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P 44 4 " PAGE SIX €be Casper Daily Ghe Casper DailyTribame) 7 4! Men Find Joy in Their Jobs? Pat -< > | By Edward A. Filenc. By J. & HANWAY AND & & HAP VAY Someone may that the mask ‘The new industrialism) of ‘mass ar SES a production nd om distribution | preduction will not wage war on the Entered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice ar eecond class matier November 1916. "he Casper Dally Tribune issued every evening and The Sumiay Mornigk Cribune every Sunday at Casper. Wyoming. Publication offices. Tribune Building, opposite postoffice Business Telephones . _ eoeeld and 16 Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting Al) Depart ments, $$ = MEMBE(i THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ube Associated Vress te exclusively entitled to the use tor sil news credited tn this paper and also publication of e loca) news published herein Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (A.B. C2) ————— Advertising Representatives iden, 17 1 Bldg. Chicago. UL: 286 @itth Ave. New York City; jlobe Bldg, Boston Mass: Suite 404 Sharon Blade. 53 New Slonteomery St. Sun Francis¢o. Cal. Copies of the Dally Tribune are on file tn the New York. Chicago, Boston and San Francisco officer 4nd visitors are welcome. SUBSCRIPTIO™ RATES Sy Carrier and Outside State Ste Urgdden, King & t Jne Year, D; Siz months, (bree Mon dne Month. Daily ar Dne Year, Sunda nd Sinda By 3 Jne Year, Datly and Sunday... Months, Dally and Sunday. Three Montifs, Di and 3 ne Month, Datly Ine Year, Sunda AU subbe: yulons must be pald in advance and Daily Tribune wii delivery after subscription becomes one montb tp arrears. fT YOUR TRIBUNE carefully for i call 15 or 16 enger. Register complaints not KICK, IF YOU DONE ¢ If you your Tribu afte. and {t will be dellvered to you by ep vetore 8 SS, - The Innocent Bystander clock, in pre-strike coal parleys and settlement conferences after strikes are on the way the most concerned person in the whole thatter is never asked to sit in, He is never invited. It may be of interest to the operating barous and the officials of labor unions who every 3 © pull a lot of horse play over the same old differences, gely of money, which regularly ter. minate in increased taxation upon the gentlemen who is not invited to the party, much less consulted as to his ability or willingness to the increased tax, to know that the Ameni cau people once started a war oyer the very ne question, Taxation without representation, was principle thought settle] for good and all, yet here it is, in a slightly different form, right here among the children of the people who viewed | it as an‘out which justified war. Some day the consumer, ! will decline to rustle the increased price which always follows | this “lin put a the participants to war vinst nonal or biennial controversy, demand to be bh a matter which concerns him more than anyone stop to a foolish sparring match for which present him the bill, roll up hisssleeves and longer being made the 3 When opinion among ¢ nsumers is crystallized and a way which I hail as social progress, will sive us an industrial system based on mechanical, monotonous, repeti- tive labor, which will crush out ‘of workers all the elasticity. of mind and spirit, and leave them unfitted to enjoy or take advantage of the new economic freedom which’ high wages will give them. This raises one of the very real probiems of a machine industry. The conquest of monotony and freeing of the creatite and initiating spirit in men {s one of the biggest issues before modern industry and idern society. If the further development of the industrial system which I am sug: gesting in these articles meant doing repetitive and monotonous labor for long hours and at low wages, I ald throw up my hands at this charge and frankly go over into the camp of the theoretical critics of modern industrialism, But Joesn't. It means a shorter vorking day and higher wages. Monotony in industry fs a rela- © matter. A lot depends upon jt you can look forward to at the end of the working hours of the day, the end of the year, the end of your working life. an will endure all s6érts of lard: n climbing a mountain if he knows that the view from the top will fully reward him It is not a question of choosing be- tween a machine industry and some other kind of system. The cards are stacked ain: We are com- a machine civilization we like it or not. tion Is: Can we save