Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 20, 1925, Page 6

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PAGE SIX The CasperA ailyTritme| By J. E. Socialist Answered Why is the United States so dif- ferent from any other country on earth? Because the founders of this nation drew up a constitution and bullt a Practical working form of govern- ment around the central idea of Personal liberty for the individual unhampered by official red tape and bureauctatic control and regulation. In spite of the prosperity in this nation, in spite of the advantages and opportunities offered the ind!- vidual as compared to other nations, there is constant agitation to. re- place the time-tested and successful American policy which favors pri- vate initiative and enterprise with Evropean forms of socialism which stand as rank failures in comparison with American progress. Ina recent debate, Morris Hill quist, national. Socialiet leader, at: tempted to show the advantage of public ownership over private owner- ship of industry. “Tho main .tests of the comparativo merits of the two systems may he enumerated under following heads:” said Mr. Hillquist. “One, cost of service; two, its qual- ity; three, position of employes; four offects on public fe. On all of these tests public ownership proves itself superior.” Such statements should not g¢ unanswered. As to cost of service: It is a gen- y accepted fact that where poll- s enters into the management of an {ndustrial undertaking, cost of operation increases. But given the same management, the only. saving HANWAY AND E.,£. HANWAY ered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second cjass matter November 22, 1916. ® Casper Daily Tribune fssued every evening and The Sunday Morning ibune every Sunday at Casper, Wyoming. Publication offices, Tribune Building, opposite postoffice. ‘ usiness Telephones ... . SRE eT Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments, MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS THe Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of viknews credited in this paper and also the local news published herein, Cc) Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A. B Advertising Representatives Prudden, King & Pradden, 1720-23 Ave.. New York Ci Chicago, Ill; 286 Fifth Suite 404 Sharon Bldg., New Montgomer: . Coples of the Dafly Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago, Boston and San Francisco offices and visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Carrier and Outside State By Ine Year, Daily and S month: Daily and Ine Year, Dally and Su: Six Months, Dail Three Months, Offe Month, Da One Year, Alls ance and Da omes one mor y Tribune will not hb in arrears, KICK, IF YOU DON’T GET YOUR TRIBUNE If you dc find your Tribune after looking carefully for it call 15 oF 161 publicly operated property could ellvered to you by special messenger. Register complaints | make over a privately operated prop: ; Lefore 8 + ‘clock erty would be through less interest f oo it might have to pay by financing ; i KES AED 1 itself with tax-exempt public bonds. This would not be a real saving! be- cause the tax Joad which the public property would escape would not be eliminated but «imply shifted to Some Intimate Causes > Suicides, robberies, holdups, murders and desecration of |the shoulders of other. taxpayers, ! the Sabbath, we find, increasing by leaps and bounds. When | With state and government regula- we ise to consider the matter, crime conditions are terrify tion of public utility industries ‘as ing beyond all expression. The worship of money is increasing |‘* © today, and ‘equally good management for each,’ the cost of it. The is disregarded, r from which that is the root of all evil, twithstanding the high source of authority . The love of pleasure has superseded the love for all the higher and nobler purposes of lif Thirty hol and murders occurred almost « .»wholly between the covers of the yellow-back novels of that d in what was known as ly preval injunction money service from public or private plants would be the same if both were self- supporting. As tothe quality of se Hilquist it come rice,” Mr. cannot point to another n the world where the com- mon everyday citizen has such serv- years ago ups somewhe period with the scene laid ica dteont let eER Ee the “wild and woolly west.” Today they occur on the crowded street railway, gas and railvond » \“thoroughfares, in the business offices, the brilliantly lighted |companies, as he does right here jn hotels and private residences of the most exclusive sections |the United States. en: royalty cannot have {t as“goodin most Eu ropean countries, When it comes to the position of employes, Mr. Hillquist's argument has not a leg to stand upon. Un- der the leveling effect of socialism what chance has a public emplo of our large and densely populated cities in almost every sec: tion of