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eo er oy bi ot ne 1s 1d le jas he ut er Ne i] PAGE SIX. “LOYAL LIVES” VIVIG AND INSPIRING STORY Lives” at One who sees “Loyal the America theater will have a much higher appreciation of the work of the persons connected wit! the mail business of the United States than one has held before. The great responsibility that rests/ on the shoulders of those who have for their duty the carrying of letters| and other articles that are handled through the department, their loyal- ty to their government, ond their effort to carry out thair work to the| greatest extent furnishes an inspira-| tion such as few lines of work can furnish. “Loyal Lives" is not m dead do- Piction of the work of postoffice emp'oyes, It is not @ picture of propaganda sent out by the govern- ment. Instead it fs a vivid thrill-! ing, sympathetic story of a family who had reason to be familiar with the workings of the postoffice sys- tem, to know ts strength and its weaknesses, to live for it, to fight for it and if need be to die for it Mary Carr, probably the greatest film mother of all time, has a lead ing role in the picture as the wife of the mall carrier who grows old in the service. Iast night Manager George Stewart of the Iris and America theaters was host to the postoffice employes of Casper, and several rows of seats were reserved for these guests. The picture has been dedicated to Casper's workers. NEW MIX PICTURE 15 LAVISH IN SETTINGS Astoundingly new, is the promise held forth by Manager Stewart for Tom Mix in “North of Hudson Bay,” his latest William Fox production. Jt will open at the America theater Friday Every indication ponte to the veracity of the manager's state- ment. The film embraces a situa tion that ts entirely new to the screen. And its newness is augment ed by the full thrill it offers. A code of the far north which penal assicns a murderer to the role of self.executioner should provide the effete movie fan wi cold sweat It sends him into vast white wilderness t the cold, pr ani and ¥ ot hunger, with a the character Mix He is a t ‘Alberta 1 innocent as a ne wild gyration who left homo te relea| him out Mi port ised on youth farm, cloiste of nate. ¢ 1 He, too. » ure, though fie to find and bring home Ur who has struck it rich an gold fields. to the north he the / On his journey meets Estelle McDonald, the ward of Cameron McDonald, factor of point Doug'as, a far north trading post of the Hudson's Bay company. The incidents and mishaps aboard the old-fashioned steamer which con- veys them north are full of original fun. Meanwhile, intrigue weaves 4 horrible net to ensnare these happy north-bound youths. ‘The production jolts forward with terrific velocity. There are scenes of great beauty laid in the land of white enchantment. The depth and sense of vastness attained by John Ford is nothing short of remarkable. Tom Mix engages in some of the most hazardous stunts to his career and never has his role offered a more delightful romance. Tt 1s expected that this picture ‘will outshadow, tn points of appeal and popularity, all previous Mix vehicles. —— MOVIE MAKERS LISTEN TO THE GASH BOX 10 DETERMINE POPULARITY 4 ROBERT A . DONALDSON. {United Press Staff Correspondent) 3 3ELES, Oct. 31.—{United a good picture. Ee t. 1 picture. Don't waste y on it.” remarks are the pictures who bromi ake and t which Ho! » s into the maw of a mo nu Perhaps the people who make them think rks gv unheed ed by exhibitors and producers. But the exhibitors of the country have terribly keen eare—which they ap ply, one to the remarks of patrons and the other to the chink of the coin in the box office. Andi when its r, they efther sing thelr paen of praise or squack their heads off at the end of month h month the ¥ ture News and Ted Tay! known 1 Angeles movie critic, mpile a list of the best and worst picture point of the rts from r popularity Covered » Flower. ‘The Covered Wagon