Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 31, 1925, Page 8

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faa rr all Pr A’ PAGE EIGHT Che Casper Daily Cribune By J & HANWAY AND B. &. HANWAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice ay second class matter November 1y16. The Casper Daily Tribune issued ev ‘Tribune every Sunday at Casper Publicatton offices. Bullding opposite vostoffice. Business Telephunes ..- Branch Telephone ting All Departments. ung end The Sunday Morting ‘Tribune w-----215 and 16 MEMBER THI ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press ts exclusively ited to the use for publication o! all news credited tn this paper nnd also the local n ws published herein Member of Audit Bureau of Cireutation (A B,C) N ional Advertising Kepresentatives exer’ Bldg Chicago Prudden, Ki ng & Fk Ave, New York H Mass. 60? Montguimery St.. co, Cal. Leary Bidg., Seattle, W. and Champer ot Com merce Los s Copies of the Daily Tribune are on Ole in the New Boston and San Francisco offices and visitors are welcome - SUBSCKIPTION R/ By ¢ and Sunc . Daily aa e paid | er subscrit vance and the lon becomes une month tn arrears. YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE Tribune after looking carefully for {t call 15 or 16 im enger. Register complaints before 8 1’cloc a You Can't Fool Everybody KICK, It you don’t find yot and {t will be delivered to you by spec rg All of us know what pleasure it is to need a person who is real—without pretentions, without affectations. Yet few of us ever allow ourselves to appear to others as we really . Be yourself! Vo affect a quality certainly good adyice from the vernacular, and to plume-yourself upon it, is just to confess that you have not get it. Whether it is courage, or learning, or inteiect, or wit, Ww with women, or riches, or social position, or whateyer else it may be that a man boasts of, you may conclude by his boasting about it that that is precisely the direction in which he is rather weak. Mor if man pe faculty to the full, it will net occur to him to make a at show of affecting it, he is quite content to know that he has it. This the application of the Span- ish proverb, “a clattering hoof is a nail gone.” Of course, no man ought to let the reins und show himself just as he is, moles, se all. There are, many of us know, evil s which r sesses is entirely loose rth-marks and to our nature les qui “the negative attitude of Gissimulation,”’ but this do not justify a positive feigning of qualities which ure not there, It should be remembered always that af tion is easily r lized, even before it clear what. is being affected. Affectation cannot last very long and one day the mask will fall off. No one can for long preserve a fictitious cter; for nature will assert itself. There is a maxim attributed to Napoleon, “Everything; that is unnatural is imperfect.” It is 4 rule of univer up plication. Careful of Material Selected The test of every man’s life, is his ability to get on with himself. When he is thrown back on himself he discovers that it is heaven or hell to live with the resources he in himself, There is something in us and something more working th that which is in us. The first factor li materia] out of which life is made. In each of us is a storage space, a deep spot into Which all that we learn and seems to sink and stay. Out of that same mysterious d come all our new ideas and all reinforcements of lif these new reinforcements make use of nothing except the ma- terial which is stored in the deep spot. If a man has gathered in readi is of what life may be, those him with a great idea of what he himself may do. If he has gathered only mediocre ideas, then those alone can be used in suggesting to him an idea of employment. Aman cannot be in- spired or helped with material that is not in his own deep spot. This is his responsibility. On the other hand, there is also an extra power or influ- us to use is nd auequantance great an be used to inspire ence which uses this raw material beyond our calculation. We never can tell in advanee just what can be done with the resources we bring i ourselves. We are in touch with more power than we ordinarily use. Drifting From Paternalism President Coolidge believes it would be pr dle to have the states assume muny functions of government t are now carried out in co-operation with the federal government. The moye by state governors for 1 of the federal inheritan tax is a step along this line. A definite policy could not be laid down, however, us in many states the population is seattered which entails difficulties not confronted in