Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 18, 1922, Page 5

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hg trdadecion? died te Ama Mera torte ltn Satte Be” ~*~ ial See lle Pong MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1922, MITERS’ TOMB IS ENTERED (Continued from Page One) fresh air Crewe under the direction of C. S. Fry. safety engineer of the) California industrial commission, fol-) lowed. . t The work of the fresh atr crews is skips presented a picture of determin: | to “mop up” after the United States ter the burning Argonaut. Virtually all_of the work of remoying the dead will be handled by the crews, headed by Engineer Fry. The firat and one of the most tm-, portant tasks of the rescue workers was the building of a bulkhead across the Argonaut shaft below the fire limit, restoring the normal air supply in the Argonaut mine. In the rear of the advance guard ‘thelr tasks three-quarters of a mile stood @ small army of medical men. At the 3,600-foot station Engineer Pickard established his headquarters. |nected with the miners’ desperate ef-| Ho was assisted by Orr Woodburn, underg aasiatant director. Dr. ©. Kindall, 4'rtrict surgeon ot the ‘ureau of sa'nes, E. United States i and Dr. B. B. Endwett, local! physician, served undergrounc on the |thelr presence seeming to drive home| 3,400-foot level. Tospital and medi eal equipment adequate for the «wm Jete care of the entire 47 men > eral days has been installed on/ this level. At the mouth of the Kennedy shaft tha surface workers were headed by) Harry M. Wolflin, formerly attached to the bureau of mines and at pres- ent superintenedent of the California industrial accident commission. Fred L. Lowell, safety engineer for the accident commission, was in charge of the,telephone at the mouth of the shaft afd all messages telling of conditions below were sent imme- diately to him, Every message, no matter how trivial, or how vital, was given in duplicate to the press for publication purposes. B. C. Hutchinson, president of the Kennedy Mine and Milling company, and V. 8. Guarbarin{, superintendent of the Argonaut Mine company, voted that every word was to be turned over to the press, even though It con- cerned only a few feet of pipe or a few bolts being ordered sent down the shaft. Mine reseue apparatus on the sur- face was under the complete direc- tion of H. Crouch, and first ald re- covery supplies were handled by 1B. H. Bullard. ‘While this work was being handed at the Kennedy mine, Dr. L. H. Dus- chak, consulting chemical engineer of the accident commission, supervised operations at the mouth of the still burnuing Argonaut mine, half a mile away. Dr. Duschak kept a constant watch on the variations in the poison gas conditions in the Argonaut and tatenhoned his reports at frequent in- tervala to Engineer Wolfin, who In turn communicated them to Engineer Pickard. Each éanvass curtain hung, bulk+ head bullt or drift door opened or closed | immediately. resulted in a change in the report of Dr. Duschak, Assisting him were R. E,. Birchard and J. M. Harrington, apparatus crew captains, and Lincoln Vanda- ment, surface boss of the Argonaut. ‘They were aided by surface crews of electricians, mechanics and black- smiths. Engineer Pickard said at teast 24 hours would be required before the first body or ressued miner could he brought to the surface. Several days, he asserted when he descended into the mine. may be required for explor- ation work before any bodies or mén are found. ARGONAUT PENETRATED AT 5 A M. TODAY. JACKKSON, Cal Sept. 18—(By ‘The Associated Press)—A hole has been drilled from the Kennedy mine to the Argonaut mine where 47 men have been entombed for more than three weeks. The hole penetrated the Argonaut workings shortly after 5 a. m. It was expected several hours would elapse before rescuers could penetrate the Argonaut workings. The opening has been enlarged to the full size necessary for the pass- age of the rescue crews, at 6:45 o’clock broken through Argonaut level Into the 4,200-foot ‘The changing of the shifts at 1 a./ m, was the only colorful event of the night. The lines of men awaiting the ‘ation None of the miners spoke, ilent by the shatt mouth, awaiting ny call that migh{ take them hun: dreds of feet under ground to gt Spiritual conpolation. to any who might require it. There