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ee A ed YE. PAGE. EIGHT Che Casper Daily Cribune Entered at Casper (Wyoming) posteffice as second <lass matter, November 22, 1916. The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening un@ The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune Build} ing, opposite posioffice. ° 7 Business Telephones ~_~-~---. ------------- 15 and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All 4 Departments By J. E. HANWAY AND E. E. HANWAY A MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the Bb use for publication of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. ° 2 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C.) Advertising Representative Prudden, King & Prudden, 1 Chicago, Ill, 286 Fifth Ave., New York City Bldg., Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bidg Montgomery St, San Francisco, Cal. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices and visitors are welcome. a SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrer and Outside State One Year, Daily and Sunday - Ono Year, Sunday only ---- Six Month, Daily and Sunday - $9.00 r ‘ Three Months, Daily and Sunda; . One Month, Daily and Sunday : Per. Copy, Sarees By Mail Ins' . One Year, Daily and Sunday sactiee ‘4 One Year, Sunday Only ~ eee ‘ Six Months, Daily and Sun: ane . Three Months, Daily and Lae ‘ One Month, Daily, apd Sunday 7 t AN subscriptions must be paid in advance and 4 the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after sub- 1 scription becomes one month in arrears. - KICK, IF YOU DON’T GET YOUR TRIBUNE If you don’t find your Tribune after lookimp care- fully for it call 15 or 16 and it will be delivered to you by special messenger. Register complaints before 8 o'clock, » ED 1 i Elect Warren—Save Regrets Hon. Charles J. De Land, secretary of state for the great state of Michigan was a Casper visitor yesterday. He came to the west on a brief tour and stopped in Casper to see some old friends, and not to talk politics. However, after he came here and observed the p 1 pot boiling briskly he could not resist deliver- ing a warning. Michigan has had her share of political misfortune, like other states, She has had bitter regrets to swallow, ‘just like other people, who acted in haste, misled by glittering promises and fallacious arguments that led away from the safe and sane and ‘from true and trusted leaders. In other words, they did not let well enough alone, and paid the price exacted ‘by their folly. “I hope to heaven,” said Mr. De Land, “that the people of Wyoming have the good sense, and sufficient pride in their state to re-elect Sen- ator Francis E. Warren to the United States *» senate next month. He is one of the few really great men remaining in that body. He is one of the few beacon lightssof wisdom along the shore that will keeps the ship of state off the rocks. We know and admire him in Michigan as; he is known and admired in other sections °° of the country. While we have made our own = mistakes through carelessness, and lost our own great Senator Townsend through overconfidence, we shall never again make a similar mistake, and we will never cease to regret our folly and failure to do our duty to a great and useful man. “Since coming into your state, I have heard whisperings of the danger of Senator Warren’s defeat. Not because the people are against him or do not appreciate the great work he has done for the country and for Wyoming, but because Republicans are inactive and take -it for granted that as a matter of course Mr. Warren will be elected. He always has heen and therefore will be again in the present elec- tion. It is purely a case of overconfidence. The same disease that we were suffering from when Senator Townsend was a candidate in Michigan. He was lost to us and his loss has remained a disgrace, that we have had to bear ever since. “I am telling you out of the depths of that weekees years after the war, Geneva says what The Ha- gue said six years before it. There is no dif- ference between The Hague dream and the Gen- eva dream, except that one was dreamed at The Hague six years before the war and the other is dreamed at Geneva six years after it. The Hague dream was ineffective. It'did not prevent the war. La Follette, Dictator You can- walk around this La Follette thing, you can examine it, talk about it, listen to its friends talk about it. 4 2 You can discuss it with your friends; and you can listen on the corner, in the hotel lobby, on the train and in the restaurant as others discuss it. You can read about it. You can take your time and*think about it. ‘ And there is only one conclusion that any sensible person can come to. : And that is, that it s in substance, in essence, first, and last, from beginning to end, up and down and around, of, by and for, Robert Marion La Follette. It is a one-man affair. Its history is the his- tory of one man. It was brought into being by La Follette, because La Follette wants to be president, because he is too big-headed and too pig-headed to play