Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 6, 1922, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT Casper Daiip Cribune Che Advertising Representatives. eS : be Bide Biég ne & ® SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier By Mall “\"\ember of Audit Rureau of Circulation (A. B. ©) Member of the Associated Press. Saat and You Your cyBune, ick if Bon't Get 7 I Developing Public Opinion PON ISSUE joining those who work and those who manage, there is no occasion to doubt the judgment of the public if conditions are clearly un derstood. The danger is that arising from f fsues. -The cry that it is labor on one side and capital on the’ r or of employers on one sid ahd arners on the other raises a false issue. The real question is that of maintaining commu ni life, and of securing a fair adjustment of the| between the workers in different indus he réal paymasters of miners, railroad em and all other workers employed in indus-) where public service is rende or goods} uced for general consumption are the public in all fairnes# have a right to be and répresented in settlements. is naturally predisposed as such they The public to side with} wage earners against.employers, and as long as the | issue seems to be confined to these parties, contin ues to be so. That is naturally the case, for a great majority the people of this country earn their| living. and as long as this is the case there is no} danger that legislation will be unfair to labor. | Notwithstanding the claims of agitators that the laws and courts are against the laboring man,| ihere is overwhelming proof to the contrary. The! cémparative treatment of capital and labor in the| igansportation service. od the exemption of labor Obganizations from te maut-trost law, afford clear} iDustrations of the dict Uat laber as a rule has t the hands of the goy-| er ities. It has the enormous weight} that i] ter ug pov * Polit ibver » social order, although} advocated in the bor while at the same} time opposed to interest, will not blind| the r minded people of any class in the long run. The same thing is equally true when applied the other way employers. More substantial progress has been made in re-| cent time toward establishment of effective author- ity in the hands of the government over matters| concerning employment terms and conditions upon) which tasks are performed, than ever before; and| it would appear that such a complete consumma-} tion would be desirable and popular with all in terests. Any plan to bring about just and equit able determination of questions constantly arising in a speedy manner should be welcomed by em-| ploye, employer and public and so long as ther must be a supreme authority the hands of the gov ernment are safest wherein to place the power! The question of obedience will not arise once all| interests are in agreement. Public opinion will readily back any move to abolish industrial dis- turbances on a fair basis to all spacespied. Benefits From Republican. Statesmanship} I N OCONTEMPLATING Republican achievements of recent years we should not lose sight of reclamation and the tremendous benefits it has brought to the west in particular and the country in general. The act was signed by President Roose- velt in 1902 and for twenty years it has stood as a monument to far-sighted Republican statesman ship. Approximately $132,000,000 has been expended on various projects, involying the successful solu- jion of some of the greatest engineering problems in the world. Two of the dams that retain river flood waters are the highes in the world, while fiye others are among the largest of the kind. A mile tunnel has been built, the longest in the world for conveying irrigation water, and a num- ber of other tunnels from half a mile to four miles} long have been tructed. Over 500 miles of main| line canals have been dug, in addition to 13,400! soiles of smaller Is for distributing the water: over the farm lands The act provided that the cost of projects should) be reimbursed to the government and it is remark-| able how faithfully the homesteaders have lived up| to their obligations. Of course the amount of the charges could not be ascertained unil the comple-| tion of the project, and it was not until 1915 that] ene division