Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
HKIDAY, JANUARY 4, 1924 be obtained at moderaté, cost to em tertain and educate the tourists who PAGE TEN. Che Casper Daily Cribune stone highway merely because they i Pair Slanderers 23 - are ignorant of.the many points of juntil 1925 or 1926 can the effect of the tariff be fully realized—and all the time there will be ‘eg . ‘ cpathews i i ‘A The ¢ )pin 110) Oth . Inrael Zangwill. shou! interest awaiting them along the|stop in those cities with free shows oie Casper Daily — ponear were is - that feeling of uncertainty as to “which way the e n of er Newspapers pbk, raat, Zane 3 noua know isterent availing tem along the| stop in thowe, cities with fee shows | he Sunday Morning Tribune every A \tide will turn.’ . m5 discuss America and. Americans Frontier Days week at Cheyenne it] season. ming. Puiication offices: Tribune Building, oppe- |" Uh TN ver to be a shadow of a doubt jabout the policy of this government ‘concern- t Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second ing protection to sheep and wool, It is too im- 1916, portant a question, economically, nationally and It ts proposed if. possible to inter est clubs in cities along the highway also hotels garages and other lines of business that profit from the | without: quarreling —Toledo Blade. | /s Proposed to acquaint visitors there pa rea eaais an Stent Vote as You Flivver | with the scenic splendor of the Yel- Not Even Vox Pop Road to Popularity jlowstone way in the same manner. er, November 22, ; - Perhaps it will prove that not only| }¢ is pretty difficult beforehand | Mr. Patee says that a projecto- Waitin Telephebed Sa “is and 16|in every way, to be a matter of uncertainty. The). “ord pat the celebrated Ford and ‘graph, capable of throw ng post card] tourist trade and seek contributions ae apart ya 2 |very safety, life of the’ government, may depend to make any sort of guess.as to) W jee tinge eeiiently at lt’ CSRS eee ccrcen; coin be parohanedl from therg 19 detvay th: expense ot selling force is now for Mr. Coolidge for President—Chicago News. oo Always Doing It Just when we think we can make Branch Te'ephone Exchange Connecting All what a coming session of congress! believes that he is the Voice of God. Departments. { ne will do, just as in the case with|—Knoxville (la) Journal. {Gouttieds the ‘services of same per juries. One thing, however, is) Spe ee 7 wure—if the next session of Con-/ Exercising Hindsight = ae peepensend 1A, Cherane 28h Noting that a Democrat the advertising campaign that ts calculated to measurably Increase travel over the Yellowstone route. jupon our having a sufficient domestic supply 0! wool in case of emergency. During the late war} we would haye been unable to clothe our troops | | properly except for the concessions made to us| | by the British, We had already begun to suffer By J. E. HANWAY gress desires to make itself solid with the people it will lose no time Advertising Representatives | King & Prudgen, 1720-23 Steger Bldg., Chi-/ jege, at 236 Pfth Ave. New York Citv; Globe Bids. Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sbaroa Bldg.. 5 New — - gomnery St., San Francisco, Cal. Copies of the Dally Tribune are un fila in the New York, Chicago, Boston) and San Francisco offices and visitors aro welcome. | SOCIATED PRESS MEMBER THE on account of the embargo on woo] imposed dur- ing the war, when arrangements were made with the British government whereby we were allow- ed to purchase foreign wool without its being in danger of seizure by the allies. How would we fre if we should be at war with the British if we had no greater supply of wool than we |both ends meet, somebody moves the jends.—Urich (Mo.) Herald. ——— Wrong Pew » Hiram Johnson fs no doubt a high- ly popular gentleman, but somehow in reducing taxes so far as possible. —Rockvile (Ind) Republican, ~ aer A Look Ahead Politicians who favor the soldier) basis when it was turned over to the bonus {fs political capital this year man declares that the Democratic| party will insist on placing the gov- ernment on an economical basis, why didn’t the Democratic party think of leaving it on an économical Republican: party?