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eid weROE EDEMA VERUIUETE C148 RIDE FEDETEEREESCY ORR OAAIE ETI PIE ATE 4 PAGE SIX. Che Caspet Daily Cribune use for publication of all news credited in this paper *’ MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Presa is exclusively entitled to the and also the local news published herein. Busjness Telephones --. ne Boston, Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©) The Casper Dally Tribune issued every fhe ‘Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at Cas ber, Wysonine. Publication offices: Tribune Building, INposite postoffice. | Bntered Branch, une are on file aden, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bk rw St, San Pranciaco, Cal. Copies of the Daily | mistake paper delegations in June for electoral The Nibbling System by -delega : Casper (Wyoming) postotfice as second Els matter, November 22, 106. ____lthe' most decisive influence on the result of the HIS sad 18 election. Telephone Exchange Connecting Departments. look for a candidate who can win. Inthe McAdoo #s 3. BL HANWAY and B. 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While the nomination of General Dawes as ‘the vice presidential candidate on the Republi- t may have been a surprise to some it » in accord with the general sequence i ra elled through a - ‘em. try. If hat FR Wal Pedro. At the first shock he either dived or was prope tne nomination was not a sop to a raarboney me thant ena it thao TiS Kane tusigoou fardenes oer habad es out aiieed setepy tO" watel Mississippt aactasene Van Bitaceletio. ye slightly. ek Mectrerieniieseet at gy rg Dea ier ele ea isgruntled minority that had to be placated for h ign ad-| the assistant paymaster, hurt. eink et yay semunnty; It was not prompted see entne round Rag ek ee as ee eee This system he employed: to such good effect | “Rule or Ruin.” . to forty-eight. by strutegic m Devoted to Service “A ice president. to It ice. = Whatever else may be said of the Republican | ticket, it represents service and single-minded devotion to duty regardless of supposed exped- is asserted that the convention was con- fervative—tnore conservative than Coolidge—but |in ‘session at the capitol. Blocs ‘and organized St was not the spirit of conservatism that led he Da siency. The writers of light literature see in the Cool- ‘ddge-Dawes ticket an illustration of She NEN of oe nsation. The Arctic united with the trop- “fon. Phe frigidity of the Coolidge north pole tem-|the determination of the Republican party, as Dawes voleano. In personal con-|expressed through the voices of the Coolidge arcely any thing in history so : in pre: ideation Devisiaeenipe: In case of |Office holders who call themselves, Republicans, ss of the ticket, the White House could |is but another evidence of boneheadedness in po- still remain the cold storage plant, but the tem-|liticians who have. persuaded: themselves that perature of the senate with Dawes stoking the ce will likely be some higher than Be time’ ators have seen of late years. And while the rs * White House looks after the dignity of the na. |He has not the sense to understand that the La:| ‘tis.tegion. the. highest ayerage of wealth in the tion under Dawes’ leadership the senate gill th t = Jook after the business of the nation closer than |Party by advocating things it has al;ways op. | 28 disclosed ‘by official statistics: The three grea ur ed by t wes stampede, What the delegates | submissively, tamely, enthusiastically or in any thought of chiefly was the extraordinary record made by General Dawes in Washington in, Hurope during the World War, and again as a <inember of the expert commission on German rep. arations and reconstruction. He is a man of tion who responds to every call for useful serv Our Icyhot * ever in its history. expletive “I nd Ma used upon a certain |That men like Lodge have taken to the worship are of She cipal aselenhearal cakes of ane ee have brought the peoples of Europe to the brink SYRUP. PEPSIN occasion by jeral Dawes when trying to jof false gods the rank and file of the Republi-|*”™ nort wiibla Se that rite Es WO lar }Of destruction. It was to save themselves that ill yee arouse a war investigating committee to life.|can party understands, but not the backsliders ant hot thi ey sear d * ‘ te erase ee “*|they have abandoned the tyranny of the dema: Wi restore good humor Sorry to disappoint these folks and destroy a themselves. The latter have thought that in re-| Wealth of the agricultural sta ahian tenets ee gogue for the reign of reason. It was to rescue perfectly good sewing circle subject of discus- | pudiating old time party principles and denying eee fuet te the eaae feiaee ake tae fhe oy of Europe from the tryranny of Europe’s dema- > sion. But the expre on is not profanity at all. )party discipline they have been “keeping up with | ea) s = ues that the Dawes commission labored so Tt is the names of two school girls the general |the times.” Also they have deluded. themselves |ReF capia wealth in a number of state Sitsesetliy. Mothers!! Apply Common Sense Went to school with down in Marietta, Ohio|with the idea that they could come the “modern. | assachuse s ;| . “General Dawes is bold enough to confess that "TiiSis the era of the prevention senna with pepsin and desirable when he was a boy. These two girls were mis- thing on the masses of orthodox Republics “oltsoyine: in ety ee : the United States has not altogether escaped the of disease and sensible people aromatics, 80 appreciated chevious, even exasperating in their mischief, |and get away with it. ney Tea . 