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ot a ea a RR ta ee RL NE SNE TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1922. United States has never admitted the principie that each participant in the Che Casper waily Cribune Do the People Rule? | Riches PAXE SIX Ebe Caspe ember of the league of nations would be to; n the Near East, which has always} Lessons In Grammar A Tourist’s Thrill t Daily Cribune ase ‘ Sunday fone prpwanve Pars = - } Y tribute to the vict 4 n Offices, ¥ been the plague spot of Europe. It was suggested — cS war should contribu ory y. ¥ Publication Offices : ‘ i In his analyats of the «He | Thes# days ‘tle quite what it was able, but even if that - she be given a mandate over the Armenians and| Reduction of tax revemue of the! They cost eo little, but they count so sentence, “He | “'S ¥ ° : USINESS TELEPHONES over the Holy Land. Had this been done the Uni 24 Bites of Utah by réason of the fact much, ts ft those opinionated vernasaaed contented: sicausd: he: Granger Was Hee who fs determined to have his own |!" motor. cars sake cf argumeat, a fair considera. would now be directly involved in thé Turk-|tbat property owners allowed their 8 The fleeting kindnesses along life’ 5 ta J } - ‘a ‘3 way,’ Ressiter Jonn: Frore coast to coast. tion of al! its elements would lecve on asp ish . at great expense of men and money, while | Preperty to be sold, rather than pay ways . the subject of the coh ator te suet the amount due the United States [ z Europe would be sitting back prepared to take ad- | {isi 1921 taxes, amounted to $gz9,-| 4 loan to one) who's! known's better tive plural, the verb} While picking up from ‘the ailies ot = figure not, far : HE ASSOCIATED PRESS vantage of anything that might come out of the} ).. ing to a tabulation pre- sbould be “are” instead of “is.” Has| N° end of dust, from where it stands today. The RTON President and Editor Settlement. Advertising Representatives. chicago. \, recent meeting of the council of the league of na- & Prudde:. 1:20.23 Siege "Grobe Bldg. tions it was announced the league had: received en-| su sg. 56 New Mnt-\onraging reports of reduction of armaments in , an } . pies of the Del| various countri A ng to this statement. 1 : erect bes ome in reported @ 55 per cent reductioy. im Fis ike = ge, France cent, Japan 59 SUBSCRIPTION RATES aly 49 per cent By Caeeier, $180| For the league of nations to claim any credit for oe Been :'339/ this showing is most presumptions. All of this % Months 1.83 | reduction of naval armament is due solely and di m t “** "Og reetly to the Washington conference for the limita- . ve. tion of armaments. The reductions made have hess $7.80 been made in accoré e with the treaties conclud- - $99 ed at that conference. The only progress toward . 195 Neace and the reduction of armaments which the ption by s a for lesm period than | Tene of nations has to report to the world is that} tates acting inde ons. a the/ brought about by the United subseriP | pendently of the league of nat pecans! __ ot should be further emphasized that had the ‘Member of ulation (A. B. C.) nited States been a member of the league of na ae aa eleeas ieee she could not have called the Washington ference and could not have proposed the dis ey 4 4}/armament program which she did propose and heroin ree because it would have been a viola : n't Get Your Tribune. tion of the league of nations coyenant to have done 6:30 and § o'clock p. M SO. ‘0 A paper will be de og fs ke it y Why The Excitement now that the tariff bill has 7 senate and has been signed the voters were sure would be th assed the house and y the president as final result when | 7 : they elected the present Repul » administration The Casper Tribune s Program by majority of seven million—the Democrats zs act as though some terrible, unforseen calamity j ai m for the |jhad occurred and are raising a horrible cry of | alarm. Why the sudden eac . been a fundamer .