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PAGE TWO The Casper: Daily Tritume By J B BANWAY AND 6B. B. HANWAY BHntered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class matter November 22 1916. The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday at Casper Wyoming Publication offices. Bullding opposite oostoffice, Tribune Business Telephones ‘Connecting All wenewnnn=--15 and 16 Departm Branch Telephone &xcha: tine MEMBEH THE ASSUCIATED PRESS ‘The Associated Press ts exclusively entived to the use for publication of all news credited tp this paper and also the loca) n ws published herein Member of Audit Bureay of Circatation (A. B. ©.) Prudden. Ave San merce Bldg. New Nationa) Advertising Representatives King & Prudden 1720-23 Steger Bldg. Chicago Lll,; 270 Madison New York City Globe Bldg Boston Mass. 607 Montgomery St. ancisco, Cal. Leary Bidg., Seattie, Wash. and Chamber ot Com Los Angeles. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the Chicago, Boston and San Franelsco offices and visitors are York welcome. SS ee IPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside Daily and Sunday Dally end Sunda Dally and Sund:z , Daily and Sunday. e Year. Sunday only-..-. By Mail Year =-~ 39.00 pemamecnennnn- nnn 4.50 One Year, Dally and Sunday Months, Daily and Sunday ee Mo! Daily and Sunday pe Month Daily and Sunday : unday onl Be ee prions jt be paid in advance and the Dally Tribune wil! not delivery after subscription becomes one month In arrears, KICK, (F YOU DON’T GET YOUR TRIBUNE on't Gnd your Tribune after looking varefully for tt call 15 or 16 I] be delivered to you by special messenger, Register complaints before § »'clock. a a Human Testing Laboratory Do you hope to see the day when machines will relieve man from the necessity of labor? Would you change our subjection to physical laws, our exposure to hu rand cold, and the necessity of conflicts with the material worl¢ . Then you do not have man’s best interests at heart, 1 owes his growth, his ene chiefly to that striving 1, that conflicts with difficulty, which we call effort. of the w i pleasant work does not make robust minds. Does 1ot give men a consciousness of their powers, does not train them to endurance, to perseverance, to steady force of will, that force without which all other acquisitions avail nothing, If the elements should be so tempered as to infuse into us only grateful sensations, that they should make vegetation so exuberant as to anticipate every want, and minerals so duetile as to offer no resistance to our strength and skill, such a world would make a contemptible race. Manual labor is a school in which men are placed to get energy of purpose and character—a vastly more important endowment than all the learning of all the other schools. It does not follow, howeyer, that everyone will find energy of purpose and character in manual labor. But work we all must if we mean to bring out and perfect natur Even if we do not work with our hands, we must undergo equivalent toil in some other direction. No business or study which does not present obstacles, tasking to the full the mind and the will, is worthy of an in- telligent man. ase, rest, owes its deliciousness to toil; and no toil is so burdensome as the rest of him who has nothing to task and quicken powers, our The Changing South Democrats can afford to declaim against the alleged “rob- ber tariff,’ as long as textile industries were chiefly located in New England, but since the factories have migrated southward, even a Democrat develops the instinct of economic self-defense and the desire to share in the prospective benefits of the “robber tariff.” If Southern Democracy is traveling toward industrial protection, it need not go very far, There are plenty of Sontherners who believe in protection for agricultural pro- ducts of the South which happen to be menaced by foreign competition. The righteousness of protection for the desery- ing peanut was discovered by Democrats in congress some time ago, and its moral claim as that of California’s Republi- can lemons and Northwest’s sometimes Republican wheat. In principle, protection is fully. appreciated in the South, and the short distance from agricultural to industrial protec- tion should be easily negotiated, even by life-long Democrats. Whacking Away [ucome tax exemption in the proposed new revenue bill has been raised by the house ways and means committee from 71,009 to $1,500 for single persons and from $2,500 to $3,500 for heads of families. The maximum surtax rate has been reduced from 40 per cent to 20 per cent. Normal rates cut from two to one and one-half per cent on the first $4,000 of taxable in- come, from four per cent to two per cent on the next $4,000 and from six per cent to five per cent on the remainder, It is estimated that one million persons will be removed from the fee income tax roll. Retention of the present 25 per - cent reduction in tax when applied to earned incomes of $10,- 000 « also has been decided upon by the committee. The 10,000,000 as the approximate limit of reductions adopted. These cuts would amount to roughly #200,- les of has beer igur Constitution of ® Invading the € one » ablest working students | constitution that the next great constitutional ovation will be the setting up of units of government which gnore state lines and recognize economic ones. A start has een made in what is known as the “New York Port Author: and a sign of crystall by the threat of Chicago to zig determination was exhibited et up a local government separate from the state of Illinois. Things like that will come about and the supreme court, as well as congress, will be sympathetic to the tendency. This is the process by which the great Amer- an constitution will one day be invided and its great useful- ness destroyed, “ternal vigilance is the price of liberty,” to- iy and in the future, just as it was in the earlier days of republic The Malign Influence Mr. Willis J. Abbott, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, the editor present at the recent Anti-Saloon “The fact that very la body of the press of America as trying to proye the prohibition law has failed, should ot necessarily be taken as proof, because these papers fail to rive anything like equal publicity to conditions in that great majority section of the United States where enforcement is automatic because observance is universal. One great news: paper boasted the other day that the circulation had in- creased enormously while it had been fighting the prohibition issue Mass circulation is largely obtained by feature head lines and sensational articles appealing to people who have not the capacity to read an editorial article, As lohg as the adyertiser desires mere mass circulation, so long as the read- flock to these papers that put sensationalism nbead of so long those pape: vill thrive and exert a malign on their community Apply to Giff the people who are writing Mr, Coolidge, president of the United States, to ask him to settle the anthracite coal strike, are all wrong. What they should do is to direct their appeals er service, influence to Gifford Pinchot, state house, Harrisburg, Penn, He is the only person having authority to act. And {f he is interested and tnkes hold, judging from previous efforts in the same behalf, consyyners will pay more for their coal rs . World Topics In.a sermon, “Has Prohibition Failed,” Dr. S. Parks Cadman, author and church leader, gave the following sumr “A majority of the working men and women of the country (have become sup- porters of pro; hibition and fa- vor its enforce- ment. 0 one ad- vocates return of. the common itroom; the saloon is dead. + “Bootleg gers of allen birth should be de ported. “Depend upon moral suasion rather than up- on politics for safeguarding the prohibition move- ment. “Supposed personal rights of the individual have .been invaded by the Volstead act, but this inyasion is justified in the interest of ‘the public good. 7 “Violators of the law today In- clude social elements and persons of wealth, whose example is foster- ing the evil of drinking among some of the youth, causing thousands of young people to race down the road of rum and ruin, “While some of our social sets and leaders persist in- ignoring the Jaw and use all the liquors they can get, the mass of the people are behind the prohibition movement,” asserted Dr. Cadman. “A majority of the working men and women of the country favor prohibition and recognize the benefits to themselves that have come from it. So long as they stand true to their convic- tions in this respect there can be no successful attacks on prohibition by its enemies, “You need not think that revoca: tion of this law is likely. However, I advise churches. not to place too much confidence in politics in éf- forts to uphold the law, Use moral suasion rather than politics, Do away with all bickerings and let us determine this question finally and completely, “Prohibition has resulted from the evils and long record of law- lessness to the bootlegger, and that part of soplety that traffies with him as a partner in hig crime, If I had my way all bootleggers of alien birth would be deported, “I know of no man with a brain s0 anaemic as to Gesire the return of the old evils of the Hquor traf: fic; the saloon is dead, The welfare of the young and of future genera- tions {# a positive trust to us all, and particularly to the churches, the colleges and other educational organizations, to maintain the pro- hibition law and deal with the real dangers that menace and would de- stroy it," REV. CADMan 5 bese 8 Crime on Wings Good new uses are accompanied by bad new uses, until society learna how to eliminate them, The motor car supplies criminals a stealthy ap- proach and a swift getaway. The means whereby to counter this new and great criminal facility have not yet been worked out, It is phophesied that airplanes will be as thick as motor cars are now, within