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erdonetoes = — eon fA Nema otee Tee MI tO Seo meee Roman we MAR mihi ee PAGE TWO. Che Casper Daily Cribune |people living here. The greater part of the coun: | MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS try was a wilderness. There was practically no | Sip Aasecinted Eaaes te eae aed ne tna cate manufacturing. It was not « country to which use publ: on news nd also the local fblished herein. People were flocking in large numbers. The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at (2 ufacturing, erce Wyomtng. Publication offices: Tribune Building, oppo-/ried on there on a scale far greater than in any site postoffice. other part of the world. Those countries certain- ly had a long start over us. as second @otered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice This coun:ry was the figst in this 17, 1923 weight felt. allies are not in ‘burned down to his pin; and then he had to listen, while his wife talked, until the flame reached her This law passed into oblivion long since, but its influence became Had F i Ey eral t BS cless matter, November 22, 1916, hemisphere Adah: pA 3|t0 adopt the protective policy. It is the on were light Fels a iredition particularly cmon Munteass etecbanes country that has consi adhered tc late at poor clerks the family day, it has a vast population, and is one beechireis rig vr pa | pete richest and most pi countries call, ised Gir hack, tore —_ world. The wealth is even! a the old nag in the fe igord uted. Other countries have had the same tunities this one has had, but they have ad i Hi] Advertising Representatives hip ; { Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bldg.. Ch! |adopted the protective ey to te cago, Ill, 286 Fifth Ave., New York City: Globe BIGs.-|tont. poli same Dost en Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bldg., 65 New Mont- ved ‘an Save Your Bread Wrappers They are good for a national certificate or one cent in trade fora limited time only at the Wigwam Bakery 327 W. Yellowstone i ' he Detly fomery St., San Francisco, Cal. Copies of t ‘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:) 3 q Unabated Egotism Egotism, his ruling passion, as strong in ill- ness as it was in health, was what Woodrow E ine One Year, Sunday Only —----: Six Months, Daily and Sunday —-—. Three Months, Dally and Sunday One Month, Daily and ‘Sunday Per Copy <a 5 One Year, Daily and Sundar One Year, Sunday Only — Six Month, Dally ané Sum with him are, in his view, imbeciles or In his address Mr. Wilson accused the Amer- ican people of being “cowardly.” This comes from the same man who, after the sinking of the Lusitania, declared that the American people are “ Ss proud to al ae eae ae bri agae Three ( Su! and the Italians with making waste paper 0: One ee eaten -t6/the Versailles treaty. This comes from the same ‘All subscriptions must be paid in advance snd th®/man who openly made scraps of paper of his Daily Tribune will not trsure delivery after subscri>| fourteen points. His appeal in 1923 for “cour- tion becomes one month ‘n arrears. age, self-respect and helpfulness” is no more vehement than his insistence apes eet of t an: American ships to carry supp oO rmany Gathering Wool Through the ports of Sweden in the days when prone to blame protection for avy falling off in ‘business prosperity and France and Britain were fighting with their backs to the wall. Mine! he — at os + oredi business revival.|moment is high morality. NKe wl assume to Legh sheng oF no credit for Sroduces nothing, {differ with him are guilty of moral depravity. att giadiy have free trade. He wants to buy| Woodrow Wilson seeks to place upon the ma- in the lowest market and sell in the highest. In |jority membership of the senate and the sixteen that way he can make the highest profits. If he|million voters who upheld them, responsibility could buy foreign goods, bring them into this|for the delay in restoration of peace in country froe of duty and the purchasing power|when it is perfectly manifest that the here remained the same as it is now he could |trouble arises from an effort to enforce an un- make a lot of money. In any case at the start,|/just and an unwise treaty, the provisions of he would be sure of goodly profits. It is his|which were agreed to by himself, when a just own personal pocketbook he is considering and jand practicable treaty might have been negoti- not the prosperity of the country as a whole. ated if he had followed the customary method When there is world over-production of farm of sending to the peace conference men trained products the farmer fondly imagines that 1f)in diplomacy, men baving a knowledge of world There sras no duty on manufactured products if |sffairs, and men not actuated by the ove he could trade hts products for those of foreign |ing desire to write one pet theory into a treaty countries manufsctured at low cost, he would |in which it had no proper place. HURRY!. THEY ARE GOING FAST! Rows of Sample Suits ALL SIZES ALL STYLES = OS warns ‘Wyatt Hotel Basement THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER C0. Everything in Building Material RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS Distributors of KONSET Z Three-Day Cementing Process for Oil Wells. hone 2300 and 62 ang RA = Office and Yard—First and Center urea Egypt eo that they can get free la- bor to dig into the cellars of the an- cients. Another explanation of the ‘mod- ern child's manners is that too many woodsheds have been converted into garages.