Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 22, 1921, Page 6

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PAGE SIX Cbe Casper Dailp Cribune every evening except Sunday at Casper, Natrona uunty, Wyo, Publication Offices. Tribune Building. BUSINESS, TELEPHONES ....... -----+2+2- 15 and 16) candidate but the party should not jeopardize its Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Entered at Casper, (Wycming) Postotfice am second class | to a showdown. matter, November 22, 1916. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ; lican enthusiasm throughout the nation. Will New York be blind to the situation? Colonel Roosevelt is known to be for Governor Mil- ler’s renomination and election if he decides to be a by permitting the Miller candidacy to come a IT COULD HAPPEN AGAIN. Ele é it ‘ 274%, great re ter J. B. HANWAX ... . Present and Diltor} Charles Cushing writing in Leslie's, draws an im- pravide tor ‘the pub-|win out. I! EARL BE. HANWAY ao paraliel a past forty year period with one in nervisn.. $n eat: rata ‘ef tee wt HONEESE Aseociave’ Duiter | the: immediate -future which is interesting even if it departmen: timber is gone|of the RE. EVANS . ‘Advertising Manager Ghtasah bod. awa Advertising Representatives Prudéen, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bldg... Chicago, I0,; 286 Fitth avenuc, New York City; Globe Bidg., _ tor, Coppies of the Daily Tribune are on file the New York, Chicago and Bost offices and visitors are welcont THOMAS DAIL’ SUBSCEIPTION BATES By Carrier 4 preposterous at this particular time. He suggests, if history should repeat itself as it has a way of doing it is quite possible for’ ccample that for the next forty years, beginning with the presidential cam- paign of 1924, only one candidate without a military record may succeed in getting residence in the White House. And the office of the presidency is chosen here only as the conspicuous token of the govern- mental influence that a powerful association of war veterans can wield. x “Absurd!” you think? Particularly in a pacifistic fie A 1.86 | nation? DEY GOODS ECONOMIST. 48| But it happened once before, and not so long ago. **/ It also might happen again if the American Legion Ghd yo oe are “ena this) Next In tmportance to the Venetian g1.20| Should choose to emulate the G. A. R. Bo let's sup- voile figured in openwork pattern in| Fur fo Mippiaien vane. 2 age d 4 t"a.90/ pose. For the moment let’s try to forget all party la- delicate, lace-like design which prom- 4 A +,1.98| bels and personal likes and dislikes—for the writer Ives to be the great succeas of the aca./*0F Sftect. | These ranterials! are very In order to conveniently care for an increasing J és i accep’ has no purpose here but to suggest a parallel from Ang egrets 4 the| history. What would you say to the possibility of such All subscriptions must be paid in advance Ant tip | 8 presidential succession as follows: Hon becomes one month in arrears. General Pershing, two terms. = General Wood, one term. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation’ (A. B. ©) General Edwards, one term, nn a General Dawes, one term. A Civilian, one term. U. S. Grant, 3d, one term. That Civilian again, one term. A Doi son in Paris. In appearance, this is very similar to a fine wool lace, or a whence its name 7 or Venetian gauze. ‘This volle ts featured in one golor ef: fect only, but in an tnfinite® variety | NoOvy The oane is{Known bythe | of designs, such as stripes, checks and fine all-over patterns, among the moat| Interesting as well ts 9 pure wool il bess Beat +4 reps called “Epinglette.” , This reps ‘The forest service had little business | =. LP bene, Poa eps Re very |has a flat indistinct ribbing on the with the department of the interior, | 4. 5 Mika-|order of silk armure. ’ and what it hag is rapidly diminishing. hich| A fourth novelty to which particu- Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. meat d Gay Se It has many times more business with | Shows the volle ground figured in open our Chicago vistt at the ; Gros I have one of the best ipped exclusive tailoring shops in the state—a wonderful assortment of wool- Call 15 or 16 any time Detween 6:30 and 8 o’closk D- = the other bureaus of the department | work squares in heraldic effects. ee ete canes ens in bolt, and I can promise the best service and de- business and it was for that reason that I engaged a fine suite of newly finished rooms in the Day build- ing (over Lyric Theater). It’s an upstairs location and just the reason why I can give better vaiues for your dollar. I am not burdened with any excessive overhead, I do my own buying. I know cloth from years of a Japearh personally supervise the making it delivered from my place of business and stand back of its wearing qualities with my own guar- antee and a reputation gained from personal contact with a majority of Casper’s best dressed men. being brought ont to replace satin, taf- feta and crepe for suits and afternoon wraps. They are featured