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

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“PAGE SIx. Che Casper Daily Cribune he Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening dand The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at tCasper, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune Bulld- “ing, opposite postoffice. Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postcffice as second class matter, November 22, 1916. Business ‘Telephones - Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments E. HANWAY AND BE. EB. HANWAY Advertising Representatives Prudden, & Prudden, 1120-23 Steger Bldg., fth Ave., New York ¢ Globe Suite 404 Sharon Bidg. New Cal. Copies of the lew York, Chicago, By 55 n Francisco, y ‘Trivune D e on file in the Reston and San Francisco offices and visitors..ure rp welcome! - MEME THE ASSOCIATED PRESS io The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of ail news credited in this paper tt -und‘also the local news published herein. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C.) SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State One Year, Daily and Sunday - One. Year, Sunday on’ Six’ Month, Daily and hree Months, One Month, I Per Copy Month, y Al subscript the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after sub- rcription becomes one month in arrears. KICK, IF YOU DON’T GET YOUR TRIBUNE If you don't find your Tribune after looking care- fully for it call 15 or 16 and !t will be delivered to you by special messenger. Register compiaints before 8 o'clock. ce 1 Want No Complications The fear of Bryanism in the White House, alone, ‘would spur sober-minded men and women of both major parties to combine to give the ” Goolidge and Dawes ticket a clear-cut decisive victory. The voters of the country are keenly alert to the danger of Jeaying the selection of a president to congress, with 1 the uncertain ties that attend such proc ng until next March. ‘ & The people of this nation want no complica- tions in the selection of their president and we believe they have the matter so ‘ly fixed in their mind that they will not gratify Mr. La Follette or any one else by balling up the elec- tion. If it is Coolidge they believe in and want they will go for him, and all indications point that way at this time. 4 f . t n a “ 1 0} has a sacred right to own 1 Psychology is doing its part in the voting t,; ass. What the few early discovered in the $ desirability of Coolidge has now spread to the it | many. The essential | presidential qualities + nave been found to be real, not imaginary. « He is not attempting to gain the high office of president by deceit and demagoguery, or by, slandér, misrepresentation. and false pretense - as his rival candidates are. Upon the good sense of the American people to do the right thing, the nation has always depended. Whenever so plain a necessity as Coolidge for president, is placed before the people they cannot possibly go wrong. Farewell Al! Yielding to pressure from national Democratic leaders as well as local and state political man- agers, Goyernor Al Smith of New York, defeat- * uM ° § aa h , ed candidate for presidential nomination by the late Democratic National convention, has con- f' sented to make another campaign for the gov yes c ernorship of the Empire state. The theory of all these Democratic directors is that Smith’s candidacy will be an aid to Davis’ presidential fortunes, which have sagged + inthe seat and bagged at the knees since the day the campaign opened. ’ New York, Democrats are leaning on a weak “reed. Heretofore Al Smith has been consid- ered unbeatable in New York State. There , has been some real basis for such belief in past gubernatorial contests; but did you ever notice » how these unbeatable persons slide down the toboggan track once they step onto it? Ore defeat starts them, and Smith has had his start, in his party’s national convention. New York State is for Calvin Coolidge, Smith or.no Smith. The up state is overwhelmingly Republican and it matters little what Smith and Tammany do. They are doomed. Nobody knows it better than Smith, and this explains his re- luctance to get into’a fight which spells his defeat. ‘yo. ay D “Lest We Forget” Robert M. LaFollette is today the same La- Follette he was in 1917, If he is right now he Was right then, The Viericks, the VHlards, the Bergers, the whole crew of open and secret sympathizers with our enemies, the paid propagandists and ,| the atien plotters against us, whose hero he was mn then} all are cheering for him today. 