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a} GE TEN. Che Casper Daily Cribune | MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS } The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the sse for publication of all news credited in this paper nd also the local news published herein. oo sth lee grrr Lt a ee The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening and he Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune Building, oppo site postoffice. Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second lass matter, November 22, 1916, Susiness Telephones _--—-.. =-—--16 and 16) Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments. | FFF | | By J. EB. HANWAY Advertising Representatives | Prudéen, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bldg., Chi) cago, DL, 286 Fifth Ave., New York City; Globe Bids. Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bidg., 65 New Mont- romery 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 welcome. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C-) SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State One Year, Dally end Sunday - One Year, Sunday Only — Six Months, Daily and Sunday -. Three Months, Daily and Sunday One Month, Dally and Sunday -. Per Copy -$9.00 50 450 OF y Mail Inside State One Year, Datly and Sundar «---$7.8) - 2.6) ~ 4.69 Six Month, Daily ané sunday Three Months, Daily and Sunday One Month, Daily and Sunday - ‘All subscriptions must be pald in ad Daily Tribune will not insure delivery tion becomes one month in arrears. 15 v a the after subscrt >-| Un-Americanized Aliens | 1d not be diverted from tedly pointed | men- | Public attention at a, t nationa anger reped berg $e Veoaideat Harding and recently m tloned by President Coolidge—the un-American:| ized aliens in our mos v tad Rover ae nized danger by the enactme’ Hes eer Peatriction law which, if fairly and effectively enforced, guards against further in- flow of undesirable immigrant classes. Our pt provide against immigration of criminals, Gey: diseased persons, of weak minded persons, anc | of dependents, but it has become apparent that these Jaws are being evaded by a considerable number of persons. As pointed out by President Harding in his address at Portland, Oregon, on July 4, last: “Thousands are finding their way across our} borders or through our ports every month in de- fiance or evasion of the law because of our in- eufficient regulations or inadequate provisions for enforcement of restrictions. “Jn an earlier address to congress on Decem- ber 8, 1922, President Harding urged the enact-| gnent of bills then pending for the registration | of the alien who has come to our shores. He truly said that: ied lassteceehs id American tunities ast PEO ns rah worth the seck- of registration if it is | fee aa the etna has the right to know who are citizens in the making or who live among us and share our advantages while seeking to undermine our cherished institutions. It needs no argument to establish the fact that a man who violates the law in order to get into this country can not be trusted to obey any other law or to support American institutions. In his recent address to the conference of gov- ernors President Coolidge estimated the num- ber of aliens coming into the United States un- lawfully at one hundred thousand annually, or} a number equal to about thirty per cent of) those who come lawfully. This, as he said, is a) perious menace to the success of our immigra- tien policy. | The smuggling of this number of aliens who) are not entitled to come in accordance with the provisions of law is a direct challenge to the American government, One hundred thousand foreigners each year defy the laws of the Unit- ed States in the manner of their admission. Having come here in defiance of the government they live here in equal defiance. Defying one law of the government they are ready to defy) every other law. With very few possible excep- tifflons they have not in them the making of good American citizens. There may be some question as to the wisdom of some of the details of our present immigra-| tion law. It was an emergency measure and! was not claimed by its sponsors to be perfect. | But whatever doubt there may be as to the wis-| dom of some features of the law, there can be no question by anybody anywhere as to the vital importance of enforcing that law when its en-) forcement is challenged by men outside of the United States who seek to come here and live} here in defiance of law. Apparently the only practical way of enforc- ing our immigration law is to provide for com- pulsory registration of aliens and the prompt deportation of every alien found to be here in| violation of law. | Far From Prohibitive From day to day in every way the prophets of | the Democratic party are being more and more} discredited. When the Republican tariff law} was enacted the cry was almost unanimous in} the Democratic press and on the Democratic side in congress, that the imposition of the Re- publican import duties would destroy our for- eign trade and make it impossible for our Euro pean debtors to pay us what they owe. It was