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"AGE SIX Th e Casper Daily Tribune By J. U. HANWAY AND EB. &. HANWAY | Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class matter, November 22 1916. Oe SE a tdci che Casper Daily Tribune issued every évening and The Sunday ribune every Sunday at Casper. Wyoming. Publication, offices: building. opposite postoffice, lorning 3usiness Telephones . nch Tel MEMBER THE ASSOCIATE, - * * Pho Associated Press is « 6 publication of , ul news credited in this also the loca! news published herein. | Member of Audit Bureau of Cirenlation (A. B,C.) | Advertising Prudden, ng & Prudden 172 Ave. New Globe Bidg 35 New Montgoniery 8t., Ss sre on file in the New York, and visito: de In are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By © e id Outside State One Year, Dz Siz Months, ‘Three Mont One Month, One Year All subscriptions mu insure delivery after of te mgnt nt ye KICK, IF YOU DON'T 3 i tf you don’t find your Trit Pre 200 Mt wild 2 Without Compensation A, Payment for millions of dollars worth of property destroy = ed under the provisions‘vf the Volstead act will be asked in u e be memorial to congress by the Illinois Malt Beverage Dealers’ association. he Highteenth Amendment did not provide compensation for property losses as provided for in the last » clause of the fifth amendment which read or shall priy i property be taken for public use without-just compensation.’ ” The government is uecused of putting a partnership out of riy « business without comper ion, haying “from September 1, 1862, to January 1, 1920, collected us its share the enormon sum $11,930 417.800, b By Suppression We have been cherishing a letter from a well known citizen who says that the holdups in this city have been caused by the newspapers. The newspapers print news of holdups, young men. read them and then go out and commit other holdups. The remedy, according to our correspondent, is for the news papers to stop printing the news of crime; thereby spreading the impression that there is no crime. But suppose youth, in the course of its educational re searches, comes across a book on chemistry, learns therefrom to make dynamite and blows a nk vault! What shall we do then? Suppress chemistry, colleges, suppress the art of book printing or banks? the the suppress suppress ; Avoid the Boom Hoover of the comme department sa bility or instability in production and distributio: the result of the collective judgment of the trades. They not form a right judgment unless they know the facts as to their own business and us to the trade as a whole, The great , Secretary est waste all our economic system is the periodic infla | tionary 1 its consequent ensuing slump with all their a speculat unemploymer and extrayagane without boom there is no slump. the prevention of booms A Real Educator It is probable that no single unpopular the radical labor tator than the establish- ment of labor banks. Labor banks today show aggregate statements running up towards the $200,000,000 mark. What happens when « labor leader becomes a . bank di- E rector? He finds that he has assumed a serious responsibility on behalf of his depositors. As a matter of necessity, he begins to take an interest in any movement, political, labor, agricul- tural or industrial which has an effect either good or bad, on general business conditions. s He soon learns that agitation which tends to discourage in- xc vestment and employment is immediately reflected in the as c sets and securities of depositors and borrowers. A labor t bank is as subject to these conditions as any other bank. He finds that economic laws are more powerful than the te lies in gency has d more to make 1e 4 rulings of any group of bankers. He finds that the “money ey trust” is an intangible myth. Above all else, he finds that tw any movement or agitation which hurts the bank and business generally immediately hurts the working man. Therefore, in spite of his past prejudices he is unconscious t ly forced to the conclusion that the interests of labor and capi tal are identical and that one cannot prosper at the expense of the other A‘ Shadowion. the Elarizon It is as economically and basically sound that invested capi- tal shall receive a fair wage as that labor shall receive a fair wage. The rate a railroad receives for hauling a ton of freight one is mile is the equivalent of what labor receives for working a specified time Phe right of one to a fair wage for performing that service is nO greater nor more sacred thun the