Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 2, 1923, Page 6

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i ~ PAGE SIX. Py ' Che Casper Daily Cribune Issue? every evening except Sunday at Casper, Natrona County, Wyo. Publication Offices, Tribune Building Che Casper Daily Cribune upon the hearthstones. The sturdy old idea of a sturdy old generation was that that was the best government that governed least and still main, tained a healthy social order. Faithful to that policy, free government in America waxed and prospered for many years. | “But nowadays a misguided public interest is persistently uprooting the local self-government that has bred strong men and women for the con- duct of national affairs is centralizing the govern: | ment in well-nigh innumerable bureaus and com- missions at Washington, and through one device and another of paternalism is seducing the an- cient spirit of independence and _ self-reliance ;among our people, gradually bringing them to be ; dependent upon the veil and favor of politicians i qe . in the national capital and implanting in them an highs wre eee eyo tity: clits Bice. ever-growing sense of irresponsibility and ease that | Boston, Mass., Sulte 404, Sharon Bldg., 55 New Mont- can in the end but breed a generation of parasites gomery St., San Francisco, Cal. Copies of the Datly and helpless dependents with whom no sovcalled | BUSINESS TELEPHONES .-.-.------.---- - 15 and 16 a Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments No WUNNER WE NEVER Copnp GET 'SSTOVE Hot! pipe WASNT Tart *NoUGH Entered at Casper (Wyoming), Postoffice as second class matter, November 22, 1916 CHARLES W. BARTON President and Editor MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Member of the Associated Press Advertising Representatives. . tain Tribune are on file in the New York, ago, Boston re i ican farmer has lost his export trade Pile new stupidities on the mount ‘and San Francisco offices and visitors are welcome. [gree Government ‘could either actually. govern, or be \pecause the Unitec States has refused OWS stupldities already plain in tht SUBSCRIPTION RATES een hi tee ponder ‘ | | to become {dentified with the quar.j Picture business. By Carrier or By Mall eiend aeoata BOD Sey Oz s time to rouse rels of Europe, Mr. Hays seems to think that Mn @e multitude to an understanding of the danger! J that confronts them and their children and their) children’s children. These paternslistic devices) |now being introduced to a people whose forbears.| would have indignantly repelled the attempt to panperize them are but the vain inventions of poli-! tical doctors who are desperately struggling to dose into a few more flickers of life the decaying civic) institutions and social order of lands across the! ” paws One Year, Daily and Sunday -. One Year, Sunday Only --. Six Months, Daily and Sunday Three Months, Daily and Sunday One Month Sunday Per Copy - All subscrip: pald in edvance and the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscription becomes one month in arrears. The Toonerville Trolley That Meets All the Trains. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) Bick If You Don't Get Your Tribune. Cal 15 or 16 anrt e botween 6:30 and 8 o'clock p. m. r Tribune. A paper will be Ce- your carrier misses you, The Casper Tribune’s Program Irrigation project west of Casper to be author- tzed and completed at once. A complete and scientific zoning system for the city of Casper. A co! park em, including swimming pools for the children of Casper. Completion of the established Scenic Route boule- yard as planned ‘by the coynty commissioners to Garden Cree Falls and return. Better roads for Natrona county and more high- Wyoming. equitable freight ratse for shippers of the <y Mountain region, and more frequent train service for Casper. rehensive municipal and school recreation Learn to Talk. nger. Make it your duty to sea. They are desperate Old World attempts to keep an outraged multitude quiet yet a little while longer. They are Old World remedies brought lover here to cure a country that isn’t sick. “Every home a sentry box.’ Let us highly resolve to restore the old balance of power between the states and the federal government in every respect consistent with national integrity and safety. Let us restore to the fullest practical measure the old spirit and policy of local self-government among (our people. Let us bend our energies as far as may be upon the idea of developing the strength of the nation through the nursery of the home and the home community. The government at Washing- ton can never be any stronger than the homes it comes out of. Let us maintain all the government we can at home, where we can keep our eyes on it.” | OO Commercialized Statesmanship. T WAS NOT a great while ago that the Chautau- qua graft almost became a national scandal. |. A_certain type of senators and representatives in Congress would howl and rant all through the session, not for the purpose of preventing the pas- |sage of a bad bill nor for the purpose of promot- ing the passage of a good one, but for the purpose |of keeping their name before tho public so that “| Silence. God must have loved the silence, for Every fear rope are sheer misrepresentations. The proof of this falsity is furnish- led by the offictal reports of the Bu- reau of Foreign Commerce. The on proof of being “better advertised” they could He laid |Amertcan farmer in tho fiscal year Paose who use the telephone, and most of us|consistently demand from the lyceum or lecture| 4 stillness on the sunset and the of 1913, when Europe was normal, ex. do, have discovered that with some people con-|pureaus more pay per lecture. dawn; | ported 258,343,629 bushels of grain versation can be carried on with ease and satisfac-| To cover the trail from the front door of the| UPon the moment when the bird lana grain products. For ‘the fiscal tion, while with others the attempt to do so invari-|capitol to the back door of the lecture bureau they tain aeelee high-h within Ter 1921 he exported 543,375,523 ably results in irritation due to inability to under-| always endeavored to make it appear that they | the gleds. ung, M bushels of grain and grain products, stand. If only everybody would take the trouble| were’ “fighting for the people.” They never origi- s and for the fiscal year 1922 he ex- to learn how to talk over the telephone, many tem-- pers now in danger of ruin would be saved, many jnated a helpful bill nor offered remedial amend- More sweet than when he sang | noons that pass ported 544,220,964 bushels of grain and grain products. In other words, rm F ments to a bad bill. That was not their business.| Too full of forest changelessne: r. imperiled friendships would acquire new warmth| Their business was to howl and rant and keep their for sound; : leew: ath tala: exporting rtoice tne and no end of more or less serious mistakes would|names in the daily press reports and then shake| Creeping, of little frosts along the| amount of grain and grain products be avoided. down the Ohautauqua organization for more ground; lthat he exported prior to the world The operators in the central offices recetve a/ money. {Silence of growth among the summer jwar, : course of instruction on the a ple roper use of the voice, the best rate of speech and the distance from the transmitter that gives highest intelligibility. The result is that nobody ever has any trouble in understanding “central” and if “central” not infre- quently fails to “get” a number right, the fault almost invariably is that of the person who wants the number but does not know how to ask for it. In the interests of the social system and the pre- President Taft broke up this practice by keeping |Congress in session, and the Chautauqua spell. binder who had to remain in Washington and at- tend to public duty for which he was paid, and dig down into his pocket to employ someone else to fill his lecture engagements, at once became his bitter opponent. It is more or less a political secret but all the way a fact that much of the opposition to President 1] God must heave deeply loved the si-/ ere one of us who has not; Promptings to silence that he} speaks not off— What of an o.d remorse; a hope that ts During tho fiscal year 1913 the exports of meats, dairy products, ant- mal and vegetable fats, amounted to 1,610,053,715 pounds. For the fiscal year 1921 they amounted to 2,834,517, 262 pounds. For the fiscal year 1922 they amounted to 2,192,174.236. In other words, the American farmer is exporting 30 per cent more meats, dairy products, animal and vegetable A SoLeMN RESOLUTION NEVER AGAIN ‘To MEET THAT EARLY TRAIN WHICH , - BRINGS “THAT BuNCH OUT FROM “THE CITY on NEéw YEAR'S MORNING. OE OS eee, OY ee oe er TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1923. \ the war 55 per cent have been those| Arbuckle pictures lest April. Tw Jot agricultural products. It shows movie business was then under | furthermore that 75 per cent of our cloud, and Mr. Hays sought to dispé exports o: agricultural produce has ‘t. Rightly or wrongly, m{lions a gone to Europe. . |people were convinced by his actict The total figures for the current|in the Arbuckle case that now th calendar year 1922 will not be avail-|movies had a master who would k able until