Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 24, 1925, Page 4

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and It will be delive PAGE FOUR Che Casper Daily Trinme By J. &. HANWAY AND 5. B. BANWAY ered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as eecond class matter November 22, 1916, ie Ca sper Dally Tribune {issued every evening and The Sunday Mornin: ‘bune every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices, Tribune Building, opposite postoftice siness Telephones .. aan nnnnnennennenneresenonelh and 16 Branch Telephone xchange Connecting All Departments, Member of Audit Bureau of Ciremlation (A. B, 0.) ASSOCIATED PRESS MEMB. ated credited tn paper and also the local news published herein. Advertisi Prudden, 1 zy Representatives udden, King & Boston, Mass; Suite 404 Sharon Bidg., y n Francisco, Cal. Copies of the Dally Tribu: New York, Chicago, Boston and San B'rancisco offic and visitors are welcome. By Mail Inside State y and Sunday y and Sunda y and and Sunday... r, Sunday only. ee acewweeewecene necce= 3.60 All subbseriptions must be pald !n advance and the Dally Tribune will not insure de! very after subscription becomes one month in arrears. ¥ YOU DON'T YOUK TRIBUNE Tribune after look to you by special messenger. Register complaints vefore 8 + ‘clock. > Se KICK, Jon't {ind you Why You Believe We hear teachers of all creeds lamenting the dif- ficulty of keeping up in the minds of believers a lively appre- 1 of the truth which they nominally recognize, so that penetrate the feelings, and acquire a real mastery over the conduct. No such difficulty is complained of while the creed is stilt young and fighting for its existence. often Then even weaker adyocates of the faith *know and feel what the fighting fo id the difference between it and other doetrines. And in th period of every creed’s exist= ence, not a few persons may be found who have realized its fundamental principles in all the forms of thought, haye weighed and considered them in all their important bearings, and haye experienced the full effect on the character which belief in that creed ought to produce in a mind thoroughly imbued in it. Chere is a yast difference when it has come to be an hereditary creed, and to be received passively and not actively when the mind is no longer compelled, in the same degree as at first, to exercise its vital powers on the question which its belief presents to it. Then there is a tendency to forget all of the belief except the formalities, or to give it a dull assent, as if accepting it on blind trust. Then naturally, it almost ceases to connect itself at all with the inner life of the human. Then are seen the cases so frequent in this rushing, pushing age, in which ihe creed remains as it Were outside the mind, encrusting and petrifying it against all other influences addressed to the her parts of our nature, doing nothing for the mind or rt except standing sentinel oyer them to keep any other creed from entering, This is rt of the experience of almost all ethical doc trines and ious creeds. They are full. of meaning and vitality to those who originate them, and to direct diseiples of the originators, Their meaning continues to be felt in undiminished strength, and is perhaps brought out into even fuller consciousness, so long as the struggle lasts to give the doctrine or creed an ascendency over other creeds, At last it either prevails, and becomes the general opin- ion, or its progress stops, it keeps poMeaeicn of the ground it lims gained, but ceases to spread further, The doctrine has taken its pl not as a received opinion, as one of. the admitted divisions of ally inherited, not adopt be opinion; those who hold it have gener- it. From this time may usually power of a doctrine. dated the decline in livin World Coutt Proposal Shortly before the adjournment last Mayeb by a vote of 77 the senate appointed December 17, 1925, as the day for beginning what in all likelihood will be the final consideration of the so-called Harding-Hughes Coolidge world gourt proposal. On the senate calendar the measure is designated as senate resolution 5, Oddly enough, it is also called the Swanson res: olution, inasmuch as the Virginia senator, the ranking Demo- cratic member on the for ions committee, introduced. This resolution embodies the Harding plan of adherence to court, with five reservations, The first four of these were drawn up by Secretary Hughes and their object is to prevent United States from into the league inadyertently, d give us full rights with other nations in the election and he he Me going ment of judg The fourth reseryation is designed to pre- the court from being altered without our consent. The fth reseryation carries with it.a further reservation recom- by Pre nt Coolidge in his message to congress, un- the l | States would not be bound by an advisory 1 e cour nie the United States had joined in Unless all si fail, the