Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 23, 1925, Page 6

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4 rt u n rm. n i 3 . if al oF y Mu ut 0, or ri ut PAGE SIX ——_s Civ Casper Daily Triame ¢ AND E. E. BANWAY ) postoffice as second class matter, 2, 1916. y evening and ‘he Sunday Morning yoming. Publication offices: ‘Tribune 16 and 16 partments SOCIATED PRES titled to the use for publication of nd also the local news published herein, 55 New aro on file ir Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. 0.) Advertising Kepr tives Chicago, I. 286 Mtth Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bidg.: ; Copies of the Daily Tribune lcago, Boston and Franclaco offices tors are welcome. n, King & P . New York SUBSCRIPTION RATE! By Carrier and Outside State State nd the Daily Tribune will not a mes one month in arrears. KICK, If YOU DON'P GET YOUR TRIBUN® nd fter loo carefully for tt call 15 or 16 r. Register complaints ‘To the Day” Under the empire, the “To the Day.” Meat Germans used to drink a toast— ling the day in which they would go outand the world in a military way, The people of Natrona county wh ot drink “To the Day” are biding their time when the 11 go out on the mission’ of cleaning up a lot of unfaithful office holders. While not so ntie an enterprise as the Germans, had in mind, and one that ended in collapse, the people of Natrona county haye selected a job of proper done which they can and will put over successfully, The Germans did a little too much drinking and a little | too much boasting, and bit off a little more than they could convenient] musticate. n If there is anything to be done or said by the. determined people of Natrona county it will be after the Augean stables ire cleaned, and not before And once cleaned, they will remain purif 1 for a long time. Room For Reform to his promise General Dawes has taken his proposed reform of senate rules to the people, He had a good chance at the Lexington-Coneord anniversary celebration and im- j proved it, If the general succeeds in reforming the old hard | | | boiled senate crowd, he will have to go further than rules, What is needed most in the United States ser ate, is Uniied State nnutors, And these we e not at present, and can not hope to have until we rid ourselves of the machinery that places the spurious article in office. The machinery is the primary election system. We are not often caught wishing for the vod old days,” but in mat ters of polit and public office the whole country could well in the wishing ne, | afford to eng There are splendid men in the country able and willing to enter public life, provided the disagreeable and expen: ive primary feature were removed. And it is of the greatest importance to the people that a higher type of men be induced to accept public service, before something happens to the country, through men as now hold places in the two branches of cor When the type of statesmen, who have preceded the pres- ent group that occupy place and power, are com , it is most discouraging if not altogether disheartenir the present welfare of the republic Public Property It is said that the past week has seen and machinery delivered to the county st belongs. It consists of pre | sorts of tools house, where it erty owned -by the county, that the county did not have upon its invoice lists, if the county maintains any such lists, It is well that this property has been retrieved, for ii cost the taxpayers money and would likely hive to be replaced sooner or later, It is said that these tools and implements and machinery had been loaned to private persons for use for various pur: ses, and that someone had become alarmed that the great of reckoning wi rat id and it would be well to haye public property out of private hands when that great Crime !tems The experiment, tried out by several newspapers, of seg ting crime items, or refraining from publishing them at all, has in each instance been abandoned. The publishers say that cireulation dropped quickly. In cases where a referen- dun was held the vote resulted as high as sixty to one in favor z the publication of crime news. of the experiment in one case was the requests and petitions of women’s clubs. In other cases the experiment was of the publishers. ews dealing with acts of ne with newspaper publish- | y on the f \ y r omit than print this class of news. | But ho I ted what they deem a reform, havc c , ha result as the latest ex have sh 1 eading public desires all the € ts patrnage to the ( er that prints it If it is offensive to