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SO PSOE SE head he S —— S S DL ED RATS SSS PEED: SN ee a cenit cerns ——— a Che Casper Daily Cribune Issued every evening except Sunday at er, Natrona A Publi- Eater Ace ode aE BUSINESS TELEPHONE....,,.....- 15 Entered at Gasper (Wyo stof- Fees At cies pratcen Wee ae site MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS FROM THE UNITED PRESS J. E. HANWAY, President and Editor BARL E. HANWA ¥, Adverti 5 ‘ANS. A . GRIFFIT: W. H. HUNTLEY. Advertising Represcntatives: David J. ndall, 341 Fifth Ave., New York City, Prudden, King & ‘Brudden, 20 tegen Bidg., icago, Ii. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on le in the New York and icago of- ices and visitors are welcom One Year . Six Months... Thrée Months .. One Month .. Per Copy .:-! One Year ... Six Months’. Three Months No subscription less period than three month All subscriptions must be paid in ad- vance and The Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscription be- comes one month in arrears. Member of wy Seen of Cireulations Member of the fesccinted Press. 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. aca HAYS FOR PRESIDENT. There seems to haye come to the dele- gates at Chicago a spontaneous idea that Hon. Will H. Hays, chairman of the national Republican committee ought to be the convention nominee for the pres- ideney. In early preconvention days,! sim suggestions were frequently made, but were met with discourage- ment from the chairman. If the senti-| ment has since develaped anq crystaliized it has done so withoyt the chairman's knowledge and while he has been occu- pied with conyention matters. The more one thinks of Mr. Hays in connection with the presidency the more the idea grows. He certainly possesses all of the desirable qualities sought for in a candidate, in the way of mental and mor ience in public life and wide knowledge of the duties His the teem and in that ‘of his cularly, cpuld scarcely equipment, expe of the executive! position in neral public € own party, be improved. There is no man in public life today wha has clearer conception of the Re- publican party's doctrine affecting good government, No man has been inspired | to @ higher sense of public duty to the| contemplati of the! No: public is more free from! people. by 4 party’s history and record. man in the country al and other influences that de- pol stroy independent action. Mr. Hays can be pointed to as one of the best examples of pure Ame} with wholesome and plain American} ideats. He thinks and acts in terms of | the whole people and not-in terms of! special groups. Due to his the Republican made fforts al national organization has been for ful and strong. Has heen to stand for the same high principles of conduct that the party teaches. brought the teachings into practice. Mr. made | He has |_ The Casper Daily Cribune PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES FROM AMONG WHOM HAYSISB COMED FRANK O. LOWDEN __ | HERBERT HOOVER HENRY J. ALLEN } (Continued from Page 1) dressed up and ready for the motnen-| tous events to he enacted. The deco- rations and arrangements are as per-) fect as artistic taste and ingenuity) could make them. The principles of the | nes: ser talking machine and the telephone have} been combined to carry the words of the ehairman and the platform orators to ha most distant corners of the great vil, The city itself, outside of the conve tion centers, is in gala attire, while the Loop and Michigan boulevard are> a riot of the national colors. At no pre-) vious time, not excepting the peak of) wartime excitement, has the American’ flag been mere in evidence. The breezes, are thick with it, And brass bands—no one knows how many of them are in! the city at the present time, brought! in by state delegations and special ex-| cursions. At any rate there are plenty! and they are entertaining the strangers within the gates with everything in, pr a their repertoire, from sacred music to SUTHERLAND {the raggedest jazz. The band that will) me play “America” at the opening of the) Bs convention tomorrow noon will be com: | ‘posed of a thousand instruments. Wyoming's location in the hail ts on the right aisle, last row.of seats, near! the main entrance. | Up to the hour the convention js! called to order the wholg interest is) gentered in presidential row. The head-| quarters of the candidates are thronged; with delegates and visitors. Important) looking gentlemen arrive and depart and’ political managers flit here and there. i | while the other human cogs, like stenog raphers, secretaries, messengers, te ‘| phone attendants, perform, their func tions with no more apparent or livelier interest in the busy seene than the> Steel, iron and other metal in any other) big machine. Run slow or speeded up makes no difference to these in the ope- vation. It works perfectly. The worry) is gitogether elsewhere, and worry speels it exactly. The action of the! national committee in determining the) contests has brought Lowden, Johnson | and Wood approximately on a level so} far as the instructed delegate vote is! concerned. The review of the creden-) tials committee of the convention will) produce no change in this status. These three candidates combined do not have_ sufficient votes to effect a nomination, while the other candidates with pledged votes are negligible. Considerably more | than half the convention vote is unin- structed. Yes, as many as 525 delegates | are running at large without owner- | ship. That is not however, | that they