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“= TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13, i925 * PAGE SIX The Casper Dailp Cribune bee — | wilh ‘on de} than $5,000 a year; more t 7 7 ied tffs in the sult brought before them. | held—to Rainbow » whede | CRRAMEROCERENRST ORGS. te Daily T Who's Who. jie, hie, wees, Sree). World. Dopied’, jeune weet ee nets [ian than fob Ripe at ToT fullewt eel Fy acquaintance with | Ree sults that these plaintiffs cannot be Investment and specu! nm — a 1 e a animal and vegetable life. He says | the extra territorial policy of for-| punished for perjuries or contempts thus matters affecting not By J. BE. HANWAY AND BE. B. HANWAY app would do the same thing’ with] ei; > in China was recently | committed by them in the course of group of. brokers, repre ernment {s Miss Patty Field. She] gine: ie he had them. According to] pu re DR W. W, Willough-| the proceedings. Furthermore, these irs comparatively few person has been assigned to Amsterdam. Miss Field {3 an at young — woman of 24 with, ved at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice ns second class matter his theory such training {s needed] by of Johns Hopkins faculty and for-| courts are not competent to con- bs toistarts: incomes, whose actiyiti< nlch a dada | to make them alert merly:official advisor to the Chinese | sider legitimate set-ofts or countel:|egy in these vjjaround Walt an@ Broua « mpted him | government. claims which may be brought for-|in the weste: New York, but literally hu to give ions {nstrue- The whole system is In derogation | ward, the validity of such set-offs or heading t pe a ‘ell. of course, | thousands’ of citizens of tions in the primitive things of Ufe| of the dignity. of a great and clvillzed | counter-claims being determinable | for its ow a eee ee coe the} Stnall earnings whose sa at less Interesting. In study-| People.” he asserts. “Because of this, | only in the Chinese courts continue But the tourist who wants |0W for the first time in | ing ‘Snowbound” in his classes he| {ts enforced existence steatts Donets gee Manoel’ bits of the high- Beige Mh sy on a ‘ Dodie : $ Salty. a| fully to create an anti-forelgn fee! el to 5 Meee Oe Oud avnid fe nee lal and « pscrgeebtnk thr gies parca thany at| {ng and deters China trom opening) Railroads and Trucks way mothod, and yet wou Bet enterprises, And tho the terms used. They were unable| UP her entire territory to full for. = long stretches of ar rronot.|@ Whole, which once: looke + | to picture in the mind's eye a New| ei settlement and unrestricted ‘oad adjustment to automobile | wha ma ay Bad Ae tless | at “unearned Incomes England farm on a winter's night.| commercial intercourse.” petition goes on apace, assuming /onous landseapel.. Wil) | lke France and England Such things were not a part of their Urthermore, "it necereitates @l important proport{ons, ‘Two eigni-|elect t hen shift to the of rentiere. Ene PEPUS f '| world. Yet it is true’that one"can-| Multiplicity of courts — different] ricant steps, one inthe Bast, one in pau Maen sity, Beene ward the corporation tc S| not comprehend much of our best} Courts for each of the powers which} the iar West, baye been announced OP iindenal peomise and interest’sin | literature unless acquainted with the | ¢Moys extraterritorial rights, in 1 The Boston & Maine de-|of unusur ; ; REESE e Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning bune every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming, Publication offices, Tribune ng, opposite postoffice, reasons njoys tourin. Ther examinations how, an excep-| y brilllant mind. 16 WAS lone of the 20 who }passed the diplo. {matic examinar h 120 ne Telephones eaeenneneeennanl5 and 16 anch Telepho: oxc: cting All Departments, MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS : titled to the use for publication of nd also the local news published herein. are G ws credited tn this pap Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B, ©.) National Advertising Representatives Prud@en, 1720-23 ger Bidg., Chicago, Ml, City; Globe Bldg., Boston, Mass; 607 Montgomery 8t., ike Leary Bidg., Seattle, Wash,. and Chamber of Com: mething sil 5 terprise inevitably will be that fact within the next wurratind: live dw Again, it necessitates the appre-| ciaed t spring that !t would lay | his surround! Project | r seles. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the ETT eee WAL Gatton of divermerlanre. candace ter ee ee ee ae eat [realizes its mpparent po ba | Chicag » and San Francisco offices and visitors are | [= i ear Al persia at “letanaiininbtiona ts al freig Me. atere.| [9 very er ral | MISS. PATTY FIELD Passes What the B@ston professor prac.