Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 30, 1925, Page 6

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ah Fn Pk ee PAGE SIX” Sac cpa — bee Ora CE WASHINGTON SHOWS HOMAGE T0 rrurr wYYqNyY! rieowrr' t BRYAN: FUNERAL TRAIN ARRIVES (Continued From Page One) chur¢h, visited Mrs. Bryan at her hotel and announced that the church service tomorrow would be one of utmost simplicity. He said he would preach no sermon, but would deliver a. few brief remarks. The service will begin at three p m. eastern standard time and will be broadcast by radio, Fifteen min. utes earlier the church quartette will sing as a prelude Mr. Bryan's f orite hymns, “Lead Kindly Lig and “One Sweetly Soler: ho ‘The former was the £ President McKi at his requet at THRONG GREETS FUNERAL TRAIN WASHING T« {Asso tiated Press.) — Wi Jennings Bryan came back to Washington to- day to receive the last f the church before he begi « rest in the Potomac hills amidst a great company the na n's 8: trious dead, The funeral train which had borne him from Dayton, Tenn., where he died last Sunday, reached the Union station early in the day, but its ar ri found a rever throng in waiting. The bronze casket was taken from the etation to an undertaker’s par- rs, but rit will be removed to New York Avenue Presbyterian j CONSTANT PAIN FROM PIMPLES Face, Neck and Shou!ders Covered, Lasted Four Years, Cuticura Heals, “My face, neck and shoulders were covered with pimples that were hard, large and red. At first I took no notice of them but the trouble kept getting worse, The pimples itched and burned and the more I scratched the worse they got. They caused constant pain and I lost my rest at night. The trouble lasted for four years. advised to try Cuticura so purchased Soap and three boxes of Ointment I was healed.” (Signed) Ed Lynn, 121 Sycamore St., Evansville, Ind., March 4, 1925. Nothing quicker or safer than Cuticura Soap end Ointment for skin troubles that itch and burn Soap fe. Ointment 25 and Soe. Taleum Be. Bold Setdoars Laborstorler Dept Atos” WEE Cuticure Sha ving Stick 25¢. Lexington Cream XXXXX Flour More and Better Bread per sack Rye, Whole Wheat, Graham, Corn Meals. } Ask your grocer for this flour and have better bread Casper Warehouse Company DISTRIBUTORS church, where the funeral services will be conducted at 3 o'clock to- morrow afternoon. A small group of government of- als greeted Mrs. Bryan at the on. Bhe appeasred in good spirits espite the strain of the long jour- ney from Tennessee. She had arisen nearly an hour before the train reached Washington, and told friends she had a restful night. Immediately upon arrival widow and her party were tak LaFayette hotel, near the White use, where they will remain untii funeral services tomorrow, They be joined tomorrow morning by am Jennings Bryan, Jr., and daughter of the Commone: Grace Hargreaves, who are by Mrs coming here from California. A detail of police escorted the party through trowds that lined the inner concourse of the station. In the president's room of the station they rested a few minutes before entering cabs for the trip to the hotel. veral hundreds gathered behind the police lMnes, stood with bared heads as the widow and her party passed through the concourse and out over Massachusetts avenue. Not until after Mrs. Bryan had left the train was the casket re- moved, A part of the rear end of the funeral car was removed to af- ford ready exit for the casket which then was borne to the east entrance at the level with the lower train platform, here the guard of honor, veterans of @ World war, placed it in a motor hearse while the crowds which lined the gently sloping street atood in allence. ‘one of the Bryan party accompanied the body to the under: taking parlor and the hearse moved slowly along Massachusetts avenue and out Tenth street almost un- noticed by the throngs of govern- ment clerks and others hurrying to the day’s work, The trip from the station to the undertaking parlors a mile away, at Tenth and O streets, northw occupied almost an hour, for the hearse moved through a crush of morning traffic. During the morning Charles W. Bryan, brother and lifelong com- panion of the dead