Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE SIX Che Casper Daily Cribune perform the duties expected of him. It becomes wha Coles Daly Teitiine Weasd eras wean este burden that must not be again plaved upon The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at Casper, the shoulders of our presidents. We have seen Wyoming. | Publication offices: Tribune Building, opPo-/what public demands haye done to two prede- | site postoffice. |cessors of Mr. Covldge. Mr. Coolidge? j There could be no question as to what the! president's personal preforence in the case! Pucerhaanes: j would be. It would be to attend the ceremony | os ——_—_—_—|that sought to honor the memory of his late associate whom he respected and loved. But! the president’s idea of duty and service to his friend and associate is to honor him by_ the practical method of forwarding the great policies he bequeathed him for the benefit of his country-} men. Could he better honor the memory of the departed? Where To Hold Convention | Shall we not conserve | Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class matter, November 22, 1916, By J. BE. HANWAY MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Advertising Representatives Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bldg., Chi- cago, Ill., 286 Fifth Ave., New York City; Globe Bidg., Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bldg., 55 New Mont- fomery St,, San Franctsco, Cal. Copies of the Dally Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices and visitors are welcome. The large cities of the country are beginning to cast about for the honor of entertaining the Republican National convention next June. Among them will be the several candidates that always appear, like New York, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, Detroit, St. Lonis, | St. Paul, Kansas City and others. Any of these large cities could care for a convention the size | of the national gathering of Republicans, and} jthe visitors in very handsome shape. The main point in naming a convention city is its geographical location, for the members of the convention come from every state in the} union and the island possessions. It is unfair} V5 to require delegates and alternates to travel any | Sains eae iendipanany, of jgreater distance than absolutely necessary, from ‘a euhoeiptions must be paid in advance and the|the standpoint of expense alone. Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subserip- If the convention is taken to either the At- tion becomes one month in arrears. lantic or the Pacific seaboards it works a hard- ship on either the delegates from one section or} Waiting At the Jail the other, whereas if it is located in the interior }/half way between the country’s extremes it gives “After having been imprisoned in the Sheri-|gteater satisfaction to all concerned. dan county jail for seven months, Mrs. Myrtle | The city of Chicago is such a point, and it} Alburn was released Thursday afternoon, when | has ie oes ee satisfactory convention {n open court, the elght charges janet aE ss The Republican party has never ventured | Issuing fraudulent checks were dismisse Y|west of St. Louis or Minneapolis and in this re-| Judge James H. Burgess. The action was taken spect has had greater consideration for its del- at the request of John W. Songer, county attor-|egates, in matters of expense. The Democratic ney, who asserted that a jury would not convict|Party, however, has journeyed from the Atlantic the woman . A charge of selling a mortgaged | ‘° the Pacific and along the way stopping at Kansas City and Denver. automobile, filed against Mrs. Alburn last) “im, 44, Republican party Chicago seems more spring was dismissed at the opening of the fall|1ixe its convention home. More of its party term on Sept. 17. conventions have been held there than elsewhere. Mrs. Alburn was unable to raise the amount jit is the most centrally located city able to care & fili f the comfortably for so large a number of delegates of her bond at the time of the Sling 'c'o » |and visitors, and since the convention is always bi 1 Februa: YY charges and has been in jail since Fe ee held in June climatic conditions are more likely The above is taken from a Sheridan news-|to he suitable and comfortable here than at paper. It tells its own story briefly, and no} points farther south. doubt truly. But it does not explain why this ane national committee will within a few = #5 hess Ss determine the location of next year’s person was held in jail seven weary months only) montis