Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 12, 1925, Page 2

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Li Oe sce@rersagiss a a n h v * e — Domai =" yet a 4 _ PAGE TWO. EGLIPSE OF SUNLATTER PART -OF JANUARY RARE PHENOMENA Eclipse Will Be Total Over Greater Part of United States When Moon Passes Between Ea urth of January pads and drive ay, for that t can Nature As. 1 occur in the er see ugain—a total eclipse in'some places and a par- the part of greater long and flung ensota across Michigan, y York, Long Rhode Is anin New you will blotted out on January 24. Those this path across the ath that ends at sun. north of Scotland— the sun shadowed in part, ng how near belt ASSAC ng of sun ne to this the twent on fourth day oon will 5 nd the sun, throw- nadow on our sphere. It is total eclipse of the sun to visible In this section of the coun- No other ke place in the more than a cen- partial eclipse is sual occurance tn: one lo- ut t is not ev generation the moon smudging out of the ss be- On new year t tween the e: e be total in Du ith, Buffalo, New York City, New Haven and many other large cities n this part of the country. The lal eclipse will be very large, nearly total, in some of the largest United States, includ- Boston, Providence, Albany, adelphia, Baltimore, Washington en as far south ans and as far west as A 4 Omaha, the partial eclipse will be large. From Lake Erle Eastward In most of the central states the sun will rise more or less eclipsed, Ities {n t ing but from Lake Erie eastward, all of the pse will take place after 6 sun has risen The total eclipse in New York City will take place about 9.10 A. M, and the time of the greatest eclipse for most of the cities in the east that keep Stan¢ ‘d time will vary but a few, rpinutea from this time. , The partial eclipse will begin about eight o'clock in the same tion and the eclipse will be o about half-past ten When the eclipse becomes total, the brighter stars and planets’ ap- pear and also the beautiful solar or nm that the astronomer is so anxious to study. This is a mag- nificent halo of pearly ligh extend- ng to a great distance from the sun and different in shape and apepar. ance at ev eclipse. It {s never visible except during a total solar eclipse and can be studied only at tk time because its light is so SPORT sult should be snappy Z and here is one that absolutely fills the bill, It is of black gray and yellow flannel trimmed with plain yellow material and a row of white butfons on a black background. Por a youthful, slender figure, noth- ing could be more attractive, PISO’S ‘forCcoughs Quick Relief! A pleasant effective syrup. And externally, use PISO'S Throat and Chest Salve, 35¢ t you will prob- | a belt 100 miles | | trogen rth and Sun. | faint that the glare of sunlight in the daytime hides it from view. It |4s only when the moon obligingly comes between the sun and earth and shuts out the light of the sun that the corona ehines forth in all {ts wonderful beauty. All those who find “themselves within the path of the total eclipse should look out for the shadowy bands, wavy bands of light and shade that flit over the landscape d buildings just before and after e total eclipse. Also, they should look out for the interesting nomenon known as “Bailey's * which are seen as the thin thread-like r crescent breaks up into beads of light as the total eclipse is about to begin, and which are Seen’again just as it ends. Look also for the scarlet solar prominence during the total eclipse | which are flames of glowing gases | of hydrogen and hel{um rising from | the hidden surface of the moon to | heights of thousands of miles and | visible beyond the edge of the moon in queer forms afd shapes. The brighter stars and planets ap- pear during the total eclipse, and even a little before and after it. The three planets, Venus, Mercury and Jupiter, should be seen in a close group some distance to the south- west of the sun. But above all else do not fail to make the most of your opportunities to observe the wonder- ful and mysterious corona which can never be seen except when the sun is totally eclipsed and which very few people ever have the good fortune to see. Although the event of this one day dwarfe all others by comparison in the January skies, in midwinter and evening skies are at the best. There are more brilliant stars “in view than at any other time of the year. New Undersea Use Found for Helium Aaron Sapiro, Chicago lawyer, hu nade a formal demand that Henr ‘ord’s Dearborn Independent retra: tatements alleged to have been 11 nded to show a conspiracy by Inte ational Jews to exploit America griculture. Sapiro has threaten file sult for $1,000,000 damac suinst Henry Ford and others co aected with the Independent if th retraction is not forthcoming FIGHT TO DEATH N IN CHICAGO WITH CITY RATS $10,000 Appropriation To Wipe Out Swarms Of Rodents. WASHINGTON, Jan. 12.