Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 27, 1923, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR. GOVERNOR oAYS RIGHTS OF PUBLIC MUST BE OBSERVED Operators and Miners Who Declares Controversy Must End. HARRISBURG, Pa., Aug. morning addressed the assembly of coal operators and, mine workers whom he had called together in the hope of averting the coal strike set for September 1. nor’s address follows in part: } LATE FLASHES| INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Aug. 27.— ‘Three persons are dead and prop- erty damage estimated at more than $100,000 was dono last night and early today by a heavy rain storm, accompanied by lightning, through out the state. LONDON, Aug. 27.—Tho oldest s@rviving nurse of the American, civil war is living in an English work house. She is Mrs, Janet Newbury, 101 years old. She was an associate of Florence Night ingale, the founder of modern Red Cross nursing LOS ANGELES, Aug. 27.—James Kirkwood, motion picture actor, was reported to be in a serious condition today, the result of a fall from a horse Inst Saturday at Beverly Hills, near here. He sustained a concus- sion of the brain. SLOUGH, England, Aug. 27.— Letty Lind, actress and dancer, Is dead here at the age of 69. She be-| gan her career as Little Eva with al provincial “Uncle ‘Tom's Cabin" company. : NEW YORK, Aug. 27.—Mrs. Miriam Tuttle Sargeant Sylvester, a member of a distinguished Ver mont family, who died Saturday in her 103rd year, was buried today in Brooklyn. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Aus. 27.—The Western Tariff congress re- cently called to meet in Denver, will be held October 3, it was decided at a special meeting of the organization committee of the congress here to- day. —_—_— KANSAS CITY SELECTED AS HEADQUARTERS FOR VETS OF FOREIGN WARS NORFOLK, Ve., Aug. 27—Selec- x s City, Kansas, as quarters of the Veter- » Wars, was the first act of the organization’s annual con- vention today. he present head- quarters is in New York. Plans also were adopted for broad- casting activities of the organization securing subser!ptions from mem. fund to be useg exglus- nization purposes. nth division véterans » meeting here, was legates from many ans of F fter the {nvocation, ed and there was a prayer in memory arding. Immediate “taps” minute of of President H was 5 Campbell Sascom Slemp, Big Stone Gap, Va., Republican state chairman and former congressman, has been named as sec ary to the president, succeeding George B. Christian, “As the representative of the commonwealth of Pennsyl- | REWARD FOR KLAN DEATH |S OFFERED PITTSBURGH, Pa., Aug. 27.—Re wards totalling $7,500 have been of- |fered by the Ku Klux Klan for in- formation as to those responsible | for the riot Saturday at Carnegie, |in which Thomas R. Abbott, a klans- man, was killed, and several wound- 27.—Governor Pinchot, this 2 ee ously, The coroner's inquest into the |death of Abbott will not be held ‘or some time,” it was declared by | attaches at the Allegheny county morgue today. Coroner W. J. Me- Gregor said that nothing pertaining vania, I have called you together for!ts the killing of Abbott had been the purpose of finding a way to keep! turn the anthracite mines in dperation.| gheritt’ wabtinvsatinat: °° * IT am acting now solely In my|jng the rioting and had nat made capacity as governor of Pennslyva-|@ report. nia, and with the rights and Inter-| patrick McDermott, a Carnegio ests of the people of Pennsylvania) undertaker, remained in the coun- Addressed by Pinchot The gover- pe Casper Lanp crivune Papyrus to Race in U. S. winner will receive $100,000. thracite fields is not a private coal bree sald the usual course would cite means not a huge loss of profits | In Free Stat “Throughout the vast region where | . sid o : “The interest of the public mind| Nearly 500,000 of this number are of a shortage of anthracite coal. dates for both the regular and Lar- to both attacks had been made on Mount sides. right in believing that the suffer-| both men and women turning out in | down of the anthracite mines would ing this would rob the wurkers of tend to block transportation; and| instance. erators. Each side represents with your experience the background With the assertion today of Les sider that fact with care, speculation grew today as to wheth- side can get everything {t would, the fortune. Wheeler said his ten tre'y confident that the public ig! Houser tore the box from the boy's rel. be followed. McDermott will be ques- “The general public is a party to| tioned, he said, and ff qufficient evi- to the operators—not only a huge| loss of wages to the miners—but it {t is used, anthracite ts the fuel] DUBLIN, Aug. 27.