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YY 2S PAGE SIX Che Casper Daily Tribune By J. EB HANWAY AND EB & HANWAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) .postoffice as second class matter, November 22 1916 Che Casper Daily Tribune tssued every evening and The Sunday Morning Our Firm Faith are far enough from the world war to see to what tésting it sub- jected human governments. The old empir of Germany, Russia and Aus went down in the cataclysm and gave place to governments re- publican in form. tribune every Sunday at Carper feayeenibe la dbiboaciael pteices Tribune} "It is significant that, among the &. Opposite postof nations engaged the Business Telephones -... 15 and 16 t 2 n its govern- Branch Telephone MEMBER [HE ASSOCIATED PR The Associated Press ts exclusively entitled to the use for publication of al news credited in this paper and also the loca! news published herein Member of Audit turean of Circulation (A. B.C) ered Aavertising tKepresentatives Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bldg Ave., New York City: Globe Bldg Boston, Mass. 65 New Montgomery St, San Francisco, Cal @re om file in the New York. Chicugu. Boston and San and visitors are welcome Departments Chicago, 11. Suite 404 Sharon Bldg SUBSSRIPTION RATES 286 with | ples of the Daily Tribune | Francisco offices | \* form and predictions, en no revolution, no sud- Our govern: as it has been here has bi den. transf ed States and was of the. other ps an adeq explanat app that the democratic publics. survive, because th whole the best adapted to the By Carrier and Outside State nds of modern One Year, Dafly and Sunday $9.00 weathered the crisis and Six Months, Dally and Sunday - 4.50 nued. reconstruction, be Three Months, Datly and Su - 2.26 © better for: ne Meth t - 18) known. One Year, Su - 2.50 Year, Vaily ard Six Montlis, Daily and § Three Monbts. Vailly and S) One Month. Daily and Sun. One Year, Su All subscriptions m insure delivery after KICK, IF YOU If you don't find your Tribu and it will be ¢ Dally T month tn aid fn advance and th 1h becomes one GET YOUR TRIB NE r looking carefully for {t call tal messer Regist arrears Attention of Parents Now you have it in the highwayman tactics employed by the figteen-year-old boys who attacked the ten-year old and looted them their playthings on the mountain Saturday. The older group did it in the most approyed moyie style where they doubtless gained the idea. All it requires is a little more perience and the fifteen-year-old gan e and a little more ex- is ready for real busi- ness. And then fond parents, if there are such things in this day, will be wondering how it comes that their boys are led astray by “bad boys.” The fact is that “fond parents” know nothing about their own boys and about who are the “bad boys” of the neighborhood, Apparently they do not eare, or even pay atten- tion to whe their boys are or what they are doing until something Saturday. It is not simply a family or neighborhood affair it is a community affair when boys indulge in amateur holdups for there is no telling where such pranks will lead or what the results may | serious or near serious arises like the scrape of Once More Mr. Wheeler ator Wheeler federal grand jur conspiracy in rel dictment along the where the specific senate he illegally ac G of Montana been indicted by the of the District of Columbia, on charges of ion to oil land cases. This is a second in- same lines, the first being in Montana charge was that after his election to the pted a fee for acting as counsel for rdon Campbell, an oil land operator, in practice before the interior department. In the present case Attorney Gene Stone held that the new case was entirely independent of the Montana proceeding, and related to acts which took place in the District of Columbia. These alleged acts, included an at- tempt by Senator Whee acting with Campbell, to secure oil land permits throu ation with Edwin 8S. Booth, who then was a solicitor in the department of the interior. Senator Wheeler was the prosecutor in the famous or infamous Daugherty case in which he used Means, the spy and alleged bootle r, and other notorious characters as witnesses. Initia tion of the and jury p dings in Washington caused a flurry in the senate which under the leadership of Senator Borah, completely exonerated Wheeler It is charged that continuously from April 1, 1920, January, 1924, the accused were in conspir to defraud the United States out of the use and possession of 10,000 acres in the county of Toole, Mont., and that through the methods used the accused were able to secure possession of 9,000 more acres than either or allof them would be entitled to under the law. from wrongdoing to The Business World Phe outstanding feature of the month in business has been the realization that conditions have not improved as rapidly or to the extent that had generally been anticipated in the all and early winter, and this has had a temporary depressing eff which has been reflected in the stock niarket. Specific unfavorable factors