asserted that Europe must pay in goods since she cannot pay in money, and that the Republi- can duties were so high that Europe would be unable to send us goods and, therefore, we conld not collect the debt. Moreover, they serted that since the Republican duties would be prohibi- tive, American manufacturers would be able to make their prices exorbitant—without fear of ‘imported of “crude materials for use in manu- jed as si jgestion of the damnable type would occur right | here in our beloved country just when it began |} tal value of imports is there on which could be based the criticism that the Republi- can tariff is prohibitory. But it is in the char- oer of our imports and exports that the best showing is mide in favor of the Republican tar- if. eLaving aside the amounts in dellars and dealing in percentages, the report for the nine months ending with September shows that we facturing,” 38 per cent of our total imports, which class of materials represents a larger proportion of imports than any other class. On the export side the figures show that manufac- tures ready for consumption constituted 39 per cent of the total, or a larger proportion than any other one class, In other words, under the Republican tariff we are importing more raw materials and ex- porting more manufactured commodities. This necessarily means that we are providing more employment for American labor in making goods ready for consumption. That is largely the explanation for the fact that American mills are running at ‘practically full capacity and wages of American workmen are keeping up at a very high standard. The principles upon which |the Republican tariff law was based was to en- courage the manufacture of goods in America. At the same time our tariff law permits the im- |divisions. This is particularly gratifying in | uct. The import statistics show that we have| increased our imports from each of the grand a source of gratification to those, Thomas has returned to the county/and to answer any questions that/ divisions. This is particularly gratifying in| the case of South America with which we are} making every effort to build up a mutually prof- | table trade. Our imports from South America caring the nine months of 1923 amounted to} 357,000,000 as compared with $241,000,000 in| 1924, or an increase of about 45 per cent. These imports were largely of raw materials or of commodities such as coffee. tropical fruits, spices, etc., which we do not produce in the Unit- ed States. |ventence of the public. | made | vehicle is not already on the bridge. |If destruction of this character con- It Ha i Publi |& Lane place, Jackson's place and Damaging Public \fhe place conducted by Henry J. Property | Rebhausen. All these places have been re- DOUGLAS—F* of the Iight|turned to the owners by the present standards on the new Platte river|lessees in order that abatement bridge have been broken completely | proceedings might be avoided. They off by careless drivers of more than|™may be reopened under new man average width vehicles trying to| agement, but never again as soft pass on the bridge, with the result|drink bars. This was the substance! that the citizens of Douglas, who|of the agreement between prosecutor | contributed $650 toward putting injand owner. In several instances the lighting system are naturally|new tenants already have been anxious to find out who {fs respon-| found. Butler & Spring, it is under. sible. A reward of $25 has been| stood, have leased the Midwest vacated by Phil Thomas. offered for information on the sub-| property Ject. jand plan to continue it as @ barber) If drivers persist in using public|shop and cigar store, but with the property in this manner there {s no| Soft drink feature eliminated. All use in expending money for the con-| affected by the agreement, with the The Com.| exception of Rebhausen, closed im-| club itse'f the| mediately. He will occupy his munity took upon 2.25 bor can use in production of the finished prod-| task of raising the funds to finance| present quarters until November 10./the committees the work that ts be- the lighting of the bridge and it was| Mr. Patterson added that Phil} his sentence of decided out having who contributed to the fund that/ Jail to serve Dougias had a modern bridge, well| three months, lighted by night. Drivers of wide, forego appeal. vehicles, in fairness to those who! = the improvement possible, should take notice before starting ross to see that another wide to Installation Delayed | DOUGLAS—The severe weather of the past week or two has made {t impossible for McLaughlin & |O'Neal, the contractors for the new} tinues steps will be taken toward prosecuting the offenders In a way that will “bring them to" with a jerk city water system, to do much n \toward getting the pipe line from Any fair-minded citizen who un- = in tts The Well Informed |{ntentionatly ‘contributed to such ae. th, Green Valley spring to Dougias ie |wtruction should report at once and Under way. Five car loads Of pit s Aj ree 2nd) have already fo > Nobody has time to read one per cent of all | Fevatees to pay for the necessary! aq have been unloaded in the yards that