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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1928 AT YOUR SERVICE—THE CARRIERS An Appreciation . THE CASPER TRIBUNE-HERALD . The Casper Tribune-Herald ‘The Casper Sunday Tribune and ‘The Casper Herald he Casper Dally Tribune (Every evening except Saturday) The Casper Herald (Every morning except Monday) Entered at Casper, Wyoming postoffice as second class matter __| the accumulation of money, recrea- {Published by The Natrona County Tribune, Inc., Tribune Bidg., 216 East | Hon and so on. As a means to a a S z well-defined and thoroughly under- Benond iftcest, Caspar: iwWacoming stood end education is not merely desirable; it is necessary, That may be sald of all other accomplishments. It may be said ‘of—of everything. All values are relative or com- parative. There ts absolutely no such thing as a value disassociated from anything and everything else. We are enabled to fix a value at all only as we compare it with some- thing else or ag it is related to something else. Therefore we say that one has lost his sense of com- | presizents forecasta two possible sources of reform: Through the uhing over of the educational in- stitutions by sane-thinking men of __________| | the younger type; and through the enormous outlays for education, | practical actions of regents and trus-| Washington official life. He ts Ul- these fancy folderols set up in the | tees in insisting that the type repre-| ysses S. Grant Ill, son of Jesse public schools of our cities, and the| sented by the two men just quoted|Grant of New York, and grandson constant braggine and boasting of] be placed in charge of the colleges of the famous gen- this city and that that it has the|and universities over which they eral and president most up-to-date public school in the} have absolute control. ot the United country, the eminently sucdbssful Here in Oklahoma we have room States. Young men in a very large degvee continue | to hope that the new head of Okla- Grant like his sol- to come up frém the country djs--}| homa university will prove to be of dier grandfather tri where such things are not| this type. He is a young man. I E 1s interested in nied in. had the please od Merete! . paryrictoe re “ ple | him in my office the other day— j a v Dope that Porat: in company with a member of the holding a major's fashioned that I cannot appreciate | board of regents and some others. commission in the the mai of reasonable progress, | During the conversation I permitted army. President but the {inclusion of gym in the] ™¥self to express a conviction that Coolidge has nam- “must” among the credits nu..ssary | as been growing on me, to-wit: ee him to succeed for graduation in high schools falls | That tt ts at least a debatable ques: Lieut, “Col. Clar tion whether higher education is Who’s Who Another member of a famous fam- ily is now galning recognition in Protests Modern Educational Trend By 1, A, Latta in Tulsa (Okla.) World. Education {s an important thing, but only relatively so; as is religion, Editor Tribune-Herald: If you]available at his age. Every dollar are beginning to feel old age creep-| he earns whether it ts dire necessity ing on, and think the world 1s not|or love of accomplishment increases just as it used to be,"and the present | that ambition. holds very little in store for you,| When we think of our paper car+ just take a few minutes off some|rier we are sometimes prone to re- morning at four-thirty or some eve-} member the one time in the whole ‘ ning at four-thirty and visit the| year that the paper did not reach Sued as ft fg called by the newsies,| our fire-side just at the moment we % is located right behind the Trib-| were ready to sit down and enjoy une building. Here you will find|an hour made possible only by the a large crowd of happy faced boys,| daily newspaper, we forget the three all eager and anxiously waiting for] hundred and sixty-four times that the Tribune-Herald to be distributed| the paper was waiting at the door to them so they may carry it to| when we were ready for it. your home, Every boy needs the co-operation To many of our best citizens this| of everv citizen in this community scene will bring back days of the| for the time will soon be here when Business Telephones a eis --15 and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS j UNITED PRESS CONSOLIDATED PRESS The Associated Press {s exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all ne dited in this paper and also the local news published herein. National Advertising Representatives — a Prudden King & Prudden 1720-23 Steger Bldg., Chicago, Il, 270 Madison Ave. New York City, Globe Bldg. Boston, Mass. 607 Montgomery Bt., San Francisco, Calif. Leary Bldg., Seattle, Wash., and Chamber of Com- merce Bldg., Los Angeles. