Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 9, 1925, Page 10

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er : i > PAGE TEN The Casper Baily Crihune| By J. E. HANWAY AND BE. HANWAY econd class matter ed at Casper (Wyoming) po November The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming, Publication offices, Tribune Building, opposite postoffice, aarremeet w-------15 and 16 Z All Departments, Business Telephones - Branch Telephone Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A, B. C.) SR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusive titied to the use for publication of all news credijed in this paper a so the local news published here! esentatives Bidg., Chicago, Ol.; 270 Madison 3 .; 607 Montgomery St., 1.: Leary Bldg., and Chamber of Com: . Los Angeles. Coplés of the Daily Tribune are on file in the Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices and visitors are leome. SUBSCRIPTION RAT By Carrier and Outside 8 One Year, Six month ‘Three Month c Month, Year, Sur One Year, Da nda Six Months, Daily and Sunda Three Months, y and Sund One Month, Da One Year, All sub: insure delive KICK, If you don't find and it will be delive bune after looking ca © you by special messe before § o'clock, Handcuffs and Shackles person whose desires and impulses are his own—are the ion of his own nature, as it has been developed and + d by his own culture—is said to have a character. If, in addition to being his own, his impulses are strong, and are under the government of a strong will, he Was an energetic character. There has been a time when the personal element of spontaneity and individuality was in exce: known as the social principle had a hard struggle with it. The difficulty then was, to induce men of strong bodies or minds to pay obedience to any rules which required them to con- trol their impulses. To overcome this difficulty, law and discip- line, like the popes struggling against emperors, asserted a power over the whole man, ming the whole of his life in ; order to control his character—which society had not efound other sufficient means of binding. But in these days society has got the better of individual- ; and the danger which threatens human nature is not ex- cess, but the dificiency of personal impulses and preferences? Times are vastly changed, since the passions of those who were strong by station or by personal endowment were in a state of habitual rebellion against laws and ordinances, and re- quired to be rigorous]. rined up to enable the persons with- in their reach to enjoy safety. Now, from the highest class of society down to the very lowest every one lives under the eye of a dreaded and hostile legal censorship that penetrates to their most personal affairs, But the legal censorship is not the worst. In what most people do for pleasure, the first thing thought of is confor- mity. It does not o¢cur to them to have any inclinations, ex-* cept for what is custom The mind itself is bowed to the yoke. They like in crowds; they exerecise choice only among things commonly done. Peculiarity of taste, eccentricity of conduct, are shuned equally with crimes, until by dint of not following their own nature, they have no nature to follow. Their human capacities are withered and starved. They be- come incapable of any strong wishes or native pleasures, and wre generally without opinions or feelings of home growth, or properly their own. ully for {t call 15 or 16 ger. Register complaints ’ ee Lowden’s Position It fits in with the future plans, and possibly the ambi- tions, of former Governor Frank 0. Lowden, of Illinois, to discount the rising tide of rural prosperity. He is now en- gaged in trying to do what the American Farm Bureau Fed- eration failed to do. He is trying to make farm co-operation in marketing a success. Therefor, he must’insist on keeping farm economic ills before the farmers and the country. He is also a possible candidate for the Republican Presidential nomination in If a candidate, he must rely upon the States of the Corn Belt and the Wheat Country to launch his candidacy. He has given much time to farm moyements for a good many years. The farmer is not yet convinced that he is or will be prosperous. The Lowden background, his present activities and his hopes for the future help in explain- = ing his statement to the American Bankers’ Association at = Atlantic City that the agricultural situation is not righting £ itself. 7 z Growth of Trade 3 That the foreign trade of the United States growing twice st of the world is the statement made b president of the United States Steel corporation. He Iso that no European nation | & changed an adverse trade ance of nearly $300,000,000 into a & favorable export balance of 000,000, Also France has in ; creased the value of her exports by fully 25 per cent, even & after allowing for deflation. The trade of the United States = has increased per cent in the same period, while that of + ‘ireat Britain declined five per cent. Not Genuine Che board of temperance, prohibition and public morals of the Methodist Episcopal church says: “The report on prohib- ition issued uy through the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America was not a report of the federal council, but