is worth reading, still trained writers learn something about authorities. We may not have time or inclination to mas- ter the science of mathematics, but we all know that “Newton’s Principia” is a great book. If we know that youth wants to win a prize for an British India he had better read Sir William Wilson Hunter. Ten years of active work is grinding out copy the busy scribe has not found time to do one tenth or one-fiftieth of the reading he would like to do, but he has some idea of the books best worth looking up on twenty subjects. If five or fifteen or five hundred newspaper editors were asked to make a list of Americans who know something about Germany all would! place James W. Gerard in the front rank. He) was there, he saw the conditions, he took pains to inform himself. Mr. Gerard may be the only Democrat of nat- ional prominence who will muke a fight for a protective tariff. But this is a tribute to his moral courage, not a reflection on his judgment. Is there any Democrat in or out of congress who knows more about the conditions than he does? |Does Mr. McAdoo or former President Wilson surpass him in the possession of data bearing jon this question? Perhaps the free-traders will stampede next year’s convention. They may ignore Mr. Gerard as they ignored Daniel Manning, or they may treat him as they treated Samuel J. Randall. But will they answer him, Aye, that’s the ques- tion. The Fordney tariff act from end to end, as- sumes that we need protection against goods made in Germany. Such is the belief of the Democrat who knows most about the matter. A New Indictment Speaking to some three hundred clergymen in New York Mr. F. B. Smith, chairman of the recent Washington citizens conference, is report- Ying “prohibition has produced greatest hive of damnable liars the world has | ever seen.” ‘We have learned from others that the eight- eenth amendment to the constitution was pro- ducing some ill effects, entirely unanticipated | at the time of its ratification, but so far as we have noticed this indictment presented by Mr. Smith is entirely new. We had no idea things were as bad as he makes out. As Mr. Wells shows in his outline of history, there have been! periods when liars were far from lonesome, but! we had never supposed that record-breaking con- to lead the procession of nations. If Mr. Smith | is telling the truth, and he at least has the rep- | what prohibition can do. He further stated: “It is a pitiful state when a man who, in 1917, was willing to forego sugar) for the flag, his Sunday automobile outing for the flag was ready to eat fifty-fifty bread for) the flag should today insult the flag for the sake | avenue; Phil Thomas’ Midwest soda|the million gallon reservoir, wil and cigar store, the Bird ready for the use of Douglas people.’ Litt’e is known of him here and it is the | f utation of being a good judge of sin, it shows jf A crew of men fs at work at the spring constructing the spring house. It ts to be an ell-shaped | building, the main portion of which Prosecutor | will be 51 feet wide. At one end of today an-|the addition will be 21x21 feet Drink Parlors Pass LARAMTIE— County George W. Patterson essay on the struggle between the French and nounced the permanent closing by Progress has been rapid and it fs|dency over failure to secure em- English for Canada we advise him to read Park- consent of five soft drink bars as a|expected that it will be completed! ployment was the cause of his act. man. If any one wants to get a-clear idea of ‘rect result of the recent campaign within a short time. | here of prohibition agents, a cam-| paign that Weather conditions up to the pre resu'ted in charges of, sent time have made it impossible {selling hooch against 16 individuals.|to start work on the pipe line and cago, receiving a wire in answer The places affected are the Smith it wil! prss, ten or twenty more years come and go, and @ Clark soft drink place in Grand before probably be late in the spring the new system, including be| fountain NOW’S the time you should know the truth—AND THE WHOLE TRUTH! Because, if you are in. the clutches of constipation, real re- of a highball.” It is most surely and certainly pitiful. We can only repeat that it shows what federal pro- hibition can do when it gets into action; but with it all we would never have thought of drawing such a damnable indictment. | | Zangwill’s Compliments Israel Zangwill the widely known writer on international subjects is no particular friend of the league of nations. Apparently he does not like it at all, and finds approval from millions jot Americans when he lands on it in this fash- poor Wilson! He was not, unfortu- competition from Europe. Statistics, which have just ben completed for the nine months ended with September 30, 1923, show that in that nine months period we im ported goods to the value of $2,904,000,000, as compared with $2,183,000,000 for the me per. iod in 1922. This was an increase of $720,000,000 or about 33 per cent. Those figures relate to imports from the en- tire world. If we confine the comparison to Eu- rope alone, concerning which the Democrats made the most dismal predictions, the