Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 24, 1924, Page 6

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t the aggrandizement of the ef for | the point is that you are saddened and disgu natien of the whole transportation problem look- | ness. £ "ae Sees ings Se Sai or share anal kas cai moet 2 to Ly ligious freedom, separa’ am n fis to. : stain a ¥ Harriman; said. that pegs ligi ight. « " Tn his lifetime Woodrow Wilson was the most tent influence within the Democratic party. Will his followers in life be his followers after death? . 1 Ss : 1 large} The Red Conclave agent = ian 2 Seta gear ek tee Es i trolled= . 3. B BANWAY _ont_B 2% -HANWAY Se ea catea caver Uae tea ae living by |) vro-23 Steger Bidg.. Chi- ceases to be a factor in the cam- pati ro Hag bs Nee Met |Cinter Tas Sntentionmeuinated Duncan Mac ie the 5 Bidg.. 55 New e convention a fomery Bes San Francia. cu copies of te Madly |}honatg of Springfield, Til, former president of |Workl of money-getting, and each respects the and San Prancioce oifices and visitors are welccme. IBSCRIPTION RATES rmers’ organizer, for vice prési-|age is that the landscape is. cluttered up with ‘ x = ote ieee eeitaions are Sealy: soanintana’l men who don’t know their business. They not a however, for the national committee of the party | only fail of a descent living, but they annoy and cents a a be organization, which is to be appointed after the} cheat men who have purchased the right to ex- L a & 3 HRW AR AUN MO AMOO DOMME OSE ME TS OB Be a n {ALIANT HU i ith) ‘AGE SIX. One Month, Dally and Sancay - ubscriptions must be paid in pally ‘Trbune wil not Insure delivery after subdscrip- tion Decomnes one month in arrears. KICK. IF YOU DON'T at ftnd rie Ts or 18 and tt will be delivered to you fully ‘for tt. by special messenger erclock candid byward : typifies calm, dispassionate s ansh ] i i compromising adherence to the constitution and | vate monopoly of anything not patented an@ it the laws of the land, and an inflexible servant to/ does not control the government. the public welfare, Charles G. Dawes connotes dynamtie energy centered upon the accontplish- ; nient of high purpose. In the two men the country | public.” The embattled farmers would insist tnat sees embodied every characteristic of the ideal/Ta Follette says the thing that is net. If he executive, Neither Mr. Coolidge nor General Dawes need very few of the high cost units in any industry be accepted by the people merely on faith. Each | y) has demonstrated a personality that peculiarly | diet. To fix prices at a point which would no fits him for the duties of the office to which he more than enable the low cost units to declare | ;, has been nominated. The consunmate skill with eight per ient dividends would produce wide which President Coolidge has presided over the! spread bankruptey among the high cost units executive branch of the government for the past / and prevent any accumulation of surplus for the year, has established him as second to no other | risks of new enterprises. t calt There Are None Better Never before has the Republican party entered | . * 3 a presidential campaign with more satisfactory ment and industry by private monopoly,’ LaFol- tes. ‘The name of each has come to be the | Jette sees double unless he means organized labor every American home. Calvin Coolidge and the embattled farmers, in which case he 75 }convention, will go to Cleveland for the July ‘advance and the GET YOUR TRIBUNE. your Tribune after looking care Register complaints before $ tesmanship, un- head in the country’s history. His supporters do not I te ha ff votes; now to resort to argument for the win-|, device to relieve mult they need only point to his White se record when urging that he be continued at his post, Mr. Coglidge became vice president | he ought to know that the Mellon plan was the on the strength of his courageous stand for law /only way to collect full taxes from multi-million- and order while - governor Hew much more does he deserve national en: dorsement months of achievement in the presidency, capped as he was by the bitter hostility of the /of government and the laws enacted under it. He anti-Republican coalition that has ruled the leg-/ of Massachusetts. remarkable twe! handi. after his isiative branch of the government, pean five years. Close co-operation between president and vice | the service, Future financing will be more and president is assured. Their relations will. be |™ore in this direction. merely a continuation of an association begun months aga As director of the budget and as head of the reparations committee, General Dawes has been brought into frequent consulta- erat Dawes leaped into public fame when | put there he was made general