Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 13, 1924, Page 8

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 181996 PAGE EIGHT - 7 the outside view of their senator, for they have - Che Casper Daly Cribune supplanted Magnus with a better specimen of. Sntered at Casper ( ming) posteftice as second] .+5tecman. *S matter, Novenbe: 1916. Hees SO SRE SS Tribune issued every evening * 5 P< proviso that sugar should g ‘Tribune every Sunday, Have a Care * ’free of duty after May 1, ~ W: Publication offices: Tribune Build - Sa! , 4 Ang. how. many know ‘that . Opposite pos.ofiice. A’ child died in New York fronr eating some Gecotréte. adnithihtration “re funiabad” TelcpDLie is ana 16| face pode Ee ee pages pel fee er it : + e "Gonnect! al a confectioner’s delicacy. is may taken. as) a naa ests has a warning to older people who are inclined t SLT AND aE ET WAT take chances with cosmetics. It isa safe rule te By. J. E HANWAY AD en <saas observe that complexion pomaars and lip MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS are ‘made and used for the purpose’ cf vi The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the) and not tasting, and while some of our sw as ees Dubicetion SOF 61 Re areae rae) give may, look good enough to eat, it is not safe Menrber of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C.) Show- approval with your eyes, good ils 2 be bai ted. | into consideration, is proportionately |, Greece, making {t necessary for 5 Mtl telephone or radio. : } D i be Deankvupted fower’ than. Base the act of 1913-| the League of Nations to intervene ihe ieceere8 oe tee The trouble is that the freetrade| ang call him off. It a evident that jcimball Drug Co. and Midwest Drug ‘mporters want as low a rate of duty | trughes’s statecraft is more efficient | Co——Adv. as possible so they can put more) than that of the Italian’ autocrat, ———.__—_. into their already overstuffed) even though it has been exercised at} For results try a Tribune Classt- ~ yockets, while the free-trade politi-| rar greater range. tied Ads. cles that the Republican party provides more ‘: 3 bp! ee the country. Thejwhole railway sit-[ cians are willing to sacrifice the | ———__—_______.; : substantial relief than can be furnished by all poliay. os ja eae be thrown, into chaos.| American sugar beet and beet sugar SUBSCRIPTION RATES other political doctors combined. They do not :neefl \v ucking fr Those 0. advocate this policy| ndustries if by so doing they hime By Carrier and Outside State legislation so much as they require good ‘busj-|+¢ tabor. leaders, grr ttieae Sig aalibeelterlc is} climb rer ER eat tao 8 peat ta ness and national confidence. When thingy are ; : ais railways into government | and consumers will be better off if going well in the world the American farmer will | po! A Swnership. Z Y lithe present rate of duty is main- » Months, % get his share. Likewise no group of leaders.in the “ : BS bs or increased. Month, Daily and Sunday -76| Federation of Labor can deliver the votes of the} * 4 “ atigm 3 how th sat ‘oh ‘eo lbp Pees ee aid be remembered that, un-| & Py “| workers ef America to any apostle of discord. It : mircy hier ecg F, der the Democratic tariff, of 1913 One Yeer, Daily and Sunday .80| is not legislation that labor lacks. It is industrial . ‘ “f 5 F ve he retail price of sugar rdse os 4 Ona Year, Sunday, Only... -60| activity. and opportunity. These are provided created railroad / Lab will. high ae Cdn: “api hey babies 90! only when the Republicans are in command. . ander Sees ce Pig 4 cetita ‘per onths, Dally and Sunday -. “7¢| Other political performers are rich in promises are heapese - y ing that other causes AN aubscriptions inust be paid In advance and| but Republican leadership has usually delivered roupaine tari? control the retail the Datly Tribune will not insure delivery after the goods. Calvin Coolidge, for instance, says price of sugar. | Prudden, & 3 Mess, Suite 404 Sharon Bids Avoid Witch Doctors 7 8 > i » Cal. Co} ron’ dein, the ew York, Chicago,| The farmers have found in all their emergen- Francisco offic capital to buy fcription becomes one month in arrears. little. He has made few if any promises, but his Cee r F ‘make other im. — rs . zie “Tf the Hi PDIP: a . ici, a7 vou pert cae Fare eee se Oe eee pe panna inne could bob arti |e Tne trastaet or nee aee'| Persia Ato World's Mot y don" in your aL . a coeiatios f C = ‘ 4 % tuly tor it call 16 of 4 and it will be delivered to you a Si Bhs le ane Sabie Vallwese| wate transportation service.” [ —- or Ss Oo or by special messenger. Register complaints before 8 Protecting ‘Investors unless the labor-unions voluntarily |- REE Or A Persian tiring squad has made ys tock _The national campaign for thrift, the eduea-[nereed to it. tt tes heen she unt-| The Duty on Sugar | :'ot,stonement for. the murder of Cars on Our asa tion of the’ pedple to eave