187 | devastating effects of the orgy of demagogy that posoewens Goul sickness: ben se now the-largest selling and since swearing was forbidden in or about| President Coolidge, to the great mass of Re Bouth Datiote has been running rife through the rest of the tools The peta mg se Tera a arc d ae eo the little old red school house, the boys fell into} publicans, is the real thing, orthodox, sane, sound world. Ife is liberal enough to repudiate the “bun- i the habit of combining the names of the two girls | conservative and loyal to the traditions and the | Minnesot most frequently arousing their ire and employ-| principles of Republicanism, and it was entirely | 1oW# ing the combination as a means of relieving any |fitting from a party standpoint that he should |% peevish spell that might engross their youthful |dominate the conyention and that those who attention. That's all there is to it. General Dawes | would not go along with him should be either is neither addicted to profanity nor chewing to-|read out of the party ranks or relegated to the bacco, Democratic campaign rumors to the con-|rear. Some overly particular people complain of the |ciples for which the party has stood long years. Unfounded Rumors trary notwithstanding. r, indigestion, Loe ae bath sory q . te u rie i y would haye his countrymen unite as good ¢ t sin. adaches,colds and oth adele nape ie Ss eye "he Sloane, ae and intelligence than for learning, Again, we|country are clustered in: these . three eastern | zens in demanding from their representatives in A Great Family Laxative of bowel obatenceasen W owt +a 2 should remember that it is not.a body only, or}states, a°fact which keeps the general average | politieal debate an honest presentation from the > rina . Il, who was a practic- laa ( palit meric cana netee a bapsoery md only, that ma neve os femitons it is a man high while the average among~ the standpoint of truth of the great issues at stake , It may be ¢ a to ce ing physi ced 47 years and store e city named, y Were ancestors |and we must not divide him into two. great majority of the people - is ~ probabl the coming campaign, and ‘not from the stand- ered, Dut it thee crfinated this formula, had of serebiiten Seage ntial and vice presidential} “It seems to me that the first teaching with|very much lower than in the states it thera pin of erica ee sureinaee’ In the ‘interest cag if; ritseetiks esta Ne abet be fos ape RO Bs of grace Pia Grocer | which we ought to imbue his mind should be|are comparatively few great fortunes. For ‘ex-]of good citizenship and irrespective of. party, he and. whic ibaa papers “The Patent” "who crac & meen rales ines that which is to regulate his morals and his|ample: If there were a community containing] pleads for “a strict adherence to the truth and artics, h great benefit: Keep th as iss ap ee 10 Was _ } ompanion of Paul |feelings, which shall teach him to know himself, one man worth a million and ninety men worth |to.the sound conclusions to be drawn therefrom, ‘evere his famous ride. family to Wore ed The Coolidge and Dawes partnership began An Old Partnership ster whe Coolidge, started the partnership. It is the’ opinion of ‘Democratic leaders in |*® that end directly and professedly. “Tis great New York on the eve of the convention that Wil- |f0lishness to teach our children the knowledge McAdoo “Doomed evening ant sufficient to elect. rosettes ee 7 who has no claim to be the choice of the party as ern” de waren Ave. oa ork, city: lobe ‘aiag., |i whole. It will not nominate.a candidate des- ik ' dg..'68 New Mont: |tined ‘to practically certain defeat. It will not =—--2'3'50| While the Mississippi's forward turret was|each year to maintain his household, His chief: 450|still a hell of gas and flame and, while ‘there | business-in life was the getting of ‘money. - §o | the stokehold and began its regular tour. Of this} rooms: in which to house them ‘and our expendi- democratic principles. The rule that) year was 3°30 |the engineer officer remarks “It was just navy tures must be increased to a million dollars the | intended, apparently, to prevent the nomination So —= 2.25 | stuff.” 