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PAGE SIX Che Casper Daily Cribune ay Cae te By J. &. HANWAY AND £. &. HANWAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class mutter, November 22 1916. che Casper Dally Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning Tria fmcome qualification for members of the legislature. Third—He is not in sympathy with the California agitation against the Japanese and other Orientals such as now constitute the bulk of the popu- lation of the Hawalian Islands. When asked whether he thought Recent Epigrams Ss produced only two national inspirations: one of se is ja music and the other is skyscraper.—Otto Kahn. It you give up beer and wine, any- “ribune avery Sunday at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune] thing may happen.—Hilaire Belloc. pa ybargbs eg i) Bored es ou building, opposite postoffice. I have come 0 °the United states share statehood, Judge Dole re- —_—-_ to see a good prize fight, a good)? °°: susiness Telephones .. ee 5 and 16 ites . ‘ s Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments horse race, a good play, and to swim There is no chance, of .our be MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS the Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication o1 li news credited tn this paper and also the local news published herein. Member of Audit Burean of Circulation (A, B. 0.) SS Advertising uepresentatives "rudden, King & Prudden, 172 Steger Bidg., Chicago, IIL, 286ifth ive., New York City: Globe Bidg., Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bidg. 5 New Montgomer: 1 ples of the Dally Tribune re on file tn the Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices and visitors are welcome. SUBSCKIPTION RATES By Carrier and Out s yne Year, Dally and Sunday Hig Nonths, Dally and Sunday ‘bree Months Daily and Sund ype Month, Dafly and Sunday dne Year, Sunday only . ne Year, Daily and Su x Months, Dally and ve Months, Wally ar: yoe Month, Dally and Si yne Year. Sunday Only .. \ll subscriptions m insure delivery a v e Dally Tribune wil! oot i becomes one month In arrears, KICK, 1F YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIRUNE f you don't find your Tribune after (ooking carefully for {t call 15 or nd {t will be delivered to you by special! messenger. before # o'clock. Laundry of Souls Benares is an old and shabby place. Nevertheless it the great laundry of souls of the millions of India who 16 Register complaints devoted to the Hindu faith. Leading down to the River Ganges are wide and splendid stairs which always are throng. ed with thousands of pilgrims dres$ed in all the gorgeous colors of the sunset, Upon the landing stages that line the shore a dense mass of humanity always can be found wait ing to enter the river, while in the itself are hun- dreds and sometimes thousands, at one time, bathing in its ‘sacred” waters. 4 , What brings these many thousands of pilgrims the whole year round to Benares? It is a feeling that they have offended their gods. So at Benares, the sacred city, they plunge into the muddy waters of the Ganges, believing that in this laundry of souls their sins will be washed away. From all parts of India they come, plodding over the dusty roads, jostling down in bullock carts. packed in trains like sardines, old and young, strong and weak, the healthy and the dying, the rich and the poor, to Benares to be cleansed of sin. And there with cries of they throw themselves into the muddy waters. ‘ Having done this they return, with satisfaction in their hearts, to their homes to take up the old life of thieving and lying and worse. Thus for the laundry of souls, which does little more than cleanse the outer man, even if it much as that Ganges does as Bidders for Mess of Pottage Many states have voluntarily put up their rights for sale. Sids from the federal government, in the shape of federal financia] aid subsidies for road building and for various other enterprises are constantly being invited. In one western state, for instance, an eastern correspondent mntered the following sentiment: ov fellows in the east can hug states’ rights to your bosom all you want; we want the government to take more interest in us; the more the better. It can interfere and en eroach all it pleases; we want federal subsidies Now if states are bound to sell their constitutional rights, they may have their way, but with federal subsidies, they will get federal control. This part of the bargain, of courst, is :, less popular. When it comes to a federal child labor amend ment, or to federal interference with the “right” of south- ern states to disfranchise und lynch colored people, it is suddenly remembered that states’ rights are being “invaded.” en ¢ Tho invasion is inevitable unless the states get back to the 4 self-respecting habit of standing on their own feet « pists ; Old Bunker Hill Today is the hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill, the first major military combat in the