G year’s | to be set at liberty with a clean bill of health ;Cvention. All of the cities of the country | ft 1 eneuchea tiie will have an equal chance to secure the gather- at the end of so long an cane a) e ing. The committee is never set or arbitrary The item is but little different from many/and the result is determined by a vote of the others you may pick up in the newspapers coy-|committee members. ering many portions of the United States, and the question naturally arises—What is wrong On by! e) with our justice and our court machinery? ntal Trade ’ If this woman could not be convicted as the The trade of the United States with Oceania county attorney confesses at the end, it is likely | "4 er eueeene hasidnereaaed nearly. 210 4 5 526,000, H that she could not have been convicted in the! 1914 to $1,627,000,000 in the fiseal year ended in beginning. It even gives rise to the question of | June. Trade from the Asiatic division in- her guilt at all, under the charges filed against | creased from 400,000,000 to $1,433,000,000; with her. Did the officer filing the charges know pari con Grey taped nine and ie oe ‘. . x and, from 4 , 0 $194,000,000, ‘or the what he was about, did he have any proof to) si.ca} year the trade comprises 21 per cent of sustain his worthless check charges? Did|our trade with all the world. those upon whom the checks were passed forgive| As is the case with the Latin Americas, with the crime, and what right had they to compound whom we bought and sold to the tune of $1,684,- felony anyway? Were the checks made good?}900 worth of goods from Oceania in 1914, and Were there no prosecuting witnesses and did Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier One Year, Daily and Sunday — One Year, Sunday Only Six Months, Daily and Sunday - Three Montfis, Daily and Sunday . One Month, Dally and Sunday - Per Copy --. By Mall One Year, Dally and Sunday _ One Year, Sunday Only --- Six Month, Daily and Sunday purchases from Asia and Oceania consists of $ |erude materials, while the bulk of our sales to they refuse to act? Was it out of sentiment] those divisions consists of manufactured goods. because the prisoner was a won:un? What was) There is, however, considerable competition in the idea of holding a prisonec in jail for seven|our market with the manufacturers from Japan, months? China and India, while Australia and New Zea- These and a hundred other questions are in land run us a good race in wool, meats, and what : 2 apr z x a may generally be termed animal products, mind when reading a news item like the one} (on sidered separately, we imported $42,000,- above. | 000 worth of goods from Oceania in 1914, and There may be perfectly good and valid rea- exported $84,000,000 to that division, In 1922 sons for the situation being as reported in the|the figures were $31,000,000 imports from and newspaper, but the public does not know, and $84,000,000 exports to. In 1923 they were $72,-| the public will wonder why the woman was ar. | 00,000 a1 $122,000,000, respectviely, a large gain rested in the first place if there was insufficient |OVeT the other two years mentioned, About evidence to convict her, and why she was not|” Per cent of the trade is with Australia alone. discharged long ago. Did it TYequire seven Our Asiatic trade for 1914 showed imports months to determine that she could not be con-|from $287,000,000, exports to #113,000,000; for victed, or was all this time used to establish | 1922, imports from $705,000,000; exports to $480,- her innocence without a trial 000,000; for 19. imports from § 100,000 ; a “ ‘exports to 000,000, In this Asiatic trade | an ranks first. Last year we imported 000,000 worth of goods from that country | Honoring Harding’s Memory jand sold her 3,000,000 worth As in 1922, Calvin Coolidge’s devotion to duty is to be!nearly 80 per cent of our from Japan admired. With him duty comes first, every-|consists of raw silk. “In 1 ays the De. thing else waits. His particular line of duty partment of Commerce, apan was America’s at present is being president of the United/fifth largest customer, and second only to the States. Nothing else interferes. He has al-| British Empire as a supplier of raw materials, ways known his duty and performed it with the|mostly silk, for manufacture. Sixty-five per greatest of fidelity. What more could be asked] cent of Japan's imports from the United 8S of any man, be the circumstance of the highest} in were distributed among seven items importance or to require the most humble effort.