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PAGE SIX The Casper Daily Tribune BANWAY cond class matter, By J. B. HANWAY AND E. ©. office a: 1916. yoming) po: November 23 day Morning es: Tribune ‘The Casper La!) Tribune every Businees_ T ‘The Associated £ all news credited on ot 8 published herein Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) Advertising ttepresentatives 3 c Prar York, Chi and visit SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State insure IF YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUN If you don’t snd it will t The Spirit of the Week | due asper, The volume of harmony t has as cend has doubtless by this time excited th envy of ver nimate objects, whose usual fur tion is epped aside and caught the spirit of the occasion and we find the barndoor hinges con cordant with the overworked Victre in the home. So, the raucous voiced whistle is likewise softened to harme with the nightly lullabys sung by fond mothers. \ Period of Frankness There ns to be conspiracy of faultfinding with our girls of today. We are pleased to label them “flay/pers” be- cause the slang terr them as snugly as the apparel they affect Surely the) re d from the Victorian heroines in their recklessness and outspokenness and while differing yet | not wholly unlike maidens of previous periods And speaking of Victorians. Did you ever pause to con sider that the prim Victorian grandmother may not have been quite as good as she looked, or appeared in the pages of books | TINE VES An obliteration of Europeansfron- tiers, particularly of custom fron- tiers, is one of the solutions for Ger- many’s ¢@conomic problems, in’ the opinion of Dr. Edmund Hugo Stinnes, Soeatuctmeee c ] cee gon of the late Hugo innes, | rom the stand- |point of business gement,”” he res, “the-over- penses of rop measured iy her limited eco- > chances of are alto- gether too high. These general ex- penses pull down the standard of living of the gen- | FOGO STINNES oral population of, Europe ful below the head E pe ce # standard. too, there fs but one nereasing the power of heapening ning must ull through pretext. of indus- hi figures as t ¢ 1913: Still, those were commercial figures with which, it must be conceded, world omy ‘fared’ pretty well. "Yet even those peace figures could be Insufficient for the Dawes nd would have to be -consid bly improved {f Germany {1 ‘to be ble her Iinbilities: un devoted to her fame? | If the truth were ed, the inquiry would be pertinent what would a lady painted and used snuff haye to re primand in a great ‘ who powdered and smok arettes If the of today are anything the re a “throwback” to | the generations that held the attention of those who lived in the fifteenth and sixteenth centurie: In William Shakes peare’s ti Rowrlind ¢ about ¢ s keen ull such Shakespearian types as Portia, nd Imogene. They were not in the least hesi iventuring themselves out into the world and ut invest themselves in doublet and hos rn the result of the world’s opinion, as the girls of tc Turn to the last scene of “The Merchant of Venic discover that Portia and Nerissa were quite as audacions, and even as risque of grace any of our granddaughters of this year There was no discount on the courage and usefulness of our girls d ng the war. If during and since that period of test of our civi ion, our girls have developed the manly qualities of bravery and straightforwardness, hitherto mon opolized by boys, where's the odds? It is only a rising out of old environments. A change in ethies and proprieties con- forming to the change in the feminine status of equality. \ Vicious Outcome The current demand for “reality,” meaning the freedom of self-expression, is one of the tendencies most detrimental to family or community peace and orderliness It implies the abolition of that self restraint which is a chief characteristic of true brotherliness. [t has little, if i for the rights and peace of others, for that obse of law which alone makes liberty possible, for that consideration for others which is the ripe fruit for Christian love much of the rampant immorality and lawl One wonders how sness of the times {is due to this vicious teaching and tendency. Carried to its greatest extreme it could produce nothing but a sort of hell | on earth, since it would in absolute selfishness. A great sociologist once stated that civilization consists in enlarging the cle and deepening the bond of brotherhood. No truer or more pre could be uttered. Edu cation, art, science, literature, wealth, the accumulation of comforts, all are as nothing compared with those two things, which are really the output of Christian love. It would be impossible for the human mind to imagine a deeper, more hor- rible hell thar development follow the sentence this world would be with id that acme selfishness which would | extinguishment of Chrigtian love. Even now our | complete scientific Newspapers Mooseheart, as njost. people know, is the ce where the Order of ee us home whoso 3 ie fr R. Adam ther,” also : 6 children young: and. edu- involves an ac- the life of the world around that the news- erefore, he wants the er his care to read the nd. to get the habit of y with who are 1 pupils will by’ the stories 1 as if normally children ced agaipst it re space American avage slaughter when they grow nowing of the that they will % schoolmatte for se of | there fs no doubt that the s Che Casper Daily Tribune tion, so many stories of brayery, sacrifice, great