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Ons PAGE SIX Che Casper Daily Tribune By J B HANWAY AND E& E HANWAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) oostoffice as second class matter, November 22 e every Sunday at Casper Business Telephones —~- os - Branch Telephone Exchange Conn: MEMBER Member of 1916 Wyoming &. Opposite postoftice. Aqvertising (epresentatives King & Prudden. York City: Globe Bidg Be San branc! New York. Chicago, Bo: $5 New Mo: By One Year, Daily and Sunday Six Months, Daily and Sunday Three Months, Daily One Month, Dall Year By Mail Inside State One Year, D: and Sunday .. Six Months, Dally and Sunday Three Monhts Daily and Su One Month Dally and Sunday unday Only fons must be paid tn adva: ery after eubseri KICK, LF YOU DONT GET If you don’t find ind your Tribune after and it will be delivered to you b betc 1720-33 Steger Bidg. co, Cal ecting All 4 THE ASSUCIATED PRESS The Associated Press ts exclusively entitled to the use for publication of al} news credited in this paper and also the loca! news published herein. Depa: Chicago, and the Dally Tribu becomes one month in errears. YOUR TRIBUN g caref, + Daily Tribune tssued every evening and The Sunday ‘Morning Publication offices: Tribune riments Aust Gureau of Circulation (A. GB. Co UL, 286 Fifth Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bldg. Coptes of the Daily Tribune on and San Francisco offices and visitors are welsome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES arrier and Qutside State for {t call 15 or 16 Register complaints Government Has Lost Lverybody, who has followed the suit of the government to apot Dome entered into with the Mam- company, occupying the attention of the federal court at Cheyenne for the past two weeks or more is of the lost. Not because it was not iled utterly to establish any one of its contentions upon which the case was based. the court before which it was trie€ demanded something more cancel the lease of T moth Oil opinion that the government has ably represented but because it fa than suspicion and rumor built up by a senatorial scandal club operating in the interest of the Democratic party. The case will close about Wednesday of this week or as soon as argument by counsel for both prompt decision by the court is expected. The termination of Mammoth Oi] company, with author. ity to go ahead with deyelopment and production means .more to Casper and Natrona county than almost anything else that *. Sinclair, with un- nd persecution ended will go ahead with his usnal erted.oil field into a hive of industry. The people will welcome a court decision in fayor this suitin favor of the could befall. It means exactly t certainty vigor and turn the now idle and of the & mmoth Oil company. des Germany's New Day Germany is in for a totally new experience—a presidential election. On April to choose a su before voted for temporary presi¢ 1 that political conditions it undesirable and Ebert's term was extended through the present year. Just what will happen at this juncture is not predictable. There are seven major political parties and many minor ones, There are dozens of prospective candidates, rangin, am must be a new election. rality is declared ele thing approachin, the midst of the political conft many today it is impossible to se and group themselves, or which ¢ It is an open bet Good Lawyers Rejection by the senate of the nomination of Charles B. Warren to be attorney general of the United States is not cal, culated to enliven the hopes of citizens who wish’to see first- class men in government posts. The only ch been attorney for He had been emy In the min 1s, able to hire t all—the United § senate, is represented by t selves Republic Warren was ¢ their votes th poration. It v Democrats cared only to stick a pin into the If these minds are to prevail and this rule ndi sugar corporation } the voters will go to the polls essor to Freidrich Ebert. Germans have never i president, Ebert himself having been elected nt by the constituent assembly of Weimar in 1919. There should haye been an election in 1921, but it was ion which cha © just how the y shstag election. In pterizes Ger- arties divide ate has the best chance. ides is concluded. A and attempt from Hohenzollerns to red communists. Under the law the winning candidates must have jority of the popular vote; if there is no majority there in which the candidate receiving a plu- ted., No one party has ever polled any- a majority vote in a R brought against Warren was that, he had Nothing was brought against his integrity, his ability, or his standing as a lawyer. d by big concerns, that was all. of unprejudiced persons the fact that big ie best of service, employed Warren ited in favor of his employment by the biggest concern of ec. But to that type of mind which, in the at group of senators who call them- is but fight the Republican administration, mned because he had been employed by a cor- t rejected his nomination. The administration. 