Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE EIGHT Che Casner Sunnav: Cribune SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1924.” gs SE ER EO CID UREN ae ene et tid er 2 SENDA ORTOBER Bali Pi Ro: ion Labor not tax the American [that on thelr purchases the wo-Jcommission also express themselves] prepared. In every case we have Che Casper Sunday Cribune moa rea tie manners pewter end ane se and Union Gepuia; “1k enables Tuisea Chat vapae | Saal phy -GeaND Medineertevier tect ial aeipenenricnet eit mice te toes ae 1 the price in men and money Tribune tssued every evening) advice, is ideally fitted for the Rost. The Kemmerer Gazette, an inde- Paes te: Pree toa) og Pena eae PP iijedlit cade ve Sop apg Sa bimbo ‘each ee bee Raa avotd those ‘Toasee in possible future z i ra op aft nd fier det litte eA Other women too are playing an important Pendent newspaper, published at|we need to consume, right here in| thing they buy, if they buy Ameri-| possible, a means for/winning the peuialak yn § crag cert ae apis Cusper, Wyoming. Publication é part in the administration of the government. Kemmerer, the home of Robert R.| this country than to buy from other}can gocds and wares. It is absurd] approval of all the contending fac-| observ it a nose | See, ing. opposite postoffice ~|One of three civil service commissioners is a| Rose, before he came to Casper to} countries, so long as we can make|to say that the women pay a tariff | tions in Europe. We have a Dawes prada lbser Bien sr wesnaky shain woman. Another is assistant attorney general. | assume the appointment as judge of or grow what wo need to consume.| tax of $3.000,000,000 every year on|Plan in this country. It one ro Pattee Dean tedtioin reat sto leap The first woman to enter-the American diplo-| the eighth jdicial district, has this | At tue rame time a protective tarift| their purchases of domestic goods. ee eeenep lp es ies eet ly ha tiie tations: datense Wl i anki matic service has just completed her first year | to say of that centieman: brings in the most revenue to the} The wives and mothers are far more |®"d the pol Lt hg dice i imum of loss and delay. in the division of Latin-American affairs, and| ‘Like an ordinary peddler, R. R.| treasury. interested in having thelr husbands |®¢ministration. Let us hope that Daily Entered class matter, November 2. Casper (Wyoming) posteffice as second : 1916. ene 15 and 16 e Connecting All Business Telephone: Branch Telep! . It will receive ort no less ——————— { has been assigned to a’ foreign post. Still other | Rose, smal! town lawyer, elevated to| °7 What fs the tarife policy of the |2nd Rain feeb Shae. toxsianers Aaiscstee VEO Sap-seda pian in| “woot petalaccesratiow ‘Gabe. lare Tv ; J. BE. WANWAY QND EB. BE. HANWAY women we find filling such important posts as | the Position of district judge at Cas- | Democratic party? Sa ie bate protective tarife is the | Europe. purposely built small, as cab drivers hoe ANE okie director of the women’s bureau, created to pro-| Pe through the famous political ac-} “The purpose and -effect of the = are able to more quickly rv'r> their ng Kepresentatives Peart f best friend the American home ever Jani 4 : Beasde Steger Bldg.,| Mote proper standards and policies governing cident of 1922, goes about the state, | pemocratic tariff policy is to make feet from the floor to the pedals, § presumably at taxpayers’ expen: had. i ‘of small con. oe cote] ie employment of women workers; disector of fewking one of hs drcitons attest | tcn,tare, se Potable for Ameren TS, wns te eng core for ints ant | PRE Price Im Mien’ [en the pedals ere ae gs Zoston, Mass 4 New| the children’s bureau, and chairman of the em-] ing labor, This decision was handed anything to the American people.{tation for a “revenue” or ‘ competi- nigh Bl , Bt. Francisco, Cal. sof the! Hi, compensation commission, A woman is} down trom the same bench he still] qhe Democcatie party believes the| tive” tariff the Democrats are try-{ In his last teeta are asian ~ aithahas bind toe me tor of internal revenue in Chieago. Two wo-| occupies and from which he has. ing to put across; officer on the active list of the army ra sco offftes and visitors are country is more prosperous indas- | men hold positions as federal merchandise ap-|not had the good grace to resign|trialy when foreigners can/ oome| ‘The cure is the election of a SET watreg tae Retereoe tine $5 oOo Reward beat praisers, one in Cleveland, the other in St. Louis. | while making his campaign for the | into our home markets more easily,| publican president and a Repub‘t- | exeeption, has found us toally un- md esse SUBSCRIPTION RATES One woman is assistant trade commissioner in| United States senate. and undersell Americans. This is on|can congress. See to it that Presi- {| ORES UA TOM'Y Une Five dotlars re-yard will be paid tells By Carrer and Outside State Berlin and another recently returned from a sin- “This dragging of the judicial