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PAGE TWO. Che Casper Daily Cribune ER ASSOCIATED PRESS Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news crefiited in this paper and also the local news published herein. The Cas Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Mo ‘Tribune every Sunday, at Cas- per, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune Bullding, opposite postoffice. Entered at Geter (Wyorsing) postoftice as second class matter, November 22, 1916. —<————————— Business Telephones ~-.-..-------—-------15 and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting Au Departments. J. E. HANWAY Nerf B. B. HANWAY Advertising Representatives : Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bidg., Chi- engo, LIL, 286 Fifth Ave., New York City; Globo Ridg., Boston, Mass,, Suite 404 Sharon Bldg., 55 New te gomery St., San Francisco, Cal. Copies of the Daily ‘Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago, Boston, and San Francisco offices and visitors are welcome. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. 0.) SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State oe One Year, Daly and Sunday anno 84 One Year, Sunday Only --~—----------—-==-—-——~ Six Months. Daily and Sunday ~—------------- 3 Three Months, Daily and Sunday -------------— =. One Month, ly and Sunday ----------------- + Per Copy a newenewenne Mail One Year, Daily and Sunday --. ; One Year, Sunday Only -ao--——--————————n-~2n= 93-30 Six Months. Dally and Sunday ---------—-----#3 ‘4 ‘Three Monte ene, ae poritey, weno neon Li) One Month, ly ani UNCBY annn—nnwnnneennn= + ‘All subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscrip- tion becomes one month In arrears. The State of Affairs To state the situation with brevity and abso- lute candor, representative government is func- tioning very badly, if at all, in these glorious United States of America. It is unquestionably at the lowest point within the memory of the present generation. We may as well acknowl- edge this and cease deceiving ourselves to a dif- ferent belief. It is evident to every thinking ‘American who is not hopelessly committed to some personal or party success. There is a grow- ing disgust with the ineffectiveness and paltri- ness and cowardice of current politics, as much as with its uncleanness. Good citizens are mortified and alarmed but they should not be surprised. Whenever the re- sponsible leaders of a people adopt a policy of dodging or postponing all serious problems, the vacuum in statemanship thus created is auto- matically filled with the noisy struggles of little men for little ends and of corrupt men for cor- rupt ends. Public opinion becomes confused by the absence of realities from public discussion and loses its ability to register. The ordinary citizen relapses into a state of helpless disgust. That is exactly what has happened to our nat- ional politics during the past two years. Leader Jess: politicians, governed by fear for their pol- itical lives have consistently shied at every great national problem until they have turned Wash- ington into an arena where only the pettiest and “most personal struggles are staged. Statesman- ship has atrophied. In its place ambitious little men are fighting other ambitious little men for personal or party gain. Public life has become infested with morbidity and hysteria. ' ‘A Lesson to Japan The one thing that jolted the United States senate into a state of temporary sanity was the threat contained in the Hanthara letter to Sec- retary Hughes. The “grave consequences” which might ensue provided a certain section in the immigration bill, under consideration in the senate, should be adopted. When the implied threat of the Japanese am- bassador was made public, the attempt to dic- tate as te what our laws shall or shall not con- tain, a dispute of our right