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(ssuel Every Be oN era brenda Stibtioa on Ottiress tribune flicts with conduct, morals or re-| Of all my hope and fear! Licpaall wore tS beagy atest eae Ye lincpevancib a staat ree shige a 3 ; idg., 216 Bast Second Street, Casper, Wyo. , | ligion, and. can be taught in such|In whose dread presence, ere an 1 : Eenteredt at Casper (WV. goming): postofiiwe-aie second class matter a way to exalt and) beantity the Sades ‘3 : eee ees baat spot bees staat (ae Bae, the ited stated of v 4 Yt fe," é : merica. e states are an essen- i Tae andsi6| todas rerdtieece ic) ince a) | bene GIR eRe a result of the protective tariff policy.| tial part of the name and of the i aifictaies:- ; It surely is hardly wise to place : : . ___Branch’ Telephone £ Lo mente Henry — Falr- If I have wander'd in those paths, | +, ah aaesdeeee upon torelgn tnaveleey flaps abled athe cane od = Prudden, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Uidg., Chica 41; 270 Madison] In recent With passions wild and strong: a : : ‘Ave. New York City: Globe Bldg. Boston, Mass.; 601. Montgomery St.,| speech sald, Apntakealng. to thats weshine wees tective tariff. “In any case it fas| dukedoms; but they are free repub- _ PRICES SLAUGHTERED AT 4 San francisco, Cal.; Leary Bldg., Seattle, Wash.. and Chamber of Com-/"“evolution Has often led me wrong. vie Pg gic rte grep rejlican states, sovereign in their ’ , merce Bidg., Los Angeles. Copies of t eiiy tibane aceon tlerin thels h'o aia “bs friendly terms with other nations. | sphere, as the United States are KI INE S 120 EAST 2ND 4 New York, Chicago. Boston and San co offices and visitors are/ in such Where with intention I have err’d, e ewe 7] sovereign in theirs; and all essential > welcome. ares * ie ae. | to Or frailly, stept.aside, 5 Who’s Who elements of that one, undivided, and * f Rich ees ; indissoluble country which is dearer : . SUBSCRIPTION RATES Do Thou, All Good! for such Thou pate praaster aes arer e . By Carrier and Mall E Art, pe ratking Dasobeab ot te Wayel cee ae ee eter a a ———= — ' 2 The Casper Daily Tribune, every evening except Saturday Ie ahndestot Cabkhees hide SOA adaena tl coniiltthes © SORE aires Hye, beets sacrificed.—David GELB DE DL DL DEDEDE EE DEDEDE DEL Da Ch tae {ENRY F OSBORN Garner, representative from Texas,) ) gy ; One Month, daily and Sunc inquiries that| Where with Intention I have err’d,| present session of congress. Al- Why not an Essex for Xmas? 3 ° e " i One Week, daily and Sunday — | the young mind, in brief! No other plea I have, Piotiph?. Gakneri: has 4 baaaatind ont — The Casper Herald, every morning except Monday | e youth with the truth and] put, Thou art good, and goodness| gress for 22 Give something electrical, 4 ‘ One Year, daily ang Sunday - $7.80) beauty of nature, not to debase still 2 years‘he has in- * 3ix Months, daily and Sunday -. 4 youth with the alloy of the me-! pelghted to forgive. troduced lese Me : Qne Month, dally and Sunday | Shans x nee or see side | than 22 bills. jf Dne Week, dally and Sunday | o1 ife or to falsify evolution as a : r ng = qospel of negation rather than as a| Eoreign Monopolies | 97-2 »s let tive ES Tseeear ne. <Oaiseh ands}: Tass {papa ee eae et rene eliclous atu ak 2 ees t inspire students unless|thing else has opened the eyes Of|makes speeches ! ¢ Meani f Hell burning enthusiasm for] people to what can be expected In| for “home con- ( andy Nleanmg of Me The college student,”| trade practices when. we place too| sumption” feel- . . Men are not afraid of hell today. When preachers use the i as sangenes animal | much relies upon foreign eel ing that his There's nothing like Car- EXTRA SPECIAL word with literal meaning people smile.. The expression has | a hundred different tastes| {or the products we consume. Cof-| constituents can ngeionaMitk ay > CA pee Sine aieioing cakes AanRECa RET eaibesiela vulgar | 284 impulses, and his interest and | fee, nitrogenous products and other !see that he is ¥ich Those Pa ela § SILK SHIRTS, in Broadcloths, Crepes; in taf, blue, oath. i ’ attention must be won over. The | materials which we import rather |accomp ishing roa ne ss grey and a beautiful array of stripes. Some with col- # PAGE EIGHT Che Casper Daily Tribune By J. E. HANWAY AND E. . HANWAY MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ssociated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of news credited in this paper and aso the loca! tiews published herein. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B.C.) National Advertising Renresentatives Six Months, datiy and Sund, oath. The idea of bell developed first when the Jews saw the fires that burned the refuse of the city and thought that so the wicked would be destroyed. Doubtless they took some sat- isfaction in the fate of their enemies.'The Savior used the pic- ture as a warning of what had to be done with refuse. Then the church worked out a theory of divine punishment, fashioned upon the attempts of government to end crime by awful pen- World Topics volution in {ts real sense of ascent and progress in no way con- field Osborn, president of the American » Mu- seum of Natural innocent teacher has to make his own sub- ject more interesting and tring | than athletics or dramatics or any of the so-called extracurricular ac- tivitles of college life. “The quiet, unseen and continu ous ascent and adaptation to new conditions is the noblest ang most pe Casper Daily Cribune A Prayer By ROBERT BURNS. © Thou unknown, Almighty Cause Of life 1 ought to shun; As something loudly tn my breast, Remonstrates I have done; Thou knows't that Thou form'd me | tew wars Is because we have a pro- than produce have all been used against us rather than fcr us. Now it is a fact that anyone can | Prove for himself, if he does not ac- cept the statement, that a goodly number of our industries have been built up as a direct result of the protective tariff policy. In many manner, socia] culture, and civil polity have associated with them. This wonderful combination of state and nation which binds me to both consume there are only a few we have to get from outside the country. These few, however, have caused us @ great deal of trouble. How much monopolies and being helpless in re- gard to any regulation of the meth- ods these monopolies use. Perhaps one reason why we have been in so dren have borne on so many fields of glory, the ever-+‘ining symbol of one nation and many states. They are not provinces or coun- tries; *hey are not principalities or will be in the Mmelight during the delicious ¢andy. Try it jsomething by and see. watching bis DRT re results rather |. GARNER : than reading long speeches in the And try Carnation, too, Congressional Record. |] in other ‘cooking and He represents a district so large|/ With coffee, fruits. and that the state of Delaware or eyen cereals, in place of costly Vermont would seem like one of cream. You'll like it— FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1925 Your old hat made new. Casper Teil the Advertiser—“I saw tt ly Hat Cleaners, 251 South Center St. od The Tribun Buy Your Watches, Diamonds, Silverware and Jewelry at Greatly Reduced Prices. THE SMISOR JEWELRY STOCK lar to match. In holly boxes ready to give. $4.95 alties upon the criminal. They sought to frighten sinners to piritual side-of evolution: and it EPO R a cia spiritual s! 0) . cases !t would not have been possible | {ts voting precincts if transferred | : mepeinsee EOE eyes Tamme pute fees | is the very frst thine that should to have ereated these Industries bad| to Texas ‘He is good. speaker every way. Values to $7.50. prevent crime. hen they hanged en fe petty 3 e taught. It should at first be! it not been for the protective tariff.| and is said to be the ablest “rough Carnation Mix Propecrs fe > won’ there was more of it then than there is today. We have found | taught from nature ftself and not| We have seen what has been done | and tumble” debater on the Demo- pipe Come early—they won't last long. it inconceivable to think of the Creator eternally torturing at once from Darwin or Wallace, | with rubber and coffee. When our] cratic side of the house, especially 1639 18th St ie page Tage Say ee eT x the great majority of his creatures, in order to save the rest. | from Haeckel or ert Spencer. | consumption reached a point where} on tariff and tax questions. His} Denver, Colo. FARRAR IER RE . oF eee re modern | the prduct became a necessity and| mein services are performed in the SILK NECKWEAR HICKOK BELT SETS Fatherliness has come to be uor great religious Is there anything in the old idea that is significant to us ? Men have said that if there is no hell, there is no need to worry, Others have said that if man is to live forever, this concept. * Wei ger minds we should nce of the elements of hu- ror, clothing it and present here the volume was such that here was a temptation to take greater profits, we are made to pay. Suppose that we had adopted a "From Contented Cow: © 1925, Carnation Milk Products Co committee, as he is an organizer | } and a strate; | Garner was born in Red River} county, Texas, in 1869 and had very | Indispensable Xmas gifts are these beautiful silk ties; a wonderful array of beautiful Hickok belt sets include belt. buckle and beltogram, encased in a neat looking holiday box, little earthly life is of no great moral significance. Behind face to face, in its simple] free-trade policy instead of the pro-| few school advantages. In spite of| Lip soa y the old idea of hell was the emphasis on the moral import- and simple truthfulness.