Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 19, 1925, Page 6

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1S PAGE SIX Che Casper Daily Crihiuae ty J © HANWAY AND E. 8, HANWAY utered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class matter November 22 1916. Phe Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Mornin Tribune every Sunday at Casper. Wyoming Publication offices, Tribune Building. opposite oostoffice. Dusiness Telephones 15 and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting AN Departments M the Associated tres all MBEH ts exc news crediled in this pa THE usively ent and also the local n- ws published herel ASSUCIATED PI Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B.C.) ed to the use for publicdtion of n National Advertising Repr on t D ve Prudden, King & 1720-23 Steger Bld 0 Madisc Ave. New York lobe Bldg _ Leston mery Si San francisco, C Seattie, Wash and ¢ ror Cor merce Bide _J.0s les of the Dally Tribune are on file in tt New York Chicag d Sen tra © offices and visitors are welcome SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State Sunday nd di and Sunda and Sunda only... Daily bafly Sunda Sun or Year All subsertp insure delivery after s One Datly ‘Tribune wil! bscription becomes one month In arrears. YOUR TRIBUNE irefully for it cail 15 or nger. Ltegister complain KICK, U 1 your | y | An enlightened public opinion will 10 much more toward furthering the of international peace than ‘EQ0Uat0JUOD [pOTJj0 JO Baz0ow Nicholas Murray Butler, preel- ——dent of Columbia Univers! In a recent ‘ad- fdress che ‘sald, “a basic fact with \which the modern jworld has to reck. jon ts that Interna- jtlonal pefice can- jnot be secured by any statutes, dec- jlarations or agree- ments or by any form ot pdlitiéal or judicial organ- BAN MDUTLER ation, but that DRN-M SUTTER © 0 soace ta | tobe permanent and unbroken {t must find tts basis and its guarantee in.the heart of ‘man. Governme however popular or however powerful, &re in these mod. ern days only instruments of public Torld Topics wernments have it In thelr power by’ skillful use of the infor on -and influence which are at mmand to rouse public opin- fon in one*direction.or to calm it in another, but, after all, it 1s. public opinion which must and will finally prevail. A chief business of the j leaders the movement to estab- lish international peace must be to bring to public knowledge the ‘real facts as to the origin, the conduct and the consequences of wars. Hu- man nature which has* been strug- sling upward through the centuries } th The Nefarious Walsh Senator Tom Walsh, of Montana, the man chiefly respon sible for what known as the oil scandal of 1923-1924, which cost the people of the country a tremendous sum of money, villitied and slandered about every person connected with the oil industry and resulfed in the discovery of a mare's nest, is framing avothe candal,” which he will attempt to g on the public during the next session of congress. He son tracing all oil leases in the principal fieltls of the country, including Salt Creek, in order to establish imaginary collusions among the large oper: companies, their officers and others and interior department of: Is, Walsh's object, of course, is a repetition of the last vestigation,” purposes, to This time it i sult of Wal “in co which was designed wholly for pol tical destroy the Harding-Coolidge administration, s to destroy the Coolidge admir former effort, was humiliation and defeat for the Democratic party. The presenf effort is timed to b just previous to the 3 campaign. Pools and demiuyogues, like» Walsh never learn by experience. Aud it would ‘seem that the level headed senators of both parties ought to put a stop to such cheap pettifogging activities as Walsh is scek- ing to carry on, not to speak of cost of them, and-+ keep the legislative branch of the government from usurping the rights and prerogatives of the department of justice or the execu tive branch of the government, The idea of dragging reputable citizens before a senate grand jury scandal school, for no other reason than they, are suspected of acquaintanceship with oil operators, or mayhap own shares in development companies, and subjecting them to a system of outrageous and bulldozing inquisition, is nant to all fair minded American citizens, who recogn ‘i play decent consideration of enterprise, proper encouragement of development to be guaranteed by the laws of the land and due protection afforded thereby. Walsh and his likes, must be curbed in their nefarious political works, if the institutions of goverenment are to r main safe and the citizens of the country protected in their rights ‘and’ business. . Standing Still Is Moving Backward The conflict of the old, the existing, the continuing, with development, improvement, and reform is always the same. Change is constant. All things must change to-something new, to something strange. Everything that is created is changed by the laws of nature. Yet man, as he changes, fights change. History teaches us that he prefers oyerturning-things, and de- stroying the equilibrium of the whole world for a time, to submitting to constant, inevitable change. x As no man fording a swift stream can dip his foot twice in the same water, so no man can, with exactness, affirm