the political game with Ss) others. If he could have hoodwinked, bunked or cajoled the Republican party into nominating him as its standard bearer he never would have thought of a third party. He isn't particularly interested in the working people, any more than he is interested particularly in the farmer or in the merchant. The one person he is interested in is Robert Marion La Foltte. He is hard bitten. by the presidential bee; he wants power. He is a demagogue, and he doesn’t care very much what issues he espouses so long as they are the issues on which he can ride into place and power. He wants to be the center of things. He made his own party, wrote his own plat- form, dictated how it was to be adopted, and, as a campaign orator said the other day, “If La- Follette was to die tomorrow his party would vanish before the funeral.” The question is, not do the people want.a Progressive party (so-called) in power, but do they want to hand the country over to Bob La- Follette as its supreme dictator for four years? If you don’t know Rob La Follette’s record look it up. Then answer this question. Bloodless Revolution (This may not appeal to you as a newspaper article, but it is the way some of the “nuts” in this vicinity are talking these days. Will they be crazy enough to carry any such sentiments into the voting booth next month?) Revolution by the ballot or revolution by blood, which do the American ple prefer? It is up to them. For me I paaenthit of the ballot, but will welcome that of blood if I must. But I believe that we may escape the revolution by blood in America. What was accomplished by force in Russia may be brought about by the ballot here. Our imperial leader says, “bring the government back to the people.” That means the proletarian not the burgoise. Not the class that has been sucking the blood of the toiling millions for thousands of years; not the putrid pampered plutocrats. And when we start to bring the government back to the people, the proletarians, we will take it so far back that not a,corner of it will rest on its present’ constitu- tional foundation, not enough for one million- aire to stand on. -The right of property shall ac rise above the rights of the downtrodden to ve. The claws of the judiciary will be pulled ont by the roots. No more government by injune- tions and purchasable court orders. There will be no more slavery for there will be no pluto- cratic slave owners. Every man will be able to say when and how he shall.work, or not work at all, Is not that a consummation devoutly to be desired? Let the majority rule. Is there any reason why brains should ‘rule’in America? Is there not a thousand times as much brawn as brains? Tell me then, tell me I say, why should brains rule oyer, this glorious aggrega- tion of wealth? Did not brawn produce that wealth? Yea, it did, and the time is drawing nigh when it will take back its own. be Casper Daily Cridune Religion and the Republic “The Puritan, the man of religion and morality, tha,man of the.circlo in family worship and of the country Sunday school, spoke in the address: which President Coolidge delivered at the unveiling in Washington of the statue of Bishop Francis As- bury,” says the Boston Transcript. ‘The, occassion. called. for emphasis ‘on thé part of those who celebrated it, upon the religious Jife of the American people; and it was no per- functory acknowledgement of the influence of morals based upon faith that Mr. Coolidge expressed. He spoke as one who believes, and has always believed, with a sort of in- herited and inherent faith, that spir- itual ideas lie at the root of sound social and political ideas. He did not speak in the least as one who thought it necessary to apoligize for this faith. No qualification is: found in such words as these, from the President's address: The real reforms which society in these days is seeking will come as a result of our religious convic- tions, or they will not come at all. There is no way by which we can substitute the authority of law for the virtue of man. Peace, jus- tice, humanity, charity—these can- not be legislated into being. They are the result of a divine grace. Our government rests upon re- ligion, It is from that source that we derive our reverence for truth and justice, for equality and Mber- ty, and for the rights of mankind. Unless the people believe in these principles, they cannot believe fy our government. It was more than half a century ago that a great student of the hu- man mind Max Muller, ina work on the influence of Christianity in Eu- rope, pointed out that the very word ‘humanity’ dates from Christianity. No such idea, he said, and therefore no such term, was found among men before Christ came. President Cool- idge did not go quite so far as this. He indicated in his remarks no choice at all between religions. But upon the fundamental function of religion itself in human institutions, he laid full stress, and he recorded his belief that the guiding force of true humanity fs some form of faith, held by the mind and expressing it- self