=" Protective tariff has i ty. We have made iple of the Republican st of it. Furthermore, it is no new nor un tried thing. Under a Republican protective tariff, the country has spent most of the past ty-two years; and has thrived and grown from a puny nz tion to the richest in the world. This continuous prosperity has been interrupted only three times. These three times were when the Democratic party lowered the tariff fences and let foreign-made goods flood our markets and drive What Women W out American-made goods. The results of such a policy is always to bring on a panic of more or HERE IS a lot of wise talk about what women | Jess severity. want in politics, as though they want any-} The business soundness of the tariff principle is thing different there from what they want any-|now recognized abroad, where it is called “the where else. Women are not so distinct or selfish as| American pla Every important country in the to ask peculiar favors for their own sex, although|world today has passed a tariff of its own. they do want sex equal and justic: Almost immediately after the war, foreign goods Women want, in the main, just what men want;|began to be shipped to this country in such quan- /ant a reasonable living, home, safety, order and sta-|tities that there was no market for American bility, justice, a chance to develop and to give op-|goods. This*brought on a financial depression. portunities to children, freedom, a nation strong|The Repubi cougress passed the emergency and honored and independent. | tariff s began at once to pick up and In order to have all this women know there must|'s growing better all the ‘ime. be a party of wise statesmanship at the helm of| The value of the tariff principle has been proved the ship of state. To bring about the above bless-| beyond a doubt. We are not going to be fooled ings women want business sense and business ad-| this tiime when its enemiies cry “Wolf, wolf!” ministration in the government. — “Women want protection for American products and American industries that business may pros- per and that we may have money enough in cireu- lation on this side of the water to keep our homes comfortable. Women do not want to encourage Americans to spend their money for foreign pro-| t ducts. ! History of Zoning YLEVELAND is the. latest of the cities to fall in line and adopt a zoning plan,” says a writer in World’s Work. “This new idea of municipal growth had it origin WW. ant economr in government business,/i% Boston in 1911. In that year the enterprising Fen aM Lilie A chonee builded upon the | Bostonians awoke to the haphazard way that their sp an he is sah Lt city, like most American cities, was growing and sands” or a home resting on uncertain business = jthe unrestricted 1 which builders and real estate speculators enjoyed. They, therefore, passed an ordinance which limited the height of all build- ings to 125 feet and in other ways curtailed the en- thusiasm of contractors. Los Angeles soon followed | with a more comprehensive scheme; this divided support is a woman's idea of misery, Women want that Republican soundness and confidence in which atmosphere business prosperity is built. Women want our government free to go ahead} independently. to mind its own business without having te be drafted into police service in every Europeon guarrel. the city into districts, each district being Women that settlement of differences|Placed aside for particular use—that is, one was around the conference table instead of on the bat-|to be used for residences, another for apartment tlefield, + w xsured by the limitation of|houses, another for office buildings, another for Ee aennce. factories and the like. New York City adopted an In genera] and in detail, women want just what/€ven more drastic zoning plan in 1916. In that nen want—godd roads and a full dinner-pail. The|¥ear it became apparent that Fifth avenue, which ian ix a pretty good pal with the|is unquestionably the most beantiful (shopping nd their wishes will not be found|Street in the world, was about to be extinguished. |The clothing manufacturers who had started build- 2 o jing large clothing factories in the lower sections ‘of the avenue were rapidly encroaching north. They Repeated V indication Jad already reached Thirty-second street and the Z 2 time was not far distant when this industry would FUSAL of the United Siates to ratify the| preempt the avenue as far as tral Park, com- gue of nations with its covenants is once] pletely destroying its beauty and its usefulness as more being vindicated by events in Europe. By ler dquarters of the highest class trade. New refusal the United States was kept out of the lea rk, therefore, passed Jaws whigh prohibited the Her membership therein would have bound|use of Fifth avenue above Thirty-second street for reyocably to partic e in all European} factories and set aside other large areas west of matters: to have helped maintain the boundaries snd divisions of territory as fixed by the treaty of Versailles. Europe is again on the verge involving practically all the lied against Germany