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PAGE Pin WASTE Divide in Cal nearing the divide at the head eontinues here and in towns of NEW RAILROAD WILL OPERATE IN SIX WEEKS Fourteen Miles of Steel| Laid Between Salt Creek arid Illco. ‘Within the next «ix weeks, or be-| ween September 1 and 15, the North & South railroad will have its initial 2ine connecting Illc# and Salt Creek fully constructed and in operation. ‘This was the statement made today by C. 8S. Lake, chairman of the board of the new carrier. Serious delay has| Deen caused by the impossibility of| eecuring prompt delivery on neces- sary materials and equipment. Fourteen miles of eighty-five pound rails have been laid or thirty per cent of the track laying from Illco north and 90 per cent of the grade has| Deen finished. At the other end of the North & South railroad, which} eventually will reach from Casper to! Miles City, Mont., much work has been done south to Garland, Mont. and it is expected that this distance of 36 miles will be ready later on in time to care for this season's crops.| Construction between Salt Creek and Garland, Mont., is approximately 25 per cent completed. Shortly before traffic is directed ever the Ilco-Salt Creek line offices for the company will be established | fn Casper. Whether or not perma- nent headquarters for the entire line ‘will be located in Casper, is a matter | which has not as yet been decided/| on Saantery: 1, 1924, was to have marked the completion of the entire) North & South railroad from Casper to Miles City had rails and other| essential materials been procurable| ywithout delay. HUSBANDS DROP EYES BUT WIVES LAUGH IN TRIUMPH AT NEW RIALTO PICTURE Many « husband will be disappoint- @4 with the truth pointed at in the picture playing at the Rialto theater, r thet “You Can't Foul Your Wife.” lewis Stone takes the leading role In this picture while the best known actress is Nita Naldi, in one of her “‘vampiest” parts, Leatrice Joy takes the purt of the wife who is nel going to be fcole® The spectator is shown a tremend 1 Wa's Street broker wao t he govs after the ruination y who sful broker invitation for a . becomes intimate t, wife of a famous airplane ride with ck before the for New ows her desiring te of any wrong the power of the © wife he has been with and comes very close to now he an f nocense fixed nt, up as usual at and the spects ng just why the hus band of one woman and the wife of the doctor should have deciGed all at ence that affairs should go no furth er. ently they did and saved themselves a lot of trouble as a re wult. _———> Men Drafted to Battle Flames Today as Conflagration Nears Crest of SANTA BARBARA, Calif., Au fmen to fight the forest fire raging since Friday and now The fire fighters said it was practically impossible to check the flames, which were roaring through a section , BROTHER JOINS TRAIN CO deve = ROUTE TS LINED WITH MOURNERS BY FIR i (Continued from Page One.) 8.45 p. m. central standard time at the Kedzie Avenue station in the west- ern part of Chicago. The westbound special carrying Dr. George T. Harding, Jr. and his com- panions from Marion was expected to meet the funeral train at Dixon, or Sterling, Ilinois according to B. FE. Terpening, assistant general superin- tendent of the Chicago and North- western railroad. ROUTE LINED WITH NATION’S MOURNERS. ON BOARD HARDING'S FU- NERAL TRAIN, MARSHALLTOWN, Towa, Aug. 6—(By The Associated Press.)—The funeral train of Presi- dent Harding arrived here at 8:30 &. m. today. Since the train entered Towa this morning at Council Binffs, it has not passed over a single mile where there were not people stand- ing to pay their respects to the late chief executive. Thousands have come from all parts of Iowa and stationd themselves along the train's route. From Councti Bluffs eastward the Passage of the train brought the same scenes—a saddened people, gathered before dawn, or in the busy hours of the day, with a common thought, to express by their silent presence, their respects for the dead president. civic and patriotic organt- a bodies of service men helped form the mourning ranks through which the funeral train passed at every station. Masonic orders, in which Mr. Hard- ing was prominent, paid him honor as the train traversed each consis- tory. National guard and American Le gion men stood at attention for the Passage of their dead commander-in- chief, and dipped draped flags as an expression of thelr sorrow. Everywhere the arrival of the train found activities of all kinds at a halt, with only an impressive silence, save for the possible tolling of a church bell, to tell of the public mourning. A chilly, dismal dawn with tnter- mittent rain, failed to decrease the numbers of Iowans who trudged tc railway stations or drove long dis tances through the night to pay their respects to the dead. ‘The funeral special entered Towa at Council Bluffs at 3:30 o'clock this morning after covering approximate- ly_one halt of its 3,000 mile journey. More than 10,000 Council Bluffs citizens were awaiting {ts coming. At every street corner were men, women and children upon whose faces the somber lights of the dawn disclosed expressions of scrrow. Some were in tears and one woman was observed with outstretched hands as the train passed, to emphasize her regard for the dead executive and her sympathy for the bereaved woman who rode near: his body, More than 2,000 town end country folk were gathered in a steady rain at the railway station at Missourl Valley, when the funeral train passed that railroad junction. Virtually every resident Poin ifornia Hills Aug. 6.