Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 20, 1924, Page 22

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— SUNDAY, JULY 20,4924. The Casper Sunday Cribune PAGE EIGHT. _ a] Che Casper Sunday Cribune overhea d b gins to devour the whole thing, the} - The Festive Jobholder - Blaine-Conkling | - — = : =| business divides up again into smaller units an¢ baiertinas Ornate cthiettn tive Smbatees * akeart By ELDEN SMALL 4 rue. Pundey-Morcing Teivane avery Bodeay, ae Caw. goes ahead. The packing industry ~ an eraniple uaPeoneI $4,000,000,000 is paid out in the Unit- For more than a half century, the feud be- of the process. Mr. LaFollette is not agreeable to permitting an inevitable law to talg its own course. He makes it a paramount issue and wants to do mething about it, or pretends he does, when he knows the utter impossibility that confronts tween James G. Blaine idol of the G. O. P. for a generation, and Roscoe Conkling, New York senator, was universally recognized and under- stood. Even today many familiar with our polit- ical history know of it, but very few recall its cause. . ed States every year to publie officials, active and retired, These figures are not surprising when we know that. nearly 3,500,000 persons are on the publie payroll, federal, state and local. » Wyomung. Publication offices: Tribune Building, Mposite postoftice. Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postozfice ay secund cass matter, November 22, 1918. HOTEL MARSEILLES Business Teleph 15 and 16 \ jephones ae Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting ; ; Besse 7 ‘ Nearly one-half of the $8,500,000,000 spent year- t Fog eS at BTSs an A cae ae ee Cheon ly by i government pcs officials and for: Both men were able, ambitious, eloquent and = By BiS-POD Popeye wuL cron thetaeee mer officials. Every taxpayer should understand | extremely jealous of each other. Away back in Broadway at 103d St. i 3. BR. HANWAY_ and E. E. HANWAY that almost one-half of his taxes go to support] the late war times both were in congress, in the Les elt ge crn ap at Advertising Representatives Why. Not Be Careful office-holders. house, and had already re each other as i Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bidg.. Chi aveays z Fi One of Mussolini's first acts was to dismiss | potential foes. Then in a debate (it was in Near Riverside Drive * Sg, Ts Re Fee Ay Ne Oe ete Slee azonc. | Abaut 25,700 lives were lost in motor vehicle | 199,000 men from the public payroll. 1866), came the clash ‘that had far-reaching re- Central Park, Theatres 4 RREUE Ore aat oennclbe Gel conioe of the Paily | Rccidents (exclusive of grade crossing collisions |” Gur trouble is that the job-holder is the back-| sults. Blaine in a scorching speech, referred to and Shopping Sections Conkling’s gait as his “majestic turkey-gobbler strut.” The thrust cut the proud New Yorker deeply and was never forgotten. There is no question that when Blaine was lat- er the leading Republican candidate for the presi- dency, Conkling’s unappeasable hatred kept the Maine leader out of the White House. It was, in fact a two-edged sword, for each angry man did much toward wrecking the high aspirations of the other. motor vehicles and trains) in the Unit-{ Hone of every political party. Jobs are the cur- only si « in increase of nearly 2,000) reney in which party debts are paid. And this he 1922 record. Grade crossing fatalities | currency is at present inflated. a total exceeding 17,000. 3 estimate was made by the National Safe- y Committee of the Automobile department of | the National Bureau of Casualty and Surety | erwriters on the basis of statistics of 135 betwee ed © New York, Chicago, Boston, uncisco offices and visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outsile State Daly and Sunday -. year. Sunday Only ~ Six Monthe. Daily and Sunday - Three Months. Daily and Sunda: One Month, Daily and Sunday Per Copy ‘room, water $2.50 - Single room and bath $3 Double room, bath $5 per day Handsome suites of 2, 3rooms Dinner de Luxe $1.25 served in Blue Room and Grill Pen aper ot tered M. P. MURTHA, Mgr. Ore Year, Flaws in the Primary “Advocates of the