Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 18, 1925, Page 6

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rb PAGE SIX ee % The Casper Daily Tribune Entered at Casper Wyoming) p@stotice as second class aiatter November tle Tribune 1 ery event The Sunday -Morning unday at Casper Wytming Publication offices Tribune Bulla >pposite gostotfice wee Ea Canine bat cca IS Od. 16 lige Connecting All Departments RssociaTep eP ntitied to t the loc for publication of ws published berein Member of Audit of Cireulation (A | onal Advertising Kepresentatives & Péudden 1720 43S Bidz Chins 270 Madisou \ vew et stor tery St 1 t Bide. Seattie Wash and Sham 4 Comn ce’! r ‘opies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the ¢ Eostor ranclsco offices and visitors are ate ) Sunday By Mail Toside State x Me nd Sunda a hree Months, D: and ‘Sunda one butly and ‘Sund. ne Yes Sund: nly All subserip'ions must insure delivery after subscription beComes one munth th arrears. KICK (Ff YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE it you don't find your Tribune after looking carefully for tt call 15 or 16 and {t will be delivered to you by. special messenger. Register complaints before § 9’clock ES, Blotting Out Vision of Angels The story is told of a mother who, with her little son, re cently visited a coemetery, and became interested in the var ious monume: They came to the figure of a child carved in marble. he sculptor had done his work with more t ordinary skill and as a result it was a gemarkably bez statue. One impressive feature was the upward look given to the eyes. The two visitors gazed at the little niarble figire with its rapt expression. Finally, the mother said, “Look at the longing expression on the little face. I suppose he is looking up to see the angels.” “No,” replied the modern son, * an neroplane. To a cert its. I guess he is looking for in extent this incident is suggestive of that transition which has taken place in modern life, wherein an age of faith with its poetic, mystical and dramatice equip ment, has given place to an age of science with its absorbing interest in the triumphs of mai an investigator mechanician. It is quite true that this change has brought much that is of very great advantage to men. At present most men liye on a much higher scale than did their predecesso So gre: are the improvements in methods of transportation that today but few are shut off from their fellows in indiy’@salistic com munities such as existed a century ago or less. Any advance men may make in any part of the world is readily and almo immediately known to all the rest of the world. Education is more widely spread thi sr before and world-wide man itarian movements are made possible to an extent that y undreamed of a hundred years ago. Moreover, modern med science has added to the span of life the accomplishment without concern. Not so very long ago Malthus reasoned that vice, crim pestilence and wars were absolute necessary to keep the earth’s population within the limits of food possibility. The Malthusian theory was built up on what seemed to be two indisputable facts, namely, that population increases in a geometrical ratio, and that the food supply increases only in an arithmetical tio. To Malthus, overcrowding of the earth seemed inevitable unles very generous death rate came to the relief. Today, to ‘ge extent, the Malthusian theory is merely an interesting relic of a past era of human reasoning, because through mechanical skill and scientific knowledge men have found a way to avoid the disaster which, to Malthus, seemed so inevitable. Countries without mechani cal skill and scientific knowledge, like China, m be crowded and so unproductive that a high death rate alone ean maintain a living balance, but countries like China are few. Civilized countries, through their machines and by rea son of their scientific knowledge, have proved that they pos sess powers of productivity equal to the demand ‘of their in creasing populations, Jt has been estimated that one city in the United States, with a population of about 125,000, by means of its machinery produces the equivalent of thirty million people at hand labor. Furthermore, it has been esti mated ‘that with the advent of modern agricultural machinery the ‘output of the farm laborer has multiplied thirty-fold since the year 1850. The preponderant belief now is that chemical discoy and intensive agriculture will keep step with increa ulation. To doubt such an outcome is to lose faith in th justice and power and the Creator. No just God would create a world with such a possibility as the wholesale starvation of Mis created beings through any fault except their own. as und “aul id humanity welcome ing pop Difference in Revolutions In one of his syndicated editorials Arthur Brisbane say that in our dealings with-France the fact should not be over looked that America owes France great debt of gratitude in t the inspiration ofour struggle for national