Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 18, 1925, Page 2

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PAGE TWO The Caspet Daily Cribune Che Casper Daily Tria By J. EB. HANWAY AND BE. B. HANWAY Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class matter November 1916. The Casper Daily Tribune issued every evening and The Sunday Morning Tribune every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices, Tribune Building, opposite postoftice. weoceweoeel5 and 16 ‘omnecting All Departments, MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited in paper and also the local news published herein, Business Telephones Branch Telephone Exchange C Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B. C.) Advertising Representatives Prudden, Chicago, Il; 286 Fifth Suite 404 Sharon Bldg., ily Tribune Prudden, King ¢ Ave. New York ¢ 55 New Montgome are on file in the tors are wel SUBSCRIPTION RAT By Carrier and Outside State One Year, D Six months, [ Three Mor One Montk Six Months, Dall Three Months One } One Year, § ° sbscriptions must be pald 1 insure delivery after subscription 6 one month in arrears. KICK, IF YOU DON'T GET YOUR TRIBUNE ss ue carefully for {t call 18 or 16 and i ered to y essenger. Rogister complaints Feelings’’—Your’s and Mine Does your life mean anything? Wherever a process of life communicates an eagerness to him who lives it, there the life becomes genuinely significant. Sometimes the eagerness is more knit up with the motor activities, sometimes with the perceptions, sometimes with the im nation, sometimes with reflective thought. But wherever it is found, there is the zest, the tingle, the excitement of reality, and there is “importance” in the only real and postive sense in which importance ever anywhere n be We are all dominated by our “feelings.” It is well-known that our judgments concerning the worth of things, big or little, depend upon the feelings the things arouse in us. Where we judge a thing to be precious in consequence of idea we frame of it, this is only because the idea is itself associated already with a if we were radically feeli things our mind could ente feeling. Psychologists tell us that id if ideas were the only we should lose all our likes and dislikes at a stroke, and be ‘le to point to any one situation or experience in life more valuable or significant than ¢ others We are practical beings, each of us with limited func- tions and duties to perform. Each is bound to feel intensely the importance of his own duties and the significance of the situations these call forth. But this feeling is in each of us a vital secret, for sym; pathy with which we vainly look to others. The others are too much absorbed in their own vital se- crets to take an interest in ours, Hence the stupidity and in, justice of our opinions far as they deal with alien lives. And hence the falsity of our judgments, so far as they pre- sume to decide in an absolute way on the value of other per- sons’ conditions or ideals. Do not be too hasty or conclusive, in your opinions of other men’s motives—you cannot know all their feelings. The Sacred Relation Several months ago, when the statement was made that the Soviet officials of Russia cared naught for the marriage relations, certain members of the radical press throughout the country questioned the accuracy of the statements made but now comes a cable from Moscow which states that common law marriages are legal and binding. A Moscow, (Soviet Rus- sia) decree just issued says that men and women are not com: pelled to go through civil or religious ma riage ceremonies. Under the Soviet laws which some, but very few, of our citi ens think advantageous, all a man and woman need to do is to go and live together; when they get tired they can go their se] rate ways, What becomes of the children or any property, if by any chance property is accumulated is a matter that does not ap r to concern the bolsheviks in the slightest. In fact, property rights, if existent at all, are so minute as to really be of such » character as not worth bothering with. The offspring would have indifferent, if at all, soviet legal pro- tection; yet there are people in this wonderful country of ours who are cither vicious or silly enough to want our citizens to live under this form of socialism, communism, bolshevism, name one s the p the first desires to 1 it, Fortunately for the e of our nation believe in decency. They right of the child is to live, to have urroundings, to er the manifold advantages ir nation offers, they believe in these things rather than ht legal protec Know How It Is Themselves yple of th country have had considerable exper e concerning the dumping of foreign products on to our markets in anticipation of the enactment of a new tariff Jaw nereasing some of the rates of