Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 18, 1924, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE SIX. Che Casper Daily Cribune Se LE eee Che Casper Daily Cribunc the existing tariff. In the same breath, therefore 7 20. Casper Daiiy, Tribune: issued. Oey eTetam sig Peconee absolutely incorrect and inconsist- The Meeteetse THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1924. ‘ CZAR REED was not a quorum of representatives 7 his almost 70 years of youth, Mr.| Dave Dickie found time to lay ‘to roll call, sufficient to Deane was a little army of effici-|aside the cares of his banking, oil = nd pass a contested bill, Tho Repub- sr seinia. Pabiatin ehicen Reine Bate] Sk Barbacue Biles aio assistant, bow: [tha day ahaking'hande tite laine py gi giants, __| Hennfomade put vere pape ‘3 3 i inconsis' has the —— : ‘ and the minority was tauntingly Entered at Casper Cwyoriie) postoffice as second! the senator from Wisconsin has the happy fac- re ic agai Anca res Aopen ae enikae ble right along in| his fellows, he ‘looks down” on| Maine was in many respects a great Democratic Loy piney ulty of being able to do either. Analyze the two|{ arth. big barbecue held Labor|this belated and desultory article. | ®°body- statesman and a powerful figure in i ; ae 16 and 16/ statements above and the results are astound- day at “little old Meeteetse,” that| Succeeding the barbecue feast the | Dan Weller, a hall fellow well met.| pubtic affairs, he will be remem-| Speaker Reed broke up cps Jephone Exchange Connecting All ing: Guaint UttIe Inlind town #0 plctur- [crowds were treated to a few re. {ho conducted tho Weller sent over | bered in political history mainly for Neri eign vege vaoe ffec- eres nents It is not sound economics to buy an article the | esquely situated on the banks of the|freshingly short political talks by svar tine, Roving ently iia’ bie bee tak ot Lefrang snes aia ropes phd at , both parties HANWAY AND E. BE. HANWAY like of which you yourself produce. The wheat | Greybull river. some budding statesmen of the ANH tion dict wi in forced cash pee chee 4 azid. the, country’ generally. wide open ivertising Representatives farmer does not purchase from the wheat farm- perk ‘eh agart erie ipny <4) - y ep pens yep ay eb Mingling with the crowd, too, was| it was denouneea itierly: aa vevotin}| ini viteiollo: atgament. hel, /on =. c & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bldg.,| er, nor does the m nufacturer of woolens absorb skirts’o® the “colorful” little town,| bucking contests were features of | “Dad” Neilsen, who, although now tionary and unconstitutional, it be-| roll ie ate sasage ae eee Grobe} the product of his competitor. But that’s what] over 30 miles from a railroad, wasythe afternoon, the program ending} !ocated on Wood river, was one of/came a burning issue in party|sat silent, leaving Republicans ‘ less because they Mr. LaFollette virtually advocates. nett 2 Labor day celebration. \that|in a dance th the Overland hotel _ {the earliest ‘settlers in the upper! politics, and it gave him the popular | thereby ‘power tneeeneetvaa, the . York. Chi To obtain a wider market in America for the| will be long remembered by, all who] Meetectse, the free translation [Pt of the Big Horn basin. On| nickname of “Czar Reed,” which | lacked a quorum in “The chair pee . : > i Follet i ce|were fortunate enough to. partiel-| from sc t Mr. Nelisen’s ranch, at the mouth| stuck to him as long as he lived. speaker calmly said: ie and visitors are} American farmer, Mr. Follette would reduce as from seni sHe ayer is sald tol oe owl creck, was located the origi- are aivects tile Clare in yee Cie Damen the buying power -of the Sout anes women a Snawea tobi Sng. aipionse eee daw tone wiliean tte none: of {hl nat town of ‘Thermopolis. Reed was speaker of the house, |of the following members as present ployed in industry upon whom the farmer must], ¥/o0°0° big affair. In fact, it could ya and the “real ordgchine P. Bowman, among the oldest | which was in the 1890 session Re-|and refusing to vote.” ‘Then he depend for a wider market. He would do this hardly be otherwise, as tte whole largely persist. Many | !t'ze"s of Meetectse in point of res-| publican by a small majority. On|named the Democratic members by taking them out of the protected market and] proceedings were conducted by a wet ‘time | tence. was a whole reception com- party questions the Democratic|whom he saw in thelr seats. Bed- A ig Pp 6 y ern types and old-time forcing them to compete with the Iibor of Eu-|ciass of men who could not do alcharacters were in evidence here on|™ittee in himself, his sunny. smile minority filibustered frequently and| lam broke loose in protest, but Reed rope and their much lower wages. And while this | small thing even if they tried. They | Labor day. ‘There wag a truly heter.