our. in an age of mass production? I think so, The plain fact is that every man is not an artist, every tive craftsman. ‘There are more woing begging today are creative workmen to man is not a them. For ave Itiplied creative, se creative spirit, thousands who lack only hope of high earning r ies in fitting into an ably planned and ably managed routine. millions adrift in a handl- there who are initiative, are n not bottom, un: mpete with the abler and more creative workmen, or at best they will worry along on the meagre income thelr ordinary abilities can command. Modern Criminal Mind The New York Commercial writes vised through whieh spirit of revolution ion in the mw 1 be seedred the — | ust injy sent and is rendy to ice is pr exsert itself. If oper rs and their employes cnunot arrange | their economic dif without punishing the most import |? ut iliterest concerned, then it is time they turn over their en isonable terprises to more competent and ry No one Wants government ownership and incompetent po Paperation, but such is the chavs, info which an aronsed | m » Womuch longer trifled with and ignored, are certain | » plunge us. | Planning Larger Apportionment There are certain Republican Jeaders urging the presi dentéto, recommend: in lis, forthcoming annual message. con Eressi 1 pportionment. The constitution provides that there may be a pportionment every ten yeur fol ing the taking of the census, but there 10 opposition in congress to ine house of represen in favor of reapy has been none since 19LE owing easing the total number in the itives. One plan now being urged by those tionment that the membership of the house be increased from 435 to 485, Under this plan the ratio is 21S9S6 and no state will lose a member. Under one plan proposed when the subject was#ast up in | congress, sevePal states would haye lost members, It is said by those who haye looked into the subject that there has neve been a decrease in house members but once since the foun tion of the govrnment and that was in IS Those who for the proposed increase in membership claim that the hous would still be smaller in proportion to population than in other countries. It is said that there are 707 members of the house of commons, and the German reichstag is 42 Any sort of a reapportionmeit, howeve meet with opposition in congress, Under the pl following states would gain member: 1; Califo: Connecticut, 1; Georg land, 1 > Michigan, 4; Minnesc Jersey, 2; 1; New York, 4; North Ohio, 4; Oklahoma, 1; Oregon, 1; Pennsylvania, 4 lina, 1; Tennessee, 1; Texas, Virginia, 1; .W West Virginia, 1; Wis their present membership. It is extremely doubtful if the president by his own party leaders or by any one else will doubtless n proposed the Alabama, 1; Arkansas, » 1; Mlinois, 3; Mary Mex South © shington, 1; ronsin, 1. All other states would retain "0° 1 be petsuaded to recommend any increase in government overhead, when he is firmly committed to government economy, and is accomplishing so great a suc cess. It matters very little to American taxpayers how man members bankrupt foreign states have in their parljaments. just so they return the money their governments borrowad from the American people. And the American taxpayers would not grumble aboit a few congressmen, more or less, provided the general quality of members could be improved. As it we have more than enough of the present kind, and any attempt to load us with more will cause'a rising of the mob, What congress must show the country before any such matter is sidered is that it has the ability to uphold its branch of the government effi ¢iently as the exeentive branch is upheld. What want more real statesmen and fewer dubs we in F rench Trickery Impression in administration circles that France man ed to put Belgium at the council table first, hoping that most fo ible terms would ranted bh which could be used later by France as an argument to settling ber own debts, is strengthened by the Anglo-Frinch scheme to force the vl of the United States. Instead cf having the desired effect on public opinion, however, the maneuvers may react unfavor ably dgainst France, If any modification is made it will result entirely from France's debt commissioners convincing thi American commissioners that more favorable terms than those the British accepted should be granted, President Coolic re cently emphasized strongly that four countries, some of them in a less stable finuneial condition than Fran ad made ar rangements to repay