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@45e Casper Daily Tribune are op file One Year, Six. Months, Daily and Three Months, Datly Ine od One Year, If yon don’t t and it PAGE EIGHT By J Entered at Casper (Wyoming) oostoftice as second class matter, November 22 1916 E HANWAY AND B& E HANWAY bune every Sunday at Casper Wyoming Publication offices building. opposite postoftice ble for the enormously increase Business Telephones ---- ‘cle: n produc which sta Branch Telephone Exchange tics gathered by the Department <2 SE EnIRaI ALTER OE | rce show have 1 Aavertiss i : arbi of the dry law. It is den. King & Prudden 0-33 Steger Bldg. Chicago, U1. 286 biftp | the oe SL Scar tiehee: Aver, New York City: Globe Boston, Mass., Sulte 404 Sharon Bldg oe Gur aD att ps ohita fee New Montgomery St Coples of the Daily Tribune} f€ of prohibiti h San n the New York. Chi and visitor SUBSCKIPTION KATES By Carrier and Outside State Daily ang S are wel ome and Sunday and Sunday nih tatty ag nds; Dally and Sur ly and Su ly and Sunday .._.. anth tn ptton becc KICK. Lf YOU DONT GET YOUR TRIBUNE looking carefully for it by spec messenger. Register 8 o'clock. tvered to you er will be « Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning Tribune yston and San Francisco offices —--—- 8.90} {on the pi 78 | Everybody Pays the wes no him a liying can The world It will yield all that is required for human suster 1d happiness, but it has its price and that price must be paid before the d liyery of the A man adhering to the theory that the world is indebted to the human race and insisting he was going to collect the living due him in any way possible wis sent to jail as a vagrant. The man pays instead of collecting. The public may provide him with temporary shelter and something to eat, but he pays for it with his liberty and his self-r ‘ Doubtless there are deluded persons who do not believe in individual effort ar factor human existence, But if their theory held good there would be no progress, no development, and the march of civilization never would have started. It has been said that it is not all of life to live and if that not true there would no incentive to achiey Human energy must be directed toward accomplishing g and greater things as time wears on or our social structure would fall and civilization would stagnat The world parcels out its bounty according to individual effort, but there must be that effort or the bounty is withheld, It is a fallacy to assume that something may be had for noth- ing. The drone pays the highest price and receives the Jeast. Real laaie Is Out fundamentally, the issue between the American exporter and his rival would seem to be one strictly of whether quality or cut prices should prevail. A strict adherence to those hi standards which have long given American wares their stand- ing in overseas markets would seem to be the only founda- tion for a lasting edifice in our foreign trade. This may m a in certain lines and trade cente but there is sor comfort in noting, name that Bur an price cutting seems to be decidedly on the wane. The high rates of interest now quired by leaders to European enterprises will present an in- asi y. serious problem for the European manufacturer, faces the inevitable accumulation of heavy ti from relief may not be available for years. There is every steady upward climb of wage rates which in per below per-war purchasing power, With recovering exchange rates as a result of stabilized cur. the advanta world me a livi wnee, comfort < The man who beliey never collect owes spec as to essary were be He which indication of Germany are cent rencies, one of monetary s enjoyed by our com- petitors after the war has been taken away European industries are in need of capital, but it ean be frankly questioned how much of the amounts sought are de- sired for legitimate purposes and how much a means of satisfying the obsession for excessively long credit terms to their customers which was so conspicuous a feature of pre-war exporting. One of the grim truths which our German competi- tors ought to have learned is the extremely unstable posit which inevitably results from over-extension of credit. The Puritan and Piety Professor Lawrence, of Connecticut colloge has expressed the belief that some of the Puritan fathers and mothers we not so pious as they pretended. If he thinks he will unde mine our faith in the Puritan by evidence, he is mistaken. Anybody who reads the ssachusetts court docket of, say 1656, will find “James Standish fined for being vehemently suspected of being drunk “Matthew Coe fined for hunting raccoons on the