showing is much the same. In the nine months of 1923 we imported from Europe, goods to the value of $865,000,000 as compared with imports amount ing to $683,000,000 in the corresponding nine months of 1922 or an incr of $181,000,000 or an increase of about 30 per cer In neither the per cent of incr ease nor the to- Y, a man of infinite wit. He did not think |clearly. He asked for a league of peoples. Sharp- er wits at the peace conference gave him = 2 league of nations instead. He proudly carrie: it home as a genuine thing, refusing to admii that he had been bamboozled. It was a leaguc that pulled the leg of nations. When Mussolin defied it, it helped him to pull the leg of the |world. I have called it the league of damna tions. It is damned. It damns small nations 1 hypocrisy. If its covenant were more than a serap of paper there would be no need of a rep arations commission. There would be no need to discuss security. The pseudo league debars a lot of little problems. It leaves important ques- tions severely alone. Tt does not dare to touch disarmament. When it comes to big questions the league is not there. It condemns itself by |i its silence. Its virtues are few. Its sins, both of omission and commission, are many. lief will come only through eat- ing bran that is ALL BRAN! Kellogg’s Bran is ALL BRAN —that is why it is reeommended by physicians; that is why it is GUARANTEED; that is why it gives positive, permanent relief! And, Kellogg’s Bran, being cooked and krumbled, is as deli- cious as it is beneficial! Re- member that! Foods with 25 or 50 per cent bran will give you 25 or 50 per cent relief, because they have Don’t stop BRAN itis 100 mild cases! You'll enjoy as a cereal or ppened In Wyoming Matters and Things, of State-Wide Interest, Wired in, Telephoned in, Written, Grape-Vined and Some of It Purloined. only 25 or 50 per cent of the bulk or “roughage” of ALL BRAN—a necessity to secure permanent relief! “pulk” of Kellogg’s BRAN that eliminates constipation} efforts to fight constipation. Get GUARANTEED RELIEF that will come to you through eating Kellogg’s Bran, because it is ALL BRAN—because being ALL Two tablespoonfals daily for As much with each meal if conditions are chronic! cious bran muffins, bread, etc, For results try a Tribune Classt- fied Ad. not known whether he had been | working in this section or not. COFFEE -the universal drink Community Chest LARAMIE—A united Laramie will participate in the Community Chest campaign, which starts, Wed- nesday, November 14. A meeting of the big central committee, which is composed of representatives of prac- tically every organization tn the city will be held at the city hall tomor- row afternoon, at 3 o'clock, when the preliminary plans of the chest's executive committee will be present- ed to them and further details con- cerning the method of the drive will be discussed. In addition to the committee mem- bers who will be present at tomor- row'’s meeting, representatives from each of the participating organiza. tions will also attend to explain to ing done by the chest participants may be asked. / Tomorrow's meeting, which wilt be the first for the campaign coun cil, will be spent in perfecting plans for the campaign. The publicity committee met late this afterneon and passed on the preliminary work outlined for informing every Lara-| mie citizen of the needs of the chest. aebedibes ses nth. Commits Suicide anging from one of the door of hts room ie neck. Wi 00 aresuasel h a re pe a fam Perfel was found in a room at the Wh House, owned and ope rated by Mra Wiliam S. Howard. Coroner Hofmann was notified at once and took the necessary steps to locate relatives or friends. The man had only 76 cents on his per- son and it is believed that despon- 1 | The address of a relative was found| in one of his pockets and Mr. Hof- mann wired to the address in Chi- asking that the body pe hef@ until further notified. | Pertel was about 55 yeare old! The Mechanic Says “We used to bring Coffee to work in a thermos bottle. That’s a great idea. Now the boss serves it right here in the plant. That’s better yet. Maybe those fellows across the street aren’t envious when they see us line up for our cup of Coffee. They've asked their super- intendent to do the same thing.” Six Rules For Making Better Coffee 1—Keep your Coffee fresh @—Measure carefully 3—Use grounds only once 4—Boil the water 5—Serve at once 6—Scour the Coffee-pot ‘The planters of Seo Peule, Brazil, who produce more than half ef all the Coffee used in the United States, are conducting this edusstional work in co-operation with the leading Coffee merchants of the United States, Tekst Coffee Trade Publicity Committee, 64 Water Street, New Yerki It is the half-way in your Building Materials We are 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 per cent efficient! Kelloge’s Bran for making deli- TRAIN SC Chicago & HEDULES Arrives AN sags ee ae bm. bound Arrives Departs RE Se aay Ping 5:00 p,m. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy | Arrives wawwennnnnnnnnnnnenn=8:10 p, m. i x = '} No. 29 —__—_... q xe Be SY 9.80 9 an, 720 am enna nnn nnn nnn nnnnn n= 10.25 D. mm.