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PAGE TWO Che Caspet Dailp Ccibune every evening except Sunday at Casper, Natrona Wyo. Publication Offices, Tritune Building. HONES ...... : and 16 Exechangn Connecting All Departments yone of these new nations which we are accused of not helping, has been helped by this country in the sum of over $15,000,000; Finland in thy sum of over $9,000,000; ; Czecho-Blovakia in the sum of over $102,000,000; Latvia in the sum of over $5,500,000; Lithuan in the sum of $5,5000,000; Poland in the sum of over $148,000,000 and the Serbs, Croats and}! Slovenes in the sum of $57,000,000. | >| “It should be also Kept in mind that financial aid} to Evropean countries and to the rest of the world | Was not confined to what the United States govern- ment advanced. Since the armistice, nations throughout the world, foreign municipalities and cueué Private corporations in many countries have been jlobe Bidg.,/loaned by American financial institutions over! the Daily are on file) $2.000,000,000. In the year 1921 American financial cago and Boston offices and visitrs| institutions loaned to y>vious foreign governments, - | cities and corporatious approximately three-quar- SUBSCRIPTION RATES | ters of a billion dollars. eh . ee Thus far during this calendar year there has been fice as second class is). Post mber MEMBE ASSOCIATED PRESS President and . Business 3 Associate Edttor City Editor Advertising, Manager W. BARTON ANWAY NTLEY EB. EVANS THOMAS DAILY fas. in the New York, Ch One Year Six, Months loaned in foreign countries over half.a billion dol- Three Months lars. Poland has been loaned $10,000,000; Czecho-} Per Copy Slovakia has been loaned $22,000,0¢ Jugo-Slavia | has floated a loan in this country of $25,000,000. | French cities, railroads and corporations have floated loans in this country since January 1 in the} By Mail by mail accepted for less period than) sum of $81,000,000. Canada, Canadian provinces, | ptites munet be paid dx advance 408 tne| Canadian cities and Canadian corporations have| rai ribune will not insure delivery after subscrip-|since January 1 floated loans in this country ag-| tion mes one month in arrears | gregating $162,000,000. The Netherlands government Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C.) Member of the Asso¢iated Press. Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the feation of all news credited in this paper and| 1 news published herein also the | To Respond Prompily and Dutch colonies and Dutch corporations have negotiated loans in this country since January 1) approximating $175,000,090. | South America has been a big borrower in the} Sate | United States since the armistice. We have made! Kick if You Don’é Get Your ype | loans to South American countries and South Amer- | ee eee nnd § o'closkt D: ™-/ican cities as follows: Argentine, $90,000,000; Bi 000,000; Paraguay, $1,920,000; Uruguay, $13,500. 000, $13,500,000; Peru, 100,000; ; Cuba, $41,000,000 ; os es the Dominican Republic, $6,700,000; various Central | American countries, $13,000,000. This makes a total Refuting Democratic Charges | of $381,000,000 which has been loaned to South end 5 DE . ; wy | Central American interests. | \HE DEMOCRATIC PARTY has launched a cam-| ee aie ns not beak out the statement that | Paign of criticism of the farm loan banks. It is| 1. United States is a selfish government and that being alleged by Democratic newspapers and Demo-| the United States financial institutions are not in-| cratic speakers that since the Republican adminis-| yineq to help out the rest of the world. tration came into power the farm loan banks have} ‘ i setaeehess not been of much assistance to the farmer. | } The mystery of such a campaign is not the mo-| The Silver Lining | tive—which undoubtedly is a part of the general a ‘ Pha § + ” plan of misrepresentation in an effort to discredit BUSINESS ROOM is impending. The: govern: | the Republican administration. The mystery is how ment insists that the nation is rapidly ap- the Democrats expect to “put it over.” The record | Proaching a condition where domestic needs will of the federal loan banks, kept from month to| bring about a great alemand that must be adequate } month, completely refutes the charge that since the |1y met. This constitutes the controlling influence Republicans came into power the farmers have not j toward the settlement of ir dust: al inactivity on the been able to get any service from the farm loan) Part of workers. To meet this promised demand, banks. ; manufacturing plants and industries of all kinds The farm loan banks began to function in 1917.|must be kept running, and to be kept running they The first joint stock land bank charter was taken /™Must have coal and transportation. This fact will out April 24, 1917, in Sioux City, Iowa, to operate | bring an end to all major industrial disagreements in the states of Iowa and South Dakota. Between |at a very early date. I that time and February 28, 1921, which inarked the | The boom itself is of course being brought about | close of the Wilson administration, a period lack-|by the return to more normal conditions, the econ- ing less than two months of being four years, the |omy of the government in handling its business, the! federal land banks made a total of 131,581 loans, | rise in the value of bonds as the people become more inyolving the aggregate amount of $369,891,890.