to say who shall or shall not become citizens of this republic, enjoy our privileges and come under our protection, the doom of the “gentlemen’s agreement” was sealed. The senate could take no other action than the course it pursued, in the face of Hani- hara’s threat. And what about the threats? Japan is in no position to issue threats in the place of negotia- tions, The world knows her financial and eco- nomic situation. It does not admit of any fool- ‘ture prosperity and well-being depends. may all seem normal to those grown accustomed | from the insanity that afflicted him at the time of his last escapade when he beat up the Gump The situation is somethat reversed in the resent instance the mother is battling to get ‘haw out of the asylum and the former wife Evelyn Nesbit is opposing his realese. It was the other way ‘about when Thaw was committed. This Thaw story from start to finish has oc- cupied possibly as much newspaper space as any case in the history of the courts, and the end does not seem to have arrived, The principal figures in this tragedy have grown old, none of them are young and several of them decrepit from age. It has truly been a fa- odin mous case. The Impatience of the People Political acrobats and display advertisers in public life are simply deceiving themselves if they think the people of the United States will much longer endure this hectic atmosphere which daily fills page after page of newspapers with a sordid mass of political and Olsocial scandal and the meaningless acrobatics S lof self advertising legislators, . The country is sickened of the haggling and bargaining which make of vital measures like taxation and soldiers’ bonus and similar ques-| 5, tions for legislative determination, footballs in a game for partisan political advantage. The people are surfeited with the, disgusting tales of corruption in high places and the degrading sales of “influence” of men the nation has been proud to honor. We have lost interest in in- fant presidential booms nurtured exclusively on destructive criticism, But more than all, we re- sent the feverish political activity which, day after day, has crowded out discussion and ac- tion on matters of real national interest and the hurricane of oratory and selfish appeals which has for months obscured those burning problems, national and international, upon which dees his to regarding public office as a hunting ground for personal gain, but the people are getting im- patient. There is throughtout the country a growing demand, as yet unvoiced, for a different and a better as well as a cleaner and more wholesome deal. in politics. The unpolitical citizen has a feeling of helplessness. He does not yet know where to begin, but begin he will somewhere. The rising tide of his anger at the piffling and corruption of our national politicians may soon- er than expected upset all political calculations. The Need of Women’s Influence In closing his address to Daughters of the American Revolution in session at Washington but a few days since President Coolidge made this appeal to womanhood of the country: “It is my privilege to make an appeal to the womanhood of America which no former presi- dent could have made in similar circumstances. Four years ago today we did not know that the nationwide enfranchisement of woman would be accomplished in time to enable all of them to vote at the presidential election. But today we know precisely what is ahead of us. The deter-) mination of national policy that will be made in next November will turn quite as much upon the attitude of the women as upon the judgments of . the men. So I come to you women, who, I know will pardon me if I prefer to address you as resentatives of the daughters of all the rev-| ofitions rather than as merely the Daughters of the American, Revolution, to say that your country wants not only