Lord’s Day, during public service,” not to men tion “Mrs iffin fined for swearing.” But the professor misses the point of*Puritanism. It is the laws handed down that matter, not how'they were enforced. If in 1659 the liquor law was amended so that bootlegging ancestry descended from the Mayflower could inform the au thorities about the drunkenness of the Indian who bought the liquor and thereby obtained his services for twelve days of and labor, and for nothing, at least that was no worse than the case of John Studly, who was “fined for stealing his master’s ox and-selling it to him.” It is inconceivable that the early white men in Am a Should have been less human than their descendants. And most certainly they professed and in their hearts undoubtedly felt, much more piety than is prevalent in 1925. Give the Puritan his due. He tried to live a godly life and did not backslide any more than he could help Large Bodies and Justice Large nblie a asse ongress is no exception—are not qualified to dis ely either justice or mercy. History abounds in epis howi this, By the use of committe the dangers are lessened, but when the committee reports reach, the floor of the house, the judicious may well grieve. Mem bers with no ise of pre ortion fritter away the precious hours in wrangling over petty payments that any competent business executive would dispose of in many minutes. seldom the value to the country of the time taken even if me sured by only the proportionate share of the coxt of the legis lative department, far exceeds the amount involved to say nothing of the that results from so much precluding ac tion on really important public business. The pathetic side of it all is more distressing. Long-suffering victims of the ma chinery of government see their hopes of relief blasted by the ost professional quibbler who refuses the unanimous consent usually necessary for action, Justice becomes a lottery. Tt is the worst 1 ct of the congress of the United States.” Reasons for Laws “The use of liquor in general furnishes on structive the v statutes mn bout. The need of some regulation of the liquor traffie by law appeared in the earliest days of the American colonies, For the most part, how ever, this was left to the individual ¢ vee till the middle of the last centur 1 béen chiefly icultural, and hurts few besi of the most in instances « ay id socia The country intoxication on the farm conscie the victim himself. With the factory era came more and more of widesprad injury from the liquor traffic. The total absti nence movement and the preaching of temperance, useful though they were, did not seem to the majority of the people in many localities to be meeting the need. So resort to written law was demanded and secured, The purely economic forces came to the help of the movement, finally winning national prohibition. It is sheer nonsense to say that congress or the stute legislatures forced this on the people. What they did was to enact into law constitutional and statutory, the evi dent wishes of the majority of the ns in the greater part ucies. of (heir constitu The Big Factor Secretary of Commercé Hoover is being quoted to the effect that: There can be no doubt of the econ- mic benefits of prohibition. View- ing tho temperance question only tro s-angle, prohibition has proved its case. I think increa temperance over the land {s respon: to sound a w nst due {ts results nent September, and one-half ndustr ts tae p enac tariff of During the past years conditions two in le have ¢ the confidenc protective minds of A and fa re is too m of t the turer: The he suppress that a prote art the genera 1 that the tar- 8 of an is a purely truth regard- 1 by at- do not our rity is. wholly due_to 4 | tion, but with ction we as- | sert’ there wou eneral | prospe conditions t ‘ ng, industry ls underlying protection. o conditions are ntlon a single rief time in the f the fiscal year our imports r exports, and all of the » wiseacres told us that this yuld “normally” ex- 2 as rch 1923, our {m- eded exports by $56, 1 by $38,760,369; in . and in June t May $276 1 year was in the succeeding fiscal year the excess of exports over imports totaled $757,145,472. But in the seven months of the cur- rent fiscal year our excess of ex- ports over imports totaled $$41,191,- if maintained for the that would total ar entire fiscal y $1.422,299,476. Thus is the beautiful theory of the free traders knocked into a cocked hat. All of this merely goes to show that the protective tariff in its third year is Hkely to demon- strate whatea tremendous factor’ {t is in maintaining our national pros- perity, because these