Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 14, 1920, Page 2

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: PAGE TWO Che Ebe ‘Casper Daily: eee, Se Ee ual fa 3 SS +4218 Intered at Casper (1 ng) Post: Biss as second-class rt Nov. 22, tte MEMBER THR ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS FROM THB UNITED PRESS J. E. HANWAY, President and bditor Bes E. HANWAY, Business Manager ‘HOS: DAILY——Advertising | Manes er pee ase Baie. “Baitgriat Writer i Ran) a iat BE Slain Ay Ave. Prud aon) Kin: ne Ke Fuaden, 1720-22 Stegen Bid, hicago, Ill. Coptes of the Daily Mle in the New York Se are on and Chicago of- f.ces and visitors are welcome. Wages EE RATES Yo subscription by mali accepted for Period than three months. UI subscriptions must be paid in ad- vance and The Daily ‘Tribune. sill pot insure delivery after supscription comes one month in arrears. Member of Audit Berean of Cirentations (AL B.C.) jlembe: the Associfited Press: ‘he pope ed Press ts exclusitely titled to the use for republication of all news credited in this paper and alao the local news published herein: a Ed Republican Ticket For President— WARREN G. HARDING Of Ohio For Vice President— CALVIN COOLIDGE Of Massachusetts DON The fri Settle, editor of the Star Valley “pendent! ate complimenting gratulating him on his nouncement that he will support Hard ing and Coolidge for president and vice WITH DEMOCRACY nds and admirers of Clyde F. Inde- and con- receht an- president and is done with the Demo- cratic party forever. 2. uring the past the Independent has given its support to the Democratic party because the éditor and ‘his con- are pexce-loving people. alized the hypocrisy of the vison administration in, war peace matters as in most. ether things} and can no lofiger cofiseientiously affill-| stitu and j ate with the party; They have discov- ered that the Republican position has been the correct one and they are undivided support. The Star Valley is the cénter_of an unusually, ingelligent Mormon settle. * ment ad an important agricultural and stock country. now giving it their aC PO Ss CHEYENNE ALSO DECLINES. It is pleasing that other Wyoming cities take the same the billboard nuisance as does the authorities of Casper. When Mayor Pelton and the ¢it¥ went on record as to note city council of Casper unalterably civic beauty the may all over opposed of Casyer With billbouras, was published largely — ap- 5 Statenient Wyoming, and ed Denver outfit applied to the city commissioners at Cheyenne the other day for a franvhise to erect billboards and local men asked similar privileges. They were all refused: Mayor Tay- lor told (hé applicants that Cheyenne has all the billboards she wants, dt the present time and. sipce other. Wyo- waging campaigns nuisance Che; increase in the ming cities were inst this enne permit ahy public woth! not They | view of} to disfiguring the! And the Néw York Times, the lead- Democratic Organ Of the country, so far back @# 1914, in a discussion of| the measure and its origin said this: “By whatéver hdffie We cal it, that bil (the bill of the Aldrich fonsiary| commission) was the source and origin it contained the spirit and substance of the present federal réserve banking net. © * © Mary of the provisions, much of the language, of the Aldrich? comthission bill were ertibodied in the act.” CoX Is not ‘Unly wrong, but he is laté in claiming credit (hat belongs to others. If Cox knows his party history ana} traditions he ought to be aware that his Party has altvays opposed elastic) bank eurrency, We belleve one of their} patroh saints, Whose birth anniversary | is regiilarly celebrated, son, Was mich opposed and even Kicked the ‘Stuffing out of the old! United States bank of his @ay. All through the period following the civil war, the Democratic party, assuming some peculiar positions at! times, | held consistently to the theor that the issuing of ¢urréncy was a gov- ernmentat function exclusively. Republicans and their predecessors, the Whigs, froffi the day of Clay and} Webster, Held to the elastic principle The Aldrich commission perfected the idea into a workable plan. Then. it- remained for Wilson to pur- loin the Republican idea together with | the working medel. + ____ | A SIZABLE CHORE. The work of the late ses ston of congress in which a Republic Jan majority was responsible, is too well lestablishéd to need any special defense from Demberatic valuable |anyone else. So i eomes with extreme ly poor grace frott Demécratic cam- |Ppromises but has made the most amaz- .,Ing and subservient jjust suffered more than seven years of while | » | nation was al SR ned against th i busy congress and worked full “time.