Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 11, 1925, Page 2

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OQ =] CS | Marmol eR ne a PAGE TWO ' - Rese 2 JR Che Casper Daily Crime By J. B. HANWAY AND E & HANWAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice November 22 1916, second class matter, ‘The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning 3" e zg. Pub es; Tribune twenty-four Tribune every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices; Tribu: Rhea hoe hie state constitu ents throughout the hectic days of the natfonal Democratic con: pur: old mansion near building, opposite postoffice. Business Telephones —. Branch Telephi ng All Departments MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Pre Member of Audit Bureav of Circulation (A. B. O,) Advertising a&epresentatives Prudden, King & Prudden, 172 New York City: Glohe Bldg ¥ Steger Bi Boston, Ma and visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION KATES By Carrler and Outside One Year, Daily and Sunday .. Six Months, Dally and Sunday . Thre fo! ss Dally and Sunday Daily and Sunday ~ Sunday only ... By Mail Inside State One Year, Datly and Sunday .. Siz Months, Dally and Sunday . Three Months, L y and Sunday One Month, Vai and Sunday One Year. Sunday Oniy oe AUI subscriptions musi be y Tribune insure Gelivery after subscription becomes one month tp arrears. KICK, IF YOU DON'T ¢ YOUR TRIBUNE if you don’t find your Tribune after looking caret and it will be delivered to you by special messenger. before & o'clock. Society Some other word than s« pce: as a whole—human beings, We are all members of soci . Society is the union of men and not of men themselves, By his very jature man is gregarious. Unless he is a particularly un- usual type, he always wants some of his own kind near him, Of cour this is true of all nature, Birds fly in flocks, bees in droyes, sheep flock together, and wolyes moye in packs. Nature has instilled in each species a liking for its kind, Seneca’s definition of man as a social animal is inept. All ani nals are social, « Historians hi decided that during the greater part of prehistory, man had no real social life owing to the organic struggle—the material struggle for existence. Then he looked upon all his neighbors with fear and distrust. He guarded his food and was suspicious of any one who dared approach it. If there was a woman in his cave, he watched her, too, Under such circumstances as these there could be no social life. Man depended not upon humanity but upon nature. The berry bush was of more importance than his nearest relative. But nature proved treacherous. There were v beasts who made it unsafe to search in the forests for food, There were other, stron men who stole the food while the owner was gone—and perhaps carried along the woman, too. Thero were forest fires, winds, storms, #nd droughts. To fight enemies such as these strength was needed, And when primitive man discovered that two were twice as strong as one, he saw the at value to himself of joining forces. Thus did society rise out of the oldest human instinct self preservation -\ thousand circumstances have*been moulding and shap- ing society since that time iy the word society means Jinan beings, people,.but it is generally associated in the mind of the multitude with caste, class, position, wealth. Let's get rid of this latter ide Summer Romances Republicans, and many Democrats, are having a period of grinning enjoyment at the latest developments in the Al Smith- William Gibbs MeAdoo controversy for hardly a day passes but what some rabid partisan of either of these aspirants for the Democratic nomination in 1928 does not appear in Wash- ington, temporarily domicile himself at one of the leading hostleries, and modestly (?) give out that he is prepared to receive the press, Whenever such an invitation is accepted by the reporters who have remained in Washington during the summer, the sojourner delivers himself of a lengthy descrip- tion of how his particular condidate is the strongest that the party can present in 1928, and at the same time, pronouncing loudly that if the other candidate should be nominated by the Democrats at their next convention the party will be unal- terably, irretrievably and forever relegated to an oblivion from which it can never emerge. Every now and again men, presumably press agents of the two leading Democratic candidates, drop into Washington, armed with typewriters and vast quantities of white paper, which they spoil for other use by using them for statements