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PAGE EIGHT. < Che Casper Daily Cribune \ fhe Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at “per, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune Building, » the job as soon as snow comes. vibe Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting WEDNESDAY, MAY 7, 1924. be Casper Daily Tribune ton. } .,. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS He has not the easy-going Taft to deal with. Wie tec pan date Estee Peat in vale. pees Curiously enough the same Francis J. Heney, }@.d also the local news published herein. of San Francisco, lugged eh the row, oper tre : < senate investigations at ‘ashington, figu: ibe ‘Casper: Dally iribune ilssued: every even ne as a Pinchot ally in the dispute with President Taft. é Pinchot wanted to dictate the Taft conser- vation policy. ae - And behind him, carrying on land prosecu- tions concerning certain infringements on the public domain, was this same Francis J. Heney. President Taft, an experienced lawyer, now. Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, thought the matter of the land prosecutions should be handled one way while Pinchot, expert forest conservationist and Tran- cis J. Heney thought the prosecutioris should be carried out according to their views. Pinchot did not carry out the fight on Taft in man fashion. Instead, being a multi-millionaire and man of leisure, he started off-to Europe to waylay President Roosevelt, who was returning from his big game hunt in Africa. Pinchot got the ear of Roosevelt and poisoned him against Wil- liam H. Taft, his old time friend, telling the colonel that his successor.in the White House was undoing all that he had accomplished by the Roosevelt conservation policy. Roosevelt came back and quarreled openly with Taft, who naturally, according to the custom of the party, desired a renomination. It was a fight of unparalleled bitterness, and ull started by Pinchot because he was not allowed to dictate the policy of the President of the United States upon a subject so important as conservation. Game Not Worth Candle The expected revenue from the radio tax is $10,000,000. The reduction of nuisance taxes on beverages, admissions, automobiles, smokers’ articles, candy, knives, dirks, daggers, etc., liv- eries, hunting, shooting. and riding garments, yachts and motor boats, carpets, rugs, etc., and jewelry, amount to $90,000,000, including beverages, $10,000,000, jewelry $10,000,000 and candy $13,000,000. Such neductions will be approved by everyone, but in the face of them what justification can there be in attempting to raise $10,000,000 on radio? The resentment that will be aroused, the difficulty of collection, and the financial in- jury to the radio industry, resulting in a cor- responding reduction of income tax revenue from that source, will make the tax futile as a revenue producer. . The shifting of the nuisance taxes from one industry to another is to be deplored. It enor- anc Cas- opposite postoftice. Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class ‘matter, November 22, 1916. Business Telephones ~..------------------} Departments. Advertising resentatives 3 . Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bite Oo cago, Ill., 28¢ Fifth Ave., New York City: Globe Hi 4 Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bldg., 65 fy ite gomery St., San Francisco, Cal, Copies of ally ‘Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago, Bost 4nd San Francleco offices and visitors are welcome, SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Qutside State One Year, Dally and Sunday One Year, Sunday Only - Siz Monthe. Daily and Sunday Three Months, Daily and Sunday --. One’ Month, Daily and Sunday One Month, Daily and Suncay --- All subscriptions must be paid in Daily Tribune will not insure delivery tion becomes one month in arrears. ICK. IF YOU DON’T GET YOUR TRU ‘ 12yoa don't find your Tribune after looking, cate: fully for ft, call 15 or 16 and it will be delivered 10 yon by special’ messenger. Register complaints fore 3} Fix the Chuck Holes Widely scattered over the payed area of the} city are many trenches cut through the paving} to permit the laying of gas and water connec- tions, and possibly for other purposes. These trenches have been filled with earth, but the filling never conforms with the surface of the paving, consequently throughout the city there are numberless jogs. which ane annoying to automobilists and expensive in the upkeep of cars. ‘All these holes should be filled and surfaced by the paving people. There is really no ex- use for the condition that exists, except negli- gence upon the part of the city or the usual procrastination on the part of the paving con-| tractors. The same situation existed last spring that exists today. The Casper public went on bump-} ing over bumps until June, when the paving com-| »ons}v multiplies the objections inherent in all pany finally found time to do the work after) such os: The only way-to eliminate nuisance complaint had been registered. | taxes is to eliminate them. There is a habit of long standing in the! matter of important street work, of spending | the spring and summer in getting ready to begin | vi after subscrip- Constitutional Rights The Supreme court, in a recent decision, held