Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 24, 1920, Page 2

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1S RG RRR fr he ‘AGE Two xsd The Casper Daily Tribune = rhe Casper Daily Cribune held inviolate, the law of the land en- Wetisic od the identical official position now | 4 ean 3 4 No ch 10, 1 ved | ay s : it would distribute a bonus of the com-| mitted to membership in the Baptist vis, N. ¥., March 10, 1764, and lived vening except Sunday nt per eae ee hie? i pale ae om by ree — ar : = Bae Pany’s stock. That promise has See: church at Swanzey. He was a black-'in Wyoming Valley from 1777 to 1800. Oil Exchange Building. Ren TRG, ue UeeeR debates. “4 Sabin! Ri: ee endorse wept ly been made®by the division among)smith, Later he removed to Provi-|Tn 1784 he married Phoebe ‘Tripp, @ CBPHONE....: eee | eae £ mits ea a = not sit am . ream in a swivel ec § those who qualified of stock of the mar | dence, where he di@i February 20, 1693.’ousin of Frances Slocum, “the loat a Hoan congress as thc Dewar T© Make He! sought ways to act for his country-|iet value of $1,650,000. But of 15,000| His son., Abraham Harding, died In!sister of Wyoming.” In 1800 he te- igtered at C asper Cv yamine) Postar. Paes the country will not a aliod as eateToGESE eter Esai of the company only 727 quali- Providence November 3. 1604. Jenving}maved to Auyanehaiitie coy, Benn: : ‘or the bonus by remaining in its|% Widow, Deborah, and seven children,|sylvania, and from there to Richland ete Bt eee ORR Pid sed look in Yain to the Repubiican party petent to do it. He wrote and delivered employ four years. the remaining 14,-}0%¢ of whom, Stephen, was born in| county, Ohio, where he died in 1889, tHPORTS FROM 2 UNITED PRESS|to o ete 21 | Y ‘ "| Brow: 2 7 >. She Chil. | See ee Se to. complete their enfranchisement. the sealed orders to Dewey, he ordered to whom this offer was made elther| Providence in 1681. He had sia ehil-) “Fiewihind son, George Tryon Hard BE. HANWAY, President ‘and Editor| Warren Harding and the party are both him to cut the cable, abandon red tape,| dia not believe it or did not aren, five of whom were sons. Two! she was born Jure 16, 1790; and dted RL ay pecthine: pjanager committed to this end and the party has | but to smash the Spanish fleet an@ take|as much as they these, Abraham and Stephen, were) s..uary 9, 1860. He married Elizabeth sons who settled in Wyoming Val! oataty Baitor}heretofore given ample evidence of its Manila. He had. sublime faith in the] change. |Madisén May 1, 1816. Their son, |Charles Alexander Harding, born ssued every evening asper, Na ation office: USINES# TE re for it cared to make v. i. HUNTLEY {torial Writer |&00d faith. |fAghting qualities of American seamen,| Probably they did not el So Le y take much Advertising Representatives There will be industrial peace, for/and it was justified. The responsibility|thought of what was going to happen| Abraham was be at Warwick, R.| April 8, 1820, and died April 17, 1878,; vid J. ani TRE Ave. labor and the employers of labor will! for action was upon him and he acted.} four years hence. That is farther aheaa|!. i" 1 He removed to Waterford. married in 1842. Mary ‘Ann. Crawford, bt eR By sine deal with a stable government which |G ter opportunities were presented to/than the great majority of people are Conn. in 1732, and in 1761 to Orang | jaughter of Joshua Crawford, who was Chicago, Ti. will enforce justice and fairness and)Franklin Roosevelt in the same official}looking in these days, possibly farther |COU"tY, New York He married Anna’ born in Baltimore and was the son of Coptes of the Daily ‘Tribune are on 16 é Bg ie : fie In the New York aha'cieaxe of|Permit of no encroachment of one in-|position and in a much enlarged situa-|than they. looked’at Any time. THe ola| Oc!