Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 17, 1922, Page 6

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PAGE SIX. Cbe Casper Dailp Cribune ming @cept Sunday at ‘Casper, Natrona Publication Offices. Tribune Building. Insured every ever ty, Wyo MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PREBS wi a 16 BUSINESS TELEPHONES ae aees 15 am ra Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments Entered at Casp:: (Wyoming), Postoffice as s¢.0rd class maiier, November 22, 1916. CHARLES W. BARTON ......!...Preaident and Editot Advert tives. Prudten, Kins; & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bidg-. Chics mm 286 t avenue, New York City: Globe sees Boston, © 404, Sharon Bidg.. 55 New Mony zomery } Francisco. al Cipiee ot the red Tribune are lle in the Néw York Chicago, Bos! and San F co offices and visiters are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier or By Mail 9.00 in advance and the not insure delivery after subscrip | month in arrears. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©) Member of the A-sociated Press. Press is exclusively entitled to the news credited In this paper and of all Kick If You Don't Get Your Tribune. { y time between 630 and 8 o'clock p. m elve your Tribune. A paper will be de special messenger. Make it your duty to Y Know when your éarrier misses you. > Irrigation project west of Casper to be authorized and completed at once: and scientific zoning system for the tion rehensive municipal and school recreat! perk system, including swimming. pools for the chil- deen of Casper ‘ Completion of the’ establishec: Saenic Route boule- vard as pla the- county commissioners to, Gar- Creek Falls and return. cen ier roads for Natrona county and more for Wyoming Wore equitable freight rates for shippers of the Rocky Mountain region, and more frequént train serv fee for Casper . high- } Why Should It Oppose. yest AS THE SOUTH wants protection through the votes of Republican members of congress, ‘so the south wants the advantage of a merchant marine without supporting the national legislation jecessary to secure it. Southern members of con- ss voted for yarious items of protection in the epublican tariff bill when these items were of par- ficular interest to their own states, but when the » di) came up for final passage they voted against it. Southern members of the senate and house vote for appropriations for the improvement of} rivers and harbors in. their section of the coun-| try but they refuse their support to legislation! that is necessary to make those rivers and har- bors most usefal in building up the foreign trade} of the United States. ? One of the most prominent and abiy edited of Southern newspapers recently said: “For Texas! rts to get the most out of the Panuma canal it is clear that they must build up a large volume of traffic between them and the ports of the Pa- cific coast, the west coast of South America and; the Orient.” That is manifestly true, but the editor might have gone further and said that for Texas ports to get the most out of foreign] trade it is clear that they must. build up a large volume of traffic hetween them and the ports of all foreign countries. - Very appropriately it has been remarked many times during the Snerchant marine discussion that no retail merchant would depend upon his rival for the delivery of his goods to his customers. Yet that is exactly what the United States does when it permits the bulk of our foreign commerce to be carried in ships sailing under the Sriiish, the Japanese, the German or other fore:ygn flags, The amount the United States pays for the carrying of our trade in foreign bottems is the least important of our losses. Far more seridus is the failure to build up and maintain perma- ment trade relations which supply a constant and dependable demand for American preducts. Every ship company, every ship captain, every ship officer or employee, is a booster for the trade of the country under whose flag he sails. Every per: manently operated shippirg line is a builder of trade for the port from which it sails. * If we pay good American money to foreign ships for the carrying of American goods we are} placing in the hands of our commercial rivals) the means by which they may gradually supplant us in foreign niarkets which they can as well supply. “- On an average, the ports of the southern states are closer 10 the center of American production than are the ports of any other section of the country. The South, therefore, should be the, strongest advocate of any measure that is neces- sary to assure the establishment of a permanent and adequate American merchant marine service to all parts of the world. ' Presidential Approval. ‘PRESIDENT HARDING is apparently thorough- ly satisfied with the accomplishments of the present house of representatives under the lead- ership of Hon. Frank W.Mondell, judging from a recent letter addressed to the Wyoming repre- sentative, who is a candidate for United States senator. The president’s letter follows: “1 am addressing you in testimony of my appre ciation of the great public service of the present house of representatives and of yourself as its majority leader. It is an acknowledgment which I record in this manner with the more satisfaction because of my warm personal sentiment for your- self, as well as my high estimate of your perform. ance in one of the most trying posts under our government. Pky 5 “It has been a pleasure and reassurance to know that your fine resources of patience, sound judgment, candor and legislative experience were always ready for application to the problems which have confronted the administration. “Few congresses have been called upon. for