| King everybody feel as if in the| \iccessfally ‘by ‘refusing to vote|was adamant, the rule was later was happening he would be driving back to the} Were the whole-souled free-handed|ogencous gathering of ranchers,| ome of his own family when their names were called.| upheld by the supreme court, an fa that floating population -which moyes|Peevle of the Greybull-Wood river | cowboys, cowgirls, sheepherders, | , Ar" Maguire and “Ed’ Magulre.| Unger the rules, this action made| several sessions afterward it’ was Cerendavin’ 10; factors ah hee again when the | V#*y, of whom my beloved friend.|miners and prospectors. Yes; and| th a8 members of different com-| ine record fail to show them as again established by the Democrats re wh the late Frank Barrow, used to|not a fey of a mo b mittees and citizens of Meeteetse ac-| present,” and without them there themaelves, then in control. wind blows a certain way, thus pauperizing the} speak so highly. If there was any. Sehitiitne of a Snape rae! quitted’ themselves with credit—in | 22 - — rmer while increasing his farm products, for|thing amiss, it was due to the fact}with a slight sprinkling of haughty eet in a manner worthy of the which the wider American market must be found.|that the management had sadly un- aristocrats, in the form of over: sepa Baoaoe cmdate is The farmer could not get a fair return for his|erestimated the size of the crowd,| grown sheepherders and glorified SutlonAl BaNK et PREC, he i ment and labor under sttch conditions, and |®™07& baat bei! reed from all} chambermaids, long a rancher on Wood river, Har- conditions would be far ‘worse thanithey are to-| SUS" [20 tevuna expmaatGmaahets tfoaertacctes MeN NecwaFeteona! vy-'an (Chasen Gd roar cerics day. Apparently the law of supply and demand ho writer, returning down Wood! mors than a fer: mention ef lo tell of former associates, many seems not to enter into the senator's tariff views| river trom his annual ride in the| In the midst of a brilliant group | ° ey ae Fecent years | have at all. Is this policy sound? mountains around the head of Grey-lof men and women, Caroline Loch, tat ONES Why this sudden discovery by Mr. LaFollette | ull and Wood rivers, was fortunate| hart, world famous authoress was Rie * if ake bat that the tariff needs reducing anyway? The sen-[enough at Dick creek to strike up|radiinting sunshine and goodfeiow-|% forgetting Don Adams? ator had one of the finest opportunities of bin| Wa .™ seu't, yecg? Sou saan aiio all around. Caroline.” ax shel Not by © tone shot eoetber wee, KICK, If YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE | long career to display his knowledge of the tariff | Ying expects to be ordained a clersy-| sociahle neck unaffected as ever, her] 2% Fead and bridge builder, pro If you don't find your Tribune after looking care-| luring the pendency of the Fordney-McCumber man of the Episcopal church with-| creat literary successes not having Bie Be of the telephone line up the MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Prees ts exclusively entitled to the use for pub ] news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State One Year, Daily and Sunday One Year, Sunday on!y essix Month, Daily and -) Months, Daily Month, Dally Copy na One Year, Six Months, and 5! ‘Three Months, Dail: One Month, Dai All subscriptions must be paid in the Daily Tribune will not insure delivers rcription becomes one month in arrears, nee and fter sub. fully a it will be delivered to you} Hill. He could have aided materially in f in the next three years. Mr. Pattie| turned her head a whit. eybull- Wood | river, vallay, | mer: aa! a berote!'s _ : ; f ; 4 54 a See Z chant and postmaster at Sunshine, by spec: Register complaints before that law t, those in p ion to know declare |is now stationed at Lovell and en There too moving among her who does not know Don? o'clock. that during the sessions of the finance commit-}sazed in palesion} ey rere in ta lea nee. appeared Mrs,» Ella Hill Of course any event in ¢he Grey. q tee, when the Fordney bill was being revised, the ay Lay saoeets orvtusice anes hacitectia eat rial Keptine Be bull valley without. the presence of SIGNS t WATCH FOR Gein senator was extremely prominent by his absence | ‘a5, or that splendid denominetion) | on Wood river; over 20 years ago, |pusene Phelps, would be Ike at- oO from