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PAGE SIX. Gdbe Casper Daily Cribune Imsuec every evening except Sunday at Casper, Natrona County, Wyo. Publication Offices, Tribune Building Entered at Casper (Wyoming), Postoffice as second class matter, November =z, 1916 BUSINESS TE. Branch Telephon: BART MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PHONES Oxchange ¢ CHARLES W. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use} for publication of all news credited in this paper and iso t he local news published herein, Advertising Representath cs. den, 1720-23 Steger Bidg., Chicago, New York City: Globe Bids. Sharon Bldg., 55 New Mon: of the Daily icago, Boston SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carriere or By Mail and Sunday .. and Sunday Sunday tions must he paid in adv {bune will not insure delivery after subscript! becomea one month in arrears. Member of the Associnted Press Member of Andit Bureau of Cireulation (A. B. ©.) Don’t Get Your Tribune, ne between 6:30 and 8 o'clock p.m r Tribune. A paper will be messenger. Make it your du! Kick If You 16 any t to The Casper Tnbune’s Program Irrigation project west of Casper to be author tzed and leted at once. A con 6 and sc! © zoning system for the city of Casper. A comprehensive municipal and schoo! recreation park system, including swimming pools for the n of Casper. Bee tc Of te established Scenic Route boute- ed by the county commissioners to Falls and return. atrona county and more high- freightrates for shippers of tho egiop, and more frequent train service for C z Fe} z= 2 w E z IN THE SQUAREST STATE Going Too Far ITTLE SYMPATHY will be wasted upon Mr. Emerson, the state engineer, wha insisted upon being forced from office to make way for the gov- ernor’s appointee. The governor has the right and! the authority upon his side as well as public policy, while Mr. Emerson seems to have nothing more than bluff and stubborness and a threatened suit in court back of him If the former state engineer really means to test the governor's power of appointment and re- moval the courts will unquestionably decide against! him. Be that as it may, and be the merits of the} case what they may, Mr. Emerson has added noth- ing to his prestige and the fine reputation he made for efficiency during his two years of of-! fice, by attempting to force his retention in office} upon the governor, | \ No more undignified nor foolish act was ever perpetrated by a confirming body than the last minute action by the Wyoming senate in confirm-| ing the recess appointment of Emerson by Gov-} ernor Carey, through Pmerson’s connivance, to foist upon Governor Carey's successor in office an| — appointment undesired by him. If the constitution! and the statutes of Wyoming mean to do anything they mean to confer upon the governor the power and authority to select such appointees as suit the; policies of his administration, qualifications be- ing taken for granted. And officers can claim no legal right to appointive offices beyond the} pleasure of the appointing power. The thing has been tried too often and success has been nil. All that can come of the matter is humiliation to} a very fine gentleman who should not have placed) himself in any such position as defying the con- stitutional rights and prerogatives of the governor! of the state. | = Se Recognizes Constitutional Prerogatives TE RADICAL League of Nations’ partisans are rather finding fault with the president because he asked the consent of the senate for the United States to enter into negotiations to join the Permanent Court of International Justice. | Senaor Swanson of Virginia, recognized as the| mouthpiece of former President Wilson in the senate, and who since the retirement of Senators Hitcheock and John Sharp Williams, will be the ranking Democratic member of foreign relations, thinks the president ought to have completed the negotiations without consulting the. senate and/ then sent the results of his negotiations to the! senate for its ratification. In other words, he| believes the president should have utterly ignored| the senate in formulating his foreign policy as Mr. Wilson did in taking matters into his own hands at Paris at the close of the war and in negotiating the peace that has not remained peace- ful. The president