2 If Senator La Follette was a patriotic Amer- « jean in 1917, then Woodrow Wilson, Theodore Roosevelt a allant boy who died for us across the se not, If LaFollette was right then ev man of us who believed in the «_ cause of America was a weak and deluded sim- s} pleton. ae Argue, if you like, that the war was not the © kightly crusade we thought it was. But Amer- *. jeaswas on the firing line. Her fate as a na- y tion was at stake. Her youth, her ideals, her 1. evéry hope of a free existence were in the bal- 4 unce. He who was not with her was against | her. LaFollette—where was he? Barking at our heels, ready with words of comfort for our ene mies and none of encouragement for us. His me heart was alien to us. His voice and his ; power were used) to hamper our every effort. He has never excused his actions nor repented them He asks his re rd now—for the con fide: of the millions A is who be lieved in 1917 that Seator LaFollette was wrong and Aasflerica ht If we are to confess our utter disillusionment =| was 1 Che Casvet Dailv - Cribune ~ Seven years have uot changed America, -We : - airs: uy proud Ueda sot the ‘enteglaotea eid From the Botserh of Our Hearts who flung their lives into the scale as we were 4 f then. ‘li they were heroes then, they are none’ : < the less today. yt : Wilson. and’ Roosevelt are’ in their graves, The golden lads who died in France are still sleeping in the faith that ae them there. ‘Phe’ men who went away und, happily came back ugiin, still believe they did their duty. “Noth- img has changed, or can change, our faith in America and the righteousness of \her cause. And La Follette is unchanged too. It is the La Follette of 1917 who asks us—hot ‘to forget d forgivebut to justify. Sore me oF rade, Bos ) ij, 2 Dene em Ont Tho Lens i | Sacredness of Property B.. K. Wheeler, radical candidate for vice- president rose to sublime heights in his Pitts- burg attack on Secretary Mellon. The chief grievance of La Follette's: running mate against Secretary Mellon is that Mr. Mellon is highly schooled in sound business metheds and has ap- plied such methods in his administration of the treasury department, a fault which no true rad- ical can forgive. “I searcely need tell. you,” said Wheeler, “that Mr. Mellon is of that class which regards property as saicred.” Secretary Mellon believes in the right of the working man to own the home he has bought with his savings. He believes the workingman occupy or to rent or sell that property. nator Wheeler evi- dently does not. Mr. Mellon believes in the right of-any man who has money to invest in a business so to invest it and give employment at good wages to those that wish to work for him. Wheeler evidently believes that private eiiter- prise must be crushed, as it was crushed in Russia. Not to believe so would be to regard property as sacred. Mr. Mellon believes that a farmer has a sac- red right to till his farm and sell his products at such profit to himself as the market prices afford. Wheeler of course, cannot share that bourgeois, capitalistic notion. The farm, the workingman’s home, the. factories, the stores, the automobiles, church property, jewelry, money; in fact, every form of property; that has any value shotld be confiscated by the State. There is nothing sacred about it. Only Secre- tary Mellon and about ninety-nine’ out of eyery one hundred persons in this country regard ‘prop- erty as The others, who have no prop- hotly to the young prince: -‘‘If: it Were not for your rank, I'd make you take that back!” from; as has been often sald “corn. will accocamodate itself to new cli- matic. conditions more surely and _ Licked a King: 0} Never > w: tori is N SI e The prince was surprised but|Teadily than’ any other grain,” but erty od br ba aly never will work sins earn By ELDEN SMALL, gatient Moves: iwind F abenta sry | ebedceelectisp imiust he TeActioda: Dp Toreuve 00 nequire property, undoubtedly: aliare|’ smcrias’campaign orators fotaold|fanjeaeiyon think you cant wring {tel farmer who! wodla + bedothe a Wheeler’s scorn of Secretary Mellon as one of . ‘f used to grow eloquent over ‘this untry’s xploits on the battlefield nst royal foes. Today, it may Wt be either courteous or diplo- matic to recall an occasion when a Yankee lad literally trounced a king of England in a formal. fist fight. Thé loser In the fray was the Duke of. Clarence, heir apparent to the British throne where he after- ward re:gned as William IV. The winner was Nathan Lord, a sturdy lad from Maine, and the battle was fought on the British line flagship, the Royal George, in the summer of 1774. .3 In the hold of the war vessel was a party ‘,of youthful ~ American sailors being taken to England as revolutionary prisoners of