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2 7 J r ) e t i PAGE SIX Che Casper Daily Cribune Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postcffice as second flags matter, November 22 1916. The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening und The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at r, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune Build- + Opposite pos.office. Business Telephine- ---.......-.--------- 15 and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments By J. E. HANWAY AND E. E. HANWAY MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the for publication of ail news credited in this paper and also.the local news published herein. re ‘“S " Meniber of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C.) Advertising representatives Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23; Steger Bldg. = {iChlcago, LL, 286 Fitth Ave., York City; Gobe “ ational rights tells his old man to go to h——, » he can made ft stick. A Forecast One of these days it will be less fashionable - throw rocks at a county commissioner or a uber of ity council when he arises and de- mands that we pay as go, refrain from issu- ig bonds for all sorts of purposes imaginable, und put a stop to passing our debts along to our 1ildren and children’s children h a per: is not popular in this day, but ay is approaching when he will be acclaimed her Many of the people of today, when they recover rom the delusion that this tax and that tax does not amount to anything and besides whatever is = e by the city or county that costs money it omes off the other fellow anyway, so who cares? The moment it sinks into the understanding of the taxpayer that costs and taxes come right out of his own packet and he doesn’t get any- thing for nothing, he will arouse himself and Lawl somebody out. Possibly he will poke about | und see where city and county money goes, and what.is received for it. Some day there will be quite a fair-sized army & of inquiriers about both the income and outgo % of county and city tax money. - Glory Not Learning <= Professor Robert C.. Angell entrusted with the ™ task_of investigating student conditions of Ann * eountry, and to a lesser deg: . Teach eighteen. , Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bidg., 65 New fontgomery St, San Francisco, Cal. Copies of the Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices and visitors ure welcome, SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrer and Outside State One Year, Daily and Sunday me Year, Sunday ony ----- Six Month, Dally and Sunday bree Months, Dai'y and Sunday - Month, Daily and Sunday Copy One Year, Daily and Sunday - me Year, Sunday Only --— Six Months, Daily and Sunday ‘ Months, Daily and Sunday — ae Month, Daily ana Sunday -- 75 All subscriptions must be paid in advance and © Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after sud- ~feription becomes one month in arrears. KI YOU DON’T GkT YOUR TRIBUNF | 1 find your Tribune after lookimg care- £ for It call 15 or i6 and it will be delivered to you special messenger. Register compiaints before 8| o'clock. People Should Have Say The people who must live under constitutional changes have a right to be consulted in the mak- ing those changes. Confused with the presi- dential election and a multitude of other issues the question of ratification or rejection of the proposed twentieth amendment was lost sight of on November 4, except in Massachusetts, where BEET) De eS a8 A ie res are sought with unflagging zeal and‘gscholarship vis Remains relegated to.a subordinate position.,What with Da pata athletic practice committee meetings, play and! secretary Davis has curtailed his musical club rehearsals, moving pict dances, | trip to South America and will re- intercollegiate games and, what is se, hours | turn to Washington 10 days earlier and hours of idle talk about these alid other di-| than he had originally intended. His there was a referendum upon it. Elsewhere it was not discussed. In other states there was no ». Way for the voter to express his desires concern. ing it. State legislators, whatever their legal powers may be, take a good deal on themselves when they ui away to a distant federal congress for all time the individual rights and the self-govern- ment of their own constituents. Ordinary deli- ‘y requires them, before ratifying such a pro- posal, to permit the fathers and mothers to say by their direct vote whether they desire to resign their parental authority and give to congress un- limited power, free from all judicial