leader, reached the hotel from;the west. After a mn the widow, he conferred with Ben G. Davis, form: an intimate associate of the Commoner, regard. call ing final details of the funeral rvices. A short while before the hour set removal of the casket to the church, the doors of the undertaking parlors where it rested for a time were thrown open and that had gathered ou through to pay {ts homage. Draped with an American flag, the coffin reposed in the undertaker's chapel while several hundred, {n- cluding many women and children, passed by with bowed heads and solemn faces. One of those who came thus to give affectionate token of his esteem was W. 5, H. Fuqua of Amarillo, Te a friend of Mr. Bryan in boyhood. He had journeyed here from his home in the southwest to attend the funeral. HONORARY PALLBEARERS ARE ANNOUNCED. WASHINGTON, July 30.—(Asso- Tel. 27 268 Industrial Ave. Substantially Lower Prices On The Great NEW CADILLAC Announced today in the Saturday Evening Post | clated Press,)—Thé honorary pall bearers at the funeral of W. J wee ae Bryan, will be: Seneter George W. Norris, of Nebraska Senator Henry F. Ashure' of Arizona; Senator Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee; Senator Morris Shephard, of ‘Texas; Representative Willlam A, Oldfield, of Arkansas; Josephus Daniels, of Norris, of Nebraska; Senator Henry the navy; Charles A. Douglas, of Washington; Clem Shaver, of West Virginia, and Colonel P. H. Callahan, of Louisville, K CHICAGO HOTEL ~ RANDITS SLAIN a (Continued From Page One) | drugs, Holmes told the police. said he dnd his pal “Tex,” the dian, had come here recently trom Texas, had met Nelson and Nugent in a pool room and had agreed to} assist in the holdup, without know ing fully the extent of the proposed undertaking. They had come here | to participate in the rodeo, he said. | Robert 1. Crowe, state's attorney to whom Holmes made offorg to plead guilty to a robbery charge, / said he would ask the grand jury | which adjourns toda to sit long enough to indict Holmes and Woods for murder. “It's a hangng case and I'm going to see that they are tried as speed- ily as possible,” he said. Holmes told the police he was in Brownsville, Texas, after enlisting in the army in 1917. He also said he had worked on the K and K ranch in Texas, ‘ex,"" the supposed half blood Cherokee was the first of the rob- bers to burst fato the clerical room behind the cages of the cashier and He bran- paymaster of the hotel. dished a revolver in each hand as he entered cried out: “We're from Texas and everybody's hands up quick! Woods told a story that Robert Scott, brother of Rusell Scott, t der sentence to hang but who has | obtained a sanity trial was a friend and associate of the robber band. Robert Scott also is charged with murder in the came indictment with Russell and the latter has dec red Robert fired the shot that killed a drug clerk, for whose death Russell was sentenced. LEPER HELD AT SPOKANE SPOKANE, Wash., July 30.—(By The Associated Press).—Sam Alapal , Was taken dy by health officers here folans declared with an advanced Alapal came from Troy, Montana, he sald. His condition was discovered when he walked into the office of P. C. Barnhart, county phy- siclan and asked for treatmet, Alapat has been sent to an isola- tion hospital, while city and state health cfficers investigate his case. Dr. Barnhart has asked Dr, A. E. Stuht, state health officer at Olym- pla, to find out where Alapat warked before coming to this section of the country. ———___ afflicted of leprosy. case CALENTHOL 1s best remedy for Hay Fever, says Wm. H. Chambers of Douglas, Wyo. He had it and knows what it means. Pharmacy At Sprecher's At these new prices, the greatest of all Cadillac cars represents the greatest of all motor car values:— Standard Line Five-Passenger Brougham Two-Pass Four-Pass Five-Passenger Sedan enger Coupe . enger Victoria. Seven-Passenger Sedan . Seven-Passenger Imperial Roadster , Touring Car Phaeton , Five-Passenger Coupe Five-Passenger Sedan Seven-Passenger Suburban Seven-Passenger Imperial . All prices quoted F. O. B. Detrott, The pr months’ per WYOMING CADILLAC COMPAN Custom Line 6 Rh Bh ae Vee Ie S64 Oe SD iow 05 Sere e . «of dey od, ts gladly given on any Cadillac ear tvileg 9299 North Durbin St. Phone 3030 $2995 3045 3095 3195 . koees . 