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YANKS HAILED AS DELIVERER LUXEMBURG Showered with Flowers and Welcomed in Great Ovation, Declares Pershing in Report of the Occupation [By Associated Prenx] WASHINGTON, Nov. que for Thursday Says: “Continuing its advance the Third army reached this even- general line of Vichetn-! -Mersch-Scuttrange-Rentgen- “ During the afternoon our troops passed thru the city of Luxemburg where they were acclaimed as deliverers by ing the Kattenhofen. 22.—General Pershing’s communi- the civilian population, who showered them with flowers and accompanied them in their march thru the flag-decked streets. DUSTIN FARNUM AT IRIS TONIGHT Since Samson pulled down the temple about his ears, and before that era, perhaps, men have thrilled at Herculean display. Samson’s feat is not to go on thundering down the corridors of time without challenge At least so far as cinema h concerned, William Farnu pearances has rivalled the feat. In a new photoplay which he has just completed, and which will be shown at the Iris theatre in this city for the first time tonight, Farnum is shown in a prodigious t of his strength. With bulging muscles and eves fairly popping from his head this modern giant strains to upset famous Balancing Rock which Zane Grey so graphically describes in his novel, “Riders of the Purple Sage.” This is the story, by the way, on which the new Farnum play has been based. In dislodging the rock, Far- num, in his movie guise, cuts off his pursuers, whom he hems tight in a gulch, and shuts himself and the girl of his choice in a valley perfectly ideal for two who seek paradise. sean ea ARTCRAFT BILL AT IRIS SUNDAY The theory that a petted child, who later becomes the doll Wife of a strug- gling lawyer, cannot aspire to higher altitudes of thought and action is dis- pelled in “A Doll’s House,” the, latest Arte t photoplay starring beautiful Elsie Ferguson, which will be, shown at the Iris theatre Sunday. In this superb photoplay, Miss Ferguson por- trovs a role of deep subtlety with con- ! summate artistry. The development of a character such as Nora Helmar in this. strong photoplay is one prac- tically new to the silent ‘drama, but Miss Ferguson is splendidly support- ed by a competent staff of players, all of whom have appeared to the high- est advantage in motion pictures un- der the Paramount and Artcraftstan- dards. is ll ap- ° = GREAT WHITE CROSS APPEARS OVER SEA WHERE SHIP SANK DUBLIN, Nov, 23. — Over the sea where the Dublin mail boat Leinster was sunk by a German torpedo in the Irish channel, October 10th with the loss of about 480 livés a great white cross was seen in a clear sky by residents of the Dublin coast, they aver. Ganon Pim, rector of Christ Church, Kingstown, sent the follow- ing statement to the Irish Times: “On Saturday afternoon last there was a bank of clouds on the horizon and against a clear sky above it there appeared for some moments the form of a great white cross of abso- lutely perfect shape. It seen by at least four members of my own household as well as by other people. “One of the witnesses described it to me that it has seemed to him first - 2s if there were a great cloud figure with outstretched arms which assum- ed the form of a cross, and as the sharpness of its outline passed it seemed to be full of the men and women, It w were, over the place wi ter to the Leinster happened. “One presumes to offer no explana- tion, but it was certainly there and at, least it was a symbol of surpass- ing comfort.” Soe EE END OF WAR MEANS GREATER LABOR CALL Following the signing of the armis- tice with Germany, the need for con munity labor boards is greater n ever before, according to an an- nouncement being sent out to all fed- 1 labor representatives from shington, to be transmitted to al! community boards. The letter urges the need of these boards to distribute the labor that will soon be available when those who have been in the army return home. owing is the letter being sent ecretary of Labor Wilson: sincerely tr that no member of the communi labor boards will fail to appreciate that the cessation of hostilities brings new opportuni- ties for service and imposes new im- portant duties. The country now faces the obliga- tion to return to suitable employ- ment, those it service in field and factory. induced to enter its The v being of the people for ma rs to come depends largely upon the manner in which that obligation will be fulfilled as well as the induction of those principles of justice which animated us in the pursuits of war. One of the most remarkable armis- tices on modern record was concludd- ed between Spain and several of the South American republics at Wash- ington in 1871. It provided that there should be no renewal! of hostili- ties between the contracting parties except after a three years’ notice, which was to be given thru the Unit- ed States government. ———___ French civilians, irrespective of sex, who have been wounded or in- jured as the result of any act of the enemy, are allowed to wear a yellow ribbon bordered with blue stripes, on which is affixed a five-pointed star. —_.— = A British arm) lieutenant, who was lately killed in France, and had been a lawyer in civil life, left $1,500. to ng George, “humbly requesting His Majesty to apply the same to the reduction of the national debt.” FACTORY HELP ‘Theyre Lined vou Ev THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE_ SUFFERING HEAPED UPON.BRITISH SUBJECTS BY BOLSHEVIK TRYANTS DURING REIGN OF TERROR, RUSSIA, Axsocinted Nov. 18.