Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 11, 1922, Page 6

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PAGE SIX. Che Casper i the family necessities assured—therefore she = e a sate Sune Natrona Yetes for the party which has brought confidence, Offices, Tribune Butlding. m of 1919 and 1920, She loves her husband and she loves her bors and OCIATED PRESS $ TELEPHONES . -..-18 and 1€ she loves her country’s honor—therefore she will lephone Exchange Connecting All Department® yore for the party which made a peace with honor, | Casper (Wyomin See as second class frec from entangling alliances, and started the matter, Nov 1916. ™ ment to settle world disputes around the con eattor ference table instead of on the battle field. This enough. Through teardimmed eyes of thinkfulness she pute a cross immediately after the Ww President and E BARTON is teger Biég., Chicago, Globe Bide, Names of all Republican candidates. wn Bidg., 55 New Mo’ ces a San Francisco, cal. ciples of the Daily ; 2 on file in the New. Fork. ‘Chicago, | Boston Women and Party — ——— THE REPUBLICAN party is big enough and = eee aed | * broad enough to afford a field of activity for Ona Fae aes -$7.89 the most noble minded of American women. Its Six Months $32 program is varied, as it should be to embrace the Three Mon hs : “eg interests of all. It does not place undue. emphasis Per Oapy . + 0$,upon this or that hobby of a class, but, made; - up of many men of many minds, it combines the 3 <S ideals of all. This is assurance that it will con- | 195 tinue fair sane. The Republican party urges the women of Amer- ica to join its ranks. Its men are the men who hawe tions must be paid in advance and the jxhored beside you in qe upbuilding of the home not insure 4 acter subseriP and have learned to respect your judgment and a ne! 3 kina |your motives. It solicits your contributions of Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B.C) | these to party welfare. 5 Member of the Associated Pree Outside party, one may be a roice—a feeble The ed Press im exclusively entitled to the! voice. | Even a group—howevaer ‘large—does not se for publication of all news credited in this paper 8nd/compare in influence with a political party. If Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. women were to remain merely a pleading voice, or b and S o'clock p.m /a group with indirect influence there was no need A paper will be de | of yaining the ballot. messenger. Make duty to| A group may pecially if it he the party in power—mar legislate. Tt may incorporate its ideals into the government. The Republican party has been the government for most of the past sixtv vears and has carried out most of its tenents. What America is today, it has become largely through the Republican party. If you wish to be a force. join a political party. Tf you approve of what Republicanism has made y when your carrier misses you. The Casper Tribune’s Program A complete and scientific zoning system for the | the America of today, and you wish to have a hand! city of Cs in shaping the America of tomorrow, joint the Re A comprehensive municipal and school recreation | publican party. park uding swimming pools for the ch: o aren of Cas Completion of the established Scenic Raute boule. The Supreme Court vard as pla by the county commissioners, to = - } Garden Creek F and return A MONG the important offices to be filled at the! In the summer of 1920 the unem-| Production and add to ft# pay rolls. | policies of the Republican adminis-| Better roads for Natrona county and more highways | 41 comirg election are two places upon the su-|ployment situation became critical.| The sum. total @f this legislation tration and written Into laws by the} for Wyoming. preme court bench, Judges Frederick TI. Blume and |It increased in gravity until by Mardh,| along fundaméntal lines of reconstruc-| Republican Cogress.—John T. Adams,| More equitable freight rates for shippers of the | Ralph Kimball were appointed to fill vacancies |1921, official estimates placed the num-|tion was the revival of industy and netonal chairman. Rocky Moyntrin region, and more frequent train |/-oueed hy cpath since the 1920 election and conse. of unemployed xt 5,000,000, This/the transformation of an army of un- — pone ae quently successors must he elected. | These gentlemen are among the most able men in| jthe state and in the service they have already ren- \dered on this bench they have added a new lustre Register Today of 2] rote at the general election to this high court. i BS esata 7th you is siuised to go to They are hoth candidates to succeed themselves. i Jo ifs,i1f ontstanding -qualifications are to govern they | usual polling place and register. No ifs. y 1 they | Saar or Titer about it. The law of Wyoming says! #heuld & overwhelmingly elected. rae is no d there is no plan by whieh you can avoid this/Partisanship in Wyoming judicial elections. the auty if you expect to vote. And you should yote,/"ames of candidates appear on a separate ballot because that is the highest duty of citizenship. and it is practically a separate election although | held at the same time and place as the election for|administration and the Republi i furnisht Hundreds of new words ‘hate been gis i out the county} ; “3 a epublican) ties and furnishings. . 