during th is made immine: Sixth avenue for that purpose. About sixty cities in the United States have now followed the ex- ample of these communities and are working on a zoning system. The question of course has had to run the gauntlet of the courts, for there seemed to ye some doubt as to the legality ‘of setting aside ot general war that were al-! World War. Thi new war t by the war which has|certain territories to be used for cértain purposes. been going on between Greece and Turkey over} The good old doctrine that a man can do as he likes and territory h were fixed under} with his own, utterly regardless of his neighbors, of Vi lles. had controlled the development ot ies as well as war between the nee of the Treaty of natic » two nations is in itself in]many other thin, in American life. The legal of Versailles and the league| point, however, has been passed upon definitely by The fact that it has been going on is/the United States supreme court, which has de- conclusive proof of the futi and impotency of|cided that a ¢ has the right toycontrol its own the league of nations, whose sole excuse for exis-| growth. . tence is its pretended ability to maintain peace in! As illustrating the development of the social sense Europe, primarily, and throughout the world as a/and the progress of the highest civilization these secondary consideration. zoning systems are emphatically to the point. At no time since the creation of the league of na-| most intelligent. American no longer believes’ that tions has there been peace in Europe although none|the salvation of the country lies on an unrestrain- of the wars that have been going on since the lea-|ed democracy, and more and more the wholesome gue was created has approached the magnitude of|idea is gaining ground that the interest of the the war between Turkey and Greece. s|whole population rather than the “rights” of indi- a signatory power to the treaty of Versailles and| viduals is the consideration that should, govern the league of nations, and as such was entitled to! public poli have all of her rights and territory as fixed by thatjis now completely recognized. The story of our treaty guaranteed and protected by the other mem-' boards of health is a story of constant interference bers of the Jeague. This has not been done, either! with the daily lives of individuals; the reason for because the league of nations is unwilling to live, this, of course, is that there is nothing so demo- up to its pretentions or because it is unable to do/ cratic as the microbe and nothing which a man so so. Either situation is condemnation of the league; shares with his contemporaries as disease. It is und its pretentions. |to be hoped that in the future, beauty as well as If the United States were now a member of the) usefulness will assert the same clai n legisla- league of nations, there is not the least doubt but|tures. The fact that more than sixty cities in the that she would long since have been called upon to| United States have decided that they will control engage actively in this enbroglio, probably in the] the erection of buildings, all in the interest of pro- form of sending rmy in the disputed territory |moting the aesthetic rights of the people, is per- Greece w to police it and act as a buffer between the warring! haps the most conspicuous proof that this new con powers. ception is making heady The recent action Tn fact. it at the laris con- New York in prohibiting the erection of billboar ference it the United State in rtain parts of the city is another evide: be made responsible for Turkey, and that her pary the same elevating tendency. The} [pared in the office of Mark | state auditor. In this connection it is interesting to note that at} 1m aontina a leading state paper | S¥eet courtesy; says, “The graduated income tax, Which is one of the schemes proposed |for adding to the burden of taxation [in thi, state (Montana), is also up for j<isporal of the voters in Already sether with other laws penalizing eap- jital in Oregon has driven outsiders away and if the income tax carries, Oregon will be set back another’ ten or twenty yea: Yet here in. Mon. tana we are starting in to go the [Same disastrous route.” John 8. Chambers, former con- troller of the state of California sa: “The principr) cause of the treme: dous increase in the cost of the state govetnment is due to the assumption lor new functions known under the |neme of commissions. These new. |fufictions, in the main, are worthy jones, but in’acdition to new agencies jhaving been created to administer them instead of assigning them to re- lated existing units of government, with resultant overhead and dther additional costs, they have been ae- sumed too rap! that is to say, without due regard to revenue and so it has been necessary to greatly in crease the tax burden.” - Estimating five to a family, Henry Ford's Weekly figures that about 15,000,000 peonle are supported from public, taxes. Reliable _ statiatics show us that there are about. 