duty, Now the British Know how it is themselves. Heretofore they have been “on the other de of the fence.” They have been the “dumpers,” but now they know what it is to be the “dumpees.” Prior to the going into effect the reenacted MeKenna duties and the safeguarding of industries laws, on July Ist, foreign nations flooded t British market with such wares is were to be subject to higher rates of duty. It is said that French autos were sent to Great Britain by the shipload, and that on the sidings of x different railroads one man saw long trainloads of automobiles on their way to the same country. Automobiles and other merchandise were shipped there from the United State while textiles and goods of var- ious kinds were poured into “the tight little isle’ from Ger. many, Ozechoslovakia and other countries of central Europe. Not only were they shipped in by old-fashioned methods, but they were it in by airplane This is the same experience which the people of the Unit ted States had prior to the enactment of our present tariff. By trainload, shipload and airplane the goods were hastened into our markets, Yet in spite of this flooding of our markets, the benefita of the new protective tariff act were soon felt Britain will have the same experience. Protection will add to her prosperity, It 1 be slower in coming than it was in this country but eventually it will arrive. No matter if the British call it safeguarding of industry instead of protection to industry, it is evident that the people of other countries look to see Britain's early and complete return to the policy of protection which served her so well for centuries, English free-trade is dead, Reducing Gold Surplus A gold outflow of #175,000,000 has taken place in the Jast seven months and now the commercial bankg find them- selves in a position sharply in contrast to that which they held almost continually since the end of the war. During those years these banks through the deposit of imported gold with the federal reserve banks, obtained funds for repayment of borrowings and for use as a basis for increased extension of credit, But recently the direction of the gold movement bas been reversed and gold exports have tended to check the growth of member banks credit and to increase tht demand for reserve bank credit, fora sa wy © a oe os + esd World Topics Industry should provide plans whereby ‘all employes shall be enabled to attain financial inde- pendence by the age of retirement, William EB. Knox, president of the American Bankers’ association, de- clared in a re cent address be- fore the Colorado Bankers’ asso- ciation, “The present polley in Amer: fean industry of helping om: Ployes with their persona prob- lems is based upon the as- sumption that they will ulti- m) mately become WILLIAM KNOX dependent, and to meet this con- dition we provide old age pensions and other forms of charitable com- pensation,” Mr. Knox said. “Such provisions are to be commended, of course, in Heu of a practical alter- native, but in principle they are wrong and contrary to the purposes of democracy. What we want is an organized plan that will direct working people toward independ- ence, and no system of industry can lay claim to complete success that does not cnotemplate the financial in- dependence of every employe, ac- cording to his ability to earn. “With a broad co-operative plan for systematic saving American employes, with reasonable prudence on their part, can reach a fair de- gree of independence while they are still working and at no greater cost to firms, than fg now required to maintain old age dependents. Here is the most logical place in our national life to demonstrate the prin- ciple of co-operation. “The solution of our industrial differences in America and of the waste in business and in the uso of personal incomes must be sought in some non-controversial’ influence that will command the co-operation ot both employers and employes. There must be injected into our in- dustrial policy an additional eco- nomic element of mutual benefit and permanent value to both labor and capital, concerned pot alone with the amount of wages and profits that are earned but with how these earnings shall be used. “I am arguing for a new eco- nomic philosophy, for a positive and not a negative philosophy, for a better understanding of common financial problems and more intelll- gent use of money. I am arguing for the elimination of waste and for tn industrial savings policy bascd upon the principle of independence, @ policy that will give the average American a greater incentive to help himself. I am arguing for a new basis of co-operation in industry, for the elimination of poverty and for a practical demonstrttion of eco- nomic democracy, “When public education teaches school students how to manage their personal