Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 18, 1925, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18, 1925 i war ee Che Caspet Daily Cribune t ‘ notable to a de-|dcne this not at the expense of a i é ° 4 Oe a 1 nay the | Quincy Adams rater oes Bg - = to be considered “behind the times,” and “out of date,” and live The Changing Status pomantiesipn end eens g to allay a fr in that he won the presidency, | othe 's, but upon eae ee Re) I Pr ae er at on the old simple scale, their growing children, as a rule, are - sap cp dtip sone | once occupied by his father. the| “We love him, for his grit # . view in New York Mr. | and}and brightness, of course, but pri . not prepared to do so, and they are apt to make life miserable denied emphatically that munitions man cf splendid ab! and | and z H ‘, Bi Per i. wet of the| marly becau while he has experl- By |. B HANWAY AND E E HANMWAY for their parents if they cannot have their ambitions gtati Whether or no Germany ever at-|Wwere being stored in large quantl-|t Deed some dicappointments along/a | fied. Of course, it might be argued that the parents should tains the ‘place'in the sun” of which | tles in Germany. “Here or the | House of F etaniier vce hel for a mo- Entered at Casper (Wizars ge poatsthictres second class matter, compel their children to conform to the old standards. This -| the rormer kaiser was eo fond of|/he said, “may be found « | In bis John Quine: is November 2 i is not an easy thing to do and in sqme respects, perhaps, it | talking, there 1s’no doubt at all that | man or a few radicals w Ada: 1 r Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Moming| is not. wise. Germany has, a gitt.for keeping 1a | stored. hundred or more guns, Dut) lous, while Mr. ‘Taft 1s 3 {hen cole twaralukenaia foarte! gray’ T every Sunday at Casper. Wyoming Publication offices: Tribune These conditions add pressure to the life of the ordinary | the spotlight. At the present sitting | 1 cap baa Mets = Apihieintets ern Europe in the ‘en+ liding. opposite postoffice. | man who has to face such circumstances. No matter how. |8t Geneva of the counc}l of the Tr Sattagedd, Cilia ia ibe doe vrie‘ie tne Only: Ansorl: | thenthiceniturs.: Teo: they took, STATS 16 and.16| bard he works and submits himself to the monotony of modern | League of babe a pitcia hay ethers ot Gollore tok etna: 5 AeHen Hagkeltinea 0 thes tapi | e form of oblong slahs, into which’ nnecting All Departments labor there seems to be little or no possibility of escape from Se AMSA Lover: (auieb. powers / He icoed by |both the executive and judicial|silver or copper stud hame ATED PRESS ehourid Coueia leans shadow all elie. Otter nations must | many will come back as a ¢ [branches of government, He has|mered. led to the use, Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. Sy SThe ORIGINAL \\<eMalted Milk \ ae 1 eee | , aa and Diet For Infants, Invalids, the Aged; Nursing Mothers, Children, etc. ink you're good, tr Then compare yo! Contains the valuable muscle and bone building elements found in the grain and whole milk. Easily assimilated by growing chil- dren, students, anemics, etc. Excellent as a ‘light Junch when faintor hungry. Prepared at homein a minute by briskly stirring the powder in hot or cold water. No cooking. Se for publication of In this situation some of the unrest, so noticeable in‘ this: | await solution of ptoblems vital to| dustrial nation, and it ma country, in the last few years, may be seen. The old con- their welfare unti! the German view | Valence of this belief whi tentment of a decade » seems a long w back, and the and the German purpose are dis- itl PH Be hr t worst of it is the future, holds out no real hope that we are | closed. now belie cele ising Representatives approaching a.brighter day. ‘A notable indication of Germany's 0-23 Steger Bldg.. Chicago, Ul, 286 Wifth ceria changing btatusis tHejabsence of the Willi H Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bldg z dictetorial tone until recently em- ullam Fi. neisco, Cal Copies of the Daily Tribune ployed by the greater Allies in: ad- ke CUI OD i Eortp py ead | Ran Eee poco aa ors WwW dressing communications to (Ber-] ‘We hardly know what the ang _visitore are welcome: CROSS ORD PUZZLE lin. To the German application for | can people would do if they SUBS "ES membership in the League of Na- occasionally smile a while with ay Carrier and. Outside State tidns are attached conditions. which | iam Howard Taft, by far the nday Here's the puzzle of puzzles. It has stumped the best solvers in | {t.J¢ impossible forthe other:Powers | cheerful looking picture { w game. It was recently submitted to the members of the Na- | to accept, but they are not blunt.and | auguration of the preside tional Puzzlers’ league, which convened at Newark, N. J. Yet not one’ | ynaipiomiatic’ whén they ‘say 80.