Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 3, 1925, Page 8

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FRIDAY, JULY 3, lz PAGE EIGHT Che Casper Daily Cribune : ; enced in a generation in Gallicia ang | 7 if Vistula and al! 1s W | We have messed about with the di-| stii! better, Uut iuiinitely more dist One Way toLove | ; Swee Sileecla. Tre Vistula and al! moi. ao 4 + ' Who's Who |rect primary, te recall, the initla.|cult, way—radically cutting down ae SE oo WNinG BK loods Dp tain streams are out ot thelr bani @ bog sper RS Ve waa tal tive and the referendum, in the fu-| the present total membership, with a y Russ Regions Cracow is in danger, Some Villages eae = The new United States Minister | tite belief that by bringing govern-| proportionate cut in each state’s| 1 6) Lona the rose in sheaves, have been submerged and loss of lire rs a nee to Albania, Charles C, Hurt, step3| ment closer to the peopte, by making | quota, To expect salary-hungry ton: | Al Ja ONES. M wees ia) feared. By J. & HANWAY AND £. & GANWAY nh rd 4 My. ns bine i Now, rose by rose, I strip the leaves ears te bridve y trom the ran 8 0 Nae: veport: | ir ag “direct” as in the old New Eng: | gresamen to.follow any such cote, | And strew them where Pauline may| | WARSAW, July AssostA see HiGeee bcs saeds es ee . Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as Re gob e RS ORS land town meeting we should cure] doubtless would be to expect to abes | Press),—Devastating floods -have fol-| over the y - mp - November 22 1916, ‘all our political ills. much, although former Speaker a Pei ocavtayee rae eH lowed the worst rainy spell_experl-! were ed away and all perished t Instead of curing them, we|lett, In his valedictory session, intro: | © . ts ——- — —— Tbe CSSDSn aay ec ane tesdad every evening tea te aoe eae bene pads thein worse: More dstho:| duced a Will to-Umit membership: to at tens vate ead te ribune every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices: Tribune iad ° : < “ ve Blanton of | The cha’ building, opposite postoffice. 4 eracy has all but destroyed our his- | 300, while Representative Blanto: tee egies torlc and time-tried system of two-|'Texas, has tried to get the last two! ity pariy government. It) has weakened | congresses to put the limit at 994) ico aie wamonth Tetras vault party allegiance and party responsi-| Since the apportior Le eT eee an Esiaito euesute! im TH ABBOCIATED. PRESA > fTEERGC T, peeve sonian and the | pitty. It has aggrandized indlyidual | lowed the 1880 census, no state has oMBE. SSOCIATE. a ; 4 . oF venture all I know. cote Re idan arr ea ad) Minneapolis ambitions at the expense of commu: lever lost a #eut. Meanwhile, the | Today T ven The Asjociated Presse ts erciusively entitied to the use for publication of ai all news credited {n this paper auchaleo the local news published herein. d chen nity needs, It has under mined rep-| house has grown from 332 to 435 EE mane ne ne Tae Eh nn athe ie GG ERE, Tee did not|resentative government, ‘sought to|members, while the district ratio has Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. 0.) copy | make rubber stamps and fawning | jumped front251,911 to only 211,877. Tree Gt | ging | de ues of the men chosen to| Probably the new congress cannot be ea ere: ul, w8e-" ibd 2 “scoop-| act as our representatives. induced to sacrifice enough of its i Sulte 406 Sharon Bldg. | the town on| More intelligence! ‘That is what|mombers to bring the total down |7> Mie Riera asiey pies of the Daily Tribune the “biggest story | American democracy needs today! | around sov. But, if there is enuusy | 4nd speak my passion—heaven or tre on fle in the New Yok, Chicago. on and San Franclaco offices MMB of the year.” Nei- ——— | pressure exerted. it may be possible | 4 inom and visitors are welcome. ‘ | ARLES CHART {!*r did he write Picture Post Cards to dissuade the new. congress from}. i) tot give me heaven? 