Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 9, 1923, Page 18

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PAGE SIX Che Casper Sundap Cribune some people think perhaps half a million, who ee belt se — reason or another suffered pretty e Casper Dally une issued every evening ai ‘rom rar. disa The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at Casper, | chow, neataliatrat, bored "sutdeed ie ee Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune Building, opP| av. Many of these cases are referred to as posiolfice. shell shocked, yst some of th rr ‘saw. the Editor Tribune: Upon reading an | taxes collected from the white man, fhe Casper Sunday Cridune i 839 j g The Texas Viewpoint é Re tered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second trenches. The mejority of the men went through | {oe See pede ea, T ac] 224 then the white man, knowing ome el matter, November 22, 1916, the war without suffering serious results, and| frst thought that some good Re-| ‘® Childish trresponsibility of the Diack Business Telephones _____....---15 ana 1¢| they have profited by this experience. But there| publican brother was haying his| sro has been as patient witn him “Brauch Telephone Exchange Connecting All are no doubt a large minority who incurred more | little joke at the expense of the peo-| a3 any man on earth could be, and ? gO Departments. or less bone losses, both those who were | ple of the south, for if the subject the physically disabled and others who seemed to| Under discussion was not so serious by we By et lose their grip in various ways. A large number |'t would really be laughable. In on of these cases need money aid. Some need most Advertising Representatives to get to work at a regular job; giving perma- Prudden, King & Prud¢en, 1720-23 Steger Bids-, Ch! |nent employment in such occupations as they cago, I'l, 286 Fifth Ave., New York City; Globe BIGs- /are fitted for would help more than a money . Mass., Suite 404 Sbaron Bldg., 55 New Mont-) ,i¢¢. this article which ts publishe? under | hate them. We will not discuss the the heading of “Their New Free uestion of the “superior” and dom,” the editor strikes at a ques- tion which for many years has been | north may be called upon very socn a serious problem to every thinking | to settle this question among them- man of the south. It is the easiest] selves, but we ¢o contend that the a 3 o San Francisco, Cal. Copies of the Daily 2 .. If the country has several billions of dollars} thing in the world Mr. Editor, to] white man ef the south haa the 5 of representatives. As the ht- are on file in the New Eheim Ra to give away, it would be far better to divide| make assertions, and often we] God given right to choose his own nn wall ee Upsiecee” Chaton : Qnd San Brakiecd. of Sere it up among the men who have suffered ser-| thoughtlessly assert things we can-| friends and associates, and wo allow James R. Mann and Frank W. Mon- Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©) Jious injury a physical, mental or business] "°t prove. There are always two| the negro this same privilege. Now | submit quietly when a negro or a| dell, Mr. Longworth has gained a Me - way, than to throw it indiscriminately in a gen. | *!es to ® question, and referring to | the south does not need the negro, | white man elther is guilty of a| skili and knowledge that will be in- SUBSCRIPTION RATES eral bonus to all. The country ought before long| t Sbiect under discussion, there} and he is not the only one who brutal crime lke this? valuable to the Republican party 2 By. Carrier: and Outalde Otte 39.00|take a census of all the former service men. to| '*,'™° sides to the negro question. | tolls and pi steele yl ene Ce eee yi ee eee (me Year, Daily ond Sunday One Year, Sunday Only _----. Bix 2 Daily and Sunday Three Months, Daily and Sunday One Month, Daily and Sunday -. which the gditor so learnedly places | the south is a man of the town and lor” lage tse hes Ledeen Sree We Want Peace before his readers. Now Mr. Editor,| city. There are rfore negroes Persons outside of congress are in fairness to the people of the] crowded together in the shacks of aware of the severe tax which ! ‘The people of the United States south, allow a man who for many| Birmingham suburbs than on the imposed upon the strength