|the Columbia, South C of ‘theese ci ving could fin They try to make‘tt*plain that Ger-] ord, one of the leading your hand at it. At least see how far | many will be warmly/welcomed as a | papers of the sout work wit ewer tomorrow. member of the League and treated| ‘While Mr. Taft, of with equality, but that the-spirit.of | say so, we may well imag hir equality for all debars special terms | adding at the close of the for-anyorle member power. It’ is| completing Mr. Coolidg Plainly feared’ that. any cavalter|the presidency, ‘and may treatment of the German applica-}have mercy on you!’ tion. would tend to drive Germany | well have been added, fc into an alllance with Russia, a pos-| knows how t sibility Europe dreads, perhaps more |in the presid than any other thing. président for four Whether the changing attitude ts dus to softening toward Germany or Tt GET YOUR TRIBUNE looking carefully for {t call 15 or 16 Ir r. Register complaints fear of her is not quite clear. A oF = 5 “scare” was thrown {nto France and GET YOUR CAR WASHED AND the smaller countries which are-Ger- r *: many's neighbors by the report of MOTOR CLEANED ‘Bum Job the military control commission that | BY THE VAPORIZED KEROSENE METHOD 3 9. Germany was secretly arming and j mer 3 that the city’s newest reservoir, completed last fall preparing for war. But now comes | A J i O LAUNDRY = approximately $115,000, is of no service to the city, Diegeg aoe te SOR tales end Aaa! | : ib, hold. wa disinterested in his observations at| always genia’ | AT THE ALEMITE SERVICE STATION y If this is, the case, and it seems so to be by the report of city’s official water committee, who is to blame for a situa, on of this sort? What precautions did the city take to insure a non-leakable », where are the cont tors and where the contract? Also ey ae > aes as the city engineer? Somewhere along the line, a y_is responsible to the taxpayers, and that gentle. alate «| uld be hunted up to explain why he delivered a bum }{ Berlin, discrediting the report of the} such character fine at this time to talk about bringing experts 2 elsewhere to tell us what is wrong with our reservoir, when t e should be nothing wrong about it, if due diligence were exercised on behalf of the taxpayers. It is also a fi a to talk about eight thousand or ten HORIZONTAL VERTICAL 2 1 dollars additional expense for repairs to make the | 1- An instrument by which to/ > Born or carried on the sea. watertight, when it has-been in use only a few measure and lay out right) 5° 4 marginal reading in the He- 0 . It should have been water tight in the first place. ge | brew Bible. . . The reach of an arm. builders and contractors of the reservoir were properly Sins. i | 4. A she bear. 1 to deliver a satisfactory job and the bond is still in | Bee rave (_oftee If it happens to 6. A component or essential part. ot the bill, To Usten to. A gL sf 4 in icine | s y or to keep | C. Pge get es | OLLOMANCE where |l. ‘The chief king in ancient Scot h bh Ct re land d Ireland. or aa A e best Coffee if Lt rows~ ££ lit HA The gold monetar, wise and the taxpayers are compelled to howl and rightly so. Bringing Closer Touch oftentimes, that a supposed enemy proves a lisguise and an imagined competitor a helpful ally. mmunication is affecting the life of the world srofound, incalculable. i exerting. One t only independent Hot- of Namaqualand 21. Immense. What if the « A carangold amt smic processi be but a ge ing together of er-fish, ids and souls, me toward some inconceivably pare for pub max or unity? The first and immediate bearing of or at tired all scientific discovery and invention -is on the physical An Instrument used instead’of a sextant. The prehensile-tailed Brazalian porcupine. To swab. A jet of steam from a volcanic fissure. rise. The twenty-second lett Greek alphabe A-village lot. A Bengalese monitortizard: t or excitement. A domestic cutting implement ¢ Bengal and of ge 1 utility (Eskimo), | hat if that be but the prelude to its spiritual ap- t Broadcasting is obviously the most potent method hitherto available for spreading information, di minating ideas appealing to mind and heart. When it was first used for church services and sermons, some ministers were apprehensive that ‘the effect upon churches and individuals would be unsatisfactory. With ex- perience the reverse is shown to be the case. Not unnaturally was feared that if the people could hear at home a whole —prayers, hymns, scripture-reading, sermon—they | 51. ght forsake the assembling of themselves together and so ([56. 