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Che Casper Daily Cribune By J. E. HANWAY AND E. & HANWAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postuffice a November 22 1916. e Casper Dally Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning Cribune every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune bullding, opposite postofice, second class matter, 3usiness Telephones -.. wmoneneel5 and 16 Branch Telephone partments or ( NEMBEK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS fhe Associated Press ts exclusively entitled to the use tor publication ot sil news credited ip this paper and also the loca! news published herein. Member of Audit Gureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) ckepresentatives ae King & Prudden 3 Steger Chicago, IIL, 286-Fittb ve., New York City: Globe Bidg.. Boston, Mnvs., Suite 404 Sharon Bidg. is New Montgumery St, San Francisco. Cal. Copies of the Daily Tribune tre on Gle in the New York, Chicago. Boston and San Francisco officer and visitors are welcome. SUBSCLIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State Qne Year, Dally and Sunday siz Months, Dally and § Jnree Months Ine Month, Dne Year, < eoen eee =- $9.00 inday . Dally end Sunday Dally and §& Sunday only unday By Mall Daily and Sunday .. 3ix Months, Dally and Sunday * Three Months, Dally and sunday Jne Month, Dally and Sunday Qne Year. Sunday Only ane Year, Che Casper Daily Cribune committee, Senator Underwood of Alabama adyocates a maxi- mum of thirteen per cent and Frank W. Mondell, war finance corporation member and former Republican leader of the house has suggested fifteen per cent. Treasury officials are said to favor a reduction to at least twenty per cent. Chairman Green disagrees with Senator Smoot, which igs concurred in by Presi- dent Coolidge, that it might be well for the federal government to abandon its inheritance tax. He predicts a treasury sur- plus of at least $300,000,000 and that this would justify a re- duction of the surtax to twenty-five per cent. Arid Enforcement Federal Prohibition Commissioner Haynes, in his fourth annual report, has this to say with reference to the enforce- ment of the probibitory laws by bis department: “Real whiskey, wine, gin or brandy is now practically unobtainable for beverage use, The big bootlegger is making his last stand. The coast guard has gone after the liquor ‘smug: gler in the most effective manner. Diversion of industrial al- cohol is substantially less than formerly. A total of 163,645 criminal indictments for violation of the prohibition act have en returned since July 1, 1921, to 0 15, 1925, of which 762 came since last July 1, Convictions in these cases so far number 121,654.” , Time has always been since the colonization of America, that people were keen to show that their ancestors came over in the Mayflower, but time has never been that people were anxious to show that they came over with the circus. The porch swing is not only safe but it is inexpensive. It All subscriptions must oi \f you don’t fin ind it will be -- 3.60 ly Tribune will not insure delivery after subscription becomes one month tn errears, KICK, (Ff YOU DONT ‘T YOUR TRIBUNE d your T e after looking carefully for tt call 18 or 16 livered to you by special messenger. Register complaints nefore « o'clock Words and Meanings : When Englishmen balk at the word “protection” but con- f cede that “import restraint” is necessary, the difference is ie Yerbul not real n Much may be learned from the study of words; but 1 n we never forget that the underlying meaning of the words is e inportant matter John Bunyan used requires neither gasoline nor o} Forgotten Industries histories naturally and rightly tell of the rapid growth of this country. Immigrants are sur- prised at the advance of Chicago, of San Francisco, of Denver. Stress is also laid on the speed with which industries have grown, This is without a parallel in the Old World, and it ought to be known even more widely than it is. But it is not true that every ham: let is likely to become a city, or that every city will double its population School epee aD : ple English. Sam- | within a year. John. Faris in “The ISK pen ran off semi-Latin sente But if either Romance of Forgotten Towns" tells had made a promise he would have kept it. The French revolu mmuities that were uwisely lo tion bas been chosen as a subject by Thiers in his scholarly | cated, or that suffered from exhaus- Ire and by Carlyle in his Germanized English, Would not tlo. of resources, or owing to a var. — the same facts be facts if we found them in the log book of a | ety of causes, and that passed out = French man-of-war or the diary of a notary public? Style is |° eins. This is not a conspicuous important, yet it may be mischievous. The writer who dreams feat ute een ca ery pee thant kis niaiiiorde Votan one F bel [i theless {t is a part of it, Old men t F re lportant than his matter gives us occasionally speak of towns that ex words, words, isted in their youth, at.d have passed ~_ There may be reasons for preferring one word | from the map. to another. An essiyi statesman, philosopher or a divine How this strikes home when we a) may like a word that dear to a preceptor or has some | consider our industrial history, There i tender association, But this is academic—what is more to the | Were factories that grew up under e purpose is that there may be special reasons for advocating Poe sopargo duce Deane neon ie the use of a word, There may be case hopelessly lost, and |£,22° crea titan ates vatetberre Scam witllitecs a ce i] Bly This c was re-enacted when ei ve tawyer, unwilling to own his defeat, seeks for n loop: |the development that followed the . hole, At times a debater or an editor who seek no hope of wine | tariff of 1824 gave place to the un- ti ing a Contest yet looks about him for some expression which | wise reductions of 183%. Again the et will at least soften his discomfiture tariff of 1842 started us In the right 0. Generally these expedients are vain. The best course for | Path, and once more we played into the loser is x frank admission that he has lost. Had’ Great [the hands of our competitors. Men I in candidly owned that it s necessary to return to | Stl, Uving remember the. Pennsyl- fedtheelon eeseantL HaWGdentieantnchinea he : » |vania iron plants that were closed a.) nosh nd ny ave fallen back on the precedents by the tariff of 1846. Some of them ise «=F five countries. But while she admits the fact and grasps at had white sheets on their chimneys the nsime she does not maintain the place she used to have on and their sheets were often called th orld’s stage. It is frankness to own an error; it ismérely “Dallas night cap: Dallas was the quill o thro the uu economic system and protend Pennsylvanian of unenylable fame ji nave of the cheea who, after long »lalming to be a pro his woth tectionist had betrayed the common: i wealth that had trusted him. . Obregon Butts In “Forgotten industries"—what stor. v President Obregon, of Mexico, in congratulating pid pe told of thern.+- Some were Prosident Calles on bis reply to Secretury Kellogg, went a |e eata arccrapeene cick : & |Canada, Some were part of what little good tiste would suggest in the circum: | the tariff of 1894 cost us. The sub- stances, red that “the president's statement fully |Ject though painful is instructive defended sovereignty of Mexico,” and that “no one could. }|and merits the attention of every deny that your reply was justified. legislator and of all those whose “Mr. Kello pretends to show that the fate of the Mext votes send legislators to Washing: overnment rests with the department of st States, and appears to ignore wh Uni- s have wh to the world, that in Mexico a government can function ton. Who’s Who t exist normally with a popular vote and without the of- {1 ficinl aujiport of itl United tutes eoverninenty The man who renewed four months The world hus noticed, despite Mr, Obregon’s statement to | 26° his offer of « $26,000 prize to the contrary, that the government of Mexico did not function | toe Ji who ane first make a for some years, and only settled down to something like the | to the United States, 1s soon to sail semblance of stable rule after the American government ex- for France to be tended rec tition, But there is just so much steam in the when the avernge Mexican official, or ex-official and we presume he is started. rh blow it off, when oceasion occurs, Raymond a pei Orteig. Paul Tar : ascon and a Amundsen Controls Bria Mens ae erg" she delay in getting quick accurate news of-the Amundsen weonrtatoe yh he expedition was due to the fact that the only communication t bY facilities ut Iings Bay, Spitzbergen, is the wireless on the in Whe Sed wil $98 Norwegian patrol bunt, Heimdal, which ts controllotl hy piake mbaTEE the rule . 