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2 Che Casper Daily Cribune |whether it will remain in sight if industrial costs! Tssuet every evening except Sunday at Casper, Natrona move higher. The building trades are leoking for! County, Wyo. Publication Offices, Tribune Building another good year, the road-building program is BUSINESS TELEPHONES =o 15 and 16 large, the automobile industry is contident of mak- ‘Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments ing a tel seme fg ee oe bea concerns - are sold up wel i ie year, the iron and steel Entered at Gasca Cyrvoriniy Postotsce Mees second class industry has large bookings ‘and the textile cloth- 2 * . ing and shoe industries have good prospects ut CHARLES W. BARTON President and Editor! When Fatty Fairchild Goes Through the Ice. —By Fontaine Fox fet i | Brown. He might be in danger, but the red Hght wouldn't necessarily. in- | dicate it. It did in the simpler days’ and in so doing would jeopardize Amer- | of our fathers and grandfathers. “To- ican institut ons. {day it indicates many th! Over a theater exit it taark toward which you are to walk] government exists as a means to fur- | Mot run) in case of fire. On the back|ther the ends of paternalism that ings. indicates the | ‘ MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ‘ 2 The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use fer publication of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Member of the Associated Press Advertising Representatives. Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger B:dg., Chicago, IN.; 286 Fitth Avenue, New York City: Globe Bldg., Boston, Mass., Srite 404, Sharon Bldg., 55 New Mont- gomery St., San Francisco, Cal. Copies of the Daily/| Tribune are on file In the New York, Chicago, Boston) and San Francisco offices and visitors are weloome. | SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier or By Mail One Year, Daily and Sunt One Year, Sunday Only Six Months, Dafly and Sunday --. Three Months, Daily and Sunday ‘One Month Daily and Sunday Per Copy AN subscrip’ Dally Tribune will no’ “becomes one month in arre Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) Kick If You Don't Get Your Tribune, Call 15 or 16 any time b reen 6:30 and 8 o'clock p. m. if you fafl to re © your Tribune. A paper will be ¢e- Itvered to you by special n nger. Make it-your duty | Jet The Tribune know when your carrier misses you, The Casper Tnbune’s Program |, Irrigation project west of Casper to be author ized and completed at once. A complete and scientific zoning system for the city of Casper. A comprehensive municipal and school recreation park system, including swimming pools for the children of Casper. Completion of the established Scenic Route boule- vard as planned by the county commissioners ‘to Garden Creek Falls and return. ds for Natrona county and more high- ways for Wyoming. More squitable frelght ratse for shippers of the Rocky Mountain region, and more frequent train service for Casper. The Price She Pays. | present prices. The margin of profit upon which employers are working, however, is very small. In most of the industries goods cannot be sold today on a replacement basis. Such profits as there are result from making up materials bought at lower price than are now prevailing. nder these conditions every increase in costs must be passed on to consumers, who for the most part are the wage-earners themselves and the farmers. The farmers suffered a reduction of about 50 per. cent from the high level, from which the depart- ment of commerce estimates there has been a re- covery of ‘about 17 per cent. The textile workers suffered a reduction of 22 1-2 per cent and want it all restored. This attitude on the part of the wage-workers is due, to the common habit of thinking of wages as wholly a matter between employer and employe, and that the higher wages are fixed the better fer the employe. When it is known that wages, prices, consumption and employment are all closely re- lated the fallacy of this idea will be seen. If the compensation of all groups could be raised together, nobody would be benefited, and on the other hand if compensation is raised in a few industries alone the effect will be to curtail employment in those in- dustries. The upward tendency of wages and the prospect of another coal strike are features of the 1923 situation that may well prompt the business man to operate with caution. Down With Gloom Spreaders. all fo all of the American people who are genuinely attached to their government were to make up their mind that they are not half as badly off as the demagogues and theorists and reactionary grumblers against government tell them they are, they would by that very change of mental attitude put