Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 11, 1920, Page 2

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Casper erones and make enthualasta of us all|ing’s home at Marlon’is the: bome Be for permanent state highways. @ plain, modoraibty well-to-dg Ameri: Give McCalman time an@ we arejcan.. : Ai i aure he will spread a network of reall “There have been intimations that pian Ways over the map of Wyoming‘nepubiican movic mien had caught the that wilt make Appius Claudius, the/eontrast and that they were going to originator of the good roads mover|make sure that the people caught it, ment, forget that he was ever in the!too, when the pictures of the ‘Trail’s business. End’ ceremonies went out. “So “Trail’s End’ was abandoned be Casper Daily Crisune Seb ets ewes: BUSINESS TELEPHOND. . 15 tered ‘at Casper (Wyoming) Postof- jee a8 Becond-class mutter: Nov. 22, 1916 MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS FROM THE UNITED PRESS JB) county: The admintatiation of Presi aition, It Js a small natl>, but Mr. @ant Wilson’ ‘has done neither, either inf Wilson had declared that small ne: ‘thie foreign or Gomestie affairs of the; tlons no fess thun big nations were to American people.” ceceive justice. The plea for Ireland oe Te pee So fel) om deaf ears. Fur that poor, per- of WE LOVE SUSTICE. ‘secuted, struggling people it spelled ‘a The Catholic Universe of Cleveland. trageay of disappointment.’ | Ohio, in a recent issue contains the} «we pelieve that Mr. Wiison should following from the pen of Wittiam Ajeet fair treatment from his political MeKearney, It is worth 4 carefill/ opponents. We know that his ‘work oe | | J. B. HANWAY, \ Bali ie WANWay, uelnens’ Mana ONE MORE DEMOCRAT. {save ap a place of entertainment for| erusal: 5 anceps gta i sina are EB, erin i The Republicans, astde from having|members of the Demecratic netional) “The New ¥orig Times finds proph-|him jthe congideration due not only to _H. . -Baitorial Wri splondid candidates for president and}|committee, the notification ‘conimittee,}ecy in the statement attributed to nis office, but to @ tragic figure.’ At ond ar ettielng Representatives vice president and a platform that|etc. It's tough luele for a home which) President Wilson.” "The! words Gome|tne same time, with all the tragedy bs men Soe te. ‘ h Ave., meets the approval of all members of | Wat good enough for a governor ef | from Mr. Creel, who says that the f that the Times may find ‘in the recent ‘ 1720. og te I Brudaen, the party, have the right to feet much} Ohi, but which is a little too good for) president spoke them on tis way home | years of Mr. Wilson's life, we are not pee ae chicago. Dh fncouraged by reason of the number of{2 Democratic candidate for the presi-|from France: : Si RSGAy 4: Ski bade” LRM poke’ faterte Men the Naw Pork sha Chicane cf | Democrats who are ‘deserting that deficy of the United Stated” “It 18 {6 América that INe WNotel tinal injustices. must be tolerated to {ces and visitors are welcome. Party, and aligning themselves with world turns today, not only with its SUBSCRIPTION RATES Ry Carrie: Three Months . 1.95 No si! ription by mail accepted for less period than three months. ab Ger ge Pye must be paid in ad- vance and The Datly Tribune will not insure delivery after subscription be- comes one month In arrears, Member ef Audit Boreau of Circetatious (A. B.C. ——— Member of the Ansociated Prens. The Associated Press exclusively entitled to the use for Meation of all news credited in this r J the ‘local news ta hte, Haber and Mie oe Republican Ticket For President— WARREN G. HARDING Of Ohio For Vice President— CALVIN COOLIDGE Of Massachusetts HIS TWENTY-THIRD TERM. The Honorabic Joseph G. Cannon has filed his nomination papers in I- linols as @ candidate for congress in the Danville disg-ict.. He will be nom- inated by the Republican party and, of course, elected in November. This being all discounted, at the next ses- sion of congress Mr. Cannon will em- bark updn his twenty-third term as a member of the lower house. At the end of the term and he will live to see it, he will have seryed forty-six years. The record for service in that body. Notwithstanding eighty-four Mr. physical and his mental altertness Impaired and the esteem in which he is] held by Republicans and Detocrats} alike grows with the years. { He comes down to us from the- day of the his years, Cannon's powers are neither } of the founding party in i856. Republican He has been consist- ently and always its firm adherent, In all of its life and most of his own’ he! has taught its principles and served it in one capacity or