—United Press}—Hellum gas which hereto- fore has been used exclusively “up in the air’ to inflate airships, may soon be put to work underground and down deep in the seas. Out of experiments now being con- ducted by scientists in various unt- yersities throughout the country, navy department experts believe, the noninflammable gas may jn the fu- ture also be employed tolessen the burdens of deep-sea divers and tun- nel workers. Some scientists, according to Capt. E. S. Land, technical expert, already believe hellum, mixed with oxygen, can be substituted for nit- rogen in deep-sea diving and tunnel construction and prevent under- ground and underwater workers from contracting ‘the bends.’ “The bends” is a frequently fatal disease which overcomes divers and “sand-hogs"’ after laboring below the surface under great pressure. “In deep-sea diving, when a man goes down a great depth.” sald Land “the nitrogen gets into his blood and gives him ‘the ben You have got to. compress him and recompress him as he comes up and goes down. By the use of helium in the place of ni in the air, some scientists claim the bends are eliminated. so hellum may have a practical applica- tion for deep-sea diving. It is very Promising also in tunnels like the Hudson River and places of that kind where men are working under enormous pressure.” Land described hellum as an ‘in- ert’ gas. That means, he explained that it is colorless, tasteless, odor- less, and will not burn. It is not combustible In anyway and will not explode no matter how {t is mixed. It has no effect on the human system and is as safe to breathe as nitro. gen MEANS TRIAL “STARTS TODAY NEW YORK, Jan. 12—A judge picked jury will hear the testimony jat the trial of Gaston B. Means, | former department of justice agent, }and his one-time attorney, Thomas B. Felder, on charges of conspiracy | to obstruct justice, The trial began today after many | delays, with Means in court as the result of a bench warrant served on him in his Concord, N. C., home when he pleaded he was too ill to Appear in court. Federal Judge | Walter E, Lindley of Danville, Tl. refused to permit the defendant's attorney to question prcapective jurors, undertaking the task him: elf, At the request of Felder's at torneys, he asked the talesmen con- cerning their attitude toward the Ku Klux Klan It was sald that the star govern: ment witness would be Means’ for. secretary, Elmer W. Jarnecke, & codefendant, who pleaded gullty a week ago. The three were charged with having accepted $65,000 from members of the Crager System, a stock selling organization on the | representation that they would bribe former Attorney General Daugherty and other government | officials to prevent their prosecution | fer alleged stock frauds WASHIN 12,-—-The | house irrigation committee after an executive session today carried over another meeting further consid: eration of the Johnson-Swing bill proposing governmental construc: the Colorado river, By 0. L. SCOTT. (Copyright, 1925, Consolidated Press Association.) CHICAGO, Jan. 12,—Surprised by the offensive viclousness of Chi- cago's rats, the city board of health is looking for a pled piper to Jead to their destruction the swarms of these disease-carrying rodents which are infesting certain sections of the city in unprecedented numbers. Every man, woman and chitd in Chicago has his rat, Dr, Herman Bundeson advises. Three million of the creatures are crowded into the city, the greater number of them what probably is the greatest rat Paradise in all the world—the South Water street produce market dis- trict. And here a fight to the death Against the rat population is being waged. It started when workmen, wrecking the buildings of the old street to make way for a double decked boulevard, laid down their tools and refused to face the vicious creatures. They were admittedly afraid of the huge rats which swarmed over the place. “The provisjon markets along South Water street have long sup- plied the best table de hote dinners for rats and down under the com- mission houses dozens of genera- tions of the creatures have enjoyed a veritable paradise,” Dr. Bundeson said, ‘They grow as big as cats; huge, sleek, black fellows, as fat as a corn-fed steer,” To hear those who have been em ployéd by the city to fight these animals, it is no wonder the work men were afraid of them: ‘The i¢ vasion of the huge clty is one fight afte her, with the rats coming out best but only after op position from the big fellows that gives the creeps to ordinary mortals But the professional rat killers with their poisons and thelr gases are getting the better of the crit