Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 25, 1922, Page 6

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fougit Mr. Clark deadlocked the convention and that the bill would become a law their vot-} ac conditions shail make it necessary America Sin gin: g Republica ins Satisfied made his spectacular fight not for the purpose of pr Rage ae oe Herat call, they en servation of the home hot SS a I Hear 4 nominating himself. - sure it when become a law af-| agriculture industry” followers of Wil- wa SE EN furnishes its Moreover in the 1920 campa'gu and since then| forded their own states ‘ample protection. = [nen ant Gus ponttinee othe padnienal policy of|! Bear ‘America singing, the varied!) 7™e rescs, |? tine. indorsement Mr. Bryan has taken occasion to betlittle the league] Ir other words, the Democratic senators and the| the Demovratic party” on the tariff. rinse of mechanica., each one -sing-|, the: Republican sdmintetratics) at tions a policy. Even in the statement|D-mocratic party are by word of mouth against} The import record of 1920 made some protective ouaes Sina at aeews Sie biithe| Washington. . United States. peaatcr be has just issued he announced that’ the) the Republican tariff im order to play | legislation imperative, and on May 27 of the fol- ann gta: |Hale and all the Republican repre - of nations would not be the issue this year | polities, but by action and their vote they are| lowing year the emergency tariff bill was whe carpenter ‘singing Nis as. be, eziMtives are reelected to help evn- r in the presidential campangn in two years, be-/7or it as a matter of business and material pros-)by Mr. Harding, having been vetoed by Mr. meanures his plank or beam, |uiute a Repubiican majority 1 Con - it was u dead issue and any attempt to re-|Pperity for their communities. “ ja few months With one or two excep-|The mason singing his as he makes 24. or contifuing the work, «> well t would split the Demorratic party wide open. rd ee tions aap lie ra ag tea pence had are. for work, or leaves, 2*E vegurt. of gétting the mation back to maha Ciaie<Seraahaiech i Cis been on ‘nderwood-Simmons normal conditions. : 3 | __ Return to Protection and Prosperity _|ixw. ‘The emergency law materially restricted this |T* Poutman singing what belongs £2 "The majority given the Republican une are on, file Cheap Politics and Industry (THE SIGNING, by the president, of the protec-|class of imports, at the same time adding to the singing on- the steamboat deck, |gentes senator and connveas anc tne offices and UE 7 f ae tive tariff bill closes an era of Democratic free| Customs reverues, Coming at a time when the phe shoemaker singing as he sits on greatest posstatin «4 Seaeteee tite e z NUMBER of representatives in congress, trade which has extended over a span of nine years|farmerr were bad?y ‘hurt by Democratic deflation Dench, the hatter singing @8/anq Congressional tickets in Maine SUBSCRIPTION RATES “\ are itie members of the “all wrong” club,/and ushers in 9 period of ity the duration of | 4nd free farm products, it perfovaed its work ad- stands, in 20 years, with the exception of By Carrier cies should be able to keep themselves on the pabiss which will depend | on the continuance of|™Mirably as a stop-gap measure. «| + The wood-cutters’ song, the Dp'OW-|the landslide in 1920. Even after one ‘Fear Bes oe pas cet sor ieee twenty yess see ee control of the government by the lican| The Democratic theory tha: icons eek bi haps ye wigs the morn. |making all allowances for the natural M —_ 5 figures jus " ished YY. * would mean increased reven' federas moon. ‘ermission increase in the total vote due t . 14 Standard Oil company, that demon of industrial | "A cursory review of the effects of the Underwond:| treasury was exploded. From 1914 to 1922, incin. sundown, iS: | entaatiuemmehtattobaes abies me hi 3 ° organizations, is no longer the octopus that injsimmons*iaw, just repealed is pertinent on this|Sive, we imported €27,000,000,000 worth of foreign|™™* “elcious singing of the gga he are exceptional. The Repub- : By Mail sr10 Ja¥* past conspired to develop the greatest oil in-| occasion, keeping in mind that the evil workings| Products on which we realized $2,296,000,000 in bod 7 hoe eS ee. bo = eerie very county in Maine. : : 390 dustry in the world. of the law were susper ‘by world war conditions, |Custorms revenues. Of this total $92,000,000 was ing. which the Democrats had nppeee 1.95 rv twenty Years many of our most successful) beginning ten months after its enactment and per-| Collected during the July 1 to October 3,|/Each singing what belongs to him or | winning, the Republican candidate has than /politicians Maye used the oil industry as the vil-| sisting down to 1921. 