Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
HmG Hm Hae Ri 8 PAGE SIX Ghe Casper DailyTrimme By J. EB. HANWAY AND BE. £. HAMNWAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class matter November 22, 1916. The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming. Business Telephones ... The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of also the local news published herein, al Prudden, King & Prudden, 17: & 55 New Montgomer are on file in the is) rs 0 0: >: Bix Months, Daily r ie} A tf you don't fi and it will be terests has been handed down in the fe {x months, Dafly and Sunday hree Months, D: nd Sunday me Month, Da unday.. ine Year, Sunda Bullding, opposite postoffice. Branch Telephone Exchang ng All Departments, MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 1] news credited in this paper a Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B, C.) Advertising Kepresentatives 0-23 Steger Bldg., Chicago, 11 Globe Bldg., Boste , San Fra 20, York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices and visitors are welcome. ve. New York Cit SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State ne Year, Daily and Sun By Mail Inside State ne Year, Da hree Month ine Year, a I subbscriptions must be paid in advance and the Daily Tribune will not insure delivery after subscription becomes one month in arrears, IF YOU DON’T GET YOUR TRIBUNE Tribune after looking carefully for it cal! 15 or 16 1 by special messenger. Register complaints before 8 «’clock, toy Henry Ford and High Wages It was ine nle that Henry Ford would pursue his own ideas in the wages he paid to labor employed on his steamship Oneida, which has just initiated him as an American ship: owner. He pays his seamen and firemen more than twice as much as our private shipowners pay and in some cases more than twice what the shipping board pays, although the in. crease On the Ford ship for officers is not nearly so large pro: portionately. When Mr. Ford began paying his men in his great automobile and tractor manufacturing establishments a minimum of $5 a day, and much higher wages than other manufacturers paid, his ultimate failure was predicted by his rivals; but be has persisted and his accumulation of wealth laughs them to scorn. The ne is true in his railroad venture —the minimum wages there are far higher than is paid by rival railroads. To be sure Henry Ford has his own products to carry, largely, especially outbound, and his needs are so vast that very likely he will devise ways of bringing his ships home loaded, perhaps 1s ly with things he requires from foreign countries, so his initiation into steamship owning is not so fair a test of the ability of this country to get along without protection for shipping as some people affect to believe. Rob. ert Dollar, on the contrary, has men of the yellow race filling many positions on his ships, men to whom he pays far less than the going wages on American ships, and is succeeding in running his ships around the world without protection. There are other cases, but not many, where American ship, owners are succeeding without protection. But notwithstand- ing such isolated cases protection is essential to the ordinary American shipowner, and protection is necessary to our ships in foreign trade if our private capital is to purchase all or nearly all of our shipping board ships. Henry Ford’s ships will add interest and zest to the return of American ships to the high seas. He and others like him, the Standard Oil and the Steel corporation, and some others, can vastly assist in keeping American ships in foreign trade, if they_care to. Sometimes one is led to think some of them not only do not care to, but would like té see American ships swept off the seas as a disturbing international entity, a feeling that at times we do not have to strain ourselves to believ« animates too many of the officials in the executive branch of our government. Master of Your Fate It is certainly true that the child is father of the man. Could the young be made to realize how soon they will become mere walking bundles of habits, they would give more heed to their conduct while in the plastic state. We are always spinning our own fates, good or evil, Every smallest stroke of virtue or of vice leaves its ever 60 little scar. The drunken Rip Van Winkle in the pla self for every fresh dereliction by saying, this time.” He may not count it and a kind heaven may not count it; but it is being counted. Down among his nerve cells and fibres the molecules are counting it, registering and storing it up to be used against him when the next temptation comes. William James is authority for the statement that noth ing we ever do is, in strict scientific literalness, wiped out Of course this has its good side as well as its bad one. Ag wi become permanent drunkards by so many separate drinks, 80 we become nts in the moral, and authorities and exper! in the actical ntific spheres by so many separat acts © hours of work outh h excuses him; won't count and scie no hve