Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE TWO He be Casper Daily Cribune Issued every evening except Sunday at Casper. Natrone County; Wye. Publication Offices: Tribune Building LSS BUSINESS TELEPHONES-__—-.-_.-___-_--15 and if Branch Telepbone Fxchange Connecting A‘ Departments ——$—$—$—$ $5 Mutered as Casper, (Wyoming) Postoffice as second-class matter, Novernber 23, 1915. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PES REPORTS FROM UNITED PRESS . President and Editor J. & HANWAY .—_— BARL EB. HANWAY. W, H HUNTLE R. BE. EVANS —— THOMAS DAILY — Advertising Representatives at Finh Ave. New York City Steger Blds., C ne aro on file in the New tors are welcome. t be paid in advance and the sure delivery pfter subscrip in arrears. month Member of Audit Bureau of Circutstions (A. B. C.) -- associated Press 4 Press is exclusively entitled to the 1 news crediced in this paper and ishc* 1 rein Member of the Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. me between » and 5 o'cloc’s p. m. if r Tribune. A paper will be deliv- special messenger. Make it your duty to know when your cafrier misses you. <> CONTINUE THE SUCCESSFUL POLICY. Senator Francis E. Warren, now second on the list in point of service in the United States senate, has been enabled to work to the forefront in that Mody because Wyoming voters started him yocng and kept ered to you by The Tribune ative Frank W. Mondell has been able to © the top in the house of representa- e will reach the top if he remsins in the . becs Wyoming voters started him young kept him in office. This has been a policy of great wisdom on the part Wyor d has inade one 4f the least-in the erhood of states the most conspicuous and influen- tial in the nation. Let us not foolishly abandon a policy that has con- tributed so largely to our well being for any program that places us in a less advantageous position. Further let us remain old-fashioned enough to say to those who aspire to represent us in our national re- lations—you are our servants, not our masters. It must be as we desire and for the good of all of our people, not as you would or for the gratification of your personal ambition. ERIE GEL SAS AE PROFIT ABOVE PATRIOTISM. Somebody ought to call a convention of the inter- national bankers of the United States and pointvout a few pian duties and’ obligations’ incumbent “uyion them which they are disregarding. At the same time impress upon them that exploitation of their own country in the interest of some other country is not regarded as Americanism of approved character. This group of financiers, commanding almost inconceiv- able resources, were the most zealous advocates of the lecgue of nations and our membership therein. Their motives were not concerned with peace or hu- manitarianism. They were purely financial, with the world as their field of operation. Their intevest in the welfare of European and Asiatic nations has been so pronounced as to excite inquiry as to whetner or not they had any interest at all in a country nearer home, known as the United States of America, and particularly needing the undivided interest of every- one enjoying the privileges of citizenship and the protection of its flag. . 5 Recently these bankers have undertaken to float in this cou: y a large European bond issue and it is re- ported that they are about to assist in floating a huge loan for Japan. These loans are apparently without restriction as ‘to the purpose for which the money shall be used, and, therefore the. nations borrowing the same 2re at full liberty to rss that money either st their own commercial interests in rivalry United States or to continue their program ary preparedness, which of course, is also in- to the United States, There has been an in- sistent plea that the United States aid in the recon- struction of Europe. It is well that the United States ns do this, provided, it first guards its own com- mercial and industrial interest, The United Sta tes itself, faces a very critical situstion today. Many. in- dustries have suspended op on; others have cur- tailed their production, and million men are out of employment. In some lines of production there is reported to be now on hand in warehouses from one to two year’s normal output, with no apparent imme- diate s immense surplus. Holders of urally not’ go on producing and es due to deterioration while house, b ani imic 2s this, two things are vitally im- ulate domestic buying; second, for our surplus. A mo- to the thought that the sec- he greatest aid to the first. Sales goods abroad will relieve the American 2 chain of employment which will 1s to become greater buyers and con- at priées which will afford a profit ly important, therefore, i 1 transactions there be the purpose of stimulating for- ican products. dication that American money has ropean nations to develop commer- in South America. American