|tectiye policy. One of the Industries | this he was admitted to the bar in| Leal oe eth See ere to a delighted ance of human life. This is a terribly serious world. What we | Ths, while avoiding !f need be-|that probably would never have] 1895. He came to congress for the seeing them— ea | \ NS sow, that we reap. Perhaps it would be more comfortable to | ‘2° Use of the word ‘evolution.’| grown to anywhere near the size it/ {irst time in 1898 and remained $1 | $3 50 and $5 00 have a kindly providence pull up the wild oats and the thistles. ree? thet rent patlbnes sata oes has in the steel industry. there until 1902, returned in 1902 50 } a! ; e Ns But they bear their deadly harvest. minds the real essentials of the! Under ’m free-trade policy other|and has been in every congress up In Holly B A Real Practical Gift f Hell is evident enough in great literature. It is in Adam vii tre cmd e found {0 | countries would have bought our ore} to the present time. Although his in Holly Boxes 3 Gide tah ht lehies aude | (2 k a : an every plant and animal we study}and possibly fuel and would have| territory ts too large to be canvassed Bede, in “The Scarlet Letter.” Hell is the realization of con- and which may be taught without sold us the steel. There is every rea- before each election no one has) | BATH ROBES sequences, whether in this world or any world. It is the con- | ‘volving even a shade cf our sclen-| son to believe that as efforts were | Deen able to defeat him for 22 years. RADIUM SILK . dition of self-discovery of evil. It is not to frighten but to | tie philosophy. = Thus the reall made to found a steel industry here. Sree Te PAJAMAS | Give him an Oregon City pure g significance of the law of evolution ateslcw6dla' dike oteen | Virgin Wool Robe; a practical § warn. Good is good and wrong is wrong, and like produces like. Of course the fearful doctrine of hell w rs met by is gradually made clear before the rstood word is used finished dumped into this country at prices; so low as to ruin the Infant industry. My Country The gift of utility and beauty 7 f i gift that will endure for years. is a suit of these finely tailor- They come in an extensive ar- the wonderful gospel of forgiveness. Does this serious: world ettte: the sfads | nefore the s nt a ft . bee: rt of us has the right to ji i e r 2 re is its: “9 g a igi " Pc — > o . a z 5 Late | 4 e, quences. Repentance is itself a cause that has mighty effect. charged until the losses had been re | up with the life of all. For who in colored’ boxts to match pa’. | Navajo patterns; silk teimmed Hate plunged the world into hell. Let the new forces of good Seabed compose my nation, and what cgn- | jamas. Priced at— | with silk girdle— af will begin to operate, let revenge be forgotten, let men learn to be fair and to be generous and much troubled Europe can Generation of Hope a press corre- In the case of the monopelies in our own country we have seen ten- It is not so They would though an stitutes my country much land and water. remain ever the same, K $10.00 $18 to $22 & emerge from that fearful train of consequences and enter upon © frleridly to. soviet | ences sions these, same nes: Cr ne led: th fi: th 2 he é fn s rientc retti . ere, | alien race occu e soll; there x Pa the redemptive consequences of a better life. Ru in a wireless dispatch trom | e\Uns Biss ve Bieta 2 ee? sectiln Rolitie basal green i bilta. ant a og ae oe ee ery ot i In this world we need alike, the warning of ‘hell and the | Moscow to the New York Times,| 0°¥® "Trae aah rh (a conrtoee ‘Sr |the same sweet valleys, the same ‘ ; promise of salvation. So again we get behind the old ideas of their fundamental meaning there is new truth for our new day and our new needs. The Greatest Restraint More than most men realize, we judge the acts of others by our own sympathies, and we judge our own acts by the sym- pathies of others, every day and all day long, from childhood