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

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am, E é & e PAGE EIGHT Ohe Casper Datly Tribune © HANWAY AND E B BANWAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class mat! November 22 1916 . By J ne {ssued every evening and The Sunday Morning at Casper, Wyoming Publication offices: Tribune building. opposite postoffice. Tusiness. -Dalephones |. 2. --2s- 5s) sia ce ae eee ee -- 15 and 16 Departments Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B, C.) MEMBER TH JCIATED PRESS ing Representatives Advertising Rep ee King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bldg. Chicago, 11., 286 New York lobe Bldg, Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bldg, y St. San Brancisco, Cal Copies of the Dally Tribune York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices and v Ts are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State nday One Year. All xubserip’ in adva: ure del » becomes one month {n arrears. KICK, LF YOU DONT G YOUR TRIBUD 2 ou dor nd your Tribune afte king carefully for {t call 15 or 16 tt will sy : Register cor ints taking fiuman Life ; Killing to end suffering,” which has had some vogue in Paris brought about by the action of a Polish actress. who slew her fian author, suffering from an incurable disease and was acquitted, set an example to a/dressmaker who killed her sister under similar circumstances, and caped punishment. A few days la just long enough for the suggestion to reach Hungerton, a village near Leicester in Sngland, the sister of a clergyman who had been dangerously wounded by the premature discharge of a sporting rifle, shot and killed him before a surgeon could be summoned, to relieve his suf- ferin t a day or two later the Denver case occurred, where a ph in poisoned his crippled daughter to get her out of her misery Here uve three widely separated cases of mauslaughter very similar lines, in which human life was, taken on yery similar grounds, The murderers posing as benefactors. In the two French cases the murderers were not held for punish- ment. The English and American cases remaining unjudged by the courts here has long been controversy about the necessity for physicians and those in public authority to in a similar way end the tortures of sufferers from disease, insantiy, even those unfit to reproduce, but such controversies have ended in nothi Tt has all come back to the principle that human whatever its condition, is sacred, and no right to take it exist in any enlightened nation. he acts recited in the several cz in no other light than murde in vindicating the right of killing es above can be viewed and the law should be as prompt of the victims as in any other case lhe Pulpit’s Duty great revival of religious education all over the-coun- try, the reorganization and revitalizing of church education boards, and the dismissal of public school children for a por- t of each schoo] week for the purpose ¢ Ving them re- ligious educ under the auspices of their own church bodies, will do much towards the rearing of a generation of law observers, but too much dependence mist not be placed upon this. Such movements cannot cure the present generation of criminals The Christian pulpit has a duty_and an opportunity in this matter. The just judgment of the supreme being is a sermon topic which seems to be avoided in these times by many ministers of the gospel. Although God's laws are admitted to be just and His punishments are seen t ural law, yet many clerg r topics. We wouder or because the virt?: lacking. Not since Moses b the mountain Sinai than in this “ inescapable in all matters of nat- yinen seem to prefer to sermonize on if it is through timidity, lack of b of the preachers of the past is ght down the tables of stone from the been greater need of the thunders of ation, Preachers pretend to base their utteran upon the Bible, yet there stands the old testament, largely deyoted to a history of the chosen people, the Israelites —a history which is one continuous sequence of departures from the commandments of God and the inevitable punish- ment therefor, finally ending in the complete overthrow of the nation and the scattering of the remnants of the people throughout the other ions of the earth. If that record was not made for instruction and for warn- ing, what was it made for? Is it not preached because it is not believed i ior believed it, and if modern Christianity is not He believed and taught, what it based If churches are no longer Christian, if