—Voting in the burned in the homes of the people. in the settlement of this controversy|new voters, most of them being is double. In the first place, thea| young people of both sexes. “In the second place, the public) kin wings. wants it settled on terms of even In its desire to be served| Joy prison. and various posts occu: | the public cannot afford to accept| pied by the national troops. but the | ings which come from one coal| large numbers, to vote. shortage after another are intoler-| James Larkin, the labor leaden, tend to undermine the confidence es-|50,000 pounds in wages. He urged sential to a continuance of this pros-| the men to march to their places of | the blocking of transportation will Pre ere be almost as effective jn making a! BERGDOLL AURIED MONEY great and vital service to the public, Moreover, each side stands in the of the present. controversy. But| Houser, a 28 year old farmer living it knows the essential facts, I ex-|near here, that the box he dug up “The public interest demands that| er the money is that buried by Gro- this controversy sha!! be settled, and ver C. Bergdoll, draft dcdger, be- lke to have. in the world we live in, But the|the money, since, he was the first going to have it It is my duty to| hands anc made off with it {nsure the public, by every lawfu jthe flu,” BELIEVED UNCOVERED BY Few people ever do year old son Howard is entitled to} Ben Irish, shown leading Papyrus, winner of the English Derby, plans to send the horse to America to race the best three-year-old of this coun- The day is a public holicay and| try for the world title. Papyrus will be ridden by Donoghue, showa mount- (ed here. The race is to be held at Belmont park, N. ¥., October 20. The astm ae oe GIVEN UP TO DIE, MRS The right of the| minutes, ceasing shortly after 3:30 | 9 ° HARRIS GAINS 35 LBS Back to normal in every way, with a gain of 86 Ibs. in weight after @ severe attack of flu, is the remark- able record of the Tanlac treatment in the case of Mrs. Etta Harris, 2834 N. 12th st., Lincoln, Neb, “Following @ terrible attack of declares Mrs. Harris, “I was so utterly weakened and emaci- ated that I was just about given up to die. I could hardly stand on my feet, much less walk, and had bad cough. Sleeping and eating was almost out of the question, and pains in my back and dizziness added to my suffering. “Tanilac rid me of indigestion. sleeplessness and nervousness and revived my strength ih a few weeks so I was healthy as before the fiu. Every ache and pain left me, while my weight went up from 110 to 145 lbs. I give Tanlac full credit for my recovery.” Taniac is for sale by all good druggists. Accept no substitute. Over 37 million bottles sold. Taniac Vegetable Pills are Na- ture’s own remedy for constipation. For sale everywhere.—Advertise ment. Me Swanson season. and of the other anthracite-using|t, jail today. He was arrested in states, clearly {n mind, |connection with the killing of Ab- “This controversy between the/bott. District Attorney Samuel H. miners and the operators of the an-|Gardner, who 1s directing the inves- this controversy, and its rights, as| dence is forthcoming, he wil! be held well as the rights of the two other fF the coroner, parties, must be represented and a — Fy recognized. A shortage of anthra- Voting Begins In Electi means also a loss of health among | n ecttons millions of American families, loss of comfort, of working power, and of time, i | Dail elections began tnrougnout the A strike or suspension such as now ; 2 threatens fs a public calamity and| Tish Free State at 9 o'clock today as such every reasonable public| with an electorate of more than 1,- means must be used to prevent it. | 750,000 eligible to cast the ballots. public wants it settled. It is utterly | wrong that the people should be|this makes possikle the closing of called upon again to bear the enor-|the polls at 7 o'clock. | mous and most oppressive burden| In Dublin there ara labor candi-| handed justice. public to intervene carries with it|n. m., when the city resumed its nor- | the clear responsibflity to see that|mal quiet. ‘There were reports that | impartial justice is done | any settlement that ts based upon|authorities professed td have no} anything lees than justice, Further-| knowledge of such attacks, (| more, an