—San Francisco Chronicle. The free trader is And auto horns that stutter. And auto horns that wail or worse And auto harns that stutter. But the auto horns that most disturb Btates in 1917 and that with which it is confronted now will not im- press informed people. In 1917 America joined its forces with the united might of the Allied nations to be desired than great riches. titi A F a, who were striving to a common a lot better off. He overlooks the fact that| Tf France be guilty, as Mr. Wilson asserts,} Metropolitan Newspaper Motto ‘ There was attri bids 1a opie: nstances he would also proba-|she is guilty merely of trying to enforce the| Count that day lost whose low Whether this is true or not, | £00: re cauy_then under sucl greed w hers. If the United States descending sun certainly there is nothing new in 1] what he does sell in the|rights he ae P| 1 much lower price than he|was prevented from agreeing to the treaty of Sees pepe ersaoadl robbery, nor yet does and his last state would be no better if as|peace, she was prevented by Wilson’s act in pay Fay good as his first. The tariff on wool is considered by many, not only unnecessary but an actual hardship and it is pointed out that such a tariff has never resulted in a frreat enough production at home to make any aypreciable eee She nee supply. Perhaps if these people would give the) wiiter sufficient study they would find that the trouble does not lie where they think it does. They might find that the tariff has been too low or has not been continued for a long enough period to enable the educating of the people to the consumption of more lamb and mutton so that wool can really be raised by our farmers at a profit. All this wool gathering in regurd to the tariff is always due to a personal rather than u broad view of the situation. Everyone in this country cannot always be as prosperous as he would like te be. Removing the tariff on certain things in order to help him become more prosperous will not change matters. For a time it may or it may not help him, but in any case it is going to burt someone else and this will eventually react upo» him to make him less prosperous than he was before. No protective tariff can be made to regulate supply and demand in such a manner that they will continue uniferm and every one will al w be prosperous. What it can do is to regu late the supply in this country of cheaply made foreign products, of cheaply produced raw ma- terial and give our own people every opportu- nity to sell at renumerative prices, and this in- cludes not only the raw materials, the farm products and the manufactured products, but al- so the labor and service a man or woman to sell. It stabalizes business to such an extent that it is safe to invest the money necessary to produce at the lowest possible cost through the adoption of labor and time saving machinery. ‘This means greater results with less labor and in turn more profit to everyone concerned. Some people will even go so far these days to point back to the good times we enjoyed only a few years ago when the free trade party was in power, and use this as an argument for low- ve tariff rates. These people seem to overlook the fact that during that administration there was a great war which resulted in more complete protection than any protective tariff can pos- sibly give. The demand for everything we could produce was very greatly increased. Produc+ tion in all other parts of the world was re encase pyat ypregsecnany: ha nee VA an Baker's G bodice duced. Imports into this country fell off. Ex- aorta eaten + ‘ a that eee ye ell th. rf You would live in i v4 crea ora ie ex- ee i ports wery greatly in eased. F time the ex- Zoalle = eaters sent out Sy thas ‘Seana om a seule, pe woe te n ignorance of these opportunities - 4 ee saoghsies = eration rig of |¢T™mor would like to make them identical through tian were it not for a vertising. Somebody might be selling Cheaply made foreign goods. Our industries, our|2Ut the nation, Bepocts froma lt ‘etlong at ws a deliciows, mt a oe fever and more economical food; or a utensil that ts , everyone among us was completely pro- 5 an. e: wo a ‘ . fected. The tariff we had in force made no aif-|?eVolt against domination by the Anti-Saloon beverage. 9 immeasurably to your comfort and well-being; ference at all. There was something greater than | KoVEE° pga tet ast eel tga eee “i some id material for making shoes or clothing— this, something over which we had very little|; . tontrol, that gave Us the protection that we|t® the Republican national convention.” _ mutt older people. ut you would never know it. needed. This announcement will not please those who Ii ts the cocoa of high qualiig ‘ : It is a very easy matter to wool gather on|Wwant to see the prohibition question removed +. “ade only by Modern advertising isa boon. It keeps informatio the subject of the protective tariff. When a man |from politics. If the prohibition amendment is W. Bal & ua to dat th hi F 10n considers the immediate effect upon his own in-|to be modified the people must be convinced that alter Baker & Co.Lra up € on the many things we need in order to- live come, hie is either very much in favor or very |modification is desirable, | The