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evreoress PAGE TEN The Casper Baily Criunw By J. B. RANWAY AND EB. B. BANWAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class matter, November 24 1916. The Casper Dally Tribune issued e Tribune every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices: building, opposite postoffice. Business Telephones .. Branch Telephone & c nge Connect All Departments Advertisin Prudden, King & Prudden 1720 Ave., New York City: Globe Bid lew Montgumery St, San PF are on file.in the New York and visitors are welcome. Representatives 3 Steger Bidg.. C cago, Ll.» evening and The Sunday Morning Tribune 15 and 16 286 -Pifth n, Masa., Suite 404 Sharon Bldg. Coptes of the Daily Tribune Boston and San Francisco offices ! ) Che Casper Sunday Cribune : % ican) war, “were killed and” 450,000. were injured by automo- biles in the United States in' 1924, This is an average of fifty- two persons killed’ and approximately 1,223 injured'every twen- ty-four hours. Of these killed 5,700 were children. Accidents at grade crossings accounted for 1,688 of the deaths and 5,650 of the injured, Automobile deaths in 1923 numbered 18,211 and in 1922 here were 15,015..The total of deaths from all causes in the United States army and navy during the Spanish-Amer- ican war was 3,014. Once More The United States court of appeals sitting in New York has ruled that law officers deriving power from the state may search homes or automobiles for liquor evidence without a warrant, but federal agents must obtain a search warraut under the fourth amendment to the constitution. Our Little White Rose By LILLIAD Just a sweet white rose, we called her, \ BURGH. L. VAD So daintily bright and so fair, Like the roses, she scattered her fragrance, With her beauty for others to share. Side by side with her comrades so trus, A helping hand, brave words of cheer She,gave'to them all, with sunshine own sweet Like her Deere.” name so SUBSCRIPTION RA By Carrier and Outside S e Year, Dally and Sunday ... Months, Daily and Sunday __. Three Months Daily and Sunday One Mont! and § 2 One Year, One Year, Daily Months, Daily Three Months, Daily One Month, Daily and § Sunday Only <~ 2.60 fons must Dally e will not t ly ‘Tribun: # One month in arrears, N'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE you don’t fi fter looking fu nd it will be delivere Show the People One of Whe greatest problems faced by growing industr. in America, is the necessity for acquainting the public with the reasons why all branches of industry must of nec sity be rep- resented by larger and larger units of capital. The danger which confronts many of the larger industrial enterprises is the possibility of outrunning public understanding, The public must be afforded the opportunity to assimilate the intricate workings of business and industry and the goals to which their directors look, All industry has made remark able prograss in the past ten j Developments which were considered startling ten years ago are today nearly forgotten because of revolutionary’ changes. ; Paint the Tanks The great United States government along with its ideas of economy. Her admitting that the great oil r k rusting and that the damage could be st - ing of oi) but this precaution the administration refuses to take because it holds that such action might constitute a recog nition of the Doheny contract, the ‘egality of which now ‘ig at issue in the courts. The navy department suggests that the Doheny company ‘could save the tanks if it desired. Even so, these tanks are in the possession of the United States and under its jurisdiction, until the legal status is determined by the court; and it would be a simple act of good faith and good sense if the property was properly protected by the government. Doheny is a good sportsman and has shown it on many occasions and if it finally turned out that the government had painted his tanks to protect them, he would willingly refund the price. Even if the final outcome should be a bad invest- ment for the government, it would be by no means the first foolish money spent on behalf of the government, Where the Money Goes caleulation showing the purposes to which the revenues of the national government go presents an interesting study. Of every $100 paid into the treasury the legislative de- partnent takes forty cents; executive department ten cen independent offices, 10; department of agriculture $ department of commerce, seventy cents; department of interior $9; department of justice, sixty cents; department of labor, twenty cents; navy department treasury department $8.10; war department $10.10; nama Canal, twenty cents; District of Columbia, seventy cents; subscription to capital stock federal intermediate credit banks, thirty cents; interest on public debt, $28.20; premium on public debt, ten cents; pub- lie debt retirement 0, This is a concise statement of the distribution of revenues. The surprising feature of the showing is that departments consume so little proportionately. However, if we group the cost of the war and navy de} tments and the payments for debt and interest and charge them all to the cost of war, these payments amount to over 60 pet cent of the whole. It is true that not the entire amount is thus properly chargeable, but there are expenditures in other departments chargeable to war so that the result would be under rather than over the burden war has placed on us. Government under peace conditions not very expensive, but war