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PAGE TWO be Casper Daily Cribune [cies aint agate, aro'Gen euch ki will aovign tae Aine judgment and admit that William Deming’s influence, | Issued every evening «xcept Suncay at Casper. Natrona) ° 5: n : 4 n political or otherwise, certainly extends beyond the| County. Wyo. Publication Offices: Tribune Building || PO ass St & Cheyenne and Lai Gauee: | el Ont THEY WANT TO PLAY BASEBALL. BUSINESS TELEPHONES... Branch Telephone Exchange ee Snvered at Casper, (Wyoming) Postoffice as second-class matter, November 23, 1916. | MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PHESS REPORTS FROM UNITED PRESS J. B. HANWAY ---. ------- President and Editor) “ EARL K. HANWAY----_-----------Business Manager| team? k H. HUNTLEY ----—. Associate Editor} trons of the advertising columns of the newspaper, 4 It is admitted that they have gall in abundance, but| nerve—there is # difference, you know. What do you suppose swelled them up to the point of issuing a challenge to the Tribune’s pennant winning baseball THOMAS DAILY ~._--.--------Advertising Manager Advertising Representatives | 1 J. Rendall, 341 » Ave., New York City tain Daily’s gallant siggers? Not so! e When the defi of the realestaters was accepted yes-| Prud: ng & Prudden, 23 Steger Bits., Chicago the peddlers of property must be literally pounded in. es of the Daily Tribune are on file in the NeW) into their favorite earth; and that of course is exact-| Q- 4 Chicago offices and visitors are welcome |i) wat will happen to them. pan?—H. W. RATES | The Tribune has not gone to the trouble and ex- | pense of assembling a galaxy of star performers ver- -+--------------$7.-20| satile enougn to make the SUBSCRIPTION By Carrier best newspaper in the| \ ~ 1.98 | ban of any team within the same area to suffer the hu- $5 miliation of defeat at the hands of such amateurs in 961 the national sport as Harry Pree, John England, Wal- ter Dobbin, Ben Scherck and others. ‘ar be it from } if anyone should inquire what we thought about them | w that, that they will have greater success selling lots |" open I that, that zhey will have greaer success selling lots All_subsecriptio: Daity {ribune will not tion becomes oue month in arrears. must be aid in advance and the at De paid in eavner subecrip:|and things thon they will dragging in home runs in| a hard-boiled baseball game, with such men as Tom} Daily, Fred Seaman, Dick Evans and their crew of Member of Audit Bureau of Circutattons (A. B. ©.) --! bocchall soloists in opposition. an However, foolish people rush in where angels pre-| is fer pussyfooting and the realtors have sought out | and insisted upon the calamity that is about to befall) them. Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. sequies they will have to do the inviting. $s © and s ociock p.m. it} Our friends crave thrills and they know of the lim-| ; A paper will be deliv-| ited opportunity for excitement there is in shutting) to: Make it your duty to| out a team of sage brush leaguers like the realtors. | ar let The Tribune know whea your carrier misses you. Member of the Associated Press ess is @Xclusively entitled to the ¢ all news credited in this paper and also the local news publishc* } rein. | game is played. | announced. ——— WILLIAM DEMING AND HIS TRIBUNE. The date will, of course, be duly —__———o REMEDY TAXATION FIRST. in, Our old friend, William C. Deming, of the Chey-| enne Tribune, has brought up a very painful sub-| vision to take precedence over the tariff as a means ject and one in which w take no pride for the! o¢ reviving business, and he is right. thoughtless part we played in the matter. Long &g0| in the midst of an economic reaction and needs help, moment of recklessness and inconsiderate at-| he declares. The tariff and revenue bills will pass,| nenities, we referred in &® More! the country need not be alarmed about them, but they/| er to a serial feature that the| cay wait until we have cleared the state of excess inistered to its readers in! profits and the higher surtaxes, and have shifted the entitled “The Convessions of &| other burdens to where they more properly belong. 