Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 6, 1923, Page 6

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PAGE SIX Che Casper Dailp Cribune 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. The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening and! The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune Building, oppo site postoffice. ————— Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class matter, November 22, 1916, prcsnmeberenaid ied! 2 Business Telephones _. —--15 and 16 $4,600,000,000 will be repaid over a period of 62 years, and British bonds to that amount have been delivered to the United States treasury. A settlement with Finland has also been reached, involving about $9,00,000, which will be submitt- ed to congress for approyal. France, Italy, Belgium, Czecho-Slovakia, Es- thonia, Hungary, Latvia, Poland, Roumania, and Jugo-Slavia have had more or less discus- sions with the American commission, while no word has been received from Armenia, Austria, Greece, Liberia, Nicaragua or Russia. Of the latter countries, Austria has been granted a j Ree arse Pe ee hve Casper Daily Cridune It Happened In Wyoming Matters and Things, of State-Wide Interest, Wired in, Telephoned in, Written, Grape-Vined and Some of It Purloined. may last another week the weather will become milder and an open win- The Scouts Help Desired Road TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1923 The Name can be imitated ~ The Package e EST EE ae ter will be the result. Aa wu: Improvement b d~ Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All tponement of 20 years for the payment of] worRLAND—Prominent among! atter sich a winter as ts pred) Pp can e€ copie Departmsata. th principal and interest of its obligation. the beet workers lust week were the|/ hy Mr. Berry, storms and bad wea-| sonmreRER — state Highway —— Re The present status of all the debts now await-| Boy Scouts they eae er pene ther can be expected in the spring.| .\.missioner, T, D. O'Neil is au- ing settlement is given by the commission as fol-| Under the direction juga*| Mr. Berry gets his predictions! rority for the statement that the pass J. E. HANWAY ig Beet Co. in the Shriner field east! from watching the beavers on his! state ‘Highway Commission have all own. The scli was in fairly ". Advertising Representatives Country sod condition the first of the wecx| Dace prepare for winter. | With the asraits of rights of way in shape to ° Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bldg. Chi) 41 nin $ pelen in Piaget 5 ed rie rl let the contract for the 43 mile cago, Dl, 286 Fifth Ave., New York City: Globe Bide. Austria Th latter ‘of the week under| recs’ Ee a aa on ae ae a hd Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bldg., 55 New Mont-/ 2Us% = put v8) Sr] Eclipses nee b aca hea Aol 2 e ua it gomery St., San Francisco, Cal. Copies of the Daily/ Belgium 7 verse conditions bak suiled Lorry reports, the beaver have not) chis road eliminates the Names Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago, Boston) 91,879,671 17,543,673) to work. | Altogether they pulled iaia in any food stores, only in one! ,.4 folden Hills, and when oom. SS and San Francisco offices and visitors are welcome. | EF; 13,999,146 789,588 | and Seeatie bo tha tiea cst en: sop heai e e °f| pleted will be an undisguiged hless- * b ll e d oa aces mons a | an choy ghana t u Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) at 000 bdo or 28000 soyaal, beet same: 660 Shots. week: ae | ie will. capectally be of banet3t to tee. can a e e€Ql a ‘ ° i“ =q| Well ag the regular experienced tect Destr ed th Wi { f B ‘Pin will be! SUBSCRIPTION RATES 308,450 | help. ‘Taking into consideration ‘oy th SY bce a Non oy fel ahaha , By Carrier and Qutside State $9.00 that none of these boys had been in much less"ttme than heretofore. One Year, Daily and Sunday ---—-—--——=++++~--¥9-00 the field before, and none of them| KEMMERER—Two federal en- pbs aut One Year, Sunday Only _- 450 had ever handles a beet knife, the| forcement officers, Deputy United A Six Months, Daily and Suni d25| Lithuania Scout Master invested in emergshcy| States Marshal Hopkins ana Under Some Peculiar Phases Three Months, Daily and Sunday ‘75| Poland .. material in thi way of iodine, ai-| sheriff Billy Conroy comprised a One Month, Daily and Sunday -——————————--—— “Th ps 86.128.495 Sorbent co.ton, bandages, adhesive raiding-party which got in some et-|_ prvenTON—There was a. case in Per Copy ——_. = Pease 192'601.297 44'610,757| Plaster and disinfectants, in case ot fective licks here and in say Sestion coure Win aren eet By Mall Unside : i ycen'yng{ accident. Owing largely to the| this week. some 1 hases One Year, Daily and Sundar ct: de 51,108,488 9,889,108] fact that there boys had been tm! ‘The voos te pias toaanTaE tos The ‘Grdset (bt tha nreetaeenn Ceo One Year, Sunday Only —— : Soe ON AD UTA | structed in the use of other ‘vo's,| 2500 gallons of wine mash at the b: ttorney Michels, Six Month, Daily ané Sunday esttotal) 254 see ++++-$5,970,117,427 _§1,088,457,478] there was not an accident tn the|! rank Coletti place in Kemmerer. Gust) BY County Attornes: Michela, Three Months, Daily and Sunday .