Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 5, 1925, Page 6

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© PAGE SIx ihe Re Casper Baily Tribune y J. B. HANWAY AND B. B. BANWAY Enterec at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class matter, November 22 1916 ‘The Cébper Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning Trib yer, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune every Sunday at C: b g. opposite postoffice. Businege Telephones Branch Telephone Exch > MEMBER T ) PRESE ‘The Aés6 ed Press is ex all news credited in this use for publication of ws published herein, Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C.) . Advertising Kepresentatives Pruddeh, King & P: : Ave., Sew York C 56 New Montgume! are oni file in the and visitors are welcome. 7 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State One ter, Dal Siz Menths, D: "Three ‘Months One Mbsth, One Year, = One r@ir-b bed the Three Month One Mbhth One Y@r Sund All sudseripti slire ¢ une will errears. very afte KICK, IF YOU DON'T GET YO If youtdon't fin Tribune after tt Hrill ‘be de! Mr. J. M. Keynes ritish economist says the re storation of the gold s ry. British price level is still too high ‘for gold par and further deflation will be necessary and reduction in money-wages may amount to two shilffigs in the pound. He says that the gold-cost of living has risengmuch more in England than in Europe, which is merely another way of saying that sterling, measured in its purchas- ing power in artic les of working-class expenditure, is not worth its gold par. “There are three ways in which Great Britain can.get back to equilibrium: by letting the sterling exchange fall until, it is adjusted with prices and wages—which would be wisdom; by gold depreciating abroad and _prices not rising at home—which would be luck; by aoReEN down until they are adjusted with the excha be misery On the other hand, Secretary Hoover says that with the return of the English pound to gold basis, between 80 per cent and“90 per cent of entire international trade of the world will be ¢Alculated in terms of gold. General condition of stability as 6 prices will be brought about that should redound to benefit of commerce and industry ‘throughe ut the world x prices and wages ges—which would ‘ Precept for Peace ¥Attorney General Sargent, on occasion, does not hesitate to express an opinion on a current topic in the same fashion be would address the assembled wisdom at the Vermont cross vas store. Of all the places in the country the cross roads or viltkge store is the clearing house for plain, wholesome wis- lom. It may occasionally disturb the checker players when the debate waxes warm, but it is the one place that you must have learned your piece before you attempt to speak it, if you would escaye humiliation. “The attorney general recently made a few remarks on the subject of peace and said: “We know that about the snrest preyentive of a fight between individuals is the presence of a man strong and well trained, with forbearance and self-con troLaufficient to refrain from striking under provocation, with visdom to ward off a blow by one weak man against another, to wndertake to persuade the contending, the quarrelsome, to listen to reason, to see his opponent’s viewpoint, without him self taking sides and becoming involved in the controversy. All the people of each and every nation can be shown and made to see the grave responsibility, the danger to civilization of a dec- laration of war. There must be, there is, some way attainable whereby the sanction, the influence of our great nation can be given to a method for peaceful settlement of national diffe ences without derogation from our own dignity, honor and ir dependence, but before that be done, there will have to be elim- inated-from the councils either the presence or the voices of clamorous pretenders whose only contribution is to stand and declare continuously their own patriotism and decry the mo tives of everyone who suggests, offers for consideration, sor thing constructive Bans Honest The word “honest” means primarily something that is not ‘ordinary, that is venerable, above us, and gr And in an age like ours which properly values the average attainment and the average man, it is always efreshing to turn aside for a moment to the things that are not ordinary, but e xtraordinary and above us, to at institutions, great men, ture and great ide Putting oneself under their influerice leads us, who are on the lower plane, to greater accomplish ments than we otherwise could make, simply by force of con spicuous example. Then it also makes us greater men and wo han we otherwise should be, for we take over some of the qualities on which we think, A temptation to dishinesty is a temptation to live by the cheap, the ordinary, the mean, the selfish self. But even “by being snatched for a half hour into heayen, the ordinary man comes back the better to earth for it. People see in us the “grand manner,” the “grand style.” There is a world of hon men and honest women who live under the influence, not of the merély expedient and necessary and profitabl t of the exalted, the great nd the unselfish. This eart} wholly ignore this fact of the r He is active and slat at ninety-one, hens uae he has always lived in.the present, In youth, Mr. Depew did not sit ¢ De dreaming yf an impossible Utopia and neglecting the opportunities of thé pre ent. In age, Mr. Depew does not sit around mourning the pa d and scorning the opportunities of tening infirmities of advancing years de I the diet and habits of this remarh t a murmur, nor did } t of near-invalidism. He merely f omplair whatever Pl the f good things of the