five or ten years, Ford and son Edsel sold their first airplane the other day to the John Wanamaker Company, to which not so many years ago Henry aold his first car. The Ford success argues that flocks of airplanes will before long blotch the heavens, as motor cars congest the streets, Now, {f automobiles have helped erlme, what will not airplanes do? Easily handled airplanes that can allght upon one’s roof maybe and take off in the dark, will make the eriminal a noeturnal bird of prey, @ great ow! as dangerous to human beings as the sinister bird Is to fowls, The prospect is no more fanciful than it is remote. ‘The realization may be upon us before, figuratively speaking, we can say ‘Jack Robin- son.” Are we doing a thing to an- ticipate the coming of the evil day? The mechanical answer te the fu ture menace, of course, cannot be invented anticipatively, But prep: aration can begin right now with our judiciary, or jurisprudence, our police. To take them completely out of politics, is the first move. Crime heretofore has been spor- adic, Today {t is more and more highly organized, and is heavily financed. Twenty-five years ago the question was whether the great cor. porations were not stronger than the government mee then the ocor- Porations e been tamed, Well, today the question is becoming whether crime is not stronger than RHEUMATION, NEURITIS, PAIN “Heet” Relieves Instantly With applicator attached to cork, just brush “Heet" over the pain area, whether in knees, feet, legs, hands, shoulders, back, neck or body, Instantly, you feel this harm- less, glorious, penetrating’ heat draw the pain, soreness and atiffness right out of the aching or swollen joint, muscle or nerve. Besides, ‘Heet" scatters the congestion and estab- Ushes a cure, “Heet"” contains two soothing, penetrating Ingredients, too. expen: sive to use tn ordinary Iiniments or analgesics. “Heet" ix a clean, pleas: ant Mquid; doesn't stain, blister or irritate the skin and costs only 60 cents at any drug stogeo.—Ady, * @be Casper Daily Cridune THE DAY ‘We are to observe Armistice Day «8 the Day of Peace, But let us not forget that peace came beeause of victory—a victory over the plotters that sought to rule tLe world for their own advantage. We shall hear much about “out- lawing war.” Very good. Let us hope and pray that we may never have to engage in another, -But how shall we avoid it? Some would say by abloshing army and navy and making ouraclves de- fenseless. We heard that many Umes during 1915 und 1916. There were “peace resolutions” in plenty and all bore the same finger marks. And any one who ventured to point out the folly of this sugges- tion was denounced as a “militarist.”” If we were not prepared to fight w> would not have a war, We were so big no nation would think of at- tacking us, But—in a mixed community—who ig likely to be assailed by a: bully? The timid individual— one who {s un- able to defend himself—or the husky fellow who is perfectly able to take his own part? 4 How then shall we bear our share of ‘the task of securing permanent world peace? Well, the Washintgon Conference was a hopeful beginning, That and the treaties providing ways and set- tling amicably any differences of opinion relating to matters in the Pacific, As the nations concerned do not regard treaties ag scraps of paper, we may consider their agree- ments as a real advance in the right difection, We shall still avold “entangling alffances,” the alliances that would o@sate us to support—right or wrong—the nation allied with us— Vhen disputes crise. But we can give friendly aid in bringing about wood understanding among other nations, Most of the world’: troubles come from misunderstandings. Abol- ish these, and the remaining causes 9° friction can be more easily dealt with, The welcome given the ‘Dawes Plan" is a good indication of world willingness to recelve our help in this direction, But what gives this Republic its influence in this dis- cussion? Not wealth and power Blonc. Fair dealing with other peo- ples, and scruplous observance of agreements are the great factors, And surely—to prevent war fs even better than to win it, When a ~umerful nation Invites arbritration instead of resorting to froce, the in- —_— government, local, state, aye, federal too. Crime {s on the verge of becoming an institution, a-regnum in regno in the United States. Crime is al. ready treated with by the police of manyrocities as a power to be con- cillated, to be appeased, to be bar- gained with, And on the principle that a-half loaf !s better than. no bread, that tribute Js better than utter terror, the procedure might be Justified. Arp we entering a perlod through which our people, as through a‘Val- ley of the shadow of death, must walk in fear and trembling before they come on the other aide, a per- fod of banditry—of exactions, inse- curity, constant danger, frequent outrage, robbery, murder? Is the bandia chief, an American edition of him, to become one of the represen- tative figures of our time, as his Uke is in China and Mexico, has been in Italy and Spain? 