Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 11, 1922, Page 6

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PAGE SIX. €be Casper Daily Cribune every evening. except Sunday at Cusper, Natrona Wye ation Offices. Tribune Building. MEMBER THE ASSCCIATED PRESS out that our super-scoundrel would be’ brought’ back to be punished as befit his crime. Not a thing | bas ever been done. And it looks like not a thing ever will be done. The Associated Press is exclusively entitie¢ to the) Bergdoll is possibly the yellowest cur that ever wae for publication of al news credited tn this paper and Member of the Associated Press, BUSINESS TELEPHONES ......+-20+--+5-.--35 and i#vanch Telephone Exchange Watered at Caspe: (Wyoming), Postotti marter, November 23, 1916. CHARLES W. BARTON . Advertising Representatives, Prvdéen, King & Pruddom, 1730-33 Ti; 256 Fittr avenue, New ‘York “Gity: Gisbe Bos! naa. Su , Suaron “Hildg., 65 New : eee tte eto Cal Coles Of the Deity| The Bergdoll incident wil*remain a stain until fritune are on file in the New York, Chicago, | Pemored by his return and punishment. and San Francisco offices and visiters are ‘welcame. $50, Sem Franciovy, ttle Ane ae Ao SUBSCBIPTION RATES By Carvier or By Mall One Year, Daily and Sunday ---. One Year Sundxy Only Six Months Daily and Sunday. ..-. ‘Three Months Gne Month Daily and Sunday --y------e-ew-———-— 78 ler Copy “scence and the) doubt the question will reach congress and a gen- ina Al outeeacusens cto A d= eral threshing out of the matter will occur. There tion becomes one month in arrears. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (4. B. ©.) Kick if You Don’t Get Your baipg ste 1 15 or 16 any time botween 630 and § o’e p.m 1 to receive your Tribune. A paper will be de ered to you by special messenger. Make it your duty to The Tribune know! when your carrier misses you. |The Casper Tribune’s Program Irrigation project west of Casper to be authorized and completed at once. A complete and scientific city of Casper. A comprehensive municipal and schoo! recreation includiug swimming pools for the chil sea 6 Scenie Route boule Completion of thy established Scenic Rou' s planned by the county commissioners to Ga> reek Falls and return. ‘Better rosds for Natrona county and more high- ways for Wyoming. More equitable freight rates for shippe-s of the aky Mi tain region, and more frequent train serv- ice for Casper. zoning system for the Service as a Motto All Depa-tments ice Ra second class Sons | for his refusal. 4.50) cumbered the earth, that ever breathed pure air jand while breathing polluted it. Has the war de partment and the law rtment of this great |country forgotten this Bergdoll bird of jaradise: | and do cither of them propose to allow him to lux- uriate in Germany, while maimed American heroes Jof a war, that Bergdoll should have served in, walk President ané Editor the streets of American towns and cities, constant | reminders of that great tragedy to our country. Not |that Bergdoll should be maimed, but that he should have served the land that gave him birth or answer | Keep the Bars Up ERE SEEMS to be a divided sentiment on the matter of immigratior. from the countries of Europe. There are those who believe that a modi fication should be made in present restrictions. No should be nochange. At least no change in the direction of liberalizing thé law to admit a greater tnumber than ‘is now permitted to enter. While there is a labor phase involved there are other and equally important features to be considered Unless restrictions had been’ placed on the | amount of immigration into the United States with- with foreigners among whom there would be a con- siderable number of undesirables. This is no re- flection on any nation, for the reason that peo- ple who are anxious to leaye their own countries are not much good to them, and if they are not the kind of people we want here in America they should not be let in. ] The labor side of the questicx involves unskilled labor for the most part. Certznly op) employment which arises should be offered first to | Americans. Otherwise there would be overcrowding of the labor market, which would work a hardship on our own people. Admission of foreign peoples should be done slowly and systematically. They must be assimilated, and unless they are not allow- ed to come