—Heavy drafting of of the Santa Ynez watershed, the Santa Ynez valley. where brush had been allowed to grow unchecked for years. They declared they had all they could do to control the side lines of the fire. About} 14,000 acres have been swept by the| flames. IDAHO FIRES UNDER CONTROL WALLACE, Idaho., Aug. ¢—Forest fires which have been raging over 200 square miles of cut over timber on Marble creek in Shoshone county are practically under control, it is re- ported from forestry headquarters. During the two weeks the fires have been buening, five camps were de stroyed. In one camp forty men were compelled to spend the night in the river when the fire swept over the district, CAPT. PLUMMER UNMBLE TO G0 TO) WASHINGTON Capt. C. P. Plummer, national vice commander of the American Legion, who was one of a committee of 16 appointed to officially represent the legion at the funeral of Warren G. Harding, will be unable to be present at the ceremony because he was not informed of his appointment in time to make the trip to the national cap- ital. At the time the committee was announced by Alvin Owsley, national commander of the legion, Mr. Plum- mer was enroute from Price, Utah, where he had been attending the Utah state convention of the legion, to his home in Casper. Mr. Plummer {s leaving the latter part of the week to attend the Mon- tana state convention of the organi- zation, A great convention was held at Price, Utah, according to Mr. Plum mer, who states that Alvin M. Ows. ley by his visit there completed a tour which included visits to every de- partment in the United States. In addition to state headquarters in every state, Commander Owsley visited many posta. Dennt ATEGE son, Carroll and Jefferson stood with bowed heads as the train passed through their communities. . At Boone the train stopped 17 min utes to change engines, and crews and nearly 20,000 persons stood silent- ly while floral tributes and messages of condolence for Mrs. Harding were Placed aboard. The assembly in- cluded large lodge delegations from Des Moines and other cities nearby. Thousands also were awaiting the arrival of, the train at Ames, where special trains and inteurban cars had unloaded mourners who had traveled through most of the night to pay thelr tribute to Mr. Harding's memory. And thus it was throughout the trip across Iowa, with the assemblies increasing in number as the larger cities of Marshalltown, Cedar Rapids and Clinton were reached. As eloquent and silent and tmpree- sive as were the tributes of the west- ern states traversed, those manifest- ed by the people eastward from the Missouri river along the railway line to Chicago showed plainly the love and affection of the section of the country for the man who was until last Thursday evening their chief executive. It was only because of the in- creased population of the states traversed today that the groups of persons who have stood mourning along the steel trail since the train left the Golden Gate city appeared in larger numbers end at more frequent intervals. ‘Their manner of tribute was but that of the smaller gather- ings seen in the western stretches at every ranch, mining camp, railroad station or center of greater habita- tion, and the effect of none was lost by the woman who journayed with the dead in the last car and who still resisted bravely against any outward sign of surrender to her sorrows, The route followed today led through the states of Iowa and Illinois, beginning at Council Bluffs and continuing through Dennison, Carroll, Boone, Ames, Marshalltown, Cedar Rapids and Clinton, Iowa, and Sterling, Dixon and Dekalb, Ill, to Chicago, THOUSANDS WAITING AT _OMAHA STATION. 4nough it was in the early hours this morning when the funeral train reached Omaha, there were thousands of persons who had kept watch for it and who, like the other gatherings at points passed everywhere since Fri- day evening, when the train drew out of San Francisco would not permit a time factor to prevent them from making their offering of respect to the dead, end of sympathy to Mrs. Harding. 4 In Omaha, as in the other places where stops were made, floral pieces also were offered, thus making {t pos- sible for those attending to such af- fairs on the train, to keep the biers always decorated with fresh flowers. Omaha was represented by abou! 20,000 of its citizens with bowed and bared heads as the special pulled into the Union station at 2:56 o'clock. Thousands were unable to get_past he Caspec Daily Crtbune INDIANS RETURH, SELECTION FOR TRIP TO LONDON NOW PENDING The Arapahos Indians who have been here for the Rodeo will leave in their wagons and with all their equip- ment tomorrow morning for the Arapahoe reservation. This trip wiil constme between three and four days. When the Indians have reached the reservation 20 of them will be selected to go with Tim McCoy to London. Certain red tape has to be gone through with before the In- dians can go. For instance they m be Indians who have no crops to attend to during the summer end the fron gates separating the station waiting room from the tracks, but they peered eagerly through the en- closure, while thousands of others stood on elevated streets nearby until the train pulled out at 3:29 a. m. “This is wonderful—wonderful,” de- clared George Christian, secretary to the departed president as he stepped from the train. “Who would expect to see such @ large crowd gathered to show thetr sympathy and love at this hour of the day?” Mr. Christian added that the crowd here