were few persons at the Ken- nedy mine. through which the rescue work was being done last night or in the early hours today. The rescue ‘crews came and went to and from below the enrth’s surface; officials ent about the various matters con- ‘Torts so far Seneatk them: several {scores of newupapermen and women worked in what was to all and purpoves a well equipped room.” Outside tents city the priests waited, |to the miners that this was the day| where on the fate of thelr comrades ‘would be known. There »>re no anxious reiatives gathered at thc mouth seeking new f the life or deach of thore below 41 that was eliminated by an ar- rangement that the waiting should be t home and that the Red Cross should carry the tidings as rapidly as might be. Every possible thing that could be done for the aid of the entombed men, should they be alive, had been done. Doctors, nurses, all the paraphenilin and appliances of a hospital await them. And, too, grimmer prepara- tions have been made to care for thelr bodies should a darker fata hold eway, On the 3,600-foot level the rescue crew battered with picke last night Rt the face of the raise they «were cutting to reach the Argonaut work- ings. They feared to use explosives because of the possibility that flying splinters of rock might injure some of the entombed men there, or =hat | { Che Casper Daily Cribun PAGE FIVE ‘ARMOUR CONVERTED TOC COMMON i} CAUSE OF CAPITAL AND LABOR |Babson Institute Issues Remarkable Statement on Nation’s Greatest . Problem by Packer Magnate WELLESLEY HILLS, Mass. |however, for both the organizing of wa; of’the public. Mr. Armour b primarily to divide profits but to as- sure them. “For certainly they must be made before they can he divided. Dividing them,” says Mr. Armour, “is |® mighty easy job alongside of mak- ing them.” In diacuesing the recent strikes Mr. Armour sa-3, “Strikes or lockouts merely show which factor for the moment is most powerful, and not In Any sense determines what is right. Tt is the strongest side which wine and this is not necessarily the side which should” fis complete statement as just issued at the te jeent conference on public relations at the Babson institute is aw follows: “Efforts to take Labor or Capital out of the Mat of commodities subject to the Jw of supply and demand are respontble for what is generally called the struggle between Capital jan@ Labor, or more properly speaking |the struggle between employers and wage workers. Always in the past, # surplus of workern has meant lower wages, Those with Labor to sell have sala that Capital yas cracking the whip, while employers pointed to tn+ creased competition and lower selling prices as poth Justifying and com. Pelling lower operating costs. “On the other hand, when workers are scarce, wages go up. Then those with capital invested have maintained that the wage workers take advant- age of the situation. The wage workers’ reply is thit higher living coats justify higher wages. Thus it Will be seen that while there isn't any question but that wages go up and down in accordance with the law of supply and demand, there are two different explanations for’ the phen- omenon, Either is reasonable or un- tho detonation would damage timber jTeAsonable, according tc one's own ing and cause a cave-In which ‘Weld |Viewpoint. delay them hours, days, or even Readjustment Brings Strife weeks. Tt was a struggle of human will and muscle against the elements, and the elements won, temporarily, when a survey showed that 11 feet of rock, ‘and not four or five, as the miners ind supposed, lay between them and their goal. But the miners-would not admit they were beaten and resorted again to drilling. JACKSON, Cal., Sept. 18—<By (The Associated’ Presas)—The opening be tween the Kennedy and Argonaut imines has been timbered and@ two men haye gone through, into the 4,200 foot levelof the ‘Atk! fictally announced at 11 a. m. “Word has been given to the ap- paratus men to go down for*the res- cue,” the bulletin sald. JACKSON, Cal., Sept. 18.