Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 2, 1925, Page 6

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Hn 00( gl ver okt igi 3 Ils PAGE SIX The Casper B, HANWAY AND E. E. HANWAY r (Wyoming) postoffice ns second class matter November 22, 1916. Ww. , ming, opposite postoffice, Telephones ..__ nch Telephone E ting All Departments. Member of Andit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. ©.) EMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Pi 1 news credited in this paper g Representatives r Bldg., ‘on, Ma King & Prudden, sity; Globe EB SUBSCKIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State nd y Mai nd Sunday. Daily and §' ° , Sunday only. \ll subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Dall msure delivery after subscription becomes one month in arrears, KICK, IF YOU DON’T GET YOUR TRIBUNE f you don’t find your tnd it will be delivered to you by special messenger. before 8 o'clock, > John Kendrick’s Text Senator John B. Kendrick in a casual conversation yes: terday, delivered a text that is worth consideration. Any one who has known John B. Kenrick long, and is familiar with his works, recognizes that he has not alone preached from his favorite text, but has personally practiced it. The senator does not claim to have originated his text. It had been driven in upon him by his years of observation, and formulated itself. Possibly the sentiment was always with him, The text, if it may be so called, is this: “A community is largely what its leaders in thought and action desire it to be, morally intellectually, physically and in most other re: spects that form its general character.” John B. Kendrick’s home is at Sheridan. He did not found the town. His home then was forty miles distant on a ranch | but Sheridan was the place he procured the important items, flour, bacon and beans so ne ary in the life of that day, ) when ranches were being made out of sagebrush flats, and towns were being laid out on similar sites, each to survive or perish, as the c may be, depending upon the “leaders of | thought and action,” who were the most concerned. As time | went on, this particular town and this particular ranch, flour- ‘ ished and grew each in size and importance. And today the ; one is the most beautiful, bes pt, most modern, most intel, lectual and moral city of homes in the whole mountain region. The other is no longer a ranch, It is an empire. A domain coyer- ug an area in which Rhode Island and other smaller states ‘would be lost. And then John B. Kendrick who had been always a part of Sheridan, made it his permanent home, and built him a castle on a hill overlooking the city. He concentrated the “thought and action” that had previously been applied widely, upon the city itself. John B. Kendrick was always strong for corners. He was even fond of those pieces of corn bread or ginger bread baked in the corners of the pan. That.is why he accumulated a large assortment of important corners on im: portant streets of Sheridan, They appealed to him, In time he erected, banking houses and mercantile buildings and office and other structures on them. They are among the best build- ings in town. Representative of the character of “thought and action” of John B. Kendrick when he undertook leadership in such things. Pioneer park the most beautiful public park in { Wyoming or elsewhere, is another evidence of what he/wanted his home town to be. His castle on the hill and the magnifi: + cent grounds surrounding it, are more evidence.*His support and influence directed for the moral, educational and physi- , eal good of his home town, has consistently been in operation. : for many years. That's how it comes to be the community it is today. There is no political prejudice in the north country against John B. Kendrick. They are all for him. Members of } the opposition party would wave flags and join torchlight | parades a mile long the night before election; but the next day they all stepped into the voting booth and helped make it as nearly unanimous as possible for John B. Kendrick. They have most all got the John B. Kendrick idea of “thought and action” in that country. It is a big country up in Sheridan. John B. Kendrick has long been, as he is today, its biggest man, and what is more , he has builded upon an enduring foundation of honesty, neigh- borliness and friendship, fairness and that leadership in thought and action that makes for the best things obtainable n the struggle called human existence. Impulse and Energy lt is not because men’s desires are strong that they act ill, it is because their consciences are weak. To say that one person’s desires and feelings are stronger than those of an other, is merely to say