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acter of his following. Perhaps no one But. Sena- tor LaFollette would insult the members of the LaFollette-Socialist party by such a charge. The better plan is that of George Ade’s county chair- ‘The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening}man: “Claim everything until the election and ‘The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, Publication offices: Tribune Build- fhe Casper Daily Cribune Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postcffice as second fluss matter, November 22, 1916. after the election holler fraud.” Debs Against Coolidge Eugene V. Debs, who is working for LaFol- lette, says: “I am a revolutionist. I have no re- spect for capitalist property laws, nor the least scruples about violating them * * * I am law- abiding under protest—not from scruples—and abide my timé.” President Calvin Coolidge says: “If we wish to maintain what our forefathers here established we shall do well to leave the people in the own- ership of their property and in the control of their government and under the protection of their courts.” Debs is a “progressive.” He is a follower of LaFollette. He has been in prison for disloyalty. He gained his freedom on his promise to quit try- ing to overthrow the government. His hand is against every employer. He would enact here | the national tragedy that his ruined Russia. He believes that the government we have and which gives so much to the 110,000,000 people of this country, should be destroyed and in its place there should be put a “dictatorship of the pro- letariat,” enslaving workers, robbing the thrifty, ruining cities and bring people to the verge of Business Telephone. Branch Telephone J. E. HANWAY AND E. E. HANWAY MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Prers is exclusively entitled to the se for publication of all news credited in this paper nd also the local news published herein. Momber of Andit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C.) Advertising Representatives Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bidg., New York City; Af Zidg.,. Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon B:dg ing “Montgomery St, San c yf the « Vatly.Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago, ent #Boston and ‘San Francisco offices and visitors are that 2¥elcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrer and Outside State One Year, Dally and Sunday mon’ One Year, Sunday on-y -- ent "ix Month, Daily and Sunday such-Phree Months, Dally and Sun ente; One Month, Dati thei.Ber Copy Cal. Copies of the y and Sunday iy tere:,Qne Year, Daily and Sunday to b.Qne Year, s, Daily and Su: grar Three Months, Daily and Sun Month, Daily apd Sunday Aul-subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after sub- 'p. #eFiption becomes one month in arrears i ET YOUR TRIBUNE une after lookie= <are-|- y for it call 15 or 16 and it will be delivered to you {ster compiaints before 8 All the things we haye enumerated would fol- low in the wake of such a rule as Debs favors. They have followed it in\Russia. Debs beholds in llette the man to bring about the conditions he desires here in the United States. lent Coolidge would cherish and keep in- tact the form of government that we have inher- ited from our forefathers. Under that form of government we have become the greatest nation in the world, peopled with individuals who own more of the wealth of the earth than do all the other people of the globe put together. President Coolidge believes that if you have a bank account you are privileged to keep it. He believes that this government belongs to and serves all the inhabitants of the United States, and that they are entitled to and should have the protection of their courts, which stand be- tween them and men of the Debs and LaFollette If you don't find your y special messenger. ee? ae An American Asset “The character of President Coolidge is one of an people. The deep re- peech he de- erity touch the the heart. They carry the mind back to the church in ous the little village of our youth, to Sunday eve- potings when the | Bi circle aid to childhood histories that told of ved ing on the snow in prayer and mn the God of his fathers in . President Cool of life is the de- ter and that religion not leg- 1 to personal character and . the assets of the jgious strain croy ; Its simplicity Can any man with eyes to see and mind to com- sides with Debs as against a man like the president, who refuses to exchange pros- perity, liberty and happiness for chaos