your votes, but your in- fluence, in all coming elections. By this I do not mean to appeal in behalf of any party. I appeal in behalf of our common country. “It is not enough to say that you did not seek the ballot. Your heroic sires did not seek the revolution. But it came, and they met it by heroic action. Surely the womanhood of the nation who go down into the Valley of the Shadow of Death for their sons and daughters cannot long neglect to participate in elections that they and their children may continue to have the advantages of a government that is clean and wisé and sound. “As it was the initiation of America which made manhood suffrage a modern ideal for the world, so we want now the initiation of America ish attempt to make threats good. True, it may|t» make citizen suffrage a demonstrated success open up a condition in relations between the two for the world. countries that will be anything but pleasant. That is to be expected. But Japan and all other countries of the world may as well understand now as at some time in the future, that the open gate to the nationals of all other lands without restriction as to numbers, and qualifications as to health, morality and general desirability, has |? been closed to remain closed. It is the over- whelming desire of our people. If Japan desires to nurse her hostility against the day she feels she can undertake measures of reprisal or even war upon this or some other pretext, that will be her business. Our business is to be prepared for just such an exigency. Unfortunate? Yes! The American people have no desire to live in a state of expectant hostility as regards any nation. But at least the situation will have one good effect, and that is that it will put an end to that form of national pusillan- imity, apathy and supineness which denies or seeks to deny the necessity of being prepared in time of peace for war that may come. Henry Cabot Lodge speaking on the question in the senate has clearly outlined our rights and our duty in the matter when he said: “If a country cannot say who shall come into the country, it has ceased to be a sovereign coun- try; it has become a subject country. “T think it should be understood by the whole world that the United States alone is to say who shall come into the United States to form part of its citizenship. What our country determines as to its immigration is neither a just cause of offence nor a subject for war or threat of war. It ig an undoubted sovereign right and nothing else, “This amendment has now assumed the dig- nity of a precedent and I never will consent to establish any precedent which will give any na- tion the right to think that they can stop, by threat or by compliments, the action of the Unit- ed States when it determines who shall come within its gates and become part of its citizen- ship. That is a decision which belongs to the United States alone and from that decision there can be no appeal.” As the matter appears at this time, it means a complete exclusion of Japanese immigration, »Another Chapter We have had about eighteen years of Thaw crime, scandal and law suits, which ought to be a plenty, Yet we notice by the public prints that we are in the midst of another chapter, This one reveals an effort to declare Thaw recovered “I have absolute confidence that if American wormanhood will exercise the right of franchise, after fair, considerate and mature deliberation, voting for what is right as their best judgment shows them the right, the right will mightily revail, “Surely the womanhood of our country, who have lavished upon the sons and daughters of the land such a wealth of affection, who watched over them in every crisis, from the cradle to the grave, with immeasurable devotion, will not hes- itate to make sufficient sacrifice to preserve for themselyes and those they love ‘the last, best hope of the world..