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—_" PAGE TWO Se €hbe Casper Dailp Cribune! Last yeer the Cuban crop. was of- to; be’ met with a combination of th — ment an square deal. ‘Then Joe ais e's. in’ « or | r a unalone fered to the American sugar board at) military power of all the bordering nii-| yo. tions, Supported by the more distant ones from behind, and we shall have another world war on our hands he- Issued every evening exce! Casper, Natrona. couni. bht- cation offices: Oil Exchange Building. ——$—$—$—$————— BUSINESS TELEPHONE......:.- ———— we lS Entered at Casper CWyoming)Postof- tice as second-class matter, Nov. 22, 1916 palace tcnnhe scans Siete MEMBER ‘HE ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS FROM THE UNITED PRESS BB, Z. ANWAY, President and Editor _ HANWAY, Business Manager TLY——A4vertising Manager .City Editor itorial Writer INTLEY. «Bail Advertising Representatives Devid J. pen rage Fifth Ave., lew J ork City. Prudden, King & Prudden, i 1720-28 Stegen Bidg., Chicago, MMi. Coples of the Daily Tribune are on Ale {n°the New Yorke aha Chicago of- fees and visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrie> One Year . tx Months hree Months . née Month . er Copy One™ Six Months a3 Three Months =. 1.95 No subscript ¥ aceepted for Jess period than three months. All subseriptions must be paid tn ad+ yance and The Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscription be- gomes one month in arrears. Member of Audit Bareaet of Ciretlations (AL 3 ———$—$—$— — << Member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited in this paper and alao the local news published herein. aa Republican Ticket For President— WARREN G. HARDING Of Ohio For Vice President— CALVIN COOLIDGE Of Massachusetts COX WEAK REFLECTION. Tf it is agreed that we Want no more of Wilson, then the urge for Cox must fall. the mere heir. y his own acknowledgement upon the most important tissue in’ the campaign, | Wilson has shown himself to be sim. ply ‘an stubborn-headed, soured old man. Trying to hang on to the faded andsadilapidated trappings of what might have. been Cox It is so arbitrar: and peeved ;Something like § cents. Wilson and } Palmer would not permit the board to |contract. Later Palmer fixed the price of American cane sugar at 18 cents. Since we do ‘not supply our needs in| Sugar by @ considerable quantity, spec- ulators were quick to grab the Cuban |crop, import it, frée of duty, and reap the benbfits of the high price fixed on American sugar. The Américan crop j.has mostly been marketed and — the available domestic suppiz" growing scarcer. We are suppose. to depend} largely from this upon foreign Sugar, until the new crop comes. in. This is the story they tell us. Tt may be true. We are ready to be- lieve anything or doubt anything about sugar- | i is on ao PAPER CLOTHING. What about the paper suits the de- partment of commerce ¥. imports from Germany? Heratded to cost some- thing like six’ bits: per suit, Where dia our late enemies get the great idea? hey seem tO have perfected some sort of plan” to clothe a prson dt very mod: erate cost. When these German suits arrive and we give them the once over it is altogether likely that we will not invest and will hot like the cut, if they are made on the usual German lines. Awhile back, Great. Britain secured a sample shipment to reli¢ve the bigh jcest of clothes. We are without in- ‘mation as to just what* vogue they tuiiged among the English. England ;may )haye been willing. to adopt the | material, ‘but we *foubt ff she would be more highly delighted with the Ger- man cut than Americans would. It will be recalled that some. years ago Thomas A. Edison, in an interview on great inventions which he. had per- fectea was about to’ perfect, went into details with a newspaper reporter concerning @ “paper shirt. This, shirt, made! of y durable ‘paper, posed of three hundred and sixty-five layers, - The: highest degree of sanita tion contd be preserved by the wear without contilsuting to the support of the laundryman. The idea was to havea frésh shirt every day by simply tearing away one of the layers which had sevn ¥ervice the previous ‘day. The shirt would last a year and afrangements would have | a or but! com- thin, be very was to power and glory had he been big} enough and great enougt to have ne- | -{ ried it through to orderly culmination. | Since he did not the mantle that he | passing on to Cox, ad of being} is colorless - and cepted ‘the will of the people and ear: is of the royal purple shoday. The fact that Cox id pliant and ac-| cepts the Wilson view as his own, | him no better than Daniels, Colby and others, and ther fore Wilson aud unt. Sy 4. Did we want more Wilson we would retain the original and not bother with! imitations and substitutes, The best that can be said for Cox is that he is a weak reflection of Wil: the thing from» which we gling to get away. The inheritance