is. is sometimes an ass, ave the government t Pearl Harbor are 1 by a slight cos A recent Lesson From Europe The newspapers are filled with storie: Lisbon and in Bulgaria. The deadly hand of ent and Bolshevism is reaping another harve bolshevism does not produce revolution and disease and pestilence. But we find important papers in the United States berating our government for its failure to recognize the soviet government of Russia. We find senators who set themselves up as great orators and great liberals de- manding that we take the blood-stained hand of the present Russian government and recognize it as having a place among civilized nations. We are supposed to assume that the promises of revolution in Moscow is appur- st of blood. Where death it produces of the soviet to us will be kept and that no further attempt will be made to bring about a revolution in the T nited States or to sow the seeds of discord and trouble, which is all that the soviet government of Russia has ever succeeded in doing. The thousands of dead and wounded in Sofia are witnesses to the mockery of Bolshevik promises. Great Britain is wonder ing whether it has gone too far in its partid] association with Russia. During the coming session of congress demands will be made, that we recognize the present Russian government and President Coolidge aud | se ary of state will be agai attacked for failure to do t [t is trug that mere recognition does not necessarily mean that we shall embrace the Bolshe but it does mean easy work in the promotion of the one iden of the soviet government, the destruction of all other govern ments. Look the question squarely in the face and then you will be able to aus the heroics of the defenders of soviet Russia riext winter Making It Even Money Reduction 300,000,000 making total estimates to be mitted to the next congress around &3,000,000,000 is the presi dent’s h®pe as the result of his drive for economy in federal ex penses. The present budget estimates for the year beginning next June 30, are for $3,267,000,000 exclusive of the postoffice Jepartment Definite Movement es of beef cattle have lvanced in spite of increased & reflecting an increased demand and reduced hog ng has also resulted in a broader market for beef which hat the United Statey seems at last definitely moy prosperit toward | aking Interest With the opening of the civilian military training this summer still more than two months ahead, applic for admission alre ber that can be re amps tions Y aggregate about 60 per cent of the num ved for training within the limit of funds provided by congress for the work. More than one-third of 000 youngsters who will attend the camps have already reepted, The Alarming Toll Ninetgen thousand, more than six times the number of . h ed from uses during the Spanish-Amer for {t call 15 or 16 Register complaints lations ference board, which say wide pool is being fayored. of brass: buttons. lining? Ameri: | on electric | 19: 9 | IN THE DAYS NEWS One of the foremost supporters of the Zionist policy in’ Palestine is Brig: mer Gen. Sir Gilbert Clayton, ‘for- chief secretary of the Pales- th rnment who {s slated to be es 04 high com: ‘missioner of the {homeland shortly, it is said. | Clayton's. cham- pioning of the Ztonist ideas is in- teresting in view of the fact that hé is not Jewish. Born July Wight College and he Royal Military academy at Wool- wich. He entered the army at the age of 20. Since then he has spent much of his’ life at foreign posts. From 1900 to 1910 he was with the Egyptian army. From 1914 to 1917 he served as director of intelligence in Egypt, later becoming chief’ po- Utical” officer of .the Egyptian Ex- peditionary torce. He was adviser to the ministry of the interior of Egypt from 1919 to 1922. In 1919 Clayton was created a knight commander ofthe British empire. He is a commander of the bath, a companion of St. Michael and St. George, q fellow of the Roy- al Geographical soctety, and ja col: onel in the reserve of officers {n the late royal artillery. Tn addition ‘to vbeing an officer of the Legion of Honor, 4th Class Oa- manieh, 3rd class Medpidle, he is an officer, St. Maurice and Lazarus and St. Stanislas; Grand Commander, Order of King George I, of Greece; Grand Cordon Order of ‘the Nile; 2nd class order, of the Nahda. He is alro a Pasha of pt. ——.—_—__ All in System Man has been told over and over that there {s no change and no an- archy in the universe. All is system and gradation. Every god fs sitting in his sphere. amine, plague, war, frost, sul- cide and effete races must be rec- koned calculable parts of the sys- tem of the world; Emerson observed. “These are” pebbles from the mountain, hints of the terms by which our Ife ts walled up, and hich show a kind of mechanical exactness, as ofa loom or mill, tn which we call casual or fortuitous events.” ‘The force with which we resist the PRS a i a HD i oe |. A well balanced selection | of thorobred breeders means, everything to the | beginner in the SILVER | OX BUSINESS. Foxes } should be endowed with fine and brilliantly clear | fur—deep, full and rich. { Behind them must be a family history that. can | be depended upon to per- petuate this indispensable quality in the offspring Start right with such breeders from our ranch. There are none better. Has Government Noticed Whether the government policy in regulating business re- and procedure hus adapted itself sufficiently to the change in economic conditions as typified by the insistent pres- sure in industry and