Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 10, 1925, Page 6

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PAGE SJX Che Casper Daily The Casper Daily Tribune By J} & HANWAY AND E E GANWAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) oostoffice as second class matte: November 22 1916 ued every evening and The Sunday Morning per. Wyoming Publication offices: Tribune osite postoffice Departments ne All CIATED PRESS d to the use for publication of he Associated P news © ] f Advertising Representativ Steger Bldg.’ Chicago 3 Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon. Bldg Francisco, Cal Copies of the Daily Tribune Chicago. and visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State UL, 286 Bitty 1 t cription becomes one month {rr arre { y DONT GET YOUR TRIBUNE ' n e after | for {t call 15 or 16| ot will to you gister complaints } 1 ' ‘ ’ same old thing g S poi out by this paper just how the law enforcement de partment nts squander the people's money in their opera : tions. The recent legislature appropriated forty-two thousand dollars for contingent expense and eight thousand dollars ‘for the commissioner's salary. The governor recommended ; of $75,000 for this activity for the biennium 1 n increase of $15,000 over the last appropriation, 'The | increas is not granted. Por a brief time, just previous to + and during the legislative session, the department agents were not sent out to e1 in the usual orgies but now that the legislature has adjourned, activity of the same old kind has been resume It is a matter of JitUle consequence whether the shooting t ineident tntut ocenrred in this city a day or two ago was The “agents” have ‘been running tru The old story of “hooch” and-women has n t accident state to form while her held its own * If the state must carry on the farce of law enforcement why is it that it does not employ men of standing to do the enforcing? . Reflecting Public Opinion The American people, whose representatives and servants in authority senators are, are not so much interested in the prerogatives of senators as they are in the transaction of pub- : lic business. The spectacle of one of a half dozen men block- ‘ing or killing important legislation through the abuse of their privileges is one of which they haye grown weary, and Vice President Dawes did not put the matter too strongly x. when he said that an “outraged public sentiment” di tm» a change. Elected by the whole American people to pre fe, the senate it was not an act of effrontery, but a simple per- formance of duty for Vice President Dawes to give expression ™' to their views on this question, just as much the business of *~ the people who elect senators as that of senators themselves. ae Vice President Dawes has shown the ability to sense and Xe, the courage to voice public opinion, When he launched his at- a tack upon radicalism in the last campaign he was violently denounced by the opposition and sent many of the leaders of ©. his own party into a fit of trembling that resembled the Saint 5 Vitus danc sefore the end of the campaign eyery Republican "3 speaker and writer was following his line of battle and the re- : sult was an overwhelming popular victory. Those who aré now a; similarly denouncing him for throwing open the windows of %, the senate to a violent gust of common sense will find that in %_ his views Vice President Dawes has the public back of him in j®. the demand that the senate cease to be a death trap for busi- ; ness and a sounding board for obstructive oratory, Legitimate debate of public questions, however extended, t is of course to be desired rather than condemyed. But:no one it is in doubt as to the difference between discussion ani ob struction yt i ar a a n . Why They Are Conservative ¢ According to a statement issued by the New York ‘Trust t. company there were in the United States last October 11,814 nd the number was stea tions was i building and loan » increasing. The total membership in these associa 80: ations f 7 @. nearly eight millions, and this number too growing every t day. The increase in the pumber o sociations and the num ® ber of members during the year 192 P at ten per cent This bit of statistics indicates that the number of wa arners in the country who are gradually building up their savings by means of these community associations is steadily I nereasing and tlfat the int t of the working people of e. the United States in the property rights and oer privileges up to October was placed in tl granted them by the constitution is tremendou®ly on the up 7. grade. T The building and loan associations, of course, only repr . if a part of this interest, as a great many of our wage earn 1 patronize the savings banks and similar institutions Phese eight million participants in building and loan asso ciatior wever, fur one explanation of the complete de feat of the radi me the United States last year and q° the accompanying repudiation of LaFollette and his constitu | tion baitir h In a country in which the wage earners by enterprise and b thrift build up thousands of savings institutions and so share in the fruits of so-called “capitalism,” the appeal of socialism has but little chance of inflicting permanent damage. Commun- ism, and individual thrift and enterprise do not go hand in hand. Communism cannot gain a foothold where thrift and en- terprise, coupled with the privileges of a free government are the attributes of the work people That is why the United States is at once the most conser vative and the m truly pre ssive country in the world. And furthermore at is the reason why a campaign to rec ognize bolshevism in Ru arouses very little interest