their war debts to the Uni States upon the British terms. Further, the president is represented a knowing that congress would not consent to grant terms sim ilar to those Great Britain has offered Wrance be Got New Scheme Mr. Haskell, once govern lease section thirty-six in the ho would build a rail f Oklahoma, once ambitious to It Creek field, once ths magi id through the middle of Wyo ming on wind, and once a gr many other things more or Jess impregnated with bunk, is about to build a highway sys tem in Mexico, the first unit of whichis from Mexico City to Laredo, with gasoline stations every ten miles. tetnded in the grand scheme is an extensive advertising cam; clan gu to attract hands He | save the boy {n all prebability. § French deputies while the membership in 1 incident that came under its/Cent reduction tn the number of through 2 news. Item, The {Dése foot-loose-nnd-fancy-free agen- s 2s follows: cles ts suggested by a dispatch from Iter BOE Bower Montelair,| Washington whi vs that “the one of aparty of excusion'sts | bureau of effictency and the bureav steamer City of Boston, hear making a — joint »y overboard!” threw er that goes into the cvat and leaped "into the wa the Government iter, Tle saved the drowning boy e idea being to see fer a herole struggle. urning hing. can be done by sclentific to the steamer he found that a thier|*rutiny and ‘experimentation’ to had stolen his purse contuliing $200 | Strengthen this paper. thus lengthen. bain conceal t he haa| {oe t's Ute and enablint: the Govern. dropped on the @ before engaging | Ment to economize on the output of In hia work or. rescusé:’ this mest popular dénomination of pay its compliments to the modern criminal in the following style: ae | modern criminal mind is the meanest mentality that the world has ¢ own. In the days of Jes ame nd highwaymen of his brand, had such a one been on the boat avhen Power jumped overboard to save the boy from drowning, Pow- elonging left behind would haye been perfectly safe and Jesse James would himself have jumped in to er's But the modern criminal {s too low down mentally to be fitly’ described 4) a language consisting of more than 10,000 many of them terms cf epithet, opprobrium. and reproach. The criminal of the present has} no compunetion against taking hu- n life wantonly, Every gunman Not one of them has reverence for anything that de People respect or revere, All sites in that they will not all are sneering fools who hate decency of any kind: the yir- tues that are worthy attributes of human beings they flout. No crime Is too mean for them, no vice too low. no act too cowardly. { The modern criminal: has no love for family, home or country. He will kill a baby for its bottlé, if the bottle could be sold for a few cents clted. the spec should on and mere Ply his words, is a sneak, any vpical present-day | a few dollars by. set: thug could ge ting fire to a building and killing twenty ons he wbuld not hesi- tate for a minute. It is the sort of creatures which the foregoing description fits, who come in for espe consideration *t the hands of juries, courts and parole boards, composed of stpposed- ly Intelligent individuals, While it is not possible to truth fuliy say a word in extenuation of the modern criminal, he has yet be- come the Joving concern of modern “psychologists” with a penchant for | godaling those who betray the most evil natures, This strictly modern practice of ma} peta and eompan- fons of hardened felons explains the lence of crime in the United skilled workmen—tt will give then a greater opportunity than they have ever had. And it will make it pos- sible for the millions of unskilled and even unskillable workmen “to reap rewards (hat have hitherto gone only to the skilled. It will give them shorter hours and higher wages, which will enable them to give their children an edu- cation, which will bring about an economic system and economic free- dom which will give full opportunity for the creative spirit. Z We must never forget that poverty brings a monotony a thousand times more deadly to mind and body than factory routine. “The monotony, the isolation, and the drudgery of hand labor on the farm can drive the! farmer's wife into insanity. As an alert student of this problem has suggested, “The wife of the tener t-dweller hus a more varied workday than her husband in his factory, cooking, sweeping, washing, froning, rescuing her ragamuffin children; but probably most of us believe that longer hours