Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 2, 1922, Page 2

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5 ns Os gel il F PAGE TWO. : Che Caspec Daily Cribune Che Casper Dailp Ccibune nority ets to-puppert ox partisl suppott of the league A SOLEMN RERENDUM X : saned ev evens © Sunday at Casper, Natrona program, Townely believes that there will be a great- : ) aay ay Pentention Offices, Tribune Building. ©? opportunity to “put across” the league program of . = Je | Sate-owned and operated industries of many kinds = ALL IN FAVOR’ P beanie nape nga) a ‘There will be no league tickets this fall, so Town- ae, Barponne. Jf @ranch Telephone Exchange Connecting AD * | ley says, except possibly in North Dakota. But Town- — < > ALL rice 2 ¥ Postaffice d class | ley’s supremacy has dwindled and league leaders are A ——" —— ; Se eacedeoner 2m. 3858- | oppedine Gasactanien As, for ipihelaah tetas Eee WHAT YOU MAYCALLEMS Sage, Sa Dateredat Cas mar | FACEFULL OF | ine — wrested from Townley in North Dakota and 7 NWORTH © ems Gs Mb Saw pene? | was ae Sten swept out of power along with 5 our ae 4 r Sete Preeident and Bittor | Frazier, the governor and Hagan, the labor commis- \ - ee RAI mie Business Manager | sioner, by cecal! by the people. %\ RIGHT HAND 2x Associate Editer) Although the league has ceased to be @ factor in TAT } - 2B. EB EVANB ... City EAttor | Minnesota politics, the remaining members oppose stance, Blackheads. Very THOMAS DALY tising MANASer | ‘ownley’s “balance of power” program. pos sth Ne pends. Barred I ==> |" As a close observer in Minnesota puts it: “Not onty ig Badly. Cuticura | ee "Meer Bide. Chicago, | have the failures of the mill and elevators operated : 286 Firth e S ‘ork Ci Cube Bidg.; Bos-| by the league, of their insurance schemes and other D Aiae Cosas otlDe Tany axis a ese on tty ts | SMRIa Raphoioen tas faith of the Nonpartisans in ‘the New York, Chicago and Boston «#ffices and visitors/ their leaders, but irregularities which have been are welcome. brought out as to how they conducted their operations — — | have caused wide open breaches which cannot be heal- SUBSORIFTION BATES. ed. The closing of more than forty state banks in = a North Dakota, the driving out of much needed credit and capital because of the radical legislation, and other developments have left the North Dakota farmer a more debt-burdened, but wiser man. Farmers of other states have seen and realized the failure and don’t wish to experiment.” The co-operative marketing program as launched in | Minnesota has given the farmers more benefits than could have been derived from the program of the Nonpartisan league. The Central Sprspeesine co emer £ e| mission company, which in less chan six months has becciptsons suaet. be: pall tn atria San-ragit Erbario be tas Tangest co-operative ivaaeaeaenee eee os ; ing agency in the United States, handling approxi- ate | mately half of the livestock at South St. Paul. Member of Andit Burean of Circulation (A. B. C.) | In addition the da’ y interests have organized and| r: _—__— | - ; j ; a4 ber of the Associated Press, are selling their products co-operatively—and Minne-| ‘The Y sherry a ie: aaarer entified to tht! sota leads the nation in butter production. A co-op-| «ase for publication of news credited in this paper and/ erative potato selling agency has been handling pota- “also the local ners published herein. toes for two years in Minnesota. A pool for wool x = Ps > selling is about to be launched. In co-operative mar-} Caan The en er ean CER Co a: p- | Wahi Dias the ‘relbedy Zor curing hediletse tous etree tt-you full to receive your Tribun= A paper will be de-| €Ts of the northwest. i g Tivered to you by special wenger. Make it your duty to The program of the Nonpartisan league has wiped “Dy face was fall of and ii iF | it The poulation of several villages be- came panic stricken but no crsualties occurred and no serious damage was —_—_———__ il let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. cut party politics in North Dakota, the two political factions of that state being divided solidly into fac- «GT tions for and against the Nonpartisan program. It has - largely had the same result in Minnesota, South Da- —. kota and other states where tho Nonpartisans had LODGE OF MASSACHUSETTS. | gained a foothold and hrought closer co-operation be- Henry Cxbot Lodge will be a spree = fegeail tween formerly opposing political factions. 