—American institutions.” Carter Glass Pained For heaven’s sake, listen in on old Carter Glass of Virginia, miserable old reactionary, hide bound and cootie infested Democrat that he is, who declares that the president's letter respect- ing the revenue bureau investigation to be an “amazing imputation” upon the senate. He de- sired only to “express in a temperate way the indignation every senator must feel.” Well, when the sengte of the United States de- grades itself by its ‘pusillanimous shilly-shally- ing, and its usurpation of power and assumption to direct the affairs of the people in the man-! ner it has since last December, it is high time somebody was handing it a whole lot of “amaz-) ing imputation.” The wonder is that the senate has not been visited by bands of irate citizens) with ropes in their hands and lynching in their minds, The country would be the purer and the people’s affairs would be wafer for just such a visitation. Old Carter Glass may feel just as ruffled as he pleases. We trust, for the good of the coun- try the “amazing imputation” sets in on him. That others of his kind in the United States sen- ate have a run of the same disease. The country will not be inconsolable however many the fat- alities. If Carter Glass has ever given evidence of anything in the public life of this nation except the most peanut of Democratic politics the rec- ord does not disclose it. He may strut and fume and splutter at plain tulk to an asinine senate, but the talk sticks and the people approve it and there ought to be a world more of it from the same source aimed in the same direction, What better to do with Carter Glass, than to take him out and drop him on the capitol steps and haye the janitor sweep up the fragments, fhe Casver Daily Tribune. ORDINANCE NO. 390-A ae. 4 Gee AN ORDINANCE DESCRIBING AND ORDERING THE CON|5 aor STRUCTION OF CERTAIN|®, | 7 eotths . SIDE WALKS IN THE CITY |54_ Court House ; OF CASPER, WYOMING AS|177 2 North MORE: PARTICULARLY SET/177 2 North OUT IN THIS ORDINANCE,|177 3 No EEMED NECESSARY FOR|i7 5 arch THE INTEREST ‘THE or and Gite Counel. oF the: Cig|177 8 pases of Casper, Wyoming: Bee a Neth byvicae ot the power cndsanaae [Ht it Noh ie power. 9 ity vested in the City Council, by|!77 22 North ance No, 95-A of the City|7? if North of C: » as amended by ordi. 177.«15.~—sSNorth nance No. 387-A, and sections|;-7 46 North 2036 to 2040 inclusive of the|;7, 37 North Wyoming compiled statutes “for|j7, 43 North 1920, the said’council of the City|177 49 North of Casper, Wyoming, does hereby 177 20 North deem it necessary for the best in-|77> 2; North terests of said city that cement|1,7 52 North conerete side walks COn-}577 93s North structed in the City of Casper;|\-7 5; East within she! period of one (1) year|i-; 35 West from the date of this ordinance, | 175 8 West such side walks to be constructed 48 aoe iat in conformity to the ordinances of| 11; 49 West the City of Casper and to the 67 7 Bast plans and specifications therefor 67 5. West prepared by the City Engineer, 20 4. West such sidewalks, including the |), 5 West necessary grading, gravel, cush- 20 6 West ions and private igs to be|>, 9 South: constructed abutting, upon, ple 1 1 reat cent, vicinal or oh ate.to.as the ot ° Weat case may. be, the following prop- 21 3 Weat erty to-wit: ay 21 4. West CAREY ADDITION a Bo Serest Block Lot Side located. Ft. Length | 9; 6 West 18511 North 144.6 | 9) 7 West 185-17 E&N 208.1|"51 8 West 183 12 = North 5.5 . 21 9 West 154 2 West 50.0] 5 21 10 South 16433 West 50.0] 21 17 Bast 154 4 West 50.0] 5 " a1 18 East 154 5 West 50.0] 5) 19 Bast 1154 6 WES 204.0/432 11. South 155 4 West 50.01/53. 2 gouth 155 5 West 50.0] 444 1 North | 155 6 West 50.0 2 North 165 7 West 50.0] 114 2 Y 14. -3—sNorth 167 1 N&w 204.0153, 7 North 157 2 West waved iesthe fo) 4 87. 