of anything in the sensible world that is. As he utters the words, even ashe thinks them, the present has become the past, and what was true has become untrue. Only the rules of the most exact sciences are unchanging. Order of every kind turns at last to pedantry, and to get rid of the one, people destroy the other; and soit goes for awhile, until people perceive that order must be established anew. The more we learn of the nature of things the more evident it is that what we call rest is only unpreceived activity, that seeming peace is silence and strenuous battle. In every part, and every moment, the state of the cosmos is the expression of a transitory adjustment of contending forces, a scene of strife, in which all.of the combatants fall in turn, What is true of each part is true of the whole. Natural knowledge, tends more and more to the conclu wi a sion that all the choir of heaven and furniture of the earth aré forms of parcels of cosmic substance wending along the road of evolution. Standing still, is after all, going backward If you are not progressing, iniproving yourself, you are de eayir Red Defeat in Britain The American people were tified tg learn that the Tussian mpathizers bad been d vely defeated in the Brit- ish-labor couvention held recently, It will’ not do however, to form the opinion that the Reds in Britain have been entirely routed. Rumsey MacDonald, leader of the more conserya- tive laborites, put it, he situation is not so much changed as clarified.” It ix stated t new group of extreme Jaborites is in the pr sof forming, with the evident intention of splitting the Labor party in Great Britain and winning seats in parliament. There is general admissi that the Red sym pathizers have made serious inroads some of the labor unions, and they : Jabor or! zations by “boring in.’ They have ‘alr ined cont one important union ¢ e made se * inroads in others. A great many Ame ns believe that British labor is as rvative abor and that a revolutionary moye of atiy s proportions in Gr sritain is impos This however, is an erroneous ide ryatiy England would be regarded as redical here. in, the American laborer does not belong to any de fined class, He is just a plain American citizen, in most in Stances owning his own home, with a balance in the bank, nd perhaps an automobile. He seeks ‘to give his children an education knowing that 1t is quite possible that seme of them will rise to positions of importance in the country. The British laborer belongs to the laboring class with little hope of escape. He is class cons nd is more and more beginning to think as a labore than-is an Eng lishman. Besides this he owns no progerty aud has no bank uecount, and this year is very likely out of a job and living off the government unempl yment dole. The American laborer, reasoning as an American citizen ond not as a member of a laboring class, las every reason to be thankful for American ideals and the American standard of living. And so do the of the Aimerican people, for that matter. For anything which breaks down or degrades one section of our people ad yersely affects the whole & in setting out to capture th ly cons ment sible The Interparliamentary Union has had such a dull time that Mr. Satalkalva ought to be glad he was barred. The Methodist church denies responsibility for that ehureh prohibition report and no doubt it will end up by being blamed ou to department ration. The re-} will not be made over in a day or even jn a generation, but such an experience that through “which | the who world passed from 1914 to 1918 is the most powerful educatlon- al influence that could possibly’ be imagined. Hundreds of millions of human beings have themselves stood as with serlousness and high pur whether {t {s poasible that all this is necessar necomitant of the mareh of what is satirleally’ called elvilizaticn “The task of each and all of us | is ‘constantly and helpfully to reach ublie opinion, to multiply human ntacts and human interests. to | le to look on the other side of any disputed difficult question, and, in particular, to refrain from hose public acts and these personal | utterances regarding the policies of another people which,wound thelr | pride and justly give! so great of: | fen® If modern civilization fs to be preserved and developed, 4t must j be protteted from any repetition of the ppenings of ten years ago. No fabric of elvilization is strong enough to withstand a second ault of that kind: Our ideal is no hopeless dream and our plan of work is no futile program. We are engaged day by day in the patient task cf doing those very things which, if well done and sufficiently multiplied, will knit men of every natfon and speech more closely together tn concord, in helpful cooperation and in a recolve to establish the will to peace.” —_o____ The Deletion of Threo years ago, at the general convention of the Episcopal church, both the house of deputies and the house of bishops voted to strike the word “obey” from the~ marriage service. Whether thly deletion would he effected hung upon the action of the convention now in session. at New Orleans. The action has now been ratified by the vote on Satur: day of the house of deputies and.will very, likely be ratified by vote of } the house of bishops. So far as the deletion of this word 1s