Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 23, 1921, Page 6

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PAGE SIX & Che Casper Daily Cribune Issuel every evening except a Po og gy ounty, Wyo, Publication SINESS TELEPHONES ....-------+00-055 ivanen Teiepnone Exchange Cu Forming) Postoffice «s second class November 23. 1916. Lntered at Casper, (W: matter, MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - EAltor 5. HANWAT - Pregdent ang HaARL E. MANWAY Bastnes ete 7. H HUNTLEY E. EVANS .. THOMAS DAILY Advertising Representatives Prudden, King & Prudden, 172023 Steger Bidg., Chicago, Fifth avenuc, New York City, Giobe ae Maas. Coppies of the Daily Tribune are on fie ia ‘w York, Chicago and Bost offices and v are welcom* SUBSCKIPTION RATES By Carrer 80 Yer= . #9 Months 1% hree Months “ One Month a Per Copy ny ae $7.80 Your Ore : 96 4 for less period than 4 in advance and the t be pal Saoer’ Puelivery after eubsoriD- insure del Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B, OG) Associated Press slugively led to tee The Associated Press is exclusively entith :se for publication of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Member of the Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. ¢ or 14 any time between 6:30 and 8 o’closk p. m- mie to receive your Tribune. A paper will bo de tf you fail to recelve your mae your duty te livered to you by special messenger. r jet The Trivune know when your carrier misses you. Pe ne ET TEE SIRI THE AMERICAN THANKSGIVING. 3 the celebration of a festival that means much to the American people. For three hun- dred years the people of this land have sought out the places of worship and returned acknowledgement to the Almighty for the blessings they had enjoyed for the year closing with the harvest season. we rss 2 +e Thanksgiving is distinctly an American institution. It means a day of worship, feasting, family reunion and happiness. At its best and in accordance with its truest traditions it is a picture of an American home, plain, wholesome and inspiring. It means the coming of sons and daughters, grandchildren and relatives and friends, It means the worship of God. It means the wide open and hospitable fireside. It means a great feast of roast turkey and all the good things that can only be pre- pared in the old American home. It means all that can be crowded into a day of the plain, honest and un- affected things of life that go with God-fearing and clean citizenship. ? No one ever participated in an occasion of true ‘Thanksgiving character but felt the better and was the better for it. It will always remain the festival of the people, and never lose its quality. Time may make modifications in its observance; but there will remain the old flavor and the historic significance, ‘There will be throughout the land tomorrow much thanksgiving and happiness, for with all the dark shadows in the world picture today, there is still much for which to rejoice, just as there always has been in all of the years that have gone before. And just as the Pilgrim Fathers found in the hardships, trials and discouragements in the old Plymouth colony when they celebrated the meagre harvi and thanked God for such bounties as he had bestowed upon them. Tomorrow mark TASER Sa CELT A WONDROUS AGE. : “What marvels God hath wrought, indeed!” pious- ly quotes the Cincinnati Enquirer. “This is the won- der age of the world. Tremendous discoveries mul- tiply so rapidly that the miracle of yesterday is the commonplace fact of today. We ride through ocean depths or miles high in the impalpable ether. We hear the voices of those who have died, and project the voices of the living ovgr seas and continents. “Just a few days ago written communications were exchanged between this country and France through the medium of radio activity. The autograph letters of Premier Briand and General Pershing were flashed from Paris and in an instant they were read in Amer- ica! Photographs now may be transmitted over tele- phone and telegraph wires for reproduction at the point of reception, Pictures and messages are per- fectly clear. “Arrangements were made to have the president's Armistice day address heard simultaneously in all the capitals of Europe through radio mediumship! r “Up at. Madison, Wis., a few evenings ago the Cin- cimnati Symphony orchestra, under the leadership of Ysaye, playing before a great audience of more than two thousand people in the auditorium of the Untver- sity of Wisconsin, was heard far and wide in many other cities through amplifiers, which carried the glor- music to the ears of the delighted