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tf ars and sought after by the beaux of the buaili- “+; Riverton a charming young school teacher, pop- |; = ; ss a t TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1924 PACE SIX = - - re ae |, Headline—"Woman Killed by Fall | With infinite pains, lable to get order — "A great jight|She grafted Ghains ' Che Casper Daily Cribune any product is to pass it through the fewest pos- to do they are very hard to regu-| ing chandelier.” con in pes ot Biinplaaced Eada: MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS sible hands, saving the charges of all agencies Henry -Ford late. ere ot cee wee The Fe eebtAa tees or nit Gee Ce en ea the producer and the manufacturer or PATEE % om A Worthy Invention ee eet oe eee Set nian Jeet tee evtnmes bas____| i Sesame Analisi may ae Din bt Trotter tt, tt pom intooa tia any|,LOfett—Thare hau ten rater Tat on Jn n'a mighty Homann | ther int, Cour at Rope we ; 2 ; it.ce: is not. US} I seo the Southern z ; for the| In The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening aud | W2Y> in ea Sr yisiaai poral jp satay baht up to the pensibities “ot ‘no man can accomplish such seg anes maga igi io sure the} Hanna. sa with the result, ~ The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at Casper,/suppose that the ¥ Muscle Shoals in the hands of things as these because they can- Grains af» all right? Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune Bullding, oppo- were realized that they could control the market- Henry Ford. Iam not 20t wield a big stick. | preby 34 i.e ae a ae | = site postoffice, ing of their product by means of a tight organ-|/put I am surprised that the entire] arr. Fora now takes a ton of coal! L‘diady—Oh, str, : ecuenene! ‘second . 4 hey. sold it directly to the man- | south has not been before chat costs him §5.00 laid down in j4rains. There are none, sir. bi postotti : ° 2 z “| 3 Gunes meatier; Movember eats Tet rst ta aaa * ‘Muncie Shonls dea. T baileverin tor] petrol, SF Hvar louse (35b e n ay ar € The High Grade Spread for Bread id . a wi pays to_ if ‘Telephones 15 and 18) rmine rrect ting the man who has the initiative, Bécas interstate com-| rested for attempting to sel’ a hotel menBrapen Telephese Bachans . th bac De therabeaiae Aces a. Pa progestagens fs fond merce will not ‘tow itm = AE Petes ihe epee Fh Met peed H - Departments. je exo things, do them. Mlege of “hauling coal over his own! boor fellow probably is! : : Ie r?CO rr" it? If it were possible to send all livestock di- No corporation ‘on earth could dojroad for less money than’ that) and bought the hotel when he paid his s . J. B. HANWAY ont EB. E. HANWAY rectly to the packers, all grain directly to the what Ford has done be Ge in four minutes he adds $8.56 to Sr bin. ee 3 —— mips millers, all cotton directly to the factories, where! [Vhy? | Becange, there, ts ‘always How worth $1366. instead’ of ine Halltos!s, trom the reports we see : eee Prudai Boece Flog 1720-88 Stever Bldg. CbYjand how could the corrett price be determined |) corporation. If corporation could | original cost of $5.00. At the samejin the advertisements, must be the Pure Cocoanut oil —refined Peanut oil churned cago, Ti, 286 Fitth Ave., New York City; Globe Bidg.. and expressed? It could not be determined by | have done some of the things that] time he ts saving the city thousands! {I] wind that blows nobody good. by ilk—with age Sbaron Bldg., 65 New Mont- ra : |Ford has done, Pittsburgh would|of dollars in damage which coal wee in sweet sterilized mi rea oO oT suite sence Cal, Copies of the Daily|any organization or group of organizations SO/never have been known as the|emoke te doing to every large city : Tribuae aro om file in the New York, Chicago, Boston accurately as it is now by the trading of all in-|smoky city. Ford has taken mile|in America neck r. CBondalds Keparteo x and San Francisco offices and visitors are welcome. /+ 014.4. on an open market. It could not be ex- |Hons of dollars out of amoke, and} are ord has done anything} 4 Stlesman, traveling on a country he has done-nothing that could not Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A B. ©.) SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State 49.00 (me Year, Dallv and funday --------------* ++=+='! a One Year, Sunday Only ~-.--. ane Six Months, Daily and Sunday -----.--------—--+ pe Three Months, Daily and Sunday .--.--+-------- id Oue Month, Daily and Sunday ree be i eb are By Mail Inside State One Year, Daily and Sundar One Year, Sunday Only &tx Month, Dally ané Suni Three Months, Siig oe nth, Baily an jun a ha raeliee must be paid In advance and he Dal'y Tribune will not tnsure delivery after subscri on becomes one month In arrears. , IF YOU DON’T GET YOUR TRIBUNE a ste don’t find your Tribune after looking carefully for it, call 15 or 16 and it will be delivere; to xou by special messenger. Register complaints / before 8 o'clock. collect such data gives these facts concerning The Poor Dear .,.