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ereertrtenresteeerr stiri oreter ttt rereeteret tiie 2 rr peer bene PAGE SX. Cbe Casper Daily Cribune Iseued every evening Wyo. P at casper, Natrona cept Sunday for % Tribune Bul}éing. Count ‘ * ASSOCIATED PRESS ied to the paper and Member of the Associated Press. {fice as second class 3916. ~ paid tn advance nsure delivery after n arrears. of Circulation (A. B. ©.) t! — svbsorip> Your Trivuns. se “ = 630 and § o'clock p. x per will be do The Casper Tribune’s Program thorized st of Casper to be au! Irrigation pr nd nd ntific zoning system for the and school recreation ° nicipal Bn Te swimming pools for the cht establishe¢ Se Route boule sunty commissioner to G a 1 return. 4 wtrona county end more higi- rates for shippey of the and more frequent train serv: ; ‘Gel the Shovel. TS mighty uncomforta tracking along city streets over uncleaned sidewalks after a snow. We doubt if there is another city of its - ize and importance in the country that can boast of great: | er neglect of its sidewalks. In the summer the wind blows sand all over them and in many places | great drifts completely bury the walks. In the) winter the snow that falls remains until warmer | weather comes to melt it. If a spell of freezing weather happens the snow becomes ice which makes it all the more difficult to walk over. It is the duty of property-owners to clear their, sidewalks and keep them clean, but so long as there | is no insistence the part of the city, property owners become e » cul yin False and Malicious. yy easily proven and maliciousness readily apparent, a pretended jan for the ecricultural interests in the west, has been de-| elari that legislation favorable to the farmers enacted in the past two years has been secured in the face of the opposition of President Harding. te Nothing is farther from the truth. While he was senator Mr. Harding was a cou- sistent advocate of legislation that would tend to promote the welfare of agricultural production. At numerous times in his addresses as a candidate for the presidency, he espoused the couse of the | farmer: and did so, not only speaking in tho agri- 1 centers of the west but when speaking! the manufacturing cities of the east as well, His pre-election promises were made good br his} official performances. It will be remembered that in the closing days of the Wilson administration thd Republican con- Eress passed over the veto of President Wilson, the! act reviving the War Finance corporation, the par-! ticular purpose of which was to provide financial aid in developing foreign markets for agricultural products, The Wilson administration refused to act for that purpose. Immediately upon his in-! anguration President Harding put the War Fi nance corporation into active and effective opera-! tion and ft has done more than any other one! thing to relieve the farmers of the depressing ef | fects of surplus production for which there was no market. The records disclose hundreds of mil | lions of dollars loaned-by this administration te finance the export of farm products with the ef- fect of raising the price for the producer. Much of this fund has been repaid and reloaned. The! Hardiug administration also changed the defla 1 wregram which had hit the farmer so hard tr| losing months of the Democratic regime. | The next act of President Harding in the inter est of the rprmers was the calling of a special ses | sion of congress, the particular purpose of which | was to enact an emergency agricultural tariff law,| which was enacted in accordance with the wishes and with the full approval of the agricultural in terests of the country. In his address to the special session of congress | President Harding stressed the needs of agricul | tural industry not only in the matter of a protective tariff but the need for lower freight rates, the | suppression of profiteering, the reduction of fed eral taxes, the development of foreign markets and the improvement of public highways, Mr. Harding also urged and signed legislation in- erensing the funds of the farm loan board. He} favored and signed the co-operative market bill, legislation extending the time of complete pay- ments by farmers on reclamation projects and the grain future control bill. agricultural conference at Washington for the The president called an| 'The Powerful Katrinka. Tis tink side sacenee HER PURSE VERY FeoLtsHLY cuT ACRoss YHE ASA ouMP WHERE THe Powerrut KaTRinwA Coup GRAS LOTS OF THINGS Te THRew. i “A man who shatters a time like/O%.’ OF @ ‘That's interesting.” that doesn’t even know it when ft slong is, as we sey, * 3f there's anything [ | i33]8 if a8 z the Revolution. purpose of adopting a general policy for promot- ing the interests of agriculture. Not in any respect or at any time has President Harding opposed any legislation which conld fairly be considered a proper national activity for the promotion of agricultural welfare. In_ his latest message to Congress he has urged legislation for the extension of farm credits. j Rights Reserved. Fi NACCURATE and misleading is the statement that the American demand for the observance rty owners and business people should have |of our rights in the Far East is a participation in wutieient eerie in their surroundings and the com- | European affairs. The right of the United States fort of their patrons to see to so small a matter as) to have its merchant ships and its fighting ships this, but thoy apparently have either lost their; go and come as they please is not an European pride or never possessed any, for downtown side-|affair, The United States has never indicated any walks and walks in residence sections are per-| intention to keep out of discussion and settlement mitted to remain snowbound until the sun does of matters of that kind. ar ienaee how much dynamite would be required nant and refusal to tle ourselves up in « perma- to aronse the city authorities to a sense of pub-/nent compact with practically all European na- lic duty in a matter of this sort? | tions, we did not announce a policy of isolation = Be ee a |uor renounce our right to protect our national in- lt Be In M \terests in Europe pet any other ae ot of os Let It Be In March. jeorth, What we did do and what we still do has "| LAW providing that congress shail meet aii pbeen coe ce Pmt ae Ae renee eeres ly on the second Monday in March -would | ¥en Re 3 e rese: he very simple. The..proposed plun to have con:| Sclven thornighe ape Sa prt abe ne Y, eco gress meet on the f-rst Monday in January, and| © bat manner Tk hr ace 3 ‘pate dive sCUusS: ria the presidential inaugural to be held quadrenially | Of @uestions of interest to ourselves directly or in- on the third Monday of the same month will create} directly, When certain European nations got together in many complications, necessitate considerable aff ; amending or the constitution, and may end an effort to distribute among themselves special a rm 4 | privileges in the Far East, our department of where. i} bs . | State, with the approval of the president, gave The constitution provides that Congress shall | *t4%° assemble at least once in every year, on the first | 2Otice of our intention to insist upon an open door Tn the rejection of the league of nations cove-} jtened the independence of America in 1776. ) States loaned Enrope more than $10,- Why Not a Y. M. C. A.? 000,000,000 and gave many thousands] tivation of the soil and ths pursuits ot American lives to ‘save civilim-|0f pesce, Europe alone can bring Balter Tribune: Inasmuch as I amj*ion;’ and since the armistice har & citizen pf Casper and also interested | "et to Europe many billions of dot- rs and many ‘millions of thie city, would ike very much to/Worth of food and -v2plles, know why a city of this size does niot/S*Meros'ty has never )ccore been re- : lcorded in human history. “Europe cannot expect the United city having a population of 10,000 or States to help compass ite own eco- |More fs eligible for a Y. M. C. A., and|nomic ruin by buyingeunlimited quan- in the welfare of the young men of! Dave a ¥. M.C. A. It t my understanding that any) men of Casper would weicome an in- ture shows, I would certainly apprect you would take th’ ter ub young men on this subject. A READER. ‘Whenever the people of Cnxper! evince en interest fn this subject, are ready to undertake, seriously, the project of a Y. M. C. A., they will find! the organization ready to push it to} success. We are pleased that some, one has introduced the subject and! (would be pleased again if others would take their pens in hand and ex-| press their views on the subject. notes the American Economist, “the many times over the aid extended by France in Moreover, the United States preserved the inde- | pendence of France in 1918 just as surely as France It T am sure that many of the young | titles of European goods in order thet Burope may get on fta feet econum!- stitution of this kind as none of us|cally and industrially. Burope wil! be have any place of recreation outside able to get out of her troubles in time, of the dance halls, poolhalls and pic:/provided the several quarreling over’ politics, boundaries, @ it if Taw matarial, including of, end other m™ | matertal matiers, will cease quarre!