with both regular and irregular ribbing. The Member of the Associated Press : titled to tne Associated Press t exclusively en' use Zor’ publication ‘of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. That fanciful parallel, as you soon shall see, is business is Trib paper will be » of agriculture, and that This new voile is also used in com- tt you, fall to by aperial mensenger., Muke it your duty to| drawn closely from the records of the line of presi-|rapidly increasing. It 1s in constant bination with other weaves, notably ie ‘The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. dents of the United States for the forty, years from ‘and intimate co-operation with every as stripse introduced into wool reps 1868 to 1908. branch of the department where it is} 014 satin cloths. For Instance, a ae The presidential administration immediately follow-| now. ‘white satin cloth is shown run at equal i ivi .| The department of agriculture has i new 4 THE GOVERNORSHIP OF NEW YORK. the chief executive's chai m as today”’—but stripe in black. to be given an opportunity to show you my new shop While the people of Wyoming, regretably, have) one hesitates to draw the parallel between Andrew and the fine selection of materials in stock. to do with the matter, talk in New York of Rsbine Colonel Theodore Roosevelt as the go 8 : liean candidate for governor of the Empire state finds) fect right to protest. : a te tremendous endorsement here. First, because of the _ Note next that from the close of Johnson’s rr (TP of cmap: ih cam. eat love our people bore the elder Roosevelt in his) istration until 1908 there were twelve presidential in-|Pelled 1 to build up & stmiler oresates Tifetime the cordial and mutual understanding enjoyed) augural ceremonies. Ten times in those forty years) tion. us I ting ¢ 6 on by both. Second, because we ace in the younger| the oath of office was taken by war veterans. The|!®,t plication Roosevelt the same high qualities we admired in the| one man who succeeded in breaking through that long — “is I aR Bee elder. The Roosevelts are dear to us because they/ succession of ex-service men was Grover Cleveland, |i js. ‘There {= not to ggodas 4 is are so much like us and our ideals of what men in| who was drafted in ’68—“his was the first name drawn ot any kind for the reagon public life should be. out of the wheel in Buffalo,” a biographer relates—|It is neither good administ opm po In Wyoming the matter of making Colofiel Roose-| but who sent & substitute to the front. Cleveland’s| business, nor good politics to undo velt Halas would be as good as settled and) excuse for this sounds good enough. Two of his| Roosevelt's work. on farms than in all the remaining Johnson and Warren Harding any closer than that! ‘public domain, of which the interior Mr. Harding, good natured as he is, would have a per- Notice to the Public We are making an endeavor 'to get all the little children out ‘on Christmas morning so they may enjoy Santa Claus and the Christmas tree provided by the Elks. It is easy enough for us to get in touch with All Kinds of Remodciine Done by Expert Tailors Frank Canner . wi while we do na presume to arrange the domestic af- It is well understood in Washington fairs of the Republicans of New York for them, still good advice is good advice and politics is politics the country over, and New York can lose nothing by a perusal of outside views if they be politically wise. History has repeated in distinguished American families, and great sons of great fathers have their i in the history of our country. The Adamses, the Lincolns, the Grants, the Harrisons, the brothers served throughout the war, and someone had y stay at home to support the family. But the G. A. bills as fast bey they came before his notice. an organization which, at the crest of its enrollmen' (in 1890) numbered only 409,781. This total,. pleas: that the same interests that attempted natural resources of it appears, cordially detested Cleveland—and he Finks ta spenrelase Ballinger's time then made the feeling mutual by vetoing all pension|are at it again. horse of the men behind the grab is in that forty years after the war, bo-|the claim that Alaska ts going back- came president without the support of the G. A. R—/ward. The fact is that from 1910 to | 096, or 866 per cent, while during the The best stalking all the children who attend school but difficult to get in touch with those who don’t, therefore we would re- quest that all grown-ups advise any children that they know who do not attend school to go to the nearest schoolhouse between 9 and 9:80 on Christmas morn- ing, and they will be picked up there by automobiles and taken to the tree. Arrangements have been made Custom Tailor Second Floor, Daly Building (Over Lyric Theater) » is less than half the present strength of the rears Garfliields, to speak of but a few. There are several) note, is ; ¢ peel hg 8 che kadonte toe: tie aes are la: between older and younger genera-| young American Legion. Hereinafter follows, if your tinitea States increased from. $1,866,- tions. It is recognizable even now in the Roosevelt} memory needs refreshing, the list of presidents of the| 258,904 to $8,228,016,807 or 340 per family. Young Teddy is the present assistant secre-| United States for those forty years: cent. Alaska business has actually’ tary of the navy. His father held that self same of-| Ulysses S. Grant, general of the armies of the U.