in indiscriminately the assimilation will be made a difficult process. TRH) “Biied ov Soa a ' : | | Pan-American ‘Amity | GONtERSNGES such as held with Tepresenta-| / tives of the Central American republics, at! Washington, should be productive of positive bene- fit to the United States as well as the nations who in the past few years, we would now be crowded | rtunity for | fhe Casyet Daily Cribune Neighborhood News. Ma. Jones Discovers sy THe MEREST CHANCE WHY THE CAsTon Oi BoTTLe 1s Se OFTEN ° “Found EMPTY WHEN THEY GET ALL READY 7 Give LirtLe OSWALD A Dose. MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1922. File Applications Early Masculine critics of the girl who have been lambasting her ae a’ usele cage not properly E ROTARIANS have a motto which places|have sent leading citizens to discuss mutual inter-| t™ined for marriage, will be capti- id. service above everything. It may well be taken ests. It at Jeast affords opportunity of inter-change | Y9te4 by the m 8a motto by every business man. That is one reason why a man engaged in business should find Rotarian membership of real benefit to himself and his business. After all, the success or failure of business concerns depends largely on their re- lations with the public. They will stand or fall accordingly as the public sees that its interests will be served by that particular concern and not the one next door. This is the basic principle of gocd advertising. Through advertising business ‘concerns apjpeal to the public. They tell the public what they hare which they beli the public is looking for to pur- chase. Often it is merely a question of dollars and cents. An article is worth so much, and feeling that the price is right or that the same article can not be bought cheaper elsewhere the buying public will purchase it. The question does not end there, however. There . ig the personal element, it might be called, which enters SEAT into business. This personal ele- ment may be put into such an spiperonne thing as a business concern is nothing other than service. It as the interest which the concern seems to have at heart for the benefit of its customers. It is abso- lutely essential to success in meeting the public. Firms which have been successful in building up their busivess over a period of a great many years hhaye succeeded because they became known for the first rate .service they have been accustomed to ve. Without this confidence they must certainly ave failed. fe ae a The Hammer Heroine i ius ESCAPE of Clara Phillips, she of hammer | murder fame, after conviction and inecarcera- tion, has a distinct smell of fish about it, repulsive to most lovers of justice and good order, whether i California cr elsewhere. That a woman could saw her way out of a steel tank on,a third floor of a steel and concrete building and escape over roofs With the desires of a great many people who do not there's ‘no of ideas and gives becter basis for solving prob-| | lems liar to the American continents. It is of real importance that relations between! jthe United States and the South Anierican coun-. tries should be very close. Both Norih and South! | America inelude vast regions which are yet unde-| veloped. They are compartively close to each other) phieally and for that reason trade relation. jcould be maintained on a large scale. But without a proper understanding of the internal problems {of the southern countries it. will be very difficult, | if not impossible to know what is the best course to pursue in keeping ini close contact with them! jin a commercial way. | The Panama vanal has been of vital importance} |to the world’s trade. The ease with which it per-| mits trade between countries of the eastern and western hemispheres is an important item in world commerce. It may be turned to the advantage of the American continents, and without a close relation between them one or the other is going to lose many advantages which they should enjoy. Either Enforce or Dehorn | ERE ARE MANY degres of sentiment and al multitude Of opinions regarding prohibition.