'Tis atory: which | further swelling {ts.own Gargantuan ; al ington for Busine: aPortiand Telephones Branch Telepho See What You Pay For? Visible Gasoline Pumps approved by state oil inspector. You can see every gallon de- livered to your car. She will not hear my music? So. Break the string; fold music's wing: Suppose Pauline had bade me sing! Advertising eepresen Prudden, King & Prudden, 1729-23 Steger Ave. New York City: Globe Bldg., Boston. Mas: 5§ New Montgomery St, Sun Brancisco, My whole life long I learned to love. SUBSORIPTIUN RATES c Ges wh Triburie) ; By Carrier and Outside Sta epee Xba whole! Woud lb aan £06 baie tarts auc : | Lose who may—T still can say, One Year, Dally and Sunday ... winbdnsntincmsongacsapeenassttOl | ela ee Oe nee tom le 4 tt he se | Those who win heaven, blest are Y G Six Months, Dally and Sunday 4.60 | correspondent at Rockvile, Ind., of | Dolan led them to, ‘eek therott Health Rules | thy | Get ie Gallons an ou Get Three Months, Daily and Sunday mae 226 | the Muncie Tribune toa post in|, On the day tented "ters LACT Me itor i | | / ‘Here's our chance to hit the high . Here are the fourteen health: points the Miles Mileage is one thing the average Motorist does not pay attention to in Gasoline. Try us and notice the difference on your trip over the FOURTH. One Month, Datly en: Qne Year, Sunday on! Washington, the ambition of every American reporter. An Indfana farm was the birth- Sunday spots, i 3 : BE. practiced and tecommended by It l U He told 3a anid ne pete Judge Elbert H. Gary, head of ‘the ativan rges | of Hart, He had only. a pub-| “We can see the world for nothing, | yiited states Steel company: lic echool education, -When 18 he| We can gaze on forelgn. scenes, : ii} ; Bxercise in the open alr, but do it J L G tt was lured to San’ Francisco by the | For there ain't a port. too difty indderately j ewetry its | For United States Marines.” One Year, Lally and Su Sia Months, Daily and fund Three Months, Daily and Sunday One Month, Daily and Sunday plc One Year, Sunday Only -....-.. eat colors aa tte in ee metrop: | Breathe deeply of pure air. All subscriptiona must be pald c e and the Daily Tribune will olis, There he firet won fame au n| | -Leaye alcoholic stimulants alone tnaure delivery after subscripiiun becomes non competent and industrious reporter | “We will lift the lid in Catro, c e ery atter subse: 8 one month to arrears. goranes ae ¢ industrious ‘reporter | Tout: gused) iorcetiny ofdemides| Drink pure w 0 ay (a4 8 | KICK, (fF YOU DONT GET YOUR TRIBUNE F Hart Hved the lite of | And we'll take a chance together | Wat tittle m | If you don't find your Tribune after looking carefully for tt call 18 of 18} tne jtenerant newspaper man. ¢ | At the slde-shows of Pott Said, | Wat red meat but once a week. | and it will be delivered to you by special messenger. Register complaints nerepap 2 All the rabbit holes of | Wat little starch, fat or sweets:! “hone, July 2.—(Associated Press). for new sights and new people. In dianapolie, Spokane, Minneapolis | They e Portland andéa number ‘of other | They're ¢ A gave . plenty ft Ce s' ble con P gt esa ia | that Itallans give to the government all their Jewelry, calculating that From the Straf meat for us on shore | { | GASOLINE and MOTOR OILS [cities knew. hiin as reporter and} kat ‘Peele dete wath | » a a a eS hat's wha rivate 5 } entails physi. | {0 this way, enough gold might be Democratic Public Schools. Wushington called, “He was sent nh: mentally and physls| coitected to’ pay ‘a considerable. part Sweet and Clean—More Refined , ; “We ‘will! send back picture post it 4 » United States . s] ‘ ; E the nd ckly wo e confi s Ree, of the war debt to the United States. y usiness ; One of the greatest issues before the Ameriean people is. |aence ofthese anith wos he nore cards, wie aid | en t Rood, clean Me oper and| Tbs newspaper urges. fascisti \ Clean Courteous Place to Do ne! whether our public school system shall remain democratic, or | in contact. A Republican, the party |, And the gang at home'll say yin: BOC Se yer and) throughout Italy to popularize the | N % r tact. A Republican, marty | rook " C Caney, vold excitement. | ‘ oie 4 | S whether it shall be used more and more in, the direction of | made use of his writing and organ: | 100k ot Dolan, Mack and, Cases, «| aye excltinent., Jide NOTICE OUR SPECIALS THIS WEEK . inine A * oT . tz i ‘i - ist see Ww ya y, 7, 6 \. * —_—e—— { equiping a professional class. The newspapers are full of pro: |'%!ns ability. He was secretary and |, Tust nee where thes ane § Is "Ghey the GoldentRules | | ager of the National Republican ue, which campaigned for les Evans Hughes for the pres Although the campaign was | successful, Hart proved to party | tests that high schools, colleges aud universities emphasize too much academic and professional equipment, when about nine | tenths of the citizenry of this country must work for a liying | | in industries, in homes and on farms, — \ remarkable union high school is in operation in Cali dere that he was no mere chron-| very mall from distant harbors, | or g operatio A ein nosmapeichron. | Ee : epared at ink | fornia and one which is attracting wide attention of educators |{cler of the deeds ot others Brings @ sheaf of foreign cards | O73 ina (aeAMimsCeld I lol €) | ‘ | ‘To the home:folks of the gyrenes by giving employment to more than half the high school boys | =e To the Soar ’ minute by The ORIGINAL " ° ln A the shadow of the Yards, ok \ : '* outside of school hours at-rood wages; doing all the work of | Concentrated Wisdom |< nees!a oh is see Yate ets the V pMalted Mik; Safe Milk | Mac! is in some C row— . and Diet Si maintaining the school pla eoeia Btetier in For Infants, Invalids, the Aged, CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE For fifteen years several hundred high school boys have Mr. lL. Hy writes: “Please suggest | But poor Dolan’s down at: Swamp-| ‘hot or cold built new buildi maintained all repairs and kept the [some one book—not too deep and scott, water. No Nursing Mothers, Children, etc. CARS LEAVE DALLY aT 90 AM FARH—212.50 pee Saver you approximately 12 nours travel between Casper grounds in a model condition—doing actual manual labor and | not too’shallow—that T can give to} Guarding Calyin Coolidge now! | eooking and Rawline Salt Creek Transportation Company's Office | TOWNSEND HOTEL PHOND 144 learning the ordinary trades that make community ‘life p jan employe of mine who has a phil- | atisfy hunger not to} Food imporis of France are now greater n before the war. On the beach at Waltkikt, Bat only to Tangiers, Vera Cruz, oh baby please the pala Travel is the life for me Casper Service Stations CY at Walnut sible, and the community likes it. The ideal isa useful con- |9serbical turn of mind and a well-| Smaller Congress tented self-respecting citizen, who can earn an honest living, | thumbed @ictionary, 1 don’t know | See | build a home and support himself and family. anything about his tastes.In reading | ‘phe last two congresses neglected a ie ee erere ta nee he ieee a stasee 1g, | the. duty, Smposed by the constitu: x ‘ he Maxims of La Rouchefoucau 5 sarees ‘ Government Versus Popular Ownership which are available In many Hon, of inpepRonppn be ecuneananee. ; editions | sentation on: the basis of the 1920 [and formats, is suggested. | La| census, ‘The new congress cannot | } foucauld , i well sidestep the task. And when the | better thin any one else that brev-| work ig undertaken, we hape—doubt- ty is the soul | ! the schemes of naturalization which inevitably require | world lows ehetire. tecaaateteinen kame Hichteltiee Oreo asm TRAIN SCHEDULES sive burecucracy for their administration, we advance under | yet he in one of the world's greatest point a opracineaserss ane } y : the urge of our own experience toward industrial democracy that Mocs not ewell. the size of un | FOf all members of the family, ailing or well. Serve at meals, g the way of sovialized individualism | already ~ over-large and. unwieldy | between meals, or upon retiring. A nourishing, easily assimilated Instead « yerument ownership we are r | boas Food-Drink, quickly relieves faintness or hunger day or night. “There is nothing in the socialism evolved out of European experience and conditions that can afford sound guidance us,” says John Spargo former ardent socialist. CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN Westbound Arrives No. 603 -- ~1:30 p. m. ale a sinall de mpanied by ge ching out to ward popular