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® f i PAGE EIGHT pe Casper Hap Crivune BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG ‘LOS ANGELES t HEROEGT BRENON ALAN FORREST CHARLIE AGN <— ‘CASPER CHURCHES PREACHED SUNDAY BY LOCAL PASTORS 1 SASSY SUSIE VS. SPARK PLUG \ ally Pw, SOO MILES CROSS - Coun Tee RACE = PuRsE ¥ 20,000 + First Presbyterian WILSON | ch: deeming features. The democracy of the auto camp pitches the classe« together. The new menace of the ‘week end” tourist, far too often ‘a week end” the upper end at CHARLES A The child Samue y and Jeho-| that. Yah was h ht was the| Where goes the Sunday? Our nila of @ religious home, and of] row nature worshipper without a Parents who met | their gre ee snap of his lash tells you that he and never delivered hin to} looks from nature to nature's God. Not on your life. Not one hundreth of one per cent are John Burroughs or Enos Mif's. Ninety per cent of then odern ureans, cr ss academic pure pag: h food and ling arotind. adders | But we * ious fait h mustn't be neither must we be dblivious of the too” severe have how muck for good of « instilled into . Boys and girls do nc sught to grow unless t ristian principles t y will find the new “efficiency” standard of mod- ern commeres and industry as ma- jor contributors. The most deliber- te and subtle piece cf paganism ever promoted. This modern grad- ing of human values on the pure sis of dollars and cents has the stamp of the manager of the bot- tomless pit upon it. Wihere does the influence fan faith { youth. MME. OCTAVE, THE FAMOUS SINGER Has WER JEWELS STOLEN FROM HOTEL ROOM. [, LOSS $80,000. WELL, I'M NO SHERLOCK. TOMORROW WE'LL. SEE A PICTURE OF HER SELLING Ice lamented, it should suggest a re-) weak and subnormal come in on CREAM CONES FOR scovery of the Ten Command-) the dea!—the dump. The modern ef- THE BENEFIT OF ments. Samt fo was one of| ficiency’ test and punch clock are DISCONTENTED the most exemplary !n all history.| worse than the golden calg of old. We need today a clearer recognition! This is My estimate of some of the the v: y impressions in| standards of modern business. heimaking of great Civil law] AN this-has its effect of course annot make men 1, but it helps! on the Sunday and on morals, The to keep a consciousness of] pagan punctuality of the week moral d s. We would Ike| makes for irrégularity on Sunday. to see the be The average man makes God and prepared for every iAtellect his soul pay for his greedy com- ergency cena: mercial sin. Let us see how Jesus omy rest spent his Sabbaths. “And as his | custom was he went into the syna- | the Sat of sat traaie cue (oe tiia Sbeal Bate 94 on Sabbath day. It trips while president, a young man sought with persistent effort to ap- proach Mr. Roosevelt for his auto. | would be the height of ignorance not to know that Jesus was one of the greatest Sabbath breakers of 3 yhen his se came and| 8 day. The sharpest controversies pair ad hn F tyre eaaaet | centered around his attitude toward it was given back to its owner with| it- Not that Jeeus in reality ever the disappointing rem ‘No ink| broke the Sabbath but the Rabinnic in y pen.’ A lesson for the un-| accretions and traditions, Josephus prepared. Equally urgent is the) tells us “that they were forbidden necessity for moral preparedness for| te wear sandals on the Sabbath every emergency of life A Prince-| With heavy nails in the scles for ton profes discovered that of| fear that on the way to the temple all words mon use in the| they might tread on an ear of corn books of t first place of quently word “time” ouns most fre. It suggests the value art in the mental and s of great and useful] | ae | Trinity Lutheran REV. J. H. GOCKEL (The sixth of a series of sermons} on Bible stories illustrating the Ten! Commandments.) | Marriage is the lifelong union of man and wife unto one flesh, insti God, and entered into by 1 bethrothal. This institution would have us keep inviolate and sacred. . Therefére He thund ered from Sinai: “Thou shalt not commit adultery,” and sternly for-| bade everything whereby the divine * ordinance of matrimony is brdken,| $* Potiphar’s = nized as such. % ever shall put violated, and desecrated, be it in or| out of wedloek, by deed, word, or de- sire. Th persona married of this commandment purity. Fir Man's natural knowledge God's law tells him that what| wife proposed in our} text (Genesis 35) was shameful adul-| tery. enioins| upon the} But there {s another form of adul-| tery which is not so generally recog-| Jesus says: “Whoso-| y his w ¥ except) it be for forn tion, i} mar-} ry amother, committ y.""