Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 27, 1923, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT, ’ AMERICANIGM OF OWSLEY STIRS GREAT AUDIENCE AT AUDITORIUM {Continued from Page one.) eign Wars and the Spanish American War veterans were represented by large delegations and sprinkled through the hall wére four or five The Boy Scouts Cival War veterans. acted as ushers. The American Legion band played several popular numbers and with the mander, “The Star arrival of t Spangled B. “I am happy in my reception in y," said Mr. Owsley in his arks. time wanted to accept the invitation fellow townsman, Plummer, “T have for a long tinued Mr. Owsely, “with the presence of the Boy Scouts. I want you to know that the American Legion is dedicated to better citizenship in the America of the future and we believe that one of the greatest factors tn this work is the training of the youth of the country. “During the late war I was stand. ing in Picadilly square in London with a friend of mine, a British officer, when we heard the sound of approach- ing drums. “"T want you to see something won. | derful,’ said my friend, and as the | parade approached I saw it was the you, and I can take ‘no issue| Boy Scouts of London. with him in his description of Casper| « ‘could anything be greater,’ said that it is the best town in the world.”| my friend, ‘than thone 5,000 boys, the After a, brief greeting to the Elks of which he is a past grand exalted ruler, Mr. Owsely launched into the main pa the address, am impressed tonight,” con. $.S.S. keeps away Pimples HERE are thousands of Wo- men who wonder why their complexions do not improve in . Spite of all the face treatments They should not con- tinue_to won- der. Eruptions come from blood impuri- ties and a lack of rich blood- cells. S. S. S. is acknowl- edged to be one of the most powerful, rapid and effective blood cleansers known. S. S. 8S. builds new blood-cells. This is they use. why S. S. S. routs out of your sys- | tem the impurities which cause | boils, pimples, blackheads, acne, blotches, eczema, tettcr, rash, . S. S. is a remarkable fiesh- builder, That’s why underweight eople can quickly build up their lost flesh, get back their normal weight, pink, plump checks, bright eyes, and “pep.” 8. 8. & fs mld Bt att drug stores in two slses. i. larger size is more economical, glorious youth of the city.’ | “I told him yes, that there was | eomething that was even greater and | when he pressed me for an answer T- told his that 5,000 American boys could be even more wonderful. | “The American Legion {s a product | of a great trial, of a seige of suffer- ing and sacrifices. The men of the legion know what it means to work, to fight-and to pray for great ideals. | “America must «.ve to the world an example of unselfishness. We must make our {deals practical. We must write them.in the daily life of eve and woman in the commo, | Man ts lost without some great Principal or some overwhelming thought to dominate his whole life. Give him clothes and they will wear out. Give him food and he will be. come hungry. But give him an {deal that will be with him in every waking 1 he will be lifted to » higher r conception ‘of his lation and bre to his fellow m “The men wko found birth tn thelr service to the United States {1 time of war have determined that they shall give to Ameica un even better service in times of peace “A realization of the power of | America was born in the late war. We men of the legion must first | make safe our future existence. In | the recent struggle we uncovered the | lack of unity that should prevail in | our race and nation. In this coun- | try of ours we find 10,000,000 people | who do not read, write or speak the English language. “Why should they live here and4| to speak our language? I it written down in the statute| sas the first great Americanism| t the English language should be} AUDITORS C. H. RELMERTH Certified Public Accountass Income Tax Service #1 0-5 Bldg. Phone 767 HARRY