purchasing agent of the/should give him entirely to W: y. rican army in France. He was the chief “go} with.” getter” of the Pershing organization, and ob-} staeles faded when he applied himself to the task of getting supplies. The same qualities of courage and relentless energy were needed by President Harding in applying the budget law to the incredible mess which the retiring Demo- crats had made of the federal egg Mig eral Dawes was picked as director of the bud-}_ ave . get, and som a knows how the Washington | ideal of community living when the interest of situation was speedily clarified, and hundreds of |oue is the interest of all. It is but a step im the millions of dollars were saved the taxpayers by | Tight direction. It is a fine contrast to the idea the most drastic ecenal banker and an expert o . u President McKinley had recognized his re jby them, and recognize the minimum of - markable talent in that direction, and for five |Sibility to the citizens. Citizen sentiment has be- years Charles G. Dawes had served as comptrol- | Come So sensitive that this attitude is no longer ler of the currency. When the Hughes repara-| tolerated. tions plan was accepted and an American ot | great financial ability was needed by the Euro- nations to head the committee, p toc Dawes was drafted by them, and established |@2d bonds are distributed among several million himse! more solidly in the esteem of his j customers and employes. This is one of the main General Dawes is a finance, 75 | Follette being persuaded to take the General : pect much of them. meeting of the conferences for progressive polit- ical action in the hope of doi with the LaFollette pared to step out in the some trading le. Ma is pre robable event of La nomination. The Wisconsin Wild Man La Follette is ussful to add joy to our politi- cal campaigns. It was amusing to see him at- tempt to direct what*the Republican party shall think and say when he has no relation to that party except that of an enemy. ba As LaFollette sees the matter we are in some- what the following horrible situation: the control of. } “Our great trouble under secretary for internal affairs of crookedness, has not been found, but nearly everybody in Rome seems to believe that the So- ialist was murderéd in cold blood. Finzi has re- signed his post. A Fascist editor fleeing from Rome has been arrested as im) plicated in the dis- appearance of Matteotti, ’ Mussolini is shaken by the stress of public feeling. He may not fall. His attitude is wholly unexceptionable. “The guilty shall be punished, no matter who they may be.” Furthermore it is intimated in the news despatehes that the dic tater’s good faith is not questioned even by the party friends of Matteotti. fi of course, that, wise or unwise pol justified or unjustified in his dictatorship, Mussolini is net a murderer nor a conspirator for assassinations. The world is willing, even anxious to accept this proposition. If Italy accepts it, Italy may stil! donbt the wis- dem of continuing what is a virtual autocracy under the form of a parliamentary government. does those parties an injustice. There fs no pri- “Monopoly * * * now. exacts extortionate prof- its upon every necessity of life consumed by “the means ‘used’ as well as ‘consumed,’ there are ch_can do more than live on a very meager “LaFollette denounced ‘the Mellon tax plan as illionaires at the ex- pense of other taxpayers.” Nobody imagines La Nollette to be wise or well informed, but surely What You Can Never Know It’s amazing the vast number of things that have been learned by the world’s people through the centuries. The sum total of human know!- ecze is so gigantic that the brightest brains would have to live thousands upon thousands of years to master it all. : For instance, the carpenter has that is entirely unknown to the chemist. Every different line of work of knowledge that is unknown to outsiders: It takes a man. an entire lifetime to begin to learn about farming, cherhistry, medicine, sales- manship or any of all the other long line of hu- man activities. We have barely scratched the surface. of knowledge. And yet a man could live thousands following a different aires. Somebody should tell him about it. “LaFollette issued eleven distinct schedules or orders to the Republican convention, in the ag- greate involving a complete change in our form says he is not a communist, but he is obviously something just as good. He is a dreadful bore, no law for supp! ing him. We isconsin to play Better Than Socialism The customeremploye plan of financing pub- lic utility operations is thoroughly American. It is a form of commonwealth better than So cialism. It is making concrete in a practical way the of lifetimes, in each one fi quired a fractign Of the knowledge that has been ford out by the human race at large. Addressing companies sell mailing lists cover- jef thirty years ago that a favored few would} ! eee 5,000 different forms of business act- i The old idea ef education was to pour facts mto the brain, the same as filling a jug with «a wnnel. But we have progressed and specialized vo much that education is, by compulsion, being put on a different basis. To succeed, a man must specialize on some one thing. In that field he needs all the facts he can soak up. But when it comes to general knowledge it jeare for the interests of the public, would profit Electric light, power and telephone companies pioneered the customer and employe owenership idea of these properties and today their stocks i 7 i Siti s futile to attempt to learn everything. It fel Americans lution of oblem | reasons why the securities of public utilities are | ** a iP < ything. that had batfied the best minds of Hurope for|im such great demand. Reasonable carsings al ‘Ply can't be done. The important thing is £0 be taught how to find knowledge when arises for using it. A dictionary is just as useful to the average person as several years’ foreign la) used in his life’s work. lowed by law are returned to the people «ao use of be the languages Not Farmer—Just Red requires &°great amount . lime of work, and at the end he'd only have ac:| i Constitution. The expected reported on the setts.” —Boston — highest their nation’s debts Lonis Times. 1913. The cause? Dawes!—Fort. Wayne If_a candidate for the happen oil lease inquiry. Every Republi- can from Harding down was denounced, but no word was said of McAdoo, Daniels, or any of the other Democrats—Omaha Bee. Speeches by Governor i under the any of “Have Faith ol Massacku- Speeches by President Cool! might a) propriately be entitled “Have Faith in America’ and Dawes! A good ticket to nomi- the peoples cunfldcnce aa’ public events ie the 's as servants in the offices —Troy Ties. Even the radicals in Europe are ultra-conser- yatives when it comes to If an average family of five per- sons bought only Swift & Company meats for one week during 1923, that family would have paid the. _company, as profit, less than 5 cents on the week’s supply. : These figures are developed by considering U.,S. Government sta- tistics on meat consumption in rela- tion to Swift & Company’s profit. By the intelligent use of capital, Swift & Company prepares meats in a modern, sanitary, scientifically- clean manner. ed when Senator Walsh were published By intensive organization, Swift & Company distributes every variety of meat, under complete refrigeration, to retail markets of great cities and small hamlets— wherever they may bé located. It isonly through the most effi- cient methods that a company can supply the meat requirements of a family of five persons, anywhere in this country, for a period of seven days, at a profit of only 5 cents. Swift & Company’s profit from all sources in 1923 averaged only a fraction of a cent per pound on all products sold. payment of United States—St. of to the Sentinel. " was ever State leaders on the Davis able compromise in the event the Smith-MeA, . cuntest develops a deadlock. rae Lines and Angles BY TED OSBORNE The * tion with the president. Each has the highest re spect for the qualifications of the other. The people are to be congratulated that ther will have the privilege of voting fo? such an ad- mirable team. was ye . master Grange, P of H. At the grange he in Boston in 1920 Bouck was convicted on four charges of violating his obligations, was repri- The pleasant custom of bridegrooms' of a few days or a few months claiming the fall exemp SS manded by the national master, and was requir | tion of a married man in computing income tax} \ Cheapest * wi a ad to make ology, which he did. Having| il! be sanctioned no longer under the latest s No Basis for Calamity Setaesamtae rwyuabinae ane haat continue |Fulings of the internal revenue bureau. The bride- peestions The Ten Command ments There is an old superstition that through some |his radical utterances along the lime for which |STO™ whose marital experiences cover a lesser came down in mysterious force a presidential election sum-|he was convicted, Bouck. in July, 1921, was sus- mysterious fe : t ready for use. mer must necessarily make “dull business.” Dull | pended from office and the next national grange business is nothing more or less than unwilling: | session confirmed that action. ness of people to buy and let go of their money. —_—_—__ Se far as its being inevitable and uneseapable ‘A World Accomplishment is concerned, presidential election dullness of r business is nothing but a myth » satisfied with past achieremen' The spreading