—Sutfc (Ry LONDON, some of the British residents of Mos- cow in the Bolshevik prisons in that city where they were kept for six weeks after having. been arrested by the Red Guards upon flimsy pretex are vividly portrayed by ( ger, a Reuter correspondent cow, who was set free B early Sweden. Beringer, in his report wired from Haparanda, says he was 2 while in the home of the British ch lai nadjoining the British consul in Moscow, and together with th chaplain and several other Engish- men and women was marched on foot two miles thru the streets to the Lubyanka House of Detention. “I was separated from my compan- ions and was led to a roof in which there were some thirty prisoners, mosey civilians including a few writes Mr. Beringer. vA spent “five s and nights in this room in which there was just suffi- cient space for the inmates to sleep on the floor. There was no bed of any kind, for food we had a piece of bl bread wooden spoon into a bowl of the thinnest possible cabbage soup con- taining some herring heads. Eight of us had to share the contents of this one bowl. Many people who were without provisions from outside were literally in a state of starvation. “Like the Russian prisoners we | Were treated as helots and’ were ad- dressed insultingly in the second per- son singular by low brutes among the Red Guards. “Late one night when some of the other prisoners were singing suddenly there w deathlike hush. I looked | up and saw a Red Guard officer and ery Da at Mos- this month and has reached Haparanda, and a few dips with a/a Up Zor YU im our Columns | the refined prison became pal > eraper wir An official of a French city that was) Cross workers did In two da HERS hevik leaders show no peing filled with gas bombs by the| thoroughly cleaned and tra gua’ A list of 1 spapers they hold Germans found himself confronted | ne paiieg shidhese eke 2 ideal friend of the the problem of looking after tire 750 children, Red Cross doct tors read oot Naeie a-what this - They urge that his example children. He telegraphed the Ameri- {attended the sick; nurses were Secured aes, Se terest be followed and preach the ean Red Cross in Paris for help. Fif- |for the babies. Suitable {gp Was pro, canna xecatiicn iti nation of the entire middle | teen trained workers were rushed to vided for all, ¢ and they we so ¢} cluded’ two. pails: of. brothers... All the relief of these children. j fled as to provide again 4 ; Pare eh A a rithout de. x == Here is what the Red Cross workers | tion of families: al the conde mae men rose wit ‘out ¢ e- jones showed con-| found: Twenty-one tiny babies under | for the permanent cure of the. ny ie 2 Biddy a8 y that shells increase in de-| Oe year old and 729 children under|dren, including thelr education, ite pik } sh sligh structiveness more than in propor:| eight yer, a Oe re ate: Sik eee ee has since been put inte “The iron folding doors between | tions to their A Tepe ANell | Oe g giipeatlen (Ot walters Ceeeeesl Cae a 750. the big room a anteroom were cht times more es 5 : best safest the | the tho ; 1 spell th ld pskou then closed. T one only when | d@ngerous than nch one. ae : “te Aidt eos) H ip ousands of oth. ie ee we rench officin! could find at such ners, Might now the Mttle children of prisoners were tak for exe-| ; as moment, but you would not think it fit} nee are your doors crying ¢, cution. The doors remained closed| Elaborate preparations are being fora a vl, shelter, protection against « for a few minutes were then re-| made in England for the George Eliot “ad here ts what the American Red|/man brutality and dying as th ioe who overlooked also rose had were without previously called out. a termor ar last time. The con were either shot in th ing party or they were the suburbs in motor there told to get out and get The bodies ble by relativ: oners. s a Russian ex s and some men nd working classes, die: d conditions were was no possibility worse, exercise daily in the There he and some received ass d. of the TRIBUNE WANTADS POSSESS A_DYNAMIC PULLING FORCE and you merely have to take ad- vantage of THEM to profit. The keen, alert buyer or seller use them WHY NOT YOU? “CHEAP and EPPECTIVE’ _ That’s Tribune Wantads tance from Major —_————— es of two other beer These ' nd the folding doors were shut a second and demned prisoners basements of the prison with their backs to the fir- taken out to lorries anc away. Then volleys were poured into them were walking or running ‘@ sometimes re- on payment of transferred to Butyrky jaiy at the other end of the city which contained some 3,000 pris- In the cell he occupied there a few sol- s of the mid- The Vermin bad as at Lubyanka and sani- There of taking a bath but Beringer was allowed a half hour others Allen ff BER 18, 1918 SATURDAY, NOV. 23, i918 Wardweii of the A who, he writes, literal half of the prisoners.” “The cond s of our internment were so vilely sordid that it is no wonder that the minds of some of n Red Cross slaved on be-| FEO Children Herded In Dirty Dilapidated Building Typical Red Cross Case : rey ¢ centenary celebration next year. ath | MOST THE MOST SANITARY THEATER IN THE STATE THE SA MATINEE 2:30 and 4 p. m. NIGHT 7:00, 8:15 and 9:30 WILLIAM FOX PRESENTS WILLIAM FARNUM In His Greatest Play in a Stirring Picturization of Zane Grey’s Famous Novel RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE THE STORY OF A MAN WHO WAS NOT AFRAID She leaned against him there in the desert, and her body was limp and trembling with feer for his safetv. Her face was upturned to his. Woman's face, woman’s eyes, woman’s lips—all acutely and blindly and sweetly and terribly truthful in their betrayal! Then ‘i Don’t Miss This W enderful-picture SUNDAY Elsie Ferguson | in “A DOI 12S HOUSE ; AN ARTCRAFT PICTURE How Elsie Ferguson’doés tug ‘at one’s heart strings! Yon find yourself sitting on the edge of your chair following ier every movement.’ Theré is a wistful quality, too, which always makes you feel sorry for h-r, even when she is having a good time. This in a measure will explain the better a and preater values we offer at every t ted Watch Our Windows <e) ES la Clothe Conscientious Priced In our estimation the strongest evidence of our customers’-interest-first policy. i is the pricing of our merchandise. The ~ Kuppenheimer Clothes n our store are marked at what they cost us slus a small profit—not at their replacement ost today. >. Westill have plenty of those fine Kup- »y>imer Overcoats on hand that have cre- “> much talk about town. Some excep- y good ones at Copy rtebs 1918. The House vc huppeanelimer $30.00 to $60.00 Webel Commercial Co. THE BIG BUSY STORE Ates Food Administration, License No. G13057 BUY W.S. 5S. Watch Our Windows