more thickly set- tled districts. But here the fec yvernment coulél mia ul. Jowances, but in general it is the tion to encourage highway development by the than a continuation of its promotion from Wa Things Material and Spiritual In the + dent's T ksgivi Day proclamation, occurs hould we progress in moral and spiritual ire a God-fearing people, who should s inst evil and. str for righteousness in living the Golden Rule we should from our abundance ve those less fortunately placed. We should tude to God for his many favors. The Old Warrior Speaks General Gourand presided at the annual exercises for the Vranco-American forces at Chaumont. In the course of his speech he said: ‘Despite the fall of the frane and the rise t ourselves and obsery help in gri bow of the dollar, France intains the same gratitude toward the American nation, which helped France gain victory in the . I prais the Locarno accords, but also remember sig- ures are not everything. I remember that arms are neces ary too. This view, perhaps, is not shared by the United States, but our trans-Atlantic friends a se ted from Europe by ditch several thousand miles broad. Were France aced like the United States, L would immediately advo eate disarmamen Who Won the War Who won the war?Comparing the six German gove ment, municipal and corporation issues now listed on the d York stock exchange board reveals the with the eleven French issues on the big somwhat startling fact that all the German issues are selling above their offering prices while only two of the French issues make a similar showing. The showing ninly raises the pertinent question, “Who won the war would at least seem to indicate the identity of the n which has won the peace, The American investing publ to take much more kindly t® the obligations of a government and a people which agreed to a schedule of reparations pay- ywents under the Dawes plan than to those of government hich gives no indications @éven of reelr o payment of one per cent interest on its debts to our government, Russian newspapers declare that the British won the big vietory in the Locarno conference. Anyhow it seems to. be asettled fact that Russia didn’t European statesmen are said to be frownin the idea f having another disarmament conference in America doubt: ss on the theoryethat it might 1 1 disarmament, 111; 270 Madison t The Casper Daily Cribune subject on which a 1 men think aif. ed by each house cf the} which was |man does Three years Idter aledictorian of the national legislature. He says; ed in 1910. his term in} , While the house of represent the United States | passed only three and one-half per | entered the rld ¥ s tor | c¢ of the bills and resolutions in Robinson entered the first officer’s| troduced, the senate, without effec- | training camp Fort Benjamin cloture, passed in prvportion Harrison and recetved the commis-|rnrec times as many as did the s'on of first Meutenant fn infantry of representatives, with clo- in Aug 1817. “He was assigned to the 234th infantey of the 84th| “ahere have been vague” claims division Cam: nary Taylor, F. bythe opponents of reform in | the senate rules, that the absence of effective cloture tended to prevent multiplicity of laws, My contention is that the figures 1 have given es- tablish the fact that the absence of effective cloture tends to increase the number of law: Touisville, Ky, 'Thre®,months later noted to captain of tn - and went overseas Sept Shortly afte 1918 of Occupation‘on the Rhine. Tt w there he recefvéd the rank of majo { he service He was ‘mustered out of with; this ran August 1919 Beauty F + ete egere ie | By Thomas Moore. iystos | — rid Topics — *|on, what a pure and sacred thing G6 Is Beauty, curtained from fhe} ofjirrest and conviction § form of punishment, will] Of the gross world, iMumining ersph from committing ®] One only mansion with her light! ing and evening it feevere sentences have| Unseen by man’s disturbing eye— invited ne Prevented crime and never | The flower that- blooms beneath | pA td will,” the ‘district attorney of New | the Bea. Sac York City, Joab| Too deep for sunbeams, does not le. H, Banton, de-} Hid in more chaste obscurity. clared in a re-| soul, too, more than half divine, cent speech, Where, through some shades of “Crime can be earthly feeling prevented only fteligion's softened glories shine, ' tice what he has| nurses shall have free tea so long been taught.” as he lv i The district fk i” the advantage to the state of speedy urrests and’ convictions as a de-| j terrent to crim by cit condi: | » t Manhattan five years ago] red with today. | p e calendar in York | ab over 2,000 