| raw cotton, 30 pe The president could have taken no more just | Sheets and wire 12 per cent; lumber 9 per cent; | or politic position than he did when the com-;machinery and parts 9 per cent; construction mittee from New York called upon him to at-|materials 2 per cent; kerosene 2 per t; iron} tend and address a memorial service to the lute|pipes and tubes 1 per cent.” ighty-nine per President Harding to be held in New York on|cent of Japan’s exports to the United States in November second. j1 were distributed among seven articles— Tho president simply and quietly transferred |™W Silk 80 per cent; silk textiles 4 per cent; the responsibility for the disposal of the time|‘t®4 2 per cent; potteries, straw braid, camphor, | required for preparation of the address and the|C#™ned and bottled goods, each 1 per cent. Prac journey to New York, occupying in all three | tically the same ratios were maintained in 1923. days, from his own to the shoulders of the com Next in the trade of Asia, on the import side mittee that waited upon him. of the ledger, came the British East Indies, | He inquired if it would serve Mr. Harding’s|{70" Which we imported nearly $288,000,000 memory better to go to New York and partici-| Worth of goods last year, selling them $36,000,000 pate in the ceremonies or to remain in Wash-|Wrth—an opportunity for trade proselyting ington attempting to solve the problems in the|tlere. Tncluded in the imports were $37,000,000 line of Mr. Harding’s declared policies. oer Oe a from the Straits Settlements and | There could be but one answer in the circum- MnO eran or erode kenh bet trans Oeyasity ates nec ve and Sumatra. ' é : saJein |....China comes next in the trade, with $170,000,- coolides dian or mare it ntiment in Calvin /qo9 imports from and $97,000,000 exports to that . country in 1923. American capital invested in The time of the president is extremely val-|China to take advantage of cheap Chinese labor uable. Nothing in an official way ‘moves!in manufacture has been extraordinarily great without his approval. He is on call at all|in the last decade, and continues to increase. all hours for the most weighty decisions. Ab-] mm, ; ‘ i he Department of Commerce and several pence from his desk means an accumulation of|trade organizations have strongly socom eer business tha pncroac) i al- pas a be Ted gare ag upon the time al | the establishment of a huge entrepot at Manila, < . Philippine Islands to advance our trade inter _. Formal occasions are perfectly proper, and ests in the Orient and Oceania. It is under. it is desirable that they be held. There are |stood President Harding had the matter under many men in the nation, high in the esteem of | consideration but his untimely death passed the the people who can ! cent; iron bars, rods, plates, nd should attend and ad-|question to President Coolidg N 8 ge. Next to the dreas them if that he t of the ram; but|Latin Americas, Oceania and the Orient offer it is not fair to the chief executive to call upon |the most important fields for future trade ex bim to surrended the time required to actually pansion, - ; jabout Che Casper Dally Cripune : Shipping Season Is On KEMMERER—Beef roundups and trajling of sheep to the railroad points for shipment are now on In full blast, and record shipments are expected to be made from Lincoln county. Several trainloads each day are passing through Kemmerer every car loaded with livestock. Stockmen of this county have had ‘\their orders in for cars for many weeks, and they are now beginning to arrive. Shipments of lambs already have left. Cokeville, but the main ship- ments will come between the Ist and 16th of October. Already a number of cattle have been shipped from Kemmerer and Opal, but the peak of the shipping season will not be reached before another ten days pass. William Mau a Angus McLean of Cokeville passed through Kem- merer the latter part of last week with Iambs for Omaha, and the first of the week Ivan Nichols, also of Cokeville passed through with a shipment of lambs for Denver. A. N. Gardiner sold a choice bunch of lambs last week, 6 cars for 11 cents a pound. J. D. Noblitt has ordered 20 cars for lambs for October 20, and will Dill them to Chicago, while other Cokeville flockmasters have ordered cars for date a little later. including Fred Roberts, Stoners, Kinney, Ol- son, Stoffers and Benntons. The Mickelson cattle from the upper Country are the first to be shipped out of Opal whiile K. Lu- man of H¥lmont has 20 cars or- dered for this week, From Kem- merer Joe Angelo and Philip Hussar shipped