was issued by its commission on research, prepared by a small number of persons and represented only them.” ‘The phrasing of the report in many instances the statement con- tinued, was not “justified by its statistical content. The eyan- gelical churches, undoubtelly are united in their support of & prohibition and few if any o/ their individual members are & out of sympathy with that support.” E ——_— = Returning Home § According to the Quebee government there is a ste B stream of French Ca iadians returning from the United St & whither they migrated in former years, Five thousand have re ® turned within the past three years, According to the United f States census in 1920, S453 sons of French Canadian & origin resided in ('s © wntry, The French Canadian popula- tion of the Dominion is 2. . or approximately twenty: é eight per cent of Canada’s - opulation at the last census, £ . adhe wie Z : Immigration = Immigrat’ n added but 1,586 to the population of the & United States during the last fiseal year, as against 92,728 persons, who were in the country previously, went back to foreign junds, while 94511 are recorded as having entered the United States. Of Italians were admitted as immi- & crants, while 27.151 returned to their native land. There @ were 826 Greck immigrants, while 6,574 went back to Gree & Vortugal sent GID and took out 8,600. There were 46,068 @ German inmigeant ‘bout 18,000 from Great ain, and z YAO from the Lrish Pree State q The Oil Output fhe petroleum outppt for August in the United States was 66,769,000 barrels, about 1 r cent less than July, and Lines produc ent GS80,000 gullons, six-tenths ne July and 29 per cent more Who’s Who | Because of the discovery’ and tso- lation of the ultimate unit of elec- tricity, the electron, by Dr. A. MIlll- kan, scientists are able to explain many electrical phenomena which " ~~} heretofore were rather abstract theories, In 1911 he first succeeded in {isolating the electron; a few years later he was able to measure It by means of ultra- a] sensitive instru- j] ments. In 1923 his work was official- ly recognized and he was awarded the Nobel prize tn =) physics for estab- . A, MILLIKEN lishing the nature of electricity. At present Dr. Mill!- kan {s attempting to solve the com- position of sidereal spectra. Robert Andrews Millikan is the son of a clergyman and was born én Morrison, Ill, 67 years ago. He took two degrees at Oberlin College, wrote his doctor's thesis at Colum- bia, and went to Europe for two years at the Universities of Berlin and Gottingen. Returning to his alma mater he became assistant in the Oberlin physical laboratories, working his way up to a full pro- fessorship in 1910. ‘Then he was taken by the University of Chicago, and {t was in the laboratories of this Institution that he did his most val- uable work during the next decade. During the war he was commission- ed lieutenant colonel and was made chief of the sclence and research division of the United States army signal corps. Since.1921 he has been at the California Institute of Tech- nology at Pasadena. It was after he became professor at the University of Chicago that Dr. Millikan’s work began to at- tract attention, In 1913 he was awarded the Comstock prize of the National Academy of Sciences for electrical research. In 1922 he re- ceived the Edison medal of the Amer- {ean Institute of Electrical Engt- neers, and in the following year, the same year in which he received the Nobel prize, he was given the Hughes medal of the Royal Society of Great ‘Britain, Gifts to Government A noteworthy example of what an Individual can do in supplementing a public service, not by establishing an outside private agency but by giving funds directly to the govern- ment for uses to which appropria- tlons cannot be made, has been fur- nished by Mrs, Frederick Shurtleff Coolidge of Chics She has pro- go. vided a sum of nearly $100,000 for an auditorium tn connection with the Library of Congress suitable for chamber music and suitable for other purpobes. This gift {s added to by a trust fund established to yield a net anriual income of 828,200 to be pald over to the Librarian of Congress to ald the Music division in the development of the study, composition and appreciation of mu- sic. The work {s to be Mone through perlodic festivals, the giving of con- certs, “defraying all the expenses connected therewith” and the grant: ing of prizes for original compos!- tions or those performed for the first time at any festival or con? cert given under the auspices of the Library of Congress. One sig: nificant part of this benefaction {s the provision to pay to the chief of the Music Division an honorark which shall be distinct from government salary received b and fn recognition of his bor and “responsibility. Librarian of Congress : final authority in tife application of the r trust fund, the don statement of her pri “IT haye wished to be the} fatter of the | pts from this ws made thi through the L vsvees the compositi an aruanee of | music {1 which might ulher- | wise, be © too untqu too Gingrily under: | n al of course. | This unta. model for oth: gift should furnish | lke it to the gov- ernment in other fields—not to dup- licate or supplant what ts being done through ordinary