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Ee es THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1 — Casver Daily eritune “Ross seemed awfully cordial at ; Che Casper Daily Cribune which earlier in the campaign, were very nu uon of that problem may as well, The man. 2 . i and been ten. By id ae be left to the president himself. They merely the dance last night. x m "MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS a ta et Pree) Sorgot at pen Coolidge s Boyhood Training baton ‘Want an : “Not cordial; just_ moonshine. Option on him. 7T Associated Presa is vel titled to the s, = cE pun ieata of al? “Cee NGredived 1D this payer i try learned of the tremendous sentiment for Mr. By EDWARD E. WHITING. ‘ We Soutt bh atcocen tthe taerk math ts 1 Sars sub! in tain don Ey Sone) snswes pean shed peceln Spell little, the selection th Detiseratt | People are beginning to worry|room in the house which is most of his office. “He has never shown Horrible. LA rrr aad : +. ‘The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening anc matters e, st ion the again about Mr. Coolidge’s health.| habitable. In {t there used to be,|an aversion to hard work. He has| Watson—‘Do you know, Sherlock, aus t Y } The Sunday Moruing ‘Tribune every Sunday, at Cas-|convention makes. Every appearance indicates it ts said that he works too hard.|and probably still aro, a woduiiti- never shown any JI effects from | you are getting terribly thin?” gts r per, Wyoming. Publcation offices: Tribune Building. | repetition of the unusual Republican major-|Very likely he does. - Many men do.| ing range, a pine table covered with | hard work. He never appears to be) | Holmes—'Yes, my dear Watson, Movie ‘plots opposite postoffices ity of 1920. And the repetition will not only in- i Soueeenl ts any Bey is in less|a red table cloth, upon which are|in a hurry. He gives no signs of| I’m just a shadow.” = Are hye 9, Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as seovnd | clude endorsement of the Republican government ger of physical collapse from | seed catalogs, mail order bopks and| possessing nerves. He can enter an . Than s clans’ matter November 22_ 1918. ____| but will be at the same fine ny redient ‘against |Overwork than Mr. Coolldge. A various other necessities of country | office piled full of work and proceed A Real Danger. ~ aig, EN Pe Pe Busin “Tele! 15 and 16/and repudiation of the Democratic railiont coal: caller at his office in the White| life; on the wall is a map of the] with what is before him with pre-| Inquisitive Old y—“"What ts but one. eae seat eg hat 3 9 : tn Be wa Se connecting All i yee Saateucts House last December brought up in| United States; behind the stove is| cisely the same manner as if there| tne most Ae aoar ties Jot have | oust :& scope, Brey ; ¢ lephone: Exchange ition bent upon destruction. conversation this question of th} 2 !arge box filled with wood for the| were on the desk not more than an es is lke lookin’ at an ugly bug : Pevartmenits: physical burden upon the shoulders|range, It probably was Calvin's | hour's iabor. He Ja not staggered | "seq Cay Se coe esi ta [UEPUSE 7e slngoanoDe: i - 4 5 a Captain—“A young a By 4 e of the president. Mr. Coolidge| duty to keep tl box full. the dimensions of any task ” ss 3._B. HANWAY and EB. EL HANWAY A Union Asks Protection pointed out this simple fact: When, pei || ends He Keeps hist balanée and’ be | One Sere (DatRiNg Su Ea afon weed to meyithak ¥ wes s he waa governor of Massachusetts! ‘rng New England farm kitchen| keeps cool. His is’ temperament biplane acd be that now if 4 ‘The city of Petaluma has an an- She—“You would pr Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) For the first time in the history of tariff pro-| ;, AS ——— © worked all the time; he could int adapted to work. We haye a sus- : ” pg Advertising Representatives tection in this country, a labor union, as a not do any mare than that as prest-|}y sampion in the city. New houses picion that Nerlikes it ‘better (than | Boal autnut) of ever .elsbt million | you didn't go:out af night so often.” = pid Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Sterer union has asked for an increase in the tariff |dent of the United States. frequently havo built in at one aide | anything else. We have a belie | °S5% Hens their prosperity. on * engo, Lil. 28¢ Fittn Ave, New York City; Globe ids.) oo oy servation of the industry with which | freq 'y have ne side Teiseecce tolatire le Aeon Diy Her—My face is my fortune.” St Maas. Suite 404 Sharon Bldg., 55 New Mont-| for the preserva f the i akc we of the kitchen table and benches | that his {dea of leisure a ORS RT Sly Tain tay {e: mine- eat put one: , pr | gomery St., San Francisco, Cal. Capica of the Day) | itis connected. The New ee ee textile] Mr. Coolidge’s health {s custom-| for breakfast use. iTinity, to 49 come more work. eee te eae gPrcran stepettne od fa ‘Trituno are on file in the New York, cago, Boston, | council has asked President Coolidge to