42; Amundsen, and the staff correspondent of the Associated Press prize in a hydro- ¢ E ix unable to file his service until the explorer lifts the embargo. airplane. starting mene The expedition, it appenrs, reached S87 degrees 44 minutes about the 26th .of pla north, Nounding showed the depth of the ocean to be 3,706 Bese Pale FONE la sucters. Vast fields of ice lod to the belief that a landing was POE ae ages impossible father north, but 100,000 square kilometers was Ireland, Newfoundland and Nova La M Scotia to New York. SS) “covered” without seeing land, and the conclusion was reached Ortelg, who has been proprietor of r there was none on that side of the pole the Cafe* Lafayette and the Hotel ‘VY —— Brevoort, w York, more than K ’ , PD. . aE twenty years and wh6 for nearly , Don't Relax Preparations twenty years bofer that was Identi- i vet of tl uncil 1¢ of nations at Gen fled with the Cafe Martin, whidh pre Di ova in 4 ng t fure should not lead ceded the Lafayette, offered the the people of tl suntry 4 lieve such warfare ig a thing | Prize first in 1919, He was moved ‘ 7 © this b: fact that th jean 4 field. The technical experts of the limitation of arms confer cross the Atlantic, went by way of 4 ence in Washington three years ago unanimously refused to the Azor Portugal and England inj Smuiction prohibition of poison is production. ~ For some without touching France, leie strange reason the report, up to this time, has been suppressed. He thought this a pity, one te ‘This report of the subcommittee on poison gas was submitted | born tn France and who had been Ber December §, 1921, and signed by representatives of Great Brit- pyetadat peti teats inca n hs ‘ mY ain c x ne se ft ce, Italy, Js n und the od States. ~~ 9 jen’ n Mt sie erat i : 1 iy a the WB bee wh, . h declared that a time limit of five years for the OMT t is not possible to prohibit or supervise research in respect | neige. but last Janusry was moved #, to such gases as are used in chemical warfa ud there is no to extend the period, In April Taras irre possibility of being certain that all countries would abide by con and Coll announeed their pyr~ ™ un agreement to communicate the results of their research.” pose of attempting the flight. Bm Since his original offer Orteig has a “x ing a P come to take more than a merely pa t Exceeding the Estimates trlotic Interest in this Western flight iy That the federal income tax collections for the fis year across the Atlantic. Olcott and ; ending June 30, will exceed the estimates by $100,000,000 to Brown in 1919 demonstrated that a 9p $15,000,000 is predicted at the United States treasury depi non-stop flight from Amertoa to ~~ nent. The June installment is expected to run between Europe could be made. They had the Bin } 0.000.000. 1 the tal for the ‘ snch assistance of prevailing winds, which WK) and 0,000 and the total for the year to reac will, throughout most of the year, 5,000,000, funds, to June 1, had amounted to $12,000, oppose fights In the opposite direc ty = 000 which was more than the amount anticipated, but this in tion, If it is demonstrated that an n turn was offset by collection of back taxes airplane can make a non-stop flight «| ee across the Atlantic from enst to west is | g ame an important step will have been ac > | The Sherman Law sharper 7 In this wisdom Henry Ford warns “big business” to be Orteig -wahta to aecompany the MN). ware the Sherman antitrust law. The Coolidge administration men on the flight If possible. t is ready to check any tendency toward renewal of trade com: = 3 ; + mj’ binations in vogue before the enactment of this legislation, Is Gold a Vice » Certain students of public affairs are saying that recent su prame court decisions practically abolish the provisions of the It fe about time for us to be rid Sherman anti-trust luw, Even if that were so, would it justify of the i that money ts sinful, American business in going back to the abuses which brought The sole authority fer the popular the erman law into belng? delusion that “the love of money in ¥ Te nn ‘ Ae the root of all evil,” appears to be per) () * the Bible, But the Bible also gives } Figuring Tax Reduction the advice—"Wine maketh merry: airman Gree! » house ways and means committer | but money answereth all things.” + witt hol eutly. in the fall to prepare a new revenve Dill. te |. Bernard Bhaw le not meraly boing will begin ‘early in the fall to prepare a : shavain when he declares that mon is of the opinion that liberal. itable reduction should be ef |i, the mont important thing in the fovted th ' ' twenty-five per cont, the | worta. for he feele that the iver figurc” i ( ina My t of the senate finunce jsol regard for money is the one e ‘ Re Ae to drive with one band will not increase the il and the tendency of occupants mard. hopeful fact in our civilization, the one sound spot in our social con- science. All of us who think know that money represents health, strength, honor, generosity and beauty as con- spleuously and undeniably as the want of it represents illness, weak- ness, disgrace, meanness and ugil- ness; and that not the least of its virtues is that it destroys base peo- ple as certainly as it fortifies and dignifies noble «nes. “It is only when money ts cheap- ened to worthlessness for some, and made impossibly dear to others, that it becomes a curse,” Shaw observes. “In short,it {sa curse only in uch foolish social conditions that lite itself is a curse. For the two things are inseparable: money is the coun- ter that enables life to be distributed socially: it Is life as truly as silver dollars and bank notes are money. “The first duty of every citizen !s to have mongy on reasonable terms; and this demand is not complied with by giving four men two dollars ench for ten or twelve hours’ drudg- ery and another a thousand dollars for nothing. “The erying need is not for better morals, cheaper bread, prohibition, Uberty, culture, redemption of fallen sisters and erring brothers, nor the grace, love and fellowship of the Trinity, but simply for enough mon- ey. “And the evil to be attacked is not sin, suffering, greed, priestcratt. Kktngeratt,.demagosy, monopoly, ig- norance, drink, war, pestilende, nor any other of the scapegoats which reformers sacrifice, but simply pov- erty." . Let us change “Love of money is the root of all evil’ to ‘Poverty ts the root of all evil.” Then we will be nearer the truth World Topics Picturing the world as sitting like Job in the ashes and sorrows of its losses, Dr. John H. Finley, former commissioner of education in New York state and an editor of New York Times, visualizes "the glorification lof that higher de- ire of mind whieh Heads to the good jof the people and now the to posmic happiness.” Delivering an address on “The Mystery of the Desire," DR. O-H-FINLEY cently: have been tm pelled to «peak at this time of the desire for something that 1s infinite. ly above and beyond that which ts visible and tangible—the mystery of an evolytion that moves toward some far-off goal, the mystery of an urge that will not Jet men rest satisfied with what was, or ts, however much we may respect the sanctions of the past or be tempted to inertness by the comfort of the present. “With an infinity of painful toll, man has trod the long. long road through the centurles to the land of his heart's desire, a land which may never be reached, a land in which the sum of human knowledge has dispelled all doubt and all m tery, where all things are known and where all effects may be traced with ease to their causations, The mind of the scholar, his work in the labor atory and the field, has from time immemorial illumined the way and it is this same mind which must go on age after age striking through the mysteries of life and Indicating the rodd to the desirable but unat- tainable beyond. “The world is sttting as Job today, covered with sores, shorn of billions upon billions of its possessions, be- reft of millions upon’ millions of its sons—sitting in the ashes of its losses apd its sorrows bewildered as to the meaning of this Satanic visit- ation, facing again the same anolent mystery, The first and natural prac teal thought js of economy, repair, of rehgpilitation, ra up 2 RAMONA\ J.LMurphy Mensger San Francisco ages fee tion. *But it is most encouraging that among those gathered about the earth in its losses: gathered and suf- ferings to bemoan it and to comfort it, there rises the glorification of that higher desire of mind which leads to the good of the people and to national and international under- standing, to real cosmic happiness. “Think, if you please, of all that man has accomplished, of the r conquests of the land, the se air, and yet the mind’s desire is not satisfied. “Under the ceaseless compulsion of the mind's desire he must in some organized way <0 on and on in that search for the