Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 19, 1925, Page 6

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PAGE S: The Casper DailyTribume By J. Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as November 22 The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening Tribune every Sunday at Casper building, opposite postoffice. » HANWAY AND & & BANWAY second class matter, 1916. Wyoming Business Telephones Branch Telephone xchange Connec ---16 and rtments All De ting and The Sunday Morning | Publicdtion offices: Tribune | MEMBEK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated tress is eaciusly dil news credited tp this paper an d to the use fur Member of Audit Bureau of Circolation (A, B. ©.) Prudden, King & Ir fAve., New fork City #5 New Montgomery tre on Gle in the Ne udden. t Globe E Advertising St, San Brancisco. w York, Chicago. 286 dg.. Bi § of the Daily o Copie: Boston and and visitors are welcome publication 01 the local news published herein itth ‘on Bids. | fribune Francisco offices SUBSCRIPTION KATES Jne Year, Da Six Months, Da! Inree Months. Dally June Month, Dally and & 2ne Year, Sunday only Ly Sunday Ine Year, Daily and 3ix Months, b: Hy Carrier and Outside State Three Months, L Ine Month, Vat! - 75 Ine Year. Sunda on woos 2.50 All eubecriptions c ip nce he Dally bune wil! not insure delivery pt mes e montb tn ears. KICK, IF YOU DONT GET YOUR TRINUND f you don't find your Tri tte efu fe 15 or 16 ind {t will be delivered to you R complaints | The Mosquito Pest As the June days ‘ow brighter and warmer and the snows of the mountains melt and seek th onward course to the sea, the mosquito here and there have taken fresh hope and about their locusts sw aking adyan of winter, and anxious to bi . time, the mosquito famil forth in search of adventure aud enjoyment lower levels in the onies hibernating yurage and gone business in life with a zest unparalleled since the oped down upon B pt some yea , their release from a long and hard on their way and make up for lost y, full of pep and vigor, haye fared They are finding both. Opportunity is theirs The have more than reached the census selves and the population al set for them unprecedented is still showing growth. Loud are the wails emanating from the wearers of diaphanous garments and transparent hosiery at the offensive launched against the with extraordinary y of pestology which m. Those who have suffered, are still sufferin suffer further do not want to be surveyed horrence of surveying parties at this particular time. They are not at their best. What the " tion or at least a rec quito birthday parties. 1 erala poison ee They tion of the mosquito population, A truction of the homes and abiding place ily and a discouragement of the ault upon mosquito breeding grounds with oil, and fire and some the stings, wounds and discomfort already inflicted victtms will- subside and suffer in silence for the rs are complaining and scratching Appeal has been made to the bureau promised to sury the situation. and expecting to They have an ab want mostly is an extermina des of the mosquito fam- opulurity of mos- npusse a gen soline, of revenge secured for present be en this can measur nainder of the season, with the fe the same diaphanous raiment and of earlier encounters Modern Labor Movement : exhibiting the battle . tive mosquito by mea § the same transparent hosiery. f n a Che ie autions and labor le thods that are compar self by his own bootstra that amount to affluenc labor movement in this country is so far in advance of that in any other country as to make comy I) Kuropean countries, including Great Bri rison impossibl rin Jabor organi- ders are still pursuing antiquated me ble to the attempt of a man to lift him Here they are using the fulerum of captial ownership and are actually lifting themselyes into positions of well-being in comparison with conditions of European daborers. Instead of fighting capital they are be- : ginning to recognize its power and to use it as an imple ment for their own improvement. There are at least three kinds: of evidence that indicate roughly the extent to which laborers are becoming their own capitalists in this country; first, the rapid growth of suving deposits; second, the investment by laborers in shares of cor porations; third, the growth of labor banks Who Pays the Taxes Seventy-four incomes of more than $1,000,000 each in the United States were listed by the internal revenue bureau for 1923 or seven more than in the previous year. The taxable in come for the year is given as 1 000,000 above the total for the p 165, Those paying federal income taxes in 1 387, or nearly $5,000, ious year, The seventy-four S450 and 7,698,347 bringing the total jon of the More than half the tax 3 up to $7$ constituted 6.04 per cent of the estimated popu or country, agains 6.2 per cent in 1922. A payers had incomes between $2,000 and $5,000. it . Julins Kruttschnitt ; : A Great Railroad Manager whose long identified with the great Southern Pacific system death has just occurred was and since 1918 had been chairman vf the executive committee, re tiring only recently, He wa 1 engineer in char of con struction and steadily working upward to the highest execu tive positior the system. He was one of EB. H. Warrimar most trusted lieutenants and in recent