- through tho editorial section of your|ing and within their respective boun- paper and get the views of other) Garies confine their time and ‘ 1 5 Is | and ‘The Bishop and the Tariff. car | “In a sermon in Washington,”| Him is apparent that both the moral and the material debt we owed France was completely wiped out in 1918. The American people are tired of being told oth- erwise. “ to the production of wealth, the cul- peace to Europe The United States will render ample ald just as soon as} Europe shows a disposition to help herself In tho meantime, the United States proposes to protect itself in| its own way.” They Are Mostly Vacant. “Deliver me,” said the girl with experience, “from any “more of these strong, silent men. They make good fiction heroes, but personally I pre- fer a man whose chief claim to strength does not He in his breaking ail records for silence. I itke a man who knows the value of pause or a moment in which no one says any- dotlars’ Such i Always the Same ay A perfected blend, always maintained in every can of Nash’s Delicious Coffee—constant Gu ‘| denna ‘Why are you smilmg” deserves just what she facility. "Modesty, reticence. are commendab’e. stupid, but a beor.” 7299 53 fit BAKING POWDER = Use ARANTEED QUALITY eare during every process of its manufacture— air-cleaning—“hot roasted” crispy freshness. Resvutr: a clear, smooth, satisfying cup of fragrant coffee, that makes friends wherever served. You'll love the deli- clous flavor. At your grocers — in one and three-pound containers. ore phate ei ong OP Frewoegts sachs sae EPS STORES a Monday in December, “unless they she y law ap- : as | Uni tates at the same time Clem-! THREE point a different day.” But representatives hold}, spn was ne, bg pena Sipe to: aspaglal heetyi ‘enceau is telling us what we should! office for two years from the 4th of March sue jer pian i Wa ecieee tie, poate ihe 8 En, | 221% our foreign affairs, especially “Institutions for the People” ceeding their election, senators are elected for six it Ay Wo reba aawaly aikie thatitn the: docma. | eos attitude toward France, mays) Pep’s Prices years, and the president and vice president are|TOP@: ™) pares Bt {tearfully thet the prosperity of the 2 4 Sher it a All of this is provided for | 40" Of international treaties, voluntary or invol-} United States is en:irely depensont Built chosen for four years. All Of This 18g neumbents | “tary, there shall be no unjust and unfair dis-|upon the prosperity of Europe, and fs by the constitution, and the present’ incumbents! -rimination against the United States. We do not|that America must hel Europe to 9 3 Stores Gt whoee Offices CAN. Nave ane yer anor aeR ask for ourselves or our citizens any privileges that |0¥s our solcalled surplus {f we do only by constitutional uinendment. The proposed we are unwilling to have extended to any other not want to see continded unemploy- plan is for the purpose of insuring change of legin- RtaEIGR or its ettiasnk sent and distress in the United lative and adin trative control from two to two} “Having failed in thats effort to induce the tates. The good bishop says thatthe Hundreds d 2 nonths ufter elections have been held.! etepencs 4 BOV-| United States no longer can assume ie inves the chauge occur on the second Monday |¢riment of thé United SStates to yield its sover-|an attitude of complete isolation: at XMAS BOX CANDY of in March would mean a delay in the end sought of /%ignty to a super state known as the league of|mus share its riches with Europe. : NEW but two months at the outside. The successful) 22tions, the internationalists in this country are|Then he quotes the parablo of the Prices $1.00 to $7.00 oe M Ae ld have about four months to cool |20W Striving on every slender opportunity to create buabandman who, finding that he DRUG candids tes would: Lane sdcuee te |the impression that the United States -is breaking ad more than enough for himeelf, off after a campaign’ wherein, passion aud pre] | oe dom ite pollay OF independence and gradual-|®™4lt himself more storehouses and BAUR'S XMAS ASSORTMENT. SUNDRY = judice might have: gained ascendency over reasou./1y" “Genarting from’ the inteeustionel policies of|Patted bimselt on the back for his FIRST TIME IN CASPER That is not too lk and it is a great improve-| Goorge Waahin; ton in reality if not in form. Ag ‘Brft and success. The Lord sald, ITEMS ment over the thirteen months now required before We. oer Ye ie Rane ii by th rda, the @uotes the bishop: “Thou fool, thy Slies a new coug convenes, unless an extra session |® Matter of fact, fu Sion hae Tet varied Pea the soul shall give account.” $1.00 per lb. box in Summer ie called, en ene. March | Republican administration has not varied trom the| «strange but the bishop ts tnac- . ‘ Arrived for the ig of congress ought to| Policy announced in the campaign of 1920, so far|curate on his economics and history. $1 00 per Ib. box at Xmas ‘ ; Bas ft is the moet rea.