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PAGE TWO TONGLEADERS AATIFY PEAGE, END BLOODSHED Peace Re-established in San} Francisco Chinatown After 17 Months of War- fare. ANCISCO, Aug. —Pat- 1 tong leaders of San Fran- {natown, after 17 months ef t warfare, have ratified a| intain peace. But] ry t dent the resting ement will La not retreat of some but in the archives of} ae ciab representatives of | frafted | the | ongs haa rad Ther HYPNOTIST AT IRIS TONIGHT a “farewell, and his A of unusual merit and one whieh s with splendid reports from managers and theater/ gorges of other cities comes to the Iris theater fc special two nights en ay sight the noved an enviable beginning pnotist who has earn reputation as the highest salaried) vaudeville attraction on the Pantages cirdit season, has been; hoplked by the eater. Dr. Lorenz hasia com rsonality, a man | of very superior talents, a genuine! originated a t of which | and as such he in pleasing his hypnotist and artist sort of enterta he is the master spletely triumphs audience There is probably no subject occupy: | gz more fittention today.than is hyp | notism It has been studied from overy ngle—it has been used for va-; = and sundry purposes. But the ri Tiis theater will use hypnotism to pro- | de its patrons with a two nights ses: sion of joy, in announcing Dr. Lorenz and his show coming: here direct from San Francisco, as an added attraction | to the regular pictt num, the popular San Francisco bart- téne is traveling. He 1s por a baritone voice of rich quailty, and renders in inimitable manner a pro- gram of popular late song numbers. With Vernum and Lorenz on the same program, and this served in ad- dition to the complete line of motion picture: 8 without saying that the Iris wi the mecca for amuse. ment lovers during the engagement which opens tonight. Sheridan Miller On Trip to Casper Ralph Denio of Sheri city for the day having evening. Mr. Denio is last the head of the Denio Milling company arrived one of the largest kind in the west. The company with- ing the past year or two just com- pleted a magnificent steel and con- institutions of its crete plant to take the place of the brick and frame one that previously burned. The new plant !s pronounced the most complete west of Chicago and the various products turned out take high rank in the markets. iAtebeniaed a AC ae RAIL DIRECTOR DEAD. CHICAGO, Aug. 6.—Burton Han- son, general counsel and a director of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul ied at the Presbyterian hos- railroad, pital here. Mr. Hanson underwent a minor op- eration on July Ws recovering when relapse y day. and apparently he suffered a He had been con- nected w the St. Paul road for nearly 40 years, starting in as an at torney v ‘in. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY WANTED—Reliable party wants ¢ rent a five, six or seven-room un- furnished house. .What hava you? Please state what you are asking for rent. Address Box A-40, Tribune. 7-3t* FOR SALE—Cheap, Studebaker spe- cial tox car in A-l condition; driven 2,800 miles; a bargain. Call Mr. Barnhi at or 1042R after 6 pm 8-7-1t WANTED—Bids to drill well fire of Casper. 236 Mid. west 8 I—At party to house ake ly man; perma- nent. Apply 8-7-2t° VANTED TO \T—Four or five- room furnféhed house; modern and rgasonable. Phone 540M. 8-7-3t® WANTED TO RENT—Five or aix- reom house; modern preferred. Box A-41, Trit 7-6t* FOR F Two furnished house keeping roo} side entrance: s and lights. 1474W. 87-31 VANTED TO <T — Two unfur ate . t om untu tied t and lights;\ | France Close up view of The President presentation was the upper photo including Poincare, most recent of the famous French Millerand of made before generals to be made a France presenting to Marshall Joffre, shal Marshal Foch, petain, aistinguished gathering of military D'Esperey and be Casper Daily Cribune A New Marshal of France | Foyolle the Baton of a Marshal of and civil officials shown in Fraugheret. Foyolle-is the FOUR INDICTED FOR FRAUD BY U.S. JURY Sale of Old Hickory Powder Plant Near Nashvill e, Probers Say WASHINGTON, Aug. day by the special ea ‘frauds against Ernest C. jury Mors |the war department; Everly M. Dz Indictments were returned to- investigating alleged war former director of sales of is, president of ithe E. M. Davis Chemical company of New York, and Alexander W. Phillips, associated with Davis. The three men, all of whom in New York, were charged in live the indictment with having defrauded the government out of more than a million ao} in connection with the sale of war-built