Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 13, 1921, Page 2

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PAGE TWO be Casper Daily Cribune County, Wyo. Publication Offices: Tribune Building B: Eusered at Casper, (Wyoming) Postoffice as seco! matter, November 2@, 1916. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS FROM UNITED PRESS J. E. HANWAY - EARL R. HANWA Business Man W. H. HUNTLEY - Associate Editor RE. EVANS - — THOMAS DAILY Advertising Representatives David J. Randali, 341 Fith Ave.. New York City Prudden, King & Pradden, 1720-23 Steger Bids. Il. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file im the York ana Chicago offices and visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier One Year Six Months Three Months One Month - Per Copy - Ove Year - Six Months Three Months No subscription by mail accepted for 5. subscriptio- must be paid In advance and the Tribune will not insure delivery #fter subscrfp- becomes one month in arrears. Bureau of Circaiations (A. B. ©.! Member of A Member of the .sseclated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the ase for publicatien of all news credited in this pape: and also the local news publishc* } rein. Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. Call 15 or 16 any time between 0 and 8 o'ciock p. m. if you fail to receive your Tribune. A paper will be deliv- ered to you by special messenger. Make it your duty to let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. Ss a FINALLY SETTLED. Merely to keep the record straight and give Wood- row Wilson his proper place in history and in the hall of immortals, dedicated to such saints as Ananias and Munchausen, we are turning back to the cam- paign of 1920. It will be recalled that Mr. Wilson took Senator Spencer, of Missouri, to task for quot- ing certain statements of his made to representatives of Rumania and Serbia respecting the sending of American naval and military forces to protest their territorial mtegrity. Mr. Wilson denied making any such statement and further declared that the original text of his remarks was in Paris with the other league files and not in this country at all. The text was then cabled from Paris and Mr. Wil- son confronted with it. It corresponded exa¢tly with the language quoted by Senator Spencer. Mr. Wil- son denied the correctness of the cabled words. It may not be of absorbing interest now but Sec- retary Hughes informs Senator Spencer that the full text of Mr. Wilson’s address was received at the state department in July, 1919, and reads as follows: “We must not close our eyes to the fact that in the last analysis the military and naval strength of the great powers will be the final guaranty of the peace of the world. * * * There underlies all of these transactions the expectation on the part, for example, of Rumania and of Czecho-Slovakia and of Serbia, that if any covenants of this settlement are| not observed, the United States will send her armies and her navies to see that thoy are cbserved.” This is the exact language originally quoted by Senator Spencer. Those interested will also remember that Mr. Wil- son, when cornered, desired the matter in controversy referred to the voters of Missouri to say who was the liar. Since Senator Spencer received a vote of con. fidence from 121,663 more Missourians than voted for Breckenridge Long, Mr. Wilson’s personal candi- date, the question of who was a liar, may now, on Missouri's vote and the state department record, be considered settled. SS As Oe DUPED BY A TRAITOR. It is all very well for General March, chief of staff, to rant and rave about getting Bergdoll back from Germany where he has taken refuge. He gave his consent, when the proposal to release the slacker from prison, was presented to him by Adjutant Gen- MORE In which to get Chicago, New! cral Hsrris, and knew that the object was to dig up an alleged pot of gold in the West Virginia moun- Imued every evening <xcept Sunday at Casper. Natrom&! + in. Good sense would have suggested that no such traitor as BUSINESS TELEPHONES-------.------------ 15 and 1¢/ Bergdo!! should for a moment be released from con- ch Telephone Exchange Connecting A‘! Departments) finer nd-class pot of gold existed and no. such yellow for any purpose except hanging. - v as he will about what the war department is . did do, which is, made an ass of itself. Each _ccessive step in the investigation simply confirms this. beld fact. The country was fully aware of the incompetency of the head of the war department at President and Editor +). time the Bergdoll escape occurred but it was not laware that it extended to the upper works of the _.. City_Bditor| regular army establishment until now. avertising Manager combo dence pari se es a We have at last found a practical use. for college professors and the knowledge they have been accu- mulating for yeats—making hooch. Harvard has done herself proud and Boston society has been saved hake utter drought, What next? ’ ~—_____—_- TRUE TO THEIR MOTHER Regardless of your view of the marital troubles of the Stillmans, you are compelled to admire the atti- tude of the elder children—Ann the daughter and James the son. The 19-year-old daughter is unre- servedly a partisan for her mother and is to be a star witness in her behalf in