any the line anxiety the of it may be,” s he keep faithf busy each hour of the working afel the final result to itself. “He can with perfect certainty count on waking up some fine morning, to find himself one of the competent ones « his generation, in whatever pursuit he may haye singled out Silently, between the details of his business, the power of judging in all that of matter will have built itself up within him as a ion that will never pass away.” Young people should know this truth in advance. The ignorance of it has probably engendered more discouragement and faint-heartedness in youths embarkifig on arduous careers than all other causes put together, about upshot of h James. “| leave Our Military Defense General Persbir States, o says: “The citizen army of the United mposed in the main of young men whe only train intensively from t six weeks during the summer months largest of military defense thi No further proof of the very democratic ¢ 0 to is the measure ha cter of any fair-minded person that fon, It would be mar uld stand the rigors of military establishment is only for to be ‘found in Bur total 2, than 125,000, te 18, nation ever had our new it could not be ré months before a military 1.6 per cent of the organize Europe alone. The active while our regular army ized military forces of army lier campnigi military urmies of numbers le Europe aggre The Court's Decree f the Elk Hille na ward L. Doheny {1 al district court at Los Angeles by Judge Paul J. McCormack. The Pan Amer! Petroleum company must pay to the government $358,081 f oil pumped from the leases and also court costs which will amount to $500,000, The government must pay to the defend ants #L0,417,440 expended by them in developing the Elk Hills properties and in construction of storage facilities at Pear) Harbor, together with the value of the oil stored in the Pearl Harbor tanks, Likewise the defendants were ordered to pay ti the government approximately $10,800,000, the value of ull oll taken from the ground under the leaves Thes a difference of $358,031 to the credit of the government. An appeal will be taken to the circuit court of appeals. ‘ Final d Virming revocation reserve oi] leases by the government to ' ter Publication offices, Tribune eweee-15 and 16 286 Fifth Mass; Sulte 404 Sharon Bidg., pies of the Dally Tribune Who’s Who ‘The resignation of Frank W. Mon dell as director of the War Finance Corporation has revived reports that he is to enter the Coolidge Cab- inet, some predictions assigning him to the post of secretary of the treasury on the theory that Mr. Mellon {s to re- ture. The more gen- eral speculation ‘g that he is slat ed for the Interior or War Depart- ment portfolio, on the more plausi- ble assumption that Dr. Work or Mr. Weeks will resign. It {s more prob able, _ politicians RANK MONDF believe, that Dr. Work will step out of the Interior Department, to which Mr. Harding appointed him after Albert F: resignation. Dr, Work belongs to the old Harding clique and has not found Mr. Coolidge particularly sym. pathetic. The president has not hinted at a desire to replace Dr. Work, but has never urged him to remain, it 1s sald. Next in line of probability, as the leaders care to see it, is the assump- tion that Mr. Mondell will succeed Mr. Weeks, whose health remains precarious, though he hag nearly recovered from his ilIness, “Lams Duck” Rescued Mr. Mondell was the outstanding “lame duck" of the administration when Mr. Harding rescued him from the discard and put him on the War Finance board. The considera. tion that Mr, Mondell was repudiated by the Wyoming electorate counts against him, according to the usual political reckonings. Mr. Coolidge has already evi- denced a high regard for Mr. Mon- dell by cBeosing his as permanent chairman of the Republican con- vention, in which capacity Mr. Mon- dell made the address of notification at the forma! ceremonies here. The president also dispatched him, with Eugene Meyer, Jr., managing di rector of the War Finance Corpora- tion, on a mission of agricultural relief in the west. The Republican leaders here think Mr. Mondell is sure to receive some cabinet job as soon as a vacancy oc- curs. It has been customary to make a westerner Secretary of the Interior, hence the belief that this is the post in store for the former Re publican leader in the House. Mondeil was born in St. Mo., November 6, 1869. He rec his education tn St. Louis and I Louts, ived iW —— — you'll appreciate | all others, settled in Wyoming in 1887, and | married ida Harris, a Wyoming girl, in 1899. He was mayor of New: castle, Wy ng, from 1890 to 1895, and was ed to the first state senate in 1890, two years later be- coming president of that body. He was assistant commissioner general of the land office from 1897-99, Mondel! was a member of the 64th congress and then served in the 56th to 67th. He was delegate to Republican conventions from Wy- oming four times, and wag president of the dry farming congress from 1910 to 1915. He was defeated in the senate race in 1 ———— ree