Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 26, 1924, Page 2

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J t J —_ i 4 " — — henctireteinetind a a —_— PAGE TWO. Che Casper Daily Cribune MEMBER THH ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited in this paper snd also the local news published herein. The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening an¢ The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at Cas- per, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune Building, opposite postoffice. Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as seound claas matter, November 22, 1916. Business Telephones ~~-----------------~-15 and 16 Tetepbone Exchange Connecting All x partments. By J. B, HANWAY and E. B. HANWAY vertising Representatives Prudden, kine ‘& Prudden, 1720-23 Steser Bidg.. Chi- cago, Ill, 28¢ Fitth Ave., New York City; Globe eve Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bldg., 65 ys meee Romery St. San rans, mi ork Chicage,, Boston, thd ne Trancuce offices and visitors are welcome. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State One Year, Dally and Sunday --~----- One Year, Sunday Only ~-~-~---0-------~ 999" ~~ Sta Monthy. Daily and Sunday —-~---<--------- Three Months, Daily and Sunday One Month, Daily and Sunday ed One Year, Daily and One Year, Sunday Only --n<-s-----0---- nn" Six Months, Daily and Sunday ---------------~ Three en ea, oa ore LY wenn ence One Month, ly any UNC RY eonnnnewennennnn= ‘All subscriptions must be paid in advance Crate ° Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after sul Pp tion hecotnes one month In arrears. K. IF YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE. phe don't find your Tribune after looking care- fully for it, call 15 or 16 and it will be delivered he 2% by special messenger. Register complaints before a RE MDM SE Wanted, a Patriot The saddest thing in these parlous times is the strange disease that has taken hold of our! public men at Washington. The members of both the old parties, as well as the radicals have fallen victim. What is to be done-in the ab- sence of either preventive or cure, we can not imagine. The longer the disease continues the worse the victim grows. The distinguishing feature of the ailment Is the total lack of ability to read, interpret or even sense public opinion. The power to estimate the sound, sober thought of the people is gone, and in the resultant weakened condition, here- tofore honored statesmen, fall prey and are in- fluenced by rabid and hostile minorities of wild and irresponsible proclivities, bent on destroy- ing or overturning the greatest system of gov- ernment the world has yet seen and erect- ing in its stead some freak scheme that would plunge the republic into disorder and revolution in exactly fifteen minutes. Wil;] not some kind friend discover some old home remedy like sulphur and molasses that will put our statesmen on their feet again, get them out of the dumps they are in, arouse them from the comatose condition in which they are reposing, and above all jar their mental appara- tus into action, so that affairs at Washington will function as they should? We are not ex- actly suggesting, but we have an idea that a stick or two of dynamite placed under each sen- ute and house seat, with a moderately short fuse carefully ignited, when the works is in session, might accomplish a good work. Then let some American patriot, who loves his country and respects his flag, step forth with a big and ugly club ornamented with large and gnarly knots and bid him crack the skull of every Red, Pink, Radical and trouble maker wherever found upon American soil. There will be a rapid recovery after this dras tic treatment and we can pursue our way to ulti- mate normalcy, to which point we started after the great war, and upon which journey we had made great progress until interrupted by the present disturbance and the sudden illness of our statesmen, e The Clothes Situation An eastern merchant who has handled piéce goods during all of his business career states that women are responsible for the slow market that is holding down the cotton mills to three operating days a week, when formerly they would be working double shjft. The woman of, say thir- ty years ago wore a mass of fluffles and ruf- flies. Today especially in