and ruin? shington knee | prehend tz Lincoln calling uy M the desperate days « sim idge believes that the ob. resi «tclopment of ch cof Tslation, is the ro: enc - 10 nation Take your choice. A supreme court or a su- preme congress. Do You Want This? The Russian soviet government since coming into power, at the end ofa reign of terror in which thousands of the nobility and men and women of the highest intelligence were murdered quotation from one of the lead- newspapers of the nation. is the same man that Davis, LaFol- n brothers charge ctices and all the little mean- Inte int ing Democratic __._Iette, Wheeler and the Bry — with corrupt 7 Unesses that their small minds had done these things: Abolished the. church and all religion. Abolished propert Under the Constitution Under the constitution with but few amend- Jhents, our population has increased from less than 4,000,000 in 1787 to many times that num- No man owns his home ot It is the state's. Abolished the sanctity of the home and moth- erhood. Women and girls are the property of x the state and are marketed like cattle. The off- ~The country has expanded from thirteen an-| spring are cared for by the state. There is no mic colonies clinging to the Atlantic seaboa: ! to iS sturdy commonwealths stretching from sea the place he li such thing as home. e There is no money or wages. The factories, a und from the St. Lawrence to the Rio} <ych as operate, are operated by the state. Every- hody works, not for himself but for the state or the community. There is no individual initiative, nor individual enterprise. All crops raised, livestock grown. or things produced .belong to the state. This portrays only a few of the high spots. The LaFollette-Wheeler plan is to abolish the American government as it-exists today and es- tablish the soviet plan of government in its Wheeler made a trip to Russia at the in- vitation of the rulers of that country and he approves the plan. LaFollette, by the support he has drawn about him, consisting of people desiring the same sort of government has begun the work by attacking the supreme court as the first stumbling block in the way of success. + We don’t know what the fathers and mothers of America are thinking pine in the face of such an impending danger. Such a calamity is not only possible. It is on the way and the only safe course against it is to bury LaFollette and Wheeler under such an avalanche of 4fnerican votes that they will never be dug out while time lasts. nde, with Alaska, the Hawaiian and Philip- pine islands, Guam and Porto Rico thrown in for good measure. From penury and provincialism to prosperity and power unexampled among the nations of the More than this, wealth is more evenly distrib- «uted and labor is better paid than in the early days of the republic, yea than in any country on Under our public school system the children of the poor have the same opportunities of obtain- ing a liberal education as the children of the Here thank God, there are no insurmountable obstacles in the pathway of aspiring genius. Slacker Citizens ts Much is being said of civic slackerism. Atten- Zion is called to the fact that in the country as 2 whole but 50 per cent of the people of voting ge actually cast their ballots. Participation of je people in elections is called deimocracy. But There isn’t much democracy in the states of the Zinion where the so-called Democratic party is Si control of legislative and election machinery. Recently published tables based on the United tates. census reports and the election returns of 2920 show that in these states, as a whole less Shan 20 per cent of the peopele of voting age Same to the polls. Ninety-nine and three-tenths f the voting age population of South Carolina idl not vote; #0 per cent in<Alabama; 80 per cent an Arkansas; 7) per cent in Florida; 80 per ent in Georgia; 87 per cent in Louisiana; 90 per “Sent in Mississippi;“66 per cent in Tennessee, per cent in Texas; 85 per cent in Virginia, and per cent in North Carolina. The Republican jarty has a substantial vote in the states of Tennessee and Shese are the only states in which a vote of re- spectable proportions is cast. In the remaining southern democratic states less than one-fiftIPof the people of voting age i bout by remaining su- Promise and Performance The Democratic national platform of 1912 de- nounced Republican extravagance and promised a “return to that simplicity and economy befit- ting a democratic government.” The expenditures of the federal government in 1912, the last year of Taft's administration, were $654,553,963, which