the minority to have all the news printed then the minority will haye to uplift the majority in | without tha | wage, equivalent t bo Lack of Enforcement |: t “A writer in the Prof. Haynes, Independ n able digeuss' of law enforcement,” & the Cr cago bune, “recalls that, while crime at present {is created by « tute and is pena ed by sta earlier periods, statute law y much smaller part in definiz tLsocial practices. Customs ually developed into the cor law. People were born, and lived under relatively ing or slowly « ditions, Crimes ber and were « ute session of our may add new crit | forbidden acts." He says a major | only {s required to constitute ar | a crime, but in fact the situation | ig worse than that. A great n any | | of the stautory mses have been created n t of any majority t pressure of an « applied to the 2 leal nerve, In the absence of a counter eheck from the actual popular ia- which normally even unawa sensitive 2 al multiplicity « were 18,000 in Mis viously read ed. 1,082 th 88 became th two pre in three 4 : thousand were enacted in| | this state The sa is golng on {n most of ernrment most statutory crea tions of offenses than multiplies n the aw were offen mon sense ¢ nee } weak would erent sense of ainst the offenses mon conscience. Therefore a law declaring them to be crimes and af- fixing a penalty had the sanction of the common will, of » virtually unanimous public opinion. Their en- forcement, therefore, was chiefly question of * administrative — ef- ficleney. But offenses treated by legislative fiat may or may not have any general sanction. As we have sald, many are imposed by a min- ority, without the auth awakened rity of an fority will or at ing cc laws cc Dp ze considerable part may not yet recogniz or may not consider c In many cases the present matt judgments and even if judgme implies public ad. opinion, sufficier “The phenomenc ment or inefficient this field cannot ‘be n seriot as evidence of a fundamental lac respect for peo Yet it cannot but some effec in weakening that respect » selously or indirec! And anc practical consequence is that overloads the adr tlee and diverts gies so that tl fective as th ing with the 7 the basic order yblems of ¢ Living by Dole ent 1,200,000 people living on gov ernment doles. In the minir id industrial regions the people of three whole towns are doing nothing. They are not suffering any extent. In the case of a miner | the dole and union benefits, coupled | with wages for thré@& da $11.50, whereas if he wo days he gets $10.50 and no is plain that under such he prefers the dole a work, to four day's we dole. A man asked to labor equal week work f ew indignant. “I $4.50 a wee ho sa I off und work, So you see it amount working for $4,00 a week, and I fuse." General Sir Ian Hamilton is ed as saying that Britain will 1 shake off for a century the m« rot resulting from the dole syst ri the Socialist clares that the country is | cinemas and de and adde land Is going to ruin and the is reading taste, for it is very certain that the publisher's inter lies with the majority of his readers, and to them he ll cater It unfortunate that taste is so low See What's Happening Week hy week the president steals more and more of the po litical der the Democrats should be storing up against r days of need in 1926 and 1928, The Republicans are in ffice, The Democrats are out. It is the Democrats, who, by ll the rules of the game, should be demanding decentraliza d less paternalism in government and who should be crusading for economy, It is they who should be demanding the hea of reaucrats and the wiping out of useless bu I ippens that they are doing vothing of the kind The e leaving to a New England Yankee Republican the evitul of the Jeffersonian principles of democracy Wt D rats, turning their backs on Jefferson, are rting with paternalism and half-Socialism, a Vermont Re publican ne farther in defending the remaining rights the st Demoerat has gone in a generation. The Ohio legislature has passed bill providing for com pulsory reading of at | 10 verses from the Bible every ng in the publ lool It is well that the state has j the need of formation of this che « feared that th e branch of knowledge sadly neglect ed, of late, in that particular state t is learned that if the costume rl this season, were to be weighed ould be no appreciable wear and tear From one who observe to be worn by the sum in the balance, ther on the balance. acter, for it | ‘Use “GETS-IT” THE SURE CORK Remover This Corn Remedy Is Guaranteed {Liquid er Plaster) You will never know