| | time Presidential election undec that 150 exquisite- ly trained ex-wives aro in the market for new husbands. They are all guar- anteed in the prime of youth, lusty and beautiful, mostly Circassian blondes. They are thoroughly schooled in all the arts of pleasing that might be expected to appeal to the tired bust- ners man of these shores. Yee, Intelligent reader, you guessed it—they're the late lovely ladies of the deposed Sultan of Turkey, each one a hand picked beauty, but the whole bunch thrown out of a job like the postmasters of Amer:ca after an old the spoils system, Bachelors, widowers “or Mormons who would like to wed an ex-jewel of a Suitan’s seraglié ate advised to apply to Rafet Pasha of the National Government in Constantinople, who is anxious to f nd husbands for them. Do your Christmas shopping early. It is not Ikely that such a fine lot modern | will be thrown on the market for a Jong time to come. Not one over 35—an outside age for an odalisque— and some are only 17. Morcover, lest any misguided infi- dels should think that life in a Turk- | ‘There are those who are dissatisfied with it entire-|1#h harmen is marked by any of the ly. They believe there is more harm than good be- frivolity of the American cabarets, a ing wrought by it. Then there are others who be-| 2#!#ce functionary remarks that all lieve that only in strict enforcement and entire banishment of the liquor traffic can success be at-) |of the ex-Sultan’s ex-wives are “very religious, faithful and affectionate.” Remember. too, that under Turkish tained. It is not believed to be a matter for indi-|iaw you don't have to keep a wife if vidual opinion. There can be one or two ways of solving the ques-| | tiffon. The law is on the books and as long as we) vhave it it should be inforced rigidly against you jand me and everybody else or modify it by chang-| jing the present letter of the law. Other than these! alternatives there is no valid ggmund for differing, opinion. Of course. this view may not be in keeping, | you don’t like her. And divorce js a simple matter. All ‘you have to do is to tell the lady “repeatedly” that You're tired of seeing hev around. Like a Coue fan you recite to her: “Day by day in every way I wish you'd go home to your mother.” And the third time she has to There are no legal expenses scandain, Rafet go. ane Pasha and down metallic rain pipes and vainish in a| Want their personal habits interfered with, butjremarks, too, that the Sultan's Old high power car, while attendants were within twen- ty-five feet of her cell at the time is preposterous. Help from the outside, of course. Help from the inside, of course. Planned before her commitment, certainly. Executed with a guilty knowledge of all concerned, without question. Has it become impossible to punish criminals|enforce the law satisfactorily the people must co-| Sultan Abdul Hamid and make them stay punished for any length of time in this land; and do the equal rigst of mon- en render them imi new day of chivalry . Must women go on murdering their own sex and the lorie of creation world without end? a War Savings Stamps ‘4 BOUT $625,000,000 worth of war savings stamps ‘of the series of 1918 will fall due o» January first. It is the hope of tbe treasury department that the holders of those securities will elect to ex- chi them for others instead of demanding cash Ste thaws: To facilitate such transfer Secretary Mel- lon has ordered that all stamps offered in exchange for treasury savings certificates before the first of the year shall be received at full value and certif- ieates dated January 1, 1923, given in lieu thereof. The certificates are issued in denominations of $25, $100 and $1,000 and are sold by the treasury for $20.50, $82 and $820, respectively. In five years they are redeemable at par, and can be sold for proportionate amounis in the meantime. Se Se SE Re An Unforgetable Incident SEVERAL years ago, there was an arch traitor, 7a yellow draft evader named Bergdoll, scion of a Philadelphia family of brewers, all of whom possessed inore American dollars than brains or 1 spectacular career in this coun- t&y dodging and bribing federal officers and law- yers and military attendants who had charge of this perticular skunk’s person after court-martial «mviction for desertion, escaped and sought sanc- wary in Germany. Thera was considerable fuss Kicked up at the time. Bic. Newton D. Baker, the consciengious ob- Sectors friénd waa tho war secretary and Mr. A Mitcheli Paimer. was the attorney general and head of the legal department and Mr, Woodrawx Wilson waa the president. That outfit was purely