4 Sage The registration offices ES tt will remain other officers. congress. | When the Kepublican administration m&de by scientific men, inventors and are now open, opened yesterday main "The concensus of opinion of the bar and the| A ‘large proportion’ of ‘thes unem-|oame into. power “JS suontha; ago. ail Manurecturire: [Uta iness words are ; of this week.) | open up to and including Saturd: t , That is to say from the 10th to the 14th inclusive. The hours are from 9 a. m, to 1 p. m.; 2. p. m, to 6 p. m., 7 p.m. to 9 p. m.teach and every day dur laity is that the membership of the court should} not be disturbed. That it is the best balanced court | Wyoming ever had. That its members are all thor : : ‘s lod oughly skilled in the law; are men of the highest ing the registration period. chara ; i Gcalifications of an elector are that Ne must bo|Mhracter andizeputs gare. Bonest faiei end ‘ United States, a resident of the |P* Baad’ : $ a citizen of the Unite f the county for sixty days| ‘7¥4ze Kimball served on the local district bench state for ae chor ere bs - pee x *<°"“land made a fine record. He las done the same next preceding the day of ¢! é thing on the supreme bench. Sickness or absence from the state are the only|"", nee excuses accepted for failure to register, at voting 1,0 "Kteridan county. bar, served in the, Wooming| i tablish the fact is often more trouble ea : , -o] time and to establis if “ trotion, touse and senate and has occupied many positions than to attend to the matter when the registra a} and honor in the state. His profound jof trust office is open for business. : learning in the law and his untiring application The election this year is of unusual importance < fapp to the people of Wyoming. There are to be elected, have produced in him the greatest writer of legal be: f ress 1 opinion Wyoming has known. a United States senator, member of congress, “| To disturb the present Wyoming supreme court governor and a full set of state officers and rep-| r and ‘ Picts at.{membership while these men are in the very flow- resentatives in the state legislature and county Of-|o, of their usefulness, would be a calamity. ficers. 7. 5 ——__—_—_0—__—_—_- In order to, make your vote count the first thing to do is to register not tomorrow or day after but A Matter of Selfishness todar. 5 IS a lot of howling about the new tariff | bill from purely selfish motives. As a matter jof fact political or local selfishness is too often the foe of industry. Take the beet sugar industry of the west—ikat supplies a good percentage of the American sugar and stimulates thousands of successful farms to greater production and employs thousands of people. There are thousands of brokers and eastern sugar refinery stockholders who take the narrow view that Cuban raw sugar should be ad mitted duty free. and they argue how many mil- lions of dollars the consumer is taxed to enable the beet sugar industry to live. They forget that during the four-year world war it was the western beet sugar industry that helped save the day on sugar supplies. We had the cheap- est sugar in the world all during that war when other countries went without sugar or paid as high as a dollar a pound. What public-spirited, broad-minded American is o- Keep It Coming HE BIG IDEA, to the head of a family, is the) income. If it keeps coming, there is happiness. If it stops, there is misery . The income pays the | rent, fills the cupboard, replenishes the coal-bin, puts shoes on little fect and school books in little arms, and means the making of the home. aie Without the income, the home is shattered, Can| anything be more heart-rending than the wail of | one’s own children crying for the necessities of| rt food and drink are not all. It is the aim of every parent to help the child get on, to give} it opportunities a little better than he or she had,| to see that it has a fair start in life. But there is no} development, no advancement, without the stendy income. | This is the reason why we must hare the protec tive tariff. * x fietal ot proud of the over one-hundred beet sugar re Without the protective tariff foreign products itineries in the United States or would be willing fill our markeis and drive out American g t? Hold up your hand. : |to see them wiped ou Since we cannot sell in our markets, we stop pro-| ducing. The mills close and laborers are out of work. The income stops coming. : | If we lay a protective tariff duty on certain for. Pr eign imports, it discourages the importation of} these things and gives the American producers a chance to supply the needs of American consum ers. This keeps us employed and the income keeps on coming. | No protective tariff means no market for our wares, no work, no income. Protective tariff means a good market, work for all, and the income keeps on coming. sa ase Again Advises Friends DEMOCRATS and others for an instant thought any disaffection would creep into the | Republic: arty because of the nomination of John y over Robert Carey they are doomed to disappointment, and their last hope is gone. In addition to previous announcements the governor has added this one to his former positive state- ments respecting his attitude. It was delivered at the recent Roosevelt meeting at Gheyenne: “I want no friend of