Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 11, 1924, Page 6

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“I PAGE sIx. Che Casper Dailp Cribune Entered at ‘Casper (Wyoming) postcffice as second competent official that Democracy has given the state ae the et Lehn The Democrats x Vy 6 virtually concede that Roosevelt, would have over- class matter, November 22. 1916. come any other gubernatorial candidate they The Casper Dally Tribufe tssuea every evening| might have named. The public service of Tleo- Bnd The Sunday Morning Tribune every sundey: id| dore Roosevelt did not end when he left the navy Nice ree Ca php tgs atin Of tioek: eres department to lead the, Republican hosts in New Ba ee. Veee uf e York. He may have been halted, but he is not sa 15 and 18) quenched. He has a name and a necting All Business Telephune. Branch Telephon Day;| attention, therefore, must be sive: | to coal, the product, We Ht personality not Ser, foes ir 4 benea‘ ali : f chill, 5 we wn cad -. < 4 a fs sie aoe a8 . As wé crowded Ip the-shelter of HANWAY AND E. E. HANWAY f e Jancy bill, . 2 <3 * Covered with vermin and fiith and THE ASSOCIATED: PRESS Under His Own Power 2d, RS ed Press is exclusively entitled to the ise for publication of all news credited in this und also the local news published herein. Calvin Covlidge may. now be said te be run- ning under his own power. The mandate origi- nally issued to Warren G. Harding has expired. paper bi Most of us bandaged and dripping joad, . Stumbling forward, underfed, _ "must begin with the product and find what part of or inherent qual- ity, you want to Improve. The whole r to the thing in the coal that is wanted. Having found the thing onsite: & search ‘must_be made to find a way to make that coal yleld the largest Percentage of the Bayle element. Any understanding of true research Will indicate at once that the fore- going is the only correct ap) of the word to the coal Instead of followingthis Jogical and natural line of action, many of those who have discussed research tn connection with .coal. have. left to be when the Republican conven- tion at Clevelana Dad insured the Republican party. against that sort of blunder and the Democrats re- sorted to it because opposing ele- ments in the Democraue convention were hopelessly irreconcilable. In language than which there can be none, plainer; ine majority of the yoting population of the country have issued’ a mandate against the bloc system of legislative control and against goyernment by congrps- sional inquisition, against slander and vilification under. senatorial {m- munity, against congressional ham- stringing of executive judiciary, and Im faver of ordered government un- 1 of Monier of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A.'B, ©.) » 9 Advertising Representatives King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger. Bldg., 4 Sharon Bidg.. , San Francisco, Cal. Copies of the re on file in the New York, Chicago, and San Francisco offices and visitors’ ure Coolidge carried it oni with fidelity, zeal and hon- or. Now he bears one of his own—conferred by the people with a unanimity that -has not -often been approached in-our national life. Apparently President Coolidge has the greatest popular vote any American ever received. He is, therefore free to exhibit his own wares. He is not the heir-at-law of the Harding. administration, Hereafter. the Coolidge presentments will be determined by the Coolidge conscience, which is a subliminal one. : A whistl SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrer and Outside State One Year, Daily and Sunday One Year, Sunday ony ---.-. Six Morth, Daily and Sunday x e Months, Daily and Sunday onth, Daily and Sunday By Mail Inside State One Year, Daily and Sunday One Yea A croakt do} Culture fi the Honie. The twenty-Six million. American homes are being very rapidly equipped with the service and entertainment supplied by radio. The home circle made more attractive, family ties stréngth: - Deopping us there. inj ody dead fatigue, “ Death beside ug, behind, before, Tired and done ‘to our very core. Comes floating up trom Hun, ys > And a muddy figure’ thro trees, . Telis, ‘thank God for life, us needed a mea#a were sea: nd bed, ve » halt league, ‘We'stop and we dfop our packs, And follow’ them down in our muddy tracks, 2 And then a silence—d ghdstly ‘stitl} No soun 0 shot, no more yntil- ng cheer from a man that’s ni aid ras th tte the Daily ana Sunday ened, and a’ higher grade of culture for the in: Armistice. Sete Ms ween An ee orinetonk midst 3 Be paid ca dividual ‘is “being ¢stablished for the American Why do we celebrate Armistice Day, the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after sub-| people. feription becomes one month in arrears. KICK, IF YOU DON’T GET YOUR TRIBUNF If you @on't find your Tribune after lookieg care- fully for it call 15 or 16 and it will be delivered to you by special messeneer- Register compiaints before 3 o'clock: ee Now Holds Highest Rank Senator Francis E. ‘Warren, by the passing of Henry Cabot Lodge, is now the ranking member of the United States senate with a full term be. fore him. This means that by his long continuout : service, since March 4, 1895, he lias seniority aboye every other member. The next member in rank being Sena immons, Democrat of North . Carolina who came to the senate after, Senator = Warren had served one full term. = By reason of his seniority Senator Warren is entitled’ to almost anything he may choose’ in committee or senate perquisites. Even to ma- Jority leadership should he so desire, but’ leader ship is usually allotted to the chairman of for- rigy relations if the chairman of that commi Take an ordinary Sunday evening program, nd it is safe to say the average American fam- ly never listened to a finer general cultural en- tertainment. F * Broadcasting. stations. are more and more de- manding high class petformérs and many of then: render. the finest forms of high class compos}- tions. . Ordinarily on a Sunday evening there are ren- ions ‘on the piano, vocal solos, quartets and fra numbers and first elass band mus Nearly ‘every broadcasting station in’ the-coun- try is now supplying at least one complete cliurch service on Sunday and sqmetimes two or more ‘These -religious sérvices-are on broad lined by preachers of all denominations. : - Yurther improvements in radio programs are proposed by the radio corporation through super »ower broadgasting stations working in conjune. tion with local stations. search.” understa’ keep! on Journal. has been ot what * “The Sub-Grade : This. is a. road-building era. Billions are beine spent for highways. History will count our high- way systems one of our greatest works, , wanted ter fat. i f cows-until they found the one which tee is otherwise qualif: Senator Warren in} But a query presents itself. In our hurry to] naturally. would produce the lerg- has always favored | tet r ' is built, are we overlooking some funda- est quantity of milk -containing the on ntal fact i lik nd military affains, H uship. is appropria 1 to desire re-election ta “Ww congress. » enntor Warren n all probability, will ge rs which will insure’that these roads “ill-dast.-Thoughtful taxpayers will recall that mir rapid program of construction has not al- lowed for a great deal of experiment—and: one. ery important item has not received all. the at- potion it deservise. This is the road’s founda- tion. 2 4 ppropr } & present commit = tions and*he is believ that committee in the i If-leadership is de ¢ = this important post, Further way of cow, farmers @z to Senator Curiis of Kansas or Senator Borah When: a new road is considered, there is much | was but! SS of Wake talk of the surface material. Will it-be concrete | question Men. tae palais, vo) eee ge madadain, biick ‘or asphalt? It: is natural that : the surfacing material should receive first. con- The Avalanche sideration. It's what'we see—what we ride over. AS far as can be jndged inthe ealm of the week | But what about’ the road's foundation= the. «nb: after, the Repub! i party has been retained in| Stade? ‘ <-g . | what. so} control of the affairs of the United States of| Engineers: know that unstable soil, -a faulty | best kt America, for another four years, as the result] subgrade moist from water seepage, can destroy | the best of an avalanche of protest. they got It was not the avalanche of protest with which the LaFollette organization and the Democratic party lioped to deadlock the election. It was, on the contrary; an ‘avalanche of pro- test against government by blocs, balance-of- power. obstructionism, intimidation and illegal inquisition, slander and defamation. And, more than all else, it was an avalandlie of protest against political renegrades who seek and obtain mn under the false representation that they 5 are Republicans or Democrats and then pro- ceed to repudiate their party. obligations anil + connections and engage in bushwacking expedi- tions against the parties that have honored them and taken their pre-election professions: of loy- alty for granted. the. best . constructed re Is: regardless of »the surfacing material