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*°GE SIX Che Casper Haiip Cribune yoming. te posiotfic Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second ass matter. November 22, 1916, nage Connecting All Departments. Business Telephones Branch Te’epho By J. E. HANWAT Advert:sine Representatives : Prudden. King & Prud¢en, 1720-23 Steger Bidg-. C! cago, Tl, 256 Fifth Ave. New York City; Globe Bids. Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sbaroa Bldg., 65 New Mont gomery St.. San Francisco, Cal Tribune are un fila in the New ¥ , “# and visitors are we'come CIATED PRESS t THE A é at Press also the local news published herein. 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A Problem To Solve business must face is how tivities may af- The yital question far political influences and 1 fect it during the coming year. appar- ently growing tendency to settle economic prob- lems by political action to inject the .govern- ment into business fields and to promote class interests by organized political effort at the} expense of the general: interest, all present a certain menace to business progress which can- not be ignored. ~ Important business problems are before Con- gress for action, and if these problems are handled from the viewpoint of political, rather than business conditions, this may well affect business prosperity. In the important fields of taxation and transportation particularly is this true The dominance of political over economic considerations has greatly retarded the recovery of Europe, and may easily hamper the progress of the United States. In this connection, the legislative program of the administration as outlined by President Coolidge in his messages to congress is hearten- ing to the constructive business interests of the country. He endorses the plan formulated by Secretary Mellon for a needed and feasible re- duction in the national taxes and gives it pri- ority among his legislative proposals. Relief from needless and ill-proportioned tax burdens would provide a wholesome stimulus to business enterprise. Necessarily, such a fiscal program precludes the granting of a general bonus to the able- bodied ex-service men. But the President’s uncompromising opposition to a bonus rests not merely upon a desire for governmental economy, but fundamentally upon the convi tion that there is no proper obligation to make | such a distribution of the taxpayers’ money. Stabilization In 1923 Nineteen hundred and twenty-three began with prices, industrial production, and other us- ual indices of the trend of general business con- tinuing a long-sustained advance. This expan- 15 and 13 Siders himself famul pies of the Dally , Chicago, Boston s is exclusive’y entitled to the for publication of all news credited tn this paper 5) that sort which they will understand and re- 3) spect, and that is the tone Mr. Tlughes has tak- trom the dawn of civilization down to the pre: ent woment, there has never been a letter mor The Casper Daly Tribune issued every evening &@ bluntly written or so void of the courtesies o lay Morning Tribune every Sunday, at Casper, Puhlcation offices: Tribune Building, oppo- diploma s Secretary Hughes’s note” Why it is mot “even courteous,” wails the senator. “It is very bluntly discourteous.” We admit that we are rather surprised to learn that the gentleman from Nebraska con ar with diplomatic corres- pondence since the “dawn of civilization” that ‘he is able to give Mr. Hughes’s note a precise rank among Lrusquerie. | However, we are afraid the senator bas over- looked «a uote of two in his hurry, including the one Vienna sent to Serbia in 1914. Musso- “'lin’s recent ultimatum to Greece and sundry pro- ducts of the “State Department” of the same Soviet Government he champions, to the weak natiols unfortunate enough to be its neighbors. | | Aside from this it is a question whether Mr.