2,900.- 000 persons on tae public payro}l— elty, state and nation. The Idaho Falls Times-Register says, “The per capita tax in Idaho for all purposes is $49.25, inclu@ing chool, state, city, county and high. way.” The tax for state purposes alone is $7.12 por capita. The people cf Nevada pay the Nighest state per cepita tax—$18.47 for state purnoses oniy, not including city, county, school and highway tax. The Taxpayers’ association of New Mexico shows a present total of $4,- 590,000 in unclollected taxes ranging from $118,000 in=1912 to $550,000 for 1919, $1,280,000 for 1920 and $1,000,- |000 for the first halt of 1921. Commenting on the proposed state |income tax in Oregon which the peo ple will vote on in November -the Medford, Oregon, Record Herald says, “Of course, there would be no re: duction In other taxes because of any additional funds collectel by the pro- posed state income tax. The army of tex eaters would be given positions at the public Pie Counter, an® more so-called tax commissions would be created.” Conditions have reached a po'nt in the state of Washington where a irect cut in the cost of government of 25 per cent is necessary {f bust. ness in that state is not to be dis- couraged In the state of Colorado, commit. tee of one hundred is wirking to figure out ways and means to duce the tax load which industry and. the common Citizens must bear. In face of such conditions our present law: permitting the constant issuance of tax exempt public bonds }zo unamende¢ and hundreds of mil- Hons of dollars of this class of 5 curities ‘are being constantly issued and the holders of this paper escape all taxation, thus doubling the load on the remaining taxpayers. ‘To cap the climax of governmental extravagance in issuing tax exempt bonds, professional politicians in the state of California have placed on the ballot for the next election in Novem- ber a measure nuthorizing the state to issue $500,000,000 of bonds far th purpose of building state owned wa- ter and power projexts. At one crack it is estimated this would increase the state debt of California seven times. ‘The demand for reduced taxat‘on is general In western states. Results rest largely with the people in com. ing elections. | | The Northwest Mounted “In the decision of the Premier to reconstitute the Royal Northwest ‘Mounted Constabulary on its former |basis there is wisdom,’—says the | Montreal Star. “When the headquarters of that famous force were removed from the Northwest to Ottawa and its personel was increased, it Jost in part that characttristic individuality which it had enjoyed for so many years. From being the guardians of law and order over the far reaches of Canada’s northernmost territory the. North- west Mounted became a Dominton- wide force, Mable for service any- where when needed. “The Northwest Mounted are part and parcel of the history of this country. Their fame is world-wide. |Their work has won for them recog- nition in every land where law is the basis of civilization, and their achieve- jments have formed the basis for |many aethrilling novel over a long course of years. To take them from their old home tn the West and make them an appanage of the formalities and red tape of the capital was at best a mistake. The Premier — is courageous enough to undertake the ‘remedy and does not hesitate about | making his views known. It is clear that the headquarters are to be re- established in the west, and that in size and dutics the force will be ze- | modeled on the old and tried lines. “All Canadians are proud of the the red tunic and the brown slouch \hat with such distinction. The war ‘and eager, and many a man from ranks won distinction at the front. Canada does not.want this organiza- tlon to be lost. It is part and parcel ‘of the country today, and {ts unique | characteristics are a heritage that has been jealously guarded in the past. PA —SS First clasn watct) en& seweiry re paring; artistic diamond resetting. E. B. Kine, jeweler. Oi] xchai ae Classified rds in the Tribure