indict: | “A person in prison could not be tried within two | cre months after indictment, and one] who was fortuna to be} on bail would r within | Salt Creek Busses eighteen months Criminals stick to their particular Casper, Townsend Hotel : Banton explained, ani m, and 1p. m and 6 p. m elias tha ieouse te ne Leave Salt Creek : pe eee )) 8am. 1p. m and 6 p. m, ¥ <press Bus “eaves 9:30 Daily | Salt Creek Transportation Co BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS TELEPHONE {44 _ ANNOUNCEMENT ON AND AFTER NOV. 1S' Royal Blue Line Parlor Cars Will Leave for Denver ness prin TRAIN SCHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN Arri BD) darian iecomsln aripiis wis ¢ soneSenerh SBO Ds Rai Eastbound NO. 6228) nos) memmodptoncnessas, Bt45ip. mi No Sunday trains west of Casper CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY Eastbound Arri No, 30 ...- No B82 ... Departs || Credit Exchange | 7 police frequently have been vaitied Who’s Who by reason of this, A professional _ robber in ‘holding up his victim The newly appointed senator from] «aula rob without. killing be Indiana, Arthur Ry Robinson whol ine shadow of the electric will fill tho seat left vacant by the] aeters him ‘from committing tour: | death of the late Samuel M. Ralston, | ger, put the amateur -frequéntly OL 6 Toppeee tik girls, Uke: Senet nn aae lia etor ne? itt 1 aspire to be president born. in ‘a Uttlel iy crimes of viol y RTO es But why Newnan HEI picks | erin wish (o assume that po- Meington, cAtareh | vent to tl n of infinite cares and res'pon- PapeereD! srenuate Mr. sibilities when the salary that goes Rae BA Atter reve With it Is not as large as that pala Ei af + he | Slender r to a moving picture executive? Mar- pate ot tae {, "Of course, th ion Pair Mrs. Tully Marshall in Hee eee then | te declared. “lt is for the fury to! private is sald to draw a larger fered Ohie| termine upon the. fects th Built salary as motion picture scenarist EBERT tar-| 25 rooms of: the étenniant and] and than President Coolidge. at Ada, Ohio.) eye, Nias detendant yw Miss Vairfax declares that (a “hire oda: coir: | & bd will be lenient on|*2@ 48 sing to resign thisasaiary |) that -dt| Beer egos fd to be the largest pal to a time two th those who. through foree of | Drntueg cant pa std” ru a fowl ‘i eo motion pietures- “on” her ARTHUI Son Who are now [ sudden’ temptation | B Ser ARTH IR RROBINSON Rabee, rank B tt ue */own.” Not from a woman's view- Willls and Simeon } pili pila’ JereiN | point, however. Miss Wafrfax de. . ea Ks 4 clares she doesn't believe. ther Fess, were professors at Ada, Af " here is Ort course Robinson \ The Two Houses — {seh o t nat Is the only degree. | Writing in the Forum Vice-Presi-| rently from all women,” she de : his m we he en-/ gent Dawes compares the number of |¢lared. “All men belleve there Is a tered Indiana law hool and was|jaws pa feminine point of view and no wo- Wwe at _|coming more appreciative of good )jand Mr. men SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1928 aera coiled and ready to strike. never be willing to spoil {t by chang ing a tragic ending into a happy one. So 1 would not care to pro- duces such stories. 1 would not care | her child was clinging, Again came to nroduce a picture with a tragic |the warning, and she found jerselt ending. The pictures are for the| Surrounded by snake@ + great masses of people and they} Mrs. Slauterback ves the need some relief from the daily grind} battle must havy ed) more of life, some hopeful note to Iift| than an hour. bad at last their spirits. I don't mind tragedy in the middle of a picture, but tt should lift o little at the last.” Motion picture vudiences ard be- won her way't! cordon the, bodies ranging in size fro! to four feet, remained as token her prowess, . Miss Fairfax thinks. She < Marshall (Tully Marshall Phillips {s his real name) have been married for 22 years. He will have an interesting part in her first pic- ture. \ picture: Heroine of Snake Fight Lived Here Until Year Ago Mrs. H, H. Slauterback, heroine of an amazing battle with an army of rattlesnakes, as recorded in dis- patches from Fort Lupton, Colo., was formerly a resident of Casper. She left here last year after spend- ing more than a year in the employ of BE, J. Sulfivan ag ‘housekeeper, according to Mrs,.H. J. Perkins, Mrs. Slauterback, known here un- der her maiden name, Kate McHale, set out on horseback Tuesday with her three-year-old daughter, bound for a nearby “field where some ducks killed the night before had been left. When she dismounted to open the gate into the field she heard the ominous tocsin of a rattler and turned a healthy, hai ee ah BSB Cuticura ‘Shaving tek to see a_four-foot reptile stands ‘to on that u legis.