| Hughes’ answer to Tchitcheien really should be considered a diplomatic communication at all. It certainly is not a letter to a recognized gov- ernment. On the contrary it is a missive to a gang of thugs that violently usurped power lover a helpless people and has a status about! jon a par with that attained by the old pirate | establishments in parts of the East Indies and !Spanish Matn. And while Mr. Hughes’ note is blunt, re- \freshingly blunt, it certainly is not outside the proprieties unless it is improper to tell the truth in a plain way to a gang of liars, crooks and double dealing bullies that are unsheathing daggers against this nation with one hand while | they extend the other in pretense of friendship. There is just one tone to adopt with cattle of | en. It really is pitiful to find that a man with! lability enough to be elected to the upper house} of Congress is so blind, so gullible as to think} otherwise. A. Rebabuhet Pahehoed muel B. Amidon, of Wichita, Kansas, Dem- ocratic Nat Committeeman from that state and western leader of the McAdoo forces, gives out the following statement: “Farmers in the Middle west are nearly bank- rupt, while eastern manufacturers are making fortunes. The situation is dye to the tariff. Because of conditions in Europe there is no market for Ame: ain there and the tariff} is so high that European manufacturers cannot compete with those in America. The remedy is a lower tariff.” This is a new statement of an old falsehood. It is a part of the campaign of deliberate mis- |representation of facts which Democratic party ‘leaders and free trade organizations as well as} |internationalists have been rying on in this} country for ay So long as such false- | | { } |hoods ‘are persistently circulated there is noth- jing to be done except to set forth the truth pa tiently and repeatedly. | First, the statement that the tariff is re-| {sponsible for, the lack of European markets for | American farm products: The following fig- \ures are taken from the official reports of the United States Department of Commerce. The} following were the total values of our exports of {farm products, food animals and foodstuffs for |the fiscal years indicated, together with the per- jcentage such exports were of our total exports: Crude Percent Foodstuffs Percent foodstuffs and of total maunfac- of total Year food animals exports tured exports | 1910 S109,828320 G42 34 15.16 | 1911 103,401,553 14.01! 1912 99,899,270 14.69 | 1913 181,907,266 13.28 /1914 137,495,121 293,218,326 12.50 | 1928° 228,031,000 474,764,000. 15.00 Chr Casper Deily Cribune Too Much Dope KEMMERER. — Something weat wrong this week with the chlori- nator where embalming fluid in) some form or other is injected into the city’s drinking water in the hope that the germs and bacteria will be assassinated before the water comes in contact with the delicate mings of the taxpayers’ stomachs. There has been a universal com- plaint from all quarters for several days at the excessive amount of chlorine which has made the city water almost undrinkable. The Oregon Short Line railroad company, however, still continues to look after the physical well being of its patrons and employes for s¢c- curely fastened to the wall above a modern drinking fountain, which bubbles merrily the while, is a neat red and white sign: “‘Don't Drink this Water.” Good Building Year ROCK SPRINGS.—Althougch 1923 has been considered one of the best years tn the building business in the history of the elty, the total amount as represented in building permits did not come up to the rec- ord of 19 In 1922 the permits Issued were considerably over the $400,000 mark, while this year the permits issued will fall about $25.000 under. The permits granted for buflding do not include all build ings erected in the city. as no per mits have been secured for the erection of buildings by the U. P. Coal company, and quite a number have been completed by this com- pany. In all some 70 permits have been granted during the year, 60 of them being for dwelling and the remain- der for buildings of a business char acter. Of the larger buildings com- ing under the latter designation there is the North Side State bank building, the Brooks building on P. street, a half dozen business blocks jon Pilot Butte avenue, the Sto-k Growers, and others. Several of the buildings for which permits were granted in 192 jeted during the past 5 least one, the Elks’ home, not be completed before 1924. pai oa A will