Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 15, 1925, Page 20

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é ima PAGE EIGHT The Casper Daily Critnmne By J E HANWAY AND E& BE HANWAY Entered at Casper Wyoming) postiffice ns second class matter November 22 1916. The Casper Dally [ribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning Cribune every Sunday at Casper Wyeming Pubiteation offices Tribune Bullding pposite oostoffice. Business [elephunes ..-...-------.---------------------------15 and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting ‘All Departments Nationa) Advertising Representatives, Prudden, King & Prudden 1720 23 Steger Bldg. Chicago 1; 270 Madison Ave... New York City. Glohe Bidz Boston Mass “507 Montgemery St San francisco Cal Leary Bidg. Seattle, Wash ind.Jhamper 9t Com merce Bldg Los Angeles. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file inthe New York Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices ‘and visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Outside State One Year, Dally and Sunday... Six mvenths, Daily and Sunday. Three’ Months -Datly and Sunday. One Month, Daily and Sunday-. One ‘Year, Sunday only 7 By Mail-Inside State One (Year, Dajly and, Sunday-.... Six Months, Dally’ and Sunday-. Chree Months,’ Dally ‘and Sun One ‘Stonth Daily and Sunday--. One Year sunday only_-. oe --. - < Al’ subscriptions must be paid in advance and the Dally Tribune, will not insure delivery after subscription becomes one month tn arrears, KICK, LF YOU DON'T GET YOUR. TRIBUNE. If you don't find your Tribune after looking carefully for tt call 15 or 16 and ft will be delivered to you by special messenger. Register complaints before § “’clock. x EEE , Best Time to Enjoy Yourself Experience seems to show that there is great wisdom in Sene;a’s advice, to live each day as if it were our whole life. Instead of always thinking about our plans and anxiously look- ing to the future, or of giving ourselves up to regret for:the past, we should never forget-that the present-is the only-reali the only certainty. Both the past and the future are of less consequence to us than we generally.think. The past was very different from what we supposed it to have been. Distance which makes objects look small to the eye, makes them look big to the eye of thought. The present alone is true and actual, it is the only time that posses full reality, and our existence lies in it ex- clusively. We ought then, to enjoy every hour with a full con- sciousness of its value. We shall hardly be able to do this if we bemoan the past and.worry about the future. It is the height of folly to refuse the present hour of happiness, or want only to spoil it by vexation at bygonés or uneasiness about what is to come. There is a time for forethough, yea, even ‘for repentance, but when it ds over, let us think of what is. past as something to which we have said farewell—and ‘of* the future as of that which lies beyond our power, in the lap of the’ gods, We appreciate and enjoy the present’more when, in those days when we are well and strong, we remember how, in sick- ness and sorrow, ¢very past hour that was free from pain and privation seemed in our memory so infinitely to be envied as it were, a lost paradise. But most of us live through our, days of happiness without noticing them; and it is only when pain comes upon us that we wish them back. Tf we are not careful a thousand gay and pleasant hours of our lives are wasted in ill-humor; we let them slip by uns enjoyed. The present is the time to enjoy yourself..To repeat live each day as if it were your whole ] Armistice Day Associated Press reports from all of the allied nations show that pretty generally they paused briefly in their varied peace activities to observe the seventh anniversary of Arm- istice Day. In the three great world capitals—Washington, London and Paris—the observances centered about the graye of the Unknown Sotdter—the symbol of each nation’s sacrifice in the common cause. President Coolidge at Washington laid a wreath upon the grave of America’s Unknown: Soldier while the nation’s official business was stilled for two minutes. In tribute to the memory of Woodrow Wilson, a twilight service was held at Washington cathedral where lies the body of the war president. Great Britain, with greater solemnity: and rit- ual than ever before, gathered at the cenotaph in London where is enshrined her Unknown Soldier and: paid him tribute.’ At Paris, thousands surrounded the tomb of the Unknown Poilu under the Aré de Triomphe and took. part in the solemn serv- ices. New York hushed its roar of commerce, crowds stood ‘in the streets with bared heads. Subway; trains and ‘traffic halted and the frenzy of Wall Street was stilled..In Rome the-fifty- sixth birthday of King Victor Emmanuel ‘was observed: simul- taneously with Armistice Day, Canada paused to honor its sons, Mexico, although not one of the participants in) the war, sent a military detachment into Douglas, ‘Ariz.,'to pay her re- spects to America’s dead. : ead Frank Understanding Addressing the English Speaking Union’ at St. Louis, ‘Sir Esme Howard, British ambassador said: “If I betieved’ Anglo- American friendship would develop into_a big, brutal}, bully: ing power, I never should desire to see it take root, but be- cause I believe that, in spite of some lapses which are unavoid- able in view of human imperfections, the British-American ideal life is just the sq e, € ing, therefore I, for ny part shall continue to advocate a clear, frank! understanding be tween our two countries. The owth of the: English Speaking Union is a proof of the feeling that friendship between all branches of the English-speaking world is a necessary factor for the well-being of the world.” The Commander in Chief Colonel Mitchell damns the. army, of.whioly he is a sworn officer, and th ry, with which he has no business for “jn competence, crimimal negligence and almost treasonable admin istration.” He contends that quite regardless of his uniform th he has i itizen to do this. After the court : ‘ying him, its finding will be laid: beforc the Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy. The Comman derin-Chief may approve, mitigate or remit the sentence. The Commander-in-Chief is vin Coolidge.” Calyin Coolidge once told the Boston police, exercising their rights as citizens, that there was no right to strike against»the public:safety: by-any- body anywhere @t any time. Sy Arousing From: Slumber oe Florida’s bid for winter tourist business and the boast of Floridians that the American Riviera will soon be so much more alluring than Mediterran ean resorts that North Ameri cans will cease to cross the Atlantic has aroused many resort hotels in the Nice, Franc rea from a long slumber and houses are undergoing modernization everywhere even to hay- ing rooms with private baths. Far Reaching Effect Prohibition in the United States has aided materially in bringing sad days to Pilsen, Czechoslovakia, the home of the famous beer, and two of the celebrated breweries which spread the name of Pilsen throughout the world have been compelled to close because of a decrease in demand. More than twenty breweries in Bohemia have closed operations. Strike Costs It is estimated that the coal strike to date bas cost the mining region approximately $180,000,000, Of ‘this’ total, $85,- 000,000 represents the loss of wages by the strikers, the balance is in business, in wages to railroad employes, now on pa time basis, and in debts contracted by reason of the strike. While there is an undoubted. shortage of anthracite. coal. in New England, no less than 600,000 tons of this fdel is stored in the anthracite regions of Pennsylvania which the operators are keeping back to meet a more acute shortage that may de Yelop in\Néw England or other eastern and northern states, Civil Control Complaint {s made that the-army and navy are controlled by civilian cabinet officers not-familiar with the technique of military or naval op- erations. It 1s suggested that ‘great efficiency in either branch of the national defense {s not possible ‘if the head does not have the kndwl- edge requisite to command a ship, an army corps or a dirigible. This criticism loses sight of the fact that clvil control of the military is ‘one of the fundamental features of our form of government. The Secretary of the Army and the Sec- retary of the Navy represent not the ‘army or the navy, but'the tax- paying’ population of the country. Army and navy are filled with ex- perts' and most of them are parti- sans of some branch or feature of the service. Many are extremists. Colonel Mitchell, who thinks we could safely sink our fleets and de- pend upon airplanes to do our fight- ing, is matched by skeptics as to he value of aeronautics in warfare. Iv{s the business of the official who represetns the interests of the gov- ernment