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% TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1923 BUSINESS CHANCES _————— FOR SALE—A grocery store doing $7,500 per month can be bought for $500 and invoice; best location obtainable. Phono 1310. Must go now. —_— FOR SALE ROOMING HOUSE! Greatest bargain ever offered; $1,500 clear profit every month: everything new and up-to-date; cen- rally located for transient trade’ 4,000 required to handle. Call 1310. ———— FOR RENT—New store and barber shop with two bathrooms; also three-room .house. Inquire after p. m. of Joe Lopy, corner Wasatch and Third, Mills, Right in center of town. LOST AND FOUND —— LOST—Elks’ charm, two teeth on it, name A. H. Duthie, Casper Lodge 1358, Reward $10. 1014 S. Spruce. ———— LOST—Airedale dog, black and tan, curly hair, new round leather col- lar, silver name plate. Reward. Phone 1258 or 1280J. ————— $25 REWARD will be paid and no questions asked for return of 30-30 Winchester carbine rifle, lost on Second atreet road, somewhere be- tween Tribune office and Independ- ent addition. Griffith, Tribune office. $10 REWARD For the return of two horses; one sorrel gelding, ten years old, branded Mgqy on shoulder and brand- on hip. One biue roan gelding, four years old, branded on shoulder. ROBERT kt. GARSON Oll City, Wyo. PERSONAL —_— BEE serves the best 30 cent baat in town, 163 N, Wolcott. ee NIBD—To hear from someone me’ ‘would consider taking part of store space on Main street. Phone 407W- i HOMESTEAD—I can locate a party on nice 640 acre homestead; near railroad station. Box B-64, Tribune. ANYONE going from La Junta, Colo., to Tucson, Ariz. or west, will profit by calling 1129, ask for Ayres. AM WONDER, wonderful bee the lady with the wonder: ful power, tells past, present and future..Call and consult her on any affairs, 450 S. Durbin. Hours 9 a. m. to, 10 p. m. Valuable ‘Airedale Strays From Home “Sagebrush Mike the Second’ commonly known as “Mike,” a reg- istered Airedale dog, six months old, belonging to Harry O. Warton, at- torney, was lost last night. The CANTLIN JURY [COMPLETED (Continued from Page One.) tion of the jury progressed, those who had no direct interest in the case vacated the court. Cantlin remained unmoved through. out the hours of jury examination. When a recess wasdeclared on one or two occasions he went out in the hall and smoked, talking freely with his witnesses and attorneys. Other- ‘wise during the day his Ups were tightly compressed, smiling occa- sionally when a humorous answer was given to a question. He was neatly dressed in a dark blue sult, wore a stiff collar, was clean shaven and showed no signs of the effects of confinemen: NEW JEWETT IS ON DISPLAY BY SPARK PLUG Tt has been talked about for weeks It has been talked about for weeks. and at last you are able to see it. The new 1924 Jewett brougham, product of the Paige-Jewett factory, and a car of which the manufac- turers and dealers are justly proud is on display In the show room of the Lee Doud Motor Co, at 434 West Yetlowstone. Features of the new car are an all metal body which in- creases the sturdiness of the car, and a baked on enamel paint job, which insures the car against crack- ing, peeling and other evils peculiar to the ordinary paint job: Lee Doud, manager of the company, will hold open house for the public all this week and cordially invites you one and all. THREE SHIPS IN DISTRESS ON PACIFIC SEATTLE, Wash., Oct. 9—A lst of vessels ashore reported here to- day grew to three when it was learned that the steamship Bea: port, loaded with lumber for Japah, went argound yesterday while try- ing to back out of Port Ludlow on Puget Sound. The motor ship Ken- necott struck on the rocks late last night south of Dixon entrance, and the British steamship Sunland got fast in the sand in Seattle today. These mishaps wero attributed to fog. SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., Oct. 9— BARNEY GOOGLE— Che Casper Daily Tribune I POPE Sv. BARNE SUMOSING WE Go "ROUND, AND SIZE ur SPARK: PLUG S SHER Nozzle in Ws NEXT RACE > HES GONNA MoP oP THE SOME OF THE MORSES WER OR AGAINST «LETS it . WICKER UNCA WALT = WICKER t Touvys CAESAR! PAGE ELEVEN. No! come AND ST ON Tee 8EmcH OnTH ME" By Billey De Beck WICKER~ANGELUS wicKkeR- / BUT HOW DID THe LITTLE FELLOW FIND IT OUT? ete, ‘SAVE YOUR CLEAN RAGS FOR PREOUYTERIANG| SERMON EXCERPTS dog is black and