other, Yet in the public regulation of rates and wages which this sense are synonymous, this principle has not been fairls followed On the contrary, one public tribunal has another has increased wages—burning the reduced rates while ndle at both ends A Already one of our lar transportation systems is in ‘re ceivership while the average return of practically all the rail ay roads affords no inducement to inyestors to furnish capi cd to keep facilities abreast of the needs of commurce. Rg » The plight of the railroads is not of their making. The United States has the best and most efficiently operated rail roads in the world. Railroad rates are lower and wages of railroad employes are b than in any other country. Underlying, overlying and encompassing the whole situatior is an orgy of increased taxation, increased weges and cost of materia] and supplies end decreased rates, We ha en by taxation taken money from their treasury to build competi tive agencies, The effect of such a policy will be disaster. It is seen the receivership referred erally between earnir and in the narrowing margir and expenses How It Works One of the best illustrations of how the American tariff protects American workmen has just been witnessed at Salem Oregon For many years a linen mill has been operated t Toront: Canada. The owner of that mill, in selling his goods in the United States, had to meet a tariff of som per cent. Wha has been the result? The Canadian linen manufacturer is establishir linen mill in Salem The tariff encouraged the Oregon farmer to grow flax a it also encouraged the linen manufacturer to blish a fac tory this country to supply the American market tepied threestiiaess est +4 The same condition applies with regard to sugar beets and = beet sugar manufacture. In each instance the farmer and = the laboring man are the chief beneficiaries of a reasonable = tariff system which tends to protect them from cheap labor, = long-hour competition from abroad. 3 The girl oO marek down the main street carrying a : cane ! md 1 d to-death if » & Wis x io) n iv ber hands | Properly Protected | Shipping elderly husband instead of a hero. Bismark never forgave the titters of the Paris court which greeted ‘his wife's large feet as they padded 1 their way to a Bonaparte's throne It {s not altogether regtettable|to pay diplomatic respocts. The hat envious foreign shipping inter-| Indies of Parts lvedto regret their 5 make a“‘“drive” | u y tongues, in 1879. Helen of prosperous and} Mar kept Sir William Wallace at the throat of the English, invaders and Mme. Montespan worked Louis XIV. n to.the point of exposing the person of the august Sun Monarch on the hill back of. the firing line. to dominate. the foregr iping is prohibitively | Women’s tongues have frequently Ip foreign. compet!-| history talked men into ‘fighting ed from wars. net within them. should turn what alls thelr ‘terrible t the soldier, at last to their lungs. Loyalty Unknown, The Spartan-spirit 4 Tt is only fale Mrsé logle' More fall] €: and. that it ‘ding four w hus been con-|He maybe six kinds of a Ha barring foreign| He may be ten kinds of a fool, ging in 0 He may be a wicked high-fyer Beyond any reason’ or rule; ‘There may be a shadow above him Of ruin and woes to impend, y not respect, but I love tional of others Any | well, because he’s my | method of adequate! ing. our friend. shippir nat did n ‘olve the i ; would be he faulte by the billion, s record's vermillion, the sweet seraphim he's always been square yours truly, All ready to give or to lend, 1 though he is wild and unruly, like him because he's my friend. led to it with adequ cover: ment nock him, I know, The same to his other f but I do it aB away, nock—well they men who manned them. | upping | adequat 1 e, I just love him, Che Casper Daily Cribune Home Improvement Put On Credit Basis in U. S. It is a singular paradox that of all of the time: payment plans that have been launched in recent years covering automobiles, pianos, furni- ture, and so forth, not until quite vecently has the idea of enabling a man to make a property improye- ment, and pay for it in installments, been given serious consideration. However, the largest manufactur- er of asbestos roofing in the world, Johns-Many Incorpor: now put into operation’ pi enables the home owner to immediately with everlasting bestos, and to pay for it as he, m perhaps in the past have paid for things which were not | permanent improvements. This new plan is sdund,from every L # higher duty | cause—well, because ‘he's