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' bad piled up an enormous war debt. { expand. PAGE FOUR a jing from the minds of American farmers the recoi €be Casper Dailp Cridune ection that they were hard Ait in the summer and fall of 1920 and that they no degree 01 : a8 te mn toon es ‘Connecting All Dasertseets Tecovery whatever until the ding administra tiog took three measures of relief; enactment of ar Entered at Casper (Wyoming), Pestathics ‘6 second elas8) “\ergency agricultural tariff, revival of the wai 66 ee |tmance corporation, and increase of funds for th« BARTON ..... <-+.-President and EAitor'taem loan board. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | Circulation CHARLES W. Guess We Were There Member of Audit Bureau of A. B.C) Advertising pure BRITISH have a very peculiar idea of the Pruédeu, King & Prudden, 1130-23 Steger Biég.. Chicago | part we played in winning the world war, and Posten get New Mont |it is strikingly shown in a recent editorial in the comery San Francisco, Cal. Cipies of the Delly London Times, on the subject of the celebration of Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago, Boston, and San Francisco ofiices and visivvre are welcome. | ae ae battle anniversaries. The London editor asks: “Why have we in England no celebration of the No subscription by mall accepted for less period than! Marne. No celebretion of any among the won- three months 4 the Grous feats of arms in which we and our french All_subecriptions mcet be paid in advance an allies shattered and ground to powder the over- 9 + if after subscrip 7 ee Se a ae, |weening hosts of aggressive and vainglorious Ger- j many.” porci Nee: bode eS SUBSCRIPTION RATES | Americans have little interest whether these evenis aa: Wane pice: .$7.80 are celebrated in England or not, but they will Bix Months 399 more than lift @ casual eyebrow when they read Three Mo! Ah of how “we and our French allies” ground Ger =o penth ‘os Many to powder. There has been more than a sus Seriseey fe |picion in the United States that American soldiers One Year $7.89 took @ prominent part in the shattering and grind. Six Months ..... Three Months Hf! ing process. Indeed it has been accepted as a fact — jin this conntry that If the American army had rot made Its herole drive through the Argonne forest and severei the principal line of communications by which Germany was feeding its army in the }west, the process of shattering and grinding migh' | have been reversed. ‘ . ao st ullding. The Germans did some shattering and grinding See Eten en eee rece. {of thelr ownatiibs aprleg @udiauene et AMIR E | Ths Associated Pree is exclusively entitled to the, wae in full swing when the American army wa: | use for publication of all news credited in this paper and thrown into the breach in July of that year and alno the locel news published herein. ‘turned the tide of defeat into victory, Early in thai |year the “overweening hosts of aggressive and EEG |vainglorious Germany” In three days drove thc ——— ——_—————|British army from Belgian territory that it hae a taken many weary months afd any thousands * , of lives to win. A little later the French and Brit | | The Casper Tribune’s Program y time between 6:29 and 8 o’cleck p m ve your Tribune. A paper will be fe pecia] measenger. Make it your duty to ne know when your carrier misses you ish together were forced back towards Amiens over | a tremendous stretch of terrain in a dashing drive | by those same “overweening hosts.” In June the | rmans went through the French lines from thc | | | A complete and acientific zoning system for the eity of Casper. A rehensive municipal and school recreation | Aisne to the Marne and set the stage for a march | park m, including swimming pools for the chil | on Paris down the Marne valley. That, in brief. dren of Casper. was the way “we and our French allies” ground! Completion of the established Scenic Route boule. | the Germans to 1918! | vard as planned by the county commissioners, to When the march to Paris was scheduled to start the “Anieriean army was on the ground and the | Germans had not proceeded far when they were thrown back in confusion at Chateau Thierry and along the line south of Soissons where Marshal Foch had decided to strike his decisive blow. Amer. r. £ i = ——— \iean divisions bore the brunt of that attack, al- . |though aided by British and French soldiers. It Go As Fer.As You Like marked the turning point of the war. Shortly ERE IN WYOMING, Frank Mondell needs no thereafter came the battle of St. Mihiel when G00.