people should |]. Resituhed 17 profitable, happy and useful lives in this age of rapid- much opposed to the tariff. If conditions change Ruments gure: st Dorchester, Mass.’ fi in the supply and the demand of the goods or|Attacks on Mr. Pinchot or anyone else who and Montreal, Caneda re progress. material he produces, then his mind may also change in reference to the tariff. Added to this are the changing conditions in the world as a whole. All this makes it impossible to formn- late a tariff law that will satisfy everybody and continue to satisfy everybody. Look at the matter in a broad-minded way, however, and everyone will have to admit that under the world conditions that have existed since the United States was settled by Euro-| peans, and under conditions which promise to prevail for a great many generations to come the only way a country such as ours can con- tinue to be prosperous is to adhere to the pro; tection policy. Under this policy this country has grown both in population and material wealth at a rate which is really amazing. A couple of centuries ago there were but few ‘ has} it started in the morning. With the new day, forcing into the treaty a league of nations cove- nant which was in no'way germane to the sub- ject matter of the terms of peace. No one man on the face of the globe is more responsible for chaotic coné@itions in Europe today than is Woodrow Wilson, yet he assumes to lecture the ‘supreme sacrifice” in accordance with his de- mands. In his view the majority is wrong and he alone is right. Once more it becomes pertinent to quote the juror who said that the jury could] from the old-fashioned) man who have agreed if the other eleven members had not] used to sift his ashes to the new generation which drives into the Mr. Wilson's closing appeal for a “return to od station and says “Gimme been so stubborn. a true tradition of America” will be met, but not in the manner he indicates. The true traditions were voiced by George Washington in his fare- well address. By returning to those traditions Pin in the Candle,” American people for their refusal to make the{'h® overwhelming unimportance of|-the English ag “The Right to be e tremendously important things| Heard.’ yesterday. vt It's a far cry (whatever that is) ae ai nce of Debts Even if the United States were so we shall avoid entangling interference in the | UsPosed it could not permit the dis- affairs of Europe and avoid political alliances cussion of inter-allied debts, in so far as it affected itself, unless it weve with European powers. Moreover we shall main-} ¢ormatt 4 officially’ represen: tain, unchanged, the tradttional Monroe doc- od that it could not be a a trin league of nations. , with no surrender of its principles to the | specific authority of Congress. More. over, that would throw the whole inguiry into the field of international politics. But the United States Gov- [The Way of Reformers On the farm there grows a weed called the tumble-weed. When October comes, the wind breaks the stalk. As round as a dandelion puff- ball, the tumble-weed is as large as a bushel basket. When the wind blows from the north the tumble-weed starts across the field, toward the fence corners. That evening when the wind changes, the tumble-weed starts rolling across the meadow toward the same fence from which the tumble-weed takes up fresh journeys. At night the wind rises, and though the farmer and his flocks sleep, not the tumbis weeds. They are still traveling. We are all familiar alas, with the career of Mr. Tumble Weed, the false radi- cal, tumbling into every public meeting, Sunday afternoon-gathering reform club and away he! goes—now toward this extreme, now toward that, driven every whither by the new wind is- suing from the puffed-out cheek of any new fad- dist in reform.—Rey. Newell Dwight Hillis. Wets Against Pinchot “Pinchot and prohibition will be fought urges enforcement of the dry laws—regardless of whatever political motives Mr, Pinchot may have—do not constitute genuine arguments against prohibition. Distribution Costs ee | The New York newspapers complain that Maine farmers sell potatoes at seventy cents a bushel while New York retailers sell them to the consumer for a dollar and forty-four cents. The chief reason for the difference in the price is that farmers sell by the wagon load while the consumer buys by the peck or even quarter peck. It takes nearly as much of the retailer’s time to sell a quarter peck as to sell a bushel. Tt is the service that accounts for most of the’ difference, - oo <n ae Pay ae iad “OTHERS” ernment holds, and rightly holds, that Germany's capacity to pay has Dy ALWAYS READY FOR Baker’s © Breakfast Cocoa Phone 1702 AT YOUR SERVICE In the old days if a. man and his by spaces allowed to talk until the flame Rothrock “Wants to See Yow” Live Opportunities For You e293 “Opportunity knocks but. once.” But don’t you believe it.It isn’t so. Opportunity knocks every day of your life. advertisement in this paper is brimful of opportunity for some one. Many of them are written with you in mind. They offer you opportunities to save time, money and effort—opportunities to surround yourself with comforts and conveniences—opportunities to eat better, sleep bet, ter, dress better and live better. Every advertisement in this paper is a real oppor- tunity. Don’t let it knock in vain ' So said the sage. Every