1913, when the oj sae law was in effect, and her and to none else, by a majority of between Sn the in our industrial life. The politicians have} Phe Underwood-Simmons law took effect Octo | about $20,000,000 Republican rates on wool|The day what belongs to the day— 2.000 and 4,000, accerding to returns subscri> the heroes who have rushed in to save the/per 4, 1913. In the words of Mr. Underwood on the/"nd sugar carried over into the following year. at night the party. ef young fel-iat hand. people from robbery of everything but their chil- final passage of the bill, there was “not a line while the revenues derived from the cy tar- een ein oe ee incl ‘The result shows that Maine elec- ae ot Cerciatin TAG) [aren Bs the great corporations controlling the ofl] o¢ protection in it.” The theory of the measure|ifi law during 1921-22 should not be credited to the pe ce bh ace ng basi) ey Reo Lh aE ayp ra _ Member St Anat Beteen of Coe business. i was that increased imports would result in lower|Democratic law. Probably about $2,000,000,000) WALT WHITMAN. |tic affairs. It Se teainteae tear tahe ~ Associated Press. Ringing the changes on this procedure has un- prices, larger revenues from customs, and expand. | Would cover the revenues of the Democratic law y et Your Tribune. wen 6:39 and § o'clock p.m A paper will be de jake it your ¢uty to 3 you if You Du: any time your — independent companies controlled 66 per cent of the| cratic law took effect, the monthly balance turned |Per cent more revenue than did the Democratic law.| mentary school pupils. pe Beta, The veers: aFS Bere iy output of the United’States and Mexico. As to pro- MaReibE wk: pha Stine natant ‘us down to| All figures used here are taken from the official) The Pledge, open ‘to all ts as soul 28F6 that the accomplishments of I The Casper Tribune’s Potten | nplete and scientific zuning 5 ap school recreation yois for the chil oute boule. sioner, to ‘ona county and more highways for freight rates and shippers of the frequent train Rocky service for Ca The Senatorial “Pair” THAT IS this “pair ” stuff we are hearing so much about at this particuler time, in con- nection wit from the sen chamber when the vote on the ad- 4) other pro doubtedly secured more millions of votes than any ess im recent years. And now what has he poor old Standard Oil instead of > per cent of gasoline as in 1913, con- 4 per cent of the refinery business in es and Mexico. In 1916 it controlled er cent while on January 1, 1922, so-call happened producing trols only jthe United jbut 6¢ duction of crude oil the Standard Oil group of ompanies at the present time are producing an jaggregate of but about 20 per cent of the United States’ production. | If Senator LaFollette in his sensationa: accusa- |tions against the oil industry can intimidate Amer- jican capital and prevent the normal expansion of |this industry he may succeed in perpetuating him- | self in public office but the people will pay a ter- rific price in the long run through the interruption jof the normal expansion and flow of a product! which is indispensable to our present daily life. Voting cn Dead Issue H1O PEOPLE pull seme funny stunts. Here we find them voting merrily upon a state con- |stitutional amendment in November purporting to |legalize the manufacture and sale of beer and wine. |It may have happencc and we may have overlooked |the occurrence; but wh-n did Ohio withdraw from the Union? The associated brewers was a fairly strong or- h Senator Kendrick and his uabsence|£@Dization in the old days, wut it was understood} |that it had gone out of business several years ago. Che Casper Daily Cridune ing exports—the more we bought from others, the|during the nine years cited. During more they would buy from us. At this time we were lately preceding 1914, five of which were un-| enjoying a normal foreign trade which in the de-|der the Dingley law and four under the Payne- cade 19041918 aggregated nearly $14,000,000,000 dna Alice law, we imported $13,000,000,000 worth of imports and almost $19,000,000,000 in exports, or a/ foreign goods, whi netted the federal treasury favorable balance of trade averaging about $500,-| $2,760,000.000. Therefore, less than one-half the 000,000 annually. Six months after the \emo-|imports under Republican tariff laws yielded 38 September, 1914, when war orders from Europe be-|tcords. gan to turn the scale the other way. The advtrse It would be unfair to make use of the prices balance in August, 1914, wes $19,400,000. At the) Which have prevailed from 1915 down to the present outbreak of the war in Europe nearly 4,590,000|time in arguing against the Diamocratic contention Americans were out of employment because of in-| that increased imports result in decreased living dustrial depression, and in the big centers of pop-|¢ost. The war and the raised wage level have ulation the only wheels