my on 1 foreign vessels than friend | we of imports in Am oo | E° TIMELY VIEWS | pr The danger of the tendency to- tariff pro: | ping in foreign ward the centralization of power in | tectiori. In an evil we were| the federal government was , em- | persuaded to suspend then we | pt recently by Representative min trade treaties |Ogden L. Mills of New York. e nat method, and] Rep, Mills said that, three, main people have been |causes underlie the centralization the termination of process, the de- to relieve us of sire for uni respect to prefer- formity; the fact hipping would be an that it was to foreign shipping, easier to per- although we never would have en- suade congress tered into these treaties if we had| the - deatr- | not 1 r vility of a par- them at will T adoption ucular reform old polley of ship protec than the legis- | that is 1 now latures of forty- | eat eit ae eight states and > the fact that it Perchance wan cheaper for ae many states to | By 919 eral enarass te } 1 built a boat of dr | Ona dectaice® ao yore Arid in dts hold | ticular task than to do ft them , because the larger and mot states paid the bulk of thi I hid a little handful there Of gold e | And eg of water | “Sweet and) pure | federal taxes He: boat. w ae | Mills said he considered complete | ; mahal y of laws.in @ country so eases eet y TED. ljaree as the U. 8, with # diveretied liccriant. al boatvot déeams | population and different economic ovkat saute tose conditions, a8 undesirable. One of } ealldectaweed the atest difficulties in the en- 1 id forcement of the prohibition law, he | : Tknow t'were dreams” |®U¢, was the almost unanimous re Phat built swede “m*|sentment of entire communities at Galt does chysiel the attempt to regulate thelr mode What wonders 'it-may do of ving by legally making a crime that heretofore had not T4 ~CORNS Talk War to Death | iff Off-No Pain! | cometh Perchance the winds r And: sink it dee Out where the w And heavens weep But etili, I th t Will unde And guide to jleepairl e-hills surz Add to the horrors of peace the : logan, of M rie Chapman Catt: “Every community should -have a/G¢% Her plan ie to talk 1, with the women of the world doing the talking. There was idea during the recent confilct Europe that talk would win the It did. |The Liberty Loan of thousands of patriots, | e harn' the t ¢ war can be t ious for rc at © come with Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a realizes th: on an aching corn, in 1 to bring it|Stantly that corn stops hurting ome® forth with|then shortly you ‘lift it rigbt | er s t « will win the| with fingers. peace.” At t that| Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of ! The eezone” for a few cents, s Troy | ficient to remove every. hard cor} pa. W - ft corn or corn between the toes, Menelaus ee, without sore- died a NO MATTER WHERE YOU EAT a Resmaran (omrrs brranom Avocet Culinery Bartenders International Leone OF America Workers eee, ‘| | | | CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE “ARS LEAVE DAILY AT 9:30 A M FARE—$i2 se | aver you approaimately 12 hours travel between Carpe, and Rawline WYOMING MOTORWAY Sult Creek ‘Transportation Company's Office TOWNSEND HOTT) PHONE 144 a A ree point of view. Mr, R. Hoff, vice president and general mana; of Johns-Manville Incorporated, 5: of the’ plan: “It opens up new pos- En- sibilities tn home improvement. tire ‘communities can be’ improved by using the credit of the commun- ity as capital. Homes can be insur- ed against roof-to-roof conflagra- tions with asbestos shingles. Beau- brought‘ within purse. ‘The on of property is inc by these improvements. ‘All this 1s made possible by using the credit of future earnings as a basis for securing better, homes for people to Hve in while they earn. “It is important to note that this applies to residing as well as fh roofing, because sométimes the ing on a house {e in a condition © worse than the roof and under these circumstances residing means an even bigger property improvement than re-roofing. Of course, where both re-roofing and residing ar done, a house is litterally transform- ed into a permanent, stone struc- ture—for asbestos, as many people may not know, is essentially stone.” Another interesting feature of this new plan/{s that it immediately sug- geste carpenters, contractors, roof- ing dealers, with almost unlimited capital for the carrying on of their business. | Thos who in the past have been to # certain extent handi- capped by lack of capital, can: now go ahead full speed, because they are