3435 « §3250 + agao » 3250 - 4000 4285 4485 Tax to be added ved payment, over a tweloe CADILLAC Die lon of General Motors Corporation 3 ‘Novel by William Basil Courtne apr fe LMER E.VANCE Copyright, 19%: LIMITED MAIL” with Monte Warner Bros. “THE SYNOPSIS A tramp, about 25 years old, is nurs- ing a reluctant bon-fire, while his com- panion, Potts, an older man, kneels on the edge of an abyss, seeking with. the aid of a tin can and a long cord to draw water from the river. Suddenly small boulder -erashes from\ the heights of Granite Gorge, and, gras- ing Potts, causes him to slide over the The younger man finds him led in a brush only three feet rescues him, brink. CHAPTER I—Continued “Prop your cover, Bob, and we'll get the water. It's way past a po- te hour for the evening meal no Presently, with Bob seated across Po! was stretched flat on his stomach—that is, as flat as the bulging front outline of his figure would permit!—lowering a can on a string toward the river that was invisible, though only thirty feet flown, It was an uncanny operation n the darkr and Potts had to I le his line as daintily a skil- as a trout fisherman to keep t from beings snatched away from 1 by the'rushing water. . Three es he erfptie? the small can’into large one, Which Bob held. The ht he retained the’ water n the small can; that was for cof- fee Bob d, forgot ne 2 mteophyte vaga- be some of his own pre occupation as he watched the fat and tattered philosopher prepare, with ritualistic care and genial fuss- the favorite dish of highway i—hobo Finding two stew. 5, Warner Bros, Blue, is a picturization of this story by + Pietares, Inc. uncertain, were brought forth. Potts twisted their heads off, ripped down their bellies with a pudgy forefinger, disembowelling them with the same operation, and pitched them forth- with into the hobgoblin brew.¥ A small, choice assortment of season- ing vegetables brought the concoc- a fat carrot with the scraggy green plume unremoved, three onions, and a miscellaneous handful from the bottom of one pocket which he turned inside out and shook into the can, blandly indifferent to the fact that, articles which were not, strictly speuking, edible had also joined in this last minute avalanche. n to await the satisfactory moment when the stew would be thoroughly cooked. To Bob fell the task of stirring the steaming mess with a casual stick, the other end of which he used as a poker to goad the fire. sat di Meanwhile, during the foregoing preparations, Potts had alternated his inary incantations with an eloquentidescription to Bob of the historyand nature of this place in which the fate of the night road had taken them. , Potts told Bob that in the first years of the trestles exist- énce.over Granite Gorge rockslides. from Old Witch's Mask—so called because its leering face, nosing/close to the midarc of the sharp curve around which the tracks approached the Gorge, hid the trestle from view until the last moment—had been disastrously troublesome. * For a long time the Old Witch's dirty face had shed boulders, like pox stones of almost .equal size Potts squeezed the now brisk fire between| Potts’ threadbare pockets of the road's best construction en- gineers who massaged and. braced and cared for the complexion of the Old Witch as carefully as the skin of a testy dowager might be treated in}a\beauty parlor. Finally their work|had won comparative safety for the Gorge passage; rocks show- ered down no more and, as twenty years went by without a slide, the locomotive drivers no longer slow- ed up, as in thé old days, except to the point dictated by ordinary cau- tion. “The Limited Mail,” the Transrockian's famed flyer, habitu- ally was taken across the Gorge at thirty-five an hour, and better. {them until the stones were close enough for the bottom of the stew! can to just bridge them. # He kept adding fuel, and poking and nursing the fire into greater ardor, mutter- ing | to‘ himself ,incantatively » the while.& When the water came to a boil, Potts stood up.