another. He, as much as any man ever as- sociated with the party, has gssisted in writing its history. He is the connecting link between} the great past and the troubled pres- ent. He has been through it all and has been a part of it. His great faith, in this party and in {he great republi¢ it has. been instrumental in building has never wavered for an instant. It never will. And when he passes en, and we trust it will be many years Ne gp a CREATIVE ACTS. - the Republican party. While there are} <oator Lawrence Y. Sherman of 1- doubtless. many Democrats who! have wrongs, Dut with its’ hopes and grisv- §nces. ‘The hungry expect us to feed! fit the opinion of one man. We respect Mr. Wilson a3 our president, we ad, mire him as a man of wonderful talent, quictly determined to (tranbfey -their allegiance and Say nothing about it, ‘we are constantly hearing from the prominent ones, those who have here- 5.000 hearers at Denver, sald this of fio, the sick’ of heart ‘ond! hody depend |the late session of congress* in which’ {# Republican majority controlled legis-| Hation: tofore been high in Democratic party | linols, in a recent address to some’ trom | Upon us for cure, terrible urgency. jaelay. “It ‘There must be no s ” “Among other great creative acts of the president the rooftess look to'us for shel-! we sympathize with him in the trage- dies that! haye come into his recent All of these expec-! years of life, but we love justice even {tations have in them the quality of /tnough it may sacrifice the wishes of Overland Trail became famous, the House established. Tt was one of the chief users é ith such a history could afford to’ offer any- councils, proclaiming: out loud theif} 7 : : has béen "so" waye, Peggle te ae Sahay wi dea be quickly destroyed. ; & ublicah congress is<the bill turn- __ % r' Ji *, 4 change in political sentiment. \e ee tesculthers “seeisehelrereres wast " a pice se Reo agent ig RED MEN, ATTENTION! This is a practical guarantee that Brunswick Tirés offer f The latest coming to notice is Peter | i RN oc le cabte to ote: ere Regular meeting Thursday evening. | usual, yet di cost. Demple of Sheridan. He has been an} Rubles Plank on’ that subject de"! 4.” minenium’ im not -cteated imme | August 12. at the reguine place, Buy; | More than the at no added aah [clares against government. ownership | time, chief's degree. “Everytedy re- | uncompromising Democrat for almost! forty years. Hag contributed to the cause and served it faithfully. He is disgusted with Wilson and his League of Nations and sees no hope in Cox or the party. Mr. Demple is one of the largest owners of city and ranch property in Sheridan, a heavy stockholder and dt-! rector amd former president of the | Citizens’ State Bank, owns one of the) finest homes in the city, is interested in! several manufacturing concerns and is on all-around valuable citizen. Men of Mr. Demple’s stamp, and of his conservative turn, do net make |chenges of this character without goed jand sufficient reasons. It is no light | matter to tear up the moorings that have held for so many years. { It has been known, however, for {some several years past, that Mr, Dem- {ple believed that his party had out }lived its usefulness and he has experi- mented by voting the Republican \ ticket! He new comes out boldly ana {proclaims his complete conversion to | Republicanism. Petes Demple is welcomed to the }party and is imvited to make himself {completely at home. per Piles 1 ae Oe COX'S NEW YORK ‘FRIENDS. It has remained for thi New York/ Democratic state conyention to place a wet plank in that party's state plat- form at its recent Saragtoga sathering. During the late session of the New the Volstead act. The plank adopted Mf 4s follpwe: “We faver an/amendnient to the so- le@ Volstead aet that will make op- erative the act passed by thé state legisiature and signed by Gov. Smith! dgfining non-intoxicating beverages! and providing for the regulation of their sale.” by the convention ite ©: 7 diately, Yet you know and } know ead operation and employe operation | 14: these ancient wrongs, these pres- of the railroads. I: does ‘not :prepose| + unhappinesses, “are not to be rem- to introduce the sovict plan in Amert/| sdied in a day or with & wave of the! tc 2 ean industrial “fe. Tt proposes ade tong. What 1 seem to Sce—with’ all quate regulation. [t does not favor the | ray: heart 1 bepe thkt # am. wrong—is destruction of individual enterprise by » tragedy of, disappointment.’ the deadening processes of Lea sagphieeeas “We! heartily agree with the. Times Prcore ne: [in its plea for fair play for Mr. Wilson. “At every time and in every st@8©/wve ao not agree with ‘the Times that of its activities the Republican part} | vir: ‘Wilson's political enemies have to hag shown both progressive and,cren-| yy extent “been brutal: in the ex. tive power. Tt ts the only national’ sine If may be quite trie, ay tte party able ahd adequate to administer riieg suggests; that Mr. “Wilson's properly the great elementary. prin-) 0) may be “ending in bitter disap- ciples that successfully govern” the} VOT) OO TS velar mind’ of the} country. It legislates and becomes the | acne might well seg “a tragedy of lawgiver pn the, , great rgmedl) css opointment’ as the result of ils a(atutes that keep pace with changing) i 14 mance y conditions ameng free people, [t ad} wag not question the original sin- ministers the laws so as to protect PeF-| ity of President Wilson. We be a son and’ property, free speech amd hii... that he went to France with the It extends the gimvantees jquested to attend. free press. honest intent of lending the great of constitutional restraints to every | o of the United States toward @ part of the national territory. Under | er >EDIECKS better understanding. among’ the tions of the world, We believe that he dreamed of a permanent and per- petual world peace. It would be im- possible for Mr, Wilson, or any one else, to expect anything more than ‘a tyvagedy of disappointment’ out of a \ meeting that ignored two outstanding receive protection. It governs. by TW: finternational injustices. One of the It appeals to thinking people. It dees: ars: acts of the conference at -\Ver- not seck to arouse the prejudices Of! .sintes was to close its doors to any groups or classes and promote govern-| , orosentation of the. vicar of Christ ment by mob impulses. It rules by / 44 absolutely. refused to- consider the! aud through the established constite | poman question, } tional channels ordained. from the: be-|" «here js no power on earth that is its rule the greatest individual develop- ment is promoted. The activity dnd genius of the American people reach their highest forms and their greatest ‘achievement. Nothing bécomes too great or powerful to escape the regula- ticns and nothing too humble to fail to RAGE loneér battery on ta stood. the test 0: iS percent of tl York legislature a 2.75 per cent beer}sinning for an endering republic.’ It |. aesentially bound up with the peace |] ©@uipped ears ¥ bill was passed and signed by the goy-| Promises a continuance of such a 80Y-| of the worl dthan is the vatican. Te BEEN agg eects bl a ae an ernor. It, of course, cannot become|erament. It «will be satisfied with notl-}ignore the greatest moral force for operative without an amendment of} iug less and it calls upon its adver-l peace and Christian civilization waste | saries to challenge efthérsits records of Successful performance or its abilfty to administer. the government of the invite ‘a tragedy of - disappointment. For 800, years a clean, | Uberty-loving, | Christ people have*fought \for 1J0b¢- Tammany and booze die hard. ° <4 ot it was only at the insistence of Tam-\ jMany that such a plank was adopted,| as a sop to hold the voting strength of, Tammany ‘together and attach such! elements if the city’s” population as, smugglers and bootleggers to the Dem-)% ocratic party. . ° 3 ° hence, he will leave an example of faith in his party and devotion to Nothing can possibly come of stich See country that may be emulated, -but|action by the Democrats of New York. | never equaled. They ‘are simply deceiving themselves An Economical One Good. —-- and their followers... The congress of| ‘ M’CALMAN’S WORK. jthe United States has abolished the} Businéss Term Deserves The State of Wyoming take/Saloon and stamped out the curse of; - Aeht pride | slic high shetlauor. It will never, by its vote, re- 5 oe E eypet prite i she Due MERWE SOA cs ap esaaity Kec. Oak na Another ris simply an en-! encour: quality, and feel the great amount of work now There Is one thing certai Engineer D. ing « thorough and complete job of Road Tt hae amateurs so long had roads connecting com: may od at » prog: , State res every section building abblet constructed. exact science. by is an in ve munities, and the amateur efforts haye accomplished ‘just ine — resuit—-pros moted profanity Now that we are building roads of hope for it is permanent character we may an improvement in English as spoken, in Wyoming Those who have, had occasion to. use ~the Wyoming highways in extended journeys have nothing but praise, for such as have been improved. - Many Casper people who bave bus- einess at Denver prefer to. make the trip by auto. Excellent time is made and