administration proposal for the 1 nee of the United States to the world court will be ac epted by the senate without anaterial changes. That there ill be a real fight on the measure, however, seems to be agreed those who have made a study of the temper of individual Here, of course, lies the danger to the administra- proposal, Ouce the floods of senatorial oratory are un- d there is iio assurance that the lines will not be drawn were in the historic fight over the league of nations isolationists” and the “internationalists. ilors, ix, between the ‘ Bitter and acrimonious debate may conceivably follow an open- discussion whieh is Calm and camparatively peaceful. his, of course, is the peril that lurks behind any congressional controversy. You never can tell in advance just how much ilterness and animosity any particular debate will ultimately cause. -Nor are the “Isolat ists” yet an extinct species. Sen- ators F ndegee, Lodge, McCormick, Knox and others are gone, it there are still left Senators Dt and hnson on the Republican side, and Senator Jim Reed on the Democratic, to act as the standard bearers of the opposition to American Uhesion to what its ponents designate the “League Court.” Por the ] galleries, at any rate, there is the pros- pect of ules in store, to balance the dulness of of appropriation bills ‘The Output August production of motor yehicles in the United States and Ci passenger cars and 3 3 trucks, 214 207 of the latter being made in the ght months’ total for both countries was r cars and 816,218 trucks, against 2,351,913 respectively for the same period in 1924, The Crusader all His 5,800 mile western jaunt in the interest of reform of senate rules at an end, Vice President Charles G. Dawes said the controversy was now up to the people and that they would force issue, He made fifteen speeches instead of the three which were on his schedule. The trip brought the vice president in contact with an average of 7,000 people each time he spoke and everywhere, he declared, he found solid backing for his proposed senate rule reform. If there are 18,000 homicides a year in the United States, we feel sure that 15,000 executions in the same year would reduce the killin the following year, ye g xe A Alten le exclusively entitled to the use for publication of Steger Bldg., Chicago, ill.; u86 Witth SUBSCRIPTIO™ KATES y Carrier and Outside State Daily and d wenn ne $9.00 I y and ne F ') ths, Dally and weeeccencnnne 2.25 Dally and Sunda 16) nly. 2.50 ng carefully for {t call 15 or 16) WARSH , DENS. > QUITE A SHARP | CONTRASS BETWEEM |! MY HAWSE AK | X ' | | “.” he Casper Daily | | THE SPLIT UP. the construc- tion of a E pean union to be both possiblp,and fm perative and the United States of Europe as de sirable, Whether its realization in the immediate future is pos sible probably depends upon what form Europea par DMUND STINNES ticularly a Franco-German customs union, can take. : “In the United States of America the American individual citizen can consume far more commodities than the European. Why? Because in relation to the individual unit far more can be produced. The means to this end are m manufacture, modernization and standardization of industrial processes, intensifica tion of agriculture and reduction of unproductive cos “A country’s preductivity is bur- dened by everything pertaining to the country's administration, be it security t or customs or ns. The number of these admin tive organs 1s terrifying the sm over-organized economic units of Europe. In Austria the worst ex- ample of this the is that there is one official for every five citizens. Austria exists, indeed, only through the fear and jealousy of other coun tries.”’ Further, “dominating Anglo-Saxon nations certainly have no conflict of economic interests.” “Credit: Stinnes says, “would be more in; they will not need to be burdened with 2 per cent pri mium on the European disorder. Europe will pay her debts to Amer England actually will get her would State of ack which otherwise ns those at least concerned lost, debts are France. * “Present-day straight into a ne no use trying to dodg Who the victor will be vanquished cannot be foreseen since it is still unknown what de elsive weapons will be. Judging by the textbooks of history should win, but the land between the Rhine and Elbe would be turned into a desert like the once blooming meadows of the Marne and the Somme. Air bombs won't leave be as far Uke und who the Germany } | ; | much of the cities_of Paris, Vienna, World Topics Berlin and Warsaw. ‘The World = war of 1914-1918 knows no real In a recent interview as to] victor, ‘he next war will produce whether or not a unifica ion of] only ruins, in which the Jater gen- European customs relations regu-} erations \ will carry out archae- lations were neceesary and, possible | ological and historieal research as Dr. Edmund Stinnes, eldest son of | we da in the Roman Forum. The Herr Hugo Stinnes sic, “I hold | greatest conceivable success ie not worth the frightful loss entailed by the so-called victory. “Politically, what grounds could there be for a war between a unified Europe and -Anglo-Saxondom upon which we are financially dependent? In the naval question, Europe sure- ly could make every concession Eng- land wants. I see no motive for war on either side.’ * The Mathers John Cotton Mather, a direct de- scendant of the grim New England parson, died the other day jn Strat- ford, Conn,, at the age of 84 years. He never had been inside a place of entertainment and the only ‘club’? to which he belonged was the ortho- dox church. Nevertheless (is the nevertheless necessary’) he was a fine, genlal-souled old gentleman and a sturdily fine citizen. There are a good many Mathers of the old stock living, working and playing in the United States today. From what we know of some of them they are solidly good, lew- biding American citizens, They are direct or collateral descendants .of the man who, as someone has dared to say, oné ecuted the saints. The New England blood was good blood whether it coursed in the veins of the persecutor or the per- secuted. Blood tells. There are some thousands of Americans living today who are the descendants of Rebecca Nourse, who was hanged for witchcraft on Gal- lows Hill, Salem, in the days of Mather. ~Rebecea was of such a fine type of womanhood that her narrow and spiritually undeveloped neigh- bors were certain she was a witch, She was the mother of children. She went to her death with a calm hero- ism. .Her descendants in conven- tion assembled honor her memory every few years. Later than Cotton Mather and later than Rebecca Nourse came Jonathan Edwards, son of Timothy, He was what they called orthodox in those days, and they spelled or- thodox with a capital “0.” He shook the teeth out of his congre- sation and “quilled” the hairs of thelr heads with his sermon, “‘Sin- ners in the Hands of an Angr. a.” The Edwards family today the United States {s large, and sald that it has contributed more than any other family to the ranks of the men and women who have made marks in American pro- fessional and business life. in t is me of those old New Pl VAIS, AN EF YO DOAN ‘QuiT RIDIN DAT SHARP CONTRAST, Yo'S GON TER BE WALKIN ROUND. IN “WO SECTIONS FO Cribune ¢ ---By Williams | ers had a habit of relegating to the infernal regions everyone whose ism wasn't their ism, but somehow or other the stock was there. It was strong and fine-fibred in. persecutor and persecuted, Who’s Who President Coolidge ts counting on | the board whieh he appointed re-| cently “to sift the aircraft situation | to-the bottom, One of the members is Howard Earle Coffin, a cosnulting engineer of De troit. After study + ing engineering at the Universi- ty of Michigan Coffin was con- nected with the S. civil ser- v from 1896- 1900. From that time on he has engaged in engineering He has an engi- HOWARD.E: motor car com: panies, namely, Olds, Chalmers, and Hudson. / | Since 1916, when he was a mem- ber of the naval consulting board of the U, S., Coffin has been active in government engineering circles. From 1916-1918 he was a member of the advisory committee of the council of national defense and chairman of the aircraft board of the U. 8. during 1917-1918. Hoe is a member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and sey- eral engineering organizations. Coffin was born at West Milton, | Ohio, September 6, 1873. | Riches By Thomas Hood. . Gold! Gold! Gold! Gold! Bright and yellow, hard and cold, Molten, graven, hammered and rolled; Heavy to get, and light to hold; Hoarded, bartered, bought and sold, Stolen, borrowed,-equandered, doled; Spurned by the young, but hugged by the old To the very edge of the churchyard moul Price of many a crime untold; Gold! gold! gold! gold! Good or bad a thousand-fold! How widely agencies yary,— | To save; to ruin, to curse, to bless, | As even its minted coins express Now stamped with the image of 00d Queen Bess, And now for a Bloody Mary. —-——__— its y tional, neer for several > Megas Serene ES ore ar resra THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1925 His Morning Tub The other day the honest inhabi. tants of Voss, on, the Oslo-Bergen | railway, were greatly shocked. The night train from Oslo, which passes that point at about 8 A. M., does pot usually present anything sensa- but serves as an alarm for most of the blameless people living in this tiny town,’ But this time it was different, The rain was pouring In torrents. The tradesmen had just opened their shops and were walting for their first customers, Then came the train, and, as quite natural, all eyes turned toward the railway line, only to be greeted by a truly astonish- ing sight. From one of the com- partment windows a man was lean ing out—quite naked. He had stepped right out of the window and was holding onto the roof of the carriage. There he remained, sway- ing on