tan with curly hair,| The motor ship Kennecott, reported and has probably been unable to find] on the rocks and washed by heavy his way back home after wandering | seas, has_been located definitely at away. He was wearing a round|a point on the northwest shore of leather collar with a silver name] Queen Charlotte Island, Alaska, ac: plate on which the name had not| cording to a wireless message re- yet been inscribed, ceived here today by the Radio Cor- Any information, relative to the} poration of America. whereabouts of thé dog will be ap- preciated by Mr. Warton. SEATTLE, Wash., Oct, $—The British steamship Sunland went} ashore at 8:30 this morning at Mea- —————_—___ (ak for “PHILLIPS” MILK OF MAGNESIA Always say “Phillips” and Refuse Imitations Protect your doctor and yourself by asking for “Phillips,” the original Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physictans for 50 years. Don’t ac- cept a substitute for the genuine “Phillips.” 25-cent bottles, also 60-cent bottles, contatn directions: any drug store.—Advertisement, a, daw Point, near Seattle in a heavy fog. She was not’ leaking, her master reported, and was expected to float at high tide. 40 MISSING ON DREDGER HAVRE, Oct. 9.—The French| dredger Normandie, with a crew of 15 men and with about 25 others, members of thelr familles, believed to he on board, is missing and fears are entertained that she has gone down with all hands, The dredger, which has been working trom Caen to the Cabourg canal, left for Havre across the mouth of the Seine three days ago and has not since been heard from, Tugs have been look ing for her and the search is still being continued. ——— OREGON CITY, Ore, Oct. 9— Plant B, of the Hawley Pulp and Paper company, was destroyed early today by fire which started late last night in the beater and machine room of the digester unit. The loss was estimated to be $750,000. Twenty workmen, trapped in the upper floors of the plant escaped |Sups ANp Dups GF You ovGHT To TRY'EM ¥, rS bu her neighbors ---- We assume her® Jaundrvy labors: Ya! laundry question both- ers Mrs. Duds no longer. She once told her next door nuighbor that she couldn’t get a maid that could do up her waists or household linens to suit her. Duds was in as ba a fix sho said. When his laundry arrived he'd fracture the English language. All's well now. We do their work. LOOK FOR SUDS AND DUDS PEARL WHITE LAUNDRY Phone 1702 W by leaping from the window: — SCRANTON, Pa., Oct. 9—The nineteen thousand Hudson Coal SPEED RECORD BREAK GROUND (Continued from Page One.) tholomew, teacher; Mrs, Wilson's class of ladies, Mrs, Wilson; Wo- man’ Bible clas, Mrs. James Shand; Westminster class of business girls and teachers, Mrs, George DeWitt i high school girls, Mrs. 8. K. »son; high school boys, Coach Munson; Beginners department, Mrs. Chas. A. Myers; many others also participated. The removal of the former mans is under way. It will be placed on a lot purchased recently by the trus- tees on South Ash street between Twelfth and Thirteenth streets. Ex- eavating for the new church {s to begin as soon as the location is cleared. lo CREDITED 10 NEW TYPE WING ST. LOUIS, Oct. 9.—Double cham- ber wings, which increased the lower) and upper lifting surface of the) plane, enabled the United States navy airplanes to attain the unpre-/ cedented speed of more than four miles a minute In the Pulitzer speed event of the international air races here last Saturday, Commander Mare A. Mitscher, U, 8. N., who was | in charge of the navy entrants, de- clared today. Asked to explain why the Curtiss racing planes which were flown by the navy entrants made much faster time than the same kind of machines flown by army aviators, Commander Mitscher| disclosed that double chamber wings | or convexes on both sides—of the wings, which the army planes were) not equipped with, .were responsible | for a feat. He said that the navy planes ,travelled as high as thirty miles faster per hour as a result of company miners on strike since Monday, todhy voted to return tq work tomorrow and permit the anthracite board of conciliation to settle their grievance: ‘This action was taken at a mass meeting on advice of the union officers OMEN! DYE ANY GARMENT Of DRAPERY Waists Kimonos Draperies Skirts Dresses Ginghams Coats Sweaters Stockings Diamond Dyes Bach 18-cent package of “Dia jmond Dyes" contains directions so simple any woman can dye or tint y old, worn, faded thing new, if sho hes never dyed befor Dru stores sell ali colors-Advertise- ment. | ever the wings, which he added, were a new invention in airplane construc- tion. Send your automobile news to “Spark Plug."