reminiscences charac erized his former chief, who, he said, founded hig transporta tion empire upon confidenc America, as the greatest and Inst of the chairman lines have grown from 10,000 miles, with #143,000,000 15,500 miles, with gross in excess Krnuttschnitt became the recommendation of a reduction of one-half ce not find that differences in cost ly established to warri b duction abnormally or high prices sale price of granulated su { On May 7 last the pric average for 1909 to 1912 Vice President Dawes in the es pany nearly 1,000,000 shares, an average of sever . the average price paid has been about 4 the prevailing market of 14044, Total of Ay t.1 elated company rred purchases not paid up, ix 650,000, holders other conditio: might warrant reconsiderat st on the subject at AS58000, himself in and the greatness of lroad kings, Since in 1913 the Sonthern Pacific gross, to of $300,000,000 in 1924 No Change in Sugar Duty President Coolidge will take no action for the present o1 rity of the tariff commission for 1 pound in sugar duties as he did of production were sufficient t change. Should decreased pro ompel the consumer to pay “the complained of in 1) the cha The average New York whol ir was 8.4 cents a pound in 1f had dropped to 548 cents, The pre-war Dawes, The Crusader i onsidering a for western tour. after his Denver speech Jul 1, in advocacy of revision of the senate rules, going to Seattle, Portland, San Vraneiseo and Los Angeles, A mid-western series of addresses also under consideration, June 28 he will make his second speech Manchester, N. H Employe Ownership Through efforts of employes added to the list of the largest corporate stockholders in the world—those of the American in the past two and a half years. Subscribers have taker 133,000 holders have beer lephone and Telegraph com shares each, and can Telephone and Telegraph stockholders, exclusive of those holding asso nd common stocks and of employes’ The grand ! tal of seenrit Who’s Who The latest .ddtiiof to the ranks Jot Wall Stre {nternational bank- | ing tigures is Col. James A. Logan | Jr. He becomes European representa- | ——___——— t lve of Dilion Reed - and company. As a background for his new role Colonel Logan has more than 10 years association with Wuropean political and financial lead- fa private es army, has had a sidier in James A, Logan, antic career. He a student at Haverford university when the | Spanish-American war broke out. He quit college at 19 to enlist as a pri- was | vate In battery A, Pennsylvanta vol- unteers. | Following service in the Philip. pines in 1901, Logan was commis- stoned as a captain and in the World War of 1914, he was made a colonel, Because of his familiarity with mil- itary customs abroad he was chosen as chief of the American military mission with the French army from September, 1914, to June 1di7. In that post Logan was military ambassador in the difficult position | of ntaining American neutrality. | When {t became evident that the United States’ would enter the war, | Gol was asstgned to make rrival of General Per- ready shing He got the title as assistant chief of staff general headquarters of the American expeditionary forces and in this place had charge of the | details of the farmation of the skele- | ton orgunization which was to han- dle the millions of American si |who were to follow General ters Per- ad. stant in Europe to Herbert ; in his work as director gen- | eral of relle¢ under the supreme. eco- | noml council. His work involved the transportation and distribution of about 5,000,000 tons of foo This work completed, Log: is attention to financial roblems as b een the coun- rles of Europe in thelr relations with the United States, He was the unofficial delegate on the repara- | tions commission fn association with Roland W. Bayden up to August, 1923, when he took eole charge of America’s interests in that commis ' Go, Lovely Rose By EDMUND WALLER, | Go, lovely Rose— | Tell her that wastes her time and me, That now she knows, When I resemble her to thee, | How sweet and fair she seems to be. Tell her that's young And shuns to haye her graces spied Phat had'st thou sprung | In deserts where no men abide | ‘Thou must have uncommended died. } | Small is the worth Of beauty from the light retired Bid her come forth ter herself to be desired, } And not blush so to be admired. Then die—that she | The common fate of | | May read in thee; | small a part of time they shave | That are so wondrous sweet and fair. ot ad ote i things rare American Language An English professor is jover to edit a dictionary ican English, or, more properly, | American language: Yn pre coming of Amer- the nkee refusing himse}f a master Ehgiish, satirically defined a lex!