have been the receivership for the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway company; the development in the senate of opposition to the administration which has led to the apprehension that it may be difficult for the presi-, dent to put through his party’s program—and this may have particular bearing on tax and railroad legislation; the re ports of reduced earni by the United States Steel corpor: ation and other sieel companies, and decreased earnings by some of ilroads, notably the Union Pacific. B these retarding forces, industry and trade mo: ue comparatively high levels of ac ; LIK ce of production and distribution at about present rates or better is indicated. To be sure, the wave of extreme nism that s t over the coun after 1 fall’s election has passed, giving way to a mor rvat utti tude. N cless, the favorable conditions underlying the recent ex on apparently remain dominant he Diplomatic Mil! x lls of dipl , r t ring tl e are esting. I lutic f reement embr g France t B n dl the t 8 American rejection thre he whole matter open, and ever since there have been attempt to find’ a substitute. Finally as result of Vr occupatior of the Ruhr region, the reparations problem shelved and there was a definite promise on the part of Great Britain given by McDonald to Herriot, of satisfaction to France in matter. This promise MacDonald tho to fulfill throtgh the Geneva protocol of last September. Six months | r the protocol was killed by a conservative British government. ti the negotiations now on between For Minister Char berlain and Premier Herriot e are W vg still an . attempt to draft a pla or Fr h eur proposal now pending vontemplate understandit h which, in effect, France’s tern frontier would be db German guarantee underwritten b ut Brit In retur many would gain the right to re through arbitration her own eastern frontier at the expense of Poland and Czecho Slovakia, Diplomacy has moved since t Amer British French pact of 1919. Whether in the right dire another question The Modern Drift Modern man has increased his tools, his machinery, h invention, his amusements, his activities and his of lear ing by many hundred fold, But in the recorded history of eiy ilization he has not increased his bre is there any evidence that he has increased his innate capacity for learning. Modern man is essentially little more than the Cro-Magnon man in a new environment, Modern knowled: has grown beyond the capacity of any individual man to en compass even a respectable fraction of it, and drifts more‘and morg guto the hands of special in by one cubic ineb, nor une will not} »se who urge that po- is:not industrial the rmer but not the may be perfect opportunity in this coun- s a closer approach to it here than anywhere else. And since the outbreak of the or ly, con- revolution has been unde: unlike w | Burop wit of the v | other *c has been to reduce the size middle 3 and to increase ch upon the one hand and the proletariat upon the dire involves. the ease of the m ss and the rance of workers who earn enough to support themselves. workers in this country are ntly securing a larger share It a in the control of industry in the best w s possible—through savings and ation and investment of pro- » can doubt that restriction of imm ave aided this The most serious danger san menace a republic is. a widening gulf between the rich and the good wages a the poor. In the United States this gulf is smaller y by year. This fact, together with the way the re weathered the crisis of war, inspire increased confidence public should in f a High Life Scandals In the two cases of scandal in “high life’ ‘which have been agitat- ing the English public two English judges took different points of view. One urged that the parties to the case brought before him should get together out of court and reach a settlement, the reason he gave be- ing that the matter to be put in evi- dence at the trial would tend to give unfayorable but wholly false of aristocratic society and uld have a deplorable effect upon e public mind. His advice was not taken; and after the jury had passed upon the unsavory mess laid an view before it, the judge expressed the hope that the case would not be further litigated, but quickly “bur- ied and forgotten.” The other judge looked at the social consequences in quite another way. He did not think it was true that cases involv: ing nauseating details should always be led out of court. It is in the interest of justice to have the meth- ods of blackmailers published tn a judicial trial; and public morals can- njured by having un- and reckless _ill-livers red in the is box and expos- for what they are under severe ross-examination There will, of course, ralizing is English prove not be g scrupulous pl be a lot of bout these ases. It will be the wealthy thoroughly otten,”” using fing’ y to the ancient r: analo: France and the Roman cted that @ political revert Communists will seize upon what happens when nbridled. To the MeDons ve it arks this that the © more pure-mind- It 1s not so vir- English assert will | | | weve Casper may cribune Military Committee, which has jur-| performers, Treland on the Sea isdiction over Shoals legislation, | show a stro es and led the fight for the Ford bid.