channels, but to do for the furthering of the high- est aims of culture what {s n6t likely to be done otherwise, It ts quite fn accord with the policy of the Libr: of Congress, which loans even at a distance “the unusual bool for the unusual need.” Congress has cre- ated a “Library of Congress Trust Fund Board” for the receipt and ad- ministration of such gifts, and this board has had prompt opportunity to function by the endowment fund of $100,000 from Dr. James B. Wil- bur of Manchester, Vt., for the ac- quisition of source material for the study of history, All this reveals not only a high public-mindedness on the part of these donors, but an ex- ceptional confidence in the conduct of the Library of congress and in the Ibrarfan, Mr. Herbert Putnam. —_————__—_ All the Same The Calgary Herald says; “Canada will retain a protective tariff. Whether Conservatives, Liberals or Progressives are in power, there will be a tariff of a protective nature. Whether we desire to have such a tariff or not, the tariff position that has been adopted by other countries will compel Canada to keep a tariff that Will grant protection to Cana- dian industry, Conservatives may call it a tariff for protection. Liber. als a tariff for revenue, Progressives what they Iike; there will be a tar- iff just the same and the range from low to high will not be very great. The people of Canada—not any sin- le party—decreed in 1911 that Can ada must have a tariff, We have to have one for revenue, and we v to have one In order that Can- ada may grow with all-round deyel- opment, not solely in the direction of agriculture.” ley ewabesrent Che Casper Daiiy Tribe Where Did You Come From? By GEORGE MacDONALD Where did you come from, baby dear? Out of the everywhere into here, Where did you get your eyes 80 blue? Out of the sky as I came through. What makes the Ught in them sparkle and spin? Some of the starry skies left in. Were did you get that little tear? I found it waiting when I got here. What makes your forehead so smooth and high? A soft hand stroked it as I went by. What makes your cheek like a warm white rose? I saw something better than anyone knows. Whence that three-cornered smile of bliss? Three angles gave me at once a kiss. \ Where did you get this pearly ear? God spoke, and it came out to hear. Where did you get those arms and hands? Love made itself into hooks and bands. Feet, whence did you come, you dar- ling things? Brom the same box as the cherub’s wings. How did they all come just to be you? God thought of me, and so I grew. But how did you come dear? God thought of you, and so I am here. * World Topics The ability of a government to carry on its business with efficiency and to plan huge projects was re- cently questioned by Dr. Charles A. Beard, former professor of history at Columbia university. Beard sald: can, of course, bulld handsome school bulldings, there are always contractors ready to supply the impulse and technique if other forces are lacking. It can arrange for the construction of water works, parks and streets, there are always enough real estate interests to pro- vide the requisite energies and pres- sure, It can build and opern‘e a merchant marine, there a efficient causes at worle in that sphere also. But can a Democratic government plan a nation, plan a state, or plan a city in the large with reference to eco.omy, convenience and asesthet- les? It can tax the rich to pension the poor and tax the poor to fatten the rich, but can it project and ex- ecute anything truly magnificent? “The impotency and ineptitude of the state and city of New York and inefficlent freight terminal sys- tem on the west side, the record of the traction quarrel in Chicago, the breakdown of Burnham's plan in San F¥ancleco. and a thousand other illustrations seem (o point to to us, you \ a negative answer. Yet the Japan: ese were not altogether baffled. A shred of imperial power still re mained in the sphere of ordinance- making and a\ decree was issued Postponing the erection of perma- nent structures in the burnt aren for five years—in the hcpe that com- prehensive plans could be ultimately carried into execution. In the Unit- ed’ States such a violent interference with property rights would have been stopped within ten hours by a profound jurist engaged in consult- ing the entalls of the Fourteenth Amendment. “So I offer no answer to my ques- tion: ‘Can a democratic government conceive and carry out any large col- lective program other than war?’ But I venture to suggest that the theme deserves the attention of spe- clalists. engaged in research.” “In approaching the question of social control under democratic gov- ernment, two subsidiary questions must be attacked. The first. is: what {s the nature of the forces that op erate in a democratic: system bring- ing about decisions? This presents thorny problems. The data are diffi- cult to unearth in many cases. In- quiries into the nature of anybody's economic enterprise are more re- sented than inquiries into sex his. tory—if the records of divorce courts offer any evidence. To the guardians of the sacred cow, it {s profaning the holy of holies te suggest for ex- ample, that the people who want the ‘taxes on income reduced are the people who pay the income taxes. Nevertheless, we are never going to get very far into the forces until we make all the quantitative eco- nomic analyses which our available data will, permit. Moreover, the search must be carried’ into the leg- islative, executive and judicial branches without fear or favor, as well as without malice. Notable be- ginnings have been ‘made but all of them are scratches on the surface. When the economists are through, then the psychologists and sociolo- gists may be called in to dispose of the remain: Small Vote Politicians are taking advantage of the recent primaries, and the small- ness of the vote as compared with the total number of voters, again to call attention to the effect’ that only a minor portion of our voters take part in the affairs of their gov- ernment. And the most discouraging fea- ture, they say, is that the number of the whole who vote seems to be get- ting smaller In every election. Thirty years ago, it 1s pointed out, approx- imately eighty per cent of those en- titled to vote, took part {n the elec- tions, whereas in the last two pres- {dential elections only fifty per cent of the people erftitied to vote, voted. Primary figures are even more dis- couraging and {n many instunces candidates are chosen by a very small percentage of the,total of the voters qualified to take part in the election. * The figures of the voters in the United States do not compare well with the figures in other countries, it 1s pointed out. In the last gen- eral election held in Great Britain, eighty-three per cent of the qisll- fied _voters took part in the election. A mark Coffee. ~your lips! What hospitality—fhat | steaming cup of Hills Bros | Tue successful hostess knows the twin traditions of our great western empire —whole-souled hospitality and its symbol, “a cup of wonderful coffee’— Hills Bros. Red Can Break the vacuum seal of a tin of Hills Bros. Breathe that rich, rare aroma! Brew a cup and raise it to’ a flavor, really! Any wonder Hills Bros. is The Recognized Standard? ‘Ask for Hills Bros. by name and look for the Arab on the can. Coffee is economical to use. . HILLS BROS COFFEE Hills Bros. In the original Vacuum Pack which keeps the coffee fresh. relent tomate In Australia the average number of voters over a period of been seventy-five per cent, while in FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1925 YRIN “EYES Sun Wind ‘Bust > Cinders BY _DRUGGISTS weOPTICIANS ‘De SOLD BY | WRITE FOR FREE EYE BOOK. MURINE Co "os"9 fal system, from seventy-five to} 42& eighty-two per cent have taken part in the recent elections. It 1s pointed out that if the num- ber of voters In America keeps on diminishing our system of represen: tative gevernment may™in time be come endangered. years has New Zealand, noted for its interest In politics, the total is eighty-four per cent. In Germany. where the republic {s still new and there are millions still favoring the monarch Finer Flavor because Hams aa Bacon “RIZENED Naturally” is the exclusive Cudahy method of sugar-curing Puritan Hams and Bacon. In “Ripening Naturally” there is no forcing —no hurrying—just a fine mellowing, like tree-ripened, sun-grown fruit. Thus the natural, mild, sweet, delicious flavor and greater tenderness of Puritan meats are retained. These are reasons why you will always pre- fer Puritan. Ask for it by name. The Cudahy Packing CoU.SA > Makers of Puritan Hams—Bacon—Lard Like all other Cudahy products “Thelastelells” Meats «rd Provisions WHOLESALE—RETAIL PRICES GOOD FOR COMING WEEK POULTRY Our live poultry department is com- plete and our poultry is all MILK fed. PORK CUTS Pork Chops, Ib. ----.-.35¢ Pork Shoulder Steak, Ib,_._._____30¢ Fresh Killed Hens, Ib.-__--____ --27c Pork Shoulder Roast, Ib. ~---28¢ Fresh Killed Springs, lb. _-...___ 27c Pork Loin Roast, lb.___.-_______32¢ BEEF CUTS Pork Ham Roast, lb,-_--_______28e Sirloin Steak, lb. Round Steak, lb._ T-Bone Steak, Ib. — Shoulder Cuts, Ib.--_ Shoulder Round, 1Ib.--___ Shoulder Steak, lb,_______ SMOKED MEATS DOLDS HAMS and BACON are the best we can buy. A trial will convince. Dolds Niagara Skinned Hams, Ib., 32¢ Dolds Sterling Skinned Hams Ib., 28¢ Dolds Sterling Shoulders, ‘ Pot Roast, lb.-- 8 to 10 Ibs., per Ib.___ * Plate Boil, lb. Dolds Niagara Bacon, te Hearts, Ib. ~~~ 45 6 to 8 lbs., per Ib.---__ ~-42c Liver, Ib, -__ : Dolds Sterling Bacon, . Hamburger, lb.-_ 8 to 10 lbs., per Ib.___ ----37c SI Wetec eh om om tee Sausage, Ib. —_ ~--15c¢, 2 Ibs. 25c VEAL CUTS Veal Round Steak, Ib. Veal Loin Steak, Ib. Veal T-Bone Steak, lb. Veal Chops, Ib.--._________ Veal Shoulder Steak, Ib. Veal Shoulder Roast, Yb Veal Stew, Ib.__ General line of Luncheon Meats and heese. Dolds Sterling Wide Bacon, lb..-_3le Dolds Bacon Squares, Ib.-. ~-25¢ Small Picnics, 1b,.._.____ 17%4c SEA FOOD Fresh Fish and Oysters every day direct from the coast and lakes. .._ Salmon Halibut Catfish Smelts Lake Trout Fillet of Haddie Select Oysters, quart — ~----90c _ Smoked and Kippered Fish Kippered Salmon Finnan Haddie Boneless Herring Bloaters NOTICE TO RANCHERS—WE WILL PAY YOU MARKE DRESSED BEEF, PORK, VEAL, POULTRY AND EGGS’ FOR THE NORRIS Co. OFFICE AND PLANT BRAN Cor. H.-and Durbin Phone 12 426 East Clee Sle aa 2540 | Fo} bel bd

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