two loads this week and A. D. Hoskins, who purchased the Wright cattle, shipped the animals to Los Angeles. The market on both lambs and beet is a shade higher than last year at this time. Soh Lupine the Cause KEMMERER—For years flock- masters of Lincoln county have been suffering losses of sheep after trailing from the forest reserve to the Cokeville district. Ofttimes the animals would leave the reserve in fine condition, and scores die along the trail, or after reaching Cokeville or even on the cars after being loaded out for shipment. ‘This has presented an entgma that the sheepmen have been trying to solve for several years. Finally, a few weeks ago, Dr. C. D. Marsh, eminent authority on the cause and remedy of range poison was appeal- ed to, with the result that he visit. ed the trail not long ago, and since his visit it {s understood that he has blamed the plant “lupine” for the poisoning. This proves the contention that some unknown poisonous plant was the reason. Whatever the cause, the facts are that hundreds of the fattest ewes and lambs have been lost. The cause seems to work slowly, but generally fatal in the long run. Report ts not forthcoming on what recommendations Dr. Marsh has offered to eradicate the evil. Rast Join se The Festive Moon- shiner SHERIDAN—Sheriff Frank R Toy again obtained the reward of vigilance when on his third trip, he discovered a still and 200 gallons of mash on the Charles J. Tanner place 22 miles northwest cf Shert. dan on Six Mile creek. John Slower occupies the place but was not at home and was not arrested at the time. The sheriff was accompanied by "FrT Raw Dor all TOWERS FISH BRAND REFLEX SLICKER Patented Features make fe Big, Difference DEALERS EVERYWHERE TOWER; ASTOWER(O. Jee e-<} “ 7234 BRD STON f HAPPINESS WILL? GREET THE MAN-- WHO SHOWS TO \ US HIS PLUMBING \ OOD idea to talk your plumbing plans over with us—whether you are planning some simple re- pairs or want plumbing for a new house or office building or factory, Phone 711, 359 EAST SECON PHONE 71} It Happened In Wyoming Matters and Things, of State-Wide Interest, Wired in, Telephoned in, Written, _Grape-Vined and Some of It Purloined. SCHANK PLUMBING & HEATING CO. INC. Charles Davis, federal prohibition | for the Student Council has come to agent for this territory, and saw the|he regarded as the final arbiter in barrels of mash through a window |all major disputes, and their decis- in the house, they said. No liquor |ions have invariably been respected. could be found. The still, a 50-gal-| The Student Council is the out- lon outfit, was found about a quar-|growth of a popular demand for a ter of a mile from the house in a| voice by the students in the manage- cistern-like cave. ment of their social, athletio and The officers waited until 6 o'clock | school affairs, it is a system where- in the afternoon for the return of|by problems of mutual interest to Slower, thinking to find the jugs|the authorities and to the students or other receptacles in his car for | are thrashed out by chosen represen- evidence and to confiscate the ve-|tatives of each body, and the best hicle, but about that time the rain |conclusion drawn began and they came back to Sheri The council was instituted in No- dan, A warrant was obtained from[vember, 1920, and has since been the county attorney and will be| gaining in papular acclaim, until Served as soon as possible. now it represents the sentiments Twenty empty sugar sacks were|and wishes of the greater majority found in the cave with the still. of students. It had its inception with Soe Principal H. H. Moyer, who was the leading spirit in its organization. The Reliable Cream Check BURNS—The value and import- ance of the dairy is being realized in this community and is reflected in the checks paid out by the two cream stations of his city. During the month of August these two sta- tidns paid out to farmers approxt- mately $2,400 for cream. Besides this there aro a few farmers who ship their own cream, others who market in Cheyenne and) many oth- ers who are small manufacturers of butter, and dispose of their product through loca! merchants and other channels. Directs Traffic SHERIDAN—A long story about the problems of traffic policemen, which appeare@ in a recent issue of the Los Angeles paper, contains numerous statements by A. V. Kan- atscher, a former Sheridan boy, who has held the traffic. post at one of the busiest corners in the California city for more than two years. He is the only son of Jacob Kanatscher of 717 South Main street, and left here