affairs intelligently, gives them an understanding of the value and use of money and pro, vides the means of applying these Principles, when the heads of firms make it a requirement that every young man and woman who accepts @ position shall be working toward a definite goal,in saving money, when banks recognize their full re- sponsibility as economic advisers of the community, then we will attack economio illiteracy at the source and begin to save men from the tragedy and embarrassment of finan. cial dependenc: —e—___ Conspiracy of Silence It is well known that the Cobden Club used to send to this country books and pamphlets on the free trade propaganda order. These pub- cations were sent to congressmen, to editors, to agents of commercial interests. and to whoever seemed \Ukely to be culporteurs for Cotden- ism. How many editorials were pre- pared for our free-trade papers or Were based on these documents we cannot guess—it is sufficient to : that thelr name was legion. These direct appeals for free-trade or near free-trade were sometimes injurious, while at other ‘times they were so manifestly British that they gave offence to American voters. Less js said of an attempt to hide from Americans the strength of the British and free-trade party. Of there is no legal proof of a for years y course put dowr been supp put on inside pages or in some way mini. mized. To the aggressive opponents of protection must be added luke- warm supporters who content them selves with voting a Republican tick- et once in four years, and who at every session of congress encourage the enemy, Every paper in the United States had something to say about Lord Beaconsfield's youthful fondness for dress and display, Perhaps halt our voters did not know that that great statesman wrote a life of the reso. lute protectionist, Lord George Ben. tinck. “You cannot fight hostile tariffs with free imports,” has all the Beaconsfield terseness back of it. But the epigrams of Beacons fleld, the logic of Byles, and the plans of Chamberlain did not re celve from invertebrate Republican fem one-tenth of the space our Sport. Ing writers bestowed on Mr. Charlé« Mitchell, who came to our shores to battle unsuccessfully with Mr, James J. Corbett There we under re Americans who grew the delusion that every. at Britain believed in ditors who claimed to be protectioniats did not tell their readers that free-trade was enacted because of a colossal fraud on the farmers, and could not haye been enacted without that camouflage, How bitter was the resentn.ant of the deluded agriculturists, how yv ne of the army and navy feared @ war with a power superior tn grain growing strength, waa not told. We had so-called protectioniats, thou- sands of them, who never weighed the words of the Duke of Welling: ton and of Cardinal Manning, At intervals there might be a paragraph on the prot of labor unions Against the admission of foreign up goods into British ports. The sub. Ject could not be wholly ignored but it w not treated & matter of moment—it did not com; with the gorelp ef Londen goncert halla or the divorce of a nobleman. Al- though the World War brought out the weakness of British free-trade, although the economists of every land under the sun recognized the conditions, the matter was viewod nonchalantly by many of our jour- nals. The safeguarding of industries act imposed duties on three thousand articles, Restrictions do much to keep foreign labor out of British workshops.. These facts are not de- nied, but they are minimized. We have so-called protectionis who are not impressed by the collapse of British free-trade, but who are ner- vously anxious lest some member of a fashionable club, should be held up for half an hour at the custom house. If we are to elect a Republican house in 1926 nd a Republican president tn 19 some Republican editors must learn that the economia istory of the British Empire is well vorth attention as ‘the latest achievements in golf or the pros- pects for the next- airplane race. They do not think so and may deem {t rude to speak so bluntly, but some day they will waken. Who’s Who of forelgn af- fairs the man who fs given credit for removing the civic dis- abilities of the Jews in his country, is now in the Unted States to meet state officials and deliver a series of lectures, He ig Count Alexander Poland's minister but a ttle over 40 years of age nd is a scion of ie of those houses of the ola Polish aris- tocracy known as the “Uradel,” that is to say, whose memberg were recognized as nobles before the dawn of Polish history. His extensive family estates lie in that portion of Poland which on the partition of the former kingdom fell to the share of Austria and were incorporated in her terri- tory as the rich mining now forms part of the Polish Republic. He was thus born as an