(°™! Person s lish a eystem of. motor truck, store-|'* ihe ‘ * re J ~ ons ch ice Adres. prat es are e ed the same trans-| oor — collectic r very of wil! 5 i y = yaa : nations ticed privately with ‘his own Boney ies afe engaged in the same trans-| goo collection and delivery math Meeting at Night SUBSCRIPTION RATE and served in the state de oy Scout wovement fe deine on} action, not only must each of them| freight in less than carload tote In| lin eS By ROBERT BROWS, By Carrier and Outside State at ngton until r A bd bo proceeded against In different} three cities. In Massachusetts. -Car Saree ‘ a Sunmay. t i ; } y a the © line, though perhap: - ; e J |The gray sea anc Xtenslvely, for thousende be] courts, but thelr respective legal! rying. full loads, the railroad trucks | American Investors | tana, youth of the oncoming generation, | “&bts and responsibilities must be] it is believed can operate more econ-| + | And the yellow half-moon 7] bis BE ah ols! determined by different laws. In not | omically the y filled trucks _— ; held by the profes. | Tetermined by ¢ orvically than the partly filled truck: is now a Third Secretary at the gation in Berne, Switzerland. Miss Field is from Deny and Sunday. and Sunday 1 Sunda not so c, e Months, . so that the id 7 . Th rowth of low: yas ed adelifte as a few cases, he says, it ts found) of private shippers and consignees.| The rapid growth And the startled little Saito ; sor are not his exclustvely.The Ih-! that there are no laws applicable to} © yor, the Santa Fe has made pro-| posits and Investment leap dian youth had to SeouNtrEe HS} the facts involved visle ” including the automobile | ers in the shares of by ‘ aft, nis ce pability { ourcefuln: woode In the fiery ringlets from t As I gain the cove w he Chinese injured by thé erim-| in a large way in its tr n service to | ations in obtaining food and inal acts of nationals of the other} the picturesque southwest count 2 tis ab ) endure privation before he pl row a Hitt fective lure: privat! n before) nowers have no way of knowing n motor cars will meet {ts ov r . Bat sh sisiesecn = 260] 4 ty | he was aamitte ®wartlor. (‘Thal Wiether the sentenious “inipored ‘ate ah Qhal Newcaiietna towne of The Liberty mar ; d the Daily Tribune will fot i mer-| = tee this phen rhe be ; BIE) ac carried out,” he asserts, “In and’ Albuquerque and introduced " month fn arrears, yihpin * ‘ode alnipg amid conditions» wher) 17, es the inconvenience of sengers:c isurely, three: | business of investmer ! I: | ation who ared lose | che not so, trained would suffer. ‘Tha | 2% : ¥ Ser eea nie arrors!y; Neha Chases GAINES. Dave Then a mile sof warm sea-scented KICK, I? YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE uch that makes ther ih Cton take os ; ng the offender before the near-| day 900-mile ride, called the Indlan | time thetr sz I baaae i t find 3 une after lool for {t call 15 or 16] and self-reliant. Ile th dh fence may have plans! ost consular court, as required by|Detour, to old Santa Fe, to the in-|and thelr y ases of Three is ros a after look ‘or it call 15 or and somewhat different from the Bo 5 | sed until today the men and| Three fields to cross t an be ed to you by ep sister complaints | elemental primitive thir ‘ the treatie: nd of then producing | habited Indian pueblos of Santajcreased until today th | before § + a . needed as a bac Scouts, but the end to be reached 14} the necessary witnesses or other | t F , arn, Tesuque, San Juan and Santa| women of relatively stall incomes, | 4 ye \ g out his {ideas w sre mete: gh ake ‘ mT evid ically Inpos-| Domingo, as wetl as to a deserted | American families living in mode ate | At tap et Ue pane, the q b faa ates viduallty and: sélf-réllance through sinie for the Chinese who have-been| cjift puchlo at Puye,. Irom Gallup, | clreumstancesysc the inves ere 1 a inculeating a desire for increased ave had exp. nd blue spurt of a light red by the acts of foréigners to} farther wes bn bine ea oe , similar gasoline pro-|ment market. a 7 | tea area fon whatever in order to] pelied vehicles will be provided by] Of the interest and other invest-| And a knowledge by pointing the direction 4 @ less Joud, ‘th that lives and grows on a farm and se take anya 4 the _Traitad 1 aaa Good S A Aisattha wood about their home. ‘They | t© take: obtain redress, + |the railroad to the Navajo reserva:| ment income collected in the United joys und fears, ood Sense and Good Manners mae baref Ek ee joted while fishing n one-half now goes} THan the two hearts ben have trapped! Tribune Want Ads Bring Results, ' to each! ‘The extra territorial courts have] tions. to the Hopi reservation— | States more little or no authority over the 1 Two hundred y ars ago Jonathan Swife sat down to write in summer and ) n with the observation: “Good manners, is the art of making those people easy with whom we converse, os Whoever makes the fewest persons uneasy is the best bred in the company.” As the best laws are founded on reason, 80 are the best manners. And as some lawmakers have introduced un- reasonable ‘thi into the law, so likewise many teachers have introduced absurd things into common good manners. Read, with eye unawed by any social register name on | the title page, some of the guides to etiquette being sold to the great American public in yast numbers, and you will find an assemblage of impressive