—Care Tribune, | First Christian Rev. R. R. HILDEBRAND We have a goal or two to- reach this year. The churches as a whole must make a further advance. 1 believe there is a new church con- science. A little peep into the his- tory of the early church will give a clue as to the compound of a real church. First. The working church—Chil- dren work better when the father works with them. An example is necessary for good work. Goa is in and through all and has been with us from the first. It was God's part to give the evidence of Christ and to send us the Savior. It was Ills part to give us the Word and show us sin, it was His part to con- vict the world of righteousness ana the judgment to come. It is man's part to have faith, to repent and confess Christ and preach the Word. The church is a company—God, Sons and Co, The working church puts Christ into men, it transforms men and makes them as noble and true as nature. The out-put of this company should be felt. Second: The consecrated church —This means a dedication of all to the Father, Many look but do not see. ‘The consecrated person sees the signs of the times. They see in the light of God's understanding. Through His eyes it is not hard to see what Livingston saw in dark Africa, what Standish and Penn saw in the Indian, what Jesus saw in an untrained Peter. The consecrated church has eyes to see, Some said it thundered, others said an angel hath spoken, but Jesus said Father. Some hear the word of God in the rumbling of nature voices, There are degrees of spiritual perception. The consecrated men and @ conse erated church have ears to hear. It | hag a prayer life. Third: The giving church—The old church was a giving church. Giving 1s not based on what you are able to give in money but what you feel when you give Him time and paying what you owe to the owner of all, True religion is betting one's life there isa God. Jeremiah made this bet. He had through God made a prophesy and it was called by his cousin, He was not afraid to stake all he had on his con- victions. We must adventure on what we know of Christ. If we put ourselves and our al! into. the church we will look toward its future. Where our treasure is there will our hearts be also. The real church is the giving church. Companionship of Parents Is Needed By, Children DETROIT, Oct. 9—(United Press) |—What the youth of today needs is ‘a modern, up-to-date mother or father who will go along to tho movies or the dance hall and be a “regular fellow,” in the opinion of Judge Henry W. Hulbert. | Judge Hulbert hears an average of twenty cases a day in the Detroit Juvenile court and he bases his opinion on the testimony of boys and girls who “went wrong,” | Parents should act as chaperones, |not the old-fashioned kind with nar- jrow ideas, but as sympathetic, brond minded companions, says Judge Hulbert, If a mother ac- |companied her daughter to the {dance hall and tr: las good a time, there wouldn't be parties, drinking and and other laxness he be- any pettin joy-riding | y per cent of the cases in thia court are from well-bred, mod- erately fixed familles, who are very surprised that thelr child should have had to come into the Juvenile Court," declared Judge Hulbert. “Not all the cases that come to our attention are children of tho streets. Most of the time the parents are People who have become so influ- enced by the present standards of |living that they have neglected to |look after the home life of the child. “The young people of today want to dance, to go joy-riding and to par. take of other pastimes. We can't solve the problem by trying to keep them at home. But we can help matters a lot by supervising their commercial entertainment. If the young people want to go to dance halls, let them go, but go along with them. Public dance halis would be far better and far safer if more mothers did attend.” Styles were given a clean bill by Judge Hulbert, because, he said, they change too often to blame ithem for juvenile delinquency, Trinity Lutheran Rey. J. H. GOCKEL “Which is the great command- asked the Lord in our text (Matr 22:34-46,- Jesus replied: “Thou shalt love