in law and in public and private virtue. “Religion long since recognized its own function in establishing the brotherhood of the human race, The primitive word made of it a tribal thing, and when the tribe was en- larged into the nation, it still as- sumed that character. Patriotism became an expression of religion, but in the epoch it was a national re- ligion. This is not the American idea of religion. The fact. that we have no state religion, and cannot have one, makes our faith universal; all religion as a universal foreé that we venerate. And it is well to be reminded, upon such authority, that, but regard as the final expression of the human aspiration for earthly j tice, we have by no means freien with religion but are in daily pul need of its inspiration and guld. Lincoln and Supreme Court The attitude of Abraham Lincoln toward the courts and judicial dect- sions is being grossly ‘misrepresent- ed by Senator La Follette anf Sen- ator La Follette’s followers. They represent Lincoln to have: been of the same mind as\La Follette now is, namely that decisions of the Su- Preme Court should not be seriously regarded, and there should be some way to nullify those decisions {f in conflict with congressional legisla- tion. In an atempt to prove this, the La Lincoln took violent exception to the decision of the United States Su- preme Court in the Dred Scott case and advocated the nullification of |‘ that decison. They also claim that Lincoln {s on record as denying the}, right of the Supreme Court to pass upon the. constitutionality of an act] of Congress. ' ‘This is gross misrepresentation of the facts. .The year before the Dred Scott decison (which was handed |" down March’ 6, .1857) Lincoln had publicly expressed himself to the ef- | ee fect that the constitutionality of acts of Congress dealing with slavery should be ‘submitted to the United States Supreme Court and to no other authcrity and ‘that the deci- sion of*the Sapreme Court should be binding. -He classed as “disunion- ists" those who held otherwise. Ina speech at Galena, Illinois, August 1, 1856, he said: “I grant you that an unconstitu- tional act is not law; but I do not ask and will not take your construc- tion of the Constitution. The Su preme Court of he United States ir the tribunal to décide such a ques- tion, and we will submit to its de- cision; and if you do also, there wil) be an end of the matter, Will you? If-not, who,are the disunionists— you or we?" ‘ On June 26, 1856, Lincoln in a speech at Springfield, Illinois, said: “Judicial decisions have two uses: first, to absolutely determine the case decided, and, secondly, to indi- cate to the public how other similar cases will be decided when “they arise. For the latter use, they ate called ‘precedents’ and ‘authorities,’ We belive as much as Judge Doug las (perhaps more) in obedience to, and respect for, the judicial depart- ment of the government. We think its decisions on constitutional ques. tions, when fully settled, should con trol not only the particular ‘cases decided, but the general-policy of-the country, subject to be disturbed only by. amendments of the Constitution, as_pkovided in that instrument it- self. MORE THAN THIS WOULD BE REVOLUTION. But ws think the Dred Scott decision is erroneous. We know the court that made it has often, overruled its own decisions, and we shall do what we can to have it overrule this. We offer no re- sistance to it.”” This was /a plain statement of a man who, while “he did hot: agree with the decisions of the court, did not hold.they should be disobeyed or a movement should be started to have the decisions nullified In ahy ir- regular manner. Lincoln's entire life and his utter- ances from the time he lauched hi» public career to Its close glyes a lie to the charge or covert Insinuation that he was opposed to the courts, In one of his earliest addresses de- livered at Springficid, Illinois, Jan- uary, 1837, ‘‘on the perpetuation of said that the United States did not have and never would have any fear from foreign enemies, All the armies of Europe, he said, could not hy. force “take a drink from the Ohio, or make @ track on the Blue Ridge in a trial of n thousand years.” Con- ‘tinuing, hie said: 3 ~ “At what point, then :s. the ap- proach of danger to be expected? I answer, ff it_ever reaches us, it must spring up among us. It cannot come from abroad. If destruction be our ours, grating to our feel- angs to admit, it would be # violation of truth and an insult to our intelli: gence to deny.” Martin Tells Past Work and Aims of A. P.. BOSTON, Mi&ss., Oct: 22.—Frea- erick .Roy Martin, general manager ot the Associated Press, and ari overseer of Harvard university, at u oanquet of the Boston club of the Harvard Business School Alumni association reviewed the past work and the aims of the Associated Press, He sald that so far as he knew it was the only organization’ tabulat- ng the national election returns. fhis work, he stated, required the smployment of 26,000 persons for 4 hours at an approximate cost to be association of $250,000. He iwelt on the covering of wars, say- ng that the two great mistakes of he world war from the polit of ‘lew of the newspapers were ‘‘fool- sh censorship and government propaganda." ‘a Woman Officer Uses Pistol to _ Get Evidence DENVER, Colo., Oct, 22.