are winners and possibly the keys we igive with every 50c paid at office will e122 win-you a big prize. —_ Oregon. | the provosed” measure to-| A flower for er for her, not used to any such” : @ sympathetic touch For one who fafied his happiness to_ H find, f | Ana, for one bound in and & body | If we could only keep our vision clear From just the joys and sorrows of our own, : What richer hoard we'd glean for {0 hourly. on oUF { ourly, on otr usual paths were some Small deeds that brought us heart and soul more near x, The poor, the maimed, the lonely and the shunned. CHARLOTTE BECKER. —_— Judge by Their Fruits Do you really think," asks the In- Rocent Bystander, “that the Repub- lican party deserves the credit for all the splendid welfsre legislation it has passed during the last titty years?! Wouldn't the Democratic party have! Passed it if it had been in power, as the Reptiblican party was?” When the Democratic party was in Power, the suffrage cause was “ripe.” The Democratic congress refused let it show Its head out of comsnit- tee. “Along ‘came @ Republican con- &ress and passed it without delay. It was promptly ratified by 33 Repubit. can states and only seven Democratic states. - The Republicans began the budget | syster= of economy for the govern- ment; the Democrats killed it; the Republiian congress tried to. revive ; it was vetoed by Democratic Pres- ident Wilson; it was passed again and Put into effect as soon as a Republi- can administration came Into power. It is by motive and design anc not @ mere coincidence that the Republi- can party hi establishen the Wo man's burenu and the Children’s bu- reau and the Veterans’ bureau and almost all the welfare agencies of the government. Why -dida't the Democratic administration sponsor a few when It was In power? While the Democratic party has not been sin complete power. in the! United States for more than eight) yeers out of the last i i states of the “solid” South for all that time. What welfare measures hes the Democratic party put into| effect in this its own arena? Almost none. The Detocratic states are the most backward in all welfare work, in literacy, in child labor matters, in care of mothers end children, in all laws concerning marriage and prop. erty rights of women, in relief meas. ures for the ex-soldier and in every thing which makes for human better- ment? Can you merttion any important welfare legislatica which the Dem: ccratic party has evs initiated? Nef‘her can I.—Floreace Boys. eae le Rural Mail Delivery On October 1 the rural mail ser- vice will be 26 years old. This recalls the fact that the establishment of’ rural free delivery service is one of the accomplishments of the Repub- Mean party. t6|t? Cate newspaper writing is seen in (82, vet it has! been in continuous power in all the! The idea was fathered) implied the num the tl ert upon t in the mind ef the speak- objectionable to me because he dis itkes modern music.” Thereupon Brown says: “Well, how about Mr. B? He is one of those reactionary Persons who is objectionable to. me because he dislikes modern sports and sticks to his books all the time.” In-those sentences manifestly “Wh” has a singular mcaning and refers to the objectionable specially mentioned, for to make it plure! would be to say that ali réactionary Persons are objectionable to Smith and Brown, which neither of them affirms in the sentence, specifically mentioning the reason for the. ob. Jectionableness of. each individual. I am surprised that Mr, Johnson id not call attention to the srowing yee of “Ike” for ‘as if” or “as Everywhere we read these days sen- tences like this: “He ran after the ball lke he had winged feet.” "I have before me a headline in a Manhattan paper reading thus: “Clothes like Dante wore are unearthed,’ Another strange develo:ment of up the unwillingness to plac’ an adverb between the parts of a verb in the compound form when conjugated with “have.” For example,» we find re- Peatedly such expressions as these. “He hardly had escaned when he was recaptured.” Just what there is to placing ardly” between “had™ and “escaped” is not apparent uniess one has the critical eye for grammar possessed by the writer of a legal right of the United States to repayment is unquestioned, and Atcericans have nothing to fear from e discussion of the moral aspecis of the case. In law snd in equity the Ynsistence of the United States fir what ‘= its due is based on the higi- est plane. S.S. S. Fills Out Hollow Cheeks, Thin Limbs! “In God we trust.” And when