Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 28, 1920, Page 6

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____ PACE SIX ~ site GASPER SCOUTS. GET CHANGE TQ BUILD UP WORK ie BEL Opportunity to “Make Good” Pro- vided thru Present Campaign for Finances and Co- Operation H. Piper, national field scout execu says, concerning the scout move. nt here The boys of Casper riven the opportunity b men of having . live Scout mo ment in the cit: which will provide leadership, trained scoutmasters, hikes, camps and all the splendid activities of a real scout program. “As organized } , the boys will have the opportunity to progress in scouting. fire now to be the business There are three de Ss, the the second-class ut and the class Scout. When boy has passed his first-class test he y merit badge tests and of these which a boy may take. “The program is so interesting t the commun ly pry boy -in ween the s of 12 ang 18, will sooner or later be identified with it.! | There are at present 450,000 boy scouts | in the organization | “The splendid service given by the 1% oy Oy Boy Scouts during the war has brought them into. national prominence. The} | most conspicuous record. is in connec. | tion with the sale of Liberty bonds. * “They sold o 300,000,000 worth of bonds ni five drives. One out of every | ee kanes: pura mth Be oe | Thirsty souls and economists §who after exhaustive tests of the subject, uty department gave service medals to | have been wondering what will become is convinced that alcohol as motor fuel the boys selling ten or more bonds.|Captains Selected Are Announced] ° al! the mots 4 Sah) het ace Gat ar iN ei MA a Ota Warvios (renlanen the aoverctieat |into the manufacture of ram, remarks Products of the sugar industry and Se Win abatiee MESO LICE: of | Today with Personnel of Teams |, writer in the current number of Am- many other other subs ances. yielding nding black walnut. They collecte1 to Be Published Jerlcan Motorists, will be interested to sugar, starch of cellulose will be utilized over 100 carloads of fruit pits for 2 learn that automobiles, trucks, and trac- in this fashion, sks.. They conducted ete 12.004| Thursday tors may be ope -d, not with rum, “According to the British committee war farms and gardens. They distrib-} as nor even with molasses, but with alco- @ppointed to investigate the merits of uted over 36,000,000 pieces of govern.| ‘The Casper men who are to put ever) hol made from the latter. Continuing,! ‘power alcohol’, the fundamental at- |the Boy Scout drive for funds on Fri-} the write traction of alcohol lies in the fact that ment literature, and they assisted in all} of the big Red Cross and kindred war} drives. This service gave the Boy Scouts a practical’way of showing their loyalty to their country. Now that the} war is over, the Scouts are very bu: rendering community service and he-| coming better prepared to save ife.} Every Boy Scout in the land: is sup-| posed to do at least one good turn + day. It would be hard to estimate just what this means to the fathers, mothars and communities throughout this coun- uy. | © “The boyhood of Casper is its zreat- est asset. Scouting helps this boyhood to grow into tlie right kind of trained manhood. On Friday a drive will be conducted to provide for a budget which will mean a better safeguarding of the for hia FIRST PICTURES FROM TURKEY SINCE THE WAR— wal day will have dinner together at the Henning Hotel tomorrow evening at) which time the final plans for the drive will be discussed. The team organization is as follows: Chairman, J. A. Leary; vice chairman, O. L, Walker. sos Cc. Tonkin, W. John- Sam Conwell, Ben Scherck, W. O. Wi son, E. R. Shipp, M. J. Foley, Joe E. Denham, W. W. Keefe, W. J. y and B. W. Baker The members of Mr. Paker t are: E. P. Bacon, B. Barnes, A. Bott, Dr. W. G. Burnett, H: F and Robert Hanway, Ww. Hufsmith, Members of other teams will be an- nounced tomorroy ee A landslide in th Ogden - ! Big Horn canyon ay, which will be Arbor Day, will 19 miles. this side of Thermopolis, be a legal holiday and will be observed jiocked the Burlington tracke trom i by the schools, the banks and public ‘ ne a J o'clock yesterday afternoon until early one all) of which :will'ibe'‘cldsed “for| tnig morning and held up No, $0 for Uh poke ee ae nearly nine hours. A train was made —~ jup here last night to take of the Tribune Want Ads bring results, In and out among the hundreds of small islands in the Sea of Japan a lit- tle white ship threa s way on a nev- er ending cruise of Christianity, It is ne Church of the Fukuin Maru, and It carries the gospel message to thou- ands who could not be reached in any The ship, like the