direct primary conscient- iously believed that it would attract to public | office a higher type of citizenship and more com- It may be all right to insure your car against | petent persons than were obtainable under the and property dam-| old methods.” notes the South Bend Tribune, lent which may be| “Theoretically it should do so, but the theory 7.80 vg fire, collision, public liability and so long as the acc One Year, Daily and Sunday One Year, Sunday Only —-- Six Months. Daily and Sunday ot... ee a ag sie } One Month, Daily ead: Buscay '- due to your carelessness merely hurts the “other | has not worked out and, with here and there Random Newspaper Opinion H All subscriptions must be paid fellow” you let: the insuranee company worry | exceptions, the people are not given the type of + x i r) i ‘del i es 3 Scientific progress nowadays seems to consist } Dally Tribune will ees seal about the t. But if you happen to be the “oth- Is they had expected the primary would chiefly in finding ways to thake more noise— » (pipes a at cas SS GRIBUNE | °T fellow,” insurance collected by your heirs may'| produce. * * * ble for Amsterdam Recorder. . ; KICK. IF YOU DON’T GET YOU! ba t help you in the place to which you go. nder the Indiana primary it is possi or = hi i hate: {Af you don't tind your Tribune after looking, care: | NOX NCI LON I th eee ee found wvifich will vote a one party to. vote for candidates of| , The modern man thinks he is roughing it when } = fully tor ft, call 15 or 16 and it will be delivered to you No insuran ae ye 4 8 party C Ec he wears a soft collar and drives the open gar. j by special’ messenger. Register complaints before 3/ prevent death and injury, hence, it pays to be] another party and then in the election vote their =Staniford Advocate. 3 o'clock. careful, ren party at nee thus Atte ps Serato Many of us are never sure whether it is op- ; the one they helped nominate besides nullifying ; “k altace in a d Let ‘Em Know 0 i the object of the primary. It therefore must be POEL BSL pence TU OF Se pes tt ta ENCES K Backed by the department of agriculture, an Railroad and Private Industry jel at pats ee nd of Lah ee by The world gets better. Now it smokes at the 4 international corn show isto be held at Athe business and industry, unhampered | pabrarpaplevrraa Cre ASGn A cthe ininon | {tle after meals, where formerly it used tooth- ) to October 4. A pri overnment regulation, can 1 the larger | picks.—Akron Beacon-Journal. ‘A FEW DOORS AWAY FROM THE a hexane, trom Boptemige ities and aids in political trickery. When a small town has a deficit in the city to make up low re- profits of prosperous } red for the best y creates an inclination to nomi- f of five hundred dollars is ; ‘eehety : t % The prim ires “OD 4 5 R ear of corn placed on exhibition. V turns or losses of lean years. , SEPA es set ee EE ‘ treasury, t hires a speed cop and puts the mag- OLD STAND ot Me retsaltig Gartitetate; ‘night ita gethin ont fila oped | Rattan foal as are Timited by law but not |e ont pilot of erowilator a pleding gee | <trates on day and night shifts.—Duluth Her- 4 show, and no doubt 1, if C. F. Robertson, of | guaranteed. De SNE 2 : ; “| ald, 4 Worland, the already annointed and crowned] up in another y ity, a ieee becanse he possesses qual: |” ‘the klan faction concedes Al Smith got off to ze 9 4} “Corn King” of Wyoming hears about the ex-| period of general prosperi greater re- | ions fo make & competent and secommo-| flying start, but they insist it was a rum go.|M ‘ S AM COONER S ; : ion. than that to which it ted, the ex YP NL bs ae Potter hes | ~Piiladelphia North. American. | who would go before a convention, w! | <e the race before a primary. Applied to local offices the primary causes athy and sentiment to prevail over ability deliberate too lightly or not at all on ti ud vote to nominate beeause a ate is a friend, has done a favor or at- When a young couple bragged about their new machine twenty years ago it was a sewing machine.