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the © New York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices and visitors are ence O. Sherrill, welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Mail fhe Casper Daily Tribune, every evening except Saturday Jue Year, dally and Sunday Six Months, daily and Sunday One Month, daily and Sunday One Week, daily and Sunday ee SST parative values when one mounts a hobby and proceeds to ride tt in utter disregard of related things, each of which is certainly just as {mportant and some of which may easily enough be of paramount im- portance. Here in America, where there has to appeal to my sense of judgment. And 80 does the practice of main- taining directors of playgrounds and so on at public expense. It may be necessary to teach a child how to play and employ an nstructor at public expense for this task, but the proposition fails to command my doing more good than harm today. I avoided debate by instantly saying that I had no disposition to debate merely threw off the The ensuing conversation at least indicated that Doctor Bizzell has some very sound views regard- it, that I thought. ISGRANTS* as superintendent of public buildings | m and parks in Washington, D. C. Lieut. Col. Sherrill resigned to ac- cept the position of city manager of Cincinnat!, Ohio. The office of su- perintendent of public parks and buildings carries a multitude of re- past when he was one of a similar croup, and grouch it will erry make them forget their troubles and believe life holds something after all. These boys come from homes of to the worst work. carrying papers, that boy will be beyond the age of and then he will take up along with the boys who have not held the same position the responsibilities of this clty and what he has learned as a news carrier every circumstance, boys who are| will be put into practice in his life ing the matter. . In our high schools reform must come through the action of the potrons in electing board members who are themselves sound agd prac- tical, who will not use their office for their own selfish purposes or thelr prejudices, and who will find a superintendent sound to the core, compelled to work and help in the home where hard knocks has made life an uphill tussle, to boys from homes where the money is not the main object, but the boy is filled with that ambition that stirs him to activity when no other work is been enjoyed for many years what we are pleased to call free schools but which are nothing of the sort, the whole body politic has been on an educational jag for many years. We may have given up drinking booze but we haye become just as intemperate on the question of edu- support! A mother sat in my office just this week, talking to me of one con- sequence of this invasion of the parent's privilege. She and her hus- band and son—an only child—have just recently moved here from Kan- sas City, where her boy had received sponsibilities ‘and ability to manage large groups of people, Whether this will be a stepping stone toward po- tical power is a matter of much conjecture {n Washington and his Progress will be watched with inter- est. Let us all yield to the practice of the high school boys and girls and give the Tribune-Herald carriers 2 rah, rah, rah. THE OLD FASHIONED MOTHER. i The Casper Herald, every morning except Monday ) Qne Year, dajly and Sunday Six Months, dally and Sunday One Month, dally and Sunday One Wee! cation, and with consequences which | tngtruction {n the public schools| place him in charge and then sup: College Girl’s Surplus Capacity etree ioe a compen shot Bie ss é may prove as grave as the old) from the kindergarten to his fresh-| port him as he proceeds to weed out 5 rs Ny year of perhaps $860,000,000. Freight ne Distance to the Horizon saloon, man’ year in high. He entered the] unnecessary adblvities, profligate ex- Soliloquy ; Tee noukenen ys ton alas es re Creative man has measured the span of the heavens, cal- This ts because most so-called} high school here, and was told that | penditures and? foolish curriculums efi? side arpevicns ren dased Bey 3% per cent larger in-Octobor than culated the volume of the stars, arrested the lightning in its Picard pave eae. ieee ae pend tar hte ag ihr a of ase auc i! re Lh iat eer ad By G. R. the alive? Ase Sekite oat mercedes in October, 1920. No concern or in- clouds, subdued the seas and harnessed the elements to do his | Sense jose at than have cone to | oracr 0 Braduate. Marka tomiewbat related to thia| 7 Soke, or not to smoke—that ts!a striking Wustration of the value|dustry can give satisfactory serv- He went through the activity re- quired and coming !n hot and per- spiring was told to take a cold shower, He demurred, The matter was pressed by the authorities, and the question Dividing all our colleges for women! Whether it is better to indulge the soothing weed Or fly to other, perchance to grosser bidding. How much further will he go? What other wonders will restless man accomplish? About this, not even the wis- est of us can make any but puny prophecies. The distance to the horizon never can be measured. We look upon education as an end in Itself, attainable, too in no other manner saye that established by their own dogmatic. determination. whole subject {s the ado being made about the bearing and the rearing and the training of children. And there is a vast difference in the to the business