Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 4, 1926, Page 6

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PAGE SIX he Casper Daily Cribune) . 6. HANWAY AND YWAY ~ Offices tion ze Connecting Alt Departments 2 ASSUCIATED PRESS entitled to the t nd also the local news publish TE ‘Tribune -15 and 16 ye for publication oy World Topics will be di ain to fulfill h to the United § to maintain 1} foremost powers in for Great Brit financial obilgation es and still be abl 7 rank as one of the industrial and commercial he world, and it is the duty of the United, States to ald her," says George Har- ey, former Amer- ican ambassador to the Court of St. Member of Audit Bureau of Cireulation (A. B.C ie: James, in a re- National Advertising Representativ vent article {n the 1 King & Pi r Steger Bldg.. Chicago 11; 270 Madison North American y Boston. Mass.: 507 Montgomery St. Review. t a Seattle, Wash. and Chamber of Com “There seems to ton cA f the Dally Tribune are on file in the ve no eocape from cork: < I n Francisco offices and visitors are the final conclu: . a sion that ever SUBSCRIPTION RATES Ince the war Eng: By Carrier and Mail | n, and Tribune. every evening except existing 1 r ally a E 3 riod of productivity daily a . 15 | has pas: sole function hence rhe ¢ every morning exce ay forth can be n that of Year. da ‘middlemen’ or manufacturing inter- s mediary between producers of raw The Bigot-Maker ou to be possessed of the most difficult, trying exactil the virtues, cultivate tolerance. It is diffieult t toler nd comparatively VW men are, one must prac und selfishness is bound up with the first n. One is led to the makes bigots of is positive, not negative. A man can dislike for their opinions and still not be intolerant. A ing no infallible than other men, people on account of opinions which do not t if he neither himself ill office, nor it its being done by others, he is not intolerant, and which fiows from a ientious of I ce to mankind of the equal freedom of all opin- tolerance which commandable, or to the f minds, possib enied that most of the intolerance of our is character, it comes from the thing near. atural to mankind is intolerance in what- aie care about, that religious freedom has hardl ibeeH realized, except where religious indifference, likes to have its peace disturbed by theological quar- had add weight to the scal in the almost all religious 1 even in the tolerant countries, the duty of toleration is admitted with conclusion men. self-preserva than ignor: nee, € person, more e to dislik sense s the only is be So ch di minds of reserye. Is a human being accountable to others for his licious belie fs Building Plans it is only whe we have completed a period of our life, or approa the end of it altogether, that we ognize the i¢ connection between our actions—what it is we have eved, or failed to do. It is only then we see the precise ri n c d effect, and the exact value of our efforts. As long are actually engaged in the working through ct in accordance with the nature of our character, r the uence of motive, and under a law of necessity. At e do just what appears to us to be right and to our best advantage. only whea we stop and look back over the course id the results of our acts, that we see the why and > of it all. Thi ads to the conclusion that when a man is accomplishing some master work, he is not con- of it as such, he is thinking only of satisfying»present of fulfilling the intentions he ypens to haye at the time. Viewing a life as a connected whole, character and c: pacities show themselves in their true light; we can see how in particular instances, some happy inspiration were, led it person to choose the only path out of a thousand which might have brought him to ruin. In any authentic autobiog- raphy of a notable person you will find this strikingly em- phasized If there is any merit or importance attached to a man’s career, if he lays himself out carefully for some special work, it is all the more necessary and advisable for him to turn his ind then to its plan. If he maps out important mself on great lines, frequent glances at this min n of his life will stimulate, d-urge him to nd keep him from false paths. now rouse The Nation’s Insurance hed World War fighter has referred to the on the “best insurance policy the nation His conclusion was that the service men’s organ- is usually