Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 4, 1925, Page 18

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"r id dex ysurd ceted ‘I've » otk ond , ar ies. yor ld nic la da her me nee n¢ PAGE EIGHT Che Casper Daily Crihune J. E. HANWAY AND E. BE. HANWAY Entered at asper (Wyoming) postoffic ovember second class matter y Tribune tssued ever néay at Casper Building, opposite nd ‘The Sunday Morning cation offices, ‘Tribune postoffice Business ----16 and 16 Branch “1 ments. Prudden Ave., National Advert Prudden, 17 City; Globe al; Leary King & » Chi 1.270 Madison w ¥ Mass.; 607 Montgomery St., and Chamber of Com- Tribune are on file in the cisco offices and visitors are ne Ye Daily x months, Dail ‘Three Months, Dail ‘ Mo Dail Yeu ur or Mon Dail 2.50 ly Tribune will not bscription becomes o onth In arrears. DON'T G fter los y special m before § o'clock, 'T YOUR TRIBUNE carefully for it call 15 or 16 senger. Register complaints ES A Strange Decision In view of the court's de feasance ision in the cases charging mal- in office by Scott and Me n, county commissioners of Natrona county, the peon!putnd taxpayers of the county are today wondering just hor;erfagrant must be the law’s viol tion before offenders myy vt punished by the courts? Whether in the face of the wgdlth of evidence of wrong doing submitted, right may best d through technicality and arbitrary ruling of cgairts and justice ated. The court's own Janguage is sufficient to illustrate the point bothering the public mind! “The court in this case, re- gyets to say that in its anxiety to see thdt laws of the state, pith reference to the duties these public officials, were obeyed, was so gravely in error-in overlooking « more import- ant matter of seeing to it that there was orderly administra: iion of justice.” In other words the court w first place, it overlooked the were defective. Hence the reve of s so anxious to punish in the et that the papers in the case al of the court's first jr ment. ‘The spectacle of w complete reversal of a court by the court itself, is a thing stariling to the people and one caleu- li ed to produce complete loss of respect for courts as insti- tutions for determining right and wrong and guilt and inno cense, If this is the way of courts the elaborate machinery of mi} volished 1 the dice and dice box set up in its stead, if we continue to haye examples of the Scott- a of defense argument in this case that the above thesaw and in place of the law, in such ¢: mor be set ses, it leaves the only hope of the people, of justice to and punish- ment of wrong doers, in revolution, It is a dangerous theory, wholly contrary to the spirit of our institutions, inimical public welfare and a menace to the liberties of the people. The Jaw of the land is supreme. In it lies the safety of society. The law must be yindieated of every offense gainst it. It is not to be jimmed in the interest of a group of grafters, how- ever larg ugh technicality, suppression of truth and fact, the urbit striking out of damaging evidence, or other- wise, defeating the ends of justice. This sort of procedure is not contemplated in the judic branch of government, and it is the court’s business to see t it does not occur, regard- Jess of the specicus pleas of representatives of accused persons, The Scott-Morgan cases will go to the supreme court, where, removed from local influences, there is hope that there is greater knowledge of lew, higher regard for justice ‘and keener conception of right and wrong. Withal, the courage and enlightenment to administer these elemental things. Senators Awakening A prediction a year ago that the members of the honor- able and rust senate would be ag ible to yoluntarily as- gning to the president authority to reor i id. consolidate artments of the government would have been laughed $ preposterous and ridiculous Congress is yet two months aw 4 but already theve is evidence that this miracle is actually about to take place. or Curtis, Republican leader, has gone on record us being in fayor of suc program, and Senator Edge of New Jersey nounced t he has already framed the bill to bring this about. Other senators are also expressing their approyal and-intention of supporting such-a measure. They deserve to be congratulated for their decision and ap- plauded for the wisdom of it. Consolidation, abolition and x slative medium is 2 practical impossibility, It would sim- ply involve the lawmakers in a lengthy spell of windy diseus- islative office rooms are not equipped for laboratory activities. An undertaking of this sort, howeyer, appeals partic- ularly to the president, whose state of mind is such thet he can evolye n plan which first of all will be sensible and rea- sonable and, again, his presentation of the mat will give it a standi Which it otherwise would not enjoy..After what he Se has rganization purely through did as governor of Massachusetts, when he jammed forty-six commissions into less than twenty, saving yast amount of money to his nati tate, he can b ifely trusted in this wer undertaking Law of Life Nothi is so constant and sure in this existence of ours as change. Change is univer: of mankind is ever nd inevitable. Yet a great body At least half of the laws ou the statute books were put here to stay the inexorable onrush of time