war for American independence. It is a day, if not with out \ -ward demonstrations, then with thoughtful meditation, upon * which every loyal American will honor those ancestors who { with crude and inefficient implements of war battled for the ¢ common rights of man against superior numbers of well equip e ped and trained military, and won because of the righteous { ness of their cause, The following hymn, written by the Rey. John Pierpont on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the battle was ¢ Sung at the celebration in 18: The sentiment expressed » was the sentiment then and will be the sentiment as long as « love of country and honor to American heroes lives in Ameri can hearts: O, is not this a holy spot ’Tis the high place of Freedom's birth \ God of onr fathers! is it not ¥ The holiest spot of all the earth” . Quenched is thy flame on Horeb's The robber roams o’er Sinai now And those old men, thy seers, abide No more on Zion's mournful brow. , But on this hill thon, Lord, hast dwelt, , _, Since round its head the war-cloud curled And wrapped our fathers, where they knelt » In prayer and battle for a world * © Here sleeps their dust: ‘tis holy grommd © And we, the children of, the brave, From the four winds are gathered round To lay our offering on their grave. : Not a Party | The department of state reiterates that the United States }government will not be a party to the proposed European se |curity pact or responsible for it in any way, In connection with reports that this country would be asked to act as cus todian of the commitments contained in the t, it is declar “ed no such proposal has ben inade in Washington, and none is expected, in view of the well known attitude of this govern (ment, Tax Board Ruling The United States board of tax appeals in a decision that is expected to have a far-reaching effect on federal taxation iy many cities, ruled that the obsolescence of buildings, due to ‘the swift changing of business centers common to Americar communitines, constitutes a legal deduction from the gross |) come of the property owners for taxation’ purposes. The board not only established a precedent, but disposed of 10 appeals reversed the finding of the internal revenue bureau and order ‘ed a recalculation of the taxes involved in the basis of its ruling. It fixed the allowance for wear at B per cent a year Court Business Increase Federal court business has more than doubled in the last ten years. More than 114,000 cases were terminated, but 00 others were started during the period, and United ates court dockets showed 16: proceedings pending May 1, exclusive of more thau 6,000 cases arising out of the war time draft approximately 4,000 inactive private suits Net t the fiven) year, 1915, totaled only and ried uy coming a state. Some from time to time have advocated the grant- ing of statehood. I!am opposed to that, If we had statehood {t might some day give us a Japanese gov- ong Island Sound.—Donn Byrne. sthing ever bores me.—Marie, Queen of Roumania. For persons who care about qual- well to examine some of thelr own mings.—Sir Esme Howard. e deepest secrets of life are hard discover, because they are so -Bishop Brent conditions our governors lave been appointed United Stat I hope that arrange. ment will continue. , Our governors have been excélilent men afid their T The new hazard which the profee: ointment by the president se- sfonal journalist has to fear is the es us inroads of the highly remunerated “We are not perfectly satisfied amateur,—Lord Oxford, Hindenburg is above all an honest —James W. Gerard. The best way !s to try to Interfere with certain political aspects of the situation, At the time of annexa- tion the president appointed a com- mar of three members: of the as Uttle possible with other peo-, can congress which’ came ple, to cultivate a, broad spinit of tol-| here to confer with myself as pret: erance and charity and let people] dent of Hawall and with Chief Jus- live thelr own Uves.—Clarence Dar-| tice Freat in drafting an organic | row ct for the government of Hawail The world without a conception of evolution would be a place in which men of strong mind could only de- —George Bernard Shaw. Nations cannot understand each other, and they cannot help disliking hat they do not understand.—Vis- ount Grey. rying a man who doesn't want a bit of as a territory: The late Senator Cullom of Tlinois was a member of that committee. We worked in per- fect harmony, We agreed upon a dr which was taken to Washing- in 1898. One of {ts {important provisions was a lmitation upon the qualifications of candidates for elec- tion to the territorial législature. It Was proposed to limit candidates for the senate to those who measured up to a cerain property income limit, and candidates for the house e things that are fundamen- essential.