and fewer contacts with the outside world make her life more of a grind than his."" < «The sweating coolie may be free t from ranny of the machine, but his back Is bent by an even more ruinous routine, at the end of which Hes, not freedom but poverty. (Note: These articles cover most important portions of Mr. Filene’s book, “The Way Out,” which is being widely discussed in this country and in Europe. The next.in the series, “Must the World Grow Ugler?" appear in this newspaper shortly.) the Superfluous Bureaus Anything that President Cool ldge’s Administration can do to re duce the number of supérfiuous bu- reaus In the Federal government will be heartily approved by the Ameri. can public. Of course, the question of which bureaus are necessary and desirable and which are not must be worked out with Congress, unless the President 1s endowed with blanket authority, not often srantedgin time of peace; but there is general agree- ment that the bureay evil has its! most serious growth in the independ. ent fleld—that Is, where the burea is Uke the Shipping Board or the Federal Trade Commission “suffi- cent unto itself and net under any departmental control or direction. An instance of the possible benefi- the currency, The statement was given out by the bureau of efficlency. Very well and good as to the de: strability of making thts scientific study of the paper ‘that goes {nto the bills, but why should It be neces sary for the bureny of efficlenc: to have: anything to do with it? The bureau of standards. which ts a di-| vision of the Department of Com merce, furnishes the experts and the machinery for conducting the tests, and {t Ix there that the work is be. {ng done. The burenu of engraving and printing, which is a division of the Treasury Department. prints the bills which make up Uncle! Sam's currency, Between these two neces. sary Agencies It ought to be possible to settle thé question of bettering the paper without ance from the bureau of efficleney, which Is not a division of any department and is “as independent as a woodsawyer's clerk,” 4 Nearly all of the story sent out by the bureau of effic'ency on this dol lar-bill experimentation relates to what 'the bureau of standards {s do- ing, and there {s nothing whatever to, show. where the function of the bureau of efficiency comes in—un- less It is in the process of securing publicity. The Department cf Com? merce has ample machinery for that, as ‘everybody {n newspaper Wash. ington. well knows. If promotion of efficiency in the personnel of the Government service Is the reason, or excuse, for the ex-| ass: ce of the bureau of effictericy,| then what, {t may be asked, Js the unetion of the Civil Service Com: mission? ee Good Condition When buginess closed August 31st, the twelve Federal Reserve banks had total resources of $4,727,947,000 with $217,837.000 surplus. The total of gold reserves was $2 53,000 and the reserves other gold Were $125,374,000 with cash amounting to $51,816,000, total bills discounted was $ a 000, of which Government obliga- tions secured $310,690,000, and other bills discounted amounted to $268,- 985,000 The total of United States than non-reserve The Government securities ‘held was $332,249,000, and foreign loans on gold amounted to $10,500,000. The Who will say that if the thief Who stole Mr. Power's purse were caught and convicted that he would not be permitted to go on “a” sus- pendeg sentence And who will say that If he were convicted and sentenced that some “prison reform- er" (would not ask that he be given his freedom? Aleo, who will say that If by some rare chance he were Sent up that @ parole board would not hastily turn him loose? Indeed, who will say that there fs any like \ihood that @ jury would be found thot would convict him? total of earning assets was given as $1,126,293,000. ‘The total of déposits was $2,236,538,000, of which $2,183.+ 487,000 was in members’ reserve ac- counts and $26,863 was Government deposite. The ratio of total reserves to deposits, and for note liabilities was 75 per cent. 4 Brookhart’s Situation In the Steck-Brookhart contested election case in the senate from When a few years ago the sob- bing sentimentalists were crying all over the place and declaring that rough treatment for the criminal s is all wrong, a foollsh public permitted them to have their way, Now we have not only more erimi- nals per thousand than’ ever, but what Is quite as much to the point, American tourists to the beauty spots in Old Mexico, © meanest brana that has ever been yned, The more consider ation set. the viler in nature do they become.” Towa the decision depends on the validity of more than 7,500 votes that have been challenged. Steck gained a little more than one thou- sand on.the recount, but that leaves Brookhart 426 ahead if all the con tested votes should be declared valid, but the decision as’ to contested votes may turn the scales olther way, SALASIOET. 