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Pare epee Casper Daily Cribune "at per (Wyoining) postcffice as second umber 22. 1916. «sper Daiiy Tribune issued every evening 2d. Morning Tribune every Sunday, at ing. Publication offices: Tribune Bulid- asipess Telephurre,/ ++. a = 15 and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments J. E. HANWAY. AND B. B. HANWAY MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is eaigusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. ———————— Member ‘of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) Advertis! ntatives King a. Brudden, 1720-23 ‘Steger Bids., Chicago, TL, 286 Fitth Ave., New York City: Gobe Bldg., Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon B:dg., 55 New M ery San Francisco, Cal. Copies of the y Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago, ‘on and San Francisco offices and visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrer and Outside State One! Year, Daily and Sunday Three Months, Dat'y and Sunday One Month, Daily and Sunday Per One One Six Months, Daily Three Months, Daily and Sunda: One Month, Daily ard Sunday - All subscriptions must be pi the Daily Tribune will not insure an delivery after sub- 50; Among all people thanksgiving days have al- their trade and have worked at it for forty. He drifts into a newspaper office occasionally, and tells the editor and reporters they should do, what sort of news they should print, how they should print it. Of course he has never.done newspaper work: But he’s an expert just the same. ‘ He tells his wife how to run her part of the housework. He is an expert adviser the subject of cooking, though the only he ever tries to cook either burn or fall Mat. He knows just where President Coolidge errs In his mé¢ssages to Congress. He could back prosperity to the nations of Europe if only had the sense to ask his advice. He has pet plan to. regulate traffic that would elim!- nate accidents. In fact this paragon of wisdom is‘a great success at everything. He admit it. \ The curious part of it all, however, is that he so infrequently, succeeds in doing much of anything for himself or his family. He is so deeply interested in giving expert advice and criticism on the big affairs that he has little time to devote to the business of making a good living. ‘ The First Thank§giving As the American Thanksgoiving day yolls round again, one thinks of the significance of that occasion in the early days of our land. ways been, but the American annual gelebration is unique. There loom up beside visions of fat savory turkeys and tempting mince pies, the pictures of harvest gatherings in the days when who Ee loom in Casper this’ @he Canvet Daily Eridune | Thankegiving in 1621 | just, what | our nervest delng gotten in, SUGGESTIONS FOR SOLVING CROSS-WORD PUZZLES Start out by filling in the words of which you feei reasonably CROSS-WORD PUZZLE re £: ay fit “without intrinsic value." oe His proposal is simply that, the states agree to stop issuing tax- exempt securities if the federal gov- it will agree not to levy in- heritance a The Sexi out of this: preposal might Se involved in technical diffi- culties and delays. But surely tf a satisfactory understanding could: be reached to this effect, and the prin- ciple straightway applied in practice at the state capitals ahd at Wash- ington, it would be a fine thing for all concerned. The fundamental evil of exempting from taxation ‘a large and growing class of investments would stop. The federal government could go: ahead with its established policy of raising the bulk of its incqme from taxes on corporate and personal incomes, The states would have the inheritance tax as a special and permanent re- source for raising necessary income and lintiting great estates, while free to tax incomes or mot, as they pleased. DINE INTERNATIONAL SYNDICATE. giving up anything of __ > WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1924 others “wou! have them closely joined» to their denominational are-important, on them depends.the future of the American church. , Martin Luther Theological Seminary, Lincoin, Neb. oo * Electoral College | . Phe provisions of the constitution and the statutes regulating the sub- Ject_of presidential electors provide that the electors of each state meet at their respective state capitals on the first Wednesday in December and then and there cast and record their electoral vote. The returns of the ballots s0 cast are sent to the president of the senate, where they are opened, canvassed and tabulated and the result officially declared. Pastors ris melts The Coolidge wisdom and )%y dence, conservative and quiet, have beeome for the time being the ac. cepted model for the people's imita. tion and co-operation.—Troy Times. <> 1 America under the Coolidge regime has not gone and will not ‘go, intel. lectually, morally, spiritually or any other way, to the dogs.