mine to refuse to support aT ys. Te the Republican ticket, just because I do not happen ie} to be on it. If he be my true friend, I want him to How She Will Vote support the ticket from top to bottom. T shall be WOMAN standing in a voting hooth, is the very much disappointed if the party does not score same creature she is standing in her own par-|complete and overwhelming victory in the coming lor or kitchen. She will exercise in one the same election.” | sense and instincts which she has exercised in the| The governor is proving himself a real hero in| other. She does not suddenly become unsexed. un-|the circumstance, rather than a sorehead. It peeves | house-wifely, or unmotherly, standing in the little|the Democrats but it endears the governor to Re-| room with a shelf before her, a cheap curtain hang-| publicans. ing back of her, and a ballot in her hand. The way! Why a life long Republican like Governor Carey,| she marks her ballot is going to be determined Should take this very proper stand. Democrats! by the effect she thinks it-will have on that home./cannot understand. They likely desire him to start “Woman wants the pay envelope the family in-|an insurrection, which would do damage to the come, to keep on coming—therefore she approves Republican party. It might do that too, but not to of the tariff. She wants the needy soldier boy to|the extent of endangering the party’s success at the be cared for—therefore she will be for the Repub-/polls in November. The Democrats would not care lican party which has always been generous with! that it would also mean Carey's political end, but | soldier relief. Republicans and Governor Carey have viewed it She approves of the humanized and welfare mea- from this angle also. sures which have always and only come through the Sr Republican party—therefore she is strong for it HE PUBLIC'S interest in the coal question is She approve of the economy program which this not how many acres there are in the world re- administration has put into effect—therefore her| maining undeveloped; nor how many years it will| ballot shall be a rebuke to Democratic waste be before it is exhausted; the burning question is She loves stability. the foundations of the home to find a square guy who will sell a few tons at secure, business moving forward with confidence a reasonable figure, order and prosperity out of the chaos and depre= | agitate, but a political party—es-| be Casper Dalip Cridune A Wardrobe to Answer All Requirements ! pletely stopped extensions and enlarge: conditions of industry and the condi ments of industrial concerns. Not un- tion of labor, collectively and individ- til it was seen that the enactment of/ ually, are immeasurably better off a proteéctive tariff wi Employment and Protection For Labor industry begin to prepare for increased due to the cumulative effects of the army of unemployed was one of the|employed Into an army of industridus y AW legacies left the Republican admin‘s-| working men. | The Needed Word tration by the outgo'ng Democratic! The benefits flowing to the working’ regime. That was 18 months ago.| people from this administration are wef Today there are fcw men out of|not confined merely to the increase) 1 books work, Labor of all kinds ia in de-!of employwent. When the Republl-|, How shall be define the vocsnien mand. |ean administration came Into power 18 . , ly devoting himself to pub fc affairs? The demand ts for a word less digni- fied and exacting than “statesman” and jess sinister than “politician.” Unfortunately words, Itke poets, are born and not made. The reco of changing the labor’ months ago living costs were higher in s'tuation from one of idieness to one many instances than they were during of employment speaks for itself. That the war. Since it came into power this has come about in 18 months ts living costs have constantly decreased. not an accident. It is due to the This is particularly true of articles of constructive work of the Republican| food, clothing, household commodi- ployed were out of work because the war taxes were still In full force and Connected with concrete objects and agricultural sections, which buy 40 effect. The Republican congrean en-|therefore stick. Scores of slang words per cent of the manufactured prod-jacted a new tax law, which Immedl-/#trike the popular fancy and are ac ucts of the country, weve bankrupt/ately lifted over $800,000,000 a year,CePted into the langutge. Few word: and unable to continue their purchas-|from the backs of the American tax-/®Fe Made by scholars berause the ing. witural dis-|payérs. The bulk of this was lifted making of a new word is a very dif- tress ongress made from the man and woman having an ficult Job. it: ponatbie, for. thiaigreat. clasdiot con] RVRREK® WARE or salary, We have the word “publ sumers of Ameri manufacturt During the war Aundreds of thou-'Which of course applies to a yp Boodr again to hecome active buyers Sands of working people purchased WhC Investigates economic or public and thereby made possible the resump-| Liberty and Victory bends. When Sffaire. This word suggests the pro- ton of industrial activities in many|the Republican administration came Pore’ néw word “publician,” as one lines. |into power these bonds were selling at Whe Serves the public. Civilian, elec- When the Republican administration | $9 cents on the doll By a policy of triclan, Bostonian and politician are came into power the inpouring of economy and introduction of business examples of words similarly formed. People fleeing from war-torn rope| methods in public affairs the credit “Publician” Is therefore u word logl was grievously aggravating the unem-|of the government was so improved|cal and Well born and would mean ployment situation, The Republican, Under the Republican administration One who belongs to or who serves congress early enacted a restric that within a year these bonds had the public. imm'gration law which stopped this|Tisen in value to par or above. Warren G. Harding is « statesman.