in-jariiy gcod. He is not an athlete ad ss ita ~ ———— > a 2 dud Ran Weavtune offices and visitors are welcome. || COUN Mate on cotton textiles, tho volume|and never has been one. Nelther| Calvin Coolidge ns, a youngster |, Mr. Colidge's motto has heen = SUBSCRIPTION RATES ~ fof importations of which has been so great as to|has he been an invalid. He is of| never walked from tha liviise to the to bes eae bl Ratio > m F By Carrier and Outside State cond Tomestic cotton. goods out. of the home| ‘2? type of physique which thrives | garage to ace if the bar was frozen. | P2*> petioles ee iarent 4 One Year, Day and Sundry -----------—--—---$9-00| oo iet and thus throw the members of the New|0h Wore, There has diways been a Instoad, he walked from tne houre ade ase Pangaea cs We = on pabnita Pais Coy, '50| Bedford union and other unions out of employ- on foe Bt BURCOls Han ema rger ged, the’ barr: 0 °Ree, Riou ites ey ie arise a5) ikea peed eeh only for ' $ yan ‘ L whether work wore a man out or| I day w tr Three Months, Daily and Sunday ------------- 223] ment. The petition of the workers reads as fol-|whother the wear came from worry Inatal “No ‘one ever thought or| the end sought, but for the process |. * 7S ae et: Wehand Beneay, los Taya: I ee : sneldental to the work There has| heating the cow barn. Warm water | 1t8e!f- a " ; By Mail Inside State ce New ‘01 ‘extile uncil, represen .| never en a satisfactory answer|in a farmhouse in those days was " 4 ! One Year, Daily and Sunday --------------—-—-$7-8°| ing forty-one thousand cotton textile workers| "hich applics untversally. “Mr, Cool-| confined to the contents of the tea- ‘ ™ ‘One Year. Sunday Only --—-------------—r-7-—— 2 30 i {age ts of the type who works hard| kettle and to the water ,eservoir|| . a Bix Months Dully and Sunday ----------------$330 pope pul (pel aw patie prseriegeesious and worries litile or not at all, 1é|qwhich was built at one end of the i he"w nig Party i Three Months, Daily and Sunday ----------—--- 2.35) plight of the ry, ie take ith. | {ere #8 any man most unlikely to} range. We ‘oubt if Calvin Collage t é Hep igeecath rane eee ae mepermppnte ae A ala us actly Gsiae| Bary vi ye Hie down beneath the burden of| ever washed his face and hands in By ELDEN SMALL i bem: Ra . 4 v 3 a , avence pecrip.|in the flexible provisions act, r, his name is Coolldge. warm water in the morning. id S Cc d # beret lle als Nate ae a ou pine | aid and sustain the industry. Ped goatee Sat Seer e esnaitad ReMevcrgnere prcaies First Ai For ick hil ren ee ” % “wi "in this country, oppose: i KICK. IF YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE. “Mfany thousands of our cotton textile work-| ‘The president was brought up in| ‘This Coolidge youngster probably {ig the “Tories,” had. no. place. in eect sealis sw hight cones ‘ 2 If you don't find your Tribune after looking care-| rs are wholly unemployed and many thousands|an atmosphere and school of hard | did without almost everything which | politics until the name was revived trate the blood-and up, the x * fully for ft, call 15 or 16 and tt will be aaliversdiee yes mére only partially employed while millions of|work. He knew the physical labor|‘he modern boy considers indis-|to fit those who opposed the policies sick. She knows that most of the saliva. They peiein hagt Sy ‘Cald- ‘ ® * by special messenger. Register complaints ore yards of cotton goods are being imported into wich is inseparable from boyhood pensable. He took work as a matter /of Andrew Jackson, 1829-36. There- ailments of childhood are trifling. well’s Syrup Pepsin safe for all 1 « otiock. the: country—goods that can readily be manu-jon a New Mngland farm. Tile of course, and the curious fact is—| after the party was for a number of, | If it seems serious she calls adoc- ages as they know it is a sim factured here. The impertations of cotton textile parents were of the average well-to- | @t least it probably appears curious | years an important factor. | tor, but whether or not she calls vegetable compound of Egyptian The Rotten Primary oodssin.1028 were greatly,in excess of ithe Sii-| 10, New pelona counts y MIGRA Sia see fe cit uae an iseertal Miacin wvoieia ieee clea a Bee oe allo oo at Fhe for Eaten 4 | 8 52 greatly ad not want for the necessary com. | agreeable time of {t. It did not sour| Daniel Webster, Henry Clay and {f laxative medicine. The doctor aromatics. The formula is on the Sentiment growa stronger as we approach an- other elction that the public affairs of this na- portations of any previous year of record. “Your petitioners respectifully submit that this state of affairs being due chiefly to abnor- forts of childhood; but he had no luxuries. He led,a thoroughly nor- mal life in which work was one of him. he and Maybe this is why, as a man, has never been afraid of work has never been hurt by it, others of equal note. Clay was twice an unsuccessful candidate for the presidency on that ticket, as was would advise thatanyway. It is his “first enced