Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 18, 1925, Page 6

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PAGE Six Che By J. B. HANWAY AND B. &. GANWAY Bnjered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second clasm mai November 22 1916. The Casper Datly Tribu ne every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices: . building. opposite poatoffice. Business Telephones ~..... Branch Telephone Bxch: Connecting All Departments MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ‘The Associated Press {s exclus! all news credited tn this paper ‘Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) Advertising aden, Prudden, Chicag Mass., Suite 404 Ave. New York Ci 55 5°, and visitors are wel ‘RIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State issued every evening and The Sunday Morning Tribune wnnnnnennnnnl§ and 16 y entitled to the use for publication of also the loca! news published herein, Casper Bally Cethinie ML, 386 +Pifth Sharon Bldg.: Copies of the Datly ‘Tribune and San Francisco offices Che Casper Daily Cridune $849,000,000 against 6324,000,000 during April last year, and $364,252,000 during April 1923. The balance of trade was fa- yorable to the United States by $51,000,000 for the month while for the ten months ending with April the favorable balance reached $997,331,760. Of gold in April there were imports of $8,869,883 and exports $21,603,945. During the ten months end- ing with April 1, we sustained a net loss in.the gold of $110,- 301.087, during the same ten months last year we imported 41,425,235 more in gold than we exported. “The Equal Partnership A bill in the Florida general assembly provides that mmar- ried women may check their husband's finances by requiring the joint signature of husband and wife or endorsement of the wife to make bark checks or drafts valid. An additional pro- vision requires a bank cashing a check for a husvand without the signature or endorsement of the tvife to pay the wife the full amount of the che { American Wanderlust The rush of passanger travel to Europe is so great as to indicate that the records of the last eleven years will be eclipsed this. summer, Out-going steamers are booked ahead to capacity and Atlantic Steamship company efficials predict 200,000 tourists will'leave New York in the next three months; There are numerous large parties of-students and teachers employes” organization If you don't YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE and {t will be ; ; roth Battleship Traffic If hall be ¢ mM among nations in confer. t it L : in arms, battleships will do a beginnir prohibition against the sale of leships m be made effective, for the battle. hip business I volve 1 eel and labor that one cannot be built s ilding requires so 1 an equipment and 50 much te I skill that few nations are prepared to build ships for To forbid the e of battleships will be an effec on if the great nations agree to it, even though Russia and Turk are not included. The Br reluctant. Their explanation is tha ix no lo y about the leiting of a contract for bui ir. ve } 1 that it is s conference is after, Tt] uration planation ion that the Bri es the susp t to lose x business so profitable that they 1 Reall stronger defense is that if they doa for Chi or Argentina or Seandi- countries will set up their own ship- al business of warship building Gi British and American dele utes, ha should not fail to agree upon a formul: traffic in battleships; for to fail would be declan th orld that whe commercial gain was inyolyed enthusiasm for prohibition of arms tr vanishe Boys and Girls 1 la on people of this great country ch crime commit by simart-aleck youngsters who be: he re to work and that the “old folks” numbers and only to be sneered ‘nt, that boys 1 girls ennnot be 1 1 io Self-respecting, self-supporting, helesoine manhood and wemanhood at m be des: cribed as the affimnative metho Y yes,” heir places, but they make mighty poor universal auswers to plending youngsters who would be all the better for sie eo ible curbing. “The motto in it hing, but as ubstitute for a knowl edge of U1 ork i isses as a dud! The girl who takes to [ r pagerly a sick kitten snng- les up: varme brick, will not find her “eareer™ en tirely ruined for wll time ifshe ig made to acquir working knowledge brov tl dist nd is likewise initiated into nys and bedmaki