Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 3, 1922, Page 2

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Natrona mary day and election day are in the distant future. | - It is related that a Wyoming boy, who had been! . in France and served throughout tbat roaring hell) | in 1918 which terminated in the armistice and final | peace, was On his way home to his native Wyoming. | | He had landed in New York on the day the Victory! loan drive was inaugurated. New York was in a frenzy. The big men and the humble men of the! city were speaking side by side from improvised | platforms in the public centers, urging the people to take up the Victory securities and save the na-; ery ever’.g except Sunday at Casper Wyo. Pubication Offices, Tribune Bi TELEPHONES ......... 1S ape 16 phone Exchange Connecting All Depar:ments t Casper (Wyoming), Postoffice as second class matter, November 33, 3916. XS SMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Presidext ana Zditor 3. EB. HANWA EARL E Aaverti Representatives. tion’s credit in paying for the war. There was! ruc King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger .. Chicage. | throughout } eee ae ene Now York Citys Giobe ‘Bldg; Dee | eroughout the country as well as in the greatest financial center, a serious doubt that the Joan would be subscribed. So great was the fear of failure! jthat returned so'‘diers were brought to the platforms | jt tell the people of the horrors of war, the neces- | |sity for meeting the bills contracted by the war and the necessity for abolishing all war from the| . Mass. ne New York, Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in| Chicagg, and Boston offices and visitors ae welcome. 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier subscriptions must bo paid in advance and the une will not insure delivery after eubscrip- che month in arrears. f Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C) Member of the Associated Press. a Press is exclusively entitled to the of 2ll news credited in this paper end published herein, Kick if You Don’t Get Your Tribune, ll 15 or 16 any time betweén 6:30 and 8 o’c'ock p.m faJ; to receive your Tribune, A paper will be de ered (2 you by special messenger. Make !t your duty tt let The Tribune know when your carrier misses you. a The Legion Drive F THERE IS in all the Casper territory an ex- service man not joined up with his fellows of the American Legion at the conclusion of the mein- bership drive now in progress he will be lonesome. The goal js set at 1,200. This takes them all more} or less. It should be reached, for the objects back| of the membership are all worthy and calculated for| citizenship of the highest character. No man who served in the great war, whatever his service, can reasonably disregard the call of association to per- Member the local new: petuate its memories, heart-breaking as some of | There is no aristocracy of | theni are bound to be. Service among the fighters of the world war, If opportunity to cross the sea and carry the Ameri- can flag to triumphant victory on foreign soil, did | earth forever. $5/place talking to those who had gathered, remem- Among the boys so brought forward was our Wyoming boy, a splendid specimen of American manhood and intelligence. He told his story and told it well. As he went from place to brance of the conflicts through which he had passed, the comrades he had lost, the gallantry his fellow Americans had shown at every test, his patriotism, ard his enthusiasm for the old flag he had served, rose to the highest pitch. At the close of the day, which ertended tc the mid. | night, worn and weary from the strenuous services| he had volunteered for his country, his thoughts | turned to the old Wyoming home. What of his| home state? Wonld she do her part in the Victory drive? Was there danger of failure there? It must not be. He would wire his governor. It was a soldier's message, briefiy reciting the situation in New York, the general fear of failure in the erisis and closing with a call to duty and a prayer that Wyoming maintain her prestige in the sisterhood of states. No reply was asked and none was expected. It was months after the soldier's return to Wyo- ming that he was accosted upon the public street one day by the governor with this curt, unfeeling and altogether brutal observation, “Well, I got your telegram from New York, but what the hell had you been drinking? It only needs to. be recalled to mind that the ob- servation was made by a man qualified and eligible to go to war but who shirked his duty, and that it was addressed to a hero of that war, who had spared |no effort to carry his country's flag to final victory. |The soldier boy bore the low-flung insult with |wisat patience he could, but all respect for the gov- not come at all, it found all ready to go if oppor. ernor was instantly banished. tunity presented, .»o finer purposes of association can be found save in the honored old Declaration of Independence, tian those contained in the preamble to the consti- tytion of the Legion, which reads: “For God and country, we associate ourselves ‘together for the following purposes: ‘To uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States of America; to maintain law and order; to foster and perpetuate a 100 per cent Americanism; to