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PAGE TEN re be Casper Daily Cribune The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at Cas- i oming. Publication offices: Tribune Building, ce. Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second lass matter, November 22. 1 Business Telephones ~. eT eT Branch Telephone Exchange .Connecting All Departments. By J. B, HANWAY and B. E. 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. 0, Iil., 286 Fifth Ave., Boston, Maas.. Suite 404 Sharon Bidg., 55 New = 3 gomery St., San Francisco, Cal. Copies of sey Bevo Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago. . and San Francieco offices and visitors are welcome. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©) SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State as One Year, Daily and Sunday - 8 One Year, Sunday Only -- 50 Stx Months. Daily and Sunday ~--------------- ia Three Months, Daily and Sunday ———--— 2: One Month, Datly and Sunday By Mall Inside One Year, Daily and Sunday One Year. Sunday Only -—— Six Months, Daily and Sunday Three Months, Daily and Sunday One Month, Dally and Suncay All subscriptions must be pal Daily Tribune will not insure delive! tion becomes one month in arrears. KICK. IF YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE... If you don’t find your Tribune after asa = ge fully for {t, call 15 or 16 and it will be Se ntere’ by special’ messenger. Register complaints “We Killed the Bear” vi doo to It has remained for William G. McA claim that the Democratic party won the war. In an address at Nashville, Tenn., Mr. McAdoo was drawing comparisons between the Repub- lican and Democratic administrations and then said: “We fought the war so efficiently that it end- ry after subscrip- Democratic representative from the nineteenth New York distrfct, who is sitting, and Walter Chandler, who ran against Bloom and on the face of the returns was defeated by a hundred and twenty-six votes. Chandler is contesting the election. The house committee which investigated the election found after carefully considering the evidence submitted that Bloom’s majority was the result of election frauds and recommended the seat be given to Chandler. Charges of re-| peating, voting the names of men on the lists without their knowledge, intimidation of Repub- lican voters, counting for Bloom ballots marked “void and not counted,” and a general disregard of law appear to have been substantiated. The committee vote was six to three in favor of Chandler, and the matter will now be threshed out on the floor of the house. Sol Bloom, by the way, is the one who said, when the election re- turns were announced: “If elected I'll be a hell of a guy or nothing. Billy Sunday won't have anything on me for breaking up the furniture. He has lived up to the first part of the promise, but the furniture is still intact. The disposition of the case on the house floor can not be predicted with ahy degree of con- fidence because of the strong coalition which exists between the Democrats and certain rep- resentatives who were elected as Republicans, but who persist in playing the Democratic game, and who may carry it to the point of supporting Bloom. The situation however, coming as it does in these days when “anything may happen” polit- ically, suggests some speculation which may not be altogether too remote for discussion. There is being staged a desperate attempt to put three parties in the field for the presidential election. A goodly number on Capitol Hill are of the opinion that should three candidates go to the people there might be no election—that is, that no one candidate would secure the required ma- jority. The election of a president would then devolve upon the house of representatives as : : provided by the twelfth amendment to the con- stitution: “and if no person have such major-| ity, then from the persons having the highest! number not exceeding three on the list of those} voted for as president, the house of representa- tives shall choose immediately, by ballot, the jlberty to permit a man to sell ice- | modities, brands the proposed Sun- “ he Casper Dailp Cribune serted at once by the men who have been elected as leaders, or these men will be repudiated and the party itself will run the risk of destruction. “A presidential. campaign is approaching. | Through the lack of stalwart and vagilant lead- ership the Reptblican party goes into the cam- paign as if it were a criminal on the way to ex- ecution. Senators who should have defended the Republican party against villainous insinua- | Blue Laws and Sunday Closing pending on the living God—Let true Editor of the Tribune—Blue laws and Sunday closing laws are danger signals, tend to make hypocrites in- stead of Christians, and historically have been tried and found impossible It is a travesty on civil and religious religion triumph servise of God-gt men to say the L cream on Sunday and. brand him as a criminal should he sell @ can of corn, From a historical as well as from a Biblical standpoint, the present} 4 widespread tendency toward at- tempting to make men righteous| and through the enforcement of religious| 2. dogmas by civil authority is a danger signal that it would be well for America to heed. The union of religion and the state is directly inimical to the teachings of Jesus, ‘Render therefore to Cae- sar the things that are Caesars and to God the things that are God's. The very nature of the discrimina- tion in the selling of different com- the ‘legislation, Believing: day law for the city of Casper a re- Mgious law and as such subservise| little attention.” God in men’s hearts, not by the pow- er of fines and imprisonments.”