that he has more of the raw mater al of human nature, and is therefore capable, perhaps of more eyil, but certainly of more good. ' When speaking of a man as more “impulsive,” they usually do so deprecatingly. Yet strong impulses are but another name for energy. Energy may be turned into bad uses; but more food may always be made of an energetic nature, than of an ; indolent and impassive one, Those who have most natural feeling, are always those whose cultivated feelings may be made the strongest as psychologists tell us. ; The same strong susceptibilities which make the personal + impulses vivid and powerful; are also the source from whence are generated the most passionate love of virtue, and the stern, est self control. It is through the cultivation of these, that so- » both does its duty and protects its interests; not by re: } jecting the stuff of which heroes are made, because it knows. }. not how to make*them. A person whose desires and impulses ;} Are not his own, has no character, no more than a steam engine las character. But one whose impulses and desires are His own are the } expression of his own culture—has a character. If, in addition ; to being his own, his impulses are strong, and are under the government of a strong will, he has an energetic character. Whoever thinks that individuality of desires and impul } should not be encouraged to unfold itself, must maintain that { society has no n of strong natures—is not the better for * containing many persons who haye not much character. ' Fair Dealing : He may never have said it, but Commodore Vanderbilt's } historic war ery, “The public be damned,” may have represented ¢ the attitude of a number of great corporations toward the pub- } lic. But now it is different. President Story of the Santa Fe ; ys to his stockholders, who are so numerous as to be prac- ; tically “the public:” “The stockholders of the company can } render nyiterial assistance in maintaining and increasing the volume of our traffic by using the company’s lines when- ever possible and by inducing their friends and acquaintances ‘o travel and ghip their goods ‘Santa Fe All the Way? ” uttitude of the public service commissions is. fast chan # from that of hostility and hatred, to that of bese 90 his is the reflex of the public feeling which has resulted ation. ¢ from a changed company attitude, Never before were the peo- ple and the railronds working so truly together. | If M. Cailloux wants to kp how interested the average American in European affairs we suggest that le stiek i around until the World Series starts between Washington = und Pittsburgh E: ~ + ee? Se ~ B atly Triimnw All Government Can ed every evening and The Sunday Morning Publication offices, Tribune 15 and 16 is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of nd also the local news published herein, Chicago, Ill.; 270 Madison 507 Montgomery &t., and Chamber of Com- Tribune are on file in the Tribune will not jbune after looking carefully for {t call 15 or 16 Register complaints Give M. ,Shaw, er governor Iowa, former secretary of the easury, and at all times one of the best informed citizens of the repub- lc, addressing the people of the Da- kotas,told them these facts: ‘| My father was too old for service in the Civil War. He stayed at home and profiteered. I remember he sold butter at 60 cents a pound that had been worth but 20 cents, and while I have great respect for the memory, of my father I have sometimes thought he would have accepted 75 cents if he could have gotten it. He was an awful profiteer. But there was one incident that occurred during that period that I shall never forget. Father came from town and handed mother some papers, I do not remember what he told her but I do remember that she called the children about her and said “No one can put us off this farm now. This is ours.” I now know that father paid off the mortgage during the boom period of that war. Ido not wish to give my father credit for too much forethought..He had some advantages. At that time the government was minding its own business, looking out for its own preservation and letting each citizen do the same. If the government had gone into the farm loan business, with agents running everywhere, urging farmers to borrow to. buy more land before prices got beyond their reach, it {s quite possible that Ney father would have yielded to the pular sentiment and instead of paying off would have increased his acreage .ar have done some other foolish thing and suffered the inevit- able consequence. But becavse my father paid off the mortgage he was able—not without difticulty—but able to withstand the ‘depression that followed that war, as depressions follow all wars, I would like to inquire