independ ence was in the writings of the French philosophers of th eighteenth:century and in the French revolution. For this contention there is no substantial historical basi The American Revolution differed widely from the Fren revolution in its causes, its purposes and its results. It might better be said t the American Revolution was the inspir tion for the French revolution, but the French revolution tool such a turn that those who foughtsour war for independence and established our government, regarded its excesses wit) horror. Americans did not throw off the yoke of one despot ism in order to take on the yoke of another; they did not over throw the tyranny of a monareh only to submit themselves to the tyranny of 1 mob. Our Revolution was not, as was the ‘rench revolution, a class war, culminating in a mere ex change of despotism. It was ngt a civil war, but the rise of a fraternal nation, The constructive course of our Revolutionary founder: set Ameri on a hway of liberty upon which the feet of the republic have been kept during all the 138 years whic h followed the adoption of our Constitution. Because France mistook class war for freedom that nation fell beneath the sway of a military dictator who drenched Europe with blood, After Waterloo, France wavered between republicar ism and monarchy for sixty years. The French revolution more nearly resembled the Russian han the American Revolution As the French revolution tventuated.tyranny,.so has the Russian revolution. Russia ike the ance of the Napoleonic era, is ruled by the bayonet, h less intelligently and liberally, and like the France of eon Bonaparte world-wide dominion through the lestruction of other nations Our Rerolutionary forefathers were trained in self-gov secks rnment. They were practical men, not dreaming doctrin tires. They were patriots, not fanatical preachers of class vatred. They learned little from Lurope, except what to avoid n th titutions they reared. The Ru have been imi ors of Robesplerre, Danton and Marat, but these preache Mf liberty and practitioners of tyranny happily have no proto types in’ our Revolutionary hist There is n lesson in the for bank robbers, dead or aliv unk robbery not even attempted holdup, be an effective plan. Why not apply it to the lope peddler, the drunken car driver and sever: of law yidlators. This dead or ward offer of, Chi There has not be bank a sin This World Topics t dangers as great as those ch ,bbset the marines at Belleau are now ‘ood can menacing the Amer- the opinion of Maj. ord, one of America’s leaders in the world war, In an Armistice speech he are when . many + problems fra solution the * American |people. | Whether We 1 again‘en. joy the constitu tional government handed down from hers, repre days =e) dst e in tts HARBORD character, or con tinue to’ live ‘un. er a multitude of extraconstituton: encies calls for your decision fon Whether the powers of pur gov- shall be legislative, judicial my contemplated) by » constitu or be . distributed wilderness of commissions . semi-legisiative and in character, but: at de the constitution, ts ch the American people “The a mary, outside the resentative govern: and marking the drift toward re democracy, which once estab- ished no government has ever long | survived, susceptible of corruption, | | ‘ect sive, and inefficient in. ‘the crop of office holders {t has produced challenges your decision as’ to! its amendment of the Volstead , far wider In its application than contemplated by the elgh- mendment, its disregard of itutional provision against le searches and seizures, he wholesale official corruption Ich it has led, ts an { Americans must ‘No intelligent person seeks the | return of the saloon and the brass- hound fcotrail, but a decent personal liberty, as to milder forms of bever. ages, with the accompanying inter- nal revenue tax, would obviate ‘the y of on Income tax In this are days when personal erty nd our free institutions are enn from. within and. without und al Americans must be on nard.” | Remember a2 cur INA GEORGINA ROSETTI me when { am going Into the silent land: no more hold me Whe by th I half turn to go, yet turning stay. Remember me hand, Nor when no’ more, day by day, You tell me of your future that you planned; Only remember me! You understand It will be late to counsel then or pr | Yet if you should forget me for | a while } And afterwards remember, .do not griev if the darkness and corruption leave A vestige of the thought that once I had Better by far you should forget and smile ! Than that you should remember and be Business | It appears that business Interesta n down to Washington ating what should) be done and when. Russia Is to be rec- ognized, because business interests want it; the tariff is to be changed, because business interests want st; we are tending toward affillating with the League of Nations for the same reasons. All these propositions are put forward in one place and | another, quite seriously, within