themselves on the highway of the most pros perous year the American people haye ever experi- enced.” Thus speaks the National Republican. “Moreover they would eliminate from their minds a vast amount of unnecessary unrest which reflects itself disagreeably in the private lite and the: lo-| cal affairs of every community. - The Americans of the constructive years of this republic were optim: ists. They were builders. They were governed by courage und not ‘by fear. Americans of today ought to sweep aside the preachers of enyy, hatred and destruction who contribute nothing but discon- tent to a situation that calls for the old American ed at 14, probable. The average boy or girl at 14 suro- Jr we net Him TRY To CLIMB SOUT HE BREAKS UP ALL THE ICE ON THE Ponp! tenance of ease and adaptability, but This seems to me quito regard to muscular strain and the ommendation which very few men {breaking of old habits and the main- can claim. The writer has known Mr. .| drivers. Smith of an automobile it serves as a mark | of caution. On an island of safety or a street obstruction a red light is both marker and an ind{iiation of possible | danger, but not.an order to stop. | To the railroad man the red light , 4s still the invariable sign of danger ahead. Some cities and towns have | given the red light the same place in | their traffic systems. But here again | there fs variation. Let some automo- bile owner from one of these cities go | to New York and drive up Fifth ave- nue; he will find that the red light does not mean “stop.” It iq merely an intermediate signal, a ‘warning that traffic is about to change from north and south to east and west. The omnipresence wf ‘the automo- bile has not only made the red lght of less significance as a danger sig- | Nal, but ft has as well created confu- ; Sion in the matter of hand signals. Railroad signals never vary in sig- | nificance, they have to be uniform. But automobile signals vary with the A signal that has some! meaning in California may have no} meaning in Florida. Or a signal that! means something to fifty out of one hundred drivers may mean nothing to the other fifty. Reactionary Radicals. “The more the public sees of the radical progressives the less it sces of real progressivism in their action, says the Washington Post. “As that group would apply ‘progressivism,’ it includes exploded political and eco- nomic fallaces and vind'ctive antag: onism against the administration and marked by the fathers. ‘They would take short cuts to attain their ends, ‘They would subor. dinate the interests of the nation as a whole to special itnerests. For them recks not the cost. “These ‘progressives’ are aga‘nst the adm'nistration because it refuses to consider the Constitution a ‘scrap of paper’ and to play into the» hands \by running after the fancies that they sponsor, Thelr opposition to the administration’s constructive program shows that they are against what is really progressive 'n government.” —< White Feet. Who will come here when I am gone And who will visit the fay? And hear the laugh in the leprechaun After my day? Who will follow the nimble path, And the footprints of white birch leaves? ‘Who will flee the hazel elve’s wrath And lurk where the witch owl grieves? Who will He and laugh at the sun ‘Neath clusters of bursting blue Where the sweet globes of wild grapes run Through aisles of shadow and dew? And who will have dreams of mist and silk In the pool where the gold fins sleep? And who will dip feet as white as. milk Where. the pool I'es emerald deep? —Martha Ostenso, , No Fair Exchange. ‘When our farmers take positions, Voicing statesman‘like alarm, We hope our politicians excludes constructive legislation that advances to its goal along the lines ‘Will not have to run the farm. ‘Washington Star. cordially invited to attend the Carpenters’ Local No. BUILDING CRAFTSMEN All members of the building crafts and ladies are Hall Monday evening, January 8. : oh GIRLS spent as much time and attention in) improving their dispositions as they do their) «complexions, they would be much more attractive. Mhia dete beat comtry.th the world) with the eve e vi vi this, Frama ocktty SDhai becnas Seah es te he | freest government, the most liberal institutions, has forgotten it, ‘and the constant use of the con-/2d the greatest measure of diffused prosperity. tents of the quick repair kit so universally in evi-|Most men in public life are honest, and most of dence in latter days, has served further to crowd | those who impugn the integrity of public men in from his mind any novelty in the application of S*meral are dishonest. It was never before so rice powder and rouge to the fair features of wo-|™uch of a privilege to be an American citizen. All mankind. {the elements are here