Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 11, 1924, Page 6

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MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1924. i 4 . PAGE SIX. Casper Daily Cribune = commented the a wedding,” rhe Casper Cribune| Texas and over three-fourths of the mo-| agricultural plain, extensive forests, rich | on May 1, this year was 89.9 based on bride, despite the fact that. there's hair is produced in that state. Goats are | mines, ete. That explanation is fallacious Ed average for five years since the war, second The Casper Daily Tribune issued every] raised in large numbers in Arizona, New | Every student of American economics is ereas one year ago it was 102. i fevening and The Sunday Morning Tribune} Mexico, Oregon and California and are| aware that the bulk of America’s vai Lumber today.as in the past remains 4 yevery Sunday, at Casper, Wyoming. bined kept in smaller bands in many: other | income is furnished, not by the farms, | the cheapest as well as the most common- 4 Artificial silk, rope, carpets an a PSE crteere Pebaine matiaing, - opposite | ates mines and forests, but by the factories | ly used building material in this nation. : other fabrics are now made of w ' celine It is interesting to recall, in this con-| and workshops. It is one reason for individually owned Se MES ‘ Untered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice| nection, the attitude of Representative| “The United States are foremost in| homes in this nation. F ity member of the ways and means. com- ft Business Telephones —-.<-------- 15 and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments as second class matter, November 22, 1916./ John Garner, of Texas, ranking minor-| the world, not only by the productivity —_— mittee, toward the Texas angora. When Youth Will Be Served - of their wheatfields, cotton-fields, for- ests, coal mines, iron mines, etc., but iS at a the Underwood-Simmons law of 1913 was} also by the output of their manufactur-| A New York boy of fifteen, has "made being- debated, the wool schedule came | ing industries. application for enrollment in ‘the citi- under heavy fire, and it was the inten-| “With existing arrangements this| zens’ military training camps for 1926) country can product 12,000,000 tons. of| when his age will make him eligible. steel per year. That figure has never| This summer he saw so many of his been reached. The United States can| friends turned away from the camps be- product at least 55,000,000 tons of steel | cause the quotas were filled that he de- per year. They produce far more than| termined to be early enough in the field half of the world’s steel and of the prod-| fo assure his own acceptance two years ucts made of steel. Among other things | hence. The remarkable popularity of the they product about 90 per cent of the | Camps among the young men of the coun- world’s motor cars, both in their own] tr bears. testimony to the ability with country and in branch establishmen: which they are conducted and to the abroad. * | soundness of the idea. Military instruc- “In the city of New York alone vastly | tion is combined with. recreation and more building takes place than in the| physical-exercise in such proportions as whole of the United Kingdom. The tex-| to command and hold the student’s in- tile industries of the republic consume] terest from ‘the moment of ‘his enroll- considerably more cotton than the whole | ment. : of this country. In the production of goods made from copper, brass, rubber, wood, leather, etc., America’s superiority “a Back to B y t oi a % : : { is overwhelming. In view of these facts The Bryans Ne pie a ¥, ia reib 4 g & Cobden’s prophecy, “England is, and al-| form, tes the New Yo: a of the oie a % et ways will remain, the workshop of the| Ue. “William J. seized control o é ¢. ¢ world,” is ridiculous. hie eae petty da ee ae epi eee: “Why 4 y ; in| its policies in cam) =_ ; bana : Why are the Americans formost in thoas of 1896, 1900, and 1908—in which : 2 2 i the world, not only in the output of food and raw products but also in that of} he was the paps: Pgs eae for manufactured goods? The reason is ob-| President. He dom Tyce re ‘i a RE vious to all who are acquainted with eco- | Crate convention of 1912 and ‘tried to dominate the conventions of 1920 and By J. BE. HANWAY and E. E. HANWAY Advertising Representatives. tion of the Democrats make all wool free of duty. Garner was a member of Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger} the majority party, and the fight he put _Bldg., C ago, Ill, 286 Fitth Ave., New] up to prevent the free-listing of mohair } York City; Globe Bldg., Boston, Mass., Suite} became a classic in congress. The rea- } 404 Sharon Bldg., 55 New Montgomery St-.