and | #7¢ interested in peace at home and years has been closely associated | farms of any two counties of the vitality of the floor leader. ‘The| #2Foad and by entering the World learn their present condition, and it should give generous help to those who suffer the marks of ~=4 the war. Whatever money the country can afford —, ‘or should be spent in this way. Per Copy ---_--. Te with the negro, and who knows | state of Alabama. There are more | the editor of the Tribune that there | men who have filled that place have | W8% *isnified a willingness to co By Mail Inside § * him as no man north of the Mason | negroes in the city of Atlanta and! will be no more lynching of the| been fortunate in dame oaceine | De WAT Wrath: Shesreet: of ‘the, wortd One Year, Daily and Sundar — Give Them a Chance and Dixon line will ever know him, ys ing of possessing e other cities and towns of than can be found on the farms of any two dozen counties of that temperaments, a sense of fairness, = Leptin eres o fC Srgget ace you in advance, Mr.| abundant humor and a camaraderie | theY 8 eer, pal which Editor, for placing these facts be-|that kept friendships intact. These sayacan katate: eee <i pay rane fore the good people of Casper, and | qualities are notable in Mr. Long-| {" operation aay ee oe The negro of the south is not a/ the great state of Wyoming, I am.| worth. In addition he has youth| PUrden of psace enforcemen nee farmer, but he is a city man, and SPENCER J. ADAMS. | and rugged health—Washington | Uncle Som. The United Miates has with the leved it! exception of a month or’ Dallas, Texas. Post. through with war end ready for peace and until it has reason to be- Neve so its people will oppose en- trance into a World Court—Lynn One Year, Sunday Only -..-. negroes in the south. Six Month, Dally ané sunday Thanking to place before the readers of the Tribune, the facts in regard to the negro of the south. In doing this, we will speak of the negro as a race and not as an individual, and we promise to make no statement that may not be easily verified by any one who cares to investigate. At the close of the war between the States, the negro was turned It is becoming a very pertinent question, why Three Months, Daily and Sunday we send men to congress, to the state legislature One Month, Baily and Sunday -------- and to the city council. Are they sent there to All subscriptions must be paid in advance and th®/ do the will of the people, or what in their hon- Dat'y Tribune will not insure delivery after subscri>/o-+ jndgement is the best thing for the people? Sion ‘become ons Lent 28 Se ee At the beginning of the government it was cer- KICK, IF YOU DON’T GET YOUR TRIBUNE tainly the theory that such bodies should be leg- If you don't find your Tribune aftér looking|islative. For example, as we look at a congress- eurefully for it, call 15 or 16 and it will be delivered | man these days it is with the consideration as to —_—. Please Decide This The Opinion of Other Newspapers | f (Mass.) Item. to you by special messenger. Register complaints /what he can obtain for his state or district or | }00s® Upon @ poverty stricken and Some strange situation arise in cane before 8 o'clock. what he can get for us as individuals. Scarcely | jcame the “White Man's Burden.” this world of ours, and one of the Tw any consideration is given to whether the thing] ana he has been the white man's strangest on record is the contro-] For results try a Tribune Classi Gold Bricking Britain he secures for hin district, was taken away from Diieden/ -Peoun tak’ Gaye Ree Neal Ford and Linssin who would choose Secretary Mel- | —otS%_ reported from __ Philadelph a. her distric’ at might need more than The white man of the south had Jon's alternative to tax reduction. In his explanation of the British preferential | his own. For the most part we are more liberal | burdens enough, Heaven knows.| wawin Markham, the poet, says | deed, it ts doubtful if a majority tariff whereby the British colonies grant a pref-|in our ideas than in handling personal and pri-| without this added weight, but with | that Henry Ford is another Lincoin. | °° the ex-service men themselves eos: e ‘ vate matters. Suppose the average citizen has|the courage that had carried him! possiply a poet cannot tell the dit-| *T@ !n line behind the proposal for erential or lower tariff in favor of articles im-| twenty-five “ollsee to give Ate gil usually | through four years of fierce war-| ferench between a Ford and a Lin- aapenes compensation. Many of ported from the mother country, in exchange | chooses the object that, in his opinion, does the| *#'® ®nd which had gained for him | coin, but any garage man can.