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® PAXE SIX Cbe Casper Dailp Cribune sed every evening except Sunday at Casper, ° nie, Wyo Pubtication Offices, Tribune Building. weaseevees--25 and 16 snecting All Departmet Postoffice as second class November 22, 1916. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President and Editor x (Wyoming), BARTON Advertising Representatives. = cweces vw Prudiet 6-23 Steger Bidg.. Ciricage hi; 286 € w Yerk C jobe Bidg.. jes of the De ‘Tribu: re on file “hicago and Boston offices and visitors 2 weloome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier , $1.0 399 Sek aw 8 7.80 By Mali * Rages RV | by maf accepted for leas period than Ne subscription three months All subscriptions mz Tribune on becomes one * be paid in advance and the delivery after subscrip would probably have singled out Archbishop Cram- atrens er as its typical figure. inning with the Seventeenth century, the pen-’ daluwm of fame began to swing away from 1 and nobles to a wider range of leadership. Wil- liam Shakespeare, a dramatist, became the leading» , figure of this century, even as Lincoln would be the choice of the Nineteenth century. ; | «The modern roll call of honor is more diver-| sified. It may no longer include kings or nobles, | and even the names of leading churchmen may be) \searce. .But the list now includes inventors, educa-} tors, artists, statesmen, writers and men of affairs. | It thus betokens the manifold character of modern opportunity and the diverse fields of service-that ‘open before this generation. “These present-day lists are of course, not final. Time may change the estimate in some cases, and bring to the fore some scarcely thought of today.) But the direction of thought to these representative | leaders is wholesome and worth while. For biog-| raphy is the best source of practical ideals; it is) philosophy teaching by example, and the personal element gives force to abstract truths. It is well! to give some thought to modern heroes in order to) know better the world in which we live and the jcharacter that is the touchstone of achievement.” | ea A ne ©be Casper Daiip Cridune Who's It, Where’s Where, What's What And Why It Is hy Hi y Liygihy MYUSMGEME YUP ASIE “Suppose shore without anything, made WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1922. FOR WHO for You *y Bed 5 he needed and got WITTHEGHARM RIRA LIKE 5, FOLKS ‘TRAILS ‘Lewis Allen Browne ‘Biased , Brother Adventurer, if there are blowing gently he had a tiny flame, stunts you /and by feeding it he hed a fire. fire. These, ncely brotied, edge off tieir appetite. Nea ing and soft bark by sharpening a el Jamshell on a rock, Ted found i (4 ss , WE WYTHE: along fine, that would have been some Member of Audit Bureau of Cirenlation (A. B.C) | The Words We Speak Wifi; UY 3 stunt. It wout—" } ett a | Yi, " Member of the Associated Prev... ine/[TMHE THOUGHLESS WORD is as_old as human | Docent sos aoa. beh Ba 1erearere | Whecwer” Pp corpaccficlcon + sae eas ts exclusively : i x nbt iepntBeRadasvear . “T've r ows credited in this paper and speech. It has broken old and dear friend-| lewo dollars toward its support you are| “Got what, a fit?” aemanded Ned. herein ships. It has made enemies of strangers who) |a moocher and should immed'ately! "We'll play ‘Robinson Crusoe’ for a a {should have become friends. It is a little thing | Your Tribune. n 6:30 and § o'clock p.m ur ne. A paper will he de messenger. Make It your duty to war carrier misses you. Kick if You Don't Get 15 to 16 a ail to ered to you by spe The Tribune know when + The Ancient Bogey Man A GENERAL STRIKE! Do you remember, you A grown-ups, when you climbed up the Jong dark stairs to the mysterious attic of your childhood. And the other older children, told you to watch out for the “bogey man?” And you jumped and shivered and shook with terrified delight? There wasn’t any “bogey ma really. It just a figment of childish imagination. Nor is there any real grown up “bogey man,”/ not even when he masquerades by the name of| “general strike.” There are those hot-headed an under-educated members of society who would like to frighten the rest of us with his name. But they} forget, these agitators, that this is America, where all have some, and many have much, opportunity to learn; where standards of living are high; where men are safe and secure in where each man’s house is his castle and mans’ wife and children his to protect and love and keep, and never a man or a government to say him nay. The American, the true, red blooded, patriotic, flag-leving, Jand-loving American can no more be! led into making himself a part of a Bolshevist bogey man than he can be led into mass murder for the