concerned, there will doubtless continue to be precisely as many | martial separations and, fortunately, | precisely as many happy marriages. Yet something will have been gain- ed. Many will be pleased to know they ye won their fight for a principle. Apparently more Eptsco- pallans will be pleased than will be | displeased by the banishment of | “obey” and it {s pleasant to have | people pleased. the charge fought minor | fous interpretations. Last. fall the | Church of England solemnly voted to substitute “cherish and. serve” for “obey,” which, looking at the words closely, seems nd very radical | Step. But here too the war .was for a principle and, since fight -we*ap- parently must, principles are fair enough things to fight abont. .1f nothing # to be gatned,., probably, from elimination of “obey,” it is comforting to reflect that probably | not much ds to be 1 | ent “ | | Volstead’s New Job Former Congressman A. J. Vol: stead ‘o longer belongs to the army unemployed, baying been ap- pginted adviser to the new pro- hfbition director for Minnesota, rth Dakota and Western Wiscon- n. We are happy for Mr. Volstea4, for we know of no sadder sight than an ex-conre out of a job and we are glad thut the father of the the sma | Vo found work. The | fathe discover that he has a troubjesome child, but, {£ time should be heavy en his hands in the north- | West, he could {ind a lot of work to do in the east, where the act | doesn’t always act as it should. We don't « © BO Into a Alscussion of the application of the theory rogard- | ing a cure of a dog bite by the hatr of the dog that did the biting, but we | think that Mr. Volstead has been out of the enforcement game altogether too long. If he cannot make bls child popular or, at least, respected, who can? |S aE v TJ URINE Night and Have Clean, Healt yee. it 2 w Sore, ieitatea } va -OUR EYES faned ce Granites 4 ire Martue often. Sesthes, Refreshas, Safet | utantor Adult. At @ff 4 or Free Byebook, tate | face to face with the holocaust of | world war. Today they are ask- | not with excitement ‘and fear, } €be Casper Dailp Cribune. _ COCKADE OR CONSTITUTION A third of a century ago Pres! dent, Benjamin Harrison said, in effect, that the fundamental differ- ence between the political systems of the Latin-American republics and that of the United States was that “here we follow a constitution; there they follow a cockade.” Differently expressed, here we followed princi- ples; th they followed the lead- ership oF individuals. That statement, true in its time, | is not sd true today either of the American people or of our Latin- Ameriean neighbors asa whole. In most of the Latin-American tepub- lcs, the tendency to base political procedure upon principles and’ poll- cles, and !és8 upon the ambitions and programs of leaders has grown, to the stabilizmion and progress of xovernment; in the United States it hag diminished. This deteriorating tendency in the United States has -been principally Cue to increasing governmental] in- terference with the internal uffairs’ of political partles—an interference in which this nation is unique, al- thoigh no nation owes so much to the political party system as an in- strumentality for cartying {nto ‘ef- fect the will of the people on funda- mental matters. The effect, if not the purpose, of most of our state and national legislation for the | regulation of political parties, has been to disintegrdte them as instru- mentalities for the expression of public opinion, and to make of them only institutions for the nomination and election of candidates for office. Our politics has therefore become, in the view, of most people, only an arena in which politicians struggle for personal preferment, and per- sonal government is being substi- tuted for party government. Voters participate {n the uffairs of political parties with slight regard for any principle or policy represented by a party, and candidates and office- holders thus chosen have a dimin ishing regard for the bellefs of those they are chosen particularly to rep- resent. We hare reached the point where candidates for office put for: ward by a political party often shed the principles of their reputed: party the day after election and even make a virtue of thelr proclaimed lack of fealty and responsibility to Jt. Politics ag a mere matter of office- seeking and office-holding {s of legitimate interest“only to the pro- fessional politician. It is not wor- thy the time or thought of a pn- triotic altizen who sees in politics only the means whereby pubile opin- fon governs under the institutions of representative republican govern- ™ment. Are we to hecome a nation of what President Harrison so well named “cockade chasers; mere fol- lowers of political adventurers, who tend to become under such a system either corruptionists or dema- gorues? It has been eaid that the time has come when the Democratle party must get back to its fundamental principles and cedse tobe. merely the toy of factions and of ambitious leaders. The sgme thing may be seid with equal force of both the great political parties and indeed of all political parties, tf we are to achieve the purposes of our form of government. Men come and go, but principles endurs. In a’ repubilc Uke ours political leaders assume Importance only in so far as they represent