Austrian subject, and in his early manhood entered the diplomatic servico of Emperor Francis Joseph and served the latter's embassies with much success and distinction at Rome, at St. Petersburg, and in Paris, When the Hapsburg monarchy was over- thrown in 1918, at the close of the great war, he transferred hjs alle- giance to the new government of the land of his fathers, and by rea- son of the laurels which he had al- ready won in the Austrian diplo- matic service was appointed Minister Pienloptentiary of Poland at Bucha- First Presbyterian Rey. Chas. A. Wilson, D, D., min- ister. Sixth and Durbin streets. Suosect: 11:00 a. m., “The Origin of Man.” A great subject suggested by the trial now in progress at Day- ton, Tenn. The speaker has spent many years in the study of science as related to the Bible. In this ser- mon he will speak of the Heidelberg, Neanderthal and Cro-Magnon men of early times as found in the geologi- cal phase of the present discussion. Song service of, one-half hour tn 1e evening, followed by short ser- mon. Mr. Wallace Allen will lead the singing, using the lantern and screen. Sunday school, for departments at 9:45 I classes and m. Winter Memorial Presbyterian. Corner “Hi and St. John, The Rey. H. W. Bainton, Sunday school missionary for Casper Pres- bytery, will fill the pulpit both morn- ing and evening. Mr. Bainton was one of the pioneers in the religious lite of Wyoming. Mr. Oscar Erick son will have charge of the Church 1 while the minister fs on his Sc! vacation. This school meets at 10 o'clock. Let us swat the summer slump. The Intermediate C, E. are ng no vacation from their Sun- night meetings. Be there at 7 Mountain View Community. The Rev. H. W. Bainton, Sunday school missionary for Casper Pres- bytery, will preside at the 2:30 hour Sunday afternoon. Let us give him a welcome to the church he helped to bulld, Scandinavian Lutheran. Corner of South Jefferson avenue and East Sixth street. Elmer M. Berg, pastor. Sunday school at 945 a. m. Morning services (in Norse) at 11:00 a. m. Theme of sermon: “Three New Testament Mountain Tops.” At the eveniag services at 8:00 p. m., Rev. Andrew Burgess, travelling for- eign Mission secretary of St. Paul, Minn,, will lecture on the subject, “The Cross and the Crescent in Africa.” Rev, Burg has travelled around the world, studying the mis- sion problems of four continents, visiting China, Japan, Arabla and Africa. During the great famine of 1920 and 1921 he served as a 10 Met worker in China, later in travel- ing through India saw the caste system in its operation, visited the University of El Azur at Cairo, Egypt, where missionaries are being prepared to win Africa for Islam, rest, a post demanding the exercise of the ut\ost delicacy and skill. ‘There he established the understand- ing between the two nations, pledg ing them to mutual co-operation in the event of Bolshevist invasion, which for the past six yeras has been the one danger of all others against which it is necessary to make provision. He did so well there that when the Warsaw government found it necessary to take some steps to allay the prejudices that existed for a time against it at Geneva on the part of the League of Nations he was dispatched thither as Plenipo- tentiary in order to smooth away all Irritation, to clear up many mis- understandings and to win once more foreign good-will for his na- tive land. This mission also took him to the varioug capitals of Eu- rope, where he created everywhere the most favorable impression. He comes here with the well-earned reputation of being one of the most brillant diplomats, able and far- sighted politicians and liberal-minded statesman of “Polina Restituta.” pak aS ols ween Bobbed Hair A patient investigator has been at pains to unearth certain facts and figures regarding bobbed hair and its effect upon the development of the beauty parlor and the allied trades. The results are ceftainly astounding. The investigator—who is of course a woman; mere un would have neither the tact r inside knowledge requis subject prope of the passed, but opinion that go stronger. 80 delicate a eT has to the strong and may fashic lear: goin) She js, at all events, convinced that there are many women now short haired who, for various reasons, principally the trouble and discom fort incidental to the intermediate stage, will never Jet thelr hair grow long again. She ts also non-commit- al on the vexed question as to wheth- er bobbed hair is a tangible symbol of woman's recently acquired Inde- pendence or merely the recurrence of a vogue. In other words, she refuses to be speculative as to the orles, and confines herself to a sur. vey of the facts of the situation as they present themselves fr an economic and industrial point of view The bobbed halr fashion has, she finds, started a new ind at least