unjust settlement cannot] The polling) was brisk and in all last. The people believe, and are! parts of Dublin city and county, able. addressing a meeting at Liberty | “The country is just now entering! Hall last night, denounced the ac-| upon a period of prosperity after a\tion of the authorittes tn making | prolonged depression. The closing | election day a public holiday, declar- perity. employment this morning and de Our railroads are heavily taxed|mand that operations go on as us- already. An uneven output of coal| ual. There was no evidence of his —now much and now. little—will/ advice having been followed in any shortage as closing the mines. The public has not forgotten, and I shall not forget, the rights and interests of the miners and the op-| portant duty to the people at large, “The public does not and cannot —— see with your eyes and appreciate) HAGERSTOWN, Md., Aug. 27. — press a truth none will deny when|last week on the Brownsville-Weav- I say that the anthracite consuming|erton road contained between $100,- people of the United States are los-| 000 and $110,000 in bills, besides ap- ing patience, and I ask you to con-| proximately $10,000 in gold coin that a suspension of mining shall be| fore his flight to Germany, avolded The thing is possible—| Complicating the situation was and it must be done. |the assertion of C. S$. Wheeler, a “Settlement means that neither | farmer, that he would lay claim to settlement of this dispute ts absq-|to fihd it. Wheeler said his aon was lutely necessary for the public safe-)Seated on a bank beside the road ty and welfare. The public needs| When Houser's pick exposed the box and must have coal, and I am en-| containing the money. Wheeler says 1 - £5 means at my command, the neces TWO KILLED sary supply of coal. | “I recognize the right of mine workers to organize for their own| IN AIRPLANE protection, and to falr and decent| conditions of living. I am fully} aware that the strike is a right 79 eS which should not be arbitrarily|_, "ORT “DODGE, Iow abridged or denied. ‘Tho exercige| Pilot Stearns and Mart of this right, howaver, should be|®&€4 16, of Rodman, made unnecessary by the use of or.|Kiled at Lizard Lake, a summer re derly and reasonable methods of ad.|S0Ft 35 miles northwest of here Jast justment jevening, when the airplane tn which "I recognize the righ .|they were riding crashed to the erators to a just hte 9m. | ground from a height of 300 feet, Yestment and their managerial abfi- it As the representative of the peo- ple of the commonwealth, I am here to tell you that these rights are to| be recognized and protected and that the public rights are to be recog nized and protected also “The Roosevelt platform of 1918 asserted that ‘the public good com ! first.’ Do not forget that the pub-| rights while it ear| Skin @ business flict over private rights while it muf- fers in health, comfort and the very asset ~ essentials of life. “We are at the threshold of win- ter, I call your attention again to our duty to the public, yours as min+ ers and operators, mine as executive | heads! That skin trouble may be more than a source of suffering and em- barrassment—it may be holding you Col. ©. bo the Late Hardin rontinue in that capacity dant Coolidge, 0, Sherritt Pres! mnitary alde will to Pres of the only anthracite producing ntate, “The edeventh hour ts upon us— and the crisis has now been reached. We must do tn this eleventh hour what should have been done before, | It ean be done and must be done. | There ts still time.” out of a better job for which a good appearance is required. Why “take a chance’ when Resinol | heals skin eruptions so easily, Resinol Soap and Resinol Shaving Stick eon- tain the same soothing properties and are used by discriminating men who like thelr gener. ous, cleansing lather and wholesome Resinol fragrance. Atall druggists, “Restnol wins by improoing skins” Resinol TT 27—Official an- nouncement was made tos of the appointment of Neville Chamber- lain as chancellor of theexchequer, and Sir William — Joynson-Hicks | as minister of health, Get rid of those blotches and black- | intment | | | if AT THE Abreast of the Times Keeping abreast of the times in motion picture pro- duction is n big task. Only those products with high ideas and vast facilfties can do it. The successful theater cannot show a big fine pic- ture this week and a small inconsequential one next week. There must be a high class picture at all times. We have allied ourselves