some time in January, but/them in order. The reversal of thil the figures for the caiendar year of ction will do more to create sen | 1921 show that the American farmer ment for censorship than the orig’ exported during that year more prod-, Arbuckle scandal itself. There 4 ucts than the average of any five-|be much ignorance and prejtidice {1 year peace period in the history of the groups which Cemand that th America. He exported more prod-;movies clean up; it may be appar jucts during that year than any one ent from the record that a cleanuy |peace year In the history of Amer-|from the outside by way of censor Hoa. ship does more harm than good; bu! suffi jg-|Unioss there is at least the pretensi et caceap IRs ge pr oh lent to die! or a clean-up from the inside ther prove all the #lly propaganda that {s/ 7 jbetng put out from the Democratic) Wil! be louder demands for a clean iLeagu of Nation, and European’ UP from the outsiie, even if it meant sources to the effect that the Amer-|tho appointment of censors who wil —By Fox D> &e Arbuckle’s exemplary purity sinct last April entitles him to anothe: chance. Perhaps it does, but ordin sense forbids it. Thi Producers and D's tributors’ association was organized ‘to attain and maintain the highest moral end artistic stancards.’ Tht ). improvement of artistic standards ft [7 ). good deal more necessary in the movies than the {improvement ol mral standards; but it does not ap pear that Mr, Hays has done muct a toward that. He has merely hel} the movies to attain the hig! moral standard, and to maintain for just n months." Too Much for Sing Sing. a | “There is something about the! movie business that generates great! clouds of bunk’—pale blue clouds @ark purple clouds, bright pink! |clouds greenish yellow clouds, that. |enshroud all Hollywood and its envi- |rons and rise up to the ambient. ether.” writes the New York Times. r. Hays, a newcomer in the bust |ness, produces bunk as easily as Mr. | Roscoe Arbuckle, who has been in it for years. But the bunk is not all on! one side. Tho Idea, for example that! the convicts in Sing Sing are lable to moral debauchment if tney look upon Mr. Arbuckle's sedulousiy pure films} |begets about as much repulsion as) Mr.Arbuck own ‘quotations from! Holy Writ. “He, indeed, {8 right when he says that his misadventure was a tragic accident. He let himeelf.in for !t, but he forgets that among the differ ences which separate members of the human race is that between those — |who get caught. When you get |caught you may as well take your |medicine. Mr. Arbuckle was acquit- ‘ted by a jury, but an odor clings to him; and it will cling no matter how much he aprays himself with the perfumes of Biblical analogy. This may be unfair, but it is the way things are. “Mr, Hays was employed to deodor- ize the movies, and he did it with notable success by shutting off the THe SKiPPER MAKES The Hopewell Hospital Lillian L. Nelson, Superintendent Thermopolis, Wyo. A general hospital, situated in the Hot Springs district of Ther- mopolis, to which visiting physl- cians are welcome. ‘ Rates moderate; only graduate nurses; for further information ad- dress the Superintendent. cheap and coolfe labor {s employed. The Bureau of Foreign Commerce shows that of our total exports since Resolve for 1923 _ And years to come to have a beautiful complexion; to servation of peace and goodwill on earth there|Taft came from those prevented by an extra session| 7° “eemly hoped: what of a griefirt.” now than he did prior to the a ° : should be a general reform among telephone sub-|of congress from commercializing their “statesman:| ,CutSTOWM use| arid war whon’ conditions in Europe have a skin free from blemishes, pimples, blackheads scribers. As there has been provided for them|ship” on the Chautauqua platform. The lure was, love? were “normal.” of the most potentially beneficient machines |not the call of the people, but the jingle of the gate —Mavis Clare Barnett. Our exports of tobacco leaf in the , t invented by man, it is the obvious duty of every- ly to learn how to use it. If the people who try talk are asked for frequent repetitions, that ‘proves either their ignorance of this. simple but > highly important art or their carelessness, and lessons should be sought by them immediately. A Political Vaudevillain. * ‘ATOR LA FOLLETTE, during the past year, > has attacked the integrity of the United States “Supreme court, he has started “another investiga- tion “of the oil industry, claiming it is an illegal combination for the purpose of robbing the con- “suming public and to wind up the year, he now launches a vicious attack against the “Big