who either are dying or scurry ng t new 58 f th eity Thousands are being killed’ each | night, in order to put an end the terrorism which the cr have inspired in the sectio In which the workmen are employed. “The city has appropriated $10,000 to be used in attacking three million rats," Dr. Bundeson sald, “Los Angeles, after the pneumonic plague of last fall, brought on by rats acting as disease carriers, ap- ‘opriated « quarter of a million dol; to used in exterminating ts. The problem there ds nothing lke that in Chicago." Nrese In fact, as the rat killers ply their trade around Water street, rome of the better rosidence sections of the city are complaining that huge rodents are commencing to put in appearance, The more intel- lgent of the millions are migrating, leaving the wreekers of the old pro duce market more to themselves, Dr. Bundeson, who sees rats as a health menace, is proposing a rat extermination week for Chicago and for the country, to get rid once and for all, of the pests. A modern Pied Piper is wanted to lead the crusade biretlee tal Wallace Estate Is Valuable One DES MOI debts of approximately $126,000, ac the administrator filed in state inheritance tax law. ——— Safety razor bindes bring to one tion of a dam at Boulder Canyon, in well known American firm a profit of over $5,000,000 a year. YES, Ya, Jan, 12.—The late Henry C. Wallace, secretary of agriculture, left an estate valued at $166,490.96, plus $49,610.70 in life insurance, with obligations and cording to the preliminary report of district court today in compliance with the Local Rotarians were told- today of the wonderful part America had played in’ administering “relfef to sufferers in tha Near East by Dr. Jaco’ David, a native of Persia, who is touring this country in the interest of Near East Relief. Dr. David told of the wonderful influ- ence America has on the people of those suffering nations and of the great work that is being accomplish- ed in the American schools in opera- tion over there. He drew some vivid word pictures of the atrocities of the Turks, leaving thousands of orphans and widows. Che Casvet Daily Cribune PERSIAN NEAR EAST RELIEF - WORKER GUEST OF ROTARIANS Colonel Scott of San Francisco, who is here in connection with the dedication of ‘the new” Salvation Army home on North Wolcott street, paid q splendid tribute to the work of International Rotary, YP. C. Nicolaysen, president of Ro- tary, voiced the appreciation of the club for the work of H. Roe Bartle during his residence here as head of the Boy Scout organization. Mr, Bartle has always been an active helper in the Rotary chub -here, be- ing song» leader and in charge of much of the entertainment. SWEET REPORTS ON CLEMENCIES DENVER, Colo., Jan. 12.—Gover- nor Sweet today made His official report on his use of executive clem- ency to the twenty-fifth general as sembly, + In giving an account of his stew: ardship, the governor declared that a total of 133 persons had received clemency at his hands. Of this number recelved pardons, three were granted reprieves and the re- mainder were either paroled or were given commutation of senten Reasons given for his various were widely varied. ee NE EE HORSE MEAT TRADE LARGE LONDON, Jan. 12.—{United Press) —A luge and profitable export trade in horse meat for human consump- tion has been developed here since the war. At present an average of more than 1,000,000 pounds of horse meat Is being shipped from London to france and Belgium every month. Smaller quantities are sent to Hol- land and other European countries. The demand exceeds the supply. Every worn out, but undiseased horse in England-is eyed enviously, so to speak, -by continental butchers, and, as a result, the French price, which has averaged about one franc per pound, is increasing. The English: society for the Pre- vention of Cruelty to Animals is re- sponsible indirectly, for building up this and important business. acts new Before the war, and -several years thereafter, broken down English horses .were usually sold, alive, to French and other, Huropean buyers. They Were shipped, across the chan- nel_and gither, slaughtered at once and sold as steak, or worked for a while longer in France before being butchered The 8. P. C. A. protested on two counts. First, that if the horse was unfit to work longer in England, he should not be worked anywhere else. Second, that the French slaughter houses for horses did not use sufficiently humane methods. For these reasons the society forced a great decreaso in the export of »ken-down live horses. There was nothing left for the dealers to do except slaughter them in England and export the carcasses. This bus!