jumped to the tem thia month, Last month Hu man Wreckage led the list. Safety |Tast, Enemies of Women, Robin When Knighthood Was in Flower haye been in the lits of the best sellers for four consecutive months land are util going strong. ———_—— = LAST TIMES TODAY FOR SEEING OF “OH MARBLE” “Oh Mable” !s appearing at the | Columbia theater for the last times tonight. ‘he Girl Question” has |been announced as the new show | which will open tomorrow with the |same capable cast from Billy Ire- }land’s “Follies of 1923." Today marks the fourth day of) }“Oh Mable.” During all perform- | ances great crowds have been drawn to the Columbia and those who have seen tho bill have gone away well satisfied with the performance. It is a remarkably funny show with p'enty of talent revealed among | the members of the company. Bud Brownle, Harry and Maudina Dun- bar, Jack Flinn, Jimmie Brennen, Lew Newman and Mr. Ireland him- self all appear in clever rotes go MU a raat FINAL SHOWINGS OF “TO THE LAST MAN” ATRIALTO TOMORROW The final showings of the Para. mount picture, “To the Last Man," which opened at the Rialto theater last Saturday will take place there this afternoon and evening. This splendid picture includes in featured roles Richard Dix and Lols Wilson. Noah Beery, Robert Edeson and Frank Campeau play in support. Victor Fleming directed the produc: tion, which was adapted by Doris Schroeder, The supporting cast is composed of prominent screen play e Send your automobdme news to “Spark Plug.“—Care Tribune. QUART OF WATER, CLEANS KIDNEYS Back Hurts, or Bladder Is Troubling You No man or woman can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known au- thority. Eating too much rich food creates acids, which excite the kid- neys. They become overworked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisong from the blood. Then we get sick. Rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary disorders often come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys, or your back hurts, or if the urine is cloudy, offensiv full of sediment, irregular of pas- sage or attended by a sensation of scalding, begin drinking a quart of water each day, also get about four ounces of Jad Saits from any phar- macy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast, and in a few days your kidneys may act fine, This famous salts is made from | the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lthia, and has been! - used for years to flush and stimu late the Kidneys; also to help neu- tralize the acids in the system, ao they no longer cause irritation, thus often relieving bladder weakness. Jad Salts ie inexpensive; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to help keep the kid- neys clean and active and the blood pure, thereby often avoiding serious kidney complications. By all means haye your physician examine your kidneys at least twice a year.—aAd- vertisement. RIALTO TOMORROW and FRIDAY What is a Woman’s Worst Enemy? SEE “Dark Secrets” What Power is Stronger than love? ‘MONKEY IN FLIGHT 15 | Hood, Down to the Sea in Ships and} ipene a Little Salts if Your | staged tn celebration of Hallowe'en. Theee prizes will be given for the most beautiful, most comical, and most original costumes. CAPTURED WITH BANANA . 22s.r=cncrme tectne ia this evening. Biting weather !s not | expected to deter the amusement lov- Monkey business {s banned tn mo-| er, for Hallowe'en is Hallowe'en, and tion picture studios—where time Js\the dances on such gala nights precious and delays are fatai, | which the Arkeon has staged in the There was q lot of it, however, on | past have always proved successful. the Paramount set one day, when| BE SHOWN AT RIALTO STARTING THURSDAY be shown at the Iris theater today and tomorrow. Dorothy Dalton'’s newest Para- mount picture, “Dark Secrets,” | The excitement was occasioned by attempts on the part of Joteph Hen- abery, director, property man, elec- triclans and