8 to govern, we shall henceforth be restricted in our choice of attorneys gen eral to mer uous enou, poration. Ir hire the best lawyers they can get. Borah Consistency LaF e-Democ yintment f responsibility v ate a coalitiox attor « ity ground that they th the president! that they nation with the greatest care, pointee should be confirmed until his record had been minutely whose ability and integrity has never been conspi h to attract the notice and employment of « that case the legal interests of the United will have to worry along in the hands of mediocre attorneys general, But you may be sure the corporations will continue at to which con general based shared an equal should inyesti nd that no ap- examined. Yet without any investigation whatsoever and with some who probably never heard of his name til the few days this combination accepted John G. Sargent for this great office. The president now has as the head of the depart ment of Justice service red eral of the pre a man who knows him who can render any 1 Mr. Sargent is not only th . gen- by its unanimous ion. * Bryan's Idea Democratic v n 1928 by means of a coalition of the south and west is predicted by Charles W. Bryan, defeated candidate for vice pre who juently last year pre dicted Democratic victory in 1924, He proposes party reorgan ization along govert t ownership lines to a certain extent. He advocated inflation, repeal of present tariff law and of the Escl-Cummins roa | He would apply government pwnership to light, heat, power and fuel, and would seek i cultural support rather th finance Lhe Stinger Stung There ch to provoke smil the neat turn the treas- ury department has made in ting on the rulgs postulated by the Couzens committee in describing what it says is the cor. thod of ning the proper amount of income tax hat a concern, corporation, firm or individual should pay to satisfy all legal income tax claims of the government. It mittee’s suggestion is the contention of the t that Senator © cting on uzens and others who sold the com their shares in the Ford Motor company to Mr. Ford, when the latter bought out all minority stockholders which matter and by doing that escape entations to the rts in th r ft government er income tax legally assessable because of tetually ma rep ntrary to the d paylig the prop he transaction, 15 and 16 ne will not And last Che Casper Daily Senator Couzens says that the action of the treasury is an endeavor to punish him because he has sought to show that the Anaconda and AGWI corporations had feen permitted to escape a portion of the levy legally assessable against them. Even if his contention be true, if he has any sense of logic, he must admit that in his own case the government has a still stronger claim for unpaid tax money than in that of either the Anaconda or the AGWI, seeing that it is dealing with an actual sale of property for a price, in cash, which serves to definitely clinch the government’s contention that it has been deprived of a very large amount of tax money prop- erly due it. The average man can afford to look on complacently while this row over income tax returns goes on. From it will doubtless come much that is enlightening. Already much that is amusing and entertaining has resulted. It now appears that Senator Couzens is in a fair way to experience what befell the boy who tried to milk the mule, thinking that it was the red heifer. When the stitches had been taken in his torn face and the bones liad been set he asked the doctor if he would ever look as well as former No,” was the answer, “but you'll know a blamed sight more, Again, Mr. Borah Borah of the Borah-LaFollette-Democratic coalition that has been hampering the president by every means in its power now announces that he will fight the pregident’s world court proposal when congress reconvenes in December. He says the United States should join no court that was not divorced from the league. Railway Net Railway net income of $988,598,000 in 1924 means a net purchasing power of 3.09 per cent on the $22,400,000,000 in- vestment in the roads. Although the net returns of the roads- was 4.41 per cent on the twenty-odd billions of capital invest- ment, this ‘net actually shrinks when paid in dollars to 3.09 per cent, based on a seventy per cent purchasing power of the present dollar. Reached Minimum Senator Reed Smoot of the senate finance committee ad- mits that the appropriations are now as low as they are likely to be, and that increases in expenditure will be forced by in- rreased activities of the government. He said that the $3,936.- 277 appropriations made by the session of congress just closed, the second session of the sixty-eighth congress, are the least under which the country can be run. Not at Home Certain senators who yoted against the president are thinking about how welcome they will be at the White House during the next four years. Senators usually have many favors to ask of a president which mean much to them and they are being told that they can hardly expect to get anything from him henceforth. CROSSWORD PUZZLE Go back to biblical history and mythical] lore to discover two of the words in this puzzle. It may be Neptune, that's meant for 55 horizontal, but a word of five letters {s called for. What can it be? B | VERTICAL 1, ee Light silk. fabric. é cine 2, To pay another's expenses as , long handl an expression of friendship. 12, Mistake. 3. Conjunction. 