} son at that time made plain by the Coe ee os i in the Now, York, cty| late Sereno E. Payne, who remarked: Br ag2e one Bre Oc tite 230 Shs eNow, ~ ana| “Lhey raise some goats in the United eset are? oad, San Francieco offices and) states. There are 3,000,000 of them. They Fe nee re wets, nS | gay tha 2,999,000; 0F them’ axel idiretes a SUBSCRIPTION RATES. and Texas must have a duty on goat i { | | By Carrier and Outside State hair—and then all the products made One Year, Daily and Sunday R =,One Year, Sunday Only Six Months, Daily and Sunday Three Months, Dally and Sunday — One Month, Daily and Sunday Per Copy from goat hair were put on at a higher rate of duty, as compensatory duty to the goats of Texas.” Garner got the duty he was after, and the sheep wool producers of the north, By Mail Inside State. east and west, were handed free wool One Year, Daily and Sunday - for their portion. No wonder the angora One Year, Sunday Only --.- goat has thrived. f°" Six Months, Daily and Sunday - There has been much criticism of cer- Three Months, Daity and Sunday -. tain congressmen who have sought office Or pt Lally, and. Shey 5 bearing the Republican label, and upon |b” and the Daily Tribune will net insure de| election have discarded the’ label and ‘e" livery after subscription becomes one month| knifed the party. But after all, there is "in arrears, little to choose between them and a Dem- ocyat who will campaign his territory shouting against protection, come to con- ; a .| ress, yote for protection on the prod- mditions on both gides of the é ep hes > Tee: yor ae error ucts of his own state and against pro- . 1924. Guaranteed to Pass Inspec- ; mess iwalts special messenger. Reg-| tection for the products of the United nd, which used to be the strong-| “He virtually wrote ‘the platform dopted by: thé Madlaon/ Maumee aed : tion. - Official Raybestos Soapielstal Bate paigelc’ States. He is a tin-horn statesman and a| hold of individualism and of efficiency | #4opted by the Madison Square Garden | ie ke S ° * mpleints before § o'cloc! parochial four-flusher, and Texas, the| has become a stronghold of Socialism.| £@thering, but daifed’ to prevent ‘the| | 2 & mt Se Br. e ice Station . prosperity consists in an abundance of| When’! Woodrow Wilson was president : PARK AT SECOND seful goods and nothing else, and that | #2@ approved by him. Newton D. Ba- ‘h bundance cannot be, created by ker was secretary of war at that time, ; Phone 632 KICK, IF YOU DON’T GET YOUR v TRIBUNE asi most insistent southern state in the] Owing to Socialist influence ca’ canny|?0mination of a presidential candidate union for protection to her products, has | has become universal. The suicidal policy| Whom he had classed from the conven- just renominated sixteen of that stripe] of restricting output has led to hostility Pell ph eng gk eg oe ep i} i for S. it ing chi ce is tows The Farmer's Free List fer comsress to, Jabor ianving machinery. Wi remit |= DOrA citer iti weal eeren eee The fact that agricultural implements * we = tg a Ww. 5, Willi y 1 he fact that ag! pi serty: Popularity of Training Camps Bryan, illiam J’s brother and uch as three English workers. “Goods produced must be consumed. They are consumed and enjoyed chiefly y the working masses. Production be- x three times as great in the United States as over h workers receive not Here's the youngest Ku Klux Klans- man in the country. The baby was flressed in a tiny white robe and in- itlated with a class of adults at Omaha. He was held in the arms of his mother during the ceremony. —-— “were-free-listed by the Republi Jaw for the benefit of the farmer, has Reports from the citizens’ military been so highly emphasized that we are] training camps ‘just ended disclose that “apt to overlook the further fact that a 44 young men took the course. The great many other articles used by the] figure compares with 11,000 in 1921, “farmer, ar so on the free list. To sug-| about 22,000 in 1922 and 24,000 in 192: = alter ego, The latter has promptly taken the conduct of the Deocratic cam- paign out of the hands of his chief “by jecting into it-an issue which is thor- oughly Bryanesque. On his own motion, us governor of Nebraska, he has chal- that everything the farmer buys be} The seventh corps area, with headquart- ers) ee Ke neehee mane rene but lenged President Coolidge’s request for T . W dd d Placed on the free list, as was done by a} ers at Omaha, stands at the head of the | receive three times as much re y_| State cooperation in observing National wice W edade = - «number of congressmen during the last] list with a total of 4,748 students enroll. | { the form of goods which they c Defense Day. Hence the American workers are infi- better fed, clothed, and housed session of congress, would be to advo-| ed this year. It is not known how many cate almost entire free trade, because | appl its were turnéd away from the the farmer of today satisfies wants by] various camps because of filled quotas; “purchasing almost everything bought by| but it is probable that the