Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 13, 1925, Page 6

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PAGE SIX >A “he Casper Daily Cribune postcffice second | | no draperies whatever. The moyies, consequently re udept in liberating the primitive, with a} technical control over subconsciousness which | seemed to land Freud among the major prophets. ) } Mr. Hay immounced resolye was to bring |. this movie world back to decency. He believed | that the American public was not a breeding: | SUBSCRIPTION RATES 3y Carrier and Outside State 1 A n paid erst eI I lelive ‘emi sor c 4 t win ea is a “IF YOU DON'T GET YOUR ‘TRIBUNE ca . cate ve ce he or v ivered to You ico tod ———_—_—_—_——— ——_—_—— <r The Business Outlook ey. ihe nes of ha seen two con * developments the first magnitude era Ibert H. Wiggin, president of the Chase ’ nk of Ne York Oi The first i prices of ricultural com h tk p h arming regions er financial ition than they restoring the buying power of the regi and toward restoring the betwe griculture and industry, It was f agriculture more than any other checked the up¥ move of the win p which retarded general busi i he r half of 1923 i the first | ght alt 19 The rise in agricultural prices in 4 s due primarily to the crop failure in Canada d rtages in agricultural production n much of rest of the world outside the United State. It was thus caused by a restric tion ipply which we cannot expect to be per-| nane ortunately the fut holds forth the justifiable gxpectation of an i use in demand i ut constructive’ development is I m of the Da Plan in Europe. re lence in Burope, the ix i reform in important |} ‘ countric 1e return of a number of | yortant European exchange rates to or | e to par, and the greatly improved political | the important countries of Hu-4 M y reasonably expect from these de lopmie an improved standard of life in Eu rope, an increased consumption of grains and vents in the countries of Europe which have been | most impoverished and consequently, such an in-| reased deniand for grains and meats next year| as will maintain the improved position of our farmers even though next y s harvests should be substantiall rger than this year’s. Sound msiness rests on a sound industrial balance. A led prosperity involving only a portion of rs cannot go very far, A business sit c in which farmers, railroads n mining interests and other pro-| ly materials all have their share f profitable vit w and can bel ee trusted to last a long tim » banker is inter- | . sted in the success of all of lig customers and} ie banker is interested in seeing a sound bal-| mong the productive activitie: \days Making Sunshine There are few who would venture to contest Will H. Hays’ knowledge of the American pub- lic, says the Washington Post. His memorable areer ug national chairman during a period] hen his fellow countrymen were obliged to turn from prophecy and get down to the very lities, the why and the wherefore of their ex-| ce, gave him unprecedented opportunity to erve them He stood, for four years, at tle very center | f a web which stretched to tl utmost corner f the Unite tates, and he became the spirit hings to all An ‘ It wa t nati 1 r ha sion was in < r c warted t lack ©. a controlling, modifying influence, should turn, for a solution of its difficulties, to} ‘s, the one man who scemed most likely to under : stand them. ; Hence in the enlighteument which sometimes | " follows despair the gr moving-picture mag: | tates voluntarily came together and formed the Moving-Picture Produce and Distributors of America, Incorporated, and placed their fate in the hands of Mr. Hay They have had little reason, in the three years which haye since e ued, to regret their de on. | The task which devolved ur Mr made | Hercules’ experi with the Au stables seem like the merest pastime. From their earliest days, the movies were accordec pecial license i id atmosphere partly, no doubt, because 0 novelty which made the public forget the 8 which it customa yplies to the leg urr given so much mor d t 1¢ footlights can ever hope to refle made it ear producers to create the h complete divorce from real " “y did to the queen's t of restraint was pit es the world over re s the forbidden rease of efficiency luction accumulation of profits, producers le to hire extraordi ry talent for their them undreamed-of lavishnes e nothing worth thinking of t of | » the of their audiences, A decade so on re ed the industry into a fever t 1 stiveness to tickle the I which it could not afford to iful vividness of “The Vaw n time into a less bald | beth producer and Tle can not always be of treasure trove nor} historic lore. Romance has got to have its in-| nings. This is where the movies still fall down. | Every boy and 1 knows there is a difference | | in the two sexes which can not be covered by | Sugar producers are pressing their goods on the | tions presentation of vice, it was only because directors | arned the secret contained in every art thatthe ilf-reyealed is much less concealed than with ut its fundamental de- | as a