thousands. The music soared from the university hall to distant Min- nesota and North Dakota and other states. It was one more wonderful expression of man’s triumph over the resistant mysteries of mind and matter. What will be the end? What heights and depths of knowl- edge may yet be scaled or plumbed by the imperial intelligence of the mortal brain? Truly man is but little lower than the divine intelligence which faith and poetry tell us are the ministers of the supreme Lord of the Universe.” —_—_--o THE RECORD, A TRIUMPH. The industyial court of Kansas has attracted atten- tion the country over. It has justified its existence and its only critics have been labor agitators, I. W. W.’s and a few ultra-conservatives who believed the institution too advanced. Out of thirty-three cases that have come before it for adjudication where there have been learned counsel on both sides thirty-one cases have been accepted without appeal by both sides, thereby sustaining the court in its ruling. J This establishes a record for any court; and in mat ters where capital and labor are concerned it is an un- heard of record. The fact that both sides abided by the findings in such an array of cases is a triumph and a vindication of the particular type of court. So ao PASSING OF HELIGOLAND. “On the day General Pershing laid our congres- sional medal of honor on the grave of Britain’s un- known soldier,” says the New York Post, “news came that the inter-allied commission appointed to super- intend the demolition of the Heligoland fortifications had completed its task and that Germany's impreg- nable citade! no longer existed. “The triangular slice of precipitous limestone with hich Germany lorded it over the North sea and threatened the English fleet will resume the tranquil life it used to enjoy when nothing more than a resort for summer bathers, a haven for Danish fishing sthacks, and the home of innumerable gulls. Its tall cliffs, with their fringe of white sand and crown of lands, will attract attention only by their and not Secause th i i great 4 } engineers, will disintegrate and lose themselves at last under the buffeting of the North sea storms. But Heligoland, though it no longer deserves headlines in the newspapers, will hold a place in the minds of men whose fathers rode the North sea, winter and sum- mer, through the long years of the war. “In Norse mythology Heligoland was the reputed home of Forseti, god of justice, and tradition tells of a temple in his honor on the rock island. The old gods are gone out of men’s minds, but perhaps the shade of Forseti laughs as he visits the tumbled stones that once were his fane and then meditatively views the gups blasted in the mighty. German fortifications, the empty gun emplacements, the silent harbor.” _——_———— WHY SHOULDN'T WE. Gener: Tasker H. Bliss, with soldierly directness, assured our distinguished visitor, Marshal Foch, that if France were again attacked we would all be found contending upon the same old battlefields. There wilk be those who asked who appointed General Bliss the spokesman for the American peo- ple and how does he know this? General Bliss needs no appointment or authoriza- tion to make such a statement. He knows the Amer- ican people and what they will do under similar cir- cumstances to those of 1917-18. We all know and all agree that if our time-honored friend is wanton- ly assailed no power could keep us from her side. Had Germany's foresight been equal to her hind- sight in 1914 she would likely have taken into consid- eration the friendship of France and America and acted with more sanity. France should have the guarantee of safety she asks from the Washington conference, and if noth- ing more the American people themselves should| make it. Such an action would forever end all Ger- man ideas of future aggression. 0. WHAT CHINA DESIRES. | The Chinese delegates to the Washington confer- ence have submitted a list of eight points upon which they desire agreement either during the present ses- sion or in the future. They are: 1. Abrogation of such agreements as the Anglo- Japanese alliance and the Lansing-Ishii agreement (at least as far as the latter’s interpretation by the Japa- nese is concerned). China wants an all-Pacific “agree- ment” substituted. 2. Respect for China's territorial integrity. For customs control and postoffices instance, foreign would be abolished. 3. Freeing of Shantu: not alone from Japanese tailitary and political control, but also from economic control, Estimates of limitations upon Japan’s grasp in Manchuria. 4. Eventual abolition of extra territoriality. 