-| defense against misrepresentations uttered by 00 men under General Pershing in two days swept sister Funk, brother Walsh and other imported the Germans from a salient that they had held in Democrats attracted by the loosening of hoops onthe face of the allies for four years. the Kendrick campaign barrel. What foreigners) Then began the greatest single operation of the say one way or another will weigh little against n War, the Meuse-Argonne offensivy.. Twenty-one life long and intimate acquaintance between Frank American divisions, many of them for the first Mondell and the voters of this state. These same |time under fire, met and conqnéred 40 veteran Ger voters know one thing about the man who has;™m4n divisions through the most difficult countr served them in congress for twenty-five years. They |that any army ever fought over. The battle lastei! have had ample demonstration of the fact, which |8tx weeks, during which the Anwer'esns took has come to be an axiom in Wyoming — Frank Prisoners and captured almost 5M canon, On the, Mondell is an honest man—he is plain, sincere and Sixth of November General Pershing ‘ound hint | straight out in whatever he does. He practices no Self on the Meuse opposite Sedan. “\Ye had ent | deception on the people. He does not pretend to the enemy’s main line of communications. ond noth | hhave done the things he was powerless to do, or| ing but surrender or an armistice could save hi that others did. Te does not agree to doa thipg “My from complete disaster,” he report ard then hurry away from the job. He remains “Germans chose the latter alternative anc and finishes the work. And it is little thought of tice was signed five days later, on the eleventh. | aelf, or the popularity of the measure, or its pos-| “We and our French allies,” appear to hive had | sible November effect that controls his action. His ®0Me neaistance as they “shattered and ground. t| word has been given, and the measure was right Powder” the German hosts, If history does not} or the word would never have been secured, and “eceive us, American soldiers not only saved the} he goes through. allies from what appeared certain defeat in 1918, Being honest and faithful Wyoming expects just| but turned that defeat into victory. We expect no such behavior from Frank Mondell, He is no de- Word praise for what we did, but it would be ceiver, trifler or juggler. He has a conscience and Some consolation if British editors would admit it has: been a Jifé long rule with him never to at-| that we were “among those also present. tack it. If this appears strongly drawn, ask par- AN. gache Cee Awaking to Better Things tienlars of thone who have lived with him for thirty! years or more, ask those who have ever had trans- OUTHERN STATES are rapidly drifting from an almost purely agricultural basis to one of actions with him of any kind, business political or otherwise. We ar> simply telling you what well-balanced agriculture and manufactufing There is no other transformation in American in these very folks ray about him. We have never doubted the truth of it in twenty years acquaint-|dustry that promises more for the future prosper-| ity of the-nation. It has heen repeatedly said that ance; and those who give Prank Mondell this char-| acter and reputation have known him many years the willingness of the south to remain a farming longer and in the bargain they are among the most section waa {ts greatest curse. Slowly but stead honorable, most truthful and most observing citi-|i1y the southlearned of its possibilities along the Hine of manufacturing, and in recent years produc- zens of the atate, jtion of mantfacthred goods has increased at a Garden Creek Fails and return. Hetter roads ior Natrona county and more highways for Wyoming. More equitable freight Rocky Mountcin region, service for Casper. rates for shippers of the nd more frequent train | has Just closed, all orders were!booked “That FIERCE BULL DOG WAS CHAINED To HIS HOUSE. RIGHT NEAR WHERE THe FooTt- BALL WENT OVER THE FENCE So THE TEAM Got ‘KATRINKA To Move THE HOUSE AND DOG FAR £NMO0UGH AWAY So THE BALL COULD BE RECOVERED. Che Casper Dailp Cridbune The Powerful Katrinka, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1922. oleae eect, Fraternities of Islam anu es Matateons (raterniies Islam always haa th but the two waich dia i>. religious and political -- 9 \ 83 fraternities, ts } i E F z i 2 5 §8 mppropriate and worthy. As to the [the Dest that ever were written were jin fact “written to order.” Shaina eae The Value of a Nickle It has been handed on from ap age that ts gone Little things grow up big in this world. ¢ That the acorn which ytelds to the first breeze, that blows, As a tree, laughs at thunderboite Djomal-e4-Din, unitke Sein est, was less of & theslogian and mors of 1. p> Mittens cuted by the Engtish. He