Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 25, 1924, Page 6

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Be ad, ve BRERVAASNO SRA PSAPCRREEALRS Sae@Uce ius Freaurd anno ve aqs earinrnes westerres aca dons. ovas oe crams N fe f ‘ [AGE SIX. "she Casper Wally Cridune Che Casper Dailp- Cribune Doubts Smith’s Sincerity ; , secctetiiae peter ey nd oa bd ghd MBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Assisted Prone ts exclusively entitied to the|_ A Democratic constituent of Governor a * ed in this paper|Smith of New York is not ived by any of and lalach ths aoral nee papteha pecetn.t: ibe pet? straddling and twaddling on the ™ ‘Member 7 Circulat! fication of the Volstead act, concerning pe: C a t Reh th mah Bb at which the governor recently made a statement conflict. It was his custom to discuss the origin ‘and f apecies and to com) man with other ani- Th Daily Drivupe lssusa every evening designed to please wet interests on the eve|° : x n The Sunday Morning ‘Trivune every Sunday, at Case of “de pationdl ‘convention, while not alienating | ™4l invariably he finished the discussion | juately housed, - nding. reel Eoponts poms: t f ecang: Rony eae dry interests which might support him in a . | ving aalarice that r > sibitice as second|Pinch. ‘This constituent says what he believes . epee clase matter, Ni vor 22, THs. oe through the new: rs. Here it is: vin vat-all ETT a r “Governor. smiths nt matement tn which Telephones ~.—.---------—----<-— e decla: in favor difyi sg ae: Papercut. at the Volstead act to permit the sale of beer raid res ee tna familia? shin abe facta tho statomaat ap, to one ft jar je facts the s ap- REC Ee Advertising cw.| “Governor now jares in ‘favor o! engo, Til, 386 icth ‘Ave., Sit sore City; Globe Bidg., | law Carnes yet he signed the bill repeal- Boston, i Suite 404 Sharon Bidg., 65 New Mont-ling the Mullan-Gage Enforcement act the effect gomery Bt., Francisco, Cal. Copies of the Daily | of which was to cause many saloons to ‘Tribune are on file in the New York, Chiceg™,come. {and to make enforcement more difficult. He and San Francieco offices and visitors are welcome. now declares himself in favor of a programme which would make enforcement impossile. Chief hes all Airmen ete g Uyriptige hed poy Justice Taft is authority for the statement that |¢ Wo’ wit tebe sli FEthe cy ¢ y an attempt to discriminate between malt and men ou ughtered. Stx tape dell g poe ° | distilled liquor would mar a joke of the Bigh- ¢ : fon: ly. eons x bra Ment Daily acd Bungay -o-cooss-seeeeoes ee Possibly that is the in- “Governor Smith professes to be the saloon, So does every wet, from $0/saloon keeper up to Dr. Butler. They are a opposed to the saloon. For twenty years A be paid in wdvance and the|semblyman Al Smith was one of the strongest | P. Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscrip-| friends of the saloon in the New York legisla- tion becoines one month in arrears. rae He opposed pi eri. ‘pian ‘would | days, ‘aay, woah Tobin se enisach wind! ss ashe drama bhtwrallet SAREE I IE 3 TRIBUNE. restrict the saloon in the slighte: legree. Rd ae tel eh looking .care- “He now favors selling beer and wine in| Pasture where a by Per Copy "Ry Hall Inlet ah red : ree the millions _o' uch. bell. | unde: noses, instead of ooking 7 : . full: it, call 15 or 16 and'it will be delivered to you/ hotels and restaurants. Practical fiance near the fence. Th i of 80 much bell SORE, ; out and the maintenance builtin. : © } be, epecia I’ messenger. Register complaints before $| (7004 tet bringing out the icodity filled the man ag rage. “You ugly{the brilliant record of the army, we, buile hed Raines law sandwich. Ten thousand “hotels” would spring up in this city overnight if the Volstead act were modified to suit the gover- nor’s views. Surely ‘a saloon would smell as brute!” CM @ ht skull }'®:‘Hell and Maria’ of a lot better government.” t is why they pay you handsome divi« i hb ee ont Ay red “| The newspaper a committee ; . den ds in satisfaction and service. : ipermen West The owner of the bull heard the remark and|the truth in,a most emphatic manner. os Ae z Dawes and the West answered: “Well, T advise against 1. The bull] waste of the ‘people's, money, selsed . * Firm, ‘rigid, unyielding, and the rik’ It was the popular belief at the Cleveland venti that Former Governor Lowden, of |fragrant if called a “hotel.” ‘ pate hurt ey and what are you loitering here | “Hell and Ma: ‘exclamation as a‘ good ‘ word in paving e Ce te Road Minot represented all: there was) in’ vies ‘presl: aud chinien eeatee Ravana) Preis (arog verhen ths lover of peace turned upon the ‘own: land Streets are also skid- And Beetial pease SIEM pete ee the “hotels” cavtyink pails of beer. Again we| Ct of the bull and said yery coldly: “That will be| tion. The explosion awakened the people and they northwes * e' 7 fl enough out of you. Just one more word and I’Ii| sided with Dawes in his demand .to. stop the money fargiy oonere ar Py ee Kpecineea knock your nose through to where it can look out | waste. This Bare ‘leat! aera was the of spending it for the support of their families.