Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 27, 1923, Page 12

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PAGE TWELVE Che Casper Daily Crivbune t 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. ; . j | J i ¥ clase matter, November 22, 1916, | The Casper Dally Tribune issued every evening and) The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at Casper, | Wyoming. Publigation offices: Tribune Bullding, oppo-/ site. postoffice, |) + eae Se Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second | | Biisiness ‘Telephones _-._--_-----. Say as. 15 and 16, ; Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All |} e Departments. \ ES By e J. E. HANWAY Advertising Representatives Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bidg., Chi- cago, IL, 286 Fifth Ave., New York Citv; Globe betonig ©* Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bldg., 56 New a ““gomery St. San Francisco, Cal. Coples of the Daily ribune are on fila in the New York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offites and visitors are welcome. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C) SUBSCRIPTION RATES | By Carrier and Outside State ‘One Year, Daily and Sunday --~-----------" ~ *Qne Year, Sunday Only —------. » ‘Six Months, Daily and Sunday - 'The result, in one sense, is the same. \extent that we have to in order to enable it to tries that produce them, we are paying tribute to the other industries that depend to a greater or less extent upon these industries. When all these different items are added together, the to tal becomes surprisingly large. Now it may be all very well to help out these other countries but it must not be done by de stroying our own industries. The prosperity of our own country is founded upon our refusal to pay tribute to any other country, It matters, not whether this is tribute to the pirates of Trip-| li or to the manufacturers of foreign countries. When we fail’ to protect any industry to the survive in the face of foreign competition what do we do? We take away from our own people a certain number of jobs. We make it impractical for the scientists in this country to. do the re-| search they would gladly do, if there was a home} market for their results and for the services of | the young men they train in this field. | The tribute we pay is far greater than the mere dollars and cents. It reaches into every) phase of our lives. The war demonstrated that we had the talent and the ability and the wil! in this country to produce anything here that is produced in any other part of the world. It was merely a matter of sufficient protection from foreign competition to enable this ability, talent and will to be applied in a practical manner. The tribute, however, does not stop here. There are not yet any sure indications that the t war has been fought. ther there are indica- tions that the next one will be won by the coun- try that his given the greatest degree of prac- tical attention to scientific research and to in 5|dustries created as a result of this research. If in the future we fail to protect any new in- Three Months, Daily and Sunday One Month, Dally and Sunday ------------------ Per Copy pases ‘ By Mail tn One Year, Dally and Sunda: One Year, Sunday Only - _Six Month, Daily ané Sunday 4 Three Months, Daily and Sunday be Casver Daily Cribune It Happened Section Man Missing SHERIDAN—The disappenrance of Wenceslado Delgado, Mexican sec- tion hand at Kleenburn, was report-| ed to Sheriff Frank Toy. According to the meagre informa- tion the officers have been able to get last week Delgado, in company with two other men of the section gang, one of whom is said to be named Marino, went to Monarch for a game of pool. The others returned at midnight saying that Delgado was still at the pool hall and was coming ater. He did not show up, however. The proprietor of the Monarch poo? hall maintains that the three went out at the same time. Delgado's hat is said to have been found lying on the bridge acros: Tongue river near Kleenburn by a fourth Mexican, Certigo. This is taken by some to mean that the missing Mexican may have met foul play or may have fallen from the bridge. Delgado has a wife and four chil- dren. Night School Enroll- Matters and Things, of State-Wide Interest, Wired In, Telephone In, Written, Grape-Vined and Some of It Purloined “ named Marguruto| they packed it up hill and down until they got it to the river where they anchored it in the water that the pitch might be removed so that the pole would absorb print. It was necessary to leave the pole submers- ed for the winter and this spring it was brought to town, It is perfectly straight and tap- pers gracefully to a point making state. A statement to that effect/as ideal a pole as can be obtained. oo Baccetie~ Baek ot} was made by James R. Coxen, state; Is a Yale Star director of vocational education, | during his recent visit to this city.