8 aN Nos cost ‘ost BO0ls;4 9 Bast 167 4 West , 50.0] 415 1. West 157 5) West id aig se 157 6 West , r 4 157 «-12——sNorth 5 158 1° North 9 158 6 South 158 12 North 153 1 West 153 2 West 153 3 West 153 4 West 153 5 West 153 6 S&W 153 7 South 153 12 = “North 82 5 — (W.62’) South 83 10 North 1 West 2 West 3. S&Ww 4 South 5 South 6 S&E 7 East 8 East 9 East 191 #10 N&E 47 6 (8.91') South 193 6 S&E 193. 10 =“ North 46 6 East dl South 45 6 S&E : 170/18 1 N&B 44 19 “North 5.5] 18 “2 North 69 11 East .5.6| 18 3 North 70 5 S&wW 17.0} 18 11 South 71 1 West 15/18 12 S&B 95 5 South 5.5] 19 1 N@E 138 1 N&E 23.0] 19 2 North 138 2 East 60.0| 19 3 North 138 3 Wes 291.8] 19 4 North 73 1 N&WwW 23.0] 19 5 North 73 5 West * 5.5] 19 6 N&Ww 74 q N&w 23.0| 19 7 W&s \74 S&W 23.00] 19 8° South 175 1 New 23.5] 19 9 South (75 4 S&W 23.0] 19 10 South | 68 — _ East 245.5] 19 11 South |C.&N.W. Ry W side Kimball 530] 19 12 S&E | E side Kimball 88.0} 20 4 North 194 4 > North 20 5 North | 194 5 ware 20 6 N&w Hie: 20°77 Wes 133 4 East 20 8 South j 16 is Bouth 20 9 South South FAS’ | 149 1 ‘North (i 49007) B&B Mes 49° 8 East ; be ead 149-9 Bast’ Baas 8 49-10 Bast ed 149 «-11_~—Ss East B05 149 «12 B&N Hic 6 150 5 South 18 7 150 6 S&E SM 160° 7 Bast aA 4 150 8 East a4 8 150 9 East ee 150 «10 N&E Lge: \181 GS & BW. 10 bat 151 6 Past a4 7 151 7 ~~ East ub 4 151 8 E&N if. 4 152 5 South 8 Md 152 7 Bast 83 : 152 8 East 83 2 9 ast 83 8 5 10 N&E bis ‘ 95 3 West 83 5 195 6. 6&E 83 & 195 7 East 83 2 198 1 N&B eae 198 2 = North 88 9 198 3 North 83 98 4 North 83 198 = =& North ted 198 6 Néw 82 169 8 West 82 169 1 WénNn bed 169 2 t 82 169 3 t 83 69 4 > Wost 82 }169 5 Wost 82 |169 6, West 82 169 7 West 83 170 1 Wen 82 }170 2 West 82 170 3 Wert 82 }170 4 Wes 82 171 1 N& Ww 81 7 West 171 2 Wost 81 8 East 171 3 West $1 14 North iit 4° Wost 0} 79 1° West 171 5 saw 224.0). 79 2 8&E C.&N. W. Ry. B side Line 124.4] 79 3 East W side Line 124.4] 88 1 = Weat }100 1 N&w 297.0] 88 2 West | 100 2 West 60.0] 88 a B&W 100 West 60.0} 88 4 8&B jase N&p 187.0} 88 & | 98 88 6 los 4 87 1 98 60,0] 87 2 West 98 87 3 West 8 N&E 8? 4 97 South 87 5 15 8 87 6 West +4 . 8T 7 West .- - 141.0} 87 8 Bast 65 8 60,0] 87 9 East o4 6 60.0] 87 10 Last 5a 7 224.0| 87 11 Bast of 1 60.0)" 87 12 East oe 3 60.0] 87 13 ast 220.0 60.0 50.0 220.0 + 220.0 50.0 50.0 BUTLER ADDITION. “4 oN&B 230.0 1 ‘North 152.6 7 West 44 8 East $4.0 9 Bast 60.0 10 Bast 60.0 11 East 9 12 East “60.0 33 60.0 14 sN&B 224.0 85-1 West © MS tend 8 2 West be} 85 3 West 60.0 is: la. Week 60.0 85 5 West 60.0 85 6 West 60.0 %& 7 B&W 230.0 %& 8 B&E 320.0 8 9 East. bd 8 10 East Ltd 85 11 East 60.0 8 12 East 60.0 8 13 East een % 4 N&E 190.0 & 1 N&ew 220.0 er 50.0 84 09-3. West 50.0 aa a weet 50.0 84 BC West 50.0 84. 6 West 50.0 07) Bast 50.0 84 8 East 50.0 8 9 East se4 84 10 East 50.0 84 11 East 50.0 8 #12 N&D 220.0 9% tL N&W 220.0 93 2 West 50.0 93° «3° West 50.0 (93 4 West 50.0 93 5 West 50.0 93 6 West 50.0 93, «7 +. East 50.0 93 8 East 50.0 93 9 East 50.0 93 10 East Be. 93 #11 East 50.0 83 #2 N&B 220.0 3 1 Naw 224.0 93 83 West 60.0 92 3 West 60.0 93 4 West 60.0 92 5 West 60.0 92 6 West 60.0 2 7 B&W 230.0 92 8 S&B 230.0 92 9 East 60.0 92 10 East 60.0 92 11 East 60.0 9212 East 60.0 13 | Bast 60.0 4 “N&EB 244.0 1 N&w 224.0 2 “West 5.0. 3 West %0.0 4 West 60.9 5 | West 60.0 6 West 60.0 7 8&W 224.0 8 B&E 224.0 +9 Bast 60.0 10 East 60.0 11 East 60.0 12 Bast 60.0 138 East 60.0 14 N&E 224.0 1 N&w 230.0 2 West 60.0 3 ‘West 60.0 4 West 60.0 5 West 60.0 6 West 60.0 7 West 66.5 8 East 66.5 9 East 60.0 10 East 60.0 11 East 60.0 12 East 60.0 13 East 60.0 af aa &E 230.0 ‘est 64.2 2 West 50.0 3 West 50.0 4 S&Ww 220.0 5 S8&B 220.0 6 East 50.0 7 Bast 50.0 8 East 50.0 9 East * 68.6 1 | West 83.1 2 West 50.0 3 West 50. 