ideas held in common by great masses of voters. With the elimination of political parties, ns has serjously been proposed by -poll- ticlans who wish free’ réln ‘for their own opinions and ambitions, tt will be in the nature of things {mnos- sible for any but these politicians themselves to exercise permanent influence Upon affairs ‘of govern ment. It 1s evident. to those who have studied the situation that the people have grown weary of the sort of politics which stands only for the satisfaction of the ambitions of Indl- viduals for place and power. The decline in the proportion of people who participate in elections {is a re- flection of this dissatisfaction with the tendency to make of politics GIRL GAINED 7 POUNDS NINE YEARS AN INVALID That's just wh Cod Liver Ql. Compound Tablets did for the Babcock Girl—and>is doing as much for tens of thousands of thin, underwetght, weak and discouraged people, all over America, ‘These sugar coated, pleasant to take tablets should be given to chil- dren instead of the vile stomach uy setting oil itself{—they surely do help the frail, delicate, ttle ones and 60 tablets cost but 60 cents at Kimball Drug Store, Midwest Pharmacy, Casper Pharmacy, or any druggists, Read this letter if you have a child that needs to gain Health and strength: “My little girl was stricken with infantile paralysis when she was 6 months o'd and was an Invalid for 9 years—when I eaw an ad in the paper that McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets would build up wasted tissues. I bought a box and she gained very slowly at first and ofter taking elght boxes, she gained seven pounds.” Thanks to McC Cod Liver Oi! Compound Tablets, after trying almost everything else on the market, ~She 1s on ‘the road and goes to school every Li’ Babcock, Appleton, H to recover, Imitations of McCoy's may be of- fered but’ be sure’ and ask for Mc- Coy's, the original and genuine and if after thirty days’ treatment you are not delighted with results—why, get your money back,—Ady, DON’T LET YOUR RADIATOR FREEZE For Lack of ALCOHOL — WE HAVE IT! Casper’s Finest Filling Station INDEPENDENT only an arena for the combat of office-seekers. But office-holders ex- ist for the service of the people’and of the natf6n, not the people and the nation for the conyenlence and service of pollticians. ‘The means of relief, however, are within the power of the people themselves. There {s need of a re- vival of consideration and discus- sion of national problems which it is possible for the people themselves to supply. So long as we have gov- ernment by primary, in which only the candidacies.of individuals are at stake, the people may find a sub- stitute for the old system of com- mon counsel by voluntary assem- blage. ‘As big things are lifted ‘up, stoalier ones disappear. With an in- creased study and application by the people of the things really {m- portant in politics and public affairs, the importance and power of tho political adventurer will become weakened. Elventually the obstacles to the development of party govern: ment, that is, government by bodles of men representing ‘dea® rather than mere appetite for office,’ will be swept aw Up-Hill BY CHRISTINI ROSSETTI Does the road wind up-hill all the way? Yes, to the very end. Will the day's journey whole long day? From morn to night, my friend. take But {s.there for the night a reating place? = A roof for when the slow dark hours begin, May not the darkness hide it from my face? You cannot miss that inn. Shall I meet other wayfarers at night? i Those who have gone before. Then must I knock, or call when just in sight? They will not keep you standing at that door. Shall 1 find comfort, travel-sore and weak ?. Of labor you shall find the sum. Will there be beds ‘for me and all who seek? Yea, beds for all who come. Sere Se During the days of the gold rush {n California ordinary store rooms in San Francisco rented for as much as three thousand dollars a month, In advance. the Who’s Who The new secretary of war, Dwight ¥. Davis, is thought by a good many to at least partially owe his ap pointment to the fiery Col. William “Mitchell. ‘During the fllness. of ex- x Secretary John W. Weeks, Davis who was then assist- ant secretary of jwar was In charge. When officlaldom hyas clamoring far che court martial of Mitchell, Davis . went to President Coolidge and pro- posed a different plan. He proposed an inipartial com- mission tg inves tigate Mitchell DWIE-T DAVIS charges. His ab’ {ty te pour ofl on troubled waters is believed to have won him his pres- ent’ post. Davis is a lover of sports and is the man who donated the Davis tennis cup 25 years, ago. Frog 189 1900 -he w gene of the count hest tennis players. He spends a good deal of his thne out of door Graduated from Harvard in’ 1900 he is now 46. During the war he wus a major and later lieutenant col- onel, For two years during Harding's term he was a member of the war finance corporation. For a number of years Davis was identified with various clvic activ- ities of St. Louls. He was mi sistant secretary of war in 1923. ——— Good Advice Big concerns should continue their advertising as long as they continue business. Some firms, hewever, make a big advertising splurge, spend sev- depend eral thousand dollars and upon this to, carry them through thelr