Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 11, 1925, Page 6

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f } eas d PAGE SIX Che Casper Daily Trime| DB E& AANWA® By J. &. BANWAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) portoffice as second class matter, November 22 1916 and Going Some The Boston Herald of April 6 com- ments editorially on the manner in United States senator re- cently used his franking privilege to guments in favor of gov- and distribution TI ay Morning ‘Tribune | Jor *n Francisco, Octo- MBE The Associated Press ts exc all news credited tn this pa OCLATED PE entitled to the so the loca! Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. Advertising epresenist< cs 56 New Mon are on Gle in t e New York, Chica; and visitors SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Untside State single man Che Casper Daily Cridune — he negotiated the treaty between Hungary: and the United States which provided for resumption of diplomatic relations, this being the last treaty of the war I am glad,” said former Sec: te Charles E. Hughes recen’ to think that the more fundaments policies of our own government 1 for peace—not bec ye ay Aliform of organiza jof political acti jour national position . processes of res json. I know ther the cause of busi ainte | Posing as Dictators the Messrs, Scott and Morgan, members of the board of county commissioners, because they have broth formed a that the re ween themselves, get the id conducting the busine Natrona cour 8 dictators? The question arises in their attempt to say to the cow attorne hom he shall have as istants in the conduct of his office; or in other words County Attorney Weedell must Messrs, Scott and Morg d suited to their purposes These gentlemen have already discovered that A unt Attorney Lincoln Sennett made of pliable mater that is a lawyer, with profc 1 respect for his oat f office It is quite natural that men like Messers. Scott Mor gan we not be pleaser hi in Sennett. They would not be pleased with any man who would not permit public ad- ministration to be perfurmed ona plan of law evasion and law de as the records how has been ne under the assumed authority Messrs. Scott and Morgan have set up. Messrs. Scott and Morgan, if they do not know, had better learn that they are not supreme, but simply a co-ordinate branch of county government with certain fixed duties and prerogatives which e law directs them to perform and observe, That the 1 branch of the nt is similarly situated ; It is usurpation of the rank missioners to assume the role of urer, the clerk, the sheriff and all other chosen by the people with fixed r the orders of the commissioners at their own peril. And from what is publicly known of the acts of M 8. Seott and Mor. gan their requests and orders have placed, officers obeying them in jeopardy. The public is not unaware of the limitations of Messrs. Scott and Morgan even if these gentlemen ar bli nty govern for the county com 2 officers are sponsibilities and they obey deaf respecting the things. Condue public busi le lot different from herdir heep and peddling misfit clothing. This, one da Il dawn upon Messrs, Scott and It is fortunate, indeed, that the yple elected Ge Weedell county attorney, and selected Lincoln. Ser in fortunate that Mr. Wee law -enforcement and’ prosecutions. There will be no di tion to them by members of a county board of commissioners whose chief desires are to conduct county business along other than the strictest lines of legality and for privte rather than for public good. While it may be rather more than could be expected from persons of the mentality of Messrs. Sevtt and Morgan to seek improvement through study of civil government, still the suggestion is open to them, with the hope on the part of taxpayers, that benefit may ensne. Legislated Irresponsibility It is estimated that if 250,000 grade United States were bridged or tunneled a cost of $20,000. 000,000, it would eliminate only about ten per cent of all rossings in the mobile accidents as not more than this number oc cur at rail road crossings. Railroad companies are favorable to gradua elimination of ¢ dangerous g crossings but law to eliminate a fs is uot pr cost involved, which the public would have to 1 ation or railroad rates, Such s i ried on the interest of compu suran all cars to where itomobile dr’ ical, due to through tax tation is similar to t automobile liabil in the few instances financially irresponsible. sure “The whole theory of trying to prevent accidents by ex penditure of money alone, is wrong. It simply leads the care less person to be more le he theory that somebody Why uat require all vehicle tc vi grade rossings? This would great har 1 not cost the taxpayers a p< olators of 1 vou put money into the public treasury and the inte of safe oul be served. We have laws defining responsibi ¥¢ Ma riv ¢ Sobering l p : k thor vers that Englishmen are drinki far less than they did before war. In England there is no there is stead 1 unce effort on the part churel exct drinker finds } lly and other Hea thorities and ¢ ed labor ve t ested ther t f rance, The re according to the English emplo nted is that -sc briety in England ha ome tl | | Livestock and Sugar Beets sta advance er y h $16 It is a not t tates } ugar dustr are tur pulp fed P bring highest price t et. These ret uld wa agriculturists