thelr. carningsjand) tht) via rete sithectho anyeortot — Teheran by the execution of two vest them safely, makes this a subject of vital} (oy reduction of riliway wages-or nore of his slayers, this maki importance. Consideration of the more im-|1, agree to arbitrate th hree Persians in‘all that have suf- Americanization portant factors affecting -securities, especially] o¢ any such reduction.” : -f cred the extreme penalty for. the wa Ss ETC SER upon farm lands and city property, is of the ut-| be ‘no ‘serious «ruestion that+thelr| 1. Sec crime: The first was found guilty The word “Americanization” has fallen under] mogt importance. Py policy will ,continue to he :the same. : und sentenced to death for his share a shadow because it has been used too frequently} “Capital is constantly accumulating. in the] {n future. ‘Therefore. 1¢ the Howell-| ine trestaent n: Yower the rate or 1, the-slaying some time a cant phrase, pat ie is io S000 Soe country and is seeking safe and profitable sin- | Barley’ Hou assed, anditauty thereon. We wonder how ae phdeens th cee There are 16,000,000 motor vehicles the limbo 0! iscredr % "e 2 t * man; of * 7 s, : 1 to the by Rept hr cians estate values that are con tions would, fustity a. edocs se of a of the ftacvithe baad a “tnd whioh ttied epee: i ak ey in the United States — approximately 2 s, * - a railway ,wages,- wo! Ppossi~ ks . al at . What does it mean? Not merely ability to read). Mfore ‘and more the bankers of the country afe'| ble to-settle the, question by. acbitra:| te, Seretieay, Witch’ the present| can Embassy in a”burst of fanat- 90 per cent ofiall in the world. and write the English language ‘and to under-| hesought*for information and advice that will| tion. ‘The principal :purpose of the, mane qutes, know what rates off ual frenzy over an act “which in stand all the modus operandi of the American government, with a smattering of the Declaration of Independence and the constitution. There are unnumbered American citizens of both native and foreign birth ‘who know all these things and more and yet fall far short of being good Ameri- can citizens. To be an American in truth is to have an un- ty have been Imposed on sugar in} his country ‘would have been con- This total is being increased mn th imponsihis: for’ ahy reduction| Pest customs acts. Very few have} Jidered a trifling offense, if any— A at the It can be safely set down that even under ad liway' wages. tosbe tude, how?| "8; {dea, we imagine, the photographing of a! funeral Tate of 4,000,000 a year. ‘ erpe eae ee piney) ax cent of the farm aver puntnabl “without! serie. ‘Al-|, For ‘instance, how many know "Ts Of ie country are solvent. though the only party that advocat,| that the tariff act of 1870 imposed a What saturation point It is admitted that farm mortgages are one| 2a the Howell-Barkley bill” in “the| @uty at the rate of 3% cents per| — A Ask any one of the 16,000,000 motor- ists trying to make headway through protect investors. against speculative securities party. The ringleader of the mob, called In the dispatches Seyid Hussein. was one of the two men who were the last to suffer the death penalty | for the crime. A Seyid of the Mo of the best. forms of investment and they are] recent political 'campaign*polted!lenq | 20UNd on sugar ‘esting 16 to 20. securing the lowest rate of interest on long term;| than one-seventh ‘of the ‘votes cast,| Dutch Standard, and 4 cents per mortgages. a_meeting of Nabor' lenders to-renew,| Pound on that above 20? How many’ f t ; te adit, i A of Know that thi h ; uupon this continent & new social order different | nraPest money in the world is high rates of tax | “ady' tan been called. | 0M augar terting' 16 to. 0, Duteh| Hossein should have been th lute our concrete highways. He will tell from and better than any social organization | parade he iA + The: Secontmporta dt fdatire. oF ea! chove 287 ve sna koe safer Miia eek you, from the standpoint of comfort and that history has known, distinctive because, for ‘hat the’ tarift ‘of . sos A the first time, here is a social order dedicated Don’t Omit Wisdom reductions: Paka] ioe ny Tete Bate dec ab tabs vet eo So a tg : safety in driving, the saturation point is to justice, liberty, brotherhood and righteousness. 5 s ere ction, of t! graphing ‘of funerals or other func. already in sight. 3 It means a profound appreciation of ‘those prin-| . Our young people are taught to be “go-getters’ “which ‘the raffwaya met (90 degrees, -polariscopic ttons that partake of a religious na- ciples and of the spirit that has made this na-| and the men of achievement are held before them | narn, ‘This jete be accomplished + ; pee eeste oc = <Caseeration Not a very encouraging outlook, is it, tion great, not only in population, but in moral| 8 examples. They are urged to get on in the | securing thé:refeal bf the rate mak |" 1894 provided for the compound) but hereafter, in Teheran at least, kee the his farce eviaepisiteal ideale world, to get power, to get position, to get wealth | (ng provisions/af'the Eech-Cummib! | “ity of 40 pe- cent,ad valorem,| they will know better than to carry | Mj man about to buy his first auto- ] f ‘ - | but 11, life is a total loss unless the exhor-. | Transportation Act.’ -eapecialy | "0. the specific rate of % cent per| their religious objections so far as bile? When a man of. foreign birth or ancestry as-} but, after all, hy securing lexisletion which would ound in: addition thereto? How|to slay innocent ‘Americans who Bee cies sumes the obligation of the American citizen he| ation of the ancient philosopher is heeded— | 7 sceuhm Atleast. $7.000.000,000, or | many ‘know: that the tariff act of] ignorant of thelr absurd superst!- by that act specifically repudiates the calture| “With all your getting get wisdom”—which: is | Sour onethind, the: valuation’ placed |1897 imposed. a duty of 1.95 cents| tions, happen to violate one of chen, So you see car owners and and ideals of his fathers in so far as that © just arfother way of saying, recognize the eternal » tthe : ;}Rer| pound on all sugar above 16,| And Persia has learned that it must tive car owners are both interested — i ilet with the spirit and | Worth of character. Con ante Dutch Standarat How many know | give*better-protection to representa 3 ture and those ideals confilct wit! pirit an x 0 lars purposes of the American commonwealth. There FET eiiaiar te js | a} that: ear ros gpenagpet ay of ideo this’ country moving about and have immediate task confronting ‘ hody which 1909 , was. ts oun: territory. them potiay divided allegiance, no other country, no The Ship's Ca : = es * the No. 1 toh 8 “Inoite crafty and dilatory oriental | f . —— — President Coolidge, by virtue of the backing the - ———— — — : ‘What are you going to do about it? é Where All Are Beautiful pnblic has just given him, will. have immense ae : » 4 rower. Most people believe he will exercise: it. The flapper has passed, and the days of the} The theory that some of Coolidge’s critics’ tried glorification of the young girl, to the exclusion | io make current during the campaign, the theory of the more mature woman, are numbered. This | that Coolidge is a myth, a wi man, a figure: is the opinion of European artists, modistes and | head easily dominated by others—that theory is milliners in convention assembled to pass upon | as far from the facts as possible, and it is prob the question, “At what age are women most b¢au-| able that the effort to circulate this incorrect es- tiful?” timate of Coolidge was a disadvantage rather Biebes wat ees aRne Your highway officials need your sup- It was by almost unanimous vote of the judges | than a help to the campaign against him. It is é port. They can’t do much unless you that the question was answered, that:the normal | grotesque to speak of Coolidge as weak or as be eanp at stand squarely behind them. woman between the ages of thirty and thirty-five is the most beautifil. The flapper vote was neg: ligible. The opinion prevailing that the flapper fs for the most part is empty of expression. is may be good news to the ladies who have ing subservient to others. Coolidge is probably the most austerely self-disciplined man in pub- lic life, and a man who has spent so much effort in making his own will supreme over his own per- sonality, is most unlikely to be without will in his all the requirements of modern traffic ceased to observe birthday anniversaries, and it| relation to’ other men. The fact is that the men will cost you more than will may be bad news to the flapper contingent that | most intimately close to Coolidge, men like Frank- —— , x begins f an has held public attention and caused fireside|1lin Stearns, do not have and do not pretend: to i ie. 56) f¥ adequate system of Concrete Roads and worry for a considerable period. q have, influence with him in the ordinary: sense. r i 4 Streets. \ People in other parts of the world will. not | It is.part of Stearn’s pride in’ Coolii that Cool- readily accept the opinion of Euro: painters | idge is a man.who does his own ‘ing; arrives . and dressmakers as binding in ir perégonal j‘at his ‘own conclusions, and put jose conélu- views of what is beautiful and what js not. _ sions in practice. ° A PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION Here is America, be they young or old, they] The fact is Mr. Coolidge is an unusually. strong 3 are all beautiful and the same board of judges'| man. Part of all this speculation about Mr.