Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 12, 1922, Page 6

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PET RRE REE RE COMET NR TET eveereer eres Re S ELM P IS ORRIN SED nore tnppeween SEE DERSS D+ bree onetpreneer - PAGE SIX. Inaues ever County. Wyo. Che Casper Dailp Cribune evening except Sunday at Casper, Publication Offices. Tribune Bul [SMSER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TELEPHONES . one Exchang 15 and 16 e Connecting All Depatiments r. November 22, 1916. (Wyoming), Posteffice as second class CHARLES W. BARTON President and Edftor Advertising Representatives. Prudten, King & Prudde: 20-23 Steger Bidg.. Chicago, Tit; 286 avenue, w York City; Globe Bide. Boston. Mass. paron Bidg., 55 New Mont gomery Si, San Francisco Cal. Cipies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco, offices and yisiters are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier One Tear ony =x Months jonths One % "i Per By Mail scription by ma: three months. All_subseriptions mu: Dally Tribune not ins tion be me month in arrears 7.80 3.90 1.9% 19 decepted for less period than +r of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©) Member of the Associated Pre: Aso 8 wae fur publication ¢ tea to the 8 paper and > ml] srr A complete ing system shippers o! The Casper Tribune’s Program tor the recreation Scenic Route boule. commissioners, to and more highways ¢ the A comprehen municipal and school park system, including swimming pools for the chil dren of Casper. Completion of the established vard as planned by the counts Garden Cre Falls and returr Better roads for rona county for Wromin. More equitabl freight rates for Rocky Mounts. region, and more frequent service for Cas; train Wyoming Roads N HIS ADDRESS at Rawlins the other evening te Hon. John W. Hay, Republican candidate forjextended by somebody and about Wyoming roads: m4 + have constructed in the past few years have been built by money realized from! That's not taxation, it’s bond! Out of the vast sums which we have voted governor had this to “The roads which w the gale of bonds. money. in bends we have somethng like $300,000 left. have built some roads, but let me say to you that| We the question of maintaining these roads is going to be a problem for we have bonded this state up to the full limit. There is no way to issue more bonds, ard if there were I am svre that the peo ple wouks hesitate to place any additional burden |tation to leave the west. upon semselves. “I gtn in favor, very strongly so, of good roads, but Sum also in favor of getting 100 cents worth @ut of every dollar that is spent on roads. The only way to bring about better roads and the prop- up an efficient organization. done ly further taxation as our people are al- ready overburdened.” Pat ees Democratic Stock Arguments N° ONE, not even Democrats would charge Al- oh variff. be Casper Dailp Cridune yvelt and who siace has been sent to the senate and] Vernon McNett. house a present nator F) of Mlinois riff. and Senator P of tht tariff of 1922. All these men have studied the present law; other | able and upright senators, new in public life, have studied the present law; and all have indorsed it.! Capable, industrious, high-minded men, of purest! character and unimpeachable integrity wh stake sary t can prosperity. M any Year was devoted to constru: i Of course it is “polit ficeseekers and free trade new: this act, cially s' hal be ahead | | —o— ore work was done and a larger time consumed in making the present Jaw than in the building of riff im our entire history. Over one solid! « the tariff act of for Democratic of- spapers to attack arranged with such care and toil—espe- ce they have nothing else to atta jis it not plain horse sense for citizens to give the paid in advance and the/new tariff a chance? Within a year we shall know delivery after subscri> |how it works out practically, and if the results are! as bad as the results inflicted on the countty | by any Democratic tariff ever enacted we will stiil W hat Mobeihins! Bias doubled in Chieago due entirely to the consump: | tion of this poisonous beverage. New cases at the rate of a hundred and fifty a week is the present! ment. city This startling situation is not confined to Chi cago alone but the some condition of affairs ex ists in many other large centers of population. Vietims under observations of the medical com- mission created to aid the courts in handling the unfortunates, are more than preventing charges alarming an oer iN west for the White House.” U |which electors participate before taken up at the White House. years ago when his father-in-law, enterprise did not get very far. were two years ago. BIER RSENS he eae Merely Democratic Propaganda SYNDICATE correspondent recently started « story out of Washington to the effect that the er maintenance of those already built is to build|government had a deficit of $650,000,000. If we fail to do that/ ceeded to asseri