they are merely ethical clubs, let them abandon pretense and come out for what ther The Law's Majesty nley, of Kentucky, has delivered u passionate 1¢ national mania for passing laws, The tifty- ays passed thirty thousand bills and resolu t expired eventeen th limitation, the sand nine hun before Exactly, » laws making it a misdemeanor to deliver milk and k children on Sunday, provided that nothing in this act be construed to prohibit the sale or delivery of ice vreai dred laws against taking bass of less than two and three-quarter inches from the Housatonic river; lawg inst women’s smok ing in public places; laws against shooting dice; laws author. izing of ment of cks upon pay- 0 for each day or fraction thereof to the state thorizing constables to shoot all dogs not led in section 4 of this act: laws mak mis ale by $10 fine to shoot a buz laws auth the state conptroller to pay the sum of $7.94 to Silas P. Ludenhopfer. “The n trouble,” s enator Stanley, “is not that we have not enough respect f law we have.” Very profound, no doubt, and certainly true. But how are we going to have re spect for « ’ low can we remember them all? Law is theory, ted will of human socie but not a single member of © American ciety, and not all the members added up together, on the statute book an remember all e laws that are nlready Gasoline Industry Gasoline production in the United States in 1924 amounted to 8,959,680,220 gallons, the greatest output in history, exceed- ing by 1,403.736,077 gallons the previous high mark of 1923. Daily average production was more than 24,480,000 gallons. Imports dropped 24.20 per cent under 19 A new consump- tion record also was set—7,780,025,085 gallons—exceeding 1 by more than 1,095,000,000 gallon 2 faster. runner than The great sunner, Nurmi, may be is not so long a runner our old friend William J., but surely be nor so frequest a runner, nce and the Dafly Tribune will not \ ‘This is the kind of puzzler bot three-letter words, "but quite a ep few, but not too many, unkeyed letters. HORIZONTAL y male voice. par Covered with wax. Dried in smoke. _ PUZZLE | SOLUTION Solution to Thursday's Puzzle, Oil rh 1} businces from | ning has been distinctly what 1 called a Sporting propos New York He kground for e 6 al exhilerating, but as a example in industrial organization it never seemed to be quite right, The spectacle of duces a prime and | exhaustible ecess: of life, ontributes about a sixth of o 4 business which pro- no means fn- wh oh | erty ed fils hearers that there was dynamite in it. ‘The oil industry was brought up on reck- | lees competition, its leading men are afra{d: of public regulation, afraid ot new organization, afraid of the gestion that the oll supply will give out and must, therefore, be a tively conserved. There {s also dyna- mite in {t'so far as the public is con- cerned, for it'{s frankly based upon @ rise in the price of oil. But {t un- doubtedly poses.a very serious pub- le qpestion. As everybody knows, it is a peculiarity of the petroleum in dustry that when one well ts opened every owner of land about the new poo! has to sink a well, whatever the tate of the market, and get what oil | he c tore it is drained out r him. As every one knows, the tes are enormous. Gas ts wasted. | 22200 the wholesome spread for bread NUCOA made from high grade coconut oil, refined peanut oil, and milk- that’s all kling of the longer kind. Che Casper Daily Cribune CROSSWORD PUZZLE Many Quite a And good interlocking of words. ompuser and solver likes up a steadier consumption. The older operators can point to the fact that the industry is becoming more stable, to difficulties in the way of so com: plete a reorganization, to new efti- ciencies and ellmtinations of waste. But {t {s not clear that they have proved thelr point, and it is clear that the public has a vital interest in the way {n which our diminishing resources are exploited.” Oh, Hail! | BY gis SPEED IS KEYNOTE OF PIRATE TRAINING like Grimm's experience as a ma jor leaguer. But he has youth, cou! age and a knowledge that the is fa chance. By JOHN B. FOSTER. (Copyright, 1925, Casper Tribune) PASO ROBLES, Cal., March 6.