-Coo)- Res pak ieee ake hg : ; , . ee a : Ideal Buildin, reviewing American pulchritude would. so de-| idge deals with the-question whether. or not he fe Pe RRT ke ee a i DENVER, cofo. clare, espécially, after the material they have | will. initiate legislation,, whether ‘he will make 4 . ‘ ‘ f 4 Nationat Organization to I just passed upo himself the leader of his party in the senate : prove and: ee and house, 1D the sense that he will recommend Extend the Uses of Concrete ba 8 Bd programs and put pressure on con: 86 to put - Billion Dollar Crop those! programis.through. The best: guesa,is.thak OFFICES IN 29 CITIES And now it transpires that the wheat crop of the United States, this year, will total in value he will. For one reason, the Republicans. in the house and senate want leadership. They ‘seek lead- 0 t one billion. dollars, if present prices hold. \Farm- ye ‘Phey seek it pubside themselves, because || * MERC TNIS'w Praia tee eA ers in the wheat area are so busy paying off their | they.do not happen to have personalities adapted ion Parki ne el hhosen. = ‘fabrics sy debts and making needed additions to their farms, | to leadership among themselves. The house and ion Parkin aad test tes % ‘ as well as making themselves comfortable for the | senate will be most happy to accept leadership that:iisure service ‘and.warmth. $i} bios . To delay building more highways wide enough and strong enough to meet winter, that they have little Soran ey still less Feo! Spells: ee oLnsErare thing he will het inclination—to listen to the calamity howlers. supply the desired leadership..There is one.pos- ‘ ee rs If the tariff was to blame for low prices, it sibility that he may not. He is by nature etl. Royal ‘Par-Kerry.- featured‘in culous about observing the constitution, and/if he must be credited with the high prices now pre- yailing in farm products. Free-traders who were | felt that leadership of congress by. the White vociferous in their denunciation of the tariff be- | House were inconsistent with the best constitu. cause of the low prices of farm products, last | tional practice, he would refrain from it. spring, now have an opportunity to tell how the If Mr. Coolidge should decide to assume lead- same tariff deserves the credit for the great in-| ership to suggest a program to congress, and to crease in prices. put pressure upon that progsam, he knows how to-be successful. For example, while he was: gov- ernor of. Massachusetts a statute was passed pro- viding for the consolidation of 118 differetit’com- missions and departments.into twenty, The stat- ute provided that this work should be done with- in three years. He took hold of it, laid out the consolidation on poper, and then ordered that _ FOR CARS RATES $7.00 TO $20.00 Inquire at LIBERTY GARAGE AND ANNEX 428-414 South Elm St. PHONES 983 AND 2303 Pie Thardercis Magaie Magnus Johnson after. a. brief..excursion into the limelight will return to the barnyard where he will feel more at home. Freak specimens. in the American congress are by’ no means rare, hut Magnus was one’ of the rarest, that is to say | it be done within one year. At the same time he he was raw. So raw that he was.a joke. He never | let it.be.known that if.any of the office holders could be polished down to fit the situation. Even | affected by.the consilidation should get up oppo- his yoice, which was farm bred and thunderous | sition tovit, or intrigue against its going through, and_designed to 1 hogs at feeding time, and] that action would be the equivalent of resigna- cows at milking time, could not be toned down | tion, tod ng room piteh. It happens that we have a similar situation gnus was loud in every particular, They | at Washington. For nearly four years there has ed of his thunder. When he leaves Wash-| been a plan for the redistribution and consolida- 1, the silence along the Potomac will be as| tion of government bureaus in the interest of pressive as the boisterousness of his presence TRAIN SCHEDULES. CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN economy and efficiency. That plan has-been per- : ; ’ wy br pe heen for a couple of years. fected on paper ever since the early part of Afr. $ 3 +--1:30 Peas. . rs 0 p, m. @ returns to Gopher Prairie, bearing no laurel | Harding’s administration, From ihhe to time - Yo. 61! 2711:00 p.m. al ne ian brow as tribute to his| it .was given out that he would try to press it ; 5 Arrives Departs Heine rvice to the people, he will] through .congress. But opposition always arose p ’ ‘ PO wom tween nnn aa nn + --~---=- 6,45 p, Mm. 6300 p, m. bens a F medal, a booby. prize, award: | of the precise nature that is inherent in such a s CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY , contest. That will represent his | situation. Individuals, whose offices. and pres: ‘ Eesthound Arrives No. 3) accomplishment, while representing the | tige are affected, resist change. Whether or not “rat state of Minnesota in the United States} Mr. Coolidge will try to put this pending, plan senate, through may give a clow both as to his-attitude - The people of that state evidently haye adopted toward congress and as to his methods, ‘THE-MAN IN THE BARREL

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