preserve the memories and incidents of our association in the great war; to inculcaté a sense of individual obliga- tion to the community, state and nation; to com- bat the autocracy of both the classes and the masses; to make right the master of might; to promote peace and good-will on earth to safe- guard and transmit to posterity the principles of justice, freedom and democracy; to conse- crate and sanctify our comradeship by our de- votion to mutual helpfulness.” The country, the community, all right minded peo- ple, everywhere, approve and uphold the tenets of the Legion, and with unanimous encouragement we all hope for a realization of the ambitions of the ‘boys who are struggling this week to make the loca! post what it ought to be and what it deserves to be. The Man Who Says It “WHE Jonnx Hay tells the people of Wyoming that he will reduce their taxes, cut state ex- penses and abolish useless employments, all of which are wasting the substance of the taxpayers, it means something, because the promise comes from Jonx Hay. There is nothing idle in any statement he may make upon these subjects. He is an expert in directing business ,affairs.down to the minutest de- tail. His years of experience and. watchfulness in establishing economy: and successful operation in his own affairs and his insight into. public affairs by contact and service and his unquestioned honesty and unimpeachable character as citizen and man of public affairs are the guaranty of every promise made to the taxpayers. . A legislature that cannot and will not work with Joux Hay, as governor, in the reduction of taxes and state expenses is unfit to represent the people and will be false to its trust and faithless to the interests of its constituents. Governor Carey has had four years in which to demonstrate his interest in the peoples’ welfare. In that time contingent expense alone has grown more than a quarter of a million dollars and the tax rate has all but doubled, while inefficiency and waste is evident throughout all departments of the state gov- ernment. Superfiluous employes are crowding the spaces of the capitol and racing over the state, at the peoples’ expense, playing at politics in the in- terest of the governor’s renomination. So far as service to the people is concerned, Governor Carer has been a failure. So far as service to Rosert Carey’s personal and selfish interest is concerned his administration has been a success. In the matter of putting business principles and efficiency into effect, the opportunity is wide open. A man of the business capacity of Jonx Hay will save to the taxpayers of Wyoming at the least cal- cylation a half million dollars a year and the use- fulness of no department or necessary activity of the state will be in the slightest degree impaired. :Jonx Hay promises Jonn Har will perform. Joun Hay tells you plainly in so many English wbrds that if you do not want taxes reduced and state expenses curtailed do not vote for him. But if you do t these things accomplished jump on and ride with him and help him do it. ; Ths ie eames 6S The Governor and the Private was a story told at the American Legion | greater effectiveness in the industrial organization In American citizenship, in duty, in honor in com- mon, ordinary decency that soldier boy is today |miles above that ignoble governor,—Douglas Enter- prise. p= BS The Crop Situation {PIE GOVERNMENT'S July report on the winter | + wh crop gave an estimate of 569,000,000 bush- els, which compares with a final estimate of 587,000,- 000 bushels for 1 The’ crop suffered some shrinkage from hot weather ini maturing, which caused the July esti- mate to be below the previous ones. It has taken considerable rain in the shock, which may cause some damage to quality, and has delayed the move- nent to market. It is not moving as fast as a year ago, one reason being that the price is down to where it yields less than $1 per bushel to the farmer at country stations in the west. The spring crop in the northwestern states will |be a bumper yield per acre, and the total will be higher than last year unless damage comes in the harvest, which is now beginning. The acreage is smaller than last year, but the country should have mare wheat in the aggregate than last year. The Canadian crop promises to ‘vv the largest since the big year, 1915, so that the aggregate amount of wheat available for export from North America probably will be the largest since then. The prospect for European demand for wheat is good. The special advices of the department of. ag- riculture estimate the production of wheat in Eu- rope outside of Russia at 90,000,000 to 100,000,000 bushels less than last year, when Europe imported about 606,000,000 bushels. The report from Ger- many says that that country is consuming much less wheat than before the w apparently substi- tuting potatoes and other vegetables. Recent rains have improved the prospect for potatoes. The corn crop of the United States is in good condition, promising much better than a month ago. The yield now seems likely to go up close to the 3,000,000,000 mark, The oats crop is a poor one, but the price remains low, on account of the heavy carry-over. The hay crop is large, and the amount of dairy products in storage is large. ; Altogether the supply of foodstuffs is ample to