* It 4s right that men should pray but it would bé wrong and sub- day laws are just as dangerous as men to be baptized or to partake of the Lord's supper. In the American principle of total separation of church and state That the First Amendment to the Constitution prohibits any enact- ment of any law for the enforce- ment of the observance of ligious institution, or of taking any step in the direction of a unton of Random Newspaper Observations “European topics now command FRIDAY, MARCH 28, 1924 to| committee, the inquiry will be in 9] campaign tn congress against Cool. Contube that Chay ase See ice cee ot fair way to remember its purpose.—] idge. It is difficult to imagine where them’ has done his duty by his party, and al! | Port#nd Oregonian. eoperene: acon e Saeee: How. of them know they are recreant to their Sa = Whispering “§ It is said there is a whispering | about congress.—Kennebec Journal. trus' _—_—_—_—_—_—_— —_!::A: ee ———— party “It is not the Republican party that is on trial. It is the leaders who are on trial, but if this venality is established the party crashes to ruin. Let them make good while there is time.” church and state, oF uniting religion and civil government; and - 3. That the observance of a re- Ugious institution is a form or act of worship, and that prohibition or secular labor and business on any stated day of the week can be and is damended chiefly if not wholly for religious reasons; and 4. That all such legislation ts not only subservise of religious liberty, but is opposed to the best interest of both church and state; and which would force} 5. That all such legislation is dan- gerous and should be opposed by every lover of liberty of conscience, and friends of pure and undefiled re- gion; therefore, I earnestly plead that the splendid men on our city council shall recon- sider their vote before the publica- tion of the proposed measure. Sincerely yours, VARNER J. JOHNS. Pastor of the Seventh Day Ad- ventist church. . 620 East Twelfth St. by the power of ven Itberty to force Lord's prayer. Sun- ny re- of the fundamental Americanism. Sunday laws are not a new thing. From the Sunday law of 32 biished by the Sunday laws of Purita history has written its dis; and often blood-stained rei persecution as a result of religious laws. ‘The Puritans fled fr principles of Constantine, de-christinn emperor of Rome, to noticed that America was losing in- terest in Europe, as well as most of the principa].—Boston Transcript. 1A. D., —_ the After the convention Mr. McAdoo probably will regret that he was so nm days,| precipitate in dropping that $25,000 sraceful | retainer.—Pittsburgh Gazette Times. cord of home Tribune. The taxpayer, whatever congress ‘om per-| tries to do, has one determined and A pessimist is a person who be Meves all the rumoms that in Washington ville Times. these da; The much-talked-of ‘genuine dirt farmer” must find himself quite at in Washington—New York Problem. This is the same League from highest grade materials, Pigs Feet ‘ * You may have| that was advertised as going to put cooked in their own jmices, by ex- ao War out of business.—Marion Star. pert Delicia Chefs. Ask your Bliced Dried Beet dealer for Delicia. Watch for the 5 Blue-Striped Package. YOUR LAST CHANCE TO GET ONE OF THESE secution in the old world only to re-| reliable friend—President Coolidge.— r before the military experts of Eu- een it could end.” And after discussing yarious features of the war he said: “Is not that a credit to the Wilson administration? This amazing partisan claim is made in the face of the record which shows that the Re- publicans in congress supported war measures by a larger per centage of votes than did the Democratic membership. The claim of efficiency in the Democratic administration’s conduct of the war is made in the face of the address de- livered by Senator Chamberlain, Democratic leader on the military affairs committee, open- ly charging that the administration of military affairs had broken down, which charge was preven by a citation of numerous incontestable cts. tathe war was won by the united efforts of the ‘American people and in spite of the bad admin- istration of the Wilson regime. We spent hun- dreds of millions on airships that never flew, on ships that never floated on the sea; on can- non that never fired a shot. Under the cost- plus system preparations for war were delayed and the expense of those preparations was in- creased beyond all necessity and all reason. There has never been any disposition on the part of Republicans to claim that they did any more than their share