| confident in the administration, the disposition on Bétween February 28, 1921, and June 30, 1922, dur-| the part of European countries to get down to busi- ing all of which time the Republican party was in | ness and settle their financial difficulties, having power, the federal land banks made 63,109 loans, | learned that the administration under Harding will involving the aggregate sum of $205,099,199. not stand for cancellation, the immigration law In other words, in one year under Republican ad-| which keeps out the flood of cheap European labor, ministration the federal land banks made 48 per| the protective tariff policy which once more hovers cent as many loans as they did in the entire four! in the offing, and a score or more of other legisla- years under Democratic administration and they | tive measures which have been written into law by loaned 55 per cent as much money in one yeur ofthe Republican party. ; £ Republican administration as they did in four years The Democrats, who have been standing idly by of the Wilson administration. and chuckling at the thought of political advantage The joint stock land banks between April, 1917,|to be reaped from industrial tie-ups, have suddenly and February 28, 1921, made 8,336 loans, aggregating| awakened to the fact that the pendulum has started | $81,034,521. During the period between February | the other way and that they have lost a great deal 28, 1921, and June 30, 1922, the joint s% 3 banks made 5,793 loans, aggregating $58,244,093. | party in power. But it is too late. Once the strikes This shows that the joint stock land banks in one)are over the boom will be with us, and no party year under Republican administration made 69 per|in power ever lost out when prosperity was on the cent as many loans as it did during the entire four) nest. years under the Wilson administration and loaned 72 per cent as much money in one year under Re : : : ndblicantadninistes Hed anat ald -tartheledtireifeur Indicating Prosperity years under the Democratic administration. | eg praer: tite FACTORS are found in a survey of These two forms of loans are the only loans basic industries and of trade and finance in the made under the federal land bank tem and they| country west of the Missouri river, despite the re- completely prove the falsity of the Democratic prop-| straint imposed by the rail strike and the uncer- aganda that is now going around to the effect that | tainty of next winter's fuel supply due to the pro under the Republican administration the farm loan|longation of the strike of coal miners. Abundant banks have not been of any assistance to the farm-|crops of all kinds are flowing into the markets and er as compared with their efficiency under Demo-| bringing good returns to farmers, gardeners and or-! cratic administration. chardists. Live stock is in excellent condition with ————— |food in plenty anu selling at prices which yield to} i; |growers and feeders a fair margin of profit over - Doing More Than Her Share |and above the investment of money and labor. There HERE IS EVIDENCE of a renewed drive by|is a continued heavy flow of crude oil from wells in | European influences to persuade the United/an elds and refinery operations show a high per States to enter into so-called economic conferences | centage of activity, though prices of both *crude oil with European nations. It is again being asserted | nq refined products have recently declined. Metal that the future of Europe depends upon receiving | mining operations have increased, with ore prices help from the United States. It is again being|,well above those prevailing last year. Meat pack- asserted that the United States is holding alobf, is}ing and flour milling continue in heayy volume.! adopting a very selfish attitude. It is again being| Some results of the rail strike are seen in a reduc asked how can the United States expert to prosper | tion of wheat receipts at market centers, though the unless she gives liberally of her means to revive} creater part of the decrease from last year’s ab- business and industry in Europe and elsewhere in normally heavy marketing is attributed to car the world. f k ; shortage and to the new system of co-operative mar- Without going into a discussion of the many!ieting which is designed to promote a steadier efforts of Europe to inveigle the United States into| movement of grain through market channels. Some political entanglements and have her become a par-| interruption of deliveries of goods from manufac Seema all et gthe EMER pen armas quarrels, it/turers to wholesalers and from wholesalers to re is instructive to set down in cold figures just what tailers are reported as affecting both manufactur- the United States has done and is doing to assist i,~ and trade; but, considered as a whole, the trade auRODe.. : lettustiohtatithis?time is” good and underlying co Leaving out of the question the amount of money | ditions in practically all