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CE MINENT CASPER REPUBLICAN WORKSFUR PARTY IN Frank G. Curtis of Casper Gives Address Before Larg- *"v*e er" “ies ‘onditions of Joining League. est Political Gathering to Be Held in James- he ited states not going ino town, N. ¥., to Aid G-O. P. Victory d so far as wé aré concerned, We oe | . *, ‘ Our friends back in York state are having a very lively cam- i Uons' ofa: Jeague as Wilson; Cox and > Prankiin, Roosevelt. woul, We “pro- pose to have the conditions of sur con- ract set ott in and made a port. of {that contaet, | \ + “ Wilson Wontd Contract’ War, “Witson, Cox and Frinklin Toosevelt. 0 er — — | saoneres | poe a — : urging. that Uje Wilsén teague WJ keep us out-of war, Dut the facts re diretdy proven to the contrary. } | Wilson's league would be a contract te} es 48 hours in city again, section of een uecording to that the wor been after equipment: with which rob some other [net going jn unless the Monie doc- trine 1s protected and excepted. )~We re not going in unless our vote equals “at Britain’s where we are concertt- | paign. Their objective is half 2 million Republican majority | {iaica orthece thinee eines to movi}, for Harding and Coolidge, a complete cleaning of Democratic | hatte in the United States senate, Enz- congressmen, the election of James W. Wadsworth as United /lsna. Prance-and ‘the other major povr-} States senator and the rescue of the state from Democratic and | (7 ai willing to accept us with. the qEamnany GOnEEOE, ete situation gives every hope of a realiza-: Woodrow Wilson agree? No set is) Hon. Frank @. Curtis. of Casper, Watching today. We do not know wo} 1De JS Bot spleen: sh i gene al uray president the New York Oil com’ ,!t will be tomorrow. 1 wonder if Cox! f! Githatne aoeiak Bn Rey ate cee pany, who at present. is at his former | Would he any stronger in Mexico thn Yi dake case of him and Coe wing | home, Jamestown, N. ¥., is in the thiek | Wi'son has been. clita Ai ae aenicrat i ‘arift, Hy of lock and hinges fram the safe. of the fight “and has Ween from the! Wilson An Issue. - \ opening of the campaign, nS ve 5) Si “The tariff is a’ living. issue: tode mariufacturing and cheap labor of t one of the largest political mee! “Why, 80 much about Woodrow Wil-i who has forgotten’ that in 1914 hun-| rope, Asia and the rest of ‘the outsid ines’ ever held ty catowit which Siaheon? Because, no sooner had Cox been | areas of thousands of our laborers were | world. iehRa a naw since Mr. Curtia eomnated at San Francisco than helgyt of work and our factories} »@ Merchant Marine. t Nori: ihe orator: ne. Jameathwal Biya. | Sourneved to the White House to how | were ceasing to turn their wheeis?] “The United States has done but lt- i ning Journal reported his speech in /40 ee W eet yoke, and what did Cox} Along came tHe war. America was cal@ tle to build up its maritime commerce. Yull ana since Mr. Curties’ sentiments S°Y When he came away from that con-)¢q/ upon to supply the foreign jvorld| It has given too small an amount of ference with the president? Why, he/tnat went to war. That is the only said: “We are of, one aceord,’-und as to) thing that ‘saved this country from a the league he said: Iam for going in.’|tremendous crisis. Foreigners could Cox is for Wilson's {dea of a League cf | Nations. Wilson is an issue in | campaign. fopoly. Harding on League. “The Democrats are forward with “Harding is for staying out of the/their old cry. of “Tariff for reven’ jengzue unless reservations are adopted, ; only.’ The Underwood tariff law en-| that will protect. the independence of acted In) 1918 is still on. the statute | jthe United States and unless the| books: T re is only one thing ‘now United States is able to withdraw atj|to save this country. from’ industrial } any time the league is not run on the | calamity, and that is to have’a reason- square, and also belng able to with-| ably high’ protective tariff wall to for- Peas n beobras rire L draw without violating’ the covenant. tify American capital and American la- nae Puptisiiry tingid pea Ye. tien Ace We will not accept foreign ‘interpreta- bor against the inroads of the cheap other nations about it, bat if it makes | # mistake in enterjng the League of Nations, it cannot be rectified without adjusting it with all of the ‘other na- tions or the league. The Heart of the League. » “The Republicans and some