Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE TWO a €be Casper Daiip eceibune) Issuéa eveT? evenifig exéept Sunday at Casper, Nattona county, Wyo. Publiv cation offices: Oil change Building. ‘SS TELEPHON -15 Entered at Casper (V ig Postot: fice as seeond-class matter, Nov. 22, 1916 MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED. PRESS REPORTS FROM UNITED PRESS J. E HANWAY, President and Editor EARL BE, RANWAY, Business Manager dyertising Manager City Editar sociate Exiitor Advertisnmg Reprexentativ: David J. Randall, 341 Fifth New York City. Pryiden, King & Pridden, 1720-23 Steger Bldg., Chicago, Ml, ished voting, and are able to read, havejroufid tfpe _ of ~ catapatininis ey Cox} Politicians to train the South te be:| dectpheréd upoh the wall the message|comes Baek fo the issues trom whieh [eve that anytiting the North and West |‘? Addressed to thémh—“Mené, Mene, tekel/he started afd which hé may be fty./Wwanted was & thing the South Should upharsen.” itig to lope. While he is talking|oppose. Bit the South is fast coming The relapse into nervous prostration|/hackward from thé rear platform of ajto realize that it needs protection more! has been pretty general. Pullman car there will still be a spec-}than any other snetion.”” Yet, in thi Homer Cummings, former Demo-}trat ‘vision on thé hotigon’ white wilt|face of these facts, the latest Demo- cratic mational chrirman, star spell) itter the wotds wien the ebérant|cratic platform contains a plain decla: | binder of the San Francisto conVen-} jy, Faustus 6neé heard: ‘You are mire. | ration of steadfast Adherence to the tion, Official mégaphoné for Woodrow/Phat theory df overntient which wWas| traditional policy of the party—that a Wilson, Detnocratic candidate for} oémie to be Hnéwh Aa Wrisonlsiy winl|Protective tariff is. unconstitutional. United States senator for Connecticut, | sft aim hifi as its Gwns While six-| In view of thé chaiged view in the and otter things, was the first to sliP/giing throtigh states Which are dry by|South and Mr. Cox's “unqualified t- back from a promised convalescencé|iature and dry by adoption, afi he for-}ilorsement of the Platform, it is not sur. ° an@ ontirely strrender hope. He! ha8}gey that he Was riéniffia'ted because in|Prising that there is strong indication Finding the success of his opponent quit being a candidate for sénator from}the general scheme of evaporation thére}|of revulsion among Southern Demo-|greater than his own Mr. Cox is ap- Connecticut. His physician has ordered} <tin remained about his political figure|crats. Many members of the party will|parently mystified and a bit envious—|! it of his state of health and|mis: enough to create, if not the rain-|Stay home on election day, #ay thé re-}xennebec Journal. ‘siish fund adhe vt he had dne #how—sotth Bend Tribune “pearitig false ritness against his} ’ neighbor” is a “thbu shalt hot” which Candidate Cox apparently has either, forgotten or féver knéw-—Boston Transcrip' it. , aah he moie Franklin D, talks the larg 4 seem his ears.—St. Louis ‘Times. ‘ la Péople should hold ofite their Liberty i bonds. The Democratic party will net \- always be in control—Marion Star. Ave, because Copies or the Daily beige are on|consequent lack of strength to 0)bhow of hope, a halo that was not de-/Ports frort that section éf the country, oo * fils in the New York and Chicago of} through the cainpaign ' but many more will have the cow! i fee ahd visitors Ace. welcate: - spair? Wilt he find the Rocky Moun-|but many more 4 ve rage Pla ee pene: SSS SE It is well for Homer Guihmings that Railroad ns tains any rockier than his prospects.}to vote their real convictions, and sup- Win Salt Lake look any. more buoyant|port the Républican candidates, with to him than th® Sait River to which,|the progranr 6f “America First” fn SUBSCRIPTION RATES. his phy ian has determined the mat- ter for him. It saves him the humilia- |\tion of repudiation by about 30,006 ma- By Carrier Spur For Beet One Year -- Six Months like a littlé FitMda, he is journeying?