we pass A village through We mucit intrigue The natives, who . “By gum! how far Them folks have comer’ —Birmingbam Age-Herald. Why They Can Pay In a Witter to Senator Borah Mr. Bernard M. Baruch gives some sub- stantial reesons why the ailies can pay «their-debt to the United States. Recélpts from German — reparations aie'to be $10,990,000,000 according to ir. Baruch, which figures almost cover the total indebtedness to th's country {f the allies were disposed to apply it to that purpose. Mr. Bal- four’s contention that the United! States and the allies contributed to a common cause, and therefore the in- ter-allied debts should be cancelgt. has only a partial bearing on the debt to America, declares Mr. Bar- uch. The United States purchased hundre(® of millions of dollars worth of war matericls in France and Great Britain for the use of our armies, ond paid Great Britain many mere millions for transporting our soldiers overseas in British vessels. These payments were made in cash and not by loans obtained by the United Men and women,—whether you will er build yourself up e to your ht depends on the nui ella in your blood. That t-right wel of hlood-: there is to it. It's a scientific fact your blood-cell factory isn't works ght, Fou will be run-down, thi lood will, be in dirorder, ‘will be brokén out and States from British or French | Yih, PInPlee. rons Bageaeoed sources. A fair application of the! facto ful time. It helps wi fulla new blood-cells. ‘That's why 8.8, 8. builds up thin, run-down peo- ‘on your bones, it “common ‘cause’ argument would require the repayment of those sums to this country. Furthermore, much of the monéy obtained from the United States by in your cheeks. much more labored phrase who ex- plained, \“Did you see hew cleverly escaped splitting the infinitive?” It jhas never been made ‘clear by such Pursuits why they are willing to throw an acverb between the subject and the predicate but in no circum- stance must put an cdverb between the parts of a verb, Archie Rice tries to make out a case for using “‘ns follows” and “as follow” according to the singular or the plural form of the subject, but L. T. Townsend in his “Art of Speech” points out the difference of opinion amor Jeading srammarians as to whether “cs follows” should not elways be written in the singular form) as an impersonal: verb un- affected by the subfect preceding. Mr. Rice shows the tendency above re- ferred to regerdi: lace of the adverb by saying “It generally can ‘be omitted.” Perhaps he labors un- der the impression that placing ‘“gen- lerely" after “can” would be splitting ithe infinjtive. Townsend (nae 115) would tell; him that aaverbs are ‘placed after the first auxiliary in the compound form ‘of, verbs,” and the first page of Herbert Snencer on “Style fwould show him how that great writer scrunled not to place long qualifying phrases cfter the first auxilia: Hicks. The Turnip The summer's sped) the fallals flown— The turnip comes into his own. Tomatoes had thelr day, and corn: The been triumphant high was born; by John Wanamaker, postmaster-/Proud was the pea, and summer general under President Benjamin squash. Harrison. He first suggested it to)But these apnear now merely tosh. Congress in 1891. /A Democratic ad- ministration was elected in 1892 and the idea was vigorously opposed dur- ing its incumbency. In 1894 the Re- publicans regained control of the Congress due to a landslide as a pro- test against the Democratic free tar- iff bill. The Republican Congress then elected revived the agitation for ru« ral free delivery and appropriated money to make the exjeriment. On Octoer 1, 1896, the first rural delivery service was established simultaneous. ly on three routes in West. Virginia —one from Charleston, one from Uvilla and one from Halltown. Nine months after the establish- ment of the first route, the service had grown to 82 routes, emanating from 43. postoffices in .29 different states. At the close of. business, June 30, 1922, the number. of routes had jumped to 44,186 with « total mileage of 1,180.448 miles. The in- significant appropriation of $10,000 made by Congress 26 years ago to initiate the service, has now grown to the tremendous figure of $86,800,000. This figure shows an increase of $3, 000,000 over ‘the appropriations fi the years 1915, 1916, 1917 and 1918 when a flat appropriation of $53,000,- 000 was made for each year. The jump was due to increases in salaries of carriers. The first complete county rural service was established December 20, 1899, in Carroll County, Maryland. From that date county service rapid- ly developed until ot now covers more than 1,000 counties. . Up to 1915 there were 26,080 fourth* class postoffices discontinued on ac- count of the establishment of rural Gelivery service, representing an an- nual saving to.the postal service of $1,613,040, while the saying resulting fron the @iscontinuance of star routes was estimated at $3,432,670 per. annum. 