such arduous service as has been exacted from the sixty-seventh. It has been in approximately continuous, sitting from the day it .came into exis- tence. In the realm of achievement, its re¢ord ae notable. I doubt if any congress in our histery har accomplished so impressive a volume of work, touching so wide a range of national interest. “Without attempting to suggest an énumera |of disputes and in delaying their settlément. tion of the accomplishmects for which the country is indebted to the Sixty-seventh congress, ‘and {its immediate predecessor, it is befitting-to ap-| jpraise the general results, which have been so helpful to American welfare that ethey will not fail to appeal to the approval of the American | people.” “4 { Think About It We SHALL HAVE low taxes when we hate | state, aunty, city and school. governments {which find ways and means to get along on less in- come--not before. We shall have such economizing governments when we have a public determined to enforce economy upon its disbursers of taxes—not before. We shall have a public determined to en- \force economy only when it refuses to heed the ap peal of this or that or the other group for this, or |that, or the other improvement or innovation or service or whatever it is that the publi¢ is per- suaded it must have. We need political leaders pledged to economy and business efficiency in government, not political “persuaders” seeking to put something new over on the people, thus swelling the tax bill and creating more offices. Siew, Sey Be Guided by Experience. QECRETA RY DAVIS of the Department of Labor is dissatisfied with the railroad labor boafd and has no hesitancy in expressing his opinion with reference to it, and what ought té be done with it. In an address in the heart of the Hocking Valley coal region in Ohio, he advocated the ab>- lition of the board and referred to it as a “quasi governmental, partisan institution.” That such of the mediation and conciliation functions of the board as the government might desire to continue should be brought back to the Department of Labor, where such undertakings more properly belong. The secretary is of the opinion and firm. ly so, that the railroad labor board has demon- strated its incapability of fulfilling the high hopes: of those who proposed and supported it as & means of industrial peace on railroads; and some other and better system of settling railroad Jabor disputes should be adopted to leave employers and employes to thresh out their difference free®ftom the hope or fear that the meddling quasi-officials would interfere or cast their little influence in the balance in favor of the one side or the other: Retention of the board, so far has proved only an intensifying influence in increasing the number me Those familiar with the long drawn out trap. portation row, will readily agree with’ Secretar Davis that the labor board h ) ular institation. It is too much government in business. It:is too involved and ititricate a’ con- cern to function in plain and simple fashion. Its power and authority has always been questioned and such as it possesses has not been acceptable to the labor interests it is designed to sérve. las not proved a pop-|" be Casper Daily Cribunc | The Toonerville Trolley That MeetsAll the Trains. —By Fontaine Fox } | | T have found in all my trtusactions that where “Mr. | Mondell has found a} | deserving case, that he has gone the jlimit'in the interest of the ex-service jman and it is surely a pleasure for! ment with a comparatively new name Ex-Service Man on Mondell. Botulism Easy to Avoid Within the past year a very old sil- Marry Porter, of Park county, Wyo..|me to show. my appreciation, formerly of Lexington, Xy,, discharged know of no other way than th from the army in the early part of ing of this letter so that the 1919; before entering service, and of and IT has been brought into public notice. @ writ'| The history of the food poisoning ba- people cillus and the ptomaine which produce Wyoming may know just what the ailment of botuliém probab. an- The inclination of the Harding administration is today, and always has been, to divorce “the | a ernment from business, except in matters in which it gould be properly siete and of benefit in a general way. The transportation act is far from perfection as a law and as a consequence far from perfection in its application, and it is presumed since a esol- net member has been so outspoken about it that the administration will make some move in the next congress toward curing some of the defects the secretary points ont. In the light of the experience of the past r there should be ample evidence at and ts gl long way toward establishling greater fairness, greater equity, greater friendship and a better working basis for those who work and those who employ in any amendments to the law that may be framed. “ A Day’s Record. NEW YORK rejoiceu over the fact that a single day, passed upon which no mortal jaccident was recorded. True ,. fourteen minor accidents occurred, among which the most serious was a fractured hip. This refers strictly to automo- bile mishaps and is regarded in the metropolis as a wonderful day for Lady Luck. She wore a necklace of horseshoes and carried a vanity case of graveyard rabbit’s feet. ‘ The result was due in part to a vigorous cam- paign for safety, but it ‘simply demonstrates what can be accomplished if the effort is put be- hind a moyement for the public good: New York awakened sto a realization of the awful toll of her population taken by the careless- ness of her automobile drivers and demanded a serious consideration of the matter on the part of those who drove cars. The result was a day of no fatalities. F | What New. York