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PAGE EIGHT Che Casper Daily T By J. B. HANWAY AND & & HANWAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class matter, November 22 1916. ‘The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning Tribune Tribune every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices: building, opposite postoffice. Business Telephones ~. — Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entilied to the use for publication o1 all news credited in this paper and also the loca! news published berein. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) Advertis) Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720- Ave., New York City: Gl 55 New Montgomery St., San Wrancisco, Cal. are on file in the New York, Chi ; and visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State One Year, Daily and Sunday .~.. Six Months, Dally and Sunday ‘Three Months, Daily and Sunday One Month, Daily and Sunday One Year, Sunday only ~ atepresentatives One Year, Daily and Sunday Siz Months, Daily and Sunday Three Months, Dally and Sunday —. wonwennecce--l§ and 16 23 Steger Bldg., Chicago, 1I|., 286-¥ifth e Gldg., Boston, Mass., Suite 404 Sharon Bldg.: Copies of the Dally Tribune Boston and San Francisco offices es Le enn nnnnnnnnn=- 3.90 eeeeecncencccnccecceccce. 3.2 Che Casper Sunday Tribune rule of life is tit for tat; an eye for an eye; a tooth for a tooth; blood for blood; measure for measure; love 1. | for love. World Topics “The experiment in Commur as conducted in Soviet Russia, “Give and it shall be given rou. will prove an absolute failure—an| fe that watereth shall be watered experiment based on the Utopian | iimself. Ideas of that dreamer Karl Marx} «“ what will you haye? quoth God; and afterward b; his disciple Lenin, for it and take it. Nothing venture, nothing have. who, incidentally,| “Thou shalt~be paid exactly for [ really belfeve,} what thou hast done, no more, or was a great man. | Jess, Tt will be a fall- “Who doth not work shall not ure because the} cat, theories upon “Harm watch, harm catch. which it rests! “Curses always fall cn the head seém in no way] of him: who imprecates them. to recognize or| “If you put a chain around the accept these| neck of a slave, the other end fast- principles or ele-! ons itself around your own. mer of human d counsel confounds the ad- ture which| yiser. make up the com “The devil is an ass.” plex character of eATned had HG. SELFRIOGE man.* It 1s thus written because it Is Ix, Gordon Selfridge, fa-] thus in life ment store} Our action {s overmastered and er, who r ned to| characterized at our will by the law of nature, We aim at a pretty end quite Qngland from a trip to Russia. “For example,” continues Sel- fridge. “envy and jealousy, which | aside from the public good, but our are the yello eaks {n man’s na-| act arranges itself by Irresistible ture, are not considered in the] magnetism in a line with the poles slightest and yet we know that they | of the world must be reckoned with. Ambit! One Month, Daily and Sunday wanenennnnwnnnmeennap—--—— _-75 | ig given no chance. The love of the . * One Year, Sunday Only —.. sscensesees 8:50] game, which creates a healt Who Will Write a All subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Daily Tribune will not | Serition, ts not. considered Insure delivery after subscription becomes one month tn arrears. KICK, {F YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE If you don’t find your Tribune after locking carefully for {t call 15 or 16 Register complaints and it will be delivered to you by special messenger. before & o'clock, The Day We Celebrate more the anniversary of the nation’s birth passed into history. 1t was observed in one form or throughout the country, Not much serious thought w to the nt the day commemorated. It is too far away, the scenes and incidents are too y, and the characters who took part in the dramatic episodes too, dim in the memory of those who have been taught, and too entirely absent in’ the minds of the many who have never had more than a vague idea of what it is all about. It is a painful truth that anything not connected with the immediate present concerns the generality but little. The past is of but little moment because it is gone. And the future, aside from the hope it may hold, is of but little greater moment be cause it is not yet here. To apply the lessons of the past to the future, and profit thereby, the great mass does net pause for so simple an effort. That would be a task in which can be seen neither, interest, profit or entertainment. That is for some one else to do, Once has another Ss given Judging one anniversary of July Vourth with another, asthe years roll on, the observation of the most momeutous event in Ame n history is largely given over to called “entertainment,” enjoyment of selfish pleasures, and noise, If there is any serious contemplation of why July Fourth is a day set apart by the greatest nation of the earth for pause tion it does not appear. Mainly, it is the date upon the calendar, marked as the one greatest in recklessness, acs cident, misfortune and sorrow. The anniversary that really means the most to all the peo: ple, the one that con degenerated rys the greatest lesson to all classes, has