| KEMMERER—The eastern foot- with) pall news plays up the name of Mr, Coxen stated that Casper was| next, in night school enrollment a total of 295. In the Americaniza-|pick Luman, star right end on the tion class here there are 131 enrolled! Yate football team, as a “comer.” and in the vocational classes there| ‘This Dick Luman is none other are 308. The night school has now) than the son of Abner Luman, of reached its fifth year of existerfte| pinedale, and his many Wyoming in Rock Springs and each year finds! ¢riends rejoice in the fact that he 1s an increase in attendance and !n-| gaining national reputation for bis terest shown in the work. Prowess with the pigskin: fens lie Nana aa At Tuesday nights general session Lady Stockgrowers of the vocational school, Rev. M: made a very interesting talk on triotism” and the Washington sct b entertained with th a1 NEWCASTLE—Mrs. J. E. Mead Chorus from Faust” and “An-| fecently purehased a fine band of us.” Leno Ceretto also gave| Sheep from Harry Brown of Sheri- a violin solo. dan and is running them on her range east of Newcastle. In the summer Mrs. Mead intends to have them taken to the Black Hills forest in Wyoming Present Flag Pole CODY—Considered as nearly per- fect a flag pole as can be grown by nature, the new pole which graces the campus of the Cody high school comes as the result of the efforts of the boy outs who camped on Mormon creek the summer of 1922 with Rev. L. C. Dryden, scout mas- reserve, as sheep thrive better on the reserve in summer than on the open range, where there is no shelter from the sun's hot rays. The sheep that Mrs.. Mead purchased are a band of ewes. Mrs. Mead is an ex ceptionally fine business woman, having dealt in horses, cattle and large flocks of turkeys, but this. is TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1923 beside looking after her other num- this week is shipping about 100|erous ranch interests. Mrs. Donies turkeys to eastern markets and we|son has one of the finest alfalfa understand the price paid ts very|farms in the state. . good. Mrs. Mead has been specializ-| Lies MS eke 9 ing in the turkey business for the! past few years. | Mrs. Nancy Dontelson of Oil Creek is Mkewise one of Weston county's prosperous lady stockmen as ost Duys and feeds sheep for market extensive grain fields. Mrs. Mead ‘Will you ‘be the lucky one at Lioyd’s? “OTHERS” Casper’s Community Chest By EARLE D. HOLMES ‘The Community Chest plan should Today all America is living on a 4 Wil wichive,thevadoport of ait ieee eee tee et ee ae ani receive P Many have sala, and rightly too, |"own before. Casper citizens, one that they did not contribute to this|@nd all, let's do our share to elimi- found because they never knew|nate suffering and unhappiness . what was done with the money, |thereby bringing into existence money. more light, more friendship, love Under this plan we all will know. |and truth. |Again business methods have en-| The men in charge of this work lterea into charity conditions and are deserving of our conficence hav- our dollars will go farther and do ing made a success of their own af- the work we want done. fairs. $ The High Grade Spread for Bread om 5 Nucoa aN 3 4 *One Month, Daily and Sunday -. ‘ ‘All subscriptions must be paid in advance and ae Dal'y. Tribune will not Insure delivery after subscri * ‘tion becomes one month in arrears. r E . KICK, IF YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE *{\ If you don’t find your Tribune after looking earefully for it, call 15 or 16 and it will be delivere: special messenger. Register complain’s Casper’s Shame ») Tt was a terrific indictment against the city of Casper, when, from the federal court bench Judge Kennedy, in sentencing McShane, Davis : und Poole, Casper dope peddlers, to the prison, |] for him to si “The Sandbar district of Cas- per is the worst in the state, if not in the Unit- ed States. It is going to be broken up if there is anything this court can do to that end. This crime is just about as serious as murder. When a man is killed the end comes suddenly and that is the end of it, but you people using the var- ious ways in which dope works, send a person to hell by slow degrees. You make people irre- sponsible and then lead them to their degreda- tion.” The court was fully informed when it deliver- ed its seathing denunciation of dope and those Who traffic in it. There ve been many offend- ers brought the court from this city They all come from this district. 