ae poate of eae a mitich: Gesine a: that the federal trade commission has not the breaking of the old habit, and wou! » to * z a : public work of this kind performed when it ig| Tight under the constitution to require acon needed, to save discomfort, inconvenience and| reasonable inspection of records. The court's de- expense to the people who ultimately pay the| cision was upon a request by the commission in bills. \ | pursuance to both a senate resolution and its Would it not be possible to have these chuck | holes looked after at once? | | records covering an entire year. «3 i} | The supreme court, in confirming the lower A a ion | a Unhappy Situati |court (Southern District of New York) in re- With the assurance of the nomination of Mr. | fusing the commission unlimited inspection of Coolidge at Cleveland, by the ate returns | records, said in part: from enough of the states to make things cer-; .)) . 2 5 tain for lim, interest has now turned to the} It is contrary to the first principles of jus- Democratic nation. tice to allow a search through all the respon- Politicians are agreed that the sudden death | dent's records, relevant or irrevalant, in the History Repeats ron into the itary | condition of Charles F. Murphy, boss of Tammany Hall,/ hope that something will turn np, * * * The hel aS gor are isla hagas ag eee right of access given by the statute is to docu- the democratic convention makes for a nev |™entary evidence— not to all documents, but to deal all around, but the Tammany influence will| such documents as are evidence. The anglogies be as strong as ever It is known that hatl/of the law do not allow the party wanting evi- Alurphy lived Be woe eh had oe eupport dence to call for all documents in order to see of Brennan an¢ art for his candidate, for} , 3 eae is s while the question of religion had come up they if they do not contain it. Some ground must felt sure enough of Al Smith’s ability as a vote| be shown for supposing that the documents getter to disregard the matter of church rela-| Called for do contain it. * * * Some evidence of tions With only Brennan and Taggart re-| the materi lity of the papers demanded must be maining and the Solid South in practically a| Produced! state of revolt it is problematical whefher or! hot the political bosses of Illinois and Indiana . will be able to put over Smith or any other can The Coolidge Character didate who bears their trade mark; it may mark Preside A : 4 chi SR ’ resident Coolidge, in character, is strong, Thee at the exon o8 Leaiore ond ies nests precisely where President Harding waa weak. 4 : agate Ney; He has been termed cold, but the coldness If Smith does not receive the nomination his j shi saat . ‘ {Aéndattn: New York Tilinois aud other sexton which chills politicians and those who want of the country will have anything but a kindly | Something for themselves is the basis of the fecling for the section of the country that| ae ly pearance motes the penis ie y id defeats af 7 | abundantly display. We thas replaced he Beith sce noe the SE en erik teas pati! | weak men whom he inherited with others who then’ the Routh, will pit im Some political | ™ asure up to the best in his cabinet, and per prophets even going'as far‘as saying that it will | sonal relations did not influence him in choos give many voters in the South the chance they| WX ‘pen. | He is relentless in’ pursuing men have been looking for, namely, to quit the Dem-| the senate strives to drag down gecretucy Mal oeratic party, more especially those who desire| jon, after faili Sudta tn cf FAG 5 ie Be hd) on, 2 r failing to sustain its char he re the benofits of a protective tariff. vuatever the/ minds it without mincing words of the limits Dainaiikte’ oe mane iitehoaee- din bs teats ot on its authority, He frankly tella where he mind and this is augmented by reports the lead-| Stmds on every public question, and he is evi. dinates bhen!.gettiug. that vase Danokente dently determined, to resume the initiative in will vote for Coolidge because they believe that| Tations with Europe, which the senate snatched with him in the White House for the next four] Sf ttomevelt the conmnan deaf eens qualities years the country will continue to prosper. The| fuage with which Wilson was ‘aiftel, hat he People, ny " be (POP UCIANE, cal sentences which carry conviction to the ud he does not move from the position akes, The: e evidences Df character in Coolidge ¢ , of the type of character that the present situa- So long as any one connected with public|tion demands. The government veered from life can recall Gifford Pinchot has been aj the true course, in one direction under Wilson, trouble maker. It was none other than hein the other under Harding, and Coolidge is the Nite created the friction between Colonel Roos-|man to bring it back. A popular mandate and evelt and President Taft in 1912, which brought) the support of a Congress where genuine major. disaster to the Republican party and placed| ity rule is restored would give him the oer Woodrow Wilson in the White House as a Dem-| that he now lacks to set the affairs of the Na- oanne Bey president and paved the way | tion in idan? and to win a place as one of our or the later Democratic victory in 1916. strong presidents. Now this same Gifford Pinchot is again try-| pads ing to bring about another Republican disaster. But the Republicans of the country seem wise | The Ides of November to his tactics, as well as are the people of Penn- | Ke sylvania and his hand has been called all around.