Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 18, 1920, Page 2

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PAGE TWO lapued every evening except Sunday at Casper, Natrona county, Wyo. Publi- cation offices: Oil Exchange Buildihg. BUSINESS TELEPHONE Entered at Casper (Wyom: ng) Postof. fice as second-class matter, 1916 pasta Deakin westinie {La nck alah ito Abas MEMBER THB ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS FROM UNITED PRESS ——— E. HANWAY, President ana Baitor ARL B. HANWAY, Business Manager THOS. DAILY ...Advertising Manager R. B. EVANS. City Bastor W. H. HUNTLEY. -Associate Editor vertising tatives David J. Randall, 341 Fifth Ave., New_York City. Prodden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bide., Chicago, Tl. Copies of the Daily Tribtine are on file in the New York and Chicago of- fices and visitors are welcome SUBSCRIPTION RATEs. By Carrie -15 One Year -. $7.80 Six Months 3.90 Three Months 1.96 One Month 65 Per Copy 05 One Year -. -$7.80 Six Months = Three Months No subscription by pted for less period than All subscriptions must be paid in vance and The Daily Tribune insure delivery after comes one month in thrée months. ad will not subscription arrears he- Member of Audit Bureaa of Circulation’ (A. B, 0) Member of the Associutéd Preas. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication o: all news credited in this paper and als6{ the local news published herein. <P Republican Ticket For President-—— WARREN G. HARDING Of Ohio For Vice President— | Ebe Casper Daily SCribune |x Re rr reekleay, Bu ascorairig: to: the rule of cuur#e the visitors were shown over the. city, tlie magnifident) boulevard éystem ahd ail. A bulletin iésued ‘by the Yoca! real estate botitd tells the story completely. Tt say “What is Kansas City going about the billboard problem? During the last city administration there weré two ordinances pending upon which no action @ver was takén, and, of course, they went the way of all ordi- nances under consideration at the close of that administration, No new ordi- nance has been introduced to date un- der the new administration. * Does that mean tht the matter is going to he dropped and that Kansas City’s resi- dential distrfct and Kansas, City's boulevards are going'to contifiue to be decbratea (2) with billbotrds unrestrict- ed by Mgisiation? “ft might not be amiss to state here] that while, generally speaking, we have heard nothing but words of praise! .ome) or whether it should be a tax concerning our great city from the 9 | realtors who were our guesis during the recent national convention, noeyer- theless, it Shdald be Stated that re- ports of unfavorable comment, even of adverse criticism, have reached this of- fice, due to the manner in which bill- boards are erected almost indiscrimt- nately in all parts of our city. Our Denver visitors would not want to be quoted as critiéising Kansas City but it is reported that one of them did say *Karikas City permits on its boulevards {what we will not permit in our moun- tain passes.’ Representatives from one two other cities felt) compelled to say that we gone bill- board mad in Kansas City. “What are we going to do about it?” {SRE QO | FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM. t Bankers and financiers have been of! opinion that federal reserve system Was in no sense a perfect modified at of its worst features is its| or seem to have the the | act! be early | and should an date. One CALVIN COOLIDGE Of Massachusetts Politics should be} and it should be] administration eliminated absolutely a ten aie ect say $200;000 ‘and sperids $60,000. for site| thls trip? 7 ‘We have the scientific knowledge, the practical ex- WHITE EASELY PLEASED. benefit not for any particular section. °F S™000N Ant spin Pe aa waar ‘ periénee and the modern machinery to produce the : Tn the recent Ohin primaries the Re-|The main trouble is sufficient elaccio-] °°" NN Ns TGR & ltt i ning | _ Gane 8 the old-fashioned Democrat, véty lenge you need, and our skilled Service assures Publicans polled approximately 275,000| ity im the present law, granted that) Torii Mul Mavdl Ne TOMO gathered to hig fathers, fs. that Old you that Saha Mevarith dane wor ene eyerin n the “Burnett Votes and the Democrats approximately |the other ills were eorrected. fedisie: backs ahan na REA hil orig dade {mossback who, formerly was wont to Way” it’s done right. - 125,000 votes: There were contests in} Hon. Leslie M. Sbaw, once secretary} . cy |announce that the “robber