past tl 1 work a1 ir chief interest in the present. Read th ws to keep and try to keep on being part of the ne ourself. T Chauncey Depew’s formula for ¢ V indicating Darwin fused with evolutior simply « of evolution, most of which ha D n’s time, Science hay dispelled all ‘ t of new species during the ages. The b es by another has be repeatedly dem fore tha 1,000,000,000 kilowatt hours of electricity were 3idg., Chicago, Ul., 286 Fifth , Suite 404 Sharon Bidg.; Dies of the Daily Tribune d San Francisoo offices call 15 or 16 d to you by clal mes z laints O'S WHO IN THE DAYS NEWS | BRESEASMET OT REMERON Amateur wireless telegraphists from a score of nations and repre- sentatives of all branches of the science from many parts of | the world recently convened for the First International Congress of the aft in Paris. The gathering and its proceedings had as an out standing figure an interesting person. ality in the realn of wireless — a French soldier whose uchieve- ments as inventor and as scientist have made him fa- mous internatiots ally. He 1s General Ferrie, since 1923 in charge of all transmission from the*great French wireless station which makes use of the Eiffel Tower. The station {s one of’ the chief points of interest in Paris for wireless enthusiasts. the world’s millions of wir enthusisasts, the name of Gen- al Ferrie has been made familiar by a whole series of inventions and adaptations of wireless appar: His work in this direction long ago ht him public recognition and lentific value was shown by the fact of his election to the French Academy of Sciences. « the World war, the general was d of the milita: vireles ervices of the French army, Under Jeveloped the r hrough fed armies the ether wers until the His reward in pravat of commander in of Honor and this was his appointment as in- spector general of military tele- graphy and transmission eneral Ferrie was born _fifty- s ago in the department pars sit upon om hit a marked pursulte, ulted in his entr lebrated Eo followe: th him and and was steadily up- as a Heutenant colonel the war broke ou da bri- gadier general soon after it ended. A few days ago a presidential decree de him general of division in the French army ceases Lee = S 3 = i} s Qa a | a = oe — speare for the pure joy of it were asked to point out the special fea- tures in which Shakespeare's plays are transcendently excellent, . he probably would mention, among « that his stories are not and his cha ‘Ss are yed.—soni hakespeare represe: ure accu supreme red to say ith ‘Hes. E par's neithe fabrics, wre of good and evil; in the ted sufferings of innocence in the dispr or penalties to. desert; tr blindness with w uustice ter 5 inr t endous - pos! ber the t the jerstanding such things fault and the sage as ignorant oy the child Only the highest o jer of genius immoral, wher names, and nok pposed to # ite disrega 4 » better 1 n ft nature he oses wha | cal ich ma about the middle of the th century Froude advanc- inion that the finest “me tale” of “modern times” is Lessing the Wh f it is to teach re at The doctrine is © mode in which it is ‘RAMONA JLnurphy San Francisco 114 Ellis St. near Powell of mankind, of whether it is seems to me. lease motion. ves to read Shake- | I to ilustr y par: 1aT but not}! any nt above another;| und ve drawn from | them the direct instruction ‘they cont there mair something | which the} ist gives, and the philosopher | nd the moralist cannot giv: It ts haracterts HOTEL 7 be Caspet Daiiy Cribtine {s interesting; but it has fault that it is not true, ature does not teach religious toleration by such direct method; and the result 1s that the play is not poetry, Only splendid manufacture. “Shakespeare is eternal; Lessing's, ‘Nathan’ will pass away with. the mode of thought which gave tt birth. One is based on fact; the other on human theory about fact. The theory seems at first sight to contain the most immediate instruction; but it is not really so.” The Ruling Passion Canon Donaldson, of Westminster Abbe: They are, he says: 1. Politics without princtples. 2, Wealth without work. 3, Pleasure without conscience. 4, Knowledge without character. 5.. Commerce and industry without moraiity. 6. Science without humanity. 7. Worship without sacrifice. And of these, says Canon Donald- son, the passion for the accumula- tion of riches’at all costs, prefer- ably without earning’ them, 1s a dis- ease of the great mass of the British nation. eee It‘ is not without justice that Americans are called ‘money-mad. But this disease, this passion for the umulation of riches, preferably hout earning them, {mbues all yage and ctyilized. er the question a ain: for It y ea blessing, What is the re it The mere desire to pos be powerful? The answer is even simpler, it Let ws passo The hur sees wealth ‘om work, from activity, from as a re- He doesn't understand or fo + that we exist physically, because our organism is the seat of constant motion; and if we are to exist intel lectually, it can only be by means of continual occip: with what so long as it {s some form of practical or mental activity to their cushioning effec pressure Balloons— Because— in the past. any longer. For sale by: Lee Doud Motor Ce mite Service Statior never idle for Activity—doing something, tf pos- sible creating something—how for- » it is that men cannot exist without that! those are mnscious of works a » rignificant purpo: a higher kind of interest to whole of their lif LY VIEWS LON AGUS) APB ‘aj. Gen. A, W. Greeley, retired, ritish expedition suc: dean of living Polar explorers, be-| cessfully used an airplane in recon- BAKING P evi at wi vert naisgance work northeast of Spitz- bergen, 'and on one flight approached within 600 miles of