Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 11, 1925, Page 6

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1 1 RC he ° a Business Telephones ... The Casper Dally Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming. Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720- Ave. New York City 35 New Montgomery St. San Fra are on file in the New York, C One Year, Daily and Sunday_. Six months, Three Months, Daily and Sunday Dne Month, Daily and Dne Year, 1, Dne Year, Dal Six Months, Dal Three Months, Daily and Sunday One Month, Dally and Sunday.......... Dne Year, Sunday only AU subbscriptions must {€ you don’t find your Tribune after looking carefully for it call 15 or 16 ind {t will be delivered to you by special messenger. By J HANWAY AND ©. B. HAN WAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class matter November zz, 1916. MEMBER THUY ASSOCIATED PRESS the Associated Prefs ts exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited in this paper and also the loca! news published herein. Branch Telephone Exchange Connec' ng Al) Departments, Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) Bullding, opposite postoftice Advertising Kepresentatives co, C cago, Bos ors are welcome, SUBSCRIPTIO™ RATES By Carrier and Outside State end vis Dally aud Sunday. s Sunday... DB insure delivery after subscription becomes one montb tp arrears. KICK, IF YOU DON’T GET YOUR TRIBUNE Lefore 8 + ‘clock. Br? i 1 Prejudiced Testimony When asked for an opinion of modern youth, be it from man or woman you will be met with strongly expressed dis- approval, and a bewailing of the passing of the songs and dances of the olden time. Modern youth evceeded anything modern youth of other periods haye ever attempted. And this is the essence and has been the essence, of thous ands of interviews with “oldest inhabitants” of all time. Age's opinion of youth has been pretty much all the same. It is about as natural for age to be intolerant of youth, as for youth to disrespect the wisdom of ¢ In the very oldest books we find youth being censured for its bad conduct and wilful we and predictions being made that the world will suffer for the wildness of its young. When a preacher stands up and shouts, “The young people of today are sending the world ‘straight to hell,” as many of them, as well as others haye done, he is simply echoing what has been said in all languages, in all ages. It simply may mean that we are seeing and hearing more in this age than any previous age has seen and heard. It is very true, that in changing conditions of life and the elimination of things that heretofore made for better things, seem to be plunging us straight into perdition. It may not be true, however. Time alone is to prove. Just as has been done in the past we are to hope and pray. The present generation will in all likelihood he hoping and praying ever the conduet of its young, with the changes in customs and habits, sure to come. Ifas there ever been any progress in the world? Here is a question we must pause long enough to answer before we are entitled to utterly condemn the rising generation. The eyi- dence is in the affirmative. Then the young of each genera: tion must have been a little better than those before them. The old should remember that youth believes that happi- ness is its due and its right. It is natural that the er period of youth is troubled and made miserable by the pursnit of happiness, as though there was no doubt that it would be met with somewhere. So it is that the young man generally dis- satisfied with the position, in which he finds himself, whateyer be, he ascribes his disappointments solely to the state ngs that meets him on his first introduction to life, when hi pected something very different. It has been said many times that it would be a great ad- vantage to a young man if his early training could eradicate the idea that the world has a great deal to offer him. The youth expects his career,to be like an interesting romance; and there, older persons know, lies the germ of disappointment. Just as the chief features of the earlier half of life is a never isfied longing after happiness, the latter half is characterized by the dread of misfortune. Thus up: youth is never properly balanced. Balance comes with ax | resigna- tior Telling Each Other It is refreshing to hear the bad boys of New Yu all each other by their proper names, such as liar, thief und scoundrel. They are at it strong, bésmirching one another with the filth they haye all had a id in concocting. Governor Al Smith has paid his sincerest compliment to William Randolph Hearst couched in the choicest nmany vernacular, and Mayor Hylan has replied in defense of Hearst in Billingsgate no whit less expressive and picturesque. The papers are devoting more space to the controversy that is justified. It all goes to show that the people of New York had better take their city goyern ment out-of the hands such men and for once eleet a com petent and respectable Republican regime, and give the peopl a chance to learn by comparison, what honest administvatic really is Attribute Defeat to Us It is learned