Community Building POWELL. — An provement being made along the highway four and one-half miles east of Cody, is the construction >° the Upper Sage Creek community building. This is being built by a corporation of public spirited peoie of that neighborhood, and is aided by chers generally throughout the Cody country. In the corpoc.. | tion for erecting and maintaining the building are Arthur Pearson, president and a leading spirit in the undertaking; Earl Newton, Hen-y Dahlem, Albert Schultz and Fred important im *Ten months only, ending October 31. | The ten months of 1923 shown in this table ‘were all under the Fordney-McCumber _ tariff. During those ten months the American farmer had. greater foreign markets for his products jthan he did in any one of the five years prior to jthe World war. Second, Mr. Amidon says, “the tariff is so high that European manufacturers cannot com pete with those in America. The following are the imports of manufac- tured goods ready for consumption as shown by It Happened in Wyoming Matters and Things, of State-Wide Interest, Wired In, Telephone In, Written, Grape-Vined and Some of It Purloined | American McNiel on the board of directors. The new community building is to be a gathering place for many of the people for a radius of many miles about. It will be used for farm bureau meetings. social gather- ings, dances, and a general meeting place for the young people of that region of the country, who have Sadly felt the lack of some place to congregate. Post Elects Officers BUFFALO.—The local post of the Legion held its annual election of officers last Friday eve- ning and transacted other impor- tant business that came before the members. Financially the Legion is now in good shape with 63 live members have thelr own club rooms, and with the co-operation displayed when they put something across in the way of entertainment they will con- tinue to increase their number as well as their financial rating. The following officers elected: Commander—George Heilman. Adjutant—Jim Gurney. First Vice President—O, M. derson. Second Hynds. Service Officer—Burton Hill. Finance Officer—Harold Graves. Historlan—Cleo Slifer. * were Hen- Vice President — John More Wool Sold made during the past week, of Frank Pomeroy and Willlam Craham, both sheepmen of the LaBarge district, and the wool be- ng loaded from Opal. Report is that each brought 41 cents a pound, the high point of the recent activity in the local wool market. Many others are holding for a few cents more, anticipating a raise between the first of the year, when another clip comes on. Basin Beet Acreage POWELL.—According to Fieid Manager Hammond, the acreage of beets grown in the Lovell factory district for the Great Western Sugar company was roughly 4,535 acres, 1,935 of which were on the Powell flat, 600 at Basin and,the remainder 2000 divided among the districts of Kane, Lovell, Cowley, Deaver, Mantua. Mr. Hammond says the beets about Manderson and Basin aver- aged slightly heavier yields per ton than up in the Shoshone valley country. The average at Basin was 12 tons, whereas it was 11% tors in the Lovell area and only 10% tons about Powell. A year ago the average in the Powell country was 11% tons. ae Overlooking a Way It doesn’t seem to have occurred to most Congressmen that one way to reduce taxes and at the same time pay the bonus would be to dispense with the well-known pork barrel.— Rochester Herald. The Opinion of Other Newspapers O, Tempora; O, Mores ! Thirty years ago Grover Cleveland! m has no place Since Cleveland’s sm has made a piace self in this democracy and is \ menace to be very existence of the ~overnment."