with these producers who are striv- ing with us toward these ideals. Results speak for themselves in our STARTING SEPT. Ist. RIALTO _ TODAY and TUESDAY TOM MIX And “Tony,” the Wonder Horse in Their First Great Eight Reel Production “SOFT BOILED” A Whirlwind of Comedy, Action and Thrills Shows at 1, 2, 3:30, 5, 6:30, 8 and 9:30 10c—————40c greater movie —WITH—. WEDNESDAY and THURS Advertising Values Are _ Reflected in Response To Big Knitting Contest ‘There are skeptics who claim that|!s proved by the fact that rich and newspaper advertising does not pay.) poor, men and women, Overwhelming proof that it does was shown by the unprecedented success of the National Knitting contest re- cently held by the Fleisher Yarns. A large room at the Fleisher fac- tory over 100 feet square was piled high with the entries. It took a staff of office workers weeks to open the packages, sort and classify them for judges. The winners are an- nounced in today's ads and by the stores selling Mleisher yarns. They will also be broadcasted by radio and by special gravure featuring the pic- tures of the winning garments and winners, Advertisements for the contest was placed by Street and Finney, Fleisher advertising agents in over 600 newspapers in every state in the union and in five magazines. Dur.) ing the nine weeks of the contest} which closed June 9, there was na-| tlon-wide interest in the knitting contest. Newspapers cooperated with the local stores which in many instances held knitting contests of their own. This cooperation be- tween advertisers and newspapers proved of muftual benefit. Almost as soon as the advertise-| ments appeared, entries began to} come into the Fleisher office, the number increasing daily. For two! weeks before the date of closing, and for days after, four huge trucks laden with, knitted garments arrived each morning as the first delivery, and smaller lots came through the day. The entries disclose garments of rare beauty both in color and de- sign, as well as others which are amusing and grotesque. That the national knitting pemtest has been one of democratic appeal Like Santa Claus she comes from the North each year to bestow the gifts of entertain: ment unique td an eager world This year a bigger, better pro- duction than ever, Bert Van Tuyle Presents Nell Shipman in > “The Grub-Stake” By NELL SHIPMAN Directed by BERT VAN TUYLE In collaboration with the author. How a wonderful girl conquer. ed the frozen north and through sheer pluck and daring made ‘t yield her gold and love. A powerful melodrama—and, oh, yes, all of the famous Nell Shipman wild animals tn import ant roles. 4 Days Starting TOMORROW RIALTO Today and Tuesday THOMAS MEIGHAN nel teow IF YOU BELIEVE IT, IT’S SO —also— Christie Comedy “COLD FEET” 10c 20c MONEY, MONEY, MONEY KATHERINE MacDONALD THEATER DAY MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 1923. hoping to win one of the $11,000 cash prizes, The judges are Miss - Helen Koues, fashion editor, Good * | Housekeeping, Miss Martha B, Dod. son, associate editor Ladies Home Journal, Miss Christine A, Ferry, needlework editor Modern Priscilla, Miss Carmel White, fashion editor, Vogue and Miss Charfotte Boldt. mann, fashion and crochet editor, Women's Home Companion, aia ee from alll send your automobile news té walks of life have sent in entries,“Spark Plug.”—Care WE ARE QUITTING BUSINESS Our Entire Stock of Clothing, Shoes and Furnishings FOR MEN AND YOUNG MEN AT SLASHED PRICES Come and Get Your Share LEARN SHOE & CLOTHING CO. 260 South Center St. 4 BETTY COMPSON RICHARD DIX “The Woman With Four Faces” Beautiful Betty in four marvelous characterizations. Mack Sennett Comedy “NIP AND TUCK’ KINOGRAMS ADDED ATTRACTION MISS ANNA M. TREVETT COLORATURA SOPRANO Shows at 1, 2:40, 4:20, 6, 7:40, 9:20, Singing at 3, 7:30, 9.49 STARTING TODAY TOMING Centinuewe—1 to 14 m. S. Hart STNas “BETWEEN MEN” —Also— H. C. Withers’ Famous Story “FIGHTING BLOOD” And International News Reel fa TILA CASPERS FAMILY THEATRE #\ But LY eR iv R BODE LAST TIMES TODAY “BLACK CAT CAFE” Presented ‘by 1923 REVUE COMPANY This is a Musical Comedy Treat. Come early! —Also— Alice Calhoun in “CLOSED DOORS” Admission 10c—40c Shows 7 and 9 p. m. West First, Off Center Dancing Academy “Wyoming’s Greatest Amusement Pal a Monday night is always a good night for the regular fellows. After Sunday you will enjoy dancing to the best music and enter- tainment in Casper. . ADMISSION FREE

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