interests of the coun- | Ice to its patrons when it is. strug- try of ample railroad capacity. ging to meet demands that exceed “In September,” says the Rail- | ‘tS capacity as the railways were in way Age, “the number of tons of |'979 + know nothing about the future, and but little abont the past, |The waste, the duplication and re-| the hoy took the show methods between now and then— pte freight carried one mile was greater pies Lele aa ire eat h But his we do know, man would have accomplished nothing | @vpication, the ruin of character—| 7@ js not here now,” whispered | excepting in the matter of bearing | 6 that Moses had inscribed upon his |*#®" in any previous thirty-day | been ma pe Heaptktni rial epic without organizatt N til 2 and I will not modify that statement] tne mother, the tears blinding her| them. That. rémains as it began, tablets month and in October greater than | ecent years, by helping to mal ' lat if Sonne tl eae cate roi wee infae learned ane Wi8- |—are enormous. eyes. “And he was our only child. | {t 1s unchatiged and unchangeable, |nn6 inevitable decres forbidding nico. |!" 8ny thirty-one-day month in his- | Proved freight acvine Lneganes have dom of co-operation did civilization begin its onward course. ne natn s epee ” although there are certain faddists “| tory. Nevertheless, the service ren-| Contributed to bringing about enor- In his “Ruins of Empir a book that is a complete itisesuseitowme thntnt least-s pert | Inia tem /caye. tp: wethiue) . tine! mous reductions in Inventories in all and uplifters &n@ busybodies who would change !t-if they could—who even impudently insists their ability to change! There are a thousand child or- ganizations of one sort or another. Recently there was held a national conference on parenthood, attended 2,000—we nearly said parents, but we will change {t to persons dered the shippers, excepting In a small area in the southaest, was en- tirely satisfactory. he main cause of the tmprove- ment in service as compared with that rendered some years ago 1s to be found in the fact that the invest- ment of capital within recent years| regulation which would enable the has been made under conditions and | railways to raise and invest enough in ways that have created surplus | capital adequately to increase their of the responsibility for this situa- tion, deplored by practically every | mother that they do not require the progressive thinker in the country,|cold shower. But they do instruct ia due to the fact that within the/{t, as hundreds of boys and girla last few decades teaching in the| know. ‘They do require the heated United States has become a profes-| gym activities, and the cold shower gion—an organized profession—seek-| after {s not merely recommended Ing {ts own interest instead of the] but instructed. And the whole is welfare of either the student or the| completely beyond the influence of state, whereas until that time the! the parent. The echool authorities told this Then would we women know the law’s command, And with one yoice obey its stern demand. edte.tion, Volney graphically traces the origin of society in a few words: “Wandering in the woods and along the shores in pursuit of game and fish, tormented by hunger and assailed by en- emies, reptiles and beasts, the first men were urged by a com- mon need of safety, and so they united their strength and their resources. As men increased in numbers, the scarcity and elu- siveness of game prompted the idea of taming the animals as a more dependable method of procuring food and clothing. lines of business which have released billions of capital the availability of which for other uses is one of the principal causes of the present pros- perity of the country. “The argument so often made that Or, if the saintly Paul, decreeing silence, Had also added that women should not smoke! Not Luther, Wesley, Knox, nor even useful art of imparting knowledge] y have been ‘told of . numerous | interested in the ‘movement Calvin railroad capacity. There has not | facilitles would be far more benefic- “Later, as certain fayored regions became more densely to the younger generation wa! other instances of similar character,| Whether half were parents or were | 5144 placed a canon ‘gainst tobacco’s | Pee? Within the last six years such |ial to the public than to the rail- populated, the cultivation of plants in the fertile areas made largely practiced by men and Wo} though of no other where death fol-| Willing to take on the suffering and tures an increase of traffic as was normal | ways is powerfully supported by the possible the establishing of themselves in fixed habitations, | men merely on thelr way up. lowed. And I have myself on | Sacrifice and obligations of parent! 