establishment of a soviet after the fashion of| Russia. ‘The indignation, the revolt, the emphatic nega- tives to talk of a general strike, came first of all from American workmen, who are Americans first, | and members of a union, sect, order, or organiza. tion only after they re expressed their Amer- icanism and their belief in, and adherence to, American principles and the American goverument. Our childish tormentors -vaid never produce the gery man.” As long as Americans are Americans +, nO agitator can ‘oduce the general strike was { but its activity cannot be questioned. It has gone on| its ruinous way since man first spoke to man, and| doubtless will contiaue until the last man has only| |himself with whom to converse. The thoughtless word is purely human. It repre- |broad man and a mighty philisophical man whe|{ lreally and truly eraces from his memery the jthoughtless, the unkind word. He is the happier! |for huving done it. But the man who permits the affront to rankle in his bosom, to cherish resent-| ment of the ungracious word uttered by intent or! |totally withent malice is doomed to misery. Misery | |for himself and unhappiness for the person who) would make amend if acceptable. | The unkind word is one of the little things that} enters into the make up of life. Some people are thoughtful and considerate, but most of us are otherwise. It is largely a matter of training andj association. No one really Gesires ta be thought-! less, much less cruel, but too many of us do our) speaking first and our thinking Iast. We should) reverse the order, Our Carelessness EFUSED final citizenship papers by the judge| of the District of Columbia supreme court} seven aliens are protesting at being the first ex- amples of unsuccessful applicants for any other reason than failure to pass the required examina- tion. The men were shown to have used their citizen- ship in other countries as a means of avoiding service in the United States armed forces during the war, and it was proved that none of them | served in the countries of their origin. The judge| held that men who would serve neither their own) jcountry, because of residence in this, nor this| jcountry, because of citizenship in other countries, | were not fit to become citizens of the United States. | Comment on the action of the judge is altogether favorable and the importance is pointed out of other jurists taking equal care and pains in grant-} ing final citizenship papers. In this connection, | Away back in Injeanna where the Wabash percolatts merrily onward to the beautiful Ohio, about midway on the line of demarcation separating the gas belt from the Mterary belt, Roh-| ert S. Ellison first saw the light of a perfect June morning. The birds; were singing, flowers were blooming, green grass was growing all ‘round and there was much other evidence jof Joy over the arrival of the little Godsend from Heaven, It was not tong before the youth- ‘ful Robert was running barefooted, hoeing corn and going to schoo’. Later on he devoted some attention accomplishments from the Midwest. Refining company aud they beckoned him down to Denver to become the head of the legal department. In this environment he legalized to his heart's content and the great joy of the company for quite some time, trudging dally hetween his happy home and his daily toll with his din- ner pail gripped firmly in’ his hand. One sultry ferenosn early in July 1919 the board held a smoker and lo, when the blue heze had cleared awa: our old friend’ Robert was proclaimed vice president in charge of produc- tion and requested ‘to pack hia doll get in line. Whenever you see a Cas- per car without the emblem of the Cas- per Motor club on its radiator you |know that that car fs owne! by a)row ov moocher. Maybe the owner has net! ; had this brought to his attention and thing and see how. over h's two dollars for dues and an-} day “Aw, every ttle kid does that,” be gan but Ted explained: “We'll to some island early in the ™morning before breakfasx without a , We manage to get “Well, hero we are,” said Ted, at a stick with a knot and branch at r; r ;that should any member see his car/along. I think—" one end—a dry stick. He charred : nts the lack of approach to perfection. The lim-| lon the street and call his attention to] “Great! interrupted Ned. and that|the end im the fire to harden @ aah ——~ | itation by which human kind is bounded. |the fact that he has no motor club is how Ned and Ted tried out thelrjmiade a fairly good spear B and with | He 1c 2 mighty wise man and a might; ui: and emblem that he would tmmediaely fork Robinson Crusoe stunt, | this he speared several fish which Ithey cooked as at E and from the other $1.50 for the emblem, and thus