in the prosecution of the war and in the support of the government in its military operations, Nevertheless since Mr. Mc- Adoo has raised this question from a partisan standpoint it is pertinent pow to remind him and others of his political organization that when the conscription law was enacted and put into effect the Democratic administration made a new application of the census statistics by the adoption of which a smaller quota of men was conscripted from southern states and a corre- spondingly larger quota from northern states. If Mr. McAdoo undertakes to defend the system of apportionment.of the draft to the several states | he will find much difficulty in convincing the country of the justice of the basis of apportion- ment adopted by the administration of which he was an important part. If we are to discuss the war from a partisan standpoint—which Re- publicans have never sought to do—then this is a very pertinent subject to be included in ths discussion. The statement that “we (meaning the Wil- son administration) fought the war so efficient. ly” is one that may be safely referred to every man who went across the ocean, or who on this , the United States are dazed and shamed by the, side of the Atlantic, had opportunity to ob- serve the manner in which time was lost, money was wasted, and favoritism was practiced by the administration on which Mr. McAdoo now seeks to confer most, if not all, the credit, How Will They React? Nothing could be more-obyious at the pres- ent time than that much of what is going on at Washington designed for its effect upon the people. Politicians are looking through their politcal glasses, the same glasses that have so often deceived them. But is the effect of a be- havior so largely mixed with politics that which is assumed or intended? There is no ques~ tion as to the nature of the public reaction to any evidence of corruption. There is no doubt that the public resents malfeasance in office. There is no doubt that people will strongly con- demn any dishonesty that may be disclosed. But what will be their reaction to so obvious an effort to use one disclosure to cast slurs and suspicion upon all men, even upon a president, whose title to public confidence is unusually clear? What will be the effect upon the people when this political effort degenerates into a daily exhibition of pettiness, gossip, ignorance, prejudice and vulgarity, even in the United States senate? To be more specific, what will be the effect upon the people, even those who fully believe that Daugherty is not a fit man for the office he hd@ds and believe that he should be ousted, when a senate committee, while seeking in every possible way to get testimony against him, denies him or his counsel the opportunity of defense guaranteed in every court? In the eyes of a great people that abhors official pre- judice ignorance, vulgarity and injustice as it does official corruption, will a man like Wheel- er become a public hero or will a man like Daugherty become a martyr? Will a nian like Caraway or Brookhart or Heflin gain public confidence by slurring the president or will the president gain public confidence and support the more they slur him? Something in the Wind Some humorous person has paraphrased the old adage and made it say “great aches from little toe-corns grow.” It suggests consideration of the contested election case between Sol Bloom, president. But in choosing the president, the votes shall be taken by states, the representa- tion from each state having one yote; a quorum for this purpose shall consist of a member or members from two-thirds of the states, and a majority of the states shall be necessary to a choice.” At present, counting Bloom, New York state is represented in the lower house by twenty-two Democrats and twenty-one Republicans; the seating of Chandler would reverse the standing. The New York vote on the presidency, should the election be thrown into that body might be governed by Bloom or by Chandler, whichever is seated. (McPherson y. Blacker, 146 U. 8. 27.) Undoubtedly the Radocrats, or Demorads, whichever we choose to call the members elected as Republicans, who have tied up with the Democrats to ruin the Republican program, have the twelfth amendment in mind in considering the possibilities incident to third party candi- dature and action by the house. Past ‘perfor- mance is eafnest enough that if they can not impose their own will on either major party, they will do everything humanly possible to wreck the legislative machinery and render the federal government powerless. If with the com- mittee’s report before thém, the “Rads” yote to sustain Bloom the fact will be additional evi- dence of what may be in the wind. The Republican Crisis The Washington Post has taken the Republi- ean party to task for its lack of fight in the present onslaught upon it by the Democratic leaders in congress. The Tribune has frequently voiced sentiment along the same line, as well as other Republican journals throughout the coun- try. It is to be hoped that out of the bitter com-! plaints registered by those who believe in the, great policies of the party, the