set its wheels to wht h faster—the beauty industry. Five years ago there were 5,000 halrdress- Ing shops in the United States; at the end of 1924 there were 21,000 established shops and several thou sand transient These figures, be {t noted, do not include those bar ber shops which do a rushing busi neaa in bobbing. Bobbing has led to the adoption of other alds to per- sonal adornment and the result ts that beauty shops flourish eve where throughout the land. A me reason for the Increase in the num- her of these establishments is that the beauty parlor ts no longer in the luxury class, ia no longer patronized solely by women of tho stage or women of wealth, but ‘lorives ite chief support from working women and housewlves, The are of beaut! fication has become democratized With beauty parlors thus swatied in number, it follows that the man. ufacture of beauty parlor equipment and viewed the return of the J ws to thelr native Palestine, Rev. Burgess is well qualied to give 2 critical analysia of the present world need for the gospel of Jesus Christ. Those who heard his splendid 1d dress last Sunday evening on “Fac ing the Crisis in China” will be g'ad to know that Rev. Burgess hat been prevailed on to extend his vaca- tion stay with us over next Sunday. A cordial invitation {s extended tn all. Our basement auditorium is cool and none need fear discomfort from the heat. The boys and girls of the Sunday school are preparing industriously for the Children's Day services and program to be held July 26. They will meet for rehearsal Wednesday afternoon at 3:30, under the supervision of Miss Gertrude Berg. Grace Lutheran, “Who Is cn the Lord's Side?” {s after all the real question to be answered. Dr. Cromer will try to answer this question next Sunday morning at 11 o'clock at Grace Lutheran church, corner of Ninth and CY avenue. You won't come to the service if -folks, pienty to fill all the churches in town. But we can accommodate several hundred of them, and we would like to have all the chairs ocoupletl, Will you be one? Come on now you good fellows. Hitch up and bring your wife and children and all sit together, please and let's give this question a real honest and candid consideration. You would hate to feel that you were on the Lord's side and not be able to give any good reagon for it. Let's settle this question right now for all time. Then we will know where to find you and how to deal with you after that. It will be too hot anyway to run raound in your automobile, No evening ser- vice, Trinity Lutheran. (Missouri Synod.) Corner fo South Park and East Fourth, streets. W. C. Rehwaldt, pastor. Sunday school at 9:30 a. m. Services (English) at 10:30 a. m. The Rev. J. 8. Her of Sheridan Services at Glenrock at 3:00 p. m. has sent us a wire that he will de- liver the morning sermon. Rev. Her is the veteran among Lutheran missionaries In -Wyoming., If you have no other church home, plan to attend the service. The Lutheran church is ‘the true modern church, because this. church preaches the old Gospel of, Jesus Christ. God has never changed, neither has man changed that we need a new Gospel. There is no such thing as a modern gospel for modern men. Has God become more liberal, more broad- minded? Has He changed His plan for the salvation of sinners? When a despairing sinner asks today: “What must I do to ke saved?” the Bible still gives him the same an- swer which St. Paul gave the tremb. ling jallor at Philipp! about 2,000 years ugo: “Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved and they house.” We believe the verbal inspiration of the Scrip- tures, belfeve in orgiinal sin, oppose evolution, preach sin and the Savior, That is our glory. That the secret of the wonderful growth of the Missour! Synod. Local Trinity Lutheran, the Bible church, extends @ cordial invitation. First Baptist, Fifth and Beech streets. Dr. Louis S. Bowerman, pastor. Sunday school, 9:45 a. m, Morning service, 11:00 a. m. Rev. J. W. De Merritt of the First | Baptist church of Douglas will preach for us at the morning service. Music, tenor solo, Mr, EH, A. Flinn, Jr. There will be no evening service. Christian Science Christian Science services. will, be held in the church edifice, corner of Grant and Fourth streets, Sunday morning at 11 o'clock, Subject | “Life.” Testimonial meetings are held on Wednesday evenings at 8 o'clock. All are welcome to these ecrvices. Sunday schoo! for child- ren up to the age of 20 years {s held on Sunday at 9:30 a. m, Reading room at 222 Becklinger butlding where the btb’e and all authorized Christian Scisi:e Mterature may be read, purchas1 or borrowed, 1s open each week day from noon until 5p. m. Church of Jesus Christ of Later Day Saints Services held in Labor Union hall at 340 North Wolcott street. Sun- day school at 10:30 a, m. and preach