Not Favor Presid inclined to fa he mide by the that a military display annually Armistice d lieving that is u day peace ra than to mililary operations such on Pershing'’s birthday, If the propo: re to me fective, we would want on by ecougress, providing fu and the approval of the yarious state govermnents The Timely Slogan “Pools Used to Blow Out as; Now They Step On it!” “Watch Your Step for Safety Sake,” “Wait-—It May Sve Your Li “Tay Saf “Don't Let Your Children Play in the Streets,” ¢ some Of the sloga ried when 10,000 per th hildrer ith sixt winds, paraded Bifth nil monstrate Gestures of Peace pper speal women’s tion of P j The Un h \ i 1 gesture Our T actlo f is tou r t] r right way. O1 I ; I he b y is probably of ition. Most of the nations of the living under conditions which, rightly or wron 1 them to le lieve that other nations mean to do them harm.” Poultry Products holdi thus early thi of eggs haye accumulated in year according to the department agriculture, which gi the stock on hand ay of May 1 at 4,901,000 enses as compared with 33,000 at the same time Jast year. Mrozey poultry holdings, with prices unduly high, 000 poun s they were 52,068,000 pounds last is time. On the other hand storage holdings of meats eclined sligh rom 000 pounds to 997,403,000 r st of b r 774,000 pounds against 0 1 r le stocks i are about ) Proposes Reduction posed nt ¢ by Representative Bacharach, New Jerse er of tlhe house ways and means committee . maximum surtax rate of 20 per cent and eliminat tates on automobiles and ac cessorics, motorbo: ewelry and club dues, also a reduction in the rates on incomes betwee 2,000 and $10,000 with tn erased deductions for dejyx ts, the surtux rate to apply only to incomes of 815,000 and upward. Smuggling and Rum Running Havana has become the largest single southern transfer point in alien smuggling traffic which is bringing 125,000 to 150,000 annually into the United States. Between OM) and 0,000 Eureopenns are now there awaiting entrance. The fee ranges from $250 for a white may to $1,500 for Chinese, Tt is more profitable than rum-runr the contraband does not have to be marketed. Trade Figures Foreign trade of the United State metked inerease exports being #400,0 in any April during the last fiy ring April showed und greater than and imports being year e president of the United States one man who can never take mo’ as he is ts t a vacation. He may | planning to do this summer, from | w shington to Swampscott, but his | | w goes with him. Round and about the office of the president the law of the land has imposed obliga- tlons which cannot be ayolded. There |are not only countless papers which ¢ only legai when he signa them, in addition there are vari- 2 commissic whose ion is predicated not sent and approval of actual direction While ‘Tom Jones their families ess cares for a couple of weeks or more during the summer, president must always be on the job. Washington in the summer is not ways the most desirable spot in the gountry, for not only does the tem: perature ascend to great heights at times, but there is an amount. of ‘| humidity in the alr which makes the climate enervating at times. In addi- tion, even President Coolidge him- self has been obliged to admit that stioning in the White House with lumbers, roofers and en, remaking and reno- e building will irupose a rhich even he is unable to carpenters, ting burde mee where President Cool- pass several weeks during | summer period, 1s located on | Massachuse is about three | miles fri The presi- y half of his | dent ce with hin. There will not | offies fore personn within a on their tange of the home that President | Coolidge will occupy during July and | part Augus | .Hyen the two weeks which the president intends to. spend with hts father at the Coolldge farmhouse in Vermont will be restricted by reason of his ever present and constant cb- ion to carry on, the routine so even from this point -he will at- rid to the labors whicli are part of duties of the chlet executive. those who live in. Washington d have ah @pportunity to view at close range just how much work the | president has ta do every day, can ‘old Gutier that president, ‘The of the president e cf location of his CHARLES NICHOLLS WEBB, {n't all built that we aps ike Slim La Cree; ¢ hear him say art Long time! no see!” 4 ween of him A e boys had give me up who dragged