—Kalamazoo Gazette. At times one gets the disquieting impression that suffrage is something many men will go to war and die for and then refuse to exercise— Sandusky Register. is understod that the corn sections of the ive increased their planted acreage this y and those sections which have never under- taken a corn crop are trying it out. It is certain tha srland will put on state corn show th Mand that th s must be turned over to the governnent, perity of pri industry depends, in a asure, on its own efficiency, enterpris BARBER SHOP NOW OPERATING AS nother exhibits y of the railroad business depends he ability of railroad men but also will be finer and larger than be finest character of regulation imposed by the f oy specimens at the Worland show should be sent] public. attention for some cause other than |” “mye old-fashioned girl kissed to make up; the . E : The primary does not promote to the Athens show, if for no other reason than road cannot improve and enlarge it ny ac an Be al pr modern one makes up to kiss.—Lynn Item. to let the world know we raise corn iif Wyoming. | cilities to keep pace with the country’s de efficiency in office or high quality in candidates. ————— ; * _- ment, nor the adequate and efficient |im {act the opposite is true. Li AC Arel T : Te bs ° vd See - Sen nailed es rénte e “It has been argued by the unthinkin, ir he Recalling Soap Box Orators cepa: dudumtresand fauicultaegstaleed (a ote Te a free, unprejudiced vote by the By TED OSBOERE, e moune Buil Ing It is this way. When you finance your corpor-} ings’ are steady and sufficiently large to at, | People. ct is the primary vote can be ens:| 4. simmer resort unt pees through three ; : ation or company or business or whatever wn-] itis new eapi a ily influenced if a candidate has the money and stages before it achieves success; if people go ing you are planning und the stock or the Some. pri > business or industry y experi- ution. This has been proved frequent: aere for a rest, its only ata vtad if they ‘go Barber Sho secu ie hes sic oe af a of smployeus the ence hard times when other enterprises are en- re Tit Se BaL ShS ve MY bem w UY. wath for enjoyment it is getting popular; and when soap itor, or the bird w ’ este: ing prosperity. Impairment. of railroad sery.| the political boss. Does it? y be more dif- S ey Be * interests, gets no where. A large iparcenta ee of bic (ap as pael aa TMRdennate Sasatin gn mittecta ficult to control a primary than a enuicus er they go for ‘a splurge, it is at last tashionable: his Usteners BES a0 EN ec eae at all i Ot hiainenat convention, Lava nu esses | is sane and will UNCLE HOOK SAYS ¥ dA ng misrepresented, anc i These are the facts supporting the plea of the | be done more thi n ever Gf the present primary “Actions may not speak louder’n words, but You ll Like It Too a Fg n continues. The expense of the primary to the voters is not in keeping with the results. Had the results proved in actual 7 e what the advocates of the primary believed the expense might be justi fied, but in the majority of instances the peo- | ple have less competent officials than under the autor gets the gh. getting to be more and more the situa tion in the industrial centers of the country, and in other places where public utilities are ution. ollette is aping the old-time soap-box ora- upon a nationa they’re a durned sight more truthful.” A TRIOLET She whispered to me That my love was returned. “Your love,’ whispered she, “T return cheerfully. railroads for re restrictive le; f from further radical and) * tion, | The Tax Refuge igh surtax rates of the are meant to catch the ver TRIBUNE BLDG. in ope’ La tor, only reduction bill rich, according ner scale. Hig appe ampaign will to! old system. . 