- rapher as a “pestilent fellow who under pretense of recording some particular stage in the development jof a language, does what ‘he can to arrest {ts growth, stiffen Its ‘flex! bility and merchanize tts methods. “For your lexicographer, having written his dictions comes to be considered ‘ ne having authority,’ | whereas his function is only to make | not to give a law. servility of the hu a record “The natural man understanding having Invested him with judicial power, surrenders ita right of reason and aubmits it- relf to a chronicle as ‘if it we ee | “Let the dictionary (for example) mark a good word as ‘obsolete’ and | few men thereafter venture to use lit, whatever thelr nee@ of ft and however desirable itm restoration to favor—whereby the process of tr fs accelerated and d and dis mizing the by ury, the b writer, who rec t language must grow | innovation If ft grow at all, makes | new words and uses the old in an fonfamillar sense, hag no following and Is tartly reminded that ‘It isn’t in the dictionary’ although down to the time of the first lexicographer no author had ever used a word that was {n the dictionary cee Blerce is ¢ high noon en from the ot pe words golden prime English speech of the great that made the fell thetr owr and Co n became the, princl Che Casper Daily Cribune speare and a Bacon were possible, and the language-now rapidly perish- ing at one end and slowly renewed at the other was in vigorous growth and hardy preservation, the lexico- grapher was a person unknown, the dictionary’a creation which hie Crea. tor had not created him to create, see Don't be afraid to use a pictures- que, unstilted, effective word,regard: less of whether it 1s in the diction? at If, it’s a good word, it'll be there eventually, And if yéu con¥erse In the tongue your neighbors understand, abandon ers with*whom he | the idea you speak Engiisin /Amert- has labored in| can ts: your language. solving the. post- war pri And | probably the out- June | standing achleve- | | ment of hisefforts | ve, with the ‘rosebuds in he GAMES A.LOGCAN in behalf of the hale’ And sEiRRrRRO doeea Et bes | American government was his work * Ebf chu GOhabet tate band “unofficial observer” in the | ‘UC6"™ = A act be y negotiations and th a | MODE Ey OM te ace ete he was able to extend, through his | U®4 éuniea, aspen waren knowledge of Huropean conditions, | 4**"+ | Fs to’ the American representatives, biuy ure the eyes of June, dnd les Charles G. Dawes and Owen D,| “#lung robe ds uf the tabric of quik. ng. white vivuds. Whe perfumed. winds According to London gossip it was} te her cuurlers—winds sweet witu Colonet n who, with hig quiet | ‘he scent tv cover-bioum, and bear diplor ived the Dawes plan by | 8 the nuustewy of droning “bees, | giving a dinner at the critical mo Sorid6n. WAL LDS: WAY OE SO chee | ment, bringing together the oppos-| brides und Vivssoms uve in natural) which resulted in an | 4tiinity. And utter the bride, comes the child, wh, some day, will walk “knee-deep in June, Uut Were, just beyond the city's Sy ing and sing tue choristers heaven; vut there walk (he spirits vt Audubon and WilsdR-and Thor- eau and Jolin Burroughs—lovers of melodious joy, familiar in natures saboratory, whetlce comes tbe ful- ness of Junetide’s dreamy witcner The seeds of Iie realize the quickening at this maternal pericd vi the year, The insect orchestras ¢ their cryptic instruments. The priest- ly stars bestow thelr benedictions up on a world kneeling before the vel vet altars of the dark. Then morning, with its orlsous of blended harmonies—all sounds that soothe, or stir to deeper joy; the cheep of baby bird, the purl of waters, the cricket's. drowsy note, the distant call of mourning don whisperings, soft lau ute of nomad youth afie or aspiash [n comrade water these with he mists that wreath Maid Morning's breasts as shiel a wimple shot with opal fires. June nig'its! Rarer than the poet's “Jay so rare’ is night of June. Moon- light and starlight, fragrance .and fancy interweaving, mystery. muric the win ter, the sh Tax exempt secur sions of the present revenue up an “economical! {9 of surtaxes,"* wer Garrard B, Winston, under- secretary of the “treasury, and held up recently as tro of the main of- fending factors in narrowing the margin on which the credit of Amer: fean. business rests. Mr. Wineton, whose statements are tantamount to @ pronunclamento AFF of the Mellon pro- a gram, erted - SE fatty that taxes GARRARD WINSTC! must be reduced if prosperity {s to continue. t by out by He estimatsd the total of out- standing tax exempt securities at $13,000,000,000, and prophesied the figure would te over $16,000,000,000 before “any constitutional amend. ment could possibly be made effec- tive." Although taking congress to task for its ‘repeated. refusals to reach the abuse of tax exempt securities, Mr. Winston declared it beyond the power of practical legislation to elim- inate all unjust discriminations of the federal tax laws, The loop- holes for the rich, he asserted, are so many and varied that any at- tempt to stop up all of them “would simply put business in a straight jacket and’make !t unable to move.” Mr, Winston's talk brought results. Imntedlately after he had finished, the association, by resolution, went on record in favor 6f speedy revision of state and federal laws, including inheritance taxes. The resolutions call for such changes “‘as will protect our business interests and our citizens against what amount to confiscation of prop iN @ less attractive i n taxable art c funds wh c erwise would be ytilized for pro 1 of our cor mercial and industrial « vities.” Mr. Winston spoke of taxation from the viewpoint of {ts effect.on credit) Ha pointed out, that the merchant {s hit from two di ons in that he has to pay the tax him self and at the came time secs “his receipts lowered because taxes: have reduced the purchasing power of his customers Every unnecessary