f t rops and of t great stabilizing lue of t bee gar dustr ing the quality of 1 ring bet prices It wasn't Josephus Daniel t we won the w but it was his fault that w blocking of efforts of naval off is what Bradley A Fisk, retired rear admiral, charges open) The rum fleet anchored off N York, bevond the (veby mile limit is in a state of seig overnment cutters, and other federal craft, The rum flee urrounded and it eannot reach shore, nor can its cust proach the fleet. This looks like war against smug ‘WHO'S WHO to Albania, be- g transferred |from that post to from Washington and Jefferson col- in eight diffe nt-Smith was counselor to the Vienna when # severed diplomatic relations wit World War. During the war f a time counselor to the Copenhagen, road, a mistake to with sd dest 5 | when American interests seek opp nities in, other lands, and other governments are held up as patterns the sort of governmental ‘enter rise and backing which wou success in a world of compet ; to give to impression of interf muse 1 countrie othe ples the of confidence inevitably produces. “Our policy tic that given American business Ives, It is Amer in many countries needing de is believed tha ment, bec ong American businéss m seeks for all, and I think I 1 with increasing succes } door of opportu I i ment or support of bu: pintaining this in It is a res recognized r general should. be ere are some who have an although mistaken no! that imperialistic policy, They, get politi- cal headaches from eyestrain caus ed by the effort to see what does | They imagine, for example, | not exh that they discover a government con trolled by bankers, To the banker themselves, consctous of the ind inevitable risks of their un efforts, such charges must seem to be the perfection of irony. The truth is that investment ign loans is, and must be a pri te affair. The business men America know that the id of militar s to collect debts. turally, the depart ment of & has desired informa- tion as to transactions with f re ments. While the government s not control private Investmen it has wisher in’ the interest of gen. eral peace and sound conditions of commerce, to discourage loans for unproductive purposes, and especial- ly such. as would be thought to promise the | strengthen military establishments in a world that needs more of rea son and less of arm: —_——— Marriage and Divorce) According to figures jyst made public by the Census Bureau, the number of marriages in the United | States increased 8.4 per cent from 1922 to 1923, while there was per cent increase {n the number of divorces for the same period, In 1923 there were 1,224,378 marriages and 165 The Next Battle Twenty-five elections in 1926. Ive of the cases sharp’ pri- TEENIE ec circumstances al committe use of | tion. Our method | © in preparatior is. | Co-operation é Republicans holdin, and thus sustainir president is some W no | think that our svernment does not espouse with |! sufficient ardor | ness expansion assurances of support | be| from that which x Sunshine milkman said (And shook his h 1 didn’t skim it.” That didn’t budg ow government cherishes an ough his stomach is tern Me pee n th Massachusetts state Boston was other countries. and gold mines furr nveniences which set clyilizations standards to —— Requiem Under the wide and star; Dig the grave/and let Glad. did I live and gladly dle. And I laid me down with a will, ni | he lies where he home.from sea, MORE AUTO DEATHS IN QNE YEAR THAN ENTIRE US, LOSSES in MONDAY, MAY 11, 1925 Beautiful Nonsense in society, since does not exist in nature, is no free animal. and equal” is an idle phi » of equality is less reason- than that of freedom, and ft ts une ain t 1, 1d not to seek whether ual among themselves, observes. “W hat -each on t and receive all an unfor supposes “We bh men are }Anatole Fran |}we must see to |'shall supply his t | necessaries of Ife “As t ratern! ward brothers dt | centuries. We do not. pre men ave bad. We they are bad. Th are, but they will live re will be no longer them to fight oft his own y from dread fon; it keeps akes solitude un- life and turns him ful self-exterra! ® contempla ul se hides fr utters us { imy spe of s We im steal a m Falling tion od to com enables us to ize’ th individt of the we fondly imagine th directed to our | the We Ilusory determina i endence, and us gods in our own eyes IOGE AND. AORAH HOLOTO ~~, PEAGE PROJET Blocking of New Arms Meeting Followed By New Plans. By LUDWELL DENNY (United Press Staff Correspondent.) WASHINGTON, May, 11.—Blocked in calling another Washington arms conference by the hostility of France and unsettled romp conditions, | President and Chairman Borah of the senate foreign relations ommittee, have decided to conden trate for the present thelr world peace plans on securing codification | of international laws, ft was learned here today Method now being discussed by the pfesident, Senator Borah and Secretary of State Kellogg, but no definite plan has been decided upon, Borah and Kellogg are understood to hold divergent opinions, espectally Co: court to w codification, but it is belleved they will be able to get to- gether on an administration plan ceeptable to Mr. Coolidge. Discussion has now entered on the following alternatives: 1. Support the international con. ference on law codification “whic the September meeting of the league of nations assembly 1s expected = to commission report. 