how those of you are situated, who like my father paid-off their encumbrances when prices were high? Unfortu- nately the record shows that the far- mers of this state, and most states advanced the book value of their farms 100 per cent and increased their mortgages a little more than 100 per cent, so that at the end of the boom period they actually owned a smaller relative share of the in- flated values of their. lands than they had owned of their lands at normal prices. In this connection T congratulate you that you belong to the only in- dustry in the world that can survive what you did. The factory that is- sued one hundred per cent in stock dividends, and more than doubled its bond issue without increasing its pro ductivity, is not now complaining. That concern went off the map so long ago that the place where It stood is forgotten. Now please do not run away. nor be offended. I am not scolding nor criticising. Every one lost his head during that period of insane infla- tion, which hit all branches of busi- ness, and it is idle to ‘pass the buck.” I review these things simply to make as clear as I can the actual logic of events. Nevertheleas, it is a condition not a theory that now confronts the far- mers, You are exactly tn the po- sition of a young mon who starts in business and in his extremity tele- graphs his father and says, "I am facing ruin and it is all my fault. I plunged when I should have con- served. I now appeal to you for I have no other place to go. Look at my plate, I haven't enough to eat.” Under these coditions your father in the flesh may assist, for he owns Property but Uncle Sam {s* compell- You certainly have my Congress encouraged you when {t should have kept hands off, knowing that your good judgment, if let alone; would ep you straight. I will do anything le gitimately within my own no property.” My friends, do y only property Us 1s some million ac worthless lands, Even the money belongs to the p. 3am is compelled \ “The only way I car power 1 nd onld take to t nat it nay give you Girect’ finan: | | cial ald? “Take it from profiteers,”’ do you say? Who profited in larger percent than the many farmers who sold w $3 a bushel, and who showed the profiteer spirit mo 1 the few farmers who refused $2.75 1 corn? A few of us who have lived some | years, and carefully studied the ebb and flows of what is called prosper- ity, are more and more convinced that the function of government !s admirably set forth, in the declara- tion of independence, which defines the inallenable rights of man to be “life, Uberty and the pursuit of hap- piness” and adds “to preserve these, governments are tnstituted among men.” I never saw Thomas Jeffer- son but if I gather what he and his compatriots meant by what he pen- ned in that immortal document, they took the brond position that it {s not the function of government to fur- nish houses, but so to preserve the 5, and Mberties of the people, and foster Industry from which all iness results so that those who Relief in One Minute & ow etifie Dr Scholl's — Zino-pads Put one on—the pain is gone | be Casper Daily Cribune are sound. in- body and normal in mind may provide houses for them- selves, or sleep in the park. Possibly you will recognize .that about all that the government can le- gitimately do is to give the farmer, through a protective ‘tariff, an ad- vantage in his own home market on all the products of the farm-grain, hay, potatoes, fruits, butter and egg, and what is more important still to encourage other industries #0 that the farmer shall feeg the men who make our steel, our farm ma- chinéry and other factory products. The American payroll is larger than that of all the rest of the world,-and to it the farmer must look for his stable and secure market. More prod- ucts from the American farm go in- to the garbage can of the average well paid American’ laborers than cah. be found on the dinner tables of/Eu- ropean laborers. The European table may carry more than the American garbage can, but it does not come from America. At the rate our indus- tries are now growing ten years hence, or twenty years at: the out- side, we will be consuming more food than the American farms can. pro- duce. When America begins to im- port wheat, farm lands will be worth what they sold for during the war. What Republicans hope to encour- age and secure is a permanent home market as good or better than. the temporary war market. Grant and His Grand- daughter When, atter his second term, Grant went on a tour ’round the world he was gladly received in England. A question put to him was “When do you think that your country will adopt free-trade?” Grant’s reply was, in substance thi “It took you four hundred years of tariff