and change. As futile as attempting to stay the tides or wayes of the ocean, The true venerator of the past sorrows Nof over its departure, as one utterly bereaved, The best of the past does not depart. It was written long ago, “No truth of goodness realized by man ever dies, or can die, but is still here, and recognized or not, lives und works through endless chang Time itself re- poses ity, the truly great has its basis and substance . Thus in all poetry, worship, art, society, as one in ete form passes into another, nothing that is really good is lost. Phe inevitable conelusion is: The present is the living sum-total the past. In change, after all, there is n¥thing terrible, noth upernatural; on the contrary, it Iles in the very essence of our Jot and life in this world If life has any Inw, then it is change. Today is not yester Lys we ouracl ve , how can our works and thoughts, if they are always the fittest be the same? Change is painful, y but needful; and if memory has its for¢ vd vorth so has } : Still Prussian Once again the German Nationalists dre bringing up the question of war guilt. They are Gemanding that the Berlin government, in the security-pact setUlement, put forth a dee- aration that Germany refuses any longer to acknowledge the ynfession made in the treaty of Versailles. They made this declaration the price of supporting the p when it comes up in the Reichstag. Precisely the same tactics were employed in the case of the Dawes reparations program, In the end the Nationalists withdrew their opposition, and the Dawes plan bills went through wijhout any declaration on war guilt. The plan avas accepted simply and solely because it was the best thing that could happen to Germany—incomparably «better than what she de in the opinion of her former foes. The security pact an advantage for Germany as great as it d for uiy other powe neerned, Por this rea on the Nationalists in the end are bound accept it, even though their support is not bought and paid The frost is of the pumpkin already aware of the approximate location World Topics “Too many young people aro go- ing to college," asserts Miss Jean Hamilton, a dean of the University of Michigan, “and they do not ap- breclate their educational oppor- tunities, rather they take them for granted.” In a recent interview on college condi- tions Miss Hamilton sald: “The twenty AO girl of years realized the- educa- al openings for. her hers won were : through the ef- SJEALHAMILTON ~ forts .of others, on and she realized that she.must make good and that it was a critical point, that it was her duty to: make good. A genera- gone and that has changed. rned while traveling through and-Germany something of education means to those France what 4 plain people of both countries. They a respect for the things that rning’ stands for. And I com- pared that nttitude with that of our half-taught .and half-learned young- sters over here in ‘America, who have grown into a disrespect of ‘learning’ because they’ are not really and honestly learned. They re getting a certain number of credits by passing exam{nations— and that is all “Only. about ten per cent of the young women attending the Univer- sity of Michigan are earning their entire college expenses. And, we have at the head of the Women’s League out there a girl from Oregon who is a non-sorority girl and who is earning two thirds of her way through college.” “At the universi she tinued, “there are’ three ‘men stu- dents to one woman student. There is a great shortage of work for women students, because men stu- dents are given first chance, plenty of housework; but that entails giv- ing up ‘everything else if a girl does that, because such work with her studies, means giving her en- tire time, with none for recreation or for the other important things in college. “It is not ambition for the best, often; which inspires a girl to go to college, an ambition to develop personality and to achieve things worth whilo {ntellectually, but it 1s merely ambition to get ahead in the world. I grant you there is purpose enough in it all, “But then, again, there {s another phase, that of the desiré to teach. That is the outstanding thing. for which these college girly are pre- paring—to teach; and I have told them, risking much to do so, that the teaching profession {is over- crowded, and struggling and teach- ing is not getting the right consider- ation because of the, fact that there are too many engaged in ft. I tell the girls that many of them are far better fitted for other’ thin; pa Ne, I Ken a Wee Lassie BY TOM MacMILLAN con I ken a wee lassle That lives on yon brae She is sweet, she ts fair, And as true as the day. She is couthie and kindly, And oh! the sieet smile, O' this loving Wee lassie Is free frac a’ gulle. I'l cherish this la Ay as lang as T liv And shield her frae dange And homage I'll give She'll: aye be my lassie Where'er-I may rove, For wee heart sae warm Was just made tae love, eran The Last Voyage BY KATHERINE T. HICKSON ie, Some morning I shall rise from sleep When all the house is still and dark, I shall steal down and find my ship By the dim quayside, and embark. Nor fear the seas nor any wind. I have known Fear, but now no more. The winds shall bear’me safe’ and kind, Long hb for and long-waited To no strange country