which revolved regularly | smothered that issue. Compared with 1913 the in- were those of the soup-cart. dex numbers of wholesale prices for 1914 on clothes The war gave an impetus to American industry, | fuel, metals, lumber, chemicals, hoase furnishings agricultural and manufacturing, the like of which|and miscellaneous commodities record no appreci- has never before been experienced, and the yessels|able change, while the prices of farm products this blood-and-iron commerce, and Secretary field of the department of commerce declared that|have the importers absorbed the while the remainder should be credited to Demo-|they have in a very great number of instances cratic policies. Following the war, Euro} her warehouses swept clear of raw materi H her cities, farms and industries denuded of sup-, plies needed for rehibilitating purposes. So the responsible for increased wages could not possibly demands for Americen products continued, Fron|be sound. We cannot increase wages by increas- 1915 to 1921, inclusive. we exported $42,000,000,000 ing imports. That the American federation of Ta- worth of goods from this country, or at the rate of bor is fully cognizant of the benefits of protection als, and 150 to 2,300 per cent on the is they imported. lows: “Realizing my responsibility as i.‘ American citizen to secure the safety wi crane 2 heleeee ong. °" *P®ihave no notion of stopping all work “Realizing that the accident the death toll of my nation, state and! city can best be reduced by thought-| fulness and carefulness. “I pledge mysel to be considerate of the rights of others streets and highways; to learn and) observe traffic rules and regulation: of the allied powers were loaded to the plimsoll|and foods, which were placed on the free lst, show jto the best of my ability: to cooper: marks with food and munitions of war to support|an increase of 3 points each. The expose of im-jate in a campaign of carefulne: |the cause. Democratic politicians made capital of| porters’ profits recently made by the senate com-|elther Red-|cittee on finance shows decisively that not only}of @ vehicle, and: TI wi'l, by precept) duties saved to and example. endeavor to assist oth-| what is but 5 per cent of it was attributable to the war,| them by the Democratic law in their profits, but|{%o tating streste and hishwaya The highway education board con- found / mulcted the buying public of profits ranging from| ducts each year a safety program which includes the “Safety Benson," | UoRoe by the majorities they rolled September 10 to December 18, UP, fF The contention. that Democratic policies were | trom national among elementary school pupis, the national safety lesson contest among| elementary schoo! teachers and. the! observance of “Seven davs for aafe- Highway Safety The American Automobile tion is vigorously behind the federal highway Program and the essay contest of ele SS PS SR SME a a ET ae Republican party is the right party to clean up this mess and Is satis- fied with the progress which is being made, The appeal of the Democrat! |that It be given control of ¢ \Congress and aasocia- education board in safe’ Possible the Republican executive. of reconstruction and losing sad/any all the good thus far while on the’ “Maine gives an overwhelmi & Pedestrian or as a driver! enacted an enormous amount structive and helpful lation, no class legislation. safety esmay contest fam!Mar with that record, thereby deadlock the government meets with no approval jthe past 16 months have been made because of co-operation be- jtween the Republican Congress and plished by he'ping elect a Congress jhostile to the administration, which would result in a paralysis of public jaffairs for at least two years. of confider~e to the present congress: Sress. Its voters take no stock jn the false charge that this is a ‘do- nothing Congress.’ They know !t has legislation, equally important they know jit Ras enacted no destructive legis- le party he nezt Thev practic- accom- ing vote of s0n- All this is & matter of record. Maine Repub- United States Senator Hale and for. their congressional candi- Gates, showed that they are perfectly The Noveinber elections will dis- 4 close the fact that the results in e . ; ; f % 4 verride| Has it come back right under the shadow of th 000,000,000 lly. Of this vast t value 62/i8 amply testified to by the resolution adopted by | 4,» | Maine are a fair indication of senti- 3 bill a taken to override ie a of e | $6,000, annually. this vast export value . i) ) tr.” which this yer will be from ee cescinant see aie |bome office of the American ani: Ssloon league,| per cent went to Europe, and since European mills | fhat body in Buffalo in 1917: October 8 to Octoher 14 Inclusive, mre A aanmoueneut the, countrs.