2. For President Cdolige to call | codification conference at Wash |ington or The Hague, either on his own Initiative or upon request of the Inter-Parllamentary Union. meeting here next October. 3, Postponement of any such conference. pending the United States entrance wi reservations in the world court, and pending pre- Uminary codification study by ex perts, The latter p apparently will be rejected because, with Borah’s op position, there is no certainty thut the administration can lead this | count nto the world court even j with so-called Harding-Hug éservations & ei a 1849 ¢ recently. been declared Identical map by Coltimbus on hla voyage of discove Polly was the daughter of missionaries living in China. Came the revolution. Polly was captured by Chinese bani- dits and held for ransom. Her terror was indescribable until learned that the bandits were lod by a white man—a young American—one oi her ownracetowhom,shethought, ehe could turn for help. Bot she had yet to learn to what depths of degradation a white man “rn eink. The memory of those terrible days will re- main with her to her dying day. She hes written about it under the title “My Captain” «in True Story Magazine for Jone. And this is but one of 18 big features. Get the June True Story today. An oratorical gentleman, speaking: in the east, declaims that a man who ntarig where preparations are being | land, made to entertain thousands of Am | f: er pre-war and pre-probibition content, | tion, is in the grip of a land boom. Pelee, the little town down by the} Pelee Island is the largest island nd prosper beyond |in Lake Erie. About 1,000 persons all previous imaginings, the busy dock, is to grow will be of ‘hu or like Broadw Tents will house those who can't | hi find other quarters; the air will trem- | Ohio, ¥ ble with the hum of airplanes, and of that} of Ontario has | beer of pre-war cont regarding the relation of the world | call on the basis of its special jurists | Ontario Ports Preparing & For American Throngs As Pre-Dry Beer Is The arrows indicate points in 0 Ww wh om 8 edo ican “tourk seeking beer or | 'T (By Central Pr AND, Ohio, May 9.—Pe-| Buffalo. Prepar , & little spot of land in| at these and at othe and most southern terri-|on Lake Erie and L: of the Dominion of Ca from the arid land to the south, mostly farmers, live t islanders are hearing from the out-| form a isolated and pastoral com- side world, The fields wherein tobae- | munity the like of which one would co pla haye waved in previous | travel far to see on the main: summers and grapes have ripened |the south. Tobacco raising !s an im- bountifully, will be dotted with a] portant feature of agriculture there. multitude of summer cottages. Predicts Lake Monte Carlo, ‘The waters about th churned by t rying. steamers, propellers | Lakes” the sa ans for a and summer resort pre incidentally, real estate and pr y Canadian and American f values will continue to jump prodig-| Th hase ueres on South jously and without Umit. At 1 | ba the hotel casinc this is what some persons are con-|courve and everything necessa fidently predictng hold weary travelers once they A Reason With Kick. The reason { foot upon the island, is reported. eer. The province| However, Ontario authorities nd pre-pre This means 4.4 per c tion | doesn't become another Tia J A Sweet Breath at all times! After coting or smoking Wrigleys freshens the mouth and sweetens the breath - So easy to carry the little packet in your pocket! So important to have when the mouth needs cleansing and _ freshening ! Odors of din: or quickly fee aed sathat Wrigley’ is more just naturally come because nerves are soothed. throat is Many do-torsand refreshed, the stomach relieved dentists recom- and digestion aided. / mend tt. ‘after every moal” AWLINS STAGE oR Y CAR { . i} RE—$ oe uppres 2 houre’ travel between Cas . Rawline WYOMING MOTORWAY Sait Creek Transportation Company's Office TOWNSEND HOTEL PHOND 14s The UNION Label THE TRADEMARK OF GOOD WORKMANSHIP Can be used by the f firms, who employ none but Union Printers 1. The Casper Daily Tribune Oil City Printers. The Casper Herald Service-Art Printing Co. The Commercial Printing Co. Let Casper Printe Hoffhine Printing & Stationery Co r Casper . Slack-Stirrett Printing Co, | TRAIN SCHEDULES / CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN Westbound Arrives No. 603 w---~ 1:55 p.m Eastboun: Arrive: No. 622 6 teweweweennnne 6 45 p, m, 6:00 p. m. CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY Arrives pe rts =a 8:10 p.m. 8:8 | oe 6:50 Hie TO nm H 9:55 pb. m | Returned happening at Pelee Is- h is only @ short distance ndusky, Detroit, Cleveland, nd other centers of popula- so happening at Windsor, across the river from Detroit, and at St. Catherine and Hamilton, near tions are being made ‘foreign ports” ke St, Clair to ia, 18}entertain thousands of “tourists” ere, and they nd to little wharf “The Monte Carlo of the Great what it will be called by ndy | July 4, or shortly thereafter, says streets will blossom like a midway |an Ohio business man. in Los Angeles.| ‘The Pelee Island Hotel company, been incorporated at Columbus, 50,000 hotel nce, golf lized the sale of | be depended upon to see that Peles ana, nt of |such as caters to Southern: Callfor- alcohol. nia nl

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