-| Miss Fairfax was first an actress, Ived-a degree of bachelor of lative body which at times must/then a playwright and thirdly a pho- philosophy from the University of/ rant concessions to individual mem-|toplay executive, She worked first Chicago. While there he specialized] jers, in order to right to|with Lasky of Famous E in modern languages, lact as a whole, more. jaws |later With First: National, and In 1916, when the w two) in proportion than a body not under|had a hand in more’ pletures ‘than | ve 3 Central Pre Democrats {n the United Sta es sen| chat handte: But what are the|she can-remember. And‘ fs record. = = ate from Indiana r Robinson, ts’ In the last five congresses|ed of her that everyone o: then considered | only youngster. /the senate bills and resvluuons| has pald its producer, aes sake ecmey tie has entered the primary peaiiiet Har’) pa d by the Senate, with ninety Sex plays will be taboo in her|the people. And the greatest) of New, and James BL vere a six members, exceeded by 18% the| productions, she want to|these is romance. I think. it has nomination for United States | yuse vilis and resoiuuons passed | 4 ferentiate between sex and ro-|been too much set aside for mere New, now postmaster gen |py the house, with members. | mane, I {i ted“tr e: ”* x en | 03 nee, {am not interested-in pro-| Sex plays. , Was succesaful in the contest.| rhe ies are 8113 for the |queing see tear ' : tetas At the time he ran for the nom-| senate a 1 for the ‘house, 9 es drama, tf it is only that.) And Miss Fa'rfax's pictures ill Heaps remy A Bikths ah nitiseht 5 Interested in producing ro-|have happy endings, for, she says, ination 4 : Sa PaERaT eR Tr venture, comedy and ro-| while “I like realistic drama at umes chat hisine heen’ in 1914 And pam Say what | hone to give to'and when it is really great, L would served in assembly in given a chanée, is the fact’ tase im anh re em 1915 and 1917, The senate was Dem-|the senate passed these 3113. bills ratic in 1915. In that y Sena-land resolutions out of a total of tor Robinson was che nimous- in@ivoed on thevHouse ity floor nd tWO) passed its smaller ber of 2931 ’ when the complexion of] out of a total of introduced. the senate chan to Republican During the last five cong es, | was elected unanimousls'| :nerefore, the senate passed ten and | floor leader and president jone-hal€ per cent of the bills and resolutions introduced in the Shall We Mix Religion and Politics? An ELECTION SERMON by Rev. A. E. COOKE at 10:45 A. M. Sunday in First Congregational Church | (AMERICA THEATER) || At 7:30 P. M. in ODD FELLOWS’ HALL Mr. Cooke Will Preach On | HE VALUE OF DREAMS” Tomorrow Rey. A. E. COOKE will begin his second year as minister of this church and both morn- there will be ANNIVERSARY SERVICES to which all members and friends are cordially ment of The Lord’s Supper and reception of. new members at the close of the morning worship. COME AND HELP US MAKE THE DAY A SPIRITUAL TRIUMPH by moral traix Like light through summer: foll- | — = ing. The rea ge stealin: von that the re-| Shedding a glow of such mild hie, | sult has not|s and yet so 8 been attained ts akes the very darkn that the indi-] More beautiful than light el vidual has re oo = ceived — instruc Sir Thomas Lipton has turned tion, but has| over the old home of his parents in not been com-| Lanarkshire for use as a nurses* Jeab H, Banton pelle to prac-|bome and has promised that the dit is. ‘ON TRIAL” Y OUR credit reoord is under scrutiny by the credit man of every business house with whom you have had dealings. Be sure that your accounts are all paid up to date. Thus can concerns. ciple. lal tien sia ibinis ibe tnieer-n ect el aio AB ae Se NUR MIanN ei you expect to retain the good will and friendliness of your merchant fread whose faith in you prompted him to extend you the courtesy of credit. IF you fail to fulfill the obligation, you not only lose your own self- respect, but the respect of those who so kindly extended you credit. It is an honor for a man to enjoy and merit credit relations with busi- It means that merchants recognize his integrity and It is unfair to betray this confidence. The operation of business requires bad accounts to be eliminated a far as possible, Your credit is now on trial. Guilty or not guilty? your bills. ROMPTLY Pam st LeRLE eRe 2 MURR laren, pepe ares a a club, she crushed its head, and started to catth the horse, to which the venomed 140 snakes, \ few inches, y, f va

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