1 upon informed ears instead of unkno of the gentlemen who insisted on making | exumple of the expense put upon. taxpay- Retr eta eee ones, and the industrialist and the owners of | them high. But most of the gentlemen who insist! erg py the primary is Jackson county, Indiana. small holdings of stocks and securities have of | on keeping them high steadily rejected every pro-| 3) the primary in that county in 1922, 3,588 Dem- recent years gone into 1 economic questions | posal looking to a closing of the avenue of escape} ocratic votes and 1,716 Republican votes were for themselves and understand the situation | which the very rich haye in the tax-exemption | cast, approximately but 40 per cent or a minor- st hand. privilege. They voted against the resolution to ity of the total yote of the county. The primary LaFollette’s whole appeal is to ighorance. He | submit itutiong) amendment which, if|cost Jackson county taxpayers an average of would have no appeal otherwise. rat ve subjected income from every v t ees source to t tion, and they voted against the amendment to the bilf which, if adopted, would A Correct and Just Knowledge have exeluded income derived from tax-exempt | She whispered to me That my love was returned. EXPERIENCED “Have you ever drilled before?” asked the top sergeant. “Yes, sir,” answered the raw recruit, “I worked two years in a quarry.” 45 cents for each vote cast. Had the delegate and convention system preyailed Jackson coun- ty t ers would have been saved this expense. h of it as necessary would have been paid by Headline in newspaper: “Still found in Rabbi’s mal contact the situation, from p ed for high surtaxes and tax exemption were not | Sum of $700,000, Much that Study without thought is useless; thought] jonas f shi =u é ; ; ‘ 3 D Oe adh) s from the deduc which the bill allows. se interested in their political parties. 4 ‘4 i PeEE Re UOy, ae Per uonny hes iad ie tine |. When the vote whic en t renders im-} “In a primary in ving Mu. tlie ‘cost: to| Home.” Israelite -wines and beer. hry ERA SG Hebe ay pes possible the purpose which they profess to wish | the taxpayers of that city was $40,000, But 12 s atone STH gaat Re ath Rat 1ih"| to accomplish, there is an inconsistency which | por cent of the registered vote was cast ‘4 OUR“DAILY SONG HIT 13k plicable to every phase of our activities, includ-| Guestions the sincerity cither of th vote or| votes cost the taxpayers an average of I Dropped Our Bouncing Baby, But He Didn't ing the problems of present day human relations| their profession. And since the act mare vet " a : 2 ; Bounce a Bit.” i r ‘ar toc c] iscussi , is ed be ig . more | vote, in Industry. Far too much discussion of this| convincing evi than the word of a rational) “A mayoralty primary in the city of C : NOE from observation, not from! ceverionge mee] man's purpose, it is not easy to avoid the con‘| ig auld to have coat the taxpayers; the tarts ore My, girl vith ! not | {lusion that many of those congressmen who vot-| ganizs s and the candidates the tremendous Wacsive ab r a ‘tical study of the situation, but f: “ i shi mi avow: a more oF less thoughtless assimilation af wecon | Moved BY the motive which they avowed. “What shall take the place of the present pri- She would have hand inform ed from indiscriminate 5) mary? That remainus to be worked out and can Brain fever promis¢ uch people ad popu In Z Dilemm be worked out. Almost anything is better than If she had : hich serve to entertain, but which | ay. you veonta4 ae EAN fe erent method and the results under that ‘Any place * f ret sults. WI 5 he New York World has written a lot, from | method, + af aie iaeren of jeantrsts, rosults. Wien (Chey. \cO Ds] sea) aaa ntne PUPAE TTT pa EE od To keep it. Owing to the fact that our main pe lagrrmeny tegen "huntaltatn’ Slay 7-had fallen in the Cut] ,,,Btead and Responsibility A Snorer high Ways are becoming so clut- effort for “c Al control’ of: riy cago market by 1 > the full amount of the| Comparatively few people yearn to haye re-| Judge—“What is your religion, tered with advertising signs as Witness—“Blease don’t give it away, Chudge, simply expose their ignorance, or m I'm a Quaker.” forgetting that words are thi use terms gs, and tho: sponsibility thrust upon them, and of these @w 1 nearly all are men. tariff of to render official warning and by the Coolidge administration to saye the mar increased cents a bushel imposed who A ARE SEASONS OES RRR RR nO et te Nae OLE LO te na beh ea Rn eS Ot A ea Ae misuse them frequently deceive themselves as ; The girl wh ky ; : . : ‘ e 1g oe ket ahd shold the farmer *vot@cita ‘cl a ne girl who teaches school or clerks in a Apbay direction signs ppenlpaalaulery- tion was $1.00%- By June Othe, ee fon was | Store to earn ‘her bread may