—Search for live ‘men or dead bodies sn the Ar- gonaut mine will’ be statted shortly after 12 o'clock noon, it was announced at 10:30 o'clock in an official bulletin. vThere are at-this writing more than the usual evidences of the strug- gle between employers and wage workers. This is due to the fact that after a long period of — increasing wages there came a turn in the tide which had been carrying wages and prices to higher and higher level ‘With the end of the period of war in- flation came an insistent demand for readjustment. Just what readjustment means depends largely.upon who de- fines it. To employers !t means ja return to normal operating constr, etc., while to wage workers it {means lower prices on the essentials haut’ thine, it was of-| lite. “Inasmych as about 90 per cent of ‘Sport Calendar Meeting of Kentucky Jockey*club, at Lexington. Meeting of Dorval Jockey In the meantime the rei workers} club closes at Montreal. will finish timbering up the opening TROTTING between the twe mines. Grand Circuit meeting opens at Co- ‘The bulletin said: lumbia, ©. Great Western Clreuit “The crew on the 3,600 foot level is|meeting opens at Springfield, Wl. still clearing out the muck and tim- YACHTING bering to make the opening safe for the rescue men. “Shortly after 12 o'clock noon the work will be finished. No one is going through into the Argonaut un- til after that time. They are still en larging the opening. “The crews are working one hour on and one hour off. A quantity of fruit, sandwiches and coffee was sent down to the rescue workers on the 3, 600 oot level.” No, fword has come through. the hole to indicate whether any of the imprisoned 47 men had survived the 21 days’ confinement in the black depths ae this morning, it was announced. The great force of the draft blowing from the Kennedy into the Argonaut mine indicates that there is no cave- in om the 4,200-foot level of the Argo- naut, the rescue officials declared. Crews of men were holding the ven- tillating doors on the 3,600-foot level of the Kennedy closed in order that the draft would not rekindle the fire in the Argonaut. The absence of cave-ins would per- mit the rescue workers under Eyron ©. Pickard of the United States Bureau of Mines to enter the Argo- naut as soon as the debris had been cleared away from the connecting cut. As soon as the second, or “reserve” squads of rescue workers enter | the Argonaut they will build bulkheads to ‘check the draft from the Kennedy. The rescue crew which has been @rtving ahead on the 3,900-foot level of the Kennedy, racing that on the higher level to see which first would break into the Argonaut, was’ taken off the work this morning when the draft assured that there Were no caye- ims on the Argonaut’s 4,200-foot Irveh Formal announcement was nade that the crew onthe 3,600-foot ievel, all members of which are Argonaut Tainers, had wen the $5,000 bonus of- fered by the mino officials to the first crew to break into the Argonaut. The fire in the Argonaut mine has decreased since the opening of the drift between the Kennedy and Argo- maut shafts, according to an official report issued at 8 a. m. by Dr. L. H. Duschak, consulting chemical engi- neer of the California state industrial eccident commission. “The carbon monoxide gas has do- creased vety materially, so that the test canary bird {s only slightly af- fected," Dr. Duschak said. The volume of air coming out of the Mul- doon shaft of the Argonaut has in: creased sbont four times over the volume that was coming out before the 3,600foot Kennedy level was 68, & 0. MEN GETAGREEMENT (Coutinuea trom Page One) will function purely as an organization to. represent the men in their dealings with the company representatives. General elections were held by the association simultaneously all over the system. Each craft is represented on the individual divisions by a chairman. The chairman, who will represent the Casper division for the one year are Al, Weinciker, Casper, machinist; G. C. Clarke, Casper, bollermaker: D. J. O'Neill, Greybull, blacksmith; H. F. Zorn, Greybull, -electricion: J. W. Adams, Greybull, sheet metai worker and E. A. Arbes, Casper, carman. ‘These men were elected by represen- tatives of the shopcrafts in the Bur- lington shops at Casper, G: t, Kir- by and Bonneville. These ai © four points on the Casper division. where roundhouses and repair shops are maintained, ‘The local chairman, representing the Casper shops, who will hold of fice for a two year term, are: J. B. Crossen, machinist; C. R. O'Teill, boll- ermaxer; Jacob Schwartz, blacksmith; R.C, Bennett, electrician; S. A. Beeson, sheet metal worker and F. T. Kiser, carmang Superintendent