Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 2, 1920, Page 2

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Issued every evening except Sunday Casper, Natrona county, Wyo. Pub! cation offices: Oi Exchange Butiding. BUSINESS TELEPHONE 15 — ae "FROM ERED PRESS x WAY, President and Bdicor EARL B. HANWAY, Business Manager THAS. LY Ad) Manager --City Editor Associate Editor Advertising Representatives David J. Randall, 341 Fifth Ave., New, York City. rudden, King & Prudden, 1720-38 Steger Bidg., “Chicago, Mi. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the New York and Chicage of- floes ‘and. visitors are weleome. ~ - SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Carrier One Year Six Months ‘Three Months One Month Per Cony. . One Year - Six Months Three Months x No subscription by mail aegepted far less period than three months. in ad: All gubscriptions must be The Daily Tribune will not vance and after gubseription be- th in arrears. Member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the for republication 09 all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. For Vice President— CALVIN COOLIDGE Of Massachusetts For Representative in NHK W, MONDELL For Presigential Electors for Wye ming— . JACOB M. SCHOOH PETER KOOI JAMES NICHOLSON Republican County Ticket For State Senator— d. W. JOHNSON Fer Representatives— E. M’DONALD For. County Clerk— t HELEN KH. CARLSON For Clerk of Ci ~ HAZEL CONWELL, For County ALFRED R. LOWEY q LYLE E. JAY _ For Coynty Surveyor— M,N, For Commissioner (Kaur Years). W. BF. DUNN For Commissioner (Fwo Years)— CHARLES ANDA ‘For €orgner— TODD W. BOWMAN THE ANSWER. THAT NEVER CAME, ‘On July 8th Congressman Richmond FP. Hobson, himself an ardent prohfbi- tlonist sent the fellowing wire to James M. Cox, the Democratic nominee for President of the United States: “Dry forces are restive. National of- fieers of Anti-Salam League have asked me to get statement from you, They cite that Harding voted for Vol- stead act. Could you glye me clear Statement of your being oppos?d to federal authorization of increasing alcoholic content? This would save to Democracy milljops ‘of voters who hold this question above party success.” Upto dute Mr. Cax has utterly failed in the common courtesy of replying to Mr. Hobson's inquiry. You will have to find out from Mr. Cox his reasons for not replying. We don't know. May he, hawever, the following item taken from a publication styling itself “Justice” gnd carrying this legend under its ‘title: “Official organ of the retail and wholesale liquor interests of New Jersey.” This is what®Justice” says: “The nomination of Governor James M. Cox, of Ohie, by the Democrats as their candidgte for president is an out-and-out ‘victory for the liberty- loving people of the coupiry who are termed the wets. His election tothe nresidency of the United States will be the crowning victory in the People’s war against prohibition. Gavernos Cox is an enemy of prohibition. He is op- posed to its » un-American principle. Governor Cox wan in spite af the Anti- Saloon League and its menacing influ- chee. * * ©. He can be counted op th use his jnflyence whon elected to amend the Volstcad law s0 as to per mit the manufacture and sale of beer and light wines and lead the fight to remove the eighteenth amendment from tlie constitutian.” We apprehend it will be some time before My. Hebsen receives his expect ed communication from Mr. Cox. POLAPICAL BOLSHEVIKS. It remains new for Jim Cox to make Boot if he cun on his slush fund charges. The officers of the Republic- an National Gommities have, submitted their books and testified under oath, so}. have the officers of the- Democratic 65 | always @ day for everything te hapren-| 14 0} be the virtim as the other, for every- {qn of New England milly engaged National Cowanities. Quy of i} alh|whe are still mambung about substantiated, try to obtain orders that will run the The things he rants about have no|mili at a profit, or the monpy that will basis In fact th the affairs of the Re- ellqw them to be run gt Qoet op ata semmittee. Tho aimellase. ; HOF the Repydliagn mannce-} “Ff it ig really continyays employ- found to be entirely! msaqt that idle textile ongratives « are different from what Cox represented im}oraying they cay have tf If they are his speeches. ‘The amount designed to| willing to make a sufficient sacrifice in be collected for the party's campaign) the wage rate. There is always