ex . It must be taken in- to consideration that it does not take many years for a new generation to appear, and the new generation {is not liable to remember the products that were popular with their par- ents, and parents somehow haven't the time to inform them. A naval officer says that on one Sceasion during his destroyer’s visit to'the Philippine Islands the sailors were lounging along the rail, throw- Ing pennies into the water for -a crowd of dusky. naked youngsters “IF THEY DOUBT KARNAK UST SEND THEM TO ME” “And I Can Furnish a Long List ef People Right Here in Denver Who Bless This Great Medicine Just the Same as I Do,” Says Miss * Taylor. “T don't see for the life of me how anyone can doubt the wonderful powers of this remarkable medicine, Karnak, after what it is doing all over town, but-if there is anybody, just send them to me and let me tell them my experience.” That's the way. Miss Taylor, 4429 Beech St... Denyer, spoke to a Karnak representative, the other day. “And if what I tell them about what Karnak did for me don’t convince them 1 can give a long lst of: other. people right here in Denver who bless and praise this great medicine just the same as I do.” she continued. “But to get back to my own case, for one long year I suffered with tn- digestion. After each meal I would simply ‘feel miserable. Bverything I ate would do me harm instead of Margaret, good and kept me feeling draggy and all let down all the time? I had to ‘force myself to work and I always felt too wort out to enjoy myself, “I knew I bad to find something for my stomach troubles and. I met so many people who had taken Kar- nak and gceocness knows I never heard any medicine praised !!ke they, all did this, so I got some, too. “And it wasn’t any time after I began taking Karnak until I was eating hearty and enjoying every bite. And the wonderful part was that I didn’t have a sign of indiges- tion or distress afterwards. So, ¥ just kent-on taking Karnak and now I'am like a new person. If: there is a thing on earth the matter with me, I don't know it. 4 “T gained six pounds in two weeks, too. Oh, I just tell you, this Ka) nak {s the best ever, and it's meant so much to me that I want to tell everybody I see who looks like they feel bad, to get some Karnak.” Warnak is’ sold In Casper exclus- ively by Kimball Drug Stores, Inc., and by thé leading druggist in every town.—Ady, MONDAY, OCTOBER.19, 1925 a Uvely scene. No sooner was ajot penny, thrown into the water than 2 native boy dived and brought it to the surface. Many times a penny did not reach bottom before 3 boy caught It. On the wharf the native mayor, surrounded by his fellow townstmen in full regatia, was awaiting the ar- rival of the American naval officers to whom he was going to tender a grand reception. "He watched the diving boys with keen Interest. A reckless sailor lad begin throw- ing quarters and then half dollars into the water, Then some one threw overboard, one after another, a number of big, glistening silver American dollars. What a seramb- ling! It seemed as if every boy In the entire town was-elther in air. or in the water. Suddenly an came dashing thi American resident breathlessly MOTHER:~ Fletcher’s Castoria is especially prepared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipa- tion, Flatulency, Wind Colic and iatrhes ; allaying Fev regulating the Stomach and Absolutely Harmless—No Opiates, The Ideal Radiator Solution for Summer and Winter Kx X x» RY 09, 0.9. AX ) x BR RRAARANS EAST SIDE GARAGE mony to go on, for goodness s; stop throwing those dollars. chief of police has alveady kicked « his shoes and the mayor fs just star: Ing to take off his cont.” dad," he answered, started something I can’t finish.’ <<<. crushed yearly making a special kind of sand RYE RY BRA AKAN XRRX RRR RX AY Wholesale and Retail sailors; “If you want this ce Little Louls had completed tirst day at school and had climbej ~ upon his father's lap to give dad if impressions the-eof. “Weill,” said dad, “how do ink you will like school?" Whereupon the countenance the honest» tr “I believe 1 “To tell you inciha Dertoe to dive’ for) cittwaa lithe wah and slloutel tothe erou, t Louls took on a most “serlors cx pression, Hundreds of tons of garnets : for the purpose ishness arising therefrom, and, by Bowels, aids the assimilation of | Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Bs(flidan | Physicians everywhere recommend it, Does Not Freeze Lasts ‘ Forever Odorless Non- Explosive Non- Corrosive YY YX NW) Say ans JOHN M. WHISENHUNT EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTOR Cleveland and Chandler Cars FIRST AND PARK Mail This Coupon Today! pay their subscription 1 Address Casper Daily Tribune. Beneficiary -.-.-... Name Beneficiary ... year at the regular rate and add the smal) c scription before the year is up, my policy will lapse. iS) tego fab Raia Reset Tee Sa Re ' (Write rame in full) Placeyor: birthoo a ofa Se oo Beneficiary --.---------.____ more than one policy is wanted, INEING~ wanjratwmniskienaeibiconnaciouwe anaes ane Application and Order Blank Federal Accident and Pedestrian Insurance Policy Issued by The Casper Daily Tribune hereby apply-for a Federal Life Insurance Com Lam:to'pay $1.00, same accompanying this order. 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