youthful people was in healthy com bat, real adventure and joyous romance. To this end he bent his vast energies for an 1 and persuasion. In the course of three he has called the self-indulgent march of audience to un abrupt halt, | and has set their feet firmly in the narrow, dry | ath which winds upward to art and education. | As an impressive testimonial to this a check-| st made among 8,600 exhibitors. shows that | I up j the plays leading in popularity are all of the sort which the youngest mother’s son might at- tend with pleasure and profit. But that much re mains still to be done is revealed,by the cess | | of other pictures not 60 commendable. } luxurious display nor impossible acts of Harolame It be both met and explained by the simple | xy ent of fun-making and wholehearted laug r such as Booth Tarkington has offered to his | countrymen | If there is a great deal yet to be done in this} phase, which Mr. Hays frankly warns his pro: | ducers, it seéms to us that it might be accom- | plished by diverting some of the enormous rev enue which the movies of today produce, toward the maintenance and equipment of erary | taffs,” trained to read and recommend. There | is a deal of good stuff in every language, avail-| 9—cruel able without copyright or royalty. This fact mov ing picture producers have so far failed signally What will probabl; Salac ms now Mi y one day be known as the anks sub. » be ssed, t At Last Sugar Drops Refiners of sugar, during the last few have bowed to the inevitable and have reduced the price of cane s fine granulated, to the trade, to a which beet ref now quote six nestic srice closely approximating ined can be bought. The and one-quarter nts | | al 1—To discharge 6—Yo cook 10—Strongly pulsing (poetical) 12—A dealer 13—Something past due 15—That Is (abbr.) to | 18—To compute 20—An adverb 21—To be without 24—To move rapidly | 25—Used In lamps ~28—Return of sound 29—Candies 81—Personal pronoun 32—An ejaculation 83—A boy 84—Possessive pronoun | 36—A preposition 37—To took closely. re-| 38—Stunted 39—A lofty elevation (abbr.) Che Casper Daily Tribune CROSS-WORD PUZZLE SUGGESTIONS FOR SOLVING CROSS-WORD PUZZLES Start out by filling in the wor sure. These will give you a clu and they in turn to still others space, werds starting at the num horizontally or vertically or both. HORIZONTAL 1 pound (six and one-eighth cents net), while beet | ¢40—Performance market at 6.05 cents a pound (5.929 cents net.) able to hold up the pr! so long in th repeated reports of record world crops the face of the competition of beet sugar pro ace of ducer who have been rushing their sugar to market in advance of the coming large crop of raw sugar from Cuba. The situation long ago indicated a reduction | of from one cent to two cents a pound in prices | 66—Shallow places 67—Motor vehicles >| 68—Imaginary-monster 69—A month (abbr.) 42—Measure of years | 43—Infantile thanks This is a decided drop in price by the eastern | 4$—To abound | refiners but has been -indicated for weeks. In| #7—To litt fact, it has been remarkable that they have been | erowls, 651A tapestry o! | 53—Part of verb to be nd in} 64—Place for sleeping | 65—Mixed types 66—A wind 69—Malden loved by Jupiter 60—Clergymen’s scarfs 63—Residence of ruler | | 61—An ejaculation QTHE INTERNATIONAL BYNDICATE. ds of which you fee) reasonably ¢ to other words crossing them, A letter belongs In each white } bered squares and running either t VERTICAL 1—A perlod of tims 2—Wet earth 8—News matter 4—An allowance of welght B—A heavenly body 6—Projected 7—To make mistake 8—Sorrow 9—An opening 11—A receptacie 12—A drain pipe | 14—A flower 17—Dry 18—A heavenly body 19—Towards 22—Division of a beok 23—Prizefighting term (abbr.) 26—A pronoun 27—Iule talk 29—Movement ef troops {inating story concerning President | | urday civMlan population. “These war machines have never represented mbre than two or three percent of the populetion. From an economic or national standpoint their destruction has never been fatal. “But the airplanp represents a new type of warfare, capable of de- stroying not.a few battleships or a few bittallions, but the whole pro- ductive power and the civilization the country Itself. Everybody knows Great Britain is at France. “France could soar over the chan- nel with 10,000 planes and Cegtroy England {n 24 hours so completely that generations would elapse before England could take her place in world again, “War is hell. And the airplane has made {t more hellish than ever. London remembers eve’ what happened durin only a few German over the dividing waters li venom: ou, grey ghosts in the nigh Lon- don remembers seeing calm: women transformed into frothing, gibbering {dlots and children shocked into pa- ralysis und a living death of fear. less ‘than* 20 mach! accomplish this, what coul sands do? -In the space o! hours a well-equipped ene turn this whole cont charnel house of broken minds. “To prevent such a c: the common atm of United States. And it ts got together to lay plans for | Wild Ideas An eminent writer’ o: cs and diplomacy -carrt t the