enjoy the feeling of Ay FINANOTAL TRIP, dof littl si ARCORSBICHOUs off to $1.01%5. By Monday, June 9, as the Repub-|imdependence that honest labor brings her but| “I see that Jones has just passed through bank- and of little use, a resolution was _ruptey.” “L knew he was traveling extensively, but I didn’t know in what part of the country.” elf to think of the ma bout her future. She may at recently passed by the’ State Highway Commission prohibit- ing the erection of advertising signs within the right of way when she permits h 11l she worr LaFollette and Gompers LuFollette is of the belief that the Shern ‘ ; ; anti-trust law is the greatest piece of legislation] “The Republican national conyention opened | #2Y time’ lose h Ith or her job. She feels in- to go upon our statute books in a generation, | next day and wheat shot up to $1,084. Coolidge | Sccure. And when at last some decent chap pla while the American Federation of Labor, from | and Dawes were nominated two days later and |‘ ‘diamond ring on her finger, about: seven-tenths jot her h joned by the knowledge lican clans were starting for Cleveland, it was down to $1.0414. Nota—“It doesn’t take very much to turn a woman's head.” Au rannre SEot asus eee. whose ranks he hopes to draw considerable | Wheat continued on up. It now ranges from $1.13 “Von igh ki a pi ESAS tis a) hel dential "hein lame ee #115 Tuly. that she e. She loves the fellow, of course,| | Bene—“You're right. A kiss on the cheek will j : support in hit presidential candidacy believes| to $115% for July. = Peete Hanae. ke Loves: the edlmrstoeronarpes |i try f lines of the. State Highways. at si fi Ss a res ion upon economic explanation is that crop-damage | ee his abili 3 ss Due notice of pe h ill development and desires it repealed. If the situa eloped on the eve of the Cleveland | WN is beP a atte seek bo quDEore Mer ane ee VERY FAMILIAR A Pp taps a year wi tion sl ane it whows the weakness of the gathering ‘which had ot been sdetente before, (Eon se tnecmee" sire cote giS Pesan tiDeE or ai | Metta eh nn wt a Aepey eaeanices be given covering the removal of although a thousand comb crop agencies had been i the fields all along. What is the unof- ind actual explanation? Is there anything tory floating around of a pool to boost »ilette position. As a doctor he would treat mptoms rather than the disease. ‘ollette has pronounced monc the great. } ficial est evil of the present. He has been a supporter | to the of the Sherman act for a long time. And in spite | Wheat and With it corn and other staples? How of its provisions and penalties he has seen busi-| could a little money be made to go so far for Re- nes sexpand into larger units. The LaFollette | publican campaign purposes? idea is that if one law fails, supplement it with} So fe the record of market prices is con- a flock of laws. Smother the fault with legisla-| cerned it is subgtanti ly correct. Insofar as the Bella—*Yes. So is his line?” those signs now erected except, those attached to State Highway markers, guard rails or bridges or those placed close to the road shoulders, in which case em- ployes are instructed to remove continue to be a good meal ticket. The man who is courting a girl—that is the man who rapturously and gallantly follows as she leads him on—knows in his heart that her obvious willingness to be courted and won would not long survive if he were destitute. He does not question her love, but he knows that his suc- cess is due in large measure to her knowledge that lie can support her. Tailor—“How does this suit fit you?” Customer—“All right, except that the trousers are a little tight under the arms.” ~Him—“Don’t you think that marriages are made in heayen?” Her—*Well if all men were as slow as you are tion. statement that the wheat duty was r 1 “to » : ‘" . a a aie ” : * ; The truth about trusts has been discerned by | hold the former vote;” that simply a nasty iat firat@ oh ea een peepee’ mers | Samsagould have, to be? the signs immediately. the American Federation of Labor, This is a| fling made for political purposes, which you| *#ndising, and such it would be if the aha INCLE : large-scale country. There are no