—Providence Journal. ecription becomes one month in arrears. the Pilgrim fathers instituted the holiday as sure. These will give you a clue to other words them, —-+ ++ “\ ror ignifvi of i ‘ id they in turn to still others. A letter belongs in white aaa ~ = 71 oN a holy day, signifying their appreciation of the] “yet us help all thi who help, ant Cee oe oN WHbune after lorkieg care-| blessings which America afforded. As early! neip ‘all'thoss who need Top. ka space, words starting at the numbered squares and either Seminary Problems fully for it call 15 or 16 and It will be delivered to you] as 1621, when Governor Bradford sent forth | ye did it unto the least of these! y . sg by special messenger, Register complaints before 8/ men to procure gamé that the New England| There are many little children in HORIZONTAL VERTICAL or Our theological seminaries and o'clock colonists might enjoy a day of thanksgiving ‘in ane need of warmer clothes/ |, ia Serres Awe yaar State heey er pa are most important brance of J its of their labors dur. | °™ 3 5S—A skin case rin considerations for the future welfare DD 1 agersiores ahaa anal fowtekin tiaat ae. inati, |j._ 14t Us make: Casper ae a pa 8—Cause to sit down 8—Toward of our churches. Some, for instance, tuted. “It did not become an official public | 3, Meanest, city in the world. : 4—Contraction of even believe that seminaries ought to be 2: : ~ To serve the people is to lay up 6—Vehicl: appendages of colleges or untiver- Looting Leiter’s Cellar holiday until 1631, and even the day of that year set’ apart was not at first intended to be treasures untold which do not van- ish. " 7—New York Ath 8—A body of w: sities, as many of them areg others, on the pther hand, would have them During the absence of the fanflly in Washing-| day of rejoicing and thanksgiving. | It was TORAS See 9—Each (ab) independent and by themselves. ton, hijackers looted: the Joseph Leiter sum-|a day of fasting and prayer for relief from the x \d to form the com-|10—One Some would have the theological mer home at Beverly, Massachusetts of $50,000] famine which seemed imminent. ; Emma’s Awakening 11—Royal chair ature during their years of train- worth of high class wines, ehampagnes and| Just then everything for the white man’s ee : 17—Before ing, engage in much outside prac- liquors. necessity was not produced on American soil, Emma Goldman, who left America 23—An adverb 18—To. signify tical church work, in order to have Nothing ‘can be said in defense of those who|'and a vessel laden with provisions had been] | Emme Golaman, who left America ree ea 3 atte pe -pereuaaing Pe dba ters dives rtaligieotond deliberately broke into the house and carried} so long at sea that the colonists began to fear is pss) omic and political. dise| 28——Prefix meaning Inte 124—A planet years of theological training should off the goods and chattels of the other person.| that they should suffer want before help was |), Russia, hes ‘now. 29—To satisfy (ab) * | 26—Inclined be given over, first and last, to But a whole lot can be said,about the person|uear. The ship arrived just before the day|in England.’ ‘There she is speaking| 31A literary work 27—Fit-to eat study and to becoming grounded in who had in his home such a supply of goods} of fasting, and frem the * was changed | her mind freely about Soviet Rusgia,| 34—A dandy 28—Border the theoretical fundamentals. Some six years after such property was made con-|to one of thanksgiving and rejoicing. Thanks-| which she knows az few interpreters | 36—A holiday 30—A pronoun want the students free of all social Lo by : Thited States. government. giving ays we Hy obsefyed also inv} have been able to know'it. Emma is} 37—A piece of English money (ab) |32—Public Service Commission life, they favor a sort of monastic Pratane ty. se United See ; lew: thi . adly disillusioned. “She. says: To give back a sound (ab) : life at the seminary; others go out Joseph Leiter may be a rich man but he|the New Nethe: r this, but n6t -mntil }sedly ‘ iperotied Maree ine 38—To g $2 Exslamation ds diggunt of’thelr way ,to’ arrange ‘soctala:of 2 certainly is a pour citizen, and his ownership | 1644 was anothe Ul proclamation made to se ta aca eh Ona natty rife sre vem eset eat re ai aul kinda tue Aa eudeatan Boole bes “MORE” Distributed By fra. ° 908 SO BRSO, An pOICUN, OLE eR E Nee Se Pel apt ar eg Me i bea regia Urclined a of today; there are thousands in| 42—A geometrical figure |87—A Southern State Meyg that the seminary _as a unit! Parker Bros. Cigar & Tobacco makes him nothing less than a criminal, — 3 prisons and concentration camps.in| 43—A preposition ;40—Animal of cat family Where did he get this stuff and how did he| Indians. Russia, not for opposing the govern-| 44—Prefix meaning down 45—A period of time get it? He certainly did not store it before The first national Thanksgiving day, by proc- | ment but for opinion’s sake. 46—A pronoun -|48—Chlef official of a city -# prohibition came in force. He undoubtedly | lamation of President Washington, was set for| ‘'To call hs Dresent sore Cpe rvcies of the compass (ab) Ase spleen built the stock up from hootlegging importers. |Thursday, November 29, 1789, ment a workers’ experiment ‘is the] 49—Move i8—Synony: i If hie) did afore it he played unfair