trade toward combination and consolida- tion, is made the subject of investigation by the national’ con- vidence of greater efficiency is seen in the great chain stores and in the fact that farmers in fif- teen states are pooling their wheat, sales and that a nation- Now they ure saying that the women of Germany elected Von Hindenburg. Women cannot be emancipated from the lure Does anyone recall a Balkan war cloud having a silvér a in 1924 took approximately sixteen billion rides ailways in yarious forms of local transportation, or about 145 rides for each inhabitant of the United States— a decrease of about one per cent from the record figures for In the last four years government. employes: have been | reduced by more than a hundred thousand. torrents of tendency looks so ridl- culously inadequate that it amounts to Uttle more than a criticism or a Protest-mead> by a nority of one, under compulsion of millions, he opined, We cannot trifle with this reality, this cropping out in our planted gar- dens: of the core of the world. No picture of life can have any veracity that does not admit of tie odious facts, A man's power is hooped in by a necessity which, by many ex- periments, he touches on every side until he learns the are. The clement running: through en- tire nature, which we popularly call Fate, is known to us as limitation. Whatever limits us we call Fate. If we are brutal and barbarous, the fate takes a brutal and dreadful shape. As we refine our checks be- come finer. If we rise to spiritual culture, the antagonism takes a spiritual form, Yet, the secret of the world, it has been stated often, is the tle between Person and event. Person makes event, person, The “times,” “the age,” what is that but a few profound persons who epltomize the times? The same fitness must be presum- ed between a man and the time and event, as between the sexes, or be- tween a race of animals and the food it eats, or the infertor races it uses. Enerson suggested that the soul containg the event that shall befall and event On the threshold of winsome girl- hood, Life's battle and victories still un- told; Eager to enter with others, the race, Its mysteries to help unfold, But the Fathér knew the rugged trall ‘That climbs lUfe's mountainside, is steep, Tho’. flowers may bloom along the way, It {s too rough-and long for tired feet. One day He found a vacant spot Among His treasured flowers so rare, So He gathered our dainty blossom And trasplanted it over there. When we think of that wonderful garden Of His choicest, beautiful flowers, We smile and with joy we remem- ber One sweet little white rose is ours. And we know, that garden ts brighter Since our owa lovely blossom ts there. LY VIE Oe OE aa Admiral William Sims, retired commander of the American fleet in European waters during the world war, recently declared that there is not even a slight chance that Amer- ™ fea will be attack- ed from the Pa- cific or that the “yellow peril” will become a reality Until China is de- veloped to the level of Japan. “America is se- cure from an at- tack in the great distance that at- tacking powers would have to travel to reach American soil,” ADMIRAL SIMS Admiral Sims said. “There Ig a possibility that the Phil- ippines could be taken temporarily, but because those islands are on the difect ine of Great Britain's commu- nications it {s doubtful if England would permit their seizure. “Japan knows that she would not have the slighteset chance if she crossed swords with the United States, and until China can become a military and naval power there is liftle probability of attack. China however, has been»at a standstill for the last few centuries so there is nothing to worry about from that angle for several generations.” The admiral lauded the work of it; for the event is only the actual- ization of tts thoughts,—“and what we pray Yo ourselves for {s always granted.” The Nun If you become a nun, dear, A frlar I will In any cell-you run,’ dear, Pray look behind for me. The roses all turn pale, to The doves all take the veil, too; The blind will see the show. What- you become a nun, my dear? I'll not believe it, no! If you become a nun, dear, The bishop Love will be; ‘The cuplds every one, dear, Will chant ‘We Trust in Thee.’ ‘The incense will go sighing, ‘The candles fall a-dying, The water turn to wine; What you go to take the vows, my dear? You may—but they’ be min General William Mitchell as a com- mander fn the aviation service and with the general's fight for g min- istry of air defense, but disagreed with him on the union of land, sea and air branches: For a naval offi- approval. ocratic member of one of these gov: ernmental trade investigating bodies has issued a proclamation own, the President's rule, but there need be no fear that this note of defiance | reduction has been not only to show will a men of the country»on the whole are trying to do the right thing in the right wa: cer to have in his command filers who know nothing of naval tactics is ttle better than no planes at all, the admiral contended. Each branch of the service should have filers especially trained for ob- servation of movements in which they are familiar, he said. dees ete Forget Washington The best message which has come from the White House in many weeks is the practical advice which the President has given the people at large to forget Washington for awhile and to think of thelr own business. He phrased it with great elegance, it 1s true, but the point of what he said has been appre- clated