restraint, xpressly ever the “labor” and impliedly over the “education” of their sons and daughters till they Any state legislature can legally take counsel of the people before it acts by means of an ad- yisory referendum. This was done in Massachu- setts, where the people rejected it by the vote of ‘ayes” 247,221 and “noes” 696,119. As nearly all the “statesmen,” including the three presidential candidates, favored the rati- - fication of this amendment in Massachusetts, the overwhelming negative result demonstrates how impossible it is for legislators accurately to gauge public opinion on such a matter. Moreover, a popular referendum leads to real discussion and full debate, such as was had in Massachusetts. Elsewhere, with thirty- n state legislatures, whose action will determine its fate, out to assemble in January, there has been no adequate discussion, concerning this rev- olutionary change in our government. The record so far stands: Ratifications, one, Arkansas legislature. Rejections, four, Georgia, Louisiana and North Carolina legislatures; Mas- etts by popular yote. e8 without the saying that the usual hys-; terical appeal for the adoption of the amend nent will be made to the Wyoming legislature. children of this state are not and never will endangered by work. Yet you can neyer tell hat a leg ure will do any more than you can ‘ejudge the result of a horse race. It will be a tine e of affairs when a Wyoming ranchman tolls his seventeen year old boy to fetch up the cows and the boy, under the twentieth amend- ment, if it be adopted, standing upon his consti- Arbor, in presenting his report to President Mar- ion Leroy Burton, draws a rather gloomy picture of affairs, which he says are not different from other institutions of learni throughout the ve the public schools of the land. In his report Professor Angell says: “College is no longer, if it ever was, solely a place for those who wish to become, cultured. It is a social practice ground where men and women learn to ike friends and carry on mutual undertakings, versions little time is left for the principal pur- poses of college study. ‘It is discouraging enough for have to work with such material. It college to more dis- couraging to have the standards of the general American life constantly imposed the in- stitution as the case of intercolle; athletics, thus effectively preventing the devglopment of higher aims among students. 2 “The evil influence of many al in glorify- ing the less important features of colfege life are well known. The interest of many argalumnus in the team of his college is really n® more aca- demic than is that of the Chicagognan in ‘the Chicago Cubs, and many a father holds forth upon his son’s performances at coffege exactly as he would upon those of a promising three year old in his stables.” The Harvest 4 This year’s harvest of sear eh crops, the highest priced in five years, th@bgh not the greatest in volume of products wa§ valued at 9,479,920,000 by the federal agriguitual de- partment. Better prices placed the value $753,- 13,000 higher than last year, when the total, as revised, was $8,726,889,000, and $1,663,882,000 higher than in 1922, when they aggregated $7,516,- 020,000. The combined acreage of the principal farm crops was smaller this year than last, there hay- ing been a total of 355,210,400 acres, as compared with 355,594,730 in 1923. Both the spring and winter wheat crops were extremely satisfactory, but corn had.an unfavor- | able season. Cotton, planted late, was affected by ight to some extent, but a fair crop was pro- « duced. A large crop of potatoes a smaller acre: than in recent years resulted from unhus- ually favorable weather. Corn maintained its rank as king $f crops and, although production was 600,000,000 bushels less than last year, its value was $188,900,000 more than the 1923 crop. The total value4of corn was placed at $2,405,468,000. Cotton rafiked second, with a total value of $1,683,274,00), of which $1,487,225,000 was the value of lint nd £196,349,- 000 the value of seed. Hay, with a total value for tame and wild of $1,467,648,000, was third crop in point of income. Wheat ranked fourth with a total value for spring and winter of $1,136,596,000. Gives Them the Laugh Senor Vincente Blasco Ibanez, the Spanish au- thor, who lately spent some time in America, and was shown unusual courtesy is now making his temporary abiding place in Paris. Since change of plan may indicate a re- consideration of his decision to re- tire from the cabinet on March 4. It is understood that President Coolidge has urged