|@conomics and in international rela- * eee, aided -96 | jority, That is appréxhfiately the ad-|wiil the earthquakes Of Frisco seem|tions. Traffic int Wyo. Par Gobet = (OE | Verse majority noty being couked up by} moe tremulous than his party plat: Pye oy CPR PPR NG ; the people of Connecticut for the whole form, or the Golder’ Gate other than a| WHICH WAY THE WIND BLOWS. By Mail WHEATLAND, Sept. 20.—Sir- Democratic outfit from Cox to League) pathway to the setting sun? When he! There's an east wind biowing with a aS peas Rds iy & Southern v g5,/0f Nations. Mr. Cummings sees it,|retarns to the Mississippi will fe dis- Aalt sea tetie have sént itv a pre! Feport on a eX? Subscription accepted for}feels it and is fleeing from the wrath|cern on the banks of ‘the Father of|fyom the Pilgrim places wheénéd the id Getic i the less period than three months. les ; NK. ‘All subscriptions must be paid in aa |‘? Come Waters,’ fit stredra for the baptism of « ation sprang: spur fs put in along its line vance and The Daily Tribune will not CT TT real prohibition candidate, any bluff; We are frée from Burope as the day | wij) plait. 2, Stigar beets. insure delivery after subscription be biggér than his own about campaign ANSWERED LIKE A STATESMAN. they sang, aids to good looks, sound comes one month in arrears, Wher Gatifornia, Washington and| funds? And Mitiné is thé straw that shows.| All Eis Leena shinai stg Meniber of Audit, ec) of Ciféalations | Oregon came to Séhator Harding with| “Although this is # ‘going west’ trip, We are corse bar Natrona Powe: nwo’ thefr dottitstic Facial troubles they were! nobody objéets to Mr. Cox coming|There’s a cyclone blowing from the dis | Go, _ 9-20-61 teeth, ‘eager appetite ahid iback; as He balatices his centripetal tant west, j lhopes against mis /cefiteifugal energy |There is thunder in it and the light and skits about the shining surface ning’s quest, ot his speédwiy: But in this cam-/But a cellar réfuge will be far from paign, Mr. Cox, a candidate must be best, able not ohly to ote back but to go] And Maine is tie straw that shows: Member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication all news credited in this paper and also the local néws published herein. << not met with shifty evasion; but on the contrary received a reply stich as was to be expected from an American | statesindn Who hag the good of the! people at heart and starids for the wel- fare of his native Jana before any other digestion are only 5¢ a Can You ‘Afford to Have a Fire? considerations. forward. It is concetvable that Senator Har-| “And when he has. described his There’ if ei rpernadl wind blowing trom a ding stood to win or lose the electoral! somé@what elongated circle on the poti- el ‘ ji vi F Republican Ticket vote of California according to the, re-|tieal map, What will it look like? Only ‘Phere’ bs Be Oy tas Wind blowing for ‘ Don’t worry over your NATIONAL ply he was fequested to make to ques-} this: 0.” a a dae aril bik woth sek _ indarance, Life has plenty tiofis put 4o him totehing the Japanese | FEN Siu Spe ET ke G ret Pee as For President Be is ianaat vxiasial PROPHETIC WORDS. pric, of worries without that. question. So far are concerned, and éspeécially Califor- nia, there is scarcely a bigger issue in the cammpaign. It was known that the) WARREN G. HARDING Of Ohio For Vice President— | Abraham Lincoin said: “A nation off And Mamne is the straw that shows.” freemen we must live through all time on die By. #itedde, There's a north Wind blowing in @ frigid See Us for way, CALVIN COOLIDGE Pacifie slope awaited with buriing in-| “When men take it in thelr Neads It has brought # fluety, but ‘the siow! Of Massachusetts terest the aahouncement of the atti-|today 16 ang gamblers of butt sur wi ae A Your Insurance ee tude thar