Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 28, 1924, Page 6

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1924, WAGE SIX. e Casver Daily Cribune I = tplans bd) pie eens monster re ail Dtibune | of his observations in regard to the dis-| ment ever provided so generously for| plain that‘Governor Bryan was chosen as . ° welcome, to. the state of the presi. €be Casper Dai pe pute over the proposed patisiton in the | those disabled by deteite in time of war.| Democratic candidate for the vice: pres- “T ord’s Acres” Thrive In dential” candidate. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | import value of sugar. By means of ‘a protective tariff we|idency with one clearly defined object. , ; ‘he Associated Press is exclusivey en| «I am reliably informed that the sugar | have saved American agriculture, labor, | He -was to hold the vote of the Bee 4d ei ee 3. RRL titled to the use for Bunions fon ve Ke gpa interests contributed not Jess than $500,-| and industry from the menace of having! and the laboring men in certain 5: b f Be Ele AP Cr P ts ; Seca Sepa ay 000 to the Harding fund four years ago,”| their great home market destroyed! egic western states against the ace! rela e A op es : ahaa, says Senator Frazier. through dumping upon it a flood of for-| of Senator La Follette.” And now the uf rok Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation! Senator Frazier knows that he received | eign products. aan ot OS ots or eee sort an Nie: strad- : ° (A. B.C) that information from, gossip alone;| The ple have never come to a dle is ‘becoming 0! es rs 5 D Oth R he Casper Dally Tribune issued every| and that there is not a particle of foun- realteation of the importance of the] ing to endear himself to halt the : evastate er > e€ ons i pee: and The Sunday Morning Tribune| dation for the statement. At least the] Washington conference. It produced’) states, is ‘becoming too radi then bane tt “severy Sunday Wyoming. Pub-| senator can ascertain from the records] the one effective agreement among the] east, and Bryan idee "By MILLARD FERGUSON. * | Lord had rewarded the farmers who 0 ,* lication offices: Building, opposite) filed whether the rumor is correct or| great powers in all the history of civil-| servative for the west, and Demo-) (staff Correspondent of The Casper| had planted an acre in His name. Kc * postotfice not. ; ization for relieving. the people of, the| ratic leaders are in a terrible funk z Tribune) Rewseenyes pene et saat ¢ riibslaied wet vcs (Wyoming) postorfice| But just what does he mean by the/carth from the enormous burden of] because they foresee the prediction of 's acres na rs Gi “tes Associat} ‘Iton, pastor, 7 22, 1916,| “sugar interests?” Does he mean the] maintaining competitive naval arma-| their peerless leader coming true. zt ‘Melton, the the newspaper at s. as. seco November > .—“Lord’s| Arlington, the post master, the R - ar trust or the beet sugar and Louis- ments. re i scattered throughout south| mayor, the bank—all were recelving e ‘elephone 15 ied x ha cane sugar manufacturers? It is}, The laws of the land are being; and Let's Smile Georgia, are being protected, seem-| letters inquiring if-it really were true quite certain that neither the beet su manufacturers nor urers of Louisi HANWAY paign committee any will continue to be enforced. I propose to use every possible effort to resist a gave any corruption in office. The American uch sum of money.| government must be clean. it must We have observed with sympathy the ingly by~dtvine providence, from|that the Lord’s acres had been so the boll weevil, the potato bug, the| fruitful as to suggest a miracle. army worm and all the other pests Dr. Melton at first tried to answer that descend upon crops. all the letters, then they became so By DONA LANE : As life, grows dull with clouds of grief And the hurt and pain that comes from 2 By r J. E. HANWAY and B. i er Advertising Representatives. If such a sum was ever’ given, it | And laughter ‘it seéms,: will never be Tisett are tloteeitae ide ee ne PHatedlata salen Abin ceclemten ei irine & Pendden, 172023. Sterer| have been the sugar trust—that is, the] continuing difficulties of Europe. - We porara 7 j fs régarded by some as a miracie.| Baptist headquarters in Atlanta ‘til, 286 Fifth Ave. Now| American refiners of Cyban raw sugar.