Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 21, 1925, Page 6

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‘1 Dy PAGE SIX “Tbe Casper Daily Cribune Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postcffice as second tlass matter, November 22, 1916. The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday, at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune Bulld- ing, opposite posvoffice. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited in this paper 2nd also the local news published herein. Momber of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) Business Telephones Branch ‘Telephone Departments By J. E. HANWAY AND E. E. HANWAY Advertising Tepresentatives Prudden, King & Prudden, 1 3 8 © Bidg., Chicago, Ili., 286 Fifth Ave. New City; Globe viet Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon B'dg., 55 New gomery St, San Francisco, Cal. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices and visitors ure welcome. SUBSCRIPTION R. By Carrier and Outside § One Year, Daily and Sunday Year, Sunday only Month, Daily and 1 ‘ee Months, Dai'y and Sunde y One Month, Daily and Sunday - Per Copy By Mail Inside State One Year, Dafly and Sunday One Year, Sunday Only Six Months, Daily and § Three Months, Daily and Sur One Month, Daily and Sunday Ail subscriptions must be paid the Daily Tribune will not insure de scription becomes one month in arr KICK, If YOU DON’T Git YOUR TRIBUNE If you don’t find your Tribune after looking care- fully for it call 15 or 16 and it will be delivered to you by special messenger. Register complaints before 8 o'clock. GE 1 A Blow To Romance The West That Was will soon be preserved only in the memory of the pioneers and in the imagination of the motion picture directors. Substituting the stall-fed Hereford for the loving long horn drove the cowboy to dis his chaps end pinto and climb into Kollege Klothes and a Ford. And now the Texas Rang ers, the most picturesque military organ in the whole world, has been ordered to disarm and become citizens by a Federal district court San Antonio. Without the Rangers Colonel Roosevelt would have had difficulty in recruiting his Rough Rid ers, and O. Henry could never have written his best stories. Since the days of old Geronimo they have guarded the stream styled Rio Grande, now ° at and Women, foo “Promenade all,” to the near- est drug store, cigar store or candy store—then get ready for a treat. “Sweet's Rodeo Bar’—thats . what you ask for. Or, better still, “two Rodeos.” You'll be glad later that you have the extra one on hand. ask for Selected walnuts; honest-to- goodness dairy cream; a layer of | delicious chewy caramel coated - ting international comity as to ford it in pursuit of a Mexican cattle thief. That Texas will without a struggle suffer the loss of the body of men which made her famous in the time when Tom Green County was bigger than Connecticut is doubtful. If they have a legal ground for carrying the constitutionality of the Rangers to the Supreme Court of the Unit- ed States it will not be long before the long- mustached and gun-bristling members of the of- of¥anization will be seated before the highest tribunal in the land, each marked as an exhibit for the defense. Pictorial Trait One of the landmarks of London is St. Pauls Cathedral. Eve schoolboy in the English- speaking world has seen a picture of it, says the Che Casper Daily Cribune W. yoming Tribune. The only other illustrations that vie with it are those of London-bridge, the Tower of London, and Westminster Abbey. In recent years we have been treated to views ‘of the Thames embankment and: the Parliament buildings, but Westminster, St.. Paul’s and the old bridge are festooned with romance, while the grim Tower also splattered with blood. When we get a pictorial glimpse of a huge dome dominating groups of man-sized buildings we know at once that the legend beneath reads, “St. Paul's, London. Sir Christopher Wren’s arch- itectural masterpiece is almost as familiar to those who have never seen London as to those who have. The city surveyor of London has, it is said, ordered the dome to be demolished and rebuilt, as in his opinion, it is a dangerous structure. Cathedral officials say that, if the mandate is enfore ed, the reconstruction of the dome will cost 2,375,000 and the church will be closed for thirty The pillows are’ hollow. Engineers ‘maintain that they were sufficiently strong when the cathedral was designed and built. Subse- quent excavations for neighboring buildings and new sewers, with the increased traffic on the ad- jacent streets, have altered conditions bearing on the foundations and the whole cathedral build- ings. The hollow pillars must be vate! with solid ones. Some engineer perfect in mathematics may in- yent a scheme to build new, solid pillars without tearing down the dome. The impossible has been achieved many times ere thi All cities are alike, yet each*is distinctive. Fifth avenue and Broadway differ from Michi- gan boulevard and State street, but New York and Chicago are alike as great cities. Cities are alike, but unlike. Some of the landmarks, like St. Paul’s, com- munities like to preserve. They remain after the settings about them completely changed. It it not that they defy time, but that they attest to transition. Time is lenient avith no one or nothing. The new built ‘all about the old is a reminder that humanity is ever active and old gives way to new as generations come’ and_ go. > and) new. ones rise. with