used. Especially in: northérn states, ‘fréezing and’ thawing of a ‘wet sibgrade can crack or “heave” any surface. And the settle- ment of moist sgils can. ruin’ roads. anywhere. The: highway, research’ board. of the national ressarch council is investigating the various types of roads. and this year will look chiefly nto the forms of construction devised to resist adverse* subgrade conditions. The investigation will cover several states, and will undoubtedly result in valuable findings about highway constfuction. It should be strong ly urged that the investigation cover not only the subgrades themselves, but bridges, culverts and ditches, to determiné if present. materials are correct and if présent drainage: equipment is adequate. 1% A valuable slogan for highway officials for the next few years will be “Look Under Your Roads.” Road building costs too much. to take risks..Let us be sure the fundaméhtal designs are correct. the riz! whole - st tield of! the cond! Keep an Eye on Dawes It is hardly conceivable that the vice presi- dency will subdue or repress the’ activities of Charles Gates. Dawes. He is likely to become more of a factor in the big business of the nation than was Calvin Coolidge when President Hard- ing invited his participation in cabinet affairs. It would hurt neither the executive nor the coun: try were there assurance of the fact. The men and women of America in all walks of life have extended confidence in the capacity of the -new yice president for great undertakings. His career is a bright story of accomplishment and his work gx. during the war and in later rebuilding the crump- Jed finances of his country and the world’ em- phasize the splendor. of his touch. He disposes of great matters without the accompaniment of a brass band and with a minimum of red tape. 9 is successful in politics because he scorns to play it. Protect the Worker A study of the per capita customs duties col- lected since the war is of increasing interest as showing. -how. fallacious. is. the -hue..and..cry-of “exorbitant”. American_tariff, , ‘or years after the armistice the customs “du | ties collected, in the U: nited States averaged loss, than‘one cent 'per capita per day, substantially the same-as -before-the -war,- whereas~in- “free trade” England, where the factory worker still remains unprotected, the per capita customs du- ties were more than three times the per capita duties in the United States. Under the new schedule of customs duties adopted by the United States in the latter part of 1922, the per capita dutied shave’ increased. to about, 1.4 cents per day, surely a very light tax where - the-staridards ‘of ge -and standards of living ‘are* higher thin ‘ih any other country in the. world. - te ars i Nothing is more apparent to the student of .the situation. than that the rate of growth of the great-manufacturing industries of England had for many years. before the war steadily, declined during which period like industriés in the Unit- ed States, Germany and Japan had correspond. ingly increased. Lg he people of England ‘and the United States are more’ snd, more dependent : upon» the suc: cess of ‘their manufacturing industries. Their problems of competition with cheap foreign labor are. identical. ; : : To import without restriction into either. eoun- try manufaetured products from -those countries having a degraded wage scale is to force the pay of home labor to the lowest world level. Of all those who ignore the well being of the wage earners, the importer of foreign’ manufac, tures is the worst offender. His chief interest and profit is to put in competition. with the in- dustriés of his own’ country the products'of cheap labor of the rest of the world. ~ ” : No nore serious duty rests upon the state than to provide reasonable safeguards against idle- ness and unemployment. It would seem axioma- tic that a well thought. out customs system should as its first ¢onsideration, establish the principle of so arranging tariff sehedules as best to afford protection to those of its citizens who must sup. ‘a port themselves and their families by honorable The younger Roosevelt will go far, but pos-| daily toil, to the end that reasonable standards sibly he cannot make all the grades covered by | of living may be maintained, that family say- his eminent ancestor. In New York he was re-ings may be possible, and that the welfare of all « quired to stand up against the most popular and the people may be promoted. Our Dear Professors Among the most amusing performers ip every national campaign are the college professors who every four years announce their support of the Democratic natiffional ticket as ex-Republi- cans. They have kept this up until the trick is a hit stale. Some forty New York’and New Jersey Wilson Democrats, “educators, professional and business men,” again announced their departure from the Reput i ment in behalf o: W. is during the last days of the campaign.’ Wouldn’t it be possible to furnish these quadrennial come-outers with a permanent honorable discharge from the Re- publican party so they will not be under the pain- ful necessity of leaving it every four years here- after? . i 1 ‘ i : The Badge of Bondage In the divorce court the husband complains because the wife would never wear her wedding ring. She was forever trying to conceal it from the casual glance. The woman defends herself on the plea that no slave would care to rattle his chains in public. Of course, if the ring is the badge of bondage the lady may be partly right, but the country is still heavily cluttered ith dames who are proud-to wear the tiny t—they would even sport it if it were gandy . Will Go Far We men with the sttpes of gold, Why not forget with the-world’s' old way, *, 3 ‘Those days that are past and old? eee eee Misleading Research Few English words are more mis- understood or have been more m' used than the simple~ word try. to fini; nin to! find--something,..and .to. thing worth while -has been ‘discov ered, 23 Natecch fe <I Thus speaks the -Mining-Congress Applied to industry, “its meaning containing a high percentage‘of but- hunting over the whole yarlety of argeat percentage of putter In that effort the intelligent man ingenuity ‘could sugges! self was’ soil treatment, plant epiture ‘he breeding and care. of. cattl They had to range over cow is efficient. ‘To apply research’ to coal; one “Re: It should ‘not’ ba “hafd to mi. “Search” means to ‘réséarch” ‘mMeans’to try jtrying again until some- niade clear by a statement ‘the farmers’ Nave’ done in ‘he matter of improving - the» qual- ity and quantity of roilk.. What. they was a quarttity--of milk Proper résearch, meant fat. research was to find a sure producing that Kind. of a iwent. about as far as hu- But the production of ti not the end of: r beginning. t. of Mving conditions .the of co" part imilate uality ~of*-food:-- Before hrough* with it the farm- ers were back ‘tothe. quegtidn rycen’ the right kind of x ikind~of--soll-4a,-whic plant it, and to a study the right, conditions: that seed Therefore,’ the simple ‘question producing | the -largest: Quantity of, milk with the highest percentage of butter fat comprehended, ,before the research work was finished, the could germina’ uly of, climatic <conilitions, gptture . and very. wid study in order to create tions under’ which even a ae Pra is y Stone?" 2-toh $-tom Acton Seton g . n a - Aa Ogee Tresters: 3-ton S-ton 734-ton lormance of twenty-four hours per day, (Chessie prices range trom $3300 to $5400 very truck is giving wonderful service.” neggerntri Agen as) and $4750. es 28 8 @ oa Bufialo, . Letustell you whatsilent, Pi YT Nested «vx you powerful Pierce- -THEKUMPF MOTOR CAR COMPANY CASPER, WYO, 216.West Midwest-Ave. the product alone and have turned their spy glasses upon the men who produce the product, and upon the books which those men keep. With ‘all proper deference to the sclentitic’ rentlemen, who have thus perverted he meaning of a good word, that it fs net researching coal; is re- searching the human nature in the coal industry. The product, when ft is finished, has nothing to do with coal. It has to do only with ™men-and- their conduct. ..Dhe ‘orfty (Purpose it serves {s to expose to a curious world the idigsyncracies, the shortcomings, and the bad man- agement of a number of iridividuals who label- themselves» coal ~oper- ators. ‘The curious fact fs that while the only purpose of that sort of re- search is to expose the weakness of the coal operator, these gentlemen they ever consented to do ‘It is a ‘rifle ‘mystifying. It ‘seems, how- ever, that we have about arrived at an end of that questionable experi- ment. That is. the operators are shout at the point of abandonine t-exposure and at the point wthere they are going to beein a re- search of the coal. itself. They are vaine to begin to exploit the pos- sibilities lying Inherent in the pro- duct, 'This_menns that they are go- ing to begin to search for a coal Aroduct which will be-of-use to- the neop’e and which will give the con- sumer what he wants, even as re- search {nthe dairy industry is giv- ing to the hables of the country. the ‘ind of milk they want. It is rather a