sunrise the next morning as /they backbone of the largest fish made a er. Perhaps you will wonder what all the new Salt Creek highway. At puts at the Lack of the state high- way department an organization that jhas a force equal to “The Invisible | marsh near at hand. Government.” It is the “Power .Be- hind the Throne.” ‘The force that-en-| ables these good servants of te public, the state highway department, to go; down to Washington and demand ‘the things which the state of Wyoming wants. The Casper Motor club has been behind every*foot of road im- provement that has been done in the state cf Wyoming, and very especally every foot that has been in Natrona county. Therefore it is the patert duty of every man or woman who owns a car or a truck or a Ford to send his or her two dollars into the motor club at the off ce of the cham- ber of commerce and add their weight to this opléndid organization that ts anding like a wall of granite behind the state highway depaftment. The new pavement on the Salt Creek road will be about twenty miles of nine foot, cement base sx inches thick; with a two and one-haif inch top of gravel ond asphalt. This will carry tho loaded trucks that are daily tak- ing mi!ons of dollars worth of pipe, machinery and merchandise out to the of! camys, more than half way to thelr destination. The next appropri- ation will put a cement highway all the way into the Salt Cresk camp. After that it will reach on to Sheridan, and before -your sons have finished “Yes,” mourned Ned. “Here we are “Ger-r-rougm ph—ger-+r-r-ougmph ‘The boys iistened.. !t came from a “Frogs legs for brenkfast,” shouted Ted. In a few minutes, with a club, they had sufficient. “Can't eat ‘em raw, can't cut ‘am up, can't—" began Ned but Ted pounced upon an old broken bottle, and with the shap edges he showed ed how to cut up the legs. He took the round thick bottom of the bottle A, wiped it carefully, gathered some very {ne bits of grass and bark, but not satisfied with that, scraped some Int from his coat with a flece of fresh water clami shell.. Making a heap of the lint, with dry grass and tiny twigs at hand, he used the bottom of the bottle for burning glass and w'th patience soon had the lint glowing. Placing the dry show the world that he was no as a= thelr boat up on the beach of fish hook, as he had read about. See a an island. |G. A fish's backbone Is made up of |"spools" lke and backbone and the {this motor club talk has to do with without food, without a knife or a ribe branch out from the base of each H It has match, without anything except a fine | onc. | everything in the world to do with {t. large appetite!” He cut off one rib clowe to the spool, cut half the other one off as | dotted lines shows, sharpened that end, |made a line by unraveling part of his {ock, caught an insect to ba‘t it and soon they had pienty of fish and were | very proud, | ‘They made a water-tight dish of birch bark as at D and swung it over a bed of conls so that it boiled the water but did not burn and in this jthey made tea from dried raspherry jleaves (which is the kind of tea the patriots drank in the revolution.) ‘The shelter F was easy and to their surprise they lived three days on fish, berr'es, clams and such things, and de- clared that. it was the greatest sport imaginable. (Friday—"Making a Bait Box.") | Makings. Copyr ght, 1922, by Gearge Matthew ss on this and Adams. t 3 | n huskings, apple cuttings and Tags and tin dishes and journey to bogey man. : ; jquotations have been made from a report of the | ounce bees. One of the legends of Casper, which town (was rapldiy out lat ochpel sheng will be A payed tebe Chalmers Six Value 5 + jhouse of representatives committee on immigration ine Wabash is that Robert was pro- Towing Denver and had a nice a Abas 9 agian y wyoming 2 °. oe; and naturalization which show the importance ofjficient in all of the endeavors men- healthy location on the banks of the a tea tchighways, one f: Imp i Than Emphasize the Spiritual |safeguarding citizenship in the United States. Ac-|tioned, and took high rank among the North Platte and was busy spread: OM Cte, Stern antncr sr the state to More ressive Ever T IS ALWAYS much easier to say of anything | Ctling to the report, a survey of 460 state insti-| fellows of his generation. Tubert came and hae been here eve! the northwestern corner of the state, = Ps - 39 s3 ea a « tutions with a total of 210,835 inmates found 21.14] One of the early ambitions to find .'ankl the other starting at the north- t is wrong” than it is to say of the same since. He is located In a nice roomy thing “this is the y it should be done.” per cent of this fifth of a million jnmates to be of foreign birth, and 44.09 per cent