mothers as Mrs. Everett package. Give Laxative for Colds aid.” Such experi- tion must be rescued from-the hands of such ‘ai d 1 ‘i i ic officers | mal world conditions they are unable by their|the normal ingredients. He un- Maybe that Is why, as president of |Gen, Winfield Scott in 1852. Only E, Hunt of Belzoni, Okla., who inefficient and often unfaithful public FS PW lots to cope with the situation, ‘They|dubtedly slept in a cold room| the United States, "he can do such|two nominees were ever successful, [| has three children and, never Adults should have at least one bas a primary. election system of nomination |own efforts to rope Matt dustry is seriously| ‘tush the winter, He got up in|a prodigious amount of worl’ as he|in the election. ‘They were Gen.| i roavement of the bowels every 24 ces. 7 + 4 jlenski hours, an e ree. produ ry this cold’reom and dressed there. | does and show no ill effects. Wm. Henry Harrison and Gen. Za-| st daide Wualara 46. hace: it wiieeiin couse menaced and that prompt action is necessary Or maybe he went into the sitting chary Taylor, and both won because | Most everybody dreads the ordeal. Nobody de- : roe tion, then headache, bilic E to prevent much hardship and suffering to the};room and dressed by the 1 That Coolidge b in “Pl. th, | they were at the moment popular at the first indication of sick: mn, then hear e, Dillousness, sires to go through it, to secure public office. industrious and deserving cotton textile opera-|stove. A purlor stove in the sitting Vt, was navee Ste eee (3 school. 4 “war heroes." The party did not timely doses have saved drowsiness ack of a pete salve Good men who do brave it have come to be * classed with the designing ones who have ulter- ior motives in securing office. Voters who for- merly took part in these public matters have be- come so disgusted with the system that they have ceased altogether to participate in either primaries or elections. As a consequence our public officers are chosen by anywhere from twenty to forty per cent of the electors qualified | to vote. | The primary is blamed and the blame is prop-| erly placed. The system has nteadily discouraged | desirable and qualified persons from becoming | tives Delay may mean ‘the permanent impair- ment of this great and valuable industry. “Your petitioners fully realize the high re- sponsibilities of your exalted office and the many claims it entaails upon your time and strength and it is only after having made a thorough survey of the condition of the industry and being convinced that no exertions or sacrifice on their part can set the silent looms and idle spinners in motion that they have turned to you to see if something cannot be done through the flexible provisions of the tariff act to ameliorate their presnt intolerable conditions.” room of.a New England farmhouse in mid-winter does not suggest the tripics It is a unit of ‘reluctant heat entirely surrounded by zero temperature. For a human being to get warm in the early morning by one of these stoves he has to stand on all s des of it at once. Give this stove about two hours’ activity in a room ull of whose windows are sealed tight and whose doors are kept closed, and you will have a temperature not only warm but smothering. In the early morning an automobile. He never went to the movies. Ho was not taken to dine at hotels. He didn't have toy steam engines and other assorted devices for making lelsure endur- able. He did not indulge the lux- ury of lying in bed on cold morn; ngs and thinking how hard it was that he was not a rich man’s son. He lived a fe, and enjoyed it which the average youngster in any American city today would consider one of intolerable hardship. What that life produced we now see in the even adopt a platform in the Taylor campaign, and both men died very shortly after thelr election. 1 When the Republican party was organized in 1856, most of the Whigs. joined it and the party disappeared. In its time it carried as many as seven states, and did much to make national history. ¥ LINES and ING Es them much worry, The Meaning of “Good” All doctors agree that a thor- ough cleaning out of the bowels is of first importance for it re- moves dangerous sons. They will also advise a‘good Pepsin at bedtime, and there wil be health and good feeling by morning. A dose costs Teas than cent, and a bottle can be had at any drug store. Colds and constipation come together, so if you notice Geena | or encezing intestinal poi- stop it at once with Syrup Pepsin. laxative,”and by“good” they mean one that is effective and yet harm- less. there are physics that never should be gi to children - self You Want to Try It Free Before Buying+s=s: “Syrup Pepsin,” 517 Washington St., that mticello, Lilinois. I need a lazative and would like to prove what about Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsi Bend'twea free trial bode. Address on™ Oaelletle be given mel, ah | d n * of a winter day dressing by the} White Ho’ t Washington. Prana candidates, and it