disproving what is regarded as manufactured testimony on behalf of the father. But the 17-year-old son James, the third, speaks as a true descendant of the grandfather, the founder of the Stillman fortune and one of America’s great- est bankers and most honorable citizens. This young- ster is a true sportsman when he looks his parent in the eye and tells him: “I'll tell you this, Dad, Guy is my brother. He has always been and always will be. I want you to know that no matter what hap- pens, he can always have half of everything I've got in the world.” And when the elder Stillman denied the charge of unfaithfulness to the boy’s mother, the boy did not hesitate to tell the father exnctly what kind of a liar he was. - The loyalty of these children is worth all that Fifi Stillman is compelled to bear from the unprincipled scoundrel who is seeking to besmirch their mother’s good name. pe Ee SNA rs cs We see they still do it.. Chicago records 181 deaths in five months from blowing out instead of turning off the gas. | oe gee PATRONAGE DIFFICULTIES. The Hardimg administration is bound to have some friction in selecting appointees to fill the vacancies that occur in the federal service; but if it abandons the ideals the country understood it set up in the be- ginning and descends to the ordinary level of pure- ly maching politics in distributing rewards, there will be disappointment, loss of prestige and forfeiture of respect of the best element of the part; A tense situation is created in Missouri in the de- cision of the administration to appoint C. C. Madison district attorney for the western district, with the to do, it will not help what the war depart- be Casper Daily Tribune state Editor Tribune: no longer an issue, it is a fact. become a law, and Wyouing will about four milion dollars to bullé hew highways with. What sre we 2 to do with this money? That fs the: vital question now. Are we going to spend it in new roads that will cause the expenditure of thousanda of dol- lars annually for maintenance or are we going to spend it with a broad foresight for the future permanence’ of our highwaysd I aay, and I say ft with the absolute knowledge that I am right, spend every dollar that be- longs to the counties through which the Yellowstone highway passes, on the Yellowstone highway. Make the worst part of the highway the best part, and make it permanent as far ag you go. Thousands upon thousznds of owners of automobiles are looking toward Wyoming right now with a view of coming out here, if not this year, then next year, but they are coming. The May issue of the Re- view of Reviews had a ten-page article on the Park to Park highway. and tourist parks in the west. It was a splendid article well illustrated and graphically written. The Review of Reviews goes into more of the homes in America, than probably any other publication in the United States it js read by every member of the family in hundreds of thousands of homes, the kind of homes where auto- mobiles are owned and whose owners car. afford to, and do, go away for a few weeks’ rest every sumoter of their lives. These people are always look- ing for good places to go where they can enjoy themselves regardless of expense. The map of the, Park to! Park highway published in. this mag< azine Is a new one, and while it shows the entire- six thousand miles of the highway, it only shows three cities in Wyoming, Cheyenne, Cody Casper, and don’t you think thay ; man who uses gasoline stopy wi he reads “Casper,” and_says to him- self. “I would like to se¢ the wonder- ful clty where they ate building the largest gasoline factories in, the world?” Don't you think he does? Don't you thing that being able’ to visit Casper right along with a trip: to the Yellowstone park {s atiractive to him? If you do not think so it's be- cause you have not been keeping up with what is going on right.in your own town, and you dont know how the whole world is talking about us. Then the American. Motoriat comes out in the May issue with 2% A.—The pounds. cerning the Colossus about 100 \feet high. entire congressional delegation, the United States senator, the state organization and leading Repub- licans throughout the state bitterly opposed. Favor- able to*the appointment are a discredited national committeeman and an equally discredited political boss or two backed by a contingent of political cor- ruptionists and grafters on public works. For the good of the Republican party the admin: istration cannot afford to make the Madison appoint- ment, leaving out of the question the moral phase of the situation entirely. i et THE PRICE OF NEGLECT. Democracy at its worst is seen in the government of large cities like Chicago and New York. Here goy- ernment is incompetent, wasteful’ and corrupt. The) people are trickéd and deceived. Yet they go on bearing the burdens of taxation to support a gov- ernment they know to be false and dishonest to every interest it purports to represent. These conditions can be charged to no other reason than that the re: formance of their own duty in looking after their own interests and taking an active part in public af- fairs as is the design of our institutions. When the individual learns that it is cheaper to take part than it is to neglect and pay the price, then such men as Hylan in