Grissinger said this morning that the formation of the Burlington Mechanical. Employes’ ax- sociation with the election of officers and the subsequent signing of the agreement, meant that the Burlington would make no further attempt to make an agreement with the six shop- craft unions. Seniority with the company will commence July 1 last. Any man working for the railroad, regardless of his former position or affiliations. will enjoy the seniority privilege from that date. Former meinbers of the unions, taken on from now one, will National Star Yachtchampionship opens on Lou sland Sound. BOXING Lew Tendler vs. Pal” Moran, 15 rounds, at New York. Jock Malone vs, Bryan Downey, 12 rounds, at Co- lubmus, O. Danny Frush vs. Ed Ket- chell, 12 rounds, at Toledo. Frank Mantel! vs. Jeff Smith, 12 rounds, at Oayton. Wildcat Nelson vs. Young Laurett, 12 rounds, at Troy. TENNIS ; Indiana state championship ‘tourna: ment opens at Indianapolis. seats *Cawtnaatie FIRE THREATENS HOUSE. ‘A small blaze threatened an outbuild ing at 1129 Souts Popular at 1:30 this afternoon and catled the fire depart- ment to the scene. Little damage re- sulted. : be placed on the new seniority roster as of the day of their going to work. R. E. Melker, master mechanic of were at the present time working in the roundhouse and 60 men in the for only five men, two machinists, two boilermakers and one tinner. He re- ported that similar conditions in pro- portion to the number employed, pre- vailed at Greybull, Kifby and Bonne- ville. . pata “ote oe Subscribe for the Tribune and get a for every 50c_paid. 12-tt ‘has been looked upon as-a great capitalist incapable of see- bureau of mines rescue workers en- (except ic low tones. Two prists stood | ing the side of either the wage worker or the public. he itas putwitted his criticism by coming out frankly ge workers and the protection that the problem of the employer and the wage worker is not Sept. 18.—J. Ogden Armour Today, egins his discussion by saying the ultimate price of commodities tn general represents the labor coats in- cident to production, manufacture, distribution, ete. it ought to be obvious that wages and prices are in the same boat and must flogt or sink together, Thya when markets slumped and prices fell, wages were started on the down trend and there- upon workers in many Industries felt back upon the strike as a weapon Against wage reductions. Economic Laws Inexorable | “The law of supply and demand calls for a return to normalcy, and Wage workers, while alming blows at employers, are really bucking up age\nst inexorable natural laws, These laws permitted high wages for work and high interest: rates for capital during the war period. Since then these laws have forced the interest rate down, and they will not permit tho retention of war-time wages. t may be a hard pill for both Capital and Labor to swallow, but the t remains chat they are subject to the law of supply and démand and they cannot eacape it. Regardicas of outside interference, “wage earnér- employer” difficulties will always be settled in accordance with the require: |menta of natura) laws and all the ills and hordships of the struggle between the two factions reaukt from realstance of these laws. “It seems to me that the tims has come when we, as a nation, should take steps which will enable the ni: tural laws to operate without. the painful and damaging struggles which are now the rule, and which are not productive or permanent good to either employer or. employe. Panaceas Disregard Jaws “Panaceas for employer-wage work: er il!s have always been on the mar: ket but in practically all cases they have been designed to produce some effect other than that which would come from the normal working out ofthe Iaw of supply and demand. They have sought to keep wages up while cutting prices, or to force wages down wile maintaining price levels, or have otherwise disregarded the normal and natural relat‘ons between wages and prices. ‘Therefore, these panaceas have rot worked and never will work, The sooner it is recog: nized that natural laws vill prevail, the sooner will we find the solution for our troubles. ‘The prcper solu- tion must bring the same result that the norma} working of the Iaw would bring, but must avold the evila and ills and damages Jncident thereto. Dividing ‘the Profits “The fight