deeds, so many in- spiring ideas and such human sym: pathy that it cannot safely be missed as a part of a liberal education. He is right in every particular. a New Deal Great effort ts to be made by the regular Republicans next year to) redeem Wiscensin from La Foilette control. It {s stated that the Re- publican workers are already pre- paring to organize for victory and that Coolidge and Dawes clubs are already belng formed in the Badger state. , Senator La Follette will tryeto re- tain control by putting over a sen- ator of his own choice in the place of Senator Lenroot who will be up for re-election next year. The regular Republicans ’ believe however that they can take the party machinery away from Senator La Follette and elect not only a sen- or but a number of reai Republt- n congressmen, Senutor La Follette danger as his prestige dimmed considerably by his showing in the eection of 1924 and| it is reported that. he will ret to Wiscons'!n next month In rt to rebulld his fences. Wisconsin was the. first state to a Republican meeting whon rty was first organized and sistently a | Republ until tt followed off 2 he regular Rey thetr state next year! lism which has en-/| genuine re ¢ country among Demoer: ° c rea the | been | Republicans and suffered In a business way b: ving after strange gody and y be the propitious year for pion : Oh, Cavalier! By Neal Gallatin streets yeomen tramp And solemn peasants pass me by. Knocking against me, outing at each othi About government And city improvement. Then—at a crowded corner I saw you bow, And as you smiled, I saw a pink feather dangling from your hat And the shine of silver Among lace ruffles at yagr throat, Oh, Cavalier! Spring, 1925 Apostle of Reform General Dawes refuses to be re- garded ava more or less picturesque accessory to the United States sen- ate. He is the apostle of reform, He wants to compel that great body t obedience to reason, to force it to loyal allegiance to public duty, to divest {t of archaic, puerile and selfish practice in the matter of th rules by which it !s governed. {fe voulaims this purpose boldly. He declares that he was elected by the people” and not by the senate, and that his duty {s to the people. ‘He Prociaims it to be his intention to carry his message to the people. He told his Boston audience and his Now York audience, in blunt :terms, that he “had just begun to fight.” Ho delicately paid his respects to the senate by quoting George Ber- nard Shaw: “No offeusive truth fs properly presented unless {t pro- | duces frritation.” There is abundant proof that Gen- eral Dawes has irritated the senate. But he profoundly has interested and pleased the public in his war. fare against a ridiculous and harm. ful custom, a custom that operates as an insolent challenge to all au thority that would seek to restrict iN THE’ DAY Earl of Balfour to succeed the Inte Marquis Curzon as president of the British \ of debate in which great service to the American people has been per- formed by thorough discussion of great national issues and problems. With its smaller membership the senate, rather than the house, ts the body in which public questions are debated most exhaustively. Vhén an important public question is at stake, it is essential that all the political life of | the Mght possible should be thrown his country for} upon it. The service rendered to more than fifty | Uae nation by the seaators who par- yeurs. ticipated in the great senate debate NEWS The recent appointment of the returns to politics been prominent in council e, + on che league of Jons Ww: his- Balfour who was | (2! arl-| “There {s no appreciable publ'c is) sentiment in favor of curtailing fale a tear | legitimate debate In the senate, The feeling against the wasting of THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1925 that day women scrubbed, swept, canned goods, cured hams and made a’: the clothes for all ihe members | of the family. Now it is all differ. ent. These things are all done for woman, largely through mechant cal appliiar.ces, and the multitude of } hold work a things that made hous has “been drudger never-ending eliminated, And Mrs, Rorer gener- not to the new to the new man. She declares h¢ has en woman nd made a com: panion of her, to betterment of the state. Mrs, Rorer’s theme t eats of the smaller things. of life, but her description of the condition of weman, past and present, is de- eidedly interesting and may well call out of the kitchen Union Pacific Wiil ‘Back Athletics Of Cheyenne Workers CHEYENNE, Wyo., May 7—The L Athletic. association, \to membership in which all employes of the Un Pacific railroad here are eligible, was organized 'Thurs- day at a meeting under the sponsor ship of the railroad corporation, The club eventually will have ‘a membership of about 800, it is an+ all league, trap- tennis clubs and & ticipated, A b shooting clubs poor | 4 t | golden egi from 1902 to 1905 the more being first dom of debate essert: d of the admir- ‘Ve senate, accoun’s jalty in coall-l that the one ARTHUR BALFOUR tion war cabinet | rinuster in matters (1916-1916, and foreign retary ment should cease. tention to the rules Vice President ~ | the ration a service. 