Mr. Harding intends, as Pres-|derers they should recollect that in the, £ For Representative in Congress— ident Harding,,to translate into govern-|confasion wtterding such trataadtfons Bini sehen cotning for Novert- FRANK W. MONDELL they wilt Be ae fiketly to Kare of burtt ‘ vs ment policy. California, Washington and Oregon's will no longer Be fh duebt* aS to nor a murderer as one who is, and that, what their people can éxpect from alacting upon the example they set, the mob of tomorrow. may, and probably | is: sie gne: most! wiiely an Ariebodit, will, ang oF ae age ot) thet. bY. has a: nei br him tite the very same mistake. tack eBAG, * * ‘Wherever the viclous por) 44 Maine is the straw that shows. tion of population shal! be permitted to —_Mctainidt teh Wilson. And Maine is the straw that shows. There are good winds blowing for the four-square man, Fot Presidential Electors fot Wyo- ming— JACOB M. SCHOO PETER KOO! H JAMES NICHOLSON ¢ Republican County Ticket Sémmé one who is neither a ganmibler WGhRe 411 Oi bs Exchange ange Bldg. Republican government. Although Senator WMarding recog: nized the eXtreme delicacy of the topic, he approached it with head up and eyes) Not only did his deliveréd} State Senator— 4d. W. JOHNSON to the front. For Representatives— address specifically answer California’s|&%ther In bands of hundreds and thou- res HARRY FREE friendly demands. it also outlinéd thé|*ands and burn churehés, ravagé-and) Henry Gabot Léagé says that Mr. v — 5. FRISBY }seope of the future immigration policy |mob provision stores, threw printing | Wilson's conception of government ne eR | ie MARTIN of the Cnited States, “Antericd first”—|presses into rivers, shoot \4ft6fs and }shown by his attitude apd acts reminds Otte oer 2, ja Breater concern hereattér for «thes heng and» burn (obnoxious. pergons at|him of the third Napoleon, an antoviut, BE DONALD making of citizens—adsimilable citizens | pensure and with impunity, la elécted by a plebicite, uncontroliéd by’ For Coanty Clerk— |—-than for edding to thé man power of upon ft, this governméiit carinét last. elt era mey legislative or duaicial HELEN K. CARLSON thé country: Mpa sets fo reg TANCED rithority. For Clerk of Court— The point! tade by Mr: Harding} SOUTH NEEDS PROTECTION. BUOY ONY, te “ ‘The amazing spectacle of Argéntine| ‘A chartered libertine of libel,” is HAZEL CONWELL County Attorney— question of Oriental! upon jcorn being sold in the markets of Tit x ne fared the description Col. Harvey applies to Kor immigration, follow: ALFRED R. LOWEY 1, It must be recognized that fric: |S has been duplicated by the sale of|Gov. Cox. For papers i or haa grown up on the Pacine coast |Chitese peanuts mn the Breat (peanut) + sm, Polatd, Ireland). these” aré Ne is JYEE and this friction cannot be -fétiored, [P¥édueing séetion of tHe-Sohtth’ After] eo Awarable areuinients’ against For County Surv The problem incident to racial!the passage of the » Wilson-Underwood! 1 fesse. pabuaue ‘Times-Journal: M,N. WHERLSS \differences must be accepted as a fact ft. Mave £1851 918) AE ae as Sane = For Cominissioner (Four Years)— : UAS ,jwere able to ship their corn, produced] ‘The senate fias not yet béen accused DUNN ind must be adequately met for the n 3 3 a) i, s 3 6i cheap land by cheap labor, and sell lof deme responsible for the great numhi- For Commissioner (Pwo Years)— |}futuré security and tranquility of our xevidents.