| have desired to assist whenever » We} wyith SGe Bebrts aching, our lips dumb] They'seem to get moro of their share | investigated the Lord’s acre plan and Boston, Mass., Suite It so happens that the American refin-} could do so effectively. Late in’ De- eth pein 4 of sunshine and of rain than plants| declared it was one of the finest ew Montgomery St.,/ ers of Cuban raw sugar. ate the people| cember, 1922, the Secretary of State an- (a air 4 ad strengthen our- across. the fence in neighboring} methods ever devised for solving the of the Dally] demanding a reduction in the import duty i eri lan, which was| Then ‘let's smile\ an fields. financial problems of the country lemanding a reducti n the imp 'Y {| nounced the American plan, ich w: oe Bacck Dr. te: of 48 . w York, Chi) on raw sugar. How could the sugar trust,| finally adopted. Under it the repar- Hocdhaktne on'waird, tod teetrwelwilksiot| cote Ne eaten ng Pa 4a aa NY hae od © offices and) demanding a reduction in the import duty | ations committee appointed a committee | 47 P fail re Rare be 100 etna | RU DEE tol Ceteincateusreate aeact explant on raw sugar, consistently. give:the Hard-| of which three | were Ameeicans, one of ¥ !] Georgia, that the produce from them | the plan and this tract was used by a SUBSCRIPTION RATES., mpaign committee half a million] whom, Charles G. Dawes, was chosen Let’s smile when friends turn*false and| Promises to yield at least $20,000.| field workers in urging the rural $ By Carrier and Outside State dollars? chairman., A reybrt has been. made “W< unworthy These crops will be sold by church phacees to give the method a Reduced to the test of hard-logic and| which received world-wide approbation My committees and the money devoted | chance, common ‘ense, there is not a word of} and has been accepted in principle by And ee tings Binyelend that brings seetuel rete uch as payment of Pie eAtce spate ater eee Sunday in Sena Prazier’s sta ont. 5: ri 3 i sted. ie te he pastor's ry. . Aga AZ says: a ' sta e ‘eve lan an uy eir members re : .05 | iff commission has finally ‘recommended | adopted. . For “to Jr ing és, Mentis nd souls, be tien Achaea PS REE have planted an average of five acres By Mall Inside State. a reduction in the import duty on raw] I confess that my inheritance and per-| PT What: chow thabesacs ’| ‘Lord's acre plan to ‘help finance the e. On r, Daily and Sunday . sugar( nearly all of which comes from| sonal experience have bred in me a keen re th that liave won life’s battles |COUtry churches was begun a year ar Arlington, the finest stalk of ( | Cuba); and the reduction would save] interest in the welfare of agriculture, | “Te earn” victory? ago by the Biugton Baptist church | cotton aap taken: from a 99) the American nsumers Of sugarg on} We now need in agriculture more organ- oie y at Arlington, Ga., and now promises § acre and just across the fence, ~ Daily and Sund: un eareraes 0 a day During the ieation, cooperation and diversification Then let's lift up our heads, look ahead} to spread throughout the country. ay aahealenee ae sore pinata tp " 4 re ae iM ahs a 9 b . i ¥ select nan ai Or pally “andy sands sen, | months of August and September, when| The farmer should have the benefit of and «mile. rept sractene oa) “Ae enya begs , ps7 whg ted not fevotahAsry 2 ae: tions must be paid in advance| the canning seasgn is at its height, this] legislation providing for flood ‘control ; Wb DS Lard'e ares pibated in avery| hisccrop te dtie (ord: The land eas uUiimea aah Cay ne une wilt not insure cs,| saving would amount to not less than| and the development of inland water- Expansion | state in the union. the same, the cultivation had been r Seana spree Suyser Bon $80,000 a da ways, better navigation east and south By ELDEN SMALL - The Rev. H. M. Melton, pastor of | the same and yet thé stall from the In two pean = —- No man with any sense of responsibil-| from the Great Lakes, reclamation, and When, after the Cuban ana Philippine| the Bluffton Baptist church’ and sits acre Sporatea. 61 wales 5 ° KICK, IF YOU DO GET YOUR ity would make any such wild statement.