those mectings. As a matter of fact, the| Mr. Pattie tsa fine manly young|” Of course, To clenaten on ony {ombung to. diay. Hamlet without principal interest he had in the preparation of | man. Kind in the Big Horn basin, from | © pcan ere the bill was to get the rate on hackled hemp jump After a ride of several ‘miles in]a wedding to a wake, would be com- camplate,-cwithaneeaas ced pee ‘d from one and one-half cents to four cenis per] !8 cultured and delightful compan-| plete without that veteran cowboy |° rkmen ee Henry Sayles end Mike pound, 3 per cent increase, against the rec- | \onship. we reached Ae ed eee! “ages lecturer ‘and Inguist, Joe fyoovan. ommendations of the tariff commission and its | festivities with able-bodied appetftes:| Magill. He would be thereeven if 8 George Florida, well remembered * What one of us, at least, did to that} he had to ride onthe sound wav: > experts, and when he had done this and had taken eg ae found waves tas a former member of the forest Repudiate Them All Unquestionably many of the present followers of LaFollette have lost sight of his demands for “fundamental changes in America. Or it +,may be that they fail to understand how far For GOOD Gas---GOOD Service You'll find AERO dealers t : * c 4 barbecued meat and other good|from a radio station. Ace: * evi here along the main under the pillars of the nation the EaFolletie] care of Wisconsin thereby, he promptly vote things, almost exceeds anything| Corisplcuous in tho crowd—as he service, was among the crowa with tahoe e patie ethers tunnels would be driven or how far the result- nst the bill. The number of meetings he at-| within’ the memory of the oldest} would be in any crowd could ho pita Mitte aaah nd Rewchtaage ig) 2 y fat re down as a rancher and adopted the pread. As President Cooli ways of civilization. At the risk of perpetrating a bull, we'll say that Meeteetse is a big town for ifs size. It boasts for in- ing ruin might , said at Baltimore: The time to stop those who would loosen and weaken the fabric of our government you see the AERO sign. You’l] get prompt, courteous service and dependable tended, it is said could be counted on the fin-| inhabitant. seen the glant form of Ralph Smith, gers ofhis right hand. If the senator wanted to] Hverything was free, Nearby editor of the Meetcetse e a at i rything free was in evidence—|big man with a big heart; and who keep the rates down, why did he not seize his except a free fight. There was Not| would not quit the little city on the golden opportunity then and help do it? i he - is ven a suggestion of that. Greybull even {f offered the editor. ‘ a i esis -firi ' is before they begin... ‘The great body of It is the votes the senator wants now—and his Meeteetse barbe-|ship of the New York “Sun” thou bts slectee GRE en ee cra AEROS { our people have an abiding faith in their | tariff record will not aid him with the labor as a " 4s hardly cor-] Indeed, ft was a pleasure to meet| ‘ho Mectectse Mercantile Co., and clean-burning AERO—the the Overland hotel, which would do credit to any city of 10,000 in the own country. The time has come when they | ing man or thinking people of any class, should supplement that faith with action. That action should take the form of an utter é repudiation of LaFolletteism root and branch, Southern Democrats for Coolidge by the voters. It ought to be hit so hard next November that it will never raise its head again. “ The snake should not only be scotched, but it] org should be. killed as nearly s yotes wm kill, This country does not want modified mob rule. Its sins may be many, but it does not deserve to be at the mercy of such congresses] “Most .southern Democrats—pract cally all gas the sixty-seventh and the sixty-eighth, who] those who come north to live—are anti-radical, - It was rather a “revival,” be:|"Ed"" Heavey, former chlef ranger ing the first affair of the kind held/of the Shoshone forest reserve, for seven years, the custom having} whom the writer met many times ptoting aneaceneniie one se been allowed to fall into desuetude/ while herding sheep, years ago, and pest and humbug the esheets on account of the world war and|whom we remember-as one of the |b ot as oe ae ; ey st Gitisr conditions: most popular officials that ever con-|" michorn Ranch, W; ‘outhern Democrats living in this city have no steer honored for the occasion | ducted the affairs tn that part of the sei’ td anized a Coolidge and Dawes club,” says the} was culte fellow. He was a 3-| forest reserve. ———— _ York Tribune.” It is a natural and pat-| year-old, weighed 1,070: was