Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 10, 1925, Page 6

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PAGE SIX J & HANWAY AND HANWAY red at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice ax second class matter ovember 22 1916. sper Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning € every Sunday ut Casper Wycming Publication offices Tribune Building opposite vostoffice. felephones 2. Branch Telephone === ---15 and 16 Al) Departments. MEMBEF THE ASSOCIATED PRIESS Phe Associated Press ts exclusively entived to the use for publication of ail news credited tn this papier and also the: local n ws publisted herein Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. BoC.) National Advertising Kepresentatives Prudden, King & Prudden 172 dg Chicago 1l.; 270 Madison | Ave., New York City Globe Mass. 607 Montgomery St Francisco. Cal... Leary Wash. 1nd Chamber of Com if os Angeles. e Dally Tribune are on file tn tnt Boston Francisco offices and visitors are d the Dally Tribune w:! ption becomes orfe month tn arrears. KICK, UF YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE | you don't find your Tribune after looking carefully for it call 16 or 16] t will be delivered to you by special messenger. Register complaints before § o'clock. E> of our development, of good and bad influences which have be- /set us, of our mutations of feeling and purpose, and of the of governments may lead to. If the British government cannot oil, cotton and copper. Only thus could American consumers eugendered when the “higgling of merchants” is “lifted to the Greatest Book in the World Nobody disputes the value of Mr. Carnegie’s gift to the masses, but we may as well keep in mind that the highest and best sources of truth, light, and elevation of mind are not libraries, but our inward and outward experience. Human life with its joys and sorrows, its burdens and alleviations, its crimes and yirtues, it’ deep wants, its solemn changes, and its retributions, always pressing upon us, what a library is this! And who may not study it? Every human being is a volume worthy to be studied. The books which endure the longest are those which give us the most truthful pictures of human life. But much more im- proving is the original, when we know how to read it. We, always have this page open before us; and still more, we are always writing a volume more full of instruction than all hu- man productions—our own lives. No work of the most ex- alted genius can teach us so much as the revelation of human nature in the secrets of our own souls. In the workings of our own passions, in the operations of our own intelligence, in the retributions which follow our own good and eyil deeds, in the dissatisfaction with the present, in the spontaneous thoughts and aspirations which form part) of every man’s biography. The study of our own childhood, of all the stages great current which is setting us toward future happiness or woe—this is a study to make us truly wise. All of us haye ac cess to this fountain of truth. If Nations Profiteer Secretary of Commerce Hoover has reiterated the warn- ing he sounded three years ago against the growing evil of in- ternational profiteering. The process by which semimonop. olistic prices are being imposed is only too familiar. It is the same as that prohibited in this country by the Sherman anti- trust legislation. The foundamental eyil of it is that ernments are the sponsors and can be reached only through the channels of international polities. Secretary Hoover clear ly points out what such competition for monopoly on the part ry: be reached on the rubber business for example, there is cer- tain to be a growing demand for reprisals which may be in our power. We might establish control of production and price on hope to get back from the rest of the world an amount compen- sating them for what is taken from them. Me The United States has no present intention of instituting this sort of reprisal. And as Mr. Hoover says, the world will never go to war over the price of anything. But the ill feeling | Price of Empire 1 The French are trying to arrive at me sort of figures which will tell them whether or not tmiperialism pays. This must be the meaning of Statistits presented the other day ex-Premler Painleve to the Fl- ance Committee of the Chamber | ee Deputies. Since assuming the Protectorate over Morocco a dozen rs ago, France according to this ort, has expended there 950,900, francs and hag lost 2,176 men killed and 8,297 wounded. Since | taking over the mandate for Syria five years ago, expenditures ‘in that country have been more than 2,000,- | 000,000 francs, with military losses 606 in killed, wounded and missing. It is more difficult to make’ caleu- lations