Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 2, 1923, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR. Che Casper Daily Cribune MOB LEADERS ARE CAPTURED Sheriff at Palatka, Florida, Jails 11 Mem- bers of Mob That Fired Upon Him in A ttemptt to Secu re Negro PALATKA, Fla., March 2.—(By The Associated Press.) Eleven members of a mob were captured today and lodged ail after being repulsed by Sheriff Hagan} pted to storm the Putnam county jail here) More than fifty shots were fired by| ail, nue striking Sheriff Hagan in the left GRIEF- STRICKEN FAMILY ITHOUT FOOD OF FUNDS | HELPED BY PASSENGERS | in the Alachua when they atter and get a negro prisoner. the mob into the the ot rope : eee | report | TOM MUN HAS FLIGHT THRILL Swaying a hundred feet j Stearns’ Electric Paste | is recognized as_ the guaranteed exterminator for Rats, Mice, Ants, Cockroaches and Waterbugs. | Don't waste time trying to kill these pests | ers, guilds oF any experimental | | } | | | rr Use—Better than Traps x Y5-o7. box, $1.50 SOLD EVERYWHERE -— and all other Underwood Products are obtainable at the Underwood ffice UNDERWOOD TYPE- WRITER CO. East Second Street Room 8 Casper, Wyo. Telephone 407 226 children, their hunger appeased ani journey, finest, f Union Pacific. ‘SHLVATION LEADERS T0 } division comprising the | Di reta hut, - West Yellowstone, Saturday and Sunday. Meetings wil! Saturdey night and on Sunday wil | W CHEYENNE, Wyo. v of Mrs. Congdon, route to ( on the t nbove al. to ‘lonopah, Nevada Ensign Boyd to this city. The public is meetings with sufficient money to provide food during the remaining of their sad therefore left Cheyenne in the privacy of a stateroom on the test train operated by the | WBIT HUT IN GASPER | Staff Captain James McHarg, gen- jeral secretary for the Inter-Mountain states of Wyoming and Colorado, and Ensign id Boyd, the young peoples’ sec- will visit the Salvation Army today, commence at 8 o'clock tonight and be held at 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Staff Captain McHarg has visited Casper | before, but this is the first visit of {invited to all the a ‘A FRONT PAGE STORY? {5 FILM FEATURE AT THE AMERICA THEATER HERE A regu'ar slice of life Is this little document from Vitagraph—a slice of small city politics which revolve around the glass top desk of the may- or and the swivel chair of the editor of the local paper. You all recognize this bit of enmity which puts color in our smaller communities, and Jess Robbins, the director of this picture has brought forth all its vitality—all its humanities and realism. Trust Robins to make no mistake when it j | comes to incorporating lifelike inc!- dent. He showed a sample of his skill | With “Too Much Business," and in “A Front Page Story” he makes his pic ture so human—so interesting that it stands out a conspicuously fine, little document. The comedy note !s dominant be- cause {t is introdu y Edward PIONEER IS £ Tanlac in Tip-Top Condition Every Way. |fact that Tanlac makes you eat bet- ter, steep better and feel Newton A. Clark, pioneer citizen o} Portland, Ore., living at 4214 took Tanlac,” stomach was al. a badly COMEDY —And— TIMBER STORY TOMORROW ONLY HOOT GIBSO stipation and biliousness. I retty bad fix. |. Fess especially for my case. ie Ry lj Lr 5. FIVE DAYS STARTING SUNDAY 2:15 and 8:15 Daily G. this IN BACKING UP CLAIMS |Newton A. Clark Declares | Ended Stomach} Trouble and Put Him Back in Still another who has realized the better is Second said Mr. | out of run-down on and inability rrible thorn in my health, and I also suffered with con- could never sleep we'l, my strength and en- | ergy seemed to be sapped, and I was read and heard so much about \raniac that I decided to try it, and | the medicine worked just like {t was I have “POET AND PEASANT”... The Netto Ladies’ Orchestra (Augmented), Vignola, MPHATIC taken five bottles of the treatment now, and everything tastes so good I can hardly get enough to eat. Why, the medicine has completely relieved | me of that indigestion and stomach trouble. I sleep like a log at night, and hayen’t an ailment of any kind. Tan‘ac has certainly put me in the top notch of gcod health, and I can | recommend it as being everything ed for it.” | ents as the foregoing 1 to the thousands that | suffer fr the same troubles. Most | people who suffer rom nervousness | and dizziness, stomach and liver trou- | bles, kidney derangements and who| are in a general run-down condition simply need something to tone up their systems and to assist the vital organs in performing thelr proper functions. Tanlac is a wonderful re constructive tonic and always pro- duces most gratifying results. Tan‘ac is for sale by all good drug gists. Over 35-million bottles sold.