the North Pole over the ice, the|Only one plane was used and {it was arctic|small, with an engine of no great under | power, auspices of the i2t3| The Constant Lover will reach the hy- ene te pothetical iand iy-| ing between Alas- ka and the North this point of yiew cerning dean ists what are to him the seven cardinal social sins of this wicked world of ours. engines y planes through the air sledges “I am confident land of e sort west of land and north of * sald Gen ral Greely recent- advanced | But the spi forty| Is due at all to me: Love with me had made no Had it any 1 observed pe- sbergs with well “Such bergs m relatively ers of snow are not broken up, are well known In the ss originate in Greenland own lands to the east, hes the sea and ‘valleys and Antarti Jon—no matter Ride on GENUINE Low Air PRESSURE Fes YOU can cut down the air pressure in your balloon tires it will ae just that much more Maybe you can’t a ‘this safely with your present make of balloon tires. But you can with the new U.S. “Royal low- These tires have the new U.S. “Low-Pressure Tread.” This tread gives a much greater area of road contact than a round ti wad. It distributes the load evenly over the tread surface and reduces the weight on the individual ieee blocks. This does away with early, uneven and disfiguring tread wear. U.S. Royal Balloon gives long service even at lower air pressures than have been recommended For in addition 'to this new Low-Pressure tread they are built of Latex-Treated Web Cord. The cord construction in which the cords are = together with pure rubber latex. This and maximum flexibility. Don’t compromise on balloon tire pressures givesmaximum strength Ride on genuine low pressure. It will surprise you to know what a difference United States Rubber Company True Low Pressure Balloons with the New Flat ‘‘Low-PRESSURE TREAD’’ and Built of Latex-treated Web Cord Stephen Dreher, Coliseum Motor Co. Public Bervice Statior Poplar 8 Jack Jones Garage. Joe E. ‘ Y. Filling Stution. Van Filling Station. 130 eezing the stratifica- ot land north of servations of other students | of the subject advanced the same opinion based on the study of tidal For more than a gen- have hoped to fluctuations, eration explorers parently the task is too great for dogs and sledges. McMillan went the objective « 2, but had to turn back impassable ice y just started. t will be a dif. A 600-mile fight to unknown region few years a because with the journ “With airpla ferent story. the center of ‘the and return should not be a difficult I believe the trip will little difficulty and that. when this unknown. region ts visited a hertofore unmapped land will be discovered.” General Greeley recalled that last summer undertaking. be made with By SIR JOHN Out upon it, Three whole days together, And am like to love three more If it prove fair weather. Time shall moult ¢ Heiberg Is-| Ere he shall dis In th Such a constant love y his LULOQUAT, t ? 2 the existenc from my ob- For Finer Texture reach this supposed land, but ap- ar i Larger Volume in your bakings use K G | | | | | | | a, a Ounces for More than aPound anda half fora Quarter | A trial will convince you ee of its high quality out Leave Casper, Townsend Hotel <{pOGRAP) a The Casper Daily Tribune. 8 a. mand 1 p. m. and 6 p. m- —/e } 2. Oil City Printers. Leave Salt Creek : 3. The Casper Herald 4 8 a.m n. and 6 p. m. s 4. Service-Art Printing Co, been bates | Millions of Pounds Used by the Government i} S#E? PHELPS Announces the removal of his Townsend Building to 304- 16-8 O-S Building, Casper, Wyo., Phone Salt Creek Busses “Leaves 9:30 Dai. Salt Creek Transportation Co. BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS TELEPHONE 144 Express Bus | TRAIN SCHEDULES | CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN || Westbound Arrives aeons te) No. 2608" <220.\cs---- (eh =. Said p.m. Eastbound Arrives No, 622 ..-.---- vee wen------ 645 p. m, CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY Eastbound Arrives 916. 8:10 p. m, Arrives 6:50 a. m. 7:10 a m 9:55 p. m The UNION Label THE TRADEMARK OF GOOD WORKMANSHIP Can be used by the following firms, who employ none but Union Printers: The Commercia) Printing Co. Let Casper Printers Hoffhine Printing & Stationery Co Print for Casper 8. Slack-Stirrett Printing Co, OTICE TO CASPER PROPERTY OWNERS All property not already listed for assessment should be returned without delay. Owners or agents will please call at the Assessor's office and attend to this matter. Per- sonal attention will obviate errors that might otherwise creep in. The assessor and his deputies have examined ° every piece of property in the city and they have made an effort to interview the owners. Of course, a good many people have been missed.and must be assessed from the records unless they come to the office and list their property. Property owners should bear in mind the dates of the meeting of the County Board of Equalization. The first meeting will be on June 1, 1925, and will continue for sev- eral days. This is the proper time to make complaint if you feel that’ your property has not been properly ap- praised by the assessor. A second meeting will be held June 22, 1925, and continuing probably three days Publish May 5, 6, 7, 8, 1925. Automobiles not found by the Assessor or his deputies as he went from office to office or from door to door will be assessed from the list furnished by the Secretary of State. This method of assessment fur- nishes no satisfactory way of getting at the value; hence, owners are urged to come to the office, list their autos and trucks and secure a copy of the assessment. , LYLE. BOJAY; County Assessor.

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