about 13 years ago. Kanatscher says women make the best drivers of automobiles, but lose their heads easier than men do, 60 they figure as often in accidents and Saving Four Thousand SHERIDAN— The taxpayers are to be saved $4,000 to $5,000 on the Main street paving and storm sewer ccnstruction. The saving will be the result of a change of plan which provides for placing the new 24-inch storm sew- er on one side of the old street car tracks and leaving the ties and the concrete in which they are set in the street, thus saving the expense of digging them out and replacing the concrete foundation of the pave- ment as under the original plan. It took two men three hours to dig out the first three ties. It would cost about $3 per tle to do the extra work of taking them out and replacing the concrete for each tle that had to come out to allow the new sewer to be laid under the west track as at first planned. The ties, which have been in place about 12 years, show no indication of decay. A saving in concrete foun- dation for a strip about 12 feet wide down tho center of the street, will be accomplished, it is stated. It ts felt by the city commissioners that the saving will more than offset the remote possibility of the cost of re- pairing the pavement if ties should rot out an@ permission was given the contractor Wednesday to leave them in and lay the new Paving on the old foundation for the ties. A further result of the decision will be a double sewer for Main Street. The old line was made of 15- inch pipe, and with the new, which is to be of 24-inch pipe, there will ba ample drsizace for the heaviest rains and floods. Their Own Govern- ment KEMMERER—“Take your com- plaints or suggestions to the Stu- dent Council.” That's one of the mast commonly used expressions heard in the halls and ante rooms of the Kemmerer high school this school year. It is usually not sald in a spirit of levity ——: ASK for Horlick The ORIGINAL Malted’ Milk The Original Food-Drink for cure QuickLunchat Home,OfficeaF: Rich Milk, Malted Grain Extractia Pow- dera Tabletforms. Nourishing-Nocooking, S@ Avoid Imitations and Substitutes Over seven seas come the fine se- .lections that are blended into this special coffee and sold at a reason- able price. « Buy ( it because} you \will like it! ee -at your Grocers! is JAKE, The Nifty Tailor The Best Cleaning and Pressing Service Also Hat Blocking WYATT HOTEL BLDG. PHONE 802 HILLCREST WATER NATURE MADE IT PURE Through Granite Walls It Comes to You Untouched By Human Hands BOTTLED HEALTH CRYSTAL CLEAR Hillcrest Water PHONE 1151 And We Will Deliver or Ask for it at Soda Fountains and Drug Stores TRAIN SCHEDULES Chicago & Northwestern Arrives 2:00 p.m. Arrives an aennmeennvnwe-=----8:40 p, m. Chicago, Burlington & Quiney Arrives -8:10 p.m ~ 7:00 a. ™ 10.26 p. m. offences against men. Very few drivers, Mr. Kan- |atscher said, give the signals right. The traffic “cop” has to watch both SCHULTE HARDWARE 228 South Center your wants in high grade lumber and build- ers’ supplies. Rig timbers a specialty. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1923. traffic rules as the | pedestrian and vehicular traffic from four directions at once, and it he is discourteous he loses his job or takes a reprimand Remember? It isn’t such a far stretch for memory to recall the day when you had to wait for a long, clear, cold spell of weather before you could have sausage. Today? No wait for weather or seasons. Just telephone your meat dealer. The delightful tang of October days is made more zestful by a breakfast of Brookfield sausage, made from the choicest morsels of carefully selected pork, blended with spices. That is but one of the services that Swift & Company renders — making available to you numerous products of the highest quality, when, where, and as you wish them. This has been made possible by the development, during more than a half century of service, of 23 packing plants adjacent to the best producing centers, hundreds of branch distrib- uting houses, one of them near you, and several thousand refrigerator cars which carry the meat to your dealer in the best condition. Volume production enables Swift & Company to offer you .this service at an average profit from all sources of only a fraction of a cent a pound. Swift & Company, U.S. A. MAJESTIC RANGE DEMONSTRATION EVERY DAY THIS WEEK —also— SPECIAL SALE —ON ALL— RANGES and HEATERS INCLUDING THE MAJESTIC You Are Invited to Call COMPANY Phone 64-W Building Materials We are equipped with the stock to supply KEITH LUMBER CO. Phone 3