—Leavenworth (Kans.) Times. ! wet ene The New Year | | By Cora Easton Kitts Ancients’ belief must have been right When they called New Year “Go- dess of ight,” ‘The January, Janus, “God of begin- nings,”’ { “Guardian of the Gateway of Heaven,” Heaven—Happiness; The Polar star Guiding us onward from afar To the h'lls beyond, where ambition leads O’er rocky climb to noble deeds. And glistening the rocks among Are garnet jewels, by ancients sung As fitting emblem of the day; Constance. fidelity Alway. The Snow Drop, “Morning Star of Fiowers,” Bravely springs from icy bowers, As white as the page on which to begin Write we with our heart blood now therein As red as our jewel, the gatnet, and fair, For the past is gone and Destiny's star Shines high o’erhead and will lead us on. To Shoe Prices and Tariff A palr of shoes can be bought Canada for $9 that cannot be ‘ated on Broadway in New York for less than $15. If shoes, hides and leather were on the free list in Canada, while a tariff was laid upon them in the United States there isn’t a@ free trader 'n the world who would not positively known that the ini quitous hich tariff was respons!b’e for the difference in the price. But WATCH FOR THE AuBi€ NINETY AND NINE sion of activity was accomplished despite the) jthe official reports of the Department of Com presence of a number of unfavorable factors merce for the fiscal years indicated: in the general situation. Among these was a /1910 $367,723,267 1913 $408,178,714 marked lack of balance between wages in dif-|1911 361,422,180 1914 *449,318.214 ferent employments and between prices of im-|1912 360,018,963 1923* 641,188,000 portant commodities. Notwithstanding such hindrances, it became} evident early in 1923 that production in many lines was attaining a menacing pace. There was widespread fear that a drastic reaction was impending. Instead of a general depres- sion, however, there followed gradual recessions in industrial production and in prices. And there was no occasion for disturbance of the credit structure. Subsequently, production and distribution of commodities—with only moderate changes in the total employment of labor—have been main- tained at levels for the most part above thos for the corresponding, and generally prosperous period last year. But the various branches of business have shared very unevenly in the year's prosperity. teadjustments, made necessary by the aftermath of the war and the reaction from the extravagant expansion of 1919-20, are still in process. Extracting the Joy The Democratic National Committee evi- dently composed of Bourbons who never learn anything and never forget anything, offer their contribution to the Yuletide joy by telling the people that, on their six billion dollar Christ- *Ten months only, ending October 21. During the first ten months of 1922, nine months of which were under the Underwood tar- iff, insofar as manufactured products were con- cerned, Europe sold to-us goods in the value of $799,567,937, while in the ten months just ended under the Fordney-McCumber tariff, Europe sold to us goods in the value of $970,655,092. Taking Europe by countries, we find that Belgium, under the Fordney-McCumber tariff, jincreased her sales to this country from $44,- | 000,000 to $57,000,000; Denmark from $2,500,- |000 to $5,000,000; Germany from $96, 34,000,000; Italy from $48,000,000 to .000,- 000, the Netherlands from $53,000,000 to $66,500,- '000; Sweden from $22,000,000 to $30,000,000; the |United Kingdom from $292,000,000 to $347,500,- | Of the years above enumerated, all of 1914 jand part of 1913 were under the Underwood tar- iff. All of the ten monthes of 1923 were under the Fordney-McCumber tafiff. The figures show that our imports of manufactured goods {for only ten months under the present tariff jare from 50 to 74 per cent greater than they were jfor the entire yearly periods in peace times prior |to ae war, when European production was nor- mal. To make more ridiculous Mr. Amidon’s as- inas gifts the protective tariff laid a tax of ap- imately one billion dollars. With an om- ence peculiar to haters of protection and confined to free tr: s they are able to show (?) that fifteen per ¢ h in round figures is the average duty on all imports was added to the cost of Christmas purchases, We doubt that the cost of any Christmas gift was increased an iota because of the exist- ing tariff. When a watch costing $1 abroad, the duty thirty cents, and other costs added bringing the landing cost in this country up to| $134 is sold for $9.45, the 0 in the retail price. We sertion that the tariff keeps European manu- jfacturers from competing with those in America the following figures are taken from the last} report of the Department