5 himself in the s e from the old Bay State. “| Advice to league farmers a year ago to hold their ° stands first on the list of continuous service in thet! wheat for $3 a bushel also had disastrovs effects on| Westerner’s Creed. bedy, baving gone to the senate March 4, 1893. The/ the league members, many of whom lost heavily by people of Massachusetts will most certainly see that| folowing the advice of their leaders. |r sinsorides as pia by ie atts he is re-clected. They know the value of long serv-|" Politicians—except leaguers—in the northwest are brim, ice coupled with ability for in the lower house Speak-| unanimous in their opinions that the Nonpartisan By ‘tia earge Kaito ees er Gillette ranks in length of service above all €x-| league has passed into oblivion as a real factor in poli-| ws. i edod exvathtan;: iat and eepting former Speaker Cannon. | tics and declare that Townley, by abandoning his old stim, Mac:achusetts has a powerful weight in the national) jeague program, has admitted that the Nonpartisan Seis ete i ti er ee Jegistature, and Massachusetts people appreciate it. | league is a thing of the past, And for my joy the Lord has given Senator Lodge has served his state and his nation| Tt is very unlikely with the evidence before the peo-| Wnt for MY Joy the Lo Yor thirty years. He has been concerned. in making| y) if a le of Wyoming they will tumble into any such mess| ‘Ten leagues of pine, and a bine, blue the laws of the land ard the history of the republic! ae the misguided people elsewhere have done or will heaven, throngh all those years. His influence has been great/ embrace Townley's “balance of power? bunk as a| And a poplar grove of shining And this, ff it be Eis will to give it, fon and one which has a material ef- Is all I ask of God— fect on our industrial situation. Be- fore our entrance into the war the tax payers were not burdened hy ex- treme taxations and the tax spenders Some dream to cherish and Itve and/had not been thoroughly educated to die for; the possibilities of thelr profession. And after toil and@ dream are over,| With the advent of the war and the A bit of turf on the warm hillside necesuary collections of billions of dol- Where the fragile windflowers cower| lars, the education of the tax spend- and hide, ers proceeded rapidly, and it would And the singing sparrows soer and|seem as if they had merely been wait- ©. hover, ing to put into use their instinctive Where the air is sweet with the|/ knowledge of the way ‘to disburse tax While life endures, soms good to try for, edie ro Sift dey and beat poo dart hk i i prairie rose, payers’ money until such time as they and it has always been for good. He ranks g*ith| means of improving local economic ills that may exist. shadow, ‘That I may dream, and tm dreams|could collect the latter. Extravagunce America’s greatest statesmen. paPe a 3 And a currant hedge, and a buttercup Fecover ran riot during the war, particularly Suet A PAGAN CITY. meadow, Some hint of the giad young Itfe I|in gevernment departments. The tax EDWARDS THE WET. ig: Right at my very door. knew; payer was told he was unpatriotic un- 2 Commenting upon the religious situatior® as distinct Or wake from a deeper less he contributed « largo port of his Sa ee eho Fos priinnc cited from the moral situation of America’s chief metrop-|And I have ears for the shy wina's|~" eee —ehe e Je ic,| Clis the Christian Century spea’ recent meeting music, And find death only @ dream come| medals on himself for the abi w! Corn Products Cook: es to eae? ae. Jeerereee Sree Ger eeel of religious workers of New York addressed by Dr.| And the song of the hidden bini;; trae, which he qistributed these vast sums.: Book of 64pases, Wee Coen Prods a ‘jae ey iat Pere of chs aotiatty should re-| John H. Finley in which some striking facts were|Amd it gives me pleasure to try and —TED OLSON. |The same situation exists Miran al-| ucts Refining Co» Dept. A, Argo, om eee Sab swat brought oat. aacahy ackint nets glad 1a" cians aooaaee a. St tarowoees ealy Then » little farther along in Governor Edwards’|, The tide of materialism and paganism seems about |‘ raperallue eee Time for Revolt the ecnteny of politioal, expediency. ’ History he proposed either to.raise the Atlantic:or sink| 0 overwhelm the first city of the republic. Even the! y, sn ivaath of a ainging word, tte Economy is a good slogan for tho the land so that everything should be nice and sloppy.|Ro™man church, as the most recent figures reveal, has ? entire country, but it must not be He proposed to do this figuratively, Actually his op-| 10st nearly two hundred thousand adherents in the last| ana T tive my life as a man should! srhis country im divided \at the pres-|applied Jocally or individually. There ject was to wet things up with liquor. His marmer|‘e® years. It does not mean that they are becoming live it, lent time into tax payers and tax’ you have the serious trouble which Petes 5 Protestants; it means that they are becoming pagans.