the country. One of the greatest inventions of modern times is the moy- {ing pictures. It has brought the smallest hamlet to the very 4°threshold of life in the largest cities of the world. To the pa gates and courts of royalty, to the intimate home life of Em: ‘ | “perors, kings, presidents and potentates of all the world. It has |to Bete his condition by long and , “brought cheer and enjoyment to millions of peoples But aa Trontus ents Hieeueten eae - Often nre the pictures powerfully suggestive of the immora and offer little reward for a life. and vicious in society. We are wondering into what will de- time of service. . velop, a generation of children that is fed on the lust, passions As to the effect on publia life, re- and crime of many of these pictured plays? sulting from public ownership of ba- | The automobile has perhaps brought the greatest amount of happiness to society of any recent invention, by bringing the sic industries, {t would paralyze ini- tiative and ambition and remove the "fresh air and country accessible to those who live in the crowd: |¥ery spirit which the founders of ed cities, and permitting entire families to take their outings hs renee pues yea: to build up ee, ave their goo es together. It isa most useful machine | © sness of the Ameri- nnd have their good times together. i i can people. What a race pf de- d nd innocent vehicle, in itself, as innocent as a pack of play pendenta would, be developed if. al * ling cards was in the Victorian period. But like the playing |nhad to depend upon the government a cards capable of misuse. We find the automobile causing wide, for a job. The paralyzing effect of a pread disrespect for law, while taking a heavy toll-in death socialism upon our public life js the greatest argument against {t While Mr. Hillquist ts endeavor- ing to turn private industry over to government ownership, private industry has*been quiety turning itself over to the people. In other words, every large industry in: the United Staten today fs placing its securities in the hands of ‘small stockholders, until millions of per- jsons are now the actual owners of |So-ealled Big Business which the So- }cialist. would. destroy. Every. man. | woman and child, who has an interest and accident, and offering many opportunities for immoral ens terprises and practices ‘ _ There is no doubt the greatest moral reform any nation ever voted upon itself was accomplished when the United States adopted the eighteenth amendment to the constitu- tion, Many believed when it was adopted the work was all done, and that saying that we were a dry nation was equiva « ) lent to being a dry nation; but unregenerate human nature 1 | had to be reckoned with."An army of law breakers is supply ing the tastes and appetites of certain individuals who have the money to pay for high-priced alcoholic stimulants, Men who or dinarily are law-abiding find this law contrary to their liking Che Caspet Daily Cribune The Man Who Couldn’t Go to College By EDWARD A. FILENE My first ambition as a boy was to run a candy store. As I grew older I discovered that there was a stom: ach-ache in too much cand So I changed my ‘goal. I ran the entire gamut of: boyish ambitions. And with adolescence there came an ambition to become a learned man, Just when I had passed my en- trance examinations, my father fell into ill health and I had to give up my dream of university training. But I did the next best thing. I started with my job in the store and found that it led me into the study of almost every field of human in- terest. Necessity forced me to self-educa- tion. Gradually I learned that the attempt ot run even a small ‘store intelligently. might be made a very good substitute for college train- ing. The business of sopkeeping may be to a mar both his university and his profession. The real end of business is not to make money but to render a service to the public. My associates and I have, from a very slender beginning, built up a specialty store that is said to be the most successful store of its particular kind in the world. But shopkeeping Has meant to me a daily post-graduate course, covering a-wider range of. human. interests than any course leading to a doctor's degree. It may be that I can say a needed word to the thousands of menyand women who find the door of the university closed to them by ll- fortune. From my store as a point of departure I have come into touch with more kinds of leaders in more kinds of fields here and abroad than most men of my generation. I have not lacked for variety and fascination of adventure. In my search for facts, I have talked with bankers and barbers, with coachmen and with commercial magnates, with labor leaders and homeless men on park benches. I have never been a great reader of boo! I certainly do not have the yegret -of-the old pitman who said to Graham. Wallas, “It makes me groan to think o' the thousands of