of the North Platte project was fin- ished. Every year since then has seen the completion of a new work. The payments began in 1916, and that year showed that 88,6 per cent of the amount due was paid. In 1917, the percentage was 91.9 per the cent; 1918, 92.3 per cent; 119, per cent; 1920, 95.2 per cent; 1921, 89.3 per cent; and in 1922, 85.9 per cent. The pronounced slump in agricultural prices following the war accounts for the falling off in the payments of recent years, but the farm- er instalments to the high point indicated. there is Probably t another business in the country that | would like ! Republic are enitled to great credit for keeping up their | justice, considerateness, inl peace. The experience of these industries dem-| ates that it is the spirit, not anization, which is of first iiportanc plan motivated by a selfish spirit will make ship wreck, while a bungling plan directed by a manage- ment which is fair and human will succeed. } “When management puts first its Jabor relations, |* when its first concern is the welfare of its working contentment} ons the scheme of} A good | « drinking foun would be ignored, but if the club appointed a com- ittee to interview him on the subject, it bring results. So it is with a political party. Speaking for its voice is powerful. If the party is in au its voice is all-powerful, tor the political power is, for the time being, the govern wre: ment. in governed c} You take your ballot is open to every adult citizen. It | Roosevelt, when a youth, that he suggested oné evening going to a meeting of the ward politicians. Certain of his family remonstrated with him, sa ing, “They are a low class of persons, saloon keep- ers and ignorant men.” “Then,” replied the young | Roosevelt, “it is all the more necessary that I go} They are the governing class for they are controll- ing politics. We who stay away permit them to, govern. I intend to belong to the governing class.” In one of the immense national parks it was) noticed that there were ne pedestrians, although | walking was not forbidden, but afoot one woud never get very far on the long stretches of winding road, With the vast complexities and problems of our country, one-man effort is negligible. To get} anywhere we must annex ourselves to modern, or-| ganized methods. That is a very easy thing to do. | There is nothing exclusive about a political party. | On the contrary it is continually bidding for} workers. | At this period, the Republican party is especially | amenable to the efforts of women. Any earnest | woman who wants to make her ballot of real use | for the betterment of her home, her community and | her nation; and who has a high altruistic purpose | to serve her generation, will find a responsive field for her activities in the Republican party. The n party gave the ballot to women. It has already placed women in office in towns, states and nation. It nominated and elected the two only women who haye thus far been members of thx congress. { In the present campaign, {t has on its tickets, in localities where there is a chance of election, more | women candidates than all the other parties put together. Oother parties have ‘nominated women candi- dates where there is no possible chance of election: that is no compliment to the sex, but rather shift- ing on them something which nobody wants. If a woman wishes to accomplish | anything pol- itically she stands a splendid chance of doing it in| the Republican party much better than anywhere | else. SS. since the| choice— is told of War Piffle Wage | can show payments in the last two years so near the amount that was due. In the last ten years crops to the value of $4 00,000 haye been raised on the various reclam tion projects hat is almost three times the amount invested by the government. Incidental to flint production there have heen built up towns and cities that consume great quantities of the produ ther sections of the country. Not onl; Wee WAGES wers bound to result in wars,” remarks the New York Tribune. | Well, we do not see why. The farmer came down | from his war prices without making a war; the! | manufacturer took his loss on goods for which he had bought materials at war prices, and he did not make w wners of stocks and bonds saw the bottom of