either of foreign lodgement in th esystem of the now rapidly growing Robert was a four- office with velvet carpet on tte floor and nice tall ‘brass cuspidors standing easern corner of the state and running to Rawlins in the southwest, crossing The wonderful responsiveness and Destructive criticism is easy. Constructive crit-| iri ient| year course at the University of In- at Casper, will be th ebest paved state smooth easy performance of the ‘ rt - or having at least one parent of foreign | > about, {deat receptacles ‘for cigar A 3 icicm is difficult. It is simple enongh to ask “what ituti diana. Nothing could eradtcate it. in the west, and Casper will be the y: i : per enens ; birth. Institutional management thus devotes at | ee eee oat ieee er any Bane Php ere ies Chalmers Six, which so impress is that matter with the church?” or what is the trouble with religion?” ‘and as simple to answer, “it is old fashioned” or “it isn’t modern enough,” or “it lacks courage” or some other complaint which makes no suggestion. Of course, there is nothing the “matter” with re- least one-third of total expenditures to the foreign stock which has arrived in the United States with-| in this generation. If the States on the average| spend 21 per cent of their total revenus for main- taining inadequates, about 7 per cent of the total! attempt. There was no known treat- ment ip that day, and sp, in time everybody acquiesced and the atnbi- tlon was permitted to have its way} and become permanent. revenue is spent in caring for degenerate and de- Just previous to a realization, how-| He has lived among us long enough to learn something about his charac- ter and hgbits and not even the sew- ing circle will say anything to his discredit. He is an accomplished horseman and rides as gracefully as the chief Millions Wasted ‘To the general public, the. boll wee- Chalmers drivers, are due to the hi: six-cylinder motor deve pert, 1 oped by engineers. Its beauty, which makes an in- ligion. The belief in x supreme diety, and worship! pendent foreign human stock, ver, Robert, having advanced In!o¢ tne roundup and always owne a {Yit i Destiferous trsect which’ docs stant appeal, emphasizes the sound of that diety is an ingrained human fundamental. cass Fae |years and come to know the full geod. horse. He\is| an. expert rif_e- someting to the cotton crop. | To the worth of this fine car. We are The ‘Snatter” is not with the religion, but with the means taken to spread, to teach, to use that re-| ligion. The Tragedy of Bernadotte | And the “matter,” to many people who iry to} | ERNADOTTE is a western Mlinois village on “B meaning of store clothes and pink percale shirts, and having in his | brief contact with an unfeeling world jmanaged .to accumulate sufficient j lerudition to pass the county exami shot and can plug the bull’seye at all distances without varying a hair's breadth. Tie don't play golf. He Is: automobile shy, and don't drive a! car, and does not know the main! cataclysm, a disaster, a nightmare of terror. To the country as a whole the boll weevil is the cause of an economic loss of unguessed prdpor- always glad to demonstrate the superiorities of the Chalmers Six. Chalmers Six Prices think constructively is that those in authority in| ~~ the banks of the Spoon river, the stream made | nation: and there belng in the culin-|points of difference between a Fora} ons : &-Pass. Touring Car, $1185 Roadster, $1165 fhe ti teekes at f° much emphasis upon’ the| immortal by Edgar Lee Masters.” notes the New /ty.at least two farmers whose peach |bug and a RolleRoyce and don’t care| Accomting to statistion of the de- 7-Pase. Touring Car, $1345 Coupe, $1595, mechanics of relgion and not enough on the spirt-| York Herald. “The population is about 100. The|orchards and waermelon pitches €s-\to Know. He is a book lover and,'a T2ziment of agriculture, in ‘tho year} Phas. ral things of that religion. ° Church fathers, elders, | deacons, and dignitaries meet and spend precious | me disenssing what words to leave in ahd w! ng to decide whether this ban shall be re-! moved and that one put on, while people hunger|2Sleep in the heart of Fulton county, far from the| cnoot. 