1d in advance and the ives. The convention wanted F Coolidge for president, and it wanted Dawes for Dawes moved his|and to know how to live well and to die well. r nthe British surround-| Amongst the liberal arts, let us begin with that Boston, and with his brotherinlaw, John the south, ‘and to one’ section, the west, which even if carried in addition to the south, is not “2—It does not represent the national Demo- cracy. It is opposed in'the whole group of states |: which have the largest ‘electoral votes, the larg: est. Democratic vote, the largest population ‘and’ “When the Democratic convention, meets it will candidacy it will see a‘candidate headed for de- feat. It will not, on its-final choice pick a man votes in November.” + Navy Stuff . “wasn ich | ty-two states and two territories. The majority nie said tale ete tea teak Tat eas da for the rule was twenty-one votes. The commit- vants and expended a hundred thousand dollars | tee reported in favor ¢f majority nominations, was imminent danger that the ‘magazine would| Now if-his butler had come to him at the close explode, a fire-room watch leaving all chance|g¢ the day and had said: “Sir we must have |‘ y imposing effect,” while the 0) i= of safety on deck far above it calmly walked into|four hundred additional aeryante an 1 | that a majority was accord! to : ear,” the rich man would shave become purple|0f Richard M. Johnson of Kentucky for vice It was..It went fittingly along with such navy. phe he would haye employed words not Tonia ta ipresioent, who, however, was nominated with stuff as-John Paul Jones’ declaration that “L) dictionaries. and he would have swung a hip,in | Van Buren. have not yet begun to. fight,” Preble’s “Blow | such maziner as to lift the butler across the prem-| _ The Democratic convention of 1840, so far as your .matches,, boys,” Farragut’s damning the | jses. ' EE ‘| available records show, was practically the only The butler, however, was guilty of no such| imstance in the history of pens aes the Ailes folly. Instead, being vested with much authority }¥ention did rot concern itself wii equestson: Apia cheerinz the Calliope as they themselves | he hired a single additional servant.and built a Van. Burean again was the unanimous choice 0! . onal The rich man paid [the convention, and was defeated at the polls The “navy stuff” is ae fine a fabric as the} the bill without comment. Then through the pass-|Y William Henry Harrison. When Van Buren world manufactures, ing-years the butler. began to. extend himself,|°#™e up four years later, for a third nomination oo He hired a man to plant a bush; hired a gard- the rule was enforced to encompass hat By this time it may have, dawned upon the) Paral & fable for, the gardener hired an assist-| perhaps more than anything else, setved to make| Joseph Caviezel, first class séaman from Los Anecles,, who miract- congressional mjnd that it has misinterpreted rei IFO aL toe si Peasioites to hand “he {the rule binding for all subsequent conventions, |!ously escaped the blast in the turret of the battleship Mississipp i that at the end of ten years the rich man’s house| ‘The opposing argument on the rule on this oc- deat to the demands of the rank and ite of the [oMtained four hundred additional servants and |casion, was made by Benjamin F. Butler who party, the congressmen pursued their own sweet |#S any additional rooms, and the business of cp Phebe Ryhngth 4 ane age ead, r maintaining the establishment, including trucks, |! 1836 only because it was known who would be way like political “coke fiends” while they were Tikeateys hospital and guards, cost something more | Nominated. He declared, amid what is described than a million dollars the:year. as “the wildest excitement,” that the adoption of The rich man gratutiiel iat times when the|the rule would mean the irlememberinént and bills came in, but everything seemed orderly and final breaking up of the party.” Nevertheless, the inevitable and there wasn’t much he could say. rule was anopeed Li) meer Spee the Moreover, he had little time to talk. Getting the |*outhern delegates, being joined by fitty-elg! money to pay the bills kept his nose in the im-|!0Frthern Net On'the ried ot iia bat mediate vicinity of the grindstone, and each year ren ‘had thirteen Anaad pt arith tay 5 oes a found him deeper and “deeper in debt. his vote began ne eee i a. = - in rate One night he came home from his*work, spent |“ Sen ih pee in pee bean h ee, f Siti at Mis, and hungry. A night guard, failing to recognize | "@8see the first “da lorse”~of politicat his- him at onee, cursed him roundly. The butler met | ‘TY, Was nominated. him at the door, however, deferential as usual, und then stood aghast when the rich man asked for food. res Wai “Heavens above!” he cried. “We-forgot about Dawes Declares x you and the servants have eaten everything in|;.