¥ An expectant smile wreathed his chubby features; and «while {het smacked his lips, winked his eyes, and wagged his head in professional vanity he be- gan to empty the contents of his grimy pockets. into, the, bubbling water, ‘A feast fit for two kings—aye, for a whole kingdom of king: be the result of this evenin, ary activities, my young friend,” he said unctuously "ve been a whole week collecting the ingredients for this dish!” A short week ago Bob's appetite would have evaporated upon wit- nessing the manufacture of this stew. But tonight he was cold and hungry his and red, It y ewpoint! cadbare pockets were ¢ magicians’ hats. First out of hem came a large and softening to- ato, v Potts squidged be- ween his fir tearin t into ed into boil- potatoes, in var- of health, were similar- four more potatoes, fish- ly treate ed from his 1 ess pockets, were thrust into the beneath the can to roast. A naked piece of raw meat as taken from the pocket of honor nside his coat—and shredded in to to join the vegetables. Three mall fish, cause and time of death scales from a countenance of evil and sin, despite the cultural efforts To people moving on the lawful business and pleasure traffic of the world, the bald and forbidding nak- edness of Granite Gorge, high and deep in the iost places of the Rocky Mountains, gave no invitation ta linger. There was plenty “for to see"—ongel—in its sheer immensity of drops and jutments and leaps, gave back the labored roars of pass- ing locomotives with a resounding and venomous resentment. men and passengers breathed easier when the Gorge passage lay behind. the legitimate necessity to virtue, that the Trans- rockian directors had arranged their al crack flyers of the road crossed the Gorge at night. 4150 | OAGES AHEAD THROUGH Ik WASHINGTON, July 30,—(By @ Associated s\—The Mac Millan Arctic Expedition became wedged in the Melville Bay ice pack yester y but ied the Nationa) Geographto § rt that It ex pected to ge wi K lifted WASHINGTON, Jury (By The Asseockated I The MacMIl ships Peary and Bowdoin ed through the Melville I hting wit! conditions after continuous fig r | Iaating 21 ho } Commande news to the MacMillan sent the national geographic soct ety in a message dated July 28 “At 4:30 tnis morning,” he said “The Peary, which had been leading for some hours, signalled for a stop nd for more than three hours the n hunted seals on the ice,” The telegram told of the Peary ashing the way through the foo r the Bowdoin and how the latter hip's bow had spilt 200 ton kes I have never Melville Bay," lan said, ln an | seen sO much Ice in Commander MnacMi! “And we aro all thankful passed safely through ft on radio tion’ to an artistic consummation— | Then, with a sigh of delight, Potts | but nothing “for to admire” because | t w with sinister and not with racious strok at Nature had u ured here. A chill wind con. tly brushed the r oad trestle span; and like a rattler’s incensed ning the narrow granite gash Train. | It was with wisdom aforethought, | accommodation of | through schedules so that the sever, | “The Old Witch is a nice girl,”| mocked ribald trainmen, “when she's {ce | | yn PEOPLE, I READ IT | PASSEO BY THE Peru has honored Miss Sarah Wambaugh, of Cambridge, Mass., by asking her to go to South America ahd help the Peruvian government in the plebiscite on the Tacna-Arica dispute between Chile and Peru. Misa Wambaugh is the daughter of Prof. Eugene Wambaugh, of Har- vard University. She was connected for several years with the League of Nations secretariat at Geneva, Switzerland, and is the only woman ever to have addressed the Institute of Politics at Wiliiamstown, Mass. She is an authority on International law ana plebiscite. On the latter subject she has written a book. A number of brilliant short stories & woman patient fn a London insane asylum. ‘She {s said to appear sane while ‘writing, but is hopelessly in- sane at other times. Mrs. J. D. Hopper, superintendent of the woman's reformatory in Mas- sachusetts, is the only woman ap- pointed by President Coolidge to at- tend the International Prison Con- gress in London in August. At Williamstown, Mass., thirty- six women are regular members of the American Institute of