thy Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all they soul and with all thy mind; thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. He then asked the question: “What think ye of Christ?” As though to say: A knowledge of the law is not enough; you must also know Christ, must be able to understand and ap- ply the gospel. _ Only in connection With the gospel does the law become useful and serviceable to you. Both the Bible and experience teach how true this is, A man knowing only the law of God either does not take its demands and threats serlously, and thus deceives himself; or he is filled with fear and terror before God and finally driven to despair, Therefore in connection with the law the gospel must be preached, the word of Christ which tells us that God's son be- came also David's son, became man to redeem us from the curse of the law (Gal. 8:13) and atone for our sins (ph. 1.7). This gospel creates in man faith in Christ his Savior and comforts heart and conscience. Here the law serves to show us our sin and guilt and our need of a Savior The gospel also makes man will ing and able to do what the law re quires, Christ's picture of man as he should be, as portrayed in His summary of the Inw, {fs ideal. But no amount of preaching of the law will make a man willing and able to ve up to that ideal, The law only reveals man's unwillingness and inability to love God above all things and his neighbor ag himself. But when a man hears and believes that God's Son died to save him and that God {s now reconciled with him. a new spirit stirs within him. He begins to love God who first loved him, Sincere love to God begets love to the nelghbor. He also shows and exercises such love to God and his neighbor. The gospel has Wrought this in him. “We are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works.” Here the law teaches us what truly good works are, that we do not follow our own {ideas of what is good and God-displeasing. Thus law and gospel serve one another, God grant us grace always “rightly to divine the word of truth," never to confuse and mis- apply law and gospel, Book Store Wide As Door and Half Block Long, Claim COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., Oct. %.—(United Press.)—Colorado Springs boasts of having the smallest book- store in America. J. A, Williams, with a space the width of the door at which cus- tomers enter, and reaching from the street to the alley, is prepared for a thriving business. ‘The entire length of his tubelike shop ia: lined with shelves, and volumes of rare worth fill them. There is no waste space in this “hole-in-the-wall,” where lterary gems and antiques stand side by side with Yon, this is the beginning Of tho football season, And a lot of fellows Who thought they were GOOD Are beginning to wonder How it all started, anyway. RK. EB. ~ —eernheand Send your automoniie newn to “fpark Plug."—Care Tribu |Casper wants rags, and it wants them for a very good purpose. It believes that if the people of Cas per fully understand the use to which these rags are to be put, that they will come forward very gener ously, gather up all the clean white or colored rags and turn them over to the auxiliary. ‘The auxiliary desires to call at- tention to the fact that within the state of Wyoming, at Sheridan, is located a government Veterans’ hos- pital, caring for about 200 patients. Most of these patfents—in fact all of them— are suffering from various Cegrees of Insanity, brought on by their service in France and other places. Their condition ranges all the way from a mild dementia to violent insanity which demands their restraint behind bars. They ere all American boys who served thelr country faithfully during the world war, and who have come back men- tal wrecks. Many of them might have been better off if they had re- mained in the long sleep on Flan- ders Fields, for they are now com- pelled to endure a living death. This fs thelr sacrifice to make America free. The American Legion auxiliary of Wyoming has undertakin the task of bringing a little cheer into the lives of these men, There are many things which can be done to make life more tolerable for them. Those more nearly normal in their condi- tion, spend thetr time in doing hand work, producing hand craft artieles of all kinds. A fino display of this work was recently shown at the Wyoming Stato Fair at Douglas, and the exhibit