dollar used by the government {s a dollar of wasted | wealth and.prosperity, #0 tax reduc: | tion is desir he said. He scored waste In government as wanton de: ruction, “Tt is not the total amount of taxation which bjectionable, but the effect of unselentific high rates on the normal play of .econ+ omic forces, he added, ‘Idle funds J.LMurphy meneger San Francisco | witfe: laws | in the hands of a rich man are not attracted to a 6 per cent taxable bond or an 8 per cent investment when a perfectly safe 414 per cent tax-exempt security yields more net ‘income te him, A man interested {11 risking his mone; his energy in a new enterprise w if he wins, the-government appro- priates half his winnings, and if he loses," he stands the whole of his loss. Why the “Ape Law” The adopt Tennessee legislature has ed a bill making it unlawful for teacher in any of the univer- and all other pullic schools of the state which ure supported in whole or in part by the pubile school funds of the state’ to teach any theory thay denies the story of the divine creation of man as taught In the Bible." Such action is regret- table, but it {s not without an ex- planation. Such e law would never have been passed {n Tennessee or {n any other state if all teachers had been more careful to confine then- selves in thei? teaching to the things which they know. ‘There are in our not a few teachers who seem to take delight {11 shocking the religious sensibilities of thelr stu: dents, and who make a practice of saying things about the Christian religion or about the church which cannot fail to confuse the minds of young people.and {ncense their par- ‘There are many of our unl- professors who If not, kindly fill out the blan THE OF FICIAL STATE CENSUS ENUMERATION furnish will be checked against the present enum your name will not be re-entered in the records. this matter to his attention. HURRY—THIS FINAL EN FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1925 in common sense. They know how lef to tear down, but do not know how They have a smatter- th to build up. ing of sclence, ed on know rovince, and they he realm of philosophy and even of theology, -making. a UN Nw offee News goer great parade of thelr superficie Re Se A. learning, and taking for granted a N ne) Schilling is the only coffee lot of things which are not yet prov roaster who produces only oy, ¥ of te: {s foun¢ 5 Beas | eeesenonsaend li tiebscantalot site | fe quality and sells tt in vacuum half-baked and bumptious type of pe uns only. Anyone can produce cheap pedagogic mind that many religious Coffees, but Schilling produces the ~ t coffee exclusively—because it’s : ~best for the home. people in various parts of the coun try have become disgusted with this ingolence and irreverence, and are| ready to take swift and summary vengeance on these miscreants who | have palmed off their speculations | and theories upon youthful minds | | not yet prepared to pass soynd judg: | ment on them, : Foolishness on one side provokes foolishness on the other, All foolish- }+ ness {s Only transitory, Tennessee | will live to see the day when her law | If. will seem to her ridiculous, The evil at which the law is aimed will be| & overcome fn another way. ‘The recl Jess upstarts who creep into tench: ers’ chalrs will some day be weo out or will learn to be more consid ate in the methods of their teaching. The very men who voted gor this law will some day be ashamed of It. We are passing through a period of YOU don’t think it’s the best coffee, your money back instantly at my store. ‘The same guarantee on Schilling Tea, Baking Powder, Spices and Extracts. —————————E—E — = | CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 9:30 A M PARB—i12.50 | Saves you approsimately 12 hours travel between Casper ands Rawlins | WYOMING MOTORWAY shock, and many persons are in a Salt Creek Transportation Company's Offics chronic state of panic. After a while || SOT NII 1B we shall pull ourselves together ‘and || EG le hee esis become sane in a ‘Look, Mother!” Waich the bowlfuls go when Kellogg’s Corn Flakes are served. It’s the flavor. They love it. No other corn flakes like Kellogg’s. No other so crunchy-crisp, so golden-toasted, so deliciously, satisfyingly good. Serve Kellogg’s tomorrow morning and taste this flavor for yourself. Ready to serve. Just pour in the bowl and add milk or cream. No wait- ing. No cooking. Also delicious with fresh or preserved fruit. Gct Kellogg’s from your grocer today. Sold everywhere. Served in restau- rants and hotels. Kelloyys OJ at OQven-fresh ALWAYS Kollogg’s patented innere sealed waxtite wrapper preserves the flavor and heeps the flakes toa: crisp, An exel Kellogg featurs! > Make this comparison! Compare the flavor of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes with any ready-to-eat cereal and you'll appreciate why Kellogg’s outsells all others. wi] k below and mail to the Chamber of Commerce, P. 0. Box 862 ration in the County Assessor's offic 1 If you know of anyone else who ha _ The information you , and if you have been counted not been counted, kindly call UMERATION MUST BE FORWARDED TO CHE THAN JUNE 22, 1925 YENNE, WYOMING, NOT LATER Si lll Meee of Birth, | rer | Oltizen | poey Married | or Place a ly Occupation and Residence | Write

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