values, and they did not make wh should a reduction of war wages € a wage war? rep out war then. caw . in on the corner, she} Through the twilight mist and the |¢red to your grocer in a truck run by would | am able to glimpse A Mess ot pane vecrer, other words, electricity or gas That ssemsas gold as tho sun that ys a most Important part in every | 11 Varieties of Green and Black Room: phase of modern housekeeping. | ae 8 +. || Pigeon Tea & Coffee Co. You belong either to the governing class or the| Turning the western sky to rose— Ee Casper Dally Ccidune Royalty {The Homesick Race Horse | Modern Methods The Oregon Short Line Railroad (4) Internati rical Worke: (@) International 1 Rrotherhood of Mlec- | ¢ and another sympath. exiled colt is Marshall in ence neutral waters while tho confer- Brotherhood of|t boy of the American lasted. Thus the Harding ad helped Subscribe for the Tribune and get a key for every 50c paid. S124 electricity or one, ut least, that His tendes face,|Pended on electricity for ignition and on mei|ghting. | | The butter you spread on your toast | And always, then, in my heart thore|Probably was churned in an electric-, grows ene operated churn. n branches’ lace, As it smiles, from the aky, BUY PIGEON’S TEAS Phone 623 And it, makes me sure that the Father| knows, That His love has put it there! —Margaret E. Sangster. Classified ads in the Tribune are winners and possibly the keys we igive with every Sle paid at office will _iwin you a bi; = prize. Same old process agme aa Pies ame old value. Same Health. ualities siving Hee oe of - Same aging Budweiser Everywhere ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC., ST. LOUIS Parker Bros. Cigar & TobaccoCo. Wholesale ioe Casper, Wyoming The parties! was making a birch bark whistle, cut- ican ministers for their presence and|™ade a mate to it as at D, putting advice, and to President Harding for|the thin strip of bark betweem them The vessel| 95 at G, fastening it at E and F was anchored three miles off shore|“nd. blowing through the hole. (1) International “Association of sta. | bavi ior Mr. Whitey is full of regrets|tory of Central America. | chinists fe having sold the colt that was.re-|to the treaty were profuse in their|ting a (2) Amalgamated Sheet Metal Work-|#rded by many as the champion of| expressions of gratitude to the Amer-|the grove as at B and C. rs, International Alliance. | his age; it grieves him to see the colt (3) Brotherhood Railway Carmen of prays James Rowe also has re- America. s when he witnesses the antics|the use of the warship. jing of bark, and it als> means to re- WEDRESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 182. WITCH ARM fece as at A and making Then he Ned proceeded to show him how to make a watertight basin from birch He did not touch this but explained that he was : deiys, = eurde u the reclamation act is a product of: As — great rescent hosses ar cunpany announces its intention to ctanee ship, the supporters of the, Night's somenesp ii. | Mer stars of the turf in/g preference to young men resid oe ayers tere ba: then | s rival this respect | tr its Unes tn employing mien, as| uumber p cally ev “ z the cosy} opera singers, baseball pisyera and|‘ar as possible,.to fil places in all} Deme in or out of congress; in ne ares lasing ether humans who are the public|classes of the raflrond service and/ e benefits of law have been so abundantly ye.” Notes New York Herald. |advances the following reasons there-| SS = oustrate! Umt the members of bout parties vie case in point is thac of the| for. FOR LITFLE, FRIENDLY* FOLKS, with ench othr im paying it trivate. | Other ite rack three year-old colt Waiskaway,| First—It will dimirate the “float ra) WHO ADVENTURES publican projects, now bitterly v»posed * throug! [r= sold by Harry Payne Whit-|er” among our employes and substi-| LIKE ney to C. W. Clurk of Montana for] tute local citizens and taxpayers. n nouons, wild prove their soundness ‘= men, ; i slation permits them to function. The close: | $150 fa 5 Second—It will create a mutual in-, ADVE ae 4 hip subsidy bill is a case in point. It contains eS eee pierre Aah as speed SOE ae ee for You by ship subsidy bi s a case in 7p oy 4 » Wats ees Cou a ney Stud near Red Bank,/ between the roads an: © people many of