Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 18, 1922, Page 6

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= PAGE TRO [ apereveereansensnerenertetserorersseontesotes (anes ine ienconaT Onsen ts sensaeNeT eeenDey pk ra re Ut OG int FO POE Aen ae IRL HEN ME er rea ‘ ‘ E E = Gre re Ty Pe yom ey me Che Casper Daily Cribunc BUSINESS TELEPHONES ... ---15 and 18 ranch Teleptone Exchange Connecting All Depactments Entered at Casper (Wyoming), mater, November CHARLES W. BARTON . Aadverrsing Representatives. 2a, 1720-23 Steger Big. Chicagc. - King @ Prusdta, 1 ager Bie. Chlenss, New York City: SUBSCTIPTION RATES By Carrier or By Mail . Deady sud Sunaay One Year Sundry Gtx Months Dai: Three Monthe D wmwenennnmnenn a 08 paid in edvane, } not insure delivery after subscrip) e month in arrears. Member of Audit Bureau of Ctreulation (A. B. ©.) Kick {f You Don't Get Your Tribu. | oF 16 any time between 630 and § e'clock p. m | your Tribune. A paper will be de | ial mesngiger. Make it your duty te| know when Sour carrier misses you. The Casper Tribune’s Program Irrigation project and eted at A complete and city of Casper A comprehensive municipal and school recreation park sy: . including swimming poole for the chil dron of Casper, of the established Scenic Route boule by the county commissioners to Gar rn. west of Casper to be authorised com for the zoning system ntitic ways for Wyoming. More dquitable freight rates fcr shippe-s of the Rocky Mountain region, and more frequent train serv- ice for Casper. « j = = | Labor and Immigration | ASHINGTON is once more wrestling with the immigration problem. The employers of var. ious sections of the country are complaining of Jabor shortage, and although they have been warn-| ed against pressing any damand for liberalization | of restrictive features of the immigration law, the/| upward tendency in wages, which may cause an-| other rise in commodity prices, powerfully rein- forces their argument. | What congress wili do in view of the conditions| now developing is, of course, uncertan. The dispo-' sition of the average member of the federal law- meking body is rather to add to the restrictions al- ready on the statute books. Yet the operation of, the present law, especially of the three per cent quota provision, has yielded surprises and suggests some change. For instance, Great Britain, Ger- many, France and the Scandinavian countries fail-| ed to send enough emigrants to fill their respec-| tive quotas for the last fiscal year. Only 68 per| cent of the British quota was filled, and 26 per cent of the German. Southern and eastern European countries filled their quotas and have been inform- | ally requesting upward revision of the immigration | limit. Opponents of such revision bring forth some cur- ious suggestions. It is said, for example, that addi-| tional British, German, French and other immi- grants might be attracted by offering financial aid and encouragement to desirables contemplating, emigration but lacking the means to execute their plans. It is not likely that congress would subsi- dize even the most desirable immigration. The problem is complex and has social and civic | aspects that cannot be lightly subordinated to pure economics. It should be studied dispassionately and} without fanaticism. Perea EES aie ea Henry and William PAPERS have all been having a lot to sey | about Henry Allen's visit to the Follies, which ts ‘understood to be a collection of the prettiest! dancing girls the world can provide. It is a place in New York where all the best people seem to go and where they take visiting dignitaries from oth- er parts to exhibit them. Henry is not the boy to! shun the lime light, which is supposed to shine at @ place like the Follies. He was fresh from Kan- sas where William Allen White had got the better of him in a little display advertising joust relat- ing to a certain placard in the window of William’s printing office at Emporia, so felt the need, on ar- rival in New York, of a little nourishing publicity That Will Rogers was called in to help is quite| natural for Henry's Wichita Eagle has ever spoken | kindly of Will's efforts in the movies. The favor was purely reciprocal. That Kansas is somewhat worried about her gov- ernor, is evidenced by what the Kansas City Times says about the matter, which follows: “Kansas will gateher its brows a little when it reads about its governor being on the stage with Mr. Ziegfeld’s Follies girls, and telling "em how retty they are. Kansas has heard about the Fol: ies and chorus girls in general, and probably will decide Henry had better hurry on to that confer. ence of governors that took him east and then come straight home. “Anyway, the conference of governors is in White Sulphur Springs and Kansas understands that the Follies show is in wicked New York where unsus- pecting and guileless westerners are frequently lured to their destruction. Kansas has always had the feeling that the best and safest place to hold a conference of governors is in Topeka, but if they must be held in the east it is strongly of the opin- ion they ought not to be on the Follies stage. “If it was necessary for Henry to hold a prelim: inary conference with Will Rogers before meeting the governors, Kansas will wonder why in the world Mr. Rogers didn’t go to Henry’s hotel. They could have talked much more privately there than on the Follies stage, where there are always a lot| of girls dashing about. Kansas can see how natural) it would be for Henry to fall into conversation | with them, and even for him to say something nice | to them about supposing they all came from Kan. sas. That was nll right and probably unavoidable, presupposing that Henry and Mr. Rogers couldn't find any other place in New York to hold their con- ference. Kansas is only too thankful that Henry | | didn’t have to dance with the chorus. | “But knowing New York and the Follies as it | does, Kansas is nevertheless of the opinion that the safest place to witness the Follies is from :i seat pretty weil back in the balcony and although! it was no doubt all Mr. Roger’s doings, getting } Henry up on the stage under a pretense to talk to |, him, Kansas will feel that on the whole Henry had | { better come home for Christmas anyway.” eee barca eee i Same Old Appeal | BONAR LAW seems after all to have adopted| the Balfour idea of adjustment of inter-allied debts by 1 back io the around cancellation. Thus coming same policy the as previous govern: ment and receding from his former statement on the subject, that the Balfour note no longer existed &be the present government was not bound by it. The premier calls upon France for moderation in dealing with Germany on the ground that that country is on the verge of collapse. And in his most recent siatement before the house of com- | mons he makes the often repeated European appeal for American help and co-operation in settling the difficult problems of reparations and inter-allied | debts. | Quite so. How would these nations on the other | side like to have America clean up their mountain of debts and supply working capital in cash.! Would that be agreeable? Would they go ahead and | do business or would they engage in new brawls among themselves on the money? i We suspect the latter. These nations have given | no signs of even a desire to do better than they | have in the past. They decline to go to work. Their! governments have never put forth a sincere effort to find work. They simply stand about waiting and hoping for someone to come along and extri- cate them from their troubles and set them on the read to prosperity. America bas al: done her part by Barope | Loans by the billion: Food by train load and ship- | load. This side is tired giving to the other sido! and feels more like asking Europe when she ex pect& to get into the collar and help herself and when she expefts to cease whining and talk tur Europe might as well forget the cancellation stuff and get busy, for she is going to pay that kale seed she owes us if it takes her old cook stove to do it That coin was given her in good fatih and it most surely has got to come back in the same manner. é — ee Extremists in Action V R. BRYAN, feeling the urge of public duty, for. += sdok the balmy breezes and bright sunshine of Florida for the rigors of the north, in order to mix it with the radicals and placo the stamp of his ap-| proval on everything, good or bad, that would change the present order. He has patted all the/| boys on the back and enheartened them to go the); limit, he was with them, so what boots who was against them. ‘Twas ever thus. From hoyhood’s sunny hour, | when he spread elocution along the Platte. From | the sweltering July afternoon when he crowned us with thorns saad crucified us on a croas of gold. | Again when be burned us at the stake of imperial-| ism. Again when he handed us a bottle of pale yur | ple grape juice and invited us to have a good time. And again, again and again. But always the same. | His paramounts have never paramounted. Always | would “us common people” rise to William's bait! expecting a real worm, only to be caught on an artificial fly. Forever has he endor: the pro- posals of radicalism and called them progress, For- ever have they proven to be impossible and discard- ed theories dressed pp in the Sunday clothes of} rhetoric and containing the same old filling of saw dust. It is a fine thing to advance. It is even finer to gct behind human progress and push. But ad- vancement and progress mean something more than | change of form. A mere adoption of th’ untried. | Embracing things known to be unworkable. A/| searching of the junk pile for things long buried. The people would welcome something of merit in| the line of advancement and improvement in pub-} lic affairs, something of actual Tauetit: something that would ameliorate their condition and lift bur- dens from their backs, but they ses nothing sub- stantial in the proposals of LaFollette endorsed by Bryan. These two prophets are without honor. And a plan for gathering political control in a ticklish situation for harrassing purposes, lacks honorable motive and sinvere design for good, We will be content to have these extremists pound away and do their part in developing a public opin- ion that will later say what it desires.. Then if the Republican party answers as it has so many