1 to be taught of God. Let the churches forget internal fights over non-| essentials, and devise new- and better ways of} teaching men and women the spirit of true religion, | jtry can imagine what this residents get their mail and their frei; which is five miles south. Tntil last week Bernadotte was very interest- ight at Ipave, ke from, the ritual; they waste time and ef-jing for the things it lacked. It had no railroad, no! postoffice, no motor cars, no telephones. It lay madding crowd's ignoble strife. Then a fiend came in the shape of a tecation man in the motion ture business. “Every oldster who was ‘brought up in the coun- pic-| caped the raids of Robert and his! |gang in the earlier years of his his-| \torr, he was, by the skin’ of his eye-} brows, able to file with the board al! certificate of good moral character| and become the preceptor of a rural) It was a great day for Robert and} it we a great day for the school. |"That was the first day. The sec- ond day and every day thereafter! were different. The business of that | whenever he pleases. student and has a fine library, where! he retires .and devours’ literature And ‘that ts. quite often. So much for his character. His reputation is remarkably free of dark spots. We have already sald that Mz. Bl- lison is a student. He {s all of that. ‘We know 0: no man who has greater faculty for digging right in and learn- ing things. from the ground up. When 1821, the crop of cotton was 7,954,000 bales. It shouid have} been 18,666,000, but 10,712,000° were ruined by natural causes, and of this enormous quantity so destroyed tho boll weevil alone accounted for 6,27 090 bales, worth with the seed which would have been ginned, $610,341,000, for the thirteen-year period 1909-1921 the damage done by the bollweevil reached -the enormous total of $3,- 102,152,000. 3 * ha-vested | h Deerert, Revenue tax 0 be added CE Keaneds Motor Co: 230 West Second Street CThe Phone 909 ag : ag snooping devil saw; the It is obvious. that scl Tas and it will be the Sunday moving picture hoi py Pete saa | 1 5S ipebynnihesee ents ca Apert bye “2! LAR ies = ees ie ThEteae oe vr faust his | main street and the cross road; the store with the |Sch0ol was education. Styles had not ea ne a =e te bapcest Ce pee will, eradicate the holl weevil, just as manager wh ai ha e church takes a nS leisurely proprietor and the veteran loungers; | Changed In the time Robert had spent/ duction and refining he app’ ‘lit eradicated the mosquito and ma- - = audience. not the clergyman who sorrows that his a il in the cel di ft th 5 y | growing up, and he readily recalled|self, He not only applied but Ire laria and yellow-fever from the Canal flock would rather sec a picture than listen to}/208 asleep in the clean warm dust of the street; /1is own experiences. Instruction in|learned. He ‘didn't do anything else Zone. At one time one of the most E him! two lines of old white houses set nicely apart, each! that teinple of learning was {mparted|until he learned all there was $0) apastly. apiols onthe tee GEtie Be = " jwith its wealth of hollyhocks, sweet Williams andjnot alone by application to text/learn about produetton and refining.itve Ganat Zone ts. now one ce eee bs dahlias; elderly ladies recking on. verandas and /tooks, but by the application of the|Ho has this Saran safely stored 1 aithiest. ‘The job was done be - 2 Modern Leaders crocheting: elderly men going slowly but surely) well-known esoond growth hi esta San iatees fale aaprt a cause there was urgent need, real Wdusie 4 about the business of life. And of course a boy or|tods sfown in Mosey aunty and ee old thne and hand yoo out the American’ determination, and no lack » ‘64 TENTATIVE list was recently compiled of|to, perhaps picking apples but certainly bare-|™2d0 4 part of the curriculum of the ee ‘it, | Of money. : i HAY GRAIN : ivi ef »|foot. And plenty of silence except for the gentle| "Ta! schools of the commonwealth.| Hope Just as fest as vou can grab It) ‘The poll weevil can be eradicated ie : 4 ‘s t Ceolraeecesteat Hing encan women,” | foot. 2 ihe zhi. P Sentle! ,na it is recorded that discipline in Des toner sbenbuedet: tora vou {OP at least, controled, and will he, Dairy and Chicken Feeds, Oil Meal, Stock Salt. = observes the Minneapolis Journal. “This was in-} ~ z the school presided over by Robert 4 5 we told rou}. ati Y B svitably ‘followed Uy vaiatiallas Mat of thertwaive| Most icity, strangers kwoulll Shave “ased Fever: |Filtson was one huadred per cent,/in the beginning, on the ling dividing wuen the government spends. enough Car lots.a specialty. = : é ently and then tipteed out of Paradise, but the lo- the oll belt from the lterary belt in : NP (4 SORA DE EYE Rate yw PRN IRR Bh tZ Toc Ltt MBECe greatest men of this nation and this day. Thomas A. Edison received the largest number of votes, while among others taking high rank were Charles W. Eliot, Henry Ford, Herbert Hoover, John J. Pershing, Elihu Root, John D. Rockefeller, John S. Sargent and Booth Tarkington. 