conforms to the constitution and) remembers that the senate has a voice in foreign) policy and the final ratification or rejection of} any treaty made. The senate should be consulted. Times has much the same opin-| ays the president’s action in consulting the senate is “an excess of prudence” and it states| that even if the senate refuses to give its approval arrier misses you, | by the Democratic party under the leadership of Mr. Wilson. Mr. Harding was a member of the \senate at that time. He spoke as one fully apprised of the constitution prerogative of that body, and as one completely in sympathy with the senate’s insistence upon the exercise of ts constitutional | rights. It had been repeatedly charged in the cam- paign that he was a member of the “senate oli- | garchy” and that he would if elected, continue to ing to this point. Mr, Harding told the Ohio legis- lators: “1 do not hesitate.to say that the senate saved American nationality in 1919 and 1920 when the | executive proposed to surrender it. The senate preserved our independence of action when the executive insisted that a foreign council should decide our future place in the activities of the |; world and call us to war and our destiny. | heeding partisans or Democratic faith to cry out against the senate and the part it plays in the | the Constitution a fraud. The senate is in reality! | the security of stable popular government. * * */ “In cartoon, in solemn editorial, in manz utter- ances on the platform, it has been suggested that be a member of that so-called oligarchy. In speak-| |. “It has become quite the fashion among un-! federal government. One might as well proclaim) Che Casper Daily Critune The Powerful Katrinka. SHE AST ME To STAY eN HERE So XL CouLD CARRY Back THE EMPTY’ WAGON BED. CANT CARR‘T No EMPTY WAGON SED | in case of Republican+yictory, the incoming presi- dent proposes to permit the senate to have some! | say in determining the policy of the government.! | I gladly proclaim all these suggestions to be liter-| | ally correct. | “If a Republican administration is chosen next November you can be yery certain that the senate,| theoretically, if not actually, composed of 9 leading men of the repubuec, will have something to say about the foreign relations as the Constitu-| | tion contemplates. * * * I want America to un-! derstand that a Republican administration stands unalterably, avowedly and completely for Consti- tutional government with the recognized and con- | sistent powers of the legislative and judicial) | branches of the government as well as that of the} executive. * * * “I want representative popular government in dependable public opinion conducted through the! fact, not merely in name. I want an end to dicta-| tion in America and the resumption of the rule of} representatives of the people chosen for that ex-| plicit purpose. | “There has been a fevered tendency of humanity | in recent years to completely alter everything which has gone before. We have that new cult in| American politics which proclaims everything that is, is bad, and suggests that everything that is to be, will be divine. “We had a period of popular resentment of the existence of our courts und for a time there was a suggestion that we should submit their decisions to popular sanction else they could not abide. There is not very much choice between venomous assaults on the integrity of the courts and the momentary clamor about eliminating the senate from responsibility in federal goverhment. | “I do not know whether the idea is one imported | | from the peace council at Paris, or whether it is a reflex of the mob mentality which has broken out in revolutions in various places in Europe. Our business is to hold America stable. Our task’ is to preserve popular representative constitutional government in America.” In sending to the senate a message setting forth the wisdom in his opinion of the United States joining the Permanent Court of International Jus-| tice and asking the senate’s consent to negotiations} to that end, the president was doing two things. First, carrying out the provisions of the United States constitution, whi clearly state that the president shall have the power to make treaties! only “by and with the advice and consent of the senate,” and, second, carrying