ownership. In the case of our public utilities, ie oy ap ters ‘There 1s more than one way of | | Eastbound popular owifership has. proceed at such a rate’ that all 5 | soing about a reapportionment, The wits 3 : NONOME naan snemoanee athe s nicl 6:45 p. m. shement nesta i {nalisation’ begin “to-ap ava representative | foe pe a eS eae " - CHICAGO, BURLINGTO! pea antigua nl not progressive. ott sth | for negehy, ale: AS Cen EUES, OC eo A. H. COBB WAREHOUSE CO. eee } Nis UINSY nyposing upon private property and individual ‘nfitiatiye | Every one blames in his nelghbur | Aadlonad. seats to the states that W. M. Yard, Mer. er eas Suisse Devers 1nd enterprise the limitations and restraints of an active. and | bat the world blames in hims-'t. | tionaty the representation of the 5 rat £20015) m. increasingly sensitive social consciousness, we are attaining n we cannot find contentment | states that have grown slowly, if at BAGGAGE BONING. STORAGE CROSING No AD pee o= p PAE Sera a genuine socialization-of results, of advantage, without the pe cael {t is useless to seek It} ai, qt is a satisfactory way for the | Reduced Rates During Summer Months No. 0. ae 6:50 ner deadly repression which scents fo be inseparable from bureau: 3 congressmen, but not for anybody | fj 136 WEST B ST. PHON 2203 No. 31 -. 2 S<9:6 hipaa; cee can we expect -~-9:55 p.m. % 4 5 keer a secret If we mistic about America, therefore, but ex ourselves? In man nother to t keep tt | ele Another. way, a better but harder way, {s to hold stationary the total Sreat | number of seats, by cutting down the |representation of the states that ere “I am not pes , ultantly optimistie. 8 not found ans ——— excess either of good or evi! [heir Service Record Lives thats eet ede tien at Tounds to | have grown slowly oF stood stil, by fwo men prominent:in world uffairs have lately passed jor their destree vee Prop ah bare PA ae te re wa 1 * waniged: le fie 4 Ne like to divine othere but we | tion of the states that have gre to their reward. One a leader of organized. labor, the other We like. to divi thers, but w | moderately,, and’ by adding a seat the head of one of the world’s ¢ se to comcanding positions | atest railroad systems. Both | Het ike to divine ourselves. here and there among the states that hard work and ‘ability, One. Men “And. thing , | after 20 years as a locomotive enginéer was made president of | f) DORs of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. He opened the eyes of labor to the possibilities of using its fi the banking business. He was labo greatest banker. Warren ne in any calling. Julius Kruttsenitt was 4 railroad genius and an excep tional scholar. He was a walking eycyclopediu on rail have grown amazingly. | Of course, there {fs a third and | HOTEL | | RAMONA: | Value of the Newspaper and J.LMurphy he seen near to be judged well: Oth u Cs Jers are never so’ well judged as at | cial resources in | a @feiarice anker and labor's | He {s not-a’ feaeonable man who | made’ a’ snecess chance stumbles upon reas he who «derives | ‘To iknow’ things pertectly, we transportation questions, and actually gave his life to upbu € know them tn detail: but as e ing a railroad system, He was the dean of American railrond | | ‘ita is almost intinite cor teovedan De eee eterna. || t e Man Behind executives. ta ait Superfi sta] and thperfect hi fects of the mind, like those untenance, augment wit It is hard to replace such characters, but, the mere fact | that they lived and carried on means that they transmitted of the:o their spirit of endeavor to others who will:make eyén greater aa Ps : | strides in the interest of the public welfare as the result of |, sc" Are often guilty of treacher the traning they secured under such master minds 7s bi ae is the only fault When Government Saves Par from hurting business, the government's economy pol Her: icy has been of the utmost adyan ready resulted in a reduction of several hund lars a year in federal taxes, it promises to bri 000,000 or S000,000,000 more r ina ine rates reasonal pd add He is the best informed man in town. He is the most sympathetic man in town. He is the most charitable man in town. ‘ He aids the church. He inspires hope in the hearts of the young. He has love and affection for the old. He fights for the cause of justice. ¢ to business. Tt hay al ! 