—John hat is a “pair” anyhow? ipnd put this over on the usually levgl headed Buck-| and farms were in no position to keep up their for-| “Resolved, That this convention go on record in| ‘The essay contest last year drew)” i ribirnres te «Aeron aa Jt is an agreement between two senators, o1/? favorable to and the other opposed to, the propy- hee Have Ohioans forgotien the subjoined paragraph j taken from a certain document that ought to be eign trade..we were requisitioned by north and favor of a policy of industrial preparedness and South America, Asia and Africa to mect their re-| the enactment of laws by congress that will ado- ‘quately. protect all _wage-earners of our country responses from thousands of school children ui over the conntry and this particination by’ schoot children, ot A September Love ° siti o be ¥ lou Tt means that neither “T quirements. rete b* is cenatar ta sutclen el crested in the proposal | familiar enough to them : The calendar year 1920 found our foreign compet-|against loss of employment Sheen an. avenns Poth futre ned Greene: tet fo any, | The Aogwood needs no touch of frost to be present when the roll i 1 ; “This constitution ¢ the laws of the United|itors securing a strong position in our domestic! of the products of any other nation. re ducted in'the United States today, as| 72 make its leaves blush rosy red. and vote his sentiments. HH States v shall be made in pursuance thereof;|market, evidenced by $5.278,000,000 worth of-im-| In short, the Democratic tariff law failed 1] ¥ gqucates ‘the future citizens of the! known in parliaments all sitfes mace, or which shall be made, un-| ports, 34 per cent of which were foodstuffs com-, every particular, so far as domestic interests were} country In. safety mefiods. gfe io ae. ete cinta sacs It means in this particul » that Sena- J rarity of the United States, shall be! peting with our farm products. The Republican | ccncer'¢? It did not lower prices. It did not} ‘The subject for the ‘safety essay Shane = rush’ to its Kendricl fter all his } stations to ex-sery-|the supreme luw of the lind; and the judges in!platform, written in 1920, recited: increase revenves. It had no part in expanding ex-|contest this year will be. “My share Spe pgp acter hae! oops : i every state slinll be bound the: thing i “ i a condition of ‘int rts, It did create depression and: cause suffer-|in making the “highway: sate,” the ice men, was willing to abandon any influence he | C¥@Ty stite site pountl thereby, anything im the The uncertain and unsettle condition of inter-| ports. Sesaalicen tastet Iie ie protection jessy tot ¢6 500 words. - ‘The | 70, axe the leaves that tell-tale hue might possess or effort lhe might put forth in be-| constitu hes of state to the contrary|nations! balances, the abnormal economic and)jing. The new Republican tar’ jaw is pi . exceed dp Baa eet Abate swhlts oued half of the men who relied upon him and leave their interests to such fate as might overtake them, That seems to have been, without question, the stewardship of Senator Kendrick. His own per- sonal interests were above the interests, not only of his constituents in general, but of ex-service men in particular. If the senator can reconcile his previous atti tude with his absence at the crucial hour, then let him. For there are those who would hear his just- |notwithstanding.” For their information, it is from the revered constitution of the United States of America and applies as much to Ohio as to the other forty- seven states of the union. Some very respectable people on the outside are wondering wher the joke is. : TESTE Made It Local Issue F THE DEMOCRATIC senators had not been ‘not ‘perfection. Tt has been passed in the face of| lof forecasting accurately even the near future, pre- the most desperate opposition on the part of im- clade the formation of ‘a definite program to meet | porters ever known. It places the country on safe conditions a year hence. But the Republican party| ground. It is the handmaiden of prosperity and reaffirms its belief in the protective principle and the twain are now one, the nuptials having been pledges itself to a revision of the tariff as soon scaled by the signature of the president. phe first definite. order for ‘new|the armistice was signed. ‘The only | Mr. Baker and History hae ‘was not p'aced until June 1,'guns of those types produced at hume 4” lseven weeks titer we entered the/thvs far received in France are 109 .