out his campaign pledges that he would, if elected, observe the con-} stitutional provisions in this respect. It is something more than a coincidence that! those who are continually seeking to destroy the nationality of the United States by joining it to the League of Nations are also those who persist in their desire for a one-man government in this coun- try, which will be in violation of the Constitu- tion and in defiance of the legislative branch of the government, which the president truly said “is the branch through which dependable public opinion makes its wishes known.” “Home, Sweet Home” CENTURY AGO John Howard Payne, a wan- dering American actor, wrote the words to @ song upon which he placed the title “Home, Sweet Home.” The music was written by an Englishman, Sir Henry Bishop. It was, in fact, included in an opera called the “Maid of Milan” which Payne and Bishop had collaborated in pro- ducing, one the libretto, the other the music. ‘he opera was given in Covent Garden, London, one hundred years ago next May. The song occurred in the second act and at once went to the hearts of the people. The opera went the way of many others and was shortly forgotten, but the song has proved immortal. ‘Wherever the English language is spoken, whether music is understood or not, the air and words of this song are known and sung. Its popu- larity is no greater with the wanderer upon the other side of the world than it is with the person safe and secure and content in the home of his fathers. It has been so for a hundred years. It will remain so forever. No song ever written has had a stronger appeal to humanity. No song ever writ- ten has contained a finer melody to match with the simplicity of the words. Each were made for the other, It has occurred but few times in the history of language and music. In English speaking countries there should be a proper observance of the birth of the old i next May and due honor paid the man who por | out his hungry heart in a song for all the world to sing. It should be an occasion for the re-establish- ment of the American home, regardless of its hum- bleness, anything so it is home, the place for which Payne longed. There is no finer sentiment on earth than tho love of home. A sentiment that is being crushed, by modern living and modern customs and habits. Wrong Again | ERB KAUFMAN, another writer of light fic - tion for the Hearst purveyors of misinforma tion, says in one of those lurid sheets: “The coun try’s delight with the new tariff is indicated by the to President Ha request, he should go ahead and complete negotiations looking to the United| States joining this court. | Perhaps the best answer to all this is that fur-| nished by President Harding himself, During the! residential campaign members of the Ohio legis-| ature visited Mr. Harding at his Marion home on August 19. At that time Mr. Harding entered into a defense of the constitutional rights of the United States senate. assaults upon t se rights that were being made defeat of Mr. Fordney, its chief engineer. This is a fair sample of Hearst accuracy, and in telligence displayed by critics of the tariff law. Mr. Fordney was not defeated for re-election or renomination. He would have had no difficulty in being returned from a district which has go often shown its confidence in him. Mr. Fordney, like} Uncle Joe Cannon, dropped out of public life vol | untarily, possibly because he was disgusted with This was because of the some of the conditions produced in public life by mum. but the producers of political bunk. MeNeugm fymeeae tne NY WHEN HAT SMALL LoaD OF COAL GOT STUCK IN THE MUD BACK oF THE HOUSE, KATRINKA WENT OUT AND BROUGHT tT RIGHT IN gust uike THAT FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1923. eon, Darwin, {s enrolle¢ as @ fresh-] pressed with the picturesque to: man in Southwestern college, Win-| buildings at that place that he q: field, Kan, cifed to have one like them back {n Pittsburgh. Of course the lodgepolcs Ship: House Logs . (Sr pce cae anee. JACKSON—Jack Powell has just Mr, Powell to cut and ship the tim. ? = ber from Jackson Hole. returned to Jackson from Driggs, Re Ida,, where he has been busily en-| , Mr. ere mn uote spon for. Pitts ghged in shipping two carloads of poae ie supe! ces 9 work 6: lodge-pole pine house loss to A. W.