> guen at the Cleveland. convention ‘belped, to the ‘honse- nominate for vice pee has = ibatcig the . . arrival of the notification commit at Evan- Question of Impoverishment ston to.commence his campaign, observes the Much is said today about the need. of “doing Boston Transcript. . * something for the relief of the. farmers of the pA Nay i reams Lote amin dot hy eB west.” Throughout that numérous and important |#nd his friends gather ne ss f Lake Michi element of the American people considerable Aer play mks Pe pce ed aratwgmaavdecieest era da a bigger ae Eonar : er et fia grasp edly paid ym bak aioe hess in a his own sprints Not i en toreian General Charles G. Dawes and Mrs. Dawes snapped at Marietta, On ority do you read out of the party men like A ‘oe, but against,one. of the most pestiferous foes | - tiation... ghee taser La Follette?” demanded Cooper of Wisconsin. lacking. Certainly no indication is given that. in bk 1p aha ten Mnupehole- the. cewagumua cohen cant ‘shortly after the nomination, every Republican, Democrat, Independent, Farm- Folleties have put themselves outside their |COUNtY is still to be found. Yet such is the tact | very, Republican, Democrat, Independent, Farm- eastern states in which wealth is supposed to be | 808%) lives on it, wallows in it-and lusts for it, Shanes xtet are, open eerie) relat wameanae a MEY ce be A acti kode York an ‘ennsylyania. Many a western politi- | ™ ” i clan will point to them as the seat of the “money ies = comagusee ie Sepa eae ee Charlee power” dnd contrast their wealth with the poy-|“- Vawes. Five years of pan Ss AF OGTR: groups told them what to do and they obeyed jmanner, thinking, perhaps, that they were re- |sponding to the voice of the people. | The press of the country quite generally tried to make it plain to them that they’were getting in Dutch” but the task was hopeless. They over- rode the president's veto when they felt like it, flouted his suggestions and ignored his recom- mendations. They were the popular ones as they then visualized matters. But they were not popular, and therefore it |must come as something of: a profound shock to discover, as they have at Cleyeland—and per- haps elsewhere—that in the estimation of the ayerage Republican they have made a politically fatal blunder, The anger of the LaFollette men, because of forces, to insist upon fealty to the party by the posed and repudiated. The “Old Guard” dies hard. It cannot under- stand what has happened. It is unable to sense that it has degenerated and deserted the prin- A Single teaspoonful of ~ DR.CALDWELL’S gogues to their passions and their prejudices everywhere are sad examples of bei ed 1] combe” of those who would have their country- the results of neglect. Be espe- is rey ee sag men “believe that either party is altogether free cially watchful of children. Rest- from the demagogue penta ritceeeae wares in — lack of normal srpetite Three Rules of Health which the demagogue deals. “Al. god -Republi- peaee nna ay: te __ Purchase a bottle of Syrup Pep- 4,663} cans and all Democrats,” declares‘the Min-| fj Constipation. ep ie thatinstant sin at a drug store and always In every one of the’ seven great agricultural | ute Man of 1924, ‘who put their country above “4 r Caldvrell's Keep one in the family medicine states the average per capita wealth of the peo- a Syrup in and you will have chest. Give it to anyone from party demand the ‘inning of an era of ted real sickness. Mrs. infant t i ple is greater than in any of the “capitalistic”, ono sense in public nein This means an Willie: 632 Pino aafe, ond the case a tess they mson of 1637 Pine safe, and the cost is less than a castern states. And a further analysis, could it} not a standardized opinion but an honest differ- be made, would show a still more striking con- ence of opinion, provoking intelligent discussion trast in favor of the west. That is bécause the| and ultimately producing sound: conclusions. great. majority, of the. enormous fortunes of the Real Education In education, Fett a wrote, though both be required, we should look more for character Beach, Cal. and Mrs. cent a dose. Lou Brawley of.Self, Ark., never i have illness in the family becauso of their prompt use of Syrup Pep- You can keep a fame ith just this simple git for consting: bit 6 Se thefeet warm, andthe bowel co be heart weet You Want to Try It Free Before graces either party in the honorable contest the more it shocks the yg7™P in.” tir Waskiegen mee hundred men worth ‘ten’ thousand dollars each | ahead, he serves notice that he will give no quar-| §) system, so wise parents ror peerage ay node zi the average wealth of course would be $10,000, |ter to puch a pest. nevergive anything but ser about Br Caldas Soran fete fo Bre teat That would be $996 apiece less than in the former] “No group of men between the two oceans are} J ® agreed $e cnelaren. meafreetriat boule. ‘Address to community, And yet ninety-nine pér cent of the | 50 ly angered by demagogy or so contempt- Penis Daa men in the latter community would be ten times |uous of the demagogue as are the service men— tive, a table com- only a thousand each, the average wealth would Asking no quarter from the demagogue, who dis- be $10,990. If in another community