th we wil) fail to keep our roads up for it cannot be |Republicans who A often been expressed by him, not only back in 1909 ency of the Republican party. when the Payne tariff bill was under discussion, | but sings, and particularly in the formation period | public: of the *ordney tariff but recently made the law. |the c Mr. Beveridge’s idea has always been that a culating it in an effort to persuade the taxpayers tariff “should be high enough to protect American |that the present administration las made false industry and markets from underpaid foreign ri-\representations regarding its accomplishments in vals and low enough to prevent American prof- iteers from exploiting the American public.” The war stopped productive industry in Europe and kept foreign products from American markets more effectively than any tariff, however high, pos- sibly could have done. This fact and this fact alone saved American industry from such a trade on- slaught as no land ever expected. Who does not re- call the epidemic of idIness in America just before the war in Europe? When millions of American laborers were out of work, hundreds of factories were forced to shut down and thousands of American business concerns had failed or were collapsing? In opening his campaign in Indiana for the United States senate Mr. Beveridge asks: “What shall we do about it? It is a simple prob- Jem of jlain common. sense. is the best on earth markets put together. Our American market better for us than all foreign Our total export business, even in normal times, was but a small fraction of our domestic commerce; and foreign markets are mow poor and meager. “Highly paid labor working short hours cannot compete with low-paid Jabor working long’ hours, even in our own rich and ample markets; and the idea of out-selling Europe in her starved. and lim ited markets is a-mathematical absurdity. “To open American markets to foreign n-made goods and attempt the capture of European mar- kets by American-made goods means that we will give our markets to European producers and not get European markets for American producers. It would be like the fable of the dog that lost the bone he had trying to seize its reflection in water. “Yet exactly this is what Democratic party would have us do. this is what the Republican party by the new tariff law just enacte3. the the political-ridden And exactly | Every argument now advanced against this pro tective tariff law was made against tive tariff law that ever was passed. which today are deafening us are but of those delivered generations ago. tration of the “burdens of protection in this campaign which has thousands of times in years gone by. The reasons now given and the language not been every The speeches | money. used againsi the new Republican tariff by against the Morrill tariff of 1861, against the Mc. Kinley tariff of 1890, against the Dingley tariff Their feeble imitators of today could be of 1897. convicted of plagarism. Every progressive who followed Theodore now ' bureau. As might be expected ntry economy. | $650,000,000. every fiscal year in government. likely to come true, where istration they not onl larger month by month. | There was nothing | Harding's ‘reference to “estimated” |ment would jcoming y |the year closed. 10,000,000. pose of reducing expenditures. of $300,000,000. TE of all the warning that have been given | rid moonshine whiskey insanity cases bave | in no sense the propaganda of wine and| tes but the facts taken from the ree-| by the most eminent alienists of that ordinary maniacs. \They are capable of any crime or outrage. A mat. ter of this sort is not to be dismissed lightly. The country cannot go back to liquor, nor even to wine and beer, but it is compelled to find a means of increase in Not Desirable Tenant R. M'ADOO says he “would hate to give up the ally in a mat- tT of this sort, there is a more or less invitation a further formality in residence is Mr. McAdoo had some such notion a couple of Mr. seemed very keen to guarantee the lease, but the| Total world registrations are estimated at 13,- There is no greater prospect, now apparent, that things will be any better two years hence than they The best thing Mr. MeAdoo can do is not to worry about the matter, but con- tinue to occupy oblivion and not expect any invi- the Democratic official ity and Democratic newspapers throughout have taken up this story and are cir- The whole story was based upon a statement jmade by President Harding in connection with his veto of the proposed honus. In that statement he called attention to the fact that there was an “esti- mated” deficit for the year ending June 30, 1923 of The public may not understand but the writer jof the article well knows that deficit “estimates” | have been a matter of routine at the beginning of The difference |the days when every well educated) \between this administration and the Democratic jadministration preceding it is that now, under the joperation