3+ would seem that authorities have, been lax in permitting criminals of t type to defile the community, even for a brief time, with their obnoxious pres- vnce and works of destruction. The shame that is attached to the city of Cas- per every court session by the arraignment of a before group of narcotic offenders is a disgrace no be good citizen desires for his home town. It is a shame he will not patiently endure for long. That new victims are being constantly added to the list is plain, from the fact of the presence of dope purveyors in such numbers that officers of the law occasionally pick them up and take them before the court. These officers could take many more. They could by systematic effort clear the Sandbar section of all of these crim- inals. And for the sake of the respectable ele- ment that inhabits this district, it ought to be done. It ought to be done also on behalf of those who own valuable business and other property in this part of the city. In fact, the city and the county ought to join in a thorough renovation of this section to the end that it be no longer a re proach to and a stigma upon the fair name of the city. i No possible alibi or excuse ‘s valid upon the They ure all charged with the execution of the laws against dope, liquor, prostitution, gamb- ling and other offenses known to exist more or less openly in this district. The people who par- ticipate in these things are in no way desir- able citizens and are in every sense parisites “4 upon a community devoted to serious matters. 4 An old fashioned house cleaning is strictly in order, if the people of Casper would rid them- selves of the reputation that has been fastened upon them by the acts of undesirables who have drifted here for the purpose of making an easy living by preying upon the weak and the unfor. tunate. We are certain the moral and the Jaw abid- ing, the honest and well-meaning among the city’s population, and they are away in the ma jority do not desire the city of their home to be branded from a federal court bench as a place for breeding the most despicable crimes in the , calendar. Hy i ; i i | } Paying Tribute This country gained much from the World War, other than war profits. These are tran sient and quickly dissipated. It was in some- thing far more substantial. It gained from the protection in an industrial way that the war brought about. Before the war, we the people of the United States were paying tribute to certain other coun- tries. Take the matter of dyes for instances. We were buying our dyes from Germany and our textile industry 1 doing was. paying tribute to that country. We had neglected to supply tar- iff protection but the war shut out foreign dyes with the result that today practically all the dyes used can be made here just as satisfactorily as they can be in any other part of the world and there has been a marked benefit to industry after industry as a result. Before the war we were importing the lense: used in photographic apparatus. During the war we learned how to produce the glass and inake the lenses. These are only two of the industries that have sprung up here as a direct result of that war. It i difficult to measure in dollars and cents ue to us of these industries, but it is very ¢ egioying the proseperity we do were it not for these industries, When we import goods that we could just as|{zl well make in this country, we are paying tribute! to the steamship lines tlmt bring them to our shores, we are paying tribute to foreign indus _— — , rtain that at this time we would not be} dustry, if we do not build up industries of all sorts which will call for the greatest possible efforts of our scientists, then we will have to pay the penalty during and after the next great war. | It is science with which modern wars are fought. Science is supported by industry. Dif- ferent branches of science are supported by dif ferent industries. If science is to be really worth while during a war it is necessary that the in-} dustries it makes possible be developed to the | greatest possible extent. In other words that the science be applied. They may talk about the army and navy. They! may talk about the aerial war craft. [t matters whether or not we have these things. than it | does we have all the industries needed for self-| protection in case of war. We had to develop some of these during the last war. We won't have time in some future war. If then in adaition to tribute we are not to be called upon to pay indemnity, we must look closely to our protective tariff and see to it that every phase of our industries is adequately pro tected. When the word protection is applied to| the tariff, it should mean protection in every sense of the word. Our Maritime Prestige There is cause for gratification over the an- nouncement t the shipping board has mad n agreement with a private steamship line for |the operation of around-the-world steamship serv! The board has sold a number of its| steamships to one of the old established lines’ with the express agreement that these ships operated in world service for five years. intention of the operating company to employ also a number of iis own vessels there- | by giving the United States sailings every two ks with w ninety day period to make the cir-| of the globe, The greatest value