times it the great regulators whose names need not be men- tioned again, rather than by any aid they may bring to the cause. Desirable and Necessary the loud opinions expréssed by its opponents who fail to see the necessity of placing our own country on an equal basis, in matters of wages and market conditions, with other countries who pay less wages and bave inferior living conditions. The world situation demands just such an equal- izing measure as the tariff to protect our own and| preserve our own markets for our own. Under present rates of exchange many foreeign workers are receiving a very small Wage compared with what American labor is getting. If I were re ceiving 10 cents and you were getting $4 a day, your employer could not compete successfully with mine if there were not an equalizing factor such as an adequaate tariff. Prices should not be ma- terinlly increased by the tariff, any more tian by other economic factors which enter into production. But people are very often misled into believing that any one thing will raise prices. SS ABS ROT Ia, UE Will Help Solve Problem ae MOTOR truck will be the solution of many of the transportation troubles of the future. Congestion will be a thing more or less of the past. At different times within the Iast decade there have been problems, difficult ones, too, growing out of transportaticn needs. Whenever business condi- tions become better there are more commodities to go to market. There is more to be sold but it can not be sold unless it gets within reach of the ulti- mate consumer. The retailer must depend on satis- factory transportation facilities to get his products which his customers are very often clamoring for, | but which he is unable to get. It 1s not infrequent that dealers lose sales because they do not have the product on hand. | -Railroad transportation is a big question, and no! matter how well handled will at times be confront- ed with perplexities regarding industrial transpor- | tation. Many short hauls could be well handled by | motor transportation, and in that way would re- lieve the railroads for longer hauls. Unless there are enough freight cars to haul products to market, the railroads are unable to give all the assistance they can. When industry suddenly experiences an improved market it is virtually impossible for every one to he prepares: With some other trans- | portation to fall back on, not only in an emergency | period, but regularly throughout the year, trans- portation problems would be made much easier. | Ca NE ate. STE Ae YOU would preserve your youth and good looks eat wisely and of the proper foods. The doctor says therein lies the fountain of youth and auty. Se Se a SAE pees for yourself, do for yourself and write your own history. It will beat having some- one also do these for you. Soe NE os QE N more hectic days in which to put over the \ commercial transactions early, that you have postponed until late. Che Casper Daily Cribune Least Week when tHe Smepen SUPDENLY EMPTIED HIS REVOLVER at A RABBIT, FouR WomEN FROM THE CITY ALMOST BROKE THEIR NECKS GETTING OFF THE CAR THINKING IT WAS A HOLDUP, Send a Christmas Card This is the cpen season on Christ- mas card hunting. Even those rugged [souls who profess to regard the send-| jing of greeting cards at other times 8 sentimental succumb as Christmas pProaches. until 11:80 Christmas Eve, but then you'll rush in to some shop and mail out a dozen in a hurry. ‘That's one way of doing it. Another {s as the royal family of England does They have paintings made by fa- mous artists, from which the prints for their cards are produced. company that prints the royal greet- ing cards then has the original can vases of the des'gns mourited in the form of giant greeting card folders! and these are giv royal family, t thousands of the replicas in customary greeting card size. On the other hand, Americans who cen afford it have theirs engraved by sora expensive stationer. these stationers execute commissions for private cards running into thou- sands of dollars for each order. Yet the average American man or ‘woman prefers to pick whimstoal bit of verse or quaint bit of prose to express his wish that some I Jone has ry Cl & in the past, we will get what we want in spite of | noeetaty, thanBnatigh toketioe send- ing of greeting cards more seriously than we do. right to since Christmas cards origin- ated in their country. lect Christmas cards. | sald to be the best posted collector in ‘ BIER i sntale Abas | England in the latter part of the lant HE TARIFF ie entirely desirable, regardless Ori centaevien greeting cards, nad gape lection, contained in some umes, weighing six and seven tone. 1894 about 163.000 varieties. hav fou: The signed by J. C. Academician, for Sir Henry Cole. in 1846. family group seated about quaffing from large goblets fluid. Some inkling of what the drink was may be deduced from the design of the border it certainly looks ike a srapev: seems that many noted Engiis ists have not disdained to paint de figns for Christmas cards. others may be mentioned Crane, John Leighton, W. F. Yearne: R. A.; Alice Havers and Kate Green. away. Probably the most noted American Painter to