of a fatalistic belicf that things |American me and ee have to be im bad state once in four years is recently been semviing photogra about as silly a policy as could be followed. It | the latest test of sts system has been to send news —— is not®based upon any actual condition whatever. | pictures from Cleveland to New York during the It does not even promote thrift, but merely | Sepublican national convention. hoarding, timidity and ade. " | The transmitting and-receiving for this work Don’t bother about osed ill-effects of | ¥23 connected by a long distance telephone cir period than a year at the time income taxes a: due will be entitled to an exemption whieh is the full exemption only as his period of bliss to a year. No doubt this ts a scientific and exactly way to distribute the rewards of matrimony either the gent who drafted this ruling to remember kre’ cayeisleniy incapenie to r exquisi intri- cate methematical pr mencrS is the mind man in the eraly stages of marital felicity. mental disorders at about that time are likely to render any attempt to marshal the serried ranks of integers and perfect form, > Pca oth your new bile” “No he didn't, but he Came near filling the hos. Tho just as ready for use, util- Sy ; its service was not handed down ready-made. . Not “What Is a smile?” “Just the whisper of a laugh.” - UNCLE HOOK SAYS. “Lots 0° folks keep wonderin’ why I ain't never married. I guess I'm a good deal like th’ rancher Years of research and millions were required to bring it to ciphers embarrassingly dif- & presidential campai the campaign, ar|<pit: and ues 2 geen casks, = ficult if not distressingly bopelese. who said he allus liked cattle, but didn't care perfection. political dise fon is to king as it is ta | Sod wake eee Pra —al Lesa immedia fer no perticlar cow.” the: Ba it soe like. pretty tS How long will it be before the user of an ordi |mary telephone cam see the party to whom he is }talking. It sounds entirely improbable but in the light of recent advances im wireless and wire communication it dees not seem outside the realm of probability. Those Who Know TIME’S CHANGES. pomr “Tet and your sister are twins, are you not?” 7 Dick—“We were when we were children, now she is five years younger than I am.* Bobby (just leaving ape just )— are hoisting up a unfe doun'thecteat= med Hig Mother—“WWell, be area cae ell, be careful not to walk on Father—“Can da: style to which het a eaaieeey aa _ about i In so far as prosperity is a state of min everyone might as well make is mind to make the best of things this vear, just as in any other year. The croaker is known as an animal who sticks in the mud. . . 2 . There is a man on third; the score is tied and His Last Political Will there are no outs. The batter, being fleet of foot, at purports t he last political will and |elects to “lay one down.” Shortstop fields the ~ Wilson fs to be laid be-| ball cleanly, for it was hit a little too hard, and of the Democratic platform hai an m the New York convent today. 4 calls for straight-cht mem- dherence to justice w Like the Commandments, the value of utility services is measured solely by the uses we make of them: of them are so jealous of their rights as to snatch from the sweet altitudes Deaven to the sordid depths of al- rapture is brief enough goodness ——____ “Patriots’ War" Now Forgotten BY ELDEN SMALL While today a mention of the “Patricts’ War" will bring only a questioning look, yet for a time it threatened to bring a real‘state of war about} Suitor—“No, sir, T cannot.” with parts of the United States and Canada ar. Father—*Then take her, my bey T was afrald raved against England. Ita locale was along the | you thought you tould.” Sete rn ler although its actual birthplace was In i" i vee provines, - astronomer says that at our presest rail read rates, a trip to M Im the latter part of ISST, the ftnanctal pante mately seven tenbied se keg saan i ape - mm thts country spread Ite effect into lower Cam. be where my wife went last winter, rf bers equal chance to throw out the batter at first or to shut off the run going home. He elects to make the throw to first. The runner scores. | Now, you, being present and opposed te any further scoring by the side at bat, bite a frag ment from some stranger's struw hat an est Heaven to slay the shortstop quickly $a normal reaction | tecte The shortstop is doomed to remain Im the min.‘ the tariff te promote foreign trade and to pre ‘ors by reason of the vacuum above his ears; but NATRONA ~ POWER COMPANY Illinois States Miners’ Union, for president, and } othe#’s abilities. William Bouck of Shadro Wooley, Wash., a One trouble with everything in this hectic i of | taxat nward of} —~

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