between employer and wage earner has been described as having to do with a division of the {rrofits. If that were true, the prob lem would be much simpler than it really is. Division of the profits is merely a phase of the matter; the big problem is to make the profits tn the first place. It is astounding how much ignorance there is relative to the profits of business. ‘The lay mind assumes that the margin between the original cost and the ultimate selling price is profy. The part that operat ing costs and overhedd expenses play in wiping out this margin gets scant consideration « “When a business pays a dollar for raw material and sells the finished product for $2.00, the layman says there is a dollar profit, but as often as‘Aot such a margin between cost and price means a lo: It may cost considerable to turn the raw product into the finished article since the labor involved and the equipment used may be a yery big expense. On top of that there will be storage charges and freight bills and sales costs. There are a dozen charges that enter in and conspire to wipe out the margin, and not the least of these represented by the taxgthat the bust ness pays. “The sum total of all its operating and overhead charges may easily wipe out what appears to be a wide margin the Casper division, sald that there| between raw product costs and fin-| ished article prices. Men work for a livelihood and Capital works for in. repair shops. There are openings here | terest. and there always will be room| for difference of opinion as to what constitutes @ good livelihood and a good interest, but there need be no question about this fact—neither men nor money will work without a return, THE PROBLEM OF WAGE EAR) ER AND EMPLOYER THEN, IS NOT TO DIVIDE PROFITS BUT TO ASSURE PROFITS, FOR CERTAIN: } General UP WAR LY THEY MUST BE MADE BEFORE THEY CAN BE DIVIDED. Drvip-} ING THEM I8 A MIGHTY EASY (Continued from Tage One) JOB ALONGSIDE OF 20.000 Greek soldiers remain under THEM arms out of the army of 250,000. Thes@ are in Thrace, retention of Reasonabir Men Agree “7 which territory by Greece Is serfously Everybody has a right to opinions doubted here. as to the cure for industrial Ils, and| Gen x7. C.J. Pelle the business with which I am con-|commissioner, started nected ip now engaged in trying outlinse night te confer with wustapha @ plan which holds fourth great pro-| scamai Pasha. at the latfers sme mise. It is not designed to. bring | eq t* seaceuthed that nation about the millennium; neither does it) iiist téader desires *o ace tain the Promige to give workers high wages | actent to w Hen net Intends to ful and employers high profits. It is founded on knowledge that the bux Seas must prosper if either employe | or employer i to prosper, With the fill the obliga ftreaty with ong Undertaken by her the Angora government LONDON. Sept. 18.—(By The Asso two factore working together with! inated Press.}—The British cabl Mutual understanding and recognition | hela a conference today over the near of the problems confronting the in-/easteen cri. Significance was at dustry, the results of the Iaw Of sUD-| tached ply and demand can be attained with to the presence of the of |Gavan. chief of staff of the my out Injury to elther factor and with! Ai, Marshal Sir Hust secudl consequent benefit to both. I Trenchara, 4 ® prominent repre. “This is being. accomplished with) sentitive of the admiralty, all of us by the workers organizing int?! whom carried iene what resembles political constitu pbs neles, they electing thelr representa-| | boards broeden the scope of their terests up to the point where Conference Board sits ir Judgment on problema affecting the entire organization. The conference boards are made up of equal numbers of representatives of employes and of | the management, and all their de cisions call for agreements between in the PROBED 10 (Continued from Page One) \they were extremely active about shis | the two teetions. The plan assumes city, where fit is certain the tragedy that reasonable men who are ac-|44 its beginning if not tts end. quainted with all the facts abopt 3 bag the widower, Mra. Hall, the matter will reach an agreement when “'dow, an her brot jer Willie, an they place thelr feet under the same | centric were the figures about table and give honest consideration 1o| hich the investigation