| Cons! on on room cabir Thompson of Pittsburgh, Pa. the plans for which have been take Mr. Thompson spent last summer from several differen cabins here at the Bar B-C rai at 0 im- the valley. All perfect for every pur- # pose—as soft as you wish; as hard as you please; but always smoother than you had dreamed, 17 black degrees (with or without erasers) Also 3 copying American Lead Pencil Co. 220 Fifth Ave., New York Write for booklet on pencils, penholders, VENUS Everpointed and VENUS Thin Leads LIVE NEWS from WYOMING Items and Articles About Men and Events Throughout the State Annual School Meeting: LARAMIE—Under the terms of House Bill 115, introduced in the house of the last legislature by the department of education of the Sta! of Wyoming, and which afterward becamé a law, the date for the an- nual meeting of the several - school districs in the state was changed from the first Monday in May until the first Mondny after the third Sat- urday in June, this year that date falling on June 18. This is to enable the clerks of the several ¢istricts to complete their annual reports at the close of the school. the fiscal year be- ginning after the close of the terms. Heretafore the fiscal year ended on April 30, leaving several weeks of school to be forestalled or to be car- ried over until the next annual meet- ing. The trustees will hold office until the June meeting, instead of having to be succeeded at the an- nual election in May. The new law will govern the meetings for this year. Art in Public Schools SHERIDAN—A, very interesting splay of commercial design work !n cut-paper posters és being made this week by the business firms of the city, representing the work of some 500 Sixth, Seventh and Bight» grade pupils of the city schools, The work involves the principles of perspective, color harmony, and the rules of balance and arrange ment. The art work was done un- der the direction of the teachers with Miss Clara Gottschalk, art instruc- tor, supervising. The year’s study of art in the Sher- {dan schools has been divided into six periods of six weeks each, Courses completed this year include color and ¢esign, drawing, commercial design and toy construction. The year will be closed with a six-weeks’ course in costume designing and six weeks of interior decoration. Battle Not Over SHERIDAN—Willlam Murdock of the Haskell interests was a special guest at the mid-day luncheon of the Lions club and addressed the Lions on the subject of the plans of the Haskell people to develop northern Wyoming through the North and South raitroad. Mr. Murdock ex- pressed his appreciation of the splen- did support and co-operation mant- fested by Sheridan people in the rail- road ject. po tgiae f influences which were brought to bear against us in ctmnec- tion with our plans to lease Section 36 now are at work in an effort to drive us out of the state, but I trust that the people of Sheridan will con- tinue to stand behind us as loyally as they have in the past, and with their help we will win,” declared Mr. Murdock, referring to the applica tlon of the Wyoming Railway com pany for the extension of thelr rail- road from Buffalo to Casper, which has been presented to the interstate commerce commission. Troop Holds Smoker LANDER—Troop A pulled off a very successful smoker at the Ar- mory hall. Among the most impor- tant matters presented for discussion was the problem of recruiting men to bring the local troop up to full strength. ‘The period of enlistment for the first contingent, dating from the time the troop was orgnnized three years ago, has expired, and a number of them have dropped from the troop. Fifteen men are needed to bring the personnel to the mini- a hoped that many more be securet recruits may University Gym Chicken Raising LARAMIE—W. A. Hitchcock has SHERIDAN—W,. H. McNees, poul- returned from Colorado Springs ant) Denver where he has been to study symnasium plan: The architect hopes to have everything in readiness for the university board meeting on the 21st, so no time will be lest in. awarding the contracts for construc- tion and furnishing. The gymnasium will be about 180 by 240 feet, with {ts southern en- trance facing Thirteenth street, !f ex- tended through the campus, about the middle of the building facing Fremont sreet. The building will be three stories high with lockers. dress- ing rooms and the like on the first flow, the second floor being given up to the gymnasium. The build- ing will be a two-phase structure, one other for the armory for the military department, the whole being of mod- ern design and first-class construc- tion, to meet the needs of the Uni- sity of Wyoming for years to come. The structure when completed will cost around $300,000. ———._ To Build Branch HARDIN, Mont.