Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 13, 1926, Page 6

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sex an She put ria re PAGE SIX HANWAY AND xcept Saturday. last Second Street 5. HANWAY Publ Casper. “Evening 3 Bldg., 216 Eentered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class matter November 22, 1916 Wyo. ation Offices: Tribune | susiness Telephones - Branch Telep ME one Exchange Connecting All Departments MBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press ts exclusively entitled to the use for publica all news credited tn this paper and also the loca! news published Member of Audit Burean of Circulation (A B. ©.) National Advertising Representatives 2a King.& Prudden, 17020-23 Steger Bldg.. Chicago [.; 27 New York City; Globe Bldg.. Boston, Mass.: 507 Cal.: Leary Bldg., Seattle. Wash os Angeles. Co oston and SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Mail bune, every evening except Saturday ay . da ‘ald, every morning except Monday daily ang Sunday hs. daily and Sunday —. dally and Sunday —.. Big Business Chickens and eggs are big business. Natrona county, while big br ess, is not in it as extensively as it should be, and not in it as it probably will be when the Casper-Alcova rr tion ject is completed. The demand is already in ex- ice and awaiting the supply from some source. If they do ra moment, of the magnitude of this chicken and United States. The late Dillion eggs produced, not taking egg s in the t statistics avail- le yw almost nineteen t the output of thor ‘s of little flocks of individ- uals. Chickens on farms were valued at more than $387,000,000 lt EES pro d at more than $700,000,000, I ra and egg producing enlist the studious ef- entists. Hens do not range at will, laying as they ise. They are bred to produce. They are checked as to out- warmed, electrically lighted. If an indi- dnal hen doesn’t make good she s condemned to death, and a ch doesn’t put on f! -2 profitably is ostracized. Poul see to it that the hen shall pay for her keep. Thanking Our Faults aying that every person in his lifetime needs is faults. t Wise men have frequently told us that, 3 th grows out of our weakness.” Not until we ure pr stung and sorely shot at, is awakened the indi which arms itself with secret forces, While a man sits on the ensaion of advantages he goes to leep. Whe to lez he n he is pushed, tormented, de somet . He has been put on his wits, his manhood; s gained facts; he is cured o fthe insanity of conceit; he moderation and real skill. The wise man throws: him- side of his assailants; it is more to his interest to find his weak point After all, whatever folly men committ, be their shortcom s or vices what they may, forbearance is our duty, remem that when these faults appear, they are our follies and s that we behold. They are the shortcomings of humanity, ch we all belong; whose faults one and all we share. yen those yery faults at which we usually wax so indignant, i ly because they have not appeared in ourselve: hakes- peare says, “Condemn the fault and not the actor of it. Who Pays the Sugar Tariff? In all the extensive propaganda which the refiners and other capitalists who control the great bulk of Cuba’s sugar in ry issue for the purpose of persuading the American to abolish or reduce the import duty on this foreign r the claim is always advanced that the tariff is to the selling price of sugar and that the consumer bill. talking to Cubans about the tariff the propagan ists t the reason the Cuban sugar producer cannot make rger profits is because he must pay 1.76 cents a pound to get sugar into the United States. Both of these statements cannot be true. If the Ameri- consumer pays the tariff the Cuban sugar grower and man ated, he has a ehance pays the I say th ifacturer do not pay it and vice versa, As to who actually does the paying the best possible evidence is afforded by the fact that the Companies engage” in producing Cuban sugar for the American market are willing to spend money lavishly in an effor e the tariff removed. Still No Relief ¢ attempt at settlement of the anthracite ther previous occasio old trouble coal is, has ended in comes the country urs end the public is ps during these re 1 1 operators and miners ppen and a long period of no production ensue, with but the one victim, the public, is never explained by either » the various controversies. Every time this same old cite strike happens people feel that ancient methods, ancient passions still persist in the anthra nothing new has been introduced, either by cay labor, no real effort has been made to establish equ 1 a friendly relations in the last half century. Vor has been that long, at least, that the country has been hay , racite coal strikes. ustained 1 the workers, the operate by rtation, by busine generally on account of ¢ ation W , if totalled for all of the anthracite coal strikes would than sufficient to purchase the mines, equipment and them in the to live on without ocean and work is that the publice is the ever connected therewith, throw ey left for everybody the whole thing r d without recourse or restitution. It will all end not by permanent agreement by operators and then by some socialistic scheme whereby the peop! ent, will take over the anthracite field taply the consur s of this particular