ten dic f injuring the vanity of erests, it 1s about! time truth ashington. all the world a. be- helpless ind{vidual ! ordinary business man to get something done at Wash ngton. An office boy of the secre- n assistant secrétary can’ | push him about and high-hat"him | without trouble or protest. He.does | not know the ways of Washington, and more than often he cannot talk ts language. |. When he talks the language of | business the 6 | what he fs t | tries to tal ng about. When she the language of. pall tics, he does not know what ‘he is talking and the politicians now he does not Know, ‘ Usually about all he accom plishes ts to get himseit investigat ed as some kind of a sinister influ- | ence. Notwithstanding about, all th business | frec ntly does get what- ity wants, ri not mean the heads’ of | orations or bank presi | dents, but. the men who. keep. the | stores and make nalls, hammers, | canned peas and radio, sets. . ‘They | get it, not because they are business, Cried Self to Sleep Called ‘‘Pimple-Face” Brooklyn. Mrs. Elsie Fels writes:—"“For months 1 tried in vain to clear my face of horrible | pimples. Once: [ overheard my dear- est friend refer to me as ‘pimple-face’ e 3 and everyone | laughed. I cried | bitterly. «I. read | about Carter's Lit- tle Liver Pills being used success- fully to clear complexions and fi- nally tried them, Well, By pie: ture tells its own story, doesn’ ina” Carter's Little Liver Pills in many cases will do more to encour: age a healthy complexion than al! he known beauty treatments. ‘They cause the bowels to move Ir tle manner relieving the their polsonoge nh fren- but because they are pretty ‘much the majority of the country. For seven years now those who want Russfa recognized. have de. ended on business to win that point. They were confident. of it when they started out and they are lust as confident now, for some rea- vo that the ordinary mind ‘cannot fathom. ‘vhe League of Nations advocates have the same confidence with nbout as much reason. Notwith- standing that this country outside the league does more business with Purope than ever before, they think that bhsiness men finally will want, us in the league for their own per- sonal profit. The idea that business {s a. unit these matters or on many others fe just about as tenable as that all business men wear lron-gtay mus- taches, neatly pressed gray suits ind look like @ cross between a dour S¢otchman and -a tallor’s dummy. * The St. John’s: Wort- BY ETHEL LYN? \ BEERS In the valley of the Tyrol, When the twilight. waxes dim, And the elves are all exorcised By the tender vesper-hymn. 4 When the grim Walpurgis witthes, Balder's host, are lying dead— / Then they whisper tale and legend. Half in earnest, half {n’dread. Of the dim St. John's wort shining. Through the mystid summer. night Mf its branch across the doorway, Rousing eltin curse and blight; Whisper, too, a peasant story. That its leaves within the shoe Thus can make a journey tireless, Though its leagues be not a few Ik _T gather from the meadow Slippers full to keep and wear, Shall I never more be weary, THough I wander here and there? Shall I falter on my pathway Never more as I do now? Tell _me, then, oh elfin legend Where to gather, when, and how. Must I go for {t at midnight. When the witches gather fast? Must I walk alone and backward, Till the mystic leaf is passed? Tell me, for I grow aweary Of the pathway of my life— Weary of its somber shadows, Weary of its aimless strife. And I falter, fearful often: Tell me, legend, witch or fay, How to gather the St. John’s wort, So I faint not by the way. Drives a Spike It is not hard to understand why Vice President Charles G. Dawes became visibly irritated when the toastmaster af a banquet given in his honor in Indianapolis Introduced him-as “a man on his way to the presidency,” It is not pleasant for a’man of honor to listen to a stute- ment which carries the {nference— intentional or unintentional—that he ts trying to undermine his chiefé But even so, there was, perhaps. a_little: calculation {nthe prompt- regarding where | politicians. don’t: Know | | Colds Pain Neuritis | Neuralgia afe— '_ fhe Casver Daily Ccibune ness with which Mr, Dawes repudl- ated the "sompliment’ and protest- ed that such statements are the sort which some people are using to beat his campaign for a change in ‘the senate rules. The charge that the yice president is “out for the presidency gained currency immediately after he stirred things up by the tenor of his inaugural speech. It appeared out ot thin,air,,and at the time the absurdity of the idea was so mani- fest that nobddy, except poszibly tlie perpetrators, took it seriously. “Gut the story has been nourished, ‘and it has persisted, and through repetition has gained a certain ‘amount of credence {n some quar- ters; and unless it {s spiked, may really have a bad effect on? Mr. Dawes's ‘effort to get the senate to pass some sort of a reasonable clo- ture rule; and at the best, his battle to bring about that reform is rather with FLASHES (By; The Associated Press) DETRO. lzzy Einstein and Moe Smith, Gen- eral Andrews had this to say to the W. C. T.Us, “LE am not tn sympathy spectacular raids, approye of any agent making a mon- key of himself.” SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y.