enabled to do as much work as they are capable of doing, without financial worry cr complication of any sort. Certainly this new time spits Sh hates 2a ee a ia been ‘even considered a question of morality. “There ts need for a reclarifica- tion of our ideas on the subject, a fresh delineation of federal, state and local jurisdic ns,’ he con- tinued, “and for « gound and well- balanced popular conception of the respective duties and resources of federal, state and municipal gov- ernment, always rememberin at, no matter how desirable and sound our governmental structure may be, the citizen 1s even more tmportant, and that the highest type of citizen- ship 1s best developed and fostered through the popular control of local institutions.’ payment plan will stimulate -re-roof- ing business to a greater yolume than ever -before, CHILD HEALTH DAY {0 URGED FOR OBSERVANCE THIS YEAR ON MAY DAY BY BARBARA BROOKS Kellogg Company, Battle Creek, Michigan lay has been chosen as Child Health Day, Communities are agked to take stock of their assets for pro- tecting the children and to study the steps which other localities have taken to improve health conditions. What do we want for our childre’ —sanitary towns with pure water pure food, clean streets, and health- ful homes, flooded with sunshine;— wise mothers who see to it that their children receive the nourishment need;—intelligent doctors ayd s to give preventive treatment. The most important aids to child health are fresh alr, sunshine and food. The first two are furnished to us free in abundance. Because they are free, may be the reason why they are not always appreciated. There are still persons who do not belleve in night air—yet how infin- itely preferable is night air to stale air! Turn the sunshine. health to the growing bodie: alr and’ sunshine—so eas} have no substitutes ‘ature provides air and sunshine —she provides food also, but the ther of the family has to make her selection and see that the meals are weil cooked and palatable, Child- ren need food which will build their issurs—milk is the bi material for this. give them heat ahd energy—cereals and tats, such as butter, will do this. They need food which will regulate the body by providing min- GOOD-BYE AKEUMATISM! “Bud’s Remedy Relieved Me!” “I suffered for years with spas- modic attacks of rheumatism,” wrote one patient to us, “and tried everything ‘to fight it off. Finally Bud's was recommended to me by a physician and from then on I im- proved rapidly. I have not ‘had a recurrence of rheumatism since. Let Bud's help you. It will cle: your system of all Insidious poisor that bring on rheumatism Full size bottle mailed upon receipt of check or money $1.00 order .. - Sold at Lloyd's Drog Store, 145 East Second St., and Other Leading Drug Stores children out WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 1925 fruits, [including a daily quatt of milk, is vitamines. and bul erals, vital usually adequate. vegetables, whole grains-and bran wi do this. Every child should have building, energy and regniat For results try a Tribune Clasef- | They need food which will | Another" 2 >=rag! Eye-Sore Gone /" ‘OW many “eye-sores” in your home have nothing wrong with them other than a few scratches and stains on their surfaces? All they need is a fresh outer coating of Mirrolac Enamel to restore their youth. Devoe Mirrolac Enamel for the household beauti- ful! Easy to apply—swift to dry. Gives a brilliant surface that looks and washes like tile. Sixteen artistic colors — to give your taste full play. When you want to know anything about paint or painting drop in and discuss your problems with us, JOHN JOURGENSEN 242-46 West Yellowstone Highway—Phone 33 CASPER, WYOMING ™ Consulta 2 about the Devoe Improvement oe tome enables : you to paint your Home-inside and out- ay for it 1n310 Monthi PaymentsY Give Days | Pleasuize’ off | | With a Good Used Car They deserve it—the convenience of motoring whenever and wherever they will—the pleasure of long outdoor drives in the open air and sunshine of spring. P Your Family— Them For your family’s Sake—don’t put off buying that good used car another day! Many makes and models are described, and the car for YOUR fam- ily is among them. Turn to the Want Ads NOW and get the very car that you have been wanting to drive. | The Casper Daily Tribune - CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING and terms are no obstacle—there’s an automobil income listed under Automobiles for Sale in the Wan ade hell ad paper. t Ad section of this