|the clever From Hoboken to Dublin, the first steamship line between these points and flying the | cer of the Army's nitrogen research | the rasp of the muted trumpets, the flag of the Irish Free State will be| office, Mr. McClellan, formerly of | shudder of the trombone tremulo, inaugurated in June. Two interned) the University of Pennsylvania, is]and the nasal twang of the banjo’s German ships, the Yorck and § ast sident of the American In-|foreando, These are all effects of Itz, of the North German Lloyd,| stitute of Blectrical Engineers. Mr. | jy individual color, but most have been purchased and will be put | Bower hus been engaged with the|of them are lke powerful condi- into service. Farm Bureau Federation in a nis. Who can make a ‘meal Friends of Ireland in this country | or aru Is problems. Se 1 t have done no more constructive aka ciidove ; — work to assist the little dominion | win cooper oC meio than this, ‘The United States-Ir an advisor | line is.a New Jersey corporation Geared Sembee financed. by American al ‘to ald e RIGHTS IN the development of agriculture and The Milk Bottle I) C commerce, and to Amer- | | ican capital to est fa i | in the Emerald Isl t ¥ friendship between the two countr | will be d and Americ: eHicer ri | and Ire! ot tread sah ve rea ered: over > by actual them. ured ONES re The xINnois i matropollae tkre ige was told by Do: State Saciinerae ther ‘ere | MacMillan, the Arctic explorer, that me problem of bottles and they were being |t2@ American government should country been depopu | the state tn earload |™m#ke every effort to claim additional lation | The old days | sie in carload | territory near the North Pole. © company rounds 3 of yict nd pover herever found ana|, Denmark has a foothold in Green- over, or awn of a ne ' 1 ldnd that might prove embarrassing day ts own And Ireland n na into the Arctic regions to make ex- to make them and the land prosper: eat iach ® few | ploration with a to claiming ous. j his deliveries from a can and| land as yet undiscovere i Heretofore American contributions greeted by the household pttch-| _ Mr- MacMillan also told the pres!- have been to political causes, to in t the taml'y door. Sanitary tdeas| dent that he would set out in June dividuals who cherished the dream new industries {on another Arctic expedition, with | of making Ireland a republic, or to}; a view to planting the American flag organizations whc rpose was to| eae LO Sit on land he believes he will discover relieve pe ar ng in the | Ss near the pole. leligetite he time tor| Does Advertising Pay? ——_—_— that, too has passed. Ald Wes to political causes now {s more or|~ Advertising has made the V less in the class of assistance in| trola Dog famo fomenting revolt. The Free State is] It has put Castoria down your no longer an experiment to be| throat, left bristles in your gums, changed overnight t too ideal-| and then came along with a Rubber. istic leader. It 4s concern. | set and took them out. ‘or the first time ory Ire It has put Sozodont, Pebecco and} has all the self government that is] Pepsodent on your teeth. possible, It has put a Gillette against your 7 i serake put Arrow collars around| WASHINGTON, March 31.—The Found the Answer | i135 056 Arrom collars around |v ectal senate committee investigat- - | your ing the internal revenue bureau con- one has sent] ned your feet in Hole-|cluded its hearings but Chairman ur Industrial edition | proof sox, put Paris garters on your | Couzens said he would permit the I consider that} toes Npwaeen es tigators to continue their work edition rful piece of ne fin : on tax cases until June 1, when the paper work. -It r fick | It has worn out your jaws on | investigation will be formally closed. on the editorial and bu s depart-| Wrigley’s and posted you on what|. The chairman added he would ments of your-organiz: If this! to buy to cure corns, warts and|!ssue statements from time to time issue . fair ® ot; thal bounionasandcingrawing toenail as the committee’s agents submit aggressiveness of the business men} Go anywhere you want to, do any-|¢V¥idence and would interpret the of your city is bound to presper.