wide field that the operators have thus entered upon. for ‘a time it will cost a considerable suni, without any {immediate re. turns, Just the same, every. other ‘ndustry that has researched Itself has. been amply rewarded. There coal ‘industry will profit similarly. ———————._—_. The Real Meaning And now that we have won this victory, what are we going to do with it? In language unmistakable. the electorate of the United States has voiced its disapproval ‘of the fads and: fancies and fabrications of. Rob- ert M. La Follette, Burton K. Wheel- er, Samue) Gompers, Wiliam H. Johnston, Morris Hfliquit, Eugene v. why; Zinoviet and the rest. thereof. It has voleed its lack of confidence in apolitical party of. dual -person- such THROUGH AGES Centuries Norse- Betaaal Seung * brings, 5 to. the same vital- nourishment that eeabled od have consented to expend consid: erable sums of money on that under- taking of doubtful value. » Just why is evéry reason to belleve that | der the law and the Constitution. The Republican. party, victor in the fight for executive control, in a position to achieve victory in the fight for legislative “dominance, can have no excuse now for a stand of tolerahce tither toward renegades or toward pussyfooting pirants for leadership who seek to gain ground for theniselves by ciliation toward insurgency party disloyalty. he rank and file bave shown their disapproval of that sort of thing. The electorate has demonstrated its support of up- standing, militant Republican lead- ers and its confidence in Republican fundamentals and courageous advo- cates and defenders thereof. The election result Tuesday, No- vember 4, 1924, means that the rad- fealism which Senator La Follette hoped to crystallize mto a single movement for his personal aggran- disement was dealt a crushing blow, verhaps that the La Follette hopes and purposes have been nipped ‘in the bud. It means that the Dem- ocratic party has met the same fate that befel the so-called liberal party of England, poetic justice for its coalition with ‘the radi 4 The English liberals, so-called, made pos- sible the brief regime of the soclal- {st government. headec vy Ramsay MacDonald. But in the’ election that camo, inevitably, in the wake l | ! Yes, the Hudson Coach _ has. been reduced in For Renit ‘Basement Room, 12x24, in the heart of the downtown section, Call 467-5 tion because in Picking up, DENVER Twelfth Ave. and Acoma ‘In a recent letter the Pennsylvania Trane portation Co) said, “We ton Pierce- Arrow trucks. eider the life of these trucks which are being - given extravedinarily hard tasge? Two of oot trucks were purchased in 1919. Both have gone over 150,000 miles.” ~ We do not know the answer to this ques- tracks built in 1.91 I are still rendering profitable : ’ The of the lvaniaT: octet abortions Sid car int tee during the night. The trucks Bho ani Ss dhemthe oper dope Arrow trucksareé doing in yourline of business. twelve 5- ‘hat do you con- of the first Pierce- Arrow is and travel 104 miles are constantly of MacDonald's factures, the Mberal party was all but annihilated. What strength the radicals under La Fol- lette had was made ‘possible by the Democraticyparty. The Democrats sowed the wind, and .what they reaped was the whirlwind, ‘4 fie So: Sal tares NEW YORK, Nov. 1i—The joint meeting of the two major baseball leagues will be held here next month A certaih\ Mary Lovering »Hol- man writes to the Boston Herald to'say that she caanot under- stand why there should be oppo- sition to the propésal to give congress the power to Hmit, reg- ulate and prohibit the labor of persons under eighteen years of age. “I have always understood,” she says, “that the Federal Gov- ernment was ourselves meeting, by those we sent to represent us, to conéider what was best for the whole country. Then why fear?” She also aske, “Has the whole country less sense than the State of Massachusetts?” Yes, Mary, we fear it has less sense when it comes to dea’ing with Uberties, rights «and “othtr constitutionally reserved affairs of the people of Massachusetts. In the matter of education, for instance, we should say that Massachusetts would have more sense regarding its own educa- tional methods than all the other States put together; also, that they would have more sense re- garding their own educational methods than Massachustts might have. Yet education - is “best for the who'e count We should also say that Massachn- setts would have more sense in regulating traffic on its own highways than all the States west of the Mississippi might have and yet regulation of traffic on the