into mere festivity and racket An ee for AG Eye an eye for tooth for a tooth; blood senseless Tit for tat; An eye; for blood; measure for measure; love for love. This, it appears is the law of life, Lixperienced men of the world know that it is always best to pay as they along, and that a man often pays dear for a small frugality. The borrower runs into his own debt. Has a man gained anything who hag received a hundred favors and given none? Has he gained by borrowing, through indolence or cun- ning, his neighbor's wares or money? Chere arises on the deed the instant acknowledgement of benefit on of debt on the at is, superior- ity and inferiority, The transaction remains in the memory of himself and his neighbor; and every new transaction alters, according to its nature, their relation to each other, He may soon come to see that he had “better have broken his own bones than to have ridden in his neighbor's coach is the proverb goes, and that “the highest price he can pay for a thing is to ask for it.” Consider how you feel toward persons you owe money, and how you feel toward persons who owe you money, A wise man will extend this lesson to all parts of life. Emerson observes that it is always the part of pru- dence to face every claimant, and pay every just demand on your time, your talents, your heart. “Always pay, for first or last, you must pay your entire debt. “Persons and events may stand for a time between you and justice, but it is only a postponement, You must pay at last your own debt. “If you are wise you will dread a prosperity which only $ you with more, Senefit is the end of nature. “But for every benefit you receive, a tax is levied. “He is great who confers the most benefits. “He is base—and this is the one base thing in the uni- verse—to receive favors and render none. “In the order of ure we cannot render benefits to those m whom we receive them, ‘or only seldom. the benefit we receive must be rendered again ne, deed for deed, cent for cent, to somebody “Beware of too much good staying in your hand “It will fast corrupt and worm worms ‘Pay it quickly in some sort.” loa line Failure to Appreciate We often fail to appreciate the most vital things in life, because they become commonplace to us. This is somewhat the situation in regard to sugar. We take it for granted that it will always be on the table. And yet our Ame n farmers and sugar factories must constantly fight for their existence, because of ill advised agi tation to eliminate the slight tariff which saves the American sugar industry from extinction by cheap labor foreign com petition. We would appreciate our American sugar industry more, if for a time we had to depend entirely on the foreign product. Immortalized the Pioneers The newspapers of the United States are handing compli- ments to the late Herbert Quick who has recently passed on from his brilliant career as a fiction writer to the realm of the unknown. He w Towa and the middle west such a chronicler of its true life as was the late Emerson Hough, who wrote the Covered Wagon and immortalized the conquerors of the far west . : Both Hough and Quick were all-round Americans, and sympathetic with the struggles of the pioneers who made this nation a reality. Their stofies are clean as the winds of the prairies, wholesome and invigorating as the lives they depict, leaving no excuse for meproducing d nerate literature for American families to read, as to Gasoline Production The production of cracked gasoline in the Unite in January, 'y, Mareh and A was 185,964,000, gallons respectively representing 26, 24, 25 per cent of the total gasoline production for these months. Of the remaining 75 proximately 7 per cent is attributable to natural gas g run to stills or blended at refineries and 6S per cent to straight run gasolir including what is known in California as “en gine distillate.” . : E if Verse for Me? le Differences of ability, either 10 By LILLIAN L. VAN BURGH tive or eloped, have no oppor: jae tunity in these theories. There {s| ye written so many verses not the slightest enco ment tc To make people laugh and weep, make people try to get ard for] But who will write my praises effort. The element of laziness,} When I’m wrapped in my last which Is a isting to a greater in nearly every hur 1 unfortunate feature ex or le extent n being, 1s ap- long sleep? I've written ditties by the score, parently not taken into account at They are scattered far and wide; 1. The ability to control, or or-| Now who will write a verse for me. | ze or to direct has no place in When I, at last, shall cross the these — theorle I therefore “great divide?” are a fow of the igs that the dreamy writings of Marx 50 years] pjease say the truth, or just keep ago have forgotten to reckon with. still The theory of Communism, ac-| you may even laugh and scoff, cording to the dard But what ever else—don't dare to| the subject, is a definite provide for every one only enough ‘ Ing, she {s better off.” to keep body and soul together. But every one is expected, in a very op-| of all the cruel, unjust words, timistic way, to work and strive to] ‘That fall from himan tongue, do his share in the general develop-| While gazing on some ‘quiet face, nent of the country—the only re-| Are these; “Her days of useful- ward