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lat ¥ ¥ E < I ri et evans MET PRO RNMT CROAT Cee TTL PAGE SIX ih - - | r ° Che Casper DatlyTrilaimie — Vor"! Tovies mr re T t ‘a deplerable condition will By J. & HANWAY AND &. ~& HA ‘VAY aT it is Island, receiving port 1 at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second November 2%, 1916, apped is the Immigration Commis- Curran, H. Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning | ssing the inspection by une . Wyoming. Publication offices. Tribune officers at the British opposite postoffice | ports Curran said: ~- “Lam sorry that and 16 the Department ¢ Labor has ar- MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ae i bas hy The Asso J Press \e exclusively entitled to the use for publication ot Bs teen all news credited {n this paper and also the local news published herein Mba SEGRE Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C.) | |e a ae cee Advertising Representatives : MMe voids a visit to Jen, King & Prudden, 1720 ger Bidg., Chicago, tll; 286 eitth | Island, This Ave. New ¥ 3lobe Bidg ston, Mass: Suite 404 Sharon Bldg. dangerous to 55 New Mon! St., San Francisco, Cal. Copies of the Dally Tribune | country. be are on file in w York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices | se our expert and visitors are welcome. nental medical --- ee eet yspegtion now SUBSCRIPTION RATES | taking plaseshen Wy Carrier and Outside State | the British Isles One Year, D ‘ be called a thorough, Six months, f : examination. Neither Three Months, Daily and § can the casual inspection aboard One Month, Da nd uip at this port, By Mail Inside State nd Sunday and Sund: ne Year, Da x Months, L Three Months, Daily and One Month, Daily and Sunday-. One Year, Sunday All subbscriptions must be pald in advance and the Dally ‘Tribune wil! not insure delivery after subscription becomes one month {np arrears, KICK, LF YOU DON’T GET YOUR TRIBUNE If you don't find your Tribune after looking carefully for it call and {t will be delivered to you by spe essenger. Register com Lefore 8 5 or 16 plaints Highest Enjoyment What higher enjoyment can there be than that of contented with ourselves. It is,in order to deserve this tentment that we are placed here on earth and endow liberty, that we are tempted by our passions, and restra by our conscience. What could Omnipotence itself do more in our fayor? Could it being con have estu in our being inc vent man from simple instinet iblished a contradiction or have alloted a reward for well-doing to a of doing ill? Is it nec in order to pr being wicked, to reduce all his faculties to x and make him a mere brute? No! Never can we reproach the Deity for haying given us souls made in his own image, that might | happy. It is obvious that it is for our own pr nature, we free od, sind vation that nature makes us sensible of our wants. Pain body is an indication that the machine is out of order, and a warning fer us to provide a remedy As for death, it is a remedy for ourselves. Nature will not let all the evils we inflict on us suffer perpetually. But ows misery, what is the explanation for it? The abuse of our faculties makes us wicked and miserable. Our cares, our aux eties, our griefs are all owing to ourselves. Moral evil is our own work, and physical evil would be in- fact nothing, did not our vices render us sensible of it To how few evils are men subject who live in primeval mplicity? They hardly know any disease, and are irritated by seurcely any passions. ‘They never forsee death nor suffer apprehensions of it. When it approaches, thoir miseric der it desirable nl it is to them no evil If we could | mtent to be what we are, we should hay no toducement to lament our fate; but we inflict on ourselves n ther real evils in search of an imaginary happiness Those who are impatient under trifling inconveniences, must expert to suffer mueh greater, Our yprehensions of death ticipate its horrors and hasten its approach. The faster we endeayor to fly, the swifter it pursues us Thus we are terrif inst nature on ac by doing outr on das long as we live mit of those evils to its nd die me Vhieh we bring on yur laws. Good News For Al Smith William G. MeAdoo is quoted as declaring that he is done with polities, and will go back to California, beh himself, and ttle down to the practice of la | is good news, if true, to the Democratic party, including Al Smith of New York, While William in the he made litical business pick up, even if he did wreck the party, It presumed that the main reason he has taken the cours: credited with taking, is because he sees no use of long tinuing the struggle for the presidency. There is no hope of election even if the Democratic party nomination were seenre: This is about the only sensible conclusion Williwm has reached in recent years was business po No Interference President Coolidge will continue to maintain » ‘ands off” policy on the coal strike, still seeing no way under la whereby