Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 26, 1925, Page 6

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PAGE SIX Whe Casper Daily Cribune Che Casper Daily Triunw 5. HANWAY AND EB. EB. HANWAY matter per Da every ng and The S Publication o! office. Morning es, Tribune Departmen EMBER THE PRESS The Associated Press is exclu entitled the use for publication all news credited in this paper and als ocal news published herei f Circulation (A, B. ¢ Audit Bureau Advertising Representatiy Steger E Boston, M. ancisco, Ca icago, B >, uf 404 Sh Prudd sg & Ave. ew York Cit New Montgomer eon file in the York, C! an and vis welcc SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State yn Year, Dally and Sund Six months, Daily and Su Three Mon Daily and One Month, I One Year, Sun )ne Year, Da six Months, Dail Three Month One Month, Dat One Year, Sunda; All subbscriptions must be paid in a e and the Dally Tribune wil insure delivery after su r es one month in arrears KICK, tf YOU DON'T GET “YOUR TRIBUNE If you don’t find y - oarerl eto and it will be deliver r Tribune afte to you by sy nesser before 8°: ‘clock call 15 ¢ ster ot n th ron Bldg., | of the Dally Tribune | Francisco offices | Book American Leaf From England's The European’ manager for international un business enterprise hus been writing from London concerning the efforts being made in Gr Britain to boom home indus try and, at the same time, exploit American markets. He writes that it is hard work to find clothing made in United States. The esmen sneer at Amer made elothing and « pon the superiority of clothing of British make Most Americans can appr te this feeling, all exeépt the international and the Avglomuaniaes, Most of us prefer our own clothing, made after our own ideas, to itish-made clothing. The same true of most other things. All of us should do so in our own interest just as the British are doing in their own interes It is, or should be, even mor than a sentiment. It is au matter of business. If we do not patronize our own industries they will languish, business will become slack and workinen will haye to aceept lower wages or lose their jobs Bat there j ery ¢ devable minority who prefer any thing foreign to that which is domestic, There are even more who jump at the chance to buy foreigu products if they hap pen to be che r, giving no thought to the effect whieh such a policy, in the long run and if practiced by many, will hay: upon their friends and neighbors and even upon themselye It will certain down business and ult in disaster, The British have last awakened to the situation and 1 adopted a policy of “safeguardi: their industries. In his country we call it protection, but the difference is in me onl, The Bvitish are now imposing protective rates of to | » forvign producers from flooding their markets lo Unlike so many of our own retailets, of Great Britain supplement the law by extoling pre of domestic productic They seck to sell their home ivtx, instead of trying to sell those of foreign countries. fo them the word “jimported’ has no attractive sound. That policey may hinder the sale of our own products in Britain, but it is necessary to the economic lvation of the British Sut for it the outlook for Great Britain is very dark indeed. They have already too long overlooked the preservation of their own markets in the reaching out for export trade, They are now beginnin » realize that the loss of the home market 2 never be compensated for by tining the markets of foreign countries. American internationalists aid traders evidently have this lesson to learn Punishment Is Certain Shakespea us compressed a whole philo: gle sentence, when he says in “The Tempest,” all the devils are here If there is a hell, then men make double their errors. For there is a Jaw that, whenever we do anything wrong. and refuse to listen to our moral sense, we start at once to punish ourselyes There is no wrong thing it. Men can be certain that they ished by themselyes, for every time they abuse any of their faculties or any part of their body The gintton or the drunkard ends by destroying his physi Hell is empty, retribution for but bri its punishment with will be punished, and pun eal as well as his moral being The man who, for ambition or uncontrollable desire for knowledge, overworks his brain, pays by suffering