summer she approaches nudity as the nether limit. Skirts are short and narrow. Waists are scanty and diaphanous. Corsets are flimsy when worn at all, mostly they have been discarded. Bloomers use up less fabric than whatever they may have supplanted. The petticoat has disappeared and is as extinct as the hoopskixt and bustle. And so it goes, The situation is tragic for the manufacturer and the operative at the mills. We know of no way to force the charming female of this gen- eration to return to mother’s style of dressing merely to accommodate the textile industry. Long years of observation have taught that styles come and then they go. The new, and always the daring, appeal to the feminine mind, more especially if she possesses the physical charm to display what she does or does not wear, We hold that man is not to be trusted as a critic in these sacred matters. He feems as fickle as even are the styles. His admiration and loyalty changes with them. Therefore his constancy must be to womankind and not to the styles or the things she wears or avoids wearing. Casting the First Stone Tt is well, at times, to have the viewpoint of one not concerned with politics and public life, directly, but whose knowledge of these things is wide and whose judgment is sound. Therefore when the Manufacturer’s Record writes upon a situation that hag arisen in the nation’s capital und attracted countrywide attention, it is worthy of consideration. The Record is devoted to buri- ness, and to manufacturing, as its name im- In a recent issue it says: » conditions in Washington are merely a symptom and we doubt not that if all the ras- cality that goes on in the politcal activities of every state in the union, if all the bartering and trading of political influence, if all the disreput- nble methods by which men get into office and hold office could be exposed, there would scarco- dy be found in the entire country a city which proportionately did not have just as much rot tenness, just as much selling of influence, just as much use of public office for private pelf in stead of for public good, as has been found, or is likely to be found in Washington. Have we not as individuals and as a nation been too long con tent to let the offices of the country, in counties, villages, towns, cities, states and in the national government be filled too often by men who are| not wholly and solely devoted to the welfare of their country? “It is useless to blame the criminals who are in office, for those who have failed to do their | osifg Mat tthe Clon Gouna duty in yoting, and in voting for the best man regardless of party, have done the country a greater harm than have the criminals them- selyes, Too many of us have been criminally neg- . ligent in our responsibility in this respect. Thou-| sands and tens of thousands, and in the aggre-, gate millions of American men and women stay | away from the polls on election day because they say the machine wil! run the election any way; some stay away from indifference; some women actually refuse to register because they would |Sidewalks, includin; have to give their age; some men say they are too | busy, that they have no time to go to the polls and the election will go along anyway without | them. “All men and women who fail to register and to vote and to vote conscientiously as in the sight of God, are doing their best to break down the government, to encourage criminality and to bring about the exact conditions which we see) in every part of this country in open violation of | the law. “Who will cast the first stone?” ‘Al Smith’s Handicaps No one particular thing makes Governor Al Smith of New York an inadvisable candidate for a party that desires to win the presidential con- test this year. It is a combination of things. The fact that he is a member of Tammany Hall, is objected to by some. The fact that he is “wet” drives others from his support. The fact that he is a Roman Catholic is reason to narrow protestant souls to flee from him, as from a pestilence. These are only inclusive reasons. The preeminent reason why he will not do, is that he is a sophisticated New Yorker, concerned and allied with everything that makes the metropolis something fearful and mysterious to the masses of people on the soil in the great continent be- yond the Allegheny mountains, To them New York City is not