#on and died in Susquehanna coun: tices and visitors are welcome. John Crawford of Scotch-Irish, descent, | terest upon the other. |tion. He did not even recognize them.) Romans had a ‘motto, “Dum vivamus| (Pennsylvania, in 1806." Abraham) whose family oFiginated “tn Scotland, SUBSCRIPTION RATES With confidence and fair dealing, law! The Democratic party has buildea| vivamuns.” which might be iberally| 28s Served in the Te if paerc it-4s: ghought in’ the: peyjeh; of Craw: Qne Year ... enforcement and industry production) upon the name of Roosevelt, but the] translated, let us have a good time as| ©°", %* "cond Meutenant in Colonel ford, Lanarkshire: | Lay ay i ; i 5 William Allison's regiment of New) pr. George Tryon Harding, father rhree Months .. will be brought to normal and high liv-'man who wears it will not stand the|we go along and let the future look out ‘ | Ine Month . Per Copy York militi the Pr » being commissioned b¥ of Warren G. Harding, is the son of incial_ congr; December 1, Charles Alexander and Mary Ann In 1786 he was appointed cap-\ Crawford Harding. He was born in Ume of the Wycraing mas- "1344 and married, Phoebe Elizabeth ing costs will disappear. |public’s analysis. The public will de|for itself. So we can see that even in Warren Harding's letter of acceptance | mand the’ quality that goes with the|our improvident spirit we have not dis- is a living document. It touches every |name and the Democratic object will be vital point in American Jife. It prom-!defeated. The spurious will be rejected. One Year . Six Months . Three Months .. > subscription by mail a anything new in life. Centuries ‘© we were told there was nothing cepted for less period than three months. eR J ty % f x Dickerson, who was born in 1843 and All subserlt tigns must be pald in aa-|ise8 nothing the Republican party can- ‘ new under the sun, not even the politi Captain Abraham Harding's s0n, | gieq in 1910. She was descended from vance and The Daily Tribune will not|not and wi * [ . e ‘ ee - sia . he dee ee rth Bubetetotion Ree not and will not fulfill. STUBBORNNESS IN GOVERNMENT | cal theories of would-be third party cre-| Abraham, Jr., was born at Waterford,!, yan Kirk family, which came from comes one month in arrears. SSS | The report of the subcommittee ofjators. We ought to get back to solid/Conn., in 0. He accompanied hat Holland about 1630, and most of Whose. Member of Audit Buren (A.B. € Member of the Associated Press, The Associated Press is exclusively | entitled to the use for republication of all news credited laa. a and also thallooaTing wa) published Mersin: jpleasant June afternoon when the rose of Clrew! WHAT'S IN AN. ME? jthe committee of the Reic York state in 1761. The y of our earnings and be prepared | {oll he returned to Con against the day of trouble or for that|"¢<t me Marricd HUNG | alee ascent antta Social-|old age which so steadily creeps upon'| T¥¥on, and they settled near fa- SPOT CASH vs the}its. We shall take no pride later in} t ‘m in Orange county, New , r garden was at its best, “What's in a Cnelusion that Germany did not avail/among the restless, thoughtless, im-| Yor: In 2771 he and his Samal Wit For yous otf name? A rose by any other name would ;heT#elf of any of the opportunities of-|contemplating the fact that we were} “© brothers, left Ogange county for LIBERTY BONDS | fered her but took a stand for unre-| provident ones who lived through this|‘"@ Connecticut settlement of | West |smell as sweet.” Z ., | moreland at Wyoming, where his | yfoney to Loan on_ Diamonds, | So with any other thing that appeals¥""70100 (0 igen eta if we do live through its! ince Stephen had settled in 1769. His Jowelry, Guns, Clothing R bli Ti k jto or offends the senses. Limburger! 