some expenses in all the states of the union)basis of oast at which manufacturers was freely shown to approximate three} Would be willing to indulge in the million dollars. A very modest sum) Speculative accumulation of staple comparable to fifteen or thirty million}goods, but the basis taday would be far as hdwled up and down the country by;below the present exorbitant wage Cox and Frank Roosevelt. rate.” eee The result of it all has peen ta place} The gecond view fram the. Tawa Cox and his Vice.presidential append-| Homestead, follows: age exactly where they helong in the “If Jaber has not the right to strike, public estimation—a pair of poiitical;neithep has the farmer ner the capi- Bolsheviks. talist. The capitalists strike wheneyer they secretly agree to limit production or advance prices, and also when in- There 18/ dividual concerns st-ut down factories hraw employes out of work. Such a strike has recently been begun by . the Amerigan Woolen Company. By body. takes the same risk and every! oiosing its mills, the American Woolep hody breaks the first and simplest of) company has deprived 40,009 persons af all teaffic rulg—he jaywalke He./ york ang limited the supply of woolen meaning Ail of us, not only Jaywalk@fiitn which last will tend to yeep between s{tect intersections: put at In-| soning up to the present high and un- terseetions as well. The object, of Just level. Toa my way of thinking, the oouvee. ia to get acfuss the sirect, dO: oie of this eoncern is far leas justi: it quickly and save the additional walk fiable than the strike of the coa} miners t8 the safe crossing provided by thel ang’ the r : ; the railraad workers for wages that city and where al the rules ef traffic) win enable them ta mest the high cost apply to the security of the pedestrian. of living, or the strike pf organized With the amount of traffic the main farmers fpr fair prices for milk or streets of the city bear for the greater sugar, bests."* portion of the day and night it is posi- HARDING'S PROPOSAL. tively dangerous for pedestrians to cross a city street between crossings at Senator Harding ‘proposes, since the any time. He should ndt do it. Cars| League of Nations has ceased to func- travel very rajldly and cvecp upon youl tion in Eprope, and its adoption in before you are aware of it. America hag failed and singe the whole Some day some horritle accident will) proposition is in a hopeless tangle, to gccur and some good man or woman| utilize the present and existing Hague will lose his Hfe and some blameless} tribunal in its best features and the automobilist will carry the weight, at) best features ef the League of Nations the tragedy upon his conscienea for;in an association of the natians of the warld to be known as the court of long months. Better cyt out. daywalking internatinnal justice and the — eoupcil anything serioug’ heupess. Jeet of which {s to establish and main- tajn the peace of the world, : LORD GREY'S VIEW, Upon this subject Senator Harding Lord Grey who for a brief time repre) io. aig: sented Great Britain as ambassador at “The difference between a court of Washington, and is high if the opuncll® Fiitemmational justice and th. eouncile of his home geyernment, has on more/ crustca by the league covenant is simple than gne occasion spoken very freel¥ line profound. évieerning the League of phi “The gne is a judicial tribunal to be question, he has shown a proper a “a governed by fixed and definite princi- to arrive at @ solytion that wou! ples of law administered without pas. aprecahle to the Amesicay people, ratte! ai) Gp prefudice.- Dhol other is "an as. er than to the American calGney ;.|Seclation of diplomats and politicians He realizes the eprateeae canes whose determinations are sure to be can membership in any ingl= influenced by considerations of expe- aagociation | for, matatennnce ; Ct PORES aicnce. ands mations) kepifininvase, The and has but recently said: difference is one with which Americans f ita be Tear Atte vorieiaeion| familiar, the old and fyndaniental Mic RAS RPES EAN difference betw. " and territory, of the civilized countries! een @. government of {laws and a government of men. of the world atanie qatar: tee a ean “I do not mean to say, nor do I mean the league wil ey he eins toate fo permit any such construction, that destiny. To put Pat ra shoe I would decline co-operation with other in ace = et agai saat ae Hations in an honest endeayor to: pre- will only jet “}¥ent wars. Nobody ‘ivi i tically name their own terms. in Wo euin that position. The on question is “The Americans shduld be entrusted one Foie Fest os ot Hh peebar with- Witty tp. teh! pe-eQtHing ® seocmBteeS Tir; ‘ine bounds yrescribed by fundamen: tion scheme "A committe ef the 99M] 161 principles. : Mes-we must never fArEet tHe PENAL wg ncey are distindtly ‘two types of rights and-duties in regard to frets ts ce ational relationship. affairs being reinforced by the seenbers offensive and defenstvé alliange of great of the House of Representatives, a Powers, like that created at Versailles, also by. nominees of the President: ani. impose thelr will upon. sha, hapless Sppreme Court-—coulé draw un pene peoples of the wortd. Frankly, I am tions for the recanstruction of ia opposed to such a scheme as that, and league. which would be consonant hag T speak knowingly when I say that the the feeling not @f ove, Wut of all artless wth whem we in America," Very well, Senator Harding has already pointed the way to the recen- struction of America’s idea of interna- tionat peace plans, the machinery is —- ———____ STOP JAYWALKING. Some day it will happen. And when it does ong is ag likely to before such &@ proposition. “I am opposed to the very thought former nong Of Oox'y statements have been} profiteering, dg uot believe thia jet them| who have as One is an} @ fought the way are reluctant to accept | 4 of our republic becoming a party to ee Breat aay political freedotn ‘48 we had in 1776) right to devel { and have thes eminence und tm i el Wp {Sasha tiong. Gp @ league of free ngtions, anfy| ta uphold. mated by. considerations of right and justice instead of might and self-in- agency ip purgnit of pegee, byt. ag or: ganized and so’ participated: in as to} make the actuat attainment of peace a reasonable possibility. Such an asso- cigtion’ ¥ faver with: all my heart, and T wauld make no fine distinction as to whom credit is dug. One need not care what it ig ealle@. Let it be an agspcia- tian, a society, or a league or what not, our concern is solely with the sub- stancz, not the form thereof. “This js proposing no new thing. This countyy ts already 4 member ef such a segiety--The Hague tribynal, which, unlike the jeague of Versailigs, [is still funetioning, and within a few tweeks will resume its committee ses- sions ynder the chairmanship of an American representative. “Tm that bedy wa have the frame- work of a really effective instrumen- tality of enduring peace. The fact that the tribunal did not nyevent the great war is, @f ¢qurse, manifest, byt the catse af the failure js no legs apparent. Germany, already seeretly determined upon a ruthless invasion, was able to prevent the adpption of oa tel bl “of free | tions, ped Sunt a conagyon nationality.” Sa IEIEccRatEeeeeeT incompetency. vention speech when it wasn't the Kansas City’ one: sat which might have proved effectual. The condition now is wholly different. Not fonly Germany, but the entire warld has profited to the extept of an awful object lesgon, the Impressions of which cannot be erased from the humun. mina} for generations ta come. The horrors of war and the eagerness ef peace have beeome universal. What ance scemed at The Hague to be a mere academic discussion has become a positive, out- standing need of facing terrifying ac- tyalities. This majes vastly easier the task of so strengthening The Hggue tribunal as te render its just decrees elther aevéptable er enforeeahle. nat uncpmmon for the advocates of the leggue of Versailles to contrast unfav- orably, The Hague tribunal upon the ground that the tribunal ‘lacks teeth,’ “Very well, then; let's put teeth inte: it. Tf, in the failed league of Versuites, there can be found machinery which the tribynal can use properly and ad- yantageously, by all méans let it he ap: propriated, E+would even go further. 