—Kearney (Neb.) The Associated Press is exclusivey entitied t0. °08/ now have? We could not for years raise enough |be doesn’t seem quite at home in the| should note that. while payments) HUb- 9 ___ use for publication of all news credited |to satisfy more than half of our needs. We do) Republican party.—Salem News. are relatively light for three years, . . and also the local news published bere’: not do that now in time of peace, and if we were eer the sum proposed for the fourth year | Yes, We Haven't Be sure your Grocer be is estimated at $661,000,000. Four Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©) at war the demand for wool would vastly in- Way to Help Mac _— you Nash’s De- years from now We shall be approach-|_ Europeans should take notice . crease. ‘ “Oy, cious Coffee. Your : es = . -..jing another national campaign.’ that we have quit singing “Over| J SUBSCRIPTION R! What we should do is to insure permanent pro-| Ford ts out of McAdoo'’s way. Now) wat will the voters do then to the There” and faken up a song about coffee taste will Ry Carrier and Outside State (me Year, Dai'y and fundsy ---—- eucweaes to eeenl One Year, Sunday Only ~----. Six Months, Daily and Sunday —---.-—--—-—-—— Daily and Sunday $9.00 | 2.50 450 2.23 if Coolidge could also be eliminated Mac might reasonably consider him- self a darned sight nearer the White House than he ts ever likely to be, except as a guest. — Manchester tection to sheep and wool. We should have, not) one-third of a sheep per inhabitant, but one for every man, woman and. child in the United States. That would make us safe in time of war party responsible for the half-billion in new taxation?—New York World. a tropical fruit.—Newark, (N. J.) Star-Eagle. you why, for it’sa treat. Look for this package. . } Threo Mont “161 " One Month, Daily and Sunday ~~ and would give us such a supply of wool that the | union. . oe T 3 fier ES “Ot | Drice of woolen clothing and other. manufac- sae Deli erent: Picturizing the Yellowstone Trail as By Mail $7.89| tures of wool would be reduced to a minimum in} Why Country Prospered Buy gare fice nus Butter ; One Year, Daily and Sundar --——- eS Ss | tines of pene (Glenrock Independent) licious. ‘ cate ese SA ESS aS, TIT 449} The way to reduce the cost of living is to} La Follette says Mr. Coolidge is % Three Months, Daily and Sunday .-. ---+--- 2.33|increase domestic production so that we shall/the spokesman of big business. Rot| Fred Patee's fertile brain has) Patee proposes to assemble a large One Month, Bally and Sunday --------- -- -tS/have a sufficient domestic supply to meet our) thinks a President ought to denounce| °volved a plan to advertise the Yel-| number of views of Wyoming scen-| ‘All subscriptions must be pald in adv: and t?® own needs. The domestic competition thus cre-|4nd destroy all big business. This|!owstone route to tourists that has/ery, especially of those beatity spots | Da!'y Tribune will not Insure delivery after subscrl >| ated will bring prices down with a thud! republic owes everything to the cir-| met the approval of Wyomingites to| that are accessible from the Yellow TY cnieres pani cacaen (in areaaee: | cumstance that those who establish.| whom {t has been disclosed, and if|stone highway and have them prc DEtIcious 4 OU DON’T GET YOUR TRIBUNE Neetu niontt find your Tribune after, looking | curefully for it, call 15 or 16 and it will be caiverss to you by special messenger. Register complaints before 8 o'clock. Increase the Flocks i i i ibuted to There is a historic declaration attributed to) our old friend John Randolph of Roanoke, which ed it were not men of the La Fol- lette stamp.—Houston Post. >. Old Clothes and Automobiles The high sign of the times is, if you wear sf shabby suit of clothing you own a motor car. “ae | possibly such a deduction would be too Swen | on setae e2 Un ing, broadly speaking, but it is not ont of har-|te tess unanimity as te whe shone mony wtih the conclusions of the National ASSO |nhe the beneficlaries,—Portland (Me.) ciation of Retail Clothiers who have just con: | Express. 