|been growing faster than the business fice at the outbreak of the Spanish-American war. He] §., two terms. ie St ev iEinited, Gtatee,, although | tHe resigned to lead the Rough Riders and bear a con-| Rutherford B. Hayes, brigadier (brevet major gen- pean ages “Mi apig qe spicuous part in that war. On his return he was made) ¢ral), one term. wit reced: the governor of New York. James Abram Garfield, major general, one term. ‘The national forests in Alaska, if The younger Roosevelt went into the world con- to have the schools open and warm. If you know of -any children who are crippled please call 252 and an automobile will be sent for them. COMMI7‘TEE, B. P, O. ELKS, & Building Costs Lowered By having us sand your ‘interior finish you save from $20 to $80 on the average 5-room house. Just - tell your lumberman to havé us sand your finish. Chester Alan Arthur, quartermaster general, one term. ‘s flict served with great credit and became a lieutenant-| colonel, the title the elder Roosevelt carried in the earlier war. Both upheld the highest traditions as soldiers of the republic and neither ever asked a private soldier to} go where they did not show the way. The governorship of the great state of New York is in danger. It is known and recognized outside of that state whether Republicans within the borders realize it or not. The Republican party can take no chance in political sentimentality next year. And the New York situation is this: The figures tell the story. Hard- ing, Republican, over Cox, Democrat, carried the state by 1,086,755; Wadsworth, Republican senator, over Walker, Democrat, 546,286; Miller, Republican gov- ernor, over Smith, Democrat, 73,887. This was only last year and a landslide year at that, In an off year Governor Miller cannot repeat the seventy odd thou- sand lead over Al Smith who is one of the most popu- lar Democrats New York ever knew and is bound to be the Democratic choice next year. The Republican problem in New York narrows down to this simple proposition, Miller cannot be elected govetnor, Theo- dore Roosevelt can be elected governor. You don't have to look in the back of the book for the answer. For young Colonel Roosevelt to follow his father’s footsteps into the Albany state house would be fitting in every respect. Some of the elder statesmen have said he is too young in years. Which is not wisdom speaking but mere prejudice. Theodore Roosevelt is thirty-five and with his upbringing, advantages and experience he is ten years ahead of the average man in public life. His father was chosen governor at the age of forty. The young colonel is a splendid type of American. He is a thorough Republican with progressive ideas which are in complete harmony with Republican dos- trine and practices of a party chastened and restored to the confidence of the people by more than seven million majority of their votes. He is popular with the ranks of his own party without the sacrifice of ideas or ideals. As he advances in years the traits he has inherited from his illustrious father become more and more apparent. These are the things that gripped the hearts of the nation and caused the people. to march under his conquering banner on every occasion. Tow elder Roosevelt benefitted every state in the union by the example he set as a member of the New York legislature, as police commissioner of New York City, as civil service commissioner, as governor of New York, #s vice president, as president; but first and most of all as the world’s greatest citizen. He| was the principal American to arouse the fighting) blood of America and marshal her fighting forces to block the destruction of civilization. Without uni- form or insignia, without authority other than his un- quenchable patriotism, his courageous spirit of right- eousness, he was the real marshal of the world war. As with the father so with the son. New York is in dangerous position with Miller. While he has made oné of the most excellent officials Grover Cleveland, civilian, one term. Benjamin Harrison, colonel (brevet, brigadier gen- eral), one term. William McKinley, captain (brevet major), two terms. “ Theodore Roosevelt, colonel, two terms. So perhaps our notion of the potential political pow- er of an organization of ex-service men is not so silly as it sounds. es A NEW INDUSTRY. ‘ “Sightseers at the conference—not ‘observers try-| ing to observe the inside of things,” says the New York Post, “‘but sightseers who have a much pleasant- er time seeing the outside of things—have drawn a picture contrast between Arthur Balfour of the gen-| tle, sceptical smile and Charles E. Hughes, about, whom, for all his friendliness, there still lingers some- thing of the old ‘height and austerity.’ It is the con- trast we would expect between the Britsih face that mirrors or conceals a thousand subtle thoughts, and the American face that has scrapped a thousand ships more or less. We must henceforth think of Mr. Hughes in the double role of statesman and founder of a new industry. - “With a view to determining the best method of de- veloping the ship-scrapping industry in the United States,’ so runs a despatch from Washington, ‘the pay- master general of the navy has invited representative groups of financiers, steel operators, ship-builders, scrap dealers, chambers of commerce, and editors of trade papers to meet this week at the Philadelphia navy yard.’ It is not too big a meeting when the ton- nage involved runs into the millions. Part of it will be actual scrapping, we presume, as when Mr. Ford of- fers to wave the magic acetylene torch and turn gun- turrets into flivvers. Part of the scrapping will be figurative, for the government is offering for sale old cruisers convertible into merchant ships. But, obvi-' ously, the thing is more than a job; it is an rs “Will it, like so many other industries, develop its vested interests and its propaganda? Will junk barons buy up newspapers to preach the cause of interna- tional peace? Will second-hand dynamo lobbies try| to put over disarmament jokers on parliaments and congresses? Will venal correspondents and news agencies flood tue press of the world with fakes about’ peace banquets in Tokio, international meetings in London, interracial resolutions of friendship in Rome, Il provocative of amity among the nations and de- signed to build up the scrapping industry? More power to them!” ——_—_—_o—-————_—————_ THEY WANT MORE. When sister Pankhurst and her band of wild women agreed to subside and abandon their activities so as to eliminate all useless domestic distractions during the war, England thought she was relieved of her troubles‘ entirely. Not so, for the wild ones have every member of the family. SUGGESTIONS _ FOR Grown-Ups Majestic Ranges, Heaters, Aluminumware, Manicure Sets, Silverware, Casseroles, Percolators, Electric Washing Machines, Electric Grills, Electric To: Irons, Electric Waffle Irons, Electric Curling Chafing Dishes. For the Kiddies Wagons, Bicycles, Tricycles, Coasters, Kiddie Kars, Sleds, Skates, Air Rifles, Knives, Flashlights. This year the slogan is “Gifts that are practi- cal.” Our store is filled with useful presents for Carving Sets, asters, Electric Irons, Electric Telephone Casper Mfg. and Construction Co. Phone 1096-J_, The Casper Manufacturing and Construction Ass’n. Burlington Ave, and Clark St. Announce That They Are Now Engaged in Building Truck Bodies and Cabs OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT AND PRICES PROVE IT Special Attention Given to Repair Work. DAY AND 0. ily. $1.95 to $7.50 Toys | Toys Toys Only FOUR more days left to buy them before we 1096-J The home of practical | and useful gifts gor ev- ery member of the fam- Have another shipment of sleds. Priced from Christmas. You will profit by seeing our line of dolls, = before you buy elsewhere. Our stock is getting low = and you can get any doll or teddy bear in the house at 20 PER CENT DISCOUNT A complete line of children’s painting sets at popu- lar prices. Holmes to Homes Phone 601 the state has ever had, he has'made enemies and his| given jndications of coming back. i very excellence has proven a weakness. This is shown! Not content with the franchise and eligibility to! in his recent contest with Tammany in the New York election to the house of commons, they are row de-/ City election when his traction program was pitted, manding membershin in the house of lords. against Hylan’s five-cent fare. If the ladies can narrow the question down to a New York Republican opportunity lies in nominat-| vote we fear the aristocratic house of lords is due for ing Colonel Roosevelt for governor, as much for se- & shock to its ancient exclusiveness, for the ladies have curing a capable executive as for victory at the polls| the vote and there are several more million of them against the Democrats. He would sweep the state than there are of the men so they will, of. course, above the Bronx and in the greater city would poll) catty the day, more strength than any otk Republican. He would It may take a tittle time but merry England is sweep the east side wheze ‘sis father was idolized and, Shortly to be the scene of some merry times. he himself is held in great esteem. He would have} {CT ORR 32 Eee ane A the votes of the soldier boys regardless of party. He} A few more accidents to the holdups like occurred would save New York in the off year. a | last night and the industry will suffer from unemploy- The elevation of young Teddy would arouse Repub- ment, ~ Schulte Hardware Co. 228 South Center Street ‘ Phone 61-W-

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