| Close to the ancient Boa; ef accomplishing it was to become a Democratic can- " ‘ Gidate for the preetOency ofl 9 take e realeier plank| There are more than two million Jews in Greater New to San Francisco to nail into the Democratic platform.| Y°T™, and yet all the synagogues put together have a The best he got was the rejection of his wet plank{ Sesting capacity, when filled, of hardly more than two along with William J. Bryan’s dry one. This marked|*tndred thousand. Thus the leaders of the Jewish) the second backset to his wet enterprises: The third| Church reach only a fraction of their own people. The! jeme is yet to come. Protestant membership of all New York churches is Governor Edwards has decided to become a ean-|*bout ten per cent of the population, with about a mil- @idate for United States senator in New Jersey. He|!ion people of Protestant antecedents unattached and| ‘will stand on the same old wet plank which has préved|®PParently unreachable. Yet nowhere is the need of very slippery in the past. He may defeat other can-|S?ititual fellowship more appalling than in the crowd- didates of his own party for nomination but he will| ©! loneliness of the great city. Nowhere are bodies not defeat his Republican opponent at the election| ™°Te jostled, nowhere are human souls so much alone. who will be Senator Frelinghuysen who keeps his feet |!" the face of such facts, in the presence of such need, on perfectly dry timber. Even im Jersey Mr. Edwards'| * divided, ineffective Christian church is nothing. short| bpetattt ss cat cores of a tragedy, and a petty sectarianiem stands rebuked De by the awful realities of modern life. No wonder ENDISTING THE TRACTORS. |Jesus wept over a city, knowing its cruelty, its block Whilo-we are mulling over the question of ship sub-|i<Kedness, its nameless possibilities, and its aching!| Sidy the French have gone so far as to subsidize tract-| P*thes! ors, ‘Tests were recently held in which the tractors So ee anne entered were obliged to conform to certain vee CATTLE, SHEEP AND WOOL. cific conditions, the heavy aericultural type being suc-|__ The recent price of fat cattle has been steady, with cessful. The purpose of this subsidization is to con-|S0me showing of strength, but a decided improvement stitute a reserve of military tractor material for heavy| #8 taken place in the market for stock cattle, which artillery transportation. It is the desire of the Re-|¢uring a great part of last year was demoralized by| publicans to form from our merchant marine a naval|{0rced sales to liquidate indebtedness. During the| auxiliary, But our merchant marine is going to pot| boom period, while prices were rising, many cattle- spenders, This is @ distinctive divis- confronts us. Whenever any proposi- Used and recommended by Public School Domestic Science Teachers add BANKRUPT SALE A EE a Bought from S. E. Phelps, receiver for creditors, the entire stock of Midwest Lunch Cafeteria Co. at aa TREMENDOUS DIS- COUNT. This stock consists of Men’s Furnishings, Shoes, Rub- ber Footwear, Hats, Caps and Work Clothing. This stock to is be sold at 50¢ ON THE DOLLAR ON TODAY’S MARKET PRICES in order to make quick turnover STORE WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY FRIDAY WHY PAY HIGH RENT! We will sell you a house for small payment down and bal- ance very easy terms. Monthly payments on some of our houses are as low as $25 per month, and in a short time the property is yours, cr you can buy a lot for 10 per cent down, balance $10 month, and you can build your own house. We allow small Fousas on the rear of the lot. Midwest Heights Realty Company Room 233 Midwest Bidg. Phone 1040W. unless it is enabled to compete with foreign ocean car-|™en became over-extended, and in many instances riers by means of a subsidy sidize their tractors, w our merch If the French can sub-| banks becaise over-estimated in granting them accom. ought to be able to subsidize|™odations. A great amount of cattle paper’was put! mt marine, the purpose of which would be| float through cattleloan companies, and bought ‘by us to make our own deliveries of American| investors who were under no obligations to renew it, > be equipped with auxiliary defense on|#%d who counted upon having their money when the! paper fell due. The turn of the times came, prices ey A SJ tell, bank deposits declined, the cattle loans fell due, A THING OF THE PAST. banks needed their money to meet the calls of deposit. 