—"“We have some queer governors in these United States. find the queerest of them ali, will have to tra exas, exander Richmond fresident of Un- fon College, | is to fit girl OF LIFE|| ; sed her when first IT—As to the firing of] lavce was there wo! aged: * nor do I States. but ff you wa nt to you vel all the way to From a speech of Dr. Al- been x Let just Premier six years — chief purpose rot a womars college NEW YORK.—‘iIt can't be; wh for Paris,” remar told that his lawyer had announced GENOA — Merchants palgning for a dolls pay its war debt MOSCOW —Orrtic go. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1 tol and money was taken. bers were executed, in arguing that the s to become home-mak- a —Mrs. Gertrude NEW YO) erton is glad to be back from Eur 1|in “the land of crime." When cead Ameri papers abroad ti sppeared to contain nothing rhen she satle a4 cae informed that Peggy | crime news. to divorce him. Then a be no contest, the sount . . . sal news! to "1 ask tor Horlicks The ORIGINAL ro} tam Malted Milk @ year contrl butions frem citizens to help Italy to the United nl disclosure has made of the holdup of nine on Christmas eve His automobile. a desperate one. Who’s Who . The Anti-Saloo.. League which ts planning t6 latinch a drive on’ Euro pean cojintries has selected Willlam (Pussyfoot)»Johnson rs its leader. Johnson came into interndt:onal ot prominence {n pro- hibition circles when his eye was ‘Iso severely injured by a mob.of Eng- Ush students who attacked him while making ‘a| prohibition speech in London that it had'to be taken out’ in ‘order to fave the sight of B the other. eye. Johnson was born in Coventry, New’ York, ‘March 1862.. Acting on Horace Greeley’s advice he went to. Nebraska cond, after completing his studies at the University of Ne- braska, he sought a job as cub re- porter with’ the Lincoln, Neéeb., Dally News, In 1906 he was named special agent of the .partment of the {n- terior to enforce the Hquor, laws in Indian Territory and Oklahoma. It wasn’t an office Job. Johnson wore and knew how to use a 44Colt. At least five of his deputies were killed. Johnson had a few notches on his fun, but kept ‘he mortality rate down somewhat by his quickness on the draw. ‘ It ts told of Johnson.’that when he heard that one man ‘had sought to’ raise a fund of $1,000 to have Johnson murdered, the dry sleuth sald, “Go ahead and collect’ the money In July, 1908; Johnson was named chief special ‘officer ot the U. 8.-In- n service and in three years, ob- ined over 3,000 conytctions for law- violations. Since that tlme he has played a prominent» part’ in various prohib!- tion activities. He has written many books dealing with the alcoho! prob. lem, Se ee PASADENA, Cal., Nov. 18 —()— Theft of $100,000 in liberty bonds and $800 in currency was repprted to Pasadena police today by John R. Osborn, wealthy Los Angeles business man, who is a guest at the Accept ‘Bayer" package which contains proven directions. Also Hand} Aspirin 1s the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid Hotel Mary'and her | Proved safe by millions and.prescribed by physicians for Headache Toothache Lumbago Rheumatism onl “Bayer” boxes of: 12 tablets itles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Saves you approximately 12 i WYOMING TOWNSEND ROTEL Westbound Arrives Departs No. 608 oo+ 221180 p.m 1:60 p.m - Eestboun . arte | No. 622_ + teeeeesescn-nowee. 6:45 p.m. 6:00 p. m | “No Sunday trains west of Casper. , | CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY | . Arrives Departs i Now 8130 p.m | vo 82. 400 p.m Westbound ropwrte | yy, By 7310 om Vo St CASPER TO RAWLINS STAG CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 9:30 A! M, and Rawlins : Salt Creek ['ransportation,Com: FARE $12.50 hours travel between Casper MOTORWAY. ™ PAP HOND 144 + “I've dy Joy Galore Look for this Carton with the Cowboy and get tank Give your motor a treat by r, a lighter grade. x DON’T FORGET to have y with our special winter grease. of alcohol or nofreezatol. ' WE HAVE [ A. E. Chandler, Independent SECOND AND PARK STOP AT _ Casper’s Finest Filling Station WHITE EAGLE GASOLINE found it!” ELLOW, listen to this-plenty of select- ed walnuts, “oodles” of pure dairy cream, just enough maple flavor- ing, “scads” of wonder- ful smooth caramel, all “chummy” and covered with pure milk choco- late. It's what weall have looked for. It's—Real— Candy—Joy—Galore! SWEET CANDY COMPANY Salt Ise, Utah ed up with that good emoving that heavy oil and replace with your transmission and differential filled Don't let your radiator freeze for lack T—YOU KNOW ME PHONE 465

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