how real easy it is to got rid of a corn o1 callous, until you have used “Gets - Just putit on. Hurting stops. Then the corn shrivels and soon you ost lift it off with th ingers. Never fails. ( \ ient } oon be able to determine the | La ( ( of hént ish, In n lot of the blushes no | they hiore cosmets than heat, Che Casver Daily Cribune time he had been overseas, is worse, there seems to be stop to the whole. | Served with distinction. ation described. La- that riots wil} fol- stem is done aw 1 be cheaper for the gov-| send its dependents to|an association which will h a course would solve/ica Federation and among problem, but | jects are the following: rness of such an ad- tent to go on living | zenship. ankind to ruin, mentally and| ment questions. It was not re first t ‘or at he age of 17 he enlisted dmmediate- in authority with courage|ly on the outbreak of the war and Back to Sanity In California they have organized 1 bear es or dominions, and in| study. Its name is the Better Amer- its ob- To reawaken in America a reall: of those who zation of the responsibilities of cit! “Few people have greater induce ments to make them wish to live than I; but I am perfectly ready to go if it pleases the Almgihty to take me; the débt to nature must be The ocher tablet bears the facts of Perry’s death and burial and the circumstances of the pre sentation of the gate by Americans living: in Trinidad. paid.’ cruiser Memphis to take part in the exercises and the golden key to the the city by Captain Lackey Memphis. The tribute to Commodore Perry is a fitting one, as Perry is one of the outstagding heroes of American naval history and the story of his) fe and accomplishments has served {nsplration to many an| American youth. as an s s made possible] To induce a more general and in- oug nment benefactions. felligent acceptance of those re- ——>_—_—__ sponsibilities. To oppose, through printed and ? spoken word, all efforts to .substl: tute any other theories of govern: IN THE DAYS NEWS | ment in place of the constitution, of ASE | the United States, st therefore be ex hite Gre aoe ete GrOee jo. | class consciousness and. th e and ten and | °F society. sed among the Fae ee eel ais Sara Linited ataten ou when South presenta it-| Property a& the 9R Reif clathed with |centive to the fu! knowledge ana| vidual energy, skill and tt ability to sery This is a program whict real American car practi Recently Mellon jturned to a young| radicals in America are man of 25 internal rev-| United States, enue bureay, This important ADYANCER CREGGwas given to Al- except in the distorted m exa Gregg as a wizard in the field of taxation, both in his grasp of the science and in his ability to give it - practical application. mulated the principles of what {s|turned out recently at Port-of-8 | known a8 the “Mellon plan,” pro-|in Trinidad to attend the dedica-| SS; but Gregg |tory exercises of the memorial gate| is the man who reduced it to wrlt-|in honor of Commodore Olts ing, Gregg explained the plar to|ard Perry, one of America’s brilliant the committees of congrees having jurisdiction, and he told just what It would do operatir As solicitor of th bureau Gregg will nosed to the last cong: signed the governmer ease in the controversy that has]|tery in which the body was been precipitated over the treasury |until it was removed to the United ler WI but led while his father was|ate the preache of congress from the Lone | cialiem and a headway In the United Stat pace lca Mell regards young Mellon for-| More than ten thousand as a law. The illustrious admiral hh to do, To will be as- jf burial. The sate 8 side of the] stands at the entrance ruling requiring Senator Couzens of | States in 1826 and laid to M back taxes covering the sale of his| The tock in the Ford Motor company. In Great Britain there are at pres | | | | higan to pay $10,000,000 or go in| Newport, R. I. gateway is n November of MAlic study To oppose the development e class passed | domination of government, business a native of|those who give them birth, will Product of|stand up against the constitution, on high schools, which |and so long as it continues to oper- of communism, s0- rehy will make title nternal revenue |Port-of-Spain on an American ¥ e important] ship in 1819, and was taken ashore vay dedicated to the ceme- buried To support the employer and em- tt bile, he |Ploye in all the rights guarantee Arana ORL? Ae te hh ete them ufder the constitution of the To defend the rights of private ical in: xerciso of in: prift. h overy subscribe to, Most of the attacks by the