Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 15, 1925, Page 6

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PAGE SIX Che Casper Daily Tribune & HANWAY ANL © & HANWAY by J htered 40 Caster Wevoming) bo © ar verond Clapp aiatter November vz 1wit Liss semper tlaalip Pebaine O every ¢ young The Sunday Mourning Tribuhe every Sunday at Cusver Wyomlox Publication offices Tribune outing. opprite Lv stoffice Telepbotier ennn-18 and Business sat ae Branch Teleptione Wxchange Connecting Al Departments 16 MEMBEK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Assuciateo Preset te exclusively entilies to the une tur publication ob ail ews credited tn this onper and also the loca) news published herein Member of Audit Bureau of Cireutation (A B ©.) Advertisin Prudden. King & Vrudden 1720 ‘ Ago. U1, 286 Ave., New York City: Glone Bi Mass. Suite 404 Sharon 85 New mery St Coptes of the Datly Tribune are on file tn the New 2 San Francisco offices ors are welcome SUBSCRIPTION RATES Hy Carrier and Outside State Inside State By Mail Siz mnths, Da Three Month One Month, Dat One Year All eubsc insure e and the Dal op becomes One monih in arrears Kt K.LF YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE {f you don't find your Tribune after looking : vy for it call 16 or and it will be delivered to you py ep. e Register complaints | % before % o'clock 16 The Lesson Learned In the midst of plenty and prosperity in a land like the United States, it is necessury for the people to realize the vantages which they. enj they ure to fully apprec them. Without this understanding and appreciation, the agitator, if he could, would determine the ideals of our constituti ferm of vernment with his socialistic doc trimes and experiments, has an easy field in which to work. The American people have paid for some dear lessons in the school of experience, when they have permitted themselves to be led astray from the founders of the countr. During the past thirty who. sic principles laid down by the years, we have witnessed the pas sage of drastic legislation which severely handicapped the fy play of private initiative and enterprise. Such legisla tion seemed necessury to curb the gr apacity of the few who would trample on the right of the x But conditions improved—until today, socalled “big busi ness” which a few years igo was looked upon by many as a curse to the nation, ig now considered essential to its proper development Comme this reaction in public se 1ent, which is based on ason and understandir istead of preju dice, Henry I system has le: profit from the It is safe to say that it has learned: and it ha question, as to whether our business n from past experience and will also prof ited. A great industry today is no longer a one-man institu tion. Instead, it is owned by thousanc and hundreds of thousands of everyda \merican citizens who have yoice in its manageme There is no question but what this change in ow: has been responsiblé in a large degree for the chan ins timent toward business generall Rational consideration of busine problems has been brought about as our people have gained a better understand ing of the questions ut The) that short-s policies of a few industrial leaders, which ignored basic ciples of justice and fair play in business, are not vient grounds for condemning all “big business.” They have found that in order to correct abuses in special cases, it is not neces sary to apply the remedy to all business alike whether it needs it or not, With experience has come understanding. Today, the ery “big business” arouses no anxiety. The public cares not how big-a business gets, so long as it is conducted honestly and in the public interest That our greatest industries are fully aware of their duty and obligation to the public is evidenced by the fact thut their brightest executives are in charge of or devote a great share of their time to the public relations work of their companies, in order that the public may know of, and if it so desires, share in the ownership and management of such companies issue. ghted prin suff Henry Ford’s question can be safely answered in the affirmative—American business has learned by it xpe rience And further., it can be 1, the Ameri ple have profited by x problems, and by trial companies sound footing aking themselves cepting partner thus establishir free from politics. acquainted with bu hip in our leading indus real public ownership on a \ Way To W isdomn It is apparent that ever neration has held many opin lons now known to be erroneous, and approved numerous things which we cannot now justify Why is it, then, that there is on the whole a preponderance among mankind of rational opinions and rational conduc’ 7f there really is this preponderance—which there must