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WEDNESDAY, JUNE at, -Ittfc BUM SPRINGS I I > On your Auto should have the attention of an Expert— I [ ; I A POSITIVE GUARANTEE - 11 that If it doesn t Stand Up it doesn’t cost you a cent’* 1 ! II goes with every job Scotty does / BRING ’EM IN, 11 —Broken Springs, Axes, and oher parts. We’ll do a |> ; i GOOD job of it—and our price will be Right! Scotty Clark SHULER'S MEAT MARKET 1 y . | z CHOICE MEATS Ham, Bacon, Sausage and Fish Fresh Milk and Whipping Cream. This cream is from 35 to 40 per cent test and will whip in from 1 to 2 min. ————————————— located in Old Standard Restaurant Bldg. PHONE 10 «... Cody, Wyoming — I FOWLER S NEW & SECOND HAND STORE Highest Cash Price Paid | for Hides, Pelts and Furs | H At the Old ' Place on Sheridan Avenue, Cody, Wyoming ||| Ipi Successor to (Lambert’s 2nd Hand Store) •• \ - 1 ■' 1 Uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiyiiiiiiiiiii I FIRST NATIONAL BANK | = CODY, WYOMING = •-S3 S i CAPITAL AND SURPLUS - $50,000.00 1 = Do you realize the importance of protecting your valu- = = able papers in the best way possible ? E = Do you know you can rent a Safety Deposit Box, kept = = in our vault at all times, at a very small cost. We have E = some excellent boxes at a yearly rental of $2.50 to $5.00. = j = We have a room especially for customers who use these = = boxes, where they can sit down in private and examine E = their papers and securities. = THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK. Blllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllillliiiiiiiillliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiin a .■iimmiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimmiiiiimmiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiu | BILLIARDS! | 1111111111111111111111111111111 | Carom Billiards -j- Pocket Billiards | | Soft Drinks, Lunch, Cigars | ~| PATCHELL’S I = NOW LOCATED AT THE IRMA HOTEL TnilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillnT | Make No Mistake I When you need Auto Equipment be | | sure to get the dependable kind —the kmd | we handle. > | Firestone tires, the kind that give you | ‘Most Miles Per Dollar.’ Westric Batteries I I THE PARK GARAGE | ' MARSHALL S. REYNOLDS ■ SSr Candidate for Nomination on Repub-1 lican Ticket As Representative In Congress. Marshall Stark Reynold* who has announced his candidacy for the nom ination on the Republican ticket, at the August primary alaztiuu, as his party’s candidate for a sea, m the na tional House of Representatives, to succeed Frank W. Mondell, is a native 61 the state of Pennsylvania, although his residence of 15 years in Wyoming makes him a compartively old resi dent. This in view of the wide range of public ond private activities in which he has been constantly engag ed since he became a citizen of this, his adopted* state. He was born in Wyoming county, but in the state of Pennsylvania, on I July 9, 1881, and Is, therefore, in the very prime of life and strength, and at an age when having had a wide ex perience in civic aff&irs, municipal, ciunty, state and national, he is emi nently fitted to enter upon a career of profitable accomplishment for the State of Wyoming, whose interests in the national capital will be best serv ed by a representative neither too young nor too old, but at the apex of ! his mental and physical power. After having finished the course in the common, or grade schools, in his native state, young Reynolds entered the Tunkhannock High School, from which he graduated. He then took a 1 course in the State Normal School ot I Mansfield and, having decided to make the low his profession, he be -1 came a student in the law department of the University of Pennsylvania, 'from which he graduated in 1905. For i the next two years Reynolds practiced law in Pennsylvania ,but he soon felt the call of the West and, with his parents and family, removed to Wy oming. The family settled first in Coke ville, where Reynolds resumed the practice of law, engaging also in farm ing and stock raising on a ranch near that city, which is still owned by him and other members of the family. It was about this time that he entered public life and became more intense ly interested in public, affairs. For two years he served as law clerk for th© Senate