that a committee apponted by the Ger Reichstag after five years of study, h lost the late war because of the entrance of the United States into the struggle. The reason the entrance of the Unit States into that war was the decisive factor in Germany's de feat was because of a practically unlimited supply of highly intelligent young men and an equally unlimited supply of all kinds of munitions of war. The production of war supplies was carried on in this country upon a colossal seale and, of itself, was a potential factor in the winning of that war. The long operation in this country of our protective tariff policy was the mainspring of our ability to help win that war, due to the tremendous growth of our population, the high skill and intelligence of our workers, the utilization of our enormous and varied urces and the diversification of pro duction. With good wages during a protracted period of un rivalled production the basis of which was adequate tariff protection. Our well-nourished and skilled men made ideal sol diers. We are apt to lose sight of this:great basic ise of our national greatnes id so it is well, from time to time, prop erly to emphasize it 8 decided that Germany What the country neec method of berth control that would induce the Pulln yeople to restore the ancient rate of 2 for a lower. Amon? characte t bits of American architecture are the colonial bouse, the movie theater and the hot-dog stand. Henry Ford is sixty-t for the future A half-for rs old and has extensive plans of Ohio, Governor “Bill” Allen, when questioned as to bis age, declared: “It does not matter how long a man has live The important considera: lion is what js left of hha Phere surely will be something of a traffic problem when THB axing iart coming back from Florida, of the old-fashioned economist who pre iv supply of oil would be exhausted Shi \ home enter than she that inuuneth 1 | inpeth a bathing beauty contest. pre ‘ t rhea or jazzet! sper Daily Cribune, a awern-eecenee—nee-l and 16 Publication offices, Tribune Steger Bidg., Chicago, UL; 286 Pifth Jlobe Bidg., Boston, Mass; Suite 404 Sharon Bide.. Copies of the Dally Tribune ton and San Francisco offices wee enen enn nnn ane $9.00 {p advance and the Datly Tribune wil) not Register complaints World Topics Tn this country after seven years at the eastern end of the Mediter- ranean, Admiral Mark L. Bristol, United States high commissioner’ at Constantinople, says that Americans in Turkey are most anxious to have the senate ratify the treat between Turkey and America. “Every country Europe and a has made treaties with Tur- key except China, Siam, Serbia, and Bulgaria,” he points out. “Bul. garia Is now ne- sotiating « treaty. "Nearly all these ADMIRAL ME BaISTO Countries have re. sumed regular diplomatic relations and the remainder are doing so as rapidly/ ag it is practicable for the respective diplomatic represent tives to present thelr credential: The United States signed a treaty with Turkey August 6, 1923, but it has not been ratified by the United States senate or by the grand na- tional assembly of Turkey. “The Americans in Turkey who in business, in oper- ating schools, in rendering relief to suffering humanity, and in phiJan- thropic and missior work, are desirous of having the treaty be- tween America and Turkey ratified, and regular diplomatic relations re- established. Our Americans, as well as other nationals are ving some difficulties in adjusting affairs to the new regime In Turkey. Howevy- er, they believe regular relations will in render all adjustments easier. “The new regime in ‘Turkey is a most remarkable evidence of a reyo- lution {n form and administration of a government. Brief an abso- lute monarchy has been replaced by a republic. Church has been sepa- rated from state and religions elimi. nated from all law codes, Religion of any kind may be taught in the churches and the mosques, but not in the schools. All persons born in Turkey without rega to race, re- ligion or nationality have all rights urkish citizenship. The Turk- ish leaders without previous exper e must evolve the new adminis- ration. ‘There are bound to be mis- takes and the evolution will be slow, but there are many evidences of progress.” Traffic Problems Pedestrians, motorists, street car patrons, and bus riders in the nat- ional capital are awaiting with more than ordi eagerness the comple- tion of a traffic and transportation y which has been in progress April. hope the surve will help to ungnarl Washington's traffic tangles, cut down the rising rate of street accidents, and bring about a general overhauling of the city’s transportation problems. When Major Peter Charles L’En- fant w assigned in 1791 by Presi- dent ¢ Washington to evolve a city plan for the capital, he 1 no idea of the extent to which the wheels of transportation would be turning, in less than seven-score years, on his checkerboard streets, his diggonal avenues, around his triangles. This problem of traffic has swiftly that it has over r helm Washington, just as it has over whelmed other cities, The original L’Enfant city plan was followed with ‘practially no: alternations