tariff” w: a| both parties, which would naturaily}6r tHe treagury and a.bunker of many |7¢8!0n Of an’ Ineome ‘of "$200,000 Whol tie cause of the high cost of living. If you have eye trouble of hy kind “het us look: bring out a larger vote than if there fa. of ‘exhétience and wh atithority | 870nds the whole, of-larger ‘pant of thats a * you in the Eye.” ct eatiatpe t acksiowtedged abitity, says of the/*um on extravagant. living.” Wolfakin make the: best paschiment | Besides this is presidential year with, resef've system: errr i ese ntial chndidates, of both lead-; “The greenback was bad, but not BURNETT OPTICAL c0 parties tesidents of Ohfo, another! wholly bad and we all ‘speak well Of . inducement for voters to ‘go to the) the bridge that took us safely over.’ polis and make a showing for their re-|The federal reserve system is bad, but spective parties. |nict wholly bad and we should all speak ‘The Ohio resuit indicates plainty| well of it. It has given us mflation which of the two parties possesses en-| greater than that of the civil war, and thusiasm and hope and which one is alive to the situation, The Republicans have every reason to feel proud of the vote cast by their! party and National Chairman White of| the Democratic party says ho is high- ly gratified at their showing. We der how much larger the Democratic vote was than Chairman White expect- éd it to be? won- ——— ~ THE PENUMBRAL BUG. { Tinally we know what alls the world. We have to thank Dr. Charles G. Hill felebrated alienixt and head of the | famous sanatorjum at Mount Hope, } Baltimore. We « suffering from a! “penumbr: mental condition, whieh |? if to it to make not actual insanity, is close enough| a straight jacket and a vitluable assets in any} jouschold. { The pituation under padded room causes. for this “penumbral") which the world is lab: ering were not born yesterday, 80 Dr. Hit snys, but have becn developing for} & long time. They were licld in re straint by strong moral forces until the; War. > During the War and since it ended The world has felt this’ moral restraint slipping, until now it has fallen almost Tuto impoteney and people are going off @he handle everywhere, Women as well gs men, , = The doctur cites the recent mob af- Minois and Other parts of the ki . the Denver case as well. In mall of these affairs the urge to wild ir- ction» burst all ‘roke through al! mora! restraint and Fesponsible jwhen we ‘greenbackism.’ now demand Heaven only knows. we thing higher eccupied and ‘statesmmanship—another name for poll- ticat poise and vision—to prevent our coming down all in a banch with many broken bones. ‘lthus far i our history haye never de ‘tury should. Show the statutory limit ever be reached we will fihd ourselves in exactly the same position as we et deflate a worse condition is n that which caused unlimited inflation, at radicalism will All know for certain fs it will be some We have climbed to @ than we ever before it will require supreme y to ensue t wild cry f Ww fierce. limb We climb gradually, but gradually. } teouble with thé federal tem is the old, element soended “The erve fad old weakness: It of automati¢ elasticity, Contraction bas to be forced by the board, and expansion, authorized by the board. Wheh the limit is reached the board can lower the per cent of re contains no actly as the national bank evve ntemplated the secretary of the treas- used to be in when the national banks had reached the limit of theif reserve the secretary failed to have the them to use their re- serve to the last dollar; that a reserv that could not be touched might as well be burned. The old system con: templated limit except the jude ment of the secretary of the treasury, a fimit. Still this is and the to dear ol? and courage to tell no es a@ great improvement country onves & debt of gratitude Séhutor Aldrich for its every good fea- and for some omitted. tu is The point I want to emphasize its want of automatic elasticity, Lengthening the tether of “the horse you are leading behind the buggy docs not prevent trouble when you come to a rough place if you have no slack loft. Adfomutic contraction was, al ways the much needed, and ever want: ing element. It is needed and wanting ‘Created havoc. £ The thipg that caused the doctor to mevenl the Status of the world’s men Jal condition was a riot at the Bultl more 1 a park in which cértain Tans projected pop botties In the direc ‘tion of the umpire because of eortain Mevisions with which they disagreed, yind the hurling of other