money rectly to South American coun- them! in Europe for the purchase ich could have been procured in the . Undoubtedly if American money shall loaned tv Jupan by the flotation of her bonds in ion of that money will be st of the Japanese battleship on program, the only possible purpose of ie to the interests of the United facts which must he well known to 21 bankers whose fortunes have been upon the profits they have made in on its back and unable to pay a rect for jouns there is a great tempta- international bankers to loan ‘their funds mission of from 5 on the sale of accurities. “They ought nough to see, however, that their ane to 10 per to be 7. ucture, as well as their foundation, depends A | strength from transactions which indicate thet inter- nations! bankers of American citizenship are willing |*© Promote the welfare of other nations to the disud- vantage of the United States because they.can make, temporarily, @ somewhat larger profit. ——<— ss ____ A NOTABLE ADDRESS. Onc of the finest addresses yet delivered by Presi- dent Harding and one which the entire nation may read with prodt was spoken to the postgraduates of the American university. A synopsis is here given: “We are at the height of the annual cotamencement season -when thousands of students go out from in- stitutions all over the land and take up the tasks for which their years of study have, been preparing them. I wish 1 could impress the young men and wonten of every graduating class this year with my own acute conviction regarding the obligation of service that is placed upon them. They have been favored with the privilege of special equipment and preparation such as is vouchsafed te an all too small proportion of the people. They will not prove themeelves worthy of their peculiar good fortune or of their special respon- ibility unless they regard it as a trust to be held for the good of the whole community.” The president admonished the nation’s graduates 45) not to believe they knew it all with the possession of theirdiploma. “I have often thought that if I knew as much now as I thought I did on the: day 4 grad- uated, I would make the finest president this coun- try ever had.” The entire address is an appeal to student graduates to make service to humanity their chief aim in life, “The world and its experiences con- stitute the greater university in which all you have! yet to compiete, so far as is humanly possible, your education,” said he. “I pray you to go out to it with- out too much thought of personal rewards, of individ-| ual gains; and yet, not to thrust these considerations | entirély aside. Be generous, but do not dissipate your/| capital of knowledge and ability in aimless, useless} generosities. Hold true to those ideals which your) government and its institutions represent. We Amer- icans will best help mankind st large if we most earn- estly sustain men immediately about us.” emphasizes this call to service by saying: this month’s graduating classes to. provide far more than their numerical share of leaders for the nation in a futare pet far ahead. You will play your parts in a world In jmany ways unlike any that former gen- erations of y8ur colleagues could have anticipated. I feel that I had performed well the part that has providentially fallen to. me if I could impress upon every one who goes out this year with a diploma the thought that it is not a certificate of right to special favor and profit in the world, but rather a commission of service. Men ail about you will need the best you can give them.’* Closely intertwined with this thought of service to humanity was his exhortation to the student graduates to have faith in our countiy and its’ ideals. “Much that bas: been esteemed elemental has been swept aside,” he declared. “Almost nothing remains that we may safely think of as sacred, as secure from the attacks of the iconoclasts. It is a time in which men search their souls and assay their convictions, in which they examine the Very fundamentals of institu- tions immemorially accepted, in which no tradition may be held immune from assaults of the skeptic and the doubter, . . . Nothing remains with us that is not queried. Therefore we need for the leadership of the coming generation an open-minded willingness to tecognize the claim of the doubter, the innovator, the 2xperimenter, the would-be constructionist. But while we must give these adyenturous ones their full chance,» we must sedulously guard against the spirit of mere cynicism, the disposition to condemn all things as they are bec&tise they are not perfect, the tendency to tear down before any plan of reconstruc- tion has been prepared. The trained mind—proyjded it is not overtrainied—is the one that. thust previde the saving faculty of discrimination. The world must go forward, and not backward; and it will not go for- ward as the result of any philosophy