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~ Ebe Casper Daily cine fesned eyery evening a Wreg" at wae, Natrona cou: i= gation offices: Ol Exc! ia tase tieeeiny SUPPORT eee eeeterberi cs qrataes CLPADOR RTE AH ED eee bees reeat eee sane prertiere ECT reaper eeererr eee ees , f.ces.and ota erat Ha welcome. u Post: Page an sedhnd-einde: a ae eR 28, tote 6 MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS FROM THE UNITED PRESS PR Se? iA hE Oo gepey and Editor eas Manager Fitos Daley ——advertiats Manager wees e ee ewase 01 W. i HUNTLEY......Editor: ‘Writer Advertising Representati David J. Randa: pete Firth Av Ave. New Prugaen Kine & BF 1720-22 Btegen Bi a Daliy y an ae ie are on Chicago of- m the SOE Cee RATES One Year . \Six Months ‘Th Per Cop, One Year . 50 No etteetn tion by’ mail accepted ‘tor riod than three months. Ali subscriptiona must be paid vance and The Daily Tribune itt not insure delivery after subscription be- comes one month in arrears. Member of Audit Bureau of Circu'atioug (A, BG) —<$ $$ + _Memher of the Ans Tne Associated Pre is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of news credited in this paper and alao local news published herein. oe Republican Ticket For President— WARREN G. HARDING Of Ohio For Vice President— CALVIN COOLIDGE Of Massachusetts KENNDEY FOR CHAIRMAN, It is to be hoped that when the new Republican committee has been selected and the matter of organization comes up the members will show wis- dom by selecting Hon. T. Blake Ken- nedy as chairman to succeed himself. He may aid may not desire the honor, Other h-class Republicans, previous- ly did not desire the chairmanship, but they sacrificed personal interests, ac- state [I'D LIKE To Know 1F THERE peace Dill was only $1,506,776.63. You will be paying taxes, for some years be- fore this and other similar Wilson ex penditures are cleaned up. All those who love Wilson hold up their hands! SAAD SS THE FRO) LAWN. We do not set up to be the secre- tary of agriculture, an ordinary “dirt farmer,” an horticulturist nor a gentle- man learned in any of these scientific branches, but we do know @ front lawn cepted and went ahead and won Repub- lican_ vic Mr. Kennedy has done these very things in the past. Let us ask him unanimously to do it once jes. more. With the chairman's job goes consid- erable grief and much thanklessness. These are as nothing to a real Repub- lican like Blake Kennedy, when he has won a Republican victory. If other members of the party aspire ; to the chairmanship we have not heard | of their ambitions. Even so, Tet them} toll yet another season in the vineyard, | before they ask recompense. This is a time in which experience and thorough knowledge are needed. It is not a time to take chances with a new captain, however able he may be. Let's try this new capta'n stuff be- tween presidential elections. Then Blake Kennedy is, widely known throughout the state and Re- publicans have unlimited confidence in his gentlemanly fighting ability, There was a certain horse trader in olden times who made it a rule of busi- ness to refrain from swapping horses in the middle of a stream. He claithed that it was ‘not only bad policy but it was also dangerous. Bad policy, in that it afforded lack of opportunity to judge of the quality, Wkewise the im- perfections of received in ange. Dangerous in, that, in the parley certain to ensue in @ horse trade, the flood might sweep your own mal a short trading sto Figuratively the} stream. Let’s wait until we are on the other side before we talk about horse trades. i Let's all ask Blake Kennedy to lead us to victory, 's the animal ex and leave you we are crossing eyen WILSON. ing old four-flusher is If the few. Ameri- not disgusted with wil who are this man can people him by this time, who still believe, in spite of revelations of his hypocrisy, let them revel in the disclosures made by one Reichenback, a former publicity agent empleo when ved by the administration Wilson went peace treatying to Europe. ome in sworn test mony ul court in New York. The came in connection with an investigation of movie methods of publicity with reference to 4 “fake? drowning. “The effect of the right sort of prop- aganda may judged,” the fact I got the worked up to such a fervor that they would fall down and worship Wilson's picture eyery morning before they gave the pope a thought. It was the same The disclosures in a fec testimony bach, “by sald Reichen- Italians and have had the experience of induc- ing two blades of grass.to grow where only one grew ‘before. We have also had a fair-amount of unlimited exper- fence in barbering lawns with all va- rieties and brands of safety razors. We have performed these operations in the early morn, when the esteemed neigh- bor had just provocation for homicide. Again, at dewy eve have we seized the trusty mower and essayed to manicure the greensward, to the further diss} ipleasure of the same neighbor. . Onee again and oft, upon the bright Sabbath) forenoon, when the beloved pastor and} his flock wended their way, at the toll- ing of the bell, to the synagogue, to engage in prayer fcr the unrighteous, have we been surprised in. our iniquity