| especially relief for those who cannot SP sores country. proceeded-to assime Sraminaton: ae the pian ore up an Lane a tuatlers ohare ar ened iscults i Pag acolo .: tter loox-| Already,” says Senator Frazier, “on the] meet their payments on irrigation pro-| .ontrol of the Philippines and other is- pr ibrtin Bay ened po gals applied gerierally to the crops on the tne cent find your Tribune after look! basis of $80,000 a day, President Cool- But the main¢problem is mar-| jands, there was mich opposition inside|ment reads a= feilews: two acres. , m~ Ba aR saeatita gaan ebes fal messenger. Reg-| ize has enabled the sugar barons to col- : . / J and out of congress against the McKin-|\ “We. the undersigned farmer mem- ster complaints before 8 o'clock. $640,000 from the pockets of the ——— ley policy of “Imperialism,” which was| bers of the Bluffton Baptist church John Ww. Davis American. people.” A Double Test - denounced as unconstitutional. But| hereby agree to plant, cultivate and Y Now, let us see about this. What are cae ouble x es! e ‘there was’ ample ‘precedent in our his- harvest one acre from our farm, said v the facts? In the first place, the sugar|’ “More than the operation of the Nat.}then sen Raila AA ince De) ashe pay Is Booked for * barons to whom’Senator Frazier refers | ional Defense act will be put to.a proper |}O5¥: 5) 17 5 0. ta aoe Tabpeegon | Se, aaren to curn eyrehe eenerretoes Gerard Backslides must be the sugar trust or the refiners) test.on St. \ intel: het Faced jg hg of the tant Touftiank feats extending by ie atinceney ‘They. tee in tapes De h teria cpasinesth vGderatetere in iksvtitlal eee the people asking for a re-| notes the Boston Transcript. - .<.|-from the Gulf to the Rockies and the| of same and distribute the funds de- enver. Speec be pu tir Hi es hittics tn eet nd duction in the import duty. According to “In all ae states oF at ie AR Pacific, but other executives had fol-| tived from it in such way as we may of a book written by James + Gerard,| Senator F ier’s logic, delay in reduec-| consin and possibly Colorado and Maine seach ast , instruct. ambassador to Germany up to the time] j. 0", ahd : sugar barons” | exeepted—there will also be a .popular| lowed the example. . President Monroe) 72° son weevil was worse that) DENVER Colo., Aug. 28.—John ion in duty is giving the “sugar baron 1 pop Florida from’ Bpain. for $5,000. 3 the United States d red war upon) an enormous excess profit or grab out of | test between veterans: of all our.warm Rontaniiiies Bowtie ay Franklin | 202" than it ever has been in Georgia. |W. Davis, democratic candidate for that country. Mr. Gerard, had a wide] tie people. Surely a large portion of this} and_ their devoted auxiliaries, whose Plegce’ : a ee he as akext fal ears MeEDe Re ee swept] the president Will avsak sen: Ss. T CREEK knowledge of conditions and was jueLly alleged profit must go to the sugar |membership includes their mothers, wives 10,000,000" yar: predate Reicna: ‘areal settee. 8A She canseatechtor ip Secnte or Sentariber 8 ucoowaity AL’ ‘ man tpabe, cunsulted oi | trust, the very people asking for a re-| and sisters on the one side and the anti- while Seward was secretary of state he|the Lora semed protected by the|to an official announcement made f BUSSES German neraily. On Dis return | duction in import duties. national defe: organizations on the hand of providence. here by John T. Barnett, democratic hie ; paid $7,000,000 to Russia for. Alaska, . home, he wrote his book*in which he had)“ genafor Frazier assumes that ‘if the| othe icluding the League of Women. bast ‘defeated Mexico in the war that|_People trom all over the state|committeeman for Colorado, and 3 Busies a Day the moral courag,. although 2 Demo-| innortsdaty on’ raw sugar ‘from“Cubna| Voters and an active dlerical bloc. Every,| _ We ey 4 ont 3 in break. | Visited these farms and they noticed| Herbert Fairall, Denver county dem- Each Wa __ erat serving under a Democratic admin-| j2 POT) Ca the price of granulated sugar | citizen not in uniform who volunteers, pela ue ac that cay hat red two sp oa Firat, the otis Sirk aE NG Lap NE ee . y 3 istration. to say that our wage earners ty the people will be reduced to the ex-| cither by marching or by attending the| 18 Siebecy we paid. her alz000,000 for wapata tires Gactculgesiota Geaacd Venere eae ak eer LEAVE CASPER steecled_ protection ‘lest. Boods. } nada, In| sant of wmv 000 a diy) patriotic meetings ‘scehuled for the eve: Callfornia: and New Mexico, besides as-|were no more fertile than adjoin-|a telegram from Senator Key Pitt. Townsend Hotel Germany” should be dumped upon us Wit does the t ning of September 12, in forty-five of the ratte her debt of $3,500,000 to’ Ameri-| ins acres and received no better cul-|man, atsigning that date to Denver. 