of the budgét, these “estimates” are not under Wilson’s admin- came true but they grew unusual about President defi¢ite, It {simply called attention to the fact that the govern. e to keep on economizing during the } s it has done during the past year. What the writer of this alleged non-partisan dicated article did not inform the public and |the Democratic newspapers are not informisz the public, is the fact that in June and July 1921, just after the present administration came into power, the estimates of expenditures for the fiscal yéar }which had just ended and which was then just be ginning, aggregated 759,000,000 more than jamounts which were yctually expended by the time} What the public was not told in this article is that the fiscal year which began in} July, 1921, promised a deficit of many hundred) millions, but that owing to the economy program of | |the administration it closed with a surplus of oyer A year ago the government faced an “estimated” has prevented deficit of many hundreds of millions with the buds | |get bureau still an untried institution, and with| the heads of the executive departments of the gor- protec-jernment unorganized for the purpose of saving/ The first meeting of the business heads of | faint echoes |this governement ever held in the history of the Not one illus:|republic was held on June 29, 1921. At that meet- is presented |ing there were some 500 department, bureau and) repeated | commission chiefs. They were addressed by Presi- |dent Harding and Director Dawes, of thé budget | They received their instructions as to how | Demo-|they should organize and co-ordinate for the pur-| cratic politicians today are identical with the rea-| sons stated and ianguage employed by Democratic It was the result of this systematic organization politicians against the protective tariff of 182 in the interest of economy that enabled the admin- stration in the first fiscal year of its existence to start that year facing an “estimated” doficit of | many hundred millions and close it with a ew In view of the fact that the budget bureau and all of the administrative agencies of 2» helped the law declared that it is honest and neces » the restoration and preservation of Ameri- 3; but public |, | He. pro- hat this alleged deficit exposed were claiming credit for balanc- ing the ‘oudget and was making it very embarrass- ing for Jtepublican campaign speakers who were re- jferring to the splendid work doné in the way of |public economy by the Harding administration. i This sly way of conveying a totally false ts pres: |S HORE DEMOCRATS who are howling about sion of existing conditions is a typical piece of bert J. Beveridge with being of the reactionary Democratic propaganda. The writer was one of the type of Republican. He opposed the Payne-Aldrich leading propagandists of the Wilson administra- His tariff theory is well-known, and has|tion and has never become reconciled to the ascend- a Republican worked and voted for the ° Senator Jobnson, of California; nee, of Marylar4; Senator McCormick, ‘oindexter of Washington are typical of these former progressives. Moreover, | every Republican senator and some Democrats who) have devoted themselves to the particular interests! of the farmers were and are determined supporters | By cuTrile Some HoLES IN AN OLD HAT Box ,VERNON M*NuTT MADE A PHONE BooTH So HE. COULD TALK WITH MORE PRIVACY To HIS SWEETIE ~ ) OVER THE BoarRDING- Hou the government, as well as the legislative branch | of the government, are now co-operating 100 per cent for the purpose of reducing expenses, it is well within reason to predict that the year will close next June with the beaks of the government! showing a favorable balance. ————-0- Our Family Auto OTAL REGISTRATION of motor cars in the| United States on July 1, 1922, amounted t6 ison 10,845,000 compared with 9,413,000 one year matey b | the bar to join supreme court agai 000,000, In other words the United States alone has over five times as many automobiles as all the rest of the world combined. If for no other reason, these figures alone show why the United States should raintain its dom- inant position in the oi! industry. If it had not been for the initiative and enterprise of American oil prospectors and producers, one person out of every ten in the United States could not own an automobile today nor could American antomobile manufacturers be turning out’ about 2,250,000 cars, jand trucks for 1922. | tf aie Any agitation or political activity which inter-; feres with or retards normal development in the oil industry directly affects our leading position in world oil production and incidentally the opera- tion of every “family auto” in our own country. BERD RA SEE the number of employes on the federal payrell are the very ones who appeal to the civil service commission and introduce resolutions to investi- gate the administration every time one of their Democratic constituents is pried loose from a go