statistics of im- ports and exports never would be what they are but for the protective tariff—no question about that! We do not gainsay that greater ef- ficlency has been achieved by labor because of prohibitio We take no issue with Mr, Hoover, , We mere- ly assert and believe the facts exist in abundance to pro rotec- tion {s the big about and maintaining our present gratify- ing conditions of general prosperity. Sie eS es mall Towns Jur small towns are being re- born. Blectrical power is doing it— power, which’ Colller’s has called ‘the greatest of all servants of society’. It is starting léng-idle fac- tory wheels, building new plants, bringing better roads, higher wages and u better way of Ife. High- tension wires are putting the pleas- |ant, happy small town of American tre dition on its feet—to st Commenting on that editorial, the Dixon Tribune says: “Collier's is right. The smi town | is as well lighted as the city. It has the same ad’ ous power con | nection for cturing as the city, There time when the [mill or fs to utilize 1 to build its wheels stream—today the mill may be two or three hundred miles away. Given advantageous shipping facilitles, small towns are now attractive to manufacturers be- vause of less valuable sites, cheaper rents and temptations for em- ployes.” One more thought should be added to the foregoing comment. Advo- cates of public ownership have been attempting to show that state of government development of electric utilities 1s necessary to give the } | ple service. No more misleading or jerroneous statement could be made, water power on the site of th Jare glibly talked about by p Che Casper Sunday Cribune rectly to the Commanding Officer of the regiment or station. The Chief of Musicians would serve for four years with rank, pay and al- lowances of-a colonel. He would in- vestigate the qualifications of can- didates for appointment as band commanders, have direct super sion over the Army music school and all authorized ine bands, make and enforce rules and regulations, sub- jec approval of the y of W rr the conduct of the Army Music School, for th ministration of the horized lin bands, and for the recruiting | fer, and promotion the person-| nizations of nel of the mus would be nk, p commissic and allow ing to length | of service. ne band would consist of enlisted personnel of the designs following stant band leader, first} 1e first sergeant and three | cond grade; eight musicians, fourth grade; and additional classes as the sec- retary of war may, by regulation’ or| special order in particular cases} scribe is ved that enactment of the bili will afd materially the mor-| efficte! and security of Tornado Times Vesuvius in eruption, snow and {ce sliding off the roof of the world in the Himalayan \avalanche, earth: quakes, tidal waves and a typhoon walking the waters aré among the most terrific moods of nature With these must rank a full-grown torna- of Missouri's Ozarks, leaping the mile-wide Mississippi and ripping across the Illinois Ozark Uplift, is an unforgetable spectacle. These storms are veritable cloud sickles of death. They spread des- truction at a speed that may reach 300 or even 400 miles an hour. ‘They are born in ‘some sky cave of the winds. They ricochet across a state, sometimes roaring like the wings of Eblis high in the sky, sometimes dipping down to flatten a town into a muddy waste of debris. One day of tornadoes may mean millions in ruined property and anywhere from fifty to one thousand dead. Tornado time {s from the vernal equinox to the summer solstice, Dan- serous days in the tornado belt stretch from February to June. ‘The great Southern’ storm took its six hundred lives in February, 1884. March and April show long Usts of these disasters. It was a May twis- ter that hit St. Louls in 18¢6, leaving fixe hundred dead in the ruins. Inlike the rattlesnake, these twis. ting serpents of the sky strike with- out much warning. The weather maps showed nothing ominous in the Mid-west. There was no hint in the lines and chart-markings of a storm that within, twelve hours would take one thousand lives, des. troy a score of towns and scourge six states, af Usually thie is true. Comes a mild day in late February, with rusty robins and sweling buds. In midafternoon, a drumming of low thunder and by dusk a tornado has walked over the fields On a warm day in March, with redbirds flickering In the dogwoods faintly blooming on the Ozark Hills Thunder-heads pile miles high In the southwes: or west. Before dark a funnel-shaped cloud has, dragged its spout across half a state. Or an April afternoon on the edge of the Plains