|the back way.” - . |¢ause of the saying of millions of:dollars. math of the selection of General Dawes is causing a change of opinion among the ‘more astute. ‘ - | Dawes’ career hag been a most interesting. 29 Der ab eee. ; 7 Fate rs | Sad y ld result from a return of . : = 6 " y d-hitting oratory of the gentleman |The misery that wou : A He was born.in Ohio in 1865. His father:was Gon- 35 F sabe Corpue actall ine ene ron the frontpage, tio liquor. traffic would neutralize Governor Submerging Taxpayers eral Rufus R, Dawes, commander of the famous , "Watch for advertisements telling about the. , wi when the congressional committee sought to be-|* at bts fare ibid the page akc ett At this time when a red hot campaign is being} Tron Brigade of Wisconsin. “Charley” Dawee . gnany other uses.of concrete. And remember ‘ smirch the American war record, together with : e drys beasii going to surrender alt that | carried on in the state of Washington for the| worked during his college years as chief. engi- ; - thatthe ‘Portland Cement Assoéiation ‘has a his services as director of the budget and his Tet pare ge ine © long fight against the passage of the Bone bill “authorizing cities and| jeer on a small railroad in: Ohio. He. graduated free persorial service to offer you. Whether you 4) work with the reparations committee, give the | liquor traffic. towns to use, purchase, sell and dispose of‘elec-} from Cincinnati law scAool at the.age of 21, In : - use concrete or have it used. for-you, this eer # Republican party, they believe, a campaign 1887 he moved to Lincoln, Neb. A great:stream ice will give you more Soe your mstiay. . bi gto asset which is eyen stronger than the Lowden| | és 3 $ 4 of:clients did not come hurrying to the door-of . - yor i activities in the cooperative farming movement. Throw the Traitors Out ate his office and added jobs of engineering during A ‘Our booklets R-3 end RA tei many fates The northwest has’ been heard from yolum- % the intervals of clients aff. him money ‘on things aboot Concrete Roads and Streets, W inously.in the interim, and conservative leaders Among the staunch Republican newspapers which to live. The majority of his meals wer eat- © © sighe Would you Bike tx to send? There ts no cRarge. who are in position to know, in the states of of the country holding the same views with ref-|tion, repair, operation, extension or betterment] at at a 5 cent Iunch counter conducted by a man ¥ North and South Dakota; Minnesota, Nebraska |erence to the acts of so-called Republican con-|of new plant or s iystem for generating, tran® | Don Cameron, who catered to university students ~* ‘ mitting or distributing electricity,” it is inter-|and struggling young business and Fy auaents || “PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION and other farming. sections of the west and/gressmen with regard to support of Republican Northwest, all state that the Coolidge’ and|principles and the Republican executive, held by | esting to consider public. ownership schemes of a] men, Here Dawea met General John J, Pershini Ideal ; Dawen-ticket ie the strofigest vete getting ‘cim- Pe HaE oor wont oo thei Sate ee similar nature, on beet agen ura owner-} who had been sent'as a “shave-tail” from ‘West DENVER, CO! , : Bt bination ever put forth by the Republican party. : uw 2 § not!ship enterprises other 5 rien Point to‘drill cadets of the Nebraska State Uni- of National Or N ly in the west and northwest but in|an inch farther than the Tribune would go. It would seem that Seattle citizens woyld have friendship. has béen™ further ‘ce- ie y all Saas Suona” of the country the opinion|And the Tribune would not apply the cleaning} had enough experience with the cost of. muni-, sad ; Z| to Improve and Extend the Uses of Concrete prevails that, “a little of the Dawes cussin’|Up process to the Republican party alone, it} cipal undertaking in the way of power. produc- |) Prdlelataly, mixed.