to be found on the right side of questions rtaining to the nation’s welfare a whole. ¢ back upon the history of this comparatively young on, it is worthy of note that its accomplishments much for their country as for their members and general. The Legion credited with haying 1 camp of radicals who sought to sow rans and to capitalize the feeling of un ntry following the war. Through its community the Legion disseminated canism, pat and love for irned upon the battlefields of irchism has ebbe Chis body of bore the brunt of opposition to the Reds and was lay the most contributing toward Amer 1 L ould have as Lookir otism er ud 1 active organization ion has been concerned with steps toward of r thr jean international organization of known the Interallied Veterans’ association. supporting the universal draft of labor, as well as man-power in the future war, removal of the rewards of war will tend te of world peace. At the same time the national defense measures. Education Week, thousand posts © ¢ to a remarkable extent, Its posts 1 fc bort community e American ‘ t the el night schools, and are developing pub: especially among the also 4 sponsoring parks terprises in many fund to care visionary dreamers the street every day that the good of the welfare of the nation, T the age. And prac | other nal endowment onnaire Dick, we the practical rood « are not meet on ho believe the dealists of Bill a nationai in See Prosperity rmer tock of wholesa labor and ki und retail dry good. both that in agri regions lustrial districts that will marshal ih A rising standard in living will sec nd commodity prices, business ex s for the farmer, industry a and it is predicted that the rai} the will be one of lar money will tend to a moder activity speculation i id the in i new rec year etter trend in we er re indicated ivy traffic Trofits. I tock and other fields, an rmer bond and nen inake polities safer, anyway, Now a polit ob in his wife's name, . an can terials a of ni ticles working m: consume! j tive disady costs bs both fetch! | The simple truth is that Berlin as realibzed on her natural wealth fron; her ore mineg are now of le and the proximity of ir conductive to low i, has ceased to be a fac- g is one great produc- which has seemed lke- maintained, although at ch has made {t toa cost- y home consumption. be in a state of utter but for a heavy direct sub- anted by the government, in heer desperation, to provide a few months’ time for study and possibie solution of the problem which ap- | pears upon its face to be insoluble. No doubt, as we are told persist- & ently, it is our duty to help ‘the orld’; but even obli{gations have degrees. Our first duty is to the one great country that has estab- lished all Anglo-Saxons, our people no less than hers, as deservedly and unmistakably pre-eminent in finan: erity among the races of the earth. “It has become a cardinal principle of Great Britain, under the avowed headship of the king, to do nothing that might by any possibility impair the friendliness of, or give offense to, the United States. In honor, no less than in consideration of our own material welfare, we should re- spond in kind and make fidelity to our race second only to loyalty to our country.” Messages By SAMUEL MINTURN PECK To me come lovely messages When I am all alone, From winds, and waves, and rocks, and trees, And birds, and insects, blown; Ay, even in the city street Where, solitary still, And hard beset by hurrying feet, They hie from vale and hill. No need have I of radio That time and space defies; No static ever works me woe Neath fair or cloudy skies: Such miracles a listening heart, | ' serv Che Casper Dailp Cribune warned off Sixteenth street. He crime news has a bad need not worry. It means his relief n the impressionable minds ma terrible nervous strain. The | of our younger people. motor takes over the worl y func: | ernor at tions of the hor a ves b rime would be to have the m nental, th eofa ore © proude wealthy master. It is} ne er the pature of a horse to delight in| w r| the newspapers let on that there {s . But while Goyernor Pierce y blaming publication of s trit speed, in show, in the splendors of | crime news for crime, Stanley Myers sport and fashion. Burden bearing | district attorney of Multnomah and the hauling of heavy carts and| county, was writing this letter to a trucks are in reality a perversion of | Justice of the peace at Independence, the horse's nature. [lis relegation | Ore.: to the ornamental side of Ife is 2 We had a man by the name of J, return to normalcy for him. If the} 0. Miranda arrested in this county horse could comme sion from he might say: in pleasanter places.’ ably banished to the country, to the | 1 his exclu- the moter th: roughfare, ‘My lines have falfen He is agree: | for the possession of a still, Be- fore could try him, the gover- nor sent him down a pardon, and Miranda had to plead guilty to get the pardon, parkway, to the airy and commodi- the reader is left the task of ous stable. It may be, to be sure,| judging whether the press or the t the relegation of the truck ho: hor tk inore ta|blama toniwhat will mean in the end no,more truck | ever excess of crime is ma} horses. If there is joy or privelege | seif felt in Oregon in mere exist ousands of ‘ sod St) equine creatures may miss that. But | at least they will not know it. The horse kind will tinue to florish as long as man lives | on the earth. It will be happy. } Think of t ard work of whieh the motor has already relieved the not di species!” eugenist and scientific autho newspaper reporters that the aver- age of intelligence on this continent is declining becaus c great burdens on the Q As far back as 500,000,000 years ago was crowding out the unfit, en in the early days of man a sic ave-child uppeared, too puny to heave rocks at predatory mamnioths, it was quietly knocked on the head. It was hot a lovely age—this period of the survival of the fittest— but it eriabled the purifying process of evolution to go on. actually Safe for Stupidity Albert Edwin Wiggam, our oddles the weakling: ‘Today all this ts ci made safer It will con- noted » tells civilization and places too uperior types. Life is © for Who’s Who Republican senator trom ja, Howard Sutherland, ainted United States custodian to take the e late Frederick G. Hicks ww York, who recently, He jwill have charge of all the property of aliens taken in- to custody during Hen property place of t the war. uther- land was born near Kirkwood, Mo., in 1865, and educated at is now the ore ton university, did not but complete - the course. He was HOWARD SUTHERLAND editor of a news: Fulton, Mo., for two years became chief of the popu- Iqtion division of the 11th United | States census. In 1893 he moved to ". Va., and became associ- and Elkins coal ts for ten years, | paper at and later the {diot than for the mal child. | ® The unfit are e ed to indulge r coal and timber in,orgies of reproduction ess of his own. Sutherland stupidity, and we good people are crowding The world is being » are be numbskulls, In a deluge of the face of the earth. porated nothing much can be By ROBT. WILLIAM BUCHANAN The crimson light of sunset fall Through the grey glamour of the And faith, can dally do, I seek no afd of any art, ‘To. Nature ever true. Whenever I'm besieged by care, The ill I quickly end, For Nature broadcas' If loyal souls attend: @ mine eyes, and fancy hears Whate'er she likes to list; And every day there glads mine ea What other men have missed. everywhere I There is a sweet, pervading Life Around us all the time Whose gentle strength, surviving strife, Reveals its source sublime. It cannot be earth's wondrous things Were ever wrought to fall; I hear a song whose burden sings: Trust on, right shall prevail, Oh, yes, I've lovely messages That bring my soul content, By winds and waves, and rocks and trees, And birds and Insects sent: | Whatever ts, whate'er shall be, Chance n de, but Wit y ays I cannot sec I'm pa: of It ee 7 And | Banishing the Horse “The horse has taker} another de on his journey, undoubtedly asant to himself, toward elegant ward the thrilling sports pl leisure or and contests of a Corinthian Ife," says the Boston Transcript. ‘Recon: nizing the fact that a slowly-moving horse-drawn vehicle on a thorough- fare {illed with motors can hold up * hundred vehicles and intensify con westion, the authorities of the Dis- trict of Columbla have fssued an order excluding horses from portions of Sixteenth street and of Massa chusetts, New Hampshire and Rhode Island avenues In the city of Wash ington, In this proceeding they are lowing the lead of Low Angeles which hag for some time excluded | horses from certain crowded streets j and gn entire downtown nection. |. “This