1 shame. and humihation that) Croirman Penrose of the senate finance commit-| of ous allusions to the same. Inj, oe ; 1 7 § inexperience we even ad-| tee S°¥8 that the tariff will come out of the commit-} in a © ing 5 r rnal hb ypathic doses t 2 aE out trom the columns| tee early in July and be passed after about two lication. We have since| Weeks debate in the house. His own committee will st confession is good for| Teduire about sixty days to consider the measure er it reaches the senate, and the supplemental hear- 7s will be held on the bill. Meanwhile business must continue to mark time until sometime toward |the close of the year. Although the present t: " are not to be paid now still they have a depri of what was Intended 'to be) iofu and Iabor is condemned to idleness ar We are not so sure that our) ‘pain of economic woes follows in the wake of find its mark in the Chey-| ‘7% and when} it was not at all! s perfectly harm- or pat, went through ter all, and if it @id-we shall not feel] °°'0" N : ‘ 5 ru it. We a yeerve a ait rent feature| The question of precedence in legislation, the tax ; rues rine e-paper. 'This-one issla-| OT tethff bill created derable controversy in’ the “¢ csions of » Husband.” This. is much|¢@tly part of the Harding administration. The ye muc to confess and get from the start. capades With a total of imports into this country of|* B,000Q00, which s ord-breaker in the] ide history of this cov nd one calculated. to}; p a great deal of uneasiness in t ds of| 1 producers. But comparing the five | of the current year with the similar period for| it 1920, it will be seen that there has been a large slump| f e-and the danger from that quar-|'" ter has been lessened: : nh re sympath marry elf hs We have in his ply couldn't teil who might be in-| plications woukl come next. t is noticed that the Kemm zid of Mr. Deming, that his limited.” It was applied in a Importe—1921 1 ‘ 000,000 | 214,500,000} a 347 465,000,000 4,000,000 | January « influence i: any Where do the honorable realtors get their nerve? | Daily -. city aes | nt fact will entitle them to any mercy from Cap-| sudje visiting Japan in 1920 was 28,265. Of 399) United States as well as play the best game of base-| or 6,360. artificial light?—R. 8. C. us to disparage their ability as baseball players, but| many in that capacity, we would feel constrained to say|‘" P« If they want their friends present at the ob-| ‘!!stle used in clothmaking?—J. G. H. They can read all about it in the newspaper when the|ence of a against the surface of the cloth. No ives, Fhis is the only xes | petals. er (Any reader can get the answer to question by writing The Casper Tribune Information Bureau, frederic J. Haskin, Director, *Vash- F ington, D. C. This offer applies strict- to information. The bureau cap- not give advice on Segal, medical and \f cial matters. It does not attempt! Do they think that because they are all pa-|{, sctie domestic troubles noe te uni ertake exhaustive research on any Write your question plainly nd briefly. Give full name and ad- dress and enclose two cents in stamps: for return. postage. All terday the word was passed to the team members that/ sent direct to the inqvirer.) replies are A—The total number of foreigners use 10.996 were Chinese, and the mericans were next, with a total Q.—Is the boll weevil attracted by A.—Experiments show that while insects resembling the boll eevil are attracted to lights, this cot- t cannot be captured by such eans Q—What color is crude oil?—J. ‘etroleum is of varying color, ck, brown, red, amber, straw; nd is reflected light, often green- h in Unt. Q—Is the plant teasel or Fuller's A.—The heads of the teasel plant, hich are cylindrical with oblong hook ted, rigid bracts between, are used raising the nap of cloth The heads © split and fived on the circumfer- cylinder that revolves hanical device has yet been found equal this natural contrivance. Q.