Mr. Davis to remain at the head of the labor de- partment. That department has never had a chief who took such a keen {Interest In its effairs or who was actuated by a higher patriot- ism. Just now, when immigration problems are so pressing, it is es- pecially important that an expert like Mr. Davis should be kept in charge of those matters. By per- sonal inspection of immigrant cen- ters tn Europe and of the methods of handling the problem by South American countries, Secretary Davis has acquired a first hand acquaint- ance of the subject probably pos- sessed by no other citizen. aaa The Neglected Child Nothing {s'so plastic to sympa- thetic human treatment as the mind of a chfid. “Nor is there anything in the line of humun endeavor more profitable to society than its care and culture. Here is a weak, de- pendent human entity in its forma- tive state. It can be made a power for good or for evil. The child lives in a world of its own, full of -llusions. Failure of the parent to enter that world is to deny -t that helpful fellowship of which. it stands most.in need and to de- velop in {t that perverse nature of- ten noted in neglected chiidren. in such a case the parent will be in a great measure responsibie for any resultant: lack of morality apparent in‘ats later life. The chaplain of Sing Sing says that while in a superticia! view of it, there would seem to be little re- sation between the criminal benind the bars and the neglect of its par- ents to answer his questions when a child, the want of parental sym- pathy evinced by such negiect may agave been and often is one the tne chief causes of the beginning of a criminai career, Here is an -mportant truth not often taken into account by the par- ent who deems the child's appeal for information not. worthy of attention. isut the arrestive suggestion made by the prison chapiain to those who have read his statement often will occur to them when tney hear an ir- rtated parent snap out at a child, “Oh, don’t ask so many questions!” Within reasonabie bounds a child's leaving America he has bolssomed forth as a real) cemands as to the why and where- rebel against the present Spanish regime, which | rore of what to him are the. vague he unhesitatingly and characteristically declares | phenomena about hm are entitied vhere they acquire a certain amount of polish d ¢ free from worries, that most delight- 1 pe of life “The students’ interest in the external rather than the vital is too apparent to require exposi- ion. Three forms of achievement are coveted which give immediate and obvious glory. I on athletic teams, ediforships of student publfea is the “bunk.” Recently he caused the various cities through- out Spain to be “bombarded” from the skies by airplanes, with pamphlets attacking King Al- fonso and the military directorate. This so incensed the Spanish authorities that they instantly assembled and issued an edict sum- moning the fiery fiction writer to appear before a military judge in Madrid for trial and punish- ment. This gave Ibanez his chance to reply, which, needless to say, he did in the following words: “TI shall not respond to your invitation. I would just as soon take refuge on a cannibal island or throw myself into water inhabited by hungry cro- cidiles, or famished sharks as to confide myself to the government of bandits now ruling Spain. “The time is coming when a regular consti- tutional government will be established in Ma- drid; then I shall go there to face any one who has charges to make against me. In the mean time I shall remain in France and tranquilly continue agitation for the regeneration of my country.” Field For Trade Expansion It was predicted last year by those who have been following our trade relations with the Latin Americas that it would come pretty close to two billion dollars in 1924, and the indications are that the estimate was not very far out of the way. With four years of political fair weather in prospect there is good ground for believing that by the time another presidential campaign rolls around we will be doing a business with the Latin Americans of about $3,000,000,000 a year. That it will exceed $2,000,000,000 in 1925 is prac- tically certain. This would give us a growth in this trade by twenty-five year periods, so far as we are able to determine from ‘the - statistics available ag follows: 1825. 