us to how either Smith or McAdoo has the Democratic party tanding on its hind legs and loudly yelling for Al or Bill. The sorrowful part of the proceeding, that is from a- newspaper standpoint, is that the majority of these yociferous advocates have nothing new or intelligent to offer. Wave of Prosperity Record-breaking prosperity is revealed by bank statements issued in answer. to a call of the comptroller of the currency for the condition of national iks as of June 80, Kesources, deposits and undivided profits of the ls New York insti- tutions exceed the previous high totals of 1919 and 1920, boom years. In Chicago state and national banks showed combined increases in deposits of $127,000,000, The deposits of the Nat onal City bank of New York, the largest in the country, exceed $900,000,000 for the first t T tal in the statement sub: t Me ( ain of more than The Telegraph View The London ‘Telegraph says editorially that Japan might declare war on America if our “feeler” for the abolition by foreign powers of their extraterritorial rights in China is followed out. “By making this dems * declares the Tele- graph,“The United States will assure at least thrown dow: y be reg dl by Japan as having the gauntlet.” Washington once more, according to the paper, has “betrayed the unwilling ness or inability of the western republic to grasp the larger , cts of Oriental question Herrick Suggests Economy Ambassador Myron T. Herrick will,take oceasion while in Washington to draw to the attention of the department of state economies which could be effected in Paris if the United States owned an office building there. There are eleven diffor ent offices for which a yearly rental of $30,850 is paid, repte- senting 4 per cent on more than $750,000, An office building could be bought for less than this sum besides a saving through all these offices being served by one staff of telephone opera tors, doorkeepers, messengers and other minor employes and heated by one plant. Not Concerned President Coolidge authorizes a denial of a story pub lished in a New York newspaper that he had instructed Seere- tary Mellon to increase the efforts of the coast guard to break up rum running in the vicinity of Swampscott. The president is not concerned over unofficial reports that several rum run- ners are standing off the coast awaiting an opportunity to Jand liquor on the rocky shore near the summer White House. Coast guard officials say there is little if any activity on the t of rum smugglers at this point on the coast, and that president has planned no new action with regard to smuggling, being gatisfied with results so far obtained Who remembers the good old days when the man who didn't wear suspenders wud ehow hard tobacco was regarded effomi { 16 and 16 fs exclusively entitied to the use for publication ot all news credited tp this oaper and also Lhe local news published herein, Bidg., Chicago, M1., 286-Fifth ss., Suite 404 Sharon Bidz. ew Montgomery St. San Francisco, Cat. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on fle in the New York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices aon enn nn 59,00 ay s |") Register complaints r icty is needed to classify that section of humanity usually identified with diamonds, Rolls: titles, fashions and fads, For society means people Who’s Who After serving his state for thirty- vention ha: hased an the Washington home in Mount Vernon and will live there. Hig announce: 9.5.UNDER ment will mean the end of thirty: two years of continuous service in Washington, twenty years as a member of the house and twelve years as a senator. Twice he has been seriously mentioned as a presi- dential candidate. Senator Underwood has been in congress since 1894, when he was elected to the lower bous He was elected senator in 1914. While in the house he was Democratic floor leader for several] years, and later had the same honor in the senate, which he gave up two years ago. He was one of the four American members of the Washington arma- ment conference in 1921. In 1912 he declined the chance to be nominated as the running mate of Woodrow Wilson. Underwood's. retirement is ex pected to cause a hot race for his seat. Former Governor Kilby and Hugo Black, a Birmingham attor- ney, have already been announced as candidates, while several others are regarded as certain to enter, including Breck Musgrove of Jas: per, John H. Bankhead of Jasper, a son of former Senator Bankhead; Judge J. J. Mayfield, Representa- tive W. B. Oliver and Fred M. Jackson, a Birmingham capitalist, a World Topics In @ recent interview John W. Butler, the farmer legislator who introduced the so-called “monkeys law" of Tennessee, gave: his rea- this tends miore than any other one thing, to make a happy home. homes are made sorrowful when th a they are taught that the Bible fs not true; that God did not create man but that man came here by a process of eyolution. They re turn home with their childish pray- ers to God replaced by a discussion on the descent of man from “mon- key and tell their parenta that the Bible is untrue and that science and philosophy have discovered that there is no God. The heartbreak: ings caused among the Eathecs and ate ses others of Tennessee by such ac I ; iispe on the part of their offspring| Cloud.” A special message to all had to be stopped.” two years Senator Oscar Underwood has announced that he wil! not be a candidate for re-election at the expiration of his present term. The man who got Faintly answering still the notes that —>____ C, T. Hodsdon, minister. Pho 1346W. The communton of the Lord's Supper will be observed Sunday COSENTINO sons for intro ducing the bill. He said: n the first place the Bible is the founda: tion upon which our American government {5 built and the teaching of any theory which denies the Bible will, I belleve, destroy the principles which have made our OOHN WBUTLER nation what. It is and for which our soldiers have fought and shed their blood from Bunker Hill to the battlefields of France. “The law is not directed against evolution, which has for {ts object the improvement of plants and ani- mals, but against evolution which denies the Bible story of creation and teaches that man has descend- ed from a lower order animlas and did not come into existence by a creative act of God, as stated in the Bible, “The textbook ‘The Story of Mankind,’ which has been used in the Tennessee schools for more than two years, teaches that man's first manlike ancestor wag ‘half ape and half monkey,’ and that this state was reached by evolution through and disclosed a skeleton to the ter- rified gaze of his playmate. he asked. “It’s nothing but an old skellington.” asked the other, with chattering teeth. it for a long time. I expect it was his first patient, had failed to turn up and a friend from next door was persuaded to fill the gap, Bame, and before long played the king unnecessarily on her oppon- ent’s ace. host, “a king cannot beat un ace.” I thought I'd let it have a try!" boasting about their respective fam- ies, They had passed from’ clothes to personal appearance, then to { terior furnishings, and finally came to parental dignity. The minister's little girl boasted: “Every package that comes for my papa is marked D." “And every package that comes for my father is marked M. D." re torted the doctor's daughter, the jellyfish and different reptiles and other forms of animla life. “Darwin says that man {s an off: shoot of the Old World monkeys and so his theory denies the Bible story that God created man in His own image. The teaching of this theory of evolution breaks the hearts of fathers and mothers who sive their children the advantages of higher education in which they lose their respect for Christianity and become infidels, “The evolutionists against whom the law is directed deny the immor- tality of the soul, the virgin birth of Christ, the resurrection of the body, and that the Bible {s the in- ed Word of God. If we aro to which our government is founded must not be destroyed, which they surely would be if we became a nation of infidels, and we will be me that very thing, a nation of infidels, when we set the Bible aside st untrue and put evolution 4 the law is to uphold ent and Christianity; the law is to attempt to destroy Christianity and to control {ts own schools, ‘ “Tennessee law does not permit the Bible to be taught in its public schools nor does it allow any sys tem of religion to be taught, but the Bible can be read without com- ment, and as the Tennessee law does not permit a doctrine to be taught the purpose of which would be to make Christians, then T main- tain that it is not fair to the peo- ple who pay the taxes to support the schools to be forced to send their children to schools where they will be taught a doctrine which causes them to become infidels and have no respect for Christianity, This, I maintain, is what the teach- ing of evolution does for our chil- dren. “Christians believe that the Bible is the inspried Word of God, They believe that it true, They be Neve that after death their bodies will be resurrected and that they will live again