has driven the electors them-|" Other unions will join with the New Bedford| parior stove is simply exercise. ae ts lige eed meen by which is mercury Namesssssesvesesrssssenenensesecencenseees f selves away from participation in elections. union in asking for relief through the tariff. It oe te. Hard work is no stranger to Mr. Ted Osborne loosens the teeth; phe- 4 It is conceded that state legislatures and con-|j, notable that the workmen themselves have| We do not know whether Calvin|Colidze. Whether some of the be! we? gress itself, which places have, before the ad- vent of the primary always been occupied by able and high minded men, have now become the} parking places of the most mediocre quality of} citizens to be found in the election units from which they go. It cannot be denied either, that the recent disgraceful antics carried on in congress, and still progressing, have all been done and per- formed by men who could never have received a nomination for office in any party conven- tion in the land. Some system must be devised more nearly in line with representative government that will induce voters to take part and which results in the selection of higher clays men to serve the public, or we may expect high taxes, poor service and corruption to continue. The primary is not a sacred institution. Tt is not a guaranty or assurance of actual participa- tion by the people, as is represented. It is the worst snare and delusion ever loaded upon American electors. It is in itself a fraud upon} the people. It should be and must be detroyed | if we would preserve public welfare and_ in- duce the people to renew their interest in their own, affairs. It seems strange, in a state like Wyoming, that there is such a lack of nerve to rise up and obliterate this obnoxious system. The theory seems to hold that in so doing, something prec- ious some aacred right is being taken from the people, which they desire to retain. The theory is utterly foolish. It is the primary itself that is, taking these rights from the people and leay- ing them nothing: worth while in their place. Of course, ultimately, the people who think, will realize just what the primary system of election does to them, and when enough of them do realize, a mighty howl will go up for relief. As it is, more and more people are growing wise with erence to the whole matter, and oc- casionally some of them give relief to their feel- ings. It sounds hopeful. It would be hopeful if they would follow it up with action of some sort directed toward a smashing of the primary system and a restoration of the representative convention system. taken action in advance of their employers. While the employers were discussing the mat- ter the workmen acted. No further action will be necessary in order to secure the intervention of the president, but, not only other unions, but the employers ag well will add their plea to that of the New Bedford union. It is fitting that the workers should have taken the first action, for they are the most concerned. Protection benefits them first and most. The employers have capital to fall back upon, while the workers have for the most part only the la- bor of their hands. The employers can if forced | to it, readjust their business, pay lower wages |and continue in business. It would hurt them, but the lowering of wages, like the stoppage of the mills, would hurt the workmen more. They would have to lower their standard of living, consequent upon earning lower wages, and they would eventually be forced down to practically the same basis as foreign workmen, both in wages and in living standards. The protective tariff ig the workman’s only salvation his only hope for maintaining the hagh standard which is the envy and admiration of the world. Every workman in the United States should work'and vote for an adequate protective tariff. Without ‘protection foreign producers can un dersell American producers because the foreign- ers pay lower wagen, and American workmen live on a higher plane than foreign workmen. In thirty-five states and the District of Colum bia we have an eight-hour day fixed by law. American workmen demand and receive leisure time in which to indulge in rest and amusement. They could not do this without the protective tariff. We hope the time is not far distant when one of the cardinal qualifications for mem- bership in a labor union shall be a belief in an adequate protective tariff. Should Not Be Deceived While business is in a very substantial con- dition today thanks to the effects of a sensible protective tariff, enacted over the votes and indignant protests of the free traders, it ought not to be a matter for doubt as to where the vote Coolidge as a small boy ate in the dining room or in the kitchen. We suspect he ate in the kitchen. The New England farm kitchen ts a unl- versal room. It combines the func- tions of a kitchen, dining room, sit- ting room and libra It is the routine burdens of the presidency might be removed or lightened is