| yo hed the need Of mere find ched the 1 ms The Democrats know this as well 3 De See the presidency perform all the may heave made. Mr. Cox not only does not take up the standard of Democracy free from has bound himself to promises Mr. Wilson promises ever known in American polices. If. Mr. Cox Would Ss#erifice his intellectual) independence by meiig a protritse in blank as he did on July 18, after be had secured the nomthation, how can; he expect anyone to believe his claim] that hé Mad friade no promises in order! to sectire tite coveted place at the head of the ticket? By @ long list of broken pledges the} Democratic party forfeited the confi-| ence of the country. By opening his speech of acceptance With sacrilegious protestations of political virtue, Mr. great a hypocrite as his party or the historic Pharisee whose language he saw fit to appropriate. The nation has} holier-than-thou executive and is not likely to subject itself to another. a opie 5 WHO DID IT? | “In 1914 there “was excuse for the) world’s ‘blindness to the sort of dose! Germany was mixing,” says the New York Tribune. It to conceive of an apparently going mad, rulers told ft to. The press, the pulpit, the lecture room for nearly a generation had been} | pouring out in a stead jttine that what ¢ did could} net happen. It was more plausible (0 condemn a8 crazy “milltatists Roberts in Great. Britain, Clemenceau in| nee And Roosevelt in America, who seemed impossible intelligent even though its stream the doc- fermar “But this justification cannot be} Pleaded a second time.. The new crisis paign ballyhooers, the charge Repuifican congress “idted time.” This Democratic testimony is that the} away its! false upon the face of it and disproved from the fact that the Republican major-| ity sufficiently «live to the inter- ests of Democrati¢ party, through thé admin: uration, from “taling away" some: thing like $1,500,000,000, which the ad- ministration sought in appropriations |more than was needed or granted. If the Republican miéjority did no other work than this one item, it was) la sizable chore and credit should be given it haga ea SPROUL COMPARES. | Gov. Sproul of Perinsytvania, one of} the leading candidates for the Repub- lican presidential. nomination at Chir cago; has cirefully read the letters of acceptance of Senator Hardftig atid Cox and here is what he has to “ay of them: “The acceptance speech of Senator) ! Harding will bé more productive Of te- )sults with the people of the country than the speech of. Gov, Cox. He did not appéar to deat with the subjects in the lofty mafinet employed by Sen-| ator Harding. Senator | [Harding's speech of acceptance showed he was jinitued with a spirit of lumility, brotigtit abdit by realisation of the great task before him. “There entirely tone, to my mind, in the specch of Gov. Gox, The message ‘it conveyed indicated he was not vety serivusly im- pressed with. the great tasks which will confront our next président. “I think. the very definite statements (made by Senator Harding will mich ¢ with the of| the country will greatef results than the speech of Gov. was an different carry r weight people and reap ee EXALTETH HIMSELI. number she already has. * The Cheyenne authorities are to be; No man familiar with scriptures will congratulated upon the ‘stand = they}fai to observe the striking similarity have taken for the ¢ivie beiuty of the capital city. Let the gentlemen who ing advertising to do find « of teaching thé ffublic with the things they have for haves pre facts about the sale. oo NO REGARD FOR FACTS. gentlemen at the head of Demo- do not i Th cratic know facts, or the hope As a gene don't As another general Democrats are not if’ perchance ffairs thit season either s of the truth fully misrepresent In king it proposition the and of stick. Demo: or know. proposition som prominent ing to stretch the it makes a better story. truth 4 ‘The inaecuraciés not to speak of the} 6f freedoth need forgeries jn their national were so glaring that the ing among them have ce jude to that document in ve one with another. And then, and loads: up. his aceeptasice * speech ) with the same sort of thunder. There is so littlé use t6 le about small things platform self-respect- to al polite con- along comes Mr. J. Cox where so many people know the facts, that a man running for presidént ought to hesitdté some time before he springs them. ymeone is bound to call him and make him ridiculous. Cox ought to kuow.more about the federal reserve act or else keep quiet. For when he says that “it was origi- ated, advocated and made a law by Democratic president and congress,” ho is simply foolish: As to the origin of it, the late Sena- tor Nelson W. Aldrich of Rhode Island) & Republican ‘of parts outlined the en tire plan er means} unwill-] Combine Jot inferiiation coneerning his between thesCox déélafration in the opening paragraph ef his speech of ac- ceptance ‘that he thanks God that he is free ahd unfettered nd the declara- jticn of the that “I thank God that I am not statement is true, it Pharisee other men.” is the first ‘ammany Hall has the conventign to knowing pretty jin) history thet jgiten ja candidate without lactinitély What he would do if nomi- and elécted. The haste of Mr. obligations