plant of the Old Hickory | Powder plant, ‘ashville, Tenn nea ooo THE AMERICAN LEGION News of Interest to Ex-Servi State and Local Activities. ‘Tne men who fought with the 78th Division of the American expedition. ary Forcer will hold their annual re ue is year at Atlantic City, Sept 30 and@ Oct. 1. Although distinctly | sed of imeparate from the American Legion the veterans of the 78th worked with| the organizers of the legion in Paris, 1919. It is estimated that more than seventy per cent of the division per- sonnel is now enrolled in the ranks of the legion. gion comrades In decorating the graves of Dorchester, Mass., ex-service men last Memorial day, Jen Frederick Lang Jr., of that city placed a flag on an untenanted grave and asked that it be reserved for him. He has just died of war wounds cnd tis been buried] the plot he picked cut but two} months ago. Military organizations or division associations that wish hold meet- ings, reunions or conventions during the attendance of their members at of the American Legion in New leans, fy T. Semmes Walmsley, ch the American Legions’ conv 2a com mittee, Royal and Conti streets, in New Orleans, in order that Mrs. Wals ley can inake arrangements for meet- ing halls, etc. Or. man of After spending two years in acquir- ing funds for a club house, the Ameri- can Legion post in Mangum, Okla., de- cided the children of the town needed & glayground worse than the former service men did a club house. Ac cordingly, the legionnatres obtained an eight-year leas> on u plot of ground and used the func ey had been so in collectin: to purchase play ground euwpinent. long In order that all the cemeteries in the state may always have the proper care, the Arkansas American Legion has started a move for the formation of a cemetery association which will supervise the laying out of new plots and upkeep of all burying grounds In his serios of articles “The, Truth About Bergdoll,"” Charies R. Pehriin of Philadelphia, describes the present |) @ppearance of America’s arch slacker as that of a “fat middleclass German with a hatred of everything Ameri can.” Fehrlin was one of the party of army intelligence operatives who re cently tried to kidnap Bergdoll in Ger many. It was the purpose of the Unit ed States government to return Berg. doll to this country to serve the sent ence imposed for the violation of the selective draft act. Shell shock caused Thurman K.Wil liamson, Lincoln, Neb., veteran of th world war, t6 forget the girl to whom he was engaged. He married another: The district court has annulled Wil. Mamson's marriage, leaving him free his first pledge, if the feels that way about it. A Pacific Arlington is planned by the American Legion posts in Los An eles county, California. A large plot | with space for 11,000 graves, has been aside acquired in ¢ has been ment cemetery. A fu rge monu tone i for the this bu While assisting his American Le-| the fourth annual national convention | La., October 16-20, should not!-| qd} ice Men Featuring National, Jing ground of the west coast’s sold | @er dead. 4 | | Ninety-nine members of the Amer! Jean Legion scaled Mount Wood atthe Jiegion's annual climb held .tuiy A | party of 249 participated in the base jcamp activities which began the after noon before the climb. A pack mule, |which succumbed to heart disease at ap altitude of 9,000 feet and plunged down the mountain into a deep crevasse, was the only casualty. | x Because the mayor of Summer, Wash., could give no legitimate rea json why the Summer American Legion should not give a dance on the Main street of the city, after he hast st forbidden such frivolity, legionnaires jobtained a court writ restraining the mayor from interferring with the cele bration. Citizens of the community jana visitors from many nearby towns | danced up and down Main street in |response to the legion's invitation whieh read: “Dance with the Lewis- |Guil post No. 53 of the A: gion by order of the court erican Le- | “The American Legion stands’ for |America and for the defenders of America, first of all,” declared Han- ford MacNider, national commander of the legion before the thirty-seventh an- nual meeting of the National Editorial association at Missoula, Mont., July 20. John Barton Payne, natronal chalr- man of the American Red Cross will be one of the distinguished visitors at the fourth annual national conyen- tion of the American Legion in New Orleans, La., October 16-20. An ef- fort is being made to have Edwin Den- by, secretary of the navy, who is on an extended tour of the Orient, accept the legion’s