11.144 tess against indulgence by the | P¢fore the wat but there has been | facts regarding the benefits the pub- As the comforts of life increased and leisure became possible There was a time, and not 60 very | numeroug occasions met young] hood we know not. But they were etx! made a large investment in im-|lic has derfved recently from the there—to hear a certain academic lecturer tell them all about how to bear, rear and train children. long ago, when practically every man {n public life, whether the con- proved and enlarged facilities. This | ability of the railways to render at ladies and young men scampering is the reverse of what occurred in | all times a good and adeqquate serv- No party politician yet has spoken- around the schoot block or out upon O, girls, this question now is upper- they began to study the nature of plants, the course of the sea- sons, question the phenomena of the earth, the heavens, and Py * ma “ gress, legislature, county or state with not sufficient the years immediately preceding the | ice. their own existence. The knowledge gleaned from their ex- | Office, or the professions, had used] (ne, Streets | With fet | BUTS | ‘rhese various movements, to be Ra ee steeping at the | ¥@" and during ana inemodtatalyitol: | sarcom. tne standpoint of both the perience was passed on to succeeding generations.” teaching as a rung on the ladder} Guirements of reasonable modesty,| Sure,,do provide soft places and poatt lowing it. Then the increase in traf-| railways and the public it {s highly Without society—organization, the earth would be a howl- ing wilderness, a dreary desert. The Mitchel! Verdict by which he had climbed. I think it would be exceedingly rash to say that the teaching practices of that day, measured by results, were in- sinecure jobs for a tremendous num- ber of parasites—who must live off the gratuities of that lunatic fringe of wealthy folk, or the taxpaying public. That ‘part of it is easily and with the temperature far below freezing. And I have been told that such activities were “must” and were under the direction of some fic greatly outstripped the increase | desirable that, in order that they in ‘railway capagity. In the four|may continue to give their present years ending with 1920 the traffic] good service, the railways shall con- offered to the railwxys exceeded their | tine to be so developed that they The problem haunts me in my daily And friends forbear to give the help ate 1 ragicehe Hein of today also meas~} highsalaried specialist. Hovenis llendugh 'atogtntial tom! ab een I ask, . hen Ye while nee ee capacity | will at all times in future have ade- The final outcome of the Mitchell court-martial case is | tted by results. I merely want to exercise the fu Lage ; ,| The while my studies must neglected | Constantly exceeds the demands of |quate capacity, and, except when yet to come. The court has found him guilty of violating the |,,Uut there was thie aitforetice’ | Constitutional rights) of one patron | ture the assertion thet hha go teased f the peak of each -fall’'s business is J articles of war, in that he criticised superior officers and There was no teaching profession, | ang taxpayer and express my un- io aide ete triale For my r, weary brain is puz- n the four years ending with | reached, a substantial surplus capac- ¥ h f th an bli ‘ “ no ultra professional attitude on the | aiterable opposition to such things,| Who are actually in the business on al 2 December 31, 1924, the investment | ity. Whether the railways will be branches of the war establishment other than that in which part of teachers, such as is charac-| rest because they are unnatural and | large enough scale to constitute a}. ere or not to smoke—I'd Hke | {7 Tad and equipment of all the rail-| able to make sufficiently large in- “~ he served. This verdict was to be expected. The court could teristic of the profession today. Be-|i, many instances destructive of] problem! Rotknae ways increased $2,324,000,000. The} vestments in property for this pur- have scarcely done otherwise. ‘i : hind the teachers of those days! health; and further because they are| Love and discipline and sacrifice} 1» peace will come, or !f ‘twill lay | "crease in the aggregate tractive | pose will depend upon the way that Since much of the evidence admitted iu the case was ir- | were men and women coming uP] not an edsential part of that char-|{n the home is worth to a child a ma a power. of locomotives in these four | railway rates and profits are regu- to take their place and use the schoolroom as a stepping stone to something else, whereas today the schoolroom is used for the purpose acter of education for which the] hundred-fold more than all of this! public schools are maintained at|It {8 my mature conviction that public expense. And I want to say these various “‘movements,” in the further, yet I am not at all Purt-| Schools, in the churches and among relevant it was brought forward probably for the general good of the service. No one can exactly approve the aviation record from start to finish in war or in peace, and in the light of developments, the Mitchell court-martial will serye an ex- years was 9% per cent and in the And so I face the worst dilemma yet, dilemma yet, | segregate capacity of. freight Here, Garcon, haste to bring my cigaret! lated by congress and the interstate mmerce commission.” the professions, have contributed a cellent purpose in bringing about a better situation both in the administration