Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 3, 1921, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT DELINOUENT TAX OF CARS TOTALS NEARLY'S400,000 | be celebrated by -most of the thea- Sheriff's Office Maps Out Campaign to Bring Own- ers to Justice; Arrests to Begin Monday. With statistics which have been prepared here indicating that nearly $100,000 is delinquent to the state fovernment because automobile own- ers have not procured 1971 leenses, the sheriff's office will start Monday ng on &n intensive campaign to > justice’ all law violators of ind Two officers will be placed on the whose only duties will tody all persons driv- ing ¢ ich 1921 not displayed. Unless there ts con proof that licenses have ac been applied for the authori: jus will make a complaint in court against the offender ask a fine of not less than costs and will attempt to invoke a jail sentence where there is an ev! dence of ‘fraud. Scores of auto drivers here, it ts said, ate displaying license applied for signs in a fraudulent menner. The new officers will question closely all persons who display such signs and if the license has not been applied for an effort will be made to get a jail sentence for the offender. It is also planned to prevent the move ment of cars which do not display li censes. The practice of keeping the license tag in the tool box so that im case something happens the authori and ties will have nothing to trace on it is also. tabood, and having a license and not displaying it will meet with the same consideration as the person does who has not cpplied for a li- conse. GUN USED IN CRIME WAS BOUGHT IN CHEYENNE CHEYENNE, Sept. 3.—Investiza tion here of the movements of Ada King, under arrest at Laramie for shooting and probably mortally wounding Mrs. Velma Woolf, has es- tablished that Miss King bought here the revolver which she used in the Laramie crime last Monday. “The ‘Weapon was purchased here MOnday morning and Miss King went to Lara- mie on a train leaving here at noon. She shot Mrs. Woolf two hours after reaching Laramie. Ask your dealer for, and insist on getting Mosteller’s honey. Then com: pare with other honey on the market. It is produced at home. 8-24-tf ‘way from its sky for some unknown reason according to astron- omers. As a result of the inotion picture public's demand for more variety in films, Paramount Week, which will ters of the country during the week of September 4-16, is likely to usher in a season which will be rich in big productions, su any that have been shown heretofore. ‘The industrial slump, the contin- ued hot weather of this last sum- mer and other conditions combined during the summer to form a buy- ers’ strike on the part of film fans. “The public is billous from pic- tures,” said one well known film producer. Accordingly, the film producers exerted every effort to make their pictures bigger and better than ever, with the desire of offering the most tempting fare to ~film fans this season. The list of Paramount pictures scheduled for early release this sea- son, which Will be inaugurated by Paramount Week as a national de- monstration for better motion pic- tures, shows that Paramount ts, lenving no stone unturned ‘to im- prove the standard of its produc: tions, “The Affairs of Anatol,” directed by Cecil M. DeMille with a cast in- cluding Wallace Reid, Gloria Swan- son, Elliott Dexter, Bebe Daniels, Monte Biue, Wanda Hawley, Theo- dore Roberts, Agnes Ayres, Theo- dore Kosloff, Polly Moran, Ray- mond Hatton and Julia Faye, is ex- pected to be the most talked-about picture of the new season. “The Great Moment,” writteri by Elinor Glyn especially for Gloria Swanson as Miss Swanson's first Paramount starring picture, is an- other early fall release. At pre release showings in New York this picture created a sensation, and smashed all records at the Rivoli theater during the hottest two weeks of the summer. Elsie Ferguson in “Footlights” is another picture that is expected to prove @ sensational hit. This pie- ture was directed by John 5S. Rob- ertson, who staged “Sentimental ‘Tom: and “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.” Betty Compson's first Paramount starring picture, “At the End of the World,” is being heralded as something out of the ordinary in its conception and execution. ‘This pic- ture is the first produced by Pen- rhyn Stanlaws, the noted iilustra- tor, who, as everybody now Knows, gave up his brush to become a film director. Another big production coming soon is “Experience,” produced for Paramount by George Fitzmaurice, Richard Barthelmess plays the role of Youth in this celluloid transila- tion of George V. Hobart's famous morality play. ‘William DeMille and Rita Wei- man, the short story writer, have been busy for the last several months at the Paramount studio in Hollywood, working on a picture produced by Mr. DeMille from Miss nn ~ The first cost 7 iS practically the last Coliseum Motor Company Fifth and Wolcott Doncse Brotners : ‘Tourtms Car $1,153.00 Coupe $1,313.00 Roadster $1,228.00 Panel Business Car $1 Screen Business Car $1,220.00 Delivered CASPER, WYO. MOTOR CARS BIGGER PICTURES COMING NEXT SEASON AS RESULT OF DEMAND FOR VARIETY Sean $2,020.00 Phone 724. coming year. an jncrease of 21 over! .Jeweiry and watch the number employed last year and| pert workmen, All the largest number in the schools’| Casper Jewelry Mfg. Co, OS TEACHING STAFF GROWS. CHEYENNE, Sept. 3—Eigityone teachers’ wili be . employed in the Cheyenne public schools during the act, one of ghese squads will be in called up in the district court far trial Casper. rr paratory 14 i eumins| next week. The famous and still un, exery effort is Being made to give the! s-copied “turntable” theory, of c probably will be an issue in the case. trona county with an unpresented claim. eee and The Battle of Armageddon Closing Scenes Before the Second Coming of Christ _ Don’t Miss this Important Subject SEPTEMBER 4 SUNDAY EVENING BIGTENT THIRD and PARK Injuries Reseived- In Park Made CHEYENNE. Sept. 3.—The Compensation sutt of Dr. J. M. Ramirez For Soldiers BY HARRY L. BLACK. Complaints by the thousands have been made over the failure of the gov: ernment to adjust claims for com- pensation and training of men dis- abied, or partially disabled, in the ser- vice. Many of these were just; many were manifestly unjust, though doubt- less made in entire sincerity. For the difficulty has rested not alone with the government but with the claim- ants who have failed properly to in- form themselves of the requirements in presenting their claims. Recognizing this fact, the govern: ment has organized “cleanup squads” which are being sent out over the country to search out every ex-service man having or believing that he has @ just claim, and to effect immediate settlement. ‘Within a few days, on September 12, 13, 14 and 15, to be ex- NoMoreMisery After Eating ‘ Just Takes An Eatonic “‘The first dose of Eatonic did won- Gers for me. I take it at meale and am bo ‘ a with toe sustained when a swing in the city park pla: und will UNIT You Are Cordially Invited.to Attend the 7 Hudson and Essex Exhibit ‘. / Showing the Latest Models of Hudson and Essex Motor Cars The Finest Exhibition of Cars Ever Shown in Casper ‘ Sunday, September Fourth _ Monday, September Fifth : Tuesday, Sepiember Sixth 320 ” ¢

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