from an unhealthy state of his mental powers th bedy and brain suffer when a man neglects to keep himself in good condition by regular and proper daily exer cise There is no offense made against nature of our own fre will but, like a stern parent and just, s 1 th It 2 law from which there is no escape The Church and Crime In the battle against crime the church can make a worthy contribution to the cause of humanity by emphasizing the ct that justice demands the infliction of punishment fot crime, Tt can influence public opinion to the point of demand ng that crime shall pay the prescribed penalty, One of the principles of religion is that justice comes before mercy. doctrine is common both the Old Testament and the New. th teach that God administers stern justice. Only when there is genuine and complete repentance does grace sus pend the jud nt The church should battle the maudlin sentimentalism which is turning criminals | wid putting a premium on wrongdoing. It should rebuke those who forget the victim and sympathize only with the erin | It should proclaim th he who violates nature's law pp likewise he who breaks the moral code should be required to’ pay. It should proclaim unflinchingly that law thout penalty is useless, but wit) penalty it is effective, The church can do this and still uphold with perfect consistence it shed doctrine of merey and forgiveness. When: lawbre repent, then mercy and for giveness may be exercised t the burden of proof is upon he muine. Valuable Distillates of distilled product. From the distillation of soft coal certain investigators have been get . to the te 00 cuble feet of gas, twenty-five gallons « fifteen pounds of ammonium sulphate, five gallons of mo f coke. Such distillates as them to s that the repr ce is g Whist only one kin tar tor fuel and three-quarters of a ton these are very special helps to pre More Comfort Tax reduction advocates received additional comfort from i treasury tabulation showing that in spite of the lower sched ules which became effective this year, interna) revenne collec Hons for July amounted to 125,866,689, compared with #110, “14,885 during the same month of 1¢ 24. = WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1925 i = "| U wheel, but no bureau can make a World Topics | Lower Prices and Higher Wages Who’s Who Cereful driver out of a pinhead, 1 ‘ eee By Edward A. Filene ident ‘The driver of a motor car who be- t is , ~ Another chapter in the political} lfeves that he can beat the fast ex- et. Berane ite dat |. Super-competition will drive us in-] The average business man Pas | carer Soun fH. Hylan, aes of heeterkem be pce erden(tie lh Scat States and Englana| t© ass production and mass distrt-| alway J the legitimate ambition | Now york, will be ‘written. in the the self-same fellow who of Lord. Bradbury, | Dutton.” Tt will compel‘us'to Fordize |'to"heromie one of the Digwent men 10 | coming wl Reatiaed ctl | Vanes hiptasacenteta na reticent representative on | Smerican business and industry. --|.his line. He has been able 10 s@t | port of 1 e is runn do any worthwhile thing in the the © reparations | We can not win ott In the intense | #long fairly w br a sma i aie | the Demoeratic| world. He is the fair-haired boy who . commission. and | Competition that {s coming by the| ™an,\golng it on his own and doing ry With aies an early and messy death—not | a considered aj simple method of cutting»prices;and) Pusingss by ruleofebumb. | Tne king Of|to be regretted—not because he is leading” ‘authori. | S4shing wages. The first thing the Susinpes pias Fe ve Felon toe 11am Ran.| good, but because he ts no g00d. SWAMPSCOTT, Mass., Aug. 26.— ty on European | Coming competition will teach us ts'| sbJe i a ge dt only OP \ ay ° | dolph Hearst. If} I¢ only the sapheads ‘who pit mo- The oclated Press)—The Bele finances that we must reduce the cost ‘of | way9: Mirst, by becoming one of the | he fsn®@ noml-|tar cars against modern Ipcomotives debt settlement in. President In a recent | Production. [eaonorss ae bene “i errcel nated, however,| in a race to see if they can get to! Coolldge’s opinion, does not ‘set a interview he de-| Too. many.of us, I fear, will] rote ee in hie inact | it Is a grade crossing just as the engine | precedent for refunding agreements clares: thoughtlesly cut! wages and‘ 60) “ieee n danger