7 When the service was first inaug- In utilitarian matters this principle ; splendid body of men who have worn! rated rural carriers were paid a sal- ‘ary of $200 a year. They may now \get as much as $2,160 a year, depend- |found the Northwest Mounted ready|thg on the length of the routes, while,” 1tS the motor routes of fifty miles or) out imore pay a salary from $2,250 to | $2,600. Tilinois leads the nation both in the number of rura] routes and in mile- age, there being 2,621 routes covering a distance of 70,174 miles in that [Rate Ohio is second with 2,534 routes, Missourl third with 2,236, Towa fourth. with 2,203, Texas fifth re | it 2,157, Pennsylvania sixth with 2.016, Kansas seventh with 1.894, ew York eight with 1,834, Indiana ninth with 1 1.810, Wiscon. ‘Minnesota twelfth with 1,657. cee et A CE CT TC TC IT eT TDS A nip informs the eager atr, And ‘we all find the turnip “there.” The glory of the autumn ground, The turnip tons the land around. His sturdy bulk, his crimson cheek, Reward the delver who may seek. Boiled and then mashed, he asks no odda— ¥ 7 ‘With honest beef, a ¢ish for gods! MAURICE MORRIS. Pesala Su One of ‘the.most attractive costumes seen recently predicts the advanced styles, with its highly lustered black crinkled silk swathed tightly about the figure and ending in long paneis at the sides which are trimmed in black monkey fur. A high standing coliar of monkey fur and long tight fitting sleeves are new notes thatgare interesting. YOU'LL GET RID OF f ‘BLACKHEADS SURE ‘There is one simple, safe and sure way that never fails to get rid of kheads, t is to dissolve them. ounces of calo- is, store — wet sponge riskiy— rn et two no imply dissolve and, daappear, © parts: without any id hi imply a secre- the and jackhi dust rt tions from the body that form in ee fat z res, and do not. Pinevin ition. ing their natural troubled with t ishes should certa! | ple method, Fair View Aaition 1 East Fifteenth street. Go So: > McKinley Street. The Dobbin Realty Co. Grouné Floor, Tribune Bldg. cS nyons hese unsightly blem= inly try this sim- | PIGEON’S COFFEE It’s Fresh Roasted Pigeon Tea & Coffee Co. Phone 623 4 { | hollowness ‘from the eyes, and it fools Father Time by smoothing out wrin- kles in men and women by “plumpin, them up, 5S. 8. S. is a re Dlood-purifier. While you are lump, your skin eruptions, ples, jkheads, acne, rheumatism, rash, ter, blotches are being removed. The medicinal ingredients of 8. 8. 3S. Great B.itain awas used in building up her merchant marine, from which she is deriving a petmacent benefit, and in buying foodstuffs which were later sold by the government to the! British civilian population. /Monev | used for such objects were in no| are (gu-ranteed | purely | vegetable. onse a” contribution to the common | 8.8.5. ts soldat all clus sores. cause, anc) the cancelation of the! sizes. The larger sise Ip (the more lozns by which it was obtained can not be urged on any such grownd.| Agam, the war did not become an | American war until the United} States entered. Expend’tures for the | common cause can be computed, | ‘FAIR VIEW ADDITION ~ far as they affect this country, only from April, 1917. Has city water and fire plugs just In his famous “common cause” ner the street - not Mr. Ralfor be ited dl bey Ba ilied debts thet can, THE DOBBIN REALTY CO., cussion of interallied debts that can be ylewed from. two angles. ‘The i i eee Ground Floor, Tribune Bldg. * eemmerrcarecoreyaee aL S — (=e a = lhl | il Ol Public conviction is stronger than ever, now, that only in the good Maxwell can such extraordinary value be found. Its great beauty and economical, reliable perform- ance cause it to stand out unmistakably. Sedan > = $1335 Compe 1235 Touring Car if 33 | ‘Prices f. 0. b. Detroit. Revenue tax to be added C. E. Kennedy Motor Co. 236 West Yellowstone “The Good XAWELL Phone 909 7 MA “ELIMINATE GUESSWORK This company is headquarters for _ modern ideas. See your home before it is built There are hundreds of modern designs from which to make your selection. Natrona Lumber Co. Phone 528 251 North Beech