fighting blood of the believers and supporters will be aroused to the end that this mass of slander will be turned back upon our traducers and they will be placed in the cess pool where they belong. The Post says? embers of the Republican party throughout | lack of leadership in their great organization. They can not understand why the Republican party is subjected to the most humiliating and damaging charges without arousing the resent- ment of a single leader in congress. The lead- era are not only defied, but insulted, and they take their punishment as if they deserved it. The administration is vilified and the entire) Republican organization brought into contempt | and worse than contempt. It is even charged| with protecting criminals, and with being it-| self a participant in crime. The government is| terribly injured by the wholesale accusations) heaped against the party in power. Paralysis} has overtaken congress. There is widespread de-| fiance of the law. The people are beginning to} suffer because the party to which they cinfided the government is unable to function. | “What is the matter with the Republican lead-| ers? Can it be true that they are trembling for) fear that further revelations will confirm the) truth of what now seem to be infamous calum-| nies? Or are they craven weaklings who are afraid to stand up for truth and right, because) of a selfish desire to keep their own individual | namea out of the current scandals? One or the! other supposition seems to be the truth. | “Scoundrels or moral cowards—it is a hard! alternative, and the people shrink from impos-| ing judgment, But the people will not wait for | ever. Republicans by the millions, whose pride in their party is a part of their life, are not dis-! ased to tolerate the cowardice of their leaders in congress when abominable allegations are, made attacking the integrity of their party. “There is beginning to be widespread belie?) that there is corruption back of the silence | which the leaders fear to face. | “Where are the great men of the Republican} party? Where are the Hannas, Quays, Platts, Spooners, Aldriches, Chandlers, Hales, Allisons, Dollivers, Reeda, Cannons, Paynes, Dalzells, Grosvenors, Moodys,, Manns, Tawneys and scores of other champions of Republicanism who regarded an assault upon the honor of their party as a personal insult, and who never failed to carry the war into the enemy’s camp. Is the Republican party dead? Is it so lacking in lead ers that it is about to disintegrate and disap- pear? “The rank and file of the Republican party are true and loyal Americans. They will follow great leaders. But they will not follow men who do not have the courage to defend the party against unjust assault. The time has come when Jeadership in the Republican party must be as; vive the spirit of intelerance against those who dared to differ with them in religious faith. "Their Sunday law was molded after the law of Charles the second of England, and Is the basis for all the moldy, blue laws, which are found upon the statute books of some states. It is time to repeal such measures and not to re- surrect them, The fathers of the American re- public were far from being Godless men, They recognized that the spirit of intolerance is a natural charac- teristic of men. They sought in the first amendment to the constitution a perpetual safeguard of civil and} religious freedom. But today we find a gigantic church combination clamoring for the enactment and enforcement of religious laws by the state,. During the past year a man was imprisoned and fined in Baltimore for carrying Doheny money. ment has been arms. So Dohen: if the governme: the weather for tried Yi: gra a some whod from his yard to the cel-| Constipation. All had failed. But| fr, que. “acy Sratefull, Weather lar. Five months ago in Birming-| retogg’s Brap brought him z Socket House Te clan ed one ca Meee chee cig | nent relief, just as it has dono for| Kellogy’s Bran, cooked and kritie Prophet tennis and other games were pro-| housands of others. Read hia letter: | bled, docs not irritate the intestines Mail Order hibited on Sunday. The Casper Gentlemen: like drugs and pills. It acts exactly as 8e Extra measure is but an entering wedge I am 43 years old, and have been nature acts. Eaten regularly, it is fora ane Beat sould slo ayacy the- for Sn Ra heal pag a guaranteed to relieve permanently tho ater and religiously guard the sup- Sees pasate Pg car Weg most chronic case of constipation, or posed sanctity of Sunday. I would} — 6¢ blood to my head, some of which your grocer will return your money. AN EXCELLENT GIFT say with Spurgeon, “Your Sunday}. eaused me to fall to the ground. I ‘You will like the exclusive, nut-like bills and all other forms of act-of- took an outdoor Isboring job and flavor of Kellogg’s Bran, ‘| When the weather fs fine, the two children will come out, and when Darllament religion neem to me to'be| {ed for the first time, skeptically irekad tae cooked and |} rainy weather is approaching, the witch will come out 8 to 24 hours all wrong. Christ needs no help from Caesar. I should be afraid to bor- row help from the government; it the Bran about three days. No meal, Eat it with milk or cream and also has Thermometer, Elk’s head, Bird's Nest, etc, Mail orders 8c would look to me as though I rested more enemas, no more Old Dr. So- in the recipes on every package. Sold extra for packing and postage. on an arm of flesh instead of de and-So's Pills, Epsom salts by the by all grocers. Made in Battle Creek. Los Angels Times. helped The United States govern- of treason.