that the small| salt been arrives there, would only ride alone | still to be svyorked out with France “With her|blandly,on. I do not say that some "A> lard . | dependent” caa ps what happens so frequently | and Italy. . yj on. hig mM} pusites man of’ the, United es! aintte rt aituainaal wrodidaiot: Beles lenin : finances ‘proper: | Wage reductions, may not be neces-| vane or the large-scale changes Hyl was] nes <j The agreement negotiated with ly and prudent-| sary in the transition ‘period. But if ayaulikelyi-to' come: ait think YSN eT was) able, Belgium, it was officially stated at ly managed and] we simply cut wages without ine} i tne. cont Gniyn the -gteatt born en a farm} ‘phe innocent people who ride with| white Court. today, has .nothing with the» will| céasing the efficieny -of .our-own | (USE mney | onnern Only ten tact | in Greene out | daredevils who are insane with a“de-| whatever to do with impending set- ace taxation | management wo: shall jsucceed only | 1, that no business man, large or Aaa! Soon sire “to step on 'er” cannot be blam-} tlement with other nations. In work- able with | in. reducing the purchasing power’) «141 wint escape their influence. | Te Ae og orphan. | ed. for crossing accidents, althougt | ing out a retunding agreement with ngland. | that, directly or indirectly, Is creat-| tne choice will be possible only for| -JOHN F HYLAH He was orphan-| they are only too often the victims|Great Britain the American’ debt 2 France) can-uns | ing) the market for our own :PrO-| those" who do it: first. ed in| early) of such happenings. commission established and congress dertake the ‘task of repaying the| duc The businesk man of: the future, | Childhood, ‘but s Rapa te The car driver is In charge of a approved, according to the prest- capital she ‘has borrowed ‘from us| The * way to! success “will , "le | whether manufacturer or merchant |/M& a public school ed dearee frei |4eath-dealing instrument that has no|dent's view, the principle that the and Ame provided she is given} through increasing the’ efficiency of | wij) make mora money reducing | #180 4 Bachelor of Lay coe 3 rae power to keep going in ‘any particu-| basis of the séttiement with each and a funding arrangement similar in}labor by . better management,| prices than the business man of the| the peetey ay ecanel line direction, except aaitt tp gulded: (every debtor tine abiiity to sn but rather more generous | through reducing overhead expense bis. ever crhnhe by | mitted ‘to the bar in 1897, he b lyertiie tind that'sulded it'belene fk Cane ee eerie Onan than our own engagement! and other production costs, by He “wil -sttive. alwns | practice in*Brooklyn |‘ fool, not only are the driver mehOrwith Cirgal Britain’ anh with United State greater standardization of products | pring prices to lower and lower In 1905 he was a candidate for | the occupants of the car in di | Belgium, it was declared, and will te rich th natural wealth: | and “by mass outnut, and finally | jevel, not trom an: idealistic social | munietpal judge—his first venture in| yori, ut the walking public as well. | to ine ‘princlole tellanad we th overed in a most re-| through reducing the price to hg mae, iutiatia pig back ogeut lll Ue: pallties. bap pe en ee rth ha waa] ‘If all drivers were sqfo and sane| American commissioners in_negoti- m the war. At/ consumer. taking a smaller profit | ie hest business nolfey ef the judictat bench in He. WAR |, a Souseheed Cf got Mdgriay teal AV ReeR Oke oh eee a of Her iar dam-] per ‘article and ‘working for 'mass) — Jn'the. past We business men hiave | elected a judge of the county court | (tte ny ee Sola the few | enlocions veiilag’ waa tanga clear FS Festoréd-—almost | sales., Tn'the end such a-polleys ably | nebn able to-muddlé through some-|in 1915. Having ‘served as mayor! VO) DE Sant. “ath, “catastrophtes | thee the peeslaon Delleves that this entirely. by avi : | administered, will enable;us to pay| how. Rut the era of muddling is|of NewYork City vd terms |! 5 not inevitable. They.can be avold:| baste isnot varied in any instance T ive capa hich {higher wages than we haye ever| drawing to a close. Th’the future It | (1918-1925) fs now seeking the |! 