be, unless human affairs are, and always have been, in an al most desperate st ohn Stuart Mills observes to a quality of the hu ource of everythir spectable tell r moral }t amely, th i Y H capabl f experienc cussion, t how experience is to be Wrong opinions a and argument: but facts anc on the mind, must be brought before it “Very few fe able'to tell their own story, without comments out their meaning.” rpreted ‘actices gradually argument yield to facts to produce any effect ets are to bring The whole strength and value en, of human judgment, depending on the one property, that it can be set right whet it is wrong, reliance cau be placec t only when the means of setting it x are kept con at d When this is « re € hip becor ) rh Good Gentlemen wh re back of sorship urge n¢ land should } c to see this ' t ance ha , mind r sins of bh a being can nm I t the ofa ject, in by heg t can be ibout it by persons of every variety und studying a " which can be looke every character of mind This is the way wise men become 2 Internal Revenue I ral internal revenue for the fiscal ur 1925 Was re duced only $212,168,400 from ihe fiscal ye rit 4 despite she rp cuts made by the last revenue law in income and other tax rater. Total tax receipts for the fiscal year 10 which ended I were announced os #2,584,010,847, of which #1,761,68 ‘41 came from the direct 2 was from miscellan assessment on incomes and $8 v yus sources. In the fiscal year 1924 the income taxes yielded $1,841,759,316 and miscellaneoug 8954 419,940 We are warved that this ix the of épcod. If correct let us have less of it on the highy and more t Ind courts. : Metra, “Datly| ‘sentatives “almost ‘continuously sihce | reaponsible for the follow: | 19¢ : {tr ¢ chotee bit sarcasm. It cat ingress se qualified appt ] almost any town, big experience t as secretary i le throughout the’ country, 颰 war.” He served: as a secand where they have fires, fire equip. | sa start on high and hike out to find :. the fire. Open your mutfler, blow Retrospective your horn and holler. If you can’e| Bs wee DP io snough, get a few nolsy | BY HENRY W. LAPIERRE noys aboard to help you out If Kipling, when he wrote his tam | “The City ordinance provides that ous poem, Porat ppPronch of any fire ap-| Had suffered half of what Ihave paratus ver of any vehicle | gone through ball tely stop such vehicle | 1¢ Triumph never set his features aS near possible to the nearest If 48 any telephone girl answer you and six hundred — eubscribers—who Want ba 7 : know where ithe all assto Horlicks inute, or charged.” Tne ORIGINAL When you hear ths fire whistle, immediately bmnere 1s ‘also an ordinance 'pro- | tf’ weakness (were, a crime invereiy tt! stopping m vehicle withig | human, ere et Of & fire hydrant, but -And'not a! portion of ‘that “Love let this prevent your parking Divine; in front of the one nearest | rp to, eS tran. oe Sue es i |1f love and hate are. strangers to i . c } the true man— , 1 the firemen hunt) ‘Then tell me, please, where is the 1 one true man's 6 z than the planted acreage. Inst year | }but Is 7 per cent larger than the} vowings and 30 per Gent larger | | World Topics r f n service of the United nore of 192: qual if not the ado reta its position as r tr of any in the wor' t ading sugar producing state of & Woods, former: | the country with Michigan-o: t ing second. place and. California dre ! third, While the crop area for the ness whole coiati {fs somewhat sinaller P a frankness and| than last season several stat oy Fas honesty ih itw}an increusetn thetr plantings.: This dealings with|is true of. California, Washington, other nati Wyoming, Kansas and Its methods have ota. been open and eage under beets in each.of4 direct. It has 8 having more than one demanded and story fs shown by the fol- ured equality ing table: States having gnty one of opportuni ach are grouped under. the for its nationa “Other States’ These ure throughout the llinols, Minnesota, Kansas | world, Its sin-| in | cerity has never | ated been questioned State akios It stands a YRUS & WOOPS 96 tng ==186,126 nd th iginator believe that of any the coun t of men of such great S can the United States. | Idaho Montar ble fo: Wyoming ' ntly lown Wiscon Total ca Alt began to | figure as one of the Important crepe | of the United States only: about’ 25 | 1”) are ago the growth of the industry | 1 t wi e that time hag been such that the production of sugar from thls much in It hag been my se I am ver: source runs close to 1,000,000 tons and fs sufficient to supply the west- ern half of the country freeing west- ern consumers from dependence on the imported foreign grown product eis din Soca, diplomatic | not alone n diplomat ing with questions of | According to politica! gossip at hd’ with “s deallnnnn’ s hington