are not rec = plenty of| proposals of adoption. Any one of them can find a good héme in a perfectly re-) spectable family with presidential aspi- rations anywhere along the presidential Promenade. There is no objections to large families here and orphans ore welcome. ‘The more the better they like it. t The present program fixes 7 and Wednesday for Senator Lodge's note speech and organization, Thursday for the oraterical deluge, Friday for | balloting, Saturday is vice pre day and adjournment, Whether this! program can be carried gut as planned | depends altogether upon the balloting. Whether a deadlock occurs, or the voting; for state prodigies Is prolonged and in- sistent. This will carry the convention | over to Monday and possibly Tuesday. Senne ) GEN. JOHN J, PERSHING Hu another thing, he has given respectability that it has not enjoyed of late y: He has brought about a working interest in the purty on the part of its hest members. For the first time in many years the Republicans are conducting the affel of the party, instead of the bosses. Mr. restored the party to them. angle, the Hays idea grows, and the convention at Chicaso uid not perform a better day's work for the coyntry and the party than to hominate Will H. Hays as the party's crudidate for the presidency. — ANSWERED MR. WILSON. has done politics a Hays ha Viewed from a’ ry lent Wilson-wrote a letter to the Oregon Democrats, says the Na tional Republican, appealing to them to at do oby the pcord the national tiministration in the primaries, about to be held, and giving forth much elo quence about the necessity of preserv ing the “national honor” by rebuking the dastards who voted for the reserva ght to Americanize the yns covenant he brought tions which s¢ Nat ague of from is. Whereupon the Democrats of Oregon, in stubborn defiance pf thé Wi}ful One. and the face of his assertion that such © course was one of perfidy and dishonor, proceeded to swat the admin istration candidate for the Democratic senatoriz! nomination, and to renomi nate Senator George J5. Chamberlain, who voted for the Lodge reservations, has criticized the gross inefficiency of the administratigh, made himself and has ptherwise persona non grata to a presidential Incumbent who makes per- song] feulty to himself @ test pf narty aud national loyalty. President Wilson, with which get nowhere and his orders no. body obeys, is getting himself much in the position of King Canute, who com: his ukases ‘The boys who are doing the voting will receive their hotel bills in their boxes | about Monday morning and this will aid materially their judgment in arrving at) a ehoice on Monday. | When the deadlock pecurs and it) seems inevitable at this hour, after “are-| ful canvas of the situation in all of its aspects, will it be fought out by the original entries in the balloting? Wise) men are asking other wise men this serious question, while gazing off across) the field ta where the large stable of dark horses, and their grooms as well,| are showing signs of restlessness. 1 —" Year, Place. 1856— —Philadeiphia G. O.P. CONVENTIONS OF THE PAST For Vice President. William L. Dayton of New Jersey. Hannibal Hamlin of Main 1 President. nont of California. ‘oln of Mline John C. Fk *Abraham J Ls gl erat *Abraham Lincoln of Illinois. Andrew Johnson of Tennessee. In the past few days, experienced! Chica, O ant of Illinois. Schuyler Colfax of Indiana. conyention goers have noted the intense | ceed -*Ulysses ant of Hlinois. Henry Wilson of Massachusetts. loyalty of all branches of the Republic- ! William A, Wheeler A. Arthur of New Logan of Illinois. of New York. York. an party to Will H. Hays, the national! ehairman, They see in the large and enthusiastic gathering in Chicago to- *Rutherford B. Hayes of Ohio. *James A. Gurfield of Ohio. James G. Blaine of Maine. Chi AN Toss *Benjamin Harrison of Indiana m of New York. flay the results of his great work. They 1892 Benjamin Harrison of Indiana. Reid of New York. see, instead of warring factions, | 4s96——st “William McKinley of Ohio, Hobart of New Jersey. amalgamated party full of hope, Tees *William Mekinley of Ohio. Theodore Roosevelt of New York. of him the same wise canyention d “Theodore Roosevelt of New York. Charles W. vanks of Indian: tion _he has given them in thi 1904-—-—Chicago -~ *William H Sherman of New Yor William H 1. Butler of New Yor Charles EB. Hughes of N York, Pairbanks of Indiang ” 2 2 2 ” > ? 2 ? ? ? 1920———Chicago *These candidates were elected. Butler was selected by the nan, the convention nominee, died before e jon and Nicholas us candidate for yice president. tJames 8S. Shi National Commit | | ied in a ha-] ter pa nent for certain classes of postal + and this was done over the! Wil-/ Opposition of the postmaster general. | Another measure of relief for the posta} this country who is entitled to think/of war” ‘neyerything is act on behalf of the American yeo-! tional m! jple. No question of “national hono| ’ islis to fool the people reg involved in the matter of standing by|son and the group of underlings “whose every a nent Mr. Wilson made, at) minds go along." ‘This publicity is ‘al-| Workers is now under consideration in Paris, ‘The American people told him in}leged to be in the imterest of postal ss, and is certain to become law. November, 1918, that he lacked a g90d| employes who have had a raw deal at| Yet the country is led to believe that it deal of being the whole American gov |the hands of a postmaster who |S congress that has been treating the ernment, and thirty-nine members of) is