of Commerce: | These figures not only expose the falsity of the charge that the tariff has erected a “Chinese wall” which is keeping Europe from selling goods to the United States, but they also expose jthe falsity of the charge that our isolation from |Europe has resulted in Burope’s ruin. “Ruined”? Europe sold us in the first ten months of this} year goods to the value of $970,665,000. The iff cuts no figure |¥ ri = : ra Ww > i a oe at | olowing table shows what Europe in pre-war the American people were able to affot iD are PE RANENset 2 aee fa . sa9t x kr. : 9 7 & 866, spend six billion dollars in gift-making during sey B60 itd Se the great holiday period, and we are satisfied 45. pacer panies <2) that their ability” to make the purchases is 80 “Tr i large measure due to the prosperity that reis Rola: ih ee aE ta months sold 000,000 more goods dhan she jdid in any entire year of her greatest productive | a y in pre-war days of pei . ; 2 ’ “-ntire campaign of the free traders and Mr. Norris Shocked |internationalists to the effect that either our ay é }tariff or our “isolation” has injured E i Mr. Norris of Nebraska is very much alarm-| i Moon eas injured Europe is a § 3 alarm: | og ra aig ase fi p] oa leet Mr. Secretary Hughes has injured the, 1 campaign based on falsehoods. delicate sensibilities of the Soviet outfi or | Thy g q i i TRUBS cy the wtcice eee Agpitt over | Ww hy not get the facts straight and discuss the in E ; he senza sts that rather than fr he sta i arti in all the history of diplomatic correspondence iti seam aah ilarn te ay hac bered in fifteen months 1 ment of the Fordney-MeCumber * th the éng aniff. Vo end ADVO fora . feel that actually satisfies, of a steaming cup of ADVO and to end up a day’s work well done. goodness morning Its golden-brown Or Men, Who want'body’ in their coffee MEN who like plenty of strength, flavor 8 to this cof- Not harsh or bitter, yet. with plenty of “body” lothing can take the place for/a “starter” in the hits the spot! qf you're 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-BRADY COMPANY CASPER Omaha, Cheyenne, Sheridan, Lead, Rock Springs Hunt WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1924 at Just happens that shoes, hides and The United States in its develop: leather are admitted into the United ment has taken in millions of cit zens States free of duty, while Canada and subjects of other lands. No » levies a duty upon them of 30 per other great modern nation c®uld cent ad valorem. How ts the free undertake such a task of nationaliza- trader to explain such an absurd tion. It is the purpose of foreign situation as that? For the matter of governments to work. upon these that, how is anybody else to explain groups in the United States» They. it?—Iola (Kans.) Register. endeavor to maintain ascendency See | over the opinions and acts of people ‘“ 9 who have become Amercan citizens ‘Superficial Americans [ana have the privileges of | citizen- The United States ts loudly talked of in terms of reproach by superfi- ship. ‘ to cial eltizens who could not carry a That exposes the United Stat deliberated and intelligently d' precinct but would carry napkins if that were the condition of their asso- Propaganda to the like of which 10 other nation could be exposed. The allen effort is to keep Italians th'nk- - ciation with the distinguished or ing as Italans, Swedes as Swede, titled Europeans. They have an in- Germans as German, Poles as Polish ~ feriority complex which makes them etc. and Americans as anything but feminine. They would have the Un ted States marry some foreign nation to reform it, but what they American.”"—Chicagn Tribune. ! ——— really want to do 1s take in washing Cynic to support it. The United States is a reproach to Still, we must say that a good a type of intellectuat or liberal who’ many of woman's activities in her defines Anierican purposes as con- broader sphere look very much like sciously malevolent to other peoples, smooth devices -to sidestep th aggressive against their well-being kitchen and the nursery.