—Cardinal | to those having certain property | holdings or income. \ Sees ae een a | “That. sounds a little bit com- Who's Who mercial, but {t” was regarded as the : $ only way in which to get men of cent election of James J,| 800d, average intelligence for ser- ; = president. of the Boy| Vice. We had such a provision: to Scouts of America marks the first |@ualify members for the legisiature of the Hawailan republic. For three or four sessions {t worked well. Tt [gave us ‘legislatures way ahead of nything we have had since the formation of the territory. . “But the provision which Senator Cullom's commission todk to Wash- ington as part of the proposed draft for an organic act was eliminated in the act as passed. The #ystem under which we. now operate has given us a less intelligent representa- tion, It is really hard to run a satis. factory government with the legis: lature we have. A few good men have to carry most of the burden on their shoulders. The majority of | the members, I am sorry to say, don't have really sound ideas on government.” ange in the presidency of that body since, Its foundation, Colin H, Liv: ingstone, who has just retired after 15 years of ser- was one of | the founders of tle movement The nei presi- dent has been| closely {dentified | with the \move- | ment for a num: ber of years as a memiber of the na- tional executive board and as chatrman ‘of the | JAMES J StoR@ow resion covering the New England states. Storrow is a member of the| ‘The presence of-alien races and j banking firm of Lee, Higginson &| peoples in large numbers in the Co irman ‘of the board of Nash | Hawaiian Islands presented a Motors Company and ‘director in| most novel and interesting situation, 1 business corporations. | with which American {nfluences are | - Along with his many other activ!- | endeavoring to deal in a satisfactory itles, the new préeident was chair- jana harmonious way. On the Amer! man of the Boston school,board for | cantzation problem Judge Dole safd: [three years,.19054908, and Good) «ye don't sympathize down here | government candidate for mayor of! with the Callforfla agitation. We | Boston’ in 1909, Subsequently he| fest that the fraternization of | was elected™to the Boston city coun- cil and served as president of the council during the last year of his | four-year term During the war, as chairman of the Massachusetts committee on pub- safety, the pioneer organization of its kind in the country, he did outstanding work. Storrow !s a great lover of out- door life, and several years ago went on a camping trip beginning tn the Grand Canyon, in Arizona, and ter- minating at the Glacler National Park in Montana. However, his tay orite recreation ground has always been the White Mountain region of on well. You have seen our schoo's in which children of many racia! origins are being. trained and edu cated. Our schools and thelr pla) grounds serve as a melting pot for |the- races. And then, again, the | meeting of all races in the miljtary organizations {s a very great similattve influence. Our young Hawallan-born boys and girls of Japanese parentage prefer to stay here rather than go back to Japan. } _ * Faded Leaves BY ALICE CAREY See Pusher and Pushed But down the level land The beech trees rustle in the wind As dry and brown as sand, Emerson’ calls history the action | 1 and reaction of Nature and Thought two boys pushing each other on the bstone of the pavement Everything’ 1s pusher or pushed: | matter\ang mind are in perpet- tilt and) balance: “Whilst the man ts weak, the earth {takes up him, He plants his brains and affections. By ‘and by he will ake up the earth, and have his gar- he clouds in bars of-rusty red Along the hill-tops glow, } And in the still, sharp alr, the frost | Is like a dream of snow ‘Phe berries of the brier-rose Have lost thelr rounded pride: The bitter-sweet chrysanthemume , Are drooping heavy-eyed. The cricket grows more friendly now s and vinyards in the beautiful] ‘The dormouse sly and wi: er and productiveness of his| Hiding away In the disgrace ight Of nature, from men’s eyes. ery sold in the orse is ; ecome fluid o ap-|@he pigeons in black wavering lin nd, and pow easure of the mind remain adamant, it Pr ant of thought. 1 e subtler force it will stream new forms, expressive of the ter of the mind.” t is our city but an aggregate toward the wide and withe: ¢ summer done. His store of nuts and The squirrel hastes to gain And sets his house tn order for The winter's dreary reign. acorns now neongruous materials which have | beyed the will of some man? | Tis time to light the evening fire ‘The granite was reluctant, but his| To read good books, to sing hands were stronger, and ft cams. |The low and lovely songs that | The fron was deep in the ground breathe nd well combined with stone, but Of the eternal spring. in could not hide trem his blast fur- —_ New Hampshire; tn which he ‘hi taken annual camping trips for mat “ BES years. ‘The! hills are bright with maples: yet; ity, Switzerland, sits enthroned on|ernor. Most thinking men doubt} her Alps, like a beacon Mght by | the wisdom of expédiency of making wh all her neighbors might do| Hawai! a state.’ Under territorial the president of the} Orientals and others here is going | | MIAY ABOLISH TARIFF COMMISION AS OUTCOME OF DISAGREEMENTS Coolidge Refuses to Accept Recommendation on Sugar Duty and Conducts His Own Investigation of Subject BY DAVID LAWRENCE ight 1926,, Consolidated Assoclation) WASHINGTON, June! 17.—Prest- dent. Cooltdge’s refusal to accept the recommendation | of tariff com- mission thatithe duty on raw sug- ar be decreased ‘probably will mean the ultimate abolition of that com- mission, i President Coolidge differs with the commission !n {ts conception of bas: fe data and ultimate decision in the | {ess ; matter rests with him. |. Commissioner rvin, who hails For more than ten months the|from New England, is of course, a commiesion has filed its report with | protectionist. Commissioner Glassie the president, who did not proclalm | didn’t vote because of a family in it but continued the {nvestigation {n| terest in sugar, but it 1s supposed his own securing additional data | that even though he is a Democrat } from the commission as well as other | he would have voted against reduc- departments. tion of sugar / This is contrary to what was gen-| final line-up three to three, in which} | [minority to reduce the sugar tariff, | Press | has been appointed minister to Rou- | manta! Commissioner Costi, | rado, who ran for go on the Ball Mooze ticket, voted with the minority and. remains the only | member of the so-called Progressive wing on the commission. Commis: | sioner Burgess, who voted against | tariff reduction’ and is a protection- ist, resigned recently to go into bus- {Copy erally conceded to be tle way the|case Mr, Coolldge felt that he had commission. {dea would work out |the deciding vote. when the measure was ‘debated in| ‘The division has existed for a long | congress. time,.s0 that the commission has WEDNESDAY, JONE 17, 1925 the Casper Daily Cribune A Graduation BY KATE HAWORTH sit far back in the darkness of the old * Opera House, my stage, Where half a hundred boys and girls sit In tense silence While the old Professor fumbles over the ribbon-tied diploma eyes upon the Flowers, . . the air is heavy with their perfume. |r thrill as across the stage there trips a graceful image In long full skirt and high-piled hair; One after figures of ‘another day— I even see the one that once was I —and smile— ‘Till some small thing dispels the past Youth—Beauty? to sigh o'er such as these, But for one hour of youth's unshaken falth— For dreams that pierce the sky and reach Infini I'd trade the yea s that can but rob It was thought that the commis-| meant apprehension and ‘exaspera sion being-composed of disinterested | tion to the other side. persons would sit in a quasi-judicial) The sugar case has been the most capacity and that the president's | outstanding one before the comm part-would be more or less prefunc-| sion. No explanation has been tory tn conforming to the law by/en at the White House for the de making public the commission’s rec-|in announcing the president's dect commendations. It was argued that|ston, The report came to him almost the tariff. would thus be taken out,a yenr ago—July 81—and Senator of politics, that the president him-|La Follette was at the time discus. self would be relieved of the usual|sing sugar and arguing for a re- pressure of politics and tariff in-jduction. After election, however, trigue and that the commission's | the report still failed to appear and | word would, in effect. be law. The |ever since there has been mystery | 1920 Republican national platform about the delay. In some quarters | pointed with pride to the commis-|jt was pointed out that the prest- sion as an agency for the making | dent was not really required to make { | ay’ | of tariff rates lower when they|a decision if he took no action and were too high and for increasing] that only thereases or decreases—in them when the necessity arose. The | other words, an actual change—re- flexibility feature was emphasized as | quired publicity. a way to meet changing economic! The | president's. “announcement condition: puts an end to a long drawn out As it worked out, Mr. Coolidge | controversy, reveals the fact that the has in almost every case that he has acted on at all, proclaimed a higher duty. ‘The members of the commis- sion ftself have been hopelessly di vided from the etart. Political pres: sure has been brought inst mem- bere of the commission. President Coolidge has had to make changes in personnel. It’s a different com- mission today than {it was when the yery same sugar report was filed} with Mr. Coolldge Commiggsioner | Lewls, Den: ocrat, was not reappointed and his” posi- tion was given to another Democrat. Professor Dennis, who happened to be a life\ long friend of Mr. Cool: commission {s a bi-partisan body and that the president, after all, {s the deciding factor with his power of appointment as well as power of ré view. Under the cirumstances it would not be surprising if the dl- rector of the budget reported to President Coolidge that the govern ment might economize by abolishing the commission altogether or at least reducing it to the status of an in vestigation board which {t was dur Ing the Wilson administration, The findings were supposed to be useful to congress, but that body even fol lowed its constitutional prerogative and did as {t pleased, irrespective of idge's, the tariff t 's nding efforts, Commissioner Culbertson, of Kan. | eM aie ait Taam as. Republican, who voted with the Trilmne Want Ads Bring ults [rer 33 years Western women have one—the half forgotten | And I am old and disillusioned with the world. What's this that time has stolen | from me? 