1 able: They can be avold,| basks Is not varied in any Insta perfor ; esents | dreamed possible and wil’ bring us se a plain choice between bust-| office for the third time. Those in- | ®- The great bulk of the drivers do) by the terms of the Versailles treaty performat nts | ar nore bilutiede | aoa © Dini on Bit he | avoid them, but tho relatively small | or any other agreement attempted or r free either to new | the 1 t tal profits in business | ness setutemanship and bankruptey. | terested in the» workings of. the | Orr tage of speed-crazed idiots who ‘ lth or to pas fo j histo | e—These : articles , cover the} powerful Tammany organization are |ToryS An ea anout the country, ¢s e SSE URE EIRES ‘ || Muss “production requires a great} most > important portions of Mr, | wondering i¢ Hylan, with He |plain the appalling figures whicl Alsace rraine, Fyan | body of consumers. We.can not] Milene’s book The Way _Out,” | backing, will pee ae mon eee yearly toll of human today 1s ably. greater | have great Baty ge consumers | wehieh fs being owidehts i naten wy Peet SR laste ie la OT the carelessness of mo was before the war. ince r y to buy and able to pay | this country anc rope. i f: 5, ie s need tha aah s brane aan pad tira nae MU or is well pafd.| next! in the gorfer. “We Must Ford a eee alae ea on | tl Horlicks own rar es is certainly It is as important to produce con-| ive oc: Fai wll appear jn. this “5 SEP has | ath - The ORIGINAL n twothivds of that of Gee, | summers as to produce goods. aehpaver iatoeiys |Brains and Motor Cars| \" Melted Milk Ait ex ri if France ‘receives nothing | ree Water street, Somerville, is direct | Somebody has said—perhaps mans The biggest stamp collection on nd Di fron n Bevartac Ruan] What Next? heir;to the throne and therefore | people have made the observation— Precord wag that of the Turkish gov peer ayn could be made at less ex | ey 7) er queen of al) the Americas.’ It would | that a college ean educate a boy, but | ernment, which numbered seventeen i: Troalide, a pen: o the national standar | An = writes in the! all con suddenly, prohobly even an't give, him brains, | million stamps in all. It was divided The ‘Aged comfort, than a fe ye Boston Transcript, who uses the| before Maggle had time to get her | @ motor car license bureaus can | into 280 lots, and sold. With the : NY: foh ngainisscacoahy, O. oily hake this te ady and to arrange for | equip drivers with credentials which | proceeds was built one section of eS at estar econ es rar pi a aiacicn tal fins | substitut at Ye Old _Donutte| permit them to take. the steering the Bagdad rally a Avoid Imitations = Subs! ¢ ment m ¢ y that, of course “An tive news ney some | Shoppe. | E = = = i a jer cay 3 time xgo discovered the awful truth] “Yes, there is definite danger In “tt ry France to set | that the Bixby lettér, which scholars | #lowing this manuseript hound to ‘ nancial house in order be-| have known for years, {t'not in the | continue ‘his wo If he cannot | wre she will, be able to make | Bodleian + Libr actually f3 not | be caught and leashed the only hope | ments in, respect to her foreign ¢ in the Podle'an library. And now | 1s that eventuaaly he will discover | on an,adequate scale. For this rea;]the eame agency’ with “uncanny | the non-existence of his own mar. | T.would t tented with power has discovered. that) no orl-| Tidge license and birth certificat’.”” | SPECIAL SCHOOL ITEMS AT WHOLESALE PRICES small ents in the| ginal of Benjamin Franklin's self- | A aa Pass bie paar a SUSTTA DISEY, Weeds Student’s Note Book Filler and pack- David's 2 oz. luall feet (ed “Obie te a. derlotiaratate’or affairs By Samuel’ Minturn Peck. age of rein- 10c Ink 5e something ‘That And and Sone about whieh | should immediately be done. failing, steps should be taken, of eight or The Burdock and the Mullei The Purslance and th: Of little wretched outcasts lines | {f that ts to no ayail, then it ts a) OF little A aeaibra of th an debt ‘settte. | clear case of censorship, if there} | Which ‘Fd aroatineatie: t, but with a rather lower rate} @Ver Was one.» Ther-pubiic,. at all | Poor flow watfs of Nature, ularly: in the | costs must not be armed in’ this | ses targets slate ee ttlement env. | ™anner, and {€ despatches, continue | Navght have they to befriend aoe eit, | to come tothe morning: m Only. the aun Sng irala compared wit of about nouneing the disappearance of man- | ae “| uscripts of which the public has} In’Argentina loct | never