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=e IT PAGE EIGHT he Casper DailyTritame, WHOS WHO By J. B. HANWAY AND £. intered at Casper (Wyoming) post November 2 & HANWAY nd class matter, AYS NEWS RE The recent determination ef Or- ville Wright, pioneer American aviator, to give the first Wright oS rare cieteaadl Tag | Plane to Great Britain for historical The Casper Dally ‘Trivune issued eve g and The Sunday/Morniag | Di oees instead uof turning itvover Tribune every Sunday at Casper W Publica 2 Trl Heed stdin = aah nattaleaieliat can institution Business Telephones - 6 and 16 has aroused Branch Telephone Bzc much — discus- . Wri MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PR. moh seat ‘The Associated Press ts exclus! ail news credited in this pape! also the | Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) Ave., New Yor 55 New are on ron Bldg. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State and Sunday and One Year, Daily iz Months, Dat ‘hres Months L: Qne Month Ail eubscrip insure delivery 8 one month {n arrears, YOUR TRIBUNE 5 caret. KICK, IF Tf you don’t fin r a it will t YOU DON'T GET feb yies n ton, O., August 19, 1871, and bedi Rains tata tended the Dayton: public schools "He received an honorary M. § from Earlham College, Ind.; the de oy ee of Dr. Technical Science from The Business,Is Beyond Them There are still people who lock the stable door after the 8 been stolen, as well as people who are forced to se spending money when they are broke, This is somewhat the situation of the count commission in suspending all road operations in what they term “the interest of economy. ‘t has not been so very long since, the members of the board, to say that member two members of the present board and the other who retired on January first, held an altogether dif- ferent vie Their idea that time was to spend taxpayer money by the thousand. To build county roads on the same scale as state highwa tre constructed. To build this class of road, where no real necessity existed. To build roads to please personal frien¢ nd politcal associates. To build roads to serve the per i nd benefits of members of the board No thot ing econom t, during theose times, was entertained respect It is only now when there exists an overd aft 4 quarter of a million dollars, that it dawns upon the county board that there i 2 necessity for economy, 3 published herein. » 286 -Fitth Tribune ly Tribune will not for.it call 15.or 16 Register complaints The simple fact is that the business of Natro too vast a concern and away beyond the business ¢ Messrs proven to say taxpay cials serving in the same capacit When the Wyoming supreme court hands down a de some day in the n in hat rs it the city pol district cou fully seized that when authorities wines was missin order tc » prod the and Morgan to ¢ uct. This m these two commission noney they have expended, t When the Explosion Occur ar future, ice of Casper in rt and return ce very large ext cal police turhed over to fed ailure to obey th rtain liquors and Becau: property, the the same to the local police, In the course of a w brought centers in what the ished be either deliberately made aw nuch 'S Ww r county is apacity of has been about everything they haye undertaken. It is safe rs have secured less for the an any other two offi- in Natrona county sinc ts ‘on, respecting the contempt case of order of the S, wrong: ion will occur. For it is known al prohibition goods seized a great share of the liquor and of the suit in court and the court federal offi 8 returne k or two the liquor and wine must be into court and delivered to the owner. Interest now “vers police department will do about the van ges. They cannot be replaced in kind. They were y with or deliberately consumed, The value of the property was in the neighborhood of four thousand dollars Her that the property consisted of liquor furnishes no exc officers of th It the Why do the people of States? selves in work t to re e is rdians of our safety It i m be Bur able to earn more a situation wide open to criticisn Why They Come Europe emigrate m and ment when the responsibility is fixed by the court. w for neglecting its safekeeping. has come to a dangerous pass in the community when nd our property cannot be trusted. to t punish- The fact ie to he United nd to benefit them: re higher ted States It is the r than 8 because they want freedom aterial matters. It is because there is plenty of found here. It Ase ages here ope. It is becaus people of the Uni and save more from their ea work the United States live bette n Europe , the people of the United States because the employers i i And in these m ther Pe more undeveloped and less thickly populated, It is t United State ! tunity becat yuntries newer than this—in ihe 1 of opportunity SE workmen are its It is not because this is a newer e¢ better yuntry, uv { being use the It is a land of oppor protected, It is because of t! protective tariff which ensures employme and high w British and American Stee! a recent issue of the New York Journal of ( re ntirely separate ne articles appeared, ¢ Wash q he z s I | 1 Br I tee trade 1 , fering fre evere depression € x ng situation are nc ur to reach 1¢ London vt d it continues: “The first is the decline f r mpt as shown b: exports, and the d ers,” ! tatement Is true a per t ports of steel ul - r 1p) and bs ck 1 boile ron } r t I S I re wel Vore Favorable Reactio ceme ! ent P th the of t weekly revic The 0 tat Ne Saturday Review and the Nat t the upevch 1: a et warning to Kurope to mend and belie Mr ghte uddress should have a s effect, par ticularly in Prance and in Germany, the