coal without the hen no fuel obtainable What It Means rge industrial institutions of Casper continue ri eir present plants and replace such portions of are deemed obsolete, it is not a sign of shut down or it of activity or reduction of output, in any sense ram of the Standard Oi] company to rebuild One half ow | operated means an expendit vr Jabor t 1 of no small amount. As much, possibly, as wonld many other Wyoming cities for ail purposes in ar year I . tinued employment for Casper labor, the ( e big payroll and the continuation of local tior no are that the world court resolution 1 receive eighty-four out of the ninety-six votes in the sen- ate. A two-thirds vote, or sixty-four is required, because ‘he alution for adherence to the court the siatus of a treaty 15 and 16 on of ein. Madison Montgomery St and Chamber of Com s of the Daly Tribune are on file tn the San Francisco offices and visitors are oe TP —- 3.90 65 a AS yp | turkey and big game, 6 k, bison and deer will soon be extinct in America if soc ns Dr. William T. Horn- aday, noted terview “for titty yea : of and tho le West have been regulating} killing ~ of| ne and solemn. ng it ‘game That hov grim NA natior DIR. BLT. HORNADAY ever, is a lived in a land joke. If you or I inhabited by and governed by giant gorillas who ate men, and the gorilla man-catchers elected that humans should be killed and eaten during only three months of the year, we would call that a poor kind of man-protection. is not that the kind of protec- tion that they, and they alone, have be Casper Daily might be would arise, as it . in the areas inhab- there does in Amer! ited by aliens, but these aro rela- tvely smaller here, and would not create the same ys Illelt stills and shebeens would still per- sist, but it would not be fair to argue that because they did, and t bécause some people at both ends of the social scale objected to the conditions; the la’ was in ad- vance of public opinion. In a review of the progress of temperance in Scotland in the same number of the Record the convener of the Temperance committee, the Rev. James Muir, shows that in spite of setbacks the cause steadily progresses. Local option is avallable under the Temperance (Scot) Act, the age when youths may be sup- plied with drink has been raised to 18, the public house hours have been greatly red d, and more than .000 Icenses have disappeared in tland nee 1900. The example of America {s for HN to think and allied spiritual forces are unit- ing. Union means streng to tem- Service It may not be generally known been giving Am ga for fifty years? ‘The areas of game species ex- tinction, already enormous, are tn- creasing and spreading in devasta- ting waves. Mighty Uttle work has been done in mapping the state areas of extinction and spreading them before the people. The aub- Ject {s too disagreeable! ‘The stories they would tell of greed, folly and imbecility would be too humiliating. Look at our own maps of the duck, quail and wild turkey situations as samples of the whole. The disap- pearance of big game like the elk, bison and deer from farming and grazing countries was unavoidable, and we charge up nothing on thelr ount, save against the men who killed those animals in wicked wastefulness of valuable produc! “The Department of Agriculture has for two years stubbornly main- tained its support of the present killing privileges of sportsmen, as expressed in murderous bag Umits and opep seasons; and its rejection of all appeals against that policy appears to be fixed and final. Con- gress could make a quick change in that situation—if it would. But who ts going to make a campaign in Congress to arouse that body and convince it that prompt and strong action 1s now imperatively neces- sary? “No one! It 1s too much trouble!” Temperance in Scotland The United Free Church of Scot- principles of local option and church, is the strongest temperance ally in Scotland, has, through its organ, the Record, taken up the cudgels for prohibition inst a well-known member of its own denomination, Dr. Moffatt. The doctor has recently visited the United States and since his return has written to the press criticizing prohibition, The Record says: Prohibition is apt to suffer at the hands of its friends. Visitors to America who touch its life at som points and lsten to casual conversa- tion, repeat when they return what they have beard regarding {ta great- est social experiment, thereby in- fluenctng uninformed people on this side who have no means of judging of the real facts. The position In regard to prohibition, however, can- not be understood by merely taking a passing glance at the situation and fgnoring the background of events, It is disappointing that Dr. Mof- fatt, one of our own greatest scholars and thinkers, has joined those who have given their impres- sions on the subject. In a widely circulated journal h Says, amongst other things, that “prohibition ilus- trates the danger of legislating ahead of public opinion, and also tho American pathetic faith in legis- lation as the cure for evil.” There was no question, however, of legis- lating ahead of public opinion in the matter of prohibition, The work of training public opinion tn the vari ous states went slowly and de Ubera: y for a century. Was no imposition of laws over the heads of the people: in every case it s the vote of the majority pf the a: abate eed prohibitio Before the v out of 48 ad voluntarily a prohibition, The congress which passed the national measure was elected before America entered the war, and it was elected chiefly on prohibition and recetved a mandate to enact it. Forty-six out of the 48 states ratified the enactment. Pro- hibition was therefore the deliberate judgment of the vast body of the American people. This cannot b; any str of imagination be termed ‘ ad of public opinior case, there is nothing in the situation in America to discour workers here; in excellent object can turn to profit that the department convention of the American Legion this year, held at Lander, provided for a full time officer—a paid officlal—to whom each and eyery ex-service man and woman in Wyoming may turn for assistance in all matters pertaining to insurance, compensation, hospital- ization and vocational ¢ ete. This action of the Lander con- vention placed the state of Wyoming in the column of 32 other states which npw have full time service officers or adjutants who act ag service officers. This is a be- cause of the deliberate effort of the National Rehabilitation committee, in a community of interest and ef- fort, to tie up state service with national, within the American Le- gion. It is the plan and hope, there- fore, of your department that ex: service men and women in Wyoming will communicate their problems freely and frankly to the under- signed. The practical operation of the plan is to serve the disabled with intelligence. And to augment the “service” work, a special committee is in contemplation to provide 1 medical and legal knowledge ani experience—an expansion of the national rehabilitation service to and within Wyoming. The “service” work now , being carried on in Casper, includes a com- piete and studious review of claims on file in the Casper regtonal office, U. §. Veterans’ Bureau. It is planned to review first the case: coming within the following class fications: (1) Pending claims. (2) Disallowed claims. (3) Discontinued claims. ‘This work will require as a work- ing basis, the card indexing of all such cases—it will always be of help to the Legion “service work; a separate card will be made for each ase file, and contains name, address and diagnosis, ‘These cards will lead to a study of the cases, which careful examination, it is believed, will bring to Hght the cases, which have been buried for want of action, and the cases lost sight of because of failure of claimants to prosecute the same. Likewise, this work may result in the finding of cases which may prove to be good under the old law and cases which may prove to be potential claims under the new law. ext, if the foregoing work 1s completed in time before the 1926 convention, as many as are possible of the compensable or allowed claims will be carefully reviewed. Your department service officer is now assisting in all cases presented to him through personal application This currerit work, of course, dove- tails, with the “service” work in- volved in the two paragraphs {mr diately preceding. likewise, contact work will be carried on with the posts and the ex-service men. It {s' also the ambition of Com- mander Wehrli to render ‘service’ in the initial stages of a case—be- fore appeal, if appeal is necessary to have a claim prepared as wel is possible before it is presented. Each and every ex-servico mar and woman in Wyoming should be told that the department adjutant and service officer is their paid of- flcer and representative, to whom they are to refer any matter, o v Commander Webhrli ing him or the u through SEL CHILCOTE vice Offic: i Insufficiency By ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING | ere Is no one beside thee and no one above thee, | Thou standest alone as the night- | ingale sings! | And my words that would praise thee are impotent thing rf none can express theo all should approve thee I love thee #0, dear, that I onl | can love thee thee; weary ns in the United Stat are different from those in Scotlan hom« entirely su Iddle states, long biding Angh ere it is least states tha foreign, where the cities nited by rac n is x on are in ame the older native Immigrants haye pour central and southern FE in such ibers that they 1 dis tinct foreign communities. It is the foreign element (including Jews) who are the most active and pros Perous bootleggers. The diffic ‘ot enfore the law- law, In deed—is not surprising to who knows the mixed c the population and the powers ¢ darkness arrayed against reform. Were Scotland to go dry through the force of public opinion acting by means of local option and then by national prohibition, we need not for the same difficulty in en cement tamen, with their aness, tenacity, and underly ing reapect for the law, would make the thing a success. Any trouble anyone racter of Watch for the Tr ammoth industr ete survey of yoming in 192 The ORIGINAL Malted Milk and Fooc Forlnfante Invalids, The Aged Nourishing—Digestible— No Cooking The Home Food-Drink for All Age tribune Who’s Who the Interstate Commerce Commis sion when hearings on the proposed Van Sweringen merger (a project launched by O. P. and M. J. Van Sweringen, of Cleveland, to consoli- date the Chesa- peake and Ohio, Pere Marquette, Lake Erle and