14. Made of oat straw or stem. du). The egea of fal 15. Point betwe | 5. Units of work or energ Europe. | To strike an attitude 16. One who speaks al of! 3° To dine. his own affatre 9. Preposition of place Diminutive er 0. To abate To obstruc 11, ‘Traps Pointed tower. 113, To mix. 7. To give access. }18. Angers. 21. A Umited amount Hallucination Muskinelon. Lightly a short time. | which pikes What your food ts baked ir . 47. To crack a whip. | 46 50, Evening. } a 51. Precious stone. \ me. | | To ¢ summoning forth. n Cape Good Hop hing upon wh 1 is cooked. fa ar is cocked NAM a Late Photo | 57. A mon order of Jews ond century B.C | 58. Topmost. | | PUZZLE SOLUTION Answer to Yesterday's Purzlo Lt. Col. James Fechet Promoted to the rank ot appointed Mitehet! as to succeed G chief of the losers are outside. | down without a glance: Cribune - France and Silk Worms The silk worm industry, long a classic occupation of the French, {s gradually regaining, the’ ground it lost during the war. The number of people in France engaged in ~cul- tivating the slik worm rose from 60,755 in 1923. to 75,168 in 1924, while the volume of eggs produced in: creased during the same period from 71,814 lots of twenty-five grammes each to 84,056 lots, In 1913, ;the year before the war, when fashion everywhere was at a’ premium, the average eelling price of these eggs was 8.59 francs per lot.) Last year it was 22.48 francs. 4 This impressive gain: is not with- out a meaning. It indicates, first, @ return to stability upon the part of domestic French industry, and second, a rising demand upon the Part of all nations for luxury and style. In the output of such com- modities may-generally be read the state of confidence and prosperity throughout the world. That the call should be sufficient to warrant, in one year, the additional employment of 15,414 men and women, while the price of their labor rose simul- taneously to the highest point on record, constitutes a proof of re- turning prosperity. rywhere. Paralyzing the League The effect of Austen Chamber- lain's speech at Genevs. is described as “stunning.” The best minds of the League are sald to be somewhat dazed by the British pronouncement of what appears to be a new and dis- tinctly hostile attitude toward. tho League. That Mr, Chamberlain would re- ject the famous peace protocol was an open secret, and there was noth- ing particularly shocking or stun- ning in this part of his announce- ment. But he went beyond this for- mality and proceeded to read the riot act to the League, questioning the verv pri ples on which the covenant was based and calling for a revision of these fundamental ar- ticles of, the political faith of the internationalists. For one thing, England practically udiates the League's | favorite weapon, “economic. sanctions,” {n other words, the commercial block- that rolled from the Ups of Senator Borah, for example, in justification of the cheap spite vented against the president. The admifrable brains of the gentleman’ from Idaho have been used for the worse cause upon a plenty of earller occasions. We doubt if they have ever unlimbered in a more patently absurd one. “The country has been w Mr. Coolidge from the start of the co: S| him | troversy. It is joining with now in his little joke on the se —that incidentally promises to y the nation a high-minded and ruggec attorney general, who will pay ex- actly as much attention to a of the United States as he d “A sense of humor is an exc thing for a’president of the United States to. possess, One might be prescribed for the Democratic party as a eure cure for most of its all ments. The possession of one might even make a useful public servant out of Senator Borah.” MONDAY, MARCH 23, 1925 ee eS nara with the proposed new bridge across the Shoshone river on the state high- way, two miles north of the city limits. This bridge is expected to be a permanent structure and will cost approximately $75,000. Bids on the construction work ‘will be considered by the state highway department on March 27. The highway comm! were acconiparied on their visit here by J. C. Underwood, pres! of the farm loan board. Representatives of several con- tracting firms have been here dur- ing the past week, looking over the proposed project and making esti- s he cost of the work PRES, COOLIDGE VIEWS SENATE GHT AT END Issue Not to Be Car- ried Before People In Addresses. By DALE VAN EVERY (United Press Staff Corespondent.) WASHINGTON, March 23.—Prest- dent Coolidge regards his recent controversy with the eenate in which his efforts to make Charles Beecher Warren of Michigan attor- ney general were defeated as a closed issue. Though urged by some of his ad- visers to take the question to th people tn a number of speeches du ing the summer in an,endeavor to arouse militant popular support of his stand against the senate Mr. Coolidge has decided to let the mat- ter drop. However, he 1s firmly ade by which the League hoped to enforce {ts rule. A blockade, Mr. Chamberlain observes, may hurt the nations that use {t more than the offending nation, particularly if the latter {s self-sustaining and cannot arved into submission, This {= viously true with respect to coun- tries like Russia and the United States. If England were to attempt a trade boycott of the United States no doubt