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| PAGE EIGHT Che Casper Daly Tritunw | WHO'S WHO By ) B& HANWAY AND & HANWAY ed at Casper (Wyoming) pos November 2 s second class matter, éwton of Sun Study Greeley Abbot of the }é Morning | Tribune Institu is head. of party which 1s making around the. w 1 interest of Telephones susine 16 anch Telephc The members of s the expeditic will MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Set aise The Assuciated Press ts exclusively entitled to the for publication of FrReaaes.. AnEOHEN all news ¢ ed in this paper and glso the local news published herein: a at of Mem of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B.C.) ithe sun, stars and cther pli tn the interest of Advertising ttepresentatives ra A haha Prudven, King & Prudden 1720-28 Steger Bidg., Chicago, (., 286 -tiftn eae yg Goths Ave. New York City: Globe Bidg.. Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bidg. pop Ah Ne! 55 New Montgomery SL, San Francieco, Cat. Copies of the Daily Tribune {8 under the aus: are on file in the New York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices pices of the Na- and visitors are welcome. SUBSURIPTION RATES SY Carrier and Outside State One Year, Sunday Only All subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Dally Tribune insure delivery after subscription becomes one month in arrears. it K, iF me aN t r BT YOUR TRIBUNE New Era Approaching Officials, and those who have had business relations with them, are facing the prospects of public posure. This is a eriaken not pleasant to contemplate and it has occasioned resort to ull sorts of tactics to suppress the facts. This we may say cannot be done and had better not be attempted, without a willingness to take the penalty of dis credit and suspicion that follows as a natural course. Enough s known by the public to force an acknowledgement of the truth from those bearing any degree of guilt of wrong doing. And the records, when interpreted, furnishes the evidence that will convict in a event. Those with uneasy consci investigation and éx nees are inducing their friends to intercede for them, and many is the threat made to induc suppression of the facts disclosed by the audit of the taxpay ers’ representative and prevent publication of the shame So far as the Tribune is concerned, these threats and in ducements upon any grounds whatsoever have no weight. It is not a matte of friendship, politics or any other con sideration so frequently advanced to excuse w rongdoing. It is purely a matter of public honesty and the common rights of taxpayers. lusion is shown citizens or if If taxpayers hay been wronged by officials, if col in the sl htest degree between officials and any man or woman has unjustly receive penny of taxpayers the ibune will not shield him, but will boldly proclaim him for what he is. And his business or pro. ional standing, his politics, or his lodges will not avail nst informing the wronged taxpayers of his perfidy No quarter need be expected nor sought. Natrona county must be cleaned up and will be cleaned up if exposure by pub lication will aid in the work mm this on there is jing to be a higher conception of public duty, a closer hewing to the line laid down in the stu tutes prescribing the powers and duties of officials, and above all else there is going to the plain, common, dollar honest prevail in every act and transaction haying to do with thi public busine There are honest men in this county and to discover them d place them in office is the duty of ayers. And it is ually the duty of taxpayers to f thful officials as f ports a s¢ St as faithfulness develops, F son of firing is at hand ‘om all indications and re Threat of Spiritual Decay The men:z to our national imegrity is the peril of un righteousness pre uve a thousaud subtle influences put forth today whic! h threa(en to break the morale of young Amer. ica eater than any possible danger from without is this un checked danger from within. The spirit of commerce the’ love of luxury, the indulgence of appetite, the flouting of law—these are more to be feared than shrapnel or high explo. sive. War is dramatic and deadly; spiritual dec ay is not dra matic, but it is more dealy than war. A few years ago men were startled one morning to learn that the old Campanile of Venice had fallen to the earth. Had there been a terrific wind? No none. Had there been an earth quake? No, none, The great tower had simply been undermine by insects and worms. Silently and ur uspected, these devastz ting little enemies had destroyed the fe ndation, and the lofty structure had fallen of its own v t. So it happens with a nation which suffer corruption at the heart. The greatest word ever uttered on the question of domestic strength is an ancient word. * iteousness exulteth a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people.” rested upon the at and America Our country’s glory in the past has character of our people. America has be good just in so far as the men and the women of have been grent hearted and good, No country can Tise to greatness on any other terms A Phase of Waste The agricultural colleges throughout the country call at tention to the enormous annual loss resulting from the neglect of farm machinery. In Mlinois alone it is estimated that the ners lose $1,387,500 ever ison through their failure proper! >| " rote ir inplements, which mea 1 0 pe r to the s I aste hold r il