—How many times has the choos- © of a presidert devolved upon the Senator James E. Watson of Indiana wants tax re-| house of representatives?—V. H. A——-Thomas Jefferson became pres- The country is| ident first time by virtue of the bal- of the house of representa time that af nhas been carried to the house. Q.—What states lead in the produc- tion of corn and wheat?—R. 8. A.—In 1920, Iowa led in production corn and Kansas in production of wheat Q—Why are carnations caiied ?—N. M.. 1. This name is derived from the pink, meaning to puncture @ and the flowers were so-called ccount of the jagged edges of the Q.—What is the meaning of Ibia?— . - has become of Thomas writing box, on which he t the Deciaration of HE. \ his valuable of the sta n, D.C relic is in the li department, Wash- The writing box is ma- ny 11 by 6 inches in size, 2 ches deep, and contains a ¢ 1 with pigeon h It bears this scription in Jefferson's. handwrit- “Th. Jeffersar gives this desk Jeph Coolidge Juntor, as a mom- of affection.” It was made by 1. E , @ cabinet maker of Phil Iphia with whom Jefferson first awer while what we had in mind to say Mr. Deming in relation to his citizen- s business success. In elther case the Re- uld be unjust. 1. Oster $ It was not #0 many years ago that Mr. Deming ar-j rived in Cheyenne, with mostly rain checks and shoe-| With this falling off of over fifty per cent in im- strings. With .these\ things and some marbles and| Ports, exports appear to be maintaining a, satisfac- chalk +e obtained possession of the Tribune. He haa| tory showing, those for the eleyen months ended Ma all through the enguirg years given the people a uni-| 31 totaling $6,179,000,000 or 64 per cent of the formly bette newspaper than they ever had before.| total trade fot the period named. He has built up a splendid plant that is now a valu-| The thing that is holding business in fetters more F aper prope and e ly worthy the| than any other factor is the Democratic system of t labor and intelligence he has devoted | taxation, and until that is wiped out it will be impos wspaper has always enjoyed a wide cir-| sible for business to get into action again. On the other hand, trade conditions the world over, wages and production costs, and all the other incidents of commerce, have by no means recovered from the de- | moralizations of the war, though they are slowing 496,000,000 431,000,000 20,009,000 $1,185,000,000 E news| years of to it. His culation _ Further than this Mr. Deming has out of his earn- ings wisely invested in Cheyenne property of the rev- enue producing kind and today you find him ow ne a good newspaper and office building, high class| funding into recognizable form. Again, as Senator apartment buildings and offer productive invest-| Watson very pertinently remarked: “We can for- ments which make him a solid citizen. His bu: mulate a tariff bill, but with the present disturbance of international exchange, the derangement of eco- nomic life all over the globe, conditions will inevit- ably make some details of any bill we bring out ob- solete within six months.” It is the hope that the next Republican tariff law will remain in force for some time, and it should be perfected by the time necessary for the hearings be- lieved requisite, but that does not alter the opinion of the country that relief from taxation is of first the Kemmerer Republican looks ovar| importance. TRAFFIC NOTICE All Cars and Vehicles ness career has been a perfectly honorable one, his public example and habits of life correct. In brief, Deming has been a model citizen. And so, in our humble judgment, a man who has accomplished what Deming has, has not done so without exerting a con- siderable influeper, not only locally, but wherever his newspaper bas circulated, and his acquaintanceship has extended. Deming is entitled to be labeled “Suc- cessful Cipizen.” And wie Are forbidden either to park or traverse the designated line of march, July 4, upon Center street, beginning at City Hall, thence north to Court House, thence east to Wolcott street, thence south to Midwest avenue, between the hours of 10 