Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 19, 1920, Page 2

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MONDAY, APRIL-19, 1920 Information Bureau, | conducted classes in‘mathematics, ethics % and Biblical literature. “HAVE COLOR IN CHEEKS Be Better. Looking—T Olive Tables @° - Che Casper Daily Cribune Nitartgaan expeditisn, three yeara| durham for the Wison administration, [$40 on thelr yersbns when passing ‘t- Pee ae reakit aieeeibr,, WRENS |cede to be the. opinion of the ma-! an u : NI is ison {Migtation officiats. rederic J. a Issued eyery evening except Sunday at] sity or em fe -iey Gee Ree Nisiragtiad ” Gepost 9 SBROL Ne oe oulle EBte shear! Q. What is Harty Houdiat’s correet| ton, D.C. This offer applies strictly to Casper, Nairona county, Wyo. Publi-|Jority of the people they represent./tlon to Vera Cruz expedition, six|0f the Senate investigating committee Mame and is he an American? J. HV. | information. The “bureau cannot give cation offices: Oil Exchange Bulldings| without regard to the intrinsic merits /rhonths; Vera Cruz expedition to Mex-|for waste, extravagance and misman: A. Houdini was born on April 6,| advice on legal, médical and financial 15;0f the question. In other words, they|ican punitive expedition, one year and|gement in the publicity department|1874, in Appleton, Wisconsin. His! matters. It does not attempt es ati |court what they regard as st popu-| th . otal . th var. i 2|name was Harry Welss, but has been| domestic troubles, nor to undertake Entered at Casper Wvomlhm Poster i acon ip their wen Fahad i? tel tae ta ee roan punitive Expeas-| uring the, war-caaghst him, who cqreat) Ao eA eset oie rte Monaien exhaustive researcn on any subject. fice as second-class matter, Nov. 22, 1916 | /@r. dgment te! | tion to world war, two months, making When was the first English sub-| Write your question plainly and brief- PAGE TWO jbe guided solely by what they con BUSINESS TELEPHONE. {them it is unwise. { ¥ 3 tet . . zi & To have a clear, pink skin, bright MEMBER THE ABSOGIATED PRESS!“ choiner ‘clive take & P acrle eee Spe ee an igh: | Carne Aa REE ind ok built in Lor: tet %G pee eter py ee aa no pimples, a feeling of buoyancy REPORTS FROM THE UNITED PRESS| © more seri-en years ‘peace out of the one hun-| Hospitals report a seventy to ninety per} A. It was built in Luraen trom Co | enclose 2*cents in stamps for 1 Te claldhood Gays, you mast kee ous and conservative view of their duty.| dred and forty-five. cent decrease in alcoholism and police}Vent Garden to St. Martin’s Lan», ty) postage. All replies are sent direct to body free from Prudden, K 1720-38 4 eses for food, because the flayor will be imparted to flesh and eggs. Q. How many years has the Untid States spent at war? . tegen Bldg., Chicago, Il. | Copies of the Daily Tribune are on} file in the New York &nd Chicago of- fices and visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier p OUS Wastes. J. EB. HANWAY, President and Editor| While they are obliv views | aH tre} ,. " tive Lendon county council, in 1862. the inquirer.) hr wards’ Olive ‘Tablets BAL WASWAY, Business Stanager| Ve ‘hey are oblivious to the views!’ During the one huhdred and forty-|ceports show slightly less. Well, it] “@ "Should onion tops be fed. to poul- pes Spe eas ee ee ewe wih a THOS DAIL¥——Advertising Manager| of the public, the masses of the peo-|five years since 1775 the armed forces| Wasn't much of an art anyway and itlérys Cc. HL G. o| ti Oc tha qd ke Waa 7 oe Oe ee | rs nears exh ) 2. B. BVANS. haadetate Editor| le. if you please, yet they feel that|/ot the United States have been en.{can be spared. ‘A. The tops of onions are eaten in ? act on the liver any ie calomel Bapclate Editor): — —yet have no dangerous after effect. ditorial Writer |/it is their duty to exercise their own| gaged in some sort of wartare for a ee Oe moderate quantities by all kinds | of le Vay s News Take one nightly and note results | bes: rme - ic j -. e ! . | poultry. his food shou! be ont . i z F Advertining Representatives |best judgment on great public ques-| little o¥er a hundred years or sixty- from birds about to be used for table’ 0 They sta: Se bile and overcome David J. Randall. 341 Fifth Ave. jtions. If their judgment runs coun-/nine per cent of the total time. ‘This 1 purposes, and from those producing{ Dr. John Grier Hibben, who enters oan aah tal bg Goreng eS ne & Beullom ter to public opinions for the time be-' includes foreign wars, Indian wars and ANSWERS 10 MUFSTINNS upon his sixtieth year today, has been ° 2c. j 5 ' ing, they feel it is their duty president of Princeton university since 1912, when he was chosen to succeed Woodrow Wilson, who had resigned two A. Betweeq. April 17, 1775, and No-|years previously upon his nomination vember 11, 1918, this republic has been! for the New Jersey governorship. Dr. engaged in some kind of warfare dur-| Hibben was born at Peoria, Ill., the son ing 106 years. of a Presbyterian clergyman. After his not only | minor domestic disturbances, as well as to act righly and justly and accord-| foreign wars and civil war. We have| ing to their best judgment, but wlso | had our army occupied on one kind of to aim to instruct and to lead public! warfare or another during our history opinion into the right channels. In!for a period of two years of warfare} other words that they should not only} Q Ca | the life of in you tell me anything about A. Mitchell Palmer? R. 0. ¥. Palmer was One Year .... A. Alexander Mitchell Six Months... j to one year of peace. | born in Moosehead, Pa., May 4,1872, He Who is the richest Inat AS t = . . hes jan in! graduation at Princeton in 188% he spent (teh |be real leaders and guides in legisia-| th view Of these historical facts and are Swarthmore Coileaes eee) ‘America? 