have designed a greeting card was Elihu Vedder, who won a prize of $1,000 offered by Louis Prang & Co. or Boston, which was the firat company in America to manufacture greeting cards. In tha early days cards the design was the thing. The verses or sentiments appeared later, with the exception of the usual wis for a merry Christmas. You may put it off that cold,” you can’t,” The same thing will cure me. to members of the | her with some| cured measles, \by using some Some of my cold. you do. out some do. Perhyps they have a They even col- Jonathan King, |P'° Prescription. more——" “Just a minute,’ I 700 vol. | BS collectively hetweer It included in Youn to admit that's taking it ser- you seem to believe. trary. mince first Christmas card was de- Horsley, a Royal It represented a Dick:nsian ate relief. lie down ané of wanted to fight. some dark We hate to say it, but art. Among Walter Pressing upwards buckthorn bers, mixed in Adiert! ter of Christmas stomach. per Pharmacy. dv. FINE UPHOLSTERY THOMAS LONG 535 West Yellowstone Cushions and special pieces made to order. jean cure anyth'ng, You might be| 1 able to tell me how somebody else] as cured something else, but you can't | everybod: tell me how I can oure a cold. cause something cured somebody of}can. But something once doesn't prove that the| more. “You might know somebody who mups or appendicitis sort of dope or pre- seription, but that doesn’t prove any- thing about colds. Colds sre some: | m: thing else again, and cur-s and mre scriptions don’t bether colds any more than hot weather hurts @ hornet. So don't tell me anything that will cure My cold ts divferent, and T| w know more about my own cold than Probably I know people who have cured colds by vari ous methods as you do, and probably 1 know as many of the cures as you “Now there was Ben Boldt, cured tis co:d by eating hot mince pie every four hours unt!l cured. Tou see, I am familiar with the hot mince have Nowadays, !f| crooked. No sooner had he taken the you are bunting Obristmas cards you|pie than he began to believe that may well be astonished by the num-|rents were coming down and wages | Der and variety of “sentiments,” as| going up. the dealers always refer to them. ——>__—_ Curing a Cold “TI can tell you how you can cure volunteered the cheerful man with an infectious smile. answered er, it. many who taken interrupted the cheerful man, never for 2 moment los: gocd-humored smile. “In the case of Ben Boldt you are a little mixed, Ben did not take hot mince pie three times a day after meals as Quite the con- He took only one c of and that quite by accident, thinking {t was laudanum or some. thing. But hard'y had be swallowed the ple when he experienced immedt!- He no longer wanted to He no. longer He no longer be. leved that the whole world was going to the dogs, and that baseba!l was OF Pressure on Lungs Caused by Gas Often a dull, full feeling in chest is caused by gns from undigested food towards Sometimes gas presses on heart and ‘se mistaken for heart trouble. siycerine, expels gas and stops pressure almost INSTANTLY in many cases. Removes surprising mat- from BOTH upper and P bowel which formed gas and poisoned | Adlerika is EXCELLENT | @ to guard against appendicities. © ete., Building Materials Weare equipped with the stock to supply your wants in high grade lumber and build- ers’ supplies. Rig timbers a specialty. KEITH LUMBER CO. Phone 3 mane ay 3 NMR lungs. Simple as lower Phone 129.J Formerly With the Shaffer-Gay Furniture Co. With that amile and fee! better, and then all of & sudden he realized that it was the mince pile that had done it. ‘I long to have others benefit as { have benefited by this simple houso- hold remedy,’ said Ben to me, ‘and T abou ‘Well, thanks the grouchy person. as grouch!ly “and go right ahead telling you know all I haven't got a minceple co'd. and mince ple can’t cure it. T uted the minciest kind of mince and the most pizenous kind of pie, and {t did no good whatever. ‘The cheerful person. ade no retort, although it was quite evident that he didn’t believe a ‘word that bis grouchy friend had uttered Toronto boasts of a young woman ‘ho earns a livelihood as a bricklayer. MONDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1922. . * s ~he-eas & tian can't Possess ang Life and Art in Wyoming! =r" girly accomplishmer‘s wit! out utterly losing caste. “f know a gitl who can throw a stone farther and straighter than 1t “Nothing could be more urwomanly than th's, and yet I worship her mcre wildly every tire I sce her throw something. Arid it's the same every time I see her draw a cork. She dovsn't attack it with ~ joure scissors cra hatptr she's the only woman I ever, rhythm and harmony, the pulse. of| saw whe goes at &. cork. with er al an: yanks it out with a plop. “Bhe doesn't dissect @ cork, pry out , the upper half in crumbs and push So: Srsuys ot eee ween | the cont ieee Coenen t out whole, and instead of censuring We. in Wyoming. are climbing the ladder of fame. Health. wealth, and beauty brings many to our portalls, but Mr. Stranger, from afar, as @ phy- sic'an feeling our pulse, has discov ered that we are not ‘quality,” 6e causs be judges our culture by tho