truth which lies in the realm of mystery. It is to keep the borders of man's estate ever pushed out to the edge of the mys- terious unknown that every man has an Instinctive desire, not simply to increase in wisdom and stature but to find the answer to the puzzle of existence.” The Inner Vision BY WILLIAM WORDSWORTH Most sweet it is with uplifted eyes To pace the ground, if-path there be or none. While a fair region round the trav- eller lies Which he forbears again to look upon; Of meditation, slipping in between The beauty coming and the beauty gone. If thought and love desert us, from that day Let us break off all commerce with the muse; With thought and love companions of our way— Whate'er the senses take or may refuse— The mind's internal shed her dews Of inspiration on the humblest lay. patent ccna RS Nee SCHOLARSHIPS GIVEN BY UNIVERSITY ARE HONORED IN SUMMER High school honor “scholarships, conferred by the University of Wy oming to 100 Wyoming seniors hav- ing the best scholastic records, now exempt the holders from payment of university general fees during four years of collegiate instruction either in the summer or the regular terms. Honor scholarships have formerly been acceptable at the university only during the regular terms but as @ result of recent action by the uni- versity board of trustees the scholar+ ships have been made good for elther of the six weeks summer terms as well. heaven shall this year represented in the student body of the University of Wyoming summer school, Nebraska sends the largest out-of-state delegation with Colorado and Kansas a close second. Registration statistics on the fourth day of the university summer session showed a 31 per cent increase over the registration recorded on the fourth day of the summer session, of 1924 and more than 250 per cent in- crease over the registration record- ed on the fourth day of summer school five years ago. The South Boston Yacht club, one of the most prominent yachting or- ganizations of New England, points with pride to the fact that its record of 57 years has not been marred by a fatal accident in which a member figured through stress of weather. ne Taking the world over, more peo- ple play billlards than any other Fame. children need without fus: Oats and milk... that’s Cooks in 3 to 5 minutes, Quaker cooks faster, That’ Quick | Half the stafes of the ‘Union are Women are Right Stopping kitchen mussing on hot mornings Quick Quaker cooks in 3 to 5 minutes The right summer breakfast ... no hot kitchens EATING your kitchen on summer mornings is a folly. Cook now the vigor food men like and Quick Quaker makes it easy. Keeps the family well protected against hot weather drain... and you against its bothers, All that rich flavor of Quaker Oats is there. Quick MANAGER OF FAIMAN SCHOOL CHICAGO, June 23.—(By Asso- clated Press.)—The defense in the William D, Shepherd murder trial further attacked the testimony and character of the state's star witness, Charles C, Fatman, Mrs. Luella Rhubell, for two months business manager of Fat man’s school, the National Univer- sity of Sciences, testified she would not believe Faiman on oath, that she never saw a letter from Shep- herd to Faiman, although she kept the files and that she never had seen Shepherd at Faiman’s schoo}, Faiman testified Shepherd wrote a letter inquiring about a course in criminal bacteriology, obtained typhoid germs and was instructed in how to use them to slay “Billy” McClintock, his millionaire foster son, Wo had made a will in which Shepherd was named chief. bene- | ficlary. Mrs. Rhubell said she had removed all “dead wood” from the letter file well before the date, October 1, $924, the alleged Shepherd letter was mentioned as being in Falman’s school records, and that no such letter ever was seen, Faiman paid her salary with four ckecks which were returned to her, Mrs. Rhubell said, She maintained she ran down a fire escape when state's attorney’ detectives visited her room in con- nection with the Shepherd trial be- cause she did not want'any further publicity. Sho also admitted she has been pald $20 weekly by the defense. She was arrested and fined re- cently for disorderly conduct, she admitted upon cross examination, but sald her arrest was caused by a rental agent who wanted to get her apartment. LAME DUCK CRY fo HEARD AGAIN AT WASHINGTON McCumber Made Mem- ber of Commission And Howl Anises. By JOHN T. LEWING, JR. (Central