of mere destruc- tion. . . . Interrpgation‘points have been written in the blood and suffering of countless millions at the end of a thousand statements’ of what a little time ago we deemed the very basic principles of economics, of ‘sociology, of international relationships, of public policy and human justice. . . . Let us. make our America the best place on earth in which men and women thay dwell. Let us make it an example to all others, an inspiration and a model. It has been our privilege to see this country which we iove called apon to redress the wrongs of the world, to restore the balance of civilization. We could not have played that part had we not ‘first been true to ourselves, con- ‘ident of our destiny, assured of our righteousness and of the’ power inherent in our concept of righteous- ness. Let us go on, holding fast to what, in'the great trial, has been proven good, seeking to make it bet- ter, stronger and more unselfish. Let us place a firm reliance in our destiny and let us seek to realize that destiny through unceasing effort and unfaltering de- votion.” He warned students not to put too much faith in books or academic learning—that education was something never completed. “The education that,can truly prepare for the demands of society in the time before us cannot be given merely in academic halls. The great. world outside must contribute of its prac- tical experience, its intimate knowledge, its discipline and disappointments to complete the equipment. We can learn much from books, but if we learned only from books we would learn only the wisdom of the past. Books are tremendously useful if they be made the servitors of the inquiring mind; they may be deadening and worse than useléss if they become the master of the too receptive mind. He who has learned how to use books, how to find what he requires in them and then to apply it, without the necessity of overloading his mind with unnecessary detail, is the one who has made his education‘l preparation most useful. As a mere storage warehouse for facts, be- liefs, impressfons, the human mind is an unsatisfac- y plant. It is too liable to error and too limited in its capacity. But, on the other hand, when it is used as a macerator of information, a molding, developing, forming and reforming mechanism it does its best work,” The president paid his compliments to the dem- ocracy of American educational institutions—one of the finest thing about our educational system, ‘There is, thank God, no caste system here. All kinds of ex- perience, of social background, of ancestry, of tradi- tion, of training are brought together in the melting pot of the American college or university. Neither social nor intellectual snobbery is’ likely very long to sprvive such experience. That is why education, when it is of the right sort, is the greatest leveling and democratizing influence we can find. It includes a realization of true standards, an appreciation of the fact that differences in estate and fortune are, after all, but the superficialties,of life as compared to the fundamentals of character, ambition, and determined purpose.” The conclusion implored “a dedication to common service, to human betterment, to civilization’s ad- vancement, on the part of those young people who at last must so largely direct the affairs of the country and of ‘society in the hard but very hopeful times which lie ahead.” a rates Se tc Marshal Foch will come to America in October to ington, D. C. - This offer applies strict- ly to information. The bureau can- not give advice on legal, medical and Apancial matters. It does not attempt to settle domestic troubles, nor to un- Gertake exhaustive research on any subject. Write your question and bricfly.. Give full name and ad- dress and enclose (wo cents in stampa for return postage. All replies. are sent direct to the inquires.) Q. How many of the presidents of the United States received college edu- cations?—J. W. M. A. Of the 28 presidents of the Unit- ed States, 19, ni Q. Is there any place in America where wild horses can be found—T. N. A. Wild horses are still to be found in certain parts of America, notably in Colorado, Nevada, Oregon, Idaho, New Mexico and Arizona. Q. Why doesn't all the fruit on a tree ripen at the same time? — H. |. D. A. The department of agriculture 5a. that there are several reasons why all the fruit of a tree does not ripen at the same time. In some. in- stances this will be a characteristic of certain varieties. The exposure of the sun is another factor, fruits being directly exposed ripening firs. There is also some difference in the fruit where the fruit is grown in clusters. It is Interesting to note that the cen- ter one will ripen in advance of the others. This is because it is fertilized with pollen before the others sre. Q. Why do gre speak of our ambas- sador to England as Ambassador to the Court of Saint James?