instructions largely nonsense. The principal point of what is known as good manners is to suit the behavior to the three degrees of men; our superiors, our equals, and those below us. Fine manners need the support of fine mannets in others. Pride, ill-nature, and want of sense, are the three great sources of illananners; without some one of these common human defects, no man will behave himself ill for want of experienc Good sense is the foundation of good manners, but because it is a gift of which very few among mankind are possessed, civilized people have agreed upon fixing some rules for common bebavior, best suited to their general customs, or fancies, as a kind of artificial good sense, to supply the defects of reason. As the common forms of good manners were intended for regulating the conduct of those who have weak understand- ing; so they have been corrupted, by the persons for whose use they were contrived For they haye fallen into a needless and endless way of multiplying ceremonies, extremely troublesome to all who practice them. Wise men’ are often more uneasy at the over civility of refined people, than they could possibly be in the conversations of peasants. There is a pedantry in manners, as in all arts and sciences, and sometimes in trades. Pedantry is the over rating any kind of knowledge we pretend to. And if that kind of knowledge is a trifle itself, the pedantry is the greater. 5 Persons who pretend to the most intimate knowledge of good manners alwa are very ‘tiresome. Ignorance of forms cannot properly be styled ill manners; because forms are sub- ject to frequent changes. Besides they vary in every commu- nity. Suit your manners to the man. This is the significance of, “When in Rome, do as the Romans 4 Mellon's Position Justified If the publication of income tax returns can be said to Sr have been of any advantage whatever, it has been to aid the cause of tax reform and tax reduction by demonstrating the extent to which capital has flowed into tax-exempt securities to escape the rates in the higher brackets. This proves the position of Secretary of the Terasury Mel Sal hy fF Fe V4 BO . 4 i el whe € he know corree lon that an exorbitant tax on income nets the government less j & revenue than a reasonable tax which would not discourage the t; e U U Ace investment of capital in legitimate enterprise. It also proves | the folly of trying to collect taxes equally from everybody . vhere the snake dance recently was |to persons whose ea in Sse nings are less | ~ ) LLZT] =n] ihe LOETZAY Y ey while our laws permit the continued issuance of tax-exeript bonds which furnish a lawful method of escaping all forms | of taxation, Will the people eyer learn? Keeping Out of Business } In spite of much agitation, no progress is being made in creation of new monopolistic state workmen's compensation funds. Bills providing for such funds re been defeated this year in Illinois, Wisconsin, Nebraska, New York and Massa. shusetts. On the other hand, bills to dissolve the state funds feat n Oregor est Virginia and Califorr ee f he oath ¥ f inc is ¥ Af n speek a. to justify bs sf ny ¢ lb c ire becoming aroused to € bus aes fat 1d iving it control of it, as is the result where : : . state funds are created. Any weakening of. the or of monopolistic state workmen's insurance would nt for other socialistic schemes state N fafa Wage , . see ate ams ae eee ee | There is a touch of romance to coffee. police power to fix minimum wages for women. The su oreme A iret ct calumbia val he ‘Ariwona lay "wy nbs Butter-Nut coffee sets one a day-dreaming of the from that decision Asiaegn ey a rr ia ibaa oa anpeat fragrant tropics, of sunny seas. Thatr idee ten? Shahan li irae tn Raa te | Drink Butter-Nut, the Coffee Delicious, the best a7 ey ae the tropics produce, blended with a deliciousness, rinatio ibolish automobjle parking in business treets with street steety with strot car tracks.” his is what the Ameren flavor and fragrance inimitable. and relieve the situation, The result of expert blending of the finest importations—over a period of many years— Never sold in bulfe Good News another record for magnitude—an wy ord in the field of, popular education, For the first time in the history of the world more than a million children are now attending public school in a single city—New York, Daily this tremenc ands of American boys and girls of every racial origin and creed, gathers up its million satchels and pre ds to school, elementary, junior high, high, training and yocational ing rr PAXTON AND GALLAGHER [0. s army, a thousayd thou Violates Constitution The nodical conference of the Luthe as follows: “We deplore the activity, so openly displayed, of « large part American Protestantism in secular and political affairs, and hold that such activity not only is a diversion of force from the exclusively spiritual mission of the Cbristian church but is likewise u violation of that basic principle of our American const{tution, the separation of church and state.” i ieee ~* A nn an chureh resolves