on the profit side of the led- Neither territory contributes taxes to the national treasury, Both, however, provide fayorable openings for French traders. Morocco “is ed upon as a reservoir of man in case of war, but Syria, un r league mandate, is. not supposed be counted upon as such. Both dd, of course, to French prestige and world influence, which are, per- haps, the essence of “imperialism. But the French are seriously won- dering whether the empire {s worth | ger. 1 pow. c to them what it costs. Certainly the have never been so successful from this standpoint as the British. a RRP DS Oban ing Tells of Russia Senator Capper of Kansas, who recently returned from a tour of Europe, is convinced that a “hands- oft" policy is the best policy for this country to practice with regard -to Red He put the matter Address on the subbject, whic » made the other day, when he said: “Until Russia is willing to play the game on the square we had bet- ow 8 ut entering into any friendly relations with her. When that country 1s willing to talle to us-on the same terms as the other nations across the Atlantic, then it will be time tg consider recognizing her government—not until." lis is sound advice, based upon the bitter experiences of those Hu1o- pean nations ve ventured to deal ja during he govern nents of some of these nations were honextly persuaded that Moscow was at length ady to nbide by the accepted rules of the diplomatic game. They were to be rudely awakened from their rosy illusions, The plain fact is that the Russian Soviet Government con tinues to play a me entirely its wn. ry Act of recugnition by aroth government has thus far cen uniformly turned by the Mus: evites to their own advantage— cifically, to the promotion of a Id revolution. Soviet tric y is now every wide-awake known tn the west of Europe more complet: than at the present moment. ‘There are indications that Red Aip:cmacy, having played fast and lous: w! jonal ethics, is this state of affairs to heart, Forelgner Commissar Tchitcherin’s desperate attempts to smash the Locarno Security Con- ference, which in effect only empha- sized the fundamental incompatibil- y that exists between communism and all enlightened, progressive £0- clety. For America to recognize Moscow would be to go to the succor cf a regime which fg. very near y on its ss—which is only just begin- s to realize, perhaps, that it can- not go on fooling all. the world all the time and that bad faith In inter: national politics, like bad fulfh in plane of international relations” can lead only to trouble of the most serious significance. Secretary Hoover has properly is | sued this informal warning to those nations that are foster ing this idea of international profiteering. It is a word to the pound-wise who are playing with fiery particles. War on Protection Every dollar of money that American bankers persuide their clients to put into industrial enterprises in Germany aud Austria will be used to the itmost extent of its influence against a protective tariff in this country. ‘The American people must soon face the most active propaganda to break down our protective tariff that they have ever had to meet, for this propaganda will be backed by great financial interests who will take the ground that the loans made to industrial interests as well as to European nations can never be paid ex- cept by throwing down our protective tariff bars and permit- ting Europe to flood our country with its product We must, say these propagandists for free trade, Jose all that is being invested in Europe or else give Europe the opportunity for | putting cheaply ma the American markets | I ement is being backed by great importing houses, | some of the big department stores, by financial interests which to some extent are keeping in the background; but the work is under way— the poison is being put into the well from which American re drinking. Without realizing how dangerous is this poisoned well, they are gradually absorbing into their system a deadly poison inimical to the life of in- dividual business and to the prosperity of the life of the whole oountry. Fear of the Old Fashioned Critics of the time seem to lose patience with anything that is old-fashioned. As thef strive for progress and take so- ciety apart to see if something may be done to make it run bet ter or with fewer knocks, they press ever onward toward some- thing that is new and different. To those who rinse their voices in the wilderne nion and free advice, the answer frequently comes that they are old fashioned. Some things do pu grow old with time. Thus it is that truth, virtue, justice ugfi the like are as young and as essential today as they were vgien the world was new. So it is with the bond of duty that