Country. Wnormous a cloud shapes dim the sun. Far-off thunder drums in a terrific bom- bardment, rolling nearer, silencing the call of the meadow larks in. the fields and the doves in the cotton- woods. Cloud silver turns dark, then gray, then a strange Juminous green. The wings of an Azrael aro darken- Minister Gets found Sheriff's Job ent E measured by the the wages paid in American industry in world. ional in men. | that 4 States The w upr as A mu toll can wh the n ing. whi cou var! one T istry con: ing the earth, There is a sudden and utter blackness, and the great don tornado, The lanes where the twisters had slashed through the timber. nadoes mountain w nd Si from famine, Mut the way: storm gods howev thelr head decently work and hope once more and build again. ———— Railway Wages ‘Are the employes of the rall- ays of the United States the best t quotes statistics recently tssued measured sities and comforts they will buy—in ious European countries are only as great in the United State recently those compiled by the International States than in aking th Y It has always been so. Indians dreaded these storms. » first white men found mile-wide Doubtless tor always be, so long as pockets bree: through fr levels, and so long ig where it iy ana Its lls are where they are. s population Increases and towns tiply in the Southwest, Midwest th the death and damage s will lengthen. All puny man do i$ to take to hia storm caves ‘le the winds pass and gather up wreckage and build again. He fight plagues and save himself of the are beyond understand- . control or prophecy. He: « r. rush to the help of t ction. He can make it the survivors to bury wil rm air per cold the valey for se body of working men in asks the Rallway Age, ch gives data from this and othe indicating that the hould be answered in the ative. ntries ques: f- he International Switzerland, “real” by por office which show wayes—that Is, wages the amount of nece fourth to one-half as he Railway Age y of Tabor Gazet published s firm the conclus ns Suggested by nor office that ‘real wages aver- very much higher in the Unit- ny other cofhtr ges paid in Lo 100 per nt w 8 England Have a Light Greet You! are mere wo ublic fancy phrases to cc lines 5 s to power, w today and in corm ilities had tion of transmi: nd development } and steam plants, the politicians ever invented the words “super power" It is only fair to give the industry dit for what it has done and not allow the political advocates of ernment hip of industry to misre or minimize ults whiol already been plist Bands Act’ was intr | gress on Mr by Congreseman Burdick, refer to | the ttee on military affairs ja } to itr mus ne des act The pro | | | jt ther | would be in the Adjutant General's Department, a bureau con sisting of « ¢ Chief Musicians the President, with the onsent of the Senate; one band commander for each au- thorized line band, and 36 enlisted men per each authorized line band. Each line band would constitute | appointed by dvice and pays. A separate organization of the reg: imént or station to which it fs as: x the command of the ader, responsible When you drive up your garage always havea light greet you. safest thing to do. | shuns the light. THE COST IS ALMOST INSIGNIFICANT. | Because of the exceed- ingly low electric light rate | in Casper, it costs only a penny to burn a 25-watt lamp for five hours.. It | A LIGHT ALL NIGHT FOR TWO CENTS! NATRONA | POWER CO. | to It’s the Crime oth most that uropean genefally great! countriss Industrial from time to ume publis tics showing the f the this country, The avers it are for workers of all classes from common labor They are thc with the average w o! of railw ment recently i Industrial ¢ by employes in December Thi such a difference between washers. discovery was first made, the May- tag Gyrafoam Washer leaped into undisputed world leadership. There it standstoday—unchallenged. the comparative ‘re wages paid In typical centers of pop ulation and indus tries were as follo countries, from 29 per cent in Lis bon, Portugal, to $5 per cent in y in other cou In Europe: statistics from two differ. now thi sing pow sources exceed those . 