|, The question which each congressman will And the quicker such alleged Republicans as| lve to answer to his constituents next Novem- Pinchot and LaFollette are dumped from the| Pe? 8: “Did you or did you not vote to reduce tail end of the Republican w pe taxes \ . ‘a Dage pile the better for the f the congressman can show by the record of the Reprblican ae * that he voted for the Mellon bill he will pass. And the manner of Pinchot's proceedure this | If unable to show that record he will not pass. presidential year in much the same as it was in| 1912 when he fell afonl pf President Taft, just as he has now fallen afoul of President Coolidge over the Heney matter, But Pinchot is Blessed are the pure in heart for they do not appear on the front page with the rest of up the sinners, against a different proposition now at Washing- own complaint, for mandamus to require two ‘tobacco manufacturers to permit access to their . S nerve specialist, it says that a week of absolute silence will cure any woman of nervousness. That is a perfectly safe statement to make, for it is impossible to disprove it. completion of the sixth grade. On] you are interested in reading about the other hand, Alabama and Ar-| investigations in congress. . kansas permit children to go to work with only a fourth grade edu- cation, and the rest of the solid ~The Phantom Stage Chicago Tribune. By The Faun, in New Maid—‘In the place I just left, I took things pretty easy."’ "Twas Coach crew Democratic southern states do not Old Cogk-—Well, you'll find it —— Tene aces tee SN ped See ithe! require any educational gtalifica-| quite different here. Everything is Fair Enough ‘Where the waters of old Missouri , 4 Hans arse bas Ts 47 aah Oka Jockeds dpe, She—"Yen, dear, Twill marry voit driver's seat a weird sae! I want to have nere's along winding way of yel- ee ead ba secerat Fe Pot aut passe PBA She motherinlaw today] oerattely isterstood. hetore "we, 8 "1 for the emplo; idren— iy _ low. clay * Rips tee @ demon’s blast from eight bouts per day. Ot ‘tl 30,|. “aot 20 , this marnin.’ She's | 2"¥ ages That beckons you west toward the Hell, weet He—What is that, my love?” fading day! As up tho erade to the Serpent’s| nly three are southern Democratic fajiin’ terrible slow. I do wish 2 =a And thou travelers tire bf its Tail > states. One southern state, North| she'd get well, or somethin’.” She—“Our marriage must not gumbo ‘mire r : Rocks the Phantom Stage of the|Cacrlina, permits children to be allowed to interfere in any way with worked eleven hours a day, and one hig 3 Georgia, has no ‘When the sun beats down and the| * In an article written by a famous | our friendship.” muck mounts higher, ‘ Yet as day subsides and the black “night glides ; It is here that the Phantom Stage Coach rides! ? southern state, Umitation, ‘Thirteen states, all told, have child labor laws which in every particular measure up to the standards of fed- eral laws. These states are: Ala- bama, Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Tennessee, West Virginia and Wisconsi: LINES i> and Now forty long years of bucking wild steers \ Have sharpened my eyes and quick- ened my ears, ¢ And though Hart Shugrue and his Swaying with silent thunder here stage coach crew Out from the post at old Fort Plerre,| Have been dead these twenty-one On through the night with its ghast: or two, ly mail No men of thelr clay would willingly The Phantom Stage of ‘the Dead- stay wood Trail! In the Cheyenne Gulch where they plunged that day— So that’s how I know, as the moon falls low, iJ It’s the Phantom Stage bound for westward ho! And often I've found, on my mid- night round ‘When my cows were milling on table ground, » They would snort with freight in dead of night / As if they could sense, with a sec- ond sight, Some danger“ near that baffled ear, Yet driving them wild with a blind- vigorous bodies and crispy Kellogg’s just * naturally go together. Oh, the passengers all are pallid of face And they laugh and lear with a ghost grimace, But till time and tide and the sun Find that Family trees, ing fear! shall fail ki Some say they were scared by a|Tho Phantom Stage hofds the Dead-| “uch like filled with flavor and health coyote's wail— wood Trail! se Flakes with fiz Are often * | serve with milk or cream. Very shady. “I saw a man today who had lost hundred and twenty pounds.” “What happened to him?" “His wife just secured a divorce.” Oppose Child Labor Laws The debate in the house of repre-ythe standards set by the government sentatives over the proposed con-| regulating child labor; in Arkansas, stitutional amendment authorizing |19 per cent; in Georgia, 21 per cent; congress to prohibit or regulate|in Alabama and South Carolina, 24 child labor re-emphasized the fact} per cent; in Mississipp!, 26 per cent. that the Democratic party and the|In the northern states the percent- Democratic sections of the country|age is much lower, and in the Pa- are opposed to such regulation. pibe coast pe Set aes. per cent This is in keeping with the record. | of the total child population ts em- Practically all