1. “Port IS signed by six members) 'd the days of the high cost! r.tyer followed them five years later. | Casper Léan and Clothing epu wan Lic! et lcheese or the liquid glue with which'°! ‘he different political part It isjof living, for which our own foolfsh:|-r4 younger Abraham Harding’s old | Store—229 Sotith Genter a grave indictment of Germany's mili-| ness is chiefly responsible. sst son, Amos, was born at Port Je aed jtary dictators at the time. Shows how ag of Ger-|ground, stay on our jobs, lay by regu-| father to 'many to- investigate the peace’ efforts] lar’ wing ‘during the winter of 1916-17, prepared rut and th: by Prof. Sinsheimer, forme ist member of the Reichstag, d descendants settled in Pennsylvania. William hakespeare plugged the irly in the center when he asually remarked to some friends one | stricted U-boat warfare. restless er nd surviy cobblers patch shoes, for instance. For President— It is then, the thing itself that counts. : Sane TTS a WARREN G. HARDING ||). ne {he thins ltself that counts.’ cconomists of Chancellor von Beth-| HARDING FAMILY HISTORY. Z © name is purely a matter of con- - Seems eae | . Dah rt x Of Ohio venience in designating a thing. Call sienna s oe eovereae even} The annivers of the battle anal | For Vice President—— it what you will by name, if it does 9)". Wraeater opie Gubudicien| te SRE ‘i Bi Deh (Pennsylvania) | nance, * did reliev restricted | ie July 2 sit eas CALVIN COOLIDGE not possess the inherent qualities you : : TY AER INE ieee Of M. Saget ve ackdaheiea ae data ac. 7% Ub warfare could insure Germany| \:so, Col. John Butler’s Rangers, with bo AES aera he a _ hen YOU victory. As the gravest mistake, the) his Torfes and Senceas, defeated and spect error eit pacnetatl _ 6 ‘ : : er He es appelation ' ort mentions.the fact’ that America’s | slaughtered the garrison of Forty Fort 2 : D eae Japplied or in the article, thing or per-{ zai . THE MARION PARTY resources were undefestimated com-|%"d drove the settlers from the Sus g t — e |son described by the denomination used. | a ee Re ramcen ers nna valley. This fort by the ¢ arion, Ohio, has had her day and { ; ;| There is a value in names that can-| | pletely. 1 been The r the submarines would prevent the trans. n ays go, it was some day. It v port says it was argued that] ticut ploneers near not be denied. Frauds and wrongs are ere Kingston and Wilkes t a.,| A New Power portation of Ametican troops, “if there | "0W Stand. and by the substi dng, Three days before, o EYE 78, j 3 stitution of. the Wrong | ore any It further dectares that| Three days before, on June 30, 1178, Arises! thing f an at I party of settlers, men and la adequate to arrive | ; the submarines failed to t ovat hat sieke AaMsLeT eR > os : querade as white. ciently neutral shipping; that sufficient r aes Dane eae : the mediocre pass for the excellent. f | Reoge ree, sales een tty cial trains aside from the regular ones attention was not paid to the anti-U = Forty F 't, and had gone to the corn Quality is not always uniform or| |boat measures of Germany flold of Stephen Hardin standard. Take the humble but desir-} ch a good, strong one.‘ It was an rtunate thing that the front por Hi ° Derpetrated by the misuse of names, y fortunate thing that transpor- r the right name and vice versa. |Thus black may ma silities we part for it required thirty river from to move the crowds into and out of enemies, ad | to hoe Marion. Most of them .were present. Sioux City has long been a grain center, but now it has be- and, finally, that when Ameri a enter able cantaldtife RAntilcdes eel his cor The party was composed i : ‘Those who did not go by train ee br 2 kf. 7 ‘auiod ‘oe ee eet RHG SWar. the milters yan Cube Seeeal of es Harding, Stukely Hara me rer ve lig Ate i sai ianuor r od the | " ae nee 2 ee sreakfast table in the morning. ‘oday 6 adea uate DEOCI ERNE ©: He x oe el eo Sh ust recently favorable freight rates were granted to -the Sutomoliee 8nd Sparking ener’ Noi recive iG teaeatle A IPENeO! OE GLC Cee ee A Te Harding, Jr, and nine city, opening to it the markets of America aridof the world: And Marion w enti occupied. The” Rapes geay baan Ree i ; «evitable lengthy protraction. others. Benjamin and Hara already Sicux City is graspina ite great, new, euportuhitlags | ie \ Republican population of Ohio simply | vor, pleasing to the, phat the German public was grossly| ing carried