the administration can make a moye. He is ¢ xpected to confine his activities, for the present, to making arrange. ments for government sistance in insuring an ade » fuel supply for the normal anthracite-consuming territory, John Hays Hammond zod the president to press for congressional approval of the federal coal commission’s recommendation The president has previously recommended to congress tion of the coal commissic recommendations. The commi would have the rnment regulate the coal industry through the use of its powers oye In extreme emergency it suggested that the president assume di rect control over the mines. The commission also recommended the establishment of a coul division in the interstate comme commission for the regulation of both the anthracite and bitu minous industries. Anth » is in a different position from bituminous coal. It is produced by miners licensed by the state of Pennsylvania, and those licenses cannot be improvised for strikebreakers. In fact the Pennsylvania license law applying to anthracite produced within the state is the stumbling-block which might trip the president of the United States at his first step, The miner's license results in making a tight monoply of anthracite production, There is no surplus of licensed miners and the consequence is that on any wage dispute the mines must forthwith shut down under the law of the state of Penn sylyania interstate commerce the cases of Airplane Superiority Admiral retired, says the of the battleshipmen have to “Even most hard-boiled knowledge that the precious not escape disablement in the presence of an air » that completely commands the air over them, They may be able to ‘drive pine plugs into the leaks’ and limp into pori, as the but as far as the battle is con s well be sunk. If,Aherefore, the great bat tleships ain in the fighting line if attacked by an offic that is practieally unopposed, it follows that of two otherwise equal fleets the one having enough planes to command the air over its enemy will win just as surely airplane carrier of thirty knot tleship 1 cerned they al board claims might cannot rer ent air fore 8 an meeting a twenty-two-knot bat lone at sea will put the other out of action with ex plosive bombs alone. If two carriers meet two battleships the result will be the same. And the same will hold true of any > . [ ropo ed Cure The Americ Federation of Teachers will seek compul ery education for all children less than eighteen years of © remedy for the alarming Iner e of juvenile delin \n investigating committee will study existing laws conditions and make a report in the form of a model pmpulsory education law. embracing the specified age limit re uinary inquiry has disclosed that { adequately educated young persons grow delinquent morally as nd commercial advance, A in Anguateia) It is only out a complete and at Milis Island that we éan carry | petent com- edical examination of those im s who ‘e coming to our cou for the rest of thefr lives ond t lives of their children." | As indicative of the ineffective | ness of shipboard medical examina- | tlon, Mr. Curran stated that for the | year 1924 nd 246 cases diseases—those soctal- among the 248000 im examined at Ellis Island, while among 90,000 examined on shipboard doctors found only twenty- | eight “This means t at least 150 dis | 1 persons slipped into this coun. It he added. This number will mented ir is opinion more j 1 igrants are passed on | inister phase of this agl- |« the throwing of allens on piers to be fleeced. worse, | 1-ships land, r of the | night ead of coming to | Ellis Island they find kind. | far aw | 1 Ww. superior, to which \¢ n s to station Public } 8 eons at American. con- rope, to inspect eac he receives his He then will be in beard ship in New Yorl hefore | detenti for deportees and in 1 office. c 1a erted at no su t ory equipment © more Interes many Instances Is re Prior to Eng we ma, y sparsely the single Chri: ufficed to distingul not romant st of as surnames n, says an English 1s Ve cong The country w | ul that nan from | When t Normans the; names ere Hen: with them: the ma r John: So It became necessary to haye ulshing betwee ution of the dif. ordaining that dd the name of first. names. hi of Wincheste of Durham, Henry of Peter- boro, and so on. At that time men were also known by their trades or callings, and as a son usually suc- ceded his father in business a great | jclass of what we call trade-names| In Memory of the Restored Unicn | |sprang up, ‘There were. possibly This Tablet Is Dedicated | jseveral Johns in a village, but as| By Veterans or occupation. varied one | was Henry. Clay Post, 201.G, A. nf. | | Jor the Tailor, another John In Honor of | the Fisher and a third John the Tan ‘| Vhen the original Johns 4 ho might be Henry, Robert, took on thelr businesses | 1 eeded the descriptive class of sur- Smith, } her (whi | r er’) Butcher, Wea- | Collie r (which ts Vinter, | r ch, (doctor or | “vet”), Clark Butler and a | host of others, he development of surnames went on also in other directions. 