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AC Il et PAGE FOUR. FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS 10 BE SPENT ON GOMING CAMPAIGN (Continued from Page One) Chairman Butler of the Republicans, and give Mr. Borah detailed reports from time to time as the campaign progresses. Announcement that the Independ- ent-Progressives, headed by Senator LaFollette and Senator "Wheeler are going to attempt to raise a campaign fund of at least $3,000,000 gives some inkling of what the aggregate expenditures of the campaign imay he. This is far more than the » able to obtain in Democrats practically death that year, white cans reveled in plenty. Democrats This year, the Democrats are hopeful that things will be different. They may easily raise a campaign 00,000. ‘The Republicans even more, so there is ison to believe that in the na tional political strong boxes there will be gathered approximately $15 000,000 for electioneering purpos nd of Radio, an entirely new expense jn al campaigns, will get the 's share of the expenditure, ac: ding to present plans. The broad: casting companies are going to reap a real ‘harvest and get t some of the heavy sums they have spent in developing this newest art of program would defeat the purpose! silken band on his left arm. communication. Thus far there has been no attempt to standardize the political charges for broadcasting, other than a preliminary statement by the American Telephone (and Telegraph company that it expected to get $10 a minute and to #=: speeches to 10 minutes’ duration, This time Mmit is proposed not alone for the benefit of the listen- ers:in, but for the politicians as well The broadcasting es know their invisible audiences: ‘They know they will not listen patiently to any person for more than any 10 minutes. In any large audience there are many persons who walk ont on the candidates as soon as they begin to talk. How much easier it is for the radio lMsteners to turn the knob and cut short the best of the ple believe they can give the poli- ticlans the best value by limiting them sharply in the amount of time they can consume on the alr. Furthermore, it Is feared that too much politics would drive the listen- ers from the head phones and the loud speak Radio audiences crave variety and will for it all around the dial. A too liberal mixture of polit addresses in the orator The radio peo- seek of the political chiefs and make their expenditures useless Word has reached Democratic headquarters here that Mr. John W. Davis, the presidential candidate, is leaning more and more toward a radio campaign, rather than to take the two big swings around the circle which were suggested to him. Mr, Davis feels he can reach more people by radio than he can by train, His managers, however, are desirous that he should meet the people face to. face so far as possible. They are anxious to “sell” bis per- sonality and while a certain amount of personality will express itself hrough the microphone, {t is not to > compared with personal contact. Mready it has been arranged that Prbsident Coolidge shall do most of his presidentlal campaigning over the radio, ‘The presidential broad casting, however, is not Ikely to cost the Republican national com: mittee very heavily, for Mr. Cool idge will speak most of the time fn connection with some public event which would warrant the broadcast- ing stations in carrying the speech regardless of the campaign. Such an event is that of Friday night, when Mr. Coolidge will speak by radio to a cumpany of Boy Scouts gathered at dinner in New York prior to sailing for Europe on Sun day. It is regarded as peculiarly fitting that Mr, Coolidge should ak to boys of America at this, time when his heart is so full of sorrow attending thé loss of his own younger son. When the president announced he would speak to the boys there was a catch in his voice which told far more than the black ‘ ‘“We women of Paris, city of light, keep our hair always brilliant with A touch of henna in the shampoo’ From a letter written by Mme. La Marquise d’E.: E PARISIAN WOMEN prize as a rite of the toilette, fi the shampoo with a touch of henna, that keeps : our hair alive with light and lustre. “Women of my world—all of us—whether our hair is black _as night, like my own, or blonde as sunlight, like Adrienne’s, must have our touch of henna shampoo to keep at its height the brilliance and lustre of our hair. “Our hairdressers have proved to us that a touch of henna in the shampoo—just a touch, remember—means beauti- ful hair; beautiful black hair for me, beautiful blonde hair for Adrienne. The secret is in how the shampoo is prepared. 