4 West 50.0 5 s&éw 220.0 6 S&E 220.0 7 Bast 60.0 8 East 60.0 9 East 60.0 10 East 60.0 il Hast 87.65 1 N&w 230.0 2 ‘West 60.0 3 ‘West 60.0 4 West 60.0 ‘7 ‘West 60.0 6 West 60.0 7 Wes 230.0 sume 230.0 9 East 60.0 10 Bast 69.0 11 East 60.0 2 East 60.0 1 it 60. uu Ee N 230.0 1 Wen 230.0 2 West 60.0 3 West 60.0 4 West 60.0 5 ‘West 60.0 6 ‘West 60.0 7 wes 224.0 8 S&En 224.0 9 East 60.0 10 East 60.0 iL East 60.0 12 East 60.0 13 East 60.0 4 Ban 230.0 1 Né&w 224.0 2 West 60.0 3 West 60.0 4 West 60.0 5 West . 60.0 6 West 60.0 7 Wes 280.0 8 S&E 230.0 9 East 60.0 10 East 60.0 it East 60.0 12 East 60.0 13 East 60.0 14 E&N 224.0 1 Wan 230.0 2 ‘West 50.0 3 West 50.0 4 West 50.0 5 West 50.0 6 West 50.0 7 East 60.0 8 East 50.0 9 Bast 50.0 10 East 50.0 11 East 50.0 13 OE &N 220.0 NORTH CASPER ADDITION, 20 61 North 1170 151 North 117.0 61 North 117.0 151 North 117.0 ol North 1170 151 North 117.0 St 117.0 aa 117.0 ant Be 5 17.0 39 61 a9 151 ay, 4 CAPITOL HILL ADDITION. 39 1 Né&w 258.0 40 1 North 163.4 40 10 North 163.4 RRR RR Re Oe te 8 Se 0 09 0 oe oy 09 8 6 08 OF cs co OP 09 Um os Cs OF EF oo OF C3 ES O19 LD HD LD ES RD ED US UD ED IS ED gs nd 19 HD ED gg MITZI DI H HM HH 1 ‘West 2 West 3 ‘West 4 ‘West 5 seat 6 9 West 2 8 | Weet . 9 ‘West . 10 12 3 3 4: 6 xf 8 9 10. 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 to 1 12 13 4 16 16 Ww 18 19 20 Bast 21 East 22 East 24 North 1 North 24 North 1 North 1 North 2 North 3 North 4 North 5 North s North 4.8 North 8 North a North 10 North South sice of block 1 North 2 North 3 North 4 North 5 North 6 North 7 North 8 North 9 North WHITE'S ADDITION. 9 East 3 East 1 North 2 North 3 North 6 South 8 South 1 East 3 East 4 East 5 East 6 East Le East 8 East 9 S&B 9 South — East side block 1 ‘West 3 West 4 West 5 ‘West 6 West 7 West NATRONA HEIGHTS 10 South n South & SATURDAY,/APRIL 19, 1924, 42.5 25.0 25.0 25.0 25.0 25.0 25.0 25.0 25.0, 25.0 25.0 25.0 169.0 169.0 169.0 192.0 50.0 50.0 50.0 50.0 50.0 50.0 50.0 50.0 50.0 13 West 15 West eh West IRNINGSIDE ADD) v 1 N& WwW ele Bo” 259 108 4 4 4 3 119 1 509 5 500 ; 2315 A no £ 50a “ 509 - 2009 : 2004 : 509 2 50.0 : 509 2 2 2 2 16 82 1 N&w 2 ‘West 3 ‘West 4 ‘West 5 West 6 West 7 West 8 West 9 West 10 “West 11 West 15 West 16 ‘West 7 South 18 South 19 South 20 South 21 South 22 South 23 South 24 South 25 South 30 South 81 South 32 saw 1 N&W 2tol? North 18 to 31 South 32 s&w 2to9 North ~ 10 N&E 11 S&E loss &H 12 to 21 South each 2 8 &W 23 8 & Ww 1 N& W 2to15 North 16 N&B Wy S&B 35 saw 18 to 34 South 1to29 Bast Né&B 31 N&E Community Park Addition WWE SHAIITIIIRSAS East East East 16 East Md 17 East 18 East 19 East 20 East 21 East 22 East 23 East 24. ast 64.60 The unnumbered lot between the North Line of Lot 24 Block 2, Com- munity Park Addition and South Line of 15th Street. 5B SECTION 2. Under and by virtue of the power and authority vested in the City Council of th City of Ci per, locations above set forth, it is hereby further ordered, that such construction be obtained during the period of one year following the date of-this ordinance. SECTION 3. The Mayor, City Clerk, City Engineer, City Attor- ney and City Sidewalk Contractor are hereby authorized and directed to perform any and-all acts and things necessary, convenient, rey quired and proper for the consuy mation of the object of this ordin- ance, to-wit: the construction of side walks as by the ordinances of said City, and the Statutes of the State of Wyoming provided. SECTION 4. This ordtnance shall be in full force and effect from and sO OP date of its passage, approval and publication. Passed and a) roved this 7th day of April, (SEAL) H. H, PRICE, City Cler!l Pub. April 19, 1924, In Old Saxon marriages the bride's father handed the bridegroom the bride's shoe, and he touched her with it on the forehead in token of author ity, ° —___—_ Expert watch an@ Jewetry repalt: ing. Casper Jowelry Co.. 0-8 Bids eae inahienk Ainaaienaenn FOR RENT A part of showroom 18x50 feet in best location in city. Suitable for real estate office. Phone 1993-J 121 East First Street