for the greatest prosperity For; since we came in from the farm, 2} bs 4 i in the mat-|2nd progress this nation has ever known. The po- Sorat <snge nas come joven The eineea jliticians who let out such demagogical squawks spirit of brave self-reliance and belief in Amertcan institutions. ter of the publicity given to the rites and cere-) ‘monies connected with personal embellishment. So far as the 1923 model is concerned she apparently believes in open covenants openly arrived at. ‘She does not retire to her boudoir, nor even seck the seclusion of a friendly door behind which she could Yetreat from the public gaze to manipulate her wwder puff or lipstick. She apparently has noth- ing to conceal from the world in her public use of! osmetics, and does not think the practice detracts | from feminine modesty. Possibly not in 1923. In} the day of pink sunbonnets and natural complex: | fons and the charming diffidence that made wo-} meni delightful it was different. Such public dis-| yy as we encounter in these days seems sbocking.! = Repairs to complexions cannot now even be post-| med until after mealtime. Before the soup order | E delivered in a public dining room, there is ay ‘general reference to vanity cases, just as if a per recepeitno could not be given to nour- dhment unless the face was kalsomined and the Tips coated with red salve. We have often wondered if these drug store products add anything to the flavor of food or is it done to change the existing flavor. We are in doubt. For the same ceremony is repeated at the conclusion of the meal when there is nothing more to be eaten. Surely, the ways of woman are past comprehen- Bion. > As to the disposition of modern woman. Dis-) position or temperament as the sense here implies, is a human quality or characteristic which is mod- eled or formed. A thing which is cultivated. The derms “disposition” and “temper” are both applied | to the mind and its bias; but disposition respects the whole frame and texture of the mind; temper #espects only the bias or tone of the feelings. That the modern female disposition has become Somewhat dilapidated through neglect and failure +o cultivate is unquestioned by the savants. They | ‘ascribe the neglect in a large measure to the lack | of time to bring the proper influences to bear for the improvement required in forming the ideal dis- position. This necessary time it is said by the ‘statisticians who delve in such matters, is taken from the upbuilding of disposition and lavished unon complexion. So, lovely woman is sacrificing the real springs and motives of actions that have charmed and delighted the world since its creation For the doubt{, uncertain and wholly artificial) results of chemist —____—_o—___—_—— The Situation in Industry. HE INDUSTRIAL situation 4s good. The gains in employment in the month of November were greater than in any previous month in the year 1922, and a tendency to higher wages and rising prices shows that the slack has been taken up. The consumption of cotton by the mills in November was 577,561 bales, the highest since October, 1917,| and close to the record. The woolen and worsted | mills are also running about as close to nominal capacity as they can get. Prices of raw‘cotton and |obtained when the work is done. as that liberated in Chicago the other day WW Mayor Hylan, of New York, trying to teach the people that the federal government is in the hands of crooks and plunderers, are more dangerous foes of the republic than the reddest communist in the country, even though the motive back of the dia- tribe is unscrupulous personal ambition rather than actual hatred of the government. All that is necessary to lead the American people into the full enjoyment of the great heritage of opportunity, that is theirs is to turn a deaf ear to demagogical pessimism and to go forward in the faith that things in this country are good, as they are, and going to be better during the year 1923, as they will be. a og a es Reparations. {eke CRUX of the European situation is the reparations question. There will be no stabiliz- ing of foreign currency, no solid basis for trade or confidence, until the reparations question is set- tled upon a basis which is so far acceptable to the German people as to prompt them to resolute- ly put their backs int@ the task of payment. It is possible to make an individual debtor pay, though unwilling, by process of law, providing he ly appears quite as alert and clever into thes it is impossible to go. for a period of.eleyen years, during 8 the majority of men and women| I personally feel that as we gain alwhich time he has proven himself. to one meets :n our crowded streets. truer notion of the nature of mind|be a man of high principles, and The army tests appear to