8 a.m, 10 a. m., 2:30 p, m. The embarrassment of the Democ to sa forty-eight states of the union, will have | Suming: So in our more recent ac.|t!¥ation in fact, in Dauas King’s case,| ‘The same message from Mr. Pitt. LEAVE SALT CREEK leaders was ludicrous to behold. It was} tion import duty on sugar? In| the satisfaction of siding with the sery-| C8” Citizens. So ding the Philippines, }th®.1rd’s acre was neglected as far|man declared that other probable Sa ee ae not prudent to-say that Mr..Gerard did] 4o+11/1993, at the request of President | ice men of the country in support of onr| duisitions, inelm ing pai an Ee. eu as measures against the boll weevil| speaking engagements for Mr. Da- oe Se ee een not know what he was talking about for Harding, the tariff commission inves-| National Defense law and of. siding} Ve atweye ce cash for stan Reece Sonbaien WEG state qerreastt viavae perieretey. decided with- aeons. SS he Had been in the manufacturing towns) tivated the effect of the import duty on| against the coalition whose.sinister pur-| We took over. erally_on tho farms of the #€ven sign-| As soon as the announcement of Pi cted scicalbp seeped ofthe Teutons and knew, their me the temporarily high’ prices of the win-| pose it is to make of that Jaw a scrap the agreement were better|the date was received by the com-}]—~ Compe : But to indorse his views was equa’'Y |} ter of 1922 and 192%. The commission un-| of paper and of our-national defense Lines and ‘Angles ely neighbors’ crops. raittee here, arrangements were HONE 144 1g. we SWkward.[t was riot safe'to agree witht a vinously reported that the increase ini syntem ‘a: -Dony-iskeleton -withont sleet By Wh OABOENE: lef spread about that a.mir-|made for obtaining the auditorium TELEP| him or to Gisagtea witli Aim. Mo sosttas price had-nothing to do with the pro-| or blood. iy 3 i been accomplished; that theon the night of September $ and init ce e -} : a as a e- I’m getting ; Sort of worried “ About Gwendolyn. The other day She went down town To get herself A felt» hag and She came. back tective tariff and that a lowering of the} “he nation’s peace-time police force tariff duty would not be followed by a] —the regular army and navy and mar- lower price for s . ine corps—is when war comes only the Senator Frazier indulges in the an-| Skeleton whose flesh and blood must be cient trick of iling the protective| Supplied by what Woodrow Wilson so tariff as a principle by assuming that| well described as a ‘citizenry trained every pound of sugar used in canning,| 4nd accustomed to arms, President Wil- every spoonful of sugar that goes into| Son was endérsing at the time a proposal tracted what he said, but he had not the ~ moral courage to stand by it. Mr. Gerard = knew that the anti-dumping measure talk ( was sheer humbug. He. knew that the © a pledge never to wear German dress goods would not stand against the seductions of the bargain counter, He knew that his t party would not squarely defend Ameri- aat ‘ sin industry, but he had not the fighting | Coffee oF prese! is taxed by the “in| to provide training with the colors for WA ee, ; par ibetia) Pal T Randall. § s iquitous tariff,’ and the consumers of | ational citizenship for as many young CROOKED WORK i 2 a Fila Gace re Ae work. | SUSAE “gouged” by import duty imposed | men as would volunteer for that pur- orp rs Feel? of diahonaaty f : oie: tenant 15 | for the benefit of the sugar barons.” | pose. Only the first step in such train ile wale th ee a ' er coe wor kshops, fe ae “ on 2a The “sugar barons” in this case are| ing has been taken at the citizen‘s mili-| in polities, said the man who was jus c lid not come forth de ite favoe, Te 124 | the refiners of raw sugar, called the sug-| tary training camps from which some] starting the game. “You are right,” replied the old cam- paigner, “I’ve figured it out many times that we hardly ever get more than two ar trust, who demand a reduction in the | thirty thousand young men will graduate import duty on raw sugar from Cuba,| this year. To poison the minds of the t the courage to that protection » essential to our welfare. He did not . : -om.