— Advertisement. f RIALTO taeater PROGRAM FOR “WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS IN FLOWER” PROGRAM Overture— Nelly G. Todd, Directress Current Events. Kinogram News W eekly Novelty—Ear! Hurd Cartoon Prologue Ballroom Dances of the Tudor Period Interpreted by the Pupils of the Ethel Mann School Feature— MARION DAVIES in “When Knighthood Was in Flower” A Cosmopolitan Production—Directed by Robt. Entire musical score secured for special production and played by The Netto Ladies’ Orchestra *) romance. Fr. v. Suppe Horton, a comedian with a sure grasp upon the qualities which create hu- mor. He plays in a deadly serious manner the part of a lackadaisical youth determined to get a job. He rides into the town at the wheel 6f a filvver and put an ad in the local pa- per. There is some deft comedy tn- troduced with the car—which re not of the slapstick brand—even though the car is always a good prop fee ho- kum. And by using his head and tak- ing advantage of opportunity when It} attended a cabaret, but nearly every- one has attended them by proxy, 80 knocks, he eases himself into a part- nership with the editor. oS The rest of the story has to do with] motion picture screen. In the Leah patching up the feud between his’ Baird Production for Associated Ex- elder partner and the mayor—and he] hibitors, does this by sheer bluff. The front}by ond with Leah Baird, Rialto page story {s nothing but a screaming} theatre patrons tomorrow will wit- scarehead announcing that the mayor|ness what, without will be exposed. It even for the partner whose ideas of journal'sm follow the orthodox chan- ne’s. The old man’s daughter is a handy girl about the office. And aside from acting as a foil here and there it is her object to carry the “A Front Page Story" plays at the America today and Saturday. RIALTO TOMORROW LEAH BAIRD peak | “WHEN HUSBANDS DECEIVE" Christie Comedy “BABIES WELCOME” Aesop’s Fables “THE FARMER AND THE MICE” STARLAND REVUE NOVEL FOUNTAIN DANCE 15 FILM ATTRACTION IN precipitates a| most costly and beautiful cabaret deal of anxiety for all concerned—| ever staged. The peak of artistry and daring draperies, do a barefoot dance in a fountain. play upon them, FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1923, ao. For BRUISES AND BURNS are turned on. ‘The wet draperies cling to their slender, graceful forms, which are posed and silhouetted against a background of highlights. sh ayrones of pe: Importance,” je last teday, is an tootsie gee The Cpliotopiay has been made with due regard for whut .8 reasonably to be expected in the way of settings. Tho exteriors are strikingly beautiful; there are Enz- lish gardens that fairly exude the NEXT SHOW AT RIALT Many people have never actually 4s the favorite household remedy, Prevents danger from Pneumonia, Croup, Sore Throat, Chest Colds Boils, Bruises and Burns, Sore, Swe ed condi. its place, At all Drug Stores. Pound cans, 50c, odor of roses and lilacs; there are broad estates that indicate the wealth and stability of the birthplace of Anglo-Saxon civilization. The in- terlors row some of the finest homes which have ever been used in motion picture making. speak, through the medium of the ———— “When Husbands Deceive,” Rent that vacant room through ¢ classified ad in the Tribune. doubt, is the reached when ten girls, in filmy While vari-colored Ights the water sprays ARE YOU ON THE WRONG Track? Two trains at a station—one headed East, the other West. You want to go to San Fran: cisco. but get on the train go ing East and land in New York. What is tho trouble? It is all because you started on the wrong track. WILDE'S WOMAN E! CELEBRATED PLAY OF NO IMPORTANCE” A Fighting Mother! A story that lays life A Beautiful Mother! bare as fear! A Young Mother! = [uife°” haben Don't make a mistake and the wrong track when you are hunting for get on health, Chiropractic has been the right road to health for many people who have been over all other roads. Consultation and Analysis Free Bring all your health troubles to Robert N. Grove CHIROPRACTOR Over White's Grocery 112 East Second Street Phone 2220, Palmer School Graduate —Aiso— PATHE NEWS SNAPSHOTS LYMAN HOWE Time of Shows—1, 2:40, 4:20, 6, 7:40, 9:20 SEATS IN ADVANCE PHONE 14 IRIS SATURDAY NIGHT ONLY The First Appearance of Elizabeth Baker and Her SCHOOL OF DANCING 20 Cute and Cunning STARTING TONIGHT ALLEN’S REVUE OF REVUES Company of 20 People Present “A TRIP TO CHINATOWN” AN ORIENTAL FANTASY DANCING PUPILS Se, 4 4 NEW VAUDEVILLE FEATURES A Thirty-Minute Including Some New Stunts by the Entertainment FAMOUS LYRIC QUARTETTE —In— “OLIVER TWIST” Starting Promptly at 9:00 P. M. LS No Extra Charge of Admission PRICES 10c AND 40c PHOTOPLAY “THE SILENT MASTER” Robert Warwick's Big Feature of Adventure In the Paris Underworld Two Shows Tonight—7 and 9 Prices 10c and 40c OH 4 SKINNAY! JACKIE COOGAN PARADE STARTS PROMPTLY AT 12 NOON SATURDAY IN FRONT OF IRIS THEATER $15.00—CASH—$15.00 PRIZES GIVEN AWAY TO THE BEST IM- le BIG M ° ° = jn w BO AO M “ ° PERSONATORS OF ° | $2 Each to the Best First Five and $1 Each to Next Best Five Jackie Coogans. JACKIE COOGAN COMO KIDS ‘NOILNGULLV iSLNOOS AOE Shows at 1, 2, 3:30, 5, SUNDAY AND MONDAY TODAY AND SATURDAY “A FRONT PAGE STOR HERE’S A TYPICAL NEWSPAPER YARN, WITH THE KICK OF AN ARMY MULE. “A Front Page Story” Will Surprise You and Give You a Thousand Laughs. —Also— A TWO-PART CLASSIC “HOPE” 6:30, 8 and 9:30 MM IN "ROMANCE LAND” Admission 10c and 40c BACK DOOR” TODAY and SATURDAY Pickford — IN “THROUGH THE TODAY AND SATURDAY JACKIE COOGAN IN AND. AS “OLIVER TWIST All the characters of Dickens’ immortal story, Oliver, Fagin, Nancy Sykes, Bill Sykes and the artful dodger, are all on the screen as you saw them in the book, and you'll love and hate them again. —ALso— “A BARNYARD CAVALIER” —WITH— BOBBY VERNON KIDS—DON’T FORGET THE BIG COOGAN PARADE AT NOON SATURDAY. 1 to 11—10c and 25¢

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