laws before you were ready for it. Our present tariff g: tem has not had twenty years of life. We are likely to be ready for the ex- periment in much less time than you were.” Grant missed the date. The Eng- Ush tariff system which Peel and Cobden assailed was five hundred years old. At the time Grant spoke our republic as a constitutional gov- ernment was not a century old. There had heen a number of tariffs, but from 1816 to 1824, from 1833 to 1842, and from 1846 to 1861—that je for nearly a generation we had been handicapped by legislation which ex- posed our industries to various per- ils.. From 1789 to 1877 is not histor- {cally speaking, a long period, and of that period more than thirty years had been adverse to protection. What may come about in’a cen- tury or s0 is not within the prov- ince of this article. The’ American tariffs have been milder than the British. Brandings, penal servitude, confiscations and sch like methods of enforcement have not entered into our system. Our tariffs were mou!d- ed by humane men, the old British | tariffs breathed the harshness of the middle ages. Among the best newspaper corre- spondents of. our day ie) Princess Cantacuzene, the grand-daughter of Ulysses 8. Grant. She. tells, not without a touch of her grandfather's dry humor, how she finds English- men who eschew the sword “protec- tion,” and do not even speak of “tar- ire” but who are ready for anything that will “safeguard” the home mar- ket. When Sir Henry Page Croft says that the primary duty is to preserve and extend home markets he {a nec- essarily @ protectionist, It ts of very lttle importance by what name he calls himself, When he says that “if home trade is looked after forelgn trade will increase,” he says what all our great economists from Hamilton down have said, and what Adam Smith rather surprisingly admitted. | Pringess Cantacuzene, in six days, found six articles in that line. Princess Cantacuzene speaks of the Ush love of tradition us in con- flict with protection. The tr: mothe Plantagenets to “the Queen Victoria were for protec: tion. Protection was well established in England before Chaucer was born. It was two hundred and fitty years old when the seamen of Wlfzabeth's day drove back the amada, It was more than three centuries old when es yd lost the DD OO 0000007 Insist - get NUCOA the high grade spread for bread pure coconut oil, refined peanut oil milk, and that’s all Prices Going Up ORDER IMMEDIATELY While our supply is complete EGG NUT LUMP Natrona Transfer,. Storage & Fuel Co. Beech and C Sts. Phone 949 Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago E . : ‘ CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN Pain Neuralgia Toothache | Rheumatism Watkecka vats N = COU ae eee + ------1:30 p, m. 1:60 p; m. pt LT rts DOES ‘NOT AFFECT THE HEART No, 622 --..... :45 p. m. 6:00 p.m. CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY i Accept only “Bayer” package Aihat maa eras | e- which contains proven directions. 4:00 p. m. Handy, “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Departs . Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggiats. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1925 Coke, Milton, Clarendon, Dryden —J|\by police at the railroad station they. knew as boys that parliament] where delegates to the union arrived guarded the English artisan. It was] and/at Independence Hall, at both part ofan Englishman's inheritance | of which places the delegates were to know this, What‘is hard for us|uistributed. The delegates came to understand is that a country so| here to visit points of interest and free. as England’ could. maintain £0 | are to leave for Washington tonight. harsh a system. Her laws stroye to Ree ee CSAS help keep out foreign goods andi to To Celia keep skilled laborers at home. In the . lifetime .of Princess Cantacuzene's BY B. JOHNSON grandfather, Samuel Slater could tell how difficult-it was for him to’ es- cape from.England/te this country. To carry machines would have been impossible but he carried the plans for téxt!e‘machinery in his head. Suppose we look at the England of the eighteenth century. Sir Isaac Newton looked on protection as he might have looked on the army, the navy, the universities or the peer- age—as part of the British system, Sir William "Blackstone faced pro- tection as he faced@the statutes of olden time,.