volution Editor Tribune: “In the beginning God created heavens and earth and the th was void and without form and darkness was upon the deep.” And since that day of the millions of years ago the all powerful hand of evolution ever been steadily at work, evolving down through the countless ages in the building and wrecking of empires and dynasties, changing the maps of the earth's surface from time to time, all of which has served to leave man in the dark to what might have taken place before the dawn of his- Modern man only has to look back into history a few centuries and ob- serve the founding and undoing of r ancients—Greece, Gaul, Tyre nd Rome to understand that how- ever substantial we may seemingly be anchored upon the solid founda- tion of a present civilization, that it will not in any sense weather the storms of time. In our museums we have material evidence that has sur- vived the ages, some of these relics antedate our most ancient history in so far as to offer nothing more than a basis for speculation, and a conclusive proof that the world oly One does not necessarily have to accept or reject the Darwin theory of the descendancy of man to agree that achange is ever in ac- tion, just as the acid attacks a metal to transform or separate it in var fous particles, just that sure does the hand of evolution attack and separ ate us from the yesterdays, Is it not true that everything existing, even from the tiniest Insect to the mightiest empire, only finds tts life and existence, to one day lose it Then who is ths Solomon of today whether it be judge, jury or a state law-making body that con accura law-making body that can accurate- ent with the teachings of our Holy law? Where will, or how will the CORN FLAKES Make this comparison? Compare the flavor of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes with any ready-to-eat cereal and commonwealth of Tennessee find twelve men who can accurately d uch a mir- The flavor that children love. What a tribute to the flavor of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes—-so sweet, crisp and golden-toasted. No other food in all the world can have the joy- ous flavor of Kellogg’s. Serve Kellogg's with milk or cream. All ready to enjoy. No cooking. Also delicious with fresh or preserved fruit. Get from your grocer—all grocers sell Kellogg’s. restaurants and hotels serve them, why Kellogg's outsells The Caspet Daily Cribune of her owr rmed then would it not be possi self-same dozen wizards to explain to us the location of the land of Nod, unravel the mystery of who was Cain's wife, and further follow the decendancy of man down through the fourth chap- ter of Genesis as to explain where the wives came from? Now if this shoyld come to pass let’s retain these dozen wise men of the south and set them out on an expedition to stake off the four corners of the earth, and in their travels they will likely find the missing members of the twelve tribes of Israel as men- tloned in our scriptures. It is the writer's opinion that were Darwin alive today he would blush with shame at the monkey descend- ants that are now turning the courts of Tennessee into a monkey bu: ness, Let’s all apologize to the mon- key. acle can be per: ACH, uth Ash Street BE. W.G World Topics Politically, economically and cul- turally, China likes America, with three political, economic and cultur- al “buts” qualifying the love, Dr. P. W. Kuo, jent of Southwestern University, Nanking, China, pointed out recently in a lecture at the In- stitute of P jes at the University of Chicago China adm America politically, but she feels that America’s Chine! exclusion laws are not just. China has pleasant dealings w America, economically, but she) ob- jects to the international banking consortium which was proposed by the United States after the world war. but she regrets that is so one-sided, with cnas going to China precious few to learn, Of the exclusion law Kuo said. “If there is in America's dealing with is found In the Chinese exclusion laws, In principle, ¢ believes that the action of America in this matter {s not just. The status of Chinese in the United States is bas: ed, not chiefly 1 treaty engage: mens beween China and America, but upon American law and Amer!i- can {nterpretation of the law.” Nor do his people, President Kuo maintained, see any good reason why erican culture, iis relationship many Amerl- to teach, but President blemish China, it other nations of the world shuld in sist on China's observance of th open door policy, while they close their own doors against the coming of the Orientals, The speaker denied that China was to fight the exclusion laws inability to take c With the mig er ere eee story lodge building and several ml- nor business buildings were entirely consumed, the little town Is recov- ering from its great loss with a ven- geance, tion during the last two decades, of twenty millions from Shantung, Chill, and Honan to settle in the sparsely settled regions of Manchu- ria and Mongolia, the problem of China's surplus millions