} Thus the law of God permit only on one ground—infidelit innocent spouse may then obtain a divorce. Again, if a wife is desert- ed by her husband, or has been dl- nd s ) vorced by her husband for a reason! eereniiis @ not allowed by God, her marriage hag been broken, not by her, but by| her husband, and she is free to mar- ry again. (See I Corinthians 7.15.) But divorce on other grounds is a violation and desecration of the en | © tate of matrimony, a species of adul- #32¢ ( tnatter of longitude and 1a = > and decent life in word ‘“S must quench the evil desir: 3 with @ to pray often: hex : | 12: well-behaved, = J | avoid all opportunities f tery, legalized by men (“because of; the hardness of your hearts”), but) pena'ized by God. Potiphar's wife repeatedly at- tempted to lead Joseph into adultery. But Joseph firmly resisted her in famous proposals. He replied: “How, then, can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God.”| ne to him when ‘as far a from the restraints of home. There are young men and women who at home are decent and but who, when tl go to another city, where they unknown, run riot in iniquity and yield to all manner of shame and vice. Joseph was not that kind of ung man. His plety was not a tude. | Joseph {s not a character in a What is related of him here actually took place. But there dre some who say that personal purity ef contine is impossible, if not The temptation Rarmtul sp of it a necekyary evil—merely the sowing of a bit bf wild oats. Such statements are among the most dangerous and d@amnab!'e lies which Satan has put into the mouths of men. Joseph is but one of many examples for the fact that youth can keep itself pure And mucn in Joseph's life teaches us how it can be done. To lead a chaste 1 deed we with God's word and industrious and ex in enting and drin prayer, » moderation unchi Especially do we a’l have need “Create in me a clean d renew a right ness. t, O God, t within me spiri Ask the to help you, Comfort, strengthen, and keep y H willing to aid you 1 carry you through avi First Congregational ROBERT ALLIN 1AM. few months more and the an national hegira begi East west and w east. Nomad is another American menace. Homes on wh Old its, cus toms au:* sentiments are smashed to smithereens. But it also has re- He went through the corn fields and plucked the ears and ate them I will fully admit that the time have changed. That there were no steel trusts working twelve hours a |day, no great industrial centers hit and thus grind corn on the Sabbath day." Jesus hea’ed on the Sabbath with their smoke and soot, no tene- ment and company shacks on Jesus day; the “speed” idea wasn't known. sut Iam as positively sure that of worship and the day of ‘© not only as much place then but a thourand times th rest I today more. The big mammon god The almighty Collar has the center of the stage. Brains are bought and big prices paid to corner and hold him. The almighty and eternal Ged of justica love and. truth is second- ary to hundreds of thousands, and he'l is loose, and will be looser until the whole infernal thing changes. Jesus had time for worship with his fellows. Not that he needed And time, full titne, must be ven to the cultivation and growth of the soul. This materialistic spirit must give place to the broadly spir. itual. Man is a living soul and his soul must have care. Mammon must be Cethorned and the God of justice and love and truth exalted above all. Se a a Grace A. M. E. REV. T. J. BURWELL Text: Acts 5:15 “They brought forth the sic’. into the streets and laid them on beds and couches that at the least the shadow of Peter might overshadow some of them.” Subject: Unconscious Influence Our lives have a two fold expres- sion the conscious and the uncon- sclous; and the scope of the latter is greater than that of the former. is king. because as the name implies the former is known, traveling along certain, definite linés, while the latter is unknown, end for that reason we are but pioneers in the field of its discovery. The pos- sibilities of the unconscious in its scope of influence have no limits in thelr operations, which is not true of the conscious, it is always being unfolded, and is always open to the discovery of the preying mind. And in this is to be found one of the most profound Iessons of life A life 1s not alone in the world, but is surrounded with other lives, not unlike its self, all capable of either consciously. or unconsciously influencing each’ other, for we live in a world of brotherhoods, with a common Father, with a common re- lation one with the other. TI one of the earliest doctrines ot unreached, in that they believed that there was virtue in his very shadow. My brethren, our lives are cap- able of influencing many, in ways that we may never think, in ways too common for either notice or serious consideration; and we owe it both to God and to ourselves to make this scope as large and as far- reaching as possible. CO-OPERATIVE MARKETING 10 Scriptures; for we note