their guns w has butit giant Grain Elevators, with a capacity of 3,500,000 2 alate and in nature's own delicate col- | bushels, The U. S. Department of Agriculture has made Sioux City the cefter cf a Grain Grading and Supervision District. into Marion for the day. There misled is a further charge in the report, | German lori ‘orles saw them at joring. Tomorrow you rceeive a canta- was simply nothing like it, in the state's } : 1 which implies that although the eco- | arried the news to an guard joupe ame only. ere yi ave d 7 . ‘ i history and Ohié is rather used to|!UPe in name only, And there you have ‘nomic “exy Ihesion to un-|of Butler's Indians, then approaching The Eyes of Grain Men— the illustration. If is unquestionably a | presideptial candidates and accustomed | to having them about. “It may Ne that restricted U-boat w of the military leaders, the expe arfare at the behest|the settlement from hoga. After had ‘quit: their work for ntaloupe, but it is not up to the re- quired specifications stipulated in the! There is no question about it—Sioux City is the center where the eyes of grain men are fixed. It is the coming grain center— ts were} the Harding since Ohio failed to furnish the latest y Fy rabid party men and did not include | t 16 dh started homeward, their your Great market. tt has every natural advantage and it now * nt we hAveshad) shbé gyipotite is Pov cr eement. first-class authorities, | expeclany pat ‘ough a deep, narrow ri has every freight rate advantace. Are you in line with the swing { thegs trate wan buRtiod eiie of the times? Are your eyes turned on Sioux City? As notec re are se whdi zine a little keener than ordinary, but still ¥ 1, there are those whol eat ini! Sippile? who ‘the report ee: f to advantage themselves, in the use of ans°and Tories, who fred up Know Sioux City Better! for a state that is playing a sure thing | 4 ould have been consulted. | é ahis election, “Ane howing a consta- |" Name that has attained greatness or} “3n tact,’ the report goes on, “no ar-| 0 them a wounded” Benjamin: “and WRITE FOR EOCX ONE (it is free) | popularit ng. "They promptly re turned the fire, and then erable interest and enthusiasm for this | depending upon this fact uments against U-boat war were per- mitted to bé placed at any time" be-| ‘or the success i : particular candidate, Harding, — hey, |" Ge eee of their. object. [eee eo Rig thed nave. wan lant ensetiole | ur friends, the Democrats, are not'fore the Reichstag. The report espe | gether gulltless‘ of suc! 7 The Indians with the Sa NGRIG OST! altogether guiltless of such attempt’at' cially méntions the withholding from i sharp practice in the temahawks rushed upon the Hy while the latter clubbed their | Stulngs Ha: 1 bloctaly CHAMBER OF COMMERCE spears and all previous. pre election of Frank. lin Roosevelt for their candidate for the vice-presidency. jpublic knowledge of communications dential parties have been tame affairs ry e jfrom Dr. Haniel von Haimhausen, for Jrought fiercely and bravely, "¢ n this you strike the!merly counsellor of the German. em- keynote of things Democratic. True of passy their platform. in comparison. That no town hereto- Soy area ee pomplotely Swatanaein the juntil, pierced through with spears, at Washington, Dr, Franz von| 4, American flag as was the town of fell and then were hacked and *s with tomahawks and rue of their nomi- Papen, former military attache to the nees. The same old Democratic at-!emba. and’ Dr. Heinrich’ &. “Albert. | tempt to substitute the near for Marion.. There have been ‘ge musical eut to pie efforts at times in the past, but never sCainel: the former commercial attache to the em- genuine. The name only for the article | with the has there been at one time and at one John Gardner, a cousin of the Hard- d away a prisoner and? place such a collection of brass bands. bassy, who, being fami ings, was cz itself. 