, but the old-/mary system of making nominations | made without regard tv the age or jages American people to buy the products of cheap | tashioned $2 lower berth. : for office, as that system pertains| purpose of the purchaser. The gov- HE RAL DAYS spent by Jomx Har in Na-|iaber in Europe and Asia to the neglect and sacri-| What this country needs isn’t more | in this state and many others is not | ernor pointed out that-state laws were trona county this week have afforded an opportu- fice of American industry. It is, indeed, a strange be Sait Lge people who take liber-| merely that it is cumbersome, expen-| of little avail if a deadly weapon could nity for many of the people to see him and talk to|®berration of human nature that causes Democratic | **s our liberty. sive to candidates and state and in-/be obtained from a distant dealer What’ this country needs is not alcapable of awakening interest on the by readi tal a leaders to adhere to the theory that it is best to buy/ 4, ror every man, but a real man| part of the voter.” “This is the view eel me Cimeeiorion UTHare him. We feel certain the impression made was a good one and Mr. Har’s suggestions with refer-|Where you can buy the cheapest. ew hat y n sik Maat Cape by the St. Louls Times. Contin: | should certainly be means of stopping ence to reduction of state expenses and taxes were It is a long recognized economic fact that a dot- 93 S COUNTY, ‘nests’ Jenits £0] Bing it sey that sort of transaction. It might well well received. TI thi “ ital liar spent in trade changes hands some ten times|Stt more taxes from the people, but] ‘For these conditions are really but| receive the attention of congress. ec, hese things are vital to most peo- Pp gh aay; for the people to get more from the] insignificant compared to the larger |-rhere is also urgent need of uniform: J ple who have experienced some difficulty gathering |in a year. The man who receives it in trade, whether | taxes. tilegation lodged against the system|ity of legislation among the weveral Built for You by Elstnore Crowell together enough ready money for meeting their last |for labor or for materials, does not keep it idle in} What this country needs is not|/now in vogue. Tha: sin is its inib-| states tn dealing with the problem of ‘ é “. tax payments. ; his pocket but hands it on to some other producer |™or® miles: of territory, but more] lity to serve the public welfare. the pistol. There should be every-|. Betty's back bone felt as if it were) seem to harm the Indians. Perhaps fase ‘ f materials or to some other workman.’ The dollar | ™es to the gallon. It is too often a means of an un-| where stringent regulagions govern.|‘¥Ning into a scenic railroad. This)that fs becaute the poison of fear If public expenses were not a continuous per-|0! Materials 3 Doge . oie What this country needs is more] known man riding into political power. | ing the sale of dealy weapons, and the|W@S ot surprising for Betty was/does not enter the Indian's heart. No formance, if there were times when relief came, |9PC¢ Started on its circuit does ten dollars’ worth Of | :ractors and less detractors. It makes wise choice of candidates 2 watching the Hopis at thelr snake/one can explain it, but s0 it ts. unauthorized carrying of a pistol should be made subject to such heavy penalties thet even the confirmed criminal would hesitate to go ahead with one in his possession. ‘There and if the burden did not always increase, the tax.| business in a year. If that dollar be spent in Lynch-} What this country needs isn't more| difficult and a € , payer might not grow so weary of the load; but|burg and kept in Lynchburg it means ten dollars’) young men making speed, put more ; A mut} A young men planting spuds. cial honors neglect his business and there is no tax vacation and the total never dimin-| Worth of business activity in the period of twelve) S20" Mir Potty needs is morejat great. inconvenience and expense ishes arid alw: vs grows larger. months. S pair. on the old place and less paint] to himself and his friends enter upon} oy ou14 be no longer toleration of the There is a wide difference between the “tax re-|__In just exactly the same manner, a dollar spent |" ‘he young face & cinvais whose outcome. cannot: bel S to of aff dance and it would have made any| . And here today is a Snake Priest, in back bone, but an Indian's, do wiggles | his full dance costume, with the magic of horror. Each year they dance this| painting on his brown body, dancing dance somewhere in the Hopi village,|about a great basket of snakes. Many and it is a very important part of| priests dance at once, stamping their Literary~Taste f affairs in which mur- re 1 £45 ‘What this country needs isn’t a low-| accurately forecasted. While this lat-| Present state o: former” who seeks to gain office through pure dema-|in the United States for the purchase of American |, fatm or interest on money, but a| er requirement ie an embarrassment |r !