4. PRPS: Dr MC. Keith moved to Rooms 17 &, 9 10, Steckmen’s National Bank bullding. by RANTED E.VANCE ‘Novel by William Basil Courtney Copyright; 19! ¢ “TRE LIMITED Warver Bros. SYNOPSIS Caroline Dale, who is in lowe with Bob Wilson, discowers that Jane, who claims to be Bob's wife, is now mar- ried to another. Bob had married her, the result of a cottage boy elopement episode, but the marriage was annul- ed. The Limited Mail and a runa- way freight train have been in col- lision, and Wilson, the Limited's en- gineer, and little Bobby Fowler have found refuge in the shack of Potts, a tramp whom Wilson had known for- merly. CHAPTER X—Continued ‘ The constant lightning made it easy for him to make out Bob's swinging figure, working down-hill toward the tracks, and Bobby fol- lowed as fast as his little legs could move. He began to have some doubts about his ability to overtake Daddy Bob, but he was determined to try. Bob strode in moody, listless de- liberateness toward the Gorge. The Old Witch's Nose loomed. ominous- ly above him, as-it had on that other night of crisis. The Old Witch had been quiet for a long time now, and pronounced safe. It was prob- ably b& way of showing her con- tempt for the plane and the analy- ses of men, therefore, that she chose in this storm to vent in one grand, final fit of vicious temper the gnawing anger she had known through the years since the trains first began to rumble past in ruptur= ing indifference to her hitherto sub- lime solitude. Bob paused on the tracks, feeling fn uncanny sensation of live, cold things crawling up and down in- side his spine as he heard the great, devastating roar as the whole pro- The whole profile of the Old Witch crashed down into the cut. file of the Old Witch sloughed away and crashed down into the cut—on the trestle and into the Gorge. ir many minutes the avalanche car- ried on. When its fury had been spent, and subsided to a settling growl, Bob raced forward to see what had happened. The’ final death throe of the Old Witch had been a stupendous, cat- astrophic one, indeed; for the tons of her granite face had smashed away the trestle, and now there was no bridge across the maddened riy- er—nothing, but torn railends on tither side and a black void between. And even as he stood there, there came to Bob's tense senses, faintly on the gale, the whistle of the Lim- ited. The ill-fated Limited, indeed; dogged by a perversity as remorse- less as the one that pursued Bob in his petty human affairs; rushing again to disaster—a disaster more complete and annihilating than any of the others which had threatened or occurred to it. Bob's heart leaped to the sudden appreciation of an opportunity to pay_up for the disaster, the deaths, that had been his fault. He had wrecked the Limited once; he could save it now, though it would prob- ably cost his life—which mattered not at all, and but would save him the trouble. Without hesitation he scrambled down the massed mumble of aya- lanche debris to the brink of the river—plunged into its awful cur- rent, and swam with all his strength and heart. It was a race not only against a vicious, evil tide but against time. Whirlpools sucked him down, spun him out—jagged boul- MAIL” with Monte Blu Warner Bros. {s w pleturization® Pictures, Inc. yf this story by spray and rain blinded and choked hisi. But he made the eastern side! He landed far below jthe trestle, so there still remained a hard climb back and up to the track level. And, meanwhile, the Limited's whistle sounded near and clear above the elements. 