—--—————— ee crew during @ weeks work. yal Mest ois eps 27 Ma pron. illegal, indecent and obscene exhi- i] One Month, Daily and Sunday -—-----—--—---—-= = . A finer group of boys than these! tier they se! royed bition resen minor child- \ VAM gubscriptiona must be paid in eavance and the The Eternal Tax Question Boy Scouts never served u more) falions of wine mash and 112 bot-| ray = the Presence of +. whe prans' Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subecri> ‘ appreqiative community thar tle; tles of homebrew beer. At the! "ine evidence in the case fafled to - ll 1RE tion becomes one month in arrears. While the federal government is doing every-| people of Worlond house of Renaldo Valle, also at Fron-' supstantiate the charge and the case N Ow yot thing in its power to effect ecenomies, the fact bath pend ast pasate ine aaa was accordingly dismissed on the je s olic’ is too generally lost sight of that this is not a lon b vi recommendation of the County Attor- Our Foreign Fe y country of one government, but of many gov- Heavy Beet Loss ad speed hee oi kd oye was | 707: Addressing an educational gathering recently/ernments. The American system is a tremend- Eeeaeeeed However, curing. the evidence and ously complicated and expensive one, with tax bodies overlapping one another in a manner which makes the entire burden a very heavy one for the taxpayer. Only a very rich country and a prosperous people could stand up to the assessments and get away without bankruptcy. State and local taxation has increased more than federal taxation which has dropped from $53.78 in 1920 to $32.49 per capita in 1922. In the same three years state and local taxation has risen from $29.88 to $33.24. In actual money raised the figures are, federal taxes $3,565,703,- 000; state and local taxes $3,648,151,000. When the average citizen is as concerned and careful about how the public funds are spent as he is about spending his private salary, we shall hear no more about government extravagance, Vashington newspaper writer of considerable Ae pepeeed sy that the United States is suffering in the world’s opinion, from the lack of . ue. orous foreign policy, that our leaders lac! un ion, that Europes’ turmoil is largely due to the failure of the United States to join the pate of nations, and that peace would be secured the world over forthwith, if the United States en- tered Europe and took hold of the situation. Such statements are not only a misrepresenta- tion of the stand of the United States, but a 4 flection upon the good sense and honesty of ‘America whose destiny just now rests in the hands of the present administration. In the first place, the foreign policy of the United States for two and a half years, has been dignified and calm. The sensational POWELL—Harvesting beets with several inches of frost in the ground is the unpleasant task that faces! many of the beet men of the Pow- ell fiat this week. Caught with one-fourth of their acreage undug. they are making desperate efforts to save as much of the crop as pos- sible. Beets are coming to market in frequent wagonloads, which tn- dicate that some success is attend- iny their efforts, but at best the loss will Mkely be several thousands of dollars. L. M. Hammond, fie'd man in this territory for the Great Western Sug- ar company, declared that at the first of the week there were 500 acres of beets remaining in the furnished by Coletti, Fagette and Valle, and later they ail entered pleas of guilty before U. S. Commis. sioner N. W. Reynolds. Sentence has not yet been pmonounced. —_—_—>____ Scout Drum Corps ‘Twenty brand new fifes have ar- rived for the use of the boys of Scout Troop No. 2. A supply of drums will be edded in the near future, when the Scout treasury ts refilled, and the rounding out of the organization of a fife and drum corps among the Scouts completed. Charles M. Hett will begin working with the fifes and boys tmmediately, and unless plans go askew there arguments {t was shown that a drink of liquor had been taken from a bot-| tle, and it was presumed to have been the real stuff. | After the County Attorney had argued that the offense charged in the complaint had been committed in the act above referred to, Gover- nor Chatterton asked if !t was a fact that @ man could get a bottle of liq- uor by a doctor's prescription from 4 drug store, thus being in ‘egal pos- sesion of it. and drink from the same! before minor and still be within the law thereby committing no of- fense within the law! while if he tool: the same bottle, and had liquor tn it that was not obtained legally, took a @rink under the same conditions,| ih Wyatt Hotel Basement HURRY!. THEY ARE GOING FAST! Rows of Sample Suits ALL SIZES ALL STYLES ALL WOOL $16.50 $25.00 JAKE THE NIFTY TAILOK Phone 802 THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER CO. eminently r ground on the Powell flat, and he| will be a real, honest-to-goodnees| %® Would be guflty under the law i J ae s pleas of eristional! mee Dap resin oan D Was at that time very pesstmiatic|{fifo and drum corps in our midst oe ee ee Everything in Building Material responsible heads fre beer I hi 7 about the prospects of getting them | somet fs . More power peabates SD a Sit ak coming. ath, keeping in mind the responsibilities of the ¢ Declaration out. It then appeared that th. |to the boys, Jnited States government to the American peo ple, as well as to the world. The tragic situation in a large part of Enu- rope has been close to the heart of this nation} The authorities have not been unmindfu) of the suffering