—Assurance that the proposed branch line of the Bur- lington railroad from Hardin south along the Big Horn Valley to the old Fort Smith camp, six miles abave St. Xavier, will be built, 1s contained in orders received here by officiais of the Campbell Farming corporation to seed to spring wheat every available acre on the Fort Smith bench. The orders were sent by Thomas D. Campbell, president of the corpora- tion, Campbell, with President Breit- schneider of the Western States Oll and Land company. Vice President Sinshelmer of the Holly Sugar cor: poration, and Ralph Denio, of Shert- dan, Wyo., general manager of thd Denjo Milling company, will attend a meeting of the Burington officials tn Chicago to consider bullding the branch. This Une is expected to open up agricultural sections in the Big Horn valley and to serve the Soap Creek oil field. ‘The farm corporation plans to seed 8,000 or 10,000 acres to spring wheat. fe a hasten wtih To Set Court Terms LARAMIE—Judge Tidbal!l, who fs to take over the court af Sweetwater, which was made a part of the Sec- ond district by act of tho last legis lature, is contemplating a trip to Green’ River, when he will set the dates for two terms {n ,that county, which now conflict with the tefms here. Several murder cases will be heard, and the judge has been a/ivised to appoint a court commissioner to hear probate, widows’ compensation and other matters. The business in Sweetbater county will almost, if not quite, eqnal that in both Albany and Carbon counties in the course of the year. New Knitting Factory SHERIDAN—B. L, Hanson, of the Hansen Knitting Works of Pravt dence, Utah, ts in Sheridan, complet ing arrangements for the opening of a sweater and underwear factory In Sheridan this fall, and organtaing a sales force. The factory will later be enlarged for a full line of mattresses and blankets. In the meantime Mr, Hansen will supply the trade here from he Provi- dence factory cn a much larger scale than in the past. Mr. Hansen is a brother of BB. Hansen, who has been resident agent for the Hansen Works for the past eight years. try epecialist from Laramie, met Lower Tongue River ranchers at the Fred Morris ranch, and talked qn the| Subject of incubation, brooding and feeding of baby chicks. Tomorrow a meeting will be held at the Orr home at Big Horn. At the same time Organization of a boys’ and girls’ poultry club will be effected. Meetings scheduled for the remain- der of the week follow: Soldier and Wolk Creek cammynities, at the Aber school; at the Morris Beal ranch at Clearmont, and at Arvatn. From Sheridan McNees gots to Caspen, where poultry meeings have been arranged by County Agent G. M. Penley, s —__—_ Park Improvement DOUGLAS—To date a large num- ber of Converse county people have responded to tie call for member- ships in the Ayres Natural Bridge Park Improvement association and the indications are that the drive will go over big and that many needed improvements can be made at the park during the coming spring and summer. However, the work will take con- siderable money and the members of the association hope that not one single improvement contemplated will have to be slighted. SS UEEREeeetE Work on Pipe Line YODER—Material {s being un: loaded at Guernsey, and a large quan- Uty of pipe has aleo reached Fort Laramie, for the 20-million-dollar pipe Une, which is being bullt east from Casper along the Burlington railroad on the south side of the track, by the Sinclair of] corporation, Ono of the Sinclair right-of-way agents was in Torrington yeserday arranging for rightof-way through Goshen county, end stated there will be a pumping plant at Fort Leramie. He said 35 acres of ground had been purchased there, and the company expecta to spend a large amount for labor on construction work in the county, as well as add considerably to taxable