F. COMFORT Auditing and Accounting Phone 2008 Suite 18, Daly Bs Ovee Campbell Hardware Phone 148 pales Se haat ee ARANTED REGISTRY OORP. Kaaitors ‘and Accountants—Stock trar and ‘Transfer Agents 290-11 Oil Exchange Bldg. Phone 666 ARCHITECTS OBO! OODRICH, Architects ms ILA, Townsend Block | Gage, Wo. Phone . J. WESTFALL, Architect WOM tito 5, Daly Building BAGGAGE and TRANSFER SEARLES TRANSVER Res. Phone 81W Office Phone 313 jatrona ol Ni Transfer, Storage and Fas te J. L. Biederman, Prop. Phone 949 BATTERIES CASPER BATTERY 119 East Fifth CHIROPRACTORS OR. J. H. JEFFREY . GRAHAM JEFFREY Phone 706 G, HAHN lropractor Townsend Bldg. Phone 423 ‘ eee M. &. HARNED, Chiropractor 162 North Kimball St. Phone 1457 co. Phone 907 ROBERT N. GROVE 112 Enst Second Street Phone 2220 Paimer School Graduate and X-Ray DOCTORS THE CASPER PRIVATE HOSPITAL $38 South Durbin—Phone 273 Women’s and Chidren's Hosptial 842 South Durbin—Phone 406 STAFF SURGERY, GYNECOLOGY AND OBSTETRICS Homer FR. Lathrop, M. D., F. A. C. Victor R. Dacken, B. Sc. M. D. EYE, EAR, NOSE and THROAT L. Stanton, M. 8., M. D. SKIN AND X-RAY. TREATMENT GENITO-URINARY DISEASES G. B, Underwood, M. D. ROENTGENOLOGIST Hallie M. Ellis PATHOLOGIST | J. F, O'Donnell, M. DENTIST ©. E. Duncan, D. D. & Offices in Rohrbaugh Building 113 East Second Street Telephone 54 and 55 DR. KATHRYN F. T. SMITH Physician and Surgeon—North Cas- Be Formerly at Corner of H. and rbi Holtzman Apartment, 721 Madison St. Phone Later. DR. W. W. YATES Specialist Eye,Ear, Nose and Throat Suite 2, 112 East Second MARSHALL ©. KEITH, M. D. HERBERT }. HARVEY, M. D. Office 208 South Center—Phone 30 Private Hospital, 612 General AMBROSE HEMINGWAY yer Reom 333 Midwest Bldg. NICHOLS & STIRRETT Lawyers 09-10-11 Oil Exchange Bldg. JAMES P. KEM 408 Consolidated Royalty Bldg. HAGENS & MURANE Lawyers 206-207 Ol] Exchange Building WILLIAM 0. WILSON Attorney-at-Law Sulte 14-15-16 Townsend Bldg. I. ARNOLDUS and Chiropractic Phone 1754 DR. ©. Osteopath! 310 0-8 Building VINCENT MULVANEY Attorney-at-Law 427 Midwest Building ©. A. THURSTON. D. ©. Chiropractor sancuy |210 0-8 Building Phone 2217 133 8 Wolcott Phone 2305W H G DONALD GALLAGHER, Lawyer air Grown CLEANERS Suite 1—Wood Bliz. oriNe THE SERVICE CLEANERS OSTEOPATH M Maliress at Jacksos DR. CAROLINE ©. DAVIS arang eliemadas Osteopathic Physician viNotles the | = Butte 6 ‘A an Ese flex: CHIROPODIST Minin usa taead PUI OS 51) eetthdolas DR. 0. A. SANFORD cap. om§ NE E. 0'DRYANT Osteopathic Physician bottle. You Specialist 316 Midwest Bldg. Phone 1030} 5), the bottle 116 Yast Second Phone 1046R) pas _— = so ug rubbe: lew DOCTORS ae BODE REPAIRING i S| Reneene teats - NORTH CASPER SHOE SHOP reWise mes: DRS. MYERS AND BRYANT All Work Guaranteed . Physicians and Surgeons | Ben Suyematsu East H 200 0-S Bidg. Office Ph. 699 Res, 746 — - ek ‘ mee ea SIGN PAINTER DR. G. 8 BARGE n | cident — on iP. noage means an abundance of Eye, } No a nd : hroat SIGNS. ROY BUTLER new bale cane pe seats Fey that s Fitted 2 aaa enw come w r ir health. Ask us - | TAILORS Tete eae DK. T. J, RIACH a ol For sale at Smith-Turner Drug Physician and Surgeon TROY TATIORS AND CLEANERS store, 131 S. Center street, Phone Residence 2118} OGILBEE & ADAMS 148 E. Midwest | | | §.| Communism or Sovietism, should be! NES. SPARKY'S Gor Aw THE KINKS OUT OF HIS LEGS+ Now You Run Away . SUNSHINE. X= Want T HAVE A HEART To HEARTY “TALK WITH HIM GOTTA! INT. You SPARKY OLD PAL © You've. GOTTA WIN THar RACE TomoRRow - GET MEY Bo THERES A_ BARREL OF OATS TLL SHWEL GOING TS DISAPPOIWT SfouR PAPA. ARE You Sweet OTTLe- AND WHEN You ~ Sow You anwTr BUT i CASE You Got ANY DovusTs SJUsT SLant YOuR PEEPERS ON Tus . A HERES Toe CATALOGUE OF House omana Hat SPECIALTY is DEALS EXCLUSIVELY iw HoRSe NTO NEVADA, THE NEXT ‘To THE LAST STATE To BE CROSSED, PLUNGE WALT “AND SKEEZIx ! BO THEY FALTER IN) /THEIR MAD DASH WESTWARD? NEVER! MILE = UPON MILE ‘ THEY SIT,SIDE BY SIDE, AND TAKE THE BUMPS ! made compulsory in our schools. “I want it written down as the