revolved, the problem before them. On ths! A! Larbe were expected to be ques- Outside chance that some. altuation|'foned again today—Mrs, Hall for may arise in which the two factions| further details of hier nocturnal wan cannot agree after such honest ané | dering: early Friqay, shortly «efter careful consideration, provision is| the viurders aie believed to have been | made for arbitration, but it fs not ex-|Committed: Mills for the story of Nix} pected that this will be necessary, [OWN wanderings at the same hour Unions Ideals All Right jend Wille further light on his “It takes a very narrow-mindea| Prediction on Friday morning that Person to believe that the announced| “Something terrible is going to hap-| jaines of unionism are other than right, Pen" and just, but there is also the certain-|_ Mrs. Hall admitted tast night that) ty that in practice the relations be-|*: was the woman in the polo cuat | tween unions and employers will be| Whom witnesses told of seeing enter) testa of strength. A STRIKE OR A|the rectory early Friday morning. LOCKOUT MERELY SHOWS|She was quoted as saying that she WHICH FACTOR I8 FOR THE mo. | Ad fo _the chu: panied MENT DOMINANT, AND IN NO SENSE DETERMINFS WHAT IS) RIGHT OR WHAT .. BEST FOR! THE BUSINESS—AND WHEN 1 SAY BEST FOR THE BUSINESS || MEAN BEST FOR THOSE WHO ARE INVESTING THEIR LABOR AS WELL AS THOSE WHO Ale! NVESTING THEIR CAPITAL We do not rxpert th's plan to ac complish the impossible, but do be lieve that when reasonable men get together to discuss and consider mu-| tual problems, a solution can be found| Which will obviate tests. of strength, such ‘as the strike and the lockout. | Public Rights Paramount “Under exiating conditions, 95 per cent of the people are made to suffer montally, physically and financially, | When 5 per cent engage in industrial] dispute. Everyone agrees thai the, whole public ought hot be made to suffer by reasons of “wage earner employer’ disputes. But as long as! certain rights now récognized as in-| allenable continue to be so recognized, | the public will remain the innocent! bystander who gets the most of the bricks. Wage earners say they hav?) PRES! ladies. rights have precedence over the rights of uty minor factions, be they work-| ers or employers or stockholders. | Arbitration Should Be Compulsory | Tam a firm believer in the fact that, ™men in the main are reasonable and| that when they understand what the requirement of economic law the will find a way to adjust themselves to it, but if.they fall to do so and if thelr failure is detrimental to public interest, then there ought to be means| for forcing settlement through com pulsory arbitration. I am, today, an advocate of compulsory arbitration as & means for ending “employer-wage| worker" isputes which cannot be endéd by mutual agreement \ “I state to the Babson institute thai there should be a tribunal of such 1 to 11 Admission 49¢ character that its integrity and fair- 40c ness is beyond question. Upon that w. tribunal should rest responsibility f ph of settling difficulties when direct nego: omfort tations fail. The tribunal should| and Joy have ample powers to compel sul mission of disputes to it and to en-|B can the interests of the great mayor! be safeguarded. Strife between em ployers and wage workers, based on misunderstanding of economic laws, must be brought to a. CAST OF West First, Off Center fat ETL £4 T CASPERS FAMILY THEATRE WO B41 LEE TODAY BERT VALLEE’S RADIO GIRLS —IN— The Prince of Broadway’ A New Bunch of Girls and Comedians Presenting « New Musi ical Comedy CHORUS OF 10 NEW FEATURES AND A BIG PICTURE. 16 Shows at 7 and 9 force its findings. Only in that way Two Evening Shows, 7 and 9—Admission... Admission 40c 3 s to minor and major conference! jt |" boards. The minor boards consider | matters of purely loca! and depart | Mental interest, whi the major This (Continued f1¢m Page is the undertaking Gulch Berry M. Deep, w We cover up takes,” the ic brags that good ho advert: the Rest hotel, looking chamber dector® min whieh maids are their apecialty, the ladies primping parior and Calamity Jone's specialty shop by her brother, Willie, seeking her husband. night before. Willie réfused whether he was with her. W 2 not see him return to t tory. Mills also has told the « of having vidlted the c 1 quee | Jackets from who had not come