America, not even American. The present is a period of agricultural un- rest in the western granary. The farmer vote is large and must be cultivated. Agrarian discon- tent must be appeased. About the last person imaginable that could do this successfully would seem to be the political idol of Manhattan and the Bronx. However, that is the affair of the Democratic) party. Whatever brick wall it desires to but} with its head is no particular concern of ours. A Safe and Popular Leader That the British Empire is in safe hands un- der the leadership of Premier Ramsay McDon- ald, the Scotch coal miner and labor leader is evidenced by his parliamentary behavior as .well as by his public utterances, made from time to time. The premier was recently a guest at a banquet in celebration of St. David’s Day at Cardiff, Wales, and the principal speaker. On this occasion he said: “We are living in bad times, times when there is too much petty, small, aggressiveness about— pettifogging things wee, insignificant, con- temptible enmities and I am sorry to say that one of the things that has contributed to that is the growth of what is called nationalism. “You and I, may friends, who believe in nat- ionalism, you and I, who are nationalists, you and I, who are convinced that a nation of peo- ple have an individuality just like a person, you and J, who attach a real definite meaning to the expression of the soul of a people, must see to it that nationality is not going to mean exclusiveness. “That nationality is barren, twisted, contort- ed, unless it means culture, Nationality is both traditional and creative, nationality consists | and contains in itself the best of conservatism, and the wisest that is in revolution. “Nationality demands not only statesmen but poets. Nationality demands that men and women should not, only worship what has been, | but should be full of faith in what is to be— and nationality, calm, confident, happy, power- ful, because it knows it belongs to the eternal Heapas of things. It is catholic and not exclu- sive. “Nationality finds its best expression in edu- eation. Ah, my friends, if I could say nothing to you that is wise except this I should give you great wisdom. The education of a people must be in accordance with the nature and the spirit and the soul of the people. “Great empires may throw dispatches into courts and foreign offices, but small nations may also sow ideas into the hearts of the people, and at the same time universities will flourish and be powerful when fleets and dispatches have crumbled to dust and are lying laden with that dust. “We stand on the threshold of years which in a very special sense may be called years of the unknown. We need men and women of pio- neering courage and polite patience both with men and with nature, “We can look for those men and women only where children are taught to revere their nat- ional traditions, Only where children are taught to pay homage to what is best in the past, to hold out one hand to grasp in gratitude their fathers’ memories and to hold out the other to grasp in hope the fulfillment of the promise that those fathers left them as an inheritance. “I feel that so long as the valleys echo such songs as we have heard tonight so long as hymns rise up expressing not merely the formalism of Caranis but the spontaneous expression of a grateful and happy soul, so long as the old fam- ily love lives, so long as your children’s eyes arc cast up to the hill from whence must come their aid, this will be one of those places to which we can Took for those strengths that the world! requires in its future struggles,” No one high or low doubts the honesty and| sincerity of Ramsay McDonald. No one can. And in the hands of a man entertaining these senti- ments, no trust, no empire is in danger of be- trayal. The absence of the Police Gazette, and the sub- stitution of Vogue and the Ladies Home Jour- nal in the barber shops in noticeable. soa seth Noi oi it by and aui vei 3 ordinances ot sid: city, ‘and the 8 statutes of said state, has hore by Ordinance No. 389-A™ kK adopted and The responsibility for the shortage of ivory in no way rests upon the congress of the United States. fhe Casver Daily Cribune NOTICE TO PROPERTY \. /NERS TO CONSTRU TO THE OWNERS OF te FOLLOWING DESCRIBE PERTY: the City of Casper, County of Na- trona, oy State of Wromings