today nercy of 28 | | } | Car world pol! an {um Kalinin of Soviet Russia in the vening Post. It {is also an interview and indicates some. of the ideas that flutter through the Kalin in brain. The ‘Russian executive | merely ® figurehead so far ay the government of ‘the nation is con-/ cerned, and it {g sald that he was picked by Lenin because of tho trust and confidence reposed in him: by the peasantry, who might becomes STOMACH UPSET? Get at the Real Cause —Take 80—To rise high 83—A meadow 86—To regret $9—Deserves | tl 41-—Beverans (pl.) {sufferers are doing now. Instead of 42—To aosert | taking tonics, or trying to petch up a 44—Caperr | poor digestion, they are attacking the . | veal cause of the ailment liver | 45—Light blows i a eee sete ieee \*"Dr. Edwares’ Olivé Tablets arouse Ae Aiprentin the liver ina eoothing, healing way. oF Li When the liver and bowels are per- 5 eon rot forming their natural functions, away pag atl goes indigestion and stomach troubles. 64—Edged Implement 67—Island 68—Wild animals | 62—Fallen tree trunk | 64—Te drink with the tongue '@5—An insect, of cane sugar to the domestic wholesale trade yet the was maintained long after the price | of raw sugar had dropped, and when export | prices had declined below the equivalent of six| cents “ pound | The president has not announced a reduction | of the sugar tariff and evidence Is not lacking | that he does not intend to make such an an-| nouncement. So at last, the price of sugar to| the domestic trade has dropped of its own| weight because of world crop litions. And, seemingly the end is not yet. Safety First Under the caption, “For Safer Driving In Pueblo,” the Pueblo Star-Journal has the fol Solution PUZZLE SOLUTION of Monday's Puzzle lowing editorial which will apply to Casper and other cities: Diver utomobile driver in Pueblo ought to co-operate with the city officials and organiza- in charg the safer driving campaign which begins today. More than 20,000 deaths oc cur annually in this country as a result of au tomobile driving, and the injured list amounts to more thousands, It is an appalling record, and will become worse if no steps are taken to im prove conditions, “The key to the entire problem ig the individ- ual driver, The man at the wheel holds life or Fo r Mutual Protection death in his grasp, the result depending upon “Ye the civilization of this North whether he is careful, reckless or inclind to American continent {sto be made take chances, The campaign in Pueblo iy intended secure, Canada and the United to impress upon everp person the necessity for 8 the best policy for the mobile driver to|- follow, und this ly the aim of the campaign be ing wuged among the motorists ‘Reckless ved at street intersections, failure to observe tr States mugt get together in some fe driving, und if this can be brought ubout| kind of a joint alr programme to there will be a decided decres in the number | Pretect thetr countries from any pos. of automobile collisions, Exercise of extreme care sible! team eeencec: suggests | .s ‘ . 6 Vancouve: ; and caution ¥ ill prevent most of the fatal auto tai trithhea iiavey eo. chansea, tise mobile accidents in this country. Playlng it safe | character of w tt today mil! fic rules and carelessness are pro causes of automobile accidents, No matter rigorously the traffic laws are enforced the problem of automobile fatalities and acci-| dents will never be solved without co-operation by the motorist, Bufe driving Is the best way of bringing this coperation about, und safe dri ing will not be attalned without constant vi ance on the part of the driver lific how Unconstitutional Minnesota's one day rest in seven law is de elared istitutional by the state euprens court, because “it yiolates the equality provis ions of both state and federul eoustitutions by providing that employees shall be given one day rest each week in certain specific employments but e cludes certaln other specific employments Che prane crop of 1024 was light bat it would hard to convince our Democratic friends t at there was any shortage in the lemon crop, Dayid. Lawrence says the Democratic leader feeling » revival of coura Perhaps that | because there will be no election in 192 Hands Off In demanding that the government keep its | hands off the farmers’ co-operative movement, | the farmers’ co-operative marketing association, have struck a new note of far-reaching effect, | which is bound to 1}inimize the importance of | the legislation which may be proposed by the | farm commission appointed by President Cool idge which is now in session and to curb the de | mand in congress for additional farm legisla- tion at this time, The president himself enter the notion that there is too much federal’ regulation of all kinds of business, tains |tary aggression ts not directed ainst a nation’s war machinee— Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets That's what thousands of stomach | Have you a bad taste, coated tongue, poor appetite, a lazy, don’t-care feeling, no ambition or energy, trouble wi undigested foods? Take Olive