3 , The launching of the candidate of a Be American situation, insistenUly yaiseetst ied in captivity. Stephen Harding, great political party and the opening of | The name, Roosevelt, has a great/against unrestricted U-boat warfare.| jr, and a boy managed to reach the the campaign for his election has an|#!ve to the minds and hearts of the|The report. mentions notably. ~von| thick woods and ¢scaped. American people. There was but one} Roosev rich von “Remember the fate of the Hard- of been acéomplished; and Warren’ Har- Papen’s message to General rmer ch’ ding, his old friends and neighbors at! t. There can be but one Roose-|}alkenhayn, f of the Ger-|ings"” was the inspiring battle c |velt. Others may wear the name, but Marion, ‘his friends and supporters in ; man staff, “if you fail to keep the|the 300 patriots who left Forty Fort the old Buckeye state and his friends heed will not possess the qualities. And|United States out you have lost the| three d later to fight against ‘wiog a tooseve! e 2 ee or eir mber ol itish a and acquaintances from eyerywhere osevelt without the qualities of | war. x thrice their number of British an¢ jTheodore Roose It is no Roosevelt at| ‘The capitulation of the civil govern-|Senecas, and with that cry on their i fas pniinke ings sith Pecacd te wnatl line, neasly avery oho tthe Noo smct a We Are Now Located in Our of showing their interest and state of “'™ now has proved to be the mi ae Be the Bs Sib aah eas 3 mind. ‘They want Senator Harding for| Put it Is the best the Democrats could | policy of frightfulness and the fact that seh ‘ e zon of is 2 T ings | were there f the ident. ‘Th do. That is perpetrate a fraud in the/the Reichstag was kept in ignorance of| ‘He Tardings who were there in t ew uarters R Wy ng Valley and early and active Fae BEA Gg pe of obtaining some small advan-|the true situation were, according to vactiteeteein ts 5 ‘or ae mong them were Abe" One Door West of W yo. Filling Station his son Amos, Lemuel Ha y all feel proud of the result. It is a way the Amc all. It is a mere name. It is a rose ment’s misgi without the fragrance of the x aken their pre: ‘y have confidence the Ameri stru te can people want, and the Marion inct- the report, the cause of Germany's col- dent contirms it, they want Wilson and | 7°t US examine this other Roosevelt, |lapse. all his works driven from power. ‘This |“? Wears this illustrious name, What| “The historical blame of Germany's just one of the ways they have of |#S he done to add luster to @ name ‘political government is,” the report con- that will live always in American his-!tinues, “that on the vital question OP ees eee fees. in SE tory? Is he worthy; by deed& of. ac-|Germany’s existence it allowed to hap-| ;...01, Micajah, Elisha, John and Wil: OUR PLEDGE TO AMERICA jcomplishment to bear the family shield|pen that which in its conviction was rere We invite the Public to come in ‘arren Harding becomes the pres- |""@ ©nauering spear? If not, then let|pexnicious to the country.” The blame! «py, sk AS Sees hee and look us over. We have in stock a no wily Democrat sé “le ay ;. ita Saat wes will feturo ta consiituticnallD fly Democrat set up claims underjof the military rontier Hardin Captain Stephen penis: in ony — Phone 711 nd of Fort Jehkins, sons ing m ndicating it ely re was not leadership is that,| country” writes Miner, the histor family — in government and abolish the ezar system {8 honorable name without well au-|knowing unrestricted U-boat warfare] of the Wyoming valley, “more ardent- lete li f z that has been galling to every American |thenticated proofs that the beneficiary }would inevitably entail America’s entry,|1y devoted to freedom than the: Hard- complete line of— citizen for seven yer The business of | Be) himself, entitled to its prestige. it played the card.” 4 ‘The » fell at ter 3 Sale the country wil! be conducted in orderly |. T° 8#in entrance, by stealth, to the eS oa Sts taken to a burying ground near Jen UNREST kins’s Ferry and interred, Over their ahoafoey ate dtoate-eto-eteete fashion as contemplated in the begin- aves the slab reads ‘Sweet be the ning and practiced by every president | Shty, clpaked in the mantle of an-| 1¢ is trite to say that ues@. an ag ie | BD aa other, is the 3 ian s ep of those who prefer de: save and’ except the present one. We ee r, is the-aim and object of the|o¢ unrest, says the St. Louls Globe- in WEES P Sp SRN Lams 58 Bs vemocratic party in the nomination of|pemocrat, that we are living in a day| S!