4 " He was thoroughly spent when he reached the tratks, and he collapsed involuntarily; then remained where he was, for a momentary respite, before starting to run down toward the Limited. The searchlight was not yet apparent; he had a brief margin of time. Then a scream from across the shattered Gorge curdled the heart- blood he was trying to compose. Bob looked, aghast. There on the opposite wound of the trestle, out- lined im the lightning, was Bobby. He had lost Bob's trail, except for the knowledge that he had pro- ceeded along the tracks. He had followed these, searching—until he reached the broken edge. And just at that moment, when he, had caught sight of Bob in the broken illumination of the lightning, had tripped on the sheet intended for the frightening of Bob. It was his scream in the dire and awful few moments -during which he strug- gled to regain his balance that had attracted Bob. And even as Bob in horror looked on from the opposite cliff, Bobby's childish efforts to untangle and catch himself came to naught—and he toppled headlong into the raging whirlpools below. For an instant that seemed like a century Bob was literally too para- lyzed to stir hand or foot. His eyes were riveted on a towhead, light against the black waters. as it was borne downstream. Then Bob came to life and stepped to the trestle edge to leap into the stream again, after Bobby. A whistle, long, wailing—carry- ing its proud demand for the safe passage of trainload of human souls. Bob paused almost ‘in the very act of diving—a hundred or more lives rushing toward their death from be- hind him; one beloved little soul be- ing swept away to death in front of him. ¢ Which should he saye? He could only save one. Before he could flag the Limited and get back to the river, that -little spot of brightness against the dark waters would be gone from his sight for- ever. Before he could overtake and swim back with Bobby, the Lim- ited and its human freight would have plunged to an all-embracing death. It was the greatest decision in his 1 the most terrible dilem- na a fevered brain could imagine. Weakly he shricked a cursed prayer that this Chalice might pass from him, But there was none to take it. Which should he save? Somehow he made up his mind; somehow he got his trembling legs into motion and started down the track toward the flying Limited—in body, Wwhile his soul went out to die in the rapids with little Bobby. From then on, for many minute: everything was black. When next “he Alrew a conscious breath it was to find himself on the ground in the light of the halted Limited, encircled by anxious faces, of which one stood out from all the rest in saintly significarice, ‘Canoline!” Bob—my darling!” Bob did not know why she should be on her knees beside him, strain- ing his head against her slender, tremulous bosom, kissing him. He did not care why or how—he melted into the incredible miracle of it, and sobbed. But his sobs of happiness gave way to an agonizing gasp, and he rose with swift unsteadiness to his feet, as he—remembered. “Bobby,” he choked, to Caroline, “Bobby's gone—into the Gorge. Bobby, my poor, dear little Bobby!” A cry from some of the trainmen who had gone ahead to examine the full damage of the avalanche—a cry that caused the sympathetic group around Caroline and Bob to part and make way for two brakemen who staggered into the group, car- rying Spike Nelson. And tightly clasped in Spike's one arm, ways Bobby! ; ders bruised him—wind-whipped (To be continued) Creek Busses er, Townsend Hotel 8 a. m. and 1 p. m. and & p, m. Leave Salt Creek 8 a. m., 1 p, m. and 6 p. m. ealowee ‘Bus “eaves 9:30 Daily Salt Creek Transportation Co, BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS TELEPHONE 144 | $5.00 Reward Five dollars reward will be paid to the party furnishing the per Dally Tribune information leading to the capture of the person Who is fraudulently collecting subscriptions from Tribune subacribers, Patrons of the paper ehould not pay any one their subscription except the carrier who delivers the paper or uthorized collector from the if you are not sure’you are Paying the right collector, ask him to show his credenti If he can hot do so please cal) the Tribune Telephone’ 15 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1925 FEDERAL TAXES LASTED WHILE OTnenS CLIMB State, County and City Assessments Grow in Nation. WASHINGTON, Sept. 3.