|lynehings in the United States during the past to live up to feminine modes exacts its | year: Play snes It ps much better to take aj It is found that there were 28 persons lynched | brief time off each day to study the fashion jin 1923. This is 29 less than ‘the number 57 for ear rie the year 1922. Thirteen of the persons lynched >, page than Fd be overtaken: like the Riverton | ai. taken from thé hands of the law, seven : ‘school teacher. ressed so well as tie actual buying and selling ae express it. Producers would, in all probab- ility, lose much more by the lack of this expres in handling. “Another angle, not-usually considered by the dreamers, is the difficulty of financing commod- ities for which there is no o market, and the comparative case of financing those which have such a market. The south had some experience in this line when the cotton exchanges were closed ; and the south does not want to repeat the experi- ence. Nor would any of us want to repeat an ex- perience which deprived us of the benefits of an open market, even those benefits whf€h are be- yond the mereopportunity of selling or buying.” The Lynching Record ‘The department of records and research of the } Tuskegee Institute, the noted school founded by | Booker T. Washington, which makes an effort to $7.8) sion than they could possibly gain by economies | have been done many years ago if the corporations that were all the smoke in Pittsburgh had*had the initiative and the brains to carry out the plans of their cngineers. That they had the money there Is no doubt. for Carnegie, Frick, enough money to have etarted half a dozen planta which would have made more money for them than they made in steel, but did not have! the initiative, or if any one man! did have it,-and proposed it, the others would discourage it because it Wag not their own idea. That ts just what ails thousands of corporations. There is very of- ten a most capable man mixed in the management, but his hands are | tied because of‘ little petty Jealons-| ies. The‘ one big man of the organ- ization can accomplish nothing «in the way of progression because of} the men who, not sharing his broad | vision, are jealous of his advice. It is not because they do not see when it has been explained to them, but simply because they are downright jealous of him, j The same happens in politics, and in- every other. line of activity, it from jails and six from officers of the law out- Word comes to our calamity department from | side of jails. % }} a representative on the scene that there is in| hore were 46 instances in which officers of he law prevented lynchings. Four women, white and one colored, were ameng those saved. Six of these preyentions of lynchings +. wick, ~ _|Were in northern states and 40 in southern Ji tely she had not been a student of |states. In 37 of the cases the prisoners were re- pie tata aa suyles, and had continued to roll i" »ved or the guards augmented or other precau- them, when all the other girls were wearing |t'ons taken! In the nine other instances, armed them at full mast and permitting no distract- force was used to repel” the weuld-be lynchers, ing scenery to confuse the masculine optic in|In eight instances during the year persons ~ blustery weather. charged with being connected with lynching | rf 3 in Riverton |™0bs were brought to trial. Of the 52 persons Recently came on what is called:in: Riverton |ihas hefare the courts only two were sent to the a. spell of weather, when the cree de- penitentiary. . ivery- ~ tote hurdied at with ait the Seat they Of the 28 persons aynenen in ae a eee ne- possessed. So did the lovely school teacher. That |ST0es and two were whites; two o! : ¢ former | is to say, she wore her goloshes all nicely buck-| ere Women. Seven or one-fourth of those put to led up, carefully protected her little pink ears death were Eee age obs ie eee and her saucy little nose, wore her fur coat and |T@Pe; One of the vic h ® gm Ga rangegtls i In fact she was all properly protected |e Was put to death and then the ly was weatnnes the rigors of winter—all did we say? |/utned. The charge against the one burned to Wall, all but her dimpled knees. These most ut- |‘ u h was murder. b i tractive features, were guiltless of red flannel| The offenses charged against the whites were: what-you-may-callems or long woolen hosiery. |participation in strike depredations, one; being ; They were exposed to a chill and unfeeling -at-|taken as a negro, one. The offenses charged mosphere. Fs against the es Fee were: qenrder, aes, mur- ni .