- ness has become much larger than the live horse meat trade ever was. Several special ‘slaughter houses for hors have been built in London, They are supervised by representa- tives of the S. P. C. A. and the meat is inspected by government of- to with the F strict compliance ards. No cold storage process Js used with horse meat. ‘The flesh de- teriorat very rapidly. So the least possible time must intervene between slaughtering a horse in London and eating him in Parts. ach night about 10 o'clock agencies n Paris telegraph London the esti- mated quantity of horse méat ‘Paris n consume the next day. Between 11 at night and three in the morn- ng, the London abbatoirs slaughter enough horses to yield the amount of meat Paris is estimated. By day- light that meat is on its way to France, .by laty afternoon tt Is In P butcher shops and for dinner it on the table. To School .— Madame Columbo Arata, 37, Italian soprano, mother of six Children, is learning to read and write English In the Bishop School at Detroit Mich, Her classmates are six-year old children, , REFORM BILL STIRS ITALY ROME, Jan. 12.—(By The Asso- ciated Press)—An alr of suppressed excitement and expectation pervad- ed Rome today with the reassemb- ling of parliament for consideration of Premier Mussolini's electcral re- form bill. The premier this morning presided over a counell of ministers to decide on a plan of Campaign for the parli- amentary session starting in the afternoon. In the evening he is to preside over the grand fascist counefl {in the hall of fhe consistory of the Pal azzo Venezia. ‘This meeting ts to lay down rules for upholding and applying fascist principles in the light of the present political strug- gle. Although disorders were expected the government took precausions. The police and Carabineers centered their forces at strategic points and increased the guards around the of: fices of the opposition newspapers to prevent violence by extremist fascist! ROME, Jan, 12. (By the Associat- ed Press).—So peacefully did the chamber of deputies resume its se- Sessions today that the event came as an anttl-climax. The galleries were crowded in anticipation of great excitement. Instead the sit- ting proceeded with the greatest calm. BOEHM HELO ON PERJURY COUNT DENVER, Colo., Jan, 12.—Kelth Boehm, who caused the arrest. of Dr. John Galen Locke, grand dragon of the Colorado rvalm of the Ku Klux Klan on charges of kidnaping and conspiracy in connection with his alleged forced marriage to Miss Mae Nash last’ Tuesday night, sur: rendered today to answer perjury charges filed against him, Charges against Boehm are based on his procuring of a marriage cer- tifleate a year ago. At that time, it is charged, he swore falsely that he was 21 years of age, when he was issued a certificate to marry Miss Mae Nash. Boehm appeared voluntarily and was released on $400 bond after being bound over to the West Side criminal court. While Boehm was giving bond, William Pritt's, retired South Den- ver banker, for whom a warrant was sworn out on Boehm’s com- plaint, surréfdered to authorities of the juvenile court. He was released on bond of $1,000. C. A. Kirkling wanted on a sim. ilar warrant, notified authorities that he would give himself up dur- ing the day. Theodore Boehm, father of Young Boehm, waived preliminary exami nation of his son on the perjury charge and asked that the latter be bound over to the West Side crimi nal court for trial Hunter’s Death Is Thought Accident SEATTLE, Wash., Jan. 12.—The body of Edwin R. Ingersoll, a prom: inent Seattle business man, was found yesterday on the porch of the Teal Gun club's club house near Mount Vernon, Washington. Near the body lay the shotgun with which Ingersoll had been hunting. Cor- oner Henry Durhom of Skagit coun ty, after an investigation, said In- gersoll had probably slipped on the ice and in falling accidentally dis- charged the gun. The body was found by Robert Pike, keeper of the club, who, while chopping wood two hundred yards away, heard the report of a gun at the club house, and immediately in- vestigated. Ingersoll had gone to the club Saturday with A. H. Har rison, also a Seattle business man, for a hunt. ie LATE FLASHES WASHINGTO® ' Interstate Comin¢ commission today reaffirmed a decision issued in 1923 forbidding railroads giving special car supplies to bituminous coal mines which furnish rallroad fuel. March 1 was fixed as the effective date of the decision, Commissioners Potter, Hall Cox dissented. Mine operators charged that tho Practice constituted a discrimina- tion, while the railroads argued that even in times of shortage of coal carrying equipment the need for fuel to inaintain transportation was paramount. 12. The and LONDON, Jan. 12.