Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 6, 1925, Page 8

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ARY 6,.1925 SIGHT Che asec OaNeeebIe. enews veel gle eS at us TURD AY, JAS generously, and 1 : of his greatest popularity Mafk]the United States. A settlement|tne strict terms of the original } Pay As You Enter PUZZLE Twain told of his struggles in be-|was made with Great Britain. The] creqits advanced in 1917. Great fee fe ew: York CROSS-WORD lignite, bovis put ertiiea} myaney: the (CAltead taten, Lorroist | See ce, co ering’ to ido arity. tke J. A. A. Hopkins, treasurer of the New York “Speaking of the ill luck of-start-| trom the American people atid which| terms the debt commission and.con- Im Follette-Wheeler radical party during the late 1 plece of literary work wrong, | was sent to Great Britain or credited gresa may see fit to accept. from campaign says last summer I started sixteen things to her, cost the United/ States treas-| france, or any other country. The rressive party will be composed of wrong—three books and thirteen | ury an average of four and one half 1-| the voters who individually enroll as such, in ac- magazine articles—and could only} per cent, per annum. Whereas the = fe , poche qvith sAmertcan WikeeaMithemaceer cart make two Uttle wee things, 1,500] original act of congress required The Factfinders Fede m of Labor, railway brotherhoods, the words altogether, succeed—only that} the secretary of the treasury to re. A reader asks: What is the “fact- ¢) farm orga out of piles and stacks of diligently wrought M8.” And yet many cf those who laughed over Mark’s “easy humor’ doubtless imagined that he tossed off a chapter or two: at a sitting! r was his friend fret Harte a less painstaking writer. Harte would write a simple letter of a page ie rap gibi aaa orparestvar gS ae finding”, commission, so-called? It United States ‘paid the people from Sere atiye iatusernick sod oa ner tt cea Qi, nevertheless! rnterlor, to ascertain the facts in Great Britain and that country ex.|fes*rd to government ' xaclasna- changed a demand note or an “1 o| UM Of arid land, and recommend « U." for regular government. bonds, |e Deltey. ‘The commission ¢on- Great Britain pald the United States | “Isted_ of Thomas, E. Campbell, oe it sulted his fastidious taste. Henry! interest for ten years, and three| ‘rats tniversite and agricultural James, whose literary scroll work| and one half per cent for fifty-two | ate university and | agricultural sometines smacks of intellectual] years. ‘The difference in the interest | Colese, of Utah; James Fe Gar: Foppery, ked to puf-in all: he ifrie| wie, United tates pays. and: Grett | terior wood Mead, now commis. touches that go to express the most | Britain will pay, is about $22,000,000| Uisner of reclamation and at that subtle meanings. His labors were/each year. This agreement with fessor in the university a harsh tax upon his vital powers. | Great Britain was ratified Daca eeaabatenine tions and the other economic bod- ral parts of such a party, be- cause | lly and in fairness to their respective memberships they must maintain their nonparti- | san attitude. The Progressive party will be a “| dues-paying organization, supportéd by the pro- portionate contributions of évery man or woman pate in the movement.” ees ane Now In Effect New York City; Gobe] The lowered income tax rates contained in the 4 Sharon B-dg revenue law of 1 are now in effect, and about 7,000,000 taxpayers will have to dig less deeply into their pockets in 1925. Returns are reqnired of every single person whose net income for 1924 Every year this country produces|gress, as all forthcoming ct the ” Amertcan — — = - = was $1,000 or more or whose gross income was a new crop of fiction writers, but| ments must be. u federation, and Clyde SUBSCRIPTION RATES 5,000 or more, and of every married person rarely does their work reveal that) rhe United States congress and of Colorado.: ‘The nl a Sunday noneeenen passion for perfection possessed bY| treasury department and debt com-|commission began its sessions in a the masters, Now and then, to Be| mission all want the country ito| Wachineton, cetober ae sure, there appears a writer who/iyow that Great Britain