national lo: ou about $440,000,000 e life uld be six one-half of that perio of the other side of the the retort that if th ss, there has been the farmer, if he would learn t to 1 economy Right little brief au en. t) rh fl rs Plor t that and Cal prosperit reform movement \ par \ppreciation of | ween erinty order fo! elng worked out t cut, men of or-he ness and 1) lend most nlied n n a prevent the visionar the jrr ! mM | repeaic if boollegyer: i! not | * tional Socie tute. Dr. Geographic and Insti- | Wr, Charles — Charles Greeley Abbot Greeley Abbot was born at Wilton, N. H. May 3 He received the degree from the Massac | ‘Technology in 1 | year he obtained later the dégree of D. & Since 1895 he has been associated the Smithsonian Institute 1907 he has been director of © Astrophysical Observatory of the nian Institute and for the » has been istant institut om as home secretary emy of Sclences, as been engaged contin- original researches on He has conducted peditions to observe total ses and has made éxten- study of the total amount and ability o fsolar radiation, its ab: ion in the solar and terrestrial lopes, and the effects medallist, Arts and Scl- the Ameri. n for the Advance. fence, a member of the ucal and Astrophysical So- America, the Philosophical Washington, the Wash: the y of Mexico and organizations 00ks Abbot has writ Mysteries” and 1 aborating with F. and L. B. Aldrich he con experiments simultaneously and later ving proof and tn. Vols, 3 ng his inals, He »paratus, tar Te: | thou shalt perish. i inegarn content to s ‘Believe or I detest j thee: believe or T will do thee a LYLE E. AY, World Marke L ihe tartan canrdbaeteet J fob 1) County Recently an official of the depar hing mr t nim yeh before an be t f ew York business men in- sted in exports and foreign trade on, warned his Msteners o! tensity of the competition with 1 the markets ot Che Casver Malin Tribune FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1928 Butin 1924, wi .t-ver Mr. may have thought and felt, he rendered. He became treasurer the Democ After saying th: we needed pro but he did it, nevertheless. tryment hoped to win. petition is not mythical, matica]l. It {s not a dream, it direct. It is not imaginary, it imminent.” What Mr, Gerard said a de hig declaration Voltaire wrot In fine, never le to civil war; ance. No land ha escaped. Voltajre risked and death to roar of religious and horrible his denunclatio; intolerance in Pr. shook all and human law, aturally law is that |men by nature. You hav child; he owes you respect « ler, gratitude as a benefactor have a right to the products of soul you have own hands. You have celyed a promise: it must be kept “Human law must in etery ca be based on natural law. All earth the great’ principle of Do unto others what you they do unto you. Now this principle, one to another: ‘Believ and what thou can of Intoleran: It is the rig | “The supposed ri; absurd and’ barb Ww the tiger; na tigers do but te food. d that the only| ‘The ancient péopie of oducers in this | tory has’ given us some sii, the probable expan edge regarded their aiff sing power of the fons ae Mnks that bound them toget markets. jer, it Was an a the hi | 5 ese observations, | man race. There y ind of rigt | the New York ‘Jor acon of Commerce | to hospitality among OK | says that “the best way of stimulat-| there was m When Ing ec | me | ican umption of ree is to cheapen them articles of com. Amer- rican {nvest- to themselves. therefore, curtail costs and reduce prices not only that our trade may hold its ition with Germany a ‘opean exporting na- tions, but that consumers throughout the werld m: be induced to buy as ch oducts of all as pos: dustry ors owe jt and Ar the § old stor market of searching a passing by ll the hame mar- American commodities the American women, {f the result of lower ef forelgn trade wage-earners expense of the home mar- hot worth while. The late in order workingmen }< chebp Expan sion the expense of the stranger reached town, his first a MEXICO subjects, two young women : man, escaped after three days tivity by Mexican CITY.—Three Reed's aphorism about the dthe bone, who, seeing hig a brook, made a grab for ww and I bone 1 his mouth, & recalled > Galileo and Gerard ra Zang te “nd! No matter bow beautiful your fea- ; be rae °f tworesare, you cannot be truly attractive ; . {ts | with a rough, clogged, blotchy or rimy skin. Resinol Ointment, aided : x " a Resinol Soap, is what you need to : ec F overcome such troubles. or egently but | “apache oats i € passed since ! said that unless we RGU tacktt -aeverel="Gearoun? “Always call for Resinol” lerwood schedules we postwar losers, The set judgement, were « with macht 1 # fielent in thet would be danger. s. We cannot recall t Democrat echoed | that they eches, but nobody | t nee him. It was hard t that a man who had years in Germany had not ything. Mr, Gerard seem: ' te. He would not retract ad said. While others d that T atic belles would dress goods, or 4 be crushed and & generation. Mr, Ger- out “boldly, There ting him for your complexion Rosson sur- of national committee. | ; ug else is found war itself Since the new year the Germans + revolution, In have <underbldden Englishmen in . five shipbuilding contracts. They | red Prof. James 'T. Shotwell, | have won several contracts for Bra bia University, in a recent ad zillan locomotives which our coun : exman com. “it is mathe- that—"Toleration, intol- tortures ering whether intolerance is of nat cultivated with you given and re British BIG HORN MINERAL HOT SPRINGS | MAIRMONT, W. Va., May 7. te police continued their searéh persons who late last night dynu: | lice *) miied the transformers of the | dyn ny gerving the | The since (he World War the program has been to narrow the s¢ of atrocity so that none escape. se sat SEEN | he careléss-minded people of tion he swallowed the Democratic] inj. country 1 would like to sey that Platform, and-the speeches Of Mr.