being just enough to live on, which reward will bo received equal- out any effort being ness are done.” My life will not have ended With the setting of the sun; Now this theory, to the man who| Tor me, a greater, broader work thinks, is entirely ur able. Than here is known, will have just “These men in Russia, sincere as then begun, they may be, blame what they call ‘ ‘Capitalism’ for all flls. But the truth is that the trouble with cap- And so, my dear friends of the pen, Write your praises by the score, Italism, when the system goes} But don't dare to say: “She's bet- wrong, is in its operation rather ter off.” than in its peincip) Every em- Nor that my life of work and use ployer or foreman/ or man who may is o'er, be in a position to control others, who uses that power dictatorial, selfish way, in an arbi- unthinking, en is helping to cul For I'll be some where sailing ‘round And I'll know and surely say,— And make you feel it—never mind, tivate the soll for the reception of| ‘They'll all get back just whi Communistic theorles. The employ- they give,—some day.” er or the foreman owes it to the business and the commiunity in which he lives to exercise his con- as far as he can on the general | For this immortal saying, principle of. ‘treating his subord!-|" From one we loved, applies Don't say,—‘everybody loved her,” Because that is not true; to ‘There’s some peping, I'll say, Little Turks, extra fine, And I love ‘em—they’re mine. Casper, V ming. The Highway of Life By LADY ELIZABETH BISHOP Souls meet and p way of Lifo, * Sols who are weary of toil and of strife, But whose faces shine forth as they pass on thelr way, on the High- And leave a new glory with each passing day. : Faces on which there's @ smile ever kind, Which tells us ‘There's ever a bless- ing to find, Seek and ye'll find, “ Twill be shown unto you, If you'll always endeavo. faithful and true.” to be Souls meet. and halt with » clasp of the hand, Passing onward then to another land But a mesage they left, ‘ere they passed on their way, A message remembered In each pasing day— “To the Master, be faithful, to your fellowman, kind, Keep a clean, loving heart and a sweet sunny mind,” And they passed on their way with a tear and a smile, And left us behind with a heart free of guile. May We pass on our way down the Wighway of Life, And though we are weary of sin, toil and strife, May wo still heed the message that was given in love, @ inspired by the Master t are hurt may we th a hand, of Divine Loye may in them be fanned And flame ‘till it brighter and still ighter gleams, And th e world finds out what the sweet message means. That the Souls meet ilighy and pass on down the of Life, And be sure to f et all the sin, toll and strife. As they strive to be kind passing on down the way, They will find thelr dear friends at the close of the’ day. OTS $90,000,000. ets employed tn the Studebaker business exceed $90,- 000,000, Studebaker is the second strongest financially of the individ- ual automobile manufacturers of the world. Se Tribune Want Ads Bring Results| the lmellgit_ frequently. has challenged Fascist! leaders to duels. Last fall, as a protest against the slaughter of Itallan war veter- ans during an armistice celebration, he sought a duel with Gen. Varin, commander of the Fascist! militia. Later, dispatches stated, he also challenged Mussolini for an alleged slight cgainst the king. This chal- lenge, it was stated, was ignored Means to Happy Life By HENRY HOWARD Martial, the things’ that do attain The happy life be these, I tind The richasse left, not got with pain; Tho fruitful ground, the quiet mind; ‘The equefl friend; no grudge, no|by the Fascist! chief, but accepted ard sirke; by his Meutenant, Gen. Balbo. The No charge of rule, nor govern-| duel did not take place. anop; He was a bitter opponent of Gab SUNDAY, JULY 5, 19; rielle D'Annunzio, poet hero, uri, the latter's tempestuous politica) 4, tivities a few years ago. Gen Garibaldi is well known , the U. S. He appeared In this try during the world war to rec, native sons, He served In the Moths cause $2,000,000 damags q, nually. ———_—> For results try a Tribune ed Ad. Without disease, the healthful life; ‘The howmsehold of continuance; * Everything for the Get Our Prices The mean diet, no delicate fare; True wisdom joined with simple- ness; The night} discharged of all care, Where wine the wit may not op- preas. 617-619 East Second St. The faithful wife, without debate; Camper and Tourist. Kistler Tent and Awning Co. Before You Buy. Phone 2065 Such sleep as may beguile the night; Contented Iwith thine own estate Ne wish , for death, ne fear his might. ho’s Who The wo ts still fer from being warproof qnd is in such a condition, politically and economically, that an outbreak of hostilities In the near future whieh might involve even the leading nations would not ar prise hil. Gen. Peppino Garibal- di, grandson of the Itallan pa- triot, sald recent- ly. He is now in the U. 8, The best pan- acea for the men- ace of which he True, we shu you want peace, prepare oO for war. Those unpreparedness. are And to ihe furtherance of peave, the words of my grandfather. Gen. Garikaldi said, Italy is devel- oping a sturdy army, navy and alr force—plaging considerable empha- sis on the Inst