me ¢ e a drowned pup. Worked on Silm fer quite a w He was nearer gone than me— 16 looks up with a smile; ps, “Dy gar! Long {ime no see! Responsibility Da. vw, & criminal law: Chicago, recently connected Leopold-Loeb case, has writ- ook on erime in which he sets h his theory of human trresponsi- which is that an individual is rictly the product of his heredity d environment, Whatever he does, se determine him, as a machine s determined tn {ts functions by me- chanical principles outside itself, | This, of course, 1s as old an philoa- ophy itself, and. {t.4e quite easy to | write a book showing that every act of man {s an effect of a preced- cause, Ordinartly the question ts fined to the abstract Meld of pec but Mr, Darrow applies it successfully, defefiding the persons charged with erlme, Freedom of will, {and will determined by necessity, | are the opposite sides of a question |that i5 classed along with certain others by Immanuel Kant in his “Critique of Pure Reason” as un- solveable by the laws of logic. The simplest example, with which almost any mind can deal, ts that of time and space, Are these limited or are they without end? Any attempt to Drove that they are elther ts futile, becaure, as the human mind ts con- tlarence of neither ean be imagined, ‘s true also in regard to free- Yoraus nocouatty, ‘When it {9 coming conclusiveness who will attend educational meetings in Europe. } What is sauce for the goose is not sauce for the gander. The entire resources of the Brotherhood of Railway Clerks have been placed at the disposal of its executives to combat that every act ie determined for us, {t may be shown in rebuttal that our knowledge of cause and effect, and of the human‘mind in {ts power of origination, is too fragmentary for us to affirm much about them, Af- firmations on oither side contradict each other when viewed 4n the meta- physical aspect, and about all that can be sald is that they stand * fifty- fifty.” When this question is remov- ed from:the field cf “pure reason” as Kant calls it, and applied to the practical phychology of everyday life the argument for necessity is) out- weighted by the laws that govern so- cla! existence. Common sense {8 the determining factor, and {t holds un- equivocally that man has moral re- sponsibilty that history and philos- ophy and all ving are based on that fact, and thet even the most pro- nounced necesgitarian must abide by it in his rel to his fellows. Who’s Who Of much Importance to the United States is the recent promotion of Sir William ‘Tyrrell to be permanent under-secretary of-state in the Brit- government. Bir Willlam had been assistant wnder-secretary. The real con- duct of the Brit- ish state depart- ment, which ad- ministers the foreign polictes and relations of the empire, Is left in the hands of the under-sec- retary. And, as one British writer points out, there has not been one in WILLIAM TYRRELL the long lst of remarkable men who have held the post since 1872 who has possessed such an” exten- sive knowledge of the U.S. and a more pronounce? sympathy for America thah Sir William. Sir William, besides being assist- ant undersecretary of @tate wi ajso the principal private secretary ish and “chef de cabinet’ of Lord Grey. throughout the latter's ten» year term of office as minister of foreign affairs, ending in 1916, and owing to Grey's frequent trouble with his eyes he came to depend tn an exceptional degree upon Sir Willlam as his trusted and devoted alter ego. Tyrrell hag been times in ed States, One of his most ant and least known missions was in the fall of 1913, when the then newly appointed British ambas- sador, Sir Cecil Spring-Rice, as one of the very closest friends of the late Theodore Roosevelt, and the | best man at his wedding in London, did not perhaps on that account at first command “the appreciation which he afterward enjoyed: on the part of Woodrow Wilson. In fact, the relations between the White House and the British embassy were for a time so lacking tn cordiality as te public comment here and in England, where demands were |made, especially in the Northcliffe press, for Spring-Rice's recall. In the autumn the ambassador, whose {health was y strong, had Ja ous and: the at: upon him in the London y in: ward for Spring 8 dlptomac ad with his knowledge and. consent, Tyrrell, one of Rice's closest tric arrived quietly at the embassy and unob- trustvely assumed entire charge thereof, but doing everything in Rice's name Instead of in his own, and remained {n Washington for sev- eral months until the patient had completely recovered and misunderstanding had been all away, Another of Tyrrell’s special mis. sions to the United States wag when in the role of envoy and minister plenipotentiary he accompanted. hiv former chief, Viscount Grey of Failodon, on the occasion of tie latter's special embassy to the United States as high comminsioner in 1919. It was a mission of ex treme delicacy, owing to the cond! tion of affairs resulting from ‘th pathetic collapse of the health of the president. But tn spite of the dif. ficulties of the situ Lord ‘Cire and Sir William Tyrrell were able to arrange for the first visit of the Prince of Wiles to America, whie resulted tn a great political and popular success, ‘the advantages of which subsist to this day. psa ata toll et ll The Lucy Stoners The Lucy Stone group of masterful women which ineiets that a womar should retain her maiden name after marriage— fy coming in for some hard slama, One of the latest and hardest comes from. a writer in The New York Times. Briefly it ts this: If women feel humiliated by taking ‘thetr hus: band’s names, why ts {t that they cling #0 fondly and the names of their fathers? as masculine as the other League—the One tn In ta tenactourly to | ail family names are masculine. To be quite consistent—if.we may assume a desire for consistency among the Lucy Stoners—the wom- en may have to go back a long way and adopt some such plan as that employed by the © aboriginal women ‘of’ America. rs, Hiawa- tha,” to be sure, was Minnehaha to her tragic end. But Minnehaha meant something fn the Indian lan- guagc—“Laughing Water’—a title suggestive of some trait of its wear- er. How shall the Lucy Stoners go about it? Since there {s no possible way for a, married woman -to retain a sur- name, ‘either her husband's’ or her father's, without acknowledging a humiliating indebtedness to maseu- Unity {¢ will be nece: y for each to coin for, herse! tinctive title, One that will serve to mark her out from allyother women. Such a title would have to possess the quality of so it would not {cted, or some- It would seem to be neces- herefore for every Lucy Ston- his upon some tneradicable nality which but thing. er to mark in ‘her own pers shall perfectly of the.vworld. stacle which may surmountable. poet—a mere male, it one..who,was. thoroughls nevertlieless—once remarked, Oh, Wad some power the giftie gl’e us 'To seo oursel’s as {thers see us. If the Lucy Stoners are to select thelr own labels they must remember this: and whatever may be their own feeling as to their dignity, their importance, thelr beauty, or what not, they must be prepared to make some concession to the {gnorance, the wilfulness or. the malice of the other humans among whom they are compelled by.a perverse fate to carry on to the end. “Rhoda, of the Love- Rhoda to her Lucy be not only Understandable to the rest on- Here enters an be absolutely neighbors. . What are Stoners going to do pbout it? oe Bryan Sensitive Mr. Bryan, it appears, is sensitive, but his sensitiveness is not impres- sive. He takes strong exceptions to published stories that he has made a falllion’ dollars in Florida real es- tate deals. He yery fervently and indignantly declares that such re- ports are untrue—that he has made only a paltry half. million. Perhaps a*half million appears paltry {n Mr. Bryan's eyes—and he is not yet through with the real es- tate business. It probably {s more profitable, business than that of dis- rupting the Democratic in which actly Mr. Bi until he very efficiently 1 the task. Mr. Bryan rejoices in the title of the ‘Great Commoner,”. but a little dispassionate investigation should suggest that, in the realm of dollar acquisition, at least—he might be appropriately dubbed the Great Cor- morant. For Mr. Bryan has been very busy—and very successful—in the collection of dollars ever since he throbbed ‘under the spell of emo- tion inspired by his vision of a cross of gold and a crown of thorns. The Nation has heard—that part of the Nation which had the price and cared to expend it—what Mr, Bryan. Knows about “The Prince of Peace.’’ It {s possible that Mr. Bryan at times may have given a bit of hiv famous flay sermon to intimate friends, but it is to be doubted. Mr. Bryan {s candidly thrifty. , Sundays excepted, Mr. Bryan goes to work, about noon time, for a Miami real estate company at a sal- ary sald tobe quite satisfactory to Mr. Bryan—and- that's saying a lot. Mr. Bryan lectures from a platform and informs his audiences that next to hearen, so to speak, Florida real estate fs the best investment to make in this world. Somehow one gets the impression t the chief reason for Mr. Bry- an’s fundamentalist proclivities {s based on his hope that ‘he streets of heayen really are paved with gold, which. with»golden harps and dia- mond thrones, should make !t a very desirable place for occupation by a real ive’ spirit who has slways an eye open to the main chance. ee The first silo in North Ameri believed to have been bullt in 1 F, L. Hatch of McH - — Molybdenum, an used in. the manufacture of a special high grade steel for field guns, comes from British Columbia. It belongs to the group of rare metals of the platt- num family. r = Ann | Best Coffee exclusi be ~best for the home Vapimet WOU don’t think it’s che best coffee, your money back instantly at ney store. If x same guarantee on Schilling Tea, Baking Powder, Spices end mien, fy Saver sou approsimately 13 WYOMING MOTORWAY | Tranenortation Company's Office alt Creek Powssib HOTE offee Newser Pd) Schilling is the only coffee 6 roaster who (ality and sells it ia vacuum only, Anyone can produce cheap’ Coffees, but Schillin vely-— because it’s CASPER\TO RAWLINS STAGE CANS LBAVE DAILY AT 9:30 ADM. e Timely Views Barbaric Asserting that aircraft could not Abd-el-Krim, great gener: is be relied upon as a sole means of| calling upon those he conside he national @efense, Navy Secretary |‘True Believers, te join him Wilbur recently declared that an] Holy War upon France was necessary be- cause the U, 8. adequate navy fs “a world power with world-wide com- mercial! inter- ests, and with inescapable com- mitments and obligations.” He assailed the proposition of defending the country solely by aireraft op- erating from our shores as born of ignorance of what constitutes Curtis Wilbur our nation and of its vast and, world-wide interests, and also of unwise enthusiasm: for one feature of national defense. While declaring that “any nation facing the sea can he called to ac- éount by our navy,” he added that “national defense will remove thought of aggression by others.” “Tt has been sald that ‘commerce follows the flag,’ but there is a more vital ‘connection between commerce and the flag.. Ityis-the thread that holds the, Stars and Stripes to- gether,” sald Wilbur. ‘ “Americans have-over 20,000,000 tons of merchant shipping to carry the commerce of the world. At $150 per ton they would be worth’ $3,000,000,000. This 4s about equal to the value of all the property in the United States at the time of the Revolution, “Wo have loans and property abroad, exclusive of government loans, of over $10,000,0000,000. These two items alone equal the entire value of the entire property of the United States in 1857... . “If we add to this the volume of exports and imports for a single year—about $10,000,000,000—we now have an amount almost equal to the éntire property of the United States in T868, and if we add to this the $8,000,000,000 due ‘us from foreign governmiénts, we hive a total of $21,000,000,000, being about equal to the total” wealth of the nation in 1874. “These vast interests must be considered when we talk of defend ing the flag. That flag must be defended unhesitatingly and with all our power whenever attacked. It makes no difference whether it floats from an army post in. Mon- tana or from an American ship in the harbor of Calcutta or Sitka. “The world .,war .with all its philosophical and historical basis, furnished a clear instance “of vio- lated commercial rights and of our defense thereof. We fought not be- cause Germany invaded or threat- ened to invade America, but because she struck at our commerce on the North Sea, and denied to our ships and to our citizens on the high seas the protection of our flag as she had denied the protection of other neutral flags. “I have deliberately direct your, attention Qs a world power with world-wide commercial interests, and with in- escapable commitments and obliga- tions tn order to call your attention to the mecessity of an adequate navy for national defense, “I am persuaded to do this. be- cause I think you can see that a Chinese wall around continenta! United. States, whether of stone, of coast defense batteries, or of bomb- ing planes cayxible of attacking ships 25. miles from our coast, is no de- fense of the far flung commerce and interests of the United States, World-wide interests require a world- wide defense. “The suggestion that the United States. can be defended solely by aircraft operating from our shores {s Born of ignorance of what con: stitutes our nation and of its vast and world-wide interests, and also of an unwise enthusiasm for one feature of national defense. A wise and sane development of the army and navy, a reasonable advance along Unes of-progress in all means of national defense, will remove serious thought cf aggression by others.”” ; Martial Law . - . Grips Lisbon LONDON, May 18.—Martial will continue clamped on until the end+of May wounding of Col chief of the stat of alleged “red a Central chosen to to America law Lisbon due to the Ferreira Amaral, curity police, by legionists,” dis accord patch tonig The gan, ters set upon Amaral last night ashe was on his way home .and four of their atx shots were. effective though not serious. The attackers escape re ig produces the ~ rf other nations, unwelcome of their lands in the Barba The newspapers refer to the struggle as a battle of civilization inst barbarism. ‘Terrible irony. ed” fighters use poison g ing planes, guns that destro villages with one she barlans” wage their w steel, a Ilttle powder lot of faith Are thi peop’ ly because their mode of different from ov ‘Their thought as ours. -'Theli reflected in th akin to offr ow thelr axioms: Covetousness has Unlawful Desires; f Injustice; for it# cor lence. Haste comes of Satan and slowness of Alla (( When the stomach ts bomb- whole e “bar- doa whole Q same common Ww +s proverbs, 1s closel. Here are some of involved, wisdom withdraws. When the eye foes not see, the heart does not grieve. The food of the lon brings 1 gestion to the wolf. w seeks fc wealth without having any {6 I!ke him who carries water In a sieve. Patience is the key of gl eee The calamities of one nation turn un Aleading dentist states that chew ing, gum cleans the teeth and acts as a mild anti- septic tn the mouth. A prominent phy sictan urges its use after each meal to heep the teeth free from DIFFERENT FLAVORS 1 Let Casper Print f Printers ) FARE—#it.i8 hours travel between Casper PHONE 144 Westbound No. 603 E 'No, 622 Eastbound No. 82 . “ap ee vith cold | And Mother said: “You may get a package Se ill sr OF ALL SALES Starts Wednesday, May 20 at 9:30 A. M. Full details in the Four-Page Frantz Shop Advertisement in TODAY’S TRIBUNE, The UNION Label THE TRADEMARK “OF GOOD WORKMANSHIP Can be used | g firr Union Printers; The Casper Daily Tribune. Oil City Printer: The Casper Her i T er" ». The Commercial Printing © Hoffhine Printing fonery Slack-Stirrett Printing Co, TRAIN SCHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHW ESTERN CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY MONDAY, MAY 18, 1925 to the benefit of another. Three persons united against @ town will ruin it, What can I think of ss virtue: y bite draws O onton, since eve! of dog, no! s to th volge the one | to th to th Follow the of the jack ner are fomenters of Ge- thirst after wealth is more nement than after water ce is the k key to fo} Allah proposes the destruction of an ant, he allows wings to grow upon. her. The we the lance. head ie ¢ used by the tong os 9 | Tho crown of a good disposition is humilit a for ice off 1e night, she ex: he tongue 1s A fly Is not joathsomeness. emy, ve eates | The remed ainst | nes is to be patient wi them. and thou sh find s€ caterer Thorium 8 a Y0 which incandescent made srmerly it came from Bra- 1, but a few years ago grent beds of this earth were disce 1 in India, and this is meq urce of the world’s sup- Wrigleys too” Wise mother: ~ she rewards the little errand runner with something delicious, long- lasting and ben- eficial. Happy, healt children Wrigley’ -and best of all - the cost is small ! = ho employ none but d ce-Art Printing Co, & Stationery Co Departs wincne. ~ 1:65 p. m. 2:10 p. m Arrives Departs ----~ 5.45 p,m. 6:00 p, m. Arrives rts 4:00 p.m. oc ° O10 m, 8:35 p. m. ives Ld ~~ 6:50 a, m. tate m. 9:55 p om

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