shal] I come, But to mine own delightful land, With love to. bid me welcome home And love to lead me by the hand. ——<$<$<$<— Ph Iphia Cream Cheese, ASCO, uth Center, . Che Casper Sunday Cribune Co-operative Market- | ing A co-operative marketing, bill will no doubt be introduced at the com- ing session of congress. This ill be directly in Hne with the utterances of President Coolidge, who, in an ad- dress before the National Republi- can club in New York, sald, “I have already encouraged organization and co-operative marketing that organ- ized agriculture may cope with’ or- ganized {ndustr; In an address to the Association of Land Grant Col- leges, held in Washington last year, the president sald, “I want to see courses in co-operative marketing and farm economics alongside of soil chemistry and animal husbandry. The agricultural problem of today is not on the side of production, but on the side of distribution. I want to see a good farmer-on’a good farm raise a good crop and secure a good price.’ ‘That some action is necessary is best evidenced by the fact that the “spread” between the producer and the consumer is becoming greater every day all over the nation. A small class of middiemen must be reaping enormous profits, for the small retailer declares that his pro- fits are not large. The producer, while receiving good, is not getting fabulous, prices, for his products. The consumer is paying prices that are out of proportion to the amounts received by the, producer for his products. A striking example {s shown by a shopping tour made by a Washing- ton householder. ‘This {s the result. Seventeen potatoes, not first class lotatoes either, cost 25 cents. In an- other store two lamb chops cost 20 cents; while in still another place lemons, not even of A-1 grade, cost $' a dozen. At another store one and a half pounds of string beans, rather anacmic in appearcnae, cost 23 cents. A dozen oranges ate up a dollar bill. The articles mentioned are a good barometer of prices of other food products. While {t is true that the wages in the United Stites are far higher than in any other country, and while it is also true that the people do not object to paying the producer a good price for his goods, it 1s also a fact that there Is a general complaint through- out the country against the small group of middlemen who have little if any, capital invested and who take practically no risks in business. It is acknowledge¢ by economists and other experts that the prest- dent's suggestions along the lines of co-operative marketing, if followed by congress, will do much in solvirg the problem of both the producer and the consumer. Buy More Coal “The assurances given when the anthracite strike began that there was no apparent danger of a coal shortage are becoming subject to a large discount,” says the Railway Age, “because the public is buying coal in a way that direttly tends to cause a shortage Although the min- ing and transportation of authracite almost absolutely stopped when the strike began, the productfor apd shipment of bituminous coal has been less since then than {t was in th weeks immediately proceding. uminous to offset the cessation of anthracite mining- . “If, this continues much langer the public will awaken, when Cold weather comes, to & realization of the fact that there is a shortage of the available supply of coal, It will then rush Into the market, and the result’ may be that it will congest the railways and abnormally boost the price of coal.” Autumnal Equinox BY Wm. LLOYD GARRISON JR. Outshone by the flamboyance of the Fall, The greenclad Summer fades, And soon, cascades : Of fluttering leaves, In gusty sheaves, Lie snug near copse and wall. Tm billowy battalions, migrant birds, With cries grotesque, In shifting arabesque, Fit through the skies, And dip and rise Like falritly echoing ‘words. From ruddy chimneys lines of twist- ing smoke The skies entwine, And, in-long serpentine, Rude writings trace In empty spacé With blurred, uncertain stroke. Earth, alr and sky are eloquent of change, And on the senses print iy More than a hint + Of) darkling Winter's dread - ° That les ahead Replete with portents strange. —<—$—$__ The first evening school for in- structing boys and girls who had Pristol, England, in 1806) Nou are regardless your call. In the three weeks onding August 29 the average weekly production of bituminous was 10,661,000 tons and of anthracite, 2,144,000 tons, a total average weekly production of ‘12,- 805.000 tons.. The etrike began on September 1. In the three weeks ended on September 19 the proqduc- tion of bituminous averaged 10,558,- 000 tons and that of anthracite was virually nil. > “The shortage supplies of anthra- cite probably were, unusually. large THE CHILI KING 232 South Center Street LIGHT LUNCHES, SANDWICHES, when the strike began, and it is evident that many of those who are accustomed to using it have’ been postponing the purchase of bitum- nous‘in the hope that the strike would soon end and-they would de able to get enough’ anthracite. While, however; in the first elght months of this year the productior, of anthracite was about two million tons greater than in the correspond- ing part of lats year, the*result of the complete suspension of mining Was that the total production up to September 19 of