saw In! = 5%, hurled. danger and worked hard to stir tt up eo: |S'nce this thing ts 90, you will pardon| i, action. Stoddart says: “It ts nt s I know “ too much to say that he is the father Ny | A @ tty #0 seemingly fickts, of every shade of Egyptian nation. * | And you never can tell, but that rome | 10) ‘N 4 | thing may «well His influence 44 not ena Your regord for « trivial nickle, Meypt. Diemaled-Din was 10 fanatic. He knew the forces Did you ever fuss.to get In a bus That was packea like a sardine can Ard find you were “fist” and hadn't ay x |_ To hand to the fare cateh'ng man? | We'll take tt for granted you raved i] and you ranted And swore at 90 public a “pickle” And we'll even suspect, if you don't much object, ‘That you know the true worth of « niekie, faced the Islam wor'd. and like nunsi, onty dealing @vith political ma: ters, Re offered advice of rea! value to his people: “It tx plain that the who's Moslem world must unite in a great Getensive alliance to preserve it from destruction, and to do th [must acquire the technique of etn progress and learn the secret of European power."—Amos I. Dushow To My Baby O, Love that will not let me got I hold my baby In my arms, Sen yay, en ay | | Five cents to some means mints or gum Or a root deer or a coke, 7 The Vanishing Mark There Is only one stable medium of exchange In the world today and al. the world Is using It, the dollar, Ger: many Ix using it openly. At the great annual Leipzig Industrial falr. which m the dollar basin: 12,000 firms ex- hibited and orders were taken for ds lvery well Into 1 It Is not usnel for 4, country with an unstable eurreney <6 employ a for azn eta rd. The 8p: hited Jollar was long In use ‘nt country ur currency got on Ite feet. e-war the pound sterling was ra to which ‘all the Euro- bowed. A pound would “nental currency pro- vortionately the dollar some vears ago and passed current at high value in/every land on earth. In add’t'on to losw of credit from ex- over assets, the fatal AS attacked the German and involves frean printing to avold a eearcity of currency, and each infia- tion produces another Thus « vielous cirele is in full oper- ation and a circle has no end. Moat, yet refusing to sinksa menace to commerce and fit only to be blown up and got rid of.--Robert L. Preston, My life has been made up of common Of which « Burns and of which Byron nark and threatens {ts @emise and Ud ssoliton isthe printing press. 1's Erzbereer was respons ble: he relcxated the budget system to the ite of d'searded governmental turn!- ture and belongings of the old regime and pet up the printing press Instead. It Is an Interceting question aa to Just at what point dn It dect'ne a de- preciating currency becomes worth Arbitrarily I should say that en the mark depreciated beyond! the pont where the paper and printing of fone mark note cost just one mark ft lost, all value as currency, loxt its selgn'rorage even, so to apenk, If auc) a term could be employed in speak’ng of paper currency. It's usefulness. as in medium of exchange may not have absolutely vanished but its value has doe sinajl as to be almost neg: leribte. a Of course the hairsplitter mht ar «ue that even if it took a baaketfull of | paper martes to be box of matehet the mark m’ght be said to have some value. So ft might. But this would [be tho value of insignificance, It would be better to borrow a match and Let the enemy shoot. Their ammunition fs harm- rapid pace. less against armor that has no weak spots, rears -| It is noteworthy that during consideration of the -——_——-0 Bad Tenants ID YOU EVER let your house for two seasona|Merous southern organization endorsed pratec- to tenants who did not keep it at all as you tive rates.. This is a comparatively new attitude would have kept it? When they vacated the prop-/ fof a southern organization to take. Nevertheless, erty, did you find holes in the plaster, floors mar-:Jt is apparent that southern statesmanship has red, woodwork scratched, wallpaper torn, the fur-/not kept step with southern business acumen, for nace rusted, the plimbing clogged, corners dirty,|Southern members of both houses of congress were the cellar full of rubbish, the shrubbery trampled ®!most unanimous in voting against the protective aha: tha lawn wens? |tariff bill on its final passage. Southeren_polit- *" If so, you can appreciate somewhat the task {icians, like many southern journalists, stubbornly which the Republican party faced when it assumed |®dhere to outgrown economic theorles. Their eyes the responsibility of or government in March,|#?e upon the past rather than upon the future. 