0 ‘comes a Townley-Nonpartisan league| TS, and cattle had to be sold. It was a mistake to story that indieates that the Nonpartisan league, like| Create so much indebtedness. The cattle business nll movements of similar character, has come te an| Would have had more real prosperity without borrow- end. jing so much. The borrowing resulted in a competi- has just completed a 90-day sen-, tion for stock cattle that drove prices up to a level ving interfered with soldier enlist-|that was dangerous for those who did the finishing! but while thinking the matter| nd ultimately brought disaster all around. product. the h To All Members of Loyal Order of Moose The Annual Election of Officers and Lodge Physician Will Be Held Townley, himself, tence in il for b ments during the T, é over during his imprisonment he iz irely| _ The decline of prices was drastic, but it restored | ; onight Moose Hall mew plan of operation, which he” calls “baleree Wy| situation favorable te tection with the Yequlnene tet FOR MARKING AND ARRANGING STOCK. < power.” | le marketed this winter are showing handsome old Nonpartisan| Profits for the men who had the courage to fill their| He does not even fa-| feed lots last summer. These men have Trecouped the YOUR PRESENCE IS REQUESTED chine. tyor the leacue ing forth candidates for state and| losses of the year before, and with this showing that r March JOHN. N. KRAUSS, Secretary. fother offices 2 eneral elections, except where he| there is still money to be made in cattle, the prices of fronsiders that the most liberal of the Hberals have con_| stock animals have rallied and a fair relation between 4th ftrol of the them and the prices of finished heeves is in the way| | Townl Program, in a nutshell, is to hold the so-| of being restored. yee ical vote in hand. This he estimates at about| The situation as to sheep fs better even than for This vote, he proposed to hold| cattle; ewes are again marketable property and the before election and to give no| feeders of sheep and lambs have made handsome prof- the prices of a until just a few ppcietcn as to way the vote will go to candi-| its. Lambs are bringing almost double dates. Here’s a Good ° e e 4 HE MAN WHO 1S" E few months ago. Another factor in the value of sheen| ale or ur ces n OMOITow $ \y iti RAIGHT A The Nonpart armer and Tabor political leaders| is the advance in wool, which is bringing about double | é Proposition A STRING will go to e lidate of the regular parties and| the prices of a year ago, and 35 to 60 per cent more) to tie to—wi ark for their views of the program for the future,|than four months ago. Wool ie ate cae aenen you have some Opinions of these candidates on the Nonpartisan | markets, particularly the best grades, scheme of transfer work to have done ask us to estimate the cost. You'll be able to figure out a saving and you surely have heard of our well known de Pendability, Gebo Coal and Coke ed industries and other industrial| organized in 1920 to take over the Australian stocks | be asked. If the candidates do not come} and the holdings of the British government has re-' » Program, these candidates will| cently reported that the stock of merinos will be en- tion by the league leaders. tirely disposed of by the end of next July, and it is A few days before the elections, the league leaders| expected that this quality will then be released from | will announce to their members and advocates the| control. The world still has large stocks of low grade positions of the idates and endorsements] wools, but even these are improving in price. Tn the! —ract to vote for the persons en-| United States, the stocks imported in anticipation of daorsed— be sent to the league farmer and labor| the emergency tariff to have been worked down tol voters. é b small proportions, and the advance here signifies that, The leaguers, if the candidates are successful, then| prices are being adjusted to the outside market plus} will claim that the persons elected are pledged ‘to the| the new import duties. \ ‘kague program so far as their promises and views, ex. RSE ot ae : eee) election when votes are so eager- The real taxation problem of the day is to do it so d the people don’t know it. They have become very fa- In swinging what he claims-to-be the powerful mi- miliar with coch matters. of late, ate WANTED—EXPERIENCED CLERKS. ‘APPLY AT STORE. ious can instructions WHEN IT's YOUR) =x _NalfOn TRANSTER LET US KNOW!) Nat 348 EFUEL ‘a

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