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THE CASPER PALLY TRIBUNIS uviay Morn- at Casi Tetv- yom and phone Connect Exel epart rents und THE ASSOCIATED BARTON Editor public paper and hed herein news publ entatives. idden, 1720-23 Repres: & VD Firth Bldg. Sha ron Lidg., San ated Press awe 08 By Mail x One Year, Daily and 8 -$7.80 One Year, § . 5 Six Months zs Three Mo Oxe Mor be paid in ‘Tripune wil ption r sut nth in arrears. Your Tribunc time between if you fail to wi 8 o'clock p. . Ms ur Tribune. receive A paper he de ou by special mes fe your duty to let the when your carries Ty misses you gril OM ee ee ee ae THE CASPER TRIBUNE'S PROGRAM Irrigation project west of Casper to be authorized and completed at once. , A complete and scientific zoning system for the cl of Casper. “A comprehen: municipal and school recreaticn park sy in ading swimming pools the ldren of Casper of the established Route boulevard as planned mmissioners to Ile and return. ™, for Completion ni Better roads fo: and more highways for v More equitable freight ra shippers of the cky Mountain region and more frequent train UNCONSTITUTIONAL WAGE FIXING “By a unanimous decision the United States supreme court has declared void the feature of the Kansas Industrial court law which authorized that tribunal to fix wages. Indeed, after the supreme court’s decision in the District of) Columbia minimum-wage case, in which it was held that congress could not constitutionally prescribe minimum wages for wémen em- ployed in any industry, a ruling ad- verse to the Kansas experiment in compulsory arbitration, at least so far as judicial control of wages was concerned, was almost a fore- gone conclusion. “Many persons will regret that Kansas is to lose the opportunity ef fully testing the virtue of judi- cial investigation and determina- tion of controversies that threaten the peace and welfare of the com- monwealth. But the supreme court has no authority to stretch the fed- eral constitution or to waive any of its guaranties in order to en- able sociological laboratories to experiment with troublesome indus-| American | trial problems. If the people desire to make departures from e: hed principles the have the right to amend the con- stitution to that end. “The supreme court affirms in the Kansas case that ‘common cal- lings” be converted into public utilities by mere legislative fiat; that the manufacture of food and clothing and the production of bee fuel have id still are com- mon callings, n yublic utilities” nse of that phrase, under the fourteenth ent to the federal constitu- tion inte e with freedom of and enjoyment of prop- erty rig in all common callings s forbidden to lawmakers or agen- cies created by them To give th ate power to| regulate wage ordin bu be of and woul ublic utility that franch h se poly, absolute or latter is subject lic utilit charact 16 | s is exclusively | tion of} -| Women are to acquire other rights! \-/ of equality with men is demonstrat- | because they are created and main- tained by the state, which gives} them special franchises, while or- \dinary business, asking no privilege! from the state, i feguarded | agdinst wage-fixing he state.—| The Chicago Daily News EQUAL DIVORCE BILL | a PASSES COMMONS Divorce in Great Britain has been a costly and cumbersome process | Which Parliament has persistently | been unwilling to change. Discrim-| ination under the exisiting system | |ran not only against the poor, to | whom the cost of obtaining @ divorce | |was almost prohibitive, but against | [all women. Equality under the law \for husband and wife was denied in| the terms of the statute. That by getting the THAT HE NEVER wo franchise | jed in the passage by the House of | |Commons, by a vote of 257 to 26,| of the bill making uniform the terms} on which.men and women can claim divorce in British courts. That | the law was both illogical in theory | |and unjust in practice has long been | argued and disputed, but no redress | has been until now seriously con dered by Parliament. What can be more obvious than that the vot- jing power exercised by women has | quickened the intelligence or sense of right of the average member? For the present law permits a husband to divorce a wife for in-} fidelity and at the same time with- | holds from a wife the right of di vorce from a huaband, however in defensible his conduct, except on| |proof of cruelty or desertion, It} |exemplifies a doctrine essentially mediaeval, to which women of this | day will not subscribe and have no| jcause for submitting when their| votes count no less than those of) Uncle Abner Futty Makes Use of His Beard— UNe.e ABHER FuTrY WHo HAS TAKES Quite A SHINE Te GOLF, WAS Tor? fo PLAY WELL UNTIL HE KEARNED NoT To hiFT HIS Hi Uhe Casper Dally Crivbune ULD BE ABLE EAD. men in the election of the law- | makers of the land. CONTINUOUS TROUBLE IN THE BALKANS Every country which joins Bul garia is preparing to guard its bor- der. Soldiers are everywhere, fully armed. | —ser . In that part of the world there ine\’ been warceversi yaar tetnsal Swept Down by the flood. There are battlements Current in Bulgaria and Serbia which can} be traced by the old walls of brown| SHERIDAN, Wyo., June 23. granite, walls that were built in the|* Meet days of Julius Ceaser. b There are groups of men in all/the swift current of the river swep the Balkan states who want to be|him from his wagon on which he was D. M. teamster, residing at 340 tt street, narrowly escaped death by drowning in Big Goose when | service for Casper. | | to the com difference | the | kings, premiers or commanders of|%ttempting to ford tho stream at the pian They want to get at the | public treasury.’ They want to live | like lords without doing a work, The people in those countries plow with wood plows. They draw wa- ter out of their wells with wind- lasses. They have no fences around! their lands. Nearly every art which! they practice, from spinning and weaving down, representing the thought and information of two thousand years ago. In southeast-) ern Europe, through which the| great Danube flows, the people are |as ancient as the hills. The old cabinet was thrown out in Bulgaria because the new cabinet wanted to get at the funds. Yet they call these matters patriotism Jand around their campfires they sing songs incident to their battles jof a thousand years ago. hate the Turks, yet they are no better than the Turks. The aver- age man in the field or in the army wears a woolen shirt and other woolen clothes which he changes not oftenér than six months. TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES 1687—-M. Denonville, with 2,000 French and Indians, march- ed from Canada for the pur- | pose of subduing the Seneca | Indians. |1757—Clive’s victory at Plassey, which laid the foundation) for British rule in India, 798—Declaration of the Rights of Man by the French conven- tion. | 1848—Bloody insurrection in Paris because of the closing of the | government workshops. 1880—Democratic national conven- ton at Cincinnati nominated | Winfield Scott Hancock for} the presidency. 1 day’s|° They |° Works street crossng. Stevens was carried down the river three blocks before he was able to grasp the root of a tree and hang-on until he was rescued by two tourists at the camp grounds fn Pio neer park. Stevens drove his team and wagon into the river from the east side. He stopped tg allow his horses to drink and then started them across the river thinking the water to be easy to ford. As the team neared the west bank, the horses stepped off into a hole and the swift current pulled the wagon arounG so that the wagon and team faced up stream. At about the same time, one end of the wagon tipped up and the wagon box was lifted fram the frame and swept down the river with Stevens in it. aera Theater Is Sold SHERIDAN hase of the ny of the d operated by Wyo,, June 23.—Pur- heridan Theater com- 4 Theater, owned 8. D, Welton, since st September, was annoanced by Tom Kerby and Rollo Shannon, managers, Troy Wade, formerly man- ager of the Monarch Theater, will be retained as manager of the Grand temporarily. Acquisition of thie theater gives the theater company three theaters with a combined seatitng capacity of 1,300. Regulate Firecrackers SHERIDAN, Wyo,, June 23. — Sheridan's juvenile population will have to be content with celebrating the “Glorious Fourth” with firecrack ers not exceeding one and a quarter Inches in size, it waa disclosed when Mayor C. W, Sheldon announced that he had issued permits for the sale of ers of this size to the Mill: company) Mack's Bazar né News Stand. heridan’s “safe and sane” ordl- nance, passed in 1911, prohibits the eale or the discharge of any equib, firecracker or fireworks of any kind without the written consent of the mayor, thus leaving {t in the power of the mayor each year to regulate the size of firecrackers or to prohibit the sale or firing of firecrackers in side the city mites, pistols are permitted, Mayor annaunces, but dangerous ion 1897—United Confederate Veter-| ans in reunion at Nashville | re-elected Gen, John B.|5" | Gordon as commander-in- | chief. 1898—United States troops occu- pied the country around | Santiago, Cuba, with little or no re ance. | 919—Great cotton mills strike in| | Lancashire, England, ended in victory for the strikers. | ONE YEAR AGO TODAY |Conflict in a coal mine strike at Clarksburgh, W. Va., result-| ed in the killing of two strikebreakers. | Lin the has been starte c r w | re nara exit ee ec NOTICE. I have moved my office from the Daly building to Room 6, Kim. bal! building, over Kimball's, Cen- ter street drug store. JOHN M. HENCH, Lawyer. LEARN HOW TO SECURE A LOT FREE BY DOING A _ LITTLE WORK AMONG YOUR FRIENDS Call 1189 biank cartridge pistola and top can- nons are strictly under the ban. This regulation does not ,however, apply to skyrockets, Roman candles or electric sparklers One hundred dollar fine 1s the pen- alty imposed for violation of the pro- visions of this or¢tnance. —_ liquor charge. Lowden Will Visit in federal court on eee Sheep Theft Charged SHERIDAN, Wyo., June 22.