er-}the theory that when things are| dent Coolidge receives enough elec- to the party furnishing the Casper f of 1 One Year, Daily and Sunday ilar post in Shanghai. Under the present Repub-| ne through the mud of partisan | cheap business is good. Cheap things | toral votes to elect him on the day Daily Tribune information leacing Bur e Year, Sunday only : politics is in itself enough to war-|make cheap men and women. rant any thinking voters to cast a 8. Does the pretective tariff bene- ballot against “Judge” Rose, while | fit the American farmer and the his past attitude toward the man who} American workingman? in November when the votes are Every vote counts. If you ‘want to save your home and its hap- piness vote for President Coolidge lican administration 2,573. women have received presidential postmaster appointments, while more than half the employes in the federal de- @a,- Six Month, Daily imi ‘Three Months, Daily son: One Month, Dally mar Per Copy --. R. C. Montgomery, |/'0 the capture. of tne person who le trom Tribune subscribers. Patrons i of the paper should not pay any- . reales one their subscription except the - Stato 5 works 1s suc! e sure! no joes an ‘ory proves | a congress. . carrier who delivers By Mail Inside St partments in Washington are women. ‘ks fi h that hi ly cannot] It d d tariff hist. nd a Republican BTeSs, Physician and Surgeon dell the Lou paliS: “cai URES —-———_—— expect much from that source, once it. More than 90 per cent, of the SE ee oe y! B fror One Year, Dally : I T. its the loboring men are fully informed. | farmer's products (outalde of cotto1 , Sunday Only e o1 | 's of! nm % Gras a hcome ; axes wer “Rose is a biennial candidate. He |and wheat) are sold right here in the} At Last Co-operation Electronic Re tid The The direct effect in lowered taxes brought | runs for some office every two years|United States. ‘That in the. farm: mic actions ty | Month,, Daily. and ‘Sunday oT r about by the Coolidge economy program has been | and has done so for the past decade, er’s best market. ‘The only way to! Owen D. Young, temporary agent of Abrams an, po eaten y "will not Insure delivery after sub-| felt recently by every payer of an income tax.|onco he was elected,’ by @ bare ma-|enable the workingman to buy free-| general for “reparations payments maz Taiotion beaieneesona month in arrears. Despite the fact that the public debt has been re-| jority of less than 25 votes, to the | ly the products of the farm is to em- under the Dawes plan, reports that “3 = ay - — duced more than $3,000,000,000, and the annual] office of county and prosecuting at- | ploy them and pay good wages. he has met the most earnest good Riverton, Wyoming = <ICK, IF YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBU Od inaithe Sl oor vn | torney for Lincoln county. Just prior] 9. What effect has the protective! wil everywhere in Germany. ‘The KICK, IF F , after looking care-| COSt of running the federal government cut down =e . tariff on the housewife? Is it true daitbaie Of th ied th Se ET taanllvardaeenaroa) T10Te rehan 00,000,000, yet it’ was possible, | t0 election he invariably: fawas upon, TEE On the —bouscwitor ia At tue _ntmbers Sed exenarasionis it call 15 or 16 « jal mess the labor unions, but after the votes rF — — — — — —- are counted he promptly forgets them. “His attitude toward. the unions several times been brought up for discussion at Lincoln county un- on meetings, and at least once has Nis attitude been condemned, offi- clally, by a labor union. The follow- ing which appeared April 6, 1922, in Rose's Kemmerer Camera, at the be- through enforcement of the strictest government- al economy, to lift some of the load of federal = taxation from the shoulders of the average man, rt talk rho pays the bulk of the income tax. CHEERED 1 Abd ! i Sica s 8 aed The tax on incomes has been cut, this year, per cent. The difference between the income Name the Industries tax law of 1921, when the Republicans came into power, and the income tax law of today, is an Mr. John W. Davis is challenged to specify the} outsanding example of the results of Republican compiaints before 8 industt he proposes to put out of business it onomy, and bringing order out of the finance ginning of the miners’. strike, shows A his party gains control of the government as a|chaos facing the nation when the Republicans} fi. extent of his belief in the loy- San result of the approaching election. took the helm of the ship of state in 1921. 