=Wash- it produced in Americit. in diréct competition with the corn}her of automobile Today, With the/ington Post. same tariff law on the statute books, CHARLES ANDA people. For Coroner— 8. Without raising any question of TODD W. BOWMAN {inferiority or inequality, the unassimil-! Mr. Harding is an “eatnest man, ee! | WHITE IS UNHAPPY, George White, Cox's hand-picked na- Uonal chairman, | There| ent | refpron-| He, former | not bewails is unhappy. are two principal cause: and One, re primary election solemn dums and lack of campaign funds, hé could survive the for the results so far were expected; but he loudly latter. It might Keen different for George had James Munchausen | Cox and Fond Delusion Roosevelt con- | signed alt the money there is to the} chest. Otherwisé he gathtred in énough to run! un- the} have not Republican war id have ampa on for provided other) and jeserving uaunee Democrats | thin biled cabbage and beans.” | It is @ sed blow to George and Coxey’s army to be crowded | away from the public trough where they have sorged themselves for several years, but saddest of all will be the @estruc-} tion of the troughs. ‘They will go | when the Democratic party retires next March, and will be known no moré for- ever. Tho taxpayers will learn what the Democratic party has cost them and the future wi! see an end bf public extravagance and waste and in| its place a strict accounting and an! economic managoment of the peopie’s business. | VESS IS CONFIDENT. There is basis for the cheerful pre- diction of Simeon D. Fess, chairman of the congressional! campaigh committee, | When he prophesies that thé general, election will return a senate majority , of ten und a house majority of at least Nifty -thrée, He bases his éstimate upon the result P, and compares. the Maine xote with thet of the 1896 election. He Says, the result in Maine points to Cox as the Worst bedten man in the history of elections. in aine, His style of campaigning indicates his own fears as well as the inevitable results of the methods om} ployed, Ohio will follow. the Muine} lead just as she did curd! 1896, | ey ict d AND 5 <Em ous * TION. “ese Democratic teaters as huvo been lable to sit wp, since Maine fin-| PROSTRA- lability of Orientals 1s obvious. llegal right to determine who or who the peanut producers of the South find Cliinése peanuts poured into the peanut oll mills of their territory. A Jackson- ville, Fia., dispatch reports that: “One thousand tons of Chinese pea- 4. We have the moral, natural and | shall fot eter the country and partici- \pate in our activities. 5. We favor such inithigration tional understanding not only assimilabflity of alien born, but of standards, tices and, ideals. The nation will support the Pa- cific coast states in measures designed |to relieve their difficulties. It Wil Be reeognized as probably the of puts are being discharged at the mu- |nicipal ter the Japenese | steamer Choyo Maru. The nuts will be erushed by the peanut mill at Madison, Pla. This is said to be the first of many such shipments if the experiment proves satisfactory.” The peanut mill is, of course, the cheapest market. Alréaily thousands of tons of peanuts havé found their way to the American market for the higher modifications als and interna- wisipersnd by our laws #8 will gaarantce their adoption American 1 ‘strongest declaration on the Japanese Guestion. ox it affects the Padific. coast |DFe Chat Can be obtammed for: the) put, latates; made by any responsible person|*Helled or unshelled, for cdrisumiption With the ‘possible exception of Theodore{™ the whole state. Shipments to th ftoosevelt mills indicate that the Chinese pro- toosevelt While Senator Haramg makes i¢{Tee™ buve an immense supply seek- | AB ‘ ie jing a Market and that they are ready plain that his administration will sedu-| ously rodyest the "Kwhor’ BF the Japad-)t. compete, with, the —Ameriekn: Deg: to the latter’s ruin. ‘The conditions which make it pos- alble fo shiyy Chinese pewnaty to the peanut préducing section of the United States may be readily understood when’ + ducer 686 people, » Will Hevertheless put an end to a state of affairs that has dis- tresuéd and at: times frightened the peo-! the Pacific coast. ple of There is ne touéh of Jingots no} navor. of dé dxucry, nO paiidering |‘ is known that wages of farm laborers \in China ate about 3 fo 5 cents a day— for votes. It was a straightforward, /Chihese workmen living