Judiciary Committee in the national capital, having been ap pointed by Senator C. D. Clark. This two years’ residence in Washington If You Want to Be Shown THAT An Oldtimer’s Cooking is Hani to Beat TRY GEO. GRUPP’S PLACE Steaks a Specialty I should prove of incalculable benefit in the future career of Mr. Reynolds, os it furnshed him with an insight into and a viewpoint of national af fairs at first hand, particularly in re gard to the ways and means employed in enacting legislation in Congress. Returning to Wyoming to begin I again the practice of law, he located at Kemmerer, the county seat of Lin coln county, about forty miles distant from his previous home in Cokeville. In 1914 he was elected County Prose cuting Attorney on the Republican ticket, which position he held for two l years, during which he made an en viable record in the prosecution and , conviction of several of the most fa mous criminal cases in the legal an , nals of the new county of Lincoln. When America was drawn into the : World War with Germany, Marshall I S. Reynolds was one of the first in Kemmerer to enlist, which he did in. , August, 1917. He served in France • for one yeor with the Artillery of the I First Army, and w’as discharged May s 26, 1919, with the rank of Captain. Returning to Kemmerer, he resumed once more the practice of law, form i ing with his father, N. W. Reynolds, I the legal firm of Reynolds and Rey- I nolds. Fn the fall elections of 1920 Rey nolds wos chosen as one of five to i represent Lincoln county in the lower house of the state legislature, where .j his former experience in legislative ' and political matters served to gain 1 him a wide reputation for usefulness to Ids constituents and to the state at large. On July 1, 1921, he was hon ored by the appointment of Collector of Internal Revenue for the District of Wyoming, which position he still holds. Among the 351,000 foreigners in China there is only one person listed as Mexican. France’s national debt amounted to 320,000,000,000 francs the first of this year. Cogswell & Moore PAINTING PAPER HANGING PLUMBING Phone 104 J FOR SALE At Auction OVERLAND CHUMMY ROADSTER to the Highest Bidder on SATURDAY AFTERNOON, JULY Ist, at 4 o’clock p. m. on Sheridan Avenue, in front of the Cody Trading Com pany. This car is at the Ford Service Station and can be seen by anyone desiring to examine it. WM. LOEWER. ERNEST J. GOPPERT, Auctioneer. Attorney. When in BILLINGS VISIT m Ladies Ready-to-Wear Shop Khaki Riding Habits and Sport Clothes A Specialty Davisson & McNamara This Is The Year to see America! To recreate in the biggest vaca tion land in the world. Realize your vacation hopes and dreams this summer. Vacation costs are down! Hit the trail West! The American West is the world’s greatest outdoors. It’s your country—get out into it—know it—feel it. Bless your eyes with a sight of that emerald gem of the Northern Rockies—Lake St. Mary in Glacier National Park. Get acquainted with the “charmed land” of the Pa cific Northwest; see Puget Sound, the American Mediterranean; visit old Mount Rainier. Take that indescribable “look” down into Crater Lake—Na ture’s unmatched spectacle. See the grandeur and feel the inspiration of the Yosemite.. Stroll amid California’s big trees—the oldest living things. Take a dip in Great Salt Lake—higher than the Allegheny Mountains and seven times larger than Palestine's Dead Sea. Stop-off in Mesa Verde National Park—“ The Land of the Past.” Go motoring past the thundering geysers and thru the soul-stirring canyons of our Yellowstone. But, remember—if you don’t see Cody Road through the Buffalo Bill country you don’t see Yellowstone. Stand on top of Pike’s Peak and look off at the rest of the world. Rest amid the tranquil beauty and peaceful grand eur of Rocky Mountain National—Estes Park—a royal outing place. You’ll come back mentally keen, physically fit— feeling as though you could lick your weight in wild cats. No form of education is more inspirational than travel. These are but a few of the great show places in our wondrous West. Pack your grip and have your heart stirred and your mind refreshed by them this summer. Let your home-town rail road introduce you. It cdsts no more to travd Burlington—Everywhere West. F. K L I N G Ticket Agent Everywhere West PAGE FIVE