in the dia- logue between God and Cain, that Cain v expected to know to the whe outs of his brother and the relation of one life to the other is clearly shown; and one life is ac- countable to the other whether it be c s of it or not When E m was sent for to curse Israel, when he saw Israel he forgot to curse but instead thought of a blessing for them thus: “Let Nation-Wide Campaign Is Projected by Association. me die the death of the righteous, and let my last end be like his.” Tsrael was not on dress parade that da just encamped in their ordinary powerful influence was exerted over manner, but unconsciously such a powerful influence was exerted over Baalam that he uttered a blessing instead of a curse. In the New Testament Jesus taught not only that men's souls should be saved, but their bodies as ized that the soul is body Thus to a higher degree WASHINGTON, Feb. 11.—Details of a nation-wide campaign to foster interest in the cooperative marketing movement were discussed by various speakers at the closing session here of the National Council of Farmers Cooperative Marketing. associations. eve ealed the] L. F. McKay, director of the de- ught that] partment of information of the s not one sided but is de-| American Cotton Growers Exchange the best condition of|advocated the cultivation of the Peter w: s doctrine as word and deed and both te were or 2 | 00d will of the world by the grow- ers of cooperatives to make the way of the cooperative organization eas- ching and|ier and to induce business interests ny which|to help in extending membh nd the! he declaréd the movement -was not to us the opinion of those involved with politics and outlined we find bin rh hei healin he could text gives ot reach dire methods of gaining publicity through house organs, trade journals, na- tional magazines, in local meetings and at district and national conven- tions. ASPIRIN Beware of Imitations! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians over twenty-three years for Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Neuritis Rheumatism Neuralgi: Pain, Pain Accept “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” only. Each unbroken package con- tains proven directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cen Drugsists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicactd. Advertisement. Rates ‘Two cents per word or ten cents per line. NO AD LESS THAN 30 CENTS. Five average wo! used a8 @ basis of estimating a line. BLACKFACE CAP HEAD! will be charged the space of two lines. All charged sdvertising will be booked “set lines” irrespective of the number of wur CORRECTION OF CLASSIFIED AD ERRORS. The Casper Daily Tribune will not be responsible for more than one incorrect imsertion of any ad- vertisement ordered for more than one time. Errors not the fault of the advertiser which clearly leagen the real vatue of the advertisement will be rectified only by publication without extra charge within FIVE days after insertion. No repubiica- Uon will be made when the ermr does not materially affect the sense or purpose of the advertisement. peng Careful attention w: ven a) ads received over the TELE- PHONE, but we cannot guarantee acc! CLOSING HOUR. ‘Want Ads to be classified proper- ly must be in The Casper Daily Tribune office befure 10:00. Want Ads recet' after 1000 to 12:00 . m., will be inserted under che ead “Too Late to Classify.” OCT OF TOWN ADVEKTISB: MENTS Must be accompanied by cash or chevk in full payment of the same. Note the foregoing instructions about counting the words and ths rate per word for the Casper Daily Tribune. BULLETI LONDON, Feb. 11.—Stanley Bald- win was unanimously re-elected lead- er of the conservative party today. WANTED—Sales: experienced in selling men’s furnishings, shoes, hats and caps, must have best of reference. Address Box B-310 Tribune. WANTED—Three or four live sales- me 1876. . Phone mornings or evenings WANTED—Lot salesman for fast growing addition. Call at 236 BE. M dwest. FIREMEN, _ brakemen, $150 to $250 (which position?) Ralway Box B-299, Tribune. WANTED—At Welch, Wyo., ole tric welder on oil tank roof, good. welders can earn $20 per day. plece work. Chicago Bricge and Iron Works. HELP WANTED—MALE AND FEMALE WANTED—Men, women and child- ren's hair cutting 35c. Under Grill Cafe. HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED—High class _ millinery saleswoman immediately; . must be competent to buy, price, display, and sell, good salary, permanent position; must be experienced and have references; state full particu- lars; name and address in first let- ter. Write Box B-307, Tribune. WANTED—Lady partner from 25 to 40 years of age, for bus'ness proposition. Box B-305, Tribune. —— WANTED—By March 1, young girl who is fond of children to help with light housework and child, Ad- dress