things at the police Who went io the umpire’s res ‘ue: When the rioters wore brought ‘beforé the police magistrate he dis- wharged them upon the ground that They were insane and he did not desire 40 fine or jail insane persons : Hill supported the magistrate’s view Dr. was appealed to and ‘Average umpire is crazy, isn't the umpire. he said, but it It is the fan who is ¢ his “penumbra” thing the doctor iPeaks of, moans a partial mental eclipse. A shadow cast tipon the men- tity. The causes of which he at- tributes to the war. VISITORS CRITICISE. Fividenee multiplies that Casper city authorities recently took the proper tand aguinst the billboard nuisance. Recently’ Kansas City entertained the National Real Estate Association, many hundreds of men from all parts of the country w guests of the — ~~ fully } The a@verage enthusiast seems to think the i | | | now. “Of course, thé posstbility of favorit: jim, and dangér of pattiaan control is always present. 1 know Of no evidence now. of either PBST ss 2 UNSCIENTIFIC TAX SYSTEMS. Appearing before a senate. committee on réconstruction and production sit- ting in New York, Otto H. Kahn, the eminent New York financier and bauk- er mde an ininteresting statement with reference to ocxisting taxes. He waid? “The excess profits &bolishead some other tax should be or essentially modified, and method devised to tix ent: porte profits. At the same time thé extreme scale of surtaxes, swbielt ae: tually defeats its own purpose, should be revised downward “The principle of a progressive indl vidual income tax and of Ax On COM ‘porate profits should be retained, “but {t should be applied not vindietively or} to do) readon Wind exnerietice. Surtaxos mitist not be so Gxtrvae that they ripple production, discourage or ptayent nor- {ifial enterprise, and preciude that ac- cumulation of business and investment funds which is av indispensable prere- quisite for material progress and pros- perity. “Careful nivestigation securities jor at Teast to limit such ex- emptions, Say, for instance, to the nor- mal federal dnd state taxes, “Much can be/said for a small tax on sales, say one dollar for each hundred dollars, Whether that should be a tax on commodities only or whether it should include other objects and. also) services; whether it should be a tax on; Bross turn-over (and, correspondingly, where that is pot applicable, on gross confined to sfles to the ultimate con- sumer (in which case It might well be! made progressive according to t Value of the article purchaséd, or in what. other. form it should be imposed, Is a débatable question on which I am not yet prepared to express a fixed opinion. “Inheritance taxation by the government should be made to cease} 4s soon as conditions permit and that source of revenue left for the use of the states, which are now hard pressed to find sources of revenue, Inhert tance taxation should be imposed not on thy estate, byt on the individual) recipient. Under the present federal; system an estate bequeathed to one de-/ federal in thé sense of basing it not merely ot income but-also on the social Aise made jof income, De Doabie eureka abel All-Weather. T1 148 E, Midwest Ave. jeye, n | West. in the If a man has av income of} this delivery thet it a eniff could understand. He was: Nari 6 aE aie heard of FS aa SSS Does anybody know just jalong Cox has got %in that job he re- should be| cently assumed in dedicating himself} nine of the question whether migang|t thé task of redidjusting the affairs of sHould not and cowld not be found to] °ivillzation afd of Greating a new day prevent further issues of taxexempt/°ut of Which he fntends to make the best of the lessons of the past? Democrats may seem to rejoice over the defeat in Oklahoma of Senator Gore by Scott Would it hilarity until they learn just what 9. ©W. Harreld, Republican candidate for jsenator, has one to Scott. Ferris, in 7th St. West, Salt Lake City, Utah, ess has teft my the November election? aR EITC “T've suffered with pevet have a0 mich | ——— OUT ‘OF ATO § AEPORT since I was a boy. and of late years it|as @ twinge of rhe es Ir seen . been so severe as to keép me tn e. 8 » ra petite enc If there ts one thing Cox don't want U ‘ 'y ‘aesy ee! ep Hides geitied at € 6 in to hear about these days it is the fact | that he granted permission for a prfier} fielit to be pulled 6ff within the state, over the péople. A. day that |Plienic from a’roped drena, an old Buck- wearing «bunch of whiskers on bis chin’ and remarked that Cox talked like Jéss Wil Jard did Toledo. Our firs of representative popular government, under the const{tutipn, Phrough, the | agency of the Republican party.