has beon| filed rt August 10, 1924, The makes a spontaneous appeal by the) geatt with by the United States most use of language that flows from his pen with little effort, but he is a rara avis. Henry David Thoreau, Whose books, so easily written out hose net income was $2,500 or more. There is uo change in the personal exemption for single persons, which is $1,000. Married persons living with hus or wife and heads of families are allowed ar mption of $2,500 regardless of the amount of net income. A credit of $400 for each person dependent upon him for support, if such E ; ; Otnt INTERNATIONAL SYNDICATE, . é é { s | person is under eighteen years of age, or incap- \ aps See of full mind, are ope rea aia 5 t able of self-support because mentally or physi SUGGESTIONS FOR SOLVING CROSS-WORD PUZ. not sent 0 eae sraprrd Piel ally defective is still allowed. Start out by filling in the words of which you feel reasonably ph otal aR 1a rs AT 7D had anything to say it should come Th will give you a clue to other words crossing them, 3 ‘carn Al Nias and they in turn fo still others. A letter belongs in each white trom him as readily as a stone drops t e 2 one tf a Eternal Vigilance space, words starting at the numbered squares and running either from hie bands iat thd At tt YOUR TRIBUNE Twenty-five Republican senators will be up for horizontally or vertically or both. tik su trie aithie cq -cebet BUG 7 : Tiuwored'to you | Te-election in 1926. Only seven Democrats, all HORIZONTAL VERTICAL | senéraly he -admita, ‘the: trath at w eee geal from solid south states, will have to run the tictum of Sheridan that ; : jaints before $| 170! Ps 1—-A portion dictum of § « ‘* *| political gauntlet two years hence. One LaFol:| J—A small poe! Ee eed ting's curst hard reading.” He tee lette- Socialist, Ladd, of North Dakota, will be} y¢—Musioal Instrument 3—An Insect jal would be willing to subscribe a a RY re-election ix Republican senators| 44—part of an epistle (abbr.) 4—An adverb {70 SO. veN EES Ce bramble ta of Kentucky; Harreld, of Oklahoma; Wel-| a2Net ever 6—Indefinite article 1 Rare ReeteS aatia cy oR SIE BS ; ay z - oor le f Maryland; meron, of Arizona; Oddie of | 15—A torn place acy eete church uthorship—isn't_a lazy mi : Path pa + Neyada, and Spencer of Missouri, are from states | 16—Money 8—Wicke ) my ~~ A OY - , § fe | _ A Glance Forward | which often go Democratic. The Republican me | 18270 dry by rubbing _9—To drive back Interallied Debts ; r n evident disposition on the part) jority in the next senate is narfow. The loss of | 19—A unit Satie et i s and constructive political think-|, jalf-dozen senators would make’ the senate| 22—Metal ring Beat? | of Utah, is the ral to assume that the defeat of the} y) inandtie , ; into a| 227Part of body re 09. c spatags | be in congress on the raya al ennai in | Pemocratic and throw the administration into a! 93 personal pronoun 14—Royal nated Coe erifmant ’ niashinary. d radical ational candic ates in | deadlock 24—A sack stuffed with hair 16—Household animals ‘pital Tat elivarcitia’ (tn TO eeee hi 1 campaign brings an assurance} 4 control of overniment in behalf of cer-| 2¢—An ejaculation 17—To fly tion. He is a wizard on finance and F lominance for constructive policies | tain nat well worth fighting | 27—Sound of escaping steam 20—Made secure figures. In the recent debate in pein oD hting to The anti-Republican | 22—Te engrave ela pe cuedlas the senate on the suggestion from y tepublican party and the constructive} and ant a f the countryca 30—-Calor 24—Chopped up the aiish’ chancellor of the kes: orces ¢ ® country in general face a difficult | poy cote i areduess is us well worth | 2t-—Exclamation |25—To rub heavily hequer that if the United States s tio the campaign of 1928, which will hi political y w dias governiient Tee paeecgereanee Alecotinted: anyliportion rot) the swat be under way in a little more than a year hence} | jg j\one { oon to begi as s fei | debt of France to this country then Hl " ’ | i ) 1 to begin a campaign educa 30—A preposition \, C PS ve e: ° e i this campaign being the cues raiser for the] tion looking forward to the congressional elec 31—A degree (abbr.) Keer Betale oun Sue aten of the telephone are found in