invitation to speak before the convention. Traveling 125 miles a day and camp. ing at night by the roadside, Donald F. Chase, 21 years old, recently passed through middle western cities en route on a bicycle from Reno, Ney., to Syra~ cuse, New York Young Chase's family lives at Syra- cuse and as a vacation from his duties as city’ editor of the Nevada State Journal, the energetic lad decided he would ride through and see his mother. The Reno American Legion saw a chance to do some worthwhile adver- tising. So arrangements were made whereby Chase should speak before 110 legion posts on his way across the continent. At first, he spoke only of what the Reao posts of the legion and the Nevada state department are do- ing, but later he found that he could be of greater service by telling each WATCE FOR THE BIG FIRE SALE |Government Swindled Out of Million in\Italian Intrigue And Love Plet In America Feature The intrigue and secret operation of the mysterious Ttallan vendetta and the love of an honest young American for a beautifal English girl “high spots” in the photo- “Mr. Barnes of New York,” now featuring the America's progrem and rtarring that smiling young actor, Tom Moore. The setting for the most unusual plot is all laid in the vicinity of Nice, Italy and on the romantic little isle of Corsica, and deals with the “for- tunes of an old-time globe trotter from Manhattan, who becomes in- volved tn Italian plot, and very nearly becomes the innocent victim of a beautiful Italian girl who has sworn the vendetta, and who searches far nd wide over the entire continent for the murderer of. her brother. How the maiden from sunny. Italy finally marries one of the same race klifed her brother years before, and how the cruel plot to force the gitl to wreak vengeance upon the Wrong man, and tn fact, her own hus- band, was folled by the clever Mr. . EINSTEIN FLEES FROM GERMANY, : FEARS AoAGSI LEIPSIC. Aug. 6.—(By Tne Assoct- ated Press.}—Prof. Albert Einstein, originator of the theory of relativity, | has fied from Germany temporarily) because he was threatened with assas-| sination by the same group which | caused the murder of Dr. Waljer| Rathenau, the German foreign min- ister, uccording to « letter from Pro fessor Einstein cancelling en engage ment to addreas a meeting here. Efforts to induce the noted scten: tist to return, in view of the govern- ment’s success in coping with situation, are said to have so far proved unavailing. é Considerable comment was caused in Geneva early this week by the ab- sence of Dr. Einstein from the meet- sg of the members of the intellectual committee of the league of nations to begin the work of organization. He had been designated to represent Ger many but @id not appear. Tt was sald he was unable to leave his work at) the University of Berlin. Dispatches from. Germany shortly after the Rathenau murder quoted police au- thorities there as accusing the notor-| fous “consul” organization with hav- ing marked twelve leading politician: editors and financiers of Jewish ex- traction for assassination, of the Berliner Eageblatt, and Max Warburg, the Hamburg banker. _——— How’d You Like To| kates Hair as You including | Ive, Rathenau, Theodor Wolff, editor) | «or | blond wig. off again, than to use peroxide and \soes the inevitable telltale darkening Process, beg-nning at th: |powraraats oe sk to your original Se But is it not better to don a|John Davidson, Harris Gordon, Charies Mabel Van Buren, Maurice B. Fiynn and Cectl Holland. Cable Service Is Interrupted which can easily be taken | Ogic. roots, in case spe Woman Who Walked ates: 4 Wil M. Ritchey. The cast is a gis Bl, fine one, including Mu- jton Sills, Wanda Hawley, E. J. Rad- cliffe, Frederick Vroom, Mayme Kelso, ‘tion between the United States and the | i} i | { | | f Change Your Gowns, your hair Iu the shade and style to suit your fan- cy. That is what Dorothy Dalten did, when they told her she was to play like you do your clothes? the feature role of a titled English) girl in George Melford’s Paramount | production, “fhe Woman Who Walked Alone,” which will open at the Amer- ica theater Tuesday Perhaps vou have bobbed your hatr. Miss Dalton did it for “Moran of the! Lady Letty." But it isn’t necessary to retain that “tonsored” appearance, if your fancy changes. Suppose again that you were born a brunette, is it ‘necessary for you to remain one? The multitudes of “hottle blondes” answer an emphatic Barnes and his money, {s part of the story. Better see it. It is hart to explain, but easy to understand. Naomi Childers, as the . English