did other centers can do, and| he good work can be extended to the towns, vil-| ages and country highways, not omitting grade! crossings. There is positively no sense in sacrificing val-| uable human life to pure carelessness, and that is the underlying cause of a very high percentage of this class of accidents. Casper neeil not lag behind in a movement to conserve human life and can well afford to take a more leading part in such-effort. Not only m street traffic, bit throughout industrial plants and in ofl field operations. on railroads and else- where should the lessons of safety and caution be driven home. t I a So eee el ee The Letter “hat Miscarried. JXSEK\1CL AN oyer the state are awaiting he reply of Mr. Joseph C. O'Mahoney, Sen- ator Keniirick’s campaign manager, to the in- quiry sent some two weeks.ago by an ex-service nian of Basin. Since there is a remote chance that-the letter has not reached its destination,’a copy of it is given herewith in the hope that it may fall under the eye of either the senator or his manager. The letter follows: “You state in Jetters to the various posts of the American Legion of Wyoming that Mr. Ken- drick Was for the bonus. Although Mr. Kendrick was not in Washington when the bill was before the senate, you-state he was paired for it. “If I were running for a pubdlic office and IT had two very good friends who wished to sce me elected, one went to another county and said he would vote for me by mail when election came’around, the other stayed at home and worked very hard for me to see that I was elected, which was the greater friend? “Mr. Mondell stayed in Washington to see that the ex-service men’s bonus bil] passed the house of tepresentatiyg, and he worked, talked, and voted for the bonus, which carriied in the house through the efforts of Mr. Mondell with fifty ballots to spare, while Kendrick was in Wyoming campaign- -|instance failed to receive a reply to The ship just vanished from the sea, after discharge, an employe of W. R. kind of a man Mr. Mondell is and how tedates the period of written history. Coe of Cody, Wyo. [carefully and thoughtfully he looks/" ‘The vacillus, the ptomaine and the Since discharged from servics, has after the interests of even the most |divexaé produced seam to be contempo- been unable to do agything, owing t® ordinary citizen like myself. I am!rary with the curing of meats. The disability, except for three months more than pleased to do all that I/name allantiasis was formerly em since that time. - Porter went to)can. to-help Mr. Mondell In any way|pioyed to designate this particuler Parkersburg, W. Va., in hope of re-|in this election, as I think that he is form of food poisoning, Both terns, Geining bis heath, but met with no the kind Of a man, that the people of one from a Latin, the other from a tmprovement, and on the advice of Wyoming should have and the ex-|G, reek word meaning sausage, have friends, he found it necessary to call service men never had a better friend! precisely the same meaning.» ’ Upon the repreventative from the siaic'in congress. and they will make a| A toxic “wubstance, apparently in which) he enlisted, which was the great mistake if they do not go down one of those bearing the name of state of Wyoming, the line for him in this election. A|ptomaines, is formed by the vacillus| Here fs what Mr. Porter has to say: fellow never realizes just what kind of botulism. ‘That the substancs is T-called upon the Hon. Mr. Monéell of a man a state official is until hejhighly polsonous ent, but. the to assist me at the time I was flat nfeds assistance and help., especially statement that it {s one million. times on my backend unable to earn “aif he is not a man of influence and as deadly as prussic acid Is sheer non- liting. I was in the state of West wealth. sense. ‘That botulism ‘has resulted Virginia at this time and had-gone| oo often the man in authority from eating uncooked sausage js true| from one locality to another in the might not render the service and-as-, without doubt; but cases of this origin hope of regaining my health so that T sistance needed, unless, he could take up my regular line of em:/ that it was going to someone of prom\-| Almost all of them have been derived ployment. hence, that would result in an ad- from canned or potted meats which I would say that Congressman Mon- vantage to him. |have been exposed to the air for a dell took just as much interest In my’ 1 am prompted in. writing this let: day or more. case at that time while I was residing ter ay a token of appreciation of Mr.| In a few instances improperly cured in West Virginia as he could pos: Mondeli’s efforts @ public servant,|ham has been reported as the source. sibly hare taken, had i been in the jn behalf of a citizen of Wyoming. |The bacillus of botulism is destroyed state of Wyoming, which he repre- HARRY PORTER. | by haat a little below the boiling point sents. Beech St., per, Wyo. [of wat As the result of Mr. Mondell’s ef- es |spores may remain potent for a long forts, while the government had only ‘time. As a matter of preventing Allowed me a 19 ner cent disability Scuttled {heating to the boiling point several Mr. Mondell secured me a full 100 jer ‘times is necessary for complete ster- cent disability; also secured me vo-'\, io ilization in cases in which the pres- cational training, which I ayn ptill tak. He grieved because bis country's ship/ence of the bacillus is suspected. i Ing today, and showed me'every cour- Served sinful booze upon her trip, Census mortality statistics of 1920 teay that it would be possible for & And with the very best intent enumerate 957 deaths from various man to be shown under the circum- He jaid his plans for betterment. | forms of food poisoning for that year, stances. I feel that 1 would , |but botulisth is not mentioned among ungrateful if I'did not show my He executed his design— jthem.. 