in a beautiful place called henven where there will be eternal peace and joy. T fa their hope and as they journey through Ufe, we see evidences daily of this faith and belief all around us. We go Into the home and see a motto on tho wall, ‘Christ Is the Head of ‘This Mouse’ or something similar; we hear the young mother rocking her infant to sleep to the song ‘Jesus, ‘Lover of My Soul’ and out in the field the father labors at his daily task humming something tke ‘lL Am Bound for the Promised Land,’ each incident an evidence of theip belief and faith in Christians ity, They bring up their children from the youngest of the party. “Hol she exclaimed, “every pack- age that comes to our house {s marked C, O. D." of the lawyer whose usual custom was to charge his clients whatever he could get: Whut will you charge to get him out?” the caller asked. Pective client as one who was not very prosperous, replied: been away from the community for exist as a nation the principles upon |’ tome time, and who had, without | worth League, leader, Miss Mary the home people knowing anything | Wostfall. Duet by Miss Charlotte about it, accumulated @ little money, | Gantz and Mrs, Fred Holland, Jr. & pulled out @ large roll of bills, Pp. m., sermon and praise service. place, bos fled wid no littl Ink he alluw picks out dem ‘spensive | He says he is mighty glad to be at Places," mistreating his wife, yourself?’ Press)—A desire that those con:| beaytiful Luthera: corned with the Scopes evolution] and hear it and ca tion to ettablishS any particular | second time. theory for personal « gratification, But it may be hot. If you are and that we all constantly inquire | afraid of in a belief in God's greatness, and for the eternal truth,” ed by Judge John T. Baulston. well, that never happens when Dr. Che Casper Daily Cribune “But sometimes these happy children grow older and g0 y to school or college where First Congregational Minister, Rev. A, B. Cooke. Chor+ ister, Mrs. Berta Smith. Organist, Mrs, L. L, Langworthy, Morning hip, 11 a. m. in the America tre. Rev. A. EB, Cooke will “The Rainbow in the whose lives are shadowed with dis- appointment or trouble or sorrow, or who aré discouraged for any, re i whatever. A message of cour: Midnight a hry hope, of invigoration and inspiration for all, Come and hear it and live in strength of it all the By THOMAS MOORE. At the mid hour of night, when stars} week, Mrs. Berta Smith and Mrs, are weeping, I fly John Boyd will sing the duet, “Lead To the Jone vale we loved, when life] Us, O Father,” by Galbraith. shone warm in thine eye; Sunday school at 0:45 a. m. if And I think oft, if spirits can steal | sinners’ class at’ same hour in # 4 from the regions of air Y. W. C. A. Nursery at 10:30 to 12:3! To revisit past scenes of delight +c. As thou will come to me there, ear And tell me our love is remember’d First Baptist. even in the sky, Sunday school 9:45 a. m. Morning service 11 Then I sing the wild song it once|a. m, Sermon by Rev. Joe P, Jacobs, was rapture to hear, Wyoming Baptist state secretary. When our yolces commingling | Contralte solo, Mrs. BE. A. Finn, Jr. breathed like one on the ear; | 3, ¥, P. U., 7 p.m. Evening service, And as Echo, far off through the] p, m. Sermon by Rev. Joe. P. Ja- vale my sad orrision rolls, cobs. Music, tenor and soprano duet, I think, O my love! 'tis thy voice] Miss Frances Bowerman and Mr. B, from the Kingdom of Souls A. Flinn, Jr. once were so dear. Winter Memorial Presbyterian, Corner of H and St. John street. morning. The church school meets as usual at. 10 o’clock and the inter- mediate Christian Endeavor at 7 p. m. At 8 o'clock the North Casper Christian congregation join us in another of the union meetings which have been found so helpful for the past four Sunday evenings, The Rev. B. A. Wilkenson will speak. The Unjon Church Vacation school end- ed last Friday night with a pro- gram which was given before a packed house. The boys and girls are already hoping for another school next summer. Mr. and Mrs. Hodsdon start Monday morning for q four weeks’ vacation tour, stopping at Clarksville, Iowa and Superior, Wis., with relatives. Pulpit supplies have been secured and will be announced from week to week in these clumns, “During my absence,” says a phy- siclan, “my two youngsters got into my consulting room, where they be- gan to play at being doctors. Pres- ently one of them unlocked a door “Pooh! What are you ‘fraid of?" Mountain View Community, It the weather man gives us a coo! day Sunday there should be a large attendance at the church