among the citizenry of the United States Political Deserters Has a politician elevated to public place bj party with which he is ostensibly afliliated licly leave that party, join enemies in and destroy it, and then without disavowal of his course, its hands recognition | that party? A negative answer to that question will of course be in- stantly returned by every straight thinking citizen. Nor will any politician with-any other purpose at heart except the serv . ice of his own selfish interests at the sacrifice of the welfare _of that party, claim for a moment that self respect her on «the part of the renegade or the party to which he is disloyal &will permit the setting up or recognition of such a claim, Nor will any sincere man argue-that those who join the en- emies of thé Republican party in attack upon that party during y_* national campaign, haye the slightest legal or moral right “to such recognition, ; / a political the right to pub. an effort'to defeat profession of penitence or that party and demand at to himself member of eficial as a 4 15 and 16} also the local news published bereln. | oston and San Francisco offices | | | } will fight shy of, thi ngsters i horizontal. din Preposition. n ple. mplish for changing air cur- who superintend a 1 inte hurch’s ests, Declines. Melody. Fogs An oil children Alluvial depos river. By means of, low matter from a sore. rm of precipitation Tart. Holy person Garden earth. Perched Those who dissipate property. String fence used in tennis Neuter. pronoun, Pinches (verb) Organs of sight Part of the verb to be. Winding part of a stairway. ‘To do wrong. One who aims uted, epirig powders. VERTICAL To satisfy march 33. t Ufe. at mouth of bod, | PUZZLE || SOLUTION Solution of Monday's Puzzle El Cantor RALPH RUMUS ORLANDO. | By | jin that I. don't know I e to g I I don catchin tly v hat I la it t | Jemic, | For we don't » one nea us ‘'biue 1 | There's nothing like singing for| banishing sorrow; : Let us ralse our vo! in joy- ous song. We'll make the w to live in| tor | For while wer it | won't take long | | When in PAIN The old reliable Baume Ben- 6 will bring immediate re- lief for every pain. It digs in through the soreness, and re- lieves congestion like magic. GET THE ORIGINAL FRENCH BENGUE CANALGESIQUE) For: —e ‘umations at Colds ai , . Tired Feet aod every Pain Thos Leeming & Co. Amer, Ageaty, Ne Ys | CROSSWORD PUZZLE is crossword puzzle when thi | 6. A maker of head, 1 ee Warmed js 3 | Hebrew name for God. | rent again. Kind of an automobile. One who stones (pl.) Fabulous bird Married To w Dry Measure for coal (p!.) Perspired Spotted Mistake owned Meadow Polite f kills by throwing m of addres: To p Double. Hunting dogs Promoted Scoffs ‘To supply food Fluid in plants. To attempt. To resist authority Wither “Too much emphas!s may be laid Line where two pleces are] upon the theaterical if not grotesque sewed. delivery of Vice President Dawes. Born It is as natural to him as his breath, To err and hed his notes been those of the Pronoun cooing dove instead of the charging Mother lion, he would, before he had been Tribune Dawes and the People "Charles G. Dawes, stepping blithely to the chair of the presid: ing officer of the senate, within five minutes demonstrates that he has] na oge but the people with him,” $ the Boston ‘Transcript. ‘In dd as well poised as his de- of {t was the oppe president blistered th making for n public business harids of one, of senators, a greater power than the ly eto po exerciged under the} Constitution py the president of the} United . States.’ we (happen to ecisely;the same Monday ,,far. be it with the’ text of uncon’ 1 Dawes | speech the new vice president hus put i finger upon a palpable defectiin 1 tional legislative procedure which in| itself has contributed ‘as much as gb most any other factor to bring the| senate into disrepute with the peo- ple. 1 “Wyether he chose the proper oc-| for af utterance, wether! liver minority of wer not with a flip of the wrist | sacrificed his influen with ~ the} senate even 4s ho enters the portals | of its chamber is a question that is} beside the mark. In our opinion he has done exuctly this, and the senate never will forgive him: He has put it on the defenstye from the start of his activities as vice] presidebt, and we know enough of the senatorial] mind and habit to war he prediction that many of the senators in the future will be more eager to humiliate Dawes in every possible way than to be guid- ed by his advice, helpful as it’ ultt- ay prove to theirown pres- senate is traditional! lous of its own perogatlyes, par- ticularly in their relation to the vice president, whom it regards merely as a piece of furniture, lke a. snuffbox, but not as the second of- ficer of the land. Rarely if ever has any'vice pres! t from his place baited the senate or assumed to ad: | vise it in any particular unless, as sometimes has ocetrred, his opinion is asked privately; and then only because of political or official ante- cedents, like those of James’ S. | Sherman, which lent peew value to hiss opinion. Mr. Roosevelt, something of the type of Dawes, one day almost came to*an open break with the senate which was averted by a convenient motion by wise old Senator Gallinger of New Hamp- ire; but Roosevelt's impatience was temperamental, excited by a passing incident, and not in any contemplation of “‘reforming”. ‘the senate, -they exer when the power of, the individual to; The World's Record - . going two minutes, haye shot him- sif in the'same melodramatic style. But the speech of General Dawes makes ‘sane and sober reading. If he chose to. make it.at- an. inoppor- tune moment, from the point of view of the