1ree Johns, for example, might be Jistinguished not by the trades, but by the Christian names of their fathers. The first might be John Robin's son, the next John John's son and the third John Herbert's n. In this way the multitude of son” ame into being— Peterson, Jameson and the surnames ckson n, Instead of calling a man Henry Rodg 8 son, he might be known simply as Roger's Henry, or Henry Rogers, Thus » Gilbertson, Gilberts, Gibson and Gibbs are really © name, Gib being the alm- nutivé or affect! te form of GII- bert the sa The next was to distinguish men by means of nicknames referr- ing to their physical powers, or the color of their hair, eyes, complex- or clothing. These nicknames erystalzied into surnames. ; ples are Armstrong (or strong !" th’ arm), Swift, Straight, Crook, Small, Black, White, Green, Brown and Gray The liker aaimals p) inally Lamb, from the ame Exar tess of persons to certain duced such names (orig. nicknames) as Fox, Catt, Bull, Badger and Bird, People other lands recelved and kept names of Scott, Irish, French, Dane, Holland and Spain. To the last class of surnames belong those which denote place of. birth, Orig. nally a man would be Known as, hn 0! London, then. the-“o' ‘opped and he became John London; . Tyldesley, the 1mous Lancashire cricketer, comes hailing from the village y. in the County Palatine. Dr. M,C. Reith moved ¢ building The. theorist says that machines will sooner or later iron the world out into a flat and dull and color- less sameness, that every ‘step we take in the direction of further me- chanization and standardization is a step in the direction of a less varied and less interesting world. Today, says the theorist, thanks to rapid transportation, rapid com- munleation, radio, and standardized goods turned out b the millions like matches or tac hundred million Americans are wearing the same kind of clothes, thinking the same thoughts, whistling the same tunes and, like so many dumb ani- mals, running with the pack, rarely exploring any side trails lest some- body shout traltor or radical, I am not greatly disturbed by this ssertion, Mass production dees not mean shoving down people's throats things they don’t like just because they are cheap. The very first principle of mass production is the selection of an article of production that the largest number of persons need and will like because its design, its quality, and its durability please them and seres their best interests. The desires and tastes of the con- sumers will always exert a referen- dum control over the things mass should be less beautiful in’ Sta basic design than a ‘costly dress designed | in an exclusive shop for the society leader. The manufacturer who pro- duces inexpensive dresses in mass can better afford to hire a high- priced designer than can the head of a small and exclusive shop. He Sweet May Morning. BY WILLIAM WORDSWORTH Ye blessed Creatures, I have the « Ye to ex I séo The hea h you in your ; My he. your festival My’he coronal, Surnames¢ the evolution | Richards. | th ft ycur bliss, I feel were sulle elf is While This th swéet May mo And ‘the Children are cull | On every side In a thousand valleys, far’ an¢ Wresh t un shing with joy TL heart a Tree, of n e looked | pon, Both of them speak of something hat Ia, gone: The Pansy at'my fest Doth the same tale roy Wither is shed the vistonary gleam? Where {5 {t now, ‘the glory. the cream? —_—— | > Chasm Closed sachunetis: beautiful evidence of S reunited spirit 1s offered Massachutetis, including he Republl Women's Relief Corps and the A {ean Legion, are preparing to un A memorial tablet to the soldlera of the Southern Confederacy, On the bronze’ are inscribed words that that should wa y heart with- in the republi “The Chasm Is Closed," The Confederate Soldie “or true chivalry and hig nism nothing is. camp: this, save the act of Congress of the United States {n unanimously au- thort the {ssuance of the Stone| Mount Confedera Memorial coins valor of the soldier of the § " ‘The Massa chusetts tablet » unveiled fn the near future: the foremost guest of the occasion, !f he finds 4t possible to accept’ the Invitation, will he President Coolidge, who signed the Stone Mountain Memorial coin resolution. Georgia and the entire South bow to Massachusetts {tt heart- deep gratitude for her generous sen- Ument 6o nobly expressed.” ——_— KING BORIS VERY SICK Amer-| ble to ROME, Sept. 4.