in the afternoon at 2:30. If the weather is warm we will have a short meet- ing and give out the literature, In either case, come. “Wh-wh-where did {t come from?” “Oh, I don't know, Papa's had One of the usual four for bridge Trinity Lutheran (Missouri Synod) Corner of South Park and Bast Fourth street. W. C. Rehwaldt, pastor, English services every Sunday at 10:30 a,m. Sunday school at 9:30 a. m. Services (German) at 11:30 a. m, Speaking of evolution ax unaccept- able to a Christian, a popular Lu- theran preacher says: “The hypo: thesis of evolution—what is that?” “A scientific gues ‘Well, but a clentific guess Is a contradiction in itself. Science moans to know by observation or eaperience, Hence, there fs no such thing as a scientific It you know or you guess. A generation from today new guesses will be made, and your cult will keep cn making bad and never arrive at the She had slight knowledge of the ‘But, partner,” exclaimed the “I know that," was the reply, “but A number of little girls were We have had much to say on evo- lution on other occasions. It will not be our topic next Sunday. We do assert emphatically: The fact that so many now take to the woods on Sunday doés not prove that man by slow degrees developed out of apelike ancestors. It does prove the statement of the third chapter of the Bible: “And Adam and his wife hid themselves from the pres- ence, of the Lord God amongst the trees of the garden.” It does prove that the world of sin is very active during the summer time, luring men and women into sin, into spiritual carelessness. Use your automobile to take you to church, nqt awey from church. Serve the Lord with gladness! . Methodist Episcopal, Corner of East Second and South Durbin streets. Rev. Lewis E. Car- ter, D. D,, pastor, 9:30 a, m., prayer. 45 a, m., bible school. Sermon, “The Costliness of Prayer.” Solo, “How Lovely Are Thy Dwellings,” Liddle Miss. Carlotte Gantz. 7 p. m. Then followed a look of contempt An old negro- entered the office “Bos: dey'’s got my boy tn jal, The lawyer, sizing up his pros- “Oh, ten dollar: Thereupon the negro, who had The lawyer saw the bils and| Subject, “A Merry-Go-Round or a Forward March" Solo, selected, Mrs. jail is it where they have| Bera Smith. Monday, 745 p. m., Sunday school board meeting in the “Why, boss, it’s de county jail, | pastor's study. Monday at 8 p. m., dey calls it, up heah on he hill.” a reception will be given ta the pas “Do you mean he {fs in the big | tor and his family by the Ladies’ Aid ith steel bars | society. This, will be a farewell re- suh; dat’s de | family move to Buffalo, N. Y. All members and friends of the church “Oh, well, when I answered your | are invited, Tuesday, 2:30 p. m., the first question, I thought you meant | Woman's Foreign Missionary society they had him in the little wooden | will meet with Mrs. William Holland building down here that they use| 841 South Kimball street. Mrs. Car- as a holdover. If he's in the stone | ter will have cha: Jail, with the barred wihdows, it will |and Mrs. John Tidball will have cont $250 to get him out of that. charge of the program, It will be a of the devotions The old darky slowly counted out | “July Christma party, All women the required amount, the while| of the congregation are invited, muttering: “Dat pestiffous boy cain't be satis. wooden jail “Get That Man.” ems | Yes, Dr, Cromer is home again. home again, There {s no place like Casper, especially when: Casper ie ‘The court had convicted Jones of | your home. Then he is going to preach at Grace Lutheran church, ou anything to say for | corner of Ninth and CY avenue. He said his honor severely. {is going to try to stir up the mem: “It its all the seme to you, your | bera of that thriving mission how “Have honor, don't give me any time off | to grow, get stronger, and more for good behavior," sald the pris} efficient. Come and hear him-- oner, looking m ingly at his wife. | come and worship with ua The sermon will be only a part of the July 10.