Press Correspondent. WASHINGTON, June Once n the ital is hearing the old howl about lame ducks. The occa- |sion is the appointment of former senator Porter J. McCumber of North Dakota, as a member of the international Joint commission, which has jurisdiction in Canadian boundry questions, at a salary of $7,500 a year. Mr. MecCumber's state turned thumbs down on, him, yet here he is getting a nice fat federal job with little work attached to it. To many persons, some of them, good party men minus a job, it deosn't seem right. Yet all these years It has been sound political philesophy that “To the victors belong the spolls, and to the lame ducks belongs what they can get.” Both parties have practiced it, even if both have been rather re- ticent about preaching it. Washington is now wondering if the principle of rewards for past ————$—— or bother the right hot day starter, Doesn't heat the kitchen, | 's the only difference. | SAYS SHE WOULDN'T BELIEVE STATE’S WITNESS UNDER CATH party service !s broad enough to’ take in George Harvey. There is an tm- pression abroad that the Colonel was disappointed at not succeeding Mr. Hughes as secretary of state. He has gone back to the North American Review, haying left the Washington Post at the termination of his years contract and there is talk that he may revive Harvey's Weekly. Not long ago Thomas Sterling of South Dakota was rewarded with a better job (financially) than the sen- ich he lost because he TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1925 guesse¢? wrong as to the relative strength of administration support and progressiyisin in his state. The secretaryship of the commission for the celebration of the 200th anniver- sary of the Birth of George Washing- ton is better from @ fiseal point o* view than a senatorship because, while the salary js not quite so large, it is a nine-year job. The anniversary occurs’en Febru- ary 22, 19382, but the commission lives on until New Year's day of 1935. The idea is that there will be some sort of memorial erected and the extra time fs to enable the com- mission to see it.completed. { ere red During a period of twenty-five years Sir Thomas Lipton has buiit four “Shamrocks” in an attempt to lift the Amreica Cup. The first three were each beaten thrice} and “Shamrock IV" hag been beaten onee. And Sir Thomas Is stil! hoping! Sige ee Tribune Want Ads Bring Results Sor summer YOUR DIET CALLS or light but NOURISHING FOOD Jaded,warm-weatherap- petites need a health-guard- ing diet —ftce from heavy foods. And you get it with SHREDDED WHEAT—light and cooling but plentiful in nourishment. Every ov- en-baked shred contains all the body-building elements of the whole wheat, includ- ing the bran so essential as a body regulator. Fora delicious, econom- ical meal serve SHREDDED WHEAT with peaches other fruit. PACIFIC COAST SHREDDED WHEATCO. Suintiseies and or intwo.- biscuits ~ TRIBUNE This Coupon Is Worth $2.50 on One Airplane Ride Present this coupon and the city of Casper. Sign here Before Presenting ~-..-......-.-<----... 50 at the Wyoming Airways Landing Field before June 22, and you will be given a big airplane ride over, Limited time only. COUPON CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 9:30 A ML PARD—312.50 Saves you approsimately 12 nours travel between Casper and Rawlins WYOMING MOTORWAY Salt Creek Transportation Company's Office TOWNSEND HOTEL PHOND 146 HAVE YOU If not, kindly fill out the blan this matter to his attention. a! | Name of Person furnish will be checked against the present e your name will not be re-entered in the records. k below and mail to t HURRY—THIS FINAL ENUMERATION MUST BE FORWARDED TO THAN JUNE 22, 1925 | Single Na or Sex | Age or of Race Married or numeration in the Count BEEN COUNTED FOR CASPER IN- THE OFFICIAL STATE CENSUS ENUMERATION? he Chamber of Commerce, P. O. Box 862. 'y Assessor's office, and if y If you know of anyone else w ativity Place Birth of Place Residence | CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN | Westbound i Re t Arrives Depart: No. 603 .__ ~---1:30 p, m, 1:80 ry ay _ Eastbound "Departs NOs ORR Snes peancenead woes ee 5:45 p. m. 6:00 p.m. CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY Eastbound Arrives Departs No. 82 4:00 p.m, 8:35 p. m. Departs 0pm, The information you ou have been counted ho has not been counted, kindly call . CHEYENNE, WYOMING, NOT LATER bai os Read 0! Occupation and U.S Write