dead himself. are strug- Cox is a Wilson réceiy by Rendered ither separately nor to-| gether can they it the Wilson way. That way is repudiated. When ‘the league be restored to life way, which is the not the European way. The mandate for this will come from issu 80 revive it will ublican and is revived in. the F American the American people in November. It will not be imported from Versailles or anywhere else and it will not be dic tated by Wilson, Lioyd Goor x other individual or — governmen power. The new American pr and the new American senate will take their arders from the American people. They are the only boss cognize. we RS Sa = WHO KNOWS ABOUT SUGAR? One’ of the most necessary articles of general household use is these days proving a mighty unsatisfactory’ one” to No to that The patience of the people pureliase. need mention It is sugar is ubout worn out with the su proh- lom and if th clk y ever do get on tra of the fellow responsible for the manip ulation unto him. Me wont be fit to loot at after the first interview. woe That sugar is being manipulated ts firmly believed by everylody. That somebody is to’ blarhe for thd present high pr is also believed by “overy body, That it can be narrowed down to the United States. government and the sugar makers is another fixed con- clusion. As near the coun and to each available the fact can be learned is divided district a certain percentage of the alloted.’ If uw beet Ys ou is versa, as into supply is a sugar ‘district runs cane in and . vice so we informed. But to be truthful Outside of the gentlemen who do tell shipped ure real no one this manipulating apparently can you how it Asa stray instance, is done. the other diy Chico brought Nn from Canada a con- siderable shipment of ea ugar that had journed from) New Or American t6 Ehgland, the’ to Canada, s40 Chicago, Can anybody figure out Why all this sea v ? ‘Does anybody know how it comes that American cane or beet sugar can be bought in Denver at 15¢, in Chey nne for 16c and the Casper pricé 1 We are satisfied no blame can b ache to. the, retail oval vetall- clear no more than’ 3 cents a pound and some do not do that well. to De made ko that it would grow gradually thinner as hot weather came on. It is not belieyed that Mr Edison ever placed his paper shirt on the mar- . he did furnish the idea, which the Germans seem to have developed. It is not a German idea at all. ; a oe ANOTHER EUROPEAN SITUATION.| “Flushed with its victory @nee confident Poles,” says the Globe- A&aocrat, possessing an Arniy~tremens; dous in size If not in equipment, fired) by zeal for extension of the Soylet sys- tem throughout’ the’ whole world and well aware of the difficulty of @ suc- cessful invasion of Russia by whatever army the allied powers or the League of Nations might be able to place in the field, the Soviet government shows small disposition, to heed the demand | that it refrain from further conquest | while terms of peace are discussed. There was a time not many weeks ago | when such a demand perhaps would have beeh heeded, when, had — the} powers put pressure to bear upon Po-} Russia, peace| but Assuming has de- over the as well as upon have been secured, tions a now 4ifferent. that the Russian government termined to continue the campaign to land faignt condi- the jlete subjugation of Poland, it}, appears to be now rather late to pre vent it, no matters what action may be taken by Great Britain and France. | Russia endured a blockade for a long | time and might continue to endure in- definitely, in the meantime replying to it by hostilities toward surrounding na- tioris and a continuance of the Belsh> vist propaganda throughout the world. “Such military aid as has been given} Soviet government the enemies of the during the pust three years has failed, | of suppyying, them with military stored and | munitions and even the of! British, French, Japanese and) Ameri-| can troops. Thtre is now no army of that sort in) the fleld to whieh aid could he given except that of Gen. Wrangel, the Black Sea and the , Polish y before the vie- t quantiti services along army, now siving av torious “advance of Red divisions. Wrangel’s army is small, and ther ir little that could be gatred strategically by such help as is practicable to give him, It is question whether nditions not such that afa to Poland sufficient to overcome the Red loffensive is not impossible. The only. of entrance (to Poland by sea 4s through the port of Danzig, the Baltic, ahd the narrow strip with one railroad connectiig that’ port . with Warsaty, which the Versailles treaty took from Germany and gavey to Po- land to give her access to the sea. The army is already reported to and closed this Inlet from Uf so, neither troony nor sup ent by that route until it Ac lanl countries tn- the it a are door on Russian fhave cut n be | plies jh | sss by been forced open: is only friendly to the allies. “Nobody “really” knows ‘the