and have been compelled to overhear criticisms meant for our moral uplift and intended to discourage transgres- sion and a depraved mode of life. Alb this taught the one lesson. Im, pressed it firmly upon the innermost consciousness. That there is no exact \time at which a lawn may be trimmed| satisfactory to super-critical ne! and an exacting public. The second great lesson in the lawn business was to carefully remove the grass catcher from the lewn mower, bear it reverently to the ash can and deposit it therein. destruction of property was repugnant, tthen tote the said grass catcher rthe hang it plously upon a |nail’ and forget it. A third aii necessary lesson. A far mous “don't# 4 the: worthy enterprise | woodshed, be left out overnight, Don't break your teting your lawn. liable family ax and do it at the time you embark in the lawn industry. Presuming, that your lawn is a g0- ing concern, you, are then all set to rake handle {other objectors and evaders, stil! held Or if such wanton} to; jot manufacturing a jawn calculated to! irti-| Employ the old re-!_ They both want to know! General report had it at the prison that Allison had more pull, from some’ mysterious reason that any officer or! person about the institution. He evidently had pull ‘enough to se- cure his release from Secretary Baker. It would not be at all surprising that in prisons for refusing to serve the country in time of war, will be released as soon as Baker believes public opin- fon will stand for it. The wholesale liberation of these birds is expected sometime before the! November election. All this ought to be gratifying to the! American Legion and others who did real duty during the war, eta HARKING BACK In what may be termed political ve- partee and political running debate,| none approach Coloiiel George Haryey,| of Harvey's Weekly. He knows, and speaks with the} sureiess of knowledge that.so miany Writer’ on polittéal mat- 'ters lack.” case that Is all his own. It may be in sarcasm, it may be in ridicule, it may! be. in ponderous blows of irrefutable; logic. He fits the style to the demands of the occasion, At times, he adopts the Mghter and aggravating form of as it were. Few essay to measure swords, or more accurately, pens,) with Colonel Harvey. In a late issue Colo- jnel Harvey permits this: gentle breeze the Democratic party while aimed d: rectly at Candidate Cox: “Governor Cox affects to be much concerned at what he regards as an an- nouncement that Senator Harding “purposes to hark back to the days of thirty years ago.” His apprehensions are, we judge, only too well founded; Wherefore we would sympathetically exhort him to cheer up, for the worst is yet to come. “We venture to say that Senator Harding purpeses to hark back even more, a good deal more, than thirt care for your desirable surroundings. Simply irrigate wisely and observantly. Mow when necessary, but let it be fre quently, A sharp lawn mower Is to be preferred in this class Of surgery. It is less painful to the grass. In mowing, let the ‘chips fall where they may. In other words, permit the clippings to settle about the grass roots and form a mat, and not only holds moisture, but pro- tects the grass roots from the singeing | in the merry months of July and August. handles of a lawn mower. We ‘have gone-to all this trouble to tell you that we-notice some sunburned kort of work that George Creel did, pro-jP@tebes in your otherwise beautiful paganda, pure and simple. I,did this) vn, and to give you the reason, work and also spread American pub- i > livity among the Unes of the enemy.” During the inquiry, Relchenbach used the word “publizing.” Where do you get that word?" his inquisitors asked. “Oh, that was a word: President Wil-! son used when he wi sending us to Europe to do press agent work,” was the reply. It “bunk” like American people gay and bought liberty was for this bonds. The Wilson that the| e up hard earnings! LIBERATES RANK SLACKER. Tt was to be expected that Secretary Biker would sooner or later release Brent Dow Allison, conscientious objector to military serv- was holding a job in thé state départ- ment, and court-martialed and sent Fort Leavenworth for five years. i this acts as a mulch” old Sol is inclined to inflict upon lawns | ‘This is out of the experience of years) jand a wide range of seasons. It is not] new. Others knew all about it before} we were tall enough to reach the the famous Ghicago| ice, who attempted every dodge imagin- able to escape service under the Mit! vis draft. He was finally broug&t to! {Chicago from Washington, where ~he} to} Is Wrong | upset makes not eating or thing —if you’re a He'has a faculty of tha aitoinels Jefferson, shaling his facts and presenting his! punishment, a stinging of his opponent,! When Something With Your Comfort —when nervousness, indiges- tion, billiousness or some other out coffee ten days and use nstant Postum This delicious drink with its. coffee- like flavor, suits coffee drinkers, Its / value to health soon shows, and its economy is so apparent under use that one quickly realizes. “‘There’s a Reason’’ Made by Postum Cereal Co., Inc Battle Creek, Michigan He will hark back about Yifty- seven