1921. In eae respects ini § sro is peculiarly. endow- Things néeded housecleaning, overhauling and|°d with resources wi promise a marylous de- reconstructing. We were in disrepute with our|Yelopment. The south has coal; it has almost every neighbors. Waste, extravagance and inefficiency |fOrM of raw material; it has abundant used water Our burden | Power; it has facilities for domestic and trans- of taxation was distressing. A host of immigrants | ceanic SH Pping. These, among other advantages, was coming in to eat the bread which should be-|h@ve resulted in & great growth of texsile manu- long to the children. Unemployment, no markets, | facturing until today one-half of the cotton goods| bankruptey and panic added to our miseries. Inter- Manufactured in the United States are produced in ference and paternalism made bnstness afraid to) the south. ‘ : There was no confidence nor stability, In years gone by the southerners have been con- and the soil was fertile for the radicalism which ‘ent to produce a few food products and cotton sprang up and endangered our industries. jwhich they often sold at ruinous prices, while they The war had been over for twenty-four months, | bought their manufactured goods from the north Mad the Democratic party made any attempt to|/F from foreign countries. That policy kept the clean up the debris? As conditions grew wore, | South impoverished. The want of factories limited Sil St aid wab to “acknowlcige ana ‘LematL> the market for the products of the farm, With the The prospect was not a pleasant one; but the @stablishment and extension of manufacturing in- party of Lincoln, which had readjusted « chaotic|4ustries and the consequent butlding up of a larg.) world after one war, rolled up [ts sleeves and °T town population, there will be a nearer, a more plunged) into the Hescules aise able market for the products of agriculture. Dodgi Deflati These are facts which no thoughfnl southern D odging eflation jbusiness man will question. Yet his representa- , EMOCRATIO brethren are having a hard time |tives in congress oppose the protective tariff which deciding jnst where to stand on the question! helps to build up American manufactories and pro- of deflation. When it was first charged that the pone in case the congress shall once more become! Wilson administration had precipitated deflation, | Democratic to the charge wae vehemently denied by high author-, ities. Then a few weeks later it waa asserted by an equally high Democratic authority that the only mistake was that the administration did not start the deflation sooner. Now a new position is taken. It is charged that the deflation, which was pre- eipitated several months before the Republican ad- ministration came into power, was brought about by Republicans. 2 However, there will be no possibility of remoy- repeal the protective tariff recent- ly enacted. This should be kept in mind by every The voter who wishes the south to be self-reliant in industry and who wishes to keep in his own section of the country money heretofore sent ontside to purchase manufactured goods, should take cafe to mark hfs ballot for a candidate who is expressly and unqnalifiedly pledged to the support of ‘a tar iff policy which will insure the stability of those factories already established in the south and coo- atantly add to their number, tariff bill in the recent session of congress) nu-| jconatant, a more dependable and ® more. profit-| southerner when he goes to the polls in November. ! use the paper marks to start the kiteh en fire, It has even sunk below the Aignity of the cowrle, the shell of a mullesk used As currency in large | parts of southern As'a and Africa, | At the present rate of 2.000 marks to the dollar ghe mark bas really ceased | to function. It fs m mere akeleton de. vold of thews and sinews or even | Mesh. What Germany will ultimately | have to do, ys to abolish the mark altogether as a currency stand. Jara, adopt another ‘standard or. call |it by a diftérent name. ‘This has fre- quently happened when revolution nas upset a nation’s equilibrium, ‘The mark itself is only fifty years old. It was adopted along with the Present currency system in 1873, after the empire ivad been consolidated and stabilized. Before that the thaler wae the standard in the states of North Germany Confederation, consist'ng of thirty silbergroschen and. gach. grow jehen consisting of twelve pfeuninga. After the French revolution the eur- rency system of France was changed the old livre being abolished in 1795 and a new system with the frano as the standard adopted. The volume of Germany's currency. Js now so great that its Tedemption Is hopel And when faith ts lost, all Notice All Legionnaires and Mem- bers of La Societe Des 40 Hommes Et 8 Cheavuex: There will be a