finest milk chocolate. Try it—then you'll understand it’s the candy sensation of the West. EVERY BITES A DELIGHT You Know It’s Good Because It’s Made By SWEET’S » SALT LAKE The Home of Real Good Candy Dre INTERNATIONAL SYNDICATE. SUGGESTIONS FOR SOLVING CROSS-WORD PUZZLES Start out by filling tn the words of which you feel reasonably sure and they in turn to still others. These will give you a clue to other words crossing them, A letter belongs in cach white space, words starting at the numbered squares and running either horizontally or vertically or both. HORIZONTAL 1—A cover 4—To heap up, accumulate 7—Naval (abbr.) 10—Like an ape 12—Terrible 16—Absence of government 17—Dignified reserve 18—Directed to go 19—Personal pronoun 20—Recelving Office (abbr.) 21—A province of modern Greece where the old Olymple games were held 22—Possesses 23—Girl's name 24—A town and watering-place In 8. W. Prussia 26—To consume 27—Skins of certain animals 28—Of the color of ebony 30—A familiar fruit 31—Part of Bible (abbr.) 32—Prepesition 33—A chamber used for baking 35—Man's name (abbr.) 36—A musical composition 37—A thin, flat, narrow strip, as of wood 38—Polnt of compass (abbr.) 39—A great Southern general 41—Diplomatio agent of high rank (abbr.) 43—To make love In low, murmur- Ing tones 45—A ‘gospel 48—Pressed with hunger 61—LIike 62—To overlook 64—An Eastern State (abbr.) 55—In addition $7—Closely confined 69—Varlable or fickle, 61—Artifice, stratagem 62—Volcano on the Island of Sicily, Italy 63—A great city In Japan 64—At the wind VERTICAL 1—Marked with lines 2—A Mohammedan official (pl.) 3—Any foul substance” 4—Destitute of water 6—Preposition 6—Volcano on the Liparl tslands, Mediterranean Sea 7—Centra! part of a church 8—Active, quick 9—To Impatr the value of 10—A glassed frame, as of a win dow 11—Prefix, form of ad 13—Royal Academy (abbr.) 14—Membranous 16—Substances dough 17—Accosts 23—Latin for “gold” (abbr.) 25—In this or that manner 27—Killed by cold 29—An Idea 30—Volcano on Island of Mar tinique, W. |. 34—Recently 39—Only active volcano In United States 40—Self, personality 41—A fermented liquor 42—A bass-singer (abbr.) 48—Hint, suggestion 44—A female ogre 46—A servant 47—Anything that happens 49—A combining form meaning the | sun S0—To cleanse after washing 53—Musica! note | 55—Salutation to the Virgin 66—Girl's name 57—A familiar vegetable 58—A table beverage 60—Proceed 61—interjection used for ralsing PUZZLE SOLUTION Solution of Tuesday's Puzzle. WT os NOT OBLIGATED. TO Uat FORGE Debt Agreement Calls For No Action by America. By DAVID LAWRENCE. (Copyright, 1925, Cohsolidated Press Association) WASHINGTON, Jan. 21, — The United States government has not become involved in any obligation requiring the use of force in the col- | lection of debts from Germany or any other country. The traditional position of the United States has been maintained notwithstanding the {mplications in European press dispatches and ap. prehengions expressed by the ‘irre concilable® group on Capitol Hill Secretary of State Hughes merely reiterated in his statement Monday what has always been the American attitude ever since Elihu Root pre sented to The Hague conference of 1907 a convention embodying the Drago doctrine which repudiates the idea of enforced collection of debts. When Mr. Hughes points out that the agreement just reached at Parls “does not provide for sanctions (pen- alties) or deal with questions which might artre if the contemplated pay- ments should not be made," he sim- ply states anew that the United States has abandoned the old time Policy of using the bayonet as a bill collector, He says: “With respect to any such contin: gency, the agreement at Paris puts the United States under no obliga- tion, legally or morally, and the United States will bo as free as it ever was to take any course of ac- tion it may think advisable.” The foregoing is designed largely to quiet the fears of those who think America was intrigued into hidden obligations by the Paris agreement, but it is exactly in Ine with what has always been done in the settling of claims by the executive branch of the government, which js under the constitution, fully authorized to negotiate with foreign powers on be- half of the United States. This 1s not the first time agree- ments of this character ‘have been made without submission to con- gress. The armistice agreements, es- pecially those relating to the pay- ment of the costs of the American army of occupation on the Rhine and the subsequent pact Known as the Wadsworth agreement, were not deemed to require ratification by congress. Ambassador Kellogg had {un mind, however, that someone in congress might think America had departed from her traditional position, so he asked for a reservation, saying America had not surrendered any of her rights, but the other ambassa- dors argued that such was the case anyhow and that a reservation was really unnecessary. Secretary Hughes has gone a step further to explain away this inci- dent by issuing a statement which, in itself, constitutes notice to the world that the United States Gov- ernment assumes no obligation to collect debts due from Germany, although participating in the re celpts from Germany. Senator Johnson, of California in introducing a resolution asking for information, pointed to the ‘reserva- tion made by the senate to the treaty of Berlin, which attempts to forbid the appointment of any rep- resentative to any commission or body under the treaty without ex- Press consent