A an envoy’s views being more or less in line with those British in rd to the European situation ra re ag Thugs do change, Ut he king ear for women on Brook]; 7 _~We explains his ax tion by stating that he. fears his original plane would not be preserved with safety in any American museum. He as- serta that the original Lang- ley plane ~ was altered. by mu- seum officials to and his brother Wilbur, first. fight N. C., December 17, The filght was of sufficient ation to prove that heavier than ir machines were possible. The Wrights flew in 1904 and again in 1905 but tt was not until 1908 that their machine became known tothe public, then, sudde many otHer people learned to fi; Orville Wright was born in Day- at Kitty Hawk, 1903. du t Royal Technical College of Munich, the degree of LL. D. from Berlin; the degree of Sc. D. from Trinity and’an M. A. from Yale University. For years Wright was engaged In the bicycle business in Dayton with his brother, the late Wilbur Wright. It {s not conceded that the bicycle business had anything to’ do with the flying machine invention. Heredity though, may have had something to do. with the’ Wrights’ inventive genius. Many years ago Bishop Wright, the ‘father, invented a typewriter, though he did not per- fect it, and he ed over other {n- An older brother, Lorin also made, patented and an improved hay-press, “prophet {g not | Bave in his ov his. own. house plies no less to the Wright brothers n to.many another Inventor. The town, which in 1909 voted $20,000 to celebrate the Wrights return to Dayton: from. Europe as the world. proclaimed inventors the flying had ,emphatically refused ars previously to go éight to see them fly. In 1903 only ple witnessed the first flight Kitty Hawk, N. C., station chosen for the initial filght on the recommendation of the weather bureau ag a point where the win: were strognest and steadiest Practically half the aero clubs of the world have honored Wright with membership. Among them are the Aero Club of France y Kingdor Sports of France; ty of Great Britain; Aero Club America; the French Academy of es. His name appears on the roster of r other scientific and aeronautical organizations of Brita Austria, Germany and other coun- tries. The Freneh awarded him the Cross of the Legion of Honor; he holds a Langley medal from the Smithsonian Institute; the Eliott Cresson medal from the Franklin Institute; the Albert medal:from the Roy Society of Arts; the John Fritz’ medal; the bronze medal from the In jonal Peace Society and and credentiais . of recognition of vice of the United of Preserving Initiative the of the bert e of dppres: vafeguard agalr nment into our people {s that buse outside the gov of | eo: War <i | tralization ‘of goverr reat dependence upon entral government. ° © of mobifization of all ef- fort wo have destroyed the in ittative of our people and destroyed the impulses of progress, But ame the {luston that most could be cured by goy- ‘erulation. Yt has been k because everybody {ll in the other fel that ought to. be ny. We need to have Ind turned off of ‘the vernment as the remedy We need to get Wash. of the front page at least t of the time. If we can decen- ize thought onto state and munt- government, and above all to efforts as yours to cure thin, we shall auto- stop the growth ef fed- achment. nal character w. It ts the aum of the moral of its individuals, When evils which rise from our growing system ‘© cured by Ive individual con 1 ence, by Initiative tn the creatior | of voluntary etandards, then ts the 1 wth of moral perception fertilized | tn eve individual character 1 The test of our whole economic | and soclal system {s its capacity to ernmenta hard to g not bullt cure {ts own abuses. New wrongs nd new relationships to the public erest will occur aa long as we c progress. If we are to | bo wholly dependent upon govern: We Che Casyer Daily Tribune by this very method have created an enlarged and deadening abuse through the extension of bu. aucra- cy and the clumsy and {neapable handling of delicate moral and eco- nomic forces, American business needs a lifting purpose greater than the struggle of materialism. Nor can it tt in some evanescent, emotional, dra- matic crusade. It Hes in the higher pitch of economic life, in a finer regard for the rights of others, a stronger devotion to obligations of citizenship that wilt assure an im- Proved leadership in every commu- ity and in the nation. It lies in he organization of the forces of our eronomic life so that we may strengthen the home and may pro- ace happier individual life, more © cure in employment and comfort, wider in the possibilities of enjo ment of nature, larger in its oppor- tunities of intellectual life. The ferment of ovganization for more definite accomplishment of these things in the practical day-to-day progress of business {s alive in our businegs world. The government can best ute through stimulation’ of co-opera- tion with voluntary forces in our national life; for we thus preserve the foundations upon which we have progressed so far—the initiative of our people. With vision and devo- tion these voluntary forces can ac- complish more for America than any spread of the hand of government. The Definition h inerea’ ican ng frequen: government is de a ocra by speakers and ters—so often that many wh« would by a moment's thought be | convinced that the term thus ap- piled {s a misnomer, fall into tl habit of using this phrase as de- scriptive of our republic, Reference to the speeches and writings of the great men of the nation up to with- ina years since, will disclose that this erroneous characterization of our republic was rare Today it {s so.coramon that consid tion of the distinction between a and a representative duty of citizensh! 9. ary definiion of er democrac public is The dlctic racy as pol “govern! collectively, ducted.” 1 a gover con he definition of republ is quite different. Webster s: means “a state in which thc eign power resides in a certa body of the people, and is exercised by representatives responsible to trem. It now often specially implies a free popular government ip which there are no cl ing exclu sive political. privileges | The decision was definitely by the founders of this government between the form of known as a democra scribed as a representative repu Hamilton and others of the tects of our ‘fede constity are denounced by radicals tod cause they inveighed again: form of government known as & ses mocracy, and we have come to use| the word so loosely t the imp: sion is given that Hamilt and Washington w ttack popu. lar goyernine means the rul through Demoer: people, without the choice o} resentatives restrained by checks and ‘balance of powe One means govcrnment by deliberation, and un- der reasonable restraint; the other means government by impulse and passion. The people rule as uly in a republic as {n a democracy; but the one case they rule intelli ly and deliber: the danger of through momen and passion. Thomas Paine sald properly understood, is f justice, in cont & sovereignty of will.” great pamphleteer of the Am: revolution drew clearly the dis tion bétween a republic Thus the | can | understood” and an autoc: democracy It te y tou ‘stand how of terms | eon form of demoers popul {t 4s not a demo cratic party has often be | to by some of {ts lead democracy"—a misnomer | In of the effort that ts cor antl; ing made Jermir those p: antees ¢ our federal which mke our gove ta) ve republic e tun- amental would | and v f gove eh 4 ectly upon. publi it constitutional restr rapidity of the action or ence with o mont guarantes of tal rights eltizente f if person and Wherever they sell good candy Lexington Cream XXXXX Flour More and Better Bread per Rye, Whole Wheat, Gr Corn Meals Ask your grocer for th and have better bread Casper Warehouse Company DISTRIBUTORS 268 Industria! Ave. flour Tel, 27 1 Applau king the pu ELY VIEWS "WORLD ‘TOD Ipit was set forth recently by Dean Wil- Mam F Iph Inge of St Paul's cathe- dral, London, as the crying evil of AGE ne being g use on t » Dean In are mar ided tl had obt If they bring the an end in silence, fg worse, I r hel 7 ‘i with thelr ix structure of if you were lste lute players. Ar hur our fancies a_sick child reachnig for Applause, the modern church, Dean Inge is now in the United States, Modern ten- dencies of the pulpit to please and not to profit, clted angérous to the Chris- h. No led. rutes for modern life found in either testa ment, "he sald, general princi- iven, he part of ire any s who y a q ned a, kingd ir sentiments thelr de say, are Ppy om. to Imost th church but and the ng to singers and id we preachers ad ing or an ice ¢ ier who gives am or someting else that 1s merely nice to eat just because he asks for it and takes no pains to give him what is good for him ;and then when the doctors blame him, says ‘I could not bear to make my child cry.’ That is what we do when we elabo- rate beautiful sentences, fine com- binations and harmonies to’ please and not to profit—to be admired and not not to. instruct—to.delight and to teach you, to go aw: applause in your ¢ better your conduct. “Belleve me, I am not speaking at random. When you applaud me as I speak'I feel tH® moment it 1s natural for a man to feel. I will make a clean breast of 1 Why should.I not? I am delighted and then, when I go home, and I reflect that the people who haye been applauding me have received no benefit, and that, indeed, what- ever benefit they might have had, been killed in the applause, I am sore at heart and I lament and I feel as thought I had spoken, al together in vain. And I to myself, ‘What ts the good of al your labors, if your s do want to reap the frult out ¢ as PT Curb our desires, Moderate our a > Always remembering that an dividual can in thing tl and that, on the o' must incur mar only an infinites mal share having ills of life, Briefly bear. we must bear If we fail to observe this rule, no’ position of power or wealth will pre yent_us from feeling wretched. THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1928 This !- what Horace means wher he recommends to us to study care fully and inquire diligently what will best promote a tranguil life not to be always agitated by f less ‘esires and fears things, which, after r worth very much. Limitation always makes for hat piness, it is proverbially said Schopenhauer observes that we happy in proportion as our f vision, our sphere of work, points of contact th the are restricted and circum nge our world, scribed, We are more likely to feel w ried and anxious if the: mii wide; for it means that our cares, desires and terrors are increased and intensified. That is wh happy as we migh. be’ Inclined sur Be. Simplicity,” therefore, as far as an be attained, and even monot- our manner of life, if it does an that we are will sntribute to happiness; just be- caus der such instances, | i equently the vt ¥ the essential concomit will be least felt. As peetio nd puts it, “Our existence will de on pe lly lke a stream r ort 3 dis- | HoLLYWwooD—Bert Lytell Isor, motion pict. ar This ts the Washer | #1959 }) Outstanding | 9 Maytag Feature alent « ater action. N 2.- Washes cleaner 1 j le mixes the soar and force thes. 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