England, dependent-on free international trade, would suffer more than this country. Regarding the threat of League action against “aggressors,” Mr. Chamberlain remarks significantly that “aggression” may be the result of “cruel misgovernment” or “of an {ll-drawn frontier.” Where are these ‘ill-drawn fron- tiers, and where {s “cruel misgov- ernment” going on? Does England mean that the map revised at Ver- sailles contains blunders calling for further revision? If the eastern and western fron- tiers of Germany are in the back of Mr. Chamberlain's mind, and if the British plan other changes, then the league might well be “stunned.” Its chief function, up to this time, has been to insure the status quo. The league {s made up of nations who gained by the warewhile the Any proposed changes naturally will be resisted by the untted efforts of the lea: members, and if Great Britain tends to work for a revision of the Continental map, she has come to the parting of the ways with the league. — ~~ Joke on Senate “Tt is as well the conflict between the president and the senate ended in a jJoke—and a “joke at the ‘ex- pense of the senate” says the New York Herald-Tribune. Such an impasse as that over Mr. Warren holds no good for the business of the natfon, which depends upon the cooperation of all three branches of government for its successful con- duct. ~The sooner the haughty and ridiculous obstructionists of the up- per chamber perceive their situation and begin to nibble at their humble ple the better. “Nothing could have made them look so ridiculous as the contrast between thelr treatm of Mr. Warren and of Mr. Sar t. They examined the former by all the mic- roscopie tests known science and rejected 1 politic was not the right tin tion-baiting progr e gent, of Ludlow, Vt cover after {t was too late tt new attorney general was bo’ corporation attorney and a wet, thoroughgoing chip of Verz granite. a mont convinced that the president should have full responsibility for the selec- tion of his own cabinet and feels that thfs principle was in no way denied by the senate’s victory in the one instance. President Coolidge belleves the conflict his administration waged with the senate was nearer a draw than the result indicated. The senate twice rejected Warren and forced the White House to name an- other man. So far {t was a pronounced senate victory. But the administration is now be- ginning to see a silver ning to the cloud. The White House believes the senate lost and the president gained popular approval by the re- jection of Warren. Administration leaders have been convinced that popular sentiment. was with the president. ‘ ae NEW BRIDGE ACROS OHOGHONE IVER 10 BE BUILT THIS YEAR LOVELL, Wyo., Mareh 2: L. E. Laird, S. J. Conwell and State Treas- urer John M. Snyder, members of the state highway commission, were in this city on matters connected 4 ee o At last a woman has reached ti Supreme Court. Miss Dorothy Straus, New York, sitting in th high court accounting proceedings is the first ever.to be given powei to hear and determine the result is pathetic constituti think of the solemn arguments of su MOTHER:- Fletcher’s Cas- toria is a pleasant, harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- goric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, especially prepared for Infants in’ arms\ and Child To avoid fons, always look for tk Proven directions on each package ren all ages, Daddy fost without it!” Officials Of MOSCOW, dispatch says five soviet government airplane flying t chum caught fire in mi? alr and crashed. Try the tourist tent. “Our supply of Wrigleys is running low ~ so please bring: us some more Wrigleys, We'd he Pass it around after every meal Give the family the benefit of this aid to digestion. It cleanses. the teeth, too. Keep it always in the house. Soviet Killed In Air Crash 23.—A Reuter eee NOE March als were killed when a military from Tiflis to Su- ———— 2 for 1 Store for, yous tory. force in Colorado. | | Westbound CASPER TO R CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 9:30 a Saves you appro. he Pk and ye ult Creek Transporta TOWNSEND HOTEL There’s Big Business in Selling Life Insurance! ARE YOU AMBITIOUS? Good, live, hustling men’ can better themselves by becoming PART TIME or full time agents for the Northwest- ern Mutual Life in the Casper terri- Previous experience is neither neces- sary nor desirable.. Intensive training | course FREE to all those accepting a A little extra time after working hours will fit you for this profitable business of selling North- western Mutual Life Insurance which has over $40,000,000 insurance in We have two or three agencies open in the Casper district. particulars, address Jesse M. Wheelock, Gen. Agt. 1437 Champa Street Denver, Colorado TRAIN SCHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN Ar ives Departs 1:05 p.m, 2:10 p m. Arrives Departs 645 p. m, 6:00 p. m, CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY Neuseaee Arrives Departs Noe nes 4:00 p. m - want tewewnnnnnee- 8:10 p. m :3 Westbound _ Arrives Dea enwnee---- 6:50 a. m. 7:10 a m AW M Aimately 12 hours travel bet wee! awling WYOMING MOTORWAY z For further 9:55 p.m. LINS STAGE FAR $12.50 nN Casper Company's Office PHONE 144