department of nation- al defense, Military aviation is making ragid strides in his country, he said, while commercial aviation is receiving: little attention since it is not thought to be very practi- cable. Gen Gagbaldi refused to discuss Italian pallitics, Premler Mussolini and his Fagcisti or the reports that he was planning to oust Mussolini. The liberator’s descendant has had an infferesting career. His en- ergetic opposition of the Mussolini governmer® and Fascist! activities before and} since the rise to power of Mussolini has brought him into First Trust & ‘Twice he NATIONAL DEFENSE DAY another international conflict, or the advance upon our shores of a hostile force, but should it come, let us be prepared. Let us not be caught with our hands at our sides, an easy prey to a scheming foe. Our liberty is the price we pay for is'the great plea this nation sounds in National Defense Day. The Stockmens Natl. Bank Combined Capital and Surplus $225,000.00 dder to think of To make ready ‘Savings Bank nates as he would reasonably like woman, too,— to be treated in reversed circum- stances.’ Capitalism in itself is all right, but very often capitalism in its execution Is entirely wrong.” These words of dear old Abe Lin- coln, Will stand ‘till all time ends,— “Show me a man who has no ene- , pe i mies, Compensation And I'l! show you a man who has no friend “Ever since I was a boy, I have] Gasper, Wyoming. wished to write a discourse on Com- pensation: for, it seemed to me when very young, that, on this subject life was ahead of theology, and the people knew more than the preach ers taught.” wrote Emerson, in beginning his essay on Compensa- tion. “The dice of God are always load- ed,” he said. “The world looks like a multiplication-table or a mathe- matical equation, which, turn it how you will, balances itself. Take what figure you will, its exact value, no more or less, still returns to you. ver ret Is told, every crime is punished, every virtue ts reward- ed, every wrong redressed in silence and certainty, “What we call retribution, fs the universal necessity by which the whole appears wherever a part ap- pears. If you see smoke, there must be fire. If you see a hand or a limb, you know that the trunk to which it belongs, is there behind.” eee should be plain to all that the! Four weeks it {s today ° oe 1 July ALG-BARNES ADOTARS IN DERSON AT CACH PERFORMANCE A Settin’ Hen’s Lament By BRENT W. GREENER Three weeks it is today, Been sittin’ in this hay, And nothin‘’s peepin’ yet From this specked hard shelled set It's not a heap o’ fun, With my legs getting numb, Acovering these eggs, That look like big nutmegs. Luscious Spring's in the alr, Bugs flying everywhere, Worms acrawlin’ so meek, Start water in my beak. Gosh! Here comes my boss, With mash and hamburg sauce Guess I'll keep on sittin’, . An axe may be hittin’. It CASPER GORILLA” rferong iy Ai cai cricca Boyan ~~ initio _MAN Sg [180 HORSES IN ONE GREAT ACT/ PERFORMANCES || RAIN_OR, SHINE || day of show at Midwest Pharmacy EE A ER ESTO a | I} Don’t This and we reserve ithe | imps, overet'in piaved | OTly 25 Lamps right to di Georgette over | tr YT 3 iscontiinue double thine. Trimmed rin To Be Sold elit eel affer antique gold yellow bands. Duri i Assorted colors. Wi d i notice, Saito $4.65 uring This Sale uw ° Group No. Group No. 2 Group No. 3 Easy Club Plan Payments tion of any of the big Lamps. with the ~~ A CLUB PLAN SALE OF i Beginning at 9 A. M. Monday—One Week of Big Lamp Values ; The high quallty of these Lamps is going to impress everyone who at- tends the sale with the extraordinary extent of the value giving. Beau- tiful Lamps of the most approved types embodying the best details of lampcraft: megal gold-leaf effect trimmed bases that are weighted to prevent tipping; the shades are of silk georgette over silk skirt— trimmed, lined) fringe. exceptional savings. d have two inner linings—most numbers have The variety is immense, affording exceptional choice as ' Junior Floor Lamps Complete Juior Lamps of gracefully simple de- sign, finished in metal leaf gold and pojlychrome; two light adjustable clus- texs, cast brass finial and weighted base. Shades are of pleated georgette with lus- trotus inner linings, skirt, gallon bandings and double bullion fringe. x $5 Down, $5 ‘Bridge Lamps Complete Benutifully turned bases, finished in oe leaf gold and polychrome: adjust- abl bracket and unique arm. The shaides are of hand pleated georgette, with heavy lustrous double fringe, the outer row of metal bullion—all in charm- ing new shapes. #5 Down, #5 {Table Lamps Complete Haridsomely ornamental bases, in metal golel leaf polychrome of beautifully blerded colors—shades of pleasing de- sign, of pleated silk georgette over dou- ble lustrous lining. Heavy double silk fringe. Entire shade trimmed in antique gold gallon bands. 5 Down, % Right now during thi Values offered on our club plan of $5.00 purchase and the balance in deferred payments of convenient wait until after the end of this sale. Come in at once. SELON RICE To Laer ea agen New Bed Lamps sale is limited | A generous selection of new SEIE OUR DISPLAY WINDOWS CALLAWAYS FURNITURE ' 133 East Second 13: | h” offer you may make your selec- bullion well as Monthly ~ Monthly Monthly 8 spécial payment amounts.