Demo: erats of the United States senate saw. fit to adopt fourteen reservations to} Are as good Republic: anism in Wyoming pw York we are bpisis: ism and Ame-- as they are in reproducing a syn< kets and encourage trading carrying our Own commodities in The Paramount Issue. “hls they were fighting: We had a mcn- “The paramount issue in this cam- Paign is the League of Nations. It Was the desire of Woodrow Wilson that this matter be left to a solemn refer- éndum of the people. Such a referen- Q@um has at all times been welcome? by Republicans and many Demoere Rectifying Mistakes. “If the United States makes a mi«- have long been: liberal! cially, Foreign shippers. {! have. ; | 1 } the foreigns time and again. “The Republican party has tried lish & merchant marine, Democrats have opposed. which 5 fuhah countries have been getting. of South America, which naturally longs to us. on our ships of industry on navigable water of the globe. “We ought to secure trade not jaggraindizement, but fair credits, quality of our goods and fair dealin’ heart of it. The reference is to A a oeetprahees cle 10. Here it is: » “The members of the league under. take to respect and preserve/as agairst nm the territorial in rity pnd existing politieal indepe of all members of the league. of lack of preparedness... If Wilscn a eect aS NERA the results might have been-vastly } ferent. In of any such aggression, the coun-/ ous propaganda ever known in gil “shall advise upon the means by} which this obligation shall be fulfilled.” | tion Would Mean War. | “Who sugrests t if there were a} violation of the league as Wilson wants it after America enters it that our gov: ernment would fail to pefform its full duty under the covenant? “What do you suppose. would happen if tb: United States had to.demand the pro | ervation of the league as against exter | nal aggression? You know we\wovll call for meh and money to do our duyy: ‘We would go to War if necessary. ‘We would become’ involved’ in’ those an. | tanglements” so solemnly _ warned against by George Washington. That i: | ret ntative of Germany. not ‘aN, der Article 10. the council | JAZZ-KLASSIK could decide for us what we would hava | ORCHESTRA ' to do. The province of congress to! i ; declare war dander our constitutica Assemblies Would be absorbed. in Wilson’s super | government. ~ “In case bf external aggression the thing would) happen that President | Wilson ‘pledged the Serbs and Ruman: | when he was-at Versailles, name- the United States would send men and fleets to enforce the | covenant in those counties. Sympathics and Needs. | started out alone in his wheel chair for a trip to San Francisco over the auto . “Wemay very well have sympathies |“ for foreign nations, hut we have \highway along the Pacific shore. The trip of 500 miles, took Davis a month and enough to do at home, attending to our) he arrived In San Francisco in the best of shape, own busines: Mexico and Ja n neal FOR THE NEXT TEN DA We will offer the bu ying public of Casper A Discount of 25% On every Suit and Overcoat in our store. These are readjustment prices and we must stand the loss ‘ ODD FELLOWS HALL Wednesdays AND . : Saturdays TRAVELS 500 MILES IN WHEEL CHAIR—RB, \ lid desired to see more of California than his immediat. neighborhood, so he E. Davis, a Los Angeles invar F: Suits and Overcoats soars Se $33.75 Regular $45.00 V alues, a Regular $60.00 Values, 3 Now selling at... Now selling at... $37.50 Regular $70.00 Values, ; Regular $50.00 Va Regular $65.00 Values, _ Now selling at... $41.25 $45.00 $48.75 1 attention given to alter- aaa fo Now selling at.. Now selling at...... $52.50 Hundreds to select from. Every suit and overcoat strictly guaranteed. My persona ations. Your money back if not satisfied. A complete line of Furnishings and Shoes for Men and Young Men FRANK CANNER Known. for Good Clothes 227 South Center Street ey es BS. SAU BE ETS A snbone Prieta robbery within ‘Thieves breke Into the filling sta- % Second street late Sat- urdsy night but were unable to ope. _ the safe after prying the combination aid to get our goods to foreign mar- through not compete with us industrially when; own ships and in extentling credits that extended. by France, Englang, and Germany esne- 3) cards stacked today against American shipping and Wilson has decided with over a Quarter of a céntury to esta}- The United tes, has. virtually stood still