have born$'as our capacity to pile up and util-|good moral character. There {s no out this impression, ize new information we may be able’place under the sun where a man's The dynamic and progresstve intel-|to meet the problems of private andjcharacter will crop out quite so plain: lect is highly exceptional and goes on|public life far more intelligently than|ly as it will out in the hills, where gaining new knowledge and new attl-/In the past, when the mind was ill|man is monarch of all he surveys. tudes until senile decrepitude over-|undérstood ahd knowledge too often) During my years of acquaintance takes it. Hobbes, and Locke and/suspected. So I believe in free with Mr. Smith it fell to ‘my lot to* Kant and many other philosophers thought and the free expression of|be very much in his company out in and scientists have wr'tten the!r great | thought. G. S. D. |the great solitude of the mountains works after sixty. My friend John} and I can safely say that my hay- Dewey said that he seemed to under- ing been’ in his company was to my go an Intellectual renaissance as he everlasting benefit. approached sixty, and G. Stanley Hail Mr. Smith ‘is a man who Is gentle, Seems to have ‘a freer and more in-| kind and firm with man or beast Approves Appointment. The program starts promptly at 8 o’clock. Please come and assist in making this an enjoyable evening, Your card is your ticket. (Signed) ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE. an entertainment given by 1564 at the Union Labor SCHOOL The mid-winter term is just starting. boy or girl slow or backward in his or her school work last term? If so, there was a cause. Diseases that are often genious mind as he nears elghty than alike. He will be a man who will he had as a young man. The attempts to measure mentality meet great difficulties owing to subt!e elements in the s!tuat’on (which sug: gest the vitamins without which bod- ily growth does not take place). I suppose that some of us who flatter ourselves that we have ever new springs of curiosity and a perennial willingness to revise our views feel that we might make a very poor showing in an {ntell'gence test. It has been asked whether the in- tellect develons with the body and decays with it. ‘This is @ hard ques-\and maintains a ranch in the very! I feel that the usual sharp dfs-\heart of the big gamo country near in turtleneck sweaters, badly in need tinction betwaen the body and mind Dubois, Wyo. Besides having a thor- Of a haircut, gathered on the campus ough knowledge of the game situa- and sang, “There's a red light on oe A certain kind of attention to the close touch with the state game and heard the mellow strains of the song body will doubtless do much to {n-/fash laws as well as the’ forestry de-| knew that the young man mentioned His many years of con-|in the song was in danger, no doubt tion. ‘8 a serious mistake and that we have much to gain by avoiding it. crease inte‘lectual alertness and post- pone mental lethargy. There is much new and exciting speculation in this id_and_aston: experiments in owns the property which can be seized, sold and applied to that purpose, but society has given up the idea of coercing a debtor who is not possessed of salablé property. There are only two ways of getting people to work; one is by holding out an inducement, a re ward or compensation of some kind that can. b¢ The other is by driving them to it and holding them to it by the power of authority until it is done. The former is the method by which all social progress has been accomplished; the latter has been tried fre- quently, the last time in Russia, and never been & successful. Individuals, much less great bodies of people, cannot be made to work unless they see some eventual advantage to themselves in doing so. In this country we do not attempt to compel coal miners or railroad employes to continue their tasks against their wills, even at pay judicially de- termined. Work is not effectively done unless the workers put voluntary effort into it. The reparations payments, to whatever extent they may be possible, must be made with the pro- ceeds of the labor of the German people in the fu- ture. The claims cannot be satisfied to any import- ant éxtent by the seizure of existing property. It would be impossible to dispossess the Germany peo- ple of their lands and fixed property. The produc- tive equipment, even so much as is moyable, could not be taken out of the country without making it impossible to collect anything more! it is worth more to the creditors of Germany where it is than it would be anywhere else. To garrison the country would cost a great sum and get nothing, except as the Germans would willingly pay to get rid of the troops. An appeal | Raitor Tribune: Having read in ths 