— bad re baby would hesi- 4 for preferential treatment on the part of Great|most good for the most people, it is not given for the ‘sdmiration of the civilised ‘world: | ‘Los: Angeles Tisaee. 1 ee ari Md ° fee 7 he took this burden and he has thelr patriotism. It is not denied Britain, a London correspondent sheds much = eee of the man who has, but for the one pedevtery ae from that that, to thousands of them Petsgs light upon preferential or reciprocal tariffs. A|Who has not. How Often Have You Said--- I WISH I could have seen that picture day until the present time, and thai| Virginia and the Bonus = [in France or in American canton. 2 5 he British Colonial Congress al constituents are not entirely | too, in spite of all the abuse hurled ments meant a heavy financial preferential tariff such as the Britis ;._| blameless, because the average congressman is|at him from across the Mason and| Of the twelve senators and repre-| Sacrifice, but what of it? Service to is a reciprocal tariff, lower rates of duty being granted upon the imports of certaian articles an arrand boy most of the time. The bloc method | Dixon Une. Now in all these long] sentatives from Virginia in con-| one’ flag in time of great need sure- is an enlargement of this system for, when an| years, what has the white man of | gress, two only will vote for the|ly has its own reward. It brings a 5 i i y “ the south done for the negro. He] soldiers’ bonus Dill. These ure| satisfaction that no pay in money OR xchange for lower rates|individual by himself cannot obtain what he ‘ from one country in & Bt ¥ thinks he wants, he hunts up other people with | "2% fed him, he has clothed him,| George Peery, of the Ninth, andj could. Besides, the great majority JUST MY LUCK to be out of town when they showed of duty on certain other articles imported from the same desire and they lustily promise to lick | "4, he has taxed himself to the | Thomas W. Harrison of the Seventh of veterans are able-bodied men, that picture. ths ‘other couubey, somebody if they do not secur bie ¢ th limit to build school houses, and| district, respectively. Senator Glaas,| quite competent to look out for Pp . ‘The question of reciprocity has often been dis tec, ey y not secure what they are] oven colleges for him in order to| when he was secretary of the treas- | themselves in the battles of peace us * OR eq rec! J -|after. cussed and it has been adjudged an unsound eco- nomic policy. There can be no such thing as true reciprocity in competing products, and un- der a purely protective tariff, to grant reciproc- ity in non-competitive products is simply to “hand the other nation a gold brick.” That is, we sacrifice no protection on any American product in exchange for some concession on the part of the other party to the agreement. We give nothing that is of any value to us, nothing that we would not and do not give without any consideration whatever. We admit non-compet- itive products free of duty. A congressman should keep in touch with pub- lie sentiment in his home district, but when pub- lie sentiment is mainly a desire to “touch” the public treasury for the henefit of a locality or a clique, he betrays his oath of office by grant- ing a favor that is not for the best interest of the entire country. There are mighty few statesmen in congress these days. There might be more, if they had a chance to do anything but chores for constitu- ents. In days gone when it took a week or more for a letter to reach the national capital from a person back home and there were fewer tele- educate him and lift him up from] ury during the second Wilson ad-| they did in the battles of war. his originally uncivilized condition. | ministration, was characteristically}| For the care and comfort of the Any fair minded {ntelligent negro] outspoken against the movement] men disabled as a result of the late will admit that the taxes paid by| for adjusted compensation, and is| struggle with