® MAGS ota. gogy, and an important business man like Jonx|Products means ten dollars’ worth of business in the/ higher interest in work. to the office seeker rather than the} anout the pistal is only one chapter in the comprehensive discussion of 3 7 & hi mats Germany, or China, or Japan,|the footsteps of the fathers instc.1|th public in a greater degree becaus governor in order to save the taxpayers of the|Sent to England, or Ger ) OF » F % state from bankruptcy. or South America, or South Africa, that same dol-| 0° the footatepe of the dancing mas. it deters many good men from’ enter-| \ition of the needs of speedier and ¥ Shen, too, the primary plan as now |SUFer administration of Justice, and nnd the press, all over the state, that Joun Hay multiplying by ten our business competition. aenerely emptoyed does not Seabect Salniecoie a, nebomnenlations reluctantly consented to become a candidate. He| It would be well for the business men of Lynch- signed to serve. It is no safeguard |for changes in judicial procedure. It A : ; ile hi i -| “Professofs of English literature| + 4 “ judiciary In accordance with pending thoroughly satisfy himself of the sincerity of le |ean reconcile his plea for the patronizing of Lynch: ‘The early proponents of a “straight i : lmetebanand Seteenckned ae Yigal burg industries with his tariff theories which en-|%%4 serious-minded editors will no|primary~ election’ to determine the | legislation. Tt, calls attention to evils affairs. Once convinced that people were in earnest |courage American citizens to patronize foreign), observes the Boston Transcript.}eaw in thelr minis all unfit mon | Parole and probation systems. Tt thus donn Hay entered the race. rather than American industries. “They have taste of course and they|siinking from such a contest. It was | emphatically places itself in line with t Feaders and pupils some taste as well.| ruption at thq poli 1d exist. The | body of unorganized citizens who are with many people. He has received assurances Might as Well Cease Nevertheless, the casual observer has oak oe. elie thonaee vledbern tor ane demanding that*this country shall not en. greeted by tax-ridden people seeking for relief. ny the|!" the United States, where there {s| would make the good citizen a power | #w-abiding to become a place of Ii been g y Peop! is ROPAGANDA designed to_prevail upon s0 large a population that reads what | for honest political rule, and that he|cense unrestrained for the crimtnal 3 x ——>_——_ reduce their taxes and make state expense less. He|henefit of Europe, or rather, some countries of Eu-| Richard Harding Davis and O. Henry Ne > > , y “No such results have come in Mis- 5 believes that one-half the state commissions can|rope, js much in ¢ idence in this country. It is not| ere read and greedily read and now|ourl from the use of the primary| An Excellent Candidate “What the commitee has to say Hay, who, alarmed at conditions asks to be made| United States in a year; whereas, if that dollar be} Wrat this country needs ts to follow | people on its face it actually harms crime. in America. There !s recog: ter. St. Paul Minn.) cent. ing official life. ; ° ; vi ’ worth of business there, It was in answer to the urgent appeals of friends |!#t will do ten dollars louning to that end the committer ish the end which it was chiefly de took many months to consider the matter and to|burg to ask Mr, Grass to explain to them how he against trickery. urges the enlargement of the federal gp bare doubt receive this question impatient-\ choice of candidates for public office |thtt have creptyinto the use of the — A would not be editors zations, and with o great vuring his tour of the state he came in tontact had not 'their| believed that no opportunity for cor-| othere organizations from many he did not meet. Everywhere he has a right to ask the question, especially | present primary system was that it | Cease to be a land of freedom for the They have accepted Joun Hay’s word that he will/I (ited States to permit itself to be bled for the|is not hard to rend. A few years ago,|couia necer be cvertinewe safely be