the elements of the reclamation act, and, Wile al oa chee ee Jersey, was ainong the colts and|they serve whereby each will be able} (Let's be friends! If you want to “s aes cotiene Spragen ggheagge represepts an investmert on the part of the gov-| Dance round thee until the dawn lies he had known from his birth|to understand dnd appreciate the know snything about boy stunts write = = non as oes og i rnment that will return as great a profit to the urdeiys, my Mieurde- jhe was as weil behaved as could be| problems and difficulties of the other,|™® im care of The Editor of this paper pores — Rng =a el people as money spent in reclaiming the west | desired and went through the course}and work to a common end, viz: the “Md I'll be glad to answer. Or, = : Se peas s' (2a Fleurdelys, my Fieurdelys; of training as scherly as his task-| Welfare of the country generally as "SPS. you have some schemes nie ‘s astanishmen' an oe Soft w! * 2. aster, the vetera’ jam he inter firoad and the| Sher fellows would be glad to hear can make one quicker than t! Soft winds sing in an undertone, | master, bh veteran James Rowe] the interests of the ra t . aun thet”; dacicrell Men; ac & sudden Peace in Industry Birds, in love, whisper goodn ght, |could desire. He was at home amid|communitjes they serve are identical.|"bout. Hand ‘em on | Go pa peng cg - | As you upen your throne the scenes and compenions be had| This is in line with the modern) | ‘cd = my S RITING of his years of contact with and obser i and gold, and white; jalwoys known. tendency of public utility companies Birch bark!" cried Ted, taking out ragateoedd = oe is vation of industrial relatious, Dr. Worth M. ny’ Flour-delys! “The transfer to the establishment|to sell their stock and bond isrues| his >>>ket knife and running toward a pes 9 anes er ree bark barre Tippy says in Richard Shipp. [of Mr. Clark brought a change . He|®™ong customers, employes and resi. large birch tree. Just aa he started| again New stopped him. fo: uses yy 3 rief ana showed a deatre to ner neal dec be | tanta Of the Restaeatae i: jto cut some of the bark his cousin} waste your time on that. It’s a silver In studying the hundreds of factories in which * ctype se Paes as. echataieeen ag Such a policy coupled, with the | Ned shouted to him to stop. Dirch ‘and the bark cracks too easily re has ben industrial peace, an extraordinary rj Railwa 3 Unions = eee nd sulky on the race} Plan of employing home le who| “Two mistakes,” a Ned ag he| Take the white birch. ges. They have no uniform system of y urse in his morning gallops, while|4re familiar with problems of the/come up. ‘First, never run with an tions. In many of them labor is union = : ¢ rail-|4t other times he tried to rid himself |Community or state is sound in prin-}open knife in your hand. Second, rs nave established labor representa-| The similarit the pomp Boni jet the boy on his back and bucked| ‘ple. It will result in be-:efiting. th jrecerset \iceh: berks trem 2. hye the form of shop councils. Thousands are labor or iethe ed asi tas ape: lunged like a bronco. It was| Public, the workmen ana ihe employ-|tree unless ‘t is absolutly necessary. ctories in which employer and employes | "Wits in confusio thelr affilia- when Marshall, the colored ex-|i" compa.y. It will reduce iapcv|It would kill the tree .f you circled vach other per itv’ din the dave OF hand |S organizations and to ar m ercise boy of Whitney stable, with | troubles to a minimum and defeat they‘ and it would disfigure it anyway.” . reagan 7 x bays: ; uons. sch 7 4 i | « ” “ | industries i the human relations are on a neigh-|" ‘The sive brotherhoods, which are in| "lose touch and Presence he was paket agitatcr with his wild! “Right,” said Ted, “but where—* boring basis. Many plants some of them employing}no way part of or affiliated with the ress aot wer borrowed to “put him “Here are two birches that have many as a thousand operatives, ‘have highly an Federation of Lador, are as rae satan eee quent Whisk-| , re down, help yourself to all the developed welfare work frequently on a co-opera-} oe ‘ " Th yo 5 ‘ tive. Basia ene ontaen wader tap eon tnoniot ake saat @) Brotherhood of Locomotive Engi-| ,.* Certiin amount of work mgt Tacoma Treaty “What's the best use for this bark?” © basis, i often unde a . neyo nd ne oh neers. 