maintain prices probably at about the present level, although the status of wheat will,depend upon the crops of the southern hemisphere which mature four or five months hence. nO No Game Without an Umpire Tt IS A condition of every game in which rivals contend that there shall be rules and authority to enforce them and decide every question that \arises. Abolish the umpire and the rules and the | game disappears. If you care for the game, support | the authority that maintains it. There is no place where the primitive impulse to rebel against authority is more often manifested| than on the ball field, but everybody agrees that the umpire must be tetained. He may be called to ac: count, and if criticism is sustained by the final au- thority he may be displaced, but while he is in authority he must be obeyed for the sake of the game. | Sympathy, as a fellow feeling, a reaction to the anxieties or sufferings of another, is a most elevat- ing emotion, but what one is impelled by his sym- pathy to do depends upon his intelligence. Presum- ably he wants to do something that will be helpful. No one is more interested in the maintenance of | i i | that of the mass of mankind and who gets his liv- jing by his labor from day to day. His fate is made} | by the general social movement. It depends upon ntion at Torrington that further illustrates |as a whole, improvement in the equipment and more | the uncouth and unfeeling character of Rograr | abundant production. The sum total of goods must Carry, both as private citizen and governor of Wyo- ming, in the real every-day attitude he bears toward jbe increased to take care of a greater population. It cannot be done without order and co-operation ASE POT GS rE IT ace Tf nominated and elected governor of Wyomlag I promise you a reduc: tion in your taxes from the encrmous amount you are now requéred fo pay under the present state administra- tion. I promise you complete reform and reduetion in the expense of con- ducting the states’ business. ‘FEMALE IMPERSONATION FEATURES VAUDEVILLE BILL LIVELY PROGRAM OFFERED AT Tt is a woman? Of couae it ie But the gentle audience is due for another shock when he removes his girlish wig. Voice, actions, and ap- pearance absolutely the women in every respect, Sinde Dale, female impersonator, furnishes by long odds the best entertainment on the bill t the America for yester- and going Y girlish “stunt” known to tho flapper, he never gives a hint of his true sex until very nearly the end of the act when he takes the wig from his head and stands reveal- ed before a wondering audience. “Nonsence De Luxe” is what Jack- son and Arnold call their act. Instil- Ung a germ of pep into a lifcless audience is their specialty, and they rply on the old lord horseplay, to bring them applause. Thier dialo- gues interspersed nom and then with one of our modern songs, are highly entertaining and earn for Entirely unsual ts the free enter- tsinment ‘which will be given at the Elks' new home auditorium at & o'clock this evening by Father Fiana- gan’s boys from the Flanagan home for boys at Omaha, Neb. “Little boy orators, little boy so- Pranos, directed from the home that feeds, clothes and educates the home- less, abandoned and wayword boy re- gardiess of creed, color or national- tt; this is the way that the treat is FATHER FLANAGAN’S BOYS TO APPEAR TONIGHT AT ELKS HOME If you want state costs cut a half million dollarg and the conasquent cut in taxes for this purpose, vote for mo. If you want to go along in the same old extravagant and inefficient way, vote for the other fellow This is my platform. It is brief. It moana business Con.ult your own in AMERICA THIS. WEEK them the word of a well accepted act Electric and Co., by use of high frequency current perform miracles With the all powerful “juice” here to- fore thought impossible. The Tesla coll, a comparatively new invention in the world of electricity, makes it Possible to pass thousands of volts of electricity through the body with little feeling, Solf, harmonious music and harsh load nonsence are the specialties of Cully and Claire, billed as “lead off” act in this weeks offerings. Banjo ukelele work should be made their sole attriction, and a real headline act could be presented. All the romance, pep, and real life that goes to make up newspaper work {8 present in the photoplay, “Dxtra! Exora!” statring Johnny Walker and Edna Murphy. The trials and tribulations of a cub reporter om a metropolitan newspaper, is clearly set before the audience in a suprisingly true ght. Benides the program given by the little fellows who are touring the country to show people just what Father Flanagan’s home kas meant to them, there will also be three reels of motion pictures. Father Flanagan's home is starting on its fourth year of service in the cause of the boys who have no other home to care for them. How success- ful it has been in accomplishing this end can be seen from the work done at the home-for these boys. Over 800 More Than Good Coffee terest and the state's interest and act in accordance with your own judg ment. You have my word. Those who know me know it is good. If you be eve in me, vote for me and we will Dull together for the benefit of Wyo: ming and Wyoming people. boys have been taken in and cared r and these are smart young men teday, who