\war. The comrainitur of one canton three-inch guns. ae Ris ee poisice a arcades 98 reported In December that his) In uviation we were in the same trade situation of the world, and the impossibility contest is open to pupita of the 5th, 6th, Tth and 3th grades. fourteen years old and 3 Must be submitted not tater. than December 4, ° the practical lesson teaching: safet on the bishway, not to exceed 3,000 words is onen to all elementary school teachers and this contest, Ifke that for the students, closes on December are offered in both contests, ——— under. The And only faintly hinted at ‘The contest embracing| 2% farer pink’ variety. nd 80 wile yet the dragon ~Are aviating sunny: air. flies | And bees find blossoms full of sweets, And thistle birds flit here and there, |The dogwood in its happiness, Handsome national and tate prizes) Tt Secret has’ to show to all. Of all the trees to fall in love aN ifieation. certain that the Republicans had sufficient ma- te short of machine gun |situation, and here again the French It.{s the first to 1 the Fall! jority * fro: certain statements made forces were | Falr View Addition is stghtly. ~ rst to love the t oO — |jority to pass the McCumber-Fordney protective |{h* fy sas Sariok af rag Encyelo- 100 per cent; of rifles, 59 ncosteyes Dim ) Addrssepe i oe to eae “yay We 921-4 BLANCHE F WADE. Look for the Authority tai fs would they hays Aupoectte pedia Britannica in criticism of his threeinch’ guns, $8 per cent, tained from the French the neces:| ea Fie Br OAL Bra PROMINENT periodical has lately remarked that “lawful authority has been too much en- gaged in attempting to do things outside its juris- diction to do vigorously the things within its jur- isdiction.” It could well have added that if of- ficialdom will but hunt x RPDS Fh : ‘ A . r rh ; this partisan manner, ma. lines August 7 .As ‘to tanks, wi things that ought to be done, the authority can|nounces the McCumber-Fordney® bill as “a piece [For this arm congress appropriated | ug: we Leanne be eeead: lof iniquitous legislation,” yet voted 11 times to! that the record be kept straight. For) +) 00 05° yn October, 1917, Baker, were ulso compelled to rely upon the There is a case that illustrates the point. Some months ago the Lincoln Memorial was dedicated at Washington and while President Harding was de livering an address an aviator flew over the audi- ence so low as to drown the president’s voice and seare the people so their attention was diverted. The local police officials complained that they were powerless as congress had not enacted a law regulating aviation. As a matter of fact, they could have punished the man for disturbing a public meeting. And so with practically all of the ordinary evils, such as interferring with pedestrians on public streets, trespass on private property, public ‘ui- sances of divers and sundry kinds, acts that tend to provoke violence or disorder or breach of the peace, carrying concealed weapons, the use of vile and opprobrious language. } All that is needed is a body of public officials actuated by a real desire to protect the law-ahid- ing from the outlaw for authority to do the} The question is suggested by a study of the roll call votes on the bill during its progress through the senate. It reveais that even Democratic sena- tors, with the exception of Owen, of Oklahoma, vot- ed for protective tariff on articles and products ox their respective states. There is Heflin, of Alabama, who vigorously de- jstand by the rates of that bill as reported from the |senate finance committee. Caraway, of. Arkansis, is another vociferous critic of the bill, yet he voted seven times -to sustain rates reported by the sen- ate finance committee, as did his colleague Sena- |tor Robinson. Senator Simmons, of North Carolina, ranking | member of the senate finance committee and floor jleader of the opoosition to the bill, who has spent ja large portion of his time every day for months in denunciation of the bill, lined up in favor of it whenever interests of his state needed protection. He yoted to sustain the rates of the senate finance jcommitte on eight different occasions. | Senator Walsh, of Massachusetts, whose indig- nation against the bill almost overwhelms him, jequaled Senator Simmons in supporting the rates | which would benefit interests in his state. Walsh \of Montana, voted to sustain the rates reported by the senate finance committee nine times. Under- | wood, of Alabama, voted nine times to sustain the ; 78 per cent; of ar-jsary planes for the training of our Ne fantry equipment, administration the Philadelphia North a take ose, int peceon aalt thay ke vos pein m3} ‘tilery ammunition, ee ae, Trimune and isa Fair View Addition ts high except 9-214t cabled from!a total of 2676 pursuit. voservation and bombing planes, Tho first air- planes received from home arrived in May, 1918. The \tirst American squadron completely quipped by Ame=ican production crossed the Ger- ‘American has said: above reproach, and he has many lb dpehis a qualities which are wholly admirable, | Dies of wintes etiapat gee | But since. the issue of his administra-|° oes tion as secretary of war is revived in! it is necessary © ‘The aircraft’ scandal