4 — tives; and they hy mehow x aged to pre-|"“t) Brotherhood of Railway Tratn-| tests of racing. If a race horse will] “Take home a tréaty” was the slo-| “For Tedtatielealigah’ For us, out | Serve the atmosphere of a big family. A surpris-| 0) not take his exercise in private it]/gan of the three Central American|camping, the very. thing outer paper- | as a whole, as for example. The Colman Lamp com-| (3) Rrotherhood of Locomotive Fire-| ™ust be done in phblic; the stimulus | presidents who met with the American| like bark on the dry side of the tree ing numbr of employers have for years talked over| men and Enginemen. of qecing under eclors usually brings} ministers on board the U. S. S. Ta-|in wet weather, for kindling,” sald policies with their men, either by departments or} (4) Order of Railway Conductors, out the best that is in a horse. With|coma recently and signed a docu-|Ned, “although there are almost hun- any of Wickita, and th A. Nash company Inc, of| (} Switchmen's Union of North|'Is purpose Whiskaway was entered|ment in ‘which “che threo republics,|dreds of things you can make with ti. I know of ane manufacturer who thinks |Americe. jon Wedn last in a race at Sara-| Nicaragua, Honduras, and Salvador | bark.” ia eo ethan but--will not|.. The, fiset four ond ee Caekies s a prep: on for ajrenewed and extended indefinitely| “Picture frames and glove boxes and that his factory needs a gymnasium but l veterréa.te as tina tg. Pour," :bette al event in which the best of the|thsir general treaty of peace made in|such things,” said Ted, scornfully. uild until the men in a common meeting agree Sirvics None of| olds were to meet. Gotng| Washington in 1907. The purpose of|“They set] them at souvenir places.” upon it. hese orgar post t colt lunged a the treaty was to settle amicably andj “No, I mean baskets, roofing for “Thag which stands out in all these establish-} The follow | te s rider. Int efficactously all differences which|temporary lean-to shelters, packs ments is the spi of the management which has|as the ‘ * and now|T2n unplace demor have tended to disturb Central Amer-|twisted intd ropes and such things, saneed fromi=itam to cthe mare It ia bolas’ afl pe nbers of the/°f condition or an Hingness to| ica recent years, and President|even watertight basins,” ‘Ned ex- tet i-will aid’ faipodaali he Gold Rule and|Rallway Department of the American | make best effort Melendez of Salvador declared it was|Plained, but Ted was doubtful about g 3 ike vor gon Pagar ne sire apap see op edging (AR PS Sa result of Whiskaway‘s be-|the most important event in the his-/the water tight basin. Meanwhile he it makes for ething else I've learned,” ed Ted as he cut some bark and fashioned it as shown at H-IJ-L. Then he folded it over along dotted line I to L, then folded it from H to K an: again from J to K. The next step was to push in this triangular fold, as at M, cut a stick and split the en@ insert the fold and bind around stick as shown at > “There you are, sir,” said Ted proudly, “a fine water-tight drinking cup with handle and all. “You win,” laughed Ned, “and that reminds me—I've heard that some campers can take a jatertight basket such as I made, susyend tt over crols nd Doll water in it, simply by keep- ing ft thoving so that it will not catch fire.” “Perhaps,” said Ted, doubtfully, and they tried it, only to burn up several baskets before they finally did achieve this stunt, that marks the ex- pert camper. Try it sometime, if you have pe. tlence. Tent. ‘ross'?* asked and Ned explained that the word (Pridey—"Making a Canvas J ‘ross means the reugbt outer cover- Tomorrow—Merry Makings. ‘Gopyright, 1922, by George Matthew rough surtsee, generally with sandpaper or a rasp or wood file. flermakers, Iron Ship Builders and to train Colin, tion has placed a secretary; bark although Ted was sure the bark men and their families, then there is good-will and|foisers of Ameria : 1 other famous race}of state at ‘the disposal of Chile and| Would crack and leak. First he cut peace. What a striking demonstration ‘of the] (6) International Brotherhood of Feru, through which the Tacna-Arica|*" oblong plece and marked @ section value of the Golden Rule as a guiding principle in| Blacksmiths, Drop Forgers and Help ) i could speak he too be es ; the pi sk 3 a Lah on the inside as at O. the management of an indust | |* his opinion of exist. | ifl s been successfully solve ponte | Among the more important of the Being dumb he can)2"4 three American ministers and an| S0lng to fo ret en bps ee | other railroad organizations which are|sive vent to his feelings only|m™erican warship on a peace job for| zéa FOS 2a Join and Take Part members of the American Federation |through exhibitions of temperament.