-with New England prayin' | would apply it to the Democratic party as well,|tion and street railway operation,:coupled with: to jnakes. a combination . Democrats cannot go|to the end that we have clean party government] lost taxes formerly paid by ig Mato 7 . asa,” and thorough party responsibility under the] and-no compensating red: ‘rates as prom. Tilinois., was ive in -behal: against with: success government as contemplated by all men and}iged by proponents of the municipal ownerstiy y cident Btekiniey ducing: the “campaign ‘of Not B Lon Distance women who believe in the supremacy of the con- undertaking, to warn the rest of the state gi Sana “tater? coumpteclion of theycut ot by g sitaticd Tes a ore he mens becarag at aa adopting a wholesale Dabs ownership. plan rency under the’Ohio president. In 1902 1 “La Follette we are here!” proclaimed Wil-|tion of all branches of the government. | sponsored by Seattle advocates. ized’ thé ‘Ceritral ‘Trust company of siahy hiebomay the keynoter at the St. Paul Chronicle says: Why should a state at large and small towns “4 - Y Lal ‘onvention. That's as far as| “Throw the traitors ont of the Republican pe loaded with the experimental ‘nchemes of cit: rer) “William Z Foster, the country’s lead-|Party. Drum out of the ranks every congress-| jes? * i a Cah ing Communist, who draws his inspiration di-}/™an and senator who, elected as a Republican,| ‘ake San Francisco as an exan ai uniak rect from Moscow, and is regarded ag the na-|turns against the party. similar to Seattle, It started a municipal; ae > . jon's chi from-within, hoisted the red) Any man who takes a nomination as a He-lsystem in 1900, Tt authorized bonded indebtedness poard’ and. showed Europe alat| _ 1. <> -Deliciously Prepared flag s..chiet “por tron i publican, asks for Republican votes, and then | of $45,000,000 in 1910 to build the system and nase men cat handle big th’ ; with Dressing William had read what the redoutable cham: |Plays the insurgent, is a turncoat und a traitor.| water is. still many miles from the city, whose in thé ‘Avimy, was*made a “Major. of Enginecrs! - , i f aimiable paternalism had said in the|Throw him out. +, [citizens are supplied by a private company| ina came out of the service a Brigadier General. {it~ bony for our 2 Piles printe cand writs prepared to give to the] “These masqueraders have brought the Re-| Roughly estimated it will take another $70,000,- Th June, 1921. General. Dawes wi named as : gathering the proper communistic flavor and|Publican party to a crisis, They have in Con-|000 to put “municipal water” in the faucets of | Director of the Budget, accepting the place with show the Wisconsin agitator that he was a per-|gress balked the party in its earnest efforts to] customers. z son who could not be annihilated’ with denun-|do its full duty by the country. Long before the city water is) running, how- ciations, not bluffed by any otheP methods short rank W. Mondell pointed out the facts in ever, advocates of public ownership have loaded ‘af dynamite. his speech at Cleveland. He said properly that} San’ Francisco with $186,500,000 worth of muni- “La Follette, we ‘are here!” sounds fine in|the present low esteem in which Congress is} cipal industrial undertakings, either. actual or a keynote oration, but it meant nothing to the|held is to be charged directly to the turncoats,| proposed including the cost of the water sys- gang at St. Paul, If LaFollette could not be|Who have blocked effective party government, | tem, present to receive the crown, they had no use|the necessary system under our constitutional] gan Francisco's total bill for municipal under- the understanding that he could resign at’ the ‘ mre he tet athe | THURSDAY SPECIAL ed in a saving for the year 1922 of $1,600,000,000 : of the people's money. Usel expenditures wer aoeghed: superfluous clerks were let go,| A 214-lb, Roast Spring Chicken, $4.35 and some heads of Departments’ were publicly taken to task for their slack cooperation in. be- —at— half of economy ‘in government affairs. He ‘ef for him. ‘That outfit was not conferring dia-| Scheme. ‘ taking, actual and under way only, is $228,450,-| headed what is kno s the Daw : ; dems by long distance. , “The Republican party must get rid of these | 00, By subtracting its $186,500,000 bill for util. lor asperts to, nee If edey ai nee be break 9 . ss ” Py men." They are not Republicans. They sail lity enterprises there is left a city indebtedness out of economic thaos in Europe. His report Russell S Delicate . Courting Disaster Tee ee ort Tey Uretended to be Ite-lof only $41,950,000 for street, improvements -and| met with the favor of the Geran people. It ssen meee g publicans ouly to get themselves elected so that openings, schools, public buildings, ete, parks, | disclosed a wey. by which they