—War- ren G. Hi — The most obvious place {6 begin re-| jscendant is taxed-at the same rate @8!ircnehment Is. by eliminating the ox- an estate divided among say six de-}tayagance of the government itself— sceidants. ‘That is manifestly unfair! caiyin Coolidite. f and socially undesirable. | Zaeuk to's: Crean “Consideration should be given to the| Tt hasn't been 6 long ago, only In — bit if you have a cbt heat ‘and question whether there should not be} 1916, that the Democratic party was! a ¢ r-, * i a revision of the iffeory of taxation,;f0" War in the East and peace in the it can be ‘corrected through the use ot Ti old Cost of Tire Mileage You are aware, of co the last able steadil of mileage built into its tires. Do ou realize, has been accomplished on to the user—that Goodyear are priced no ater cae today than in 1910? each .. ite 5 ae Hes In no tire in the Goodyear line is ps de sein ey —25e c. Desa e ee de ce eS ee tase wee er ewerccee the declining cost of e more eatounen ba ts, 18x18, evident than in the present 30 x 3-, * So is i SA a ARE Reema Al -10¢ 30 x 3% and 31 x 4inch size Good year Tités made especially for small Cars. If you own a Ford, Chevrolet, ests Startor. ante popal pels al pee endurance Soe Goodyear Tires and Tubes Phone East and dry in the West. of his letter of sono th be an address that even it, but we have not yet a child, who believes it. } how far Chartes Creech is in’ the Private ‘hex pital suffering with injuries to one ee ns the result of an Ba Pa accident on thé Salt Creék road Monday night, Whe J. G, Lever car; driven Julian Lever was overturned on a curve, an] five occupants were thrown out but Creec wahs te only one hurt. The car was badly damagea. CHILD SUFFERS BROKEN MAM OR BEING BOUNGED C. Jewell [ Clarence . Tanlac . He Gains Fifteen Pounds. pase eS “When I was tortured beyond heuatty ha tp teed nie. Tih only thirty ‘eight years old ioe v. ‘8 a wonder, after 2 GORI te look Atke a —— Ferris, ‘both — Democrats. not be well to suppress their it my duty to give other sufferers the benefit ot. my experience,” recently de- clared, Clarence C. Jewell, of 855 Sputh most of the time. Last winter it hit me so hard that I was laid up Thrown violently from from her seat when | cofmpletely. .HBvery part of my body j her father's Gar struck a ‘rough place | ached, I couldn't sleep. elther day or in the road west of town, the littie’| night on account of the pain and it ddtughter of Mr. and Mrs. Will Me-| was agony even to turn over in bee. {Kenna of Comanche, Okla., sustalned| My joints and muscles became stiff a broken arm. The chifd was taken to} and my feet and legs swelled to twice the Private hospital yedterday after-| tneir normal size, I couldn't ever hold |jmoon and the arm was set, & newspaper to read and my wife ac- The family was returning {rom Per # sf trip thru Yellowstone Park. a eg weight: I can do a day's work now with any man and can honestly ay that. I never, felt better in se Taniac is certainly great and 1! iaain: Casper by Casper it as long as I live.” Tanlac is sold in Pharmacy, in Alcova ‘by Alcova Mer. Cantile Co,, mh Salt Creek by Salt Creek drug store.—Ady. overwhelming protests of the nd when it occurred the other Cox spoke at a Democratic! @® mouth like a steel trap, before the famous battle of) ‘sy nernstoin of Casper and Denver [will act as mi er of the M. D, Bar- nett Outfitting Company during the ab- sence of Max Petker who is nding his vacation in Los Angeles, Cali a os t committal is the resforution) larding. i} his year that party is for wet Can} pulled Glasses we can supply them. bunk be ‘successfully Practital Optometrists Hotel t Hota somgnte! Caaper, hid etropolitan 5 to 50c Stores SPECIAL THURSDAY ONLY old Dutch Cleanser’, SABRE Ree ie Lux Flakes, 3 packages:...... Congoleum Mats, 36x36, , that during ten years, year has been to increase the amount also, that cacti Ladies Black Silk Hose, “eaegade? ‘« soft SRE Si aie a eis aay Men’s Work Hose, pair SNe ig 3 ala toiid il Blow g 0) sieiattel>' Bre Men’s-Canvas battoas pair or othér car go to. for ur nearest t Tires—get the builds into them. NO INSURANCE MEN IN HEAVEN OR HELL BETTER SEE BAUER TODAY: CASPER MOTOR 60. Goodyear Tires and Tubes 143 West Second St. Phone 909 “BEST BOWL OF CHI TOWN TR ~ -20c at the CHILI KING LUNCE nasa seca sesie as. |S 1203

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