hours I've spent i’ reading the wrong béoks.” The man _ without the sche lar's background works un- der a very definite handicap, but at least he doesn’t know any better than to try anything. And some of the finest enrichment of business policy has come from just such fool- hardiness. I certainly do not mean to counsel young business men to a deliberate avoidance of éducation. I mean only to suggest that conventional education and wide reading too often tend to take the element of daring out of a man’s mind. This does not mean that education is to be disregarded. It means only that it must be improved to the end that Mean Desires By Maurice E. Balk. : coy 11 go, said I, to the woods and hil In a park of doves I'll make my | fires, And I'll fare like the badger and the fox, I said, And be done with mean desires. Never a lift of the hand I'll give | Again in the world to the bidders and buyers; I'll live with the snakes in the hedge, I said, And be done with mean desires. I'l leave—and I left—my own true | love. © faithful heart that never tires! I will return, tho’ I'll not return ‘| kins—ah! jit is affecting times to p it will make men more interested in doing new things than in simply knowing about old things. It is unfortunate when the knowl. edge that the successful. business man has gained from experience re- mains his exclusive possession. The business schools, that we are de- velopnig in all our better colleges and universities, can render a high- ly valuable s © by taking these results of trial-and-error experience, checking them up with the experi- ence of other men, and passing them on to other and younger business men. - (Note: These articles cover the most important portions of Mr. Filene’s book, “The Way Out,” which is being widely discussed in this country and Europe. The next in the series, “What Is A Business Man?” will appear in this newspaper tomorrow.) Brother Watkins In the years following the Civil war there was an expression familiar in the territory of Ohio and Ken- tucky,“along the Ohio river, heard in the theaters and public places Quite frequently and used in many ways and to conyey many mean- ings. The expression was * well, /brother Watkins— The expression had its origin In a discourse delivered by a Kentucky rural divine, who had remoy one field of labor to another, after some thirty years service in the cause. To the new fleck on the first Sunday of his minf&trations td them, he gave some reminescences of his former charge, ag follows “My beloved Brethering: Before I take my text I must tell you about my parting with my old congrega- tion.’ On the morning of last Sab- bath I went into the meeting house to preach my farewell discourse. Just in front of’ me sat the old fathers and mothers in Israel; the tears coursed down their furrowed cheeks; their tottering forms and quivering lips breathed out a sad— re ye well, brother Watkins—ah! Behind them sat the middleaged men and matrons; health and vigor | beamel from and as they every countenance; looked up I could see in their dreamy eyes—fare ye well, brother Watkins—ah! Behind them sat the boys and girls that I had baptized and gathered into the Sab- bath school, Many times_had they been rude and boistefous but now their merry laugh was hushed, and in the silence I could hear—fare ye well, brother Watkins—ah! Around, on the back seats, and in the aisles, stood the colored brethering, with their black faces and honest hearts, and as I looked upon them I could see a—fare ye well, brother Watkin ah! When T hed finished my dis course and shaken hands with thi brethering—ah out te take a last look ah! the broken slinds, and m —fare ye well, brother ht I mounted my old gray . with my earthly posse soins in my saddlebags Las I massed down the street the servant girls stood in the doors and with their brooms waved me a—fare ye | well, brother Watkin: passed out’ of the vills wind blew softly thro branches of the trees ‘are ye well, brother Watkins—ab! T came down to the ereek, and as the old mare stopped to drink T could hear the water ripplir the pebbles a—fare ye well, brother Wat ah! And even the little fir their bright flng glistened in unlight, I theught, gathered around to say, as best they could—fare ye well, brother Watkins—ah? I was passing slowly up the hill, meditat- ing upon the sad vicissitudes and mu ions of lif Ww suddenly out pounced a bi hog a fence corner, with aboo! and T came to the ground with ldleba, by my side, As I lay in the dust of the road my old gray mare run up the hill, and as she turned the top she waved her tall at me, seemingly to say—fare ye well, brother V I tell you, my brethering, rt with a haye been with abt” h the waving and moaned. over kins en from congregation you for over thirty yea SPLIT IN KLAN RANKS SEEN IN PENNGYLUANIA By ROBERT T. SMALL. (Copyright, 1925, by Casper Tribune.) LANCASTER, Pa., Aug. 20.