upwards, until associations, as indissoluble as those of lang- uage, are formed between certain acts and the feelings of ap- proval and disapproval. It becomes impossible to imagine some acts without the approval of the actor, whether he be one’s self or anyone else. We come to think in the acquired “dialect of morals. s Co! ing: th A - setat. ‘ sthin? . them, “ y mparing the price of coffee to- eye ‘An artificial personality, “the man within,” as conscience | firs ¢aces ennaian exer meUke: | day with the price when. perhaps it 2 e is popularly called, is built up beside the natural personality. | hair, tong men's coats sy ete ly cost more to raise {t is another point 4 e ouse He is the watchman of society, charged to restrain the anti- | pinned up or cut and ragged. They | ‘at Indicates all the world ts not social tendencies of the natural man within the limits re- | shuffie together taking counsel, Paap ieseri gel g retrain from i y i velfare. v i e feeli then swift < ra profit where an oppor- | quired by social welfare. The evolution of the feelings out As swallows make one| intty offers. Let any. other coun- of which the primitive bonds of human society are so largely forged, into the organized and personified sympathy we call conscienc, is the ethical process. So far as it tends to make any human society more efficient in the struggle for existence ith the state of nature, or other societies, it works in contrast with thé cosmic process. But it is none the less true that since law and morals are restraints upon the struggle for existence of men in so0- ciety, the ethical process is in opposition to the principle of the cosmic process, and tends to the suppression of the qual- ities best fitted for success in that struggle. It is obvious that the greatest restrainer of the anti-social tendencies of men is fear, not of the law, but of the opinion of their fellows. The conventions of honor bind men who break legal, and moral! and religious bonds; and while men endure the extrem- ical pain rather than part with life, shame drives the weakest to suicide. sive way than merely crossing them e off the books. | The Sandpiper Suppose that instead of rubber | Soothing to Voters rong-arm n . In his message to ¢ said that rence his sé evale hods often p ngress he gently ont- of development that is alluring to the r n ] | sby and diffident maiden whose front name. is taxpayer. | and dry Also suppose that the-people of: eech He is outspoken on. lines of economy, reduction of taxes, |The wild waves reach thelr hands | SOUnHY uiding 8 menopoly did not | Codes Reever DELA Y ED SHIPMENT and a constructive agricultural policy. He gently coaxes the | for cause they thought we peahgebl <itens) European maidens to fulfill their financial dance cards. He | The bdr aise raves, the tide runs | cuite ag liberal 'as we might=have| OF asks the ladies of our own political sewing. circle to make their | ., uy and down the beach we fit, |D0e® 1 regard to debt settlements. dollars go-a little further, instead of making more dollars g0, |” One little randpiper and I, ‘| THE tenure of office in these coun: | FLOOR LAMPS which tickles Miss Columbia in the midriff and.she. sweetly | above our heads the sufen clouds | ‘Ties not being any too secure on ac-| smiles. Scud black and swift across the | Cunt of the lack of prosperity the Beas: pace would find f wie tray BRIDGE LAMPS - F 1 to the galleries. Composers Chance Shosta tn misty shrouds | “Under such conditions where ae See { $3,000 awaits the American composer of an would the automobile industry stand? ROUDOIR LAMP . ymphony or symphonic work. The winning composi- can reach area Giots Veroe Mai be dar Laat " : tion will be selected by five of the nation’s prominent sym- | thathpial {prides :woabs cab: uplaerhe ALL AT phony conductors, who will give it a first performance in as | atatper’ nods source of supply might become un-} many ci The contest is sponsored’ by musical America, | aa re akfiae aon certain. We would have to pay. e which seeks to stimulate American composers. The symphony | step alleen pain) In practically every case where O awanl will be followed by a similar contest for an American | ; we have not developed our own See 1scoun opera. A third contest will be for an American choral work The only restriction jlaced on contestants for the symphonic work is that each must be an American citizen, born or natur alized. An expedition has been fitted out to discover the place of origin of man, presumably somewhere in North