are dauntless to face the world, and determined to make ;ood. To teed, clothe and educate there toys has been'® most trying probiem ut has been gone through with sue cessfully. Says Father Flanagan, “The decrepit. and starving little body of the neg- lected waif may envelop a mind which, if given a chance, may become a beacon light of a new era in the world of men, It might be the mind of an inventor, a philosopher, a states. man or that c* a great commercial en- terpriser, a mind which by, its-produe: tion can bring about a happier, holler and more prosperous era.” Many lettera from educators and welfare workers all over the United States have been received by the home in appreciation of ita work. Ih has, furthermore, the enthusiastic backing of the Omaha chamber of commerce. Everyw! the precocious boy entertainers have gone they have carried with them an inspiration to thejr audience. But their direct end hes been to entertain, and this ts what they promiss tonight. feet tae os eet me at the Smokehouse.”* ta eee Tate ee SE | ER PAGE TWO Che Casper Datlp Cribune AUSUST 3, 1922. Cbe Cas;er Dailp Cribune use for their friendship and votes, and when p i John Hay Says ‘CANDIDATES’ NIGHT’ SCHEDULED FRIDAY BY THE REPUBLICAN CLUB Local entries in the races for offices in the primaries wil] be given a golden opportunity to tell the public of their plans if elected to office, when “Candidate Night” is conducte Fri- day evening at 8 o’clock in the district court rooms at the courthouge, under the direction of the Young Men’s Republi- ean club. In addition te the many volunteer speakers expected Marshal Reynolds of Kemmerer, candidate for Repub lean nomination to congress; Vincent Carter, of Casper, candidate for Re- publican nomination fur attorney gen- eral; Frank Lucas, o* Buffalo, Repud- Mean candidate for secretary of state, end Mrs. Katherine Morton, candidate for state superintendent of instruction, will be present to deliver the regular addresses: The meeting will be purely political, and will undoubtedly find many of the newer candidates ready to discuss thelr platforms with other candidates tor the same offices. INDIAN IGE AND COLD STORAGE NEWINDUSTRY New Company to Begin Oper- ations First of Week; Plant Has Capacity of 40 Tons Daily. Gally painted wagons soon to course dally through the streets of Casper, will not herald the coming of another “world's greatest,’ but will be advance representatives of Wyoming's largest artificial ice and cold storage plant soon to be added to Casper’s jong chain of thriving industries. Sed'net wait te vieces caer re ee eee fe oe ee Soap process of construction for several months {s at last complete and wil! begin operations the first of next week General offices are moderniy equip. ped and located at 216 Industria! ave nue. Latest machinery and modern methods will go far toward building up operating efficiency. The new plant will open with an output capacity of 40 tons of ice per day. Absorption systems ara to, be in use throughout the building, and distilled water will be uend in every cage in the ice manufacture. Follow ing the firm establishment of the tice system, work on the completion of the cold storage plant will begin, and mer chants will find ample room and the best of service in storing perishables E. E. Bruce Is president of the new company and chairman of the board of directors. Harry Free, real estat« dealer, is vice president; Leigh Thomp gon, secretary and treasurer; Har- Parsons, general manager; J. E. Spies and E. J. Garrett, other members of the board of directors. The delivery system ts at present Umited to five large wagons, with em ple facilities for enlargement, should the demand in Casper warrant it. Seal If not @ legionnaire—now ts the time. PURE ASPIRIN DISTURBS DIGESTION [ts Perfected Form Includes a Digestant and a Laxatire—tt is Known as Tingle’s Laxo Aspirin it has been ¢ fact For years known to physicians and laymen alike, that aspirin ie ful diapelier of pain. from taking ssp’ they resiised ft would instantly Fellove thelr suffering. ' | In order to perfect aspirin, painstakingly for years. At last the perfected iris tablet is offered to the public, a Qablet that relieves pain and Goesn’t burden the stomach. It te narcotic nor habit-forming tle Inxzative ase gure you thorough ecien~ 1 IGLE'S LAXO ASPIRIN T g Ask Your Druggist for the “Three scarch Dd. co, Point Box." Mherapeutic Lal “Washington, i and Your Comfort Ice is as essential to summer comfort as the very air you breathe. among the most i things of life — for your health, the welfare of children, t food and your comfort ent upon the kind of ice you get and the service you require. It’s ndispensable he safety of are depend- law and order than the common man, whose lot is! f you get quality—flavor and aroma at an actual saving of money when you buy Golden Gift Coffee. You save because it is packed in an inexpen- sive moisture-proo fdouble container which pro- tects its flavor and freshness. Ask your grocer about it. OLDEN Gi FT CoFFEL With us you can bank uncondition- hi ally upon the purity of the product and the regularity of our delivery. We will be ready to deliver all orders Monday. HAVE YOU ORDERED YOURS? Indian Ice & Cold Storage Co. Phone 1340 216 Industrial Ave,

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