valuations. Buys Business Site SHERIDAN—Through a deal con- summiated today, Louls Jacobs of the Jacobs Clothing and Dry ‘Goods store becomes the owner of the B. F. Small property on North Main street, occu- Pied by the old Jacobs Tallor Shop, the Singer Sewing Machine Supply shop and the James Klindt Real Es- tate agency offices. Although the consideration has not been announced, it is known to have been approximately $500 a front foot. ‘The property has a frontage of 33 feet. The present buildings, which were erected 85 years ago to house the Henry Gerdel Shoe shop and the Andy Eads Harness shop, will be dis- mantieA next June, and a modern two-story brick structure erected. _—— Kingsley in Sheridan SHERIDAN—The Rev. Ira W. Kingsley, for seven years pastor of the Sheridan Methodist Episccpal chureh, and for two years superin- tendent of the Sheridan district of the Methodist church, arrived from For Morgan, Colo., and will be in | Sheridan for a few days. Rev. Kingsley last October accept- | Eptecopal church at Fort Morgan \ Colo. His two daughters are attend. ing the Fort Morgan schools and his ed the pastorate of the Moethodist-| your wants in high grade lumber and build- ers’ supplies. Rig timbers a specialty. KEITH LUMBER CO. Phone 3 DOCTORS THE CASPER PRIVATE HOSPITAL 938 South Durbin—Phone 273 Women’s and Children’s Hospital 542 South Durbin—Phone 406 HARRY F. COMFORT Ls} STAI SURGERY, . oe ee Gn ATE DO ANY Phone 1008 Suite 18, Daly BIds-! Homer R. Lathrop, M. D., F. A. 0. & —————|__ Victor R. Dacken, B. 8c. M. D. 0. F, STEFFEN EYE, EAR, NOSE and THROAT Auditor—Accountant Harmon L. Stanton, M. S., M. D. Income ‘Tax Service 9| SKIN AND X-RAY’ TREATMENT 312 Con. Roy. Bldg. Phone 145! GENITO-URINARY DISEASES G. B. Underwood, M. AUDITORS ©, H, REIMERTH Certified Public Accountant Income Tax Service 401 0-S Bldg. Phone 767 i. D. R. C. VAN DENBERG ROR Certified Publlc Accountant ENTGENOLOGIST Income Tax Service PATHOLOGIST Over Campbell Hardware | 2 OGRE Phone 148 Ly PHARMACIST GUARANTEE ISTRY CORP. | get vothian, Ph. G. and coun! D. ore Audietrar and ‘Trausfer Agents i aossne B.D. a 208-11 Ol Exchange Bldg. Phone 660 fiesta ne ae ARCHITECTS Piiocemebe unis SoU sesee Tei GOODRICH, Architects DUBOIS fo Townsend Block Oasper, Wyo. Phone 449 . 3. WESTFALL, alas Suite 5, Daly Building 54 and 65 Phone 2121 Sulte 304 % DR. aa E. SHORTT = aa Eye, Ear, ‘Nose and Throat E, Second. Casper, Wyo. DR. DE ORGLER Hair and Scalp ie ude ee a DR. T. J. RIACH Physician and 5: Phone 1219, SY reaghdeten 2118. DRS. MYERS AND Bi ’ Peat fms RYANT ws SEARLES TRANSFER Res. Phone 87W Office Phone 313) BATTERIES BATKERY Gb. 200 0-8 Building woe weeSEER, BA Phone 907| Office Phone 699 ‘Hesidence 740 BEAUTY SHOPS LAWYERS fn oe Tear} as ee, “THE RADIANT BEAUTY SHOP AMBROSE HEMINGWAY Henning Hotel, Mezzanine Floor. Ex-| Room 221 NICHOLS & STIRRETT Lawyers | 8309-10-11 Oil Exchange Bldg, JAMES P. KEM 1 408 Consolidated Royalty Bldg. HAGENS & MURANE wyers 206-207 OU Exchange Building CHIROPRACTORS M. GABRIELLE SINCLAIR Palmer Chiropractor West Hotel, Room 72 Phone 15403 DR. J. bh. JEFFREY DR. ANNA GRAHAM JEFFREY Suite 318 Midwest Bidg. Phone 706) Wit DR. B. G. HAHN, Atimnncat ten y opructor Suite 14-15- wnsend Bldg. pe oe See | ite 14-15-16 To ; VINCENT MULVANEY Attorney-at-Law 427 Midwest Building OGILBEE & ADAMS iat — 3 E. HARNED, Chiropractor 162 North Kmb: - Phone 1457 Dr. i. B. BERQUIST 210 Zuttermeister Bldg. Phone 1767! —--0-S Building Phone 2217 DR. ©, I. ARNOLDUS OSTEOPATHS Ostecpathic and Chiropractic DE. CAROLINE ©. DAVIS ie Osteopathic Ph: '310 0-8 Building Phone _1754| sutte 6, Tika ee eClaN on ses CHIROPODISTS He C. A. SANFORD CORINNE E. O'BRYANT Midwest Bldg. Phone 1036 Chiro; list and Ortho; i Post Speciale Fo 212 S. Center St. Phone 124-3 RADIATOR REPAIRS NATRONA RADIATOR SHOP SLIA RUSSELL ing, ing of Radiators aoe selenite‘ epediat 425 |W. Yellowstone Phone 1523 be rm a ov 4, Zatoormetster Digg SHOE REPAIRING NORTH CASPER SHOE Sol COAL Work Guarantees Aya Ben Suyematsu 235 East H s] PE OAL AND CO! Mao we, skshitne Gabo coal yids TYPEWRITERS - oeaeh paar ED Lo hone 671) REMINGTON TXPEWRITERS DRESSMAKING 309 0-8 Bldg.” Phone 2278 MISS CARGIL Q Uae) dp bg ny is and TAI BS ay epair Work. TROY TA AN . 324 S. Lincoln Phone S48W! 148 E. moar vii) Phone yea Sarna re rte eee