Box B-297. POSITIONS WANTED WANTED—Position as housekeep- er for working man by - able young woman. Address H. A. care Tribune. EXPPRIENCED chauffeur wants job driving; country or city Phone 2337R. ACCOUNTANT Auditor, books open- ed and closed, income tax state- ments and financial reports prepar- e@ monthly audits and part time work a specialty. Phone 982M. WANTED—Work tn grocery or gent’s furnishings; have had 15 years’ experience in these Phone 618)\Y, EXPERIES saleslady and bu: er, dry gods and ready-to-wear, at present employed, but desires new connection with reliable house. Cal! 618W for information. BLACKSMITH wants job. 1387W. SERVICES OFFERED Phone I CAN save you money on your new home, will also help you plan same L. D.'Leisinger, general con- tractor. Plione 1975M. CALCIMINING and painting small jobs; prompt service; work guar- anteed. Phone 1860J. WANTED—AIl kin¢s of day work, house cleaning and work by the hour, Call 1828M. Corliss Griffis ‘Arrives In U.S. NEW YORK, Fb. Hooven Griffis of Hamilton, Ohio, who was released recently from pris: on in Mosbach, Germany, after serv- ing part of a sentence for complicity in a plot to kidnap Grover Cley land Bergdoll, der, arrived home today on Albert Ballin and was’ giv tion at city hall. 11.—Corliss American ‘draft eva- FOR SALE—One rvll-top desk, two flat top desks, one typewriter desk and two typewriters, One white ivory bed room set cheap. W. J. Bailey, 326 West Yellowstone avenue, Phone 1617J. FOR SALE—United Home Builders contracts at a discount, am leav- ing town and need the money, Box B-306, Tribune. FOR SALE—Standard Underwood typewriter $35. Box B-298, Trib- une, FOR SALE—AUTOMOBILES WANTED—1,000 side curtains to repair; we also do a? kinds of top work and seat cushions, Tucker Auto Top Shop, 455 W. Yellowstone, on balance. Phone Pennington 1204. Cc. BLUTHARSCH at Jack Jones Gare: ‘HONE 2041 Best Values in Used Cars To Be Had in Casper Donse BRoTHERS DEALERS SELL GOOD USED CARS The man who gets a better Used Car than he believed possible is com- ing back some day for a new Dodge BrothersCar. Good Valu for Today— DODGE BROTHERS Late model touring; high hood; A-1 condition mechanically; si- monized, wheels. repainted, top and upholstery dressed ~___$700 1920 model touring; motor over- hauled $300 1920 model roadster, equipped with large Westinghouse shock absorbers, in first class condi- tion --.. -2----------- +5! $475 1922 model Commercial truck at’ -..-........ enna nn nea -- $425, BUICKS 1923 mocel six cylinder touring, driven less than 10,000 milea, revarnished and in first class condition; a number of extras at FORDS 1921 model touring, starter and demountable rims; new top and curtains STS 1921 model roadster, starter, good tires; a good buy _-$175 Coliseum Motor Co. OPEN SUNDAY 131 E. Fifth Phone 724 FOR SALE—AUTOMOBILES Used Ford Cars ON VERY HASY TERMS. Runabout ~------_-----_$100 Runabout -—-~------------$140 Runabout --------------_.$300 Touring <_---——------__-$145 Touring ~~.---.---.-.---__$200 Touring Coupe Coupe ----~------.---—---$450 Sedan —--.-.----_---_-._$400 Truck ~-—-—--~------.-$325, Overland Touring —-----.$125 on F111 )) 22-2 = $400 EARL C. BOYLE 125-137 _N. Center Phone.9 POULTRY COLUMBIA HATCHERY P. 0. Box 1102, Denver, Colo. We can fill your oréer for any quantity of Baby Chicks; 17 varie- jes, standard bred. We it and only electric hatchery n iver, capacity over 10,000 per feats and pera te write fe and prepay parcel post.” for orices and full particulars. 3 ———— FOR SALE—Pure bred Buff Ko- chen Bandas stock and eggs. 732 S. David. Phone 2463W. HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE—Lease and furniture of close in rooming house, big in- come, $1,000 wil! handle.” Phone Pennington 1204. month, $25. 129 8. Keuwood. Phone 24617. $$$ FOR SALE—One kitchen cabinet, ene heating stove and one oil stove. 134 East G or phone 1441NW ss FOR SALE—Bargain, three-piece overstuffed Karpen lvingroom set, like new, also Kitchen Maid cabinet. 1036 S. Cedar, Phone 1911Ww. rop leaf walnut fin- day bed and pad complete $13.95: Oak dresser, 12x20 plate mirror $17.95; white enamel child crib and pad complete $12.50. 27x54 Axminster rug $4.25; duofold pads $5; 45-pound mattress $6.50; 36 inch cot pads at $4.50; porcelain kitchen table $9; four burner cab- inet gas range side oven — $33.9! Simmons two-inch post bed $10.51 we do save you money, 241 W. First ae 986J. Hunter-Goll Furniture ‘o WANTED TO BUY WANTED TO BUY—Furniture. will pay highest cash price for used furniture. Harned Furniture Co., 234 8. David. Phone 249. fied Ad. Tribune Want Ads bring results. WANTED: TO BUY—Hignest cash price pafd for second hand furni- ture. Brooks 660 East H. Phone 1648W. WANTED TO BUY — Mechanic wants Ford with starter at bar- gain, pay cash. Tribune Box B-302. i