'Tribune the announcement of appoint- ment of Frank’S. Smith to the import- ant position of state game anc. fish \commissioner I feel duty bound to suy a word in favor of a friend of eleven years standng, in hope my offering will tind {ts way into print in the Tribune. The announcement of ‘appo'ntment of Mr. Smith by our new governor is an important and frst action. Mr, |Smith has for many years lived in close touch with the game of the mountain states. He at present owns tion Mr. Smith has for years been in partment. \stant. aasoctation ahd companionship ‘with not only the game but the laws which protect them he'll be a leader not a driver. need. jat an early date. RICHARD E. ALLARD, Wyo. { The Old Danger Signal. track for Boozer Brown,” all from his bad habits. A modern audience might not be in itself a rec- certain what was in store for Mr. 200A A SALE OF COMPRESSION INNER TUBE LCT imma I Our New Shipment of Goods Will Be Here Soon WE NEED MORE ROOM For this reason we offer our present stock of Compression Tubes at INFLATED say, “come on boys let’s go,” antl not say “alright boys go.” In other words | Al lteader in that position is what wo } I hope you will find room for this; 1334 South Willow street, Casper, Back in the days when young men = analysis. Over White’s Grocery Will Always Two Pair. back. Take them to a Chiropractor today for a spinal ROBERT N. GROVE, Chiropractor (Palmer School Graduate) , om Three Ducks’ and a Four If you call 2224 you will raise “Dick.” But there is no question about Dick having a full house -- of stationery, of- fice supplies, all - steel furniture and _ office equipment. raw wool are high, and the textile operatives are|to that motive, however, would be a shift from the taking steps to demand a recession of the only|policy of coercion to the policy of bargaining—of reduction they have taken from the top wages of| seeking to find out what the Germans will under. 20 PER CENT OFF — Was your unnoticed hold the kiddies Phone 2220 Beat Give him a chance to show his hand and call 2224 -- he will see you im- the boom in 1920. That reduction was 22 1-2 per| cent, made in December, 1920. These symptoms do) not give assurance of the stability needed for pros- ity. pares from the threat of inflation, and with a reservation as to European conditions, the out- Took for 1923 is excellent. The principal industries take to do to clear up the situation, get their af- fairs in order and be able to build again for the future, Once such a bargain {s made upon terms which put the German people in practical unity be- hind it, the task will be a voluntary one, and the German people will be as anxious to make the payments as the French were when they: antici- Guaranteed Puncture Proof Will Outlast Several Casings Wave -all the business in sight; they need to minke a prosperous year; the only question is The Human Mind. She mind ts to me what we know @i4 our disposition to aval! ourselves pated the age ad upon the $1,000,000,000 indem- nity of 1870. accepted by the great mass of people who could not have made them for themslvs. I am confident that there are innumerable more things to be noted and pointed out and put little curiosity and prefers to go on believing the same things. Education as now practiced rarely encourages keeping “one’s mind open and does much to discourage curlus * Of our knowledge in our conduct and|¢ether and that consequently the! ity. Taliefs mind {s in the making I think that the recent tall: about a2he human mind has been bullt up) Viewing the mind in this way I aee|an average mental age and the state. Brough hundreds of thousands of|no reason why almost any indlvidual| ment that the average person has the Wepre by a very small number of ex-|may not go on getting more and more| intellect of a chiJd of 14 or less, morv- @®btionally curlous and ob g in-|mind, namely more and more intelll-|ly means that the majority. of people idunls, the pointers out, as they|gence, if he has natural curiosity an they get older do not develop any y bo called. They have noticed|a disposition to accept new sugges-|greater capacity for adjusting them- what escaped their fellow men and4| tions. nelves to new uations and for gain- their discoveries have sometimes been! But the great mass of mankind has! ing new knowled than they possess- Our. stock is limited and we will be able to accommodate only a few at this price. WYOMING COMPRESSION TUBE & TIRE CO. 426 East Second St. Phone 1125-M HAA as 4 mediately if not sooner. SLDDDDLLD PADDED OLD OSDDSOLSOO04GL 0080050580000 The Commercial Printing Com- pany’s Stationery Department is now located at 426 Hast Second street -- just a few steps east but there is no need of walking when the phone is within reach and all you need say is 2224, 7