{t was part\of the Eng- land he knew, Adam Smith said that absolute free trade was impos- sible, and that the greatest of all protective measures, the navigation act was “perhaps the wisest’ of all the commercial regulations of Eng- land.” Are not these names worthy of notice? Most of us would say that the Eng- sh traditions include parliament, the church and the throne. Cromwell swept away all three, but he kept to protection. As it lasted from Pianta- genet to Tudor, under. Stuart and under Cromwell, under Orange and under Hanoverians—we.may claim that it shares in England's traditions Cobden and)Peel,'Brightiand Glad- stone were forces in their day, but the traditions) of England go back away beyond them . pete Se 2s Gen. Mulcahy Of Free State Is. Assaulted PHILADELPHIA, Pa.,. October 1. (By The Associated Press.}—Rich- ard Mulcahy, minister of ‘defense of the Iris’ Free, State, was struck in the face by one «f a group of men and women at’? dependence Hall, while visiting ‘the’ historic build- ing with other’ members of the in- terparliamentary union. About fifteen arrests were made Drink to me only with thine éyes; And I will pledge with mine; Or leave a kiss but in the cup And I'll not "look for wine. The thirst that from the soul doth rise Doth ask.a drink divine; But might I of Jove's nectar sup, I would not change for thine. I sent thee late a rosy wreath, Not:#0 much honoring thee As giving {t a hope that there It could not withered be; But thou thereon didst only breathe ‘And ‘eent’st it back to me; Since when {t grows and smells, I swear, Not of itself—but thee! >. Conspiracy Is Charged Firm | Mellon Owns BOSTON, ' October. 1,—(Associated |. Press.)\—Suit for ' $15,000,000 against the Aluminum company of Amer- ica, of which Secretary of the Treas- ury Mellon is one of the principal owners and’ its directors, was filed in the federal. court» here today by Geor B. Haskel of Springfield, president of «the Bausch Machine Tool company. He charges con- spiracy. Haskell charged that the directors conspired with George J. Allen of New. York and James B. Duke of Somerville, N. J., to pre- vent him from obtaining the needed water power to permit him to manu- facture aluminum, Haskell asserts that the Bausch concern used large quantities of aluminum and that he has found it difficult to get the amount’ necded at reasonable prices. He charges that the Aluminum Company .of America controls virtually all of the bauxite, the metal from which aluminum is derived‘in this coun- trx and some foreign countries. truine. 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HILLS BROS COFFEE , In the original Vacuum Pack which keeps the coffee fresk, © 1985; Hills Bros. ‘ rT CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 9204 & FARD—S13.50 * @aves you approximately 13 bourse travel between Casper and Hawline WYOMING MOTORWAY Salt Creek Transportation Company’s Office TOWNSEND SOTEL PHONE (44 TRAIN SCHEDULES Aspirin is (ho trade mark of, Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylieactd — Application and Order Blank Federal Accident and Pedestrian Insurance Policy Issued by The Casper Daily Tribune 1 hereby apply for a Federal Life Insurance Company Travel and Pedestrian Accident Policy for which Iam to pay $1.00, same accompanying this order. I hereby enter my subscription for The Casper Daily Tribune for a period of one year from date of issuance of policy. | agree to pay your carrier 75c per month for The Casper Daily Tribune. Subscribers receiving The Casper Daily Tribune by mail are required to pay their'subscription 12 months in advance. If you are now, a reader just renew your subscription for one year at the regular rate and add the small cost of the policy. I agree that should I discontinue my sub- scription before the year.is up, my policy will lapse. Daten ts aha be ee Signed sooo rien a (Write panne enen nanan annn---- =~. ----------------Date of birth---- ~---~~—~— ~~~ === ----~--~-- Occupation ~~~ name in full) Place of birth. Age__~.---~_-Street address. ------_--_________------+----_-2--------_--R. F. D. Now City’... ----L.--_--__State...________ Are.you at present subscriber? tk 2 BE te . (Answer Yes or No) Beneficiary ——----__-__ Relationship: aden 2: a te ne 'Old-subseribers and new subscribers between the ages of 10 and 70 can secure a policy issued by The er Daily Tribune. It is not necessary that more than one copy of The Casper Daily Tribune be sub- scribed for'in one home. Every member of your family between the’stipulated ages can have a policy. If more ‘than one policy is wanted, just fill out the following and include‘$1.00 for each Policy. Members of Subscriber’s Family (Living in the Same House) Who Desire Insurance, Sign Here Dt Parca 5 Zk Sena SN Le RO ee ete Occupation-___-_ ‘Beneficiary __.----_---.------__-___. ' Name a oe oo a a ee wanna nwo nen---~-------------2--- Age----__-. Occupation_____- ene, WRehafictary 42th preterm ee nnn enn n-ne 31.00 must accompany order for each policy wanted. No physical examination necessary,

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