next great Americanism that our flag must be displayed on every school building on every day in the year. “We who are dedicated to the language of Jefferson must have the visible and audible symbol of Amer- ica to bring about unity and solidar- ity in this wonderful country of ours.” Mr. Owsley sketched briefly a re cent experience in Trinidad, Colo., where he told the children that they should refuse to attend a school where the American flag was not ‘dis- Played, and then launched tnto a vitrolic attack on the red element in the country today. “I say that any man,” sald Mr. Owsley, “that is here enjoying the Principles of democracy and freedom, who advocates the destruction of our present form of government and) fosters the principles of Bolshevism,| deported from the country.” The commander, in taking up tho} problem of immigration, told how the) Imitation statutes, including the three per cent Dillingham bill, had been written largely by men who had fought for their country in the late war. "I gay,” continued Mr. Owsley,| “that no person who ts unfit for cit!- zenship, mentally, physically or tem- peramentally, should be permitted to land on American soil. “Search the record of menaces to| the government in the years gone by and you will find that practically all) of them originated in the heart of some man born on foreign soil. “I have to no utterances to make against those born on foreign sol! who have seen the glory that ts in America but we must make it cer-| tain for the future that our govern- ment will never give way to the ideas of men born on foreign soil. “Citizenship is not a question of| birth or naturalization, it has become! a matter of faith and belief. i "Show me a man that says ‘to hell) with those soldiers’ and I will show} you a man who didn't do his part in the war.” With this ringing sentence as an introduction, the speaker went on to) discuss war time graft and the atti-| tude of the men who stayed at home) reaping war time profits while their countrymen went into service. “In the next war,” declared Mr.| Owsley, “I want to see not only the} men from 21 to 30, but every man, every woman, all our resources, our| labor and our power, universally drafted Into service. “During the late struggle we found ® peculiar type of fellow, the man who is invisible in war and invincible in peace. “I want to see any man who made his war time graft on the blood of American boys in the courts to an- swer to the charges. I want them behind the bars where all embezzlers and thieves belong. Near the close of his speech, after| reciting a few of the great thing» | made the supreme sacrifices of the! | Cumberland barnyard, stand demurely AVERY HAS BEEN THROUGH HERE O} IN MY Dey WE RoasTeD CHESTNGTS WHEN ANY FRIEND SPULED ~TODAY ALL THEY THINKOF |S Tazz that the American Legion 1s accom plishing, Mr. Owsley paid a wonderful compliment to the organization, “I believe that in the American Le- gion has been born America's mightiest institution. One that shall! lead men back to the ideals of Amer-| iea and the glory of the flag. In the| legion we have men of all political] belfefs and religious creeds. Blood of your blood, flesh of your flesh, they dedicated themselves to God and the salvation of your country, battling to- gether that government by the peo- ple, for the people and of the people,| shall not perish from this earth.” The closing words of his talk were a touching compliment to those who war, the gold star mothers. a ae MOUNTAIN SCENES OF RARE BEAUTY SHOWN: IN’ FEATURE AT THE RIALTO Lifting two acres of land bodily out of the valleys of the Cumberland mountains and planting it in the foot- hills surrounding Hollywood, Calif., is literally what was done by the ‘Paramount company producing “The! ‘Trail of the Lonesome Pine, picture starring May Miles Minter, with An. tonio Moreno, featured ag leading man, which comes to the Rialto ‘Theatre today and tomorrow. Picturesque in its resemblance to the actual thing, the scene was made for