1916-1919.) He was head of the Brit- ish commis: to Ameri 1 1917 | gero the « gogu un’ { Balfour recen perv from. Palestine, where obstructive; uses, month he opened the Je’ em. His visit c Th the antiJew left the 4 — fter his hotel in Damascus By ELIZABETH BARRET stoned BROWNING, me | What's the best thing in the world? y-de wind, t June-rose, by Me Sweet south Tax Dodgers not’ cruel to a , not in not self-dec by | Till its pride is over aires rushing to Wik antage of the” exer nd inheritance ntly guaranteed to as tax dodgers. Ordin does not profit from in tax dodgers, but Florida is the exception to the rule. Loy Something out of it te undergone such “ T aevelnment in the} 2) Lhe New e as has Florida, } x —_ ly . Sarah | be to the tax-exempu *. ‘The money that tk triumph tn he of n in taxes Is her song utilized development | ™an w ‘ n sun enterprises, In an ind!-| man's work was ne 08 | time by — meaningtess nd has ener 7! about, nothing in rious cabinet Pc-| strong. .The abuse, legitimate use, of the greater free- man of the buses of the sengte of legitimate debate in Best haste ndment to the | Light; that never ma constitution, smetimes re-| Memory tgat gives no pain; , when, so you're loved What's the best thing in the wi r—she of cook harangues basketball le: particular is for a Look on “The World Made and not the jal to an effec- for the demand five-man of ininor mo: In calling at- Dawes is doing The most dan: to purel w impearl'd, hat 1 friend.; to end I think. Man” song of burden to sun but wo: done. In of course, the state's tax receipts will be increased. There is a lesson in what fs going on in Flor- | ida for othér states, and for the | United States. Stated simply it {s:| “Do not kill the goose that lays the Wherever they sell What He Opposes Vice President Dawes, in his cam- paign agai filibustering in the senate, makes ft clear that what he objects to is not legitimate debate, but interruption of the business of congress by insignificant minorities, in palpably obstructive tactics The senate has been from the bi ginning of the government a forum ive Me 24 Hours To Prove | Can End Your ¥ HAY FEVER Tortures y. All I asic fs 24 hours. I heve complétely felfeved thousands of Hay Fever and Summer Cold eut- ferers who had been victims for years and had.tried nearly every- thing without lasting success, ¥ Rinex Prescription ts entirely ‘ordinary reme- Rinex capsu direct to pollen poisoning in the blood und neutralize it completely. Bo all the sneezing, runny eyes and nose, headache, fever, eto., vanisi: in 34 hours, or ‘your money’ back. Get Rinex today and just TRY it. No narcotics or other harmful Gruge—no bad after-effects. Al! wood druggists, mple 24-hour ‘Treatment HB from your druggist or matied by the Clinical Lab. Co,, Cleveland, ©., on receipt of 10¢ to ‘cover pack- ink, etc. But you take no riak tn getting the regular $1 size on guar~ antee from any druggist—money ek if not relieved in 24 hours nds ALIKE, BUT DIFFERENT automobiles are killing people faster than does man ar, and science, they tell us, has developed pois ases which | in the event of war will destroy the life of sities in ar hour, A portion of the daily press is « serion whether the ought not to be t ormously in ord to build fortificatior | all t and brid those ople I tted to operate high-y Self-contre é raints ought to be sufficient such cases but w done with a generation wh abdicates self-contr ts fingers at le straints In viev number mic ar killings and other Lifficult < forcing laws pertair nani guilty persons, wher little leave o Christian love wh eve mate et ere t ly eliminated and ever raised int ever other man | \fter against betting on b ul in eli inating this form of l pe the old stinct to t hance e back an¢ once more offer So open he tack track betting i ha motion by church and r Kentucky, Mar, , Flor New ¥ and othe states to strengthen the In ne t bett Following Example Ce is made that “wome r é ery much with the , now that they have it.” However, if anyboc will look over the figures of the last clection it will be seen that the men aren't doing much with it, cither Of the 2,972425 who so far } der the a ‘HAD PIMPLES A) WHOLE SUMMER On Face and Neck, Lost} Rest, Cuticura Healed. | tatnight. I bed the troubic | nets ‘was treated without success | | reed an advertisement for Cuticarn and Ointment and purch: and after using one box of Cuticura Ointment and two cakes of Cuticura Soap I was complet healed.” (Signed) Mre, Fore _Keick, R. Re 4, Roekford, Ohio, | Une Cutlcura tu clear your ekin, My, Boi widen, Mn Wing Silek £50. j came form, ready bring it to p Like th them — The Ten Commandments \| down } Though just as ready for \| use, utility service was not H handed down ready-made. i Years of research and 1 |} millions were required to \j ments, the value of utility service is measured solely . by the uses we make of NATRONA || POWER CO. proper in for use perfect erfection. | e Command- } ; | meetin Will Be the 16th NOTICE 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. 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 Publish May 5, 6, 7, 8, 1925. good candy MOONS Come in for a Demonstration list ty. 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. Property owners should bear in mind the dates of the meeting of the County Board of Equalization. The first g will be on June 1, 1925, and will continue for eral days. This is the proper time to make complaint if you feel that your property has not been properly praised by the assessor. June 22, 1925, and continuing probably three days, LYLE E. JAY, County Assessor their A second meeting will be held DELICIOUS OFFE bY As Always We Are Prepared to Make Immediate Delivery Just Received—Three Carloads of ESSEX Per- SCv- ap-