openly and notorious! litical) Post office workers unfairly, the United States senate warned him, on; manager for the Wilson adminis these employes have been treated March-4, 1919, that they did not prep: The people are urged to appeal to; U"ustly ts trues The wages of these to stand for the thing he,was cogking| congress‘ for reliof of the postal em-| Workers, most of them skilled’ workers up at Paris. That he proceeded in yio-! ployes: to write letters and send tele-| Whose tasks necessitate the exercise of lation of these definite instructions {s) grams demanding that square deal be * high: degree of |Inteiliganbe, tay failed no fault of the American people, and! given the men who handle the mail. ‘The| ‘P 44venee In anything 4 pie proppty the diplomats who accepted him at his! impression is left that it is congress that| “7 Prevailing in other Iihes of employ- own valuation at Paris are simply in| jy responsible; purposely oor threugh 7°" The result is that the depart- the position of\ the Copenhagen Unt-| negligence, for the underpayment of|°"t has been deprived of the services| versity professors who feted Dr. Cook] the postal employes. ‘The truth is that af thousands of employes who have as the discoverer of the North Pole.|for thjs situation the post office depart-| ound Mi; mare Dron Rie berece es Hath these performances humiliated the|ment of the Wilson administration is| 2 Tee! Cleaners? Walle ‘the administra: ti as been frecly ad American people, but they did not bind) directly and personally responsible, 4 ae ch been ee detained ye ve tho. Atjetiann iaminaics Ait © employers in private industry about —— and responsibility of recommending to 3 its management of the post .office de- AOE CSS OnE Le -Proous ing Shp \eonsmaes (ai |partment. No effort to camouflage the sing the buck on | employ ne whose highest mi ling Mr. Every man insures his life, tion of circulation. either the/every postal employe in country knows. ‘The department nished'on request, We insure our advettisers, manded the ocean to back up and got “sore” when the tide proceeded to func tion as us There are still Jeft those mindless thinkers who proceed on the theory that everything Mr, Wilson says is holy writ, but there a growing number even of Democrats inclined to believe Ubis ought to read, “Wholly Rot.” The ¢ on Democrats have told Mr. Wilson very plainly that he is wrong in the theory that he is the only man in, ' has reached the appropriations to adequately pay postal) situation 1s going-.to foal the “postal em- histiost degree of ne fertion in the wil Fae carriers ene other bed Of! ployes, who have ey bereésnl farhillakity, son administra om. ne » latest) the department, b i an failer { nat adgsnbayalie ee oe ron eagle Hats epee H es . ant with the situation, no matter how well | fi jit may succeed in bunking people who su administration that has “kept us rs hay has passed one law providing bet! do na know the facts, and distriét problems back home. They! gna make an ideal all recognize in Mr. Hays an intense! ple afterward? Th. American of boundless ambition and in-|les sargument in dustry for the things of righteousness) against it. in American public life. They have seen \him take a defeated and disorganized Re-| ity of the | - | publican party, without hope or life, and| their favorites, , make of it in brief time, a militant, con- ; quering organization, full of vim in| a Will Hays. Pir mind: . snap, ready to battle for the same prin- ciples of government that made great the fe Roosevelt, | American republic and happiness to the} people. who knows the great principles of the party and adheres to them with strict- They look upon his great organi- zation ability, statecraft. These samie seasoned convention ob- ‘s ha are not presidentiai qualification: {if Will Hays is not the type of man to insure Republican success at the polls names of Lincoln, President of the Deo- z idew admits oF en ts vor and none Partisans, representing a sm all mine convention, ae are cheerjn; for The thoughtful mas. ity of the conyen' his is the situation in Chicago a: 4. | hour, in the calm that precedes or. McKinley and) vities of tomorrow, _ he acti. and brought honor to the} They find in Mr. Hays a man his wide knowledge of ‘His unquestioned integrity. ye asked one another if these 2 And “PACHSTAWIO Denver. Cotorade He protects his investment. "THE M ANUF ACTURER Insures his plant, machinery and The merchant insures his buildings and stock. The farmer insures his stock and equipment. The family man insures his house and furniture. Insurance protects investments, The adyertiser’s insurance policy is the report of the Audit Bureau of Cir- culations on the publications with which he places contra¢ts. He knows. that he really gets what he is paying for. The reports of the Audit Bureau of Circulations on The Tribune are’ fur- White Low Cuts— Complete the Summer Wardrobe The fashion of wearing White Shoes with almost all Summer costumes is becoming more general every year, Above is an Oxford with a Cuban heel, stitched toe and. good walking sole, for good general wear. Priced $4.50 and up Above is an Oxford with a Louis heel. Its plain vamp is modi- fied, —‘With its light, flexible sole one is as- sured of a comfort- able fitting. Priced $4.50 and up WHITE REIGNSKIN ’ ONE-EYELET TIES In Louis and Baby Louis Heels The fine woven material in their up- pers is hard to tell from the finest kid leather. To be had in either height of a Louis heel, light turn soles. 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