while ons share of the trade, including that “The American flag should be flyme¢ eve Preparedness. Woodrow Wilson's idea of a League of! Me 5 Nations, Let us consider that portion paanara ap Shad 8 pita besitos: in of the\league that Wilson calls /t : st _Let-not the Americy 1 | people forget the late, severe lessons, rkened to the great»mnn of Oyster iy at the outbreak of the World war, Germany was maintaining in ‘this country the most powerful, insic- diplomatic world, With von’ Bernstorff in Washington, D. C., at its head under the guise of being the accredited rep- t no red-blooded American fail to navocate the building and maintenance of a first-class standing army of rea CHEMBECK sonable proportions; the building and maintenance of a {irst elass- navy, mun ed with the best’ of Amoricg’s meu and up. to the minute In oyery respoet, Fahd let us not fail to Wild andomain | agin atur tai a Submarine fleet nnd ian’ Aerial } UI Z : of u a fleet to excelmnything in ‘the world. One-Man Governnient. : “We are soon going to be rid of 4 ni n’ government, In all. history } ‘one-man’ 4 there hag never been a monarch who ae eee ne thal CHEYENNE, Oct 19-—A. recent “In: : c ataten terested. visitor to the Wyoming stato) ley “ave a0 tn tea yale Oe Fats 'ynuseum was Sir Thomas Esmonds of! question... Everybody knows it. Treland, who is the guest of Governor Harding. ‘Spects Tribune) | co ; 1 the (Special to The 0 Re is rood mi ervation of. her ht PASUreR. and Mrs. Robert D. Carey. Sir Bs- “Harding has had such experience in| monds, who hag-visited all of jour leal- congressional matters that thereby ho| {hs eastern museums as well as. =n (tT, is particularly fittea, to occupy the | great _museums of” Burope, POS White House. One should specialize to ai, 7 j.be president. Congress is the beat school for that. Harding's policy will be to act with congress and his expe; rience has teught him how to do it. You wil not find him trying to usurp the rights and powers of the senate, or ef congress as a whole, which is quite | the opposite of the conduct of the pres ent occupant of. the White House. y- Coolidge. “Tt is éxtremély wholesome to’ hav a splendid, New England type in {ts fhu- gbighest form of efficiency represented on the Republican ticket for vice pres dent, Governor Coolidge is a man of splendid convictions, who has the man- hood to carry them out, “f naturally sympathize with labor. I'm proud to say T've labored on a farm for 60. cents a day and in a factory in this city for $9 & week. When erratic leaders of labor were teading Jaboriniz men against the rocks, Coolidge took 2 position that saved them from>* their own destruction and saved America from a blot that might otherwise have been very difficult to erase, He taught public servants that- their offices are publi¢ trusts and that.a strike among them is ukin to’ treason puemedis Eis. cu ela Three Men Held on Murder Charge for Part in Wales Case league this; 27. straight, a st one to Store of Quatity—One Price toMy, 138 East Second Street . O. O. F. Building | New Fall Suits Materials of broadcloth, peach bloom, wool velour, _ tricotine, trimmed with fur; also plain. Lat- est fall fashions. & Priced $39.75 to $150.00 Fur Scarfs Less 25 Per Cent Discount ie e fi Millinery TRIMMED HATS , Less 25 Per Cent Discount Sole Agents for Vanity Silk Underwear our the for the the he- > LANDER, Wya., Oct. 19.—Henry ). Johnson, Ray Thompson and Charles Coleman, the three men held on charges of murder in connection With the kill- ire of Nancy Wales in the Sweetwater !@’ country, have been hound over to the Wistsiet court for trial and are being , "in the county jail following the re- fal to allow bond, ~ , - f Sennen ess anPaeel . Mathum has rarely been found in ele masses larger than a pigeon’s oor, ' Foon STARTING. TODAY .- - America Theater Presents a by, the Ss. had} cit- - > the ~T65ORGE FITZMACPICE PRODUCTION Seldom has a more colorful photo- play been offered screen lovers, In the brilliant scenes in Broadway cab- arets, the luxurious apartments of the rich, and the myriad-lighted skyline of the great city, a dazzlin: has been. filmed. ae Dance! Dance! Dance! EVERY SCENE 4 SENSATION BrayComic Franklin Cleverly on “Happy Hoodini” the Mammoth Organ ADMISSION—40c, Including Tax. Shows at 1:00, 2:00, 3:30, 5:00, 6:30, 8:00, 9:30 $ :00, AMERICA — -Casper’s Finest Theater Mammoth Wurlitzer Organ — ALSO