—(Associated | service. Have you heard the rvice? Come how you wil! ‘divest themselves of all ambl:| like ft, You will surely come the DAYTO! nM stroke, don't come. If you are afraid of going to aleep,— wah expre! streets. Rev. Charles A. Wilson, pas- | Preaching, 11 a. m. ¥. P. 8. meet) tor, Dr, of the Hastings College of Hastings, | Week praper meeting, Wednesday at He generally has mething to say, and then he has a Anyway come, we'll have an usher to watch you and wake you up, It will be too hot to go out riding. The air in the casing will expand The best place on Sunday for everybody is at church. Dr, Cromer is anxious to seé as many of his friends as can get into the church present at 11:00 a. m. and 8 p. m, Sunday gchool in the morning at superintendent, Robert Heinze, will be present with his usual smile and “hell we wouldn't have written all this {f we were not so anxious to have you come. Remember the place, Ninth and Cromer preaches. services and wil} talk to the Broth-| Did you ever hear of an ice erhood class and Mrs. Wils' day school class during thelr recu-| bling to see it burn? Of cour: strong voice. and blow it out, The general clal by juvenile choir, Pierre N. Church of Jesus Christ of Later Services held in Labor Union hall at 340 North Wolcott street. day school at 10:30 a. m, and preach- ing services at 7:30 p. m, is cordially Invited to attend, day school at 9:45 a. m. services (in English) at 11 a. m. Jl-| Carey's visit, August 18. The last Unity Truth Center Zuttermeister Sunday 11 a, m. services, Mrs, Pet- Tuesday, 8'p. m. les Mrs. Sam Service, leader, Friday 2 p. m. Good Words Cla at 8 p. m. Next Sunday will be Mis- erson leader. sion Sunday in our midst. We arelence Soptember 10, in Pueblo. \ sons in truth, appointment with us In May had to be cancelled, will be with us and interpret for us the colossal work of Christian missions. Rey. Burgess has spent several years in study and| Mrs, Emma Sanders, presidents. travel in Europe and Asia. He was in China during the last great fam: | ices. Church of Christ Church of Christ will meet in the auditorium of the city hall on Sun- day afternoon at 3 o'clock. er meeting every Tuesday evening at 7:30 o'clock, St. Anthony's Catholic pastor; the Rev, Father J, F, Mvre- P Mass on Sun- t 7, 8, 9 and 10:30 a.m. Mass 7:30 and 8 o'clock. during the week at * Midwest Heights Community Young people's services, evening at 6:30 o'clock, services, Sunday evening at 7:30, H. BE, Wood, superintendent; the Rev. Hatt!e Lambert, pastor, morning service and In the International Bible Students Meetings on Sunday mornings at 10:30 at 944 South Oak street, Spiritualist Meeting Service each Sunday evening at 743 at the Knights of Pythias hall. Madame Keyes gives messages each Beneay evening, The public is in- Christian Science Christian Science services will be held {7 the church edifice, corner of Grant and Fourth streets, Sunday morning at 11 o'clock, Subject “Sace Testimonial meetings are held on Wednesday evenings at All are welcome to these Sunday school tor child- ren up to the age of 20 years ts held on Sunday at 9:30 a. m, 222 Becklinger where the bible and all authorized h Science literature may be read, purchased or borrowed, !s open each week day from noon until — East Side Mothodist Community. Sunday school 9:45 a. m. 11 o'clock morning service, speaker, E. I, Lyon presiding. ‘The Young People's services 7 Pp. m,. An nouncement of the evening services will be made during the morning. B. Durham Emmanuel Baptist Fifteenth and Poplar streets, J. T, Hanna, pastor, Poplar street. Special prayer service, 9:40 a. m. Sunday school 10 a. m. 11 a.m. ‘Text: Num. 85-12-15, and Heb. 6-17-29, will be observed at the clo morning service. Text: Mark 8-34.35, All members and friends of the church are urged to attend thege Residence 1510 Sermon at 8 p m. First Christian. R. R. Hildebrand, pastor. Church Morning worship 11. Christian Endeavor society 7. Eve- ning services, 8 We have a cool building and will have a hot weather morning. The ser- mon will be short and enthusiastic. Subject: “God's Fools,” service Sunday After the rest we t Spend the Week-End Cool Mountain Cabin At Brookside, on dations for 4, 8 miles from $2.00 per day, Phone 386 or 7F3 Cc. E. LITTLEFIELD ception before the pastor and hik YOUR ESSEX IS HERE NOW AT CASPER FOR $1,025.00 Lexington Cream XXXXX More and Better Ww Ask your grocer for this flour and have better bread Casper Warehouse DISTRIBUTORS 268 Industrial Ave. SATURDAY, JULY 11, 1925 Sunday we are Jooking for all mem- [cordial invitation is extended to aj bers to attend/and help keep Old Man | who are without @ churcl home to Slump on the run, The Tau Gamma | worship with us. P Gamma play “At the End of the Rainbow," will be given early next First Church of the Nazarene, month, -] Corner of Twelfth and Poplar stre Rev. C, L. Johnson, pastor, First Presbyterian, Phone 369M, Sunrise prayer meeting Corner and Sixth and Durbin|7 a m. Sunday school, Sa. m ‘alvin H. French, president | 8:30 p. m. Preaching, 7:20-p. m, Mia. Neb., will preach during the morning | 7:39 p.m. ~ 's Sun-10n fire and a large crowd lar time. Sunday school at 1945,|*ut you have seen fires in other Morning services at 11 o'clock, There | Places and crowds gathering to ss will be no evening services. it. Alright then step on the starter, and keep going untill you arrive af Kenwood Twelfth and Poplar and see ths Sunday school, 10 a, m. Morning | Church that's on fire from the bare. worship with sermon, 11 a, m. ment to the roof with God's. Holy Spirit and old time religion. No mov. Mills ernism ‘n our creed, Good music and Sunday school 10 a. m, Evening | excellent singing. A hearty welcoms worship with sermon, 8 p. m. S,e: | at the door. Grace African Methodist “The Friendly Church." 