sequences of the photoplay men- tioned. Two acres of land on the Lasky ranch were fenced in with long rail fences. Golden corn, stacked and | appearing like sentinels guarding the| little farm and house, wait to be haul-| ed from the field A cabin home of three rooms, with several coon dogs, a couple of horses, scores of chickens and ucks, two don- keys and other common natives of the in the center of the two acres. Even a barn with a hay loft and cackling chickens, cows and a nearby pen of hogs, adds color to @ scene beautifully reminis- cent of the Cumberland mountains of east Tennesses and Kentucky during the past, Civil War period. The story of “The Trail Lonesorge Pine,” written by the late John Fox, Jr deals with a family feud in the Cumberland mountains of Ke@ucky and Tennessee. Miss Minter is seen as June Tolliver, a sprightly mountal!n rl, who meets and lovee John I al mining engineer und head of a law and order or ganizat © sends June to school, years Phone 968W 176. and within two she is educated it were. NOW WERE GoINd TO FIND OUT WHETHES with atalls and) of thelf 1-4 TEEN—A HAND IN HAND IS WORTH TWO IN THE LAP. KIMONA STOPPED HERE LATELY? -Too MUCH FRIVOLITY IN This SPEED-MAD WoRLS OF Topey- Policeman, and Hale is obliged to arrest him for murder, Then the feud breaks out afresh, and many drama- tle incidents follow. There are many thrills in the subsequent scenes, all of which contribute to make this pic- ture one of the most entertaining seen here during the current season. Ernest Torence, a noted screen play- er, is featured in the cast. NEER-DO-WELL’ COMING TO THE RIALTO. THEATER ‘The Paramount picture, "The Ne’er- Do Well,” which will be the feature at Rialto theatre for four days deginning Sunday next. brings Thomas Meighan 1 Lila Lee on the screen together 228 E. Second St. THE BEST BY TEST ~ Pigeon’s Fresh Roasted Coffee ory of wrll's regeneratioa. —o HERDER FOUND DEAD ON RANCH WINNIPEG, THEN HE MUST BE BEHING. HE NEVER COULD GET PAST ASIGN WHERE ANVTHING WAS FREE WITHOUT STOPPING. Poe (ca ea Hor DIGweTy | (T FEELS Good To EVEN HOLD HANDS” WHEN NGS @ oD ESGLE-EYED CHAPERON “ere! Four Children Are Drowned according to Man., July 27.—our children were drowned at tl ‘Tuesday, reaching here. Names of two of the children were given as Bernard Stitt, Pas information Ro 22, and his sister, Molly, 10. TI /other two names were not obtained. Coroner Lew M. Gay was called yes terdny to Soo pass, 19 miles abuve Log Cabin in the Big Horns, by the report that a sheepherder had been found dead. The report was sent in from the Sweet ranch. No intimation was given that ste had had met with violence at tie hands of other prrteis ahd it is sup. posed that he wns elther struck by lightning or died trom natural causes, Phone 623 USED Essex Touring — Call and See Second and | Yellowstene TOR TRUC AW . | ae CW | 1406 On her return home her uncle kills Excellent Values Are Offered in the Following Cars: Buick Roadster ________ rs Hudson Speedster -_________ Chalmers Touring ~_-___. RAO: RONG. EQUtings 2 so eo Haynes Touring ~-______________-§9775 Terms On Above Cars Nn HtARE Prone CARS Them Today yoming. sha Se ee ets o ® nad and Pig Molds. Metal Po Wyoming Baki Phone 1732 * Casper, Wyo. Notice to Printers The Following Job Prin’ cheep, By the Sheridan Model 8 Linotype—rebuilt 6 months ago. Model 8 Linotype—fair condition, Duplex 8-page Flat Bed Press—excellent Cranston Cylinder Press—6 columns quarto. 12x18 Chandler & Price jobber. 10x15 Chandler & Price jobber. 86-inch Chandler & Price cutter—good one. 86-inch Roseback Perforator—practically new. Boston Wire Stitcher—1-inch, practically 2-page Imposing Stones. t and Gas Furnace, Small Casting Box A big buch of Job Cases aces—a complete as; which has never been Sheridan Post-Enterprise ting Equipment for Sale— Post-Enterprise at Sheridan, sortment of Job Type, some of out of cases, J. D. Sullivan and Type Sheridan, Wyo. Se a PETTITTE i be ae

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