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Watermaris@eifountain Pen i] 129 South State St., Chicago | New York, Boston, San Francisco, Montreal ¥ - - WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1925 David Lloyd George, prime minister| c_ but when he went to| ing Lincoln's looking forward to the of England during and following the world war and accepted on’ both sides of the Atlantic as one of the Am a he found this entirely un- true; he never met a man who would vote for the re-establishment of the 5 time when there would be no slay- 4 ery and no drink. <b, ; 4 most astute, practical politicians of} saloon, and so far as public opin-} " He sot rid of slavery,’ exclaimed lage Sable AREA AU Vege... nd Sb. x Golkinien bel ionic America wan concerned the} Loyd ree, “and sixty yaare later But it is one thing to REFRAIN | 2448 that “no political party in| beer house was a thing of the past, e neopls he 90 re ae from aggression, to treat the weak-| Aduerlca’ now would dare propose! “Detalling varfous advantages, Mente plata a est nation with as much co-rtesy| *POton of prohibition. which he attributed to America’ ot e and ‘consideration as wo give the| As quoted in an Associated Press| becoming dry, Mr. Lloyd George| All of which may be described as strongest. And it is quite another ‘spatch from London, Lloyd George | said: disinterested testimnoy from a thing to INVITE aggression by | said: shrewd observer and a_ practical “It is an experiment we ought to inyestigate. Do not condemn it hap. hazardly. Qne hundred and ten mil- ions of people do not continue to make fools of themselves for long. They are the most prosperous péo- ple under the sun, not because they man not generally amateur in politics NFLUENZA As a praventive, melt ané making our own nation helpless, un- aang eel oei able to defend itself against insult and injury, It would be just as wise to abol- fsh the police force, and trust the safety of life and property to’ the “It is no use indulging in slap- dash condemnation of America. Not only have Americans carried pro- hibition, but no political party in ‘America now dare propose abolition of prohibition, As politicians. the good impluses of thugs and thieves.| Amercans beat us at every tur have the gold, but because they have inhale night and morning— Lander, Wyoming. The ‘Agsociated Press dispatch con-| not the drink.’ DR Lo taining that quotation then contin-| ‘The former premier pointed to Who’s Who ueé: Canada, where, he remarked, it was P RUB “It has been suggested that pro-| hibition in America was the craze suggested prohibition -had been,less successful, Jara Used Yearly In the limelight atthe present time we have another President Taft. He is Charles P, Taft, 2nd, the son of Chief Justice Willif{m Howard Taft. He has just. been elected presi- Pade 64 and concluded by recall- b gene “5A AIG ATP dent of the In- ternational ; Young Men's Christian Asso: elation. Taft is just 28 years old and is the youngest man ever chosen to | fill that office. | The election took place at Washington; D. C., on the occa- sion of the 42nd aay «(Triennial = con- SOLES PAAFT vention, 1 Young Taft who is a lawyer at Cincinnat!, O., is following in the footsteps of his relatives, His father practiced law at Cincinnati! when a young man. His three uncles, Henry, Charles and Horace Dutton Taft, also practiced Jaw in their earlier day: Horace and Charles began their legal careers in Cincin- nati while Henry began his practice in New York. Too Often Profaned By Percy Bysshe Shelley. One word {js too often profaned For me to profane it, One feeling to falsely disdained For thee to disdain it Mme hope Is too like despair nrudenge to smother, fvom thee more dear sat from another, I sive not what men call love; But wilt thou accept not The worship the heart lifts above And the heavens reject not; The desire of the moth for the*star, Of the night for the morrdyy, The devotion of something From the of our sorrow? America’s Prosperity “The people of the United States are the most prosperous people un- der the sun, not because they have the gold but because they have not the drink,” was a direct and-un- qualified assertion recently made by WZ7OU’LL find a wonderful combination of selected walnuts, honest-to-goodness dairy cteam, maple flavor and smooth, chewey caramel, all covered with a generous coat of rich milk chocolate. SWEET CANDY COMPANY Salt Lake, Utah f he OF IGINAL Matted Milk Every Bites a Delight « int STOP AT Casper’s Finest Filling Station and get tanked up with that good WHITE EAGLE GASOLINE Give your motor a treat by removing that heavy oil and replace with a lighter grade. DON’T FORGET to have your transmission and differential filled with our special winter grease. Don’t let your radiator freeze for lack of alcohol or nofreezatol. f ugh ‘WE HAVE IT—YOU KNOW ME A. E. Chandler, Independent SECOND AND PARK PHONE 465