5 alty of the miner to this union: thor In his speech at Des Moines the Democratic] A married man, having no children, enjoying ‘Hundreds of miners have left Wor nominee for president denounced the Republi an income of $5,000 in 1921, paid an income tax] Kemmerer, many for other coal Fra tariff Jaw because it has “tended to divert labor 1 from beneficial and profitable en industries ill adapted to American Prior to that the had paid $120 w enacted this year, and affecting arne! last year, reduces this tax to $75. camps in Utah, where it is stated they will accept employment un- der non-union conditions.” “Such propaganda, manufactured and tery an¢ conditions.” he will sala den setae eae pays his taxes,| jom whole.cloth; aia mot set well) the That means, if it means anything at all, that It is hard f T J oH D0. ; [with the miérs, and ‘Rose waa" not con: if Mr. Davis and his mtrol of the} 7* t a % he i cemagogue to convince any} supported in the Lincoln county Dig government, they will ff law which} ™an that he has not received ‘direct benefits| cont camps at the primary election from Republ n economy in the face of such facts as these. ‘ast month. In fact, he lost the Kem. rer district, where he resided for/ ——_—___——_ en years. Even his home precinct : Vd not give him a. plurality in Kem- Tariff Plank yperet,. forse vin Mp sec ara niece oie: The Democratic platform ‘says that the Ford-|trict where he is best known and ney-McCumber tariff is: “The most unjust, un-| where the conviction is general that scientific and dishonest tariff measure ever en-| he is unfit timber for the exalted po- Since, therefore, in Mr. Davis’ opinion, the} @cted in our histo: sition to which he aspire: . - 35 an ; ‘ 4, “Of further interest to union la- 2 : Republican tariff has diverted erable aoe an the one tion of this tariff measure 5, bor is his’ reported comment on the amount of labor and capital to a considerable unemployed workers have found work at { industries which should be aban-| the highest level of wages ever known; our ex-| lig" of ue, miners who went, on LOCATED IN SOUTHEAST PORTION OF CASPER er ¢ ies Ww: 8 ‘ Act 3 X-| strike in 2 1 3 : aoe vill be of interest to know what 7 ports increased more than $1,500,000,000, and| may now be repeated, it having ap- YOU BUY AT YOUR OWN FIGURE R will put an end to those ill adapted ent srprises and to which labor and capital have been diverted. 4 Presumably Mr. Davis would not mention~a matter of this kind unless it is of sufficient B magnitude to be of national interest. He would not discuss trivial matters in a great national campaign. P aril stries he has in mind, What enter-| thirdly, our duties from imports have added some | peared previously in public print wl anon io “wink tO" elcue. down *1.100,000,000 to our national treasury. nd never beno dented by Tose, The seel; ae ; When the Bryan brothers .get to explaining] {act is the report of the remarks loyes docs he desire to throw out o} 3ryan | ge P! a}. ‘heed = Bad 2 2 s Sra aoreeek trapliyiven: it Bolee ocoupations -erpich that democratic faritt iANK: they. will: havo: to] came team, SrepBtAble siteea itd All located within the city limits—city water mains, fire hydrants, gas, telephone forg he deems adapted to American conditions? bi th acts, for t ee are muny more 10 add tO} Fone éxcorhited the'miiders for strile- and lights—all city conveniences. “f degre - neat The mention of one or two industries ya ab ye: ag Fic Jo sie epee vi have ling for higher wages, saying that fe PE eas % aie suffice to justify his broad assertion. ‘The la |sold in two years $3,000,000,000 worth of manu: | {hey wore netting enough aanvey tor > * eee ee ‘ De eee a ey ee Oee er On nei rhctifed eens abroad.’ Whom have we cheated? | inate worked hea acres for The sale includes 150 city lots, and’three modern houses never even occupied. The suce of business under the proposed Democratic tar- m have we deceived? None. The tariff has] pect more—in fact the miners were auction sale commences way iff are entitled to fair warning of the impending pelped and is helping STery. man, woman and|making more money than bank thea aaaet At tiviti child, except t a kK Tni elerk: thea cessation of their ieee = P @ pawnbroker, in the United] piri DER BES palancadt oi the z Is Sia pale ae when these alleged remarks were < opin $ | >? 7 made; he had just been defeated for oy Sas ee Hepp sai and norma bt et mon MON DAY OCTOBER & worl i ; ~ ri hadn't yet work- lke Henry Ford is a great business genius. He is 2 teben leeeeneys. Ee naires provide a hard e arma takes in't yet wor! 9 liter a man of broad view and far sight. Any Sheet ASAbtaee matinee thar eee eon apone is Sc: Trobe ota rare eag aed aA may mike Upon any aubseck $8 OLvalwe: | y aisoe agricultural good fortune is an accident, beet iaMnviy Seapets cs AT 2:30 P. M. to be followed by even more desperately hard times for the farmer of 1925. But that, after all,| upon himself sineo hie sojourn in is theory, and the extra hundreds of millions in| the clouds over in Casper. the farmers’ bank account are highly convincing] ‘The Gazette is not parisan in its f Many people remember just how far the] ®ntagonism to the Casper senatorial me argument, similarly employed by the Bry- | °*ndidate, but in common with those \ e e e - an campaigners of 1896, did or did not outweigh | "ho Know the real Toso, ‘believes Remember. This IS an uction @ and You Bu at Yo Own F el in the November vote the influence of the 40 cents | ‘Dat, he Js unfit to represent tho . ai i per bushel] rise in wheat. > great commonwealth of Wyoming. 