306 North St. Mark's. Grant street. Rev. T. J. Burwell, Seventh and Wolcott streets, Rev. | minister. Sunday school at 10 o'cjo Philip K. Edwards, rector, Sermon and‘worship at 11, Byer Holy communion 8:00 a, m. services at § o'clock. Subject of Chureh school at 9:45 a. m. moo, "A Twilight Meditation,” th Morning prayer and sermon \at| sic by the choir. There are certain 11:00 a, m. seasons and times which make thé soul more susceptible to God's ca Scandinavian Lutheran. than do othe: This sermon will Corner of South Jefferson and Bast | deal with some of such times. Choir Sixth, Elmer M. Berg, pastor, Sun-| rehearsal Friday at §:30, Dollar Morning | Money’ Day, August 2, Bishop Fredin, minister. lustrated lecture service (in English) | regular service for the conferencs year, September 6. Annual confer. happy to announce that Rey, A. S, series cf entertainments are being Burgess of St. Paul, Minn,, whose | given so as to complete our financia{ report for the ygar. The one on lait Friday-evening was under the aus: pices of the Stewardesses and Stew- ards’ Ald, Mrs. Frances Broadus, and You are always welcome to our sery- Ine, In the service of the Lutheran mission In the province of Honan, Returning to America, he completed his course in theology at Luther seminary in St. Paul, Next Novem: Father Deeds bev be will return to China to take ‘é up his work as a missionary. Rev, Burgess has a happy faculty for Fine Estate bringing hix hearers with him into the scenes and experiences which he portrays and speaks with a clearness To John D. Jr. and warmth which only personal ob- servation and heart interest can give. He will preach the sermon at the WHITE PLAINS, N. ¥., July 11. ning, | —(By The ociated Presa)—John under the auspices of the You D, Rockefeller today deeded to his People's Luther League, he will give} son, John D, Rockefeller Jr., his a lecture on China, beautifully f{llus-| estate at Tarrytown, his home for trated with views taken by him on| many years and valued at $1,733,- his travels. We bespeak for him a] 500, The deed was filed with the full attendance at beth servic A} West Chester County registrar. THE RAINBOW IN THE CLOUD Rev. A. E. COOKE will preach on above subject tomorrow at 11 A. M. in First Congregational Church (AMERICA THEATER) Are you in trouble? Are you living under a loud of disep- Poa eae or misunderstanding? Has sorrow darkened. your ife? Or hardship and poverty made it a misery? Do you feel like giving up the struggle? Is there no silver lining to ther cloud above you? If so, come and hear this message. It will scatter the gloom, and give you fresh courage and hope. It will invigorate and inspire you to new and better. things, It will give you a fresh grip on life and love and God. Come and Worship With Us—A Cordial Welcome Awaits You FOR RENT Entire upper floor Scott Clothing Co. build- ing. Room is 25x70. INQUIRE SCHULTE HARDWARE CO. CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 920 A M FARE—313.50 Saves you approximately 13 bour® travel between Casper end Rawiins WYOMING MOTORWAY. Sait Creek Transportation Company's Office TOWNSEND HOTEL PHONE 144 TRAIN SCHEDULES %& CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN # | Westbound Arri Departs | No. 608 .. wat eenne--1:30 p.m. 1:50 p.m. Eastboun: Departs NO, 622 222. pecewecccnnnwecene 5145 p.m. 6:00 p. m. CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY Eastbound Arrives Departs No. 82 - _— 4:00 p,m. -=-~~8:10 p,m, 8:35 p.m. Departs 7 ~6:50 a. m. 7:10 p.m. ; ~-9:565 p,m. The UNION Label Can be used by the following firms, who employ none but Union Brintere: 66 A’ q 1, The Casper Daily ‘Tribune. 2. Ol) City Printers, 8, The Casper Herald &: The Commercial Pristing Co. » The Commercia! ntin; Let Casper Printe: a nery Print for Gasper 8 Bacestuees a, @ Sut “6 THE TRADEMARK OF GOOD WORKMANSHIP

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