ing services at 7:30 p.m. Everyone is cordially invited to attend, Church of Christ Church of Christ will meet In the auditorium of the city hall on Sun- you are not Interested. You may not care anything about the great moral and religious questions which are being so widely discussed in these days. But we have a right to know on whose side anyone really is, with whom we discuss these great questions, We don't want to fool. our time away with any real wolver who may be sporting around in sheep's clothing. An altogether different treatment needed for I if you think you really have a soul and that it is eternal in its nature and will live h and if you believe that the w believe, think and live here upon the earth fn our natural lifetime has anything to do with the kind of a life we are to live hereatter—why you are the fellow we are. anxious about just now, During this hot weather we would rather take up the more hopeful cases, thosa more easily reached, more open to conviction, more rational in their attitude toward these age-long questions, And there are lots of just really y we such millinery impetus. It was thought at first that bob. bed hair would "Pequire but little attention, but that is a fallacy that was quickly dispelled. Tho bobbed haired woman, if she is to be at all presentable, needs the services of the halt dresser urgently and regu: larly, At firet sight, it might seem absurd to think that the cutting off of hair would stimulate the artifl hair trade, That it has done however, seems certain, for nov. elty, as usual, holds sway and many women have gone in for wearing the hair short in the daytime and for concealing this cutaway appearance by donning artificial hair in the evening. As to hair coloring, the fact that $7,500,000 w pent in this way In the United States in 1924 ia wufficlently eloquent without fur- ther elucidation, Finally, the bobbed-halr fashion has created m fresh means of occu. pation for women, and the spring: ing up of ne wheauty shops and hair. dressing parlors in all directions has resulted {n a demand for operatives far greater than the supply. Whateve rthe moralist may think of the complex eltuation that has thu# arisen, tt is plain that the Industry has felt a new celal 0, bas grown tremendously, In addi tion, the artificial hair trade hae been revived, the bu hair dyeing Js being reorganized, and the} bobbed hair fad—if it be a tad—has ut least to Ite credit the stimulation of various industries and trades, day afternoon at 3 o'clock. A pray- er meeting overy Tuesday evening at 7:30 o'clock, St. Anthony's Catholic The Rev. Father J. H. Mullin, pastor; the Rey, Father J. F. More ton, assistant pastor. Mass on Sun- day at 7, 8, 9 and 10:30 a. m. Mass during the week at 7:30 and 8 o'clock. Midwest Heights Community Young people's services. Sunday evening at 6:30 o'clock. Preaching services, Sunday evening at 7:30. H E, Wood, superintendent; the v Hattle Lambert, pastor. pa ial International Bible Students Meetings on Sunday mornings at 10:30 at 944 South Oak street, ‘Spiritualist Meeting Service each Sunday evening at 745 at the Knights of Pythias hall, Madame Keyes gives messages each Sunday evening, The public ts in- vited. Unity Truth Center Room 5, Zuttermeister bullding. Mra. Funkhouser, leader. Sunday, 11 a. m. services, lessons i- truth. Tuesday evenings, 745, Good Words club, Friday, 2:60 p. m. First Christian R. R. Hildet . Pastor Church school $45, Morning wor- ship 11:00, C, BE. Soclety 7:00 We are having some splendid morn ing audiences. Our butlding is as cool am you will find. We cordially invite any and all to our services Short enthusiastic sermon and good Salt Creek Busses Leave Casper, Townsend Hotel 8 a.m. and 1p. m, and 6 p. m. Leave Salt Creek 8 a.m, 1p, m and 5 p.m, Expres ‘Bus Leaves 9:80 Daily Salt Creek Transportation Co, BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS TELEPHONE 144 SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1925 Weman Leads: U. S, Educators Most Difficult Task of Life. 7:00 p. my. No evening service because of thy Chautauqua, Wednesday, 7:00 p. m., prayer meeting. This will be the last ong to be conducted by the pastor before he leaves for New York. Friday, 2:30 p. m., Circle meetin, Busy Bee, with Mrs, Charles Jon, 126 West BE street; Capito) 1) with Mra. C. A. Badger, 821 South Lincoln, Mrs. Harris will assist; Bpe. clal Service to be announced late Victory Workers, with Mrs, ©, Greep, 182 North Beech Street, Mrs, Dorton will assist; C ¥ and Kensing. ton will not meet, The time remaining before the Pas. leaves for his new work is short. He will be here only one more Sunday after July 18. His last services wil be on July 26. He would appreciats a full attendance of members any friends this church for the next two Sundays, and Most Important ". Epworth