open ational con wo years later, 2 Pronoun similar treatment, Senator Reed, of wire and aerial cables, on pole tines The dominant factor in the campaign of 1 nd a sorasawn —Point of compass (absr.) Stladoucte ticHodTrépestedio torbens 5 ” ioScon siden ce) neh vesloeuv acon uuge: Diff @ Gn Spit 43—A preposition —Abhor iow Biiostnter tacts, and’ fguves fies and in cable conduits under the nt that this coufidence, strong as i peeked rete ed ae iE—One who Is sent Killed tFingssis Gnmiraneans sents tole treets. Thousands of miles fie out is, will grow stronger rather than weaker duriug peakix New York upon the occ Of | aaiian edverb 1)—An entrance United States and the work of the streets. : the next two years. That confidence, will not ce of the drow Wilson *0-2AN purpose 4 share rs n of. which Senator of sight, sharing the sub-surface of necessarily control the congressional elections, | Lo Cecil said 5i—To set apart ui e member. . 5 ter og 2 however. Hardings’ landslide brought about a] “Let us look buck to the state of things that ea.| $2—An animal a6—Always (What weye the original debt con- city streets with gas and wa! aaa -“ Republican majority of 100 in the house in 1920. | isted before the war. At that time the st catch ere a Hahatae a hen Great BEEN and the electric wiring which supplies The even greater Coolidge landslide produced | conception ional” relationships’ was| SS—Partiof werb “to be Gatacws hiss sla var yd Restos light and power. a Republican majority of but forty-seven. Two | ° ery nution for itself und the’ devil take the| 57_ ya arr sae tceetomitrom pale je eats tetuaatts : yeirs hence the Coolidge popularity will inevit-| hindmost.’ Unresir d national rivalry was| 59. 54—Short. quick. sour ( 1917) to issue bonds and . * ‘ably cut less figure in the elections than if he| preached almost as a y irrespective ‘of the) ¢o- 6—A t to TecHAtice Chasen Factories are working day and were on the ticket as a presidential candidate. obvious fact that the on ical outcome of such | 61 1 58—Negative 1 $50,000,900,000 approximately . = le $ Moreover there was a division on the national | a doctrine w r sooner of later,’ | 62—To prevent 60—Exist nt by t United States in the | fight to Provide the sheathed cab) ket of the anti-Republican forces in 1924.} Lord Cevil can speak for Europe in-this mat | World w out $11,000,000,000 and copper wire which when finished Linas dir alpen ohana sree aaa Ss) Bae aaa irae ne NM TALS stion because of hard lterars:| TE Gueatieviaine amet becomes a part of the telephone congressional elections of 1928, This coupled’ in the any. iblic to prove the dom PUZZLE | After he had sent the last! “ms of these loans to Great | with the usual mid-administration reaction pre-| inance of such a « oi of international re } chapter. of hisPurmoll" sto. his pub-| rttain-end her allies were that the system. sents a problem to which Republicans and others | lations in the United States? . van? Tarkington. said, ‘My | sd) 4atAseuNakiouial raselwa ceo interested in making the Coolidge administration The United States has lived side by side for SOLUTION nat all in and so am 1."1;i.6 allied countries receiving credits Materials high now but the a complete success, and in bringing about Repub-| nearly a century with many nations in this hem 4 " of me aftar writing| OPstbe eksavair ain Ub aiivenis: 2 8 are lican victory‘in 1928, should be giving thoughful | isphere which ii could at any time have overcome |L<———__ See | book,” sald Howells, “never |ng the same rate of Interest. Dut job can’t wait. Every new demand i ; | by military or nayal force. In that time it has| s : quite sufficient: to write an-) Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo | tl Base made no territorial acquisitions as the result Benton | of Apaaay satire oth | did not-wait for the bonds, loaning | must be foreseen and Promp' met ‘ of conquest undertaken for that purpos Oi The a heat of Seaneys ates money sites ecets / pus by the installation of.adequate equip- i a oquisition of te a ke 4 Medi ary work, though necessary for the sor “ s” from eack Over Representation j only acquisition of territ is sis the weaker na lL production, often takes its toll | r t including Great