beauty, whose brother was ever in @anger from the vendetta, gives ex- cellent support to the dashing young star. ARHIY CAMERA MAN TO SNAP OIL FIELD SCENES FROM THE AIR —<—_—______ Having just recovered from an “invasion” by the navy department, res.dents of the Salt Creek-Teapot area are due far another vombard ment by the army, a high powered warplane now being on its way here for the purpose of “shooting” the field from above, and warning 1s given people of that district to have their storm cellars in readiness for instant use, According to reports received this morning, an airplano is scheauted to arrive here some time today and will post of all the good things that other posts along his route are doing. The young gattling gun, which he carried withyhim saw service, when an automobile driver ran into his bi- eyele near Topeka, Kan., and then re- fused to stop to see what damage had been done. Chase put a bullet in a tire and then made the driver haul him and his bike to town. “One doesn’t realize just what the American Legion is doing until he visits legion posts and sees the efforts of these posts to improve their com- munities," he said land at the Stock Aviation field east of the city. An expert photographer will be carried and tomorrow the plane will circle over the field from which he will “shoot” it with a mov. ing picture camera from all angles. The resulting pictures will be used in the making of a mosaic map, copies of which will be used by the various departments which look after the {n- terests of the government in the de- velopment of the field. WATCH FOR THE BIG FIRE SALE You can dye any piece o goods or garment a bling suds of New Improved RIT Makes home dyeing and clean- ing simple and easy. Resultsare —on on any fabric: cotton, silk, wool or mixed goods. Directions in each package. RIT washes as it dyes, See new RIT color card at your dealer's. It shows how perfectly the 24 colors (9 dar! colors require boiling) will dye th: most difficult of all fabrics—-mixe goods. Be sure your dealer has New Improved RIT. Easily ident- ified by the wrapped cake and guarantee and price plainly printed on the package. eautiful color—and launder it, too, by dousing it in a colorful, bub- f k 2 d Do you ever wish you could change, t go out and invest in a wig of| i | | White RIT removes color, Never say‘‘dye”’—say RIT HAY Car lotsa CASPER ST' Dairy and Chicken Feeds, Oil Meal, Stock Salt. 313 W. Midwest Ave. GRAIN specialty. ORAGE CO. Chalmers Six at $1185 Outstanding Value In keeping with the policy of making the Chalmers Six the+=tstanding motor car value in its class, prices on all models are reduced. effective immediately. At the new price of $1185 the Chalmers Six is more than ever the soundest automobile in- vestment in the fine six-cylinder field. You will instantly recognize its superiori- ties when first you ride in the Chalmers Six. NEW CHALMERS SIX PRICES 5-Pass. Touring Car. 7-Pass. Touring Car. Kennedy Motor Co. NEW YORK. Aug. 236 West Yellowstone CThe CHALMERS SIX $1185 $1345 MONDAY, AUGUST 7, 1922. Ireland, France, Germany and North. ern Europe, through the Commercia) Cable company was cut off at 3 o'clock this morning, probably te cause of seizure of the station a: Waterville, Ireland, by the Irish Re Publican army, officials of the con pany announced. Virtually no messages are being taken for tranemigsion to these cou tries and those accepted are subjec: to serious delay, t 7.—Communics, Roadster. Coupe. ++ $1185 -$1595 Phone 909 Western Sales Co. One Door South of Kimball’s The sale of real values—standard merchandise at prices which mean a good saving on every purchase. Clothing and Furnishings, Hats and Caps, Gloves, Underwear, everything going at reduced prices. Men’s Dress Hats._.$2.45, $2.75, $4.95 75c, 95c, $1.45 Men’s Caps... Men’s Hand-Tailored Suits in high grade Worsteds, Cassimeres and Serges 914.50 =< $18.75 Men’s Dress Shirts.__...45c, 95c, $1.45 Bates high grade Dress Shoes. Values $8.00 to $10.00, our price, pair_ 220 S. Center St. Men’s and Boys’ Shoes, ° Men’s All- Ledther Goodyear Welt Dress Shoes... $3.75 Work Shoes, All-Leather, . pair. i. -$1.75, $1.95, ($2.50 Boys’ Scout Shoes, pair. 3 High grade Munson Last Army Shoes, pair. Special—Fine quality Army Officers’ Shoes. Goodyear welt, rubber heels, salesprice_ Good quality Khaki Pants and sno $$1.35 ~$3.45, $3. 35, $4.95 Breeches..$1.45, $1.95, $2.25, $2.45 Balbriggan Underwear...... + +-50C Plain toe Comfort last, Cushion inner soles, Black Kid Shoes, $4.45 Khaki Army Jackets (good Work Jackets), each. Leather Work Gloves...