hope: legs in such matters as the Bergdoll offense. But along came the Harding administration and the treaty with Germany when great hope was held ity ot the winds. ¢ from punishment in this | jit seems to be the only one which is going to build | Up a policy of law-abiding habits by the people in | general. | Otherwise, the attempt to enforce the prohibition jlaw without full co-operation of the people is go-| |ing to breed a widespread disregard for law. To| opejrate with governmental authority.. If they de not like it, let them bring about a change in a law: ful manner. But dodging one law is not going to create a proper spirit toward all the others. } Has No Feith in I | | J® IS EASY to believe former Premier Clemen- ~ ceau when he denies that he is urging the Unit- States to become a member of the league of na- tions. What he wanis above all else is for this country and Great Britain to jarantee France against future German attacks. Clemenceau knows t6o much of the complications of European politics an dthe insincerity of European diplomacy to place} any confidence whatever in the league. France, for which Clemenceau speaks, already has the protection guarantee of Great Britain and some forty other nations that signed the league| covenant. The outstanding feature of that cove- nant isa guarantee by all that external aggression against any one member will be resisted by all j members. If the league were or could be an effec- tive guarantor of peace, France would be satisfied | to rely upon that covenant as a safeguard against} another German assault. But France cannot depend upon such assistance | because each of the leading members of the league |as well as France herself, has demonstrated that it Mr. Clemenceau knows that to be a fact, and he wants to obtain the guarantee of another nation, the United States, which guarantee, if given, he knows would be scrupulously observed. | Recognition in advance that many other nations | would regard the league covenant as a scrap of } paper, and would neglect their obligations under! |.and other cosmopolitan entertainers. ——————.. ‘has no regard whatever for the league covenant. | Dutches—count ‘em, 150!—will only expect small dowries from their new bridegrooms, and that under Turkish law the dowry is repayable tm case the blushing bride does not. come up to expectations. In the days of the unspeakable the imperial harem at Constantinople contained about 1,400 women, These included troups of French and Russian dancers Lote Manded: Children Speaking of left handed children brings to m'nd a pecullarity of Leon- ardo de Vinci and makes me wonder if, after all, to turn left handed chil- dren into right handed children is dealing with the matter in the really scientific way. Leonardo, it is said, was in the habit of paying special attention to the unusual. For instance, in his study of the univalyo or spiral shell, after learning that the rule was for shelis to turn one way, say from left to right (I have forgotten whivh way it is), if, perchance, he found- one shell which turned from right to left, he spent all his time on the study of that _one ‘shell, endeavoring to find —By Fontaine Fox| J Bj avout Even in cur factories does not seem suf-| people ficlent to satisfy the United States, from foreign srrent year will aggregate about 2 pu t its| how and why differed from fellows. a ‘Th y the study of the unusual, | oy ne attained that originality his characteristic in © art and actence and wh! the master man, The modern student of the human body believes thut there are unde- veloped musies and even undeveloped sensss, perhaps, which, if developed would open new stores of knowledge and pleasure to us in the universe which Is} ry branch of| ch makes him ca m’ Perhaps by Parts of our bodies equally, hearts would grow stronger, eyes surer, cars keener. Digestion even might im- Prove and the lungs perform thelr office of purifiers more completely. The human body is yet as unex- plored as parts of Africa or Australia. and we shall never learn to know and enjoy all {ts treasures save by Leonardo's method of paying atten- tion to the unusual. > CHARLOTTE G. ee MILLER. A Righteous Kick Is {t fondness for the music of hard engh clashing -2\ glass that prompts so many clerks +o scatter change al! over the surfece of show cases? OF ls it simyly desire to see those re- celving it work for It—dig for it ‘till finger nafls break? Whatever the temptation to strew the colns in man- er that makes their recovery vex'ng- Alfficult—it seems to be irresistible. 