1 would: jake and combine all that is goog and excise all that is bad from both organizations, ‘This statement ts brpad: enough to inejude the syades- tion that if Jeagye, sa 6 tofore rasta dur “dor encom te ) hap lider 90” Ghryinea | gnc Inteswoven intq the peace of Hu- rope, that its good must be preserved in order to stabilize the neace of that continent, than {ft can be amended or | | revised so that we may’ still have a'rem- nant of world aspirations in 1918, builded inte the. world’s highest ae i Your. Watch ar it i eS gn it up, ne matter “what ‘the des. I, Schwartz Iris. Theater Bidg. E. Keating, Mgr. already to operate. It requires sim- ply to turn on @ little steam. nivEnouts Vinws. ‘There has been cansiderable said one way and angiher aboyt the slosins in the manufacture of woolen praducts, @nd the’ cansecquent enforced idteness # NONE operatives. We are giving two widely divergent views below. Phe first is by the Textile WorldJournal which says: *@urtaiiment of production farced by eancellation of orders, and at present most acute among the worsted millx_af Lawrence, Mass., qnd the cotton yarn milla of Gastonia, N. C., is beeoming sufficiently protracted to cause appre hensign among textile eperatives gen- erally, and to bring visiens of soup kitehens and bread lines to those di- reetly affected) Phe mayer of Law- rence has,caTled p special meeting of the aldermen to consider the lattey con- tingeney. He and certain radical laboy jeaders suggest that the mills could well ‘afford to run ut a loss for a time to prévent suffering among the em> ploygs Labor radicals would have. {t @ppear that there is something sinigter in this: curtaliment mavement, same: thing aimed at the marale of keber er: saqnigations and haying @ political’ mo- tive as well. < “Mayor White, of Lawrence, thinks it strange thatthe shut down should] ¢ have come so soun after the yecent gen-} eral advance of 15 por cont in New} England textile, wages; an adyence piled on top of previous adyances ranging from 166 to 200 per cent; yot neither he nor the radidal labor leaders, nor the operatives have had the common sense to suggest the abrogation of the last ad- vance, und. posajble further cut Jn Weeds as @ partial volution of the eur tallmeat problem. “EH the fadiculo who ctiticie many facturers for ¢loging their mills; and » % Electric OUR School D LENDS IN A Natrona Power ¢ res. Sewing Machine SPECIAL SALE FEW DAYS | Matisse ula : Phone 69 of Welptul co-operptign iq the, wag “E believé humanity would welcorne| the face of it was a fraud. @ ereation of an international asso-| “Still, for the last five years the de- for conference and a world court|partment has mations would be both willing gad ghle| > 10¢-frane order, which ecquid be The -degigion - of quoh court or ‘the recommendations of such & conference could be actepted without sacrific:{, om oUF part er asking any ether power to sacrifice one fota of its: Anything* that might be said af the administration of the Hostwffice De- partment under Mr. Burleson, so far as criticism of speed and effigieticy in can- cerned, would likely prove an old story before it was fairly told, for some other fellow would be certein to came fom ward with @ more flagrent asample of We had seareely got threugh inquis- ing of Mr. Burleson just why he per- mitted Mr. Newton Baker in his prj- vate apeech making eppacity tq flood the country under the frank of Newton the Ohio Demo- cratic state panyention et @ cost of six- teen canta per geny ta the taxpayers, the money, whea Frederic J Haskin, Director, Informatie Daily Tribune ts ctlcog! Yeas peraps doin to) its own. prac he cae offering a return ef §0 per cent invegtors In forty-five gays, whieh “on sigs Eoiund cornet, mol be been ‘selling foreign Money erders at the old rate of ex: goun- Plat. day and e| Bought at o bank for #7. oe "punn “A department which has just got) +r: favoring @ two-hour after five years to correcting no work du the two Listen, good Sriends,and you Shall hear why some Cigarettes are so all-fired dear ‘ Se cigarettes are: packed in pretty 4) Boxes that certainly don’t grow on trees. Next, they're dolled vip--and flavorings are sure getting expensive: And then, they're Priced a bit high so they’ll seem exclusive,” But read how Spur Cigarettes offer the highest possible quality at the lowest possible price= If there are any finer tobaccog from ‘the Orlent and the good old U.S, A, than those selected for Spurs, they must be a secret thet ‘ the world has never heard. And when we get these combined in Spur Cigarettes, what do’ you suppose was the result? Just the best taste and aroma that any cigarette could give,’ and Willie Doll-up) or Freddie. Flavoring hadn't athingtadawithin, 90 ‘Spuria‘‘clasa” all through—eyenta —- the smart brawn-and-silver”’ package, triple-wrapped, that keeps f Spurs fresh and fragrant, Try out a % . package of Spurs. You'll say ““madg ate of ' and priced for popularity,” 5 MANUFACTURED BY * Ligosrr & Myzrs Teaacca Ca. |: & y

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