members of the cast, to recapture a small monkey—a part of the atmosphere of ono of the South | Pacifico Island settings, and without |which the scenes cou'dn't go on, | Phe monkey, evidently reminded sround for the setting, became un-| (6°44, thrill! hi rf manageable, Chattering and shrick.' Of the bch “9 ng sees parole |ing, it clamberea about ov the igs 78 Bitte Sa ns" % nae: |structural steel beams under the |{" Long Islan bib ees sienata” Saki |glase top of the big enclosed stage, ort Bilis is Miss Daiton’s leading | to the extreme annoyance of his pur- | ™*"- sSuers. Finally, a banana pti it back to earth. | ‘This was probably ths animal's! first movement o freedom since !t vas captured in its native ora ‘The Man Unconquerable” is on: the most thrilling pictures of a current season. Sylvia Breamer is teadint woman, “WONDERS OF THE OF THE re” ‘AT WYOMING TOMOnOW. BORDERF f | H T d | is deep sen ‘Would Apply Costs of nest J. S. Garrisons to Education. A real eatupaaylia’ |home, {s shown in J. B lamson’s remarkable undersea ts ated a ‘onders’ of the Sea,” which g distributed by Film Book-| lag. Otrices of America. An encoun-| |ter between an octopus and deep sea divers, photographed below the| water, is a feature thrilling enough| to satisfy the most jaded tast e Assoc'ated Press)—W. P. Thir- Other deep-sea phenomena, and the|kield, resident bishop of Mexico, of diving and swimming of Miss Lulu! the Methodist Episcopal church in a DES MOINES, Iowa, Oct. 31.—(By McGrath, the daring sea nymph,|speech before the Woman's Mis- make this a production you can't/sionary society here, disclosed a plan afford to miss. |he a’ready had presented to Prestl- “Wonders of the Sea” will open|dent Coolidge and Secretary of War a run at the Wyoming theater to-| Weeks for the abolition of the 12 morrow. forts along the Mexican border, } ee which now are manned by 8,300 sol- |dlers and 450 officers. joe QUNCERT | are sree Pate tt Bishop Thirk'eld pleaded that the lused in establishing four or five N hundred scho'armships in colleges | ny if EE enne of the United } E mC eapone the most capable and Fitty dollars in prizes is betng of-!promising Mexican youths, lét them ered by the management of the be trained in {deals of modern demo- rkeon dancing academy this even-|cracy, in statesmanlike views,” he at the mask ball which will be sa'd. “Let this, young generation of LAST TIMES COLUMBIA Zoos “OH MABLE” Presented By BILLIE IRELAND'S “FOLLIES OF 1923” —with— THE DUNBARS BUD BROWNEE JIMMY BRENNEN LEW NEWMAN CELESTAL O'NEILL —and— THE BOSTON HARMONY FOUR —also— BEN TURPIN in “THE SHRIEK OF ARABY” NEW SHOW TOMORROW “THE GIRL QUESTION” Beautiful and Thrilling —N. Y. Mail Che Casper Dally Cridune Mexicans catch the broacer vision of life and the spirit of altruism and unselfish spirit.” The bishop, who came to Des Moines direct from Washington, | said President Coolidge and Secra of War Weeks listened to his suggestion with evident Interest and sympathy. He also suld that Dr. L. S. Rowe, director of the Pan Amert- | can union. is in sympathy with the | movement. The forts, with their menacing guns pointing over the border would be substituted by a system of bor- @er police, Bishop Thirkield said. “There now is no danger,” the bishop declared, “fram any armed Mexican attack. President Obregon has cut down his army by half. He is using $55,000,000 thus saved, for public schools. The great camps at SanAntonio would be ample to meet any possible emergency.” ———_—_. E. Richard Shipp Paid Compliment By “Step Ladder” The “Step Ladder” a Chicago monthly Mterary publication in a jreview of Rocky Mountain poets in its November tssue says this: “Over in Wyaming ©. Richard Shipp looms large upon the horizon, His produc- tivity is astonishing and the true western spirit rings from his songs of the range. He has a new volume entitled ‘Intermountain Folk,” which 1s a distinct contribution to the literature of the west.” Expert