this year was about four million tons less than last year. Purthermore, the amount of bitum- inous in storage undoubtedly ts less than it was a year ago. “In the week ended September 19, 1924, the amount of bituminous ship- ped was 10,856,000 tons and the amount of anthracite !1,851.000 tons; 4. total of more than 12,000,000 tons. In the corresponding week of this year the total amount of anthracite and bituminous shipped was. only 10 876,000 tons. The current small shipments are duo to the fact that the public is not buying enough bit- LUNCH Casper, Wyoming WAFFLES Leave Casper 8:00 a. m. Arrive Denver 8:00 p. m. Royal Blue Line Parlor Cars Traveling on Regular Schedule Between Casper and Denver LUXURIOUS—HEATED—COMFORTABLE—SAFE An enjoyable trip over a wonderful scenic route. Fare $11.50, at the Rate of 3.6 Cents Per Mile CASPER HEADQUARTERS AND TICKET OFFICES Henning Hotel, Townsend Hotel, Gladstone Hotel Leave Denver 8:00 a. m. Arrive Casper 8:00 p. m. to work all day was established ata flying start here last year, has _._,Who’s Who =~ x % ee AE The newly appointed ambassador W. Davis, Democratic candidate for president in W9Me nt 4s He has been general ; counsel for the. United States Steel Corporation for a number of been prominent- ly Yaentified with public ser- vice: The elder MacVengh was attorney general under President Garfield and the ambassador's uncle, Franklin MacVeagh, ‘served as sec- retary of the treasury under Presi- dent-Taft. MacVeagh was born® in * West chester, Pa., in 1860 and is a grad- uate of Harvard. He succeeds to the post left vacant: by the death of Ambassador Bancroft who died in Tokyo after a short term of service in the diplomatic corps there. ere eine WHEATLAND ARRANGES G0-T0-CHURCH SUNDAY WHEATLAND, Wyo., Oct. 3.—Go to Church Sunday, which got off to been fixed this year for Sunday, Oc- Introducing the BYLLESBY Organization ’ a2 always welcome at the office of the Mountain States Power Company, ou Are Always Welcome | of the purpose of Good service means unremit- ting, night and day effort by ‘many people. No matter what } intentions may be, human help. will bring We want The good “Person limitations: make perfect serv- ice impossible without: your When things are not right, let us know about-it. Usually we can provide a remedy that satisfactory. results.: do not fairly earn. A com- plaint is regarded as a fayor— not a nuisance. will of the public is absolutely necessary for, the maintenance of. satisfactory service. Largeamounts of new capital are required annually for the construction of new plants, improvements and ‘ex- tensions to meet ever-increas- ing public demands. e Byllesby Engineering & . Engineers and Managers for the Mountain States: Power Company al, Courteous Attention to Every Customer” ro SS SORENSON SR A en tober 4, on which date the churches ‘of: the: city z fervices.and issué a cordial’ inyita- into everyone to either continue:a to Japan, Charles MacVeagh, of | 800d habit, or acquire a new one at New York, is a law partner. of John | that time. The idea of the founders of Go, to Church Sunday was not that this one Sunday*should suffice for the entire year, but that those who have al- ready been “sold” on the church go- ing idea should take this occasion to sel] {t to as many more people as possible, bringing in once again those whose attendance has for one cause and has|or another lapsed, in the hope that world {s.to be set up near Cherbourg? France. * at a distance of thirty miles. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1925 have arranged special Salt Creek Busses Leave Casper, Townsend Hotel 8 a. m. and 1 p. m. and 5 p. m- Pacers Leave Salt Creek been in Wash-|they may once more become consist: |] — sm 1p. ‘m. and 6-p..m, ington much of] ent in the practice. Express Bus “eaves 9:30 Daily phe mes Fb Salt Creek Transportation Co. family. have}! The most powerful! foghorn in the|| “BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS © TELEPHONE 144 The horn will be audible Depend Upon ‘Burrer-Nur Containing pure wholesome ingredients and being sanitarily manufactured. An ideal toast loaf, for it contains the materials that make it so. It must be good if popularity counts. INSIST ON BUTTER-NUT Made by WYOMING BAKING CoO. ‘l ( ( oi ‘| d (| i He 14 H IC ( | ( ( ¢ The Byllesby organization is ‘ well equipped to obtain this CF capital. The investment bank- if ing house of H. M. Byllesby ie S& Company, with headquar- ! ‘ ters in Chicago, has bratiches in New York, Philadelphia, | ‘ Boston, Providence, Detroit, | Minneapolis, St. Paul and \ Kansas City. A large business is.done in the underwriting, ~ wholesaling and distributing (| } ( of ‘securities, backed by effi- i i ciently managed utility com-, panies, ; ~ But in order to obtain capital, | . the public standing of any company must be high grade., It must enjoy the confidence, { and friendship of the people | whom it serves. The well earned friendship of the public is considered the : most important objective at every Byllesby property. This friendship, we realize’ fully, must be earned—mer- ited by living up to heavy responsibilities. Such shall be our conscientious efort. ent Corporation DOOYOO ONO ONS ONIONS OY ONIONS OOOO YEN ONEYSSONENENENONONS PAD ”

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