to be the arbiter between such contnding factions. His {dentt- fication with either clique would hinder rather than help the cause of national defense. It hapens that both Secretary Wil- bur and Secretary Davis ate qualified by service for the dutles they are verforming.. Secretary..Wilbur, Ike former Secretary Weeks,{s a Naval Academy graduate; Secretary Davis was-a gallant volunteer soldier 'n the World War. * We have had com- pevent Secretarfe~ of the Nayy who had never been aboard a battleship when they assumed the portfolio, and efficient Secretaries of War who had no military experience Secre- tary Stanton, who was the . right hand man of Lincoln during the Civil War, was one of these. Some nilitary men have been failures as Secretary of War; Secretary Alger, for instance, “got in bad” with the public. In order to be a successful railway nianager or superintendent {t is not recessary that a man know all about the construction’ or operation of a locomotive. Meén rise to these post- tions from varlous occupations {n railway operation, and from outside occupations. It {s a source of strength rather tifin. weakness to the man from the outside that he does not lay undue stress upon some single, phase of the railway service. It is his duty to ‘arbitrate the de- mands of various. branches of the service from the (viewnnint of the stockhalder and the shipper. We do not want teronauts a® Seb- vetaries of the Navy who would pro- eed to sérap’ the navy: while bulld- ing’alrplanes. or vice versa: and we do not want Secretar'es of War who will disband or handicap the infan- try, the cavalry or the artillerv be- cause they have been’ so long asso- elated with a single branch of the Service that they have become hab- \tuated to belittling every other, branch. One of the great curses of the feferal service—one that han cost the people of this country mil ‘ons of dollars—hak been. the dinno- sition of public officials totplay the came of some particular brach of the service rather than the game of national defense. ‘ These are facte to be kent in mind tn connection with the exhihition of navy and army politics’ which ‘ac- companiés the various agitators and ‘nyestigations relative to the army and ‘navy. i h British ‘Columbia leads the Prov- Inces of Canada in the total amount ofcapital Invested In lumber indus- trie The Bolshevik By Susie Carnes Corbett. When night has come, and all fs still The tired nation sleeps. But, under cover of the dark A-giant monster creeps; With bloody thirst and heart for lust, Who longs to trample in the dust The Stars and Stripes. Devoid of honor, soul or shame, ‘And Ughts the skies with crimson flame As he goes by. He goes to kill—and in his train A writhing mass of tortured pain— Humanity, the highest price Is offered up a sacrifice, To satisfy his appetite For more ill-gotten gain. He mangles with his hairy hands Religion, virtue—all that stands For Christ. And drags us down, with fiendish mirth Into a:seething Hell-on earth. Who would, notrhave this creature dle? AWe'see him dally passing by A man Unqugstioned in our eye, Without a social flaw. Who swears allegiance to the flag, And walks‘ within the-law. In all his business dealings just, Who wins our confidence and trust, But stealthily—unknown, to us— He sheathes the gleaming Sword of + Right, And feeds this monster of the night. pa diaNaabte ae God Save the: Flag * By A. M. Haswell. God save the flag! Long may tt float, As on that morning long ago, Above our patriot fathers’ ranks First showed its stripes of flame and snow. And ever, as those shining folds Have waved a'down . the fateful years, Its stars of hope have multiplied ‘To cheer our hearts, and quell our fears. God save the flag! - Where’ first it stood For a young nation weak and lone, Today it waves from sea to sea, The continent Is all its own. And not by might of tron fleets Or deadly strife that land was won, But by?the rugged hand of toil, And by the right of work well done. Lord Ged of God saye the flag! hosts, Who Weesed our fathers in their strife, Keep watch and ward above that flag, Dear emblém of the nation's life. Thou, who'didst lead’ thelr scanty ranks In many-a deadly battle fray, Lead us, their sons, against the host That ekg the nation’s.life today. Smite Thou the traitors, native-born Or vipers of the foreign brood, Who only evil would return Where they received but good. nite ovr hearts; make strong our hands To guard our homes from