years, to the principle of “gov- ernment of thé people, by the people, for the people”; a principle enunciated by ne Abraham Lincoln who was. re- viled and denounced by Governor Cox’: follow-partisans more than Roosevelt and Henry Cabot Lodge and Warren G. Harding all put together have been. ‘He will do more than \that, He will hark back to the days of ninety-seven years ago, to the principle that “in the wars of the Eurépean powers, in mat- ters relating to themselves, we have never taken any part, nor does it com- port with our policy so to do”; a prin- ciple enunciated by one James Monroe, whom degenerate Democrats of today seem to wish to repudiate and to for- get. “He will hark back to the days of 119 years ago, to the principle of “peace, commerce and honest friendship with all nations, entangling alliances with \noné”; a ‘principle proclainjed by’ one whom Democrats today claim as the founder of their} party while they depart from and deny the wisest’ of his national policies, “He will hark back, we haye no doubt, to the days of 124 years ago, to an utterance which ran in this fash- ion: “The great rule of conduct for us, in regard to foreign nations, is in exe! tending our commercial relations, to. have with them as little political con- nection as possible. * * * ‘Tis our ighbors|® Pe Wafted in the general direction of true policy to steer’ clear of permanent alliances with any portion of the for- jelgn world, That utterance, we may remind Goy- ernor Cox, was made by one George Washington, whose patriotic sagacity is still highly esteemed by many Amer- ican citizens, despite the efforts of the league covenanters to belittle it. “He will hark back to the days of 131 years ago, to the text of an instru- ment which vested in the congress of the United States the sole power to de- clare war, to raise and support armies, and mi you think you are drinking the right coffee drinker, cut Theodore} general to make laws for the internal and external conduct of this republic; an instrument known as the constitu- steric] TO LUISA ASTLUM which a great many American citizens persist in preferring to the covenant at Sher ipemee peers J. B, Newburg, who escaped trom al “He will hark back, even, to the days} Louisiana insane asylum, and who was/ * of 144 years ago, to an historica¥ docu-| arrested a | of “weeks ago at ment which declared: Powder River following activities in which he tried to evangelize the town, “That these United Colonies-are and) _.., tourists, and-start-a general con- of right ought to be free and independ-| flagration, was sent back to Louisiana}, ent states * * * and that as free|yesterday leaving on the fight train in} and independent states they have ful)/custody of deputy Neil McPherson. trast ailasood! anesbhias soccteoy asa FLORES CASE IS RETRIED TODAY to do all other acts and things which independent states may of right do." “Those words occurred in a document known as the declaration of independ} “ionowing the failure of the a to reach an agreement in'the case of Eli- zabeth Flores, who was tried as an in- competent before District Court Com- ence, to the maintenance of which the missioner M. P.. Wheeler here yeste1 signers pledged their lives, their for- tunes and their sacred honor; and which’ day, the case was retried today with a new panel of jurors. thelr descendants today have-no mind Mrs. Flores is~ practically | feeble- to abrogate or to repudiate. “sijce thus to ‘hark back’ seems to minded, and authorities asked that she be so deciared and sent to the institu- be the order of the day, it may not be tion for the feeble-minded at Lande’ inappropriate to suggest that Governor Cox himself might do well to hark back to a still more ancient date than any of these, te a code which says ‘Thon shalt not bear. false witness against thy neighbor,’ and to inquire of the practical managers of this cam- paign how much longer they purpose to let the forgery of San Francisco stand in the Teading item of their platform.” PA SIRES MARQUIS 1S FAVORITE IN BETTING ON SHERIFF Heavy betting on Marquis as favor- ite candidate for the nomination for sheviff for: Tom Meaney, who is run: ning a handbook to place the odds ar 1 to 4 in favor of his nomination yes- terday.. The other candidates for the nomination are listed as follows: Sheff- ner, even money; MeKay 10 to 1; Wolf 3 to 1; Campbell 8 to 1; Martin 8 to 1; Hedges 10 to 1; Royce 10 to 1. Of the Democratic nominees odds on Forbes are 1 to 8 and Hambright is even. ee) 2 Ce FUNERAL PLANS INCOMPLETE Arrangements for the funeral of Simon Solomon who died Monday morn- ing have not been completed. A brath- er at Shinglehouse, Pa., has been noti- fied and the Snieetars is arene a reply. —but if you have defective vision and it can be corrected threugh the use of Glasses we can supply them. ‘We have the scientific knowledge, the practical ex- perience and the modern machinery to produce the very: lense you heed, and. our skilled seryice assures you that whatever is done for the eye in the “Burnett Way’’ it’s done right. If you have eye trouble of any kind “Let us look you in the Bye.’} BURNETT OPTICAL CO. 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