|derous assault, two; rape; six; attempted rape, Beg ta edhe ton oh dae Morelia MhPeietiticraner, sea tee Ue wounding of: the youth of the district, and on the journey on jficer. of the laws Swe mo change reported, three; the coldest morning of this particular spell of |# ing man charged with rape to eseape, one; weather she was accosted by a rude fellow named |Tesisting posse searching for man charged with John Frost who deliberately, and over her T8P¢,' one; ‘cattle stealing, one: “trying io act ic ap i rotests, pinched her pretty knees, |!ike white man and not knowing his place,” one; Pinched Be 80 Berea that she was compelled | isulting woman, one; peeping in window, one; to remain at home for a week and at the same |*triking man in altercation, one. time suffer severe pain. The nine states in which lynchings occurred She is better now, and during her enforced ab- pace the uysaher - ar Se ee as puree sence from her daily toil she read up on styles |=‘? as, two; Florida, eight; . jeorgia, four; and fashions and has learned that they are |Louisiana, one; Mississippi, eight; Missouri, wearing them higher of late, and during cold |®¢} Oklahoma, one; Texas, two; Virginia, one. weather most of them are wearing two pairs, What Makes It Good silk ones underneath and woolen ones on the outside. The audience will please rise and chant that] ‘Yonder stands an American workingman at old familiar hymn beginning, “Some Things Are |tho cashiers’ wicket, where he. recéives his pay; but Vain and Fleeting Show, for Man‘s Iilusion enyelope. As he .steps away another takes his Given,” after which we will be dismissed. place until the long line «f employes has been paid, - L4bor and Economics That is the business of the hour for each of these men, and no other interest absorbs them We do not ordinarily think of the average fac-|for the moment. tory hand, the laborer, as a student of economies, | Each envelope contains currency or coin of the or, in the broad sense, as a business man, yet |realm—the greatest. realm over which a free more than ever before in these United States people preside through their chosen representa- “tis the laborer taking an interest in the eco- tives, and contains nothing more. Upon the face nomics of business, < of each enevelope there may be prin: Butghe does not call it by any such academic|°randa concerning the man’s time name. of wage. His is a practical lesson learned every pay|, A sermon lies there, day. Since the great war, the American laboring | tainer. man has had occasion to study money first hand. He has learned to make comparisons. From across the seas has come to him many true ac-| ‘counts of the depression in Europe, the stagna- ~tion of business and the idleness of millions of men. ular with the patrons and beloved by the schol- within each yellow con- price of money is measured throughout Enrope today. It represents one hundred cents. It rep- resents, not one day of toil, but is the fraction only of the total of the-man’s daily earnings, a very much larger sum, indeed. What does this dollar buy ‘the workingman of the United States? It buys such comforts and luxuries as no workingman of Europe today enjoys. But it does more than that for him. It puchases insurance. For so long as this man lives under the present regime of goyernment, with its bulwark of a protective tariff, each. la- insured that the value of his dollar will appear as he holds it within his grasp. iples of a protective an—and we should younger wage- arners of this country who went abroad to fight beneath the Stars and Stripes saw the! ropean laborer in person. They often fought —together, or idled away their leisure periods in the company of each other. While abroad and since their return these men of the indust army learned much about the currency question; much concerning com- parative wages; a great deal about foreign-made goods. They visualized the purchasing power of the franc, the shilling, the lire and the mark, -during their stay in Europe. compared to the greater value of the American dollar. Now the wageearner understands as he never did before just what it means to lend his hand to the manufacture of our products, which sell at good figures, din the manufacture of which he is paid a living wage, plus, He understands } better than ever what protection means to him and his family—protection through a tariff, that | } admits foreign-made goods, produced by poorly : paid workers, only after a duty has been levied that equalizes tLe difference between his wa and that of the workers in Europe whom he 1 while over there fighting. \D ff have worked out a term it a benevolent plan—whereby