| thing you wish, and advertising has|™eaning of their findings. < Our citizens ve been holding| had a hand in {t—absolutely The sessions have all been execu- meetings late hearth. Mr. Curtis {s a professor of chemical | end to little, to carry engineering and was executive of! pe engers he prop 7 » of America’s money with which cover what is]! And then some people ask, “Does sco. of the oily tone of the saxaphone, British col eek to the United States, Mr. MacMillan 1 beckon. to| + ginal cost. T tl said, if landing zones for airships een. There | ;, BpeL noe meee rene irships are needed in the north. t on the Soa titions 4 that either the airship Los land needs ther sor the Shenandoah be sent S NEAR CLOSE tive and details of the evidence and within meager bounds g sense of rythm, But ng amounts in the since the ear Soon tires peed. the matter with Red Wing. T} advertising p the committee’s reports will not be think I haye the answer in your a made public until they are reported industrial edition. . to the senate at the regular session J. H. DOYLE The Horrible Jazz | iesinnine in December. Red Wing, Minnesot —>—_—— If jazzed music ts to rise to the T S Ll L Shoals Probl level of symphonic music, it must| £ O DCL ease Oals rrobpie do one or both of two things—be- _ come flexfble enough to express 2 The Muscle Shoals problem Sale en eee On Coal Lands be studied by a commission consist- | tic’? scho velop a sense of beauty ing of former Representative Mc. | like th school. Tied, as Kenzle of Iliinols, former Senator] it necess rythmic limita v IINGTON, March 31.—Sale Dial of South Carolina, Prof tions, it c » neither; while, and|at public auction of a lease on 80 Harr A. Curt of Yale Unive: y-|in any case the small harmonic of coal land In Rosebud county, William McCle 1 of New York and | variety, which seems to have become | Monta was uthorized by the In- Russell F, Bower of the American|an unshakable convention, stands as| terlor — dep: ent An invest- I named by | ¢ one wall in the way prog ment of $1,000 and a minimum pro- te . McKer Two qualities, and two on an} duction of 2 voluntarily from Con-| jazzed music composers | mencing wit 4, was man of the| and ang the | required. 2,000 h tons a y the fourth ar ear com: ———— ee the “What's the trouble, rubber Maybe it’s not the cigar, old fellow,’” the other tried eating a few Life Savers between smokes? vonderful how they freshen your mouth and take Their wonderful aromatic flavors freshen your “he was making a face like a horse chewing briars’* “What's the trouble, old fellow?” | Sanderson was making a face like a horse chew- ing briars. Something seemed to be wrong with his thirsty. cigar. It tasted terribly. his friend asked. uble?”” he exploded. “This cigar testes like a boot. I don’t know what’s gone wrong with nd aly ys have a package handy. may help yourself: Pep-o-mint, o-mon, Lic-o-rice, Cl-o-ve and Vi Inc., Port Chester, N.Y. d. “Maybe it’s you. By the way—have you nat after taste.” a # # o Eat a few Life Savers fact: Life Savers, those delicious little candy ith the hole, easily double your smoke enjoy- mouth like a good drink of water when you're really Once you try them this way between smokes, you'll Six flavors are displayed at all good stores so you are} Wint-o-greet o-let.—Life Cinn- avers, between Smokes ee es ee | “I want Eveready Columbias” WING FLAPS OF PLANES AID LANDING LONDON, alr expresses, the Imperial Airways to ply between London and the continent, will have specially designed wing flaps which can be raised or lowered from the pilot’s seat. When the flaps are lowered the machine can get with a heavy load and alight at a 10c the Package very low speed, while with the flaps raised and the machine fn the air. head resistance {s lowered and the machine becomes capable of high MACARONI TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 1925 New giant built for March 31. now bein, Macaroni Wholesome and satis! asa maindish. Delicious with other foods—cheese, tomatoes, mush- rooms, oysters and eggs. Try it on your Lenten menu. off the ground Eveready Columbia Hot Shot Batteries contain 4, 5 or 6 cells ina neat, water-proof steel case. BECAUSE they have a snap and vim that you notice at once, purposes around the house and they’re great for radio. ignition. Easy to get. Sold everywhere, at radio, electrical and hardware shops, general stores, marine supply dealers and garages. spring clip binding posts on the Ignitor at no extra cost to you. NATIONAL CARBON COMPANY, Inc, New York gas engine ignition telephone and telegraph starting Fords doorbells motor boat ignition heat regulators Don’t Drive Into A Dark Garage! ’ bl] bl TRAIN SCHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN iy aL esta Arrives Departs o bound tera tnennee= 1:55 p m, 2 bm enatboun Arrives Departs No. 622 22... wee nenne---- 545 p. m, 6:00 p. m. “4 CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY Wa reamed Arrives Departs No. 80 gi5 boa Westbound ‘Dates Noape Departs Nee 70 a m. I-can use them for all general The Hot Shots are fine for gas engine Fahnestock Manufactured and guaranteed by San Francisco Popular uses include— tractor ignition tadio “A” firing blasts lighting tents and outbuildings running toys busters ringing burglar alarms protecting bank vaults electric clocks EVEREADy COLUMBIA jf | Dry Batteries ; . they last longer pees. you should drive into a dark garage and “take chances”. Holdup men relish darkness. Because of the low electric light rate in Casper, it costs only a penny to burn a 25 watt lamp for five hours. Just think-for a penny you can drive into a lighted garage. The cost is so in- significant, it doesn’t pay to “take chances”. ’ There is no reason why | AY ae er A Light All Night © * For Two Cents! . N atrona _ Power Company