heard, there is bound: to be| pers, are so persistent a uprising. -Some bright person | the government includes a a sooner or later, that | department, the “Agricultura € news interests are in the pay of | tectlve Department, for copi thristic’s and call for ir migrations. revolution “And then there is always the deous chance that some Journal tic sleuth, snooping around the man | useript files‘ of great lbraries, will | | find that something more of im-| | portance has ‘been lost. The original | of The Iliad, for instance. Or} | Caesar's love letters to Cleopatra Or the original copy of the Ten Com: mandments, Or the manuscript of | “The Lost Chord.” Or worse. still | the chord itself. | | “What if, some Wednesday morn- ing, We should open otr'paper at the | breakfast table and discover that the original of the Declaration of | Independence has mysteMously dis. appeared and ‘is not In the Henry Huntington TLibrar: all (where® tt bas always been sed to be hanging beside Blue Boy") 7 hie ‘and cry | all newspapers would take it Ip about a week someone would suggest, as someone did {n the case | of the Bixby letter that the Declara u nd lea tha Stan or Sotheby's nd Amer imilar cA without ris pacity t “Tr do biltt ever fail ould pape not ' believe lia would be an inte je burden if German reparation payments r. If the Dawes plan 50 per cent’ of its believe. France y bette) than ' that | allze | | estimate, I Battle Hymn of the Republic Julia, Ward Howe. by sup! “The e would be great Mine eye ha n the the coniing of the Lord: | He is trampling out the vintage | where the grapes of wrath are | stored; We hath loosed the fateful lightning is of and up. of His terrible swift sword tion was all a hoax in the very be His truth ds rehing on | ginning, and that {t never existed at all. Then there would be. the vers T have seen Him in the wateh-fires | devil to pay. We should all have ef a hundred circling camps; | to haul down our flags and.replace hey have builded Him an altar in| them with British ones. We ehould | the evening dews and dan Ihave to treat the Prince of Wales | | can read His righteous sentence by | as an imminent sovereign and not the dim and flarin mps ‘as a side show exhibit. We should His day is marching on. | all have to take to tea and whiskes and s6da. cancel thé British debt ' ¢ read a fiery gospel, writ in | don Oxford bags; discard straw hats burnished rows of steel: | cease to giggle about Queen Mary's “As with my contemners 0 | hats. and“drop oiir ‘h’s. : you my grace shall deal: | “But thatswould not be all. Ti Lett born of woman, crush | mediately ‘flushed with success, the ent with his heel news ‘agency’ would “discover that Is & on original of the Constitution 1b ppeared from the’ | Harley led forth the tr neh of the vw" York! Lfbray ne call probably was never ther earts of t ways,’ that undoubtedly tt wa n Ismet tremendous hoax written by’ Mar sw uld Twain. Then, indeed we: should be Him! be jubilant, my fe pset. Mr. Coolldge would discove Our God‘ts marching on | himself entire! without power or | marines, . Mrs. Coolidge would -re In the béauty, of the lilles Christ et a singer to thrill “My Wild was born across the sea, Trish Those” and be-greeted by “Te Wi glory in His bosom that | for Two.’ And, some* student’ o tvansfigures you and me | political sclence would declare. that \s He dled to m men holy, let} America has always been. an abso us die to make men free, jute manarechy and that Maggie While. God ts marching on | Ginch (unmarried) of, 447. Wert A Boarding School For Girls NOW IN ITS 45TH YEAR Located in Beautiful Salt Lake City in the Wasatch Mountains Established by the Episcopal Church ““A School of Character” Equipped. With Every Modern Convenience. Grammar and High School. Strong Art and Musical Departments—Domestie Science— Physical Training, Swimming, Winter Sports, Gymnasium— Tennis and Basket Ball Courts—-Large Campus—Beautiful Bula agy:— Cine personal touch and instruction for each girl. 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Many other refinements now add to the beauty and quality of these cars. See your nearest Authorized Ford Dealer today for complete details. ‘DETROIT, MICH. 3 ’ Added Beauty and Utility Announcing Important _ Changes in Bodies No Increase in Prices:

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