50c a bottle at drug stores and pere fume counters. “Your American women of society know all this. But every American woman should know it, if she would show, to her lover or her husband, her hair at its loveliest.” HENNAFOAM SHAMPOO contains just the right touch of henna scien- tifically treated to bring out the full beauty of every woman’s hair. The touch of henna is blended with pure, cleansing vegetable oils that main- tain the health of hair and scalp. For brilliant hair, begin using Hennafoam Shampoo today . TRADE MARK REG HAMPOO “Makes the hair glisten’’ nnafc Oam THE JOHN TRIPENY CO. 241 SOUTH CENTER ~* Drugs and Jewelry THE MIDWEST PHARMACY of the Kimball Drug Stores MIDWEST BLDG. (Two Stores for your convenience) THE CASPER PHARMACY 111 EAST SECOND Drugs and Jewelry ‘THE KIMBALL DRUG ‘STORE 214 SOUTH CENTER (Two Stores for your convenience) Che Casper Daily Cridune : Both of the older parties are going to try to make their campaign finds as popular as possible, but neither side will limit the amount that an individual may give.” Will (Continued from Page One) that Miss Trickey might have been in winning form. Perhaps the superlative “thrill” of Thursday show came when, in the mpionship steer roping, Barton ‘arter’s horse and steer both were “busted.” Carter and horse parted company in mid-atr and the cowboy soared twenty feet before he raised dust in thudding initial impact with earth and sequent bounces. Dazed but game, Carter got-to his feet and recled to the stunned steer but the recuperative ability first functioned and the man was unable to make the hog-tie. ‘There was a flock of, “thrill when Sage Creek, goaded by the spurs of Bob Askins, charged a crowd about a refreshment stand. ‘There was a mad melee of persons intent upon going away from there and for a moment the air was crowd- ed with flying pop-bottles and “hot dogs.” In the ensuing inventory it was revealed that nobody had been burt, that Askins was still forking Sage Crek and that the refreshment stand had ceased to exist. “No time" was the persistent re: frain of the announcer during the steer and calf roping contests. Ben Johnson, defending champion, made the best tie of the afternoon, in 24 4-5 seconds, a performance hardly as remarkable as that of Ike Pude, who completed the tie in 53 seconds after “busting” his annimal four times. The summary: Calf roping—Roy Quick, no time: Louis Jones no time; Cliff King no time; Jonas DeArmon :32; Ben’ John- son no time; Scout Maish no time; Eddie McCarty :35 2-5; Lem Carmen 334; Fred Lowry :26 1-5; Toots Ayres 326 1-5; Herman Roark no time; Perlie Morris :32 4-5; King Merritt :19; Roy Mayes no time; Earl Marsh 386 2-5; Vern Elliott no time; Barton Carter 42; Jobn Judd :30 1-5; Lee Gilford no time; E. L. Herion :31 1-5; Lawton Chample no time; Lee Robinson :25; M. W. Nichols no time; George Chample no time; Jack Col- Mer :56 4-5, Cowboys mile and half relay— Irwin string first, Pruett string sec- ond, Walters string third. Cowboys Flag race—Bob Crosby first, Jimmy Taylor second, Claude Sawyer third. Bulldogging—W®. L, Herion :22 2-5; %. L. Ward no time; Buddy Sterling Soapy Willams Yakima Canutt .12 3-5; Slim Frenden- thall .23 4-5; Shorty Ricker :17 3:5; Johnny Meggart no time; Roy Mayes :46; Harold Neptune :35 1.5; M. I. Butler :29; Pete Schwartz : Don Bronwnell :17 4-5; Johnnie Rob- erts :16; Tom Henderson :17 2-5; Nor- man Cowan :20 3-5. Milk cow race—Fred Lowry first, Dick Merchant second, Shortly Ri- cker third. Cowgirls bucking contest—Mabel Strickland on Good Eye + and on Grumbling Ann (reride); Loretta But: ler on Brown Eagle; Prairie Lily Al- len on Moonlight; Opal Wood on Zip: Marie son on Dapper Dan and on Black Cat (reride); Bobble Newton on Sixty-N'ne Brownlie and on Reckless | Bil (reride), | Cowboys bucking contest—Dave Whyte on Black Diamond: Paddy Ryan on Scorpion; Dutch Foster on Badland Jim; Hugh Strickland on Bear Creek; C .R, Williams on Kid wis; Norman Cowan on Box k; Lee Sepulveda on Old Dad; Oklahome Curley on Irawana; Bob Askins on Sage Creek: Mike Stewart on Sure Fire; Floyd Carroll on Bed Wagon; Jess Coats on Loulsville Lou. Harry Bowles on Big Sandy; Johny Meggart on Nigger Killer; Billy Wilkinson on’ Redskin; RL. Ward on Made in Germany (spiled): Yakima Canut on Strip; Jess Coats ow Yellow Fever (reride); Dave Campbell on Betty Shannon (reride). Roman, Standing . Race—Lorena Trickey first Pruett second, Paddy Ryan third, ‘Cowgirls relay race—Mabel Strick- land first, Lorena Trickey second. onnfe Gray third, ‘eer roping—E. Pardee .39 1-5; Ea rty no time; Ben Johnson’ :24 5; Hervert Myers no time; Chester Byers 1:01 1-5; B. L, Herion :54 3-6: Barton Carter no time; Scout Maish no time; Claude Sawyer :53; Toots Ayres :44 1-5; Buddy Sterling no time; Ike Pude 343 3-5; Cliff King 32; Mabel Strickland, exhibition, 366 2-5. Wila horse