could ¢ die i ; If by any twist of fortune, or misfortune, ‘bay sala Practice sabotage. playgrounds and miscellaneous projects, includ-| obligations and yetnot be condemned: toa life Public Market Beech St. Entrance whichever may suit your fancy, the New York No, Hens no representative or senator the|ing viaducts, sewers and reconstruction work. | of sconomic slavery. Strangely enough, . the i : hia at convention should name William G. MeAdoo as|Fight to his own opinions. — But we do hold that] ‘These fi were published in a recent issue! French did not look with disfavor upon his plan East Second Street Paras ae the Democratic standard, bearer, the indepen-|When a representative or a seuator is elected as|o¢ “The City” issued by the San, Francisco Bu- . . - o H and if Gerniany ins her ‘place in. the ‘indus- dent voter would be offered a candidate who|® Republican by Republican votes he must, if he|reau of Governmental Research. They show how trial world, it will be Ja: rit Wag has received ‘large emoluments from interests |/8 an oe carne Repulican or resign. | the tentacles-of-muntcipal ownership spread and calm, pousthlatptatnees fits mod worked ty concerned with the exploitation of government When he finds himself no longer able as | overshadow all other neceseary functions of city | Charles. G.. Daw: ; for selfish’ enda. an get! man to maintain me principles with government, once they are established. - While Dawes dynamic, hard hitting’ and. If the oil land leases are an issue in the|Which the ere beta ica there is only|” Largely out of the San Francisco.and Los An- forceful to the extreme, there ix an intensely. hi- campaign they may be construed as more fayor- bead decent ig for 0 do. That is to) geles municipal ownership. undertakings was man side to: his charatter. In memory of his able to the Democratie than to the Republican |Tesign. developed the proposal for the 000,000 Cali- ‘on his uppers’ is ever permitted to feel that he is the recipient of charity. A similar iristi- tution was founded by Dawes for women. With Coolidge in. the. White . House. and Dawes’ as Vice-Président, the people of the United States can go-to bed at night with the feeling that these two men will see that none of their money is wasted and that taxes will be brought to as low-a point as it-is: humanly possible to bring them. Even many Democra‘ im Washington are forced’ to’ admit that -it a good, honest, sensible, business-like téam that vealed by others. That fact alone places him | °°. upon a difficult defensive. However, be that as hd 1g the time to get rid of these traitors |the state of Washington hive witnessed in Seat. it may, Mr. McAdoo would be the most yulner-|t0 the party. Let their names be erased from |tle should cause any taxpayer to hesitate before able opponent. that ‘could be selected. from a|the ore roll, Let the Republican Con- authorizing a wholesale establishment.of polit- strictly Republican political viewpoint, and we |Stessional Campaign Committee support honest | jcal undertakings at the expense of the taxpayer. should rejoice in his selection on that account, Re A ana for their places. Let every Re Soaps ia res were it not for the fact that he is totally unsafe|PUblican organization turn its back on “these Can Rural Church Be Saved? That the rural church in America is in a bad as an executive.” men, cord ‘Thereby will the party be strengthened. Hie Spaeety bon dis rallroad re g nis . jway is obvious even to the most casual observer. No boast of membership. or, of income can dodge deflation record are all proofs of his unfitness. “Throw the traitors out.” the issue of dwindling attendance. And, after Democracy. is courting disaster in flirting ; ‘Tax Free People—Tax Free Bonds Figures such as these and such as citizens tn’ ‘ son, Rufus, Gene: ates ‘ party, as figured from.the Democratic stand- Gaiters a full ea to appeal to the voters | foria water and power act to develop hydro-elec-| the’ Rufus’ Mies sieal fee ae : point. "Tf the object is to attract the indepen- eee sth ah gg Dart le Reree pe dea a he tric power plants and other utility undertaking#|in Chicago, ‘There is also a hotel of like-char, ; dent vote this issue can only avail if the m- . S ‘2)in the state, -* i ‘ Sot ocratic nominee is, himself, above suspicion of |? proceed with self-respect and the respect of] This measure was déciélvely defeated by the pa ateeiavab ined te theoo ne py relationship to oil interests, Mr. McAdoo was |" eh atts eval people, as well as recently proposed bond issues lohtaihed for 5: and 10¢ and excellent meals are an agent of oil interests, and morever he nt 4 t s elected as