Germany, the govern- the negro.of the south amounts to little compared to the taxes white man. paid by the those who fail to see merit in the | appropriation made for them. But and this same negro will admit tha: | bonus proposal. Virginia is opposed to a bonus ior AT the great bulk of the money re-| ‘The percentage of the state's rep- | able-bodied veterans at the expense | THE quired to build his schools, pay his| resentatives in congress favorable | of federal] tax reduction—a matter teachers and buy the school books] to the bonus is, perhaps, just about | that affects everybody, including the for his children comes out of the] the percentage of Virginia voters | veterans themselves. And, if it we:e 1 WAS SICK, but if it ever comes again Well, Here You Are expected to be a strong factor in| ment cannot spend too much. Not the coming fight on the side of] @ murmur will be heard against any Possible to submit the question to STARTING NEXT SUNDAY @ referendum, it would not be at all surprising to find a majority of the Seven of the Best Pictures Shown, Returned by Why Evade the Issue ? ex-service men on the side of tax ul reduction.— Richmond _Times-Dis- Her ea Ste By FRED PATEE ‘There is no use trying to evade the ——— : EVERY DAY Big Jim Cramer®told a story the] issue, we have got to have a hard) Why One City Mourns A NEW PROGRAM other night that made n hit with/ surface betwen Casper and Glen-| me. He said a Sunday school teach. | rock or lose the money it has been fifteen years since er was asking his class, who was! ben spent on that road within the| Dr. Frederick A. Cook led atrium Every Program a Wonderful Feature and a High the greatest man in America, and | next eo years. ante only ioe that] phal parade over the boulevards of Class Comedy one boy spoke up and named some! has n spent, P wl we} Kansas City and wore a wreath of man that he thought was the great-| shall’ have to spend to try to keep| honor about his shoulders. It the THE MOST SENSATIONAL RUN OF PICTURES est man, and then another boy nam-|{t smooth an , and open tol decree of a Texas court holds, it EVE WN ed another man,’and so on till one|travel.. Why should we allow our| will be at least that long before he BISHO: IN CASPER boy named Billy Sunday, and sald| money to be wasted in that man-| again visits Kansas City, And, it Loy TRA Ae eateak BET Gicee rome |SasthGEVA ak cestabmarliowcere | eteeerm eee cien oe CUT THIS OUT had converted so many people and|save what we can of it by covering|will be no wreath.—Kansas City graph and telephone wires a member of congress had some chance to reach the statesman class ing of alu to the, peo pier eae ort weer by reasoning individually and with his brethren, erential tariff is up for consideration, the Brit- - i, ish colonies determine how high a rate of duty The Impossible Hiram such ys as the British preferential rates. |Party and Hiram Johnson himself, can very de- Then, in order to make it appear that they have voutly wish to see Mr. Johnson become the Re- conceded something to Great Britain, they im-/publican nominee at the national convention of pore Pa ae of Sty inn tote 1924. The Democratic party might very reason- fee been ohanden &, gold. brick.” ably pray without ceasing for his success, per- That is to be expected, however, because re- ceiving in the voluble Californian the easiest The British proyinces or colonies yield noth- ciprocity is, in its essential features a dishon-|man to defeat Mr. Johnson may have good rea-|trought them to a better way of|the surface with a coat of asphalt} Times. One Each Da: Don’t Mi est proposition. As viewed from the American] sons for wishing to be nominated, but after a|lving. And then another boy said, | or cement? Use the grade and gravel Sa EEDenEEE 7 y ‘ iiss Them standpoint, reciprocity in competing products * ; Z A z No, “Henry Ford was the greatest | for a foundation for a real boulevard. Floor Leader Longworth SUNDAY, DECEMBER 16 e nity pe momentary deliberation we find ourselves still he had shaken the| Lets do it now. ’ consists in the sacrifice of the duty needed by A : 4 man because he had “Smith” in order to enable him to meet foreign bothered to know what they can be. Certainly | devil out of more people than any SS aaa ‘The organization of the house of “THE OLD HOMESTEAD” competition, so that