2s cluded a sartorial survey of the country. } The rule thus fairly well established does not | Narrow Gauge, Single Track Hold Up Your Spoon a few more as favorable replies to his letters are received as those that have already come to him from men who will benefit from the advertis- ng, the success of the plan will be assured, jected on a screen nightly at Over. land Park, Denver, the camping place of thousands of tourists, most| of whom continue their journey into Wyoming and many of whom tra verse routes other than the Yellow. “C OF FEF. ORC oT valk i y y to kick ; ia reads—“I would walk a mile any day to Kick) cessarily work both ways. A man may own a AUDITORS a sheep.” As we recall this doughty oe \irsit | motor car and still dress in the height of fash-| ison is of the same C4 DOCTORS jan we do not doubt the eutbentiosy ty if ath - ion, though the chances are against that con-jopinion still—Council Bluffs Non- gle, gl ye eae Cc. KEITH. M. D. mark. In all probability tt was ered SS sewer a | ; ce Income Tax Service Otfice Boe Bonth tone ees 4S day when a band of lamblets wanderel’ 1 The anxious retailers of men’s wear have dis- 401 OS Bldg. Phone 761! Private Hostnt it soo ee ' the gates from the back farm and viv some~| covered and recorded a number of striking in-| oe . “SUAMASTER REGEN OOK: . General Practice Surgery eae I what despoiled his rose garden about A je man! stances where regional prosperity was reflected Rising Prices and eee ee aes eae iT aes RIMBAM: AEE iy sion, which engendered a brief spell 0} ee yok: ‘in a phenomenal rush for new cars, but in no Kegistrar and ‘Transfer Agents ‘Office Ph. 2208. Aas taiaines ness. We cannot palieverne greasieastats sens |corresponding rush for soul-satisfying sarments. | Wages Compared 208-11 Of Exchange Blde Phone 660, ALLAN EL . Ph. i Randolph could harbor a pe pi. Indeed, the motor car seems to have become a eh McLELLSN, M. D. 4 against the most useful of all gomestic animes sort of universal excuse for wearing the old suit] By N. Y. Bankers BARRY K. COMFORT —|Pa'y Bide. Ofrice ih. sit.:Rtes. 90 k o i i K as a si . 7 yew 4 From time Lee eae The Ocak Ts. | #nother season. ; 58 ? Phone 2008 Suite 18, Daly Bldg. MARK H. SMITH, M.D. 3 upon sheep for food anc . sand oon Meantime the clothier and the haberdasher pose—as soft as you wish; as | Se eee on ‘hysician and Surgeon i irate ised L nae if It had not. been for |@2Y be supposed to be pondering deeply upon) “New york —nited Press.)— hard as you please; but always | certitiea Ne eRcrountant ree 242 E. Second—Phone 2046 ~~ pied the “Promised Land” if it had ne "ithe destiny of man, That curious biped has fal-| our grandfathers. or at least that ; | Tax Service RR Ges eee the their flocks and herds. Certain it is that con-!jen far from his former high estate, when: tall| pcrtion of them who earned thelr smoother than you had dreamed, | taco none 118 | Physician and Surgeon quering nations of eeare ar + ile oe Bons. {and resplendent hats, embroidered waistcoats | bread by the sweat of their bro\ 17 black de jO-S Bldg. Phone 123 that have possessed a sufficiency 0° - Bona: | snd other impressive articles of apparel gave him! whether that sweat was the produ ‘with ithous erasers ITECTS parte once declared that with sufficient wool 1? \dignity, not to say sublimity. If henceforth he|°f manual or clerkly labor. hai i iy Hage es ) ARCHI LAWYERS clothe his troops he could conquer ne rau Tis to content himself with the rough-and-ready pane of the luxuries which today pying One great reason the Germans were able to “5 | garments of year before last in order that he may | peppers sy indispensable. pert American Lead Pencil Co. ont as long as they did in the late war was be-|\00, nis motor car up to concert pitch and buy A Sat dene eee et eae 220 Fifth Ave., New York 6 erate circum: Wit, J, WESTFALL. architect canse of the fact that they bought up all the} wool it was possible for them to secure, by fair means and foul. The Bnslish have a book called “The Golden | Fleece,” written by a couple of college profes- sors, treating of the industrial history of Brit: | ain in which the statement is made that, “Wool