—(By The Asso- elated Press)—The Giornale D ‘Ttalin today published a report that King Boris of Bulgaria ts gravely {il from the effects of poison and that ape. clalists-have been rushed to Varna. to attend him. The source of the re- port fs not stated. eneger San Francisco 124 Ellis St. newr Powell raace Tessonaltc F fd ta Then, too, can spread the salary of the highly- pald designer dreeses, where the head of the «mall shop must spreat it over sco dresses, It 1s shortsighted business to be satiafied with the best available designing genius, {f you are making clothes in mass. We can rest assured that healthy human desire for variety * % Bs will prevent m too great standard. jaation of style. ducer who goes too far in trying to cheapen the cost of an article by taking away the things that make It attractive: as well as serviceable will be checked by falling sales: And as the bulk/of Industry goes te mass production of standardized the small factory will for special beauty and thus’ find {ts place outside a competition that {t can not meet. as men become freed from the struggle for economic ne- eessitles, as they have a wider mar- gin of money and leisure, and as thelr taste and grow In that freedom, we shall see a new competition for beauty refinement. This more beauty and refinement, come only under economic freedom, | a over anything and] In addition to performing his du ties as'a churchman Bishop Brent general, interest in| has also served the government in seventy-elght denominations in forty nations {s the task of Bishop Charle H. Brent of the Protertant Episcope diocess of Western New York. nas recently been nade chairman of he continuation committee by the Universal Chris “an Conference ‘or Fatth and Or- jler, at Stockholm, 4Sweden. His work *)'s to Bring about | he consideration | vf doctrinal ques- | fons which divide |/ | | thousands of 3 of Jess than the The mass pro- hem. The emmit- | The On at Bishop ¥ April 9, 18 Trinity colleg also recelyed di college, Harvard, play | its products He was educated ‘Toronto, es from King’s ‘columbia, Yale and in but has | » ment been birhop of Washington and New Jersey. He declined to ac- cept the latter bishopric after ing elected Sense of values be that can | various capacities. In 1903 he acted a member of the Philippine Opium That tonic touch | Associ Che Casper Daily Eribune —— GET © Ey Must the World Grow Uglier? Who’s Who ae 9 By Edward A. Filene To bring about doctrinal unity In dei REPEAL OFDRY <3. AMENDMENT Io URGED AY VETS Raid on ~ Headquarters| of Tulsa Also Asked. LSA, dt je, | ing for the repeal of the elghte jamendment to the constitution w sed by to the twenty-sixth annual ene: a large of the Wars here. A second resolution urging Prest- dent Coolidge to investigate n the headquart . by prohibition office also. was dissenting votes U.S. Air Force of mountain air in every steaming cup THE zest of the West rises in every fragrant wisp of Hills Bros. Coffee .. . the exhilara- tion of mountain air ... the dash and spirit of the wind- whipped plains. Just break the vacuum seal of a tin of Hills Bros. Coffee. Thrill your very being with .an aroma that stands alone in ‘the world of fine coffees. Brew a cup and /ift it to your lips! Taste that wonderful Hills Bros. flavor, The Recog- nized Standard! Ask for Hills Bros. by ‘Bes. U. 8. Bat. Of. Veterans passed FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1925 for our will mel of the | Shenandoah a m uir forces,” declared Mitchell, commun. hth fr units announcement of the orps <r Meeting vote of del of Wore The ORIGINAL iMalted Milk | | | “ask tor Horlick | | | | y Safe Mill. and Diet ForInfants, Invalids, b The Aged nth | A well-balanced, palatable, eas- ily assimilated food that nour- ishes and up-builds. Use at meals, between meals, or upon retiring, * | and when faint or hungry. the raid ers of the V. If Prepared et home by stirring the pow- doer in hot er cold water. No cooking. Mon with but fe’ of will be another check to a stand-| commission and four years later More and Better Bread per sack Pau neki rere tnlay we use to-| ardization that unwisely tends to! served as the chairman of the U. 8. N d E “f Rye. SubEe Mien Graham. day we are paying a high price for | usliness. commission and president of the In eeads xper S, | oro) Kenle complexity of design and manufac- eet ternational opium commirsion. Again |} Ask your grocer tor this flout ture, a complexity that seldom NOTE—These articles cover the} in 1911 he was chairman of the lL S Mit I ll and have hetter bread adds one whit to the beauty of the| most important portions of Mr.|S. de'egation to the International] . ays ttcne Casper Warehous product Filene’s book, “The Way | Out.” | opium conference at the Hague. asper arehouse We can the beauty of] which is beng widely discussed in| During the world war he served as | ares k Company the world by simplifying the things | this country and in Europe. ‘The | chief of the chaplain service at Gen-| Texas, Sept. 4. 2 Ltd we wear and use. next in the series, “New Freedom | eral Headquarters, in Fran edies have dem DISTRIBUTORS These !s no reason why a ma-| for the Masses.” will appear in this ritten exten’ on re-! onstrated, as never before that we! | lel. 27 268 Industrial Ave. ching-made dr for instance, | newspaper shortly ne Lexington Cream XXXXX Flour name and look for the Arab onthe can. Hills Bros. Coffee 1S economical to use. Tn the original Vacuin Pach wh ich keeps the coffee fresh