4 é LOCATION. ° And during the next few weeks the Gazette will endeavor to prove it.” Pub ea eh ba leg Ten Points on the Tariff 1 ron eno a yee sce ae /NOTE CAREFULLY—Theee lots are located in the southeast part of the city of- Casper. What this means is apparent to everyone—théy are in the direct line of the BEST GROWTH of a growing section of a growing city. of the high cost of living? Democratic waste and extrava- gance during the war, inflation of paper currency and false “prosper- This property is along the new Country Club and Sceneic Drive, £djoining Bucknum Park, and only two blocks from the new school—one of the city’s finest, now being completed. ity. ‘he Republicans are trying to pair the mischief the Democrats ave done. 2.. Does the protective tariff ip- crease prices? The first principle of property values is loca- tion, and these lots are the most favorably lo- cated of any such possibility in the city. It takes many things:to make for value, and every comparison and standard will show this prop- It does not, The highest prices ever recorded in. recent American erty to be especially favored by an economic development. “The present political campaign offers three distinct attitudes for the people’s thought. One | is an attack on industry and every form of su cess, on the theory that Big Busines means the Money Power. Of course, it does not. Another at titude attacks a dead administration, but not the present one, and raises the slogan of “Honesty in Government,”-as if all the rascals were in one party and all the saints in the other. Of course they are not. The third attitude is that of contin- uing straight along the common-sense road of American progress, extending te usefulness and prosperity of the American shop, enlarging the advantages of the American home, holding fast the established ideals of American libertiés. Th third attitude will win.” Taxes Will Be Up An analysis of the situation makes it diff cult, indeed impossible, to understand why any rmer should support the Socialist-Third par on its plank declaring for government owneship of the railroads. There are huridreds of examples to show that government ownership would prove a. direct y rmer. Presumably what support the 1 party has on this plank comes from the belief that the farmer might enjoy low. er freight rates. A glance at the recent past, when the government operated the railroads at terrific cost to the taxpayers, and at extremely high freight as well as passenger rates, should be enough to discourage any such idea. However that was mere operation of the railroads. To own them the government would have to buy them, at a cost many billions of dollars, which the taxpayers would have to put up. Most important and most direct in its action on the farmer, however, would be the fact that the railroads pay a large percentage of the state and county taxes in agricultural states, Under the coat of venéer he has plastered And Continues From Day to Day Until the Entire Property Is Closed Out Here Is the Record What has the Republican administration. ac- complished ‘in the way of economy? Briefly, these things: Reduction of the publie debt by more than 000,000,000, saving in interest alone more than 35,000,000 a year, . Reduction of the cost of running the federal government of more than $2,000,000,000 a year. Reduction of ‘the number of employes on the federal payroll by close to 100,000. The establishment and operation of a budget system in handling the fiscal affairs of the fed- eral government, resulting in economies hitherto thought impossible. / Ending of the naval construction races of the great powers which laid terrific tax burdens on the whole world through the Conference for the Limitation of Armaments. A record any party could be proud of, and par- ticularly proud when it is remembered that con- ditions almost chaotic were inherited from the preceding administration. All Oil Rights Are Guaranteed . the Purchaser This is an oil community, built and sustained by Oil, with new producing properties being developed continuously. Full oil rights to this property is guaranteed you with warranty deed and certified abstract. * DO YOU REALIZE Many experts believe oll to be in the structure east of Casper and that a high class drilling outfit, backed by Casper business men and operated by experienced drill- ers 1s now operating within ONE AND A HALF Miles southeast of these lots? And that you may buy these beaurifully located residential lots with full off rights at your OWN FIGURE? That is the arrangement, There is now a deal on for the location’ of another oll well only about one-half mile south of these lots. It is not surprising that we have had many Inquiries abour this property, and have had to inform all inquirérs that we had a contract that provided th Per satres ley would be sold south and history were in 1919 and 1920 under a low or Democratic “revenue” tar- itt, 3. Is it true that the protective tariff enables the “protected inter- sts” to rob the people of $4,000. 