lines better than for many the United States government, as a government, months: loaned to European governments during the war, it may interest the taxpayers of the country to know | that after the armistice was signed when there was| no longer any need for “war loans” being made to|mmHE LEGISLATION recommended by the presi- any European country, this nation advanced to the} 4 gent in his address to congress will be framed several nations of Europe the total sum of $715,- immediately. It is probable that the fact-finding 626,475. This includes no money advanced by this | commission for the coal industry will be authorized government to any nation to help prosecute the|in a few days, while the amendments to the trans- war. It was all loaned to other nations after the portation act, and the proposed law to enable the| signature of the armistice, some of it being loaned | federal government to enforce the rights of aliens as late as January, 1921, Of this sum, Belgium re: /wi1] be taken up in the early part of the next ses- ceived in round numbers $30,000,000; France, $407,-| ion, 000,000; Poland, 136,000,000, and other smaller nations smaller amount There is continual talk in some circles about the duty the United States owes to the new, small na-|é¢\]O MATTER what clouds may gather, no matter tions of Europe which were created at the Paris! what storms may ensue, no matter what hard- peace conference and started on their uncertain|ships attend or what sacrifice may be necessary, | In Obedience Is Safety ways. The records shaw that the United States is|government by law must and will be sustained.” | prpbably the only nation in the world that is really! Thus speaks WARREN Hanptnc. Do you recall high-| helping any of these new nations. jer or nobler sentiment, or expression of greater sin- Tt is therefore interesting to know that Esthonia, 'cerity, more befitting the times? ck land|of valuable time dreaming dreams and abusing the|* Che Casper Daily Cribune The new publisher of the Casper Review. Charles W. Barton Daily Tribune and Wyoming Weekly Beauty of Pass Route (By Fred Patee) Two-Gwo-Tee Prss route is getting its share of the tourist travel, and well it may, for it is an unusally at- tractive mountain drive. I would not want to encourage the tourists to go rom Casper to the park by way of e south entrance, but I want to im- press upon them to be sure and re- turn by that route. The roads are best I have ever been over for their age. I cannot understand just how the promoters of the South entrance route have been able to actomplish so much in such a short time. We were never able to make such. strides. on the Yellowstone highway. I was up to the South gate last week. It rained for a part of three nights while I was up there, and one whole fore- noon, and yet the roads going ove the pass almost ten thousand feet above sea level were not only pass. sidering the rain but one bad piece . or was of road, and that was called a detour, though in fact, it was just the old road. The new road ich runs right past the Two-Gwo- Inn at Brooks Lake, and whic was to have been opened: last week, will cut from ten to twelve miles off from the old road by a direct graded highway of eight miles tha being finished by the Unitec bureau of roads. This new road like all of the work of the United State bureau of roads, is graded and raised just like the railroad grade, so the water will never stand upot it, and all it will need to be a perfect high-! way will be sores kind of a surface that will keep it from being slippery during a rain storm, It might for 1 week, and unless it were cut up by” some unusually beavy loaded truck it would be all right agein after two hours of sun shine. Coming from the park south one meets at Moran the unexcelled moun raingwhere the Indian agent in the enery of the Tetons, These are first mountains I have ever one might walk right up to, and look up to the top a mile and a quar- ter above you and sight your eye along an almost perpendicular gran- ite shaft. The Tetons are of ditfer- ent heights, and stand in a straight row like so many great sentinels casting their shadows over Jackson Ja Although Jackson lake is fully twenty miles away from the foot of the mountains one would think they came right up-out of the water, so | plainly do the shadows reflect in the lake. Owen Wister mentions the Te- tons as being the mo» wonderful {American mountains in the “Virgin- {ian” and he was most certainly right fabout it. Te was through this very {country that Owen Wister describes ithe ride of himself and the Virgin fan when they were trailing Tram: jpas, the bandit, after he had killed | Shorty, and left him behind. Mr, Wis- ter describes the hiding place of the jihad men as “Steep ranges and for- «sts walled him in from the world on ali four stdes, almost without a break, and every entrance lay through intricate solitudes.” “Snake lriver came into the place through canyons and mournful pines and |marshes, to the north, and went out at the south between formidable | chasms.” very. tributary tq this |stream rose among high peaks and ridges.” It is this very country that ‘one ‘avels through in the way from the south gate