and practical ends of such a branch of national defense, , Out of just such uprisings great improvements have re- wulted and the people are hoping that will be the outcome in the Mitchell case. Mitchell may not have conformed to all the official requirements, in fact he, himself, owns he has not. But he should not be totally sacrificed on that account. He has put forward many excellent cures for what ails the air department. They should be accepted and acted upon, and credit accorded him in spite of the manner of securing offi- cial attention to what appeared to be shortcomings. The verdict, as it stands, is now up to the president for review and approyal or disapproyal. Outsmarting the Law On the whole, it seems to us that the criminals are smarter than the law. Here is a recent case in point: Frank Belmont, jailed at Detroit, Mich., on a charge of murdering Howard M: Donald last May, was dismis from custody. Acquitted of the charge? Oh, my, no! Frank had Simply married the state’s principal witness, Irene Baker. A wife cannot testify against her husband. Counsel for defense moves that Miss Baker's evi- dence, given before she became Mrs. Belmont, is not competent. ° Objection sustained, case dismissed. Belmont may have mur- ane . Dreaident of the Univeralty of' Wis vote ‘for: it, our 80, ave 3 dered McDonald last May, but the state can’t prove it because | {att {hat there te already available Sea at er utes eaten pest Sine de Lentoot of | That I would not trom him, that haa On Lake Michigan . . . facing the Park. . . enchanting, of a marriage in the jail two weeks ago—a marriage, be it ob- | woman in the state institutions of | yit°r¢ ‘the University oreMioligany Wrisconatalintcire thgm go. unobstructed views from the windows of every one of served, which must have been allowed by state officials since it could not well have occurred otherwise. Bringing Communities Closer During the fiscal year 11 the federal and state governments in co-operation, The total since 1916 has been | nd Just as unworthy ag excessive | and discussion of universities have the most powerful love. doth ao daily . ...a beautiful, quick, clean 10 minute ride to the 16,485 miles, and at the end of the fiscal year, June 30, there | Purdens In the name of roll to do with physical expansion, with nation tn the world | such wrong, as when @ married man city. A truly marvelous hotel for those who want rest was more than 12,000 miles being built. ‘The cost of the year’s | "tat oF Bratt or profile more _DyUnaee ee leat oaaee tee tease ores doth woo. and quiet, . . yet wish to be near the heart of Chicago's ork we 188.57 of which the United States paid $111,- The competition of high schools thet 4¢ ts possible fore ary be etpersey activities. A wonderful location . .. that no other Chicago - Forty-three per cent of the mileage last ye with preparatory schools, academies | cause of various types of diversion, | out the world court the small and | Curt, under the statute creating it, hotel can offer. sixteen states, Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississ and technical institutes—even unt- weak nations of the earth must sub-| 8 Connected with the league tn, but Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas, Montana, Idaho, Wyo- ming, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Utah and Nevada. What He Learned Vernon Willey, president of the federation of British in- of benefiting the teaching profes, sion which is constantly berating the general public for not taxing itself more and more, not for the benefit of real education, but for the benefit of the highly-organized teaching pro- fession which is constantly seeking new, ways to spend money without increasing the efficiency of the edu- cational system. When educational facilities are maintained by imposing a greater hardship upon the public than in reason {t should be required to undergo; when educational institu: tions are so numerous that com- petition exists between educational administrators in order to make a showing; when there is being thrown off each year a vast num- ber of graduates educated far be- yond their natural capacity; when the people are called on to support state untyersities which maintain extension departments for no other purpose than to supply students in such numbers that new buildings and moro teachers are called for each year, and this in spite of the higher learning with capacity far in excess of patronage, it seems that a time has come when a good many people should not only think but speak plainly and clearly. Be- cause excessive burdens in the name of education are just as intolerable versities, however appealing it may be to local pride, results in a loss of time in the fundamental studies, a scattering of the faculties over a large field of subjects that should only be approached at all by the tanical, that it 1s folly to criticize or young women for being flappers and exhibiting portions of their per- sons which appear to be scandalous; for their failure to practice any of the modesty which was once the most glorious and appealing phase of the sex, when