—Burning of the premises of a Catholic newspa- per and other alleged fascist excess. at Plea, Italy, have drawn a vio- lent protest from the ‘clergy, ac cording to a Rome dispatch to the Datly Telegraph. | was 101 degr After. climbing an embankment six feet high and running 15 feet across the lawn this ‘flivver™ made a des- berate effort to climb on over a house at Vincennes, Ind The car was stopped with its front wheels in the air and the driver. intoxicated. was taken to the state farm to sober up ~* MYSTERY GIRL IS IDENTIFIED CHICAGO, Jan. three days spent in the Cook county hospital, her apparently lost, “Charlotte Norris,” the mys tery girl of Chicago, yesterday was identified by relatives as Charlotte Maguire, a student in a St. Louis college. Miss Maguire was identified by Mrs. Annie Griffith, an aunt. The 20-year-old student was re- turned home last night to her mother, Service Said Main Factor in Schools ITHICA, N. ¥., Jan. 12.—Service, rather than brains, should be the de- ciding factor in determining admis- sion to colleges, Dr. Frank P, Grave, state commissioner of education de- clared today in an address prepared for delivery at exercises in observ- ance of founders day at Cornell unt- versit “Were the universities to devote themselves to rearing Leopolds and Loebs as the yellow press of late has seemed to’ imply they are doing the sooner they were swept out of existence the better it would be for the world” he said. INDIANA HAS NEW GOVERNOR INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Jan. 12.— Ed Jackson, Republican, became In- thirty first governor today redited with having had the solid sipport of the Ku Klux Klan in the primary and in the elec- tion. The klan issue, however, was not brought up by him in any of lis campaign speeches, in all of which he declared he favored relig- fous and civil liberty for every cit- izen regardless of color, race or creed, Fish Living In Hot Water Found In Far Arabia LONDON, Jan, 12.(United Press)— Haunted ruins, singing sands, and fish that live in hot water have been discovered by British explorers in the Arabian deserts of Jafura and Jabrin. Major Just ret R. E. Cheesman, who has rned from an Arabian tour claims to have. been the first Euro- pean tre r to tread this waste. less area, With a party of assist- ants and cames he joined the Al Murra, an Ikhwan tribe that roams the desert Reporting his discoveries to the Royal Geographical society, Major Cheesman said Jabrin, which has long been yelled in mystery, was found to be a depression, with date palms and ruined castles repated to be haunted by spirits. The desert Was encroaching on all sides and the oasis wells were drying up, Major Cheesman mapped the Jaf- ura desert, a vast tract of moving sand dunes, along its western side. He brought back with him speci- mens of f ht in a hot spring at Hafuf, the temperature of which elt xhibits were Among photog his other graphs of a ruined town which he discovered on the coast at Oqair, supposed to be the site of the an- cient Phoenician port of Gerra, It was near this place that he encoun tered fhe phenomon of singing sands on a beach where each footstep brought forth a mysterious piping whist Major Cheesmans object was to n n of desert animals birds from central Arabla, and an he found nine species and olght subspecies which are sald to be new to scienc Dur his trip he was the guest of Tbn Saud, the Wahabi Sultan of Najd a Jan, 12 (By the Assoclat- Fire which broke out to- historic Palazzo Rospig- in which American Ambassa- dor Fletcher Hives, was extinguish- ed after several hours work, the flames having been confined to the Mbrary of Prince Gullio Rorpigliost. The ambassador and his family, who cupied another part of the palace were not endangered, * MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1925 PRIMARY BILL | A Smart UP IN IDAHO BOISE, Idaho, Jan. 12.—A state- wide direct primary bill was intro-| duced in the lower house of the eighteenth Idaho legislature at t day’s session. The bill is sponsor by Democrats in keeping with pledge made at the state convention of. the party last year. It is iden- tical with the measure introduced by Democrats and which faled in the seventeenth legislature two years ago. The house was the scene of excite- ment during a vote on a measure to ereate # reference clerk whcse duty it would be to scan all bills to see that they conformed to aij] rules us- ually observed in drafting measures The measure lost 31 to 30, The senate was inactive today. Market Gossip Phillips Pet. 1924 net before de preciation and dep-etion estimated at between $14,000.00 and $15,000,- 000. Federal ofl conservation board has rent letter to officials cf leading oil companies asking them to submit their views of methods which could be employed in I ns uction and stabilization of industry Total production of oil in the Unit: ed States for 1024 710,463,300 barrels; decrease