of the Yellowstone |park to Lander and every section of the route is filled with romance and wonder. Crow Heart Butte, Is the last of these wonders before you arrive at Washakie the Indian village and Indian police keep house for Uncle Sam, and the government has supervision over |the last of the Shoshones. It was | Chief Washakie who gave the name! |}to Crow Heart Butte. There was an ‘Indian battle at the very foot of the hic SS). al aes in Washin ton (, MRs.MARRIET TAYLOR UPTON pce Chairman National ekeepin: hepubhlian txecutlive Cozmittee MAKING ENDS MEET The average woman experiences an inward glow when she finds she has been able to save money. The realization of a bit of wise fore- thought and saving acts like a tonic. Women are natural con- servers, therefore the women of America ought to be especially in- terested in the saving in govern- mental housekeeping that has been going on since President Harding came into office. | If the experse of running the | United States government. had to | be paid on an equal basis by every man, this year would be nearly eight collars. The Republican Congress passed taxation laws more than eight million dojlars in tax burdens from the people in a single year. The population of the United States is approximately one ‘hundred and six millions. The “nuisance taxes’ came closer home to the women in all Tanks of life in this country, than any other class. In removing the taxes on sales, or “nuisance taxes” as they have been justly called, the government semoved a burden which rested heavily on women | wage earners and on women in the removing | affects 90 per cent of the people of the United States, also have come to the direct attention of the women of this country. The Republican administration mext year will spend, exclusive of the interest on the American nat- ional debt, only a little more than one-third of the amount the Dem- ocratic administration considered it must have in order to run the government in 1920. Before the World War the wom- en held their breath at the idea of | @ $1,000,000,000 Congress. Today women and child in this / country, the saving. to every one | the Republican administration be- cause of its inheritance from the Democratic administration, is com~ mitted to more than dofible that sum in obligations and fixed charg- es that cannot be reduced. The result is that savings can be af- fected but upon two-fifths of the | Smount needed each year to run the government's household and keep {t in a position to pay all its bills and the interest on its debts. ‘The army and navy departments and good roads take more than one-half of this amount, leaving only about one-seventh for all other governmental agencies. In the light of these figures the women of America cannot but con- home. The repealing of taxes on freight, express and parcel post matter and the increasing of ex- emptions on all who have an in- come of $5,000 or less. sider the reduction in the tax burdens of this country a remark- able achievement on the part of which | the Benublican administration, _~ |fous and Washakie, then a young butte, the Shoshones met the Crows in the river bed and the battle took Place in the shallow water of the stream. The Shoshones were victor- man and valorous chief cut the heart| ‘Out of the body of the Chow chief and clambering up to the top of the butte some fifteen hundred feét above the river, ate It in full view of the whole} ‘world. The days are past when such his tory wil Ingain be written in the great out doors of the mighty west Dnt the days will never pass when our boys and girls will cease to read these histories and to marvel at the storiés that have made these spots | famous and so when Lander and © per get together and make up a set) of trip maps that will give in detail! all of the history and various legends | of the country through which one May pass in going to and from the Park by these different routes, they ‘will have the most wonderful and most interesting, and the most ro- mantic and most historical tourist | route in the known world. In Los) Angeles County, California. 96 per cent of all of the people living there, came from some other part of the United States, from somw other state. ‘They came mostly tourists too. So Wyoming by encouraging this tourist trade, and making up sets of trip maps such as the Forest Reserve are now furnishing in Lander, that will embrace the Yellowstone highway via the new Wind River canyon to the park and back to Casper by way) of the beautiful little city of Lander, they will furnish amusement and en- tertainment for the tourist that will turally get interestec business, for Wyoming !s fui great business possibilities. 