one thing and acts|in Los Angeles for extension of municipal Own | served at the cost of 7¢ each, ard no man whi eo 2 : kept that connection a secret until it was re-|®8 another, he is entitled to no respect what: lersh p enterprises in that city, i "1 " * tess THE MICHELIN MAN IS. MOVING ‘Across the Street From His ” Present Location : ae with Mr, McAdoo, Alloa dkareh in only as strong as its number of fhe Republicans have put up to be voted for ‘in He Expects to Be Settled in the After State Power Congress at its next session will consider an| On the basis of attendance figures, the Insti- New Place by the End’ Having failed in successful operation of city|amendment to the Federal constitution which|tute of Social and Religious Research reports of the Week lighting plants, the politician is now offering to| provides for taxing the income from future is-|that Protestanism is losing its grip in raral No. State Monopolies take charge of state superpower plants and|sues of state and municipal boni!s by the Feier-| America. wholesale electricity to cities and to farmers, jal government. It also provides that states] ‘Here is one example out.of a mass of mater: It is‘coming to be generally understood that Statistics show that more than 700 cities|:may tax the incomes from future issues of gov- and towns in the United States have in ‘recent|ernment bonds that are owned within their years abandoned ‘municipally owned electric] borders. In plain English this means thet pla , and. others have given up gas and other|the income derived from tax-exempt bonds, in- Jal studied: the county of. Windsor, Vermont. | private firms and corporations can enforce bet- Disregarding membership figures and contribu-|ter business methods than are possible through tions, an investigation showed that the church | any "fede machinery. attendance record covering some 35 years’ had Thi # general fact probably induced the New 1 : Mtilitie stead of being tax-free as in the past, would| dropped 47 per cent. Whereas the Protestant | York Legislature'to again defeat n bill creatie R M MOSHER Only about six per cent of our entire popula-|hereafter be subject to taxation in the same ponrlation of Windsor county had increased 11/8 state insurance fund monoply, Another bil \ » tion today is gerved by municipal light and/manner os income earned in any manner what- per cent in the last generation, ‘ to create a mutual automobile owners’ insur. The Michelin M: power plants, whereas not many years ago this |soever, In other words, church attendance in this typ-|@nce corporation on a semi-monopolistic plan 316° W. Yell ape percentage was nine. That would appear to More than a billion dollars is now diverted | {cal New England township is only half of what | Was also defeated. ae F 2 ¥ grawetows Phone 309 indicate a loss to municipal ownership of 83 1.3]every year from agriculture and business to] {t was a generation ago. The same rate of decline The: latter proposition was one to compel ; WILL MOVE ACROSS THE per cent. Today less than four per cent of all/tax-free bonds. This is a knife that cuts both] keeping up for another decade or two will find|motor vehicle owners to carry lability insur. STREET SOON electric energy is supplied by municipal plants,|ways. It EN Ala industry of the needed cap-|the rural church of this locality deserted; - ance under a mutual system’ controll by the amore than 96 percent by privately owned plants. jita] and it shifts heavier taxes upon agriculture} What is the matter with the rural church? stato, H ; All political management is known to coat/and business. If that leak is stopped by the] It is a complex question. But we think the Very, few citizens who have had experience more than business under stress of private en-|passage of the amendment, agriculture and bus: | heart of it is here: Too many churches and nig-| but. know that business efficiency under politi- terprise and private initiative and competition. |iness will thrive as never before, gardly salaries for the preachers, Which comes |cal- management is. the exception. . The people are learning that politics is less Taxfree bonds and heavy surtaxes do not] first is as great a puzzle as that of the ogg and It-in-no wonder that a great industrial state efficient in getting @ dollar's worth of anything |promote gootl times, Lower surtaxes with-no! the chicken. . like ‘New ‘York will reject creating a state mon: for a dollar, more tax-free bonds will promote prosperity, But observe a vicious circle: Too many @pély of accident insurance, — ~ , Tribune Wantads Bring Results ’

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