chiefly én oa courageous interpretation | of} future policy with respect to Mat auantity of rice, living in’ hovols " pipe? a {and éhanging their clothing only when the gatintits drdép' off tidir bédies in It is with stich labor the Demo- and Ameri aliens who do’ not fit in a> cannot be- comé ‘w part of the Ameériecan racé. i ate ott ; cratic party hds thrown the Americatt THE CIRCULAR SWING. workman Jute competition. ‘The ins Cox, “whose gubernatorial liens of the South im the subjéet i gre thodretically at the Columbu,| pomfed éut Wy Mantfucturér’s is ‘swinging around the circle,’ as }Recerd, a paper which caters particu’ & candidate for another office,” remarks. jarly fo Southern interests. That paper ‘the Troy Timds. “The one thing most! says: notable about a swing around the circle! “ppg whole country is now confront: "is that it always comes back to thé’ sq with the question as to whether it Votht from which it started. Will be floddé@ with the agricultural and “Mr, Cox will come .back from his |industrial préducts of thé Orient) pro- 9,000-mile tour—or is it 9,000 speeches—/ duced at wages which would destroy through twenty-two states, whieh aré/ine earning capacity of American Dirt: Hot quite half Of the ehtire numbér, atid] es and mecimmies, or whnthet wé shall he will bo the same ‘Jimmy’ €e6x. All) protect oursélves against suth disas- alleged thought whieh he will take on|{ers, the trip will “At jast the farmers of the South are WogInnine (6 TéAlize whet it meins to theth. Misled by unwise politicians, féd theories, the people of the not add one cubit to his satu. which it By pursuing w circle, nembere will x fre is a continual de-} will viution, 1 & straight line, he oh economic make |a path to nowhere, not even to|South were for years made ta believe the White House, which has been con-}that a protective turf did not Interest nected with, the most) futile jeurney! them, but that they should fight for ever made. free trade, mainty because in former And by his adoptuun of the merry-go- years it had been the custom of these feeling his fesponsibility and weighhis his words:—St, Louis: Times. Se Se Evidently Gov. Cox wotld rather be president than right, and is not likely to bé one and certainly {6 net the other. =Piiladelphia Press. BUSSES Baik would 1 be welt for this country if there were today a greater difference between # demagogue and a Democrat. —Racine News. It re Being a newspaper publisher Cox ought to Know Something about the modérn doctrine of trath in advertis- He shovid not have advertised a ing | BONER | AND MEAT Laat PHONE 345 Sandison & Fiddes THOUS, FIDDES, Manager Oorner Fourth and Jefferson Sts, are een ik 6 STOP! Ask Yourself Are you fully protectéd by Tf it is not con- |. venient to phone, fill in this coupon and mail. R. T. KEMP.CO. Insurance That's All 112 E. Second Phone 370. Sturdy, Silent, Simple, Practical These four dominant qualitiés make the Grystal a thorough-going washing machine for Every | Household purpose. ~ They are based upon a single mechanical Gras the smoothly running One-Way . i The One-Way Cylinder gives sturdiness and silence because racking jars simplicity because ing gears are done away piseige aie it és ounce practical because i it washes delicate garments gently and SMALL DEPOSIT — VERY CONVENIENT TIME PAYMENTS CHAMBERLIN FURNITURE CoO. A phone call will bring a Crystal to your big for demonstration. cleanses. heavier fabrics thorougtily- and quickly.’ Come In Today And arrange for a FREE DEMONSTRATION IN YOUR GWN HOME See how quickly and easily it washes those collars and cuffsthat have troubled you so, how gently it will cleanse dainty. underthings, lace cur- tains, ete., and how easily it will do blankets and comforts. Chamberlin Furniture)€o; (Crystal Dept. ), Casper, Wyo. Please have your Crystal Representative demonstrate at my home next. inorning. * (Fill in day ere.) Name Address Phone... Casper, Wyo.