1 by world is full of parasites. In tiled States | everyday business and social life we by other e the human “leafloppers.” Th rage wages large justri 5 to the most efore comvara ges earned b ay employes. A 8 Natio: 1924 y They didn’t r throughout t! try? The N s given t re EES has written washer history It has been made by thousands and thousands of women, What they found amazed them. tional Indus- the survey of the trial Conference board. “In view of the facts that, first, ‘real’ wages in the industries of the United States as & whole greatly ex ceed those pald in any other coun al’ in- an try, and secondly, that the wages paid by American railways exceed and; In Sydney, | those paid by other American indus cent; in Ottawa, | ries, it seems necessarily to follow cent; in Philadel-| thot'the ‘real’ wages received by the | employes of our railways received by any othe of working men In the Ww Human Parasites antly hopping from cons here and a ilttle there dodging work and shirking 1sponsinility. We als of.| often meet the human ‘rust,” ture who dallies throug h th world, living a life going to do’ lied | and dying w hing done—rust ve. the Luman “smu! i gossips who ing away to t Then we have —slanderers nal | sr ont © board 8 | tong and low tteught The in 17 industries in the United | “smi occupy a unique. position (not including the railways) ig human parasites. Not mere the average hours worked per week > they live off others, but they oré | seck to d the reputations and e one position to another sapping a little SUNDAY, MARCH 29, 1925 lour forces are pever strong enoury to eradicate all of the human para. sites. They have marred the prog. ress of every age—and probably al. fvays shall. tay Grain Salt | Cotton Cake Chicken Feeds Choice Alfalfa and Wheat Grass Hay Carload Our Specialty Casper Warehouse Co. Phone 27 268 UNDUSTRIAL AVE ° | YELLOWSTONE West Yellowstone Ave. PHONE 2750 1| Handiest location in Casper. Three t|minute walk from Center street, COMPLETELY FURNISHED JANITOR SERVICE i HOT AND COLD WATER = FREE GAS AND LIGHTS. FULLY EQUIPPED LAUNDRY -| And the-rent the lowest in Casper ‘| $32.00 Per Month Pay by the Week if Desired _ Es ri is prayer and ‘then guns f b witht Ng yet igh’ ta cdepatine ¢|48 and that the ave characters those who suppor Umatilla county, Oregon. ‘That's | Made were at the rate of jie Ket Sue Mey iad because R. T. Cookingham, the new | Week. In the same month—Decer Es nunity, every pro sheriff, is minister, He’ defeated | bet 1924—as shown by the lon ALUE GUE iy iiea ee Zoot Honest typi oldwest, two-|f the Interstate Commerce h het ae ‘black gun sheriff; and the first change he | ™ssion, all emy acct iiinblen hey made in administration of the office erorree _ on Ligiet - leoamitt ‘ nN cealan steal en erationti aff to daily | Week and made earnings averaging | mar the beauty and reduce the vs See aE ves bar eso bree! $81.25 a week.°It yill thus be seen | ues in life. They are fixtutes which they take on their shooting frons. | that the average w earnings | cannot be ved without destroy- df ~__| of railway employes exceeded by 16| ing the whole body to which’ they cent the Average earnings of em-| have attached themseives, train of the wind roars over and in the industries included in! Like the botanists we find_ tha: by. oo = rn ee The Great Valley, the enormous basin between the Appalachians and the Rockies, is the playgrdund of the lest ealize there could be Less than 600 days after this This is the test: wash with the Maytag—then do the same with any or all other washers. no doubt will remain as to which is the washer for you. will be brought to your home any day you say. No obligation. Phone without delay. “ Gyrafoam “Washer wi CAST ALUMINUM TUB, —eie—— FOR FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION PHONE THE MAYTAG SHOP If It’s Painting--“Bush Does It” Does Years of Tried and True Service Mean Anything to You? Signs, Show Cards, Decorations, 9 Outs 1—Washes faster. The Gyrafoam Principle tanding Maytag Features creates a more highly energized, turbulent nd continuously effective Water action. No idle water. 2—Washes cleaner, The Gyrafoam Pring ple mixes the soap evenly through the water, and forces the super-cleansing,soapier wash. ing solution through the meshes of the clothes. After that The Maytag 8—Tub 9—Meta into 7 positions. cal rst Street a ch: f eleven intermountain stores ners exclusively. /E AND SATISFA —EE Be Tatpeat hood tears eats 4— Most compact washer made — takes Bosc apace only >: 5—Cast aluminum tub — can’t warp, rust, rot, swell, split nor corrode. 6— Fasily adjusted to your height, and esse oF aber beaheas 7—Clothes can be while washer is running. for handkerchiefs or blankets. matic drainboard. All parts enclosed. Reasons for TION GUARANTEED No idle suds. capacity in world—50 wash per hour. 5 inches square. put in or taken out cleans itself in 30 seconds, al swinging wringer, Low. Swings Adjusts itself automati- Auto- Instant tension-release. World Leadership Telephone 960 selling Maytag House Painting 1132 EAST SECOND ST. WE GO ANYWHERE ANYTI PHONE 1666-J ME 7