was $8,000,000 less than in the first year of Taft’s administration. Under the sway of the economy party they rose rapidly until in 1916, the year before we entered the war, they were $741,996,727 or 15 fe For the year ending June 30, 1920, after the war was over, the aggregate requests for appro- priations made by the various departments under the Wilson administration footed up $11,101,015,- 690, or 16 times more than was spent during the A Republican congress cut these requisitions down $3,855,874,688. For the year ending June 30, 1921, two years and a half after the close of the war, the Democratic tion asked for $6,3384,312,929 and got from a Republican congress $1.474,426,602 less } than it wanted. en the Republicans went out of power in 1913 there were 420,752 employes on the federal payrolls. Under the Democratic administration, months after the war was over, there were 0,000 names on the federal payroll. But the in- e was not only in the number, but in the aries of such employes. In the United States shipping board a Democratic administration cre- S places with salaries ranging from $6,000 000 a year. Congress discovered that in ) the Democratic secretary of war was pay- 50 a day or $18(\ a year to 11 different 10 qa day or $15,000 a year to three dif- ferent men, and $75 a day or $27,000 a-year to the railroad administration Mr. McAdoo put 76 men at work on salaries of $10,- 000 a year up to $50,000 a year, some of them experienced railroad men but many merely de- serving Democrats. If democratic management would do this on a pledge of strict economy, what would happen if the same leaders are now given power, when big campaign funds from the days when Senator} they aren’t saying so much as they did in 1912 “Stephenson was putting up for LaFollette’s Wis- “‘consin campaigns, Senator LaFollette knows that “elections cannot be “bought.” If enough of Sena- tor LaFollette’s votes can be bought to defeat him, he must place a low estimate on the char. six to one on Coolidge being the next president. orth Carolina, Florida and e in elections, | }48t Republican year. makes such a record on its own ground fill the ‘air with sonorous ph “rind “rule of the peopl “Holler Fraud” Senator LaFollette tha nial ery, “they are raisin. us” a ljttle late in the es about “democracy” g a slush found to buy ampaign. James M. Cox struck up this familiar tune in August, four Sears ago. He succeeded in getting one of those tigh-priced senate investigations which unex pectedly wound up in Dayton, Ohi ¥Eandidate Cox’s intimate conne ash funds; the moment this lead was struck r. Cox dropped the subject like a hot cake and never returned to -»aluding Senator LaFollette, that the Republi- ‘can national committee is and has been “hard up,” without sufficient money to carry on the necessary work of the ea hand, the La¥ollette-Soci hing two special campaign trains, is distributing documents with a lavish hand and gives more evidence of affluence than any other party in the digging into mpaign. On the other alist committee is run As an experieneed politician familiar with about cuttins down expenses and eliminating a “horde of useless employes?” Betting in New York now-ranges from five to - .. Che Casper Daily Cribune ; TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1924. _ The me Market NEW YORK—There 1s a decided) pecially trie of Gaytime spparet, 7 . tendency today toward the simplest| Jyather for street or for ats Frank Mondell, former mem- 2 lines, with an absence of decoration snore ‘fare: w. n- a and with a tailored look. This fs es-| mal wear, : = ber of congress from Wyoming, now c = & director of the War Finance) corporation says: wal 4 > Do you = ‘ j . tign of agriculture in our country 5 rs i HAY with the tariff barrier removed or : oS reduced to a point allowing the un- Z : ‘ \ | j checked inflow of : industry J > ot our industrial ‘competiters,. and at For Constipated Bowels, Sick Headache, replons producing competing “age 4 . Sour Stomach, Bilious Liver regions producing competing agri-|in congress. I want to submit the cultural staples. The contempla-| question to the peopje who-read this £ Cz tion of the widespread unemploy- in view of the facts herein The nicest cathart!claxative in] will empty your bowels completely ment, distress and disaster which| related, which can be verified by tees by morning, and you will feel splen- the breaking of the tariff barriers records in the court, house, ppeeiwrort, £0 BuystO sty alga did. “They work while you sleep.” would occasion among the wage| whether or not they can expect bowels when you have dizzy head-| ~.scarets never stir you up or gripe earners of the country is appalling;| honesty from Judge Rose in case ache, colds, billousness, indigestion.| ike Saits, Pills, Calomel, or Oil and but, viewing the matter for the mo-|he is clected <o the United States or upset, acid stomach {s candy-like| they cost only ten cents a box. Chil- ment entirely from the standj ‘senate? £ < s." One or two tonight] dren love Cascarets, too. of the farmer, who furnishes Sur LEW SCOTT. well-paid industrial population with oa foodstuffs, with wool and cotton for the heir clothing, we find ourselves 7 ccntensplating’ « situation i wmicn| MObbing the Umapire out wits « stent sare at tne news the Present’ home market, which- now consumes more. than 95 per Baseball is' governed. by rules.| LONDON—Lingérie today ts going | icen with pienty of money would| designed, however, to Protect the cent of the products 0! the farm and[The rules themselves provide for weg De en ognepherdess | support him, he could persuade Con-| American canary bird In his rights; ranch, would be so limited and cur-| umpires whose duty it is to uphold Sacer : Pobipes georgette or Ital-| cress to pass a law liberating every | infringed upon, it was alleged, by tailed as to compel the farmer to| them. a » it has delicate Uttle wreaths | goiatish in the country. What he|a horde of allen warblers and chir- seek an outlet for a large portion of! Suppose when an umpire makes| “nd medallion .effects in the palest| needed first was an organization, | pers allowed to wing through from his products in the very regions|a decision which the members of|°! Pinks and rose. with an office,”plenty of stationery, | the Hartzheim mountains without a which are now seeking to “disposé|one team don't like, they could vote a list of patrons,-and above all, a| stop at Ellis Island. Yet if geese and of their surplus farm products im]|to override his decision and do as} LONDON — One society matron | press ugent who, in ©. Henry's lan-| canary birds may rightly engage our market. This is the amazing} trey pleased? dancing at the Savoy the other eve-| guage, would never let any cigar-| the attention of a corordinate branch prospect which the Democratic can-| Suppose when he decides a player| ing Wore an ingenious bouquet of | store Indian come up and stand be-| cf the Federal Government, it seems didate for the presidency and. those | has yiolated a rule, the player could | #rtificia! flowers on.a black ribbon | hind him. Money would:provide all|a trifle invidious, pernaps even who support him are presenting to/ change the rule and put the umpire | tt her wrist. When the dance was| this. With a brace or two of college | against the spirit of the Fifteenth the farmers, at a time when the] our of business merely by violating |OVer, She produced from the bou-| professors out of a job, to give tone -\mendment, to discriminate agagist farmers are clamoring, not for a re-lit the second time? 3 quet like a magician from a hat,|to the campaign, two or three sta-| the goldfieh who can neither stg duced, but for an increased market; How long. would baseball last t¢| her powder puff, lipstick and cigar-| Usticlans capable of making the fi; nor migrate, but only gape and gog- not for more competition with the} the players were permitted to “rag” | ettes. ures play dead or sit up and bark at| gle the sad story of his sufferings, products of the outside world, but/ine umpire and reverse his de- eee the word of command, a flock of| mute behind crystal walls. for a better price in the home mar-| cisions? . NEW YORK—The girl with bob-| *!¥ertoned orators to traverse the The Organized Minority. ket which American industry af-] 3+ would degenerate into a rough-| bed hair has found a new eoiffure or. | PFOVince, and a saccharine bevy of| Under the whip of organized min- fords. Great as are the benefits to} pouse respected by nobody, and|nament for the evening. This is a| °°-Sisters to embellish the Sunday | orities Congress is trying to do work the farmer of the best market in the} .vogied by all clean sportsmen. round comb, sparkling with jewels, supplements, he wouid be well under | which it was never intended to do, world at his own doors, made pos-)" you cannot have orderly baseball | which encircies the back of her head. | “8%: and for which, under the Constitu- sible by the growth and” develoB-|o, any other decent sport without It would then be easy to drown| tion, it has no warrant. Pegasus ment and maintenance of industry] _uies and an umpire whose decisions the country in tears by relating the | Would make an indifferent plow- under a sound protective tariff ee are obeyed. story of the unhappy goldfish torn| horse, and the finest watch that tem, the farmer, need not look |""S cy" Cannot have orderly govern- from his native haunts doomed to| ¢Ver came out of Switzerland would wholly to these jodie Areas: ¢| ment without rules and an umpire pass his days and nights a prisoner | be useless to drive nails. The dis- which are unquestionably | Mis. titg|Whese decisions are obeyed. ‘The in a erystab bowl, gaping for the| tance between the constiutional he finds direct and effective benefits | trniteq States Constitution is the amusement of his calloused master. | functions of Congress and the func- in the tariff schedules which protect |1,.0:: o¢ rules of the American gov- He felt sure that within the day of] tions which minorities are striving need of tariff protection for the pro}... Court is the umpire. that the money held out, he would | #ble- ducts of the farms of country [oer e United States Supreme Court Bend ‘The. tate” Chainp + Glatk, ciwisea ve advanced and the difference in e s«- four famous | or Peters ichthyological Uberators baci poniaeresne at home and| between different branches ot| flavors + from the four at work. What was to be done with | Situation in pungent language. “If zr = 3 within the rules laid down by the prison could be determined by a| Tins to a group of lobbyists for the See ee Tanti Cne|tine on tha | Comatttution. Board, modeled upon the Freedmen’s | Federal education bill, “would only framing and enactment of the Ford-| —between the federal government Black [Or. P koe] Con, rh Severvehin "McCumber tariff law, under|#D4 state governments to see that ange Fe gress. is Board would also ything, and then get back to ney-) néttGieer, Viotale’ tabs vuhow- wie: AAW determine’ the penalties to be in.| the States where their schemes be. THE STORY OF THE GOLDFISH Some months ago, a humorist A bill of this nature was intro- wrote that if a public-+pirited cit-| duced in Congress last year. “It was the products of his industry. The}. nent. The United ‘States Su- There are four famous every goldfish now living, providing | to force upon Congress, is immeasur- have a large and competent army has grown as our living standards} oo inpire— Sptakes ot. ie He road has increased, but this need government to see that each keeps the goldfish thus iberated from his| these people,” he remarked, refer- corners of the East--- Bureau of 1865, to be appoined by | Understand that Congress can't do which we now operate.” by the Conatit-itlos. Green [Japan] flicted upon bootleggers feloniously | 0". Perhaps Congress would have . —between the individual and tte peddling goldfish, upon: all persons | time and the courage to get through High Cost of Rose government to see that the liberties Oolong _ | unlawfully depriving said fish of| the work assigned it by the Consti- of the one guaranteed by the Con- their Mberty, and upon manufact. | tutio’ But that, precisely, -is Editor Tribune: I haye been in] stitution are not taken away and Fy Break fc urers of bowls or similar contri-| What the lobbyists have no {dea of attendance’ as a jurymanh on the]|tbe authority of the other estab- English ‘ast yances, operating .without lcense doing. They have either the de- regular panel for the Steptember| lished’ by the Constitution is not S € a from the Federal government. votion of a fanatic to the i hat the short cut to every desirable re- form is through an act of Congress, or the deathless devotion of the de at the story of the goldfish’s woes, | ™*S0sue to teh dollar, and in one all that ie for results| Pirit or the other they camp on serve on the jury, 1 made arrange-|rules for baseball. It cannot change Cle 2 a ments for extra help at the ranch,j the Constitution any more than the] worlds is an organized minority. - Witness E e trail of Congres. - Hence the and was prepared to attend on the} umpire can change the rules of rei ~ | the campaign which ended when | 11004 of Socialistic and'sem!-Socialis. term of court in Natrona county, | overthrown, The story is not extravazant. being called here originally Septem-| The United States Supreme Court Thousands of Americans, weak- ber 15. My ranch is 55 miies from] does not write the Constitution any mined or wrong-headed, would rise Casper. Anticipating that I would} more than the umpire writes the 15th. Before I reached Casper, 1] bazeball. ; the Federal Government took charge | ‘I< ¢sislation, ‘threatening. to over- was notified that the jury would Riedy ted and the duty of the of the wild goose, under the plea Roshan epoca at every session, be required to report again on the | United tos Supreme Court as the that since this fowl occasionally mi- ‘oats schemes, apparently intend. 