Five” ~packers, accusing them of “robbing the people by “unlawful combinations” and demands an investiga- =tion of the proposed packing company merger. * Senator LaFollette has stayed in the limelight all his life by constantly attacking some person or corporation. His line of reasoning 1s destructive. He ap- =peals to the hatred and antagonism of the masses y pitting them against organized industrial activ- ~ ity or our established form of government. It is constant agitation of the brand LaFollette peddles that keeps the country in an unsettled industrial condition. Senator LaFollette is undoubtedly the headliner in American political vaudeville and can keep more xeople fooled all the time in favor of voting for him than any other politician of the United States. With his scalping knife under the hide of the United States Supreme court, the oil industry and * the packing industry in 1922, the public will wait to see whether he can hang theso trophies on his belt during 1923. In the past he has been able to wave his political knife at those he wishes to attack and thus get “great publicity beneficial to himself but he usually fails to bring home the bacon for the public. Seay eee Government Proceeds From Homes. 6s.HEH GOVERNMENT at Washington can never receipts. While wholesome education of the masses best insures public rectitude and mental equipoise, still in view of the harm potentialized by demagogtc preachment it may well be questioned whether any man in public life shall be permitted to commercial- ize his views on the Chautauqua or any other plat- form for back of and surrounding it is the incen- tive to play to the grand stand, not for the pp»pose of promoting the public welfare, but to become “better advertised.” Senators and representatives are paid a regular salary by the public for all their time and when permitted to commercialize their views on the lecture platform they compel a por- | tion of that same public to pay twice. If a sense of | publi duty impels them to lecture let such lecture free and not tainted with veneered duplicity and avarice. Who Will Get It? TLLIONS and hundreds of millions will be turned over by the government.to the hold ers of government securities during the. coming year. What will become of this money? The sharpest brains in the country are studying ways and means to get hold of it. Will the savings of a lifetime of many individ- uals be dissipated in speculative undertakings about which the prospective investor knows noth- ng? id If you were sick or had matters which needed legal attention you would go to a doctor or a lawyer ‘as a matter of safety. By the same token, when you have financial matters to consider it is es- |sential that you consult your banker or bond dealer before letting go of your hard earned money in an investment of unknown quality. 1 How Much and How Long. OW FAR should the public treasury in these days of high taxes, be loaded with further |burdens by extending the scope and. expense of the \national government? Records Disclose Falsity. The American farmer has not been deprived of a foreign market becauwe of the refusal of the United States to enter the league of nations’ or to doin any European league or alliance or to be a participant in any Euro pean conference, or to agree to can- cel any European loans, All of the propaganda now being fed the American farmer to the ef- fect that he is a sufferer because of the refusal of this government to be- come {dentified with European em- brogilos is a t'ssue of les manufact- ured out of whole cloth. The ‘warnings which vartous Bu- ropean lecturers touring this country and League of Nations advocates (principaily Democrats who were Prominently identified with the Wil son administration) are issuing to the effect that the farmer will never re- fiscal year 1913 amounted to 418,796,- 906 pounds, For the fiscal year 1921 they amounted to 496,878,830 pounds. For the fiscal year 1922 they amount- ed to: 461,555,221. Cotton shows a decrease. Exports of cotton since the war show a Ce- crease as compared with pre-war rec: ords. The figures are as follows: For the fidcal year 1913 wo exported 8,- 724,572 bales of raw cotton. For the fiscal year 1921 we exported 5,403, 986 bales. Vor the fiscal year 1922 we exported 6,541,841 bales. Two rez sons are assigned by the Bureau Foreign Gommerce for the decreas of raw cdjton exports es compar: with the préwar period. First, © shorter prodietion in th's countr and sqgond, a tremendous increase tn the consumption of raw cotton by American cotton’ manufacturers. Th’ two combined left less surplus for export. The Bureau of Foreign Com merce might have added a third rea: son, namely, European cotton manu gain his foreign markets until the United States “does her part” in re- establishing normal conditions in Hu: facturers are. buying more extensivé ly of Egyptian and other cotto mine’ in countries where land { | FOR THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF KASSIS— il ' This marvelous new fiesh colored, sweet-smelling clay not and wrinkles; to always have a smooth, velvety skin, - portraying the bloom of youth. You Can If You Will At a Very Small Expenditure, by Using Wondeifite | Facial ‘Complexion ' Clay only opens the pores and removes all the impurities, but com- pletes its work by whitening the skin—then closing the pores— \f} allin 15 minutes. No bother—no mussiness—no lotions. A com- plete treatment in itself. | Thousands of women are acquiring entirely new complex- ‘| ions—complexions wonderfully clear, fresh and beautiful—with | the use of Wonderlite Clay. IT WORKS WONDERS - be stronger than the honies it comes out of.”| The desire of the sorely tried taxpayer, and of } ‘This is the declaration of Hon. Frank L. Greeno of | husiness in general, is for a radical lessening of Vermont, in a protest against the prevailing ten-| But two great obstacles intervene. ; the tax load. } dency toward enervating paternalism. = | First, about two-thirds of the total government | ————= ; _ Mr. Greene is an editor of high standing in New | tax goes to meet items that are fixed charges over } England journalistic circles, is a public speaker of | which there is no administration control. Interest rare attainments, and was recently clected to the| on the public debt is nearly a billion dollars a year. senate of the United States as a recognition of| The second obstacle is the tendency to widen, at Mls satisfactory servico in the house covering a/tarce cost, the scope of government through’ so: ‘ period of twelve years. \called “improvements” and “reforms.” The more Wiis discussion of the evils of paternalism was federal appropriations demanded for bureaus, edu- contained in a communication endorsing .the pur-| cational, maternity, hygiene and other innumer- Everything in Building Material pores of the “Sentinels of the Republic,” an or-|able “progressive” ‘projects, the less chance for at 8 e ganization which takes as its motto, “Every citizen retrenchment. r a Sentinel: every home a sentry box.” In the course Conditions faced by the national government are a of his letter Mr. Greene said: |faced by virtually every state government and. to RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM “MACHINERY, WAGONS The skin contains millions of tiny pores, with which to expel impurities. But when dust bores deeply into these pores they become clogged, and the im- purities remain in the skin. Soon blackheads, pimples and other embarrassing blemishes appear. Wonderlite Complexion Clay stirs every one of these tiny pores to life. In only 15 minutes the clay dries and hardens, and there is a cool, pleasant, tingl- ing sensation as the powerful yet absolutely harmless clay draws out every skin impurity. Remove the clay and with it comes every harmful impurity and every blemish. Then look at your complexion. See how fresh, clear and youthful it has suddenly become. You will be actually amazed at the wonderful improvement the treatment brings. So that everyone may test this marvelous preparation, we are making a very $3.00 Value Only $1.50 very first “Civic liberty was born at the fireside, was a large extent bv lesser political subdivisions, The reared and made strong by experience in local self-|remedy rests with the people; {f they constantly ° government, and forever renewed itself in success:|demand more and more from their government sive generations of men and women who did not cx- they mnst expect to pay higher and higher taxes, pect the nation’s government to do for them w It will be interesting to watch the coming ses. *they ought to do for themselves at home. This|sions of western states’ legislatures to see what ~ American experiment in civics originally | attitude our representatives of ‘the peonle mani- meant to be a popular government, deriving its just was Office and Yard—First and Center | - fest toward retrench t in ie ¢ ir: . . S powers from thevransent of thin ‘governed! proce ther ann a retrenchment in public affairs. Tt Phone 62 For Sale at All Casper Druggists and Beauty Parlors ing from the countless hearthstones of the land to have nothing toe. ¥ yreatly increased te | Washington, and not descending from Washington burdens eee tha ei areatly increased tax | ut which they now complain

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