Tablets the substitute for calomel. De ats Olive ae eS ie ely vegetable compound mixed with | blive aa You will know them by their olive color. They do the work without ping, cramps or wr ake one or two at bedtime for quick e army and navy—but against the | Aspirin ts the trade mre > TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1925 terrible if aroused against the gov- ernment. It is his mission to con- vince rural Russia that soviet rule ts spreading over the world and ts e worthy advance in government. This is a hard task In the face of the ng facts, but Kalinin is still holding the line. Acording to the interviewer, this {an has .eome strange » he would ike to inffict For one thing, he have too much money in 7 ; also too.much luxury. He says that here there are lots of men who have motor cers for their own use. He would put such a high tax on gesoline that nobody would use an automobile except for practical »|SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for Colds Pain Neuralgia Toothache Lumbago Neuritis Rheumatism Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets—Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. t Bayer Menvfecture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicsiicacid purposes. ‘There would be no riding tor mere pleasure. That would bo attended to through- busses provided by the state. He also asserts that there is too much class and race dis. tinction in this country. He would correct this by compelling racial in- termarriage for several generations. In this way a nation of real work- ers would be produced. - That at least is the Kalinin opinion as tndloated to an American journalist. To a msn up a tree it would seem: that the program which the Reds havo arranged for America wou 1 rot be very popular even with our 2 ed socialists. Better a blind beggar on Broadway than a soviet boss in the Kremlin Cross” on iablets you are Headache Everything in B RIG TIMBERS | Vistrihr | Three-Day Cementing Phone 2300 and 62 Office and Yard—F ief, Eat what you like. 15¢ and 30c. THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER CO. FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS KONSET JOIN THE AMERICAN LEGION NOW uilding Material A SPECIALTY \ ntors of Process for Oil Weils. Casper, Wyo. irst and Center Sts. The Power No one can deny that It Gives {t gaves to congress the power to prohibit the employment of any person under 18 years of age, of whom 187,000 are married. "A person may argue that the power will not be used but the undeniable fact remains, that the power to prohibit is a part of the Amend- ment. Wil] Suspend No one can deny State Laws that it suspends estate laws, for the second section specifically says that state laws shall be suspended to the extent of the Federal Les- islation. It is true that the states can enact laws higher than the Federal statutes but the fact re mains that state laws are to be superceded to whatever point con gress enacts legislation. Why the 18-Motions made tn Con Year Limit grees to make the limit of age 14 and 16 were both yoted down. The advo cates now excuse the 18-year limit on the ground that it was desirec in order to control emplo dangerous occupation: were true Congress wou have made the mit, regulate and proh' § and to limit regula hibit up to 18 at ha pations. Amendment t up and pi 19 occu Will It Affect The following Farm Labor? extracts from th Congressional Rec ord of Saturday, April 26th day the Child Labor Amen 9 Passed the House the iar | | | | ‘The Chairman: The gentlema from South Carciina offers an amendment, which the Clerk wil report The Clerk read as follows. Amendment offered by Mr. Me Swain: Page 1, line 11, after the word “age” strike out the period ta colon, and add the follow- : “Provided, That no law shall conrol the labor y ehild in tho house, or business, or on the premises connected therewith, of the parent or parents.” ‘The question was taken and the amendment was rejected, The Ohoirman: The gentleman from South Carolina offers an amendment, which the Clerk will report, The. Clerk read as follows: Amendment offered by Mr. Me- Swatn: Page 1, line 11, after the word ‘age” strike out the period, insert @ comma, and add: “But no law enacted under this article shall affect in any way the labor of any ehild or children on the farm of the parent ov parents.” The question was taken; and on a division (demanded by Mr. McSwain) there were—ayes 76, noes 192, Note that the suggested amend- ments did not exempt commercial ized farm labor but only the work of children upon their parents’ farm or in thelr parents’ homes Had either of these amendments been adopted th®labor of children on the farms ar in the homes of their parents would have been ex empted.and it would not now bi necessary for the advocates of the amendment, to’ be asserting that they have no desire to regi late farm or home labor. Actions speak louder than words. ‘The Intentions of Facing certain The Advocates. defeat the ai vocates of tl Amendment are now loudly pro claiming that they have no desire to regulate farm labor; but