the edge, taking a bath in the fresh morning rain while the train was rushing along at more tian forty-five miles an hour. The nearest station master was immedli- ately advised by wire than the man must be mad. When the train’ stopped at the next station an official entered the confpartment, only to4find the man, still naked, sitting in his seat and humming a cheerful ditty while he shaved himself. He was quite nor- mal, It was merely “an English- man who wanted his morning tub! The Giddy Globe By Oliver Herford. If this little world to-night Suddenly should fall through space In a hissing, headlong filght, Shriveling from off its face, —_ As it falls into the sun, Tn an instant every trace Of the little crawling things— Ants, philosophers and lice, Cattle, cockroaches and kings, Beggars, millionsires and mice, Men and maggots all as one As it falls into the sun— Who can say but at the same Instant from some planet far 4 A child may watch us and exclaim: “See the pretty shooting star! FAI MENU HINT. Bregkfast. * Oatmeal with Top Milk Milk Toast Fresh Apple Butter Melops Coffee Luncheon. Clam Chowder Cookies Milk Tea Dinner. Baked Potatoes Scones Sliced Cucumbers and Ontons Peach Hot Tea or Coffee Pork Chops Boston Clam Chowder—Two thin ly sliced onions browned in butter, two » potatoes, thinly sliced, a quart of clams, + Cover with water and boil until tender, Add a quart of milk thickened with a tablespoon of flour, a generous shaking of pep- per, and serve with Boston water crackers, Ds —Four cups flour, spoons baking powder, one spoon salt, four tablespoo three quarters cup niilk. Mix flour: baking powder and salt. Cut in the fat and add enough milk to form a soft dough, Roll out thin and cut into cireles. Fold each circle over, place on greased tin and bake in a moderate oven. Serye hot. Scone Peach Tarts—Two cups flour, three ounces butter, one quarter teaspoon salt, one half teaspoon baking powder, Sift flour, salt and baking powder ‘together and cut in the butter, Add enough water to make a stiff dough. Roll out and line small sized muffin tins with the dough, pricking with a fork. Bake in a quick oven. When cool take from tins, fill with peach jam or fresh sliced peaches and add a little whipped cream on the top of each. SUGGESTIONS. When « stair carpet is sin use, it may frequently be renewed and AMUSING THE BABY. Remember that the tiny baby of less than a year does not need much amusement. The quieter he is kept the better, for he has much to learn in this first year of his life. He should not be handled more than is necessary, should have as regular times for feeding, bathing and sleeping as is humanly possible, plenty of sleep, and should be allowed to develop as simply as a flower. taking a third of a pail of hot ter to which two teaspoons each turpentine and ammonia have added. Wring a clean cloth out of this and wash the carpet, rubbing well. Do not neglect the portion which covers the “rise” of the steps, as well as the “tread.” The wooden step at either side may be wiped off with the same solution with good results. This is a less dusty process than sweeping the stairs with a broom or-brush, and may be alternated with yacuum cleaning with benefit ve glass jars preserves or mustard. be painted in various colors, 60 that the glass is completely hidden un der the paint. i . Paint the neck one color, possibly black, and the body a harmonizing of been from olives or color, for instance gray. These serve as very pretty flower (jars) vases. They are useful in the sum miér when flowers are so numerous > Plays By Walter Savage Landor. Alas, how soon the hours are over Counted us out to play tho lover! And how much narrower is the stage Allotted us to play the sage! But when we play the fool, how wide The theater expands! beside, How long the audience sits before us many How Whht a prompte: brightened in a very easy mann A prize of six hundred dollars has been offered by the French Acad- emy of Colonial Science for the best suggestions for the deveolpment of the Sahara. Tea | Coffer Bak:ng ‘Powder Extracts Spices (ok an es . > You omld flavor your cake with an onion+* but you would prefer the delicacy of the orchid. The delicate orchid-like flavor of Scw1tiine Vanilla is effected by the expert blending of the world’s finest vanilla beans. chillingVanilla Extract tt em ti AM ta tal RB OO Almond | Orange : Peppermint ‘ Anise and 25 others SRE DT AESOP A ATED } you ever the SY Choice, of the The biggest hit in a “coon’s age.” Choice selected walnuts, wonder- ful pure dairy cream, then good old . maple flavoring, together with tasty, smooth caramel. All mixed up and covered with the most gen- erous pure milk chocolate covering Ra ’ n enjoyed. . It really just hits that hungry spot when you don’t ‘now what -you want—but you want it. SWEET Always Look thi jhe Ty rad CANDY COMPANY Salt Lake, Utah Cowbay chor These may

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