New York and Thompson in Chicago, and their respective cohorts will not be the directing agents in these great cities. PTET, SOL Well!. Mr. William Jennings Bryan who now claims Miami, Florida, as his residence, c~atemplates becom- ing a candidate for United States senator next year. DAYS an Eden Washer and an American Beauty Electric Iron absolutely free. Do not let this opportunity pass by. Phone us NOW for a free demonstra- tion in your own home on your own clothes. NATRONA POWER Co. Phone 69 owners of the government are negligent in the per-|" of splendid itlustrations of our FP to Park highway, and_ the © motor, camps along the route. The Motorist is the official organ of the largest automobile association in the world, “An organization with a mem- hership of more than 250,000, and the 23 pages devoted to the Park to Park highway ‘contains about one-third more matter than the official book- let published by the state of Wyo- ming, called “Wonderful Wyoming.” That only shows you something of what the world outside of Wyoming is doing for Wyoming. It .shows they are thinking about us. It shows that we arp /golng to have. thousands, of “plendid people come out here to see us this yoar and in thé years to come. The least.we can do is to make Wyo- ming attractive to heme. They. will “Gets-It” Ends All — ir: jgafter you touch the corn th this Nauid coro remover she ding, stabbing pain of it stops,forall “CAPITOL LIFE” McGREW PHONE 153 mer wants Vests, Vests, Vests, Ai a For Vacation or Stopover Don’t miss a stay at the strictly modern Carter Hotel. AT THE Big Horn Hot Springs “The largest mineral springs in the world.” '| THERMOPOLIS, WYOMING will help us pay for all t! we bulla for thelr us2, it that the Yellowstone highway gets it remained ynil! A. D. 672, every dollar that’s coming to it. and | Moawlya, a general of Caliph Othm ts: it in permanent pavement too. FRED PATE. (Any Tedder can get the answer to any question by writing The Casper Daily Tribyine Information kin, Directo-, Wash- applies large imported Swiss cheeses weigh between 200 and 250 Q—Piease give some details 70n- ENTIRE STOCK IN THREE GROUPS t 1.—Values to $42:50____$29.50 : 2.—Values to $50.00_-__$37.50 ‘ 3.—Values to $82.50__-_$50.00 Of Silk Taffetas, Méssalines and Tricotines of the latest modes. 20 Per Cent Discount — Union Suits Now is the time to obtain your sum- -Mests, 25c values, 35c values, 65c values, 75c values, 90c values, , but not with is often: stated. In 224 B.C. an earthquake cast if to the ground, that the JIV, sold it to a Jew of Edessa who togk| OT enone ww Soatliget yet | | oe ere 5 i A.—Abraham Lincoin died in a Littte, house on Tenth street. opposite Ford's | theater, Washington, D. C.. where he/ had been shot by anaseasein. ~~ O—Wil a wagon, run more Usht Bureau,) with eight wheels than it will with four?—T. J. D. / A.—A wagon will not run more_ lightly with eight wheels than with four. Generally, the greater the num-; ber of wheels, the more friction there) will be. 2 f Q—Who said “Taxation without Fepresentation is tyranny?"—G. I. T. the person who framed tne sentence. *] A pamphlet called “The Rights of the British Asserted and Proven,” of Rhodes.—L A. A.—The Colosstis of Rhodes was placed at the entrance of the Har- It\took 12 years to erect it (292-280 B. C.) It cost 300 Made and Guarantecd, BK Royal Baking ,00k- [ts free Price Baking Powder Factory, Loo} Independence Blvd .Chricago,IN Coats ENTIRE ST: ‘OCK OF COATS 20 Per Cent Discount’ uits ” Waists and Blouses Georgette Crepes, Taffetas, Minuets, Voiles. All Wanted Colors 20 Per Cent Discount Dresses _ Corsets _ Silk and Muslin Undergarments Vanity Fair Silk Vests, Bloomers; also Crepe de Chine Teddy Gowns, Bloomers and Vests, Maderia and 20 Per Cent Discount Infants’ Wear Entire stock of useful articles for e little one. - One-Third Discount Casts - The Store of Quality—One Price to All 138 East Second Street. I. O. O. F. Bldg: in Underwear. 5 for__.-$1.00 4 for____$1.20 2 for--_$1.00 2 for_-._$1.25 2 for_=_$1.45 at the entrance of the statesman and patriot, James Otis, a leg on each Contains the statements that the col- where}onles did not wish to be free but when Wanted representation in parliament, cry bad arisen. A.—This has never been traced 20 ware rox poonitr om MoTweRneoD Ans THE Baar.reee ) BRADTIELD REGULATOR CO,.DEFT.Q-D.ATLANTA.GA. Muslin Gowns, Teddies and Bloomers. a ee EU 400 SUITS TO SELECT FROM Go at.... Suits Regularly Priced at $30 to Go a $22.50 Suits Regularly Priced at *$35 to Go at... .$26.25 Suits Regularly Priced at Suits Regularly Priced at $45 to Go ai $50 to Suits Regularly Priced at $55 to Go at... |$41.25 Suits Regularly Priced at $60 to Go at... . $45.00 It:Does Not Take Much Figuring to Recognize the Saving, Does It? 1500 Pairs Dress and Work Pants 14 Styles of Riding Pants, Button and Lace Legs" Pants’ Regularly Sold at $2.95 to Go’at..... .$2.25 Pants Regularly Sold at $3.95 to Go at. ..:$3.00 Pants Regularly Sold at ‘ants Regularly it $5.95 to Go- 4.5 Pants Regularly | $7.95 to Go at: .. °$5.95 Pants Regularly.Sold at Pants Regularly Sold at $9.95' to-Go'at. .. .$7.50 Figures Are ‘Figures. The Saving Is Here. Why Pay More Elsewhere? - Yours for Lower .Prices and im . Always. The Man in the

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