of this service lies not so much in the opportuni forded for the trans-| portation, freight and passengers as in the prest- ige given to the United States, to the American flag, and to American shipping, in the main tenance of a service of this kind. Most passen- gers and most goods can be transported equally as well in ships making passage between distant ports and return over the same cou Zut there is something that appeals to th in a shipping service that goes entirely around | the world. This service will have an advertising value fo er than that which would be pos sessed by s traversing the same distan in going half the way around the world and back ain. | There is another incident in connect |this contract entered into by the shipping boar: |which will have particu value to the United \s A dozen of the ships bear the names: of {American presidents. These names alone will ‘have a very al advertising value in im- | |pressing upon the minds of people wherever | these ships touch the fact that they are Amer- | ican sh and in a measure representatives of | the American government, for the United States will have a call upon the ships in case of an em-} lergenc Th ports at which the vesssIs will touch on York, their round-the-world service Ifavana, Cub; 'Balboa, Pa are, New Canal Zone at Angles, Honolulu: Kol Shanghai, Hong Kong, Manil Penan{ x, Co.| lombo.t ypt, Port Alexan- dria, Marseilles and Hoston, | Not Overwork Academic elements in polit are represent- ing that American presidents brutally sae- | rificed on the altar of overwork. They are offer- i to relieve unfortunate occupants of the} \ te House of their strenuous duties by creat-| ing four or five more departments or “cabinet positions. It is to be hoped that President Cool-| jidge who seems to be a common-sense, bard-boil- nder will not fall for these kindly bureaucrats—he knows hard work never hurt anybod More presidents have had their careers short jened by banqueting, strong dark cigars and so- 1 high-life forced upon them, than by. the| cruelties of hard work, or even the worriment of appointing people to office. The bureaucrats are always Teady to propose new cabinet position, or a new department, nd then fasten the myriad occupants on to tax. |payers for life. A. Roliable: Bulwark The country weekly and the small city daily re the people the facts, and seldom resort io cense in criticism. | The institution of the freedom of the press is! so firmly entrenched in this country that any attempt to curtail it instantly arouses public | resentment. | | People demand facts, facts can be given only through a free and untrammeled press. | No better recognition of this can be found| |than in the fact that, when a dictator arises in| any part of the world, his first action is to mu: the press. No dictator can progress far without the ai of censorship of the press and of news dis patches. ment ROCK SPRINGS—Surpassing all previous records the total enroll- ment in the night schools in Rock Springs is now 439, the largest en- rollment of any night school in the ter. ‘The scouts were desirous of find- ing a pole for the new school and with Dave Jones as guide they searched the st for the finest possible specimen. Cutting it down her first experience in handling sheep, but she will undoubtedy make @ success of it, as she has large tracts of land which produce an abundance of alfalfa hay and in the north part of the county she has Pure Cocoanut oil —refined Peanut oil churned in sweet sterilized milk—with necessary salt—that’s all BOROE CHORCHOROROBCE®3 CDOROROROHOR DVO solves the coffee problem at once and for all time for the housewife who has many tastes to please. Here is a coffee with mellow richness, flavor and fragrant aroma that suits the great majority of coffee drinkers. For years it has been blended so as to make it the coffee for everybody. ADVO has been tested against all—and ap- proved by most tastes. You can serve ADVO Coffee with assurance. It will please every member of your family. Your guests will praise it. The first taste proves its deliciousness and excellent quality. No other will do, once you have tried ADVO Coffee. Try ADVO tonight. Give your family a real coffee treat! ‘They'll notice the difference. Order a can of ADVO now At All Grocers! BLENDED, ROASTED AND PACKED BY THE McCORD-BRADY COMPANY CASPER Sheridan Cheyenne Lead Rock Springs ie, |=" who must please the whole family ADVO Coffee now comes to you Vacuum Packed with all its delicious freshness, flavor and fragrance sealed in the tin. We could not improve ADVO quality so we improved the container. With this new air-tight container you get all the richness of superfine coffee —just as it comes from the roasters. It is your guar- antee of getting every potnd of ADVO Coffee in Perfect condition. To open, simply turn the key. : You'll like ADVO lad ce ep)

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