while the. former Federal Child Labe Law was in effect they held Conference on Child Labor Stan ards ani certainly reasonat to assume that should the ( Labor Amendment be ratifie those who adoptec ‘minim laws tn confo er than same. ‘The standards adopted by a u animous vote of the Conference “were as follows: (See Page 443 U &. Chidren’s Bureau Publication No. 60) “An age minimum of 16 for employment in any occupatt: except that children between 1 and 16 may be employed in agr! cultural and domestic service dur ing vacation period: “AN chil dren shall, be required to attend at least nine month r, either full time or par tween the ages of “There shall be agency which shall de. juvenile employment Adequate provis for advising children on the leave school the employmer opportunities open to then assisting them in finding suitable work, and providing for them Such supervision as may be need ed during tho first few years of thelr employment. All agen working towards these ends be coordinated through the tral agency,” a central al with ¢ problem ion shall be x ot To anyone who can read the English language these st: ‘de vay that the minimum objective of the leading advocates of the Amendment ate that no child un- der 16 shall work on a farm or in domestic service except that those between 14 andié may work du ing Vacations. FACTS ABOUT THE CHILD LABOR AMENDMENT The remaining peragraph of thefr minimum standards includes such schoo] requirements tha very few persons under 18 yeu: of age could secure regu’ar en: ployment. ‘They were Incorpor: ated at the suggestion of certain English “uplifters" who were present, and during the Confer ence Miss Julia Lathrop said: “The great advantage for us ir a discussion of this English meas ure is that it shows us a w standardize education in the terest of the future same time get rid of the one thing we have never dared attack —rural child labor.” in and at the Who Are the The report of the Authors? Senate Judiciary Committee accom. panying Joint Resolution No. (the proposed amendment) dis closes a continuing recognition by members of the committee, and from her own declarations, that Mrs. Florence Kelly Wisehnewet- zky was a directing influence in the form and management of the amendment. She testifi her instructions pation in the lection of the Sen ator who should be asked to in troduce the bill.” [ra. Flor Nec Wischnewet st ator of K friend of Jerich Enge! author wit rx of the communist manif of Hull House, Chicago, the Amer {can Association for Labor Legis lation (a the Internatio National ¢ eumers’ Leagu president the Intercollegiate Soci (mow the League of Demo¢ ) Ke cht at E “ ‘ sian or Wischni zky, from whom she was later divorced. Mrs. Kell was also president of the Inte Socialist League the continues its socialist Kelly has also r of the fac Rand School amber of Mrs mections and ac he war are covered tn the port 6 arsistants were Owen Lovejoy, Secretary of the National Chi'd Labor Committee, and Miss Grace Abbott, Chief of the Children’s Bureau of United States D V. Debs was put in prison for dis- loyalty during the war said Love- joy wrote him a love letter’ cun- taining the following expression, “© © © You came to earth too soon. We aren't ready for, you yet. You are as premature as Lincoln was, or Huss, or Wich- liffe, or Jesus. Well might you say as you pass us in the shajows of your Gethsemane, ‘Sleep on now and take your rest; behold the hour is at hand,’ ” Miss Abbott, who will if, the Amendment 1s successful, get an increase of at least $1,000,000 per year appropriation for her, ‘de- partment, came to the Children’s Bureau from the Hull House in Chicago, which {s a hotbed of 8o- clalism, and while there was u cloge associate of Dr. Aunp louise Strong, who {s now chief press agent for ‘Soviet Russ Miss Abbot {s president of the National Conference of. Social Workers and also served as “‘con- sultative mémber” of {ts execu- tive board at the recent Won: ational League Fourth J Congress at W e Hague Florence What Will the The transfer of Amendment power from 43 Accomplish? states to the Hed- eral Governinent could only be justified by a grave necersity. Statistics’ presented by the advocates for the purpose uf creating the impression of suc!t necessity includes those above tiie age Umit of the former: Federal Child Labor Law and those in oc cupations euch as farming and domestic work, newsboys, etc., not covered by its provisions. The 1920 Census, althou; taken {n @ period of unusual dustrial prosperity, showed {1.: per cent decrease during the d ade in the employment of ct dren in industry, and on'y 9,473 *0 employed at that time. If the farmer Federal Child Labor Law could be put into effect today i would remove less than 40 per tons from all the manufacturing establishments in the. United States. No necessity for Federal Gente and supervision exists to- ny. Tn 1900 we had 3 Bureaus, Aw nual Cost $820,000, In 1928 we had 83 bureaus, An» nual Cost $550,000,000. FARMERS’ STATES RIGHTS LEAGUE Taeorporated

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