paid for our wars.” It has been the policy of this government, since its very foundation to build up the sheep and wool industry—with a few lapses when vot- ers lost their heads and voted in the party of free trade. This yacillation on the part of the voters, and the folly on the part of the free trade administrations haye done more than anything else to endanger the wool and sheep industry of) the United States. Free traders have claimed/ that the tariff has made clothing high, but the | truth is that free trade has been responsible. | If we had enough wool to supply our needs we) should not be forced to depend so largely upon foreign nations therefor, and we should be able stances. A comparison | wages with the all the new motor appliances as rapidly as they) are invented, the makers of modish garments | will have to employ strategy as well as persua- sion. the last eighty years. Dy Their chief hope lies in womankind which pro-|cheney Brothers, New Yor bank, verbially objects to untidy husbands and fathers.|ers, from their wase records. and Sad to say, however, the female of the species | trom figures of the United States in her own infatuation for motoring, has come | Bureau of Labor Statistics, show to overlook many deficiencies in the attire of the |h3t the high cost of living was a man of the family. far greater problem in 1843 than now, or, to put it differently, white living undoubtedly comes high to day, we have the means to pay for it, whereas eighty years ago the struggle to make ends meet resulted in a lowering of standard of living of te history of cost of living for Business Is Booming Business is booming in the United States. The evidence is before your own eyes. People of good} to the bare. necessities. eyesight have no doubt of the fact. Unemploy-}| The figures issued show that ment has disappeared largely; railroad freight! While the cost of such commodities traffic beats all records; the holiday trade haa |& the Nao eerie eee been the biggest in the nation’s history. pe ds mm : ince 1843, during the same time Everything the free traders predicted has fail-| +), weekly, wago earned has in: ed to come to pass. The people are buying more | creased 85 per cent, or in other Write for booklet on erasers, VENUS Everpointed aud VENUS tht Tost Creamery Butter, per Ib.. Full Line of Fresh Ki PEOPLE’S MARKET “In Rear of New Public Market—Second and Beech Strictly Fresh Country. Eggs, per doz... . Good Potatoes, per 100 Ibs......... Roman Beauty Apples, per box... Fancy Jcenathan Apples, per box... illed Poultry and Fish | Suite 5, Daly Building. AUTO TOFS CASPER AUTO TOP SHOP Auto Trine nig, Upho'stering and | it tina, 633.8. Center Phone 10848 LCOTT AUTO TOP SHOP Auto Top re fa and Unholstering 133 North Wolcott Street “Auto Painting B. & D. SUPPLY CO. t nd Reparing—Dayton meee wats Accessor es—619 B. 2nd.) BEAUTY PARLORS 2 BLADTY SHOP 3 Brine Phone 1027 Asm Was rats 2S eo SEE BAGGAGE AND TRANSFER SEAKLBS LBANSFEL E 5 AMBROSE HEMINGWAy Lawyer, Midwest Bldg. SECHOLA & STIRRED’ awyers: 309-1011 O11 Exchangs ‘Blag. GEORGE A, WERDED 404 Midwest Bu: ding a4 JOHN RUSSELL LONG lorney at Lavy, 515 Cons. Royaliy Bldg. Phone 40 WILLIS | STRIDGER wyer Suite 218 Midwest Blds.. Phone 1193 JAMES P, KEM 498 Consolidated Toyalty Bldg" W, i PATTEN Ationie 225 Midwest Bidz) ‘"" phone 210 MAGENS £ MURANE Room 332 . ., Lawyer: to set the price of wool, not have it fixed for us} foreign products than ever before, because they | words, the weekly wage today will Res. Phone 87 Ultice. Phone 313 206-207 Oil Exchauge Building by other countries. Just why wool clothing is so|have more money to spend than they have had|purchase in such things as cloth- NOTI M. NELSON, Wareh DURHAM & LoWEY 4 + ; am a 7 Pri i 1 M. NE IN, LoUSe - po ES high is explained by the department of agricul-|for at least three years. American producers and | ing, food, heat, shelter, etc., six and aren pre Con Phone ieth. 402 Midwest: Budding ture in several paragraphs of a recent report: “Though the United States is the third country in wool- production, and has produced an aver-! age of 300,000,000 pounds a year for the Jast thir- manufacturers are selling abroad more products than they did in 1913 and 1914 before the World} War; they could not expect to keep up with the} war level. Building operations all over the coun-| one-half times as much as it could in 1843, From this it is apparent that a very large part of the com- munity life in those days was re- duced to the fundamentals of exist- It Is Time to Put Those Comforters Together, So Call At ——— | NATRONA TRANSFER, STORAGE AND FUEL CO.