League, Emmanuel Baptist Dr. J. T, Hanna, pastor. rir. teenth and Poplar streets, Prayer service, 9:40 m.) Sha, day school, 10 a. m. Sermon 11 % m. No evening service en accourt of the Chautauqu Come to Sunday school and the morning services, Important nouncements Sunday. an The Apostolic Faith Assembly Elder Geo. W. Guest, pastor, 25 North Boyer Street, Meetings are now being held un. der our tent. Come out Sunday ana hear Elder T. M, Russell, of Master, Colorado, tell you something that will benefit your soul. Many ars coming out. Some are accepting ths word of God. You that have not at. tended arrange to hear him before he leaves. Sunday morning worsh Dp 11:30. Sunday school, 1:00 p. m, Evening services, 7:30 p.m. Ali ara welcome. A woman is the new president of the National Education Asso- ciation. She is Mary Macy Skimmon (above) of Brookline, Mass. She succeeds J. H. New- ton of Denver. music, There will be no evening services on account of the Chautau- qua, First Christian church is lo- cated on the corner of Grant and Lind Streets, .The ‘ant street bus passes, Grace African Methodist “The Friendly Church.” Rev, T. J. Burwell, D. 'D., m'nister, 306 N. Grant 8t, First Church of the Nazarene Rev. C. L, Johnson, pastor. Phone 369-M. Cor 12th and Poplar Sts. matiow! 7:00 a. m.; Sunday school, 9:45,a. m.; h ‘) preach from this subject: “The Joy of Sery. ice.” BEyening worship at 8 o'clock. Subject: “Prayer and the Goodness of God.” The entertainment of Fri. | day given by the stewardesses and stewards ald way a most successful affair from every angle. Choir re. hearsal Friday at 8:00. Dollar Money Day August 2. Bishop Carey's visit August 18, Final service © closing conference year September 6. This Sunday the Age Rally will be held, Kindly enclose two cents for each year of your age and drop in th plate when pasted. Proceeds fet annual conference claims. Let ey. ery one do his share. preaching, 11:00 a. m.; Y. P. 8, meet- ing, 6:30 p. m.; preaching, 7:30 p, m. mid-week praayer meeting Wednes- day, 7:30 p,m, If you should see a messenger ap- proaching your home how eagerly you would await his arrival, to see what the messags contained. If bad news, the world would look gloomy; if joyful, well, that’s different. We hope these few lines will be “JOY- FUL" to you inasmuch God does not send “GLOOMY” messages, but he does send us warnings of his re- turn to earth. There will not be any peace until he does return except, as we obey his commandments. Just two roads to follow, one is wide and ends in de- struction, the cther narrow and ends in an eternal home.. Which road are you on? Come hear the Gospel in its fullness, Special sing- ing, good music, and a hearty wel- come at the door, Queen Helena's love of children is a popular tradition in Italy, Tto number of fat little “bamibinos” who have felt the caress of her royal lips is beyond computation. and at the charity bazaars which she visits it is always the baby clothes booth that secures her earliest attention and patronage. Her Majesty can- not be reproached with bourgeois tastes, however, for when. the occa- sion arises she presents a bearing Bible schoo}, | not to be excelled in the most: fast!- “The dious court: Do Christians Love One Another? or THE ELEVENTH COMMANDMENT Last sermon by Rev. A. E. COOKE until September. Come and hear this searching discussion of whether present-day Christians are keeping Christ’s greatest ORI te A vital message for all church mem- ers, 2 First Congregational Church (AMERICA THEATER) AT 11 A. M. Strangers and visitors most cordially welcome Metohdist Episcopal Rev. Louis E. Carter, D. D. pas- tor. Corner East Second and South Durbin Streets. Prayer, 9:30 a, m.; A. H. COBB WAREHOUSE co. y. M. Yard, Mgr. BAGGAGE MOVING sroeace Reduced Rates During Summer Montt 136 WEST B ST. ; aes CRATING PHON 2203 CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 9:30 A Mm FARB—312.56 Bayes you approximately 12 hours travel between Casper and Rawlins ‘ WYOMING MOTORWAY, Salt Creek Transportation Com; Office TOWNSEND HOTEL apse frre TRAIN SCHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN | | Westbound No, 608 ....cccn. aidt ee ry om Eastbound rts NO, 622 22. snemcccnnnwnncnnnn 6145 p.m p.m CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY , Eastbound Arrives Departs No. 82 . om ltciaae 4:00 p. m No. 80. -~8:10 p. m, 50 a.m. 7:10 p.m.” 55 p.m. 4 ~~ 6 9: The UNION Label Can be used by the followin, firms, who employ none but Union Brinters: 1. The Casper Daily Tribune. |i 2. OU City Printers, Fr 8. The Casper Herald MN 4. Service-Art Printing Co, 5. The Commercia) Printing Co. Let Casper Printers 7. Hoffhine Printing & Stationery Co 8. Slack-Stirrett Printing al THE TRADEMARK OF GOOD WORKMANSHIP Print for Casrer

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