—Syracuse Post-Standard. Leaders of the farm bloc talk as land Times-Commercial. The tip has gone out that the Lea- gue of Nations will drop the opium Naturally Mr. Carter—whose letter follows—was skeptical. He had tried practically everything for the relief of This country ts rich {n capital; but the investment of capital ts so restricted by harassing laws that vast amounts of it are withheld from private industry; and the prosperity of the country rests upon the basis of prosperity in private business.— Los Angeles Times. Obregon with helping him with can not be accused nt could guarantee the farmer.—Cleve- An inventor has offered the Sen- ate committee a serum that will make witnesses in the ol! inquiry tell the truth. If only someone else will offer an antitoxin agaist petty poll- tics, for the exclusive use of the Was skeptical of Kellogg’s Bran until it gave him back his health ton, ete., ad infinitum! You have ie ian Seethts Sale Beginning Friday Large, Strong, With Assortment o 6 bars P. & G. the White Nap 1 bar 6-oz. Ivory 1 pkg. Ivory Flakes Get This Big Bargain at Any of Albin Brothers Store No. 1, 426 Figurora, Cas- per, Wyo. - Albin Brothers, Store No. 2, 100 South Ash, Cas, per, Wyo. qyAndersou, W. W., 1115 South Poplar, Casper, yo. Boyle, George, Mills, Wyo. Brown, W. H., 949 North Durbin, Casper, Wyo. Buckmaster, J. W., 319 East A, Casper, Wyo. c a rocery and Market, 653 CY avenue, Cas- per, Capital Grocery, (Ed Lord), 330 South Jackson, Casper, Wyo. Craig, A. R. Snyder, Wyo. Dundon Mercantile Co., Mills, Wyo. Fitchie, H, H., Twelfth and South Cherry, Casper, Wyo. lies, G. F., 903 North Washington, Casper, per, Wyo. M. W., Twelfth and South Jackson, er, Wyo, and Grocery, Inc., 228 East Second, Casper, Wyo. rsbentcht, Gordon, 412 East Fifth, Casper, yo. Hazelip, G. W. Glenrock, Wyo. East A, Casper, Wyo. Oy oY Avenue, ( , 219 East J, 638 EB: Kummer, William, 805 United, Casper, Wyo. Logan & La Clair, Jefferson and A’ streets, Casper, Wyo. A ing Until Saturday, April 5th FREE! 50c Galvanized Pail Soap ‘All for Only $1.05 Assortment of Soaps $1.45 Value nn, H. C. (Lucky’s Market), 740 CY Ave » March 28 and Continu- Double Seamed f Procter & Gamble’s 1 pkg. Chipso 30c size. 1 pkg. Star Nap Powder, 5c size 1 large Galvanized Pail my $1.05 ONLY the Following Grocery Stores: Lincoln Street Grocery, 650 South Lincoln, Casper, Wyo, McNamara, J. P., Glenrock, Wyo. Mellas, Peter, Store No. 1, 307 West A street, Casper, Wyo. Mellas Peter, Store No, 2, Casper, Wyo. werutual Grocery, 934 St. John street, Casper, yo. Midwest Commissary, 628 West Yellowstone, Casper, Wyo. . Natrona Butter Shop, bin streets, Casper, Wyo. Northwestern Grocery (Papp Brothers! West A street, Casper, Wyo.) mae Noyes, W. C., No. 1, 920 North Harrison, Cas- per, Wyo. wre W. C. No. 2, 903 South Spruce, Casper, Rehal & Rehal, 726 Madison, Casper, Wyo. Rosenthal & Shelquist, 956 South ‘Chestnut, Casper, Wyo. Service Grocery (W. R. Menke), 600 East A street, Casper, Wyo, qaterFill, Bessie “A., 930 South Jackson, Casper, vo. yomith, A. C., 1317 East ‘Thirteenth, Casper, yo. Smith, Lewis, Glenrock, Wyo. 266 West B street, East Second and Dur Smyth, D. J., Mercantile Co., Glenrock, Wyo. —— Spaulding, A., 450 West Midwest, Casper. Wyo. == = = Sta dard & Abrams, 712 South Washington, sper, v0. * + wi + ¢ TE Stark, C. ¥., 849 North McKinley, Casper, Wyo. SALT CREEK BUSSES tone Grocery Co., 233 East. Second, Casper, Wyo. 3 Busses a Day Each Way ‘Sweeny & Doherty, 803 West Midwest, Casper, LEAVE CASPER—ARKEON BUILDING] Leave Salt Creek Wyo. 8 a. m. Baggage and Express 8 Whites Grocery, 114 East Second, Casper, Wyo. ei Called for and Delivered ie B, R. Williams Stores: 9 a.m. Salt Creek Transportation 2p. m 2:30 p. m. Company Tel. 144 8 p.m WEATHER PROPHETS This coupon will not appear again. If you haven't mailed or brought your coupon In yet, act quickly, for our supply wil not last long. Good for ahead of rain or snow. reports better and more reliably than general weather reports. ~ CASPER PHARMACY DRUGS AND JEWELRY 111 East Second Our price, while they last, only 69¢ The hygrometer will tell advance weather It Phone 180 TRAIN SCHEDULES Chicago, Burlington & Quincy No. 30____. wanna nas = -- 7:10 A. Mm. -----------~---9:55 D. m Of Our Service is the use of our splendid funeral home, It is furnished with every convenience, and makes an ideal place from which to hold the last services, We make no charge for the use of our splendidly appointed fun- eral home as we feel that it is part of the equipment that the ™modern funeral director should place at the disposal of those he serves, Chicaso & Northwestern Arrives 15 p.m. Arrives 4:45 p. m. Arrives ———-———=8:10 >, m