enrollment “any other of consumers. There are| could have been doubled had there, been certain articles, however, in addition to] funds and facilities for caring for all. those peculiarly designed for farm con- The popularity of the citizens’ train- sumption, wh the farmer pretty gener-| ing camps idea, since General Wood or- ally uses, and the following list, though] ganized the fir, camp at Plattsbur; not an exhaustive one, considerably am-| has increased with remarkable rapidity plifies certain free-listed items which] Young men of seventeen years and older liaye been stressed. look, forward to spending a month of Beginning with agricultural imple-| their summer vacation under the dire ments, before mentioned, we have on the} tion army officers, knowing they will ™ “Gfree list plows, tooth or disc, harrows,| combine much healthful exercise “and theaders, harvesters, reapers, mowers,|pleasant. recreation with instruction in drills and planters, horse rakes, culti-] the fundamentals of military — science. “vators, thrashing machines, cotton gins} Parents, too, haye learned of the great and sugels machinery, wagons and carts, | benefits that come to their sons through cream separators up to $50 in yalue,/the camps. The public attitude toward] mother’s door, “Want. any nutmegs?” he} paredness as his brother always has “and all other agricultural implements] these courses of officially supervised asked, as he showed her his offering of | been. William J. resigned as secretary 5 = of any kind or description, not specially} training is a refutation of the pacifist | heautital big nutmegs, at a price ridic-| of state in 1915 because he did not sym- : ‘i ests come claim that the people do not approve of | wWously low. Grandfather and all the} pathize with Mr. Wilson's attitude to. i gee provided for, whethere in whole or in parts, including repair rts.” The “not | adequate preparedness for defense. then-little great-aunts and great-uncles} Ward Germany after the sinking of the »Specially provided for list” is meager. | loved the nutmeg's spicy flayor, so great | Lusitania or with the small degree of If the farmer desjres to add to his Why America Is Rich grandmother stocked up with a’ generous | military preparation which the presi- buildings, silos, walks, ete., he will find To be justl Bas MG order, That night out of the oven came] dent seemed then willing to sanction. Tet brick, “cements JOms, < Han bers ai eae ate echt DEAD ep Fictipe Get ean eee as pudding| The Bryan theory of sufficient prepar- lumber are on’ the free list, unless some | 0» nation- with whose’ people we have}. *) FOU ONs cupboard came the grater| edness was summed up in the fatuous and one of the new nutmegs to give it} declaration that | 1,000,009 men would other country should take a notion to} been in rivalry since we’ became a na qpiges (a duty on “auch ‘materials whan | horas Tot nnbieaeangs Ne sbettn asi ola trnerinaietbich ot deteintenesa tak ae spring to arms overnight if the United ipe of the nutmeg upon the grater did coming from the United States, in which | ed by nae mpons Froe reat new qpane: case a corresponding duty is placed. on | not only establishes a friendly feeling on | *¢rPe ae sea Se = identical goods coming here from that] our part toward the people of that na-| 0) ee Ses TG nugeteeher a articular countr A ni tion, but it also establishes a respec’ s as sawdust. or ha particular country only. That does not| tion, but it alsd O8 ALLOSPESHEDO IN Rshb'a woolen Minted setts the Gor necticut peddler, seem to be unfair. the integrity of the medium of publica- * same conditions as brick and cement, ete.| ‘The London Dally Mail is a’ newspaper | tied merchandise protects great-zrand-| Profiting wided in 1920 for stature while petroleum is. freelisted uncondi.| of world vision: It\is in:no sense pro-| noilens great granddaughters. Today [gress “prdvided ‘in: lor future co- = tionally—the elixir of his-tin. Lizzie, To] vincial in its utterances, as the follow-| the manufacturer uses printer's ink to] Ordination of the Regular Army and the pet eer ? tell about his product and he signs his] State forces, the mobilization of the name to the.statement. .And then he] first line defense and the assembling “National, Defense Day is to be ob- served under the provisions of the army reorganization law, passed by Congress an worker recognizes that ing on high wages in respect of an} #04 the chief objection he and Mr. Wil- utterly insufficient output. He recog-| 800 had to the law was that it did not that capital and the labor-s: authorize 2) Regular Army .of about chine are his friends, not his enemies. | 600,000 men. They were thinking then Hence the American worker can of using the Regular Army to carry a motor car and other things wh through an American mandate for Ar- this paradise of trade unionism, of So-|™Menia and possibly for Turkey. = ism and of ca’ canny are the privilege |, “Governor, Bryan reprobates the Na- of the rich and of the well-to-do.” tional Defense Day test as “meaning an economic waste, giving ® wrong impres- sion and alarming war sick of other na- tions.’ He is evidently as much of a A peddler knocked at great-grand-| pacifist and an enemy of national pre- DEEADERCESDUSA SE bate RATED Helpfulness of Advertising , > It is evidence ot rea: Aospitality to show your guests ‘ agebeettotgeageys svsenssanieestengespenszenisert a bathroom that is “‘their’s.” The privacy and con- ey venience of such arrangements is in pleasant contrast theory had its test in 1917. It took the United States more than a year to get 1,000,000 men into action in France, and many of the units used to the usual one-bathroom dwelling. The house thus equipped is far more comfortable for both family and guests. piretatoares rm his inner man he will find coffee,| ing, froma recent issue, will doubtless , and cocoa on the free list. To warm | Prove: . We é “Agitators d ding. vast pabl -| makes his statement good, for advertis-| of the elements which would constitute : ° . Fed Te AA ete ane Aan | aan ree thelr pet erojects reient,| ing builds confidence and confidence | the second line. All that-National De- : ) boots and shoes are to be purchased in| ly tell us that England is ‘rolling in|™¢ans trade. The continued patronage af | fense Day involves‘is an ,experimental ea! B ja free marke 2 3 wealth, that it is ‘the richest country in| %¢WSPaper columns shows that it pays test of tis spa Poe apd ige td * eed aaliy 7 te , ade. advertis ‘a roode: view the light] « ‘hi 711 359 With respect f li the world.’ That was, perhaps, true dec-| the advertisers; the fact that no wooden | a view to ering them in ‘Here Comes the Bride—for the Phone E. Second Pai lagonr| peep Red dates tear Maleate Poa pee hid te vee a very different | Nutmegs are sold today is one of the| of experience. It marks a real step. for. second time,’ the organ might have poet meee rhe now. England is poor, very poor, if com.|™&ny signs that show how adver ward toward rational preparedness. played when Ruth Wightman Mor- mil racaliven teticer a ipesaithon tone pared with the United br a ‘? helps reader: But a practical advance of this sort|Tis and Gouverneur Morris, the f:- Tost. ~ i y | mous anthor, wi married a second turpentine. On his horses he may place| “The United States are fabulously ere infuriates people like the Bryans. They mere, Not All Revenue free harness, saddles and saddlery, and| Wealthy. Although they possess only Per at it aaa military, gentiree!, “Any From an oil well is supposed to flow = on\ 4 w With freelisted barbed ware, and if he| the world, they have half the world’s # cecurer. military position. clashes “with should be a bit exclusive, or want to set] wealth and have more than half the pense of drilling “dry holes” is over- 1. 0ff his house and grounds, posts, pickets | world’s gold, diamonds, pearls and prec- ‘ eand palings have been gathered into the] ious stones of every kind. t list. “The true wealth of a nation can best adicate insect pests sulphide of} be measured by the condition of the and white arsenic, used in mak-| "asses. The prosperity of the American ‘8, are free listed. He may sheaf| Workers is almost unbelieveable. More n with free binding twine, pro-] 0r less unskilled men, such as carters, tect his hands with free leather gloyes,|milkmen, builders, laborers, etc., earn » sand sharpen his tools on free hones and] 45 shillings per day. Vast numbers of rwhetstones. And that his crops may| Skilled workers earn 1,000 pounds and the pacifist gospel: that the best means of self-defense is to remain utterly de- fenseless, “Of all the ‘illusions swept away by the Great War the one which’ the Amer- ican pacifists hugged to their breasts was the emptiest * Yet most of them seem to have learned nothing and for- gotten nothing. They still scorn the ugly realities of national antagonism and friction and shut their eyes to the looked by the public. One of the latest efforts to secure oil is carried on by the Standard Oil company of California on Bondoc Peninsula, Island of Luzon of the Philippine group. The area pros- pected had promising surface indica- tions. For fiv ars this company is carrying on wild-catting programs in this territory, Eyerything necessary for horse pads, His cattle may be fenced in| about one twentieth of the population of action. which puts the United ‘States in a steady stream of liquid gold. The ex- the run AERO GASOLINE is the “cream” of the run r the work, including thousands of tons of | .U“ i as it comes from the re- are sold under a positive Where formerly but one could be pro- The assertion that America’s wealth] the Pacific. Twenty-five men carried out] tionely peominel to ist Nebraue ay , 4 ry es 2 Warn who buy HI- duced, bones, bone dust, fish, guano, ba- bel engs to es sore that ane at i cost