4 distinguished pathologist has cfation for all the kind efforts Mr.|A hole below the water line— |been quoted to the effect that of ap- Mondell has put forth in my interest’ “And thus," he cried, “there is no, proximately 150 recorded cases in the| and I know from experience that my doubt | United States, covering a period of case is not the only one where he has The wicked stuff will all run out.” |more than twenty years, there were dealt out mercy and assistance to de- But something went extremely wrong|111 deaths. Granted that the number serving men. Despite his zeal and morals strong; [is small, it is by no means inconse- It's ® pleasure to mention the pa-'The hole that was, his special pride | quential; because with the exercise of lence Mr. Mondell has shown in the|Let too much water get inside. | sufficient care’a considerable number st three years. I have written some of the cases might have been prevent- 200 letters-to him and I have in no And that is how it came to be jed, and prevention rather than cure is |the proper thing tolbe sought. But in j@ country of nore than one hundred \ 143-N. / ti every letter by return mail, and in And on the ocean fat and wide some cases the congressman went to No Starry Flag could be descried. the trouble of wirin: fcLandburg Wilson. million people neither the total num- ber of cases nor t ratio of deat! SAME PRICE For over 3(Q) years Ounces for (More than a pound and a half for a quarter) 9] eo USE LESS than of higher priced brands Satisfaction Guaranteed ing and claiming he was doing as much for the bonus as he. could’ by beg “paired for it. “T ask you, Mr, O'Mahoney, which was. the} greater friend of the ex-service man?” thought!in the United States are very rare.| ay It is spore bearing and the TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1922. ee a sr se See ut ea cause for )be eternally ringing the Changes - and Thermopyiae ani j, text ‘The ratio of /Greek and Latin, and of th: ec: to survivals should give alarm. The harm comes quite as M much from exaggerated reports as/ing back to read in odseur. from the allment itself. Geaths to survivals indicates that ‘the lars of patriotic virtue? I thank ailment fs not more dangetous than/|that we can fird them nesrer bom- ™ that strains of the noblest sentin- To the best of knowled@e infection |tnat ever twelled in hé breast of » . is Gte chiefly to meats which, owing/ are breathing to us out of every 5... other alireents due to micro-organiems. infection by!our own country, on our own to. imperfect preservation, haye been of our country’s history, In the contaminated by exposure to the at maine. There are very many _pto-| spirits and character that ga matnes, but only few are toxic. Prac- and Rome their name and thei: Ucally all of them result from the de-|among nations.@ Here we ought to composition of substances rich-tm nt. for instruction—the leason trogenots matter—fish, flesh, milk'is clear. Products, and certain vegetabies. Everett. Tiiness' from food poisoning is com- mon @nough, especially in the summer months. Not much te due to ptomaine | polgoning; most of it is preventable. | And when foodstuffs are protected} from flying dust and ‘rom contamina-| tion by insects and other carriers ill- ness from food poisoning is noticeahiy | ~ ae Pe ® is ie i applicabdie. —_—_——____ Eyes accustomed to subdue; Biue, D4 the usual thing ensue? Si) I didn't“say adeu | Dian't-wilt beneath her blight, How is the spirit of a fre: people Dior my suit to her renew. te be formed ait animated and| No. 1 simply took to fight— cheered, but ou: of the ctorchouse of | Blew! ts historic recollections! Are we te] - America’s Inspiration. air. | eloquefice of our mother tongue—: After the bacillus has entered the i!v-| the colonial and provincial counciis .+ ing body it creates the poisonous pto|America exhibit to us models of the An Enchantress Foiled Biue he® eyes and very bright— Snubbing me, they made me quite —May Wilams Wara —— n 4 Coffee Making’ ‘Revolutionized LE remained for the roasters of Nash’s Delicious Coffee to select, blend and roast coffee to give a uniformly delicious flavor and wonderful Aroma, whether you use hard or soft water. Wa cAoahcs thd choll ond den fs. saeubeaTes seston Retains that “hot roasted” freshness. three pouad containers, j Your Grocer Garries It , 9 The . Casper Sunday Morning Tribune Is a paper yunning from 38 to 48 pages with all the important features of the great metropolitan papers of New York and Chicago. It carries just as much news as the editions of cities with hundreds of thou- ands of inhabitants; and that news is ALL. LIVE NEWS. No other western newspaper gives you the varied features of this, your own home town produc- tion—a paper you can be proud of. A few of the many attractions in the Thibune are: — » W. E. Hill, the great crayon satirist. Briggs, the Country’s Humorous Artist, An 8-page magazine section containing articles of local; national and international interest. Four pages of comics. : A second news section with automobiles, theatricals, society, church news and other pages. ‘ A main news section with two pages of the best sport news obtainable in the coun- = try; two or three pages of up-to-the-minute business, oil and financial information; world news over our own leased wire, hot off the telegraph instruments, and every- thing that happens in Casper. oF READ THE Casper Sunday Morning Tribune “Ryerybody’s Paper” -- Segoe ite fresh flavor in moisture-proof tainer. th 0 TAA

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