the products of “Jones” may | the prospect of election does not figure among | man tn pee And right anay| For results try a Tribune Cleeai | representatives will bring to the receive some concession in the way of lower rates | them. Advertising? Hiram scarcely requires any | {it sre out over the Yellowstone | Lede front Representative Nicholas Long: Fables and Kinogram News es duty, gee ones eer in ena aN -|now. And yet Hiram’s slouch hat is definitely sion to ie other contracting nati n. s Fy ; +. an. | that boy was right. does not sacrifice any of the protection needed in! the sahaae gg ne speed xeP, The Yellowstone Highway would by him on his own products. He simply trades |Tesenting the latest sonian theories, plus | snake the devil out of anybody right the protection needed by “Smith.” That is an-|the very clear intimation that all others are | now. I rode up from Glenrock few Here «you’llifind other case of “gold bricking.” In fact, reciprocity | imitations so pitiful that the party will make | 4#¥s ako ina ie ne eas that ¥: and preferential tariffs, are, in the final analy-|the mistake of its maturer years if it disre- | Wa* gvenly balanced and vet! loaded, eed any ne th suet palige i gil a|#ards Hiram in favor of Calvin or Gifford or| miles per hour, and as I happened Highway, day after day, and I knew MONDAY, DECEMBER 17 THOMAS MEIGHAN ‘ “THE BACHELOR DADDY” the genuine East- man. line: Auto- ; ride 1 he back it head : blind man ought to be able to see the brick crop-| anyone else. bumped the top of the car at least||| graphic Kodaks Mermaid Comedy, “Cold Chills” ping out. Hiram Johnson has at one time or another}, qozen times in the 24 miles. Do $6.50 up; Kodak News Weekly been all things to all men. When it served best | you ont that a real highway? Ane Fun, ‘Kodak Ac Bs hee ome se TL . ” +. . Oh! Boy, where were you last vat : aa Standardizing the Bar to do/so, he ‘served the Rostslof/papital, in: tH080 | pn eaay?a “Din cod appen #0) bs TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18 days the organs of the plain peepul rose up to cessorics, Laymen as well as lawyers will read with in-| denounce him—but Hiram got elected. In later terest the announcement of the American Bar| years when it served better to cater to a differ- association of a list of some sixty university + Fi law schools which either are accepting or have ent crew, Hiram became the friend of the plain promised to accept the association’s standards. |Peepul, and the San Francisco papers that had These standards are by no means unreasonably | belabored him of old became his vassals and ab- high—acceptance of studends only after two|ject admirers. Hiram still got elected. Then ears 3 o = library; enough teachers giving their entire|Hiram as he was and as he is—before taking time to the school to insure personal acquaint-|#nd after taking, once so familiar in the liter- ance and influence with the student body. The|ature of proprietary panaceas. Hiram has been rrdeaare for Pie nceteer S the qualifications | reactionary. Hiram has been progressive. Hiram or admission to the bar are progressing. i _ Hi i Of course there are elements higher than those etd een Lgeete be esa ce Bt sty Rene gE which are merely scholastic in fitness for the|*2™ there. Now Hiram wants to be president bar. They are beyond the reach of standardiza-|and thus fulfill the aspirations which no doubt tio Jertificates of good moral character” are|his parents, like most others, expressed as they easily obtained. But sensitiveness to the obliga-| bent over his cradle tion of good faith, of duty to clients, of duty to 5 ., : $ ‘Twenty years ago New Jersey and the courts, of which the lawyer is an officer,| Senator Johnson's hope and expectation is to} tnaiana were still building gravel rs cannot be tested in this way. They are tested in| C@Pitalize for his political aggrandizement the] pikes all over those two sintoe. ‘To- When you bring us your films, you exercise 0 silois Sava eieee aaa aed’ animosity . i day almost every foot of highway : Sood, the exercise of the profession, and every lawyer | supposed stimpeihy Of) the PArieriia Ds BPOPla te: | ea) leeitolitaata te areeaG unis! te are sure of developing and printing knows who has and who has not met the test| ward foreign entanglements. We wish we could| now a hard surfaced highway with = satisfactorily. - believe that, if the American people were on|elther @ cement or an asphalt sur- of the satisfactory sort, Most of us cannot avoid the impression that : ip i att face under the heavy travel that has a very large amount of litigation that comes |ft¢ for membership in the league of nations, | XO “iotea hy the motor cara, the before the courts could be avoided if lawyers | Mr. Johnson would not be out-Wilsoning Wilson| motor trucks, and the tmmense We Carry All Sizes In Kodaks and Complete were frank with clients and frank with opposing|in his perfervid advocacy of that very thing.