watch and jewelry repair- ing. Casper Jewelry Co., O-S Ridg. KLAN STORY 0 MER ROUGE [a OLD IN COURT Deposition of Investi- gator Read in Suit For Receivership. ATLANTA, Gal, Oct. 21,—Asser- tion that J. J. Bracewell, a Ku Klux ‘Klan investigator had told him when he went to Bastrop, La., to investi- @ate the disappearance of two men “there was no uss for him to go to j|Mer Rouge, that the two bodies |found in the lake had been tied or ‘spread eagle’ on logging-cart wheels and rolled down the hill and that that was what crushed the heads off the two bodies,” was in jcluded in a deposition by S. N. Lit- tlejohn read at the hearing of the suit of E. M. Rittenhouse and oth- ers for receivership for the Knights of the Ku Klux Kian. Littlejohn sald that he was em- ployed at the time as an investi- gator for the Ku Klux Klan. He was sent to Bastrop about January 12 to make the investigations, | Littlejohn said that Captain Sk'p- with at Mer Rouge urged Imperial Wizard Evans, to keep him (Little john) on the job there, Littlejohn said that he was ¢etailed to work Proved safe by millions and Colds Headache Pain Toothache SAY “BAYER” when you buy-Gonune Neuritis Neuralgia prescribed by physicians for Lumbago Rheumatism ‘ ackage bg Accept only “Bayer” fUsMme™ vist contains proper directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists Arpirin ts the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicaci’ THE NETTO Pe U2 ets Matinee 3 o’Clock blood-thirsty octopuses—. rd man-eating sharks— SEE “Dark Secrets” Would you give the man you loved to another wom- if you could not marry him? —see— DOROTHY DALTON “DARK SECR a mor: deadly ays— beautiful gardens—- sea myriad fishes, treasure-laden wrecks— an enchanting fairyland— YOMING STARTING TOMORROW “The Eighth Wonder of the World” HALLO For the most Comical and Costumes. Dancing ADDED ATTRACTION SUNDAY ONLY The Mooseheart Concert Party Tonight MASK BALL $50.00-—_IN PRIZES. Arkeon Wyoming’s Greatest Amusement Palace Always Something Interesting TODAY 1, 2:40, 4:20 6, 7:40, 9:20 ZANE GREY’S Greatest Picture “TO THE LAST MAN” Produced Under the Personal Direction of Zane Grey It’s Gripping and Full of Smashing Scenes HAL ROACH COMEDY NEWS LADIES’ ORCHESTRA SOME, ALONG) Evening 7 and 9 o’Clock WEEN ——$50.00 beautiful, most most Original Academy ‘___ WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 197; under the direction of Captain Skip with and that al other investigator: were sent away and that, his instruc- tions were “to work with the end in view that there might be no in- dictment.” Ten-elevenths of the world's po, ation are north of the equator. He said that when the grand jury RNS cca failed tg return an indictment he PIGK: sent a telegram to T. J, McKinnon. He said that his instructions from McKinnon were to “keep Captain APORUB Skipwith quiet so as not to crowd ‘on i fn Sars Coed Yoong the issue.” He said McKinnon was afraid the captain would talk too much, ————— Among the natives'of South Africa tere {8 @ general belief in the split One tribe believes in three (8) — one in tho head, another in thie stomach, and a third in tho big 7. LAST TIMES TODAY REGINALD DENNY “The “That Old Gang of Mine” is a rare “hold that chord” har- mony sung as onl; Lica Kentucky lumbia Record. 99 A-3976 Derby \ 75¢ Comedy News Columbia)” .._.. Process RECORDS COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPH ©0. ishop-Casg TODAY and THURSDAY JACK HOLT —in— “THE MAN UNCONQUERABLE” —also— “CASEY JONES, JR.” ‘A Bishop-Cass Theater FODAY AND THURSDAY LOYAL LIVES A Big Drama of the United States Mail Service PATHOS, COMEDY -AND DRAMA —with— Brandon Tynan, Faire Binney, Mary Carr, Wm. Collier, Jr. —also— LARRY SEMON —in— “THE GOWN SHOP” —and— NEWS AND TOPICS Shows—1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 6:30, 8:00 and 9:30 10c and 40c the VAST WHITE ee WILLIAM ‘FOX nents HUDSON BAY with JOHN, FORD w; A Sishop-Cass Theater STARTS FRIDAY