made « long hapter in the discreditable record. Seeeatttte program were “in process »f; Such was, in part, the concrete rec- ese ars tea and \tnat. the forces »vlord of Mr. Baker, whose friends are France would be “amply equipped.” |resentful because the Encyclopacdia Yet in April, 1918, one year after we|Britannica records the fact that he Fee e |enterea ie war. a senate comrities|was conderanél for “hls fallute to “Mr, Baker was appointed in Feb-|souna after inquiry that the manu-|prepare adeqcately.” THey complain, ruary, 1916, succeeding Lindley M-! ‘ature of combat planes had been “'a|too, because his career is summar- Garrison, dropped by President Wil-| Juistantial failure"; the total-output/ized in 200 words. We must admit son because -he stood for nstions!'ro4 heen fifteen machines, of which|that that seems a meager allowance: preparedness. Baker. was selected| 0.4 nag heen sent to France.. At that it permitted no proper account of an because as @ pacifist and an avowed] sine not a sing'e American fighting administration which thru unprepar- opponent of preparedness he fitted’ iiane was at tho battlefront. Norjedness at the beginning and incom- into the approaching campaign to Fe-| a there one in July, during the ter-|petence to the end. prolonged the war elect the president on the platform) riyie ordeal of tke American troops: and was responsible for the’deaths of of “keeping the country out of war.”’| nts fact was officially recorded by|thousands of Americans and the And he was so faithful to the task cnaries E. Hughes, eppointed dy) waste of billions of treasure. Furth- committed to him that fourteen | president Wilson to investigate the ermore. the process of editorial com- months later, when the country was| scandal, : |preasion. left sno. teow for an auto: forced to iake up arms in a strugsle| «wre Baker failure in the matter of biographicai note, without which no long known to be inevitable, not one ordnance. was not’ less pitiable, con-|sketch of Mr. Baker could be con- preliminary move had been made to gress appropriated tor this purpose sidered worthy of the subject. In the fit {t for self-defense. $4,887,000,000; yet mo American big|war department's Official Bulletin of “Bakerism’s record of neglect and’ guns ever reached the battlefront, and June 7, 1917, he acknowledged that in vehemence on the part. of pleaders, whether they ‘speak as his official associates or.as his personal! Te telephone system must keep ahead of the needs of its com- munity. That costs money. The expenditures for expansion, how- ever, do not come from earnings, but from new money which is constantly being invested in the securities of the company. A reasonabie dividend must be a see fiance committee's rates. ‘Trammell, of Florida,| delay, of vaciliatlon and incompe- foniy, a thirty-day supply of small creating the mation’s defenses there paid on this investment exac‘ly the yoted with the Republicans 10 times; Sheppard, of|tence, of endless confusion and pre-|shelis, chiefly shrapnel. Some five: been ““ culty, disorder and Source of No Joy Taxa woted with. them, 49; idmaaa ead soca loti postercas Inefficiency, is too vollm-\and wixinch eecon&hand guns were|contuslon.” and added thls complzc- same as reasonable wages must be a ; Se Jaroli i" " inous for more tl a outline in} sent over—without amm e ch. ua a happy con- . : ME. BRYAN'S announcement that he is going tol Bone Csralins, Sed eke mes vis, ene ts ints blacs ettsnmnecof the outstanding |vee: come. teninoh: une delivered| fusion.“ delight in the fact “that paid to employees. If earnings are wT activels age in the cpmpaign now under rsa fs , acte. The shameful conditions ‘ere | Yehind the. lines lacked mounts and/when we entered this war we were way is received with enthusia «in but few Demo. eratic circles. There is acidulous comment in most quarters. For instance, the friends of Mr. Cox. late Democratic candidate for president, do not ;Seveu times to sustain the “iniquitous rates” of the | McCumber-Pordney bill. | Ashurst, of Arizona, voted to sustain 22 of the rates reported by the senate finance committee. Jones of New Mexico yoted to sustain 18 rates. Sen- conceated during the early period of|shell=;. tt 2° single high-explosive not, like our adversary, ready for it. ‘America’s participation in the war. by|shell above three-inch caliber reached anxious for {t, prepared for ft and an elaborate system of censorship andj Franen before the fighting ended; not inviting it.” % official propagandy, but revelations an American gun of six-inch “Far from éxhibiting partisan ran- began with congressional committee! or over went Into action. ‘The Ger-|cor, the encyclopaedia's biographes | - too low there will be no dividends and therefore no new investments and no extensions and no important e e. They