dispensed with and a money saving of algo open as was that whose purpose was to lure or|:h® Clever young men in tho literary | nominating system. Aside from bring- f i supplements imply or more tha: 5 . third of present cost effected. force this nation into the league of nations, but all|piy that such @ performance argued akg eeetnre toons iar ona Ea | | macl C, Bovis te/che. of) the ‘most This should be welcome news to people who have | intelligent persons perceive it. ' Door taste or more on the public's! piving the number of paid workers | treful business men in Caeper. ie earn a rfect success of his own had their shoulder under tax burdens for the past! yp the time of the campaign whose object was!many, Tt is not carsing nor eneying | 2,& campaign, there has deen little | pucinena and has been tried out in the several years. « to commit the United States to participation in|to say that the average “best sefler”| <°tUa! Benefit to the cause of §004| canacity of city councilman in Casper. : F government. On the other hand, much ble, conserva- the adjustment of foreign complications that are)‘, ote not the ability to re-|fierm bas been suffered by true tn-|tive and’ economical ae. he. has been Hitchcock and Hok not its concern, false appeal was made to sentiment,| jive certain impreasions, but the oa.| terests of the people in their political] sins own private business. their religion—just as sacred as our to sense of duty. Bffort was concentrated upon at-|pacity to make choice of them. The| !! It is rarely that a man of Farl| raster ts to us. The whole celebration | waving feathered sticks. To make « “ seate “ i le| books and this means novels, which yle's ity can be induced to.run 2 < i cock, of Nebraska, asserted that “old restric-|W® oth 1a. Th quently of poor work and a public|!" now seen to be necessary—its need:| airs engross his attention and prove] given up to feasting and games The|of the Indian given and then fold the tions on imports can only lead to disaster; and that |CeTming any and every part of the world. The prop-|with taste ought to be able to tell|°¢ changing from a machine suppos-| much more remunerative and besides| Rattlesnakes are collected from miles} paper many times; being sure that every shipload of goods that we keep out by tariff |@gandists seemed to hold the belief that they could/such work when it sees it. But thie| *dly selfoperating to a system in]ing hother and worry of publle bus!-|around—and there are hundreds of|the folds come exactly at the points A t a ohinn e AShoet hich |cajole us with word pictures of our greatness, our} public 1s not so able. Quite the same which the brains and experience Of} ness is not at all timés pleasant. them for deserts grow snakes almost|and B. ‘Then cut through all the folds axes pee =. ip aan o ae meena 7 ch|jower, our influence for good. They seemed to|thing is true of much of the fiction | Party raete yal ieeatrs upon to) Earl Boyle was drafted to become|as well as our gardens grow pansies,|and when you open the paper your canno’ be 50! abroad, goods musi ue uy Ld . narr serve e lc. @ primary 5; ve as masala aa Se re : z x imagine that through constant reiteration of flat- ‘ative in our periodicals. It is a candidate for the two year term &s/ They are not harmed, for the celebra-| string of priests will be ready for : ; tery and of assertions that it was our duty to help Was there ever one small paragraph so replete poor work and patently poor work, |tem as now employed does not do this.| county commissioner. His many Re-|tion ts a great prayer for rain and|painting, Paint the bodies brown. h ; ‘ yet the public doos not see it and| lt 4s too eesily captured, moreover, by | Hublican party friends insisted, for| iindness from mother nature, and{ieaving the sigeag marke white, Make 5th ihe Sepa ae in the adjustment of all international disputes, they|easerly consumes the printed sheets] those skilled in political cunning.” | the good of the county and for the in-| the snakes are supposed to carry that|the blankets and baskets very gay. with tariff buncombe as that? ___ could prevail upon us to accept the view which they|that are dealt out to it in millions. terests nf the taxpayers. His friends| prayer back into the wilderness where| And be sure and don't shiver when Prior to the war, and under the protective policy, ted and act in conformity with their selfish |S°™* of the more serious work that H: t of the Pistol are right in the view they take of Mr. the balance of trade was in our favor from year ee ge peer is