Britain. | iment. Under the constitution any /state may: decide | ous of this lemisphere were the territory ceded | from the too strenuous hnically this was a violation of | | what portion of its population is fit for self- by Mexico and that given to the T nited States by | the way pf reduced vitali statute authorizing the exten/| : government. No portion of the population of a anaima he struction of an oceanic | Norris is said to have killed himse ion of credits to Great Britain and ; <A he incane anal open on equal terms to all nations. In| trying to write 3,000 words a d : ; state deemed by that state to be incapable of | ‘ I J i } t ‘ bare narticipating intelligently or safely in voting. ither ca war | sked for the purpose | k London sad ‘ould write Five years after the end of the} : Bell System ay pe pating B 3 3 1 of acquiring these possession 1,000" words and then must. re r, congress created a war debt | should form the basis of representation in con nequiring I 1 i eet . i ‘ { In China the United States government pre- Phe first page or two of.a pl of |c »n with authority to enter} wv gress or the electoral college. vonted’ the siartiMMeet the. sapice rane 'y : | writing generally In tiations with countries ¢ Whether the non-participation of a voter in , i f the empire in the face | toa fr A Murope pecettinee theme le atte Heer elections be due to disfranchisement by his own | @ /-uropeun demands, after the Boxer rebellion. - ES I state on the grounds of unfitness for self govern The spirit of good will toward other nations, ment, or whether his unfitness be demonstrated | With no desire to take what belongs to them, pre- by his own failure to vote, his influence should| Y#iled in the United States before the World M t : $s T hi count for nothing in the distribution of voting} W@T and it has preyailed since. At the peace The Mountain tates ‘elephone and power in congress and the electoral college} CoMference that spirit was exemplified by re- among the several state: fraining from demands for territory or indemni- i The constitution contains a provision for the] ‘¢s The other spirit prevailed in Europe before A Worker’s Job reduction of representation in the house of rep- the war and it has pre ; led since. It threw resentatives and the electoral college of any state I resident Wilson’s idealism on.the scrap heap,| yo1¢ nas an instructor inyEnglish | fi which by disfranchisement reduces its electorate. | #2 it insisted upon war terms which have kept] yno has been giving lterary The amendment is mandatory, but it has never| te world in an uproar since. aspirants in his class to undystand 0 effect. To do so,-indeed, would! be President Wilson failed at Paris because be} that they have chosen a hard ro r| ecause of the practical impossibility | 2id not understand that the change he hoped for| to hoe. “Authorship,” he ea: is} an exact determination of the extent | 2 the spirit of Europe had not come. It may|not a lazy man's job. This, deapite| to ch failure to take part in elections is due | Come, but there are few signs that the glad day| the vague ideas of many agit what is near at hand. Whenever European nations ac. | they taney to be the easy life of the a cep he internatio: ideals anc 0) yw the - BuUthOE, is “wise talc . » pt th t t ideal 1 follow the in Every drop delicious Telegraph Company CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE ” nchising laws and practices. / CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 9:30 A. M FARE—$12.50 e the present system one vote in certain epresented ten fold in the house of rep * . 7.9 As r} * eal lit t ly fi a 4 ternational example of the United States it will ween eeerecterey, eapeoguce Fibs ywotaeta: > cated? adie) Nahe Saves you approximately 12 hours’ travel between Casper not take a of nations to prevent wars yer r. | Fi . nd Rawlins the electoral com 4 c e v tain pen over paper. Few of our . 