to the latter part of the last c tury. As late as 1902, when the Mc Millan report presented the conelu sion that the iriginal L'nfant plan should ‘be ppHed to the devolop ment of the outlying sections, not a word was mentioned about trans portation, nor were any plans sug gested for traffic. It Is plain that | the complicated traffic problems of today a most entirely by the inc i i f motor driven vehicles and electric cars. Some concepiton of how traffic move & modern American cits with If million population me | be gained from traffic count made sa part of the survey. ‘This count showed that 287,985 y other than street ca busses red and le ed sac on of Washington in ¢ day un average of 1.8 A total of 17,280 r busses entered and left the congested district during the ng 3 passer sengers | convey Thus a grand total of hicles of all kinds, « nd total of $61,959 passengers, entered and left the congested district Washington in one das How all this traffic flows in and about the city, what the transpor- tation facilities are, costs of differ ent types of service, causes of acct dents, population trends, speeds of travel, and all the other elements in the complex question of transit will be d d in the final report on the | surv t will be made to the commt jn the latter part of Sept 7 m of this survey will} ‘ expot trattle facts ur figures, to ed us a bash mene of various t . 1 rinunent remedies, It it mprehensive stu: of maneger - San Francisco 174% Ellie St. near Powell of the pao Fel amusement Uperior manner te \ eee poles circles, and through his picturesque | of | Che Casper Daily Cribune ' Can a Business Man Be “Liberal?” | i} BY EDWARD A. FILENE Some psychologist ought to giveright can not depend simply ‘upon us a realistic study of how success- ful business men think and act. We should exp that the man who has been successful in business. would bring the spirit of the Impar- tial investigator, the inventor, the innovator, the pioneer to afy issue in any field. Yet many consple- uously successful business men dis- play an astounding lack of vision in the larger matters of social and industrial policy that lie outside their immediate businesses, I have seen them display an utter inability to distinguish between sane social advance and revolutionary so- clalism, One of the books we business men should keep always on our desks {s a book of synonyms, It might help us to avoid branding stralght think- ing as radicalism. The conservative bus:ness man ap- parentiy does not realize that if he were wholly successful in his oppo- sition to his more liberal associates there would be left no method of progress except revolution. The social progress of the future will be achieved through the develop- ment rather than the destruction of the business system, We must somehow succeed in reducing {f not removing the opposition to the lib- eral business man. Many successful business men do not, as a rule, have enough social and recreational contacts with men qf other classes, other interests, and other points of view, The average business man trains pretty’ consistently with his own crowd. Even inside his own business he remains the “boss.” And. outside he spends his time in the hunting lodge, on the golf links, or in the Metropolitan club, where, by and large, he meets only the man who share his point of view. He is care- fully insulated from’ that social con- tact, that glve-and-take of discussion with ‘men of different social rank, different race, and different points of view, which {s so necessary in checking up, correcting, and human- izing one’s outlook upon life and its issues. Furthermore, the cause of conser- vatism ts invarlably better organized than the cause of liberalism. Men who approach the,problems of busi- ness and labor from the stock-mar- ket point of view excel their more liberal associates in the organization of a staff of secretaries, experts and publicity men. We should provide machinery for the sort of social mixing that will reduce the extreme cocksureness of conservatives as well as the intoler- ance of the radical, And if the Mberal minority among business men are to counter the activity of thelr more numerous conservative associates, they must duplicate the machinery ‘used by the conservative majority. To do this Hberal business men must have equally effective staffs of secretaries, experts, and publicity men, and mu: have a equally adequate funds. The liberal business man has learned from experience that the transportation ever made in American city, and the fac out in the survey may serve in t nature of a guide for the nation « whole. | 3 pound Can i pond Gan pj is in its righteousness for {ts success. He knows that sound business and soclal progress can be achieved only. by virtue of organized effort care- fully planned and adequately finan- ced. Business liberalism must fight bus- iness conservatism upon its own ground and with its own methods. NOTE: These articles cover the most important portions of Mr, Filene’s book, *‘The Way Out,” which is being widely discussed in this country and in Europe, “The. next in the series, “Doing Is More Vital Than Owning,” will