Secretary, Weeks will : ERA he ines Materia ce retire because. of {Jl health able to obleing (arislng= tee and Representa- ith vision and with under tive John Q Tilson of Con regretted that the necticut, will not take more probably mucy r Foreign Service. ceed him, © Til of the. government son hag the un-| reclated or so. little divided. support of his. home of the state. orgdniza world to- tion, and hts ex- | perlence ae | our chairman of the Milltary Affaire | ems, and e destined to Committee ta} an important part in thelr so: believed: “to In f this solution the qualify him: for rvice of the United States serious consid: | 1 tir ad the way. | eration by President Coolidge. He | e th diplomatic fy. | Dae been elected to be floor leader Auta on of our diplo. | Of the next House. He has just ie past, and that guccess will be | Feturned from a ‘visit to; Europe, at ‘auir ination Reet went to study wur con sped ° is a native | a of Te | | Clear Bran | z re tha years ago. He has x 4 : rieticed law at > ; When Fire Occurs’ | pr#sticed tv at Now Haven, Conn, as been. ‘a ‘mem ber of the national House of Repre: rt Meutenant in the Spanish Amerlean war. He served as Heutenant colonel of the 2nd Connecticu, Infantry on the Mexican border in 1916. a damphools. The Courler jump into your car slowing, and naln re until such Or if disaster never made him blue; apparatus has passed. This is t fellow doesn't ed, about and hated, “he haa! ordinance ‘also | Uked it ) bits | er the fine se.| And praised the lars for. thelr s also for the other felloy | Pleasant ways: If Fate had curbed his genius and had splked It, Instead of lending Fame's’ most “wondrous rays; n you hear the fire truck get an even start and raco Don't forget to open your » blow your horn and holler; akes the race more exciting Malted Milk ugar Beets ay ted to sugar. beets year is to reporta | ¢ owing | age nt lens Avo! nn CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 930 a M. FARD—J12.50 Bayes you approaimately 12 houre travel between Casper WYOMING MOTORWAY | Salt Creek Transportaiion Company's Office 3 | TOWNSEND BOTEL PHONE 146 ty TRAIN SCHEDULES — | CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN Westbound Arriv Departs No. ewwen + peswcon] 180 p. Mm. 1:50 p.m Departs 6:45 p, m. 6:00 p.m AGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY | & s ' WEDNESDAY, JULY 15, 1925 National Menace In @ recent a D. Fess, of Ohio, calls attention to} the mania for leg! tion. ‘The de mand that the government do every thing for everybody, he believes {s in tinf: alone tna er of laws enacted or the most dangerous tendency fn our but atso In the c et politics. Senator Fess says: proposals. Sound e o b “During the past winter the coun- fon {s thrown to the wind appeal for 1 favor ed, The sta to the politician. given the political sideration {s not £0 be the ultimate effect of the n upon the country, but rather what will be the {mm of hi vote upon the try at large was flooded with 30,900 proposals for legislation. The con: gress which adjourned on March 4, after three mionthy' session, sup piled food for thought. “The Senate calendar yhows at least favorable action on over 1,100 bills and resolutions. The House calendar shows action on nearly a thourand, This te about ten per da during the session. The supply bille passed in the three months amounted to about four thousand million dol . or forty millions per ds fnd two thirds m “Notwithstanding this gtind of the eno: legislative mill pressure of propaganda of in the ested " U cannot expect any ofher weee : car dealer to have the sam ‘ope with representatives don: i wees - 4 felled tn the capital, continues: Con, ess, shouid couse thinking interéet aa the Ford oscars are “ gressmen without abatement are hei a ghia Poems eee in seeing that you get the est — importuned cajoled and ed | thinking in terms o atl 3 5 Fee on behalf ‘of degislation, by letter, | fare upc as Pele used Ford for the money you invest, ¢o fews. In one x of mails’ that reach oe each senator's office, one deliver w fibre + « ee Le OLE aE I COULD RIDE NOT UNLESS LIKE THis {SOMEBODY FOREVE 3 PAID For THE COULDNT (Copyright, 1924, Interna al Feature’ Service, In A Load of Laughs! = ~ HAPPY HOOLIGAN by Opper is coming your way! Happy himself, one of America’s oldest, be and best loved of comic characters, with Gloomy Gus and Montmorency and Lord Chumly—all of i his famous fellow funmakers—wil] be a Sunday fea- ture of this paper beginning soon. Don’t miss a single laugh. If you want pure, clean, spontaneous fun with your Sunday morning paper read Happy Hooligan— scores of millions laugh with Happy. ‘ Every Sunday beginning SUNDAY, JULY 19 Che Casper Daily Tritumw t known

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