and torture of the millions, amid hate, jealousy and greed, all the products of war. The foreign policy of the United States has been for peace through understanding; but peace can come only to individuals and to nations in a receptive and peaceful state of mind. No pre m looking to peace can be effective so lony as human nature remains unchanged and The grand central idea of the Declaration of Independence was the sovereignity of the peo ple. It relied for original power, not upon states or colonies, or their citizens as such, but recog- nized as the authority for nationality the revo- lutionary rights of the people of the United States. It stated with marvelous clearness the encroachments upon liberties which threatened their suppression and justified revolt, but it was inspired by the very genious of freedom, and the prophetic possibilities of united common- wealths covering the continent in one harmon- ious republic, when it made the people of the thirteen colonies all Americans i ere! devolved fight Ws oes snow ia the weather forecast of C. P.| over twenty eligibles and before | permitting, he 1s planning a trip to Every important step taken by the present) "pon sem a Simin by themselves and for| Ferry, of Bitter Greek. After this|the charter is closed there will be|the Big Piney and Fall River sec. administration for two and a half years, has|themselves, the prerogatives and power wrested| spe] of snow and cold weathe- that} upward of thirty-five members. tions. - from crown and parliament. It condensed Magna been in the direction of peace, The arms confer- Charta, the Petition of Rights, the great body ence is an example. Failure to accept the advice of some to plunge) ing accumulated in the decisions of the courts, of English liberties embodied in the common law]. into ‘urope is not eyidence of disinterested- ness, it is the result of American tradition not to mingle in the political attaira of Kurope and not to undertake a joint retormation of Kurope’s economic muddle unless asked. Now that the crisis has perhaps been reached Europe should be willing to try the plan of the United States to have a conierence of economic and financial experts to ascertain what Ger- many is able to pay under present conditions. But France amends the American proposal by} insisting on a committee of experts named by| the reparation commission, and declaring that} on no account will she reduce her demands upon) Germany. it is evident that the time has not ar rived when europe will accept anything from} us but our men and our money, That is no fault of the American government, When peace comes finally as it surely will, the credit will belong largely to the responsible Americun leaders in charge and to their wisdom in keeping aloof from suropean affairs until such a tune as the situation demanded some- thing more than politics, parleys and pessimism. Sweatshops and Low Wages The Women’s Bureau of the Democratic Nat- j wealthy men and gamblers from robbing the the statutes of the realm, and an undisputed though unwritten constitution, but the original principles and dynamic force of the people’s power sprung from these old seers planted in the virgin sgil of the New World.—Chauncey M. De- pew. Sugar and the Tariff Three years ago when sugar was on the free list a combine got control of the market and ran the price up to three times what it is now and did it Just as it is done now. One reason the conspirators were able to do the trick so easily was that putting sugar on the free list threat- ened the beet sugar industry in the northern states and all that was necessary to rob the pub- lic was to get control of the cane sugar. Perhaps if some ladies would get from under the influ- ence of free trade politicians and study the mat- ter themselves they would realize that sugar should pay its share of tariff taxes as a matter of justice—and that is good Democratic doc- trine, too — and also that a protective tariff which builds up an industry in a way to prevent sses of life’s necessities is a good thing. Pro- tionists are not all Republicans. There are cold was going to hang on for # time until the ground was thoroughly frozen for the winter, but since, a warmer spell has come and the ac- tivities in the beet fields are each day increasing. With favorable weather there yet may be saved a considerable portion of the beets re- maining in the ground. i Winter Forecast GILLETTE—Residents of North- western Wyoming can look forward to a mild winter with practieally no New Legion Post OSAGE—Osage ts to have it’s own post In the American Legion. At a meeting Wednesday night definite steps were taken to com- plete the organization. Vere Smith was chosen temporary chairman but it was decided not to attempt the election until a full meeting of the body could be gotten together, The application for a charter has gone forward, carrying the names of Had Tough Trip | KEMMERER—Deputy State Game | Warden John Mischier returned this week from a trip into the Grays River and Fontenelle sections. He’ was at the former place when the Snow storm started, and he states that fully two feet and one-half of snow fell. Warden Micheler states that, ow-! Ing to the heavy fall of snow, the elk are beginning to come down from the hills and that he saw eight splen-! did specimens in one bunch on Gray's River, Next week, weather LOY Men, RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS Phone 2300 and 62 Distributors of KONSET Three-Day Cementing Process for Of] Wells. Casper, W: Office and Yard—First and Center Sts.’ T AN ARMY OF SPECIALISTS €--T Telephone workers must be special- ists. There isa minimum of untrained labor in the business of giving tele- phone service. No other industry, perhaps, requires so many kinds of skilled workmen as this. One of the important figures in our army of specialists is the telephone in- ional conuitteo through its regular publicity, is|yet, in America many disciples of that Demo- Who ‘want'bod 4 staller. The operator is in constant CoE Ee Rt at tanita a stpudid fiction oe ee and speaker of the house, Sam- X y voice-to-voice contact with the public AA In one of its recent grotesque misrepresenta- ———————— | h ff and other tions it deplored the fact that the tariff had tre- Co: titi M 1 n t er CO ce employes meet telephone mendouesiy increased the price of woolen mpetition or iVionopoly clothes. Upon that subject the representative of ene of the largest manufacturers of woolen clothing in the United States offers the follow: ing information: ‘The price of woolen clothes will never go down unless the people of the United States compel a return to sweatshop conditions. The reason of the advance in clothing is because of the advance in wages of clothing workers. Expert needle workmen are receiving more than duuble the wages that they formerly received. Bushelmen received $16 a week; today they get $35. Cutters received $183 a week; today they get $40. Pocket) workers received $20; today they get $45. Sweat-| shop workers received 60 cents for making a pair| of trousers, 40 cents for making a vest and $1.40 for making a coat. Today the sweatshop worker has been eliminated by legislation and organized labor. The question now arises: Do the women of the Democratic national committee wish to go on record in favor of: reducing the wages of the worke: in the clothing industry? That is ex- actly their tirade against higher priced w clothing means. Standing of Foreign Debts The American debt refunding commission has It is a fundamental principle of socialistic teachings that state monopoly in any line of service is to do away with competition. As a general principle, government service is only efficient when it meets the direct stimulus of coicpetition with private enterprice. Postal charges compete with express and in- surance and banking rates conducted by private corporations that carry on successfully. Socialistic propaganda continually seeks to take away all private competition and thus fas- ten upon the public government monoply. Complete governmental monoply brings stag- nation to any country for it kills the initiative and enterprise of its citizens. Complete monoply in casualty Insurance is the aim of the workingman’s compensation law in. several western states to the detriment of labor and industries. Debs’ Opinion If you want Eugene V. Debs’ opinion in the matter here it is: “No man is less fitted for the presidency of the United States than Henry! Ford. The automobile manufacturer is a very strange and disturbing factor in the political sit- uation. I cannot conceive of him as a presi- dential candidate. He will make a very grave ‘OU MEN who like plenty of strength, flavor and goodness in your coffee will take on ADVO fora pal. There’s something to this cof- fee! Not harsh or bitter, yet with plenty of “body” that actually satisfies. Nothing can take the place of a steaming cup of ADVO for a “starter” in the morning and to end up a day’s work well done Its golden-brown goodness hits the spot! tf not already enjoying ADVO, now’s , the time to start. Have your wife order a can today. You be the judge tonight! At All Grocers!’ BLENDED, ROASTED AND PACKED BY (THE McCORD- CAS! Omaha, Cheyenne, Sheridan, Lead, Rock Springs BRADY COMPANY PER AD to you Vacuum Packed with all te delicious fresh- y arantes of gett! Everyipound of ADCO Cok foe in perfect condition. ‘To open, simply turn the key. users in our offices. But the installer goes into your home. He is our rep- resentative and, in keeping within the high standard of his calling, is as cour- teous and obliging as he is painstaking and expert. “BELL SYSTEM” THE MOUNTAIN STATES TELEPHONE & TELEGRAPH CO. & One Policy, One System, Universal Service, and all directed teward Better Sereiea ‘Westbound No. TRAIN SCHEDULES Chicago & Northwestern Arrives 603 .. --2:15 p. m. completed the draft of its report to be made to| mistake in allowing himself to run for presi-| iH ARGH yA Of G82 ee he Sd Gta dae congress. It shows considerable progress dur-|dent. He understands the making of automo- PA VO Hi ———--——~4:45 p.m. ing the past year toward securing eventual re-|biles. He has a great genius, the greatest of its Bil Hil Chicago, Burlington & Quincy payment to American taxpayers of the vast sum|kind in the world, so far as the automobile in- ATOOOTONY AUNT opened ed by them to the allied nations during the, dustry is concerned, but he would absolutely go : war. The Cuban obligation, amounting to about $8,-| 000,000, has been paid in full. A settlement with} Great Brifain has been effected under which out of his field of triumph by endeavoring to become president. “Politicians want Mr. Ford for his millions not for himself.” aan aaenee---10.25 D. mi.

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