race—Reese Lockett first, Harold Neptune second, N. F. Butler third, C. B, Chick fourth, Homar Ward fifth, Paddy Ryan sixth, FINALISTS IN FRONTIER SHOW. CHEYENNE, Wyo., Julz 25 Contestants in the world's champlon- ship finals of the broncho busting and steer roping contests of the frontier days celebration, to be rid- den and roped today, follow: Broncho busting—Lee Sepulveda on Big Sandy; Mike Stuart on Black Diamond, Floyd Carroll on Skiddoo, Harry Bowles on Kid Lewis, Hugh Strickland on I Wanta, Norman Cowan on Redskin, Dutch Foster on Black Thunder, Billy Wilkinson on Box Creek, Bob Askins on Baldy Brown, Yakima Canutte on Bear Creek, C. R. Williams on Yellow: Wyoming Motorway On July 25, we will inaug- urate an efficient passen- ger service between Raw- lins and Casper, leaving Townsend Hotel Bus De- pot at. 2 p.m. daily, TRAGEDIES LAGKING IN THIRD DAY'S EVENTS OF GREAT SHOW Hays attempted to do that tn 1920 and piled up a deficit of something Barred like $2,000,000 before the ballots were cast. In wiping out this deficit, the Republicans cast the Hays rule of $1,000 only to the winds. “WASHINGTON, ‘July . 26.—The Pittsburgh-plus system of determ- ining steel prices {s held by the fed: eral trade commission to not only be an utfair method of competition, but a violation of the Clayton act in that it is a means of price dis- crimination. In an order directing the United States Steel corporation and its sub- sidiaries to abandon the system, by which rolled steel ‘products shipped from various points are quoted at the * Pittsburgh base price plus freight charges from that city to destination, the commission asserts that it is a method of price fixing not founded on the law of*supply ‘and demand. Operation of the system, the com- sion adds, tends to retard the steel businesg.in all centers except Pitts- burgh, to lessen and eliminate com- Petition and to increase costs to con- sumers to an amount that reaches $30,000,000 a year in the case of farmers in eleven western states alone. The corporation and its subs!- daries. are required by the order to Ust the transportation charge sep- arate from the steel price in future quotations, A dissenting opinion, holding that the “law does not require absolute fever, Pat Ryan on Nigger Killer, and David Whyte on Jack Johnson. Steer roping—Lee Robinson, Fred Lowry, Roy Kivett, Jack McCaleb, Ray Bell, Lioyd Saunders, Riley Burgess, Fred Beason, Phil Yoder, Billy Kingham, Claude Arnold, Ben Crosby, Hug’ Strickland, King Merritt and Johnny Judd. an Rich Mineral Strike Made In Dominion Senorita Blanca Loudres, who came to this country with Luis Angel Firpo, didn’t even get a look-in at the United State: Immigration of- Uicials on Ellis Island shipped her out to Havana, Cuba, on the first boat. The girl was supposed to be Firpo's secretary, but examination revealed she didn't know a single shorthand character. a EDMONTON, Alta., July 25.— Iridium, a valuable ‘mineral has been discovered on the upper waters of Peace river by the Canyon Gold Mining company, said a representa- tive of a Edmonton syndicate who returned from the north and filed claims for 10 miles along the river. For results try a Tribune Clas- sified Ad. “FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1924. PITTSBURGH-PLUS SYSTEM IN STEEL TRADE HELD VIOLATION OF CLAYTON ACT IN DECIS freedom of competition’ nor “en- join the observance of sound eco- nomic principles”, was filed by Com- missioner Gaskill. The case which was opened on the commission's initiative, was one of the most vi, orously contested In its history, ai torneys for 32 middle western states and western steel consumers join- ing in the fight for abolition of the system. ——__—_ The first municipal hydro-electric power plant in South Dakota has just been put In operation at White River. Like a bracing breeze —that cup of Hills Bros Coffee IET it to your lips and drink deeply, that steaming, stimulat- ing cup of Hills Bros. Red Can Coffee. Every savory sip is a prod to drooping spirits. and lagging body, the fulfillment of its aromatic promise. Every swallow makes a summer Wyoming Motorway © 1926, Hills Bros. of contentment and explains why. this one brand is the largest-selling in the world—explains the tradition of the West as the home of wonder- *. ful coffee. The Recognized Stand- ard! (That’s what they, call “Red Can.”) The_marvelous flavor of Hills Bros. Coffee ig imprisoned in vac- uum, which keeps it fresh until you break-the seal—days, weeks or years ater! In all the world, no coffee like this nomical to use. Francisco. “Tn the orjeinal Vacuum Pack which keeps the coffee fresh With all its high quality, Hills Bros. Coffee is not high-priced. It is economical to buy—and eco- Hills. Bros., San _ HILLS BROS COFFEE