we permit our edu- cational authorities to completely destroy modesty by requiring naked girls and boys to associate on equal terms in our schools. No one recognizes more clearly than do I the powerful hold the edu- cational profession with its fads and folderols has upon our wholé po- Utical and social system; and no one recognizes more clearly than I that relief must come from some quar- ter of the educational profession. Happily there are signs in the sky tokening reform. ‘Two of the youngest college presi- dents in America, recently installed, have pointed out a*few of the de- fects here mentioned and called for a change in our whole educational system. They are Glenn I. Frank, at the age of 37. Mr. Frank was formerly editor of the Century Maga- zine, while Doctor Little comes to Michigan university from the Unt- versity of Maine. Frank expresses the about three-fourths of the activity view that to remain four years in college, re- ceive a degree and yet remain “un- touched”, And those of us in the business world who come in contact with numerous applicants for em- ployment who proudly exhibit their “sheepskins” know this to be true mighty influence to undoing the old- And after {thas of these fashioned home. all been done; movements have exhausted them- selves, one feels like judicial tone of voice for a com- parison of the products of the old system with the products of the new system. The old system produced mighty fine boys and girls who de: loped into mighty fine men and women. The old system did not produce flappers or jellybeans, And there you are. leave it! World Topics “The consclence of America in- dorses the world court, the two great political parties have pledged our ad- herence to it and I have an abiding confidence thgt the necessary two- _ thirds majority in senate mit to the decision of disputes’ by political representations of powerful or fight. There is no forum of justice where thelr cases may nation: be tried.” after all ‘Take it or cent speech, “We should ad- here to the court because we will thereby give the indorsement encouragement of Touching on the contention of king in a Stay, O Sweet . By JOHN DONNE. Stay, O sweet, and do not rise! The ight that shines comes from thine eyes; The day breaks not: it {s my heart, Because that you and I must part, Stay! or else my joys will dle, And perjeh in their infancy. "Tis true, ‘tis day; what though it be? O will thou therefore rise from me? Why should we rise because ‘tis Nght? Did we lie down because 'twas night? Save which in spite of darkness brought us hither, Should in despite of Nght keep us together. Light hath no tongue, but is all eye. If it could speak as well as spy, This were the worst that it could say? That, being well, I-fain would stay, And that I lov’d my heart and hon- Must business thee from hence re- move? Oh, that’s the worst disease of love! The poor, the fool, the false love can Admit, but not the busied man. He, which hath business, and makes three ways; the election of judges; the fixing and payment of the sal- aries and other expenses of the court, and the right of the council of the league to determine under what con- ditions the court shall be open to a be est Chicago Affords our, 1000 outside rooms, In the center of our own private x6acre estate . . . removed from the city’s clamor into a veritable garden spot. And think of it! Thecitycenter, the great stores, the thea- tres, the business district, is exactly 10 minutesaway. 350 Illinois Central suburban trains sweep along the lake with club Rates are moderate... Room with bath for one person, $4.0¢ to $8.00 per day... two persons, $5.00 to $9.00 per day. Serve icebyan are organization. A fine cuisine y reakfasts, 40c to $1.00. Table Whote luncheons and dinners $1.00, $1.50 dustries has been oyer on our side of sea looking about. When | student bent on a positive goal, and | beyond the peradventure of a doubt.| Representative George H. Tinkham | ?tions not members of.the league he returned home here is what he reported to the folks: the graduation of half-baked edu-| Here ts the baneful effect of the] of Massachusetts that. the pc eae man onda ithe iennke ite and $2.00. And an a la carte menu at most “In the United States the fatal doctrine of a necessary con- Biers. Tae peat a8 $ | “activities” we have just been dis- | Court is merely, R.creature of, the | "le COVORANT Of the leasne- moderate prices. Fora few days’ stay ora flict between capital and labor does not prevail. Instead, co- | S4yertionat cctinde and a pnaitice | Cussing with reference, to high| league of nations, Senator Lenroot nent home, you will find unusually : wits, 1 elias brit educational methods and @ positive} school work, belng condemned by | maintained that the league had no accommodations here. operation not only has proved possible but is paying. There Injustice to the taye''> nublic. the president of even a university!