attitude nd the purpose of the Soviet Geyérn- possible cross }ment. But if that Bolshevism upon the world by the use purpose is to press ita milicuty by all sides. of on power pushing out as is now being done in {Persia ay well as Poland, it will have |cause we did not close up the’ old ong|!" fact; has been ‘spread through allied powers, A ramor, which has no foundation the promptly when we should. The hope) “ity to the effect that the undersigned of the situation 1s that the Soviet goy-)"4ve an agreement that if one of us emment hs no sich military program|™ Mominated and elected sheriff the and will We willing to make peace with| ber is to become chief deputy. The) Polgnd of G6nditions which preserve! Me® 48 preposterous and absolutely, thé government and the boundaries o¢| M8e. We both believe we are big that country while assuring the Rus./*oush ten to be the sher¥f jand sian government that there will be no|?ther of us is looking for a deputy's more atacks upon it by the Poles or|J0b. We have been acquaintances for any other nation with the ald of the|tWelve or fourteen years and are good leaving the people ot | Srienday that’s all. There is nothing, Russia severely alone, to, determine @ !, 80 just forget it. their own form of government, | J. Le. arene eee i “TI Never Forget YOU, Lady” OU’LL never forget the * delightful taste surprise in your first morsel. of WHEA- O with cream and sugar at breakfast—the rich, ripe sa- vor of the bran coat giving ‘a-- nutty flavor and -a-granular — consistency much better for your: stomach than pasty breakfast foods. Get a Package-From Your Grocer Today Manufnet' by THE W. 1. FIELD CO., . Denver, Cole, We Will Close Our Store — MONDAY NIGHT, AUG. 16TH. The building we occupy will be torn down. -We will erect a new business block which will be ready: for occupancy about December 1. SATURDAY, SUNDAY AND MONDAY x We Will Place on Sale Our Entire’Stock ALCOST FOR INSTANCE: Plug Tobacco 85c Ib. Cigarettes $1.60 Carton. Can Tobacco 15c per can, $3.60 per Carton. McCord-Brady Hand-made Cigars, $1.25 per Can. Just remember, everything in our ‘stock “at epst. Cash only. FIXTURES FOR SALE John Tripeny Co waar eed ae aT is a quiet and peaceable man. He} the No. ue m1 omy trouble. But he possesses more | outside interest woud gota He nerve than ten average men combined. | would be the sheriff not. ¢ in name Men know this by instinct. This is just+hut infact. ne feason he would make the best! The county needs’ ju: Sheriff Natrona covfity could select. | this time itt its history. 0 Other qualifications are, excellent bu: Marquis as much as you like. He asks ness ablity and judgment, a high re-|it. Then do the best thing you can do gard for the right and an abhorrence | for yourself and your county, Nomi- ‘f the wrong. A believer in law en-| nate him for &! and elect hn. Torcement and with no patience ‘with ce te tan ate, oes WIFE DESERTER UNDER ARREST Marquis would establish a new respect James Morris, arrested yesterday ut Tor that office in his jurisdiction. He | would give a splendid business admin-} istration of the affairs phe ae to} Le wo a er- Sachs. aie iat oe F Pathfinder dam by deputy sheriff Earl the most important citizen having busi-|Cantlin, was sent to Gebring, Neb. ness with the court or the county | this aftern-on, where he is wanted on ould receive alike courteous _treat- 4 charge of wife desertion. Pennsyl- vanla “stock thoroug! yeare of resitience In Wy! ‘could you the next year And you would wel- Since away back in 1893, When he first in the livestock and hotel business prin- cipally, and he has bought. and sold stock and fed and housed the people ete Advertisement) _ Joe Marquis-is one of the best men body will tell you this about is honest and square, He was always all these years. And all those Who Have come in contact with him or had busi- n ng with his who ever came to to make hia home. He ia of re - Bvary- him. He as good or just — p bit than ness transaction with you back and have ahother one with come bin came to Natrona county, he has been fectly. The most humble as. well as 7 eANNOUNCEMENT We wish to announce that we have opened for business a Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Store We will carry a complete stock of everything in our: line. Our prices will be as reasonable. as ‘the market af- fords. : FOR SATURDAY We Offer the Following Specials standard size, each.....7..... 10e HOT HOUSE TOMATOES; per pound We Solicit a Share of Your Patronage CANTALOUPES, 30c No housewife knows the full meaning of ideal cooking until she has used AN ELECTRIC RANGE Perfect ‘cooking requires a heat that is under: perfect control Electric Cooking fulfills this purpose to perfection. In our stock you will find a size and style that will meet ; : every re- quirement. : ; Call at our showrooms or phone us. Our representative will ex- 3 plain. our special prices and easy payment plan. Natrona Power Co.