here were a which makes us free, they all serve, no doubt, in their degree, to the ordering and employment of our life, as everything else does also, in some sort; but let us make choice of that which serves v as well off as a similar number in the former, | the service men of the Democratic party no less} | pound Egyptian § . liam G. Adoo is doomed. to. defeat for the 4 hg phils A ak boca imiowlelee or ae By the same rile, given approximately the'same|than their comrades in the Republican party. sihdclioaalt (Bi Baile "tw tly coveted presidential nomination nothwithstand- Hy | gene: rtual’ Irrespective of party affiliation, they will thank : ing that in the early ballots he will have more | **lves- general:per, capita average, the actual perieapita ea: * votes than any other candidate. The plan of his| This is the true educator’s idea of education, lieutenants to substitute a majority for the two- |¢Yen in this day of dispute as to what should be General Dawes for declaring war. on “the un- principled politician,” as the dictionary defines avera, of the great majority of the people will be highest in the states where there are fewest - " “tx n demagogue no matter whether the demagogue c> P thirds rule is regarded as an admission of weak. |t?URht. Unfortunately, few school systems are|steat fortunes. i hates with the Ku Klux or howls with the mob. |} A.) TRAIN SCHEDULES ness, and it 1s believed that the rule cannot be |{¢xfble enongh to permit a true teacher to do} Unquestionably the’ people of the west ure sut-|tf the servies saan in as powerful at the New ws Chie y changed unless the unit rule which binds state |!8 best work, Also—and this is the saddest| fering from excessive ‘taxation’ and other eco: ace & Northwestern delegations to vote as a unit is changed. The Reasons Why York convention as he proved himself to be at the Cleveland convention, the Democrats will Weatbouna |Phase of our whole educational problem—not| nomic burdens and ills,in common with the rest pS tantee are qualified for this sort of teach- 3 ye country. ‘ed ene nee such nod nominate on their ticket two men of character ‘30 Dp. = tal jd | ing. erefrom as-can be prov: through’ sound leg-}and.common sense—leaders who will co-eperate erzver The two youthful Chicago murderers certainly |islative and’ administrative measures, But they | with Cool ;id; id Dawes in th th poe Pre 5:80 p.m. When a hundred and seven employes of the| were not educated in this sense at all. Character bay i de ther ep lt enh ERR et. oo a Bh Chleage, Burlington & Edison storage battery plant at West Orange, |apparently had been omitted in the teaching hey are not in a condition of permanent impoverish- | pandering politician, and who will be qualified hoe aa >. ». J. were dismissed a note accompanied each dismissal, saying: “We find it necessary to re duce production on account of bad business con. | ditions’ which we believe are brought about by: ‘1—Partisan political investigations at Washing. | His Platform ton. 2—Passage of the soldiers’ bonus bill. 3— Failure of congress to adopt the Mellon tax re- duction plan, ” pape nation or else tt jw yory Srank Jn wiiting why own peoplo-so thi purlty, shall bo-restored bes the consequences. - ..~ y we <5 Gampaign develops its own humor, It is McAdoo's Strength York World is a Democratic news either opposed to McAdoo's nomi ment, in cOmparison with their fellow citizens Cow and eager to join their honorable opponents in of the eastern states, They are not beyond help|® discussion of the issues intended to inform from themselves and from their fellow citizens|rather,than influence the electorate. und from the nation. Most they need is to have|. “To address the intelligence of the American their real condition clearly understood and ‘sym- pocate in this presidential year, instead of their pathetically interpreted. They deserve, in addi-|!#norance, their prejudices or their “passion, tion to this, intelligent help in their every effort | Would be to invoke the spirit of Abraham Lin to help themselves. coln. Such an invocation would be an inspiration to America and an example to the world.” h | recelved in thelr homes or in the schools they | attended, This is the platform promitigated by William McAdoo when he arrived on the scene of the battle of New York: “International co-operation for the Cy of ne K BUSSES abolishing wars cutting down or elimination] Whatever may be wrong with the. old parties, Lapa este BS Hos LEAVE Chan en a Day Fach Wa of excessive military and naval armament; re- | the substitution of “1, llette’s party would be 8 Baggage and Hi ge Leave Salt Creek storation. of world-wide economic improvement |so much worse, that t folks will proceed to] An eastorn organization has recent} add Called for and Delivered broudening the have of prosperity among our take thelr pick of one of the old ones and abide for its sloga he truth is politic: 9a. in. | Salt Creek ‘Transportation 2:30 p. m. Company Tel, 144