—W. C. D. A. St. James’ palace was the Lon- don residence of the calvah kings! from the time of Wijliam HI>to the accession of Queen Victoria. During this period the expression “Court of St. James” came to be generally used, and fs stifl maintained as the official designation of the British court. Q. Who wrote the story about the lady who threw her clove in a lon’s den, commanding her lover to return it to her?—. 8. . A. This story hai adapted by Schitler, Leigh Hunt and Browning. tut was originally ‘told {about 1550) by Pierre Ronsard. Q. Why 4a chickens pick feathers Sees each other and eat them?—A. A. The Mepartment of agrictiiture says that chickens pick feathers from each other becouse of lack of meat or protein in their diet. Sometimes chickens are afflicted with this habit because they are kept in close con- finement. If ts necessary that chick- ens be,out in the open and} hive free range. If\ chickens. ‘persist in the habit under these conditions, tack # small piece of meat to a post where they can peck at it. Q; Is It not ttuc the ‘Third division is a six-star division?—I. M. GC, ~ ‘ A. The war department says that all important thing — taste —everything coining mint. Q—Is tic “king’s shilling” in re gard to fiction or fact?—F. Z. A.—The king's or queen's shilling, @ shilling given by a recruiting offi- cer to a recruit, until 1789 was by its acceptance considered a binding enlistment in the British army. -—-How long are the ears of a jack- N. M.A. -——A jack should measure at least 33 inches from tip to tip of ears. The poll between the ears should be nar- Tow, approximately three inches in width. pA ad "SS a The claqueurs in the Buenos Aires theaters, men and boys whose voca- tion is to create’ applatse, have de- manded the right to be unionized 1s & regular part of the theatrical pro- fession. 7 -- Lawrence has retired from her position as director of train- Ing in the Minnesota normal schqi Miss Isabel at St. Cloud after 42 years of service! sons were killed and@ four wounded during factions in the eastern part of the ‘state of Michoacan yesterday. The jclash was caused by a dispute be jtween the factions over the owner- ship of. a hill midway between the ltwo towns of Etacuaro and Villa Guadalupe. The two parties met near the hill yesterday and after a verbal dispute fell upon each other with their fists, clubs and guns. Soviet eléments in the village of Chilchota, in the same state, at- temptea yesterday to take over mu- nicipal authority, but federal troops jarrived in time to suppress the up- rising. | : } i 1 a been variously |. Velour Beauty Parlor Refinite water softener rain water. 213 0. Foods should be nourishing. That’s what they are for—to build up Strong, sturdy bodies. ‘ Calumet Baking Powder is pure in the can. It is made in the largest, cleanest, most modern Baking Powder Factories on earth —only of such ingredients as have been officially endorsed thorities. States Food Au for shampoos, as soft as Special attention to children’s Velour Beauty Parlo S. Bidg? first thing you in foode-and’ ak is purity. Cost” else is of | rsed by United VAT Vi ra BAKING POWDER BEST BY rest It’s pure in the baking. Cal- umet never fails to produce the sweetest and most palatable of nourishing foods. It has more than the ordinary leavening strength. You use less of it. That’s one reason it is the most economical of all leaveners. Another reason is—it is sold at a moderate price —you save when you buy it. be the guest of the American Legion at their Kansas City convention. | peer hE BA The discovery has becn made that cotton shirts are a whoie lot cooler and more comfortable than ones. Mr. Ruth continues ruthle glory. to pound A pound can of Calumet contains full 16 oz. Some baking powders come in 12 oz. cans instead of 16 oz. cans. sure you get a pound when you want Be it. i 5 i i j % f eli ‘7 | Fashionable Footwear that encourages . beautiful feet One's feet.can remain youthful and pretty indefinitely if shoes are al- ways chosen with proper care. Yet how quickly the wrong shoes can do lasting damage! In our summer shoes you will find the utmost comfort, as well as style, for every mode is fashioned over a correctly formed last. And we en every fitting an individual study. wissy afisfaction Saturday’s Specials Fresh Creamery Butter, per Ib. 11 Ibs. Sugar, for ae e 100 lbs. Sugar, for 1 gallon Mazola Oil __. % gallon Mazola Oil 1 quart Mazola Oil 1 pint Mazola Oil _.. fs 3 Ib. can Butternut Coffee . 8 rolls Toilet Paper No. 214 cans Silver Band No. 2 cans Early June Peas. SCA‘ 5 Ib. cans Table Berry Jams (assorted flavors) $1.30 1 gallon cans Loganberries PRESSES: — $1.2 1 gallons cans Yellow Freestone Peaches _....... 75¢ 1 gallon cans Red Pitted Cherries .. $1.35 You should buy at these prices, and save money. Yours for fair prices and service. r HI it WE DELIVER THE G GIVE US A \