war, Duke was aboard as a junior of- ficer, getting a naval training under his country's best admiral. His In- solent reference te the bels"” successful corn grower. Now is the time to go into the field and select the seed for next me,” he replied, “you're welcome to try it.” .So the young “rebel” was freed, and the two lads engaged in. a lively battle, witlt no interference from officers or crew. Young Lord won, the prince acknowledged him- self whipped, ‘and inquired the other's name. When the boat was anchored at home and the other prisoners were marched away to celis, the prince's intercession led to Lord's being set free and given five pounds to pay his way back to America. Masi acest PEE ES Selection of Seed Corn By C. F. ROBERTSON. The scarcity of/seed corn, showing, a_high germination test, last spring, should be a warning to every corn: grower in, Wyoming. Home grown seed is best for the “that class which regards property as sacred.” The Fragrant Wheeler Every time B. K. Wheeler makes a __ public stateinent, there is certain to be some one rise up and ‘dispute the truth of it. “Montang’ peo- ple woold say that he is such a confirmed liar, the truth is no longer in him. Others would say, as others have said, he is such a contemp- ibly low double crosser that to tell the truth would. be to double cross himself. Wheeler, who is under indictment in “the Montana federal court and trying at the present moment to evade trial for violating federal law by accepting fees, from a fraudulent oil com- pany for using his senatorjal influence to obtain oil land leases forshis client, said in an address the other da; “Perhaps it would interest Mr.. Edward B. MeLean’s_fellow-townsmen to know that as the Within the next fifteen days, all corn intended for seed should be housed where it is dry and kept from freezing during the winter, months. “4 The soil climate and abundant water supply in the Big Horn vailey has a tendency to produce the large ear, therefore in selecting «orn for seed, gather the smaller ears, well filled to the tip of the cob, with thé kerne] rows straight and sym- metrical. Once in the field the work of selection will be found simple; in- teresting and instructive. Do not overlook picking. tho ears which show carflest maturity thit is. m- portant, as hastening the develop-| ment of early maturing varieties. Fall plow for corn, so that plant- Loe growing movement in “Wyo- ' -, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1924, later is alwaye m_ danger of eatly| we are anxious to have one in the frost in the fall. hanfs of every corn grower in It cannot be too strongly Wyoming. Write us for one or call upon’ those interested in the| jiu Rese ye = Rag bith cites ater, who will have a plentiful sup- mug, the importance of ; Pe those: selection of seed:in thay fold. Even |PY. for distribution to all if your corn fs not of a pure strain, a bu? has become |, be sure |, to select from. it, sufficient seed for your next year’s planting. * x, De not. depend upon seed grown elsewhere than in © Wyoming, the risk cf not being to procure seed next spring, suitetl to our cl | matic condition, is too great. Most of what has been outlined herein applies to all of the corn growing sections of Wyoming. Remember to select the most per- fect ten ears of all yarieties and | Rich Milk, Malted Grain ext.in powder place ‘them in competition the | form,makes The Food-Drinkfor AllAges. second annual Wyoming State Corn | Digestfble—No ot ie ele shew, to be held in Worland, Decem- | elways at hand. Ti form. ber 4, 56 and 6, 1924. Premium list | Ask for ““Horlick’s,”’ at all Fountains. Avoid Imitations tm- Wolrand, Wyo. Permanent roads area _ good investment —not an expense Road Building Far Behind the Automobile ‘Millions_now recognize the automo- bile as a necessity. it is no longer a luxury for the few. Sixty per cent of its use is for business, Because of this the modern paved highway has become an economic ne- _Cessity. Yet although the mileage of Concrete Roads and ait has been steadily in- creasing, our highway system today lags far behind ‘the automobile, The great majority of our highways are as out of date as the single-track, narrow gauge railway of fifty years ago. Such a condition not only seriously handicaps the progress of the automo- bile as a comfortable, profitable means of genierreicn, hey bc? holds back advancement in prac ly every sec- tion. of the country. It is costing tax- payers millions of dollars annually, EERE aboard caught the ear of young reason, that it requires time to accli- Lord, who was in Jrons. He spoke mate corn wherever the seed comes ing may be well out-of the