000,000 every year by imposing high prices? It is not true. This mythical “rob- bery” changes from $2,000,000,000 to $8,000,000,000 according to the political temperature of the Demo- crat or “Independent” who charges It. If this “robbery” actually takes pince, then the farmers who are pro- tected must take at least $1,500,000. 000 of it, Yet the Democrats tell us tha: the farmers are the people who ‘© robbed! ’ ° Japan's Victory Japan his won a yietory before the league of nations, The so-called compromise plan has been submitted to the sub-comm m on arbitration. It provides that all conflicts between nation even those arising over matters of internal jur- isdiction, may be examined by the council of the league when any member introduces the subject COL. W. B. CARPENTER IN CHARGE rye | ownership of the federal government, they would | for discussion. This is in effect Japan original eae oa a a a ena el bibs One of the world’s greatest real estate auctioneers, Col. W. B. Carpenter, will cry 1ubis not have to pay a cent. amendment to the protocol, which was abandon-|‘protiteer" and the treisury? this sale. He has gained a national reputation and Success by his conduct ot a A In Montana last year the railroads paid 385|ed in favor of a much stronger one when the| ‘No; every doline callnnny at the sale of this 1ature—being fair and being square. He will Permit of no by-bid- ba per cent of the entire tax levy. If the government | first one met with disfavor. The second propo-| custom houses goea into the treas- ding, so stipulated in his contract with us that Wwe agree to this. We, by thi oes owned the railroads, not a cent of this tevenue sition, which was considered as gravely endan-| ry. None of it goes to any “prof. 4 clause can do no bidding ourselves, and in fact we do not want to- h rele : ing! would have gone to the state. It has been figured | gering the future of the protocol and of the pro. | teers" or business, interests, into this sale to sell, and that is just what is going-to be di Weare eine Ath that in some of the agricultural states the addi-| posed international conference on disarmament,| 5 Does the protective tarift come lad to have a man of Col. Carpenter's tation Ndline” thu’ are mighty | tional charge against each farm in the called for the suppression of the protocol clause beng br Us oa Led Yee pearance - that YOU will be pl Hy el ation. handling _ this auction—it mm would be'close to & which proclaimed as an aggressor any state re-| ig i umen® jou, Prefer to Duy tor- Loh eriaa ng Pion (eater eis Wel : : Elt Where does the farmer come out, if the rail-| fusing to abide by a World Court, ruling that]untess you prefer to sec foreign rev roads are bought and run by the federal govern.|® particular dispute concerned the sovereign | workmen employed rather than alia ment? rights of the state complained against and hence | American workmen. Bvery sult of eat “ —— that no conflict was justifiable. Tokio says the clothes you “buy made of foreign ’ 23 : Japanese proposition is pure legal, wi goods; every foreign glove you wear: ‘, + * oy Prue igadity papences hropeaitionads 3s Sr alagads feriti hi every dress of forelan seiko "seu Colonel W. B. Carpenter, Auctioneer will announce terms and conditions of sale MG ica, Dut the fact remains that under this artiele| Se%,,thOWs some American wage: each day on the grounds. Remember Monday, October 6, at 2:30 h : ad The sAmerican woman has received material an could have our immigration law examined | wear American Sona aa eR ae d you control th t for C ae ‘ 7 my p. m. the sale starts, inc * recognition from thé present Republican admin.| by a foreign tribunal. do nat pay a Rent ei temattene at a0 y i ce ay : Semoun you Day, oh Aspens choicest building propert tl istration, expecially through the department of lise American kitchen utensils and 2 A st agriculture, which touches intimately more homes Unhappy the candidate who must defend his cods instead of foreign ones, you war record. do not pay a cent in tariff. You keep some American workmen at work. 6. What iv the tariff policy of the Republican party? The purpose and effect of the Re- publican party in fevying a taritr is to give employment to American workmen and capital. A protective «4 than any other branch of the government ex cepting the postal service. - A notable itistance of this recognition was the A man is known by the company he keps. That establishment recently of a bureau of home eco. | is why practically all of the Roosevelt Progres- nomics, with the same rank as other government | sives have refused to keep company with the mot bureaus. It is in charge of a woman of execn-! ley crowd of extreme radicals who compose. the b bo Drou " 4 b Phir Lriy Dobbin Realty Co.