exclusion, whieh ts Mkely to | be adopted elsewhere, marks a Kreat hange in people's id in their habits. would not horse-drawn mounted by * as well as Witty years ago it have been believed that vehicles or horses men could ever have westion of thoroughferes ean only be relieved by the rapid progress of all vehicles on their way. Every- | body must keep out of everybedy | else's way. A steady, swift pour ts the only solution. ‘The slow-moving am" is an intolerable obstruction. Individual right on the publle high Way must yield to the pubile nec So the proud “high-stepper, as Well ae the oxlike truck horse, is be forbidden the use of the streets: the right of the citizen to travel anywhere and in any lawful guise on | th public highway was regarded au | sacred. ‘The motor has changed jeverything—notions of right along with ways and customs. ‘The con Her sun-tanned neck, And dies upon the bre: Like trodden snowdrift melting in And until eugenics becomes incor. into politics and done about Liz murmuring rain, One to mark, of night, the dark. Two Letters Here are two letters, both written In Oregon, that tell thelr own story. To one of the newspapers of tha’ state, the Ranier Review, V Plerce, governor of Oregon, wrot I believe that the repeated and high-colored publication of the de- “BAYER ASPIRIN” PROVED SAFE “ake without Fear as Tol< in “Bayer? Package not Does ue Unless you see the “Bayer Cros on package or on tablets you ‘e not getting Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physi. clans over twenty-five years for Colis Headache | Neuritis Lumbago | Toothache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain | Each unbroken “Bayer” package contains proven directions. Handy boxes of twelve tab! ost few cents. Druggists also sell pott! 24 and 100.—Ady, * ¢ le safe for swamped ‘The of this planet are so busy sticcoring the nitwits that they own kind off the religion her glistening alter M. erved in the West Virginia senate for several terms and then was sent to congre as m representative for two terms, He became a sepator in 19i7. He is president of the board of stees of Davis and Elkins college. Heraclitus By WILLIAM CORRY told me, Heraclitus, they told me you were dead, They brought me bitter news to hear and bitter tears to shed. I wept as I remember’d how often you and I Had tired the sun with talking and They And creeping o'er the housetops sent him down the sky. crawls Through the bi }And now that u are lying, my the broken r dear old Carian guest, Steals to the straw on which she|A handful of gray ashes, long, long les, ago at rest, And tints her thin black hatr and|Stlil are thy pleasant voices, thy hollow cheeks, nightingales, awake; \F Death, he taketh all away, but eyes,— them he cannot tak While faintly, sadly, fitfully she ——+—_—_ speaks. ry " But when it {s no longer lic’ 2 eaereecerene cares at ube) Weed The pale girl smiles, with’ only 2 3 t Salt Creek Busses Leave Casper, Townsend Hotel Sam. and 1p. mend bp m. Leave Salt Creek $8 =m. 1 p, m and 6 p. m. ‘xpress Bus “eaves 9:30 Salt Creek Transportation Co, BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS TELEPHONE 144 Are Gre Welosmed, We Manuscripts 5h ceeding 250 Words and Should First Presbyterian. Rey. Chas. A. Wilson, D. D., Minister ubject, “The Salt of the Barth.” A familiar Mustration was used by Christ to indicate the saving influ- ence of the good. Corrupting anda}! thing for any community is to mul- Uply the number of good people in If legislation could save people, have it. all ought be saved, plenty of laws on the If ordinances could save, only to look to the city councils for deliveranc Laws and ordinanc avail little if the consciences of. the People, are at fault. This church and its minister are working year in and year out for a better cit: We are doing it by quiet constructive for we methods, the success of which time always demonstrates. We are mak- ing the problem of city government easier for every mayor that suc cessively holds office, The leayen of every day goodness will ultimately do {ts work. Of this there can be no question. Tho best possibilities | of life are persistently held up. to the individual. Life is opportunity. M men and women ty ;supated. Dr, Caldwell’s Get out your Bibles, and study God’s | must sive to the ocea:|Sin not only causes a gentle, way for’ your life. One man said] sional help, else from | bowel movement but, best of all, to his minister, that he had grad- : is often months before another dose uated from the Bible to the news-| Constipation. One might as well re-lis necessary. Besides, it 1s abso- paper. A paragraph. writer says | fuse to ald weak eyes with glasses |lutely harmless and pleasant to ta that too many people are wearing |@8 to neglect a gentle ald to weak} Buy a large 60-cent bottle at out their dictionaries looking for.