the entire road between the two points caniiot be called other than good. From the Colorady state line on the Cheyéhne-Gredloy road, 2 new roadbed is being placed to gras na is being surfaced > with disintegrated avanite from pits adjacent to the road. When completed this section will be » marked improvement. The stretch vf eighty-two miles fr Cheyenne to ‘Wheatland ix, perfect. Motorists aver- age thirty-five -miles un hour over this road and are not awave of the clip at m which they travel. The Wheatland: Douglas section is fair throughout. Considering the hilly gn’) the reute drivers of cars call it good. On the Douglas-Glenrock stretfh . new con: struction is under way at present, but still the traveling is good. The home streteh from Glenrogk to Casper is fair However, the perfect stretches, sery to make us dixcontented with the poc S. McCalman is pérform-! low percentage bee tering wedge to a come-back of whole line of intoxicating liquors. ‘The, nation is sober now and clothed in its, right’ mind and it will never consent, to a re-establishment of former condi-’ {tons And the party making the at- tempt is simply driving nails in its own coffin. | Whatever the degree of wetness of Mr. Cox, the Democratic candidate, he has been too busy to wire his congratulations, although these are the friends who actually put over his’ jnomination. | Kos RI be ak TO00 PRETENTIOUS, Since the ceremony of breaking the; news to Jimmy, at Dayton, there has, been much speculation as to why +t show was moved from “Trail’s End to the Montgomery County — fadr grounds. The Cincinnati Times Star! comes to the rescue with the desired information, likewise the reason: “Goy. Cox abandoned “Trail's wR as the scene of the Democratic notifi- cation cercmonies. It would be entire- ly impossible, it was explained, to hundie the crowds at the ‘governoy's Dayton home. And so she celebration was moved over to the Montgomery County fair grounds. “It may be that there were other reasons for the transfer to the ‘fair rounds besides ‘those Invelved in ax- uments as to seating capacity, ete, “Kor one thing, there is the striking }eomparison between Gov, Cox's home in Dayton and the Harding home at Marion. ‘Trail’s End’ is an elaborate, en magnificent establishment. It {iy bully of stone and sits higa cn a hit jin splendid: igolation. Nothing wrong that, of except that it loos not fit in with the picture as the governor Would like it to appear, Hard- t the! presidential 7 jahout course, 'Z The friends of J. B. Griffith, who are responsible for this’ advertise- ment, urge his nomination at the primary election August 17, and his election at the general election in November, because he gets you somewhere in the building and maintaining of good-roads. Everywhere you may go in the county—east, wes’, north or south-the people will tell you that the roads were never in be’ter condition than they have been this year, although there has been a'most twice as much travel over them as in former years, and it is true tha’ a great many hours’ time and no little amount of money have been saved because people “get there” when they start on.a trip. With the splendid equipment for building roads that the county now owns, because of the judicious purchases made by. the Present board, and with the good start that has been made, Natrona county in another year will have the very best roads in the state, But we mast continue to elect men who understand how and who will give their full time to building them. Jim Griffith. knows how to build roads, and if you want good roads in addition to having your other county affairs honestly, intelligently and conservatively managed Vote for him at the primary and at the general election. (Political Advertisement) 5 shin a Mu atin twtr dod 2, Me ha ok eee dts a a Srohe-sreke-<fosfe-sfe <Lp-<fo-eoate-<2o-akoate «p-ahoore- Seo’ Louis R. aagneieeh Tos ty || AUTO ELEOTRICAL CO.. 136 Ey Midwest Ave. Phone 9683 Get your first one now. You'll not be satisfied until you THE BRUNSWICK-BALKE-COLLENDER CO. Sold On An Unlimited Mileage \, Giarcsites Bods Center Street Filling Station” It is, to say the least, careless of you to start on a trip without the proper equipment on your car. With our un- limited stoek of auto ac- cegsories* we can sup- ply your every need. And our prices—well, we'll hold. them back as the big surprise. CASPER SPORTING GOODS CO. The Most Complete Stock of Auto Supplies and Sporting Goods in Wyoming. Cot. 2nd and David Sts. Phone 214 ‘CAPITOL LIFE’ McGREW _ Phone 153 BEST BOWL OF €HILI IN TOWN 20c at the CHILI KING LUNCH

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