1 e the advantage of common worship. But it is doubtful ,.| 47 A union of two characters rep ether churth attendance is adversely affected. If some <a resenting a single sound. | ple who but for broadcasting would attend public worship 8. A adult male fir-seal. } 49. To migr A little me, the interest of large numbers who do not ripsies r is stimulated in things religious and the sup: port-of some of them gained for the cause. The advantage to the sick and to the. aged is of course very great. Even the col lection, so far from suffering, sometimes gains, wireless hear ers being impelled to send contributions one in y extinct dinornithold w Zealand. 1 I duce » especially when it re} The Present Drudgery In no department of life the drudgery, which is created by the demand for specialization, felt to greater extent thar in the « of man’s ordinary work or occupation. Other examples of it might be cited, but seeing that work takes up s0 many of the waking hours of the average man, exhaus much of his strength. 1 occasions s0 much anxiety, it haps the most characteristic example which might be Perhaps at no time in his long history has man found th sure exerted by this work-a-day worid heavie Y It is true that the development of many wo: P VA f t be too thankful | s aK wledged that with the introduction « tas tex € Aliza rms of labor, Frequently this intense special " ° . alts in.a.loss of the sense of creation, which at onc Bound from romantic tropic ports ed interest to the work of thc er ly developed industrial system. For this reason the 8 pronounced in many departments of modern la- r ars of age h times as good a chance of bec is he ey} Fe come cargoes oj rich, rare cotjce 1 ‘ould it his fat! ] ) nerate into the weary monotony of the treadmill, grace your table. iy Surely it was never intended that work should become such, That our modern industrial system has this tendency few will Our men buy only the cl The girl who puts innumeral bottles furnishes an extreme exa1 2 pickles into in- ple. Many other numer 3 a Ns ] ae ng. cterees; salght be given, from) alist grades, They search the world jor y is this tendency confined to factory labor. Good-busi those exquisite coffee flavors so art- rk until they become. most h PENCIL | fully blended In that cup of Butter- n ) h im total work of with ry ri > N : ee] } | ‘ l Ms ut you drin a eciali han the t wh obtal ed RUBBER END Dutter-Nui lea 4 you arin an Tater e blind to the dead Wena a eon | PANT A 4 ia hose who edt their eer | will shit you. night. Biche amore of ithels 2 Added’ to this is the ecor snuaineriine oal- meek : qhelé gronern’ a ( i ; 12 hee qualities~providing Never has there been a blend to a manual. toil. n lal ah 3 a A Lesley luxury and ; i : pensation than formerly, t ratail his aa’ = a oe B preiaey compare with delicious Butter-Nut. i. economic position to ar ’ le ex » the cost r ; of living is proportionately high noceanee al Padi eiberenteun: $1.20 per dor. rise nearly in proportion to the rise | Ke Tar ctapea qapaitioaienees Ask for VENUS B= of fact, many people find that tl ate etter off under t Mae iels wok tered fer high wages than they were under low w j ¢ standing . In addition it must be acknowledged that with the rapid severa} Bul dae Apc il Bed ies At your dealer or write us direct social developments of the 1 ee sl vine ie’Gbie te | American Lead Pencil Co. so advanced that it is an exceedingly difficult matter for some. |a ple eis people to keep pace with it, und the ¢ tlesirc keepup | t | appet es and live as well tive ae ined yet been exorcised from the average Ame fumily. Not fer 1 Store for and secondhand, withstanding the fact that many parents are quite prepared

Other pages from this issue: