Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 20, 1922, Page 11

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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1922. 201 RADICALS aati Angle to This Coal siaea Get CHARCE TO. ~ ESCAPE JAIL PORTLAND, Gre., Oct. 20.—sus pended sentences of 90 Gays éach were} Uelng mmpoced by Mun'lupal Judg* Witjam. A. Ekwall upon 201 =| arrested by the pclice Wednesday following aniouncement by Mayor George L. Baker that the police had | P i Veen ordere* wo round up alleged membcrs of the Industrial s¥orkers of thé World connected w:th a =t.ike of Jongshoremen called by that organiza. tion here. ‘The police announced that the pris- oners would be taken to the city mits and allowed to leave, Prize Beauty Kidnaped But || Is Found Safe}| Che Casper Daily Ctibune , PAGE ELEVEN —By Fontaine Fox Under an old law still in force in} A number of the most beautiful) l pcan ania, the arrest or imprison. | homes tn the South were designed by | of goats’ beards pment of any woman for failure to pay | Miss Henrietta C. Dozier, well-kno’ taxes ts prohibited. architect of Jacksonville, Fla. UL S. CITIZEN IS PROTESTED TOKIO, Oct. 20.—(By The Ase slated Press.) — Ambassador Warre has lodged « forma! protest with the Jap- enese for office against the treat ment of R. M. Andrew, American business man, whose house and office were ransacked by police in search of photographs of se areas he was spected of having n his possession. Cozy Evenings at Home a hot bath, a soft, Warm (but light in weight) Dressing Gowns AURORA, Ill, Oct. 20—Ida Mae Haskins, a 16 year winner of a Mi: sour{ beauty prize, who was carried away from her home in Independ. ence, Mo., two weeks ago by Frank Rawlings, 32, a manufacturing stationer, who had employed her, is “unvarmed and as Innocent a* the y she wais born,” according to a + statement by Frank Michels, for 35 y chief of police of Aurora. Rawlins is married and has two children, The girl's parents are «omihg here .after her. Kansas City. authorities are coming after ~ Rawlins. They have a warrant charging him with abduction. Despite the charge he ts not at all the type of desperate lover pictured in the films. Thete is nothing about him to suggest a shiek or wicked knight. * A drab little man whose “voice is flat and monotonous, police- men, term him “moth eaten.” MISSING GIRL LOCATED OIL LIGHT BEATS AFTER MONTHS’ SEARCH ELECTRIC os As MINNEAPOLIS. Minn., Oct. 20.— BURNS 94 PER CENT AIR} Belief that she had killed a man ry who had attacked her, prompted the disappearance last March of Miss ingly .brilliant, soft, white Jig! 7 Lorraine Schneider, 23 years old, better, thap ete, Fae Rd oy school teacher of Avon, Minn., ac- n test y the U. 8S. government! cording to a statement made to disappearance made no mention of bes Pinsent PE Te nse ie Minneapolis detectives today by her | the man in her room, Miss Schheid- lamps. It burns without odor, smoke! ter, Miss Emily Schneider. er, according to her sister, was too or noise—no pimping up, is simple,| , 10fraine had retired for the night | frightened and ashamed’ at the clean, safe. Burns 94 per cent air and| im her room in a Minneapolis hotel. | = - 6 per cent common kerosene coal oi].| her sister said, when a man entered, | The inyentor, G. H. Johnson, W.| apparently drunk and-attacked her. HAY Lake street; Chicago, Il., ing| She stunned him by striking him | to send « lamp on ten days’ FREE nation-wide search for her, instigat- ed by her father. She has left Den- ver now, her sister said, and is in “a southern city,” When newspaper accounts of her on the head with a jardinierrec and { D. ‘ nd Chi ken Feed: Oil Meal, Stock Salt. It’ Fresh Roasted 1. or even to give one FREE to! jhen fled, fearing she had killed airy a ic! 8, Oil s ihe firwt user tn each localtytwHo will]. itm, ae eer eae are 1 Car lots a specialty. He,t Tea & Coffee Co. WHEN BETTER VALUES ARE FOUND—WE'LL GIVE THEM. day for -full particulars, Also ask For seren months, according to him-te. explaly how you can get the|. the sister's statement, Miss Schneld-; | puplietty giveryher flight. She wil | 79% When you Increase the number come home when public Interest in x the case died down, her sister said, | Lversthing depends on blood atrenetn, pi el ad a | | The earliest cotton appears to have been in an encient sccred writing of India, about; {300 B. Cc. tre, while detectives prosecuted a | GRAIN CASPER STORAGE CO. find, without experience .or! er lived in Denver, working as a | 313 W. Midwest Ave. jake $250 to $500 per month. cashier at a mov picture thea- RALLY | _ELKS’ HALL Monday, October 23, 1922 8 O’Clock in the Evening FRANK W. MONDELL known than any man in Congress. JOHN M. SNYDER per cent efficient. os FRANK E. LUCAS State. Be Able to Vote Intelligently November REPUBLICAN CENTRAL COMMITTEE. _ REPUBLICAN Wyoming’s Great Leader in Congress—a man who is more widely and favorably Qualified by éxperienée and training to make the office of State Treasurer 100 A power in our state affairs—a man who will ably fill the office of Secretary of Thinking Voters Will Hear These Men So That They May 7th Second Floor Consolidated Royalty Bldg. 5 Phones 945 and 652 That’s the Life! Step-Ins sas Is the Great Builder of Red- Quilted Silk Bathrobes. Orchid, pink, blue. Gs RELAX! w Be RAGE Comfortable! | i : ra After a strenuous day ; r at the office or in the } be social world go home to as Bloud-Cells and Rheumatism Up from __... 22 — $17.50 Dove Brand a Must Go! Jast Try It! Radium Silk. “Rheumatism? Me? No. indeed, it's’ Taffeta and Faille Silk, Crepe de Chine Up from Pap ig A A Breakfast Coats. Up from...........—_——-—. $12.50 P an jo; 01 0" fo: e rt by goer Coase fa wonderful Van Raalte Glove Silk Knickers and $5.00 Bare when my days weif younger Vesta....!...2 4. BEM i .$3.00, $3.75 and $4.25 | t my hands ee ~ Re the us ave. ad to do that Intinay genre. | DEPENDABLE MERCHANDISE—PRICED RIGHT ” a of Joy and Ube s era in misery, do not close your eyes and think that health, free motion and strength are Fore from you forever! It te not eo. it is here and now for ail of you. 8. 8. 8. ts waiting to help There Teason why SS. 8. will help Men’s Departments OVERCOATS—Heavy Ulsters.. cannes ttssmeresennnnnnssere$20,00 to $40.00 LEATHER VESTS—For the out-of-doors man. __.. $8.50 to $20.00 SHEEP-LINED COATS—Fur collars... _..$10.00 to $25.00 SWEATERS—AIl-Wool, Slipovers and Button $3.50 to $15.00 CAPS—With fur inbands..... sw-«-$1.75 to $3.50 3LOVES AND MITTENS—Leather or r Wool for work « or ef your red-bloud cells, the entire tem undergoes a tremendous change. Blood which {s minus sufficient red- fells leads to a long Met of tro aptes. mis one of them. §& 5. 8 eat blood-cleanser, blood known mention of tigorator, It toc, pimples, Tt bi mp run ‘down, tired 4 women, beantifies complex: for driving —.....——,.. ..$2.00 to $5.00 el Soe oetetliaeten gee BLANKETS—Cotton $3.50 to $8.50 ts in two sizes. The larger size bottle is the more economical BLANKETS—Oregon Mills, Wool ..$10.00 to $20.00 RICHARDS & CUNNINGHAM CO. 1888—Dry Goods, Men's Furnishings Hardware, Groceries—1922 ay =| BUY |, PIGEON’S COFFEE Phone 623 l NHN A AUTOMOBILE NUMBER With illustrations, stories and news of Casper’s first Automobile Show. It will be the Get the Big next issue of the Casper Sunday Morning Tribune And whether you are an automobile man, a man who owns an automobile or just a man who rides in automobiles when somebody invites him, you can’t afford to miss this edi- tion. The committee in charge of the Tribune’s Automobile Show, which opens October 23, is working hard to make this display one which will be as much of a credit to, as it is an innovation in, Wyoming. So many dealers are going to exhibit that it will only be possible to get in all the.cars by rotating the different displays, and this will be done with impartiality and dispatch. Tires, tops, rims, windshields and accessories will be DT TTT ATM TTT TT on view. If you have ever seen a big automobile show at the Grand Central Palace in New York ‘or at the Coliseum in Chicago you will get an enlarged picture of what the Casper Auto Show is going to be. All society news, and a complete story of the Fashion Show in this same edition of the Casper Sunday Morning Tribune In addition to our regular features—Comics, Magazine Section, Sports, Business and Theatrical Pages, Churches and General News. St rs] = TOUTS

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