|% set:together treaty to includy the 7 —— ace ‘, : 3 of Labor are the following: |He is begging to go home.” Central American disputants. And y HEN WOMEN tained suffrage, it was the)” (1) united Brotherhood of Mainten-| ——————_— the league of nations slumbers on. po onteng advice of Mrs. Catt that they should go into}ance of Way Employes and Railway Y M _ T. M the party of their choice and be active in it, hav-} Shop Laborers, which organization did | our ornin: oast . | After Ned has rossed off the thick part | Adamns. ing an influence on its policies—otherwise wh at | not go out on strike, pending a re-| s LIKE CLOUDS ACROSS A SUM- | r = was the use of the ballot? They had “indirect | hearing of. a Teter i wages or-| we | MER SKY influence” before, and if they were to’ stay out-|“ered by the Labor Board as of July 1.} Perhaps you made it in an electric | side of the parties, they might as well not haye| © Brotherhood of Ratlway and/ toaster; perhaps your gas range, |foretelling the dreaded storm are the P ie ° Sse | Steamship Clerk. Handlers,' But, before the bread reached you—|SY™mptoms of women’s diseases which the vote. af ee Express and | The fertilizers which fattened the|POlnt the way to physical and mental As individuals, we have a certain influence—not * (8) International of wheat ¢: had been ground and|>reakdown, The nervous irritability very much among more than one hundred million | Firemen and Oilers . d by electric machines the backache, the dragging pains, are people—but, joining with others, moving in the] (4) Brotherhood Railway Sighalmen wheat, had probab'y been|net only hard to endyre, but they, same direction we are going, we are a force which | of America. threshed, had been grouna] bring estore deepens of Meese un-| is not only the sum of the force of the individuals} (©) Order of Railroad Telegraphers.|into flour, ctricity. less something is done to relieve the n but the grou ains a certain additional mo- h went into the dough Sufferer. There is one standard rem- at bite hatte: srOup gains a certain additional mo- | : ’ come trom, chwatnitiices whey which has moons rne way lout tor ¢ 0 ¥ electricity. nearly 60 years. ‘The women who Do you remember the Roman story of the bundle Sunset Prayer The loaf wan kneaded, shaped, ana|HAVe “come back” through the use of of sticks? Tt was easy to break one alone but, bound |carried to th en b y Lydia E. Pinkham's. Vegetable Com- 4 8 | Otten, when in some far-off place, Nerf! 20) OVERS DY TRORIREY TON |) Os ist t together, they could uot be broken. |. Where tall pine trees sing to the| 0. electricity It was baked in an ! present an argument stronger Women’s clubs discovered long ago that if one = 4 oven heated by gas. Tt was wrapped|'%®" werds could ever be—Adv. 7 ‘ : ———————_—_ individual should suggest to the mayor that she| 1st seems as if, for a little space Y an electric machine. It was deliv { Wear! Wear! Wear! but it never touches the wood Prd bengie heels, kicking toes, poe eee tucinae legs never ® floor vi wlth Devoe Mare Floor Fisch "* Its deep rich glow adds buwuty to the room. Its fromhes, makes cleaning easy. Its ovatoess haere dust and germs out of the pores of the wood ‘What ® great help to good house- keeping is a floor finished with Devoe Marble Floor Finish Varnish. Extremely durable. Easy to apply, AL it) A John ppt ensen 22 WwW. Sauna Phone 33 WATCH FOR OPENING! FIRST ADDITION TO MIDWEST HEIGHTS. Lots facing the Pavement are now being graded. Weare equipped with the stock to supply your wants in high grade lumber and build- ers’ supplies. Rig timbers a specialty. KEITH LUMBER CO. Phone 3 Building Materials — | 3 : 3 : TISTOPO SPOS POOP OLIOOP PPO PIE DOD OOS OE POD OOOSOOP DODO

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