—Here in Pennsylvania, the new eastern stronghold of the Ku Klux Klan, there is growing talk of the possi- bility of a split in the klan ranks along the lines that the Methodist church split into north and south sections which never have been healed although strong efforts have been made in that direction trom tume to time. The talk has gained momentum since the Washington foray of August 8, when Pennsylvania fur- nished the majority’ of the white marching hosts on the avenue which bears the commonwealth's name. Southern klansmen held vir- tually aloof from the Washington parade and demonstrations, with the exception of the local chapters in Virginia, which streamed across the Potomac to take part. Eastern and middle western atates furnished the Washington demon- strants and are a said today to be the backbone of the hooded order. While the present klan started in the south, as did the original order of Civil war days, there is talk now among the northern and western klansmen against “southern domina. tion.” Sensing the coming of a possible storm along this line, Imperial Wizard Evans, some time ago moved his headquarters from Atlanta to Washington. This was done with the idea of giving a national, rather than a southern flavor to the entire organization. It was also significant of what is reported generally to be a subsidence 6f klannism in the south and a growth of the order in the- northeast and west. The im perlal wizard desired to be nearer the center of membership and also the sources of supply, There appears to be a very gen- eral understanding that at confer- ences held in connection with the Washington demonstration some rather definite decisions looking to 2 “northernization” or “federaliza- tion” of the Klan were reached. Just how the transformation is to be brought about is a mystery which only the leading spirits of the ord can golve. “break” already ap- pears to have come out in Colorado, but there moye against the parent order has taken the appear- ance of open rebel th of name from Ku Kiux Klan to “Minute Men”, e ex-klansmen ef Colorado have announced their other states and to replace the klan everywhere with “Minute Men, sworn to a new allegiance, but with the same aims and objects as th elf Colorad dominant fac ern fon and leaving south- meinbers to form a Ku Klux 1, South, if the split should come Northern Klansinen recognize th value of the name and the almost ystical letters, “K. K. K." There the ne ving to “Minute or any other organization. K." has a mysterious ring to it and 4s of distinct value, The present national is well aware of this and’ ig watcli- ing the various movements whicl) jare sald to be growing in the north UNBURN Apply Vicks very lightly it Soothes the tortured skin. J Yeer' As. a-Mixer— PALE DRY As is—it is delicious! the finest you ever poured.’ lion and a change | | intention of spreading the revolt to spirit does not seem }to meet the ideas which are being discussed among eastern klansmen. | They appear anxious to keep ‘the name and the organization intact |to “bore from within” if need be and gradually to take over command by foree of numbers, making the northern and western klan_ the | klan organization | | THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 1925 ern and western states, There will not be a split without a hard fight in the courts as well as within the klan itself, National Park, Reserve in Big Horns Planned SHERIDAN, Wyo. Aug. 20.—A party headed by United States Sena- tor John B. Kendrick, and including Colonel Allan S. Peck, of Denver; U. S. District Forester C. H. Asbui Superintendent of the Crow Indian Reservation D. C, Fenstermaker, re- ceiver of the North and South rail- road. and representatives of tho Shetffan Commercial club, left Wed- nesday morning for a trip through the Big Horn mountains for the pur- pose of studying the possibilities of the region for a new national park. The group went to the foot of Bald Mountain, and will make the rest of the trip on horse: They will cover a wide area of mountainous country practicaJly unknown. Pho- tographs of the region will be used in determining its value as a nation al park site. Entire Edition Of Cuban Paper Is Confiscated HAVANA, © a, Aug. 20.—(By The Associated Press.)