itinerant preacher and the circuit rider of the old days, makes port In ionely out of the way places, It dispenses a hospitality that might well be envied by American churches with better advantages, Na- tives flock to hear the messages deliv- ered on its deck. ‘The Fukuin Maru js the only floating Baptist church in the world, and it Is regarded by members of that denomi- nution as one of the most unique e: forts of the Christian missionary move- ment, For rs it was commanded by Captain Luke Bickel, who ently died, and now the Northern Baptists are endeavoring to find a captain- preacher who will take his place. There are 33 churches of the Baptist faith in Japan, with a total member- ship of 1, Plans have atready been outlined, however, for thé building of 15 new churches immediately and later s sent Casper people going south and w: out at the regular time for Denve to erect a church Baptist work. “The people of Japan are ready to Msten to the gospel,” a recent report of the field survey committee of the Northern Baptist Convention says. “Their faith in the old religions is broken. But the gospel must be pre- sented to them by men of their own race who are competent to present It in a strong, intelligent way. We must have thoroughly trained Japanese lead- ers and pastors who can command at- tention.” Careful consideration is being given the housing of the Christian church in Japan so as to win the respect of the people. “A rented store in a sitle street does not command the respect of the Japanese any more than it does of the Itallans in New York,” the report |states. “Our fine institutional church building, the Tabernacle in Tokyo, ought to be duplicated at every impor- tant center, and attractive, dignified houses of worship should be erected at every other point.” The Baptists are endeavoring so far as possible to develop complete inde- | pendence of the Japanese churches, un- lder their own leaders, y| re in every center of } | SRR ET BBE iting to see the sultan pass on his way to prayer. sets forth: | its chief sources are found in the vege- | lea dsptioatien Stu HER SpeminiTi fies cere wble world. In consequence the raw Jed by the use of aleohel as fuel for in.|M#terials for the manufacture of pow- leet teenie tne er alcohol are being continuously re- aah anees wed and are susceptible of great ex- nsion without supply. ther interesting experiments were made with alcoho} derived from the flowers of the mahua trees growing in East Indies. It is said that the sun dried flowers of his tree contain some- thing like 60 per cent of fermentable sugar and that they can be colleced ESRB encroachment on the chnologi r} vborate te through its series of ¢€ e value of gasoline and acohol producers. The most sults of the investigations tained in the evidence that well-desig internal-con istion motors using a 1 or gasoline will consume about as power important eighieeinenne fraereemesnyur cyt Pee thc a - growth (0087.60 ger tons One }a pint per hour per break horsepower) tem of these leaves products’ 90 gallons from gasoline as well as for fuel aleo- | Of #lcohol. . hol. In this comparison it is of decided | “Our late antagonists, the Germans, t that the thermal value of alco-| 1008 before the. war, had developed a nly 6-10 thatof givaoline—-a fact {system of ul alcohol manufac | which explains the persistence of the | tre under which every farmer could txperimenters better. than anything |PPeduce his own motor fuel. ‘The cir- Sree. i | cumstances that our own oil resource’ | { are so jant may delay similar de- “Heretofore the obstacles in the way | veopment in the United States. There of a universal adoption of alcohol is no doubt, however, that alcohol for | motor fuel lay in the difficulty of find-| motor fucl purposes looms more import- ing a raw material that could be nnt and more promising than ever."* cured sufficiently cheap to render the | making of alcohol for fuel uses profi table. And now come prohibitio; TEAM OF MARES SELLS |, molass: and alcohol in quanities practically as | delectable dainty of the gr shop—| 5 rum. | EDMO: y Mail).—What “In Britain ‘where gasoline is much /is thot ice for a team more expensive than it is here, the |purcha: rm auction in the prov- question of finding a substitute fuel paid rec When a fine ‘ ntly received renewed attention, | ed p A committeeghias been appointed which, * 1 “alls nd for $1,! 