o’clock and 12 o'clock a. m., also be- tween the hours of 2 o’clock to 8 o’clock p. m., and also from 9 o’clock to 10 o'clock p. m., and the street to be absolutely free from vehicles, on Center street, between the Henning Hotel and the Court House from 10 o’clock to 12 o’clock a. m. By order of J. A. SHEFFNER, Chief of Police. Soseoncee We're Ready To move your household goods. _ We specialize in haul- ing furniture and pianos. Baggage and any kind of hauling. We are prompt and we give a guarantee on all our work. See Ben Transfer Co. Stanley Overbaugh, Prop. Phone 74-J ee SIMMS Indepen- | Che Casper Daily Cribune satin se ao | AMERICAN EXPRESS TO tical one on which the draft of the Declaration of Independence was writ- |" b ten. Politics as well as religion has ita = superstitions; THERMOPOLIS, Wyo., President Harding may vi ter Haynes Post No. 18 of the Amer. foan Legion here August 2, 3 and 4, wing his celebration at Cheyenne. v was extended executive and it is thought he may) find it possible to visit Thermopolis.' of the follo a aad ANNOUNCEMENT The Fuchs Co. Will Locate at 138 East Second Street Store Formerly Occupied by the Coyne-Saller Com; With a Complete Stock of mad Ladies’ Apparel of the Better Grade Mr. Fuchs Is at Present in New York Buying Entire New Stock. ticello, Q.—Piease tell me how to cream beet tops—M. K. A.—Take 1 cupful of minced, cooked | young beet tap greens, % pint of milk jor equal parts of milk and cream, 2 tabjespoonfuls butter, 1 ful flour, 1 teaspoonful sait butter in a saucepan; add the flour, stirring until frothy. Add the minced | beet top greens, salt to taste, cook five minutes, Add the milk; ook three Do many Americans visit Ja-| minutes longer; serve hot. ——_ Jewelry and watch repairing by az pert workmen. guarantee. Casper Jewelry Mfg. Co., OB, Bide. 25-tf —— LEGION INVITES HARDING. Tie Celebrate FIREWORKS Cap Pistols, Roman can- pedoes, Daggo Bombs, Holmes to Homes charter of our independence. Mon- November 18, 1826. Melt the - All work | 29th for the | show. |. The |known as July 2—| Alpin hotel of New York City, it the W visit _td the Frontier tion An in-| to the chief : Avoid a. and Substitutes. = ——_ — = eee EXCLUSIVE PICTURES OF DEMPSEY WHICH ARE ALLOWED BY HIS MANAGER LYRIC SUNDAY Celebrate Direct From the Arsenal dies, Fire Crackers, Tor- etc. WE ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR FIREWORKS Holmes Hardware Co. Baby Bond Store Phone 601 INI PENA AVA AAI =; SEND ELECTION TU <=] GREAT FRONTIER MEET on the last day of the celebration for @ party which the company is to send through an arrangement with the Mc- will consist of a sufficient number of sleep- | ers to accommodate the travelers, two | dining cars, club and card car, an observat and a “gym” car. Will be one of the most thoroughly equipped trains ever run on American railroads. The cost of the trip to each passenser, for traveling ex- qt Cannon Crackers, Devil- on-the-walks, Sparklers, Spin Wheels, Salutes, pwnses only, will be about $450, which will mean the expenditure of approxi- $70,060 by the party for travel- Counterfeiter Oi Fight Tickets Is Seized in Gotham NEW YORK, July 3.—A small te:. ter ‘a’ instead of a capital “D’ on a ringside ticket to the Dempery-c pentier fight -|of a man calling on a charge of tickets. He was in the woman's world champlon- ship broncho busting contest for the , given by the McAlpin hotel, and @ purse of $1,000. _—— Pictures printed in dote on the Braille system, are the latest inno- vation for assisting the blind. NOW WORKING IN CASPER Write us NOW about installing a Tile Bath Room or Fireplace or Store Entrance. McElhinney Tile and Marble Co, 427 17th St., Denver Colo. r. H. C. Davis will be at the Henning next week with samples and catalogues Our L.O.O. M. All brothers are request- ed to meet at Moose Hall at 9:30 to take part in the cele- bration on July 4th. Be on time everybody. Dairy Ice Cream Ask for It By Name OUR ICE CREAM BRICKS WILL PLEASE YOU. Phone 471 ; Now Located in Our NEW QUARTERS Midwest Building Wyoming National Bank CASPER, WYOMING