| tonnage which has been diverted Line of Accessories lawyers. The ideal condition would be to heve| What we do believe is that he would be for it] from the railroads to the highways no one practicing who would consent to take a/hammer and tongs. He is usually for the sort hy he: uae ioe see eniclens | TS wa - bien H DRUGS AND JEWELRY The point is academic, however. Mr. Johnson +6 Mina rs . oft ;. ies try to keep a smooth surface with “phony” case with the hope of “putting something | (¢ ¢hing he thinks will yield the most votes, and The ‘Proper Bonus hasn’t any doubt where the people are, and he| very heavy wet snow would soak 111 East Second Casper, Wyo. on the Yellowstone Highway and see how the wind was taking the sur- face over into Converse County? Every loose pebble was blown away. Every car that passed raised some more and not one of those that were raised ever lit within several hun- dred feet of where they were loos- ened, and not one ever got back to the highway grade at all. Stones that were big enough to have killed the giant if used in a sling shot, like cna town eo faraway it twy||| Lake @ KODAK with you could never be located again. It And as the shutter “clicks,” graphic was a sight. Hundreds of tons of gravel were blown from the grade glimpses of the fun the season brings are transferred to film. “MANSLAUGHTER” Fables News ‘WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19 GLORIA SWANSON —in— “MY AMERICAN WIFE” Christie Comedy, ‘Hazel From Hollywood” between here and Glenrock in that one storm last Thursday. How long will it take at that rate to lose all the gravel we have on that high- way? THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20 THEODORE ROBERTS rade Fea “GRUMPY” Mermaid Comedy, ‘Pest of the Storm Country” FRIDAY, DECEMBER 21 BEBE DANIELS tes j Mant “GLIMPSES OF THE MOON” Christie Comedy, “Green as Grass” on ; gravel we will spend more money | | over.” But that is at present hardly more than sat hard the most iridescent ch dreams. while this is doubtless excellent politics we find | than the cost of a icikompry it hard to accept it as sincere statesmanship. har etre Dies rma pay Vecapaaibe never have a real highway at that. ‘ SATURD. CEMBER knows well how to play on the anti-everybody | it clear through and make deep ruts, AY, DECEMBER 22 Generosity is a fine yirtno, but it ndmgg%to be|string. All up for Little America, boys! To] and heavy mud, in spite of all the practiced with discrimination, or it often does | Hades with everybody but our noble and isolated | workeyou, coula put on them THOMAS MEIGHAN more harm than good. This truth applies to deal- | selves. The pity is we cannot cut this hemisphere —in— ng with the soldiers of the World War. Somefadrift and go soaring into space like the moon Hable. sare leet lal eee 6 entiat tite matt: Bel oapetane and all tae talk ohouwrce spend CASPER CABED VELOUR BEAUTY PARLOR RACK HOME AND BROKE” giving a bonus to the whole lot of them. regard-|the fortunes of the old world would cease. less of their special needs or whether the sold-| Has Calvin Coolidge much to fear fromHiram Specializing ia AND Cameo Comedy, “Plus and Minus” iers individually want it or not. It is a marked | Johnson? Probably not. It is rather too early to PHON E 13 2 SOFT WATER SHAMPOOS ease of indiscriminate giving and will have tell, but it is also too early for a prudent nan YEAST FACE PACKS z Ps ed rm harmful as well as beneficial results. . to Jaunch a boom. The hour chosen for it is ite 211, O-S Bldg—For Appointment—Phone 259-3 There are mapy men who were in the seryice]in itself an indication of weakness, e i Suit £- Pp - =

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