with his} In-the interior various days in various months | 08 Preposterous lle ever told. The| 5¢—Actually \ 51—Suffix used to form the com. by secreting more than the law provided he had used none of it which is » improbable to those Joseph I government perinitted, nwhile, >» know were set aside liy state governors. From time to time other presidents of the United States proclaimed thanksgiving days, and for many years past it has been the annual) party in power has emasculated the revolution; it is “slowly ‘under- mining all that‘isbest in ‘Russia. “The Russian "Bolsheviks are the arch-counter ‘revolutionaries of the uthern State (ab) ‘An Eastern State 67—Keystone State (ab) 58—A preposition parative degree 52—A mu: 54—An Ini 65—To wi ; 60—Omissions excepted (ab) 86—Point : if he has accumulated the supply since the} practice of the executive official to name ‘the| world. For Sean is Perk coon 4 61—The crear Maker” Mieaayasl iit date the government made prohibition effec-| last Thursday of November for a national day that does not hold high ideals’ 63—On the top preposition 2 he is no better than a common. bodtlegger | of rejoicing and expression of gratefulness to be jhave been" discredited ’ in Lea al pi s |62—A middle State (ab) ans and a violator of the laws’ of the country| the Giver of all good and perfect gifts. aGE Tniée th her Ute, "ae this L ohare which harbors and protects him. ee = Bet Muay itn aaa Pe nce : Joseph Leiter has exposed himself as a _ [is right. ‘Tyranny 1s tyranny,|neceesary to man, and 60 are fdeals.J{n a genuine democracy, and that mighty inferior citizen. And the matter Can We Protect Ourselves whéther infilcted by one or many.|Both have been stifled in Russin.| ‘capitalism’ is probably inevitable in should not be laughed off as a joke. whether by an absolute monarch or | Emma seems on the way to discover-|.the present stage of human develop- % The incident furnishes all the evidence any |» What will become of the mere pedestrinn-a few |by an organized class. Freedom is|ing that they cannot flourish except | ment. 5 enforcement officer could desire of guilt of law| Years hence, when the skies are cluttered with ses violation: rplanes, as the streets are today jammed with @ If the first citizens of the land be permitted | ™otor cars? : ‘5 to get away with a thing like this, why should Not so long ago in Chicago an airship crashed 4 : e the humble pint flask sport be dragged before | through thearoot of a big bank, eine Bevaral Percolator . the judge to be fined and jailed? persons and injuring a few more, while inflict- TCO! : Either all should be equal before the law, or| ing mate jal damage, ‘To suppose that we cau [ee - We find ourselves, almost without the law should be abolished. take to airplanes as we haye to automobiles pO anieies: realizing it, a natién on wheels. . It is. a question, which has brought the| ad ayoid frequent accidents, would he extray- z greatest shame to the nation. The open sale|#¢ant. The mot®r age has exacted its toll of We drive or ride in 16,000,000 of liquor before prohibition or the evasion and | life, an@ the flying one will do likewise, plus. 4% level table- motor vehicles, ‘ flouting of the prohibition law since its enact-| Yet we are destined to a flying age and that epoon MJ-B ; b will be taking to the air, the one’ alleviation : in and out of town. We ovér-run even Paying Just Debts heing that possibly the flow of motor traffic so-called remote regions. And we are Someone has said that “to be in debt is. to| on the ground will be diminished. The air will ts . be in chains.” No one knows the truth of this| be full of flights hither, thither awd across. pounding to pieces all but permanent better than those at some period in life have tres diving pall 08 mpdited, even, pore roads, felt the galling weight of some financial obli- an fas been by the motor car or the rail- & gation which they knew not how to meet. rond.:. For as the transportation is, so largely Next year 4,000,000 new cars will In this connection recall that rather pathetic] is, human living, and jwhen the multitude goes be on the road. Compared to this in- 3 statement which Sir Walter Scott made re-| imto the air, a lot that can be imagined and crease, the mileage of new ¢ garding the hardship which clouded his later} ® lot more that cannot, is going to come'to pass. be ike permanent - years. “I am at sed,” wrote Scott, “in the cot me cone or ey changes? It og aes roads will ignificant. Pa dark, and the vessel leaky into the bargain.”