home the} eva, American fat the peril of their rescued [sands c fugees while the fire was |in progr Chester Griewo American meé ant RITISH SPEED LEGION FETE TO. CARNAGE TOLD. — PLANS OPEN TONIGHT — BY AMERIGANS ed irom Tage Ones 4 drowned them zed American eit dead when the Kem 1 his wife and sister. Other intim with pis Com saved six death after th gated the eit British pe med ing er-humaa Christians Kk. ance terror f his missing wife at about the same | by hi« successful pleas with the would ‘ that. Hire. Hall anid she was|be Turkish slayers ere. He regarded it an strange that) H. A. Jauqi of Darion, Conn he had not séen her or Willie but/said to the correspondent azarded opinion that ey{ “It was a night of tetrey. The might have visited different parts| whole popo’hce rushed to the water's f the church.” edge. Women cried to heaven fa’ The theory that the rector and his|help. Many plunged into thé water hoir lender had been s'ain elsewhere | preferring drowning to death F the bodies removed Somerset It was most harrowing ploture to complicate the investigation | of mis and anguish T w % was based chiefly on conditions at| messed. The hent was go intense th * he spot where they were found no one t could survive Although tender notes, believed by | It was an apr climax to a w a> the authorities to have been written | fraught horrors of war, mas “ by Mra. Mills to Mr. Hall, were|sacre and the strewn about the bodiey. the minis-| “The French Cat = deserve ter's frock was neatly buttoned up| tnstinted praise for their* herotsn ¢ front and all of his clothing was| When the fire was at its worst t ; imaculate as when he had first|rushed into the hospitals .. ed it. Even his eye glasses | tisk the'r own lives ; were carefully adjusted on his nose,| the helpless patients : though his hat was over hie face.| ““The Americ people should +” Mer: Mt pody, too, was carefally | Proud of the valor and intrepidity of laid out. Not crease of her plaited! their sailors » showed reckless un- [ kirt was dlearranged. Her handajconcern for the'r own security, help- & were fo'ded across her breast and her|!"& Women and children to escape Joa. scart was draped acro © face. from the holecaust. ‘They forred their Boos wapaper men who visited the] Way with bavonetx through te dense ene yesterday found two cro ly congerted crowds of erased fu, carved with w& penknife on a cedar{tives which extended for two m near the apple tree where the bodies |Slong the quay, consoling and com were found. |forting the women and children - = Bo a NOTICE. Subscribe tar ‘Tribune and get « T wil! not be responsible for any bills contracted my wife, Maude Lanning ED LANNING 9-18-at¢ ——___»—_- Classified ads tm! the TrMune are winners and possibly tho keys w give with every 50¢ paid at office will win you « b A Bishop-Cass Theater LAST TIMES TODAY ~. MACK SENNETT ENTS coupon “THE CROSSROADS OF NEW YORK” A tale of the way of a country lad with three city A gambol down the great White Way with twelve real stars and hundreds of Broadway beauties, for a right to refuse work; employers|{| 40 cents. claim the same right. Wage workers | A REAL SENNETT SURPRISE! say ee have a right to fight for| —Also— what is them; oy: ke Mmllar claim. I appreciate the denest “CLIMBING THE MAZANAS” and of advocating the abrogation of i y rights, but It does seem that the pack . CURRENT EVENTS lic ‘too has some rights, and that its Continuous will A Bishop Cass Theater TODAY AND TUESDAY JOLLIES C ‘PRESENTS —ALSO— FEATURE PICTURE HELEN GIBSON —IN— ..40e admit W. G. BOLES and one to the America today. T. Sept. 18. TOMORROW, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY ROY STEWART With an All-Star Cast in “THE SAGEBRUSH TRAIL” 10¢-25¢ Cecil B De Wille’s Paradise” Dorothy Dalton and Mildred Life on the Texas Border. dile. “The Sheriff” A Laughable Rural Comedy from the First Rise “THE WOLVERINE” This coupon will admit J. W. BING- HAM and one to of the Curtain. Continuous 1 to 11 P. M. 10c-25¢ LAST TIMES TODAY “Anne of Little © Smokey” HAROLD LLOYD COMEDY AND PATHE REVIEW TOMORROW “Fool’s Harris Playing Leading Feminine Roles. SEE Lawless The Underworld The Fight for the Queen. A Rescue from the Croco- The Sensational Dance. : —And— COMEDY 40c Worth of Entertain- ment oon fhe Sheriff.” T. Sept. 18.

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