sea to sea: That this dear land.our fathers won, Shall be forever free. God save the flag! _> Who's Who Known over the world’ as the “millionaire hobo,” James Eads How has long been a picturesque American figure. He broke into print recently when he established fi “hobo college’ dn Al- fortune Casper Community Fund Campaign Opens Nov. 17. Let’s Put Er Over Quick! The Casper Sunday Cribune between $750,000 and $1,000,000 he hag spent the major portion of his Ufe in attempts to better the con- dition of the poor. and has himself often lived the life of a “hobo”. In his, college, in Chicago, How is try Ing to provide higher education f those who cannot afford to pay un! versity tuition. Hconomies, political science and socialism are among the subjects taught. How has traveled the world over living among the unfortunates, studying their prob'ems and trying to he’: chem. He has often ridden underneath box cars and shared a neal around a camp fire with the ‘Knights of the road”. Home, Sweet Home By John Howard Payne. ures and palaces tho we may roam, it e so humble, place like home! A charm from the sky hallow us there, Which, seek thru the world, is ne'er met with elsewhere. Hom sweet, sweet, Thre's like home! Mid p’ there's’ no Be seems to home! An exile from home, splendor dazzles my lowly thatch’d cot- tage again! The birds, singing gaily, that came at my call— Give me them!—and the peace of mind dearer than all. Home, sweet, sweet. sweet, home! ‘There's no place Uke home! The Worland Corn Show '. Robertson. By C. The question of successful grow: ing of corn, in Wyoming, up to six thousand feet elevation, will, this year. be put to the supreme test, at the Wyoming State Corn show, In Worland. Various Burlington of- ficlals, from Chicago, Omaha and Denver, have signified their inten- tion of being present. this means that our Wyomfng grown corn is going to be subjected to a cold bust- ness ana as to whether or not, in the minds of the business world, it 1s to be regarded in the future as one of the major crops of our diver- sified farming If we can assemble a sufficient number of ten ear samples from the various corn growing sections of the state, I have no ‘fear of the result, and that corn will take its rightful place fm the scheme of agri- sulture in Wyoming. If’the farmers of the state will oromntly in the best ten ear selections, y will be greatly ald- th ‘ng the corn cause besides adding zest to the earlier hours of the show. If our corn growing demonstra- tlon, this year, 1s conclusive. it fs, of more than state-wide significance: we can then carry the message of corn to the farmers of the central west, with confidence and thereby bring} about an inflow of settlement onto our vacant irrigated lands. shear hia World Topics “Susp'clon and fear of the Japa- nese {s without reason, The Exclu. sion Act was an insult to a friendly people and was unnecessary as it was brutal.” So sald the Rt. Rev. Yohn McKim, Episcopal Bishop of Tokio now In New York In a ser- men on international amity and brotherly love between the United States and the Far Hast. “The exclusi act," he declared as_unneces: unwise SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1925 contemptuous slap in the face, an| is Insult to a self-respecting, patriotic the real attitude of the soviet sym- naturally taken as an index of| pathizers toward American “institu. tlons. and friendly people. It was unneces. sary, because if we had given Japan the same relative quota of tmmigra- tlon we gave the other nations {t would have meant 146 Japanese oming into our country each year. “While our friendship with the Japanese nation was strained almost to the breaking point.” he said, “the irritation was tempered by the tre- mendous outburst of sympathy and generosity In every part of the Unit- ed States at the time of the terrible earthquake In 1923. “America, through the Red. Cross, sent more than $11,000,000 to clothe and feed the suffering) Japanese. This was a sum greater than, the contributions of all the other nations put together.. The Japanese are an a eciative and grateful people. . “They are a discriminating people and they do not hold Christianity responsible for the un-Christian leg- islation of congress. , Here is what seemed to me a very striking incl-' dent: July ¥, 1924, the day the ex- clusion act went into effect, which, by the way, is called the ‘Day of humiliation’ by the Japanese.) the. Japanese government. sent to us for Sy Luke's Hospital, Tokio, 150,000 yen; for St. Paul's University, 80,000 yen; for St. Margaret's School. for 70.000 yen. We felt duly grate- ful—and humbied.”” Bolshevist Hypocrisy ———— ‘ The ‘hypocrisy of the cry of “free speech” in behalf of the commn- ists who wish to advocate the o throw of the Anterican government is revealed in the columns of the Datly Worker, of Chicago, commun: ist organ which declares that “the pol'tical prisoners in Russia are con- srirators against'the workers’ repub- lic.” The reason this should be, de- res the Worker,-is that opposi- tion to a ‘workers’ republic” js on a “different footing” from opposi- tion to the American republic. Either the communists are right. says the Worker, or they are wrong. If op- position to the American form of government {s right, says the Work- er, “every means of doing away with the robber system {s moral. * ¢ * We believe this ts the only: position for revolutionary workers to‘take.” For commu..ists this is, indeed, the logieal. position. By thy same sign, it is an {logical posticn’ for any friend of American ‘institutons to take, and it is this fact that throws suspicion upon all those, whether calling ‘themselves “socialists,” “lib- ‘srals". or “reyolutionists” who ‘con- done suppression of free speech for ant!-bolshev!ks in Russian while de- manding “free speech” for pro-bol- sheviks in the United States. This HARTMAN’S THE ONLY DELICATESSEN Pure food cooked just the right way. i} _ SPECIAL Baked Spring Chicken Home Baked Pies and Cakes Our Hours ANYTIME Old Public Market Phone 303 = Chicago Affords . On Lake Michigan . . . facing the Park. . . enchanting, unnbstructed views from the windows of every one of our 1000 outside rooms. In the center of our own private 16acre estate ....removed from the city’s clamor ‘into | a veritable garden spot. And think of it! Thecity center, the greatstores, the these tres, the business district, is exactly 10 minutes away. Bro Illinois Central suburban trains sweep along the la! daily . . .a beautiful, quick, clean ro minute ride to the city. A truly marvelous hotel for those who want rest and quiet. . . yet wish to be near the heart of Chicago's activities. A wonderful location . . . that no other Chicago hotel can offer. Rates are moderate ... Room with bath . » for one person, $4.00 to $8.00 per day... two persons, $5.00 to $9.00 per day. Serv- ice byanexpert organization. A fine cuisine with club breakfasts, 4oc to $1.00. Table d'hote luncheons and dinners $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00. And an ala carte’ menu at most moderate prices. Fora few days’ stay or 2 permanent home, you will find unusually fine accommodations here. Write for Booklet A ea booklet that tells all about “*Chicago's Great- est Hotel”... will be sent you free of charge. Write, for lf acopy. Tell us the name Be the Railroad on which ag | lus | | will come to Chicago. We'will send you, with our i u trated booklet, exact directions so that you can beat the Hotel 15 minutes after you leave your train, When you read the Chicago Beach Hotel booklet you will know why this hotel is known as ‘‘Chicago’s Greatest Hotel.’ i : : Ea hil at GicagoBeachPlotel “Chicago’s Greatest Hotel” Moti Hyde Park Boulevard » +» + on the Lake CHICAGO A. G. PULVER, V. P. and Gen. Mgr. Casper-Buffalo-Sheridan Stage ‘LEAVES CASPER AND SHERIDAN DAILY. 8:00 AM." ‘(No Transfer or Layovers) hens Rebar $I} / : Casper-Sheridan Daily Auto Service Saves 18 Hours—Good Equipment—Careful Drivers HEADQUARTERS HENNING HOTEL, CASPER, PHONE 616 CRESCENT HOTEL, SHERIDAN ' ~~ Even though the cries and moans of cold and hungry children may never reach your sheltered ears; even though the wails of penniless and pain-stricken old women and old men -may-never disturb your comfort and com- Meet the Hard Fist of Fate With Your Open Hand! Help to fill the Community Chest! - You men who are prosperous; whom Adversity has edged away from only to jostle rudely your less fortunate brother. rr plaisance, still they are more and more to our community’s roster of dependents. impoverished, afflicted and incompetentcharges. Help to organize th mon fund that can be intelligently distributed and justly apportioned. It’s a duty you owe to your community. A’ responsibility the community owes to its unfortunates. SS eetudnduaenteaee among us and this,winter will add e municipal charities with a com-

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