conversations and manners to be seen snd heard on the streets. Let us use art. in restoring can,” said Smitty. t pai to| No, our community life and have a ‘cul- ture drive,’ regulating the pedestrian, that he keep to the right, breaking relegating the foulmouthed biasphem @r to the im:hage can. Let us usa art and culture i: the ‘Our Great West.” The architect knows that the build. | {ne must have proportiton, barmony, and rhythm, plus a real foundatien, to fulfill its end and be @ delight to the eve. Art is one easential tn every } | trade ozs rofession. No machine can | be successfully operated, unless every such an upwoman!y see her draw a cork. “There are many them makes her more that knows her. stance. Part ie constructed along perfect) a..y lines, With perfect harmony and} sng put tote of agilits rhythm, the motor sings. into it. The good salesman shows on! his patient must have harmony 1 bis surroundings; happy tones voice and color, with many silences, to restore to rhythm the puleé of life whistle many draw many tunes T eaw her drive a nat. Sr he sends us into ‘The hilis, from| great spectacie Thi whense cometh our help.’ Here The} her in the movies Great Artist hes spread a fe: No| nafie Ike a colors clash, no harsh sounds clang | dreams of hit | Great silent filled epaces of time are | hammer. there. We do not find the tiresome circle returning to the old beaten|to persuade that | ward turn | nitely The rhythm in al} natural move: ment appeals to both eye and ear. The flapping of the wings of the eagle, as he mounts on high, the splashing of the trout in the stream, the footfall of the deer on the pine needles, passing as In a dream, the cail of the wolf to its mate, the sage-hen mothering her own, reminds always of Nature's beautiful perfection. I'd like to bee. na so beautifully by fascinating name. sharpen a pen with a penkife, of that Arabella | surgeon and wi finest point, never jo—regular handles a all emudged up. watch Arabella The music of spheres in a'nging. We would borrow for the lyre, : The colors of the sky, we would copy To hang by our winter fire he began to The scent of the pines and the flowers We would weave into poems divine, To last tll the shadows gather, And sorrew our spirits would bind complishments. Then why do we starve our spirits? When beauty in nature abounds With harmony, rhythm, proportion, We may that beauty compound. making fudge, aligning millinery, for telling me,” re- floating about it.| There are pigments in Wyoming To paint the most beautiful hue. Materials for our pencils And beaver hair for brushes too. —Cora Eaton Kitts. But Arabelie? I tried Toiiibso ve a Sissies — Never One of the things no fellow can understand, according to Smitty, ts how a girl can manage to possess and practice a whole lot of masculine ac- compl'shments and only seem tho more bewitching because of them, THE BEST © stil happy. ——— CHRISTMAS GIFT A daily reminder of your thoughtfulness and gift which will be greatly appreciated isa sub- scription to the CASPER DAILY AND SUNDAY TRIBUNE Send no money now. Just fill in the coupon be- low and mail at once. We will notify your friend that he or she is to receive the Tribune as your er Daily Tribune, ‘asper, Wyo. Gentlemen: Please send the Casper Daily and Sunday Morning Tribune to : at almost ery with delight every time I stunts that girl does, and each one of cmy {3 me but to every other fellow Whistling, for in She can whistle lke a bul) She can p'pe a sustained tune And she'll whistle over mak those | ing a éake or trimming a hat just as articles which in line. quatity, and/ unconsciously as a boy over bis bes | color, are suitable to his prospective | ish pur: tomer. The phys‘ciat, too, realizes) «pur ough I had heard this gir! and seen corks and throw many stones, I don't think I really appre. ciated her masculine attributes unti? Why carpenter and never ner thumb with Cm "I tell you. if I was lucky enough girl to marry I'd want her to Crive some nails ever) j path. The infinite lines of nature be | it leaves, rocks or hills, wander| evening when I came home to éinner | away Into space with never a back-| Honestly, I'm s'mply 4 * ching: be 4 sometimes I thinit anti would lead us indefi.| Watching her. and somet i | . to be driven home Arabella—that’s her “Did I méntion that T mea You know what kind of @ meas the ordinary woman makes ttles a penc’l to the reaking the lead, or slitting her fingers or setts I could just sharpening penc' lf . What puzzles man should be called a ‘sissy had as many feminine accomplish- ments as Arabella has masculine eo- Is it fair? Is it just? Or do we discriminate {n faver of thé Arabellas and against the Clarences? “Suppose Clarence has a talent for and another for and another darning socks, and another for makirg island or knitting babbies’ booties, shouldn't we accept those ac complishments as admiringly as we d> the masculine accomplishments of we don't! Arabella’s got us buffaloed.” performance | ether maniy irrestatibie. not and expression her Say! that’s a ought to she driv crazy about she can . Of course butehery. But knife like a w I guess TARE s]awior(0 a

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