of from 1923, according to Oil Weekly. Humble Oi company completed well number 3 B Poindexter with 4,500 bar initial production, and Number 3 #. D. Crouch estimated at 5,000 barrels daily. Production of Wortham pool Saturday is estimated at 150,000 barrels, increase of 15,000 over Friday. Midwest Refining now pumping 700 wells in Salt Creek field as a result of recent competion of first unit of big power plant. Northern Ontario (Canada) mines are producing at a rate $25,000,000 a yei gold of London Girl Has Records Beaten For Terms in Jail LONDON, Jan. 12. (United Press) —it ever a Victor Hugo wants a character to out-Valjean, the hero of ‘Les Miserables,” let Elsie Andrews be paged. Life, to Else, means just police courts and prisons, She scarce'y walks out of one before she steps into the other, Only 26 old, she has a record of 88 convictions for violation of the law. Jail is so nice and quiet that Elsie is nervous when she's outside—the fall of a leaf or the flutter of a bird—sounds to her like the tread of a _ police. man. And yet— The other day when a big Lon- don bobby arrested her for loitering, Elsie thought the law was going a bit too far. She broke a plateglass | window before reaching the polic station and another plate glass win- dow when she got there. After that, she contented herself with biting a policeman. The judge sentenced her to six months’ hard labor, and detailed the strongest man in the Aldershot po lee to take her to the Winchester jail. TRAINS CRASH IN DENSE FOS PARIS, Jan. 12.—Three rear end collisions occurred in Paris railroad yards today during one of the heav- fest fogs France has ever exper- fenced, extending in a broad strip from Calias to Pau, with Paris in cluded: in the wide territory covered Nine persons were slightly hurt in one of the collisions, and in all three tracks were torn up, causing inter. ruption of traffic. In the streets of Paris traffic pro- ceeded at a crawl with many jams. alt as LYNCHBURG, Va., Jan. 12.—Wal. | ter E. Addison, editor of the Lynch: | burg News, died today | Daniel Guegenheim tor many years & leader in the copper industry, 4 ‘ ~ reported as seriously {1 | Wrap — N extremely smart wrap fot early spring is this short jacket of printed silk boand with nar: row/ bands of fur. The silk is in shades of brown and tan and fs lined with cloth of gold. The straight cut demands that jt be worn with a frock of equally straight line, BRIBE TRIAL SET FORWARD NEW Yc J -Having hurried h Yr to avoid forfeiting Edward J Butler, pres dent of the Peter Brett company of Elizabeth, N. J.,. was informed when he appeared before Federal Judge Winslow today for trial on indictments charging brib- ery of government agents, that his case had been adjourned to Jan uary 19. Maxwell Mattuck, ass! ant United States district attorne; apparently had not read his mor: ing er, for he announced when court opened that the “defendant was absent from the jurisdiction.” “Oh, no, he isn't,” said Butler's attorney, ‘He's here, ready for trial.” Nevertheless, at the request of the prosecution, the case was sét forward. ; YY Candy Man Will Put in New Line w. Lappe, representing the Sweet Candy company of Salt Lake city, is in Casper this week ca‘ling on the trade preliminary to the in- troductign of a new confection in this city that promises to create a mild sensation here. The Sweet Candy company is one of the lead- ing candy manufacturers of © the west and its products are already big sellers in this city. Mr. Lappe says that his company: aying preparations for one of biggest years in Its history, ‘w territory is being added each r until now the Sweet Candy company’s candy is being eaten by people in a very large area, pe hs laid Deas WASHINGTON, Jan. © 12.—The United States supreme court today refused grant appeals to Dyer up for decision, the following queda tion: “Does the action of state courts in appointing a receiver “to take charge of a state bank constitute an act of bankruptcy under federal statutes as raised by John Demos and others in the case against Chris- tion and Peter Yegen, who conduct- ed banks at Butte, Billings and Gardner, Montana. Recetas aS SPRINGFIELD, ll, Jan. 12. — Len Small becamé the governor of Illinois for the second time today. when he took the oath of offic The First and Original Cold and Grip Tablet Proven Safe for more than a Quarter of a Century as 5, G d - ENZA. and as a Preventive> The box bears this signature C.Ukbore Price 30¢, CASPER TO RA CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 9:30 A Salt Creek ‘Transportat: TOWNSEND HOTEL Saves you approximately 12 hours’ travel between Casper and Rawlins \ WYOMING MOTORWAY WLINS STAGE M FARE—$12.50 fon Company's Office PHO, 144

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