~--Phore 949 BATIERIES | ~ —— WILLIAM 0. AVILSON. bas wyers Suite 14-15-16 Townsend Bldg. OGILBEE & ADAY i LS . i ; ty-five years, it has never met the home demand.|try are at a high level. Export prices of many|ence—enough food. to lve on: \ 210 O-S Bi s j Tarports for some years prior to the war aver-|agricultural products, partigularly cotton, are/enough clothing to keep from CASPER BATIERY CO. Pilone 2217 { aged 200,000,000 pounds. They reached a peak at higher than last year. Retail prices of most art-| freezing; sufficient. shelter to keep y RE 119 East Fifth Phone 907 OPTOMETRIST | 453,727,000 pounds in 1918. Probably a normal icles of ordinary consumption are lower than a|out of the ‘rain; and people went ‘ 4 CTORS | amount which must be imported is around 300,-|year ago thus making lower the cost of living,’ | without many of the things which CHIRUPRA' EYES CAREFULLY restED j 000,000 pounds. Again it is demonstrated to the whole coun-|e have come to consider not as —in— DK. J. 1. JEPFREY | . un ginahen j “American sheepmen have therefore no need| tty that confidence returns and business booms JERBr lew, Hb ROGUES: wR. ANNIE UKAMAM JEFFREY | proper.y {uted to be afraid of overshooting the home demand |#* # Tue ene. the perky of protection and sound The New Second Street Public Market, corner of fq Suite 318 Midwest Bidg hone 705 by { for wool. Since 1921 wool prices have more than pandas say eeree Tere peDowerssa, Meinaty | 5 Second and Beech streets, and get your cotton bats. J _L. 2- CONNELL, D.C, Ph. C. | Seen ans doubled. The problem of selling wool is not to| ional governm HEATING New lot just in, 14-Ib to 3-lb. Full comforter size. _fg| Suite 13. Daly Bids. Phune $ivy | = alts ren.) } create a market, but to take the best advantage = e OSIEOPATH | of one that exists. “The ratio of the number of sheep to popu- lation in the United States has declined since COMFORT without extravagance Serving the Customers The heights to which the radio might rise, eith- If You Don’t Trade With Us—We Both Lose— So Come In orth Kimball Street Phone M07 DK. 1. BE. BEQLIST M. E. HARNED, Chiropractor i DR CARULINE C. Osteoputhic Ph; DAVIS ‘ian 1884. From 1899 to 1913 there were about fiveler in pleasure or business, have not yet been Zuttermeisier Bidg Phone 1757) Suite 6, Tribune Apart, Ihone 389 t sheep for every eight people. Ten years later reached, but each day brings forth the remark- Cc NERS Dr. EL. WADI | “ LEA pathy there were only 2.8 sheep for every eight people, | or about one-third of a sheep per person.” We produce only half the wool we need, de- pending upon other countries for what we should able usese to which this new force of world af- fairs may be put. A new idea which may develop into nation- wide use, is the plan adopted by the American What Do You Want in Furniture THE SERVICE CLEANERS Railroad at Jackson Phone 56 Over Frantz Sho Phone 11258 AU10 FAINLING ourselves produce. We are falling behind in the] gayj 4 = + = Yellowstone Auto Paint & raising aheep per ratio of cieeeoaatetiors AS Sent tribees ate nate ins leer ae Rete eae T k BOCIURS os 1914. Yellowstone? the report says, where we formerly raised five|the benefit of its patrons. x o make your home complete and comfortable? You THE CASPER PRIVATE LAG Ast Ag | sheep for every eight people, we now raise 2.8| The bank’s radio equipment brings to its cus- can always find here what you need in the furniture HOSPITAL. PLANING MILL sheep per eight people,“ or about one-third of a sheep per person.” This would not have been the case of sheep and wool had always been ade- quately protected against foreign competition. People will not raise sheep at a loss. We shall not