1850 18) 1900 . ++ 266,000,000 1925. bet » 2,000,000,000 It can not be too frequently reiterated that our trade with the Latin Americas is in a larger sense | complementary rather than competitive.” We im- | port their raw, materials and tropical: fruits, while they take our manufactured goods. The farther their civilization progresses, the greater their purchases of our fabricated products. The more urban we become—and we. are rated at about fifty-one per cent urban now—-as a result | of our increasing population and industrializa- tion, the greater will be our dependency on them | +» 107,000,000 | to some sort of reply. Sometimes, of course, these demands are an in- flict on, but there are far less bear- able ones, Toere is a mystefious something inherent in the mind of a child which causes it, in a company of grown people, to cough until it chokes in order to draw attention; and from this we may infer some necess ty in nature which this act subserves, “But children’s. questions are. a nuisance,” many of their elders will vote, and so they are if let loose be- hind one in a film show. | When such Infantile queries as ‘What's that?" “Why.do they do- that?" “What's he going to do now?” as- sail ones ears there is no comfort in that neighborhood. In such a place the offender should be sup- pressed, but not in the privacy of the home. There the riddles of the lttle Sphynx must be answered, though an overdose of them iis to. be discouraged. © Henry told the story of some bad «men who stole the son of 4 rich father,and held him for ran- som. In the camp of the kidnapers the boy asked so many questions that his tormented captors were gind to release him without the pay- ment of the sum demanded for his return. One may spoll a child by encour aging it in the matter of too fre- quent and aimless interrogation, but habitually to ignore it when it would extort some show of parental in- be Casper Daily Cribune CROSS-WORD PUZZLE ie oe oa EERE sure. and they in turn to stil) others. Space, words starting at the numbered squares and running either horizontally or vertically or both. HORIZONTAL 1—A weapon 6—Puckered 11—Relating to colors 13—Uncovered 14—A tree 16—The tally 18—Just before an event suddenly it for 25—Beforehand 26—A tag e 28—Secretion of a sore 29—A term of respect 30—A musical Instrument 32—A salt used @ preservative 33—To reduce to liquid 34—An cle 35—A parent 36—A common seasoning 38—Nolse 40—To irritate 43—A beverage 44—The total 45—Substance for closing seams 47—Cry of heep 48—Responsible 51—To yleld 53—To analyze 54—To weep convulsively 56—An adhesive mixture . 57—To negotiate 59—Egg-ehaped 61—To fix firmly 62—To collect an armed force 63—?Prevents PUZZLE SOLUTION Satntion of Monday's Puzzle. ATR TAT BD TSO] [BIAIVIAIRIo} are TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1924 taught to do everything from pulling teeth to filing corns. They can brew herb teas for headaches or they can carve a man's kidneys or flush his stomach. They are quall- fied to treat everything from dan- druff to Ietomotof atax a—that is, who give their careers to the mat- ter of extricating birdshot from the human frame. There are wise men who do nothing but measure the beatings of the heart or ceunt the corpuscles in the blood. But, thank heaven, the kindly and SUGGESTIONS FOR SOLVING CROSS-WORD PUZZLES Start out by filling in the words of which you fal reasonably These will give you a clue to other words crossing them, they are as competent as a college training and a little experience can make them. . i It is certain that the family~doc- tor, who knew the physical charac- teristics and» mental moods of each member of the household, is missed. Specialization has reached such a stage that there are strong men who spend their lives administering ether to patents about to be operated on ‘There are experts considerate family doctor is not to be lost forever. We may still have a sympathet c physician as well as a synthetic one. The lure of special Unes of medicine and surgery with larger fees and easier hours Is great, but it will not hold every student. The family doctor finds his com. pensations.. He is the friend and adviser. He has adventures and ex. periences that never come to a spec- ialist. for appendicit: that Keeps Christmas Fro the woman who receives a Maytag Gyrafoam Washer on Christmas there begins a new kind of washday—more real; / practical helpfulness thari she has ever known before. Washing, that task which formerly required TERNATIONAL SYMOICATE, A letter belongs .in each white VERTICAL 2—To frighten 3—A menace ronnie ally sete, he abe —An American Indian ally reduced, by the won- o— Marks of wounde derful principle of the Gy- 10—A colored crayon Tafoam, to a matter of ag evcentmeaty minutes. A tubful of. to trees clothes clean in 3 to 7 17—Future moth minutes. In 60 minutes an 19—A | 2t—Sparkling ordinary family wash com- 23—A small portt immaculat 24—A (Latin) pletely, tely fin Z—Plgment 31—Te consume It’s quick! It’s thore sere parece ough — handrubbing even * 36—c. = ° et ascorspengstion on wristbands, cud or 38—To proceed In court 9 Outstanding collars, is unnecessary! And ayn petaied rganization (abbr.) Maytag Features since it washes entirely by 1 Washes faster. 