senate, he undoubtedly realized that he would get his ideas before the country in’ his inaugural address as he never could again. never will, unless the demand comes so overwhelmingly from out- ide that It cannot be resisted. In- deed, in our opinion nothing short of @ nationdl campaign with this as the leading issue-ever will lead to a gurrender by, senators of the power iso, Under their rules; for impede the’ public business, to dic- até what measures may and which not pass, to match and even run the authority of the chief executive—when this power is sur- rendered''a sénator is little larger than a member of the House of Rep- resentatives.” Fuel Efficiency y the Iway§ are, saying rmeny millions of dollars. by iricreas- ed efficiency in-the use of fuel is shown In an editorial in the Railway Age. It estimates that the {ncrease in efficiency in the use of coal in 1924, as compared with 1923, saved $29,500,000, and that increases in ef- ficiency in 1 4s compared with 1920, four years before, saved About 44 million dollars: These estimates do not allow anything for savings due to reductions ‘in the price of coal. “The average number of pounds of coal consumed per 1,000 gross ton miles of road frelght service in 1923 was 161 pounds," says the Railway Age, ‘and in"1924 only 149 pounds, a reduction of 12 pounds, and the best year's record ever made, Total gross tom miles in 1924 were 1,085,765 mil- lions. The amount of coal saved in road service by increased efficiency in {ts use was, therefore, 6.514.590 tons. The average cost in 1924 was $3.05 per ton and) therefore the say- ing was about $19,870,000, “The amount of coal consumed in Wssenger service was reduced from -1 to 17. pounds pei’ passenger train car mile of 1.1 pounds. This made a further saving. of almost 2,000,000 tons or about $6,100,000. “The foregoing figures’ are for road service only. ‘There must be added ‘for other service a saving by the Class I roads of approximately 2% million.dollars, “It would appear, Ey for a hot breakfast 3 tos minutes for Quick Quaker ERE is a rich breakfast, delicious beyond com. pare. Yet cooked completely in 3 to 5 minutes, | Look for the Quaker on the label That means Quaker flavor. That means 3 to 5 minute cooking. That means the super- fine oats you want—the finest grown, the most delicious in all the world, Your grocer now hi That’s quicker than plain toast; coffee. Why then, have less nourishing breakfasts, less | delicious and enticing breakfasts? | “Hot oats and milk,” doctors all are urging. . | “Savory, flavory oats,” your appetite and children’s urge, I Get Quick Quaker today. All that rich and wonder- } ful Quaker flavor is there; the smooth deliciousness that once tasted is never forgot. See what a joy tomorrow’s breakfast can be. Standard full size and weight packages~ Medium: 14% pounds Large: wo kinds of Quaker Oats—the kind you have always known and Quick Quaker it’s ready before the 3 pounds 7 ox } d itis the country that must} rules, for the| TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1925 i found to amount to about 14,400,- | or at the average ore than 44 : com-| is that the saving accom-| Am plished by the Class I roads solely | 000 tons of con), oF ay Py increased efficiency in-the use of | price paid-in 1924 a 29, F D. million dollars res couche Ted Bet ete thevaimount ot| “This saving would pay a 0% per “The ction e a t 1 ou by the Class I roads in| cent return upon an investment of coal used by s | i923, as compared with 1920, was| about 770 million dollars. about’ 5.169.000 tons, although the} SS ee freight-service rendered in 1923 was slightly larger and-although, in spite | © of a reduction of p: r traffic. | l¢ reduction in th , therefore, The cherimoya. a fruit found in is described as a vegetab! because of its white flesh, the consistency of a firm combined flavors Baby’s First Gift — CARRIAGE is baby’s first important posses- sion. See that it is of a design, finish and quality of which you can be justly proud. You can secure this quality as well as comfort and style in any Heywood-Wakefield Carriage. "They are backed by 99 years of manufacturing experience. Each Heywood-Wakefield Car- riage has A Quality Seal on Every Wheel. The Quality Seal is a red and gold hub-cap which guarantees a quality far greater than the price tags would indicate. . Ask any good furniture house to show you theattractivenew Heywood-Wakefield line of Baby Carriages, Strollers and Sulkies and other Juvenile Furniture. Also our Reed and Fibre Fufniture, Porch and Lawn Suites, Cane and Wood Chairs, Cocoa Brush Door Mats and Cocoa Floor Matting Look for A Quality Seal on Every W) (A red hub-cap with gold letters) We Handle Heywood-Wakefield Nasatings CALLAWAY’S FURNITURE 133 EAST SECOND STREET Not Even Robert Morris In the days of the American Revolution, history tells us that a very rich and true American— Robert Morris—financed the war against England. As a financier of that day, he was considered very wealthy— one of the richest men of his time, But could Robert Morris, with the turn of a switch or the press of a button, fill his home with bril- liant electric light? _ Even though he had envious riches, could he command the ser® vices of our common servant— Electricity? In his home of wealth there were no electric toasters, vacuum cleaners, bright light from electric lamps, cooling fans and other con- veniences made possible by elec- tricity, , | What Robert Morris could ‘ 0 I s not buy with his great wealth you are enjoying every day, ; - But a few homes in Cas without the comforts m sible by electricity, per are ade pos- Power Company | Natrona

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