reds and pentered on when | the constitution of the United States he was called up+| because they know that so long as it stands as a sentinel of the people, ancy in the office| there will be no chance to substitute ft! other schemes of government in the Malf baked theories of govern: postiment which can have no standing of not inds es. Perry’s Memory pe naval leaders, and hero of the me morable battle of Lake Erie, in 1813. died rest at appropriately made of iron and on the supporting ast year Secre-| pillars are two bronze tablets. sent Gregg to England|/one of the tablets are inscribed the Itish methods in Yealing!famous last words of Commodore} ith this most difficult of govern- Perry: of r Haz On CURTAILMENT OF U.S, FLEET |. Island and oth The business of Natrona Power Company is to render satisfactory service to the people of Casper, Mills, Evansville and the sur- rounding territory. To make this service satisfac- tory, it is necessary that it be continuous—that the employes lend every effort to help our cus- tomers in case of any electrical trouble; that our employes meet and treat our customers with every consideration and courtesy —that the result may be “Na- trona Power” is synonymous with tisfactory Service Rendered.” Natrona Power PLANS URGED ::.. WASHINGTO tary Wilbur has been Frederick J. Libby of the Nat Councl! for Prevention of W: abandon or curtail the prog the fleet visit to Australia. | or mitten, hy Mr. Tibby said ship during the vovage to American are all on the side of mis. | Poms: understanding even in Australia, but| The new not less 20 in the United States and| remedy what officials regard as the onable feature ystem requiring {mmigrants eal examination af- his country, had “A lett P cruise Japan, “There adds, multitudes of citizens in the} to undergo medi United States who prefer that we|ter thelr arrival in gestures and who are| been submitted to the consideration enthusiastically behind our preei-|of officials of the public dent and his efforts to maintain a consistent and unwaverlng poli friendship and understanding with | ference. all_nations.’ avoid milita: of the department prospective effect, cc April 23 urged by embarkation Iners conduc most objec are unquestionably,” it | present If You Bake Your Bread me YOU will be interested in ; This flour is a straight hard wheat flour and is especially adapted for easy bread-making. The strong points of Lexington Cream XXXXX Flour are— Better and more bread to the sack. Uniform results and ease in handling. MONEY BACK GUARANTEE Ask your grocer for LEXINGTON CREAM XXXXX FLOUR and be better satisfied. CASPER WAREHOUSE COMPANY RRS EE ——$ <<< $n —_————— become the “white elephant” of the labor department and where cond tions were bitterly assailed a ves -.” ago in the British parliament, you! WASHINGTON, April which immigration conference ance of Secretary Davis. The plans which labor department officials hape may ntemplate examination of intending immi: both medica! and otherwise, suls abroad and possibly at into|of Magnesia.” te ants ons of the fur- 1 exam: board ther suggesti to the health ser- vice and other agencies concerning of| prior to the calling of today's con- The Ellis Isiand st ISTRIBUTORS THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1925 be eliminated under the eyentu plan immigration station and use only as a cencentration point 1 allens held for deportation. Secretary Wilbur cent the U. S ABROAD REPORT gate was presented to the mayor 0 J New Plan Taken Up for Consideration at Washington. SORE, TENDER FEET ) RAW, ITCHY TOES W———EOEOEOEOESE Irritating a perepiratior from the foc pores produ | and aggravates | cracked toes itching be tween to abor rawness 4 examining abresd. hope need! “Phillips Milk of Magnesia,” all t for an immigration station at Bilis] soreness, were up for| appears co’ fon at an inter-department-| instantly, apeiney i at}odors, relieves foot soreness an tender, achir swollen feet. The ‘monic you apo ching and tiredness di> Just pat it on othing else stopy fc foot weariness so promptly as this harmless antacid, Insist upon genuine “Phillips M All dvug'stores s sent bottles,—Ady HAY GRAIN STORAGE Dairy and Chicken Feeds Alfalfa, Cotton Cake, Salt Casper Warehouse Co, 268 Industrial Ave. Phone 27 P.O. Box 547 Are You Fully Covered By INSURANCE? Better see Marion P. Wheeler A sentatives for Old Line Companies. Let us write your in- surance and serve you. M. P. WHEELER Stockmen’s National Bank Building PHONE 678 gency today, repre-

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