un- the power regularly Ly proved at a ™ Prd city Counc hela Re Boge thet ‘com grading, “eke di a eae day period, commencing on a ee first day of the publication of this and espiring the 10th day of May, and expirin, e 0. ALD. f924 p i And you, and each of you are hereby notified that unless such sidewalks be constructed within such thirty day period, that the same will be constructed by the duly appointed: lified and act- ing City Side ‘alk Contractor, side walk contractor to con- struct the same, in which event, the total cost of such side including the cost of the side proper, as well as the cost of any notice, curbing, grading, private crossings and all other necessary expenses will assessed by the City Council, as by the ordinances of said City and the statutes of said state provided, against the property along side of which said walk is so built and constructed; and that such of said property as are street corners, will be assessed for that part of such side walks as may be within the street inter- sections; and that such assessment will be made to defray and pay the special improvement warrants which were issued to said contrac- tor for said walk, such assessment to be collected as other City taxes and payable in installments ex- tending over a period of four (4) years, that upon all paymiant there will be collected simple interest at the rate of six per cent (6%) annum from the date of the is- suance of such warrants, and as each payment shall become the interest on all deferred pa; ments shall also become due, pro- vided that the City Treasurer will receive payment in full for the interest to date of such payment and give receipt therefor, for the entire special assessment on any property at any time that same may be tendered him by you, said owner or owners of said property or your agent or agents. Cee ee rr er rt rl | mwa awonns SaraaaesEgs nd you, and each of you are hereby notified as the owners of the following described party in the City of Casper, yoming, that the City Council has ordere cement concrete sidewalks to be built abutting upon the following (ge property as follows to- CAREY ADDITION Block Lot Side located. Ft, Length 185 i North 144.6 186 17 E&wnN 208.1 183 12 ~=-North Weg 1 154.02) West 50.0 154 33 ‘West 50.0 14 4 West ° 50.0 14 - 5 West 50.0 i4 6 wes 204.0 155 4 West 50. 155 5 ‘West 3 50.0 155 6 ‘West 50.0 155 7 ‘West 50.0 157 1 N&w 204.0 157 2 West 50.0 157 3 West 50.0 167 4 ‘West 50.0 157 5 West 50.0 157 6 West 50.0 157 12 North 131.0 158 “1 North 154.0 158 6 South 5.5 158 12 North 136.5 153 1 West 62.5 153 2 ‘West 50.0 153 3 ‘Weert 50.0 153 4 West 50.0 153 5 ‘West 60.0 153 6 s&W 204.0 153 7 South 136.5 53 12 North 55 5 (W.62') South 62.0 10 North 1410 1 ‘West 45.0 2 West 60.0 3 s&éw 224.0 4 South 1410 6 South 164.0 6 B&E 224.0 7 East 60.0 8 East 60.0 9 East 10 N&EB 6 (B,91') South 6 B&B 10 North 6 East 6 S8a&E 10 North il East 5 Ba&W 2 West 5 South 1 N&E 2 East a wes b 1 N&w 5 West 1 N&w 5 s&a&w 23.00 1 N&W 23.5 4 Baw 23.0 68 _- East 245.5 C, & N. W. Ry W side Kimball 58.0 FB side Kimball 88.0 194 4 North 66.6 194 5 ‘West 63.2 194 3 N&Ww 224.0 133 u East 6.5 148 9 South u4L0 148 10 South 140.0 149 1 North 62.5 149 7 B8a&E 170.00 149 8 East 60.0 149 9 East 60,0 149 10 a 60.0 149 1 6 149 12 160 6 ui 150 6 230.0 160 7 60.0 160 8 60.0 160 9 60.00 160 10 140.0 161 5 . 70") 93.0 161 6 60.0 181 ? 60.0 131 8 230.00 153 6 M410 152 7 60,0 152 8 60.0 152 9 60.0 152 10 230.0 195 a 60.0 198 6 254.3 195 7 60.9 CHIAMABBHCAMATASH ee ee HSESESS Bee AAGHHIRWUH RODE OCHA MHD wre DD we eee eee: a eS Sense 8 W. Ry. E side Line South South South South South South South South South N&E North North South 58éa&E Nét North North North North Naw was South South South South S&B North North N& Ww wes South South BUTLER ADDITIO East East egegee abe eraae tieete LELSee Lee ae SOooNMD.OwE SSssssasss 2208222232 Sombooe 33338 eooo 224.0 224.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 224.0 230.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 69.0 66.5 66.5 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 230.0 64.2 50.0 * 50.0 220.0 220.0 50.0 60.0 68.6 83-1 50.0 50.0 50.0 220.0 220.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 87.65 230.0 60.0 60,0 60.0 60.0 60.0 230.0 230.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 230.0 230.