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PAGE TWO Che Casper Daily Cribine By J. E. HANWAY AND BE. B. HAN WAY asper (Wyoming) post November 22 office as second class matter 1916. y Tribune issued every e Sunday at Casper, Wy Building, opp ostoffice. Business Telephones .. Br Telephone ecting All Departments, ning and The Sunday Morning Publication offices, Tribune 15 and 16 MEMBER THBP ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press 2 exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited {n this paper and also the local news published herein Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) SUBSCRIPTIO™ By Carrier and Outside State r y Tribune will ecomes one month in arrears. GE T YOUR TRIBUNE KICK, IF YOU DON n't find your efore 8 + ee k. | go, Ul; 286 Fifth uite 404 Sharon Bldg., of the Daily Tribune an Francisco offices after looking carefully for {tt call 15 or 16 messenger, Register complaints Practicing What Is Preached ew of the current alarm of certain spokesmen of the hes over what they Velieve to be a weakening of the in ci r t would seem that the first verses of chap. r r of Ron , Would form an appropriate text: eak in the faith receive ye, but not to doubtful d For believeth that he may eat all things; an ri weak, ¢ herbs. Let not him that eateth de- and let not him which eateth not nd it ¢ or God hath received him. Who are t an other man’s servant? to his own master he standeth or falleth. Yea, he shall be holden up: for God able to ke him stand. One man esteemeth one day iboye another: another esteemeth every day alike. Let every man be full persuaded in his own mind.” Then more: ‘Let us not therefore judge one another any more: but judge this rather, th no man put a stumbling block or an occasion to fall in his brother’s way. I know, and um perst by the Lord Jesus, that there is nothing un clean of itself: but to him that esteemeth any thing to be un- clean, to him it is unclean. But if my brother be grieved with ritably. Destroy him not ny meat, now walkest thou not ch with thy meat, for whom Christ died Very plainly it is not for us to judge our fellows. Yet we laye the very principals who should be denouncing such judg- ments, judging. Nverywhere there are organizations collecting funds to judge and to reform, Persons with their own ideas of what clean and what is unclean, censor our books, our | tures ur act A. sovere ta put er ibove another—in a land who: constitution pro ¢ religious freedom, and decides what the children of parents of all religious beliefs shall be taught in the school Crime Suppression The national crime commission,,just organized can be a useful institution if it devote attention to ways to sup- s crime, If it is wise, it will make its role as propa idist ry to its role as investigator. What we need most of at this time is information. The coun is a unit in its abhorrence of crime. It is not a unit in ideas as to what to do about it.-The only thing which can guide it, which can we it costly experiments that accomplish nothing, is knowl- edge, Such a work as that of the Cleveland crime survey can do more to direct an intelligent fight against crime than ex hortations, If the new commission will assemble information, vill persuade communities to do their share then progress is certain The job cannot be done in a day, and it cannot be done on a shoestring. From published reports, the commission is pre pared for a long pull and an expensive one. That it approaches in this spirit augurs well for ond its success. Foreign Debts The United States will receive a minimum of $12,310,403,- in the next sixty two years from the war debt settlements o far tiated with the six nations which have arranged payments. Following are figures showing the totals of prin cipal and interest which each nation will pay into the t ury during that pe Belgium, ALTA TEO OD principal, $310, 050,500 interest, $7 0 ‘total; ait Britain, $4,! 600,000,000, ‘1, 105,94 000; TF inland $9,000,000, Hungary, $1,930,000, 0, $4, 01,940, $14,538 Poland, 135,687,550, Eleven-other debtor nations exclud uunia, $6,050,000 $s. O40: g a and have yet to fund their debts which ag y ‘ nterest $6,2 7,000, France and re 1,5 2,138 852, are Trade Increase f decr rea iring last May and June when com I th the same months of the previous year. May exports ere greater by 000,000 than in May, 1924, and June exports ere heavier rly $7,000,000 than in June, 1924. May im- J increased 00,000 and June imports by $6,000,000, nths endi or the twelve m with June exports were # 080,180 or $530,187,082 less than in 1924 and im were 429,275, or $3,600,482 than in 1924, The trad Y ‘ t United States in the