1 ‘on gol bout a tax xt year. When reduction of the government saves money it does not mean that the money a pp ahh * F | s not spent: AVhat it does mean is that, instead.of, being spent nner He isa fighter—a thinker—a worker. | by officials to keep winecessary: bureaucrats in, unprod.uct¢ ine gure | i When the circus cones to tuwn the words of “the news- jobs, the money is left'in-the hands of the man’ who earns it t move’ intellieer 7, malat=h hh “2 et - ” ¢ vy, 4 and’he may decide himmelf how it'ehall be spent. va (oe te rere uneenunence’ bell , YOUR ESSEX paper es Diet pour. When a local charity needs | The president will find the people: bebin im in his | he,uttered a burning truth that is | ssistance the plea of “th Ww vd P determination to administer national affairs in an economical ginning to alti deep into the c IS. HERE NOW | p € newspapreman’’ touches the | heart of his fellowmen. . When industry trembles and needs a medium through which confidence can be inspired, “the newspaperman” has his finger on the pulse of business. When local mer- chants have real messages for the backbone of all trade (the public), “the newspaperman” is consulted, When manufacturers need facts concerning the many markets of America, the most dependable source of infor- mation is “the newspaperman.” | Is itany wonder that “the newspapermen” are real cre- ators of advertising? Manufacturers everywhere consult their personal friends among “the newspapermen.” You know how it has been in your case. Get on good terms with “the newspaperman” and take advantage of what he knows and has at command, and let him help you. Let him talk to the public for you through his advertising columns. . The Casper Daily Tribune is the finest medium in Wyo- ming. ; and business like manner. State officials’ can*follow the lead | *“evaness: of the American poopie. of thé piesidenit. i [t hdd an application on the pollt hs cal side that is worth pointing out Ae RA x Mor the last decade or two we ha Mining and Oil been experimenting with the con Never liave oil refineries been’called upon to supply such SAP eer political , doctrin New Z ed to produce more demo enormous quantities of gusoline. New mines will have to be man tite ih: tua Cabicownas'e THE opened and new fields developed to keep pace with the greatly - increased world-wide demand for precious and semi-precious metals, Shares in oil and mining companies represent owner ship of basic industries. New companies are being organized daily to develop new supplies of these minerals, Strict or ganization laws in the different western states mean stronger companies with more safety for the inyestor. Conditions are right for new successes in the mining and oil fields and millions of dollars will be invested in new mining and oil development in the west. Few industries distribute so much money for wages and supplies in the territories where UNION MEN--NOTICE | ] | * Telling Figures mportant Meeting Manufactures in 1925 in the state.of New York and Pent bs sylyania were worth nearly $16,400,000,000, a figure larger than : Tonight the output of the entire country in 1904, On th me basis the estimate for the entire country in 1923 would exceed $62,418,000, 000, New York manufacturers employed 1,150,901 workers.on the average, that year, paid them $1,582,006,000, and they pro duced goods valued at $8,960,593,000, an increase of 28.5 por AT LABOR HA cent over 1921 figures, Pennsylvania, with 1,005,066 employe: who were paid $1,450,826,000, produced goods worth $7488, 600,000, an increase of 47 per cent over the figures of 1921, BE acs: Everyone lL; Welcome reek succéss by improving their service, avoiding polities and being frank with the public is what T, 8. Storrs told. New | ‘ York transportation men, One essential, he pointed ont, is for the railways themselves to use the busses Who is this fellow—“The Newspaperman?” : ; AT CASPER FOR $1,025.00

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