with which he n charge@ and the well- of Tammany leadé apén the its support in nated ‘Cox to dei hap not 1 customs to cast doubt known sin- cerity of his statement. But the truthfulness of his assertion not be left to infer- enc® or suspicion. Mr. Cox has al- ready given the le to his declaration \that he is uhfettered by promises. On |July 18, at {he close of his conference at the White House,’ he declared that Whatever Mr. Wilson had promised he would pit forth his best érideavor to give. "It is néfdfious that Pfesfdent Wil- fon made promises whith hé coriccited from the Amefi¢an péople evefi in vio- lation of his express agfetméft that |the promise should be disclosed In the treaty,of alliance with France and ‘Great Britain, for instanee, it was agreed that that treaty mitted to the senate at should be ‘sub- the same time as thé treaty with Versailles. Despite |that agteement, — Pre Wilson |neither submitted the at the | sume time nor disclosed i xistenc IMr. Cox is re of this withholding! agree- mént, yet the Democratic nomifiee for the taxpayefs to prevent the} |bica jness has much! is too close in point of tiitie to the old linked in a thousand | their relation not to-be lyears no —teo ways for een. For two]! Imsis for doubt Has existed Jas to what sort of power was building |iteelf up in Russia. It made no secret! |of Its purpose to use force to otganize jthe world on tts plan, just as the Prus-| Sians sought by force to ofganize the world on_thefr plan. “No ore has any reason to be sur- prised over the outbreak of Russian! imperialism. That the Bolshevik power ,if it dared, would try to pl the role Germa ny failed in was certain. Democracy is as hateful to the Lenine crowd @s to the kaiser | thing done was food, crowd. Every to be for the world’s If the world was so stupid as not to recognize this, into a better “Those who then it must be understanding. have -encouraged Rus-; sia to start on her amuck rtnning may with boast of the c her reaetion to their stimulus. | | | | | | | reason lerity” of Let us| j blame on Bolshevik emissaries and the | format propaganda of Moscow. “Th this ¢ountry the sinister Must. been forwarded by Ameri- cans, in Great Britain by Britons, in France by Frenchmen. The noisy minority which has spread the idea that the allies wer lign influence. Its members have done | all in their power to break down the} Morale of the allied peoples—have }made them doubt and suspect one an- other and their governments. a “It is Probable a Way will be found} to bridge thé present crisis. But the bridge will not be stable. Russia will be no more satisfied with crushing the jnational aspirations of Letts, Lithua- nians and Ukrainians and with humi- jlating Poland than Ge was with wicked has a ma many the acquisition of Alsace-Lorraine and the humiliation of “> the fourteen pointers of Ameri ca and other countriés these few ‘words! may be addre: { work! If new ri France. ‘Look on your handi- rs of blood must flow to stive democracy and the |of freedom, no stfiall part of the str is traceable to_you as its fountain. ! tomes |‘POLITICS IN WAGE R m DUCTIONS?’| Undet the above heading, but with-| out the question mark, the free-trade w York World hints, without daring Ment which It cunnot prove for the} foundation in| feason that it has no fact. | fied we y childish whim, institutions | ® to assert, that wage and work reduc-| tions are being made for purely poli- tical reasons. That! is a nasty way of” trying to Impress an idea upon the public without openly making a state- Casper Daily Cribune ‘wool, steel. The report showed that there had been a cahceliation of orders for wool leather; €otton dna iron en textile fabries amounting to about F 100,000,000. In the face of such can- jeellations and in the absence of new orders, down. the mills Were forced to shut The mills of the American Woolen Company were not, the ony enes affected nor the only ones to close. only Nor were the woolen mills the textile mills affected. condition obtaitied among the silk mills ‘nd cotton mills, as well as in other industries. ‘The effort of thd World to discreast domestic prodti¢tive mdustries is easily understood. It is due to an effort to turn away the attention of the’ public from the cause of the sudden chosing | one A. Jack-|Cox invites the suspicion that he is as/@2W" of hitherto busy. factories. ‘The: importa-! real cause is the enormous tions of foreign merchandise at such low prices as to tempt dealers to can- cel their orders for domestic goods and, in their place, purchase foreign goods. an adequate protective tariff it would be impossible for foreign pro- ducers to so greatly undersell domes- tic producers. The World wishes to attention away from and s0 hints that there is some wrong being done by domestic producers for political purposes. If any wrong is being done in connection with the mat- ter for political purposes it is being cone by the World and by Mr. Gom* draw pers. QAUGHTER OF WEALTHY AANCH OWNER. SOUGHT BY SHERIDAN POLICE SHERIDAN, Wyo, Aug. (Dolice and sheriff here ‘hav ‘qui sted -by Sheriff G. {Johnson county 14.