was the largest attendance since the train left the far west and also praised the way Nebraskans paid thelr respects at other points alone the line, Mrs. Harding, he said, is a noble woman, and is “bearing up wonder fully well and with remarkable fortitude. United States Senator R. B. Howell, Republican, of Omaha, and Major General George B. Duncan, com- manding officer of the seventh army corps area, were among those pres- ent. State officials, headed by Lieu- tenant Governor Fred G, Johnson of Hastings, came with a wreath, bear- ing the word “Nebraska.” They brought with them too a resolution of Nebraska's sorrow for the departed one, and a message of sympathy for his widow. It follows: “It is with inexpressble sorrow that we hear of the death of our honored and beloved president, War- ren G. Harding. In his passing we have sustained an irreparable loss that will be felt in the hearts and homes of all true citizens of the re- public. We bow in humble submis- sion to this affliction with the hope that the God in whom our departed president believed and in whom he placed his trust, will guide our people in the future as in the past. “To his faithful wife, whose hero- ism and christian fortitude have been an inspiring example, we wish to convey the sympathy of our state.” This was typical of the spirit of Nebraska everywhere as the train stopped at Sidney, North Plattg Grand Island and Columbus, and at other points where it had to be slowed down because of the crowd. Not only did they come from the towns where stops were made but from other cities and villages and the countryside for miles around. ‘They gave of flowers too, religious organizations, fraternal bodies, and many others joining in the movement. Men, women end children came. In Omaha some folks were carry ing babies in arms, whil state even rain Brule, the people all the time.” representation. tising doesn’t pay. MARKS FALL TO NEW LOW NEW YORK, Aug. 6—German marks depreciated forty percent over the w end being quoted in the local market te at 53 cents a mi lon, or $1,88¢ to the American dollar as compared with 89 cents a million on Bathe Internally Get Well Pay Wes ‘Thousands regain and retain bounding health this way. Very Simple. Read how reasonable —a FREE book. Call for it. their goods. SMITH-TURNER 131 & DRUG CO No More Fooling Other advertisers proved that the only way to ad- vertise successfully, make regular customers and build up public good-will was to tell the absolute truth about So, you can be sure that every consistently adver- tised product is good. The advertising test has proved it. The very fact that it is advertised is your best warranty, of satisfaction and true quality. The concern that tells you frankly what it is doing is a good concern with which to do business. That is why, it pays to read the advertisements, to patronize advertis- ers, and to buy, advertised merchandise, It’s Mighty Good Business OWHERE did Abraham Lincoln show his shrewd- ness of judgment to better effect than in that fa- mous utterance which ended, ‘‘You can’t fool all In the past, there were a few misguided advertisers who thought they could sell their wares better by mis- But those advertisers have long since gone out of business or mended their ways. Hard experi- ence taught that Lincoln was right. Untruthful adver- out in the MONDAY, AUGUS/ 6, 1523. HONOLULU, T. H., Aug. 6—(By The Associated Press)\—W. Herrman Was arrested here charged with vio- lating the Desha bathing suit law, which provides that bathers must wear | the while on the streets. the police Herrmann walked down the street and into a downtown restaurant clad only in a bathing suit. It was first arrest under the law since a_cloak in addition to a bathing suit it was enacted in 1921, they must not have any children who are going to school. E. J. Farlowe, a man who is very familiar with the Indians, will gO With them to look after them, see that they are properly cared for and are kept away from conditions of vice. MeCoy’s announcement that he wanted 20 Indians to go to England with him has aroused much enthu- siasm among them and they are all desirous of getting back to the reser- vation and getting started east as soon as possible. North Platte, Ogallala, and other points did not stop them. At points along the route special religious ser- vices were held as well as in other cities, the memorials including the singing of some of Mr. Harding's favorite hymn: The train was somewhat late in Omaha because of the storms and because the locomotive slipped a tire at Chappell. This caused no serious inconvenience as another engine from a train following was requisitioned and the Journey resumed. Pulling out the train carried offi- clals of the Chicago and Northwest- ern railroad company. Reaching Council Bluffs, the train did not stop but slowed down, from 5,000 to 10,000 persons viewing its passing. Knights Templar there in full uniform uncovered and saluted and boy scouts handed in a tribute of wild flowers. The American Legion, 150 strong, was present. than the wastebasket. man you want to reach sell him. results? Telephone and ‘The simplest way to end acorn is Blue-jay. Stops the pain in- stantly. Then the corn loosens and comes out. Made in clear liquid and in thin plasters. The action is the same. Service Don’t Go Into the Waste Basket When you write you take a big chance that your selling arguments gets no further Your advertisement, no matter what the media, may be disregarded. Your salesman may not be admitted. 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