Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE Twe Wid. TISDALE PASSES AWAY AT IUSPITAL HERE Pioneer Woman of John- | son County Dies at Age of 60 Years. Katie A. Tisdale, 60 years of Johnson county Irs. Mrs. Tisdale 2 one of the any of W: Tisdale, dt was present a the. tis ock and Mrs. Tisdale came ng years a brides. s took up thelr home at jomestead at the foot ain which is about he foot of the Big isdales lived with them, of courage must have < ssod by the young brides who were often left alone whilo their hust gone for 4 at a t ng provisions. It was sary to go to Douglas to obtain stance about 150 miles. was taken from Buffalo as a result of 8 that obtained between ons in those days. The Mr. Tisdale left the widow our children on her oldest of these, Mart Tisdale, set supporting the family. other children included a who is now Mrs. Perkins , & son who was killed in Id war, and the youngest son who now resides in Casper. M Tisdale made her home with her daughter during the late years of her life. The deceased was a woman who made many friends during her life, many of whom live in Canper. The remains were shipped from the Shaffer-Gay chapel this afternoon | to Buffalo where burial will be made. CASPER WATER UNUSUALLY HARD, DECLARES ENGINEER A water softening plant for Casper ‘s greatly needed according to R. 1, McDonald. consulting $ngineer, who spoke before the Casper chamber of. commerce yesterday noon. In the course of his speech Mr. McDonald brought out the fact that. Casper’s water is much harder than the water found in most other cities of the United States “It is 461 parts hardness,” sald the engineer. ‘Cities where the water is only 150 parts hardness find it eco- nomical to soften it. Why then should it not be economical to soften it in Casper?” Mr. of water. One was Casper hard wa- ter and the other was soft water. He put a Mquid soap in each of these and demonstrated more soap to lather in the hard water 2han it did tn the soft water. ambush near quarre The Hill Cres water is an excellent ex-| ample of soft water. It lathers with extreme ease and is unsurpassed in wholesomeness for drinking and cooking purposes, It 4s the cheapest way of fighting hard water. ee HAROLD LLOYD PERFORMS OWN THRILLS IN LATEST COMEDY AT THE RIALTO No one will be able to question the fact that Harold Lloyd performs his thrill stunts’ in the seven-reel, Pathe-comedy, “Bafety,| which comes to the Rialto Saturday, for in practically scene in the picture Lloyd's theater and chills aro with the spectacled com« ‘orming the difficult task the aide of a twelve st and reaching the roof after the most hilarious and fearful hazards, And, although suf-| fering part of the time from a dis- jointed shoulder, Harold declined to use a “double” at any stage of the production. Indeed, it will not re- quire a close inspection to disclose this fact. a DMIAY-JUDGING TO BE QEMONSTRATED FRIDAY AT WHEELER RANCH P { 1, t Wheeler ranch D. J hush: na cour ndman, from fterwards hold among the his hands, | McDonald showed two bottles! that it took much| ging demonstration will} 'HARDING TO OKEH CANAL TRIP PLAN WASHINGTON, May President ‘ding was said by White House ers today to be inclined toward adoption of the proposal that he re- turn from his Alaskan trip by boat, | passing through the Panama Canal | and possibly visiting Porto Rico, Secretary Denby, who advanced | the proposal, | of the shipping board, have discussed | it with the executive several times within the Iast week and it was jlearned today that president plans in the near future to go over | it thoroughly with several of his ad- visers. The return by water would prevent the president from speaking in a number of cities where he has tenta- tively promised to make his addresses and very likely would make neces- | sary a rearrangement of his {tinerary from Washington to the Pacific const, “OH, SKIN-NAY! CIGAR CONTEST IS WIDE OPEN | Girls and boys, would you like to surprise Dad with a fine box of I vester cigars that will not cost you a cent? To be sure you would like to do anything to show your apprecia- |tion of him. All you have to do ts to tell Dad to buy a Harvester cigar and give the band to you. And then here is where the fun comes in. Construct a sentence from j the word Harveste arting the first | word with the letter “H”, the second | word with the letter "and so on through the entire word Send your sentence and cigar band to The Tribune on or before May 15 and you will have a chance of win- ning one of the following boxes of high-grade Harvester cigars: ist prize—100 Harvester Perfectos, 2nd prize—60 Harvester De Luxe. 3rd prize—50 Harvester Perfectos. |_ 4th prize—50 Harvester Record Breakers. sth prize—25 Harvester De Luxe. | Gth prize—2s Harvester Perfectos. | 7th prize—25 Harvester Record pangs sth LBS LATE SPORTS SACRAMENTO, Oalif., May 9.