Africa. After that question has been fully dete ~d, will some one fit out a larger expedition to learn whither the human race is going? OS SK CONST OF OF OUCH OROE CROCE CHUECAYETs<o 3 When you know it you'll insist-on it tells of the hordes of abandoned children now thronging the streets of Moscow, having degenerated into little less than wild animals in their search for food and: shelter. The tendency of there children to turn to violent crime is troubling the soyfet government. Many of them share with occasional corpses the cellars of a vast unfinished pre-war building called the “catacombs,” from which groups of boys and girls from seven to twelve years sally forth in groups in the hope of obtaining enough food by seizure to sustain life. Mr. Dugenty describes after another, # leap at the counter, grabbing anything, leaping like the wind.” A well clad child was kid- napped,by a party of these child- bandits, imprisoned {n a hen house for the night and stripped of his food clothes. These children, as Mr. Duranty put it, “left free to rob, free to fight, free to kill and free to starve.” have become high- waymen murderers and dope fiends. The bolshevist philosophy frees par- ents from the responsibility © for rearing children, and {s more irter- ested in educating young com- munists to be violent revolutionaries the institutions of civiliza- han {in protecting either child from suffering.” . By CELIA THAXTER. y bit. bleached fluttering drapery, thought of any wrong. me with a fearless e nds are we, well tried ar strong. little sandpiper and I Go not fear for thee, though wroth The tempest rushes through the tices. the United States must be conducted ina fair manner and in uccordance with the way in which we define the word fair. Size must not be per- mitted to put smaller and equally efficient concerns out of business. Units of all sizes must be given an equal ‘chance. It doesn’t require any great gath- ering of statistics to show that this policy is not world*wide, Just com- paring the cost of: automobile tires now with the cost when every- thing else had reached the peak is enough. try acquire a monopoly of any thing we use in vast quantities and sooner or later we are called upon to pay through the nose. Yet there are people who in the face of all these facts. will talk free- trade. They would have us depend- ent upon the products of other na. tions. They would place us at the mercy of foreign governments which may not be at all in sympathy with us. Some say that we must have free- trade in order that other nations may pay us what they owe us. course this {s really just a round about way of cancelling those debts and in the long run a more expen alone we had to { e of an bile. MM farther and. suppose that tn the case of each kind of material some country had a monopoly on it. | source of supply under our own flag When that we hare been made to pay. this country was founded all was here was the raw material. a single industry has «crown In great size and prospered uniforn that has not owed {ts prosperity eith y or indirectly to the pro concerns in this country, has pre vented an industry from getting a foothold in this country until {t was fully protected by the tarit?. During the war we became aware that {t would have been wise to have developed a dye industry. Since ot | ranges of mountains, and the same lakes and rivers; but all these com-| bined do not make up my country. | | They are the body without the soul. That word “country” comprehends | within itself place and people and | all that history, tradition, language,’ RICHARDS & CUNNINGHAM CO. DEPARTMENT-STORE 3 i 3 ios ° Ge | Gey Gew Few For Convenience and REMEMBER OUR They make wonderful Christmas gifts. If your home is without one COME IN NOW There are many beautiful models still on the floor. Any article in our entire Appliance Department may be purchased on easy terms—payments made with your light bill. Complete Depend- MOUNTAIN STATES POWER CO. 421 South Center St. Phone 69 the war it has been Impressed upon us that a mistake was made tn rot creating our on source of supply 2 sky u hill For are we not God's children both, Thou, little sandpiper, and 1? aaa $ of rubber. We have become enor hone 402 for Galnaday. mous consumers of rubber but have falled to create a source of supply. Se a a i Rad Ea re nh SN hal See SE worthwhile, | The prospects are that this error wil! | oo —— be rectified tn future nonesoncnones Drink Hillcrest AVater. hone L131,' Considering all the products we! i aes