stuffed] Circling in the throngs, and tem- ss See reaction on their part to the 1924 political] ®t 125 hams and gther things,|porarily free trom the cares of his Lines and Angles By TED OSBORN! gasoline that gives you abounding power and more miles per galicn. Get full value for the money you spehd for gasoline. Ask for and get AERO. ‘ ALEMITE eng Greasing Service Aero Oil Products Co. We have the tacttities, the equipment and the ation snducive to epicurean’ delight, and ttle and “dude ranches on beau- : »wed to cook for 80 hours. Talk}tiful Timber creek, was jolly Myles of beef! The man who never ate} Bennett, a good scout from the hair ‘ ¥ jenced operators : barbecued meat knows not what hej on his head to the nails on his toes, We used to be Casper pe dige = lived and were shaken by fear, driven by panic] {f the southern states felt free to.act outside the has missed. The writer has good causo to re-| Told that every time si for gered a quick, thor- and cowed by minorities. With the Democrats} Democratic party. they would line up.almost| But who ronsted the steer? What|member Myles, having once insulted We smoked a SUSB. ICE straddling, this issue’ is between Coolidge and JTaFollette. The American who believes in Amer. 1 icanism will do no hesitating between these two. 4 : ‘ is tte we 2 solidly against an affiliation of perverted liber-| suiding genus presided throughout?|both him and Mrs. Bennet by offer- Cigaret . m with outright Socialism, eS What master hand directed the|ing to pay for a couple of ‘days raves ait ‘ : 3 wera. ‘ whole performance? board and lodging. nm our co! pmouthern« Democrata -whp,.liye. at home “vote |W wade courge-awngl eae iebuld ielt eioce Sheppard, cowboy and range But we.don't the Democratic ticket as a matter of local pol- be? Who in by gone days ever did?| rider of many years, and known as Believe it any more, ‘y. Candidates and platforms do not coant much The far-famed—in fact the one and|“‘one of. the best fellows in the Big Because below the Mason and Dixon's line. But southern |only—John —W. more popularly} Horn basin” was a conspicuous fig- Women smoke and Democrats who move north are relieved. from | known as “Old Josh” Deane. ure dn the crowd, his “roll” at the Who ever saw a local pressure and can take a broader view of |. Fesplendent {n the resuscitation of |disposal of anyobdy who might be national polities. Tn this campaign they see a | RS I9tY: handsome andsdashing in short of ready cash s class movement started, with the hope Crank Cases Drained FREE ‘ “Keep Wyoming Money In ret us arain yours and Wyoming” refill with HIWAY OIL. Your money back if you don’t think you've found the RIGHT oil for your engine. Remedies for Discontent Despite large crops, despite higher prices of farm products, reports come out of the west t farmers are thinking of supporting the lette-Wheeler group. What is their chief remedy? at is called th bber tariff” | ree i , rr Sets ALAM rei “0 sell jaa free trade| first, of oataeliabing, a new extreme, radical thin! bat ‘ ; bs a rty and ondl market und buy in a protected market.” They | P°°9 ba) 3 j are told they will be better off if they can in-| °@!ege vote sufficient to throw tho election crease th nportation of foreign merchandisé of a president and vice prisedent into congress lower prices by this competition, and thus bef, Vat is their duty under the circumstances? able to buy in a competitive mark They. h a Democr#tic presidential candidat . - bee : 4 to support were no he question arises would the farmers be bet-| Hom they m ter off because of the substitution of foreign for | third party tic ld. But Mr. Davis has almost no chane ‘ecto. hous of getting a majority in th: domestic merchandise? Would the farmers prot ity ii “te sitive \ ul college and no chante of election in the it by the shutting down of m@ny American in rid trai re fn dustries? This would mean an army of at least] !!0US¢ of representatives were the college deat i 5,000,000 idle wage-earners, all consumers. From | eked. The Democratic candidate for vice presi : f 1919 to 1921, official figures show that more than pent might easily be chosen in the senate and Uu 5,000,000 American wage-earners were witho . ~2 ident. % nt suiy work, and almost the st thing the Harding at jovernor. Bryan was not free choice of the D administration did was to call an unemployment | ’¢mocratic national convention. He was mistak conference, to inaugurate measures to stay un-| UY peneee on the party by Mr. Davis. He is employment. This period was coincident with | !