the dollar of. the pi enevelope of the American working- man-never goes into competition with ‘the © leap dollar of Europe.. The products of his cun} hands are. safeguarded from . sacrifice, which would result if the marts of trade were flooded with foreign-made ‘goods. America for generations has been confronted by this question: Protection to American labor or free-trade and no protection. ‘Theorists and dreamers from -year to year and from decade to decade rise up_to denounce the sound, practical {Proposition of levying+upon goods made abroad 1 sufficient duty to: equalize the difference in the cost of production there and here, which is |the difference between working conditions and earnings of the poorly paid of Europe’s hordes of wage-earners and of the better paid, bettér conditioned working people of the United States, recent-| The dollar of the pay envelope 1s a good dol- nts in ilar, and it will so remain a stable medium of other exchange, just so long as the protective tariff n mar-jis. retained to equalize the values of the prod- ucts of cheap labor, us ugainst the values of goods made by well-paid Jabor at-home, The Open Market The National Stockman and Farmer ly published the following in which ry favor of marketing livestock as well agricultural commodities through the ope: t ket ave bronght out: i “In theory the most economical way to-market ° ted the-mem-| pian involves and the rate|it not somewhat Take out’a dollar and examino it. It is|iudgment of a perfectly good dollar, the unit by which the petént ‘body of public “men, with- happens in clubs, and in the chamber of commerce. No one but Roosevelt | could have built the Panama. Canal | three |No one but Roosevelt could have |all’ of the other smok ¢hus | crushed Wall Street in 1907 and} America, is entitled to more consid- made them call off.the money Maxims of a Flea He preyeth best who biteth best. A little crawling is a dangerous thing. Sweet are the juices of obesity. A leg of beauty is a méa! forever, A king's flavor is not inherited, A roving flea gathers no food. It is a long Umb that has po din- ner. A little body doth often harbor a! square meal. There’s many a sip 'twixt the knee and the hip. A miss is as good. as a meal. Incision is nine poinis of tue coaw, Ints Tragic Interest bare Shi Without going more specifically j into the reservations involved in the. Bok prize peace plan, it will be ob- sefved that except in one {mport- ant respect it coincides quite closely with ‘the Senate plan of ratification of the Versailles treaty with the Lodge reservations. The import- ant respect in which they do_not |' coincide {s that, under Senator Lodge's resolution with reservations the United States would have rati fied the Versailles treaty and en- tered into membership of the Leagte of Nations. Under this prize plan the United States would not be- come a member of the League, but Would cooperate with it, under res- ervations ‘suc ‘has Senator Lodge proposed for - actual - membership, Senator Lodge's second reservation covers precisely vse same «ground regarding Articles X and XVI as the proposed plan and Senator Lodge's othe rreservations, so far as the League covenant is concern- ed, are yirtually accepted in the Provisions of the prize plan requir- ing the action of Congress in par- ticular cases. Viewed in this light the proposed elements of \peculiar tragic . interest. With a prize of $100,000, out of over 20,000 proposals, through the exceedingly, com- out a suggestion of political connec- tion of prejudice, Mr. Bok. brings us almost, but not quite to the plan of ratification of the Versailles treaty, League and all, proposed by Sena- tor Lodge four years ago; the plan which fatled because President Wil- son would not consent to. the Lodge reservations and influenced enough Democratic senators to oppose them and so prevént ratification of the treaty and full membership in the League. “President Wilson stubb- bornly held that Article X, was “the heart of the League,” and as he held ‘this'and rejected other propo- sals the treaty failed and the Unit- ed States failed to become a member of the League. We have said that Mr. Bok has brought us almost but» not quite to where we would have been had it not been for the opposition of Pres- ident Wilson to‘the Lodge’ reserva- tions. _" We -say, “almost” becausé the prize’ “plan does riot suggest going all the way back to the Lodge plan of ratification. It merely goes. back to the plan minus ratiti- cation and ‘niinus American mem; Wership in the League. It 1s this that gives the prize'plan a peculiar and, as we have suggested. a some- what tragic interest. Expert watch and jewelry im Fepal tng. Casper Jewelry Co., O-S Bice. WATCH FOR THE A.B.C. Appealing