ernment job. SS His Best Opportunity but in his first speech since his resignation he pirates. Automobile Foot “Flousemaid’s knee, a an affliction becomes aware what is the mat- they wil have “Auto many will seek medical it will be fashianable to asaistance; whieh bears a poetic but too exatt| havé @ chauffeur with a bandaged foot; and fashionable for the owner tO apénk of the dangers cf driving one’s own car. “Prodably some §,(:00,000 o the §,- name, has dropped out of fashion, notes the New York Herald. “Writer's cramp has not come into fashion since —By Fontaine Fox) Green Flash at Sunset THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1922. [point of light drawn out Into a } tleal Mine If the eyelids have been | tiatly closed to screen them trom ‘: | “When the sun séts behind a dis glare of direct #inlight. tant and clear horizon its last rays) ‘disappear with an enserald Mash.” notes Nature. rtmesphere by which the sun's image remains above the j the elevation the violet and to some extent the blue lrays are absorbed by the layer of air |torough which the light has to pass moment of sunset. “Thid seems clear enough and éven obvious. But there are always certa'n sninds that ¢: always to the disadvantage of and others which rebel } monpluce explanation of a striking ef-| fect. Imagination is always ready to! supply more or less fanciful alte: tives leading to controversies anJ cor- respondence in scientific journ ‘un this manner a considerable amount of literature on \ the green [flash has accumulated, and this is now collected by Profemecr M. E. Mulder E A volume of 140 pages. nee The tides of time Ge@lay. Is sense enrapturing, And & mélody entices ‘Radiant rainbow showers serious alternative explanations that have been offered to replace the one : based on the dispersion of light In our) Visions cf vain regretting tmosphere might be dismissed in one 0 - cae The green flash cannot be, Forgotten and forgett'ng, j Perhaps some readers of Nature can verify the i apparently from a Scr cording to which tho seen the green ray acquire the power teh legend, ac Appeared a tiny light otice of the green £ pub: ished only in 1885, w Chevrentl ——_——o- ENRY FORD had bette: N° DEMOCRAT ever Bh Bess attacks a Republican pro-| sprervations could tel with any de tective tariff for what it has done after it has! «ree of certainty r ceme alive or he will not be able to keep the boys out of the trenches they will be in at Christmas time. Bec EPO BE MERICA was never developed and made pros- perous by patrons of the customs houses. been in operation. He only dwells upon what he claims he is afraid some protective tariff not yet in operation may do. EOE Hate aa Wakes ’Em Up JENATOR WESLEY L. JONES of Washington jarred Republicans out of a very comfort doze the other night, and stirred them to an enthus 5) jasm that had not existed an hour before he began \to talk. The senator is an arch-enemy of Genera) /Apathy, and the manner in which the routed the |famous old villain who operates in off years; aud stood Republicans on their heads, brought back jthe days of long ago. Senator Jones made a splendid impression on his Casper audience and bronght to their notice |the real importance of the approaching election and jwhat it means to Wyoming people. eae TIN sa A NY ADVOCATE of cancellation of foreign debt: says if the American people had been given the ‘choice in April, 1917. of naying $5,000,000,000 or \going to war they would have come across with the $5,000,000,000. Not unless the old-fashioned ORMER JUSTICE Clarke of the supreme court | American spirit is dead which. exclaimed “Million announced that he was resigning in order to/for defense hy* not one cent for tribute.” in reply devote himself to work for the league of natlons,|to a similar ‘}roposal made by the Barbary Coast v eb! Jone made in the Indian ocean! | And by its feeble glow He tended Icng’ agc MI ‘heory of complementary colors. Ac-! cording to Professor Mutder’s own view a complete explanat in still wanting, although he agree: must be bared on the dispersion the oty. But I would suggest that his res: wvations depend almost entirely on) the importance he attaches to discrep. | ancies in the Gescriptions TX different observers and in their estimates of | the duration of the flash. “Apart from real differences in mospheric conditions that may be very considerable it im not fo be expected shat men not specially trained in such Blackhead. —soft ones or bi Part of the a iY calonite pows ponge — ru! briskly for a few x off. You’ blackheads heve gon: ler and the hot lemolved th ing Dlackheads only o of the hily — whether an outburst of light Iaste a tenth of a second or} is. Some have described the | “ash as appearing in the form of a vhort line, while on others ft has left | 10 impression of shape. The author, | who hasbeen a professor of ophthal- cal po" mology. is not likely to have forgotten| Store and If you thes hts je effects of astigmatinm,| Gertainiy