—After pretty Mildred Hart, who is acting as a special investigator for the po-| lee department, shoved a revolver between his ribs and offered him the ternative of going to jail, or point- ing ont a bootlegger from whom he Was alleged to have purchased whisky, David Winter {dentified French Miller as the bootlegger and Miller was arrested. ‘With Miss Hart and another, girl, Winter was walking.on a down- town street last night. One of the girls suggested that he purchase some whisky. He left for a few minutes, returning with a bottle. Miller, who was charged with yio- lation of the prohibition laws, was granted a continuance of one day when arraigned in police court. ———————.—_ * CLEVELAND, Ohio, Oct.°22.—The speech of John W. Davis, Demo- cratic presidential nominee, at the Public auditorium ‘here Thursday night will be radiocast through sta- tion WHK. Hay Grain Salt MUTE Mother Love OTHER love demands aHeywood- Wakefield Baby Carriage—be- cause 98 years of experience have shown Heywood-Wakefield designers every re- quirement for baby’s comfort and pro- tection. Look for A Quality Seal on Every Wheel. It is a Red Hub Cap with the letters H-W in gold, distinguish- ing Heywood-Wakefield Carriages from all others, and assuring you of a carriage built to fit yourbaby. _ : : Better dealers everywhere are showing Seautiful, new models in a wide variety of designs and colors. They are priced within the reach of every purse. Ask your dealer about Hey- swood-Wakefield Reed and EG. U. S.PAY. OFF. ‘The seal is a red hub cap with gold letters ZIT TS We Handle Heywood-Wakefield Furniture CALLAWAY'sS FURNITURE 133 EAST SECOND STREET CAR STORAGE © FOR WINTER . LOTS OF IT! LIBERTY GARAGE 428 S. Elm St. Phone 983 Cotton Cake Chicken Feeds Choice Alfalfa and disgrace, be on your guard. Take nothing for} La Follette and his. slogan, “Bring: back the granted. Don’t cease your work in Senator} government to the people,” is the thin edge of Warren’s interest until the polls close on the|the wedge when inserted into the crack of.class day of election. See that every qualified voter,| prejudice and driven home by the sledge ham- man.or woman, gets to the polls and votes for|mer of Wheeler's eloquence, will’ open the way. Warren. Warren is worth more to Wyoming|to Revolution, a’ bloodless revolution, but as and to the nation, than any new man you can| effective as that of our soviet: brothers in Rus- put in his place. He has the seniority and the|sia. The pallid flag that our leaders now. wave Follette followers are claiming that prestige, he has the wisdom and knowledge and he has the power above any map in the senate. Unless you are prepared to come down from the high place. you occupy in the affairs of your country, you had better return Senator Warren as your senator. Defeat him and you are nothing more than an unimportant far western state and will be soon forgotten, be- cause you have no faithful watchman in the watch-tower at Washington. It would be im- possible for any new man, however great his ability, to reach the standing and _ influential position of Mr. Warren in the federal govern- ment until he served many years, and it is al- together probable that he would never attain an equal standing if he served twice the number of years Mr. Warren has, “My advice, and my prayer to Wyoming peo- ple is to elect Warren and have no regrets.” 5S eS EE Eo A ee ee ea - a ee one, : Evidence of a Lost Cause John W. Davis is manifesting one of the principal symptoms. of the effect of seeing in That symptom is toss of temper. When he spoke: in Indianapolis he made a bitter attack upon irasident Coolidge, called the record of this Kepublican administration “pitiable,” declared that the campaign slogan should” be, “Coolidge then chaos,” tried to be- little the danger that is in the La Follette-cam- paign, and accused the Republicans of “going into hysterics over the menace to the Constitu- tion presented by the third party.” Mr. Davis previously delivered: some stump speeches, but this was the “stumpiest” one of the series. Presumably Mr. Dayis is seeing so many for- merly Democratic votes going to La Follette that he fears the consequences, and in trying to win them back by resorting to methods of campaigning which are like those of ‘La Fol lolte. History Repeats Six years before the war all the nations assem- bled at The Hague unanimously recognized the principle of compulsory arbitration. Germany played a great part in the conclave. She pro- claimed her devotion to the unwritien law of peraspageceegeres will grow crimson in the new dawn. I implore you, who are about to cast your ballot on the fourth day of November, to ponder my words well. Do you want a peaceful blood- less revolution with La Follette, or do you pre- fer the other alternative with Coolidge or