to Your Risibilities BY TED OSBORNE ago, if some of the men who knew all about what could be done had had the money to do these things. It is simply @ case of one man hav- the initiative, the brains, and money all at the same time, Muscle Shoals ‘is turned over Hy act of. reclamation that has ever been done in the south, if not in all America, Mr. Ford is not a four- flusher not an autocrat, he is a plain man who has unusual fore- sight, and who always seeks to ar- rive at a destination by the shortest | route. I know him personally, sold, him steel when he had only a very. small shop, and have met him and been entertained by “him ter half a day at a time twice since he has Lecome one of the greatest million- aires in the world, and he is the same old Henry Ford that he was in Itv2-"3 when he practically bad no money at all, He does things because he has the vision, the money, and the courage to back his own convictions. I say, and I think most every man in the State of Wyoming, agrees with’me, Let Henry Ford have Muscle Shoals. A man who can take more than nineteen million dollars per year out of the smoke that has been going to waste for a hundred years, from fe stacks in eration than any other man. When in Rome, roam on the Ro- ans. Fuint heart never bit fair lady. A. wooden’ leg furnisheth poor pro vender. . An intrepid hunter named Blaine, Was chased by a Ton in Spain. He ran, in a fright, With all of his might, And the lion with all of his mane. A Comparison Women are liks clocks. Some of them are fairly rellable with but lit- tle attention, while others need al- most constant care, and it is not always the high-priced jeweled ones that are.the most'dependable. They may have pretty hands, pretty faces and pretty movements, but they are ——— road, noticed a eign painted on | | fence by a zealous evangelist: “What done, and would have not done, long! Mitat 1 Do'To Be Saves?” ‘out of his car and added another line (to the inscription: ! Pus" days later to see a third line, which read: to Mr. Ford it will be the greatest | God. / necessary salt—that’s all | RIE esd ai EI He got Tastes Better—Goes Farther—Always Good Pigeon's Fresh Roasted Coff 228 East Second St. Phone.623 THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER C0. Everything in Building Material RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS 4 Vistributors of KONSET Three-Day Cementing Process for Oil Weils. Phone 2300 and 62 . Casper, Wyo. Office and Yard—First and Center Sts. “Take Beeker's What 8 his asonishment a few ” “And Prepare to Meet Thy . eee Misplaced Philanthropy Yesterday I was walking Down the street and I saw - A small boy crying as _ Though his heart would break. I asked him what the Matter was and he said, “I had two quarters and A man took one of them Away from me.” I asked him why he Did not call for help. “T did,” he answered, “I yelled ‘Help! Help-’ Just like that.’” I asked him if that was as Loud as he could yell And he said it was. \So I took the other Quarter. The Old Reliable Gebo Coal Phone 948 and 949 ; SALT CREEK BUSSES 3 Busses a Lent Each Way LEAVE CASPER—ARKEON BUILDING| Leave Salt Creek Natrona Transfer Storage 8 Baggage and Express 8 _—— Called for and Delivered a.m. Seal Co 9 a. m. Salt ‘Creek Transportation 2p. m a“ 2:30 p, m. Company Tel. 144 3 p.m TRAIN SCHEDULES Chicago & Northwestuo Arrives 5 p. m. FOR RENT Store room 20x60 with full basement in Chandler building, 617 East Second street. Departs 2:35 p. m 603 9d Eastbound— Inquire at A. E. , Chandler Filling Station You can pay for Pierce-Arrow Trucks month by month=as they work ; . Dual Valve HEAVY DUTY MOTOR TRUCKS Comes sorting S-ten, 4-ton, 5-tonj Tractor: 3-ton, 5-ten, 735-ton, x Prices Six-cylinder Motor THE KUMPF MOTO Casper, Wyo. 316 West Midwest Ave range from $3,300 Bus chassis: Pierce-Arrow Dual-Valve Trucks and Motor Busses may be purchased on a most liberal financ- ing arrangement, You can pay month by month, if desired. If there were any question about the ability of Pierce-Arrow Trucks to yield maximum returns on your investment, this purchase plan would not be sound business practice. But owners’ records over long periods of years prove what Pierce- Arrow Trucks will do. We back this proof with our offer to finance theirpurchase f youthrough the Pierce-Arrow Finance Corporation, a Pierce- Arrow banking institution. Today’s Pierce-Arrow is the most powerful ever built; likewise the most economical. Yet the Price is no greater than that of any good truck. Let usshow you how conveniently you canown a Pierce-Arrow Dual-Valve Truck,-No obliga- tion, of course. R CAR COMPANY, Denver Coi i Twelfth Ave. and Acoma 121 East Bae to $5,400, £ «. b. Buffalo, N. Y, # $4,600 and $4,750, at Buffala,