done by men who apparently have arvest 0: je isto: Boyle’s fitness and qualifications for/are kept in the sacred ‘places of the| they're quite safe. lesires. ee to year. That meant that more shiploads of goods “Through its committee on law en- forcement, the American Bar associa- feet, playing strange instruments, ‘The reform of the primary system mother nature lives. For a while they|you look at the snakes for I think no best seller aspiration is none too the office. Hopis, washed, and danced about. were sold abroad than were imported. The Under-| Now they are so shaping their appeal that they good. It is not such a long time ago ‘The voters of the county should tak |‘Then they a: t oo 4 Nee iia fg sit fo Pherae ley are sent back. It is all] Monday—Adventure Trails: “Light: z l- pride in putting him over next Tues-| ve: sts _ ” wood law, a tariff-forless-than-revenue measure, was |°xpect it to reach our self-respect. They are tell-| teen in the press and elsewhere as|tion has’ conducted an. exhaustive | Gay. mee ane ae i Ang erie sae Copyright 12, by George Matthews in effect but seven months before the balance of |ing us, in varied phraseology, that if we do not be-|+o the superlative qualities of Mr. Wil-| study on tHe couses of crime in the who touched them, yet they do not! Adams. mad : trade was turning against us from month to month. |:tir ourselves to help largely to rehabilitate and|son’s prose style, whereas there is| United States,” observes the Boston z - That t hiploada of ing refinance—especially refinance Europe, then Burope| thing remarkable about ft. But to} Transcript. “Hearings have been held Unchaperoned at meant more shiploads of goods were coming rl nt i dibusy ais aindesithe debate judge from these enthusiasms, Boling-|in many cities. The committee has in than were going out. Just glance over the fol- will go all to pieces an: 3 *|broke and Emerson had jointly seized| had the benefit of opinion expressed} ¥ " ot i * lowing table, expressed in millions of dollars, bear- We are told more or less directly, that we ought/the pen to treat of certain political|and facte presented by judges pros- "The Inst ten years have witness: ; ing in mind that for the ten years cited we operated |to “cancel” debts which foreign countries owe us,|8m¢ Mstorical matters. The public| ecuting officers and others in position : SPECIAI PRICES under the protective policy : That means, we should take those debts upon OF) Sen ui acute aed atrongths 8o plain [toy cecrt te tha eae caati resented | notes the Buffalo Express. “Everyone |J Year Imports Exports |own shoulders, for they must be paid, and if they|tn this much lauded prose, yet had it]annual meeting in San Franatsco,|*?OWs what shoved the firehorss .into 1904 $ 991 $1,461 | that owe them are not required to pay, then we must] possessed a llterary taste, 1t would|Concerning the conclusions of the fees ok: Moa epee Avy be 3 1905 117 1,461 |do the paying. One argument which is persistently| have smiled at the praise no wide-| committee, it may be said that they|CUererons ie Piaf wie thee tent To close out . 1906 1,227 1,744 |advanced is that we might as well do the “cancel- dre ens ae wantin: taste; ia aegis: he sgn been SS Sraettn aneaba tiie tianand” the axes 1907 1,434 1881 |ing,” because it will be impossible to collect the! snown by Franpo, where the classicall‘Ae to, ie etetlense at cena nad Did jazz arrive after the 2 R f s t r vs 1908 1,194 1,861 | debts. system of schooling will not give the| found that “the criminal situation in Poona Thee wid egg ts Beaters ne rigera ors 909° entire explanation of this character-|the United States, so faryas crimes | ‘°%! one : = a 3 1312 1,663 Also we-are told that we ought not to fmpose fatto, Naturally, thevelassioal training |e -wictenos. are concerned, ie oreves ‘Turn back a few leaves «if timo i910 1,557 1,745 | protective duties upon imports because, if we GO| has a great deal to do with forming|than that of any other civilised coun.| 224 think what a swell chance you 1911, 1,527 2,049 |not open wide the doors to foreign produets, then but here inltry.” ‘The committee estimates that |!*4 of taking your best girl out for as 1912 1,653 2,204 |the countries of Burope cannot sell enough of their|the United States there _ little oF] inst year there were more than 9,500 8 wee Yehineat in peeat ep rine HAMMOCKS ; 1913 1,813 2,466 | goods to get the money that they need to restore “| unlawful homicides in the United |; Q = — thelr economic health and strength, ‘That sf the| "ed in the future. 