federal legislation for | Ployed in what is classified as gain- the benefit of women and children | ft! occupation. has been enacted by Republican} The United States, when the child congresses, ‘The bulk of the opposi-|labor law was in effect, established tion to such legislation has come} minimum standards for employment from the Democratic “Solid South." } of shilesen, These included an age The first bill for a Zederal law to} Minimum, an educational minimum prevent child labor was introduced | 994 @ physical minimum, It included in 1906 by Senator Beveridge, Re-|2/s0 @ maximum number of hours publican of Indiana, and Repre-| for children to work in factories, sentative Herbert Parsons, Repub-|°@"neries, etc., and it prohobited lean of New York. Senator Lodge,| Might work for children under 16. Republican of Massachusetts, also|/t 48 interesting to compare the introduced a bill of similar char-|*t@ndards set by states with the acter. After several years of agita-| S'®dards fixed by the federal gov- tion in which Republicans took the|®'nment when theschild labor act lead, a federal child labor law was | “2% operative. ' Worse of Two Evils. No one knows better than we do that Ford jokes are out of style. But we can not resist telling just one more. Two men met on the street the other day and one asked the other what business he was engaged in, “I'm selling automobiles.” “What make?" “Well, to be perfectly frank, I'm selling Fords. But please don’t say anything about it to anyone. I wouldn't have my mother find it out for the world; she thinks I’m a boot- legger.” THE EXCHANGE FURNITURE AND HARDWARE CO. IS YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL CAMP AND FIELD EQUIPMENT A Vain Request. Polite Owner of Boarding House— ‘Could I tender you another piece of steak?” Impolite Boarder—“No, thanks. but I wish you could tender this piece you have already served me.” enacted with the provision that it Peat kd staves have laws which —— WE BUY AS should become operative December|"* the age minimum as high or] “I made abet: with my wife to- v | 1, 1917. ‘Three days before the act] isher than the federal standard. ” és JOBBERS AND CAN went into effect Utigation was start- id these, ai are Homies states ath Which won?” SELL YOU AT ed against it by mill owners in} "ve are Democratic states of the} “Say, how many do you think I WHOLESALE North Carolina. This litigation was | Sold South. have?” in the form of an injunction to pre-]| From an educational standpoint : THE ADDRESS IS vent the law from being enforced.|13 norttern states require children| She—“Do you know, Suzanne's ‘ 215 W. FIRST ST. The case was carried to the United} 0 have completed eight grades of|face reminds me of a beautifully i States supreme court, and on June|common school education before | tinted china cup.” ts THE TELEPHONE 3, 1918, that court by a decision of] -hey may obtain employment certi-]| He—‘Yes, It’s o beautiful mug.” if IS 1086 five to four declared the law uncon- stitutional. A second federal law was enacted February 24, 1919, to become effec tive April 25, 1919. This law was also contested by southern manu- facturers, and again the United States supreme court declared the | law unconstitutional. Both decisions} 4 ) : : : were based upon the general propo- } sition that congress did not have the right or the power to enact such legislation, The proposal now pend- ing before congress is to amend the Constitution so that it will give congress such power. It is interesting in this connection to note that while child labor is con- fined to no section of the country, it is at its worst in the solid Demo- atic southern States. In Tennes- see, 17 per cent of the total child population is employed contrary to ficates; two northern states require sompletion- of the seventh grade, und _nine northern states require The investigations in congress make mighty interesting reading if LEAD AND ZINC | } Another Approval PAINT | Editor Tribune:—Since I read that agnificent editorial of last week akdown or Uplift,’ I have pur- posed expressing my appreciation, in fact I have a card on my table which I wrote, but failed to mail it. Since that, however, I have observed your Willingness to assist all needing em ployment, and I want to commend you most highly for that manifesta- tion, and, to add further, express my appreciation for that editorfal on Sunda regarding the assisting the ecburches of Casper. When the press throws {ts in. fluence for such good causes, as above referred to, it will mean much fo the forces of righteousness, 7 thank you, WILLIS H. GERMANY. The V. F. W. Poppy By 919 My petals aro fashioned with infin- its care With fingers that fought with the boys Over: There In a home for disabled where day after day The hopelessly fly away. Woe %& Raynoalds Co.ln¢ Your House Painted Faster Easier and Better at Less Cost CONOMY and satisfaction in ‘ y painting a house are reckoned, not by the cost of the paint per can, but by the beauty and durability of the finished job, and by the spread... the number of square feet a given quantity of paint will cover properly. . _Devoe Lead and Zinc Housé Paint goes farthest, looks best and Assert your pride of Ownership. A well painted house is the best evidence of a man’s prosperity. 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