year ending June 015 for the previous year Getting Raddy 1 1, where the troops of the defeated ppo udventurer, Baron Wrangel, have been lan they are beginning to look very spick and span 1 excellent equipment. The Y where ll the x ney is com hat is the idea behind this rehabilitation? Is ! ry another drive against the Bolsheviks? It } out t the Paris headquarters of the aspirant to the he Grand D holas, have been active of l ‘ e general staff” } be reconstitutec What He Think ) e World ¢ r t the Institute of Politics, Ander of the United Cireult Court of Appeals t ted that from } thirty-five years’ experience t the bar he believed “from one-half to three-fourths of the br t before the courts are sheer parasitical waste be he re for t fit of lawyers and not for the bene- e public. T also believe after being a member of the te commerce commi n that three-fourths of the cases before € r on are sheer ely for the benefit of] rs without in any way helping the service the railroads ould give the public The world is bound to remain imperfect think the a state sta is long as people e human nature through the medium of \ ean cha ule arr after him and after his father, a colonel of the The new state solicitor of the state department is Green H Hackworth, of the District of Colum- bia. He succeeds Charles Cheney Hyde who re signed to accept a professorship at Columbio. Uni. versity. Hackworth was born at Preston burg, Kentucky, for: ty-two years ago, He is a Kraduate of Georgetown, George Wash- ington, and Val. paraiso univer- sities. In 1916 the present so- red the state department clerk and has steadily worked his way up. Whilé assist ant solicitor his chief resigned and he has been in charge of the office since that time. Best for Children Mildred Sti Forum, says: “Parents I ell, writing in the ve sald to me, ‘Do you hildren that the Bible is I might ‘When you ries of Johnny Chuck « 1 do you tell them that Mother Nature is true? I find that children mingle fact and fancy more naturally than their sophisticated elders, I read them the Bible stories as I read them tr ANS Wwe thelr other books and answer ques: ns as they come. I find the chil- dren for the most part independent in their own criticisms, believing and disbelieving where I least ex- pect it. “My little girl, at eight, years, promptly scouted the story of Jonah, but that did not kéep her from en- joying {its dramatic appeal. She voluntarily drew a cross section of the mammoth fish with the unfor- tunate traveler seated in its ‘in- nards’ and a few crabs gamboling in the seas withou But on Christ- mag she took me to the window to show me a brilliant planet, ‘the Star of Bethlehem.’ “When I read the Easter story of the empty tomb, she surprised me by asking skeptically, ‘Was it really an ange! I looked up the story in all four Gospels and found that St. Mark, now considered the most accurate of the evangelists, describes instead of an angel, ‘a young man in a long white garment.’ I reported this te my little girl and left her to interpret the Easter story according to her own beliefs “Despite the inaccurate, impos- sible, and some times grotesque and revolting passages in the Bible, truth and beauty flame through it from cover to cover. A child brought up with no knowledge of the Bible is robbed of his best heritage. To insist on “Truth or nothing’ for our hildren seems to me an attitude of conceited intellectualism. Rather let us dell them the ‘old, old story.’ Let us take them straight to that great treasury of religious experiences de- servedly called the Holy Book. Whether it is the Doual, King James, or American Revised version makes little difference. But let us try to guide the children as ‘un- obtrusively and as suggestively as possible, and leaye them to choose only what seems true to them.” Oo Light of Other Days By Thomas Moore, Oft in the stilly night, Ere Slumber’s chain hat beund me, Fond memory brings the ght Of other days around m The smiles, the tears, Of boyhood's years, The words of love then spoken; The eyes that shone, y dimmed and gone erful hearts now broken! in the stilly night, dre Slumber’s chain hath bound me, Sad memory brings the light Of other days around me. When I remember all The friends, so linked together, I've seen around me fall, Like leaves in wintry weather, I feel like one Who treads alone 16 banquet-hall deserted, Whose garlands dead, Whose lights are fied, J all but me departed Thug in the stilly night, Slumber's chain hath bound AS 10 ght und me, Local History Recalled A writer in the Chicago Tribune. from Flora, Tlinols, in a comment om the news of “Sixty Years Ago Today” wherein mention was made of a thousand Indians attacking Platte Bridge Station on the tele graph road, the writer, FL H Wright, Sr, says “My deceased father, TR. J Wright, was a sergeant in Co, D. 1ith ¢ Volunteer cavalry and the Lieut. Colling named was in thi company. As a child I heard my dear old dad relate the story. Your records are correct, but not quite mplete. “The day before, my father and Lieut. Collins had returned from a ten day scout up the river. The next day a fresh detail, commanded by Collins, was ordered to go to | Platte bridge. The leutenant re rked: ‘Understand, Collins {s not fraid to go into the gates of hell ‘This not my turn and it fg a damn imposition to send me.’ He then ted and gave the command to The results were as you mentioned. Sergeant Wright was with the reenforcements sent and he said Collins had one hundred ws in his horribly mutilated body, which was surrounded by doz navy revolver was empty and blood and hair was on the butt. He was So brave, the Indians wanted t torture and capture him alive. He ns of ¢ 1 Indians. His big V is brave a lad ag ever trod the ins Casper, Wyo., ts named Collins, Col ment “If any of the old timers who wer In the 11th’ Ohio cavalry read (hie be Casper Daily Cribunc World Topics In the near future labor disputes “open discussion Business Is Better Than Politics will be settled by afid intelligent consideration of all predicted Mathew By Edward A. Filene. Granted the right leadership, busi. instrument than r the achievement of an increasingly better social order. 3 operates all function at efficiency only part of the time. Business deals with the concrete things that affect the daily lives of ; politics deal too much in airy abstractions, Business leadership is determined in most instances by tho careful pro- cess of selection; political leadership none-too-effective factors involved,” a Woll, vice president of the A. F in a recent 1 be the busjnesses that: processes and re- » cost of production. of its present “Prejudice and indefensible wastes. Bring the price of the necessities ten the hours of labor and servance » the margin of leisure, ecurrent unemployment: \ Limit the area of the industrial enlarge the floor council chamber. Create better and better work 4 pon sibilities, method of election. space of the are néaring the Business determines the careers of Ateteiat’ alkoraen chiefly the careers of office holders. Business men control the progress Not because they geniuses or because they. have joined in a dark plot to capture and loot the common ase the comforts and pros employes and MATTHEW WoLL of an antiquated of this country. industrial age." » things that will s decent social progress. iction that has come lifetime spent id tumble of business. These articles cover the r than one year encouraging for possible nd removes the irritation that when contracts happen to be on the levers of power. industrial disorder are blundering or , Whether they are actuated , business men still control the y Clscuswed -Jn »8 of production, and consumption. standards pre- And these three limited to one | nd oftener than all the torch congressional and reform move ort of place America is going to be to live in will be determined Pittsburgh and F New York banks t, Louis shoe factories, Arizona , and the other business and industrial centers than in Washing. our state capitols. MEXIGANS TO OBSERUE TAY OF INDEPENDENCE and thug succeed in trans- e » work of the world from a burden that crushes into a culture that enables maniind.” “If we hope to merit the respect 5, We must in turn observe in a full measure our collective duties and responsibilities. “No relation can long survive that is not founded on ‘ance of equal rights, a preservation of common interest.” for the achievement of with appropriate and are yet able to write, I should be glad to hear which Mexico mutual respect, n will Iast two day ng September awaits the final SSS germs to a certain degree. than Palmolive. The real difference in soaps is in their effect upon your skin. And good complexions are too precious for experiment. Remember this when you are tempted to touch your face with other than a good complexion soap. In old days, women were told, “Use no soap on your face.” Then Palmolive came. A soap made of cosmetic oils. _A soap made to be used lavishly on the skin. Then note what happened. Women tried it and found amazingly good complexions. Palmolive became quickly the leading toilet soap of the world. In France, home of cosmetics, Palmolive is one of the two largest selling toilet soaps. French soaps, in France itself, are being sup- planted by Palmolive. That is because Palmolive Soap is a unique creation, based on 60 years of soap study. ‘A scientific soap made for ONE purpose only: to foster good complexions. Don’t expect Palmolive results from ordinary soaps. Don’t expect them from medicated soaps. Don’t expect them from “jack-of-all-trades” soaps—soaps claimed “germ combatants,” soaps claimed for facial use and fabric cleansing alike. | Palmolive is not the only fine toilet soap. We know of two others that compare favorably.’ But they cost you 25 cents, while Palmolive costs but 10 cents. . . no more than ordinary soaps, Enormous production brings you this modest price.‘ Wash, launder, cleanse with any soap you wish. But when beauty is at stake, take care. Use Palmolive, a soap you know is safe to nee. It is nature’s formula to “Keep That School- girl Complexion.” FRENCH WOMEN Largely Vote “‘No”’ on French Soaps In France, women smile at the age-old beauty bubble of “French soaps.” of the two greatest selling toilet soaps in France. French soaps have been supplanted. Parisian beauties are glad to pay almost twice as much for a cake of Palmolive as American women ay. And, in many cases, three times as much as r their own “French” soaps. Remember this when tempted by “Frenchy” claims for soaps. Palmolive is today one Note carefully the name and wrapper. Palmolive is never sold unwrapped. EK MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 1925 that the condition of industry and the market for the product must be included in arriving at what con. stituted a fair compensation for svork produced. Co-operation between employers and employes for the accumulat- ing of facts, their analysis, con- structive criticism and interpreta. tion to reach valid conclusions conyietions, was advoc O06 15 RESCUED AFTER BEING LOCKED IN MINE OTARVING FOR § WEEKS SHERIDAN, Wyo. Aug. 24.— Locked in an abandoned mine for five weeks without food or apparent source of water, Ben, a dog belong ing to John Koltiska, ranchman ¢ Upper Prairie Dog, clu’.g stubbornly to life. Ben, a pitiful bundle of bones and emaciated flesh, was rescued Wednesday from a forgotten cham- ber of an old coal mine on Prairie Dog creek, along with the body of a dead companion which had_ nc been able to survive the enforced fast. Five weeks ago Koltiska and a friend went up to tho mine to dig coal. While they were excav the two dogs which had ac them scared up a rabbit it about the country, They followed it through an old entrance of the mine into an unused part. Appar red and sealed the chamber, with the dogs in it. The two men' hunted for the dogs awhile after missing them but de cided that they had wandéred off and were exploring the hills. Con- sequently they returned to the ranch without giving the matter much further thought. Wednesday they had oc the mine. ating anied hased to go again to old entrance | The Tribune. they heard a faint, queer sound as 1f made by some ying thing, ‘They broke through the debris that ob. scured the door and found Ben, starving, weak, and unable to bark but emitting little moaning sounds Beside him lay the dead hody of the other dog, Lander’s Shipment Of Honey Increases LANDER, Wyo., Aug. 24—De spite the ravages of American foul brood in the valley the past season, the shipment of honey from the Lander country this year will be from two to four cars more than was shipped out last year or in any pre. vious year, according to the predic- tions of Lander honey producers, In the spring the early flowers were very weak in honey making properties and the bee men were forced to feed their broods several tons of sugar to keep them alive un til the later flowers should come on. ae W.C. T.U. Will Meet in Greybull Oct. 2, 3 and 4 GREYBULL, Wyo., Aug. 24.—The state convention of the Woman Christian Temperance Union will convene in Greybull this year, the dates being October 2, 3 and 4, and the local organization fs now plan ning for a large gathering. It {s ex pected that two hundred mor of the White Ribbon wearers will be in attendance during the three days Governor Ross {s a member of this organization and a representative from the Cheyenne body and will be scheduled for the principal address. phish ah eats Tell the Advertiser —‘“Saw It in - For Germs No soap that is safe for toilet use will “remove” germs any better than Palmolive If guarding a good complexion is your aim, use a soap made to protect it OME beauty seekers, we are told, may be practicing a grave mistake in complexion care. So this is published for the good of all concerned—for your sake and for ours. Soaps to “destroy” germs should be used only on advice of a physician. All soaps “remove” No soap suitable for toilet use will “remove” germs any better For all soaps were too harsh.