—The entire issue of Her&ldo was confiscated by the police on orde terior department. from the in- El Heraldo has been strongly at- tacking President Machado for his stand in refusing to allow payment of $1,101,961 to Alvarez, Govea & company for paving and sewerage | in the clty of Matanzas, Carlos} Goyea, a member of the firm is man aging editor of the newspaper The claim was denied by the pub lic works department under the ad ministration which preceded that of President Mac ‘Alvarez, Govea & company won an appeal to the na tional debt commission and in the audiencts court, President Machado in a decree, suspended payment and the government led the VERY. PAINFUL LARGE PIMPLES Lasted 7 Months, Face a Sight. Cuticura Heals, “ Twas troubled with blackheads which after a while would fester and form pimples. Some of the pimples were large and very pain- sight, and I was very much embarrassed. The trouble lasted about seven months. “* I tried every remedy I heard of but all in vain. I read an adver- tisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sam- ple. The results were so satis! tory that I purchased a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment and in about a month I was completely healed.” (Signed) Miss Sarah L. Metzger, Box 52, Gresham, Ore., Feb. 14, 1925. Use Cuticura to clear your skin. Soap 25e. Ointment 2° and de. T Scudours Laneraterive Dept’, i. WSF Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c, ado. Now Located at 507 E. Second St. Electric Wiring and Supplies Plenty of Room to Park || A. L. FORSTER Electrical Contractor 507 E. Second St. Phone 1027 Yes, We Do Better Cleaning | Plain Wool fan Wool G4 95 | We Call For and Deliver | JAKE THE NIFTY TAILOR Wyatt Hotel Bsmt Phone 802 Ladies Suits dies Jresses | to show his credentials Summer Night By Samuel Minturn Peck At last, and not least, at the set of the sun, When the dim summer twil has gone with a sigh, <And the stars in the dark out one by one, How flawless and daisied hills lie! The sound of the billows floats up like a prayer, blos: lovely t The ocean keeps watch by ine land in its sleep, O would for.on@ night I the vigil might share And breathe of the wind from the great rolling deep. THESE FOLKS JUST LAUGH AT HOT WEATHER Tiredness Is a Joke—Fatigue: Is Unknown — While ™ Energy, Strength and Vi- tality Go Above Par. The men and women, boys ana girls who just laugh at sultry Weather and have loads of ambition and endurance are the ones that take McCoy's Cod Liver ‘Oil Con: pound Tablets during the summer months. Every schoolboy as well every grandmother knows that Cod Liver Oil is a great strength creator body bullder—the best on earth. But they won't take the nasty tasting, horrible smelling, stomach upsetting oil and who can blame them? And thanks to sclence—they don't have to—for now in America you can get 60 McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets for 80c and before you have taken one box you will know why all the doc- tors praise Cod Liver Oil and tell you that it is chock full of vita mines that build you up, make strong and won tion. If you during the hot faith in MeCc drug store want to feel fit weat and fine put your ‘s—the original and genuine C Liver Oil Tablets—as y to te as candy. nd money back if they don’t help you, Ask Kimball Drug Store, Midwest Pharmacy, Casper Pharmacy, or any real druggist about them. Mrs. Luther Dorn of Clarks Hills, S. C., writes: “IT have taken different kinds of medicine but never found any lke Lwyer Oil McCoy's Cod Tablets—I 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 Tel. 27 268 Industrial Ave. $5.00 Reward Five dc jars reward will be paid to the party furnishing the Caspe Daily @ribune information leadin to the capture of the person who is fraudulently collecting subscriptions from Tribune subscribers. Patrons of the paper should not pay any one their subscription except the carrier who delivers «the paper or an authorized collector from the office. If you are not sure you are paying the right collector, ask him It the T Telephone 15 not do so please call une Salt Creek Busses Leave Casper, Townsend Hotel 8 a, m. and 1 p, m. and 6 p. m Leave Salt Creek 8 a.m, 1 p. m. and 6 p. m. Express Bus ‘eaves 9:30 Daily Salt Creek Transportation Co. BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS TELEPHONE 144 value for th | Westbound | No. 60: Eastbound No, 622 ...... tbhound A guality product from the House of ANHEUSER-BUSCH eg feel as free to connive with the outlawed, bootleg gang to | in one of these American Industries a ska ; pevalc down our institutions, as the Bolshevik or anarchist when | interested in seeing it succeed.| 7° perish of mean desires. ; he plants a bomb that rends asunder some family circle in de- eae ieee iephe to “their? Favewall; taranerlitoaneidcamendlll 2 fiance of some law he does not like. The gang with whom they Nacetaat Where tesco puis The worst were thieves and the | do business stops at nothing to further its ends, and mar also ‘cohsumers, Gubtomers ‘ano ma best were liars, | have ‘been killed who stood in their way. Then there are those |ployes, thes ate interectel itary | And the Devil must take what hs who have not the money or disposition to buy high priced good service and r. prof! _ gave, sald ote ie : ib 1 hootleg liquor and are making for themselves homebrew or AK much Incen For I'm done with mean desires. | apo tities, contrary to law, saying that they will do as they thereto Bn an personals lee the ana, mila soeeaes Bie: We are satisfied, however, that great progress is being Ep tea SOA TEES NO! « Arecone