| jjjesu wo become aware of facts, Davis, 2} 7 pe 1 bossism | pot ngs of emotional appeal’ but been more Intolerant than in bis] ¢.cts, this country may run the risk . case.; Of all the men in the union,| .+ east of becoming the aggrensor he was the best known advocate of! 1, 4. world catastrophe. Revolution duties to keep out Germon goods.|i° the art of wut has changed. the but -he wrote letters Legging for! nature of statesmanship, Which was mr oF to a party pledged to y used to gain national ends. Inctease foretgn imports. We'do not] i cannot be circumscribed, aa In the l U suppose that he enjoyed the work, - ricultural da. Jd unless ‘The movement to free the world | js|0f War in the future does not dis regard the role, war has played fn} tho past, such services as In estab. | ishing frontiers of civilization,” he continued nere is no is be returned without delay. relations, which has formerly rested upon war as a time-hopored method of solving international disputes. 2 The World War caused the move erance has covered the earth with pas ticpa' ihe anbery ce or his deputies as he went from office to arnage als to a definite realm of s : e wtoleration tw recognition of the | pa have. learned thee] ‘office or from door to door will be assessed private judgment and allow: | througt War, the law of | ¢ a bean oon ey ta ad abe eager taw of anareny from the list furnished by the Secretary of proved. is is al et ce less m with no check lions have died be use of intoler State. ns secure a copy of the assessment. ‘ you would be regular as * clockwork, each meeting will be on June 1, 1925, and will continue for sev- be day some way enjoy eral days. This is the proper time to make complaint if ROMAN MEAL—a you feel that your property has not been Properly balanced food praised by the assessor. ht mining properties PROPERTY OWNERS All property not already listed for assessment should Owners or agents will please Automobiles not found by the Asses: 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 Property owners should bear in mind the dates of the meeting of the County Board of Equalization. A second meeting will be held June 22, 1925, and continuing probably three days. - | tension power line that serves other believed by po- object ‘of the not damaged. miles been the but it w was heard fot tol umniters exp enas tere Witt te repeat. it of tue peat und: iat anisenia Fall’ pea, dto this fer pene will think of It. -Gailleo dented w " zatlon of saoritice ot (Hobe fie, with call at the Assessor’s office and attend to this matter. Pe will it. jal denied he 5 wedge? oii | sere ee sonal attention will obviate errors that might otherwise held his peace, Srnie than ie TEAR EGR ee : fe . oe ; dray \p parallel wo! is | Bovis ashi enol eaten | creep in. The assessor and his deputies have examined A ic Right. |tret onthe tin foundations “ot | every piece of property in the city and they hay e made an | Barbaric Right Tentae ea glee cate effort to interview the owners. Of course, a good many elg# visltoe went home, shocked, to | ,,W9,.r2, Rew. confronted yea people have been missed and must be gatoesed from the clerant dietion auipagple cbomithe He spoh heasolah oa records unless they come to the office and list theii earth, And we who like ‘to think |* ba oe eNea pasties ; ’ of it as the land of the free, cannot great crises of 798 Dae won eee property. be too sure there is not reason for the entire process of international The first properly ap- Assessor, h- | |g ue at ~ THE ROADS ARE GOOD TO was to worship the gods of the coun try: even the god enemies were | ftrietly venerat | We are pleased to consider our- elves. advanced in civilization be yond the anci Yet history indl- cates that no oft ancient civ {ized nations, restricte freedem of thoug j had a rei , y used it in t ‘ 7 aid in regatd to their gods. All of them recognizéd a supreme God, but | they associated with him a prodi- | ylous number of lesser divinitier. They had only one cult, but they per- |} mitted numbers of sp ems. LARGEST IN THE WORLD OPEN ALL THE YEAR Owned and Controlled by the State of Wyoming and Other Sports Swimming, Danci | Apartments, Etc. A good place to spend a few days, to recuperate, to forget cares pleasant surroundings. to in Salt Creek Busses Leave Casper, Townsend Hotel Sa.m and 36, 8. and 5 p,m Leave Salt Creek . Porslbly mir €f position, but ud Wy his rec *ey'ea 8 a. m., 1 p, m. and 5 p, m, Express Bus eaves 9:40 Daily Salt Creek Transportation Co baer AND EXPRESS until following Monday. Ample Accommodations, Best Hotels, SPECIAL EXCURSION RATES WEEKLY Beginning June 6, the Burlington Railroad will sell return tickets each Saturday and Sunday, Douglas, r Casper, Billings and intermediate points to Thermopolis at rate of fare and one-half, good returning Come on Over to Thermopolis and Enjoy Yourself CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, THERMOPOLIS, WYOMING ng, Tennis, Golf |} vite health amid s