— Arch Rife of 8: mto, set what was said to’ be jd record for endurance mot elo riding when he completed his seventy-seventh hour of riding at 2 o'clock this morning. At that hour officials stopped the race. According to Kenneth Lee, national referee of the Auto Trade association, the for- mer world endurance record was seventy hours, and 19 minutes. ———. American-Born Rabbis Favor Dry Amendment FRESNO, Calif., May 9.—American- born rabbis are preparing a petition to Congress to amend the Volstead act to abolish the use of wine for sacramental purposes, Rabbi Alex- ander Segel of Temple Beth Israel, Fresno, today told members of the Fresno Lions club. “In spite of the fact that unlimited opportunity is given to the rabbis, Rabbi el said, “there is not an American-born rabbi who has, sunk to bootlegging. When it was found ‘that there was some foreign born who were taking advantage of condi- tions, the American-born rabbis band: ed together to prepare the petition, declaring that under the law the use of wine is no longer sacramental, but sacreligious. |Wreaths Laid on | Graves By The | King and Queen n ROME, May 9.—(By The Associated | Press.)— King George and Queen tombs of Italy's unknown soldier and of King Victor Emmanuel II, and King Humbert. Driving to the panthon where the two former sovereigns are buried, the British rulers were recetved by the minister of public instruction and by the veterans of the Italian war of Independence, who since the death of Victor Emmanuel II, in 1878 have maintained a guard over the tomb. ——————— \N. Y. BANKER SHOT DEAD y 9—1Py | PARIS, M The Assoc!at- ed Press.)—James M. Parmalee of ew York, cashi of the Parts branch cf the Guaranty Z¥ust com: pany, was shot and Killed as he was walking heme through one of the Principal streets 1¢ n te t night, The body a police station and an as ordered in an endeavor ain if the bullet that killed nshier was from a pollee revol. ver or was fired by a member of a battling detectives a tance awa a A ¢ se gentleman always sends pair of bees to the lady of his a c oked upon as of conjugal ¢ Mary of England laid wreaths on the| and Chairman Lasker YORK, Pa, May 8—Two men who have confessed to dollars “easy mone; | bank at the same time, now say it | doesn’t pay. They are in jail and the City Bank of York which has nearly 10,000 de positors, has been forced to close its doors, Behind it all les the tragedy of a drab Main Street. | Thomas B. Baird was a teacher in this little Penn: Dutch county, The pay wa attractiv nor was the work thrillin, And Baird wanted marry | So he got a Job in the local bank. | Money paesed through his hands |in quantities that he had only dreamed of. It set him thinking. | He wanted to rise above the life in the small town. He wanted to do big things. | ‘rhe thought worked on him, and worked on him, and finally, he suc- | cumbed. According to his confession, he be | san his manipulations in 1900. He was caught only last month. During the 23 years of his activi- tles, he says he stole more than $800,000! | Alongside school Baird, who was the cashier of the bank, worked ‘William |H. Boll, as assistant. Ho, too, had |lived in the ttle town for many | years, and was tired of it, He began traveling with a fast set. It was hard keeping up, until he, too, started to find an easy way out. It consisted of sprinkling forged notes among the bank's papers, and Pocketing the money, bank officials technique was different. investigators say he took cash the savings deposits and put | false slips through the ledger. Neither knew of the other's opera: from tions, "It Avent on for years. In 1915 Boll went on a vacation Baird looked over the books. He discovered defalcations, but said nothing, Boll learned only recently that there ‘were other irregularities. But the state authorities didn’t dis- cover anything wrong until it week. State Bank Examiner R. P. Ferguson was the first inspector in 23 years who saw through the cash. Jer’s manipulations. “Just as soon as he stepped up to the bookkeeper,” sa: Baird, Ke 5 wrote on a slip of paper: ‘It's all up’ and showed {t to Boll.’ But that night both back to the bank. rd took $1000, and Boll $500 |as their last loot, to hire lawyers,” gays the district attorney. ‘There's no use trying to beat the game,’ said. Baird when he was ar- | rested and jailed after failure to raise 0,000 bail. men came He said he had lost the money in wildeat speculations. “Anybody playing the market,” he warned, “is a sucker.” In 1916, according to Baird, he was |short in his accounts between $200,- 000 and $300,000, all of which, he claims, was lost in bucket shops. He backed many ofl and mining companies with half a million dol- lars, officials say, in an attempt to make big money and get out of the small-town banker class. He wanted |to show the world that he could be a big financier. | But Boll went Into the game for a different reason. He wanted to step up out of émall-town society. “Remember two things,” he told |me, the firet newspaper man to In- terview him in the county jail, “t |may be easy to got into fast com- pany, but it’s mighty hard to keep up with ft, I know. I tried it. “Small pay and lax regulation lead to temptation.” Boll salary was $3500 a year, many years it had been $2000. Both men are over 50, married, and have large families. Wives of the arrested men are de- For ARE EY. Che Casper Daily Cribune THE CITY BANK OF YORK, CLOSED BY THE STATE, AND LEFT, WILLIAM H. BOLL, SISTANT CASHIER; RIGHT, THOMAS B. BAIRD, CASHIER. termined to stand behind them, This in spite of State Banking ‘Commis: sioner Cameron's statement that he has letters involving other women. “No matter what happens,” says Mrs. Baird, ‘no matter what people say, my faith in my husband can’t be shattered.” ‘The townsfolk are sorry for her and Mrs. Boll. But they feel none too Kindly toward the husbands. There were many school teache and small depositors among the thou- sands affected’ by the closing of the bank. “They will probably get back about 50 per cent of their money,” says C. H. Graff, deputy of the state bani: examiner's department. IRISH REBELS ROUNDED UP DUBLIN, May 9.—(By The Assoct ated Press.)\—A roundup of Irish irregulars is progressing in the mountains near Blessington, county Wicklow, where large numbers of them are reported to be hiding, ac- cording to reports recélved by tt Central News. Heavy firing wa heard near ington. Later more than a dozen pr.soners were brought into that tow Night Flying By Mail Pilots To Be Delayed |" CHICAGO, May 9.—Beacon lights for night flying are expected to be completed by July 1, but actual night aerial mall flights probally will not be made for at least a month after ward, it was learned today from at taches of the aerial mail service. Des Moines, Iowa, will be made a station. The plan, as announced some months ago, contemplates emergency stations at intervals of 25 miles be tween Chicago and Cheyenne on the western route fromm Chicago to San Francisco. At present Iowa City is the first stop between Chicago and Omaha. Beacon lights are to be erected three miles apart along the route. HOME. IRENE PRIOR, Oriental Dancer DOROTHY HAYS, JR., Blue Singer HEINE KLOTZ, Singer and Whistler TOM WATKINS and His Orchestra Playing for Dancing from 9:30 to 12:00. ALL FOR 25 CENTS AS.) K EMPLOYES WHO CONFESSED TO THEFT OF MILLION “EASY MONEY’ SAY IT DOESN'T PAY 200 REBELS IN TRIPOLI SLAIN IN LATE FIGHT Army of 1,500 Defeated By Italian Regulars, Official Report May 9.—(By Tho Associated “ifteen hundred rebels were defeated and 200 killed by the Itat- ns in thelr latest operation in Trip- involving the occupation of an | advanced point, {t was announced in \ | O-NICHT AT THE OWN YOUR HOME SHOW EXHIBITS OF ALL FEATURES PERTAINING TO THE at The Arkeon the official statement covering the latest developments. The statement says: “Our troops occup'ed Bertagemut, 60 kilometers south of Siimen and Misurata, after defeating 1,500 rebels of whom 200 were killed. We also captured arms and ammunition, Our casua'ties were 19 Askaris (native troops) killed." An unofficial report says the Ital- jan losses included 119 wounded. ————>—_.— White House Is Economizing on Sugar, Report NEW YORK, May 9.