will recall) that after Mr. Bry: } F t k: Z parame age ee way at Ban enc es fave) 2OF Reed,of Missouri, was away from the senate inaulsiee, Arms egal ote Lede piu ee ans: pete saw an aeereen a mene 19 pave ixeatet Mr. Baker with betterments. : 2 8 way at Se a : : , - piled pei ly thereafter. Let ¢ Am tank corps was Raat reserve. out a yery caustic interview at the close of the| during the discussion of the tariff until after the) Pit" Del OOS Scuation as it was dis-|organired until March, 1918, and not ed |Democratic primaries in Missouri, held on .Au- t reached the battlefront. | past 1.) He then rushed back to! Washington in tae ames ‘And at the ctose of the war thr{ conyention, in which he deplored the low estate to which the party had fallen, predicted its defeat Remember that a company which closed after, the country had been at Why buy lots in the country? — \ war for three-fourths of a year. Ea ene und then to make good his prediction as far as to get in at the tail end of the roll call and voted!" “cy to the very. days of the declar-| record was speeaph ater’. Corroborsses | All rich men bought a lot. | You is not prosperous cannot render good possible xetived to his summer home) in, Florida jto sustain tho senate finance committee on one rate.) ation not a contract had been madejby no less competent os Thee can buy a lot. 9-21.41 service nor extend its system to meet he 1 th ined. ‘ailent thecamicnt oe ae Senator Broussard of Louisiana; Senator Rans-/for a singie cannon or rifle or cart-/General Pershing hims Se eas p So : x : / and there remained silent throughout the cam-| dey] of Louisiana, and Senator Kendrick of Wyo-|ridge or uniform. Nine months Jater,|liminary report, dated -Xov -29,” bo you know that at a recent con the demands of growing commu- paign. jming, voted with’ the Republicans on practically |is mildwinter, there was a shortage in 1018, wore these passages: 9. ,|ventlon in St. Louls, over titty Sper The friends of the late Champ Clark also failed to throw up their hats at Mr. Bryan’s announce- nine military camps of 20,000 over-) sent companies ise cuexiliavion siscessary [Bee Uaitel Hanae Builders noeiie. fe and 47,000 woolen blouses, and with few of the ai neceass reorulte were drilling in summer un. | for {ts conduct in the modern sense.|tlon. “multe 206, Beckilnger derwear, using wooden rifles and) Among, our most | tmportant defic- 5 dummy machine guns. There ‘vere fencles mat were artillery, | cc gaa Bes camp hospitals, crowded with soldier aviation and tanks. In order to meet Girls buy a lot. 9-1-4t patiens, which lacked heat, water sup-| our requirements as rapidly as posel p'y and plumbing. Pershing’s expe-jble, we accepted the offer of the, dition landed in France without a French government to provide us piece ‘of arlillery. heavy or jevery schedule and yoted for the passage of the . 5 s 7 ce-/bill itself. Senators Kendrick of Wyoming; Jones, ment of his renewed activity in Democratic polit-|o¢ New Mexico and Ashurst of Arizona, are all ical councils. The events of the Baltimore con-|candidates for re-election, and each of them are vention of 1912 are not so far remote that the Clark |asking for support of the people of their states supporters haye forgotten what Bryan did at that upon the gronnd that they supported the Republi- convention. can McCumber-Fordhey protective tariff. Nor are the Wison adherents notic enthus-|" Tf the iariff is as iniquitous a8,the, Democrats iastie oyer Mr. Bryan's injectioy elf into| would have people believe, why did 35 out of 36 nities. Ge Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co. nt for thirty divisions. * * * | this campaign. While Mr. Wilson was the nominee | seeutio Unitedssinten sap 5 every machine gun and cannon his ; : i, A apa 4 i seals ae e nominee Democratic United State: senators vote at Various | oops had.was supplied, by the Allies.) A'though we soon began the manu-) on East Fifteenth sireet, Go) EI ree ec try Decanee «OF Bryan's jtimes to sustain the rates in this bill? The answer| i107?" commander-in-chief bough? facture of theme classes of suns at/ogt South McKinley Street. yhi aganst Clark, much inside history of th ee is iden They vo! afford ti in- (22 a Set land. hony were gun a it fight Beanet Clark. much inside histor that con-jis evident. Th ted to afford protection 10 in-|290,090 uniforms for them in England home, there were no pins of the el: phe Dobbin Realty Co. yention ba en written and sade. public since terests of their own states whenever those interests’ hee be coumcnot get enough from iberk, mentioned: manufacty , tie and it is now so well known that the date ' Ground Floor, Tribune Bldg. America, on our front at My. Bryar were involved. They did thie because they knew’ home

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