6 Easily adjusted . 5 42—Lying dormant 2 Washes ch to your height. woater action, it is every bit 44—Craftiest =, careful with dainty gare 46—A meal 3 Largest hourly 7 Clothes can be sie wi ity 49—Uncovere capacity in the putin or taken ments as hand washing. 50—A preposition world. out with ths 62—Mechanical apparatus 4 Most Bere washer running. Take the happiness your 54—A tuminary esientee 8 Tub cleans ite wife or mother knows at 58—Courageous takesfloor space aelf, 4 baeeconabried oy 25 inches Bee ; Christmas and prolong -it 60—T pete with Sere dh i ats ashdays—for ‘0 com B Cast wigeeseie for her wi all tub—can’t adjusting. In- the years to come. Give bars whose questions in ch'ldhood swell, tant tension Maytag. she remained unanswered. Often these pie or conceda release. her a 4 , wee questions arise from what Words- Rossons for that kind of a gift, that worth calls “the blind misgivings of a creature moving about in worlds not realized;’ and these misgivings ‘should be set at rest. . The patient answering of ques- tons is part of the duty of the par- ent as set forth in thé scriptural in- junction, “Train up the child in the way he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it.” But, aside from considerations of its future, one of the most pitiable objects in the world Is a negiected child. The Family Friend Complaints are heard that io these days the old-fashioned family gector 1s, fading out of the picture. Not so—that is, not wholly eo. There are still numbers of them standing in harness and now North- western University is running a full- World Leadership kind of help. THE MAYTAG SHOP * 233 £AST FIRST ST. TELEPHONE 960 One of a chain of ten intermountain stores seling May- tag Washers and Ironers exclusively. SERVICE AND SATISFACTION GUARANTEED HIGH GRADE craving for sympathy ard for know- ledge and to disregard the possibil- ity of such a resultant evil as is suggested by the good chaplain tn terest is to deny its very natural h's picture of the man behind the family practice... They are being ———e——eeeeeeeeea_ee__e_______ ee ee hristmas Mix fledged education plant with the express purpose of turning-out more of their kind. Likely young ,medical students are being train for general or Now. read this letter from Mr. Kane. Remember, it is because résults. Mg dear friends for raw materials. Here is a field of friendship. and profit which | we can ill afford to slight. Prophetic eyes will discover in the future development of the Latin Americas much more for the welfare and uplift of the peoples of the western hemisphere than can be expected to accrue to us from our reln- | tions with war-ridden and race-embittered Eu- | rope. Clay beheld it in the second decade of the nineteenth century; Blaine saw it toward the close of the century. We are more and more be- coming exporters of goods. Great Britain will centralize her energies during the coming cen- tury ‘on trade with her dominions. The Latin Americas provide our special field for trade ex- pansion. Borah Objects | The sincerity of Senator William E. Borah | is to be admired and his consistency is to be com- mended. He is for economy and retrenchment and so far as he is concerned he will do the es- sential things that bring the actual results. Therefore, when a proposal is brought forward | to greatly increase the salaries of federal judges, now regarded as fair, Senator Borah rises in his place and says: ‘I am utterly opposed to the proposed in creases in salaries of federal judges or anybody | else’s salaries,” The Soviets announce there won't be any more red paper money, It seems the Russians persis! Tei Bedi a wonkline woes ‘An elderly lady whom 1 not at your product, able to. ay ‘am tell pie, ieee Feat talk. aya whenever | Eran--Kellogs'e “‘Krambled., countless days of progress, I Yours for success, lieve constipation permanently. spoo! ‘dai ee, chronic every meal, You wil Sold by all grocers, is ALL BRAN that it was so effective in his case—just as it has been in thousands of others. Only ALL BRAN can produce 100 per cent 9 @ young man weighing 163 ofa months par! 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