5. China wants the conference to put a time on commitments now in effect, which she says outsiders a strangle hold intefinitely upon her tional resources 6. China wants to be guaranteed as a neutral in ease of future wars so that there can be no grabbing of her rights under the stress of war. 7. She particularly is anxious that a Pacific trib- unal be established so that questions not now adjusted can be settled later, and any new problems can be con- sidered. 8. China wants foreign troops removed, especial- ly Japanese claims in territories where, China says, there is no justification under any treaty or otherwise. eee THOSE WHO LIVE BY WAR. “Just now the forces and interests that live and profit by war,” observes the Philadelphia Ledger, “are dazed and reeling from the tremendous impact of the American proposals. The white-hot enthusiasm with which the world is welcoming the proposed destruc- tion of existing armadas and the ten-year building truce has cowed tae seinsh. They have bowed to the whirlwind that swept out of | Washington Saturday, ut “These proposals of America strike at jobs and ca- veers, at dividends and industrial dreams; at great 3 ts and winters on the Riviera and at mighty yards and mills and shops and at private yachts drifting un- der Caribbean moons, They will wipe out men’s fu- ture and glwindle fortunes made or in the making. In them there will be a far-reaching adjustment of many of the world’s greatest industries and the disturbance of ancient and vested interests. For these proposals will cut through one of the oldest, thickest and deep- est of the taproots of war. Carried through to their logical end, they will make old institutions and an- cient crafts no more than a song that is sung or a tale that is told. limit give na- “These vested interests and their allies will fight. If} the more impressive and powerful machinery of war at sea is to vanish it will go because the vested inter- ests of war cannot hinder its going. lay keels, forge rifles, roll armor plate and hammer out gun turrets cannot be expected to welcome the ending of their day. Nor can the men who point these guns and command these ships. “The mingled forces of reaction, selfish and unsel- fish, are many, and they are strong enough to make themselves felt. It will not be long until their coun- termines are exploded and their poison gas attacks be- gin to roll in upon the conference. In ways direct and indirect, tipped with venom and directed by greed, fear and hatred, they will take their course. “The friends of arms’ limitation, of peace and of that disarmament that is beginning to loom upon the horizon must be xeady, anxious, even eager to meet and shatter these attacks and arguments and choke these certain intrigues. It may as well be fought out now. There never was a better hour and place for the Armageddon of armaments than today in Wash- ington.” fon at ie LIVETH FOREVERMORE,. A subscriber wrote the Kansas City Star inquiring the source of the quotation used in connection with war memorials, “Their name liveth forevermore.” This afforded an opportunity to call attentiog to a lit- tle known but great piece of literature. The quotation occurs in the forty-fourth chapter of Ecclesiasticus, one of the books of the Apocrypha. The writer feels strongly the world’s debt to its lead- | The men who! €be Casper Dally Cribuns | (Our Song of Thanks (TWO ARE ADDED sity Thankful. for countless blessings/For rain, and frost, | strewn along our way: home's endearing | Por mercies numberless, we render|We thank Thee, thanks, this day. all-shelt'ring arms. |, for Thine CASPER SCHOOL Wyoming Law School Ex- Thankful for love, O God.—the Jove} Thankful are we for peace o'er all our beyond our ken:— land, this Gay; The “love that passeth knowledge.”/ Yet, Lord the world’s wild tumult we given ty Thee to men; would seek to atay; The love of Christ Thy som, who,|Wilt Thou not hear our pray’r, ana} Panding, Hopes for Affilia- counting not the cost, give the whole world peace, tion With University Lett all the joys of Heav'n, “to seek! And bid the armament of war, fdr- Law College. and save the lost.” ever, “Cease! 