2 Wothiin nertath' It is hich are the outgrowth of selfish nationalism,| great authors have dis layed any WYOMING MOTORWAY yme condition prev with | 2nd until they*do a league of nations will-be| great facility in the preparation of alt Creek Transportation Company's Office manuscripts. Balzac was a worke H was the of his printers who had to under the theory of} Powerle to protect the world from the evil represent sovereign | T¢Suts of international hatred, jealousy and cov ‘ p| etousness pulation; whereas members of mi the innumerable alter are supposed to rep- | he penciled upon his proof sheets le, Whe dlatinetlon dterstoreialclans The Measure of Desire Charles Lamb's brain was relieved | Si [i] iG Gl Gi MES id Gal Gs a nm 7] - Unity, a publication strong for pacifism in the | Wh!!e he wrote by the placing of his United States, says that Russia has reduced her D HOTEL PHONDP 144 THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER CO: TOWNSE: tions feet in warm water. Robert Louls | E D B * D | parring for Adjustment standing army from 610,000 to 562,000 men, and piso OF eet ee nate Me ay, a gam ay: vernment neither officially] that the present size of the bolshevik army is “a | changesvn the text. ‘Tho paragraphs B a ‘ * * a1a:. . nor 1 ally 1s received any assurance, as | measure of Russia’s sincerity for peace.” Judg-| of Emerson's essays gener lly were “44° Everything im Building Material t Lor that Great Britain had as-| ing’ from the size of the army and the poverty] written on bite of paper, with no 1 fams tore United States she would not stand in| ofthe people who have to support it, the mea-| thought of sequence and afterward | ° ° tage A pe ee at ge ae : | RIG TIMBERS A SPECIALTY ne but the failure of the British for-) Unity feels contrained to warn 60 persistently | Gf 7900 or 8.000 words an arncant 129 W. Second Phones 10—11 CHI ? ONS o deny that such a suggestion might] against militarism and military preparedness 66 “cons $c turned out in > r = rtheoming is noted with arent interest. On - - Ky eobie Sevens pee oiler ot Swift 8 Premium Ham a the other hand the French foreign office con uestion of Control | facility. Muir complained of indi- Qblice¥for 22. eke E Distributors of . “ ae ; ,,.| The country is looking forward to a test of Pot Roast, lb., | ed een Finance Minister Clementel and Sec - | strength between President Coolidge and certain4 elements in congress to see which shall be domj- nant in shaping legislation. Wha 121% and Three-Day Cementing Process for Oil Weils. Phone 2300 and 62 Casper, Wyo. stir ten-year moratorium ation os to what the French France might be able to do in | at form the test Pork Chops, Office’ and Yard—First and Center Sts. ents. TI he first tangible ° ut take i ie 3) d ; ed tN . aye pearb. os sd JOIN THE AMERICAN LEGION NOW ave favohahly cout tee hall be an extra session of the sixty-ninth con Round Steak, ecejved gress. As inauguration day opproaches, ther< iLMurphy [Seed eh as oe SE ag rin is much speculation also to what ¢ anges ‘will San Francisco wae . be made in the cabinet. Some changes are re-| 17: Veal Chops or Steak, , To Have Company | Beale ag 3 Ea. ner Poel eae a: | TRAIN SCHEDULES or eff “XA eb part me CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN g Governor “Ma” Ferguson feel| The return of Jackson's birthday reminds us|} @ ied Westbound 2 1 nl new environme ay | that this founder the modern Democratic party || Tates reasonable No. 608 us. Top. v5 have men to the supreme of was & protectionist and a nationalist, and if al] rooms are outside y No. 618 ----_ rl first time in the history of Texas that a wo-| he were to return to earth would lay his hick: reome Sar private Callie Hams, Eastbound Departs 10K man has n appointed to the highest state] ory cane about vigorously among the orators | Tooms the some Her’]b, Spots iad) 2 NO.M68S¥Pue sn. . 5.45 p. 3:00 p.m rt. The women are, Miss Nellie Gray Robert-| at almost any present day kson day banquet. | A . CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY 1, county attorney for Hood county, special | iy Rib Boil, Eastbound Arr Departs chief justice; Mrs. Hortense Ward of Houston, President Cool accused of “a passion for + eel glee i Sp Ae oo Ne # 7 -- - 4:00 p.m prominent woman attorney, and Mrs. Edith T parsimony.” This 1 new thing in Washington v < - 185 p.m. Wilmans of Dalfas, former member of the state | and preferable with the taxpayer to a wildness || WE DELIVER Neen Deperte mans an ot a , Fei

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