7: oy fs the work of the professor and’ hie|Mostiy an expert fn. producing. and) 70 O14 tt N ‘ 9 athinee ate sor. Motion picture men. The ladies no longer dare to] aevotion to the cause of learning, [refining off and equally a student andj “°r! cotton. Not to protect the Ais SESS EES indicate that hero "0r-|¢9-to the store in calico dress and poke bonnet. ph ae eae Sut hia design ot devotee of terature. Barly environ- peat bad: its growers by ample ° e Sigaks ship is not dead in this country. American lead-} laving sign Of) nent has its influence upon the after|2PPropriations to stamp out the in- ateria. Ss ers mar at times feel discouraged with their work, but their influence reaches farther than they real- : } A jample. esi hina senna ieitrociot etacrsmemnmon jand maybe tempting world. Motion picture men line of h’gher education and having; *™?!* fe kc La OES | refrain from spending money in home 3 VW au oe Sava left th 1 P A si |i rule Bernadotte whenever they want the back-/been awarded £ savare oft shea is [defense as (rui if it were a hu- 1 “Women, , have he seculsion o: © past | cround for a rural play. Tourists will buzz through emblazoned with a gilt sea’ e size} ‘ NOTICE. SS |man enemy ‘instead 6f an tnsect on Ww 7 . and are taking on a large investment of influence. | fre street and coma ahe storekeeper into selling gas of the face of the old famfly clock at!9o Property Owners in Dis.) Which menaces prusperity, € are equipped with the stock to supply Tf not heroes, they can be heroines of progress. The|oline. An enterprising spinster from Springficld Sree Nore doors of opportunity are open to them as never be-| fore. | gnificant also is the character of the lists{ presented. They are typical of the modern age, an anyone can see who will compare the modern lead- sinned, while Bernadotte is innocent. It will he t© the mountain broozen and flaunt feet se action tn tegane te ae, cone ey OF | the Denutitut floral offerings ers named with earlier heroes. If the Seventh cen-|overwhelmed in the modern jungle of telephone the. fact in the faco of Mr. Pike's ing assessment. | iR. AND MRS. C. I. DAY. KEITH LUMBER Co fury had been called upon to place its hero in ajwires, trolley tracks, motor tire displays,. phono- Pek: | He, specialized tn. corporation | Bok : g-11et o.ag-ite ° hall of fame, it would undoubtedly have picked | graph concerts, radio antennae, fox trotting, bridge |e te he Seine tere ence es) SS RE Gis . Gregory, the church stateman. The Tenth century |whist parties and income .tax reports. he leadii attorney ef! ThE Wyoming Building and Loan| Classified as In. the Tribune are} — Phone 3 would likely have selected Alfred. a great king Some day some scoundrel will sell ive. ¢reum : wS Enssociation fu soved its offees to ween ae the keys we to represent il, Likewise, the Sixteenth century cones on the summit of Mount Everest.” not hide his wisdom and Bide Phone tt. of esate wi you, a bis en sane iter bistt wEtteeeoeoeoonoocoes cation man hustled over to the nearest town where there was a telephone and sent word to his master that he had found the swellest “set” for a screen play that ever was: “So now Bernadotte is beset with motor cars and |The dog will sleep in‘the yellow dust at his peril. | apsorbing about all there wai |The small boy will hear the whispers of an onter/at the University of Indiana tn the! Hfe and Mr. Ellison fs a living” ex- will start Ye Olde Tea Shoppe. “The tragedy of Berngdotte is almost as terrible as that of the village in Kipling’s “Letting In the Jungle.” In that case, however, the village had plus, perfect. There are today grown |men, leading citizens of Indiana, who | could, .if occasion demanded| show the marks of education on their | backs and legs that would instantly convince you of the thoroughness of; s to learn |home,’ and tied with a very blue. rib- bon, our hero Robert, seized Ness] |by the hand and led himself t-| ward to Colorado Springs, Colorado.’ Being now a full fledged barrister he did not hesitate to swing a shingle Indiana, it is not strange that Robert | Bllison {s devoted to both these great! interests. Not being ‘able to decide to whtict: faclination to pursue, hi pursued them both. Therefore he is A meeting* willbe held Tuesday evening. September 12'4, at 7 o'clock, in the church at the corner of ou: teenth and South Jefferson street: for the purpose of selecting a com- (fighting it, it would now be gone for-! before, It is pointed out in congress that had one half of the damage done by “the bol! weevll been spent tn ever. Cotton is a necessary of life, and the south, great source of sect which is enemy ‘not only of -\mericans but of all mankind, is to + CARD OF THANNS. | ‘We wish to express our sincere thanks and gratitude to all who were so kind and symprthetic during the illness and death of our beloved sis- CASPER. STORAGE CO. 313 W. Midwest Ave. your wants in high grade lumber and build- ers’ supplies. Rig timbers a specialty,