10 Reels—A Superb Show TIME AND MONEY SAVING ADVICE the gardens of: the imperial palace, showing crowds | j} er HINTS TO THE MOTORIST Use brakes as little as: possible and rakes as jittie as: possible and. exclude dirt and grit-until the tine eliminate tire wear. In coming down beh ate Shy a es a hill on th@engine, going into inter-| Comes to restore the plug to place. mediate if necessary. A little care in| When on long trips strain the water driving saves a good deal of money in| that goes into the radiator, preventing a + impurities from getting into the cool- Lack of a serviceable engine does not| mg system and causing trouble later on. render an auto useless. A camping trajier can be’madg from the body and rear wheels of an old car, If stalled at night and without a trouble lamp, scrape together a small pile of sand, pour about a cupful of soline upon it and set ablaze. It will |burn from fifteen to twenty minutes. | Low-grade gasoline is frequently In- dicated by a black, smoky exhaust with disagreeable odor and by difficulty in getting the engine started. Trouble from water in the gasoline can be avoided by pouring the fuel into the tank through a chamois skin. To save tires, especially if‘they are An emergency cotter pin can be made wet, jack up the car so as to relieve|from a piece of wire fastened around a ght on the tires and permit them| nail to dry readily. Valve stems sometimes are inclined to mean. power sted. The| This is due to deposits of car- of water, fuel or ofl. Gooa| bon and may be remedied by pouring the: beat“inapranos sa into the air valve while the engine is running. tence of a le When a car is driven oft a car track the spot. the wear of the car comes in one place, When a the! placing an unusual strain on with oil ‘it the Walls of the tire. The tires are a compound of common further damaged by small splinters of which are like! to become em- n the fabric. Don't drive on a road is open elsewhere. le grease use and water. AlN pull down the clutch touching the gear shift. “How often during the winter ,when it hecomes nec me your mo tor to secure a s you cursed your luck when you found yourself with nub a container of some sort for the priming fluid? xt time that happens just take one of your tire valve caps, tie a string around it and lower this im- provised dipper into the fuel tank; it will bring up-sufficient gasoline to prime the engine. Simple, isn’t it?”"—Ameri can Motor * Empty gasoline tanks are more dan serous than filled ones for the reason that they will not be entirely emptied and the remaining gasoline will vapor: ize, the vapor will mix with the air in the can and the mixture may be ex- plosive. To grease springs, take a paint brush ‘nd oil and paint them weekly. It soaks in. Theft of an aute ¢: vented by 3 before track if To economize on tough felt washers made of rubber felt three-eighths of an inch thick. These will outwear asverdl-e of the: usual sort. MANY FLOCKING TO SUPPORT OF SEN. LENROOT it. } WASHINGTON, April 28.—Sup- porters of; Sentaor Irvine L. Lenroot for the Republican nomination for president are increasing greatly in number and many of the large news- papers and magazines’ are preparing forceful articles in the interests of the campaign being made-in his be- sayin] Jo pups snoas10H APU] . half by friends. Senator Francis E. Congressman Frank W. ‘ticularly the former, feel removing indispensible parts of the ig- nition mechanism, such as ignition fuse, ‘otor or distributor heads, or inter- hange wires leading to spark plugs. Warren and Mondell, par- very friend- EG EW dy toward Lenroot. New piston rings should be installed| ““ pojitical Jeaders’ in “Washington every elgtiteen/months: of late have received many tele When the xpark plug is removed| grams and letters from constituents vom the engine for any cause it is well but _a_cork in the: spark plug hole! : IRIS THEATER TODAY LAST TIME ETHEL CLAYTON urging their support for Lenroot. <n IJ “More Deadly Than the Male” Woman—Riddle—Tigress—Spider—Angel—Call her what you will ALSO ADDED ATTRACTION, FATTY ARBUCKLE THE HAYSEED’ LYRIC THEATER Continuous 1 P. M. to 11 P. M. TODAY CARLYLE BLACKWELL A Class Feature Jennings TOMORROW Shirley Mason in “Molly and I” Also Two-Reel Comedy “A SURE CURE” and. MUTT AND JEFF A Firestone Year OOD news travels fast. That’s why “the trade” speak of this as a “Firestone Year.” The mileage that ‘Seeds of Dishonor’ N-E-X- A BIG COMEDY N-E-X-T AROTHER TWO-REEL COMEDY COMING ; LOUISE GLAUM ‘LONE WOLF'S DAUGHTER’ the Firestone Gray Sidewall has been giving has gotten around, No more shopping around for those who have discover- ed the real most miles per dollar answer— nS Most Miles per Dollar Earl C. Boyle 125-137 North Center Street—Phone 9 WALD YY AY} wWols padvasy oy 141 JO ajoy ui ‘4049 jnsYNvag ‘uvaq DIpISUg YM Youd uapyT-sduDWOY loquieyc pU FOUR DAYS THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY

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