8. D. | four years in study at Princeton Theo- PHONE 345 Per Copy tion, but thmt they should also be real) the) disdtganized conditions existing in venext pied a he sanene el A. Jackson Burnett, a Cherokee, nas! logical seminary and at the University & -, : eir - | 7 = - e . Lo ae gg] rite and netrciors for their con ure tell As the nec ot ce eee emer™ ecole hele gin ct taron” in isthe wer oranned 1 Sandison & Fiddes stituents. Q. What countries lead in manufac-|the Presbyterian ministry and during turé and number of automobiles in use.) the next four yeats filled a pastorate at Chambersburg, Pa. He then returned Three Moaths The masses of the public! fairs in the’ Western hemisphere, com-!Phi Kappa si Fraternity, of which may sometime, thru misinformation, or’ mon sence suggests that the army and) President Wilson is also a member. Mr. Palmer married Roberta Bartlett Dixon 1,6 No subscription by mail accepted for less period than three months. THOS. FIDDES, Manager Corner Fourth and Jefferson Sts. All subscriptions must be paid in ad-|lacl{ of information, go astray. In navy should be kept in good working! 5 A. An unofficial estimate gives|to Princeton a4 instructor in logic and P t Servi vance and The Daily Tribune will not]... S as : ra of Easton, Md., November 28, 1898.] r,, 5 ; ¢ ¢ . romp' ice insure “delivery atter subscription be-|SUch cases it is the duty of the Rep-' oraer and that we have & little 'pow-| Was admitted to the lan 1898. Member| United States first lace, Canada sec-{ psychology. During this period of his We Deliver comes one month In arrears. resentative the nece: ond and Great Britain third. career the versatility of his scholarship (Any reader can get the answer to; was demonstrated, for, in addition to to give his constituency der on hand. ry information and to guide |sixty-first and sixty-third congress, 1909- |1915. Appointed judge United states -———0 Member of Audit Bureat of Cireulations rey c.) a ee Member of the Associnted Presk. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. re SCORES THE PRIMARY Following so closely the recent dis- graceful primaries held in his home state of Minnesota, the country 16 tre. mendous son's interested in Senator ‘el s mgde in the Senate in} which he took oceaston to compare the former method ' of and rem: selection the day election of candidates with Taan- ner in which it is done at present. ‘rhe Senator is right in saying that the primary method produces an Inferior | type of men. The evidengg.is present in both branches of Conf PP ertats repugnant toa man of quality to sub- ject himself to the struggles and hand- to-hand methods of the primary. It cheapens the office and humiliates the candidate. A plausible demagogue with litue or no c¢ cter and no qualifi- fons whatsoever, but with a consid- erable anda Metho-| out and win no trouble; fitted, of things | fund <n go election with ontly broad knowledge, “a that him for the ducting the people's busin ing their 1s is distanced in the race. He cannot and will not appeal to the mob nor engage in the rough and tum- campa: n dist hand-shake a primary where a man é in all k of con- | or mak-| prepare ble of ward contests. Our plan of government is based} strictly upon party responsibility, and removes us too far from is no check the primar this responsibility, and ther to be had upon the actions and con duct in government. Another objection | and a serious one to the political morali-| is the ex- ty of the country, and that pense, the use of money made more or less necessary in conducting practical- ly two elections. Then a primary is! a hurried voting with litle or no con- 8 of what results it may produc The electors do not consult and advise upon men or measures, It goes with a whdop and # rush. The ucus and convention w delibera- brot tive bodies, they people together to talk over their public affairs, there effort to se best qualifica-| | discussion and an the and there was always failed to was candidat in tions obtafnab! if nominate the best man possible the oth. this ineentive your party ef party was likely to do the thing you omitted to do and so win the election at the polls. And it credit the everlasting convention be it said to the and in ten were the under it as are primary while of caucus system, not one time mediocre men chosen 8} there the thing, chosen und And now anoth tem. them into true and just premises and conclusions. “The class I have first mentioned is in the