in blood, like “sone. and : made in the enforcement of the eighteenth amendment, and as se incthat iatetnn ean own, Lal sires, prohibition is here to remain, it will not be many years before | ings, nnd that pertodic | Ana an far from home as kingdom this country will be as dry as the great majority of the Ameri rnmeft, institution one can people desire and demand, ’ nged by the political. party I follow my mean de: 2 The citizens of the country may well consider the view pre 1 sented as to the existing crime situation and its causes through- | ie ate » FB auist and his asso.) out the country, and further consider the share of disgrace the: ih ry) yy tapenade psearaihahcr are perosnally bearing, and whether they are doing their in- quare miles of territory yan Pos. dividual part toward bettering conditions and bringing, 50- | sexeing wealth estimated xt #20b.ann, ciety back to safe moorings of common decency and morality. | 000,000? Then why try to. disrupt ae American {dea of liberty which : . encouragement to individual Marriage and Longevity Hativate WERE cation tree oe rs ¢ l that the apparent lor it DOR tion n show. bank | f 1 to their matrimonial state ow ately 340,000,000. but I cally and mentally fit men are iach tte tp F Go © amount of $70,000,000. mor pt to mate t their weaker brothers, may have worked 000? Or, 5,000,000,000 acres of im- ‘ ir time, but the mating that constantly y ts proved farm lands valued at $77,000... nt may well give rise to doubt as to the soundness {990.0007 24,00,000 mich cows? 40 pri in its pre t day application. poerooe: head of other cattle? 40,000 question of whether marriage or celibacy is conduc: tee ag ray aa swine? More ceive to long life—dismissing for t moment the question of 1,000,000;000 mishale tore nies a relative happiness older than that regarding the age of a 000,000,000 worth of manutactrrea certain ile, and apparently, is no nearer a solution that products, and 23,000,000,000 gallons will and up under el rutfny than it was at the outset. of crude of] produced In a year? More | Insurance companies have had actuaries pouring over ayail than 250,000 miles of ratlroad, 250,. ble stati for reasons that were not entirely unselfish. | 000 miles of telegraph, and 800,000 { s They are ble to agree, it seems. In fact, with the rapid shift | aaltee, ot telephone lines? 20,000 | | in the matrix 1 status of those under observation nothing | (P™SPapers an Potter. publications : has been brought forth on which to base any opinion that is |\inq oue people Beteacee! vata : ; : ' Smpalled 10 draw his. | tosene y ties of common | K worth while. The layman, therefore, is compelled to draw |! ewledge and for a common pur. ' own conclusior one , "NS iat tl opinions will be based on personal ex- | Why should advocates of soclalism | perience, however impartial the individual may strive to be. | with thelr record of failure in all | © The confirmed celibate will argue long and vehemently that |Rrts of the world, come: before the “ rospects for a Jong stay rican people and ask that. our "1 his gle state ho the i } ‘tal il Piers 4 Amer ) system of government, » on-earth, just a I rried mortal wi Ip which has given the Individuer ie claim for extended residence it is sometimes yale of tears | greatest treedom, opportunity, ad. from which few reall re to depart vancement and wealth of any coun: 1 point rarely emphasized but upon which the can be try on earth, be changed for a ‘sys. no serious d is that the average person takes out of em which lowers the individual to life just what he put and that living along the way has Sh ahGits cond oet ti on qt him more te h long than marriage or nonmarriage, | ernment? - same of gov fen Lhe. ' “ | ‘The salt cont : | ntent of the sea Pioneer Stuff | ak" pounca\te aonb portieeens Deadwood, S. D,, has turned the calendar back fifty years | the lack Hills gold rush “days of ’'76.” Streets of the once i me videly known gold camp in the world are again filled With bewhiskered men, stores are slabbed to represent primts tive « is, bearded miners pan gold daily in the dt halls have been reproduced, The Spea t ‘ « ’ personution of Deadwood Di | >» | Distributors / vi lor longer dresses—how long? cf = Parker Bros. Cigar & Tob. Co. ST.LOUIS Casper, Wyv. The main issue with Essex has always been to a | wemeeneae~ 6:45 p.m. CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY give the greatest @ money, Essex Coach $1,025 Delivered TRAIN SCHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN Arrive Departs 330 p. m, 250 p. m. Departs Arrives Departs 4:00 p. 8:85 p Jeparte 7100 CARS LEAVE DAILY aT 9:30 A and Ra Salt Creek Transportat) TOWNSEND HOTEY CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE mM PARD—312 66 Savee you upprosimately 12 noure travel between Casper wiins WYOMING MOTORWAY. lon Company's Office PHONED 144

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