way by net closed on some of the others involved in the the fifteenth of May, Corn planted government scandals, Mr. McLean through his attorney «asked Senator Walsh, conducting the oil investigation, and myself, if Edward B. Mc- Lean could obtain immunity for himself by tell- ing all he knew about others.” It may be explained that Edward B. McLean is the owner and publisher of the Washington Tost, newspaper, a man of high integrity, whom Walsh attempted to draw inte the oil investiga- tion, and whom Wheeler, sought to connect with the Daugherty investigation, simply because Mr. Lean was on friendly terms with the Republican administration. i Wheeler had scarcely uttered his low-flung insinuations that Mr. W. J. Lambert, Mr. Me- Lean’s attorney, made this public statement. “Any charge that Mr. McLean ever through me asked for immunity is false. When the suggestion was made to me by Senator Wheeler that thew would be willing to extend to Mr. Mc- Lean immunity, my answer was, as Mr. Me- Lean’s attorney, that he had nothing for which he either desired or would -accept. immunity.” The public will accept Mr. Lambert's state- ment as the truth in the matter, and it un- doubtedly is. Tfow long will it be before the people drive this loud smelling skunk, Wheeler, from thé public life of this nation, One more turn of the political wheel ought to accomplish the desired result. ‘The Same Gang Secretary of State Hughes sees no possibilit of resumption of diplomatic-relations with Rus- sia, because the Russian government. is organiz- ing and financing tlhe communist contingent which i: tempting to start.a bloody revolution in this country for the overthrow of our govern- ment and the confiscation of all property. Tt joted that Secretary Hughes. is ally of matters of which he has rledge. It would seem to be desir- meets every in Somewhere in this chart is your cup of coffee. Do you like your coffee strong, mild or half-way? No matter! Do you prefer a , standard coffee pot, drip m or tricolator? No matter! Your cup of coffee is here. But it’s up to you to find it! This chart will show you how. Put it up to M-J-B and see! spoons MJ-B to the cup The Sovi doing vthing of the: kind, which» shows developed lying into a fine art. The third internationale’ is absolutely trolled by a small body Moscow, which orders to its agents throughout'the world. The leading’ members of that*body are identi- eal with the controlling leaders of the Sovfet governmenf. When they think it worth while to say something nice to reach people in foreign ands they speak as the Soviet government. ¥ they act to promote trouble’ they speak as the third internationale, It is the same gang. j His Guess “The Democratic party has no: chance! Cool- idge stands the best el of winning. The p: tical alternatives are Coolidge, or an ele tion by the house, s Johh Moody, statistic: writer, who, in 194 imated 276 electoral votes it) is that con- giyes 4: and. must f rewardthose who were against us, why not put the laurel crown on the head of Dugene Debs? He did not sulk, he did not whimper, he did not hide behind the power of an exalted office—he frankly ‘and freely told us that no word of his would help us toward military victory. We put him in jail; he suf- fered in silen and then we turned him out oa the world, broken in health, ready for the graye. Better, far ‘better, he, than La Follette, for Wilson »}> for Hughes when the actual result wa and He elaborates by say- ing that the industrial vote in the east will show a Democratic loss and in the south and the west (level) equal a seep cnitcan loss. aie Republican yote in each l sta he 8, Should be Jarger than in 1922, but . proportionately smaller then in 1920, : Dore: a level ones lrounded) a equal r Somewhere we gained the impression that John W. Davis was running for office. Observation leads us to correct it, He is merely, strolling. Highway building should be con- tinued and enlarged upon, Your highway authorities are ready to carry on their share of this great public work. But they must have your support. Tell’ them you are ready to invest in more and wider Concrete Highways now. PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION Ideal Buildin, DENVER, Coo. ‘A National Organization to Improve Extend the Uses of Concrete oe OFFICES IN 29 CITIES Se | The Price of Coal Is the Lowest It Will Be . This Year BUY NOW This is your opportunity to fill your coal bin for the winter. We respectfully solicit your order. Casper Supply Co. Phone 913 or 914 Chleaze 2 Northwestern Asrives, 1:30°p. m. +11.00 p. m. Arriver wapawnwnnnn 5:45 PD. m.

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