binds parents and children together in to what is known as the family circle f 8 of oF Homely and Dumb Albert E. Wiggin, New York biologist and author, speak- | ing before the Wisconsin Teachers’ association said: “The more intelligent, beautiful women are allowing the less intelligent and less beautiful to have nearly all the children. If it keeps up the next generation will be born homely and dumb. It takes three college women to product one baby and that during the same time one homely secrubwoman with little education will produce two or three, Only about half of Ameri college wo iwen ever marry and the average college-bred married woman s but two children.” | moreover, private life, doesn't pay in the Joni; run NE ice 8 T. R. and Tariff “Roosevelt and the Old Guard” ts the title of a book dealing with the McKinley-Roosevelt-Taft period of our polftical history by J. Hampton Moore pf Philadelphia. As a resume ot political conditions that prevailed when Roosevelt was in power, the book will be of value to all students of that hectic petiod of American history. Mr. Moore was president of the National Republican League which helped mightily in the two Roose- velt presidential campaigns, and was for a time, by appointment of Roos- chief of the bureau of manu- res, in fact, the organizer of bureau which ultimately merged the ¢€ ting bureaw of foreign commerce in the de- commerce. He was for about 14 years, a mem- ber of the house of representatives, and during his later years of service one of the most active of the mem- bers of the ways and means com- mittee on which he served as second in rank to Mr, Fordney of Michigan throughout the World War. In 1920 Is estic nt of mayor of Philadelphia, The book, therefore, comes from one who was in close touch with national affairs while Roosevelt was in the running. Mr. Moore deals familiarly with the leading men of Roosevelt's tlme—Taft, Cannon, De- evelt period, and Mr. Modre not. He quotes some of the earlier speeches of Roosevelt when he stood squarely for the McKinley policies, but credits him not with “unloading"™ the tariff question on Taft, his successor, but with rather overly elde-stepping the tariff at a critical period. He tells how Taft, Cigarette Growth Despite the increase in population in the United State the consumption of cigars is no greuter than it was twent t irs ago, while the consumption of cigurettes has increase: more than 1,000 per cent, © mokers vow prefer a ligh ed cigar, while in the Not over five per cent of the cig necticut vidley is suitable for 1 but n dark*one woul osluced in the Con when a candidate, started 1A on the tariff and finally went out to, Win: ona to defend .the opponents of 8 KX, Old time Republicans, who remember the resultant battle, will er Mr. Moore's recital of facts, some of them not hitherto narrated. Of course, the Roosevelt es leading to the break litferer of are eribed. Mr. Moore was with loosevelt until that break ame whe yained with Taft nd the ‘ nization, not’ withstand fection of many ot he resigned from congress to become | pew, Root, Beveridge, Pinchot and others—and tells some noteworthy | stories of these distinguished per. sonages in their relations to the “Rough Rider” president, So con uous an advocate of a protect! could not well leave t of a book dealing with ’ | soft corn, or corn between th World Topics “America {s growing up,” said Walter Prithard Eaton, critic and author, in a recent lecture. He is not glarmed at the present state of affairs and says our tastes in Ntera- ture and plays are a healthy, portent. “America now reached a point in its devel- Mopment. where {ts resources - have ——— “We are: begin- ning nationally to come of age.” © One of the signs pot) America’s ma- jority ts the great revival of interest in) American ;an- tiques. Another sign that America ts coming of age, and’ the, most striking and’ pro- WALTER DEMON vocative ! of com. WALTER EATON ment, especlaliy by the “viewers with alarm,” is the revival of seventeenth’ and’ elgh- teenth century plays in this country, Because of thelr alleged. indecenctes of thought and phrase they have been banned from the stage both here and !n England for more than 150 years. “The revival of such plays ’ as Congreve's ‘Love for(Love' and ‘The ‘Way of the World,’ the’ moot bril- Mant of these Restoration plays,” said Eaton, ‘has literally burst upon the American stage. Most of them were never acted before in America, largely because they were thought too improper. “Some one or something*has been sitting on the Nd in. this country for a great number of. years,” he sald, “We have lived under a long list of taboos and suppressions. Now the lid {s off.” Some of the faflings of the Purl- tan stage of American art, he @hid, were