1 can cup your hand invitingly and put the most appealing leok in your eye, but they ignore both hand and and broadcast them—then| drop into interested pose to watch you grub for them. It is hard enough to make the money offered for change, and it is vexing to have to work hard for it when broken into smaller denominn- in in mi 5 “They Came, They Saw, They Bought” “If peopie bought your goods, they must have seen them. “If they saw them they must have come into your store. | “If they came into your |}| stcre— | “They must have read your |}/ ‘Christmas Gift Sug- column of this news- paper's alphabetical classified |}| & section.” | That’s the way a good many Christmas stories will run this year. | Milk, per quart. Milk, per pint Cream, ¥/2 pint. it*,the United States senate wisely refused to per- But for that action the United States would now. be bearing the burden of an effort to maintain, al-} most single handed, the peace of Europe and Asia.! |. This country, fortunately, has not yet reached the ext: ie where it desires to take up the duties of nations that have thrown international moral- mit this nation to become a party to the league. ; —— : | MILK PRICES Increased cost force us to put the following milk prices into effect, beginning December 11th: Whipping Cream, 2 pint. | Casper Dairy & Ice Cream Co. Rs Bae aa es a eas ey doesn’t ‘share {t stockings fresh froin the factories of number in the -calendar The totat artificial about dollars in 1921. fact ane of the few show yarn in the United States grew from 1% million pounds in 1913 to § mil- ons tn t er the ghiss, the that ‘the patron — 1° Trade in Artificial Silk le The fact that the foreign world n on Christmas Eve-hang up 20{* 2! ion pairs ef new artificial silk te: year 1921, the exports, of silk of all erades will be! 6% million dollars in) 1922 ainst a litUe more then 4 million Artificia! silk is in Articles which values in 1922 value of larger an in 1921. The increase in our exports of this new ‘product of the American factory ‘s especially Interesting in view. of | the fact that the industry is cone of} comparatively recent development with us. jor to the war most of he world's tifleial sik was produced n Europe, especially Belgium, Ger- many and France, but with the inter-| ruptions which the war caused fn the} the output of artficial stik export dustry, 1918, jumping to 15 millon 1921, and a prospective 20 million | the year which ends with this onth. The value of the artificial « yarn produced in the United E We have presses, both platen and cylinder, that were built for Qual- ity Printing, and we have pressmen who know how to get quality from The chemistry of printing has been studied and we are able to secure from ink and paper results that cannot be had without the knowl- edge thus obtained. Few people realize the extent of study necessary them. States ‘Tee maud American factory im Mlustrated by the fact that our export figures only gj atl you < | back toe 1916, prior to whieh ti | Department Jeonsider artificial } | knit goode as wel general character. rapid growth factures of be included that of the whole we —_ Instruments of Torture. |‘ What gives out the most Nttle-oys end «# Makes one think th The silver cornet makex the moa: here ia, his scales there isn’t ° flesh bringing nolses. go down into the front cellar an shut the Goor and those scales Bui there one makes the most di who say boy with a saxophone alongside jo hoy with a silver cornet, the xophoniat will produce a brand of ment that wil! a_hody homesick right in the middle E-O-U--P-ME-N-T Insures Service In Printing to produce good printing. We have the equipment and the men to operate it—and this means Servite and Satisfaction to our customers, WE_ARE AT YOUR SERVICE THE COMMERCIAL PRINTING COMPANY Basement Midwest Building Main Entrance—Take the Elevator in therefrom | one’s own home te suicide. Ba when in production | get throu goods produced 000 099. te hig growth the saxophone talkinz and the nds of the | wha: seem Importat.on jet the lot. A fiddth say, tziking emotionally, beats thing thet plays. dem for the countries during the | give a man a headache