1 say Lander and to Casper “Get together.” | Make up a few sets of trip maps giv: | ing full details of the romance that | has bullt up the state and give them| freely to all tourist bureaus all over the United States for distribution, get the tourist out here. And keep him here. Webster's Apostrophe When my eyes shall be turned to behold, for the last time, the Sun in heaven, may I not see him shining on the broken and dishonored frag- ments of a once glorious Union. on States diswevered, discordant, belliger- ent. on @ land rent with civil feuds, or drenched, it may be, in fraternal blood Let their last feeble and iin- ering glance rather behold the gor- wecusly ensign uf the republic, now known and honored throughout the) Earth, stiM full high advanced, its! arms and trophies streaming in their original luster, not a stripe erased or |pollutes, not a single star obscured; bearing for its motto no such mise: able interrogatory as ‘What is al! this |worth?” nor those other words of de-| ‘lusion and folly, “Liberty first, and Union afterwards; but everywhere, ‘spread all over in characters of {lving light, blazing on all its ample folds, as they float over the sea and over the land, and In every wind under the whole heaens, that other sentiment, dear to every true American heart—) iberty and Union, now and forever, one and inseparatie.”—Danicl Web- ster. { Non-Taxable Securities Western states will make a terrible misteke in experimenting with state income tax laws and fixing rigid rates of interest. Who pays for the political expert- ments? The unfortunate man who has to borrow money on his home or his farm. High rates of taxation on incomes j Owls? TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1922. MERRY MAKINGS Built for You ty You've heard of American Lovers 4 Italian Lovers and Lovers from Greece and Turkey and the Far North Pole where they keep the Honeymoon packed in ice. But did you ever hear of Desert Lovers? Here they are today—two of the truest lttle lovers that ever shared the same supper of tender young gopher snake. That sounds like a joke doesn’t !t— and of course I am giggling a bit. But these two little birds are truly Great Lovers, and Human ‘Folks would do well to copy them. They sre only tiny, brownish Ground Owls, and they do cat s: bugs and other things. But theit love last for all their lives. They only mate once, and they take the very best care of their babies. Didn't you ever hear of Ground They live in the ground out on the deserts and plains. Their homes are in the deserted burrows left by ground squirrels and prairie dogs, which the owls clean and en- large. In them they lay their eggs, sometimes as many as eleven, and a lively place it is, with eleven small owlets all squeaking at once for break- fast. Each owl eats more than its own weight in food each day. Think wat a job that makes for Mother and Father Owl! Suppose your mother had to feed you more than your own weight in food each day! And now ‘spose you mount Mr. and I] snakes an very unromantic |appecred. Elsinore Crowell Mre. Oscar Owle on cardboard, color them light brown, cut them out, and stand them up with little supports as shown at B. And just wait unti you see that hat on Oscar's head! And don't forget to notice Olga’s favorite flower on her bonnet. What is it? ‘A fat young mouse, of course! “Mak- Tomorrow—Adventure Tralls: i a Catapult.” _— SURE WAY TO GET _ RID OF BLACKHEADS ‘There is one simple, safe and sure way that never fails’ to get rid ot blackheads, that is to dissolve them. To do this get two ounces of calo- nite powder from any drug store— sprinkle a little on a hot, wet sponge —rub over the blackheads briskly— wash the parts and you will be sur- prised how the blackheads have dis- Big blackheads, Dlackheads, no matter where. they are, simply dissolve and disappear, leaving the parts without any mark whatever. Blackheads are simply a mixture of dust and dirt and secre- tions from the body that form in the pores’ of the skin — pinching and Squeezing only cause trritation make large pores and do not get them out after they become hard. The calon| powder and the water simply dis: solve the blackheads #o they wash right out leaving the pores free and clean and in their natural condition. Anybody troubled with ‘these un- sightly blemishes should certainly try_thi thi ud and property have driven the people to invest in billions of non-taxable securities. State income taxes will only drive people farther into this line of de- fence against laws arming the tax- gatherer to the teeth. Property taxes and federal and business sur-taxes down or interest higher. A way must be found to get non- taxables on the tax rolls to bear their ‘just share of. the burdens of govern- ment. taxes must come rates are going sok ee Classified ads in the Tribune are winners and possibly the keys we give with every 50c paid at office rr win you a bic prize. 8-12-tf The more experienced and critical you are of motor cars, the more enthusiastic you will be asan owner of a Wills Sainte Claire. This car is designed and built for those who demand and appreciate the finest and the best. KENNEDY MOTOR CO. 236 W. Yellowstone—Phone 909 én the Heart of the Loop Convenient to Sil theaters; railway stations, retail and wholesale districts, by living atthe MORRISON HOTEL HOTEL OF PERFECT SERVICE Gare and Madisorsts. “The Home. AN OT | MOY FF SO VR 1 SE 7 SETS 6 COTA | NEES 0 2 . ‘the... | 1 : = ENS BEAL | THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER CO. Everything in Building Material RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS Office and Yard—First and Center Phone 62 RENT YOUR ROOM THROUGH A TRIBUNE WANT AD little. «