| his reduction would increase the differ- | fathers and mothers against these train- 4 prorat a true soldier of the com- ential between raw Cuban sugar and re-| ing camps and discourage attendance at | thirds of the votes we pay for.” ( nan BEOL ie aopat fined sugar in the United States which| them was the purpose of one of the or- ; Now the mncrsitig natty Dan sn marks the profit of the sugar trust less | ganizations now active in promoting’ the ‘ nok eee, walter, <fan havelchareed all the passenger and all the business cars in the- = y £ § r “| the freight. . ‘sapping expedition’ against the u- | for three soups” a : : fe a : : n goods and a candidate who indorses he eucer trustiweants aaieecm iret Wass ae rvance of Denfense Day. rep “Yes, sir, You ‘had two, and there is Mountain States lubricated with Polarine were 1 sparen mia tl ates pe raw sugar in order that it may import} “Organized and subsidized mendacity | the one I spilled on madame’s dress. assembled, they would’ form a procession nearly 600 Moti wea Seetadbr'ay i s the wi ag wmistakable as William L. Wilson’s | 7° wugae frowp, Cuba, at less scomt-and ; ios ipty | merease its profits. The sugar trust championship of English goods thirty | ™ ; ‘ ro. Mr. Gerard is treasurer of the | WoU4 drive the American cane and beet utional committee. rr sugar manufacturers out of business and EF; 7 i z then raise the price of sugar, and squeeze eapon with which this partic: tion attacked unsuccessfully ming camps. It weapon to pre- vent any popular participation in the FINISH IN SIGHT “Ts your daughter a finished musi- cian?” “Not yet, but the neighbors are making miles long—evidence of the Popularity gained through the uniform, high quality of Polarine and the fact that it is supplied in the correct grade for the efficient employing the sam necds of the country» But Gerard does |“ lowering of the import duty on raw| the false jnformation which one i Destiny is now the danger and years ago he wari | SUs&? Will not give the consumers cheap- | bulletins contains is the insinuation by A Enba deak Lubricating Engineers Regular Users an the iy tint 4t inaee beet sday |e? Sugar. If a lower duty on sugar re-| quotation that Secretary Hughes is op- Tie xicken: Say— SS he, is ‘collect the cash for those | {¥ees the price why did the price of] Posing the government's plans for the Teese 3 5 : y" ri I 4 licy hostile to| SU8#? advance to the highest points ever | Observance of Defense Da Any citizen sirghed ‘The grade of Polarine foreach The right grade of Polarine : Ur national interpate es? BOstile to) Known, between 1914 and 1919, under the| Eullible enough to be taken in by such Good man to type of motor is made suffi- makes it possible to get the pars ater ga ber Danie | Democratic tariff with reduced import | Propaganda should write direct to the Carve it ciently fluid to reach all parts full power out of an engine; Nia nin aeanenee ee sae a fs ie th duties on sugar? department of state. The circulation of pbaation i requiring lubrication; hassuf- reduces gasoline bills; slows tudy of the Fate newactingh cat Senator Frazier is simply deceiving| Such an insinuation only shows the im- tisfaction. ; ficient body to protect mov- up depreciation and goes a ing parts from metal-to-metal long, long way in helping a friction, even under intense car to deliver the full-time, heat and pressure, and, at the trouble-free service and to the people who do not know the facts, | portance of increasing the numbers of He believes he can make political capital | those who will supply the flesh gndblood and weaken the Republican protective | for the skeleton of a national defense force in case w 7 ords, that ad valorem duties had been a vurce of fraud he said so. The free-trade papers were shocked, but he stood his “Paw, does a woman always get the last word?” “Not always, my. boy..Sometimes she “iat PORES Sa RAT Ue policy by telling a lot of things that are . ar comes. iH same time, with 3 * + ‘ a ag bi sople . e time. ‘or America “a citizenry trained and ac- te rs : 1 = ine es e 1 to aienhae eae at ai te eee y customed te arms’ includes the vast ma- UNCLE HOOK SAYS Teakage past pistons andrings. manufacturer. © Was expected to sho at the McKin “Th’ only feller who'c’n express an’ c : : : h = : ~~ | jority of able-bodied Americans 6f mil- ‘ pearance per peaiyyfc abe rat High ‘Spots In. Coolidge ry age one PUFpORe of | Denferise Day Reageey express charges on et is a law- One of the five grades of Polarine exactly meets the ¥ ‘ 8 Wo! is w. have ben achieved. who aid in| Yer: icati * * : sal fl aunt, ane to a the figures. h Address the achievement of that purpose are sery- ist “ch mt fathead tot Tees requirements of your car. This grade 1s in 1c cigures showed that wages rose} Perhaps in no peace-time perlod have] ing their country and. promoting the| Minister—“Aren’t you ashamed to be indicated by the Polari icati hart. Con instead of falling he published the re-| there been more remarkable and con- peace of the world. Tow. many cltisetia an object of charity?” wa It th “f ne Lubrication C “th e Lee egiad Kept on doing so until he lost| structive accomplishments than since| Are willing to stand up on Defehse Dag] Tramp—4E ain't an object of charity. sult the Chart, remember the. grade and use it Hetort La Read. He would not dodge or | March, 1921.. We have ratified treaties | with the defepders.in all our wars and| 2m. algreat: moral: an’ civilisin’ infloo- regularly. These three things are worth doi. pistort me rwpuld not evade or equivo-| of world-wide importance h Germany, Aa mchantadd r apeore of the American | ence. I’m-a promoter of philanthropy.” F ¥ Me: ies gs well doing, gq cate. He published genuine statistics and} Austria, Hungary, Colombia and Mex. nlicy of national defense? September 12 evous was the wrath of the Demo-| ico. Forty-two other treaties have been | Will indeed be a. double tester tect of DRAMATIC INFLUENCE THE CONTINENTAL OI COMPANY atic campaign managers. approved by the Senate and six treaties | the National Defense act and of the coni-| High—“The theater owes a-great deal (A Colorado Corporation) Manning and Peck were of sterner| are now awaiting its action. Our for- mon sensé and gommon patriotism ‘of | to the Shakespearian drama.” Marketing a complete line of high-grade ie = stuff than ( urd. He knows that Ger-|cign relations have been handled with the American péaple so splendidly rep-| _Low—“That iv does. Some of the fun- Petroleum productsin Colorado, Wyoming, man importations are injurious to our | a technical skill and a broad statesman: | resented by thelmedéfenders in all war.” | niest burlesques I ever saw in my life ew Mexico, Utah, Idaho and Montana Wageearners, but if they are part of the| ship which has seldom, if ever, been sur- =f — were on Hamlet and Romeo and Juliet.” show he will go around with the cash | passed. Tol 5 box. More than forty per cent of the amount Bryan old Them “ The other day - of debts due us from foreign countries| What Dayis is, William Jennings I started wondering sar : " > : j has been liquidated. and will proyide| Bryan told. the Democrati¢ convention. How in the world The Foolishne ss of I razier funds for the ent of about $13,-) “Mr. Davis’ ‘present employment would I would start this . Senator Ly n J. Frazier, who received | 000,000,000 of th principal of our na-| be fatal handicap in a~ presidential Kind of paragraphs his political schooling in the North Da-| tional debt in the course of sixty-two | ra said the once Peerless One. “He If it were not THE PERFECT. MOTOR: OIL — kota on-Partisan larmer-Labor-Social- | years. The finances of this natioh have | would not carry a single state west of For the words vy istic kindergarten has forfeited the re-| been managed with a genius and success | Pennsylvania, and as no Democrat. is “The other day.” A grade for each type of engine” spect of prety body who believe in fair| unmatched since the days of Hamilton. | likely to carry an eastern state against ¥ and truthful statements regardless of] Most generous laws for the relief-of | Coolidge, this would leave only. the THE REAL DANGER Use Conoco Coupon Books. They are conveni | T who might be -affected. | ‘The Wrazier| disabled veterans have been enacied.| south, which has not enough votes to] Doctor—“Tntineria ine ip) nod so trouble making change. Good at ull Continents Geter eee and school (of political thought profess to | Compensation 4s being paid at the rate| elect a-president.” ‘The N. Y. Times, a] dangerous but it 1s liaite vo Ve followed accepted by dealers generally. pride themselve g s ts to enlighten | of about $100,000,000 year, which will | leading Democ ie organ, tells’ why] by terrible the people. “Profess” is used advisedly.| be increased about $30,000,000 under lee Bryan was pi % The senator recently made public some) islition recently passed. No govern-' candidate. consequences,” * , Vatient—*Yes, I've noticed that before in your bill, ked for vice-presidential It is by this time pretty

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