—The White House has been added to the list of households which are attempting to force down the price of sugar by means of economy, it was learned in a letter from Mrs. Warren C. Hard- ing’s secretary to Mrs. Louis Miller, deputy commissioner of public mar- kets. The letter, sent in reply to a re- quest that the presidential household aid in the fight to lower prices, read in part: “Mrs. Harding has seen your tele: gram of May 3. She asks me to say to you that the White House is economizing to the fullest possible degree in sugar consumption.” The quickest cooking eats in the world Now your grocer has Quaker Oats in two styles. One the kind ae have always known—the other ick Quaker, uick Quaker cooks in from 3 to 5 minutes. And it cooks to perfec- tion. So it is almost like a ready- cooked dish, No other oat flakes on the market cook anywhere near so quickly. The two styles are identical in peality, and flavor. Both are flaked rom the finest grains only—just the rich, plump, flavory oats. A bushel of choice oats yields but ten pounds of these delicious flakes. But in Quick Quaker the oats are cut before flaking. They are rolled very thin and partly cooked. So the flakes are smaller and thinner—that is all. And those small, thin flakes cook quickly. Ask for Quick Quaker if you want this style. Your grocer has both. But always get Quaker Oats for their delightful flavor. WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1923. Fort Worth, Texas, and directed that all mail recetved at Fort Worth au. dressed to the company be returned to the senders. Reward Posted For Swindlers NEW YORK, May 9—The New York stock exchange late today of. fered a reward of $5,000 for informa. tion leading to the arrest and con. vietion cf. the persons who. flooded brokers of New York and other cities Monday with fake orders to buy stocks. accompanied by forged cash lers’ checks aggregating approx!- mately $2,000 C00, POPE RECEWES KING AND QUEEN AT THE VATICAN Military Honors Are Paid Royal Visitors to the Holy See. ROME, May 9%.—{By The Asso- ciated Press.)—Pope Pius received King George and Queen Mary ot England in the vativan today, Thelr majesties were accompanied by Hon. Theophilus Russell, British minister to the Holy See. They were fccorded military honors by the Pala; tine cuards and a detachment of pon- tifical gendarmes. Prince Ruspoll, grand master of the Holy Hospice, in black velvet and ruff, opened the door of the caa bearing the king and queen and as 7 i ; tioned off the sovere'gns stepped forth ther Miss Irene Brown auctioned « were welcomed by Monsignor D%| kisses at the Brighton Sowa Samper, papal Major Dumo. ‘The| {n London to aid a charity.’ sa papal court cortege escorted thei) the evening was over she h majesties up the staircase into the| lected $ 5 Clementine hall, = King George was in full dress uniform. Queen Mary wore, the cus: tomary black dress ang veil, At the head of tho stairs twenty four Swiss guards presented arms, the remainder of the papal court received the royal visitors. Only King George. Queen Mary an’ Mr. Russel! entered the private lib- rary of tHe pontiff where the audi ence tcok place. ANOTHER OIL FIRM Ih BAD WASHINGTON, May 9—As the be-| ginning of a campaign by the post-| Doctors Keith and Har- vey have moved their of- fices to rooms in the Kim- Pius XI, walked to meet the Brit:| office department against wild cat o!l/f hal] Block over Wray’s ish sovereigns, holding out his hand| Promoters, Postmaster General Cafe: Phone 30. to them in cordial greeting. ‘The| issued a fraud order against the 2 audience lasted nearly an hour, Aji| ¢ta! Lee Development fnterests its conclusion members of the En glish suit of the king were intro Cuced. ee Don’t fail to see the Lorain Oven Canning Demonstration Tonight at the Casper Gas Appliance Co. Booth. Build Your Own Home Joe Lippert will leave tomorrow for Montana to be gone a short time on business. Sure Relief ogi INDIGESTION f | 25¢ and 75¢ Packages Everywhere ] DECLARES THURSDAY A Sweater Day For Women and Misses 500 SWEATERS Of All Descriptions. TO BE CLOSED OUT At less than manufacturers’ cost. They come in mohairs, silks and wools, slip- ons and tuxedos, SWEATERS SWEATERS Values up to $3.95. Values up to $5.95. FOR THURSDAY FOR THURSDAY $1.45 | $2.45 TWO-PIECE SWEATER SUITS SKIRT AND SWEATER Can be used for all occasions. Absolutely the ae rest in women’s sport attire. Regular $16.50 and $18.50 values. For Thursday, $12.45 ALL HIGHER PRICED Thread Silk Sweaters, Sweater Suits and Knit Dresses ‘With Hand Embroidered Monograms. AT BIG REDUCTIONS