Davis? —A_ PROLETARIAN. Riverton, Wyo., Oct. 20, 1924. Telephone Wonders It is expected that the new system of sending pictures over telephone wires, perfected by. the engineers of the American Telephone and Tele- graph company and the Western Electric com- pany, will be of great utility in the business world. Not only is it possible to send photographic re- productions over the wires, but cartoons, sketches, finger-prints, music and specimens of hand-writing have been transmitted successfully between NeW York and Chi ago. Bankers are es- pecially interested as they foresee a quick and prospect, a cause Jost. _| sure method of verifying signatures on checks which have been sent from far away and offered for collection. Court proceedings also may bencfit from the new process in the securing, without delay, of exact reproductions of deeds, mortgages, deposi- tions, requisitions and other legal documents. Interest in Radio The value of the radio business is nearly twice as great as that of the carpet and rug business. For every dollar spent on furniture, thirty-three cents is spent on radio, For every dollar spent on boots and shoes, twenty-five cents is Spent on radio. For eyery dollar spent on musical instrn- ments—pianos, organs, band and orchestra, phonographs and even the lowly harmonica— seventy-five cents is spent on the ra yalue of the radio business is three-four: jewelry business with its clocks, watches and novelties. Radio is not 2 1 but a utility. For this reason the public is vitally interest- ed in constructive policies both national and in- ternational, which encourage the universal use of radio communication. The favorite pastime of statesmen and pub- humanity. But neither The Hague conyention|lic men generally is to enroll John W. Dayis nor the principle of compulsory arbitration pre- in membership of the Anannias club, and make} yented the war with all its horrors. Now, six it stick. ree eS ‘Lamb Chops ~~-~<---_-+..-_-_ 30c Lamb Shoulder Chops -_-_----_ 20c Lamb Shoulder Roast _--.---__ 20c Lamb Legs ~_---1----___-___ 30c Lamb Stew -_— 10c Beef Pot Roast ~--.------_ 12i%c Beef Plate Boil --_.-----_-u_-_ Be Veal Shoulder Roast ~---..--__ Beet, Livers. 25-9 loo ee Beef Hearts -__.--_-_. Hog' Biver Uo oo =e Veal: Stews) =a00 See anes : Hamburger, 2 Ibs. -_-_ 25c Sausage, 2 Ibs. ---_-_-----.-— Bilbo ea Dold’s Niagara Sugar Cured. oe Skinned Hams —-__-.-.__-26¢ Beef Shoulder Steak ~---_----_ 15c¢ ‘Dold’s Niagara Sugar Cured Beef Shoulder Round Steak —--- 15¢ ; Beef Round Steak —-_ ‘We Are Agents for the Famous DOLD HAMS AND BACON Bacon —-~----- Dold’s Sterling Standard Dr. A. P. Kimball wishes to Office room location 114 West 2nd St. Harry Yesness Store Suite-1 to 11 $ Tel 2208—1715W Wheat Grass Hay Carload Our Specialty iptions from Tribune subscribers. Patrons of the paper should not pay any- one their subscription cept the carrier who delivers paper cv an authorised collector from the oftice, if you are not sure you are paying the right collector, asic him to show his credentiala. If he cam not do so please call the Tribune. Telephone 15 EEE Eas For results try # Tribune Class+ fled Ads. | announce new over Beef Sirloin Steak _---------— Beef T-Bone Steak —. Beef Short Cuts ~____ Veal Sirloin Steak -_----------- Veal T-Bone Steak ~---------~ Veal Short Cuts -__------_---- Pork Loins ~-------~ Pork Hams! 2o2s2S55%. Pork Shoulders Snare Ribs LUNCHEON MEATS—Wholesale’ Pig Souse -15c¢ Brannsweiger — kinned Hams -_-~____.--___23¢ Dold’s Sterling Standard Bacon_-27c Dold’s Picnic Hams____________15c CHEESE—Wholesale Long Horn Cheese _~-~-. Loaf Cream Cheese —-~_ Loaf Swiss Cheese ~--~_--_. Loaf Pimento Cheese —- Limburger Cheese ~-_-__-______30c Imported Swiss Cheese ___ 75c Imported Roquefort Cheese_____75c Fresh Oysters, direct from coast, QUuar.c2 concen, $1.00 Fresh Fish and Poultry every day Lard Cracklings, lb ~--.-____ NOTICE TO RANCHERS Bolted: Hams pregecdsiet we Pyle Par rage atest rice for Dressed i ao ae eef, Ho; ‘eal, Pou d Boiled Shoulders _____. Gouetpradnetete ua: ry, Eggs and etc, Ship SPRING CHICKENS NOTICE—After October 27, our branch market will be located in ARDMORE BUILDING, one block east of the present location in the Second Street Public Market. a THE NORRIS Co. OFFICE AND PLANT NEW PUBLIC MARKET:BRANCH Cor. Second and Beech Streets Phone 2540 Minced Ham — Bologna - —~ Cor. H and Durbin Phone 12 To the Voters af Natrona County - Some of my good friends appear to be laboring under the impression that I am a candidate on the Demo- cratic ticket for the office of County Commissioner. This is not the fact. trona county for 25 years; have always been, am now and will continue to be a Republican. you as your County Treasurer for two terms and one term as County Commissioner. office and take this means of distinguishing my iden- tity from that of Mr. John (Jack) E. Scott, Clothier, who is the Democratic sioner four year term. John’ (Jack) “TSeate. I have been a resident of Na- I have served Tam not seeking any andidate for County Commis- Natrona Co. Abstract & Loan Co,