the tendency to confuse@es- thetic morals with everyday ones, and the insistence on a happy end- ing. ‘0 country but America could be so quaint, could be quite so un: able to divorce literary personalities from actual personalities. We were a people unable to keep calm and disinterested in judging works of art. That is one of the troubles with drama and Iterature in this country. The fact that we would not approve of a certain code of conduct In everyday life doesn't mean we can’t see it on the stage without frothing at the mouth. “Our insistence on a happy end- ing {s due to the same thing. We can't help identifying our everyday selves with what is going on on the stage, and so we don't want the dramatist to do anything but make that self come out all right in the end “The artist of today {s slopping over. The New York rtage has some of the things the matter with {t that church people «ald tt has. It is true the era of frankness {s being overdone. But the pendulum will | swing back, »rd we don’t have to worry about the present low mora! stage of ovr literature and drama, Not only has America achieved it» restoration period, according to En ton, but It has gone the old-English exponents of dainty wickedness on» better, if not two or three. “The folk who journeyed to see the Restoration comedies last winter | in the hope of hearing something new In profanity and indecency were sadly disappointed,” he said. “After some of our more naked reviews and a few cf the smutty plays of the Past season, there was no ‘thrill’ of this sort in them for present-day theatergoers, “As for the young people, they vawn boredly, and wonder why al! the fuss about these antiquated | plays.” The war department has shown. 1 bit of real business sense when it de- cided to git in while the getting ts good and place upon the market what !s known as Chapman field, on Biscayne bay, acquired as a nat- fonal aviation field, It {s a few mys south’ of Miami, Fla., and its sale will enable the department to take advantage of the Florida land boom. The tract contains 795 acres of a minimum assessed value of $3,000 an acre and undoubtedly would sell at a much highér figure. It {s near Cor- | al Gables, also 1s not far from Villa Serema, home of the late William | Jennings Bryan. It ts believed {n ex. cess of $8,000,000 can be: realized | from the sale. | : CORNS. AND GALLUSES Lift Off: with Fingers { ' Doesn't burt a bit! Drop a little on any uching corn, ca! lis, or “hardskin"” on bottom of feet. Instantly {t stops hurting, ten, shortly you Mft it right off i) fingers. Your druggist sells a tiny bottle Freezone” for a few cents, suf- mt to remove every hard corn, | toen, Jand the foot calluses, without gore! ness or irritation.—Ady, t. The Casper Daily Cribune has], i Hef, Who’s Who At a recent convention of the National Council of Women held at Detroit, Dr. Valeria Hopkins Parker of New York City, was elected pres- ident, succeeding Mrs. Philip North Moore, of — Bt. Louis. Dr. Parls- er is well known for her lect: and work on so- cial hygiene. She was born {n Ml nols, studied» in Obio, was married in Massachusetts, fought for sui rage in Connecti- cut, and has lec- tured on social hygiene through- out the country, . Dr. Parker has SE ERR iat niSe lex Case h training in the field of social hy- gieno. She was at one time chair- man of the social hygiene commit- tee of the National League of .Wo- men Voters, director of the depart- ment of social morality of the W. C. T. U. and a member of the staff of the American Social Hygiene Asso- ciation, She was also the first state policewoman in the United States, in which job she supervised the work of six women police who did protective work for girls in Connec- ticut. In“1921 she was appointed ,execu- tive secretary of the United States Interdepartmental social hygiene board. In this position Dr. Parker was the leader of the federal board for protecting girls near army and navy encampments and for protect- ing soldiers and sailors themselves from infection. After the war con- gress considered abolishing this de- partment, but women all over the country protested, saying that the soldiers and sailors needed protection quite as much {n peace- time as during the war. ee alti Song By RICHARD WATSON DIXON. The feathers of the willow Are half of them grown yellow Above the swelling stream; And ragged are the bushes And rusty now the rushes, And wild the clouded gleam. The thistle now fs older, His stalk begins to moulder, His head is white as snow; The branches all are barer, The Unnet's song is rarer, The robin pipeth now. Deceitfulness, accord'ng to old be- iy the failing of those whose birthday occurs in November. Because of the way they are built, Insects are particularly fitted for a strenuous life, and a tired insect Is a thing unknown. _——___ What was sald to be the firs radio exhibit ever held In China took place recently at Shanghai, It was promoted by the International Amateur Radio Association of China nd was well attended. Hel health | KOA RADIO PROGRAM Wednesday, November 11—¢* Armistice Day. Note: KOA will rematm silent today until 6:30 p.m. 6:30 p. m.