of congress. Altho accepted at the time on the ground ct expediency, the international lawyers chuckled to themselves be- cause congress can make no law or treaty with « foreign govern- ment which changes the relation- ship between the executive and legislat! branches of the United States goyernnient. The appoint ment of ambassadors ard commis- sioners to deal with forelgn govern- ménts on any subject whatever is vested in the 2xecutive branch of he government, under the consti tution The agreements that may be made, however, are not binding until ratified by coogress, if they are of such a nature as to require congressional approval. “The mere negotiation, however, or mem- bership in an international confer- ence is not a violation of any treaty and probably never would be so con strued by the courts because the con- stitution explicitely gives unlimited right to negotiate to the executive branch of the government. Apropos of ‘the attitude of the United States in declining to have | anyone suppose for a moment that America will help even by the ure of force to collect debts, the con- vention ratified by the United States on November '27, 1909, and by Austria-Hungary, | Denmark, France, Germany, -Great Britain, Guatemala, .Hait!, Japan, Nether- lands, Norway#Panama, Portugal, Russia, Salvador and Spain, reads in part, as follows. “The. contracting powers agree not to have recourse to armed force for the recovery of contract debts claimed from the government of one country by the government of an- other country as belng due its na- tionals. This undertaking 1s, how- ever, not applicable when the debt- or state reftires or heglects to re ply to an offer of arbitration or, Do you know you can obtain the NUS ‘V PENCIL with RUBBER END (from 4B to 9H) Famous for its emooth writing qualities—providing pencil luxury and pencil economy. 10¢ each $1.20 per doz., VENUS Siihs forpee fi Quality Pencilin. peered 17 black—3 copying degrees | Slip away from Go one route and ping off where you Comfortable, City and Denver wi Sunshine _ Recreation Florida ida, Cuba, Texas or the Gulf Coast, where June temperatures invite you to outdoor play be- neath the palms. ~- Attractive Winter Fares. modern, LINGTON trains make convenient con- nections at Chicago, St. Louis, Kansas via all routes South. Let me help you plan your winter trip. January to Flor- return another, stop- wish along the way. BUR- reliable ith best through trains F. S. MacINTYRE ° Ticket Agent WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1925 a CROSS-WORD PUZZLE after accepting the offer, prevents any compromise from being agreed upon or, after the arbitration fails to submit to the award.” The submission of disputes arts: ing out of the failure to collect debts involves a sperial procedure by treaties with various countries, but in the main, the United States hag been bound to pacific settle- ment of such controversies. Thus, there is no significance to the im- pressions cabled from Europe that in any future cecupation of German territory, in the event of German de- fault, the American flag and its troops: may march with the forces of other nations 2,000 Escape Theater Fire TOKIO, Jan. 21—(By the Associat- ed Press)—Two thousand person in the’ audience at the Engiza the: ter fled to safety without apparent injury tonight when a fire broke out which destroyed the building. No Ities_were report: Mach favored by women traveling without An Hotel of quiet dignity, having’ the atmosphere and appointments of a well con- ditioned home. 40 Theatres, all principal shops and churches, 3 to 5 minutes’ walk. 2 minutes of all subways, “L’” toads, surface cars, bus lines. Within 3 minutes Grand Central, 5 minutes Pennsyl- vania Terminals. National Bank Failures Due For Decline WASHINGTON, Jan. 21.—The current year will see an important reduction in the number of national bank failures, treasury officials pre- dicted today on the basis of repo 4 showing that 35 national .. closed thelr doors in the last six months of 1924. Secretary Mellon declared that general banking conditions were sound and that he believed the bank- ing institutions of the country were seldom, if ever better able to meet the business neegs. Failures among national banks itn the first half of 1924 totaled 72, The figures indicated that Habilities involved in the closing of such banks in the last six months were less than half of the amount involv- ed in the failures between January HOTEL ST. JAMES TIMES SQUARE, NEW YORK Just off Broadway at 109-113 West 45th Street escort. ‘Sunshine in every room” Send postal for ratés and bookler 'W. JOHNSON QUINN, President Buy your tires from a man who handles nothing but tires and tubes, and only the best quality ‘Michelin Cords The prices are surprisingly moderate. R. M. MOSHER THE MICHELIN MAN 317 W. Yellowstone—Phone 309 Every Day a GROCERIES 129 W. Second Pot Roast, Ib., 12M%c and perips Pure Lard, per lb, Picnic Hams, per Ib, RIG TIMBERS Three-Day Cementing Phone 2300 and 62 x ee E.R. Williams Store No. 2 Link Pork Sausage, Merlyn Sugar-Cured Bacon, Veal Chops or Steak, Berkshire Farm Style Sausage, per lb. (100% pure) 2 Center Slices Swift's Premium Ham for_ WE DELIVER THE NICOLAYSEN LUMBER C0. Everything in Building Material . Bargain Day MEATS Phones 10—11 —, A SPECIALTY FARM MACHINERY, WAGONS Distributors « of KONSET Process for Oil Weils. Casper, Wyo. ffice and Yard—First and Center Sts. JOIN THE AMERICAN LEGION NOW Rae

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