| power to give life to the court. JUST RECEIVED _ - is a spirit sometimes referred to as the ‘new deoasean ee Avery cohaldargbig number of tn- | wafany students,” continues Presi-| “Forty-eight mations adhered to Write for Booklet of a square deal on both sides, which goes far to explain the structors In high schools recognize | gent Frank, “leave college untouch-| protocol establishing the World une 5 3 amazing increase and efficiency of American production. The | the evils of the so-called activities. | eq by any real intellectual discipline | Court,” he said, “and it 1s their ac- A Mixed Carload of pi ee ge tells all ted) (Chicago's Great? - American employer believes in high wages, but believes also | TheY are numerous, costly and de-| and without any coherent notion of | tion, and theirs alone, that hag vital- Teil coe ston free of charge. Write for a in a high output at a high rate of efficiency. The operating rok aed hove bash shied te the modern world in which he must | ized 1t Into existence. Saylor’s, Whitman’s ote = Chi so We the Railroad on which hoe. 5 ratio there is as high as that in many of our industries is | member of the ‘Tulsa high school | ove: ‘The Wiscotsin senator, who is\a will come to Chicago, We will send you, with our iflus- In his inaugural address at Ann Arbor, Doctor Little sald in refer ence to the goclal life of universitie We cannot train a mind in the Gevelopment of its highest scho- member of the senate foreign rela- tions committee, confessed that it was difficult to be patient with those who assert that the United States, should it become a member and McDonald’s CANDY trated booklet, exact directions so that you can be at 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,” low.” faculty talked to me concerning this matter. This teacher enumerated the number of minutes that were ro- quired for this activity, the number Correcting Dream Books President Coolidge’s statement that the age of perfection for that and so on, the whole con-| lastic powers in the atmosphere | of the court, would be compelled to is “still in the somewhat distant future” is bound to harm a suming so much of the period that} of a veritable Gettysburg of so- | submit to that body's interpretation s } lot of con men who have been telling their constituents only 120 minutes of the whole day] cial activities where, after a pro- | of the Monroe Doctrine, mimigration TL ica (o} eac that the age of perfection began with their election to office | Were lett for application to the| jonged artillery preparation of | polices or the question of the for-|[ = caney) packages suce ? @ and will end when they are defeated. fundamentals. which constitute the] jazz and fast traveling joy rides, | bign debt settlement. you\néyer sawibetore. : basis of practical education, In certain backward nations of the world the church has ground into peonage the great > ass of clit! zenehip, because of costly edifices, demands for church tithes and so forth. This has at various times caused scandals of the first magni- tude, Yet religion 1s a very tmpor- tant matter In the life of man, But its importance {s relative. There is a Pickett’s charge of “dates” and petty but absorbing gossip are in progiess. And that applies with even greater force to the scandalous practice prevalent in some high schools, of holding dances and other social functions as a part of the school notivities! Such practices inject the sex question into the student mind, and with that mysterious but natu- “I think {ft fs a fair statement that no one should venture to ex- Press an opinion as to he powers of this court unless he has first read the statute creating {t,”. he said. “No one who has read the statute can make these statements. Let me repeat the article relating to juris- diction: ‘Article 36. The jurisdiction of the court comprises all cases which the parties refer to {t.’ This “Chicago’s Greatest Hotel” Hyde Park Boulevard + © + on the Lake CHICAGO A. G. PULVER, PF. P. and Gen. Mgr. On sale at The Smokehouse Indication of Progress Talk as you will about the ingenuity and hardships of our forefathers it must be noted that a young man of today is able to pack more stuff on the running boards of a flivver than his great-grandfather could pile on a covered wagon. Casper to Buffalo Sheridan Stage The law of supply and demand doesn’t seem to work in the case of sensible parents, CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 9:00 A. M. are | the danger, the imminent danger, of | ral consciousness aroused, the tem-| means that the court could never |[/With a Complete Line U gaves you approximately 18 hours trny FARE—$11.09. Scientists say sleep is a form of intoxication. Now watch ence ane ang? teaching Bepten perament faneeaty ta the acquist-/pass on questions affecting our Cigars hd Simokene of Ppro: ui TRANSHERS ae ramen, Carper and Sheridan, out for a law forbidding more than one-ha " mitting the same offense | tion of knowledge departs! rights and interests without our con- ehh 5 ci t Ulan eerie toe ce half of one per cent | and creating the same condition| One ts emboldened to hope that |eccte* Supplies. CASPER-SHERIDAN TRANSPORTATION co. here in America. In spite of these the attitude of theme two college TOWNSEND HOTEL Senator Lenroot doclared that the PHONE 144 . . ‘ i =