—John Kryana, Beckton rancher was ar- raigned before Justice Pat Cusick and released on $500 bonds for ap- pearance at the December term of court to answer to the charge of re- ceiving stolen sheep, Mike Prastina a sheep herder on a Big Horn ranch, arreated with Kryana, has yet been unable to raise bonds and is being held at the county jail, Prastina is charged with stealing sheep, ‘The twa men were arrested by Sher-f¢ Frank Toy when in a raid on June — 22, overnor the president of the Association of Amer July 13 of the extension University of Wyaming, and L. Lowden, with an address, and later periment station farm, The MRS. LYNCH the Kryana ranch he found three 801 Con. Roy. Bldg. lambs and one pelt bearing brand of Ph. 208 the Big Horn Sheep company, owned ope: by Kenneth Stewart and Goelet Gal- Experienced latin, Kryana claims that the ani- mals were given him by Prastina. This is the second time Kryana has Public Stenographer ANNOUNCEMENT We have moved our law offices from the Consoli- dated Royalty Building, and are now occupying Rooms 401 to 404 in the Midwest Building. DURHAM & LOWEY GEORGE A. WEEDELL SPECIAL NOTICE All members of Casper Lodge 1182 Loyal Order of Moose and their families are requested to be at the Moose hall on Sunday morning, June 24, at 9 o'clock, where automobiles will be provided for those who wish to attend the first annual picnic to be held at Paradise Park, By Fontaine Fox) | been arrested in the past few weeks. | He is now out on bonds, to be tried} Lowden of Mlinois, jolstein-Friesian is to be here and A. EB, Bowman, director lepartment of the Tv. Oldroyd of Laramie, the agricultural! | | agent for the county of Albany, are arranging for a meeting at that time, | hoping to have a two days’ meeting here, inoluctng the visit of Governor demonstration of dairying at the ex-| details SATURDAAY, JUNE 23, 1923. ee If Telephone Bills Were Itemized ings in the state will be held here of men interested in dairying. Governor Lowden will stop here and at Chey- enne. If this company were to send to its Casper subscribers, just for this month, a detailed bili of services rendered, it would bring a realization they never had before of the ac- tual inexpensiveness of telephone service. Osage Is Raided OSAGE, Wyo., June 22. — Sheriff Johnson and deputies closed down the three pool halls and two soft drink parlorn in Osage by serving an Injunc- tion qm them.which will cover a period of thirty cays in which time the defendants will have a chance to show a reason why the injunction should not be permanent. The places sed nro the Path- finder Inn, Osage Billard Parlor, ‘Todd's Por int! and McDonald's Soft Brink Pari ‘The closing Judge Nisiey, an all under special Arrest 16 Negroes LARAMIE, Wyo. June 22.—Off! cers arrested and lodged in jail six- teen negroes who were beating their Way on 2 green fruit train, and who hact deen ving the crew more or less trouble during the day. Some even had gotten into the bunkers of the refrigerator cars and were some: t diffioult to dislodge. The county }sail seemed one of the busiest places Jin the city ¢ » sxteen men had to the sheriff's For instance, suppose the bill, instead of the usual narrow slip with its statement, read something like this: “ae by court order by the places are now ard. “To saving baby’s life when she became ill suddenly at night and a doctor had to be called when seconds were precious.”’ “To long distance conversation with my part- ner over a deai which saved thousands of dol- lars and when no other means of communi- cation would have been as satisfactory.” “To calling fire department when a night blaze threatened the home.” Loses Life In Ford ANDER, Wyo., June 20.—Amadeo Stroppa, aged 47, a miner. who had been employed by the Poposia Coal company at Poposia, met his death near the minea when his Ford car overturned. The cause of the accident is not definitely known at this time, many reports are in circulation. An Inquest will be held by the officials when the real facts will be learned. The b.dy was brought from the doe tor’s office at Hucson to Lander by Coroner Benson. Stroppa was bern in Selve, Austria. —- Suppose there was a long string of such items and yet the charge was the same as it is for the usual bill. Wouldn’t you get a new vision of the value, the economy and the absolute necessity of telephone. The Mountain States: Telephone and Telegraph Company “A Berlin chet has written © book in which he deseribes $12 different ways to cook potatoes. IT’S CLEAR SOFT AND PURE Order by the case or 5-gallon bottles. HILL CREST WATER WE DELIVER 503 East Second St. Phone 1151 JUST RECEIVED Two Carloads Hudsons and Essex WE HAVE A FEW MODELS FOR EMMEDIATE DELIVERY Come and Look Them Over—Prices Are Right Making These Cars Attractive LEA Second and Yellowstone Sis » rg z F- GENUINE BUTTER-NUT “Rich ‘as Butter— Sweet os a Nut? Wyoming Baking Co Casper, Wyo. « Phone 1732 TO THE PUBLIC Owing to the large increase in our business, we are compelled to notify our customers, that beginning on the first day of July, we will deliver our water in case lots of SIX (6) bottles only (3 gallons) or in five (5) gallon con- tainers. Any one wishing it in smaller amounts, can ob- THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER C0. Everything in Building Material RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS Distributors of KONSET ‘Three-Day Cementing Process for Oil Weil Phone 300 : Caspe: Office and Yard—First and Center Sts. Wyo. -__ tain same by calling at our station in rear of 505 East Sec- ond, Phone us at 1151 when you are ready for another case. _ Hill Crest Water Company PHONE 1151