looks as if {t were going to be automatically solved by the coming of a new. era of industrial progress, the edu- cator explained. So, “with China, then, the objec tion against the exclusion of labor immigration fs not a question of ne- cessity, but that of national honor and justice.” On the proposition of the Interna: tional banking consortlum, which was farmally organized in 1920 by representatives of the United States, Great Britain, France and Japan, with the alm of financing all future loans to China, President Kuo liat- ed, among others, these objections: ‘The monopolistic character of the consortium. China's surrended of the right of freebargaining. Infringement on China's sovereign rights by putting her public finances under foreign supervision or control. Summing it up Dr. Kuo sal long as foreign investment has more of a political than a business flavor, the Chinese will be unwilling to ac- cept the loaning terms, feeling {t is better to remain in national pov- erty than to suffer from a foreign financial yoke. Midnight Hour By THOMAS MOORE At the mid hour of night, when the stars are weeping, I fly To the lone vale we loved, when life shone warm in thine eye; And I think oft, {f spirits can steal from the regions of air To revisit past scenes of delight, thou wilt come to me there, And tell me our love is remembered, even in the sky. Then I sing the wild song ‘twas once such rapture to hear, our vyolces commingling breathed like one on the ear; And, as Echo far off through the vale my 6ad orison rolls, I think, O my love! ‘tis thy voice from the Kingdom of Souls. Faintly answering still the notes that once were’ s0 dear. pata Ast iatlnds Crook County Sure signs of the greater develop- ment of northeastern Wyoming can be seen in the renewed activity of the inland town of Hulett, centrally located {n Crook county. Following a disastrous fire last October in which the Hulett State Bank build- ing, a cOmmodious hotel, a two- When All Oven-fresh ALWAYS Kelloga’ patented inner-secled wantite Preserves the Fourche river ten miles from world’s famous nestling tn the hills that grow into the Bear Lodge hills a few miles east. On the table lands throughout this section are some of the finest farm lands in the state; on the shel- tered slopes dairy cows are fast sup: longer such a handicap. FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1925 Since the fire a new modern h building hag been erected. A ne hall has been made and the bar has completed plans for a cam: dious building over the ashes of old. A new confectionery and ¢ age have been established ‘anc quipped newspaper, the Crook ty“News, hag been established town, the first issue being published July 23. These signs of lasting acti, would not mean s0 much if ¢ were caused by an oll boo; 6 the Belle the Devil's Tower, and Hulett is situated on wut as planting the disappearing range cat. ; ‘t !*, *t means permanent deyciv)) tle. Elght years ago cream was|ment based upon the agricult unknown here. Now trucks laden|development of the surrounc with cans of cream leave the town | country, the one lasting develop. daily. The town being situated fifty | ment. miles from a raflroad, land values re —.——_ main low, but with good roads be- ing built’so that truck lines may| In Loulsiana a woman cannot be operate the lack of a railroad is no|the guardian of a child, even her own. —_ ASK for Horlick’s- The ORIGINAL \. Malted Milk —, 4 Safe Milk and Diet For Infants, Invalids, the Aged. Nursing Mothers, Children, etc. Contains the valuable muscle and bone building elements found in the grain and whole milk. Easily assimilated by growing chil- dren, students, anemics, etc. Excellent as a light lunch when faintorhungry. Prepared at home in a minute by briskly stirring the powder in hot or cold water. No cooking. ’Guess th’ Catipiller Musta Died! YouR =e A GOOD ANIMAL TRAINER NICODEMUS — BSYT_ UNCLE TOLDSA Yours WAS WASTIN' YWououR TIME TRYIN' T'LEARN A CATIPILLER. TO cof WALK BACK. WARDS of C 1023, K.F.S., Ine, Do you remember the hone and one kid antics of your childhood ? Remember the “m’nagery” of fexaciou: beasts cwned by the boy next door? AD CARTER’S === JUST KIDS” will give you more genuine fun and | awaken more soul tickling thoughts | and hearty laughs than any other ; Kid comic you've ever seen i DON’T MISS ONE! _ _ Beginning Sunday | Casper Daily Tribune 66 i Live it all over again with “JUST KIDS” | CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 0:30 A M. PARD—#116 Savee you Approsimately 12 hours travel between Casper end Rawlins | | WYOMING MOTORWAY. | Salt Creek Transportation Company’s Office TOWNSEND SOTEL PHONE 144 ae TRAIN SCHEDULES * CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN Westbound Arrives Departs li NO/S08 A cnn tuducoecund tubeaslne p.m, 1:60 p. m. | Eastbound Departs NO, 622 22. sennnrnnnnennnnnn- 5:45 p, m. 6:00 p.m | CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY , Eastbound Departs No. 82 eco 4:00 p.m, No. 80s esscvas 8:36 p,m. | We tbhound Departs No, 29 ..... 7:10 p m.