—The | been re- 8, Stevenson of Wyoming, to be on ithe lookout for Nellie va, 12-year-old daughter of Artone Sylva, a wealthy flockmaster. The girl disappeared from her home at Baffale several days ago, {taking her clothing with her. She was traced to Clearmont, Wyoming, where it was ascertained that she De ig a ticket fo Billings, Moritana, ‘search for her has been pita Wes to Billings and al other towns in this region. Whether the child, who large for her age, was inveigled ray ‘from home, or left as the result of a pied Sale not known. THERMOPOLIS TO, MAKE BID FOR EAGLE HOSPITAL' THERMOPOLIS, Wyo., Aug. ot Thermopolis will make a bid for Eagles’ home Which is to be erecte somewhere in fhe west by the Frater- nal Order of Eagles. Thermopolis’ cii- {net be silie enoneh te Jay: the exotusive matic alwaritages’ aid the super-ad- vantage of the health-giving thefmal, springs here will be argued as reasons | why the home should be erected hére. lucements in the way of a site and grounds for the institution, etc., be held ont. ‘LIVE WIRE REPUBLICAN CLUB AT HANNA CAMP An enthusiastic meeting of Republi- cans organized the ‘Hanna Republican club” at the Hanna ¢oal camp in Car hon county Wednesday night. T. H. Butler was elected president and R. D, ry, of the mew club. Republican club s been instrumen- ng the present cam- rst being a lve-w which Mr. tal in forming du paign, the f nization at Superior, in S' © county. Intense interest in the coming elec- tion was displayed at thd meeting. S. D. Briggs was selected as the chair- n Of the membership Gommittee, h will whi active “In the j kept the voters, stronghold. immedidtely commené drive for new members. good old days before ‘He us out of war’ was used to fool Hanna Was a Republican With Ule helb or Mr. Bite aun ler, Our new president, we are going to return th mp to the Republican Ve disstass nex fall,” was the cotmment by Mr. Briggs after the miéetifie. a Cc. Spe executive retary of the Republican e central commit- ti attended the Hanria freeting and sted in the § organization of the Re publican lub, ummer resort. proprietors i to be behind the protest short skirts on the ground th no longer see any seashore are be- against t men reason to go toythe The World editorial i 6n the statenrent of 4 American tion of. head of the | Laber, to the effeet tha vage redue- | tions and the closing down of mills are! being made/ not on account of) any economic cOnditions, but for the pur-, {pose of renting sentiment. Mr. Gom-| pers proposes resistence to wage re- We are not the state- ment of Mr. ompers, for he ts noted for his radical views and he fs also striving to retain his hold upon the or-| ganization which has recently broken| ‘away from his leddership in several in-| stance: But that the World should make statements editorially that its news columfis disprove excites wondei The Wort refers to Mr. Gompers' at-| tack upon the American Woolen Com- Pany because it closed down its mills| which had made large profits during | the past yeitr. Yet In the news ¢olumns reported the figd-| ra for surprised at | | ductions. | | | | | of the sume issue it ings of the the past month, ing Of impéftant e 0: { federal res | showing the sla ent such inidustries, ANNOUNCEMENT I have opened a first class Millinery Store at the ¢orner of CY Ave. and Walnut St. Have a new stock of Fall and Winter Millinery Am out of the high rent district and my prices are reasonable. We trim over hats. MRS. B. E. RUCKER and make “a The same! this fact! will = \ LESS THAN REGULAR PRICES 3 Days. Only — Guy A. Fisher, fur ex- pert from one of the old- est and most reliable fur Manufacturers in Detroit and New York will be at our store AUGUST 16, 17, 18 and will display for sale all the latest models in Are strong in demand, and will be shown in Mink, Jap Mink, Squirrel, Mole; Hudson Seal and other rare Furs. Body Scarfs Will be the strongest in Foxes, and we will show them in Battleship Grey, ~Dove, Gun Metal, Grey, Loretta, Maurice, Liberty Blue; Georgette, Taupe, Baum Marten, Black, Jap Cross, Red Foxes, Lynx, Canadian Wolf, Raccoon, Skunk, Russian Wolf and other varieties. = E : = = = E = = = 3 156 South Center St. |= HAN SPECIAL FUR SALE] $100,000 Worthof Coats Made trimmed in Skunk, Beaver, . Fitch, Squirrel, Raccoon, Aus- tralian ,Opossum and Plain. We will have a large line of AUSTRAL- IAN Seal, French: Seal, Japanese Mink, Rugsian Wolf and Coney Coats, plain and trimmed, all of which have been designed to meet the most exacting customer’s requirements. of Hudson Seal, Marten, Coatees Will be shown in Squirrel, Mole, Jap Mink and. Hud- son Seal. Scarfs You will find attractive features in Kolinsky, Mar- ten, Squirrel, Mole, Fitch, Hudson Seal, Mink and other fine furs. Frantz Shop Phone 1304W. SE TA Hn AAA IAA

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