main, of a more modern type} than the other class some extent to be evolution that has taken place in re- cent years system of nomina- tions and elections. and seems to in our “Most of our prominent and leading| 4-5 If gathered rogethgr tt would make |™ legislators of former time, of bygone days, appear to have belonged to the Second tlass which I have referred. These great men of the past did not! rd themselves as mere legislative | tomatons, to register temporary fluctuations of the | so-€alled. publié pulse. They felt that first of all their constituents were entitled to the exer- cise of their best judgment and opin- ion and all great public questions, that this wi an important part of theit functions, “While they were willing to hear all and to counsel with all; yet like jury- men, they must render theif own judg- ment upon the law afid facts of the ease in hand and wet accordingly.” o— legislative OUR WAR HISTORY Altho we are accounted a peéace-lov- ing people during the one hundred and forty-five years of our national exist- ence we have devoted one hundred of those years to-war. True some of the | wars required littlé of the national ener. gy and resource, still they were wars and kept armed forces’ in the field and war vessels upon the sea and the at- tention of the and navy, depart: ments of the government occupied. During the one hundred and forty- five years since the, begitming of the American revolution in 1775, these strik- ing fi are presented. The United States has been engaged either in civil or foreign wars for almost thirty-eight years, or one foutth of the time. We have had one year of such for three years of peace, consider- years of Indian warfare and disturbances: as peace time. The length of the peace periods dur- ing the hundred and fodty-five years are summed up as follows: The war of the revolution to the War with Frante, fifteen years three months; the war with France to the war with Tripoli, nine months; war with Tripoli the war with Great Britain, years chd ore month; with at Britain to wat with Algiers, Tunis and Morocco, one year; war with Algiers, to war with Mexico, thirty years and six months; war with Mexico to civil war, e years and ten months; civil r with Spain, thirty-one years and eight months; Philippine insurrec- tion to Cu¥an pacification, four years and pacification war s war every ing the minor one to seven war ci tow three months; Cuban an outcome of the; Tunis and Morocco} | The Melting Pot, oT | The Ameétican record for bigamy we longs to Charles Newton Harvey of | Californiw, H6 had been married to twenty-six women ‘and was about to! marry the twenty-seventh when arrest- quite ah interesting family reunion, but! Lofd’ help the head of those twenty-! six) families. | Pussyfoot Johnson is of the opinion| that Great Britain or most of it will |adopt local. option this fall. Scotland | sure, England ceertain, and Ireland pos- | Sibiy. ; Republican Leader Mondell is of the! opinion that Congress ‘will recess June Sth with a good share of legislation} scheduled for the. present sessitn ac- complished and out of the way. The official count in the South Da- | kdtte Republican Presidential primary} election gives ‘Johnson, 26,391; /Lowden, | 26,961, and Wood, 31,265. George A. Zabrisit, president of: the! Uilited States’ Stigar Equalization Bohrd, ‘in testimény before a. Senate investigating committee, stated that (At, tomney General Paimer jvas responsible for, the pagent high’ price of sugar, whén he tixtd the pfige Ot) 17)18 dents! for} Thuisiana ugainy he elevated tite || ideas of iGubails: pent, “homething | likg three a ik says Pile! Was witholt Tegal power to fix OVERALL CLUB Birmingham, Alabama, is engaged in | fighting the high cost of men's cloth ing ahd more tlian two thousand men including judges on the bench, city of- ficials; attorneys, ministers and men in all. walks of life have joined the Over- all Club. They have laid aside their| store clothes and signed a pledge to wear overalls exelusivély until the price of clothing is brot down within the réach of the average purse. George Creel, former peddler of bull We sell and take care of the NA- TIONALLY advertised WILLARD thread rubber insulated batteries. We have the hecessary instru ments to test and repair magnetos, generators, straters and the lighting eqquipments on all makes of cars. AUTO ELECTRICAL CO., 136 E. Midwest Ave. Phone 968 {Old 11 E. First St.) jerty custodian order to enter this country? F. L. | longer urt of claims, April, 1915, resigned eptember, 1915; appointed alien prop- by President Wilson, October 22, 1917; made attorney general March 5, 1919. He is a member of the Society of Friends. Q. Is there a visible sign of the prime meridian in Greenwich, England? A. 8.. On the road to the observatory at Greenwhich, the meridian has been arked in the stone. Q. What is meant by winter rules and sutimer rules in golf? W. H. » A. Under summer rules, a player must play his ball as it lies, while under winter rules, he isepermitted to improve his lie or tee-up his ball everywhere ex- cept in hazards, Q. What is calorene? M. S. A. This is a new cutting gas made from’ alcohol. It is quite like acetylene. An analysis of it shows carbon 86 pet cent and hydrogen 14 per cent. It gives a maximum temperature of 6,200 degrees Fahrenheit while acetylene | gives 6,300. Q. How great a pressure ches thick stand? 