attempt to pass upon the pro- visions of the wool schedule of the Tariff Act tomers the daily market reports of Chicago and New York and important news of the world. It is a feature that will prove popular and other banks in the nation may well emulate the example of the lowa bank. Here is all the com- fort and health of ra- diator heat without ex- travagance or bother’ Every radiator is a complete heating unit. Gas is the fuel. A Great Servant that will surely please. Second Street line and anything in household furnishings at prices Market Furniture Company Public Market 642 South Durbin—Phone 406 Si SURGERY, GYNECOLOGY AND OBSTETRICS | Homer R. Lathrop, M. D., F.A.C.S. Victor R. Dacken, B. Se., M. D. JOE F, THOMAS Planing Miil and Cabinee Shop Vhone 1806W 214 West B St. ruBLIC STENOGRAFHER ETHEL ©. LYNCH | of 1922, but it appears to afford adequate pro-| B.A. Bat a 4 | Public Stenographer—Notary Public tection to domestic wool, as did the emergency | EYE, EAR NOSE and TROAT ei Nine ears in Legal Work tariff act of 1921, for the most part. Since the| Samuel Insull : “Tremendous changes are Harmon L. Stanton. M. S., M. D.. Paseo Royalty Buiiding rates lave been concededly adequate for two and| coming in America with the development of SKIN AND X-RAY TREATMENT xe Res. Phone 5535 one-half years, there may be some who will say that the situation should have been relieved by this time in that there should have been a con- y years from now power will be so cheap accessible that man will be independent of GENITO-URINARY DUSRASES | G B Untdecwoud, M. NOENTGENOLOGIST Hallie M. Ells OHUE KiPALKING NORTH CASPER SHOE Pp and Machine Work | so siderable increase in the number of sheep. But surroundings. pete er tan Ben Suyematsu 235 East A two things should be borne in mind. The first is A vast system of central generating plants Wi 3 Mg J. F, O'Donnell, M. D. paride i me UPR dh that there may be men who hesitate to go into wal place power at the disposal of the small | gt the low cost of this c have be een thirty and fifty loads of R apy rt ibe ah TYPEWRITERS the sheep-raising business for fear the voters |Village and the isolated farmstead as well as i * DENTIST ‘ - trade iminist which will at once} “Power will make the comforts and luxuries! Z P | Offices in Rohrbaugh Building Rentals tangle nay eee 1 “kick” the shecn cf|Which are today inseparable from: aiost of the pchousands to use. m suitable for either stove or fireplace. pie rapheyi ty 239 E. Second Phone 850 - and collectively by |!arge cities available to every home in the coun- ment houses. p rake } ie ‘ a placing nd wool on the free list. | ™ | and store buildings. | Bein etn deen: TAILORS 4 We hope tha : sd ie 0 at “| ectricity will f ee | - Physician and Surgeon a hope fhat the voters will not soon again be} city. perform all the mechanical 133 N. Wolcott Off. 113 Res. ph. 800! TROY TAILORS AND GUND ; guilty of this supreme folly. |processes of industry and most of the domestic Let us give you the a eee ee TRUE TAILOHS AND: CLEANERS ; But the other and more important reason is|S¢Tvices. “So ; } Di. 5. ae ret oS al SE i ca, eer an ors Heportan reason 4 ERS lea sag no of asoe? = 0 er Lumber Co. ff 2 nt UPHOLSTERING enable the sheep farmers’ to greatly increase | SF aE ey eparaecs te 133 8S. Wolcott Phone 113} 9 their flocks, It was, too late to begin bre n| Every state in the nation except si Enterprise Construction Co. Upholstering and Furniture Pack ng 1921 when the emergency ta wus | prevision for bonuses or mualgtasien ein pore C.T, Pluckhahz, Rep. PHONE 240 Physician Spee Puione ion Ne > . Not until the following year could licts. Thesecbenefits nro .catimated | 1341 South Dayid Strect Ph. 1219 310 0-S Bid, Ph. 2118 | —— “ , oh Se . “" 7 b cs ri to total r q ‘a . Ae. S ig. Res. Ph. 2118 ——$~ ne be Ke A lamb does not become | $184,00,000. In addition, the national government Casper, Wye. “DRS. MYER AND SORNSON WAREHOUSES shecp until he is at least three years old, Not gave cash bonuses at time of discharge, RGR LEST W ‘hysician and Surgeon PT 200 O-S Bldg. Office Ph. 699 Res, 746} \LESLt M. NELSON, Warehouse and Transfer Co, Plone 1234,