special meeting Monday night, Ge- tober 9, in the basement of the Becklinger Building. You are urgently requested to be present, as matters of importancé are 10 come before you. The sunbeams I have seen were born The common speech, | While it. may even fect ke a whote equare meal “To a guy when he's all tgt broke And to me ft seems that T might write reams On th’s thing—-but I feel the tiekle Of the last jit I've got from my last | week's lot, | So I'll go andospend my nickle. } GENE MARTIN, Casper, Wyo AN radiant with a heavenly glow— And I am captive to her charms, ‘This gentle warder’s tiny hands Gira my soul from day to day: ‘The weight of toll the world demands Passes with her smiles—awny. And oftimes when the moon's above, Aa l jull her to and fro, T ask in prayer to be worthy of ‘The Love that will not tet me got D. L. HARTLEY, McPHEEsMGINNITY @ MAKERS OF °CLIMATICALLY CORRECT? PAINTS FOR A QUARTER OF A CENTURY Is lost. Each decline tn value requires more currency in every transaction A National Anthem Discussion of national anthems ts again rife, somewhat more extens!ve- ly, earnestly and persistently than ever before; taking chiefly the tone of unfavorable criticism of both the words and music of “The Star Spang- le’, Banner," It i» to be hoped that the time will never come when Amer- teens will. not love that historic poem | nd de thrilled at the sound of ite stirring gir. Indeed, it Is to be wished that more than one im a hundred of them would Jove it enough to learn ite words, Tet it might be even finer than ft is in doth worts and. musia without belng well suited to the pur- poses of an official national anthem. The indisputable objections to two: That it ts « ." based upon & cific incident not of the first import. ance and therefore unsuited for | per- manent use, and that its aptrit is ¢l- most entirely martial, not to.say bel- ligerent, and therefore unsuited ¢o the peaceful uses of @ peace loving depreciation, As it is now the mark & derelict, waterlogged and drifting, unable to oe The Common Level things; I have not gone the highway of great chance i Nor strolled the secret by-way of ro- mance; I do not know sweet aud great cher. ishings the mings, Nor do I have the yearning each implants. to dance nation, ] Not on the ocean but on mountain| ‘The obtections to the music are that \ springs. it Its of foreign origin; that the earl- lest association with an obscene T know atone the thoughts of common drinking song, and thrt it is difficult men, to sing, Not one nor all of these five Tie pommnen eeds that can by them |objections can ever banish the song done, | |from the hymmnary of patriotism, but they may well impeach Ita c'=!m ito supreme distinction and official adcop- ton. I cannot recall that any air hae ever been aconied as @ national an- the common The Bath Room and’ the Kitchen food, and then At last the common love that comes to one Who feels the common rapture of two|them which was’ Rot composed tor 4 z ha carts ae tat purpoue, oF nt least for patriotic No rooms are of more concern to well as any who play greater i that with ingle obvi the housewife than these. B BLA, tee; nor that with a single obvious : exception, any was ever thus adopted that was of alien origin. The one ex- ception to the latter ruls is of course, that air which Peethoven, Haydn, Weber and other great musctans to- gard as One of the noblest comp s!- tions of human sentus an¢ which be- GENE MARTIN, Casper, Wyo. —_.__ _ She wants. them to radiate cleanliness, purity, spotlessness—to be nothirig less than immaculate! EMOLITE EN@MEL is the answer—be it pure white, old ivory, Parisian gray or. light blue. Jewelry ana weten renarng oy ox “ert workmen. All work gusranteec “atper Jewelry Mia. Ce, 0.8 Ride , N abent the application of Emoli Wanted—500 People Enamel "Re serapé no bake, ht apply from can Who.care as much about making a LIFE as making a LIVING for their children. RALLY DAY SERVICE METHODIST CHURCH Sunday, October 8, at 10:00 A. M. Corner of East Second and South Durbin Streets LIVE PROGRAM BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY It gives a porcelain-like finish, to woodwork or tub, and cleans perfectly with hot water and soap of cleaning lers, . Natrona Lumber Co. Phone 528 251 N. Beech St. v@ the surface and = you Save all Help The Red Cross — | NASH CASPER MOTOR CO. ANNOUNCING ' The arrival of their “23” Models, Fours and Sixes. Many new features and refinements embodied in these new greater NASH Models. See our new Enclosed Sedans and Coupes. ; Ge to the TRIBUNE’S Fashion Show October 18, 20 and 21 _ At the Elks Lodge Nash Leads the World in Motor Car Values 146 South Kimball Phone 1318 Entire proceeds go to Red Cross