| question, ap society: can Ww 0 33 What added to the mathon: of Scott’s wretched] motor car is not yet demonstrated, It is not We don’t ‘want to be a.nation on condition of debt was the fact that in no sense was he to blame for it. He had become con- nected with a publishing house. When that concern failed the novelist felt that it was in- cumbent upon him to accept the liabilities, amounting to 130,000 pounds. It was quite possible in a legal manner for him to have dis- owned all responsibility, but Scott’s sense of honor forbade such a step. The story of the gigantic effort he made to pay all the ereditors of the publishing house is a story of chivalry at its highest and best, and in some respects is un- equalled by any of the stories concerning won: derful’ heroes whom Scott introduced into his books. In fact, while at the zenith of his fame as a writer and when he should have been en- foying ‘the fruits of his labor, Scott was toiling ea galley slave to pay a monumental debt for which he was not legally responsible. It is well to remember in reading Scott’s later only a juggernaut, that crushes many victima, but the greatest weapon ever put at the dispo- sal of the ¢riminal. Its offensive power in the hands of evil men seems as yet superior to its defensive power in the hands of guardians of the peace.- Improvement of police methods may wthitigate that superiority, but the hope is a doubtful one at that. 4 r) When anybody and everybody can go winging about in the air how much privacy, secur- ity will remain? When a brace of c! als can land én any roof, what house will be its owner's castle? Or, will not every. house have to be made into a new kind of a castle, proof against ofislaught from above, as well as an attack from below? ‘ In Chicago the other day, a gangster was killed whom the police deemed the arch-criminal of the city. The chief said the police were greatly “relieved by the murder of that man, ws (level) equal 1=& lrounded) “You know what you like in a cup of coffee. You know when you wheels, with no place to go. The answer is, build more, and where necessary, wider concrete roads —and start building them now. - : Not in a long time have general con- ditions been so favorable for carrying on such public works as highway building. ‘ to carry on their Permanent Your highway authorities are ready share of this great public work. But they must have your support. Tell them you are ready to invest in books that they were written with his heart’s| who had been many times a murderer and had getit. you know how to get it every time? Can you lay more Concrete Highways, now. blood, as a‘ result of this sacrifice. ; never been tried. for his crimes... ‘The senti- your on the exact taste that means coffee contentment at No one ney. better than Scott what it was peep sana say that ee : man, shrews, your ? That's what this M:J‘B chart is for:.to take the hit- to_be in debt, nor felt more keenly the ling} a good busineas man, was cient or insane. ‘i coffee-making. PO. misery often attendant on such a y ioe meee He was just plain bad man, whom society should ér-mise-out of i Ms “% i RTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION chivalrous to an extreme as his action may seem| have removed, instead of waiting for » private Coffee is too important a featare in our daily lives to make it Ideal Buildin, to ‘be 2 Rinse Beate did tp only thing possible Jesus a9 ae et Rae is “by guess-and-by. ."” There is just one coffee taste that just DENVER, COLO, tg an honorable man. e shouldered his bur- looks ost as S age was mu i i i 5 pea) den and did‘his utmost to pay. for itself. Some say that civilization cannot Pei hare and chart will h ond find it. It is on of National Organization to Improve and Mr. Smart Alec You know him. He's the fellow who can alahys do everything much better than ele. radio hookup is better than any of the hookups body He's the fellow who is always right. Hin survive another great War. But can civiliza- tion survive even until another great war? Society is failing in self-possession. In on der -to achieve such protection it will require to perfect its organization, to better its morals, to increase its justice, to slough its corruption. of home tests made with M-J-B Coffee by critical force etnies: Tt will set, you-coffee-right forall time. Make test and see! ~, Extend the Uses of Concrete OFFICES IN 29 CITIES ‘ ———___— ee = ———s ~ im in the neighborhood. His boy is smarter than your boy. His wife is the best cookin the country. His house is warmer in winter, cool: er-in cummer than any other house he ever heard of. TRAIN SCHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN Westbound No. 603 No. 613 Eastbo To meet the mechanisms of the criminal offen- : - sive successfully, society must reform and also -re-form. S : e@ @ A headline in the New York World tells the cockeyed universe “Brookhart Faces Hot Fight ' on Seat.” Vou can have our barrel stave. y of doing things is always the best can give the minister points on the- tell him ‘how to preach better sermons. = oe meets every his wise bird is an authority on everything. Nineteen twenty-five will be the most pros: taste in He’ will tell the ‘men who paint his house how] perous Year in American history for the investor to mix their paints, 4nd how to apply them, in| the wage earner, the farmer and the merchant. - a, spite of the fact that he has had no experience | This is distressing news to denmgogues, but they -8:10 p. za. vith paint. He knows more about carpenter | have had a lot of it recently and can stand some Arrives * cork than men who took four years to learn ' more. “ ; ' epee ie cn Te SOPRA HP a a ae : Sia