25th of September. In the mean-| umpire of our government are fixed grates from State to State, although : Bes @ good end, but making new time, I could not dispense with }by the Constitution itscl} = = under his own power, he may prop. aa rape of Congress upon. the extra help and reported again on| Because Senator jette and = = erly be considered an article in in- aie ee of: local self-government, the 25th. I was in attendance from some of his followers do not like ter-State commerce, and as such ies underlie the Constitution {t- the 25th of September until the 18th decisions made by the United under the control not of the State | “7 “\merica, Sept. 6th. 1924. of October. I was then excused of his habitual residence, but of the * in 1900, we had 3 until the 28th of October. Owing = Federal Government! The goldfish | “ Te nee $820,000, to the long distance from my ranch is na traveler, but since he appears A —— A had 33 Bureaus, and the muddy condition of the | to suffer from wrongs which no |" Cost, $550,000,000. : roads, I am obliged to stay In Cas- State will right, why not cut straight FARMERS’ STATE per during the interval. through the heart of this unbridled RIGHTS LEAGUE While in attendance, we have had cruelty ant make him a ward of INCORPORATED various judges presiding for one Congress? ADVERT! week ‘ot; n, tine, af & Dix ‘expense te ——=>=>>==——=—=——_——————— the state, inasmuch as I understand that the state not only pays the salary and expenses of the local judge, but also the traveling and other expenses of the non-resident judge and his reporter. ‘ T am entirely willing to perform my duty as a citizen and a juror, but do not believe that the jurymen should be cajled upon to make uf necessary sacrifices. This condition, has been not only a serious incon- venience to us stockmen, refin' workers, and business men, byt disarranged our business and eni- ployment to cur, serious detriment So long as it is necessary to per. form our duty as citizens and jury> men, I do not feel that we have any right to object;,but when this condition is the result of our presid- ing judge canvassing the state in behalf of his personal candidacy for the United States senate, while drawing a salary from the state, I fe@l that the people should know COLDS Break a Cold Right Up with ASK FOR The Real Wyoming Tire Chain THE DREADNOUGHT DOUBLE DUTY Ask: your dealer for a pair of Dreadnaught Double Duty Tire if you want a husky, d % ming. Made extee coi epee sence ‘then ME es / fastencr eliminates’ alf'are Pe rcamage om the a other-ciate, ‘fasteners, locks and unlocks in a jiffy, arent as ‘ ; You get more traction, and longer chain life, if you insist upon Dreadnought Double Duty bi You won’t appreciate this chain until you've used it, LEAVE SALT CREEK - Sam, 2 p.m, 4p. m. BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS Bus Leaves 9:30 Daily Salt. Creek Transportation Company TELEPHONE 144 For Sale by All Automotive Dealers in Wyoming THE AUTO EQUIPMENT CO., 1 , Wholesale Distributors fae Woomin coer FOR CHILDREN You can feel FOR COUNCILMAN Gas THIRD WARD “Pape’s Cold Compaund” WALLACE D. EVANS |X] ; 3 DECORATING Take two tablets av tes. Seits|| ‘Season Ts Here AMERICAN PARTY = are taken. The first|| Don’t wait until the last minute dose always gives to have your work done. relief. The second/} We do painting and decorating Election, Tuesday, November 4, 1924 and third doses that, will completely break nhspiesse. a7; up the cold. Plea-|| Let Us Figure On Your Work. sant and safe to take. Contains soll -Calvin Platt quinine or opiates. Millions use “Pape's|| Established in Casper 9 Years. Cold Compound.”* Price, thirty-five 1332 S. Boxelder. cents. Druggists Phone 1495NJ guarantee it. TRAIN SCHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN Westbound Arrives Departs Yo. 603 1:50 p. m. Departs | a eee anaapiey t Gals 5.45 p.m. 6:00 p.m. CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY Arrives Political Advertisement THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER CO, Everything in Building Material RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS Vistributors of KONSET E. P. BRENNAN 114 S. Durbin St. _ Eastbound Departs No. 3 ret Dime ect, ee dgmenting. Process for Oil Weils. ce and Yard—First and Center Sts.” bs JOIN THE AMERICAN LEGION NOW Toa m.