secured a number of prizes. Now as to the rags. These ex-serv- {ce men do a great deal of rug weay- ing, and produce some beautiful woven rag rugs. Heretofore, the gov- ernment has furnished tho rags for this work, but has recently discon- tinued the supply. The men, eager to Co this work, are very anxious to secure more raw material and the auxiliary wants to furnish ft. So they are asking the readors of this paper to donate all the rags they can—pounds and pounds of them. They want white rage that can be dyed; partt-colored cr gayly colored rags of all kinds. They would like to. have them clean, of course, and would prefer that they be troned out flat before being bundled up, as they will be easter to handle. Now if you are out of rags and still want to holp, you may @onate @ sum of money—any amount that you like, ‘With the money so do- nated the auxiliary will purchase the rags, which they can get for a very reasonable price, baled in bales of 100 pounds. These tales will be shipped to the Sheridan hospftal along with tho rags donated. Get your rags together, or deter- mine what money you can contrib- ute, and, telephone either Mrs. J. M Stewart at 1123 or Mrs. John Henag- ney at Phono 216M or to any other Bathe’ “ Internally Get Well y Wes | Thousands regain and retain bounding health this way. Very Bimple. Read how reasonable -—a FREE book. Call for it. For Sale By SMITILTURNER DRUG co. 131 South Center Street. | AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY ment in the Law?" was the question | ‘The American Legion Auxiliary of auxiliary member whom you may /|% know, and they. will \the Tags or money. \teday. \Chinese Student end or call for Please do this Colony at C.C.| COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., Oct. 9.—(United Press.)—Seventeen Chinese students, the largest enroll- ment of their nationality ever to enter Colorado College, form the Chinese club hero this year, The seventeen live together, and are often to be seen in one group on the campus. HE DIDN'T KNOW NOUR NAME. HE WAS TRYING TO SAY WHISKERS! decrease, however, when this year’s clase takes the four a as thou- sands of Chinese are preparing for education in American colleges and universities. i Be Workmen digging @ canal in Westphalia unearthed the tooth of mammoth welghing 220 pounds and measuring seven feet in length. | ACLEAR COMPLEXION | Ruddy Cheeks— Sparking Eyes | —Most Women Can Have Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Known Ohio Physician Dr. F.M.Edwardsfor17 yearstreated scores of women for liver and bowel ail- ments. During these years he gave ta |his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredients mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. You will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on While their own country is going | the liver and bowels, which cause a nor- through a series of revolutions, and |mal action, carrying off the waste and an age of banditry, these Asiatics, | poisonous matter in one’s system. along with hundreds of others scat-| _ If you have a pale face, sallow look, tered throughout colleges of the | dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head- United States, are assiduously apply-| aches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out ing themselves to the task of acquir- | Of sorts, inactive bowels, you take ona iny an occidental education to carry | Of Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets nightly back to their revolution-torn home- | fora time and note the pleasing results. land. | Thousands of women and men take Four of the group are sentors.,|Dr- Edwards’ Olive Tablets—the suc- two juniors and one freshman. cessful substitute for calomel—now and : ¢, then just to keep them fit. 15c and 30c, They do not expect the number to f Business Our Entire Stock is Offered at Greatly Reduced Prices No. 1 cans Richelieu Royal Chinook Salmon, 3 cans for___- A No. 24 cans Richelieu Sliced Peaches, SCANS Olne nee ee ee nn No, 2 cans Richelieu Cut Okra, 2 cans for... : ----35¢ Richelieu Grape Juice, pints 35@; qts. 65e Richelieu Marmalade, Bitter and Sweet Orange, Grape, Grape Fruit and Fig, all per jar_ No. 214 cans Aunt Dinah Molasses, eac 20e Hand Picked Navy Beans, per pound_{Q@ CASPER STORAGE GROCERY 117 East Second Street NO EXCHANGES NO REFUND Bargain On One Hand Power W fachine Pe-t-8-2 §-Pe-e os a be