appear in this newspaper shortly, \ Night Piece to Julia HERRICK Her eyes the glow-worm lend thee, The shooting stars attend. thve; And the elves also, Whose little eyes glow, Like the spark of fire, befriind thee. No -Will-o’th'-Wisp mislight thee, Nor snake or slow-worm bite thee; But on, on thy way Not making a stg Since ghost there's none to affricht thee. Let not the dark thee cumber; What tho the moon does slumber? The stars of the night Will lend thee their light, Like tapers clear, without number. Then, Julla, let me woo.thee, Thus, thus to come unto me; And when I shall meet Thy silv'ry feet, My soul I'll pour into thee. ‘Approval Editor Tribune: As firm believers in a man's personal liberty, espect- ally his right for absolute custody and control over the records of his private and business affairs, we take this method of voicing our approval of your stand in not publishing the names and amounts of the iacome taxpayers of thie district. MR. AND MRS. W. B, M'ADAMS. wit Investigation In Death Of Judge Sought D 11. —(By The Associated Press)—Hlizath Gra- ham, 19-year-old daughter-of Judge xyal R. Graham, who was found dead in a gas filled room at his hom yesterday today qsked the city at |torney that an autopsy be per | torme She gave as her reason ! lief at her father had not committed | suicide, ; A letter was found today which Judge ¢ am wrote to his wife who Chicago the night before. his Delicious” death he btu ‘gave 10 Indication that comtemplated suicide Theres none to Compare with Who’s Who At eighty-five Leopold Schepp, New York millionaire, is endeavoring to help those who have been lees successful in life than hv. He has al- ready given $2,500,000 to the Foun- dation for Boys to be used for edu- ri cation of youths who would lead clean lives and wish to better jtheir status. A short time ago he idistributed checks to all his employes ranging upwards from $1,000. } -Schepp started life as a poor boy. His father died when the lad was 10 and his mother had a@ hard strug: gle. At ten young LEOPOLD SCHEPP Leopold invested his money in palm leaf fans and sold them on horse cars. His trade boom- ed so that he hired two boys and added matches to his wares. Soon he peddled wares from a horse and wagon. At 20 he opened a shop and hired a clerk, When 27 he had made $3,000 importing and selling tea, spices and cocoanut. Starting with a working capital of 18 cents and acquiring millions Leopold Schepp is now known as the “cocoanut king.f ‘When he recently sent forth an ap- peal for aid in giving his fortune to better the world, thousands an- swered. But it was only the rare re- ply which outlined a philanthropic plain, almost all were personal re- quests ranging from $10 to $5,000. —_s—_—__ More Approval | Baltor Tribune: | lo congratulate you for standing by the courage of your convictions re- garding the matter of publications Please allow me of income tax returns, I had often expressed my views in almost the identical language used fn the Trib: une, ERNEST C. BOND. Milwaukee, Wis. Landing Field On Post Office Will Be Asked CHICAGO, Sept: 11. — A landing platform for mail planes on the root is included in plans for a new $15,- 00,000 Chicago postoffice which con- gress will be asked to approve at its awe the wholesome spread for-bread NUCOA fine .as shortening in high grade pastry the original - always sweet Be Oe: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER. it, 1928 etween Chicago and | session, Postmaster fortheoming He ts by nearly an hour, Arthur C. Lueder has disclosed. SE Eee cate sto eatntie The platform would be two city| which ts required n od, IN, mail from the field_at Maywo blocks long. Its use would trim the Look out! Two winners are coming! The flavor makes boys and girls pals with Kellogg’s Corn Flakes. Put sweet, crisp, golden- toasted Kellogg’s Corn Flakes in a bowl with rich B5 milk or cream. with fresh or preserved fruit. Easy for mother too. No sticky dishes to wash. You'll like it. Get Kellogg’s Corn Flakes from your grocer. ‘Ask for Kellogg’s at restau- rant’or hotel. 9 Delicious CORN FLAKES Oven-tresh ALWAYS Kelloga’s patented inner-seeled wartite wrapper preserves the Maver and keeps the Aoher teasty-cri: 7 an excl size Kellogg feetare! Why Kellogg’s is always on top! It’s the flavor—marvelou: AS ALWAYS You Can Save on Quality Meats By Taking Advantage of OUR SPECIAL PRICES Prices Good at Both Stores for Saturday Coming Week. Veal’ Roast, Ib. _- Veal Steak, lb.___ Veal Stew, Ib. _____ Boiling Beef________ Roast Beef, lb. Shoulder Steak, Ib, --______ Milk-Fed Spring Chickens, |b, Milk-Fed Hens, Ib. - Sas Pecwsnee eI ain ee ~-~-.16c SMOKED MEATS Picnic Hams, lb, - Sugar-Cured Hams, |b.__ Sugar-Cured Bacon, |b. Lard, Ib. -30¢ 35c-40c 22ac MEYER BROS. MARKET FIFTH AND WOLCOTT PHONE 303 CENTRAL MARKET 129 WEST SECOND ST. PHONE 10 Casper-Buffalo-Sheridan Stage LEAVES CASPER AND SHERIDAN DAILY 8:00 A. M. (No Transfer or Layovers) ‘asper-Sheridan Daily Auto Service Saves 18 Hours—Good Equipment—Careful Drivers’ 1EADQUARTERS HENNING HOTEL, CASPER, PHONE 616 CRESCENT HOTEL, SHERIDAN

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