'Twere foolishness , Any time youdo not think. hat SCHILLING Cofice s the*best coffee you can buy— Girls Father and Brother Held for '‘Beating Her Lover WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. June 17 (By A, P)—A ict of second de luree assault was returtted toe 4 | ugainst William MacClymount, the nkers real estate broker and son- jaw, Randolph M. Steele, Newark (N. J.) bond broker, who were tried rges preferred--by Willlam Nand,,a ‘ormer suitor “for the hand of MacClymont’s daughter. The verdict carries a maxinyum penalty of five years’ imprisonment but the court may In its discretion Impose a suspended sentence or fi | Holland asserted the two men lured him into MacClymont's office | and, inflicted severe injuries by tle ! ing his wrists with ¢ epee Get the habit of calling Troy | Laundry when you wish laundry | service. Phone 1672W. ‘or results try Tribune Classified Ads. nt nsurance \ | y—instantly e coflee.” ; depended upon the famous ipa “Money-Back” offer on Baking Powder, Tes, Spices, Extracts and Coffee. row. 226 South David Street Vacations Burlingten Route White sails on the blue Atlantic, the colorful gayety of Atlantic City, the thrilling spectacle of Niagara! Which of these contrasting allure- ments is it that appeals to you as the avenue of escape from accustomed sights and every-day activity, to per- fect vacation enjoyment? EXCURSION FARES EAST Circle Tours Stop Overs See me for mation---Reservations-—Tickets R. N. McNAB Ticket Agent TRIBUNE Present this coupon and $2.50 a Field before June 15, and you wi the city of Casper. Sign here Before Presenting TOMORROW! Look for an important ANNOUNCEMENT BY STUDEBAKER in this newspaper tomor- It will interest everyone who owns or expects to own a ¢ar.. BIG SIX MOTOR CO. Phone 1817 COUPON This Coupon Is Worth $2.50 on One Airplane Ride t the Wyoming Alrwaye Landing Il be given a big airplane ride o er Limited time only. maces, x The Tribyne carriers have Wam: Wood, Mm@ copper, rubber, food, | pum for thelr subserfbers. Ask the were dispersed over the earth and| boys about it. Get Wampum on sed, in valn. Here they are, within | YOUr subscription, of n'a day-labor— every ants of them, whol “The world is the flux of | matter over the. wires of thought | ot * points where {t would | tid merson opines. The ORIGINAL Certain ideas are in the alr, We Malted Milk are all impressionable, but some e than others, ‘The ¢ruth ts tn e air, and the most impressionable In will-announce It first, but all ‘ "nnounce [t a few minutes later, ave the curlous sontempor f inventions ard discoy le—No Cooking tations — Substitutes re, the great man, that ts t imbued with the spirit is the most {mpresston: Lexington Cream XXXXX Flour More and Better Bread per sack Rye, Whole t, Graham, Corn M Ask your grocer for this flour and have better bread World Topics Tudge Sanford B, Dole, thé “Grand Old Man of Hawalt,"" who at the age jot 81 te iving hale and hearty tn Honolulu, has these views on the situation of the tslands: Firet—Tfe ts oppored to any || Casper Warehouse Branting of statehood to Hawall, but favors continuance ef the present Company terrltorial form of government | DISTRIBUTORS Becond—Me favors the establisl || rel 27 268 Industriv) Ave iment of eome form ef vroperty or! your name will not be re-entered in the records. this matter to his attention. HURRY—THIS FINAL ENUMERATION MUST BE FORWARDED T THAN JUNE 22, 1925 1 the County Assessor's office, If you know of anyone else who has not bee | Name of Person or | Eex | Age or of Birth of | Race Married or Place Residence pi ] ‘4? 7 7 TRAIN SCHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN | Westbound Arriv D. ts No. 608 ---.,..---- 2.222222. 1:65 p.m. 2:0 pb m , Eastbound Arrives Departs No. 623"... wanerees 645 p. m. 6:00 p, m CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY Eastbound Arrives Departs 4:00 p.m ae m 3:35 pm f ves Dd te No. 29 . 6:50 a. m 710 w mo 9:65 p. m. SPER IN THE OFFICIAL STATE CENSUS ENUMERATION? If not, kiadly fill out the blank below and mail to the Chamber’of Commerce, P. O. Box 8 | furnish will be checked against the present enumeration ir 62. The information you and if you have been counted n counted, kindly call O CHEYENNE, WYOMING, NOT LATER Color Single | Nativity | Place Citizen of | Occupation