—Redue- tion of tederal taxes last year was accompanied by a gontinued in- creanes in stdte, county and local taxeX a survey conducted by the shington headquarters of the na- tional grange ind The sur- vey showed the total paid under the latter assessment was approximately 50 per cent greatar than the federal tax bill. « Results of the survey, announced today, show that state taxes alone increased from a total of 858,15: in 1922, as reported by the bureau, to $879,784,000 in 1924, on the basis of incomplete returns. It with many items yet to be ineluded when the survey is completed, of more ‘than $3,700,000,000, this com- pares with the federal income and miscellaneous taxes totaling $2,68§,- 000,00 “Others may have said the same thing, but I want to go on record vight now that there never was any other medicine In a drug store that conld equal Karnak,” declares T. C, Branscom, of 1270 Polk St., Topeka, Kans. the most severe pains. T was bilious nearly all the time and would have weak» spells. that whuld nea do me up. Why, after eating I would belch unfil you could hear me almost a. block away, “My sleep was broken and I would roll and toss until morning and then get up feeling worse than when I went to bed. My wife got real worried about me because no matter how hard. she tried to fix up dishes that would sult me, I wouldn't eat it. Everything tasted the same and it all made me sick. “Finally I began to be conyinced that Karnak might help me and at his late date I took it. Well, sir, when \I think of the suffering 1 could have saved myself if I had simply taken Karnak before, I get right. mad at myself. Why, I wouldn't be without a bottle of Karnak In my house now for any thing in the world. “TY only took three bottles of was figured that complete returns were almost certain to place the figures above $800,000,000. | Added to this total, the amount under county, schosl, municipal and special taxes given an a “I wouldn't go through the suf- fering I did before I got Karnak for anything,” continues Mr. Branseom. “Everything: I would at would lie on my. stomach un- digested and cause gas-bloating and] study to dmount to as much as state taxes and school taxes were reported to generally exceed the total state tax. The high taxe€ were ascribed to the cost of school and roads and the extension of governthent into a “wide area of questionabie activi- ties.” While the trend of cal government cost continues up- ward, there were found to be “some notable exeeptions {n the middle and western states.” state and lo Sometimes By Thomas S$. Jones, dr. Across the fields of yesterd: He sometimes comes to nm A, little And yet he smiles so wistfully he has crept within, if he hopes to see The man I might e been Gold Balance _ Shown in July NEW YORK Assoc uted Presa.) time since last rt balance of gold for the United tates shown in July, the fe erve bank of New York~ Total imports for the. mont@ w $10,200,000, uni excess of $5,800 over exports. ‘The bulk of the Slowing gold came from Mrance and z while experts were chiefly for Nexico and the orient. ~ wate BE Te the Adevwtiser—"I saw 2.—ABy the The Sept. or yember it in SEEMED LIKE KARNAK “WS |“Why, There’s Not Another Medicine in a Drug Store Can Compare With It,” Says Topeka Man. T. c. Karnak but T can eft anything on the table and never suffer a min- ute. Nothing hurts me and {t all sure does taste good. T sleep like a top, my nerves are as steady ax a die and TI feel so full of life and energy that my work is a pleasure again, “It just looks liko Karnak was made especially for me, but that’s what everybody thinks about this Medicine. J guess it was made for everybody and will do the same thing for ono person it does for another, It looks like it, anyway.” Karnak is sold tn Casper exclu- sively by the Kimball Drug 8S Inc., and the Midwest Pharmac? and by the leading druggist in every town,—Ady. NOTICE Will the delegates elected by the several ladies’ auxiliaries, clubs dnd societies to assist the Cas- per Trades and Labor Assembly in entertainment of Governor Ross be at Musicians’ Hall, Basement Turner-Cottman Building, 7:30 P. M.? Thursday, September 3 1 Have a Care! We observe a constant regard for your furniture every min- ute it is in our hands and vans. Moving without breaking, bruis- ing, marring your pieces is ou: tusiness. We have raised th standards of moving withéut in- creasing the expense! We think We can move you better than others can. Let us prove it! See Ben Transfer Co. JUST PHONE 74 Stanley Overbaugh, Prop CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE CARS LEAVE DAILY aT ¥30 A M “an FAKD—312.50 Saves you approsimately iz nuure crave) between Casper and HKawiine TOWNSEND AOTEL WYOMING MOTORWAY Balt Creek [Cransportation Companr's fee PHONE (44 7 i. TRAIN SCHEDELES 3 CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN Westbound No.'608) (22. Je Dooce Eastbound No, 622 tbound 2 tem ewmeewnenenenne 0:45 p.m. CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY Arrives Departs 4:00 p. m. 8:35 p. m. Departs 7:10 0 m.