—Dinagy comecert, Her- bert White and his @wer State or- chestra, Brown Palase hotel, Den- ver. 7:30 p. m.—Book of Knowledge. 8:00 p. m.—Summary of votes cast by KOA’s audience on recent jazz versus classical program, followed by an Armistice day presentation This will be given by the Denver Council for World Peace. Program includes vocal numbers — by - Unity church quartet; memorial address, Morrison Shafroth; bass_solos, Wal. ter C. Brinker, readings, Mrs. Alvin B. Collins; soprano solos, Mrs. George B, Kent; adress: ‘Interna- tional Relations,” oy Mrs. Mary C. C. Bradford, Colorado superintendent of public instruction and instrumental selections by the KOA orchestra. —————.—___ The Japanese are very supersti- tious in regard to lucky and un- lucky numbers. Certain numbers are deemed so unlucky that no tele- phone subscriber would accept them, so they are usually taken by Gov- ernment offices, schools, police sta- tions, and other public institutions. BEAUTIFY IT WITH “DIAMOND DYES” Just Dip to Tint or Boil to Dye ach 15-cent pack- age contains direc- tions so simple any woman can tint soft, delicate shades or dye rich, perma- nent colorg in lin- gerie, silks, ribbona, skirts, walsts, dres- ses, coats, stock- ings, sweaters, dr peries, covering hangings — ever: ] thing Buy Diamond Dyes—no other kind—and tell your druggist wheth- er the material you wish to color {u wool or silk, or whether it is linen, cotton or mixed goods.—Ady, NOTICE | If you fail to receive your || Tribune, call the office. Phones 15 and 16, and a | special messenger will bring vou a copy of.your favorite | paper. Calle must be regi ered’ before 8 p. m. week- * lays and noon Sundays, i il i CIRCULATION DEP'T. | = “OO A ra Salt Creek Busses Leave Casper, Townsend Hotel 8 a.m. and 1 p. m and 5 p. m. Leave Salt Creek 8a. mi, 1 p. m. and 6 p. m. Express Bus “eaves 9:30 Daily Salt Creek Trans: tion Co, port BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS TELEPHONE 144 i TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1925 Worland high for the champtonzhip | of the state. Thus far, neither team has su: fered a defeat, and If both manage to withstand the season without a = doubtedly be played, probably at Cheyenne, and will prove to be one FOR WYOMING TITLE of the best football attractions of the year. See 4 CHEYENNE, Wyo., Nov, 10.—Et. m a reéent Sunday a party of forts are belng made to arrange for| Colorado mirers dro y miles m post season football game be-|to attend a church service in Den- tween high ‘enne ool _and vei Don’t spoil your appetite by humoring a false hunger between meals. Let WRIGLEY’S supply the “taste” you need—the craving for “just a snack.” Then you'll be set for a good, full meal — your stomach refreshed and ready—your appetite pleasantly stim- ulated so you feel a healthy hunger. WRIGLEY’S cleanses the teeth, acts as a mild antiseptic to mouth and throat, gives a lasting good taste. And “AFTER EVERY MEAL” it greatly aids digestion. The , Flavor Lasts! WRIGLEYS |. “After Every Meal’, TRAIN SCHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN Westbound Arrives Departs No. 603 ...--..------~...------1:80 p.m Eastbound No. 622 _.. Masshen 10740 Dp, iD. No Sunday trains west of Casper CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY |. Eastbound Arrives Departs No. 80 a 8:00 p. m, 8:80 p.m. NOU SS) Coane. 4:00 p.m. Westbound Denurts No. 29 700m No. 81 Mail This Coupon Today! pay their subscription 12 months In advance. year at the regular rate and add the smal! cost of the policy. Application and Order Blank FOR Federal Accident and Pedestrian Insurance Policy Issued by The Casper Daily Tribune 1 hereby apply for a Federal Life Insurance Company Travel and Pedestrian Accident Policy for which lam to pay $1.00, sama accompanying this order. | hereby enter my subscription for The Casper Daily Tribune for a period of one year from date of issuance of Policy. | agree to Pay your carrier 75¢ per munth for The Casper Daily Tribune. Subscribers receiving The Casper Daily Tribune by mail are required to {f you are now a reader just renew your subscription for one scription before the year is up, my policy will lapse. SST a E ERS ES ARES i UE (Write came in full) \ BRACE OL Oe ee nn nen en ne em ewremewnranawnen late of birth Age__ Bereficlary! 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