@very- have ha@ no usurpers of power and {ee anidin ; wale Democrat, Abraham Harding of this family, very little’ discord among the several | sags . When, nobody is satisfied, and in this} | A0rtnO eee e ming with, bis ss branches of government until Mr, Wil-| 71@ Pas done nothing in his public/country at least, the masses are “milly uncle, Stephen Harding, Sr., was the ; career, that any other clerk could not|ing" like a herd of cattle on the verge tga “ase ag ancestor Of the Senator nd future temple; to aspire to the seats of the| THE DAY O01 have done as well. He has fetched andlof¢ 4 ‘stampede. Industrially this is a carried for Josephus Daniels and Wood- w W Warren Harding will bring us back President, Warren G. Hardir One of the first Hardings to arrive m Harding ‘of ious matter. It keeps the cost of on. He has been content to}production up and quantity of produc mere cog in the machine of govern-| tion down. The labor turnover, as it is to national government and sober sense with peace with prosperity: We ‘will; in America was Ab hav done with visions and internation-|” ment. He hus di » Aass, who came from Eve | Later we will carry a complete: ulism H © has displayed none of the|technically» called, was never so great ssibly with ptain ¢ in $ We will have, under him, a treaty of aprerde haracteristic of the worth-las it is now. Men go from job to job He married in apart line of Gas Supplies. peace and friendship with our late ene-|%#¢ branch of the family. He would]ana place to place for no apparent who came from England ! not bé th istant se mies in v He became & proprictor at ar, that will uphold every tra- etary of ihe|purpose other than to make a change. 7 America and safeguard every |#¥Y for seven years unfess he was the|Inaustries are put ‘to the extra expense Mass., in 1650, and died there in Oil ry e b riy and freedom of action in|®“™P of man he is with mediocrity]of¢ constantly teaching new men and leaving a son, Abraham, who ¢ our national and international tite we) titten all over him. suffer the decline in production that fol-] was born in that year. | um in & have ever enjoyed, And our polteies | Has any one heard the name of}iows the loss of experienced workers] A lative of the first Abraham f e iklin Roosevelt during the world/and the taking ~on of inexperienced] was Stephen Harding of Braintree and Ss “t Engin aniary uleers sure in’ company with the war? Has hig name be Sven inducements which in for-| Providence. He was born about 1 nations © world There was opportunity in abundance.{certain to fix men on their jobs do not! tance) a sister or other near relative Por 'S a nations of the worl! to maintain @|rhere, wa Ta to eg ean fo Ba men on thelr Jobe Go not{ot Thomas Entance of Swanzey, n. 1.\ Otte Door West of Wyo. Filling'Station 11 married Bridget (or E. permanent peace throughout the earth was opportunity to bejhave that effect. For instance, four be enforced and respected under sociated | ones. ct worthy a Roosevelt ich treaty We will join in any with any per ir jmer times would have been considered a Welshman and 1 xw and order and not by force made. And a regular Roosevelt makes|years ago a ge shipbuilding corpora-| Thomas Estance v es , Phone 711 if } i“ 4 o America om ertfordshire, The people of this nation may rest as- \oPportunity. ion announced that to all employes who $ He é : Y : ured t their expressed will will he} At one time Theodore Roosevelt oc: jremained with the company four years + — ey, }

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