by al Furthermore, in ask- Let Us Paint Your House-— You Pay on Liberal Terms 20 PER CE Balance in 10 Equal Monthly Payments Let Us Explain This Proposition CALVIN PLATT 1332 South Box Elder St. NT DOW Phone 1459-J Announce the Marshall To Engage in the Gener: Federal and THOS. C. MARSHALL and S. E. PHELPS Special Attention Given to ’ Commercia] Law and Probate Matters. Offices 304-6-8 O-S Building Casper, Wyoming Phone 916 r Partnership of & Phelps al Practice of Law in All State Courts. ing the business men of the coun- try to forget Washington, he has already co-operated in the program to assist them in this line. To that end he has advised that the ‘Paul Prying activities of various bureaus, boards and commissions, which has bred an entirely distinct race of parasitical, auditor accountants, will be halted. After a board or a com- mission has made a proper investi- gation and has deliberately reached @ conclusion, he agrees that such conclusions are properly a matter for publicity, but the habit of mak- ing progressive reports, founded on half truths and half visions, which have excited and disturbed business men, meets with his expressed dis- It ia true that the Dem- of his announcing his dissent from last very long. The business The President ap- ’ Not Sometime’but NOW Think of an automobile of 1901 vintage and what we are going to say will have the proper background ‘This is the simple story of the passing of acertain type of adding (and adding only) machine. We might as well look the matter squarely in the face. The day of the high or low cost straight adding machine has gone. "The day of the direct subtractor has come. Approximately one year ago you had to pay from $600 to $1000 to buy a 100% printed proof, one operation direct subtraction featured adding and listing machine. Then Sundstrand produced direct subtractor models with adding, listing and automatic-shift multiplication features at a price range from $150 to $300! And now that adding machine users have learned the tremendous advan- preciates that and. sees no reason why, in addition to their ordinary business problems, they should be continually harried by amateur in- vestigators with governmental badges and credentials. Tho public at large will commend his decision. aad aie Snide Sa Prospective Reduction | An additional 12 per cent reduc- tion in Income taxes is regarded as wholly possible this yeat—based on the unofficial estimates as made by the treasury officials. The treas- ury department has intimated that of itself it is not likely to propose any particular program for the fur- ther reductin of taxes, feeling that the matter can now be properly left to the members of congress. The big thing which has been accomp Mshed by the President and Secre- tary Mellon in this'matter of tax the will but the way to reduce taxes, and {t can be said without any ex: SUNDAY, MAY 10, 1925 tion within congress itself to reduce taxes been so pronounced. In fact by their persistence the President and Mr, Mellon, instead of hauling the load alone, have secured many willing congressional workers, anx- fous and ready to carry on with them. Debt Reduction ’ $702,000,000 is the amount of the reduction of the public debt of the United States during the year end- ing April 30th, according to the an: nouncement made by Secretary of the Treasury Mellon. This means that interest charges, ny aggeration that never before in the history of congress has the dispotl- - SSeS SS SE the burden of which falls on the tax payers, have been reduced by ap- proximately $28,000.000, For thousands of years the mem chandise going to Szechuan, China, with its 90,000,000 population, has been hauled through the rapids of the Yangtse river by sheer man power at the end of a 1.000 foot rope. pO Automatic Cross- Tabulator, carriage position control, $385, motor extra tages of direct subtraction, it is be- coming more and more difficult to sell a machine without this feature at any price. All understand why a 1901 auto- mobile is obsolete. For the same reasons, the ordinary straight adding machine became ob- solete when the direct subtractor Ask Your Grocer FOR THAT GOOD Butternut Bread Wyoming Baking Company 324 West Yellowstone Phone 1732 after May NN IAAT NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS All taxes automatically become delinquent 10th, . Since May 10th as stipulated by law is the last day for payment of taxes without interest and May 10th falls on Sunday, all taxes will be- come delinquent aftér Monday, May 11th. AGNES M. CLARE, County Treasurer. Sundstrand ADDING AND CALCULATING MACHINES Adding (%» Subtracting (-) — Mubipiying 00 Dividing «+ NOTICE DR. M. E. HARNED-BOYD Is Now Located in New Quarters at 150 NORTH GRANT STREET Phone 1457 Marvel Model 0 O- $225 to $275 Motor extra Sundstrand Marvel Model was an-) nounced at a price range which made it available to every type of business, | large or small. | The wave of enthusiasm and flood. oforders -esultiny from our announce--¢ ment of a full line of adding machines including this highly desirable feature has proven a revelation even to us,! as the demand has directed our pro- duction to these models. ‘The other famous Sundstrand standar@! features are included in all modele—auto~ matic-shift multiplication, one-hand control 100%, printed proof, forced printing of totals, simplicity and speed of 10-key keyboard! convenient desk size. Let us demonstrate. You won't be Sundstrand Sales Agency 119 East First Street Casper, Wyo. Phone 502