3 may be that] Staten Im no year during the past dec-| eMcalac of an evening, They lined CROQUET SETS 4% af ° we shall dispense with taste alto-| age, it is stated, has the number fal.|°> is. They lin 10-years $13,525 $18,592 | United States were made a wide-open market for} gether in « final lterary democracy] on below 8,500. the walls at dances. Buz those days In other words, we imported $13,825,000,000 worth | foreign products, our own producers would be| where bad English shail ie down with} ‘This wholesale destruction of hu-| °° Sone forever. If mother or aunty of goods during that-ten-year period, exported $18. {ruined and ultimately our condition would become |¥0od, but at present it seems asi man ite is due in large measure, in|°™ Sn evening now-a-days she gets . : though a little taste in readng matter a eat thy ites tothe {28 88 evenh g now-a-days she gets 592,000,000 worth, and recorded a favorable trade|worse than is that of Europe, we are expected to| Joula help the public and in the end i es frigate oat SLANE ata hes ae such a flood oé flapper seorn—which, balance of $4,767,000,000, or at the rate of a little|forget or ignore, be weloomed by it.” tatcea andl tHe fal fea fs by the way, is no mean scorn—that under $500,000,000 annually. The lowest favorable} his nation gave many thousands of lives and PER St eae ee Hig a A ey Phat mre Heidloms: opeae fleepe Nh ged Be balances during those years were in 1909 ($351,000,-| billions ef its wealth for the winning of the war, -} Fy AG weapons. Sych conclusion is in line Feng tithe “ala aah segs th: eral 000) when commerce was awaiting the rates of the |because it was assailed by the power that had un- With Us in Spirit qrith the genecal understanding of the | 10 Atte unioey toe yore cae Payne-Aldrich tariff law, and in 1910 ($188,000,000) |dertaken conquest of Europe‘and ultimate world t rious hit with the i : tick A. Jack, a former | prising to be told, on the authority a sei when the Democratic party secured control of con-|conquest. It is suffering from the effects of its par- aoe maria ais pail ae rete of the committee, that ninety per cent ink pice Reed “Hvidently the chaperon was a hu- gress and began tinkering with the tariff with {ts |ticipation, not so keenly as the Europeay countries,|dce, Idaho notes with satisfaction the|0f the murders in this country are , so-called “pop-gun” schedules. but perceptibly. What it can reasonably do to help|stand The Tribune has taken for Hon. | committed by the use of ithe pistol; man appendix; nothing serious has : | happened now that she has . It .| The committee suggests effort to rem- gon To offset these figures Senator Hrrcrcock would |Furope it will do, but it must not be asked to dojJohn W. Hay fer governor, and ex.) 0° Bi) ‘deplorable condition. throurh {it should be asked where she has gone, no doubt quote the figures from 1914 to 1918 when |more than it chooses to do, or to concede that it is|citn the ‘Wyoming railroad men to] °vernment control of the sale of pis- it might be suggested that she has ‘we were exporting huge bills of goods to the allfes|under obligation to comply with any and all”de-| vote for “our old superintendent.” | t0!8 and ammunition. It says that the | Probably gone where they used to wish SCREEN DOORS WINDOW SCREENS. ‘All Greatly Reduced: HOLMES HARDWARE COMPANY. | she ha ° and the years 1919-21 when Europe was buying|mands that comis from Europe, or to do anything See eee pea ie oi a an ira anak al cae Phone 601 Second and Wolcott heavily from us for reconstruction purposes, for the | while the countries that may appeal plead utter| Jeweiry ana watcn repewing by ex-| law-abiding citizen, PLAYER PIANO. “ Democrats are still trying to make political capital |{nability to do anything to help themselves. Propa-|pert workmen. AN work ‘guaranteed| ‘That the problem is one cating for itaig. 5 pent Eat ieeaeitice practically out of the disaster of Europe. ganda to make the United States what someone| sper Jewelry Mfg. Co., O-S aa at least some measure of national ©0-/t> math and about 20 Bie wine Mr. Hitcucock would have been much nearer the! called perpetual Christmas tree,” must fail. Pan Get tease 7 Bigs Beat ongration ian oars ipathoritics was!range terms with responsible party. = truth if he had said that every shipload of goods The propagandists are wasting their breath. Mok ine.nt; dis Micaniam uainins) rt 5 a as Pome ahr Ma cha dt i oh ies ep a ca E ed Governor Cox, some time ago, to] eral delivery, sis2t” “OR QUIEK RESULTS TRY TRIBUNE CLASSIFIED ADS