try thie eereie Dut even s_perfect eve might see and unless water disso! ipg the skin their natural Go to the TRIBUNE’S October 18, 20 and 21 individual wrote verse fur'ously. In| $87,600 car owners in this country will some degree the debutante flouch,! met know “automobile foot” as a dis: mantkin's glide, camel walk and other eage; they havé Jong since grown used varieties of seif-provulsion have taken/|to the slight cramp from holding the the place of the once fashionable trou-| foot on the accelérator for long bles; but, like “vapors” all women can} periods. The symptom of this afflic- and do sharé them. The upper crust] tion, distress in the ball of the foot, of American humanity until the first) would not be recognizable to a busy of this month lacked a selective, arig| driver as one worth worrying about, tocratic harmless d'sease. imuch less as one worth stopping for.” DIAMONDS High Grade Jewelry, Watches and Stlverware Oil Exchange Building At the Elks Lodge “Forunstely the fifth annual con- vention of physical therapeutists countéd among its delegates a San Francisco doctor, who announced an! entirely new diseasé—a selective, fc and harmless disease! His Giscovery should stir the count | Xn | the In Pimples. Formed Hard Crust, Hair Foll Out. Cuticura Healed, —— «“*I Bad ececma on my scalp. The Destiny of Many Lives Started on a Want Ad Page RE you interested in your tu- +4 future? Don't go to a fortune teiler— scan the Want Ads in the Casper Daily ana Sunday Tribune ani you'll find your destiny. ‘There's congenial and profitable employment waiting for you. Ger in touch with the poeition you want through a want ad. | i i That's the wey to méet opportu. nity fifty-fifty. The Casper Daily and Sunday Tribune ae rplus These registration places are NOW “When seen through a telescope : green appearance seems to be much mo: “The coloration regular, the green colOration first a; is due to the refraction of light in our pearing at the corners of the cap that here h about half « .| seems no reason to doubt that Alene. |%ha"slshton ineseecing fr the vod sto combined with abeorpion of Tavs to the violet end of the spectrum. As completely accounts for the effect.” live wes “author lit ts the bluish green part of the spec. When the twilight's necromancy dominan timate Evokes its dreamy spsi). ced gs ge or. T am off on the Parque of Fancy For the coast of Miramande!. not| There with a rythmie motion | The banyan branches sway, gainat a com. And there by the ancient ocean The fragrant breath of sp'ces From birde of crimson wing. Drift down the warm monsocr- The two Aed there are rapturous hours Under the red.golé moons. Take on the garb of joys: Life seems as though at poise. SCOLLARD. e after image in an eye fatigued by| the red light of the sun, because it} wa Se i appears at sunries as well i> at sun-| nat lights are paling nor cn it derive ite olor from ac-| - “tie the vesper bell! age through sta, because | Come. love. let us go sailing so seen when ine aun disap-| For the coast of Miramandel:: * behind a land horizon —CLINTON We note with interest that the first 22 yrs aN ori ted fencriptlon. of the Brose: fee Fox Fire that can be t is contained tr > ond we a erne entitled “Le}An ow! with quavering voice vert” and published in 1882. piaine Rayon Vert" and p gana Se Tee it at the stars, taken |A Milver mist chscnred the moon prea jee Damp smelts were on the breess ‘eho uve once And flickering in the garden, 10: the hearts of AS If @ baby star had dropped shone tn 2 facil a £99 sings Unheeded through the night. “If the author's investigation of the, + be Sine flame it solentific literature ie as exhausti a ; And yet ilumined not ° fi « {fie 48 It appears to be the first: actentific (|, ae ee ieee tte. “This dark and quiet spot, communicated to the French Academy A wraith that bears a candle end e ne af | observa the bee te pele dee Caren Or te ear inemtbars (OU | ty Traven, wwho-adopted the erronects t what he termed “the present period of criticism.” If Judge Clarke confines his activities to propaganda of that sort he will render a real service to the country. Visits zome well beloved plant A IRVI Sat) BLACKHEADS GO QUICK BY THIS SIMPLE METHOD ; —big ae little one +, €° quic! J | Heated sel see es 2) b over the seco: Help The Red Cross Fashion Show Entire proceeds go to Red Cross NG the por: kin and leave them oven you should EVERY VOTER MUST REGISTER The law is MANDATORY that every citi ishi mi wer eC at every citizen wishing to vote on Nov. at the last general or past elections. regardless of whether or not he or she ¥oted REGISTER AT YOUR REGULAR VOTING PLACE OPEN from 9:00 A. M. to 1:00 P. M.; 2:00 P. M. to 6:00 P. M. and 7:00 P. M, to 9:00 P. M. Headquarters—Second Floor, Oil Exchange Bidg. YOU HAVE BUT TWO DAYS LEFT FOR REGISTERING— OCTOBER 13 AND 14. s Do Your Duty as an American Citizen Republican Central Committee Phone 945

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