highways is undoultedly “best for the whole country." It does not follow that because something is best for the whole country it is best to give Con- gress the power to look after it or, rather, to pretend to lock af- ter if. If such a thing followed, Mary, you may be quite sure that those who spent several months making the Constitution would not have been so careful to limit the power of Congress to those things which it alone could safely do for national ends, so careful to reserve to the States duties that they alone can effec- tively discharge and so careful to reserve to the people those richts that no democratic government can safely take away. As _ re- gards certain things it 1s more important to Massachusetts what Massachusetts people think than what the Senators and Represen- tatives of Nevada think. Yet these things may be best for the whole ‘country. It is doubtless and ~ unfortu- nately true that this lady's lack of understanding 1s not unique. Presumably there are others, both men and women, who cannot see why Congress should not be given pdwer to do anything that at any time in any circumstances it happened to consider best for the country or that some lobby. ing group or organization might force on Congress. Apparently TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1924, in the rooms where the national league was organized fifty years ago. Se Lickling. Throat - aren nmicts Sooet worse when it afflicts night. You gay stop it quickly wig CHA RLAIN ‘COUGH | Every user is a DY MISUNDERSTANDING “CHILD” LABOR they have not so studied our form of government, designed to func. tion sucessfully over a_ great territory with people of different points of view, as to master the distinction between the reserved powers of the people and those delegated for national only, ence between that motes -the enterprise, purposes In relation to public wel. fare they fail to see the differ. which pro. self-rel!- ance and good judgment of the individual citizen and that which subjects him to a bureaucratic Paternalism assuming the right to Imit, regulate and prohibi dividual enterprise and to smo er the virtue Leaving the question, there are certain liberty and rights out they fail to see things which onty local authority can manage effectively; things that cannot be managed effectively tice by a changing thority which is farmed out to a or with jus- political ‘au- money spending bureau that. if it functions at all in sition. must function in a general inqut- such affairs, The same argument that fs ap- plied in behalf of giving the Fed- eral Umit, labo as might regulate and apply to whole that Massachusetts country. are Government the power to prohibit the ot seventeen years old boys, st for the whole country,” anything anyone considered best Many are best for the people of ulso best for for the things all the people in the country, but really that is no reason why Massachusetts shou'd surrender its authority to a bureau tn Washington. To wet down to fundamentals, this theory of giving the Federal Government the power to do any- thing on “best for straight tution and form of soctaliem adapted to tt. the sistent party In the now. It labor they are for the the theory that cofintry” away from straight that The Socialist party comes near being the most is united on and when Berger and. its leaders say that they are for thy prohibiting» amendment be- cause it is socialistic it is leads our Consti- * toward a is - not con- country just socialism. other and . that amendment to abolish the authority cf the Su- preme court as an interprete~ of the Constitution, they are :0" per cent consistent. The propa: sals are theirs and they know what they are adott. Unfor- tunately, some good people like the 'ady we have quoted are lens acquainted with abouts.—Springtield fon, In 1900, we their where- Mass.) Un-l had 3° Bureaus, Annual Cost, $820,000. BY FARMERS’ STATES RIGHTS’ LEAGUE, Incorporated Adv. LIBERTY PHONES 983 FOR CARS RATES $7.00 TO $20.00 Inquire at GARAGE AND ANNEX 428-414 South Elm St. ANP 2303 THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER ¢0, Everything in Building Material RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS Distributors of KONSET Three-Day Cementing Process for Oil Weils. Office and Yard—First and Cente ga” V3™ Phone 2300 and 62 Sts. JOIN THE AMERICAN LEGION NOW COLORADO SPRINGS 121 East Bijou f | No. 32 TR Westbound 603 __ Yo. 613 ‘CHICAGO, I stbound 2 Ea: ON & QUINCY Arrives eIN, SCHEDULES Departs 1:50 p.m. Departs 6:00 ». m. rts 310 a.m.

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