4 Thankful for loving hearts, who ling-|For many other joys, Thy name we er by our side; praise and bless; Thankful for dear ones “gone,” who| For strengthefor all our need, in time now with Thee abide; | of strain and stress; Thankful’ for friendship sweet, which| Thankful Thou “wilt not let us go," ‘round our pathway winds; when stray our feet: For Christian fellowshtp—the blessed | Thankful for hours with Thee in blest}ine University of Colorado {s teach- “tle that binds communion sweet. ing tort. Mr. Fates ts lege) adviser For all the season's gifts, our hearts |0 Lord ‘of Henviy. sna, Marth!” “rng [ten fon wena R ee ene een would thankful be— | name we do adore, For Spring's appealing charm, close-| For Thou hast faithful been, and witt| Sa! peo be 7) 9 pa B bg gama veiled in mystery; be overmore! A For Summer's wealth of bloom in gar-| Thou art our God; The Only One; Thy| D8KOta. Bo irctacreirekrenenee. den, tree, and Geld; | name we praise; “i For Autumn's golden days, with all|To Thee, with joyous hearts, phils fe aaa aoe fee iene thei 7 A t, - i ; heir glorious yield. ‘Song of Thanks” we raise. Tn fess titnce Sonia. Clipe, In the opinién of Mr, McCann, Cas- per is the potential metropolis of Wyoming and the rocky mountain re- gion, and for this reason the school has beon established in this city. “It is the invariable rule, MeCann, “that the graduate courses of the universities such as ‘law, medi- cine, and dentistry are attracted to the centers of industry. Although the school has been operating for only a period of a few months, the work al- accomplished is indicative of its rating. ‘The course offered is for & period of three years, and fost uni- ersities will accredit the students of the Wyoming Law school with work done in that institution, and allow thefn to take the senior year for their degree without other preparation.” ‘A board of lecturers composed of ihe best lawyers in the state are also co-operating With the faculty. Judge ©. 0. Brown, John B. Barnes, Jr., H. B. Durham, G. R. Hagens, C. D. Mur- ane, R. Hi Nichols and W. O. Wilson constitute the board It is tHe antici- pation that the Iaw school will"be re cognized and become affiliated with the college of law at the state univer. |# ‘The Wyoming Law school in Cas- per has added two more instructors to its staff. 1. H. Sennett, LL. B., graduate of. the University of Minne sota, is teaching contracts, and E. H. Foster, A. B: L., LL. B., graduate of our The Basic American Policy DANIEL WEBSTER. “It is certainly true that the just the present age, on the side of; ltberal policy of this country is, in the first]/and enlightened sentiments. The age place, a peaceful policy. No nation/is extraordinary; the spirit that actu- ever had less to expect from forcible!/ates it is peculiar and marked; and aggrandizement. ‘The mighty agents|our relation to the times we live in, which are working out our greatuess/and to the questions which interest are time, {ndustry, and the arts. Our|them, is equally marked and peculiar. augmentation is by growth, not by ac-| We are placed, by our good fortune quisition; by {nternal development, not/and the wisdom and valor of our an- by external accession. No schemes|cestors in a condition tn which we can be suggested to us 60 magnificent/can act no obscure part. Bo it for as the prospects which a sober con-' honor, or be {t for dishonor, whatever templation of our own cpndition, un-|we do is sure to attract the observa- aided by projects, uninfluenced by am-/tion of the world. As one of the free bition, fairly spreads before us. A’ states among the nations, as a great country of such vast extent, with such/and rapidly rising republic, it would varieties of soll and climate, with so|/be impossible for us, if we were so much public spirit and priyate enter-! disposed, to prevent our principles, our prise, with a population increasing so|sentiments, and our example from much beyond. former example, with| producing some effect upon the opin- capacities of improvement not only un-|ions and hones of society throughout applied or unexhausted, but even. in athe civilized world. It rests probably great measure, as yet unexplored—so! with ourselves to determine whother free in its institutions, so mild in its|the influence of these shall be salu- laws, so secure in the title St confers | te ~- ~o~>intone : school has ani enrollment of about 15 students, both. men and women. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, pes at an early date. At present the Auto —__—— ° Margin Orders We execute orders for all classes of active listed securities. Ask for our requirements on the following stocks: ‘Standard Oil of Iridiana Elk Basin Consolidated Salt Creek Producers Corp. Mountain Producers Corp. Sinclair Consolidated eneeee Liberty Bonds We buy and self‘all issues at New York Stock Exchange prices, re- ceived by\private wire. 2000eo Taylor & Clay, Inc. Ground Floor, Oil Exchange Bldg. Telephones 203-204 on every man to his own acquisitions —needs nothing but time and peace to carry it forward to-almost any point of advancement. In the next place, I take it for granted that the policy of this coun- try. springing from the nature of our government and the spirit of all our Institutions, ts, so far as it respects the interesting questions which agitate U. S. Consulates In Germany Are Opened Monday Take Yeast Vitamon Tablets To Get - Job-Winning “Pep” Easy and Economical—Results Quick. scarce sl wy ing Frolh estaba y ‘ a fe to with their pe for a short time wal tions improve. . Mcrtins VITAMON Tablets supply in highly concentrated forms (rue yeart-vitamines combined with the other health-giving wel jeveloped. Ifyou are weak. thio. down, oF fool lacking in. brain i ru 1s OF power ambi want that firm flesh “pep” which gets the money, surely need some precious vitamines in your eystem at once: Mastin's. VITAMON Fs BERLIN, Noy. 23.—(By ‘The Asso- ciated Press)—Shields of the American consular offices in Germany were set up outside the buildings Monday for, the first time since relations were broken off between Germany and the United States. The consuls are ready to carry on offigial business. The Germah government was _ re- quested to recognize 13 consuls pro- visionally, all of whom have taken up their duties. Widow of Late Railroad King Answers Call) 220¥iiiaeR-vetiesstaniasviramon | STINS : i _ as rie ; ai ges fi ; is is HS ii E Ty Tablete at all good druggists, ST. PAUL, Nov. 22.—Mrs. James J. Hilt, widow of the late James J. Hill, president of the Great Northern Ralil- way, died at her home here yesterday following a long illness. if it jisnt Art Metal files and safes are down to a pre-war basis. See a big stock of these products at The Mills company store, 139 West Second street, Caspe: Wyoming. 11-10-14-19-23. Your Christmas Gifts THE BRITISH ISLES AND EUROPE HH ers, to the men who have wrought out the fabric of civilization. In stately verse he invités his readers th the words, “Let us now praise famous men.” He ngs the praise of the artificer and workmaster, of the physician, the composer of music and others: { us now praise famous men, the Lord hath wrought great 51 Such as did bear, rule in their kingdoms, And were men renowned for their power, Giving counsel by thelr understanding, h as have brought tidings in prophesies; aders of the people by their counsel. So he celebrates the list of heroes, in very much the strain that Kipling might have used in referring to the mighty dead of England. He sume up in these noble lines: All these were honored in thelr generations, re the glory of their times. Yea, they were men of mercy, Whose righteous deeds have not been forgotten. ‘Their bodies aro buried in peace, But their name Myeth forevermore. , “Their bodies are buried in peace, but their name liveth fgrevermore!” Are there any more splendid lines in the language? 0- Senator Lodge predicts the conctusfon of the arma- WE ARE OFFERING FOR SALE Wonderful Bargains in Second- Hand Building Material ebel building is being demolished to make The way for the new Lyric Theater. Apply Charles Shoblom AT WEBEL BUILDING You Will Need the Necessities to Make the Day a ess. Roasters, all sizes, up from... 7B Percolators, up from..._......._.. tétmenen— $1.75 Community Silver, all patterns, C: pote Pi 8, Carving ina oo FD oa oa ens China and Glassware, Pyrex Baking Di Food Choppers, up ; eam Pes — $2.00 Pressure Cookers__..........__......_,$20.00 to $39.50 Butcher Knives and Knife Sharpeners. Holmes Hardware Co. Phone 601 Must Be Mailed Before December 10 The most satisfactory present you can send is one of | our foreign drafts—as your American dollar is now at a premium in Great Britain and every European country. Casper National Ban CASPER, WYO. Checking, Savings and Trust Departments ments conference by Christmas. In time to declare peace on earth and good will to men. 0- : when things are’going good, Germany threat-| ens to declare herself bankrupt. ; Investments, Safety Deposit, Foreign Banking TR RST We Would Be Very Glad To Figure On any. building or improvement you might have in mind.- If you have an idea what you would like but don’t know exactly what it will take in material, come in and give us your ideas. We will figure the bill of mate- rial and the cost. O. L.Walker Lumber Co. West Railroad Avenue Phone 240 ePPerernoeveeceeress: We would be thankful, Lord and bless;For Winter's Gift of gifts—Tfe chia ‘Trani pgm a | eee eee ore 136 East Tae te ie vetay, nat rer 7ak peas aoe Ore ores] ULEAD Sia kere ser carer mh Midwest more the same;— Crown and Fale ae | a : sepa ose taan= ope ioe Ave. and snow and : iL2p-6 i

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