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 224.0 224.0 60.0 40.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 230.0 224.0 60.0 60.0 ~' 60.0! 60.0 eeeerese Ssssageserss Fess OBESE BOLL ,w EMM QUEUE EHH HHH MH Hee 20 East 6 West 60.0 5 West 7 Wes 230.0 & ~ West 8 B&B. 230.0 7 West 9 East 60.0 8 West 10 Bast 60.0 9 West 11 East 60.0 10 West 12 Bast 60.0 ou 13 East * 432 ease 4 B&Nn 13 We 1 Wén. Fad 5 ee 14 West 3 | West. re tos Oe) Went, i East 5 West East 6 West ae 7 Best 2 Ba Ree 2h Bast pach 3 8 24 East. NORTH CASPER ADDITION. | 3 25 East Rit aeoress 9) 3 26 Bast 161 “North 1170)°3 27 East 61 “North 117.0| 3° 28 East 151 North 170} 3 29 S&E 51 - North uno} 4 2 8 & Ww ‘151 “North 110} 4 2 West 61 = North 10} ¢ 3 West 151“ North 1170} 4 4 West 51 North 117.0) 4 7 West 151. North uno] 4 8 West 61 = North 11720] 4 9 ‘West 161 North . 117.0] 4 10 ‘West 1L HILL ADDITION. 4 11 West 1° N&w 358.0] 4 12 West 1 North 163.4] 4 13 | West 10 North 163.4) 4 15 West baitig ee hadnt 4 16 West 42.5 MORNINGSIDE ADD) 2 West 25.0] 1 1, N&W Damas 3 West 20] 1 65, West 500 4 West 25.0] 1 6 West 509 5 West 250] 1° 8 South 138 6 West 2.0} 1 9 N&B 110 7 West 25.0] 1 10 East 50.0 8 Weet 25,0|.1 13. East 50.0 9 West 2.0| 1 16 B&B 200.0 10 West 25,0] 2 1 N&w 200.0 12 West 425] 2 2 West 500 1 West 54.0] 2 3 West 50,9 2 ‘West 25.0 2 4 West 50.0 3 West 25.0] 2 5 West 500 4 West 25.0| 2 6 West 500 5 ‘West 25.0) 2 7 West 500 6 West 2.0/2. 8 Sew 2000 7 ‘West 25.0] WEST CENTRAL ADDITION 8 West 25.0} 2 10 South 1030 9 West 3 1. North 1049 10 West 3 10 South 1030 11 West 4 1 North 103,0 12 West 5 1 North 120.9 1 Wen 5 24 South 1209 2 West 6 a4 South 1200 3 ‘West MIDWEST ADDITION 4. West oA Ny ae We 110 5 “West 1 3 North 25.0 6 ‘West 1 3 North 25.0 7 West 1 4 North 8. Weat 1 5B North 9) west 1 6 North 10 West 1 7° North 11 West 1° 8 = North 12 West 1 9 North 13° Bast Fea i Reeee 14.) Sot 1 41 North 15 Bast 1 14 = North 16. Bast 1 15 North 17 wast 1 16 North 18 Bast 1 38% West 19 East Bie Liew a, 20 Bast iy se 21 East Bere 02) 2) West 23 East lene atte enn 24 North aw Pe eveat 1 North SoS eet, 24 North 2 7% ~ Weat 1 North 2 8 ‘West 1 North 3. 1952 West 2 North 2° 10 West 3. North a aE eee a. No 2 15 West 5 North 2 16 ‘West 6. North 2 17 South baie 3 24 2°18 South et Seoatis 2 19 South 9 North 2 20° Bouth 490). arate 2 21 South Bouth si¢e of block St oe 1 North 3 South ae. eee 2 24 ~~ South ae 2 25 South forth 2 30 ~~ South 4 North 2 a1 South 5 North 2 2 saw 6 North Shiekh AN 7 North 3 2to17 North 8 North 3 18to81 South 9 North 3 3 sS&W WHITE'S ADDITION. 5 2to9 North 9 _ East 5 10 N&@Bs 3 East 5 il 5éaB 1 North 5 12to24 South 2 North 5 25 South 3. North 6 1 West 0 eat 6 2 North 8 South 6 8to9 North 1 Saat 6 10 N&E hee 6 11 BaE 4 Spank 6 12to21 South ii. Wat 6 2 sa&W “es 3 6 2 Sé&W ag % | AS ae ae 7 2to16 North ; pr ree oo Renee ae. OF 9 sdl Beadle aon”) = South eI. 96 a Be Ps ee block 5) 7 18 to84 South rj West ts 8 1 to 29 East v' 0) 8 30 N&B 4 West 0! 8 81 N&E 5 West 50.0 Community Park Addition 6 West 60.0} 2 13 East 50.0 7 West 79.0/°2 14 Hast NATRONA HEIGHTS 2 15 East 10 South 1398| 2 16 Yast 11. South 1282] 2 17 East BURLINGTON ADDITION 2 18 = East 1 South 149.0] 2 19 East 12 East 22.0] 2 20 Bast 18 East 25.0] 3 #1 Bast 14 East 25.0, 2 23 East 15 Bast 25.0| 2 28 Hast 18 East 25.0] 2, 24 Hast WwW East 25.0 |,,7b® unnumbered lot between the a8 Vmeet 25.9 | North Line of Lot 24 Block 2, Com 19 Bast 26.9 | munity Park Addition and South Line of 15th Street. 25.9 Carey a 12-Ft. Walk 25.0 =. sWw 25.0 25.0] 73 061 NW 2691 ‘Sidewalks sh feet E lewalks shall be five (5) 25.0) in width, exce it Fpl not 26.0)ed, of cement concrete four in- 25.0 25,0 25.0 ches thick, with four inch gra cushion according to the speci! cations now on file in the office of the ine Engineer and the City Clerk. n cor lots walks are fa be extended to adjacent cur nes, You are further notified that {f you have any objections to the above order of the City Council, yeu shall present the same in wr't- Ing to the said City Council on oF before 8 o'clock P. M, on the 19th day of May, A. D., 1924; at which time the City Council will at the Council Chamber in the City of said City to hear and de termine any and all objections. eae Sy per, W; oming, the lay of April, A. D., 19° E. W. FASSETT, Pub. April 19, 26, May. a rl , [> 1924,” Dota

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