— Also, speed is his bi IN CALIFORNIA CAMP. My stuff is good. think it’s bad, y folks, I'm the best poet Ws @ best—the No one has praised me much, e: st ming ever though som a folks | | pty are but m | VERTICAL 1. Excellent. Carbuncle. Heavenly Bones supporting chest. Crown of head. Stepped. Pithy uae Allow; 65. Bee Oil is wasted by being left in t ground because new gusher wel press thexprices below a level whi the old well in this coun’ as if it were everlasting. ‘The Doherty plan proposes ble to contro! production, and bu: makes it possible fully to work out The predictable supply ‘y steadily diminishes. But what we have is scattered about stabilize the industry, to make it pos- , hail me as the | Hail me the Writ the west prejudice, s Cramp of all, and common sense, 1 to me with {ll-con The Writer’s Cramp of all the Gol- den West! n me, and here'twill Wor if you don't—I'll take tt anyway. eae ‘OWIDEND CECLARED = ON DEFUNCT FIRM |Bramer Loses Bout on Foul ALBUQUERQUL, New March 6.—Eddie Mack of mosa, Colorado, won on a foul from Harry Bramer in the ninth round of a scheduled 12-round bout here last night. ‘They are featherweights. pists ho tur’ he Mexico, ich The Japanese national costume to| does not lend itself to golf, and of attaching a pennant. The keynote of the Pittsburgh Pi-| !ng rates in 1925 will speed and more speed and after that more speed. Speed radiated from-the town’ like musi ‘om a radio broadcasting sta- tion. Every member of the team, in fact, a broadcasting “station all his ‘middle name. They talk of the four hor football, but "Bill McKect: has the original four flying bu: eers, who can outspeed any is his own. fron steed, And the outfield is far from slow. Barnhardt, the slowest of the five outfielders, is not here yet. The oth- er four, Cuyler, Bighee, Carey and Grantham, are skimming back and forth in the gardens like swallows flittering about a barn. In ‘this dazzling array, Bill Mc- Kechnie {s building once more hopes. If we can get a good start this year, we have a good chance to win,” sald. McKechnie, “I; do. not say We will win. I'am too old a baseball! ty the Pirates lose. out, it will be codger for. that, But we have better|o. jack of something else than bilities than some other clubs. | greed P in my opinion, We missed our good four horsemen that ever mounted a grid- FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1925 FOAGER 15 CAUGHT BY GAPITAL POLICE CHEYENNE, Wyo., March 6.—T. C. Colbit, alias G. H. Gibson, ts held in the county jail here on a charge of having obtained $2695 on a forg ed check. Sheriff Carroll is in re \ ceipt of information that Colbit alsa is wanted at Greeley, Colo., on harge of forgery, and that he is suspected of having | safes at Greeley. GLORIA OUT OF HOSPITAL PARIS, March 6.—Glorla Swans son, American film star, who un- derwent an operation for acute perl+ tonitis on February 18, has recov ered to such an extent that she is leaving the clinfo at Auteull this “plown" two start last year because of weather conditions that hurt us. We left Cal- ifornia:in fine fettle but we got tnto the river section on the way home, hung there in the heavy spring rains and became mildewed. We won't do that this year.” ‘Pile’. Traynor, who played part of last year under a physical hand! cap that made him dally around third base until he almost shed tears of mortification, is outrivaling the California sun this spring to see 18) 'Impedeu' as a) hecekeary,©'nc: c which can make third base the hot- companiment. ay io m CHEYENNE, Wyo) March 6— Ha te is in ee cue eae around a ° Bee line. Shapers " he | Citieriss Loan||: ce. noet ce seen. ieee Emperor. ES iy Oca: Van ere ic keep out of rahge of a hunter. He epee eee Girl. company, an adjunct of the Citizens | “be: kept. away-troin- the. old C guae National bank, which company sus sec Te, w xOOkIesEBan B6-clag thre, Spoken pended last July 9 on. the eame day | S20k- <3 tend : pende Hurled: Rub ona teat A that Citizens and iret National; TT@ynor {s out Lae thente pediteey Linear measure Resemblane or Autom | hanks of; Cheyenne-jand ‘several as: ee baie teaeent Catheter To inflate. ro teevearale sociated, Wyoming and Colorado} (oy ose. = Cry. 000K polinds banks failed, has declared an Initial OF hs. Existed. me iooustl is dividend of 20 per cent. It {s stated| Traynor's spirit is superb and his Face value. Se ae that' the ‘Citizens oun company foakiias saasnAatls You lock at him 28. To bribe ay 428 yi ci, | eventually may 80 per cent of | Once and think: ). ‘witching, TOE O UALS ET eer Te el dtmtagpt03 $62,000 of obliga-] “What a great ball player two or Awaits tions, three managers lost a few years ago Not flexible, = when they had Pie and did not see Cittlo fruit: M. Mallor him through.” pg ie ETS. Another fast flyer is Glenn Wright Pertaining thet | a Whey radinie raboue oF atartatt Se aTine | position, showing several thousan¢ at. Dita #2. Literary compo In Finals OF | Siine'st sere. 