5 ° A. Sound ice of this thickness will bear_a pressure of 1,000 pounds per square foot. Q. Must all imigrants have money in will ice 10 fin W.B ‘A. The Bureau of Immigtatior 4 immigrants are required* to have a “Gosh! How ty back aches!” After Grip, "flu” or colds, the kidneys and bladder are Often affected —called nephritis, or inflammation of kidneys. This is the red flag of danger—better be wise and check the further inroads of kidney disease by obtaining that wonder- | ful discovery of Dr, Pietco’s, known as Anuric¢ (anti-titic-acia), becatise it etpels the uric acid poison from the body and Temoves those pains, such as backache, rheumatism in muscles and joints. Naturally when the kidneys are deranged the blood is filled with poison- ous waste matter, which settles in the feet, ankles and wrists; or under the eyes in bag-like formations, Dr. Plercé’s Amuric is many times more potent than Jithia and often clirinates uric acid as hot tea melts sugar. MADERA, CAL.—"I recommend Dr. Pierce’s Anuric very highly. I have suffered for the list three years with | catarrh of the bladder, having tried every remedy [ heard of but without relief. L siw Aniific advertised in the paper, and like a drowning man grabbing at a straw HOR ELE I would try it also, which I did with great suc- cess, as it relieved® almost imme- diately, be had taken all of the afore tria! package, and having great confi- lately sent dence in the remedy f imm to the drug Store andbought a packhge. I can say to all suffering from an; disease of the kidneys or uric aci troubles, Fy His romedy send aalter no ave great faith Iti Doctor Pierce's remedies.—S, P. Hensn.ty, any question by writing The Casper his work in logic and psychology, he Electricity will help you to take off that disagreeable, shivery, unhealthful chill—the chill that is the cause .of so many colds. } a ahi adaseoncsa western Electric y © HUGHES . Sunspeam Heater will furnish enough. heat to make you comfortable: Any electric light socket in your home will furnish the current —and you can carry the heater with you from room to room. * The cheery glow sent out by the polished copper reflector car- ries with it a powerful volume of heat that will effectually warm up the average room. It’s safe, too. The chilly days are here. Get your heater while there is an ample supply. Protect yourself. : Call on us or call us up. Natrona Power Company "PHONE 69 may have occurred fsolated cases of} | under the old} corruption and unfairn system, th never was such oppor-| tunity for widespread debasement as is] presented and practiced under the pri-| mary stem. i} ‘The highly or efficiently organized po: litical party, even the led ‘‘bossed” party never in history pleced in county, state and national office the inferior | of administrative or represen: | ability, tnder the convention} as has (he nurherous cooks whé, prepare the broth under the primary plan. Senator Nelson blames the primary, rgely responsible for th who votes which- ya from home blows, and more elections as politician in Congress, ever the npared with wat w the other able type who has convictions and stands by them and paints out to his constituents the right, the logical and} the to trav Altho the distinguished it may be poihted out the gro courts public among the whole people honorable road does this disrespect ator connection that for erally authority gen-| and to the primaries in the and un: traced partially ction of inefficient, inferic satisfactory offic s to direct the peo- ple affairs. | Speaking more particularly of the} situation Senator Nelson | | Legislators upproach their duties! from two different angles « on twol} different theories One ci m to | lave no pronounced opinion on any! ‘| prices qu important public question, but seeks tol A N D $5 oted. Make Your Selection Early and Be Assured Just What You Want TheGoldenRuleStore $2998 Women and misses who are quick to sense real values will at once recognize these Taffeta, figured Georgette, Satin, plain Georgette and Crepe de Chine Dresses as remarkable presentations at the of Finding Said Dad to Jim-- ‘‘Jim—T'll put up from $2,000 to $50,000 ay amount you say in any bank you name) to the credit of Mary and the children—if you'll just deposit a small rate of interest against it each year, for I want to help you get an estate for them 5 “And—I'll never ask you to est—and I'll stop even that if your bank to their order, “‘What’s more—if you live to old a you can call the deal off-~an@T’'ll ag: not all, of the interest deposits made.” pay the principal—ijust the inter- you die and then deposit the full estate in ge and need the money— ree to give you back the bulk, if If you were Jim~Wouldn’t you take him up? Sure you would! Practically the Same Offer Is Open to You “CAPITOL LIFE”? McGREW Phone 153

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