of | the undertaking in this fever-ridden, pest perve Natioviel Defense Das stoner standing quality can be marked by its UNI- ommended ae Read sic 8 2 i ite. iving counterbalances e 4 rages |; + 2 5 4 y ) i SE oad) A } us, iaatte, ypu, muriate of potash, po:| prevailing, ts incorrect. The white popu.) fest! aid rainsoaked country: Toles | Sitorable extent, taka for poliieal por {| | FORMITY—in gravity, volatility and purity, who do not find it'meets hogy sp Poe ¢ 5187 ea i ic i i is 3 oa 5, i 0: ie claims made weuadissinm sulphate, kainite, wood and] lition of the republic is a little more| foot were revealed aud ho oil, This vive | Poses the futile pacifism of 1914, | If it ; for it, can i 41 Dect-root ashes, nitrates, tobacco stems | than twice as large as that of this coun-| was carried on to help find apes Money him to AS age ine pate AERO IS different from ordinary brands of money back forte ee » and manures, all used for fertilizers, are| tty. However, the United States have] br crude ¢ nd is part of the necessary agate dhe hallmark ae sateen: a gasoline. A gallon goes farther. You'll note ing. i on the free list. ; Bee mesely sid the Aa of tele-| cost of a gallon of gasoline poured from Teri heecibae etetin of thle arrogance the difference immediately in the improved . . There are many articles of general} phones an¢ tm orcars that there are in| ine pumps at filling stations. So a large and misjud; nt will not be a Repub- erformance of your engine; Y ; tg HIWAY OILS are made American use not on the free list, the du-| this country but have fifteen times as part of the liquid gold that comes from | 1 ; apr aay Aad pu Pi y gine. You can prove it to’ our own exacting spe- ties of which have been reduet auto-| many. To every three families there are| one producing oil well is absorhed i o| can administration, : enforcing: aiwise with a tankfull. cifications. We KNOW P a Praag ; ne producing oi absorbed in the| ana patriotic law, but the Democratic their fi mobiles for example. All of the farmers’ two telephones und tYo motor cars. Mil- necessary work trying to find new oil a i at tat their fitness for lubricat- products have been given the highest pro-| lions of unskilled-workers have not only | Nroqucicg leade. presidential candidate. Look for the AERO sign—the oi Seach nonile vengines— “tection ever accorded them in ariff| roomy houses which belong to them but = es or . — 3 Sign—the sign of trouble- Property and’ economical- Yaw. Thys accouter may | have a telephone, a motor car and other = LEGAL STRATEGY — ‘ free gasoline. Dealers everywhere, y- ence our money- back guarantee, Building Records Exceeded Four out of the five months of 1924 exceed in money valuation of building permits all corresponding former months and place the aggregate total for this year ahead of the heavy record of last year. Considering 60 cities for the month of May there were 101 in c es i age scales and nine cuts. The aid in the building indus- call for his fiddle, t “fle free rosin, smile compl: ing grain p anc strike up * in-the Straw.” For 1924 as a Republic ear. luxuries of which English working men scarcely dream. “Before the war England’s savings came to about 400,000,000 pounds per ) Although the American people are eae extravagant their savings are estimated ~ te come to 2,700,000,000 per year. Last i We Have Our Goat year the Americar Baoan motor cars A textile report says: “The produc-| and trucks alone 750,000,000 pounds, If ‘tion of mohair in the United we add the expenditure on garages, etc., tiereased ninefold in less than the motor car expenditure last y =" ‘Standing at 8,651,000 pounds in 192. ceeded 1,000,000,000 pounds. ‘G2 Yield of fleece per animal and the qual-| “It As frequently stated that the. 1 ore AY of the hair have also been greatlyled States owe their vast wealth to the| to the same juthority, counterbals nees Prisoner—“T'll do it if you s ==. improved. More than three-fourths of the possession of their great natural re- this somewhat. The perceptage average ' How much do you charge for the ady “~ Angoras bred in this country ure in sources, to the possession of a fruitful for representative construction materials Lawyer—“A hundred dollars.” Lawyer—“Young man, before I under- take to defend you, I. insist that you . vith me.” pee ptt e728 Aero Oil Products Co. CASPER Lawyer—“Diu you or did you not take f y me USE AERO—“Keep Wyoming Money in Wyoming” *CSSSOUPEREGESADLDAGSAGDAASEALISESLESERIASASGLUSEEASDABADAESISLOSADAL the ten thousend dollars you were ac. cused of embezzling?” Prisoner—“I took it, sir.” Lawyer—‘How much of it is left?” Prisoner—“Only a handred dollars,” y the Dodge reports, is at Lawyer—‘Well, your only chance is to the peak since the war. The downward | plead guilty ‘and throw yourself on the change in building materials rding | mercy of the court.” 5 & ad wv

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