in Sea? ove. bi which, It wil bring tears in foreign de- this new product of thejecannilal A fddle, n de io give a hobse the las a bi of Commerce did not it its manu- a or suffi in . | Abroad kind ¢ | evident when we rec: ©| ple “to whom the is so dear," on beha‘f of racial he er cc and fiddle, met back seamg to more ghastly slaughter at form of 2,436 Irnchings st thirty-three years. year, When crimes every on the sil Turk A person own tolerance o “racl tag ri along down after him af) bande Bi hoe fust_aa strong ani robust and | these ite competent when they gat there as aft od ua oO ae “fithey hadn't traveled any. distance at) TSther Jat ged any. distance at) 15) ‘Turk, on that matter of prot re others who say 2 sax-| ing ‘ou place beth example and precent What is. the ditt erty so massacre Uberty to Iyneh sn Aw And he who reads history that if make a forget! NOTICE Penetrative? iniilion pounds with @ value of 8% | will. go through three houses ay million dollars. The uses of artificial silk, ax 's well known, it made chiefly from word fibre. are expanding and it is now utilised in nearty all classes of be four as tran) an a or at the + peep heir case, then you | to be the strongest c these wretet = nearly 56 million|et his own home, and the next thing dollare and the factory value of the/to being homesick in the middie .¢ finished $7 lower the value of real estate 1 Atrocities at Home and The total exports « material of | k this kind in the ca! year 1%.) within the past few days T has the first year of record. amounted to tal ¥ habia | $1.483.000, advancing to about $10.-| rAd 1 tne newsanepere or aot with the reopening of European fac-| )) Dons alleged to be “promincr tories to about $5,000,000 in 1920, 34.-| BY Persons allegod to be “promin hop Rigor ary ping, bowever, in wational effairs.” urging upon h 06,000 In Tet md seems ikety daned on -tapeanit be |The growth of this ny jthe Unite: ustratec by |the tact th rn of arti |S silk ya 3 great as a De spirit of humantt po los, Abroa y place th Sil abiog we sho the house next door Ais pene abodes Tae. won't he fille? with . rence between y and the must Owing to the rapid increase in the price of market milk and butter fat, we are compelled to-raise the price of milk and cream to the retail trade as fol- lows: lc Per Quart on Milk * 1c Per Half Pint on Cream 3c Per Half Pint on Whipping Cream Lander Dairy & Produce Co. Phone 980-J tion of intoxicants he can give our |red nosed maralists noints galore 11 » Bnited herds "| the sliver ecornesist entirely know that commerce has won more afi in couresivees 0 ch sige aa ogee manufac} They admit that 2 saxophone wit!|rigtts for the human race than ail only through the, study and: cultiva- tlghtentrig blr wud pe | Permnnas atoms o8 loud and alear| ine: prtmpions “for mumenly re tion of tho unusuel, the rare, that we markets. Latest export figures | Wen | abefuph iv pipe atga dan ide pooetig es if we want a better world shall find these unknown treasures? Tee ED ee ee ee eee eee ee octet oe Fane 4h We are keen observers, we muderns, t cut of the United States | through the ltting rc pe eet kee onan” ee Tite bee a) Ries meet cheterer ss Segcree ONT he 1922 wit ap. |S@¥ that there is’a qua tone|they should’ do to ts as “the he lUksace of losine eltwe have by eur | srommate tra. Up to the|Ahout the sAxophone that makes up/fosstble commercial policy. desire to have every human being|°P7 of September t Lad pit tog so), SRS re atid der Sardaa eA a 2 Just T'kp some other who seems to us|*Ween 12 and 15° million patra, ana|! mournfuinces, an invitation to sit) | = BATA UA en to|f OPP mately ntilion pairs per | Pers . {serable ! f > s 3 t TEE hence eat cranial monies month, tho total eaporta of ariiicll | Ute than the sliver cornet can mals) 20ur eur i aSOmBe andar vr td te be | 82k hosiery in the full year seems| im feet in . cm recess 8 Ree igh bene ge to ickaly 266 be beast oc, quite. 20 anit.| The sxcohone, they say, can maxe| 2° Co., successors to Shi learding to use doth} !0M-pairs agningt less than half that : a n play out of ine. and in the * hands of m little giri or © Ute % as draperies» trim- | tt always (oes play out of tune mings, and many other Ifves of th's | keeps on and on and on playing ou of tune until it turns every civil:

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