traffie barriers | have learned to expect from that source. —~ port tae Ne not Ree cae rat ee “Ef a man Womitieey ene he Joves, to trade between the various sections. The taste: The World also implies something which it is} BU 2e does understand and he glories in his], | , htsant i it it ie people speaking sonora ave similar | unwilling to allege for feag at sr state | ADM to foot the bile Hi desire to be leaned | Me's aye Ee negret t; an” women he ropets STATE HIGHWAY What more likely, what mo evit than | demanded, It déals with innuendo. But w upou is no less keen than her desire to lean upon | When he does. : DEPARTMENT him. ble, 1 that the country should take to large-s: indus- | doesn’t it lay the in © in price to the tariff, % PAID IN try, as being the cheapest way of providing its| the goat upon which the sins of the entire| There probably isn't a woman in Christendom]... 0. PA oe iadly ByO : material needs? Neither the Sherman act nor the} economic world are laid? Why doesn’t it call] “HO has no Sepa 408 OS, ay ie Home re “vey sft ry aac apes 1 th y Order of the State Highway ery pike xe . ae ‘ SA ee Hinata, A) 3 | 4 eS, ° + & man on whose shou era zi issi : Clayton act, nor. per any other lw whieh | down the wrath of “the consumer” upon the tar- | auites, first of all, am ape UT ee ert cr Commission Mr. LaFollette might able to bring forward, | iff-of forty-two cents per bushel which the pres- can stand athwart this tendency and prevent its | ent administration levies upon wheat? Why development, The best that laws can do is to| doesn’t it say that the “high protective tariff” harass the big corporations and by means of | or the “prohibitive tariff” or the “tariff Chinese costly regulation, high taxe. id prying bureau 1,” which shuts out all importations of Can- make it impossible for them to get the full | ¢ » has added to the cost of living, even | (vantage of the cheapness and efficiency of | if it has given the farmers a more adequate price sf “T should say so. He’s dead.” ried people are sa 1—the man because he has a woman to k his house in order and minister to him; the woman because her present and future are secure, . There are women who support their husbands and women who browbeat their husbands eyen while depending on them for bread and froc! “Mary, these hot cakes taste of soap.” “Yes mum. You told me to fry them on the soapstone griddle, and as I couldn’t find oR soaped the other one.” -:a0n ere tepel@euseserorrsatenraseenecersretuterareewessas: i‘ large-scale methods, Mr. LaFollette’s anti-mon- | for the wheat i : =) : ane Moe obi rgb ISN ado ae but in the ordinary American household the’ wite TOO RESTRICTED »poly program, whateyer form it may eventually No answer is expected from the World so the is a clinging vine and the husband a flattered Judge—“You have sworn to tell the truth ‘ take, can do little but increase the difficulties | explanation may as well be given here. What bread-winner, and this arrangement keeps both | #4 nothing but the truth.” ; of doing business on a large scale. It cannot] will the election of Coolidge and Dawes do for = 41 5. yi i a bring back the old days of small-scale, local in-| the benefit of the farmers, if merely nominating | 0! them reasonably happy. wae rene but the truth: your honor dustry. them sends the price of wheat up twelye cents Wit “Then 1 The *, ss . r ness—“Then Iw: yon’ There may be a cure for monopoly, but we] per bushel, according to the World’s own fig-| Notice the flivvers as they pass by with father, | have much to aa warn you that’ I ‘won't don’t know w it is and LaFollette is no bet-| ures? And does the fact that the inerpase in price | mother and the children, You will readjust your si ter off} It oecurs in business. It occurs in goy-° is the same as the increase in the tariff suggest ' opinion that the automobile is killing the’ family “Gosh, but this fried chicken is tough.” ernment. It occurs in industry. Then when the ‘ anything to that benighted organ of free trade? spirit, “Yeah I'll bet it was a hard egge in its youth.” SL ————————_—_—_—___— «Tribune Wantads Bring Results ii OO

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