8 fo fall in drops. eat Vets: | Moore at second io. is: less . A Person to whom a gift {s made. cence machine. | T : Pl widespread than his playing mates, nation with Facts admitted Onpitnekerieries enns (LY) | perhaps, but: be fits in with them 100% food Sorrowful. Tairhee” beautifully. Only an injury of some Bowl. Tiinieawireblentive | kind can keep him out. MeKechnie To plan Aloolega eae PALM BEACH, Fla., March 6—| put him at second after fully con- And don’t f pad ayale Owns, [Fresh from her ‘victory over Miss] sidering his work. Pressed a little as nd don To forbid. Binaltirees Penelope Anderson, of Richmond, |.to why he let Maranville go and re- urface,of cloth. modal nifiranieval, Virginia, yesterday, Mrs. Molla B.| placed him with Moore, McKechnie oven-baked Fluid from the eyes. Menibierees wing of: fish. Mallory, former national _ tennis| sald: Write for recipe Pine tree. SOACIASSE champion, will meet Mrs, Bernard Moore {s superior to Maranville! book, "50 Ways 60. Railway station. Sensitive perc ption. Stenz, of New York in the finals of] in eve: way excepts in his hands. of Serving ‘To the weather side. ‘Adjective bing fying} the annual women’s Florida tennis| Maranyille has a wonderful pair of SHREDDED There’s no ‘ The crossword puzzlé craze. slaGee laa eet championship tournament today hands. But he has nothing else on WHEAT.” Witkan: To venture; Se ae Moore.” EAT. It would be odd if the pennant of 1925 should come down to be de- clded on an issue of a pair of hands. Suppose by *some chance Maran- ville’s hands should prove enough to make him Moore's superior as a ball player and {t should happen that these two players met in a game on which the issue of the season hung. ‘There would be something new in baseball—hands versus a whole ball player. But McKechnie has his cour- age. He has staked his chance on the change he has made and ts go- ing through with it. Then there is Nieuhaus at first base, right-handed as against the nearly all Japanese golfers wear the itd left-handed Grimm and with nothing not two--or three-- or properly pres Watch Your Coffee! OMPARE your coffee this morning with the coffee you served = several weeks ago. Does it taste quite the same? — Schilling Coffee does. The tradi- tional blend stands--untouched, \ There is but on Schilling quality-- Sour. It is brought to you sealed in vacuum tins only--for there is no other way to erve those rave and easily- | 1oit flavors of fine cof. INTHIS | combination Of course, you can buy lots of ex- pensive, indigestible foods that supply little or no nourishment. But why do it when Sxreppep Wuxar in combi- milk or butter supplies value—easily digestible, balanced nourishment? orget that Sareppep WHeat appeals to the taste, too. These flavory, loaves are the favorites of youngsters and grown-ups alike. ‘They have an appeal which can’t be duplicated. “substitute” for Sureppep PACIFIC COAST SHREDDED WIIEAT CO, Oakland, Calif. raise money, I am offe prices: Open Flame Heaters Patriot Closed-in Heaters Four-hole Gray Enamel C Detroit Jewel High Oven All White Enamel Univer: Regulator Reduc Granite Ware Coffee Pot *aints, all outside colors, White Roman Interior Wz E. P. BRENNAN (THE GAS STOVE MAN) Owing to the fact that I am overstocked and must Radiant Fire Heaters____ All Other Gas Ranges for One Week Only at rranite Ware Stewing Pans _ Aluminum Ware Kitchen Utensils at Lowest Prices 50-lb. Glacier Refrigerator__ 70-lb. Glacier Refrigerator__ 144 SOUTH DURBIN ring the following special --$6.00 to $11.00 $12.00 to $43.80 $21.00 to $29.00 $30.00 -$46.50 as Ranges___=__ Ranges as low as. sal Gas Ranges with $87.00 ed Prices s 8) ak eee ill Paints, gal.__ PHONE 133 (Just Off Second Street) DBVWA B® 2A 990004 See This Car at the Show 25 Miles to the Gallon 58 Miles Per Hour 5 to 25 Miles in 8 Seconds THE NEW AND FINER MAXWELL CASPER MOTOR CO. 230 WEST YELLOWSTONE CARS LEAVE DAILY | Baves you approximately | WYOMIN Salt Creek Transpor | TOWNSEND HOTEL 4 Westbound No. 30.222. Westbound No. 2! PHONE 909 TRAIN SCHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN J t Arrives De No 603 . -. 1:55 pm 20 en No, 613.2, s.... mewnnn-----10:45 p.m i Eastbound i Departs NOW ORR Sette sna 0's akecet eet 545 p. m. 6:00 p. m. CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY ariteoeed Arrives Departs ae ae a CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE M. AT 9:30 A PARE—$12.59 12 hours’ travel between Casper Rawlins MOTORWAY tation Company's Office PHONE 144

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