@t 7 ete of man most southern Democrats the lowest price level for farm products and the | YoUld like to see in the presidenc: His qualifi- greatest depression in agriculture. tions are insufficient and his record is not re The remedy suggested by the so-called “pro suring. His election would be a distressing essives” in the west would lead to the same] *"ti-climax to this campaign, © lisaster that came to agriculture in 1919 to 1921 n order to guard against the joint danger of An army of 5,000,000 idle workmen will do the|* deadlocked electoral college and the possible farmers no good, The best remedies for agricul-} SUCcess of Governor Bryan many southern Demo depression are active industries and well 8 feel justified in voting for Coolidge and paid wa rners. Outside of cotton and wheat, Dawes. The defeat of LaFollette, with 1} pro more than ninety per cent of our farm products | §™@™ of constitution wreckingy is the main rketed in the United States. ‘The. pur- thing to be aimed at by good Americans of both WE'RE LOOKING — FOR TROUBLE power of the wage earners must be sus-|™Jor parties. It can be accomplished best by | Ls tained by adequate protection supporting the Republican candidates, not only c : because they have already a much larger ele 4 toral vote in sight than the Democratic cand dates, but because votes for Davis are reall n, Who in case of deadlock, would Dawes Plan and Protection With the full operation of what is known as the Dawes plan of rehabilitating Germany, the | owe his election toa senate combination of Demo policy of protection is the only thing that will » Farmer-Labor party men and LaQollette Saye the United States from inundation by Ger. man merchandise. Germany will recover indus trially very speedily and because of low wa will be able to ship goods to the United 8 We never side-step or detour customers’ complaints. We want to hear them. The Appeal of Economy Not that,they are music to our in large quantities. If the Democrats are in ¢ . trol of the government and lower the tariff with There is absolutely no way of getting around ears; but they are outward a view of inaurgurating what Mr. Davis calls] one thrilling and outstanding achievement of the signs of inward service: de- fects. a “competitive tariff,” American competing man-| Harding-Coolidge administration. ufacturers must either materially lower wages They certainly did cut down on public ex- or shut up shop. penditures. As result the Republicaws 2 to The present protective tariff does not stop] their credit a record of reducing our income tax imports from Germany. In the last fiseal year| by twenty-five per cent. they were valued at $147,000,000 in gold. True, we And they have to their credit a record of hay- exported goods to G ny valued ¢ 000,000 | ing reduced the public debt during the last year but American industries and w So don’t hoard your service- trouble complaints — if you ge are} by over a thousand million dollars, ‘These are interested in imports, sihice they measure the] the figures: EG Shy: foreign competition in the home markets, PUBLIC DEBT > _ If more than $147,000,000 worth of merchandise} June 30, 1£ ri ; we’ ; Was imported from Germany last fisc year] June 30, 1924 Shere them wiih oer ae Heute if under a protective tariff, it y be seen the cause in zip time, = that after Germany's industries are stimulated | Reduction 5 sb eee ones eens e $1,098, 894,376 by the’ loan of $200,000,000 much of it from the An administration has a trong appeal to the United States it would be folly for the United people when it holds the public purse strings so States to turn about and lower the tariff until] tight that it can at the same time cut our taxes competition from G 1 in the American | und produce such an tounding reduction in markets would be intolerable. the figures of the national debt. ee oa ae NATRONA tection all the more necessary The Maine Shadow Maine casts the shadow of a gennine old-fash- The senator from Wisconsin, who aspires to | ioned Republican majority over any pale Demo- the highest office in the land, radios his tariff | crat hopes that may have been growing in views to the country at lar le is convinced | Ne ngland. It does even more, It foreshadows that the only way to relieve the farmer is to in-] a debacle of the Davis hopes in the east as crease his American market. Absolutely and | sweeping and ruinous as the Democratic breal sanely correét. But he also announces that should ! down in. the west where! the Davis campaign. is he become president he would namediately reduce collapsing, LaFollette’s Inconsistenc y | POWER. COMPANY . y eee ee coro

Other pages from this issue: