Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 4, 1925, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR Che Casper Daily Trine By J. B, HANWAY AND B, EB, HANWAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class matter, November 22, 1916. ——————_— The Casper Dally Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning ‘Tribune Tribune every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices: building, opposite postoffice. Telephones Branch Telephone MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press | Busines — amen change Connecting All Departments Member ‘of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B, C.) Advertising «&epresentatives Prudden, King & Prudden, 1120. New York City: Globe Bldg., Boston, Ma: ew Montgomery St., San Brancisco, Cal. are on Ole In the New York, Chicag and visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State One Year, Daily and Sunday .. wae enone nen n nnn e nana nnn none -= 39.00 ix Months, Daily and Sunday ree onths, Daily and Sunday One Month, Daily and Sunday One Year, Sunday only Dally and Sunday Daily and Sun fonths, Three Mi One Month, L One Year, t All sut y and Sunday Sunday Only riptions must bé palc sure delivery after subscription becomes one month in arrears. KICK, Uf YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE will be delivered to you by special messenger. before 8 o'clock. eGo Suspend Them From Office There is no politics in public mor A crooked Repub lican is no whit dif nt from a <d Democrat, and vice versa. Crookedness office and shall be pun- And the po n apy pts to shield or pro. t manne himself un faithf ul to public trust, is s ber who has been guilty of betraya When the whole people bas suffered wrong, and their tax money squandered reckless and taken from the treasury v rant of law and converted es of public of. fici litics is adjourned, while eves are brought tc It is the duty of officials elected r that purpose to promptl e steps to caus st and prosecution of those who have fallen under suspicion. It is for the court and jury to determine guilt or innocense of the charges preferred. nwhile, we have the situation of men, shown by the public ords, made by themselves, to have violated their trust and sed the laws created for their conduct of the public business, remaining in office and directing the public affairs while these charges hang over their heads. What ® and remove hould be done, and done at once, is to suspend these them from any further possibility of wrong and challenge them to prove their innocense. the governor of the state, with the information already placed before her, is justified in sus pending J. BE. Scott and G, T. Morgan from the offices of county commissioner of Natrona county as persons unfit to men upon the people Under the circumstance transact the public business. And to remain suspended until their acts and conduct have been officially inquired into by the court Every day these men are permitted to draw warrants the people's tax funds simply affords an opportunity rer depredations. rh 1 hould pend these commissioners and place x ntegrity temporarily in their places to carry on the lic | ‘ itil the court can determine their fit- ne ru c The time ix now, The people of Natrona county are impatient w udow of wrong hanging over them, and are ready to 1 back the governor in any move to rid them of i r of right and wrong and d ¢ irk to ye been wron Time to Take Inventory Periodically the manugers of ey successful business Must check their ass and their liabilities to know where they stand. What is good for a business is good for a govern- ment, The people of this nation are stockholders in the great- est business in the world, namely, the United States goyern- meut Private business must constantly be on the alert to pre- vent bad accounts accumulating on its books. Failure to do this has wrecked many otherwise promising institutions. The peo- ple of this country must be diligent to keep bad accounts (ill exorbitant taxation, public officials and islators with radical and visionary ideas) from clogging estroying the machinery of government, Just as bad debts will wreck a business, so will exorbitant taxation, radical leg. Intion and unbalanced public officials wreck a government. It is well to take stock of ourselves six months after the idential election, Excitement of the polit ed i 1 mpaign id all new public officials are in office, The nation ly settled down to the first normal period of activity rst gun was fired in the World War eleven years We haye what every other nation in the world is striving ure, namely, sound domestic and financial conditions un e form of government. in this nation today, public officials, teach onal lecturers who would, if they could, under: basis on which we are operating and substi- tute ir J structive and destructive ideas which have ‘ tability afety and progress of some of the lea y nations t the yple of this nation do not wish to see any ex I ram adopted was m very evident at the last election. 1 of the agitator never ceases, Hence, our } | private citizens must be ever on their rd to prevent liabilities accumulating in the affairs of go nent just as the managers of private business are fi intly on their guard to prevent liabilities creeping into ffairs of private enterprise. ’ What a great thing it would be if, when our national con re re yenes, it would deyote itself more largely to the rovernment and less to the affairs of private citi and private business than it has during recent years, in the history of the United States has the r situation been in such ¢ ulthy condition, ours are rea nd wages are good. We have legislation covering prac every phase of business activity, The workman is pro The public is protected. Industries are protected from competition, Labor and capital are actually working harmony, and workmen through the purchase of the h 1 securities of the industries which employ them are in the profits or losses of such enterprises, to he benefitted by any program which would tend satisfactory status? The people of this na hould demand that government business be | to continue along safe, sane and normal lines with ¢ influence of uncalled for experimental mea and policies which tend to destroy the perfect ance wh®h this country is maintaining today in its domestic rela t An inyentory of our national affairs will show that we and with proper management we hould continue in the same situation for an indefinite period to tl Who 1 sound condition future ‘Taxation ix the process by which money is collected from the pe ? to pay the salaries of the men who do the collecting rhe surplus is used to pay the salaries of the mey the peo ple elect to de how muck shall be collected from them, --—-15 and 16 exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited tn this paper and also the loca} news published herein. 8 Steger Bidg., Chicago, fil., 286 -iifth Suite 404 Sharon Bldg.; Copies of the Dally Tribune 0, Boston and San Francisco offices the Dally Tribune will not on't nd your Tribune after looking carefully for it call 15 or 16 Register complaints Who’s Who The of Mary Lewis from sing- er inh little Arkansas church to primi donna in the grand opera world, in six swift years, is striking proof that the twentieth century American girl has “pluck! Mary Lewis was nineteen when shi decided to aim for Che Casper Daily Cribune mirage, and the one abiding thing to distinguish realities from appear- ances, the elderly man must be ‘in: deve of a singularly tough and valid fibre who is certain that be has any clarified residuum of experience, any assured yerdict of reflection, that rves to be called an opin- jus but if he had, fecls that he Is fied in holding mankind by the on While he is expounding it.” or. And in a world of hourly journa- the artist's plat-| lism, where every clever man, every form. ‘That was|man who thinks he fs clever, or in 1919, when she| Whom anybody else thinks clever, was the Sunday |Js called upon to deliver his judg: evening soloist of | ment point-blank on every concelv- Little Rock's Pres-| able subject of human thought, or byterian congrega-|on what sometimes seems to him tion. Her friends|to be very much the same thing, urged her to hold there is such a never-ending flow of bat local glory rather} banal commonplaces that there is ic than pursue vis-|little chance of “beguiling a new MARY Lewis fons of foreign| tune out of the nestringed instru- fame. Her widowed mother needed | the $30 a month that the choir work | ™ earned. But Miss Lewis took the chance of winning both money and | success on the stage. d She started by joining the chorus |! of a vaudeville troupe. meant | ¢ four performances a day in combi. ion movie and vaude teaching New York th ent on which we haye been strum- = so long.” eminent When the naturalist Agassiz, was to deliver his first ecture as a professor he However, it provided m ling the fact some years needed, a tour to the Pacific c he sald; “When I had spoken and ings in qa year to|a half hopr, I had told them eve: buy cket to Broadway. |thing in the world I knew, eve: Then I began to repeat my ss, she sang in c self, and I have done nothing else ul placed ever since.” Everything has been said before, ‘ 1 over again o fi agree with Gay | My tongue my Ips I rein; | jt Who talks much must talc inv And after all, the secret of be Ir., secured iresome, is telling everyth the f us Voltaire told his king, House last year musi 4 for her to bow before th | | | | a | | “When com: 2 once well established,” Robert I sident of the Am Express company, issue of the pres-| 1 ent moment. “When Henry Ford listened to the whirr of the the plane|tr made ts] V trip a short jtime ago, carry: jing Ford parts to Chicago, wit- nessed as great a Rosent BM Cowie yn in the transportation pro- gress of the country as was ever brought about by raflroad train or automobile. For this trip was in no sese a demonstration; it was a great progressive scheme for more rapid transportation, accomplished by a man who has been a leader in seeing visions which he invariably brings into reality. “I think I am safe in saying that within the year we will be using the alr commercial! for many prac- tical purposes ying is not a fantasy of Jules Verne, nor a war emergency mea- sure. It i@ a practical engineering feat which will commercialize for transportation purposes tbe un Mmited expanse of space over our heads. . “There {s no question whatdoever in my mind but that serious efforts will be made immediately to inaug- urate some sort of a widespread aviation service, and whenever a well organized and dependable air service is available the American y Express company ts pre: pared to co-operate with it and of- fer this expedited transportation service to the public. The benefits we know will acerue urge us on to this action, for, In my opinion, no great new onterprise revolutionizing existing methods ever loomed up 60 large with such practical bene fits as jal aviation.” Railws or somr Ode » & ARTHUR O'SHAL We aro the GHNESSY music-r the Yet we are the m With wonderful deathless ditties We build up the world's great cities And out of a fabulous story We fashion an empire's glory One man with a dream, at pleasure Shall go forth and conquer a crown And three with a new song's mea sure Can trample an empire down We, in the ages lying In the buried past of the garth, Built Ninevah with our sighing, And Babel itself with our mirth And o'erthrew them with prophesy- ing To the old of the new world's v For each age is a dream that 1s dying Or one that ts coming to’ birth Oratorical Gentlemen James Russell Lowel! opined that hie must be a born leader, or mis leader of men, or must have been sent into the world unfurnished with that modulating and reéstrain- ing balancewheel which we call a sense of humor, who, In old age, has as strong a confidence fn his opinions and in the necessity of briging the universe in conformity with them as he had in youth. “In a world the very condition of whose being ts that it should be in] XN perpetual flux, where all seem ‘AE-ROOFNGOVER OLD home o' hou wooden some of the shingles are beginning to fall out; and a disreputable look- ing roof on top of a house makes OHINGLES 15 SAVING OF TIME, MONEY, WORRIES When Spring opens up, every | ner feels the urge to beau home. To make old look a little newer and fresh- to clean up the lawns and trim y, to dig the grass out ks of the sidewalk; these fy his the are simply manifestations of the cos- mic s ¢ Springt that {s as much a part ime as is the flowing of c here will be no such thing|sap in the trees or ‘the singing of as isolation in this coun Yur- | birds. thermore, commercial aviation is] But the home owner is frequently not a vision for] deterred from obeying that impulse future genera-|to brighten up an old house, for the tions; it {s a live} reason that the expense is frequent- too gre: “The hous He muses probably: needs a new roof; that Shingle root is leaking; he house look like the very dickens! on, but it costs so much to tear away all those old shingles and the trouble and annoyance js so geeat that the game's hardly worth the candle, We have always hud to re- place these shingles every few years and each time we do {t we haye the same disagreeable experience to go through—let alone the big bill we receive for the work” after it is done.” | Now if the home owner, at this stage of the game, © will. inquire around, he will discover that there is a new method of putting a shingle roof on a house which does not ne- cessitate the ripping off of the old shingles, and all the dirt, dust and annoyance that accompany it. For it has been found, as a result of more than 12 yearstof practice, that asbestos shingles, if laid on a roof right on top of the old shingles, give as good, and better, service than if the old shingles were torn away. Asbestss shingles are made of asbestos fibre—the silky strands of a rock which geologists tell us is many millions of years old. It has soned and tempered by all fires and changes of : s waterproof; it is fire- it is indestructible. Asbestos combined with Portland ce- ment unde a rific hydraulic pressure are formed into shingles which are literally slabs of stone Shingles of sprt, once placed upon a roof, lude the necessity of re-roofin One's roof troubles ther represe Johné-Man- . Inc. sbe anufacturers of York, bs his method of ofing wa nated, tells how | it 1s done, | “A great amount of trouble, in enience and expense can be sav- this method of re-roofing with os shingles, If you have ever re-roofed, you know how disagree- uble it is to have the wreckers mount up to your f top with their tools in hand tear off the old shingles sending a cloud of dust nd 5 into the upper rooms of | your house, while the shingles pos sibly Il down on to the lawns and injure the shrubbr t the side of the house. The chances are, with nature's preversity, that a rain storm will root is off, come up just when the To add to your ill humor when the job is completed, you re- ceive a bill for jobs, for tearing off the old roof, and one for putting on the new, “But by the new two one method -all that has to be done is to apply the as- bestos shingles right over the old shingles! Once you have done this your roof troubles are over. Of course, there may be a few bad Places in the roof where the old shingles have droppe@out, but, the replacing of these two or three new wooden shingles is a very slight matter, & Nhe extra layer pf shingles (that 1s, the old wood roof) insures extra Secure nailing and in addition pro- vides an effective insulator against the heat of summer ad the cold of winter. “Asbestos shingles weigh no more Ye ought to have a new roof put y wooden a few braces may be added at a cost which js much less than the cost of tearing away the old shingles would be. = “And so by the process of re- roofing with asbestos shingles one is not only saved trouble, time and expense, but one has, when the Job is finished, a better roof all around.” Baffin Island Called “Beyond The Unknown’ WASHINGTON, June 3.—(United Press)—“Beyond the Unitnown” was the name Queen Elizabeth gaye the fringes of the territory the MacMil- lan arctic expedition proposes to ex- plore this summer. ; The southern point of Baffin Is- land, the third largest island In the world, was discovered by the Eng- lish explorer, Frobisher, 349 years ago, but little more Is known of it now than when he reported his {ce bound discovery to his queen and she scornfully named it Meta In- cognita—beyond the unknown," All known facts concerning the eat island which stretches an in- rminate distance north of North America have been collected by the tional Geographic Society here for the use of the expedition Donald MacMillan will this summer, “Mountaynes, in most part cover, ed with snow,” is the way Forbisher described the southern extremity of Baffin Island, Modern discovery agrees to this description and also to his belief that “the northern lands have less store of snow, more grease and more playne countreys,” Forbisher's account of the Eski- mos and thelr manners conforms to our estimate. But Baffin Is- land ore than a 1,000 miles in length and little or nothing is known of the interior except vague reports brought by the natives. A lake 120 miles long and 40 nilles wide is unknown to exist in the in- terior, together with several other akes believed to be as large. In the event the navy planes accompany- ing MacMillan desire to alight on these lakes, warmer than the sea and in midsummer unencumbered with floating ice, will provide safe water landings, The entire Eskimo popilation of the island is estimated at 670 per- lead into the arctic sons. Inland Baffin Island is under. stood to have a pleasant summer climate. Though cold and forbidding throughout the year along the sea- coasts the interior js warmed by the sun of the long arctic summer days. Brilliant flowers, and butterflies pro- duce an atmosphere unlike most conceptions of arctic climate. persicae cia suse EW YORK—The engagement of Miss Isabell Rockefeller, grand niece of John D Rockefeller, Sr., to R. W. has been announced to CON nettle NTINENTAL | Service Stations Anes at Continextal Ser- vice Stations are wonder-workers when it comes to keeping a car fueled and oiled to do its best. Clean, well- equipped stations promote efficient service. - The surest way to fill your car chock- full of pep and power, and keep it always ready for action is to take it regularly to a convenient Continental Service Station for Conoco, the Bal- anced Gasoline, and Continental qual- ity lubricants. Crank-cases drained without charge, and thor- ough oiling and greasing jobs ablerates. Most stations have done at reason- restrooms. Air and water whenever you want them, wre cNot a single weak link in Conoco's power chain— hence Greater economy and satisfaction. CONOCO GASOLINE Polarine Motor Oils MOTOR OILS Gargoyle Mobiloils CONTINENTAL OIL COMPANY Producers, Refiners and Marketers \ of high-Brade Petroleum products in Arkansa rado, Idaho, Kansas, Missouri, Montana, Neb New Mexico, Oklahoma, Ore, Washington iat Wyoming. Round-Trip Ticket Colo- ka, on, South Dakota, Utah, to Better Motoring Ask the attendant about Conoco Coupon Books They provide the most convenient way of b: uying soline and oil. Especially useful on business trips and pleasure tours. Accepted by Continental Ser- vice Stations and by Continental dealers generally, Ee i when wet. If by any chance the, her parents, Mr, and Mrs, Percy A. the heat of summer and the cold of | Rockefeller. prea oe semecerwnesne esa THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1925 Money talks, but “the men who make it are generally silent. “Hot Dog! This will get in the money!” _ “It’s short and sweet and stands for ‘The Best Candy Bar ever manufactured.’/” a). You see he's out to win part of the $200 in Cash Prizes and 20 Other Awards “th Offered by Brecht for the best name for G,Just imagine a nice, big portion of rich, flufiy, malted milk eream, resting on a layer of soft, smooth, vanilla-flavored butter caramel, all topped off with a liberal sprinkling of walnut and pecan meats and roasted peanuts, and the whole made into one satisfying bar thickly covered with fine milk chocolate. GS ee TS GOh boy! You can't appreciate it or fully real ize its goodness until you've sunk your own teethintoi . +. s a 5 GG, Then read the name contest conditions on the ‘wrapper and learn how to win a prize. Send in as many suggestions as you like, but each must be written on 2 separate wrapper. Everything for the Camper and Tourist. Get Our Prices Before You Buy. Kistler Tent and Awning Co. 617-619 East Second St. Phone 2065 SUMMER BREEZES IN CASPER 7 Casper has quite a. repu- tation for breezes. Some people call it wind, but that wind doesn’t always circu- late just where we want it. tor hitched to a fan we can direct the breeze just most needed. { With a little electric mo- } where it is i Natrona * Power Company TRAIN SCHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN Westbound Arrives De art x TE apn! hareeseceenoasenn ats ma. 2:10 p. m. un ives Dapaste No, 62 6:00 p. m. 4:0 Sy 8. 8:36 p. m. \ Departs

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