—Hous! and their resources Post. The High Grade Spread for Bread * § Nucoa — Pure Cocoanut oil —refined Peanut oil churned in sweet sterilized milk—with necessary salt—that’s all d mononononenoncuenenoncnenenenens nt @cenenenencne: nt 4 AUDITORS i DUCTORS : C i. REIMERTH | MARSHALL ©. KEITH MO Do - Certitied Public Accountant | HERBERT ‘L. HARVEY, MD” pichatinenne. Sea Noa A GUARANTEE REGISTRY CORP. | “**™ Practice Surgery Obstetrics Aud'tors and Accountants—Stock A. ?_ KIMBALL, M ftegistrar und Transfer Agents .. M. D. sos Tt Of Exrliange ide Phone 660 Off ce Ph. 2208 Res. Ph. 17151 TARRY ¥. COMFORT | MARK HL &MITH. M.D, : Auditing ana Accounting ‘hysician and Surgeon Phone 2008 “Suite 18, Daly Bldg.| Office 242 E. Second—Phone 2016 K, C. VAN DENBERG | DR. LNOF eed Certified Fubile Accountant fon pis sician and aufonse In ‘ax Service i; lg. ephono 18 Phone 123¢7~ : LAW7E. ARCHITECTS ee aERS MULVANEY & BARRETT oS DLBOIS & GUODRICH, Archiects) Keoms 11-12, Townsend B.ock Casper, Wyo. Phone 410 Wid, WESTFALL. architect Suite 5, Daly Buildiag. AUTO TOFS AMBROSE HEMINGWAY weer, . Room 332 Midwest Bldg, NICHOLS & STIRRETT iwyers 309-1011 O11 Exi : change Bldg. “ ~ “GEORGE A. WEED: ; 404 Midwest Bu ld ae JOHN RUSSELL LONG 633 S. Center WOLCOTT AUTO TOP SHOP uto Top Mfgrs. ard Unholstering 133 Na Wolcott Street 1 ‘y at Lay Auto Painting 515 Cons. Royaliy Bldg. Phone 40 B. & D. SUPPLY CO. JAMES [. KEM Auto Tops and Keparing—Dayton | 408 Consolidated Itsyally lag Tires and Accessor es—619 E. 2nd.) BEAUTY PARLORS ELITE BEAUTY SHOP HE iM. PATTEN Jorn 225 Midwest Bldg. Ds bea fant 710, 1027 13 E, First Phone MAGENS & MURANE ER |. 206207 Oi Mxthango Bauain; BAGGAGE AND TRANSFER |— 20207 01 Exthince canaing Sa RARE DURHAM & Lowey SHAKLES IKANSFELR Res. Phone 81W Office Phone 313 402 Midwest Bu.ding — WILLIAM 0, WILSON LESLIE M, NELSON, Warehouse ). and Transfer Co., Phone 1234. ) ATRONA TRANSFER, STORAGE AND FUEL CO.—Phone 949 wyers Suite 14-15-16 ownsend Bldg. OGILBEE & ADAMS 210 O-S Bldg. Phone 2217 BAT LERIES OPTOMETRIST ; SPER BATTERY CO. “EYES CAKEFULLY TE Te Car tre Phone 907} EXES CAkur UMLY LUSTED Dre rane rei tbs y Chin UPRACTORS Pe eee fe DR. J. BH. JEFFREY JESSE EV. wR. ANNIE GRAHAM JEFFREY sai - 134 Ss, Genter Suite 318 Midwest Bidg Phone. 706 |. CONNELL, 'D. C., Ph. C. OSIEOP. suite 15. Da'y Bids, Pi me 8194 alla laa = = R. CAROLINE ©, DAVIS M. 5. HARNED, Chiropractor Osteopath y Street fe ic Physician ; 162 Nee mianet Suite 6, Tribune Apart. I’hone 383 De. 1. B. BERQUIST Dr. L. L. WADE guttermeisier Bidg Phone 1757 Osteupathy CE - Over Frantz Shop» Phone 1125K LEANERS - AU10 FAINTING THE SERVICE CLEANERS - Railroad at Jackson Yellowstone Auto Paint 5 Phone 56 First E., Yellowstone a rst Class Auto Paintin DUCTURS = THE CASPER “ER ATH PLANING MILL ui JOE F. THOMAS 938 South Durbiu—Phone 273 Planing ‘Mill and Cabinet Shop WOMEN’ Te a S| Phone .806W 214 West B St." ” 342 South Durbin—Vhone 406 ple alii 2 ARETE roth rc FUBLIC STENOGRAPHER i SURGERY, GYNECOLOGY AND OBSTETRICS ETHEL C. LYNCH R. Lathrop, M.D. F. A.C. 5. Victor Dacken, B, Sc.. M. D. 4 n M. D. EYE, EAR NOSE and TROAT Harmon L. Stanton. M. 8., M. D. Public Stenographer—Notary Public Nine Xears in Legal Work. 1 301 Consetduted Royany Buidmg Phone Office 203 Kes. Phone 5553 KIN AND X-RAY TREATMENT 5 REPAIRIN : GENITO-URINABY DIRBASKS i SHUE IG G. B. Unde: M. D. NORTH © io + s ‘, > ; PATHOLOGISe . Suyematsu 235 Kast . F, O'Donnell, M. D. 5 PHARMACIES | TYPEWRITERS thian, M Casper ‘lypewriter Kxvhange DENTIST New and Kebuilt Typewriters omeisaMettiaeh Mine |qgieeeiecsupotin, a Rena es in aug! a = 113, East Second Street Steels Broce Phone 856 Telephones 54 and 55 } TAILORS DR. WM. A. BRYANT 1 Physician ‘and Surgeon | “. RUBIN, Mfg. Talor 133 .N. Wolcott ‘Off. 113 Kes. ph. 800) | Tailor to Men Se 136 W. Midwest DR. G. S. BARGER iS ———-—___ -- Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Th “ILOKS AND CLEANERS Glasses Fitted | 14] est Phone 908W 133 8. Wolcott Phone 113) | = DR. T. J. RIACH OLSTERING EO Fela le nd Furniture Pack’ . 12 -S is. = le . ack u, SP RSIS O'S PURE ER BUI On JOLSTERING CO.” DES aYEE: AND _ JOHNSON | ‘ 1672M y sict and Surgeon ni: Cah. 200 O-S Bldg. Office Ph. 699 Res. 748) = -OUSES ALLAN McLELLAN, M.D. _|LESLIB, SON, Wi Daly Bldg. Office Ph. 844. Res, 90) and ‘TA, fy Phone Take”