Western, and Erle : railroads with the Nickel Plate as a ~ nucleus) are held will be the com- mission's chief ‘dis- sent sald Jo- seph B, Eastman of Massachuse He holds the of. tice by reason of an of Ay agreement eee coe! ten years’ stand- JOSEPH EASTMAN ing which revolves the office y by year, the chair- man moving up in the order of pre- cedence fixed by length of service. Eastmon, chairman of the 1926 commission and the youngest mem- ber of that body, has led a militant minority and has written many thing dissenting opinions scorin decisions which the majority has a rived at. A holder of radical views, he has alw. dealt strictly with mergers avoiding those which per- mitted banking and financial organt. zations to step in and out with proft- its which he regards as unreason ble. Eastman drew a fire of advers criticism when, in the Missourt, Texas and Kansas case, he refused to allow lawyers to collect exorb!- tant fees for their services in the stock organization which took place, Eastman, however, will have little opportunity to impress his viev upon other members of the commis- sion during the , as the chair. man is re than a presiding officer. He was born in Katonah, 9 in 1882. Attended Amherst College and later hekt an Amherst fellov ship at South End House (social tlement) in Boston. In 1906 he be- came secretary of the Public Fran- chise League of Boston, During ad Lo 3 1913 and 1914, Eastman was counsel for employees of several street rail- way companies in wage arbitration cases. After he had been a member of the Massachusetts Public Service Commission for four years, he be- came a member of the Interstate Commerce Commission in 1919, ae eT Robert Henderson, well-known Yukon prospector and discoverer « the celebrated Klondike-Indian river gold fields, has recently come out of the far north after 31 years’ gold- hunting there. Now he is about to start prospecting on Vancouver island in the belief that th rich gold deposits on the island Occupying the chairman's seat of | | | U liked the flowers that used to fade WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1926 With the first y of the New When She Came to Year, Rev. 3. W. Wellons, of Greens- boro, celebrated his one hun- | Glory By FLORENCE WILKINSON Nay, loose my hand and let me go! Goa’s glories plerce und frighten. I want my house, my fires, my bread, My sheets to wash and whiten. I liked the dusty roads of earth, ‘The brambles and the roaming; The small lamp in the gloa fields of God they blind my eyes; Dread is this heavenly tillage I want the sweet lost homeliness Of the dooryards of our village. Where are the accustomed common things, The cups we drank together; The old shoes that he laced for me, Th pe for rainy weather? Dear were our ways, His words’ impetuous flurry His tossed hair, the kind anxious brow, The step's too eager hu: stumbling human o il archangel with such wings, Your beauty Js too burning! Give me once more my thr dress And the sound of adbare eet return A New York lawyer, gazing {dly out of his window saw a sight in an office across the street that made him rub his eyes and look again. Yes, there was no doubt about it. The pretty stenographer was sitting up- on the gentleman's Jap, The lawyer noticed the name that was lettered on the window and then searched in the telephone book. Still keeping his eye upon the scene across the street, he called the gentleman uy In 2 few moments he saw Kim st vic nd take down the receiv “Yes,” said the lawyer tho telephone, “I should would start." The victim whisked his arm from {ts former position and began to stammer something. “Yes,” continued the lawyer se verely, “I think you'd better take that arm away. And while you're through think you dredth birthday anniversary by preaching a sermon to the studentr of Elon college. i | NEW HANDY PACK Fits hand ~ pocket and purse Always ready, in your pocket, to give you long lasting bene- ficial refreshment. BEST Chewing Sweet for any money. Look for Wrigley’s P.K. Handy Pack on the Dealer's Counter. about it, as long as there seems to be plenty of chairs in the room—" The victim brushed the lady from his lap, rather roughly, {t ts to be feared. “Who—who the devil is this, AGL DaG. anyhow?” he managed to splutter. + “I,” answered the Inwyer in deep impressive tones, “am your con science!” Street Groce ——____ Watch for the Tribune-Herald's mmoth Industrial edition. A éom- plete survey of Natrona county and Wroming in 192) The world’s most famous plen- tations send you their choicest coffee in Butter-Nut. Artfully it is blended to bring forth those delicious qualities of flavor which have made Butter-Nut so distinctively delightful. Order a can of Butter-Nut to- day. We guarantee you will like it better than any other coffee you have ever tasted. If you do not, yourmoney will be refunded upon return of the unused portion of the can. ot G Nee NOTICE air, formerly of Logan & LaClair, Pjo- neer, Grocery, of 847 East A Street, wishes to an- nounce to the public that he has purchased the Grant located at the corner of Grant and Devine Streets, and will handle the same line of meats and groceries as heretofore carried by him and in- tends to render the usual efficient service. 101 Coffee Delic 3-lb. can $1.75 1-Ib. can 60c vy io

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