| addition to the rank of the unem-! Briefly, the Republcan administra-'Charles F. Murphy is a politician, | Dloyed. tion, without any attempt at demo-|Theodore Roosevelt, in h’s earlier c:- Another factor in the unemploy-|§9s¥, Without any appeals to classes,/reer, was a publician. ment situation was the operation cf has in 18 months turned an army of| I believe the word publician the Underwood free trade act. Under| unemployed into an army of profita-/ good one and fits the case, even it Imports cf manufactured goods were|bly employed. It has restricted the! it 1s somewhat lke the word “publi- coming into te United States in con-|inpouring of competitive foreign Ia- can.” stantly increas'ng quantities at prices| bor. It has enacted a law guaran-|a difference in # lot of words, for in- far below their possible cost of manu {teeing American labor Protection from stance “‘signer” and “‘sinner.’”’ Yet facture in this « ry. This operated|the Inpouring of cheap foreign ta-jone does not hesitate to become a not only to close down many indus-|bor. It has reduced taxes which have {signer Jest he may thereby become a }trial plants, but it made all classes| Tested heavily upon the working peo-|sinner. of industry'so uncertain regarding the During the last 18 months living Ron | c. JOHNSON. H ple, futiire that they operated at only «| conta have mater ally decreased. Sse fraction of their capacity. It com-!' No one will attempt to deny that the Register today. The Terrible Tempered Mr- Bang certainty dif/than i8 months ago. That it is so 1s} | ‘A change of one letter makes} WEDNESDAY, Of FOBER 11, 1922. —_—-——- {protect the consumer against any a: j tempt upon. the part of any clase o/ progucers to abuse the protection t The people of the country will do’ ettempting to raise prices beyond a well to keep tn mind one fact con- jegitimate level.” cerning the tariff ‘The aoove statement fully answe-s wointed out by € de eriticiams of those, nearly all Dem Adams of the Rep orraus, who set up after-war condi committee. The bill provides a means tions as a reason for jonger deferring of adjusting tariff rates to changing) tariff legisiation. The ‘aw was not conditions during the period of ad-}enacted until nearly three yeare afie- justment following the trade Gerahge-| the war ended. It was not enacted un ments brought about by the war. On til imports of foreign commodities ha thie subject Mr. Adars has well said:| begun to grow at an alarming rae “During the discussion of this tar-|and exports had rapidly decreased, iff 4. new argument has been advanced cutting our favorable balance of trade to the effect that world conditions are/to such an extent 48 to present ree so unstable it is impossible to frame cause for concern. a tariff that would meet these chang-; The Republican platform of 192 ing conditions. This objection bas, recognized the unusual conditions ex been met by- the clause in, the Me-|isting, and pledged the party agains: Cumber-Fordney act giving the presi- hasty aetion. There was no haste dent power to change, within certain The Republican congress not on} mits, the rates so that the tariff acted with the greatest deliberation while permnent, is also very flexible.| but went further and made provision This clause upon one hand will pro-| for adjustment of rates, within libers test the American producer against/ limits, if changing conditions eho» competition that may develop from! that changes are needed. unexpected depreciation in foreign! Not from any viewpoint is the R- values. On the other hand, Tariff Elasticity it_wil] publican tariff open to sound criticiam Owners who have driven the good Maxwell mary thousands of miles have found that it is not only most comfortable and eco- nomical, but so well built that it requires practically no expert mecljanical attention. Cord tires, nem-shid front and rear; disc seel wheels, demountable st rim and at hab; drum type lamps; Alemite lubricetion; motor-driven electcic bora; us- long springs; new type water-tight windshield. usually Prices F.O. B. Detroit, revenue tax tobe added: Touring Car, $885 ; Roadmer, $885; Coupe, $1235; Sedan, S115 C. E. Kennedy Motor Co. 230 West Second Street Phone 909 “The Good dW Fol. MA "AMERICAN SHOE SHOP ASK FOR NATIONAL CERTIFICATES— WE GIVE THEM yy Go to the TRIBUNE’S MR BANG STARTS OUT fo CHANGE. THE LARGE. BILL WHICH MR. HINKLE USUALLY TOSSES ON THE CARD TABLE WHENEVER HE AND MRs. HINKLE HAVE LOST. “ Fashion Show October 18, 20 and 21 At the Elks Lodge Entire proceeds go to Red Cross ee ee. | /

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