| bowels. store that sells medicine and just see cross-word puzzles when they ought Is your present laxative, in what-}fon yourself. to be wearing out their Bibles look- ing for rules of living. Some would Uke to get away from their past failures and begin over again. The best way to get rid of the past is a future out of it. The Bible the best help in doing it. A great painter was asked, “For which of you ‘or the paint nex In Asia a missionary was describing the life and work of Jesus as he went about doing good. Years before, hundreds of miles away, the mis- stonary had exemplified the way of Chfist by unselfish ministry, being a friend to the sick and a help to all in trouble. A Moslem stood up, COULD NOT SLEEP ON | LEFT SIDE! “I had pains through my stomach (due to gas) and could not sleep well, especially on left side. Thanks to Adlerika I am well again.” (signed) mue! 5. Payne. Adlerika removes GAS In ten minutes and brings out old waste matter you never thought was in your system. It fs such an| excellent intestinal evacuant that it ig wonderful for constipation and stomach trouble. Stops that full, bloated feeling and makes you happy and cheerful. No matter what you have tried, the REAL Adlerika ac- the things you have done do He answered, * to care most?’ picture I am tion will surprise you. Casper Phar- macy, 111 East Second street.—Adv. SERMON EXCERPTS from Ministera for Publication Under This Head and said, man, could not the Christ in all who profe: ever form, | weeks muet ache, dizziness, sour, gassy stomach? Pepsin will establish natural, healthy bowel time, even fo! MONDAY, His followers. salt of the earth. present King 8 Visited ould Be Typewritten, Not Da- Be in This Office Saturday. younger clusively “wh and he sald I have seen that looks just like you. the missionary,” “you have seen Jesus for he many hundreds of years <0, His brother pointing out to him tion and his duty a ived so destructive powers are held in check |#0." The Moslem had mistaken by Christian men and women ex-|the servant for the Master. A Mfo] prince. ‘Th high ideals, purposes, |0f loyal service to Christ, and Christ-}go and sing God sa and standards of life. The best | likeness are the best reminders of] mother, while “I to be girls.” DR. W. B. CALDWELL AT THE AGE OF 83 promoting regularity for often. for months—or “purge” and “physic” e r two to avoid sick head- bilfousness, colds, or nd One dose of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup movement for weeks at a those chronically con. Such also da i Old Folks Need a Mild Laxative JANUARY 4, 1926 —_—_——— George Canad in s well, “That's all right,” said the young re mre two of us. You grand. ith th ve yo Dr Caldwell's SYRUP PEPSIN CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE CARS LEAVE BAILY AT 9:30 A. M. FARE $12.50 sives you approximately 12 hours travel between Casper and Rawlins, WYOMING MOTORWAY Salt Creek Transportation Company’s Office. TOWNSEND HOTEL PHONE 144 TRAIN SCHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHWESTFRN Westbound Arrives No, 603 ...-. 22-2180 p.m. Gi oh ane * po cee eucssatvews enn l 1465 Py Ms b 4 Sunday trains west of Casper. CHICAGC BURLINGTON & QUINCY Eastbound Arriv No. 30 - wwenece-~-=8:00 Pp. m. No, 82 ..-.--.- Westbound No. .29 ... Sith Departs 1:50: p. m. Departs 6:00 p. m. 4:00 p. m. Departs 8:30 p. m, Departs 0 a. m. APOLLO CLUB ONCERT With SOLOIST AND 50 MALE VOICES at the TUESDAY ELKS Auditoriu EVENING JANUARY 5 8:15 P. SOLOIST—RAY MOND F. MARQUIS M. Admission 50c Tickets on Sale at Casper Pharmacy, Sprecher’ John Tripeny Co. , Kimball’s and the are tho in coms the Duke of Clarence, t at a ball in Quebec, given of the two royalties, prince devoted his time cx to the young ladies, ing little or no attention to tha el- derly ones and chaperons. reprimanded his social pos pay: him, ia ie %, | hb r t y I t £

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