|#8 international relations are concerned. We now|During the flecel year 1921 ¢he United . ‘ and aR Seen ethed of | M@4intain diplomatic relations with all the other)S8tates exported merchandise to a most Simplified method of |jeading nations of the earth just aa we have|Europ@ vatued at $3,408.000,000; In Hundreds ny, oD eRe : |throughout our national existence. We not Cd patie arrbegeineepaliecy one DJER Mere vision when the constitution was | Seek to maintain friendly diplomatic relations but Tord wer which wees tine 009,000 KISS Are August 7th, 1787 provided {0 @ttain closer commercial relations. We do this,| i. "1912; $1,499,000,000 in 1913; and in December,’ as the date |2OWever, without in any way limiting our right as | 1,339,000,000 in 1914. HOLIDAY BOXES on the erat conen but Randolph sup- | nation to shape our international policies accord-| I: 4s not possible to maintain ex: Way plied the atiee: Garcnael by Madison, and | 228 to conditions as they are presented from time| ports at. the war or post-war level, adopted by a vote of eight to two. Morris and Mad Veet } in which the United 8: is i pecocctig hi eshte Pataca o.6" $2. 75 at ison w May inserted instead of December be ary Pre mebs ilar ee yey pring ide a ee . Prices e Prices PRICES : E : lated is that it refuses to meddle in foreign contro-|®Vérase before the war. This does not : cause Europe were planned in the Tegiwhink > Wh indicate that the United States 1s suf- 00 Tha winte 1 intelligence of them in| YeTS!es which are none of our business. art inn. (tering much because of loss of Buro- That i t for the the ae Mer iaetcy FOr aes oq. DY foreign negotiations affect the rights and in-! wa TE “ pat : e sprir as an inconvenient sea-) torosts of the Un ited States the: ba to be Pare pean markets. The real trouble fs Talk $5.50 Talk RICH son for tr: thought summer would |'“™S"S enon ctet ety ena (0 be foreign has been, the home markets have ‘ artis SEES RE. eS Now, 2 past, wi ports pe reached '° e beet yateliec sine in the ‘states would | + usiness and letting other jueoplé's *haainess mlevel lee cob te chimes a aaet Gn ASK FRIEND BILLINGSGATE LOWLY teAetanble:to ae pation? ae ————_. -0-—_—__—_. averaged $900,060,000, which commodious as po: tyro... Improved munica: was lost by to| The Score Scitled. SEBSSING in Btemorial 4 transpo: i methods of com 1 fathers Continental Hall at never dr discussion of the sub- Daughters of the American Revolution, Mr. Clem- ject th oda But their consid-'enceau reminded his audience that France had come eratic c ional questions suffers to the aid of America in 1776. “We answered your not a h rison with some we hear today—|call. Now are you going to answer ours?” he said. more frequent logic of the framers makes the} Apparently the distinguished Frenchman thinks or les of Freedom” sound like some- the Tnited States still owes a moral debt to France hing ot had the fores to on account of what his country did for us in the’ date of the meeting! Revolution. In his query he gave no credit for about changing; what we did in the World War, but it has been ¢ president. The‘ the notion of most of us that what we did in 1918 > to March for Con-|repaid our obligations to France about twenty the date of the inaugura probabilities are that a « gress would meet Washington, the national headquarters of the| more than any year before 1912-1913, when the low Underwood tariff came Into operation. It is not possible for the American people to consume be- tween seven and eight billion dollars’ | worth of competitive merchandise, as they Aid from 1918 to and including 1922, and at the samo time keep |Amertean competitive factories and milfs and shops in full operation, “How can there be a ‘surplus’ of American merchandise, generally speaking, when in two years (1922 and 1922) the United States imported more than eight billion dollars’ worth of foreign at least one- half of which was competitive? er sian ae with th pproval today, ard | times. l itenae be sars Wei tae vited Memes “$nnovati: BUEe 10" of rendering! In the money we spent on the war, the number of Statee, rich beyond compare, {s sel: eee toae pos- soldiers we sent to France, and the number of ~«s and ‘isclated’ He forgeta that American lives lost in the struggle, we exceededduring the world war the United A FAST SALE DRUG SUNDRIES Bought at a Discount Lots of "Em! They’re Sold at Cut Prices Open-Handedly. Fast Furious Ferociously CIGARETTE CASES Formerly Sold at $3.00 and $5.00 PEP’S XMAS PRICES $1.75 and $2.50 TOBACCO POUCHES Sold Formerly at $5.00 PEP’S XMAS PRICE $1.50 CIGARS XMAS BOXES at SUMMER PRICES NATIONAL BRANDS PEP Leads in Tobacco Sales PEE AEGERE EGE EGE GUNNISON Ss WATCH SATURDAY’S TRIBUNE FOR A DRUG SUNDRY SALE A “HOLE-IN,THE-WALL” SALE A XMAS SALE all, as every one knows, it Isn't so much what is said as the way it :5 said. The strong silences and the enigmatical smiles intrigue only unt!) a girl finds out that there's nothing them, “If she is so foo"hardy as to ask, “What are you thinking about? or that much to be said for these men, anyway; {f they can do both. they vary thelr acts. apptying the one to explain the other with a remarkable Teserve—those But a man who thinks that silences and smiles indie. criminately used, can carry him through the world, must be not on!y ea Ne