detatable. Undoubtedly there is much drudgery connected with the office which {is unnecessary and which should be eliminated or trans- ferred to others. Perhaps the sol ‘When some girls Get engaged They have Absolutely No intention Of marrying imme fii\_— other says » Nothing Else Will Do ©Yhe reputation for excellence spreads quickly among women. Grocers tell us John Doe owned a grocery store. He had a capital in- vestment of $10,000.00. He sold his goods on credit. He was lax in his collections. Had he collected all of his accounts he would have made $2,000.00, but he didn’t—he failed to col- lect $3,000.00 of his accounts. If he repeated this process each year, how long could he remain in business? That we remain in business longer than John Doe could, we collect our bills regularly, * 2 v ~ Bey od é mae will go this fall, nor would it be if an honest y : . effort is made to keep the real issues bef 3 ‘1 : Backing Mr. Coolidge UN aaa P Perdis di ge a) more and more women are ordering Butter- It has been suggested that all Republicans} should the Democrats get in on an: f A . throughout the country, who opposed Calvin tataet these will be Sante a free rae rg Sea Nut Coffee by name every day. Coolidge in the state primaries, be called to-| pill to take the place of the present fairl - : gether in first annaal reunion, the object being beeen fier op ep atid You can afford to be particular about WER ' to secure a census and get acquainted with one| ‘Thig talk of big r . another. Almost any small village possessing a Fon OSE its hac touetaabe sist rete the coffee you buy. Good coffee is not one-room school house, can aspire as a meet-| consider may, be fooled, but if he would look : . ing place fos the gathating. just how far be-| back and note the conditions brought about by so much a matter of price, but of artful 4 A y t f a change of tariff policy ,inducting free : H . ; hind the Republican styles its members are, and | Fos heltaolite ha owl an cchioa consets alae Yee blending. It is the rich, mellow flavor of H just how far out of harmony with Republican | aver. ye’ ille s made by th * . otitis tise “poeaible tor them-t0 ec” rece negra spe Falta he ee eee Butter-Nut that has won it so many friends, « It has been some time since it was so clearly] 1¢ the ern ‘ an ‘ . eA seat 3 » average man would stop and think| s,s . r indicated, sixty days in advance of the conven-| what this countey would come to: withont bie| Order it in the convenient econom- tion, who would be nominated. At least, not since | pusiness, ho would never again be deceived by . r jl Roosevelt ras chosen in 1904 by the unanimous | the wily’ free-trader, Capital is'as Teceeanty the ical 3-Ib, size. § action of the party has such an event occurred. | Anite ot prs , Eiectiatiee: trentyaine. votee in Yissamain | oa ee RetLd ek Sota Ba aac nee a TRAIN SCHEDULES , > is hardly enough to start anything radical in the| tunity, and from the poorest laborers in the s Chicace & Northwestern convention, and Hiram Johnson's thirteen from | land ‘come some of our masters of big busi ‘Fo arr P South Dakota can not possibly be of any effect| Read the story of the lives of our richest men 180 °p. ‘ in disturbing what the one thousand sixty-seven | and you will find rity of th pong | isms alae Coolidge delegates may desire to do. | POL Oe Cia CEA ee eae sae Rehind the one thousand sixty-seven Cool-| wi ks of Labor, ean sa. || Plo enw CIELO Bo URS) i iicage, Burttn, 46 p. m. cate to ipa edatpgatas in tho, unquestioned. will of.the| iar tesacon wehbe bh iy ern edge ner jpicced seariger a geg Mn J 5 oR faleatt party ofthe United States. f 'e/ mand for labor. rithout big business where} UL! No. 82 .... Arrives Republic: Barty of the ited States for a| would the small business man be. It is the em- “he Me. Welainncctcl cs, . nomination by acclamation. This is the very| ployment of vast capital in business enterprises eS 66 Westbouna sn Pee a, i a3 He is u no | who labors. Y item aaene oferty mn. 4 ks the Hepubican party In favor of Mtr. Coolida Looked at in the right light one will see and] ee _——— y Be pe © of the voters of other lerstanc F rc ry ¢ . osperous | ps Ld try fdasmrative and lovel headed Demo jae eoate A tata | @ e 99 ——————— crats, who cannot accept Al Smith or W.. G:|life, Business and Jabor, or capital and labor e 1C10 SALT CREEK BUSSES McAdoo, as their party leader, and it looks as! if you will, go hand in hand, each a necessary 3 Busses a Da. E. SSES , if one or the other sey Be sominated at New | adjunct of the other, and the whole system where i |] LEAVE CASPER—ARKEON BUILD Way ! | York, make no secret of their intention of sup- it works out properly and prosperity. depends Siam, Baggage and Express | ‘**¥* Salt Creek { porting Mr. Coolidge. i on an adequate protective tariff to keep the Ora. m. Called for and Delivered 8a m. 7 ; . The rumors of the third party movements, wheels ojled and everybody busy, i 2:80 p. m Salt Creek Transportation 2p. m x f: . Company Tel. 144 Spam. 3 =