Politics. Making country life more Interest- ing to the farmers’ daughters is the work of Miss Gertrude Warren, spe- clalist in the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture, She organizes girls’ clubs and strives to improve wholesome and intelligent viewpoint of farm life. Miss Laura Heller, newly elected president of the Cleveland League of Women Voters, with the ald of Mrs. Malcolm McBride, former prest- dent, has organized the Cleveland league Amto districts, Each league operates as a complete unit with round-table study groups on import- ant legislation. The parent league stands ready to supply speakers, conduct meetings and handle pub- Holty for the district | “Distributors NOVELS LIKE THIS WONT HORT © FA MATES FRANK MERRIWELL \f ese Witt BE ALL * |ES'ALNAYS DOING GOOD FOR TS NOT A BIT LIKE“TH' OLD DEADWOOD DICK NOVELS I USED “1 READ-AUH-L HAT THEY MOMENTS WE'D LIME TO UNE OVER? with human appeal are the work of | emaking and to give the girls a| leagues and i stant! Parker Bros. ‘ef WELL, T GUESS WNSELF, i Re loNG BOARD OF CENSORS.” will conduct several large study and forum projects into which all the districts will gather. The league en- gages speakers both for and against any measure discussed so that every member has had a chance to vote on it intelligently. BEAR KILLS PROSPECTOR ‘IN ALASKA CRDOVA, Alaska, July 30.—(By The Associated Press}—A murder mystery which was suggested by the finding of the bod, of John New- man, Dan Creek prospector on a gravel bar in the stream, with a blood stained pillow case nearby, was solved today when it was learn- ed that he had been attacked by a bear while washing dishes {n the creek. Badly injured in the fight that followed, after resting for a while in his eabin bed, Newman started for civilization to seek ald and died of his wounds and exhaustion while on the trail. He had been missing for a month. | Wife Is Seized For Stabbing PRICE, Utah, July 30.—(Asso- elated Press.\—James J. Powell, 47, a bridge contractor, fs dead as a result of-a knife wound and his wife is under arrest in connection with the slaying. At the dinner table last night Powell ts alleged to have slapped his wife's face follow- ing an argument and Mrs. Powell is declared to have picked up a butcher RIGHTS BUT HE'D, , BEATER Nor LET MME CATCH HIM WITFL ANY OF “THOSE WILD yor MA! HE'S A. POLITER. FELLER ‘N JESSE Tames. HE DONT NEVER SHOOT PEEPUL, HE JUS Gwes EM A PoNcH ONT NOSE. Se nla 1025 BY WEA SERVICE ihe] ™ ef 1-30 21 Girl Gained 7 Lbs. i9 Years an Invalid That's just wh Liver Of] Compound Tablets dia f the Babcock Girl— {s doing as much for tens of thousands of th underwelght, wealc and disc people all over Americ: These sugar coated, pleasant to take tablets should be given to the children instead of the vilo st upsetting ofl itself—they surely help the frail, delicate little ones and 60 tablets cost but 60 cents at Kir bal! Drug Store, sildwest Pharmacy Casper Pharmacy, or any real drufge gist anywhere in America McCoy's Cod Read this letter if you have 14 that needs to ain health and strength “My Uttle girl was. stri wv infantile paralysis when she was months old and was an invalid f 9 years—when I saw an ad in tl paper that McCoy's Cod Liver Ot Compound Tablets would build up asted tissues. I pought a box and she gained very slowly at first and after taking “eight boxes, she gained Seven pounds. anks to McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets, af ter trying almost everything else on the market, She ts on the rond recovery and to school ever da: Mrs, Babcock, Appleton, Wis. Imitations of McCoy’s may be of. fered but be sure and ask for Mc Coy's, the original and genuine and it after thirty days treatment you are not delighted with results—w get your money back.—Ady. goes L. HUDSON AND ESSEX STAND THIRD IN THE MANUFACTURING OF CARS. knife and to have thrown it at him The knife point struck Powell over the heart and he died almost in- PALE Gye ble’ As is—it is delicious! As a Mixer— tt o ao the finest you ever poured, Cigar & Tob. Co. THINK IT OVER! DRY | A quality product from the House of ANHEUSER-BUSCH ST. » LOUIS ”

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